FRONTISPIECE to the American Edition of D r WRIGHT. Complete BOOK of MARTYRS
THIS ELEGANT FRONTISPIECE
[...] Jesus Christ and also the Martyrdoms of th [...] Apostles Evangelists &c [...] display of the Burning of the [...] Southfield during the Reign of [...]loody Queen Mary
THE NEW AND COMPLETE BOOK of MARTYRS; OR, An Vniversal History of Martyrdom: BEING FOX'S BOOK OF MARTYRS, Revised and Corrected, with Additions and great Improvements.
CONTAINING AN AUTHENTIC ACCOUNT OF THE LIVES, PERSECUTIONS and SUFFERINGS of the HOLY MARTYRS; AND THE MANY DREADFUL Persecutions against the Church of CHRIST in all Parts of the World, BY PAGANS, JEWS, TURKS, PAPISTS, AND OTHERS, FROM THE EARLIEST AGES OF THE CHURCH TO THE PRESENT PERIOD.
INCLUDING THE Life, Sufferings, and Martyrdom of Our Lord and Saviour JESUS CHRIST; WITH THE Martyrdom of the APOSTLES, EVANGELISTS, and other PRIMITIVE CHRISTIANS.
The Ten Great Persecutions under the Roman Emperors.
The Persecutions in Persia, under Saphores: and the Persecutions under the Arian Vandals. The Martyrdom of the Missionaries in China: The Persecutions in the East-Indies: The Barbarities exercised by the Spaniards in America: And the Cruelties practised on the Christians of Abyssinia and Georgia.
The Persecutions exercised by the Papists in various Parts of Europe.
Together with a COMPLETE HISTORY of the MARTYRDOMS of The FAITHFUL and VIRTUOUS in the First Ages of the World: The Persecutions of the Maccabees by the Greeks; of the Hebrews by the Egyptians; and of the Children of Israel by the Philistines, and other barbarous Nations.
THE WHOLE FORMING AT ONCE A General Christian Martyrology, and a Complete History of Persecutions.
By the Rev. Mr. JOHN FOX, M. A. late of Magdalen College, Oxford.
NOW Revised, Corrected and Improved, with many Additional Articles, Relating to the Acts and Monuments of the Church.
BY PAUL WRIGHT, D. D. Embellished with Forty Elegant COPPER PLATE ENGRAVINGS.
IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. I.
NEW-YORK: PRINTED AND SOLD BY WILLIAM DURELL, AT HIS BOOK-STORE AND PRINTING-OFFICE, N o. 208, PEARL-STREET, NEAR THE FLY-MARKET.
M, DCC, XCIV.
PREFACE, TO Christian Readers of every Denomination.
THE Acts and Monuments of the Christian Martyrs, formerly written by the Rev. and Learned Mr. JOHN FOX, is a most valuable, but at the same time a very scarce, and voluminous Work. Upon which accounts, the Editor and Publisher of this New and Complete BOOK of MARTYRS, or an Universal History of Martyrdom, being FOXs Book of Martyrs, revised and corrected, with Additions and great Improvements; have resolved, at the earnest solicitations of numerous correspondents, to present the same to the Public in Forty Numbers, that, by this means, all ranks of people, may be enabled, by this mode of publication, to purchase it.
We think it needless here to give a tedious detail of all the particulars, which will be contained in this important undertaking; but it may be necessary to [...] to our readers, by way of information, (for the truth of which we pledge our own veracity, and their future encouragement) that this work will not be a trifling summary of mere names—not an inaccurate, lifeless abridgement—not a crude, indigested compendium—not a hasty catch-penny republication—but a full, complete, and perfect Christian Martyrology, from the most early age of persecution to the present time; containing a display, and fuller account than has hitherto been published, in any book of the like kind, of the lives, religious Principles, cruel Persecutions, Sufferings, Tortures, and Triumphant Deaths, of all these faithful Christians, and godly Martyrs, whose constancy was tried for the truth of the Gospel, and who have sealed their faith in our most holy religion with their blood.
[Page iv] Fellow Christians! This Work will serve the Christian cause. It will teach you how to conquer sin, your now grand persecutor; to make your appetites and passions martyrs to your salvation; and hence you may learn, that there is not any thing so difficult, but we may overcome through Divine help. We have the same cause, the same God on our side, the same recompence of reward to encourage us; and having so great a cloud of witnesses, let us press forward, and the same heaven will be our portion for ever.
Christian Families! Read, value, and recommend this Complete Book of Martyrs; which will be a most valuable legacy to leave your children; for [...]rein you will find exhibited, not only the characters of the best men, but those [...]ble principles which enabled them to brave the severest tortures which Popish [...]ruelty and Pagan barbarity could invent. You will see those mournful tra [...]dies that have been acted in your own country, upon your own countrymen; [...]d here, as in a glass, you will see that pure religion of Jesus Christ, refined [...]om all corruption of Popery, which religion we are in duty bound to propagate, and to leave uncorrupted to our dear posterity.
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THE NEW AND COMPLETE BOOK of MARTYRS; OR, AN UNIVERSAL HISTORY OF MARTYRDOM: BEING FOX'S BOOK OF MARTYRS, Newly Revised and Corrected, with Additions and great Improvements.
BEGINNING WITH A COMPLETE HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF THE LIVES, SUFFERINGS, AND DEATHS, OF THE PRIMITIVE AND EARLY MARTYRS, FROM THE CREATION OF THE WORLD, TO THE TIME OF QUEEN MARY I.
CHAP. I. An Account of the PERSECUTIONS in the FIRST AGES of the WORLD.
THE spirit of persecution soon began to shew itself in the world, after the creation. Of th [...]s we have a lamentable account given by Moses. The righteous Abel was the first martyr who fell a sacrifice to the envy and cruelty of his brothe [...] Cain. Afterwards commenced the persecution of Noah by his son Ham; the persecution of Lot at Sodom; and of Joseph by his brethren.
IN these early ages, the first general persecution may be deemed that of the children of Israel by Pharaoh. This tyrant not only afflicted both sexes of all ages by means of the most cruel tas [...]-masters, but even orde [...]ed the new-born infants of the Hebrew women to be murdered. He was, however, pu [...]ished fo [...] his persecutions; first by ten dreadful plagues, and afterwards by being swallowed up in the Red Sea, with all his host.
THE children of Israel, after being freed from bondage▪ were successively persecuted by the Philistines, Ammonites, Egyptians, Ethiopians, Arabians, and Assyrians; and many of the prophets and chosen of God were persecuted by several of the kings of Judah and Israel.
THE three righteous children were thrown into the fiery furnace by Nebuchadnezzar; Daniel was cast into the lion's den by order of Darius; and Mordecai was persecuted by the malicious Haman: but these were all respectively saved by the Almighty, and their persecutors punished for their perfidy.
[Page 6]THE Jews were persecuted by the neighbouring idolators during the time of their building and fortifying Jerusalem, till that great work was finished by the care of Nehemiah; but after its completion they were frequently disturbed by the Persians, and the successors of Alexander the Great, though that monarch himself had granted the most unlimited favours.
BUT a little more than a century and a half before the birth of Christ, Antiochus seized upon and sacked the city of Jerusalem, plundered the temple, and murdered many of the Jews who refused to conform with his idolatry, by scourging, strangling, crucifying, and stifling them, and by closing up the mouths of the caves to which they fled for shelter.
ANTIOCHUS and his idolatrous tormentors were, however, at length bravely opposed by Matthias a priest, and his valiant sons, the principal of whom was Judas Maccabeus. This able commander Judas, with his brave brothers, inspired the dispirited Jews with new courage, defeated the generals of Antiochus, freed their country from bondage, and afterwards turned their arms against the Edomites and Ammonites, over whom they were equally successful.
AT length Antiochus died a terrible death, his flesh having been some time before quite pu [...]rid, and producing maggots; so that he became loathsome to himself, and nauseous to all about him. His successors, however, continued their enmity to the Jews; but they were opposed, with various success, by the Maccabees.
THE Jews now entered into a treaty offensive and defensive with the Romans; but soon after lost their worthy champion Judas Maccabeus, who was slain in a bloody battle fought with the Greeks, under the command of their general Bacchides.
ANTIOCHUS Epiphanes now reigning in Syria, and having some success against the Jews, went to Jerusalem, where he ordered Eleazer the priest to be put to death in the most cruel manner, for refusing to eat swine's flesh. Then seizing on a family of Maccabees, consisting of a matron named Salamon [...] ▪ and her seven sons, he carried them all to Antioch. He would fain have persuaded them to embrace his idolatry, which they nobly and unanimously refusing, he ordered them all to be put to death.
MACCABEUS, the eldest, was accordingly stripped, stretched on the rack, and severely beaten. He was next fastened to a wheel, and weights hung to his feet till his sinews cracked. Afterwards his tormentors threw him into a fire till he was dreadfully scorched; then they drew him out, cut out his tongue, and put him into a frying-pan, with a slow fire under it, till he died. As long as he had life, and power of expression, under these exquisite torments, he fervently called upon God, and exhorted his brothers to a similar perseverance.
AFTER the second son had his hands fastened with chains, with which he was hung up, his skin was flayed off from the crown of his head to his knees. He was then cast to a leopard, but the beast refusing to touch him, he was suffered to languish till he expired with the excruciating pain, and loss of blood.
MACHIR, the third son, was bound to a globe till his bones were all dislocated; his head and face were then flayed, his tongue cut out, and being cast into a pan he was fryed to death.
JUDAS, the fourth son, after having his tongue cut out, was beat with ropes, and then racked upon a wheel.
ACHAS, the fifth son, was pounded in a large brazen mortar.
ARETH, the sixth son, was fastened to a pillar with his head downwards, slowly roasted by a fire kindled at some distance; h [...]s tongue was then cut out, and he was lastly fryed in a pan.
JACOB, the seventh and youngest son, had his arms cut off, his tongue plucked out, and was then fryed to death.
THEY all bore their fate with the same intrepidity as their elder brother, and called upon the Almighty to receive them into heaven.
SALAMONA, the mother, after having in a manner [Page 7] died seven deaths in beholding the martyrdom of her children, was, by the tyrant's order, stripped naked, severely scourged, her br [...]asts cut off, and her body fryed till she expired.
THE tyrant, who inflicted these cruelties, was afterwards struck with madness; and then his flesh became corrupted, and his bowels mortified, which put an end to his wicked life.
CHAP. II. Containing an Account of the LIFE, SUFFERINGS, and cruel MARTYRDOM of Our Blessed Lord and Saviour JESUS CHRIST; together with that of his APOSTLES, EVANGELISTS, &c. and the TEN GREAT PERSECUTIONS in the PRIMITIVE CHURCH.
HEROD the Great being informed that a king of the Jews should be born in Bethlehem, sent a number of troops to destroy all the children, under two years of age, in that place, and throughout the neighbouring coast. By this cruel order he hoped to have destroyed the child Jesus; but in this he was not only disappointed, but punished with such a spirit of lunacy, that he slew his own wife, children, relations, friends, &c. He was afterwards visited by the most grievous maladies, particularly an inward burning, slow, but unremitting; an uncommon appetite, continually craving, but ever unsatisfied; a cramp that racked him with pain; a flux that reduced him to weakness▪ worms that bred in him and gnawed him; vermin that engendered about him and devoured him; a general putrefaction that consumed him; and, in fine, all those complicated disorders which could possibly render him hateful to himself, and odious to others. His torments at length became so intolerable, that not having either the comforts of religion, or the support of a good conscience to sustain his sinking spirits, he attempted to lay violent hands upon himself. Being prevented in this attempt by those about him, he at last sunk under the oppression of his afflictions, and expired in the most miserable manner.
HEROD the I [...]ess having married the daughter of the king of Arabia, repudiated her, and espoused Herodias, his brother Philip's wife: for which marriage, full of incest and adultery, John the Baptist boldly and severely reproved him. This freedom greatly incensed Herodias; for we are informed by St. Matthew, in the xiv. chapter of his gospel, that when Herod's birth-day was kept, the daughter of Herodias danced before them, and pleased Herod: whereupon he promised, with an oath, to give her whatsoever she would ask. "And she being before instructed of her mother, said, Give me here John Baptist's head in a charger. And the king was sorry; nevertheless, for the oath's sake, and them which sat with him at meat, he commanded it to be given her. And he sent and beheaded John in the prison. And his head was brought in a charger, and given to the damsel: and she brought it to her mother." The authors of this cruelty were, however, all severely punished; for the daughter of Herodias being afterwards dancing upon the ice, it broke, and she falling in, had her head severed from her body by its again closing; and Herod, with the incestuous adultress Herodias, falling under the displeasure of the Roman emperor, were banished, and died miserably in exile.
BUT to proceed to the history of our Blessed Redeemer. In the reign of Herod the Great already mentioned, the angel Gabriel was sent by the Almighty to a holy virgin, called Mary. This maiden was betrothed to a carpenter named Joseph, who resided at Nazareth, a city of Galilee, but the consummation had not then taken place; for it was the custom of the eastern nations to contract persons of each sex from their childhood, though the cohabitation was not permitted till years of maturity.
THE angel informed Mary how highly she was favoured of God, and that she should conceive a son [Page 8] by the Holy Spirit, which happened accordingly; for travelling to Bethlehem to pay the capitation-tax then levied, the town was so crouded that they could only get lodgings in a stable, where the holy virgin brought forth our Blessed Redeemer, which was announced to the world by a star and an angel: the wise men of the east saw the first, and the shepherds the latter. After Jesus had been circumcised, he was presented in the temple by the holy virgin; upon which occasion Simeon broke out in the following celebrated words: "Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace according to thy word, for mine eyes have seen thy salvation." Luke ii.29, 30.
JESUS, in his youth, disputed with the most learned doctors in the temple, and soon after was baptized in the river Jordan by John, when the Holy Ghost descended upon him in the form of a dove, and a voice was heard audibly to pronounce these words: This is my beloved son, in whom I am well pleased.
CHRIST afterwards fasted forty days and nights in the wilderness, when he was tempted by the devil, but resisted all his allurements. He then performed his first miracle at Cana in Galilee; he likewise conversed with the good Samaritan, and restored to life a nobleman's dead child. Travelling through Galilee, he restored the blind to sight, cured the lame, the lepers, &c.
AMONG other benevolent actions, at the pool of Bethesda, he cured a paralytic man, who had been lame thirty-eight years, bidding him take up his bed and walk; and he afterwards cured a man, whose right hand was shrunk up and withered.
HAVING chosen his twelve apostles, he preached the celebrated sermon upon the Mount; after which he performed several miracles, particularly the feeding of the multitude, and the walking on the surface of the water.
AT the time of the passover, Jesus supped with his disciples; informed them, that one of them would betray him, and another deny him, and preached his farewel sermon. Soon after a multitude of armed men surrounded him, and Judas kissed him, in order to point him out to the soldiers who did not know him personally. In the scuffle occasioned by the apprehending of Jesus, Peter cut off the ear of Malchus, the servant of the high-priest, for which Jesus reproved him, and healed the wound by touching it. Peter and John followed Jesus to the house of Annas, who refusing to judge him, sent him bound to Caiaphas, where Peter denied Christ, as the latter had predicted; but on Christ's reminding him of his perfidy, Peter went out and wept bitterly.
WHEN the council assembled in the morning, the Jews mocked Jesus, and the elders suborned false witnesses against him: the principal accusation [...] him being, that he had said, I will destroy this temple that is made with hands, and within three days I will build another made without hands, Mark xiv.58. Caiaphas then asked him if he was Christ, the Son of God, or no; being answered in the affirmative, he was accused of blasphemy, and condemned to death by Pontius Pilate, the Roman governor, who, tho' conscious of his innocence, yielded to the solicitations of the Jews, and condemned him to be crucified.
PREVIOUS to the crucifixion, the Jews, by way of derision, clothed Christ in a regal robe, put a crown of thorns upon his head, and a reed, for a sceptre, in his hand: they then mocked him with ironical compliments, spit in his face, slapped his cheeks, and taking the reed out of his hand, they struck him with it upon the head. Pilate would fain have released him, but the general cry was, Crucify him, Crucify him; which occasioned the govern [...] to call for a bason of water, and having washed his hands, he declared himself innocent of the blood of Christ, whom he truely termed a just person. The Jews, however, said, let his blood be upon us and our children; which wish has manifestly taken place, as they have never since been a collected people.
IN leading Christ to the place of crucifixion, they obliged him to bear the cross, which he being unable to sustain, they compelled one Simon, a native of Cyrenia, to carry the cross the rest of the way. Mount Calvary was the place of execution, where being arrived, the soldiers offered [Page 9] him a mixture of gall and vinegar to drink, which he refused. Having stripped him, they nailed him to the cross, and crucified him between two malefactors. After being fastened to the cross, he uttered this benevolent prayer for his enemies: "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do." The soldiers who crucified him being four in number, now cut his mantle to pieces, and divided it between them; but his coat being without seam, they cast lots for it. Whilst Christ remained in the agonies of death, the Jews mocked him, and said, "If thou art the Son of God, come down from the cross." The chief priests and scribes also reviled him, and said, "He fayed others but cannot save himself." Indeed, one of the malefactors who was crucified with him, cried out, and said "If you are the Messiah, save yourself and us;" but the other male [...]actor, having the greatest reliance upon Jesus, exclaimed, "Lord, remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom." To which Christ replied, "This day shalt thou be with me in paradise."
WHILE Christ was upon the cross, the earth was covered with darkness, and the stars appeared at noon-day, which struck even the Jews with terror. In the midst of his tortures Christ cried out, "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me;" and then expressed a desire to drink, when one of the soldiers gave him, upon the point of a reed, a spunge dipped in vinegar, which, however, Jesus refused. About three o'clock in the afternoon he gave up the ghost, and at the same time a violent earthquake happened, when the rocks were rent, the mountains trembled, and the graves gave up their dead. These were the signal prodigies that attended the death of Christ, and such was the mortal end of the Redeemer of mankind.
An Account of the Lives, Sufferings, and Martyrdom, of the APOSTLES, EVANGELISTS, &c.
I. ST. STEPHEN.
THE Proto, or first martyr, was elected, with six others, as a deacon, out of the Lord's seventy disciples. Stephen was an able and successful preacher. The principal persons belonging to five Jewish synagogues entered into many altercations with him; but he, by the soundness of his doctrine, and the strength of his arguments, overcame them all, which so much irritated them, that they suborned false witnesses to accuse him of blaspheming God and Moses. Being carried before the council, he made a noble defence, but that so much exasperated his judges, that they resolved to condemn him. At this instant Stephen saw a vision from heaven of Jesus, in his glorified state, sitting at the right hand of God. This vision so greatly rejoiced him, that he exclaimed in raptures, "Behold, I see the heavens opened, and the Son of Man standing on the right hand of God." They then condemned him, and having dragged him out of the city, stoned him to death. On the spot where he was martyred, Eudocia, the empress of the emperor Theodosius, erected a superb church.
THE death of Stephen was suc [...]eded by a severe persecution in Jerusalem, in which 2000 christians, with Nicar the deacon, were martyred; and many others obliged to leave the place.
II. ST. JAMES the GREAT, a Galilean, was the son of Zebedee, a fisherman, the elder brother of St. John, and a relation to Christ himself; for his mother Salome was cousin-german to the virgin Mary. Being one day with his father fishing in the sea of Galilee, he, and his brother John, were called by our Saviour to become his disciples. They chearfully obeyed the mandate, and leaving their father, followed Jesus. It is to be observed, that Christ placed a greater confidence in them, than in any other of the apostles, Peter excepted.
CHRIST called these brothers Boanerges, or the sons of thunder, on account of their fiery spirits, and impetuous tempers.
HEROD Agrippa, being made governor of Judea by the emperor Caligula, raised a persecution against the christians, and particularly singled out James as an object of revenge.
JAMES, being condemned to death, shewed such an intrepidity of spirit, and constancy of mind, that his very accuser was struck with admiration, and became a convert to christianity. This transition [Page 10] so enraged the people in power, that they likewise condemned him to death; when James the apostle, and his penitent accuser were both beheaded on the same day, and with the same sword. These events took place in the year of Christ 44.
MUCH about the same period, Timon and Parmenas, two of the seven deacons, suffered martyrdom; the former at Corinth, and the latter at Philippi, and Macedonia.
III. ST. PHILIP. This apostle and martyr was born at Bethsaida, in Galilee, and was the first called by the name of Disciple. He was honoured with several important commissions by Christ, and being deputed to preach in Upper Asia, laboured very diligently in his apostleship. He then travelled into Phryg [...]a, and arriving at Heliopolis, was greatly grieved to find the inhabitants so sunk in idolatry, as to worship a large serpent. St. Philip, however, converted many of them to christianity, and even procured the death of the serpent. This so enraged the magistrates, that they committed him to prison, had him severely scourged, and afterwards crucified. His friend, St. Bartholomew, found an opportunity of taking down the body, and burying it; for which, however, he was very near suffering the same fate. His martyrdom happened eight years after that of St. James the great, A. D. 52.
IV. ST. MATTHEW. This evangelist, apostle, and martyr, was born at Nazareth in Galilee, but resided chiefly at Capernaum, on account of his business, which was that of a toll-gatherer, to collect tribute of such as had occasion to pass the sea of Galilee. On being called as a disciple▪ he immediately complied, and left every thing to fol [...]low Christ. After the ascension of his master, he continued preaching the gospel in Judea about nine years. Designing to leave Judea▪ in order to go and preach among the Gentiles, he wrote his gospel in Hebrew, for the use of the Jewish c [...]nvert [...]; but it was afterwards translated into [...] by St. James the less. Going to Ethiopia he ordained preachers, settled churches, and m [...]de many converts. He then proceeded to [...], where he had the same success; but returning to [...]t [...]i [...]pia, he was slain by a h [...]lbert in the city of [...], a [...]bout the year of Christ [...]0. He was [...] inoffensive in his conduct, and temperate in his mode of living.
V. ST. MARK. This evangelist and martyr was [...] Jewish parents, of the tribe of Levi. It is imagined, that he was converted to christianity by St. Peter, whom he served as an amanuensis, and whom he attended in all his travels. Being entreated by the converts at Rome to commit to writing the admirable discourses they had heard from St. Peter and himself: this request he complied with, and composed his gospel accordingly, in the Greek language. He then went to Egypt, and constituted a bishopric at Alexandria: afterwards he proceeded to Lybia, where he made many converts. Returning to Alexandria, some of the Egyptians exasperated at his success, determined on his death. To accomplish this they tied his feet, dragged him through the streets, left him to remain, bruised as he was, in a dungeon all night, and the next day burned his body. This happened on the 25th of April. His bones were carefully gathered up by the christians, decently interred, and afterwards removed to Venice, where he is considered as the titular saint, and patron of the state.
VI. ST. JAMES the Less. This apostle and martyr was called so, to distinguish him from St. James the great. He was the son, by a first wi [...], of Joseph, the reputed father of Christ: he was, after the Lord's ascension, elected bishop of Jerusalem: he wrote his general epistle to all christians, and converts whatever, to suppress a dangerous error then propagating, viz. "That a faith in Christ was alone sufficient for salvation, without good works." The Jews being, at this time, greatly enraged that St. Paul had escaped t [...]eir fury, by appealing to Rome, determined to [...] their vengeance on James, who was now [...] of [...]: they [...]ccordingly threw him down beat, bruis [...]d, and stoned him▪ and then dashed out his [...] a club, such as was used by fullers in dr [...]ssing cloths.
VII. S [...]. MATTHIAS. [...] and martyr was called to the apos [...]l [...]ship [...]fter the death of Christ, to supply the vacant pla [...] of Ju [...]as, who had betrayed his master, and was lik [...]wise one of the se [...]ent [...] disciples. H [...] wa [...] [...] at Jerusalem, being first stoned, [...]d then [...]
[Page 11]VIII. St. ANDREW. This apostle and martyr was brother to St. Peter, and preached the gospel to many Asiatic nations. Arriving at Edessa, the governor of the country, named Egeas, threatened him very hard for preaching against the idols there worshipped. St Andrew persisting in the propagation of his doctrines, he was ordered to be crucified on a cross, two ends of which were transversely fixed in the ground. He boldly told his accusers, that he would not have preached the glory of the cross, had he feared to die on it. And again, when they came to crucify him, he said, that he coveted the cross, and longed to embrace it. He was fastened to the cross, not with nails but cords, that his death might be more, lingering. In this situation he continued two days, preaching the greatest part of the time to the people; and expired on the 30th of November.
IX. ST. PETER. This great apostle and martyr was born at Bethsaida in Galilee, being the son of Jonah, a fisherman, which employment St. Peter himself followed. He was persuaded by his brother to turn christian, when Christ gave him the name of Cephas, implying in the Syriac language, a rock. He was called, at the same time as his brother, to be an apostle; gave uncommon proofs of his zeal for the service of Christ, and always appeared as the principal speaker among the apostles. He had, however, the weakness to deny his master, after his apprehension, though he defended him at the time; but the sincerity of his repentance made an atonement for the atrociousness of his crime.
THE Jews, after the death of Christ, still continued to persecute the christians, and even went so far as to order several of the apostles, among whom was Peter, to be scourged▪ This punishment they bore with great fortitude, and rejoiced that they were thought worthy to suffer for the sake of Christ.
HEROD Agrippa having caused St. James the great to be put to death, and finding that it pleased the Jews, resolved, in order to ingratiate himself farther with the people, that Peter should fall a sacrifice to his malice. He was accordingly apprehended, and thrown into prison; but an angel of the L [...]rd released him, which so enraged Herod, that he ordered the centinels, who guarded the dungeon in which he had been confined, to be put to death. St. Peter, after various other miracles, retired to Rome, where he defeated all the artifices, and confounded the magic of Simon, the magician, a great favourite of the emperor Nero: he likewise converted to christianity one of the concubines of that monarch, which so exasperated the tyrant, that he ordered both St. Peter and St. Paul to be apprehended. During the time of their confinement, they converted two of the captains of the guard, and 47 other persons to christianity. Having been nine months in prison, Peter was brought out from thence for execution, when, after being severely scourged, he was crucified with his head downwards; which position, however, was at his own request. He, as well as Paul, suffered on the 29th day of June. His body being taken down, embalmed, and buried in the vatican, a church was afterwards erected on the spot; but this being destroyed by the emperor Heliogabalus, the body was removed, till the 20th bis [...]p of Rome, called Corn [...]lius, conveyed it again to the vatican: afterwards Constantine the great erected one of the most stately churches in the universe over the place. Before we quit this article it is requisite to observe, that previous to the death of St. Peter, his wife suffered martrydom for the faith of Christ, and was exhorted, when going to be put to death, to remember the Lord Jesus.
X. ST. PAUL, the apostle and martyr, was a Jew of the tribe of Benjamin, born at Tarsus, in Cilicia. He was at first a great enemy to, and persecutor of the christians; but after his miraculous conversion, he became a strenuous preacher of Christ's gospel. At Iconium, St. Paul and St. Barnabas were near being stoned to death by the enraged Jews; wherefore they fled to Lyconia. At Lystra, St. Paul was stoned, dragged out of the city, and left for dead. He, however, happily revived, and escaped to Derbe. At Philippi, Paul and Silas were imprisoned and whipped; and both were again persecuted at Thessalonica. Being afterwards taken at Jerusalem, he was sent to Cesar [...]a, but appealed to Caesar at Rome. Here he continued a prisoner at large for two years. Being released, he visited the churches of Rome, and preached in France and Spain. Returning to Rome, he was again apprehended, and, by the order of Nero, martyred, by being beheaded.
[Page 12]XI. ST. JUDE, the apostle and martyr, the brother of James, was commonly called [...] haddaeus. Being sent to Edesa, he wrought many miracles, and made many converts, which stirring up the resentment of people in power, he was crucified▪ A. D. [...]2.
XII. ST. BARTHOLOMEW preached in several countries, performed many miracles, and healed various diseases. He translated St. Matthew's gospel into the Indian language, and propagated it in that country: but at length, the idolators growing impatient with his doctrines, severely beat, crucified, and flayed him, and then cut off his head.
XIII. ST. THOMAS, as he was called in Syriac, but Didymus in Greek, was an apostle and martyr. He preached in Parthia and India, where displeasing the Pagan priests, he was martyred by being thrust through with a spear.
XIV. ST. LUKE, the evangelist and martyr, was the author of a most excellent gospel. He travelled with St. Paul to Rome, and preached to divers barbarous nations, till the priests in Greece hanged him on an olive-tree.
XV. ST. SIMON, the apostle and martyr, was distinguished by the name of Zelotes, from his zeal. He preached with great success in Mauritania, and other parts of Africa, and even in Britain, where, though he made many converts, he was crucified bv the then barbarous inhabitants of that island, A. D. 74.
XVI. ST. JOHN. This saint was, at once, a prophet, apostle, divine, evangelist, and martyr. He is called the beloved disciple, and was brother to James the great. He was previously a disciple of John the Baptist, and afterwards not only one of the twelve apostles, but one of the three to whom Christ communicated the most secret passages of his life. The churches in Asia sounded by St. John were, Smyrna, Pergamus, Sardis, Philadelphia, Laodicea, and [...], to whom he directs his book of Revelations. Being at Ephesus, he wa [...] ordered by the emperor Domitian to be sent bound to Rome, where he was condemned to be cast into a c [...]aldron of boiling oil. But here a miracle appeared in his favour; the oil did him no injury, and Domitian therefore not being able to put him to death, banished him to Patmos to work at the mines. He was, however, recalled by Nerva, who succeeded Domitian after his decease, but was deemed a martyr on account of the having undergone the mode of an execution, though it did not take effect. He wrote his epistles, gospel, and revelations, all in a different style; but they are all equally admired. He was the only apostle who escaped a violent death: lived the longest of any of them, being near 100 years of age at the time of his death.
XVII. ST. BARNABAS was a native of Cy [...]prus, but of Jewish pa [...]ents: the time of his death is uncertain, but supposed to be about the year of Christ 73.
An Account of the First Primitive Persecution, which began in the Year 67, under the Reign of NERO, Emperor of Rome.
IN the primitive ages of the church, the first per [...]secution was begun by that cruel tyrant Nero, the sixth emperor of Rome. This monarch reigned for the space of five years with tolerable credit to himself, but then gave way to the greatest extravagancy of temper, and to the most atrocious barbarities. Among other diabolical whims, he took it into his head to order, that the city of Rome shuld be set on fire, which was done by his officers, guards, and servants, accordingly. While the im [...]perial city was in flames, he went up to the tower of Mac [...], played upon his harp, sung the song of the burning of Troy, and openly declare [...]. "That he wished the ruin of all things before his death." Among the noble bu [...]l si [...]gs burnt was the Circus, or place appropriated to [...]: it was half a mile in length, of an oval form, with rows of seats rising above each other, and [...]p [...]ble of receiving, with case, upwards of 100,000 spectators. Besides this noble pil [...], many oth [...] [...] and houses w [...]re consumed; several thousan [...] [...] in the f [...]ames, were smothered in the sin [...], or buried b [...]neath the ruins.
THIS dreadful conflagration c [...]tinued [...]i [...]e day [...], [Page 13] when Nero, finding that his conduct was greatly blamed, and a severe odium cast upon him, determined to lay the whole upon the christians, at once to excuse himself, and have an opportunity of glutting his sight with new cruelties. This was the occasion of the first persecution; and the barbarities exercised upon the christians were such as even excited the commiseration of the Romans themselves. Nero even refined upon cruelty, and contrived al manner of punishments for that the most inferna imagination could design. In particular, he had some sewed up in the skins of wild beasts, and then worried by dogs till they expired; and others dressed in shirts made stiff with wax, fixed to axle-trees, and set on fire in his gardens in order to illuminate them. This persecution was general throughout the whole Roman empire; but it rather increased than diminished the spirit of christianity. In the course of it, St. Paul and St. Peter were martyred (as we have already mentioned in our account of the lives, sufferings, and martyrdom of the apo [...] tles, evangelists, &c. in the foregoing order) and beside many others, whose names have not been transmitted to posterity, were some of their converts and followers, the circumstances concerning the principal of whom we shall here relate.
ERASTUS, the chamberlain of Corinth, was converted by St. Paul, and determined to follow the fortune of that apostle. For this reason he resigned his office, and accompanied St. Paul in his [...] and travels, till the latter left him in Macedonia, where he was first made Bishop of that province by the christians; and afterwards suffered martyrdom, being tortured to death by the Pagans at Philippi.
ARISTARCHUS, the Macedonian, was born in Thessalonica, and being converted by St. Paul, became his constant companion.
HE was at that apostle at Ephesus, during a commotion raised in that city by Demetrius the silversmith. They both received several [...] upon the occasion from the [...], which they bore with true christian [...], giving good advi [...] in return for ill usage, and not in the least resent [...]ng any indignity put upon them.
FROM Ephesus, Aristarchus accompanied St. Paul into Greece, where they were very successf [...]l in propagating the gospel, and bringing over many from ignorance to a [...]aving knowledge, and from Pagan darkness to the glorious light of christianity.
LEAVING Greece they traversed a great part of Asia, and made a considerable stay in Judea, where they were so successful in making converts in those parts, that idolatry seemed to fly before them, and truth to diffuse its rays wherever they came.
ARISTARCHUS afterwards went with St. Paul to Rome, where he suffered the same fate as the apostle, for being seized as a christian, he was beheaded by the command of Nero.
TROPHIMUS, an Ephesian by birth, and a Gentile by religion, was converted by St. Paul to the christian faith.
AFTER his conversion he accompanied his master in his voyages and travels; and upon his account the Jews raised a great disturbance in the temple of Jerusalem, the last time St. Paul was in that city. They proceeded so far in their malice against the apostle, that they attempted to murder him, for having introduced a Greek into the temple; for Trophimus being a Greek, was looked upon by the Jews with detestation. Lysias, the captain of the guard, however, interposed his authority, and by force rescued St. Paul from the hands of the Jews.
ON quitting Jerusalem, Trophimus followed his master to Rome, and did him every essential service in his power. He then attended him to Spain, and passing through Gaul, the apostle made him bishop of that province, and left him behind the city of Arles.
ABOUT a twelvemonth after he paid a visit to St. Paul in Asia, and went with him for the last time, to Rome, where he was witness to the martyrdom of his master; which was but the fore-runner of his own, for being soon after seized on account of his faith, he was beheaded by the emperor Nero's express orders.
JOSEPH, commonly called BARSABAS, was a primitive disciple, and is usually deemed one of the seventy. He was, in some degree, related to [Page 14] our blessed Redeemer, and became a candidate, together with Matthias, to fill the vacant place of Judas Iscariot, the traitor.
THE gospel and ecclesiastical writers make very little other mention of him; but Papias informs us, that he was once compelled to drink poison, which did not do him the least injury, agreeable to the promise of the Lord to those who believe in him.
DURING his life he was a zealous preacher of the gospel; and having received many insults from the Jews, at length received the crown of martyrdom, being murdered by the Pagans in Judea.
ANANIAS, bishop of Damascus, is celebrated in the sacred writing for being the person who cured St. Paul of the blindness with which he was struck by the amazing brightness which happened at his conversion. He was one of the Seventy, and martyred in the city of Damascus. After his death a christian church was built over the place of his burial, which is now converted into a Turkish mosque.
An account of the Second Primitive Persecution, under the Emperor DOMITIAN.
THE emperor Domitian, being naturally inclined to cruelty, first slew his brother, and then raised the second persecution against the christians. His rage was such, that he even put to death some of the Roman senators; some through malice, and others to confiscate their estates. He then commanded all the lineage of David to be put to death. Two christians were brought before the emperor, and accused of being of the tribe of Judah, and line of David; but from their answers, he despised them as ideots and dismissed them accordingly. He, however, for his lenity here, was determined to be more severe upon other occasions; for he took away the substance of many christians, banished others, and put several to death.
AMONG the numerous martyrs that suffered during this persecution was Simeon, bishop of Jerusalem, who was crucified; and St. John, who was boiled in oil, and afterwards banished to Patmos. Flavia, the daughter of a Roman senator, was likewise banished to Pontus; and a law was made, "That no christian, once brought before the tribunal, should be exempted from punishment without renouncing his religion."
A variety of fabricated tales were, during this reign, composed in order to injure the christians. Among other falsehoods, they were accused of indecent nightly meetings, of a rebellious turbulent spirit, of being pernicious to the Roman empire, of murdering their children, and even of being cannibals. Such was the infatuation of the Pagans, that if famine, pestilence, [...] earthquakes, afflicted any of the Roman provinces, it was laid upon the christians. These persecutions among the christians increased the number of informers; and many, for the sake of gain, swore away the lives of the innocent.
ANOTHER hardship was, that when any christians were brought before the magistrates, a test oath was proposed, when, if they refused to take it, death was pronounced against them; and if they confessed themselves christians, the sentence was the same. The various kinds of punishments and inflicted cruelties were, during this persecution, imprisonment, racking, fearing, broiling, burning, scourging, stoning, strangling, hanging, worrying.
SOME indeed were torn piecemeal, with red hot pincers, and others were thrown upon the horns of wild bulls. After having suffered these cruelties, the friends of the deceased christians were refused the privilege of burying their poor remains.
THE following were the most remarkable among the numerous martyrs who suffered during this persecution.
DIONYSIUS, the Areopagite, was an Athenian by birth, and educated in all the useful and ornamental literature of Greece. He then travelled to Egypt to study astronomy, and made particular observations on the great and supernatural eclipse, which happened at the time of our Savious crucifixion.
ON his return to Athens, he was highly honoured [Page 15] by the people, and at length promoted to the dignity of senator of that celebrated city. Becoming a convert to the gospel, he changed from the worthy Pagan magistrate to the pious christian pastor; for even while involved in the darkness of idolatry, he was as just as the gross errors of Paganism would permit.
IT is easy to be imagined, that a soul which could appear with some lustre while loaded with original sin, and tainted with superstition, must, when illuminated with the light of the gospel, shine with the most splendid brilliancy.
THE sanctity of his conversation, and purity of his manners, recommended him so strongly to the christians in general, that he was appointed bishop of Athens. He discharged his duty with the utmost diligence till the second year of this pers [...]cution, viz. A. D. 69, when he was apprehended, and received the crown of martyrdom, by being beheaded.
NICOMEDES, a christian of some distinction at Rome, during the rage of Domitian's persecution, did all he could to serve the afflicted; comforting the poor, visiting the confined, exhorting the wavering, and confirming the faithful. For those and other pious actions he was seized as a christian, and being sentenced, was scourged to death.
PROTASIUS and GERVASIUS were martyred at Milan: but the particular circumstances of their deaths are not recorded.
TIM [...]THY, the cel [...]brated disciple of St. Paul, and bishop of Ephesus, [...] born a [...] Lystra, in the province of Lyca [...]ni [...], his father being a Gentile, and his mot [...]er a J [...]we [...] ▪ [...] both his parents and his grandmother embrac [...]d c [...]ristia [...]ity, by which means young Timothy was taught the precepts of the gospel from his infancy.
St. P [...]L coming to Lycaonia, ordained Timothy, and [...] him the companion of his pious labours. It appear [...], that while he attended the [...] could be [...] equalled by his [...] mentio [...]s him with peculiar respect, [...] that he could find none so truly [...] and mind, as Timothy. Indeed, the apostle, upon various occasions, speaks of him in the most affectionate terms, which is a sufficient proof of his great merit, and evinces, that he was a disinterested and diligent servant of Christ.
TIMOTHY attended St. Paul to Macedonia, and there with the apostle and Silas, he laboured with assiduity in the propagation of the gospel. When St. Paul went to Achaia, Timothy was left behind to strengthen the faith of those already converted, or to induce others to quit the darkness of ignorance for the light of gospel knowledge.
AT length St. Paul sent for Timothy to Athens, and then dispatched him to Thessalonica, to strengthen the suffering christians there against the terrors of the persecution which then raged.
WHEN Timothy arrived at the place of his destination, he did all that a zealous christian could for the service of his Redeemer. Having performed his mission, he returned to Athens, and there assisted St. Paul and Silas, in composing the two epistles to the Thessalonians. He then accompanied St. Paul to Corinth, Jerusalem, and Ephesus.
AFTER performing several other commissions for St. Paul, and attending him upon various other journeys, the apostle constituted him bishop of Ephesus, though he was only thirty years of age; and in two admirable epistles gave him proper instructions for his conduct in so important a charge.
TIMOTHY was so very temporate in his living, that St. Paul blames him for being too abstemious, and recommends to him the moderate use of wine to recruit his strength and spirits.
ST. Paul sent to Timothy while he was in his last confinement at Rome to come to him; and, after that great apostle's martyrdom, he returned to Ephesus, where he zealously governed the church till A. D. 97. At this period the Pagans were about to celebrate a feast called Catagogion, the principal ceremonies of which were, that the people should carry battons in their hands, go masked, and bear about the streets the images of their gods.
[Page 16]TIMOTHY, meeting the procession, severely reproved them for their ridiculous idolatry, which so exasperated the people, that they fell upon him with their clubs, and beat him in so dreadful a manner, that he expired of the bruises two days after.
An Account of the Third Primitive Persecution under the Roman Emperors.
NERVA succeeding Domitian, gave a respite to the christians; but reigning only thirteen months, his successor, Trajan, in the 10th year of his reign, and in A. D. 108, began the third persecution against the christians. While the persecution raged, Plinius Secundus, a heathen Philosopher, wrote to the emperor in favour of the christians; to whose epistle Trajan returned this indecisive answer, "The christians ought not to be sought after, but when brought before the magistracy, they should be punished."
THIS absurd reply made Tertullian exclaim in the following words: "O confused sentence! he would not have them sought for as innocent, and yet would have them punished as guilty." The emperor's incoherent answer, however, occasioned the persecution in some measure to abate, as his officers were uncertain if they carried it on with severity, how he might chuse to wrest his own meaning. Trajan, however, soon after wrote to Jerusalem, and gave orders to his officers to exterminate the stock of David; in consequence of which, ail that could be found of that race were put to death.
SYMPHOROSA, a widow, and her seven sons, were commanded by the emperor to sacrifice to the heathen deities. Unanimously refusing to comply with such an impious request, the emperor, in a rage told her, that for her obstinacy herself, and her sons, should be slain, to appease the wrath of his offended deities: to which she answered, that if he murdered her and her children, the idols he adored would only be held in the greatest detestation.
THE emperor being greatly exasperated at this, ordered her to be carried to the temple of Hercules, where she was scourged, and hung up, for some time, by the hair of her head; then being taken down, a large stone was fastened to her neck, and she was thrown into the river, where she expired. With respect to the sons, they were fastened to seven posts, and being drawn up by pullies, their limbs were dislocated; these tortures, not affecting their resolution, they were thus martyred; Cresentius, the eldest, was stabbed in the throat; Julian, the second, in the breast; Nemesius, the third, in the heart; Primit [...]us, the fourth, in the naval; Justice, the fifth, in the back; Stacteus, the sixth, in the side; and Eugenius, the youngest, was sawed asunder.
PHOCAS, bishop of Pontus, refusing to sacrifice to Neptune, was, by the immediate order of Trajan, cast first into a hot lime-kiln, and being drawn from thence, was thrown into a scalding bath till he expired.
TRAJAN likewise commanded the martyrdom of Ignatius, bishop of Antioch. This holy man was the person whom, when an infant, Christ took in his arms, and shewed to his disciples, as one that would be a pattern of humility and innocence. He received the gospel afterwards from St. John the Evangelist, and was exceedingly zealous in his mission. He boldly vindicated the faith of Christ before the emperor, for which being cast into prison, he was tormented in a most cruel manner; for after being dreadfully scourged, he was compelled to hold fire in his hands, and at the same time, papers dipped in oil were put to his sides, and set on light. His flesh was then torn with red hot pincers, and at last he was dispatched by being torn to pieces by wild beasts.
TRAJAN being succeeded by Adrian, the latter continued this third persecution with as much severity as his predecessor. About this time Alexander, bishop of Rome, with his two deacons, were martyred; as were Quirinus and Hermes, with their families; Zenon, a Roman nobleman, and about ten thousand other christians.
IN Mount Ararat many were crucified, crowned [Page 17] with thorns, and spears run into their sides, in imitation of Christ's passion. Eustachius, a brave and successful Roman commander, was by the emperor ordered to join in an idolatrous sacrifice to celebrate some of his own victories▪ but his faith (being a christian in his heart) was so much greater that his vanity, that he nobly refused it. Enraged at the denial, the ungrateful emperor forgot the services of this skilful commander, and ordered him and his whole family to be martyred.
AT the martydom of Faustines and Jovita, brothers and citizens of Bressia, their torments were so many, and their patience so great, that Calocerius, a Pagan, beholding them, was struck with admiration, and exclaimed in a kind of extasy, "Great is the God of the christians!" for which he was apprehended, and suffered a similar fate.
MANY other similar cruelties and rigours were exercised against the christians, till Quadratus, bishop of Athens, made a learned apology in their favour before the emperor, who happened to be there; and Aristides, a philosopher of the same city, wrote an elegant epistle, which caused Adrian to relax in his severities, and relent in their favour. He indeed went so far as to command that no christian should be punished on the score of religion or opinion only; but this gave other handles against them to the Jews and Pagans, for then they began to employ and suborn false witnesses, to accuse them of crimes against the state, or civil authority.
ADRIAN dying, in the year A. D. 138, was succeeded by Antoninus Pius, one of the most amiable monarchs that ever reigned; for his people gave him a title which he justly deserved, viz. The Father of Virtues. Immediately upon his accession to the imperial throne, he published an edict, forbidding any farther persecutions against the christians, and concluded it in these words: "If any hereafter shall vex or trouble the christians, having no other cause but that they are such, let the accused be released, and the accusers be punished." This stopped the persecution, and the christians enjoyed a respite from their sufferings during this emperor's reign, though their enemies took every occasion to do them what injuries they could in an underhand manner.
An Account of the Fourth Primitive Persecution under the Roman Emperors, which commenced A. D. 162.
ANTONINUS PIUS was succeeded by Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Philosophus, who, being a strong Pagan, began the fourth persecution, in which many christians were martyred, particularly in several parts of Asia, and in France.
THE cruelties used in this persecution were such, that many of the spectators shuddered with horror at the sight, and were astonished at the intrepidity of the sufferers. Some of the martyrs were obliged to pass with their already wounded feet, over thorns, nails, sharp shells, &c. with their points; others were scourged till their sinews and veins lay bare; and after suffering the most excruciating tortures that could be devised, they were destroyed by the most terrible deaths.
GERMANICUS, a young man, but true christian, being delivered to the wild beasts on account of his faith, behaved with such astonishing courage, that several Pagans became converts to a faith which inspired such fortitude. This enraged others so much, that they cried he merited death, as they did also of Polycarp, the pious and venerable bishop of Smyrna.
POLYCARP, hearing that persons were after him to apprehend him, escaped, but was discovered by a child. From this circumstance, and having dreamed that his bed suddenly became on fire, and was consumed in a moment, he concluded that it was God's will that he should seal his faith with martyrdom. He therefore would not attempt to make a second escape when he had an opportunity of so doing. Those who apprehended him, were amazed at his serene countenance, and comely gravity. After feasting them, he desired an hour in prayer, which being allowed, he prayed with such fervency, that his guards repented they had been instrumental in taking him. He was, however, carried before the pro-consul, condemned, and conducted to the market-place. Wood being provided, the holy man earnestly prayed to heaven, after being bound to the stake; and as the flames grew vehement, the tormentors gave way to each [Page 18] side, the heat now becoming intolerable. In the mean time the bishop sung praises to God in the midst of the flames, but remained unconsumed therein, and the burning of the wood spreading a fragrancy around, the guards were much surprized. Determined, however, to put an end to his life, the struck spears into his body, when the quantity of blood that issued from the wounds extinguished the flames. After considerable attempts, however, they put him to death, and burnt his body when dead, not being able to consume it while living. The twelve other christians, who had been intimate with Polycarp, were soon after martyred.
METRODORUS, a minister, who preached boldly; and Pionius, who made some excellent apologies for the christian faith, were likewise burnt. Carpus and Papilus, two worthy christians, and Agathonica, a pious woman, suffered martyrdom at Pargamopolis, in Asia.
FELICITATUS, an illustrious Roman lady of a considerable family, and the most shining virtues, was a devout christian. She had seven sons, whom she had educated with the most exemplary piety. The empire having been, about this time, grievously troubled with earthquakes, famine, inundations, &c. the christians were accused as the cause, and Felicitatis was included in the accusation. The lady and her family being seized, the emperor gave orders to Publius, the Roman governor of Rome, to proceed against her.
PUBLIUS began with the mother, thinking that if he could prevail with her to change her religion, the example would have great influence with her sons. Finding her inflexible, he turned his intreaties to menaces, and threatened her with destruction to herself and family. She despised his threats as she had done his promises; on which he changed his battery, and began with the sons, whom he examined separately. They all, however, remained stedfast in their faith, and unanimous in their opinions, on which the whole family were ordered for execution.
JANUARINS, the eldest, was scourged, and pressed to death with weights; Felix and Philip, the two next, h [...]d their brains dashed out with clubs; Sylvanus, the fourth, was murdered by being thrown from a precipice; and the three younger sons, viz. Alexander, Vitalis, and Martial, were all beheaded. With respect to the mother, she suffered the same fate, and was beheaded with the same sword as the three latter.
JUSTIN, the celebrated philosopher, fell a martyr in this persecution. He was a native of Neapolis, in Samaria, and was born A. D. 103. He had the best education those times could afford, and travelled into Egypt, the country where the polite tour of that age was made for improvement. At Alexandria he was informed of every thing relative to the seventy interpreters of the sacred writings, and shewn the rooms, or rather cells in which their work was performed. Justin was a great lover of truth, and an universal scholar; he investigated the Stoic and Peripatetic philosophy, and attempted the Pythagorean; but the behaviour of one of its professors disgusting him, he applied himself to the Platonic, in which he took great delight. About the year 133, when he was thirty years of age, he became a convert to christianity, and then, for the first time, perceived the real nature of truth.
HE wrote an elegant epistle to the Gentiles, to convert them to the faith he had newly acquired, and lived in so [...]ure and innocent a manner, that it was evident he merited the title of a christian philosopher.
HE employed his talents in convincing the Jews of the truth of the christian rites, and spent a great deal of time in travelling, till he took up his abode in Rome, and fixed his habitation upon the Viminal mount.
HE kept a public school, taught many who afterwards became great men, and wrote a treatise to confute heresies of all kinds. As the Pagans began to treat the christians with great severity, Justin wrote his first apology in their favour, and addressed it to the [...]mperor, to two princes whom he adopted as his sons, and to the senate and people of Rome in general. This piece displays great learning and genius, is written with a manly elegance, and occasioned the emperor to publish an edict in favour of the christians.
[Page 19]Soon after he entered into frequent contests with Crescens, a person of a vicious life and conversation, but a celebrated cynic philosopher; and his arguments appeared so powerful, yet disgusting to the cynic, that he resolved on, and in the sequel accomplished, his destruction.
JUSTIN'S second apology was occasioned by the following circumstances: a man and his wife, who were both bad livers, resided at Rome. The woman, however, becoming a convert to christianity, attempted to reclaim her husband: but not succeeding, she sued for a divorce, which so exasperated him, that he accused her of being a christian. Upon her petition, however, he dropped the prosecution, and levelled his malice at Ptolemeus, who had converted her. Ptolemeus was condemned to die; and one Lucius, with another person, met with the same fate, for expressing themselves too freely upon the occasion.
THE apology of Justin, upon these severities, gave Crescens the cynic an opportunity of prejudicing the emperor against the writer of it: upon which Justin, and six of his companions, were apprehended. Being commanded as usual to deny their faith, and sacrifice to the Pagan idols, they absolutely refused to do either; on their refusal, they were condemned to be first scourged, and then beheaded; which sentence was executed with all imaginable severity.
OF the writings of this celebrated martyr, and great philosopher, only seven pieces are now extant, viz. The two Apologies. An Exhortation to the Gentiles. An Oration to the Greeks. A Treatise on Divine Monarchy. A Dialogue with Trypho the Jew, and an Epistle to Diagnetus.
SEVERAL were beheaded for refusing to sacrifice to the image of Jupiter; in particular Concordus, a deacon of the city of Spoleto, being carried before the image, and ordered to worship it, not only refused, but spit in its face; for which he was severely tormented, and afterwards had his head cut off with a sword.
SOME of the no [...]thern nations being in arms against Rome, the emperor marched to encounter them. He was, however, drawn into an ambuscade, and dreaded the loss of his whole army. Enveloped with mountains, surrounded by enemies, and perishing with thirst, the troops were driven to the last extremities. All the Pagan deities were invoked in vain; when the men belonging to the militine, or thundering legion, who were all christians, were commanded to call upon their God for succour: they immediately withdrew from the rest, prostrated themselves upon the earth, and prayed fervently. A miraculous deliverance immediately ensued; a prodigious quantity of rain fell, which being caught by the men, and filling the dykes, afforded a sudden and astonishing relief. The emperor, in his epistle to the Roman Senate, wherein the expedition is described, after mentioning the difficulties to which he had been driven, thus speaks of the christians.
"When I saw myself not able to encounter with the enemies, I craved aid of our country gods; but finding no relief at their hands, and being cooped up by the enemy, I caused those men, whom we call christians, to be sent for; who being mustered, I found a considerable number of them, against whom I was more incensed than I had just cause, as I found afterwards: for, by a marvellous power, they forthwith used their endeavours, not with ammunition, drums, and trumpets, abhorring such preparations and furniture, but only praying unto, and trusting in their God, whom they carry about with them in their consciences. It is therefore to be believed, although we call them wicked men, that they worship God in their hearts; for they, falling prostrate on the ground, prayed, not only for me, but for the army which was also with me, beseeching God to help me in that our extreme want of victuals and fresh water (for we had been five days without water, and in our enemies land, even in the midst of Germany); I say falling upon their faces, they prayed to a God unknown to me, and immediately thereupon fell from heaven a most pleasant and cool shower; but amongst our enemies great store of hail, mixed with thunder and lightning: so that we soon perceived the invincible aid of the most mighty God to be with us therefore we give these men leave to profess christianity, lest, by their prayers, we be punished by the like: and I thereby make myself the author of all the evil that shall [Page 20] accrue by the persecution of the christian religion." It appears, that the storm which so miraculously flashed in the faces of the enemy so intimidated them, that part deserted to the Roman army; the rest were with ease defeated, and the revolted provinces were entirely recovered.
THIS affair occasioned the persecution to subside for some time, at least in those parts, immediately under the inspection of the emperor; for we find that it soon after raged in France, particularly at Lyons, where the tortures, to which many of the christians were put, almost exceed the powers of description. The aspersions, false accusations, taunts, threats, revilings, menacings, which were but forerunners to all manner of punishments, torments, and painful deaths; such as being banished, plundered, hanged, burnt, &c. and even the servants and slave of opulent christians were racked and tortured, to make them accuse their masters and employers. The principal of these martyrs were the following:
VETIUS AGATHUS, a young man, who having boldly pleaded the christian cause, was asked if he was a christian? To which answering in the affirmative, he was condemned to death, and received the crown of martyrdom accordingly. Many, animated by this young man's intrep [...]ity, boldly owned their faith, and suffered as he had done.
BLANDINIA, a christian, but of a weak constitution, being seized and tortured upon the account of her religion, received so much strength from heaven, that her torturers became tired frequently, and were surprised at her being able to bear her torments with such resolution, and for so great a length of time.
SANCTUS, a deacon of Vienna, was put to the torture, which he bore with great fortitude, and only cried, "I am a christian." Red hot plates of brass were placed upon those parts of the body that were tenderest, which contracted the sinews: but he remaining inflexible was re-conducted to prison. Being brought out from his place of confinement a few days afterwards▪ his tormentors were astonished to find his wounds healed, and his person as perfect as before they tormented him: they, however, again proceeded to torture him; but not being able, at that time, to take away a life which was miraculously preserved, they only remanded him to prison, where he remained for some time after; and having had this respite, received the crown of martyrdom by being beheaded.
BIBLIAS, a weak woman, had been an apostate, but having returned to the faith was martyred, and bore her sufferings with great patience. Attalus, of Pergamus, was another sufferer; and Pothinus, the venerable bishop of Lyons, who was ninety years of age, was so unmercifully treated by the enraged pagan mob, that he expired two days [...] in the prison.
WHEN the christians, upon these occasio [...], received martyrdom, they were ornamented, and crowned with garlands of flowers; for which they, in heaven, received eternal crowns of glory.
THE torments were various; and, exclusive of those already mentioned, the martyrs of Lyons were compelled to sit in red hot iron chairs till their flesh broiled. This was inflicted with pcculiar severity on Sanctus already mentioned, and some others. Some were sewed up in nets, and thrown on the horns of wild bulls; and the carcases of those who died in prison, previous to the appointed time of execution, were thrown to dogs. Indeed, so far did the malice of the pagans proceed, that they set guards over the bodies while the beasts were devouring them, least the friends of the deceased should get them away by stealth; and the off [...]ls left by the dogs were ordered to be burnt.
THE martyr [...] of Lyons, according to the best accounts we could obtain, who suffered for the gos [...]pel, were forty-eight in number, and their executions happened in the year of Christ 177. They all died with great fortitude and serenity of mind, evidently [...]vincing, that they preferred the everlasting pleasures of an immor [...]al and happy life, to the transitory scenes of one that was precarious, dashed with afflictions, and at best but short and [...]leeting.
BESIDES the above ma [...]tyrs of Lyons, who are usually enumerated tog [...]ther, some others suffered [Page 21] in that city, and in different parts of the empire, soon after. Of these the principal were:
EPIPODIUS and ALEXANDER, celebrated for their great friendship, and their christian union with each other. The first was born at Lyons, the latter in Greece; they were of mutual assistance to each other, and prepared themselves for receiving a crown of martyrdom in this world, and a crown of glory in the next, by the continual practice of all manner of christian virtues.
WHEN the persecution began first to rage at Lyons, they were in the prime of life, and to avoid the effects of its severities, they thought proper to withdraw to a neighbouring village. Here they were, for some time, concealed by a christian widow, whose piety protected, while her obscurity gave a sanction to their retreat.
AS they were eminent persons, the malice of their persecutors sought after them with indefatigable industry, and pursued them to their place of concealment with unremitting assiduity. Dragged from their retirement, they were committed to prison without examination; but their misfortun [...]s did not oppress their spirits; for, shielded by the gospel, they were secure against the woes incident to this life.
BEING, at the expiration of three days, brought before the governor, they were examined in the presence of a crowd of Pagans. They confessed the divinity of Christ, when the governor being enraged at what he termed their insolence, absurdly said, "What signifies all the former executions, if some yet remain who dare acknowledge Christ."
HAVING separated them, that they should not console with, or fortify each other, he began to tamper with Epipodius, the youngest of the two. With a dissembled kindness, he preten [...]ed to pity his condition, and intreated him not [...]o ruin himself by obstinacy. "Our [...]eities (contin [...]ed he) are worshipped by the greater part of the people in the universe, and their rulers; we adore them with feasting and mirth, while you adore a crucified man; we, to honour them, launch into pleasures; you, by your faith, are debarred from all that indulges the senses. Our religion enjoins feasting, your's fasting; our's the joys of licentious blandishments, your's the barren virtue of chastity. Can you expect protection from one, who could not secure himself from the persecutions of a contemptible people? Then quit a profession of such austerity, and enjoy those gratifications which the world affords, and which your youthful years demand."
TO this illusive harangue Epipodius replied; he contemned his compassion, as a heart full of faith could not want it. "Your pretended tenderness (said he) is actual cruelty; and the agreeable life you describe, is replete with everlasting death. Christ suffered for us, that our pleasures should be immortal, and hath prepared for his followers an eternity of bliss. The frame of man being composed of two parts, body and soul; the first, as mean and perishable, should be rendered subservient to the interests of the last. Your idolatrous feasts may gratify the mortal, but they injure the immortal part: that cannot therefore be enjoying life, which destroys the most valuable mo [...]ety of your frame. Your pleasures lead to eternal death, and our pains to perpetual happiness."
FOR this manly and rational speech, Epipodius was severely beaten, and then put to the rack, upo [...] which being stretched, his flesh was torn with iron hooks. Having borne his torments with incredible patience, and unshaken fortitude, he was taken from the rack, and beheaded.
ALEXANDER, the companion of Epipodius, was brought before the judge, two days after the execution of that excellent young man. On his absolute refusal to renounce christianity, he was placed upon the rack, and beat by three executioners, who relieved each other alternately. He bore his sufferings with as much fortitude as his friend had done, and at length received the conclusion of his glorious martyrdom, by being crucified. These martyrs suffered A, D. 179; the first on the 20th of April, and the other on the 22d of the same month.
VALERIAN and MARCELLUS, who were nearly related to each other, were imprisoned at Lyons, in the year 177, for being christians. By some means, however, of which we are not informed, [Page 22] they made their escape, and travelled different ways.
MARCELLUS made several converts in the territories of Besançon and Chalons, but being apprehended, was carried before Priscus, the gover [...] of those parts.
THAT magistrate, knowing Marcellus to be a christian, ordered him to be fastened to some branches of a tree, which were drawn down for that purpose. When he was tied to different branches, they were let go, with a design that the suddenness of the jerks might tear him to pieces.
THIS invention failing in its proposed end, he was conducted to Chalons, to be present at some idolatrous sacrifices, at which, refusing to assist, he was put to the torture, and afterwards fixed up to the waist in the ground; in which position, after remaining three days, he expired, A. D. 179.
VALERIAN was soon after apprehended, and, by the order of Priscus, was first brought to the rack, and then beheaded in the same year as his friend and relation.
MUCH about the same time the following martyrs suffered, but we have not any circumstantial or particular account of their death.
BENIGNUS, at Dijon; Speusippus, and others at Langres; Androches, Thyrseus, and Fexlic, at Salieu; Sympoviam and Florella, at Antun; Severinus, Felician, and Exuperus, at Vienna; Cecilia, the virgin, at Sicily;, and Thraseus, bishop of Phrygia, at Smyrna.
ANTONINUS the emperor dying, was succeeded A. D. 180, by his son Commodus, who did not seem to copy his father in any particular. He had neither his virtues nor his vices: he was without his learning and morality, and, at the same time, without his prejudices against christianity. His principal foible was pride, and to that we chiefly ascribe the errors of his reign; for having taken it into his head to fancy himself Hercules, he sacrificed those to his vanity, who refused to subscribe to his absurdity.
APOLLONIUS, a Roman senator, became a martyr in his reign. This eminent person was, at once skilled in all the polite literature of those times, and in all the purest precepts taught by our blessed Redeemer. He was, indeed, an accomplished gentleman, and a sincere christian.
THIS worthy person was accused by his own slave Severus, upon an unjust and contradictory, but unrepealed edict, of the emperor Trajan's. This inconsistent law condemned the accused to die, unless he recanted his opinion; and, at the same time, ordered the execution of the accuser for calumny.
UPON this ridiculous statute was Apollonius accused; for though his slave Severus knew he must die for the accusation, yet such was his diabolical malice, and desire of revenge, that he courted death in order to involve his master in ruin.
THE accused Apollonius refusing to recant his opinions, was, by order of his peers, the Roman senators, to whom he had appealed, condemned to be beheaded. The sentence was executed on the 18th day of April, A. D. 186, his accuser having previously had his legs broken, and been put to death.
EUSEBIUS, VINCENTIUS, POTENTIANUS, and PEREGRINUS, were all martyred, for refusing to worship Commodus as Hercules.
JULIUS, a Roman senator, becoming a convert to christianity, was ordered, by the emperor, to sacrifice to him as Hercules. This Julius absolutely refused, and publicly professed himself a christian. On this account, after remaining in prison a considerable time, he was in the year 190, pursuant to his sentence, beat to death with cudgels. Virtue, whose essence is religicn, supported him, however, to the last, and he died a glorious martyr to the truth.
An Account of the Fifth general Pers [...]cution, under the Roman Emperors.
THE emperor Commodus dying in the year 191, was succeeded by the short-reigned Pertina [...]; and he was again succeeded by the still shorter-reigned Julianus. On the death of the last, in the year 192, Severus became emperor.
SEVERUS having been recovered from a severe fit of sickness by a christian, became a great favourer of christians in general; and even permitted his son Caracalla to be nursed by a female christian. Hence, during the reigns of the two emperors already mentioned, who successively succeeded Commodus, and some years of the latter's reign, the christians were not persecuted; for we find that they had a respite of several years.
AT length, however, the prejudice and fury of the ignorant multitude prevailed, and obsolete laws were revived, and put in execution against the chr [...]stians.
THE progress of christianity alarmed the pagans, and they revived the state calumny of placing accidental misfortunes to the account of its professors. Fire, sword, scourges, wild beasts, and cruel imprisonments, were now used; and even the dead bodies of christians were torn from their graves with pagan prejudice, to be mangled by popular fury.
BUT though pers [...]cuting malice raged, yet the gospel shone with resplendent brightness; and firm as an impragnable rock, withstood the attacks of its boisterous enimies with success. Tertullian, who lived in this age, informs us, that if the christians had collectively withdrawn themselves from the Roman territories, the empire would have been greatly depopulated.
VICTOR, bishop of Rome, suffered martyrdom in the first year of the third century, viz. A D. 201, though the circumstances are not particular [...]zed.
LEONIDAS, the father of the celebrated Orig [...]n, was beheaded for being a christian. Previous to the execution, the son, in order to encourage him, wrote to him in these remarkable words: "Beware, sir, that your care for us does not make you change your resolution." Many of Origen's hearers likewise suffered martyrdom; particularly two brothers, named Plutarchus and Serenus: another Serenus, Heron, and Heraclides, were beheaded; Rhais had boiling pitch poured upon her head, and was then burnt, as was Marcella her mother.
POTAMIENA, the sister of Rhais, was executed in the same manner as Rhais had been; but Basalides, an officer belonging to the army, and one ordered to attend her execution, became her convert.
BASILIDES being, as an officer, required to take a certain oath, refused, saying, that he could not sware by the Roman idols, as he was a christian. Struck with surprise, the people could not, at first, believe what they heard; but he had no sooner confirmed the same, than he was dragged before the judge, committed to prison, and speedily afterwards beheaded.
IRENAEUS, bishop of Lyons, was born in Greece, and received both a polite and a christian education. It is generally supposed, that the account of the persecutions at Lyons was written by himself. He succeeded the martyr Pothinus as bishop of Lyons, and ruled his diocese with great propriety: he was a zealous opposer of heresies in general, and about A. D. 187, wrote a celebrated tract against heresy.
VICTOR, the bishop of Rome, wanting to impose the mode of keeping Easter there, above all other places, it ocasioned some disorders among the christians, in particular, Irenaeus wrote him a synodical epistle, in the name of the Gallic churches. This zeal, in favour of christianity, pointed him out as an object of resentment to the emperor; and in A. D. 202, he was accordingly beheaded.
THE persecutions now extending to Africa, many were martyred in that quarter of the globe; the most particular of whom we shall mention.
PERPETUA, a married lady, of about twenty-two [Page 24] years of age, with a young sucking child at her brest, was seized upon for being a christian.
DURING her confinement, the father, who tenderly loved her, [...] to console with her; and at the same time would fain have persuaded her to renounce christianity. Perpetua, however, preserving all the respect due to a parent, maintained the character of a christian.
HER resolution so much incensed her father, that he beat her unmercifully, and did not visit her for some days after. This gave her, and some others who were confined at the same time, an opportunity of being baptized, as they were before only Catechumens.
BEING carried before the pro-consul Minutius, she was commanded to sacrifice to idols; but refusing, she was ordered to a dark dungeon. The gloom of this place was of itself disagreeable, but the being deprived of her child was much more so. Two deacons, however, Tertius and Pomponius, who had the care of persecuted christians, procured her some few hours daily to breath the fresh air, during which time she had the satisfaction of being allowed to suckle her child. Foreseeing, however, that she should not long be permitted to take care of it, she recommended it strongly to her mother's care.
THE father of Perpetua paid her a second visit, and again besought her to renounce christianity. His behavour now was all paternal tenderness, and endearing humanity. If any thing worldly could have softened her, this would; but inflexible to all things but Christ, she knew she must leave every thing for his sake; and she only said to him, "God's will must be done." With an heart almost bursting he left her, and found his only consolation in his tears.
ON her trial, Perpetua gave the strongest proofs of fortitude, though of a sex naturally timorous; and exhibited to her friends, as well as a great number of spectators, an amazing strength of mind.
THE judge, at the same time, intreated her to consider her father's tears, her infant's helplessness, and her own life; but triumphing over the softer sentiments of nature, she forgot the ideas of both mental and corporeal pain; and determined to sacrifice all the feelings of human sensibility, to that immortality offered by Christ. In vain did they attempt to persuade her, that their offers were gentle, and her own religion severe.
FINDING that she must die, the father's parental tenderness returned, and in the fury of his anxiety, he attempted to carry her off; an which account he received a severe blow from one of the officers. Irritated at this, the daughter shewed that she had not lost all natural sentiments of filial duty; for she immediately declared, that she felt that blow more severely, than if she had received it herself. Being conducted back to prison, she remained for the day of execution, when several other persons were to be executed with her, of whom we must now proceed to give an account.
FILICITAS, a married christian lady, was big with child at the time of her being apprehended. The procurator, when he examined her, begged that she would have some pity upon herself, and the child within her, and consider the condition she was in, but she replied, that his compassion was thrown away, for no thought of self-preservation could ever induce her to submit to any idolatrous terms. She was delivered in prison of a girl, which was adopted by a christian woman as her own, and brought up by her accordingly.
REVOCATUS was a Catechuman of Carthage, and a slave. The names of the other prisoners, who were to suffer upon this occasion, were Saturnius, Secundulus, and Satur.
ON the day appointed for the execution, they were led to the amphitheatre. Satur, Saturninus, and Revocatus, being bould enough to denounce God's judement upon their persecutors, they were ordered to run the gantelope between the hunters, or such as had the care of the wild beasts. The hunters being drawn up in two ranks, they ran between, and were severely lashed as they passed.
FELICITAS and Perpetua were stripped, in order to be thrown to a mad bull; but some of the spectators, [Page 25] through decency, desired that they might be permitted to put on their cloaths, which was complied with.
THE bull made his first attack upon Perpetua, and stunned her: he then attacked Felicitas, and wounded her much; but not killing them, the executioner did that office with a sword. Revocatus and Satur were destroyed by wil [...] beasts; Saturninus was beheaded; and Secundulus died in prison. These executions were in the year 205, on the 8th day of March.
SPERATUS, and twelve others, were likewise beheaded: as was Ando [...]lus in France. Aclepiades, bishop of Antioch, suffered many tortures, but his life was spared.
CECILIA, a young lady of a good family in Rome, was married to a gentleman named Valerian. Being a christian herself, she soon persuaded her husband to embrace the same faith; and his conversion was speedily followed by that of his brother Tiburtius.
THESE things drew upon them all the vengeance of the civil magistrate: the two brothers were beheaded; and the maximus, or officer, who led them to execution, becoming their convert, suffered the same fate.
THE lady being apprehended, was doomed to death; the manner of which was thus: she was placed naked in a scalding bath, and having continued there a considerable time, her head was struck off with a sword, A. D. 222.
CALISTUS, bishop of Rome, was martyred A. D. 224; but the manner of his death is not recorded: and Urban, bishop of Rome, met the same fate, A. D. 232.
AGAPETUS, a boy of Praeneste, in Italy, who was only fifteen years of age, absolutely refusing to sacrifice to the idols, was severely scourged, and then hanged up by the feet, and boiling water poured over him. He was afterwards worried by wild beasts, and at last beheaded. The officer, named Antiochus, who superintended this execution, while it was performing, fell suddenly from his judicial seat, cried out that his bowels burnt him, and expired; feeling miraculously, in this world, a sample of the torments due to such cruelty in the next: while the martyr patiently suffered, in hopes of a glorious resurrection.
An Account of the Sixth general Persecution, under the Roman Emperors.
IN A. D. 235, Maximinus being emperor, he raised a persecution against the christians. In Cappadocia, the president, Seremianus, did all he could to exterminate the christians from that province.
A ROMAN SOLDIER, refusing to wear a laurel crown bestowed on him by the emperor, and confessing himself a christian, was scourged, imprisoned, and afterwards put to death.
PONTIANUS, bishop of Rome, for preaching against idolatry, was banished to Sardinia, and there slain.
ANTEROS, a Grecian, who succeeded the last-mentioned bishop in the see of Rome, gave so much offence to the government, by collecting the acts of the martyrs, that he suffered martyrdom himself, after having held his dignity only forty days.
PAMMACHIUS, a Roman Senator, with his family and other christians, to the number of forty-two, were, on account of their religion, all beheaded in one day, and their heads set up on the city gates.
SIMPLICIUS, another senator, met with exactly the same fate.
CALEPODIUS, a christian minister, after being inhumanly treated, and barbarously dragged about the streets, had a mill-stone fastened about his neck, and was thrown into the river Tyber.
QUIRITUS, a Roman nobleman, with his family and domestics, were, on account of being [Page 26] all christians, put to the most excruciating tortures, and then to the most painful deaths. Thus this nobleman suffered the confiscation of his effects, poverty, revilings, imprisonment, scourgings, tortures, and loss of his life, for the sake of his blessed Redeemer.
MARTINA, a noble and beautiful virgin, likewise suffered martyrdom for the sake of Christ, being variously tortured, and afterwards beheaded.
HIPPOLITUS, a christian prelate, was tied to a wild horse, and dragged through fields, stony places, bushes, &c. till he expired.
DURING this persecution raised by Maximinus, numberless christians were slain without trial, and buried indiscriminately in heaps; sometimes fifty or sixty being cast into a pit together, without the least decency.
THE tyrant Maximinus dying, A. D. 238, was succeeded by Gordian, during whose reign, and that of his successor Philip, the church was free from persecution for the space of more than ten years; but A. D. 249, a violent persecution broke out in Alexandria. It is to be observed, however, that this was done at the instigation of a Pagan priest, without the knowledge of the emperor.
THE popular fury being let loose against the christians, the mob broke open their houses, stole away the best of their property, destroyed the rest, and murdered the owners: the universal cry being, "Burn them, burn them; Kill them, kill them." The names of the martyrs, (three excepted) and the partic [...]lars of this affair, however, have not been transmitted to posterity.
THE three martyrs alluded to were the following:
METUS, an aged and venerable christian, refusing to blaspheme his Saviour, was beaten with clubs, pricked with sharp [...]eeds, and at length stoned to death.
QUINTA, a christian woman, being carried to the temple, and refusing to worship the idols there, was dragged by her feet over sharp flint [...] stones, scourged with whips, and at last dispatched in the same manner as Metus.
APOLLONIA, an ancient maiden lady, confessing herself a christian, the mob dashed out her [...] with their fists, and threatened to burn her alive. A fire was accordingly prepared for the purpose, and she fastened to a stake; but requesting to be unloosed, it was granted on a supposition that she meant to recant, when to their great surprize, she immediately threw herself into the flames, and was there consumed, which plainly evinced that she contemned the fears of death, and trusted to a lasting future reward, for a temporary punishment in this life.
An Account of the Seventh general Persecution, under the Roman Emperors.
DECIUS being now emperor of Rome, began a dreadful persecution against the christians, A. D. 249. This was occasioned, partly by the hatred he bore to his predecessor Philip, who was deemed a christian, and partly to his jealousy concerning the amazing increase of christianity; for the heathen temples began to be forsaken, and the christian churches throng [...].
THESE reasons stimulated Decius to attempt the very extirpation of the name of christian; and it was unfortunate for the cause of the gospel, that many errors had, about this time, crept into the church: the christians were at variance with each other; self-interest divided those whom social love ought to have united; and the virulence of pride occasioned a variety of factions.
THE heathens in general were ambitious to enforce the imperial decrees upon this occasion, and looked upon the murder of a christian as a merit in themselves. The martyrs, upon this occasion, were innumerable; but the principal we shall give some account of in order.
FABIAN, the bishop of Rome, was the first person of eminence who felt the severity of this persecution. The deceased emperor Philip had, on account [Page 27] of his integrity, committed his treasure to the care of this good man. But Decius, not finding as much as his avarice made him expect, determined to wreak his vengeance on the good prelate. He was accordingly seized; and on the 20th of January, A. D. 250, suffered martyrdom, by being beheaded.
ABDON and Semen, two Persians, were seized on as strangers; but being found christians, were put to death, on account of their faith; and Moyses, a priest, was beheaded for the same reason.
JULIAN, a native of Cilicia, as we are informed by St. Chrysostom, was seized upon for being a christian. He was frequently tortured, but still remained inflexible; and though often brought from prison for execution, was again remanded, [...]o be the object of greater cruelties. He, at length, was obliged to travel for twelve months together, from town to town, in order to be exposed to the insults of the ignorant populace.
FINDING the endeavours to make him recant his religion ineffectual, he was brought before his judge, stripped, and whipped in a most dreadful manner. He was pu [...] into a leather bag, together with a number of serp [...]nts and sco [...]pions, and in that condition thrown into the sea.
PETER, a young man, amiable for the superior qualities of his body and mind, was apprehended for being a christian, at Lampsacus, or the Hellespont, and carried before Optimus, pro-consul of Asia.
BEING commanded to sacrifice to Venus, he said, "I am astonished that you should wish me to sacrifice to an infamous woman, whose debaucheries even your own historians record, and whose life consisted of such actions, as your laws would punish.—No! I shall offer the true God the acceptable sacrifice of praises and prayers."
OPTIMUS, on hearing this, ordered the prisoner to be stretched upon a wheel, by which all his bones were broken.
HIS torments, however, inspired him with fresh courage: he smiled on his persecutors; and seemed, by the serenity of his countenance, not to upbraid, but to applaud his tormentors.
THE pro-consul, at length, tired with torment [...]ing him, ordered him to be beheaded; which command was executed immediately.
NICHOMACHUS, being brought before the pro-consul as a christian, was ordered to sacrifice to the Pagan idols. Nichomachus replied, "I cannot pay that respect to devils, which is only due to the Almighty." This speech so much enraged the proconsul, that Nichomachus was put to the rack. He bore the torments, for some time, with patience, and great resolution; but, at length, when ready to expire with pain, he forfeited all the advantages he had gained in his former sufferings, by abjuring his faith, and becoming an apostate. He had no sooner given this proof of his frailty, than he fell into the greatest agonies, dropped down on the ground, and expired immediately.
DENISA, a young women, of only sixteen years of age, who beheld this terrible judgment, suddenly exclaimed; "O, unhappy wretch! why would you buy a moment's ease, at the expence of a miserable eternity?" Optimus hearing this, called to her, and asked if she was a christian? She replied in the affirmative; and being commanded [...] to the idols, absolutely refused.
PROVOKED at her resolution, Optimus gave her up to two libertines, to become the object of their lust. These took her to their own home, and made many attempts upon her chastity▪ but without effect. At midnight they were deterred from farther attempts by a frightful vision, which so amazed them, that they fell at the feet of Denisa, and implored her prayers, that they might not feel the effects of divine vengeance for their brutality. This deliverance, however, did not soften the heart of Optimus; for the damsel was beheaded, by his order, soon after.
ANDREW and [...], two companions of Nichomachus the martyr [...] on confessing themselves christians, were cond [...]m [...]ed to die, and delivered to the multitude to be stoned. Accordingly, A. D. 251, [Page 28] they suffered martyrdom by stoning, and expired, calling on their blessed Redeemer.
ALEXANDER and Epimachus, of Alexandria, were apprehended for being christians; and, confessing the accusation, were beat with staves, torn with hooks, and at length burnt in the fire; and we are informed, in a fragment preserved by Eusebius, that four female martyrs suffered on the same day, and at the same place, but not in the same manner; for these were beheaded.
LUCIAN and Marcian, two wicked pagans, though skilful magicians, becoming converts to christianity, to make amends for their former errors, lived the lives of hermits, and subsisted upon bread and water only.
AFTER some time spent in this manner, they reflected that their lives were inefficacious, and determined to leave their solitude in order to bring others to christianity. Pursuant to this resolution they became zealous preachers, and made many converts.
THE persecutio [...] ▪ however, raging at this time, they were seized upon, and carried before Sabinus, the governor of Bithynia [...] ▪ On being asked by what authority they took upon themselves to preach, Lucian answered, "That [...]he laws of charity and humanity obliged all men to endeavour the conversion of their neighbours, and to do every thing in their power to rescue them from the snares of the devil."
LUCIAN having answered in this manner, Marcian said, that "Their conversion was by the same grace which was given to St. Paul, who, from a zealous persecutor of the church, became a preacher of the gospel."
THE pro-consul, finding that he could not prevail with them to renounce their faith, condemned them to be burnt alive, which sentence was soon after executed.
TRYPHO and Respicius, two eminent men, were seized as christians, and imprisoned at Nice. They were soon after put to the rack, which they bore with admirable patience for three hours, and uttered the praises of the Almighty the whole time. They were then exposed naked to the severity of the open air, which benumbed all their limbs, as it was the very depth of the winter.
BEING remanded to prison, they remained there for a considerable time; and then the cruelties of their persecutors were again evinced. Their feet were pierced with nails; they were dragged thro' the streets, scourged, torn with iron hooks, scorched with lighted torches, and at length beheaded, on the first day of Feb. A. D. 251.
AGTHA, a Sicilian lady, was not more remarkable for her personal and acquired endowments, than her piety: her beauty was such that Quintian, governor of Sicily, became enamoured of her, and made many attempts upon her chastity.
AS the governor was reputed to be a great libertine, and a bigotted pagan, the lady very discreetly thought proper to withdraw from two such dangerous enemies, as lust and superstition. She accordingly retired from the town, but being discovered in her retreat, she was seized, and brought to Catana.
FINDING herself thus in the power of an enemy, both to her soul and body, she recommended herself to the protection of the Almighty, and prayed for death, as a relief from her miseries.
THE governor, in order to gratify his passions with the greater conveniency, put the virtuous lady into the hands of Aphrodica, a very infamous and licentious woman. This wretch tried every artifice to win her to the desired prostitution; but found all her efforts were vain; for her chastity was impreg [...]nable, and she well knew that virtue alone could procure true happiness.
APHRODICA acquainted Quintian with the inefficacy of her endeavours, who, enraged to be foiled in his designs, changed his lust into resentment. On her confessing that she was a christian, he determined to gratify his revenge, as he could not his passion.
PURSUANT to his orders she was scourged, burnt with red hot irons, and torn with sharp hooks. Having borne these torments with admirable fortitude, [Page 29] she was next laid naked upon live coals, intermingled with glass, and then being carried back to prison, she there expired on the 5th of February 251.
CYRIL, bishop of Gortyna, was seized by order of Lucius, the governor of that place, who, nevertheless, exhorted him to obey the imperial mandate, perform the sacrifices, and save his venerable person from destruction; for he was now eighty-four years of age. The good prelate replied, that he could not agree to any such requisitions. But as he had long taught others to save their souls, that now he should only think of his own salvation.
THE governor, finding all his persuasions in vain, pronounced sentence against the venerable christian, in these remarkable words:
"I order and appoint, that Cyril, who has lost his senses, and is a declared enemy of our gods, shall be burnt alive."
THE worthy prelate heard this sentence without emotion, walked cheerfully to the place of execution, and underwent his martyrdom with great fortitude.
THE persecution raged in no place more than the island of Crete; for the governor, being exceedingly active in executing the imperial decrees, that place streamed with pious blood.
THE principal Cretan martyrs, whose names have been transmitted to us, are the following:
THEODULUS, Saturnius, and Europus, were inhabitants of Gortyna, who had been grounded in their faith by Cyril, bishop of that city; and Eunicianus, Zeticus, Cleomenes, Agathopas, Bastides, and Euaristus, were brought from different parts of the island on accusations relative to their professing christianity.
BEING brought into court, they were commanded to sacrifice to Jupiter, which declining, the judge threatened them with the severest tortures imaginable. To these menaces they unanimously answered, "That to suffer, for the sake of the Supreme Being, would to them be the sublimest of pleasures."
HIS threats failing, the judge attempted to gain their veneration for the heathen deities, by descanting on their merits, and recounting some of their mythological histories. This gave the prisoners an opportunity of remarking on the absurdity of such fictions, and of pointing out the folly of paying adoration to ideal deities, and real images.
IRRITATED to hear his favourite idols [...], the governor ordered them all to be put to the [...] ▪ the tort [...]res of which they sustained with surp [...]sing fortitud [...]. They at length suffe [...]ed the period of their martyrdom, A. D. 251: being all beheaded on the same day.
[...]. [...] christia [...] of a liberal education, became bisho [...] of [...] A. D. 237, on the demise of Ze [...]inus. [...] inimitable zeal, and governed the church with admirable prudence during the most tempestuous times.
THE first misfortune that happened to Antioch during his mission, was the siege of it by Sapor, king of Persia; who having over-run all Syria, took and plundered this city among others, and used the christian inhabitants with greater severity than the rest.
HIS cruelties, however, were not lasting; for Gordian, the emperor, appearing at the head of a powerful army, Antioch was retaken, the Persians driven entirely out of Syria, pursued into their own country, and several places in the Persian territories fell into the emperor's hands.
AFTER Gordian's death, in the reign of [...]ocius, that emperor came to Antioch, where having a desire to visit an assembly of christians, Babylas opposed him, and absolutely refused to let him come in. The emperor dissembled his anger at that time; but soon sending for the bishop, he sharply reproved him for his insolence, and then ordered him to sacrifice to the pagan deities as an expiation for his offence.
THIS being refused, he was committed to prison, loaded with chains, treated with great severities, [Page 30] and then beheaded, together with three young men who had been his pupils.
AS they went to the place of execution, the bishop exclaimed, "Behold me, and the children that the Lord hath given me." They were martyred, A. D. 251; and the chains worn by the bishop in prison were buried with him.
ALEXANDE [...], bishop of Jerusalem, about this time was cast i [...]to prison on account of his religion, where he died [...]hrough the severity of his confinement.
SERAPIAN, being apprehended at Alexandria, had all his bones broken, and was then thrown from a high loft, and was killed by the fall.
JULIANUS, an old man, lame with the gout, and Cronion, another christian, were bound on the backs of camels, severely scourged, and then thrown into a fire and consumed. A person who stood by, and seemed to commiserate them, was ordered to be beheaded, as a punishment for entertaining sentiments of too tender a nature.
MACAR, a Lybian christian, was burnt; Heron-Ater, and Isidorus, Egyptians; with Dioschorus, a boy of fifteen, after suffering many other torments, met with a similar fate; and Nemesion, another Egyptian, was first tried as a thief; but being acquitted, was accused of christianity, which confessing, he was scourged, tortured, and burnt.
ISEHYRIAN, the christian servant of an Egyptian nobleman, and magistrate, was run through with a pike by his own master, for refusing to sacrifice to idols; Venatius, a youth of fifteen, was martyred in Italy; and fortv virgins, at Antioch, after being imprisoned and scourged, were burnt.
IN the year of our Lord 251, the emperor Decius having erected a pagan temple at Ephesus, he commanded all who were in that city to sacrifice to the idols. This order was nobly refused bv seven of his own soldiers, viz. Maximianus, Martianus, Joannes, Malchus, Dionysius, Seraion▪ and Constantinus.
[...] emperor, wishing to win these soldiers to renounce their fate by his intreaties and lenity, gave them a considerable [...] till he returned from an expedition.
DURING the emperor's absence, they escaped, and hid themselves in a cavern; which the emperor being informed of at his return, the mouth of the cavern was closed up, and they all perished with hunger.
THEODORA, a beautiful young lady of Antioch, o [...] refusing to sacrifice to the Roman idols, was condemned to the stews, that her virtue might be sacrificed to the brutality of lust. Didymus, a christian, disguised himself in the habit of a Roman soldier, went to the house, informed Theodora who he was, and advised her to make her escape in his cloaths.
THIS being effected, and a man found in the brothel instead of a beautiful lady, Didymus was taken before the president, to whom confessing the truth, and owning that he was a christian, the sentence of death was immediately pronounced against him.
THEODORA, hearing that her deliverer was likely to suffer, came to the judge, threw herself at his feet, and begged that the sentence might fall only on her as the guilty person; but deaf to the cries of the innocent, and insensible to the calls of justice, the inflexible judge condemned both; when they were executed accordingly, being first beheaded, and their bodies afterwards burnt.
S [...]CUNDIANUS having been accused as a christian, was conveyed to prison by some soldier [...] ▪ On the way, Verianus and Marcellinus said, "Where are you carrying the innoc [...]nt?" This interrogatory occasioned them to be seized, and all three, after having been tortured, were hanged, and, when dead, their heads were cut off.
ORIGEN, the celebrated presbyter and catechist of Alexandria, at the age of sixty-four, was seized, thrown into a loathsome prison, laden with heavy fetters, his feet placed in the st [...]ks, and his legs extended to the utmost for several succ [...]ssive days. He was threatened with fire, and tormen [...]ed by every means that the most [...] imaginations could [Page 31] suggest. But unappalled with dangers, and unshaken by sufferings, his christian fortitude bore him through all. Indeed, such was the rigour of his judge, that his tortures were ordered to be lingering, that death might not too soon put a period to his miseries. During this cruel temporising, the emperor Decius died, and Gallus, who succeeded him, engaging in a war with the Goths, the christians met with a respite. In this interim Origen obtained his enlargement, and retiring to Tyre, he there remained till his death, which happened when he was in the sixty-ninth year of his age.
GALLUS, the emperor, having concluded his wars, a plague broke out in the empire: sacrifices to the pagan deities were ordered by the emperor, and superstition immediately bowed the knee to idols.
THE christians refusing to comply with these rites, were charged with being the authors of the calamity. Hence the storm of persecution spread from the interior to the extreme parts of the empire, and many fell martyrs to the impetuosity of the rabble, as well as the prejudice of the magistrates.
CORNELIUS, the christian bishop of Rome, was, among others, seized upon this occasion. He was first banished to Centu [...] [...]ella [...], Civita Vecchia, as it is now called: and [...]fter having been cruelly scourged [...] ▪ wa [...], on the 14th of September, 252, beheaded, after having been bishop fifteen months and ten days.
LUCIUS, who succeeded Cornelius as bishop of Rome, was the son of Porphyrius, and a Roman by birth. His vigilance, as a pastor, rendered him obnoxious to the foes of christianity, which occasioned him to be banished; but in a short time he was permitted to return from exile.
NOT long after, however, he was apprehended, after having been bishop about six months, and beheaded March the 4th, A. D. 2 [...]3. This bishop was succeeded by Stephanus, a man of a fiery temper, who held the dignity a few years, and might probably have fallen a martyr, had not the emperor been murdered by his general Aemilian, when a profound peace succeeded throughout the whole empire, and the persecution of course ceased.
MOST of the errors which crept into the church at this time, arose from placing human reason in competition with revelation; but the fallacy of such arguments being proved by the most able divines, the opinions they had created, vanished away like stars before the sun.
An Account of the Eighth general Persecution, under the Roman Emperors.
AEMILIAN, the general, not being properly supported by the army, was slain, and Valerian elected to the empire.
FOR the space of four years this emperor governed with moderation, and treated the christians with peculiar lenity and respect. But A. D. 257, an Egyptian magician, named Macrianus, gained a great ascendancy over him, and persuaded him to persecute the christians.
EDICTS being published, the ungovernable rage of ignorance and superstition was let loose against the christians. The persecution began in the month of April, and continued for three years and six months.
THE martyrs that fell in this persecution were innumerable, and their tortures and deaths as various and painful. The most eminent martyrs were the following, though neither rank, sex, or age were regarded.
RUFINA and Secunda were two beautiful and accomplished ladies, daughters of Asterius, a gentleman of eminence in Rome. Rufina, the elder, was designed in marriage for Armentarius, a young nobleman; and Secunda, the younger, for Verinus, a person of rank and opulence.
THE suitors, at the time of the persecution's commencing, were both christians; but when danger appeared, to save their fortunes, they renounced their faith. They took great pains to persuade the ladies to do the same, but failed in their purpose. Rufina and Secunda, though too just to change their religious sentiments, were too diffident of their own strength to rema [...]n longer the [Page 32] objects of such solicitations; on which account they left the city.
DISAPPOINTED in their purpose, the lovers were base enough to inform against the ladies, who being apprehended as christians, were brought before Junius Donatus, governor of Rome.
BEING inflexible to all remonstrances, and having passed through several tortures, they, A. D. 257, sealed their martyrdom with their blood, by being beheaded.
STEPHEN, bishop of Rome, was beheaded in the same year; and about that time Saturnius, bishop of Thoulouse, was set upon and seized by the rabble of that place, for preventing, as they alledged, their oracles from speaking. On refusing to sacrifice to the idols, he was treated with all the barbarous indignities imaginable, and then fastened by the feet to the tail of a bull. Upon a signal given, the enraged animal was driven down the steps of the temple, by which the worthy martyr's brains were dashed out. The small number of christians in Thoulouse had not courage sufficient to carry off the dead body, till two women conveyed it away, and deposited it in a deep ditch.
THIS martyr was a most orthodox and worthy primitive christian, and his doctrines are to be firmly depended upon.
SEXTUS succeeded Stephen as bishop of Rome. He is supposed to have been a Greek by birth, or by extraction, and had for some time served in the capacity of a deacon under Stephen. His great fidelity, singular wisdom, and uncommon courage, distinguished him upon many occasions; and the happy conclusion of a controversy with some heretics, is generally ascribed to his piety and prudence.
IN the year 258, Marcianus, who had the management of the Roman government, procured an order from the emperor Valerian, to put to death all the christian clergy in Rome.
THE senate testifying their obedience to the imperial mandate, Sextus was one of the first who felt the severity of the rescript. Cyprian tells us, [...]h [...]t he was beheaded August [...], A. D. 258. We are likewise informed, that six of his deacons suffered with him.
LAURENTIUS, generally called St. Laurence, the principal of the deacons, wh [...] [...]aught and preached under Sextus, followed him to the place of execucution; when Sextus predicted, that he should, three days after, meet him in heaven.
LAURENTIUS looking upon this as a certain indication of his own approaching martyrdom, at his return gathered together all the christian poor, and distributed the treasures of the church, which had been committed to his care, among them; thinking the money could not be better disposed of, or less liable to fall into the hands of the pagans.
THIS liberality alarmed the persecutors, who seized on him to make a discovery from whence it arose, and commanded him to give an immediate account to the emperor, of the church treasures.
HE promised he would do this, but begged a short respite to put things into proper order; when three days being granted him, he was suffered to depart; whereupon, with great diligence, he collected together a great number of aged, helpless, and impotent poor, he repaired to the magistrate, and presenting them to him, said, "These are the true treasures of the church."
INCENSED at the disappointment, and fancying the matter meant in ridicule, the governor ordered him to be immediately scourged. He was then beat with iron rods, set upon a wooden horse, and had his limbs dislocated.
THESE tortures he endured with fortitude and perseverance; when he was ordered to be fastened to a large gridiron, with a slow fire under it, that his death might be the more lingering.
HIS astonishing constancy during these trials, and serenity of countenance while under such exc [...]uciating torments, gave the spectators so exalted an idea of the dignity and truth of the christian religion, that many became converts upon the occasion.
AFTER laying, for some time, upon this burning bed, the martyr called out to the emperor, who [Page]
S T LAWRENCE Burnt on a [...] by order of the Emperor [...] in the 8 th Roman Persecution of the Christian Church [...].
Two Primitive Martyrs put into a Copper of Boiling Oil by order of [...] Ephesi [...] during the Reign of Nero. AD. 69.
[Page 33] was present, in a kind of jocose distich, made extempore, which may be thus translated:
THE executioner turned him accordingly, and after having lain a considerable time longer, he had still strength and spirits sufficient left to triumph over the tyrant, by telling him, with great serenity, that he was dressed enough, and only wanted serving up. He then chearfully lifted up his eyes to heaven, and with calmness yielded his spirit to the Almighty, on August 10, A. D. 258.
ROMANUS, a soldier, who attended the martyrdom of Laurentius, was one of the converts to his sufferings and fortitude; for he could not help feeling the greatest veneration for a God, who inspired his votaries with such courage, and rendered his martyrs superior to all the cruelties of their persecutors.
THE brave Romanus, when the martyr Laurentius was remanded to prison, took that opportunity of fully inquiri [...] into the nature of the christian faith; and bei [...]g entirely satisfied by Laurentius, became firmly christian, received his baptism from the captive, and seemed to have his mind impressed with a lively idea of the kingdom of Christ; a kingdom replete with eternal joys, and everlasting happiness.
THE change of Romanus was soon known, when he was apprehended, scourged severely, and afterwards beheaded.
HYPOLITUS was another, who, for the same crime, was seized in a like manner, and suffered a similar death.
IN Africa, the Persecution raged with peculiar violence; many thousands received the crown of martyrdom, among whom the following were the most distinguished characters:
CYPRIAN, bishop of Carthage, was an eminent prelate, and a pious ornament of the church. The brightness of his genius was tempered by the solidity of his judgment; and with all the accomplishments of the gentleman, he blended the virtues of the christian. His doctrines were orthodox and pure; his language easy and elegant; and his manners graceful and winning: in fine, he was both the pious and polite preacher. Indeed, an easy delivery, and polished manner, are requisite in every preacher, who would make an impression on the hearts of his audience. This was the practice of St. Paul, and this was the accomplishment of Cyprian.
THE latter, it is said, was so perfectly a master of the rules of rhetoric, and the precepts of logic, and so complete in the practice of elocution, and the principles of philosophy, that he was made professor of those sciences in his native city of Carthage, where he became so popular, and taught with such success, that many of his students afterwards became shining ornaments of polite learning.
IN his youth he was educated in the principles of Gentilism, and having a considerable fortune, he lived in the very extravagance of splendour, and all the dignity of pomp. Gorgeous in attire, luxurious in feasting, vain of a numerous retinue, and fond of every kind of fashionable parade, he seemed to fancy that man was born to gratify all his appetites, and created for pleasure alone.
ABOUT the year 240, Coelius, a christian minister of Carthage, became the happy instrument of Cyprian's conversion, on which account, and for the great love that he always afterwards bore for the author of his conversion, he was termed Coecilius Cyprian.
PREVIOUS to his baptism he studied the scriptures, with care, and being struck with the beauties of th [...] truth they contained, he de [...]rmined to practise the virtues therein recommended. Subsequent to his baptism he sold his estate, distributed the money among the poor, dressed himself in plain attire, and commenced a life of austerity.
HE was soon after made a presbyter; and being greatly admired for his virtues, and his works, on the death of Donatus, in A. D. 248, he was almost unanimously elected bishop of Carthage.
[Page 34]CYPRIAN'S care not only extended over Carthage, but to Numedia and Mauritania. In all his transactions he took great care to ask the advice of his clergy, knowing, that unanimity alone could be of service to the church; this being one of his maxims, "That the bishop was in the church, and the church in the bishop; so that unity can only be preserved by a close connection between the pastor and his flock."
A. D. 250, Cyprian was publicly proscribed by the emperor Decius, under the appellation of Coecilius Cyprian, bishop of the christians; and the universal cry of the pagans, was, "Cyprian to the lions, Cyprian to the beasts."
THE bishop, however, withdrew himself from the rage of the populace, and his effects were immediately confiscated.
DURING his retirement he wrote thirty pious and elegant letters to his flock; but several schisms that then crept into the church gave him great uneasiness. The rigour of the persecution abating, he returned to Carthage, and did every thing in his power to expunge erroneous opinions.
A terrible plague breaking out at Carthage, it was, as usual, laid to the charge of the christians; and the magistrates began to persecute accordingly, which occasioned an epistle from them to Cyprian, in answer to which he vindicates the cause of christianity.
A. D. 257, Cyprian was brought before the pro-consul Aspa [...]ius Paternus, when being commanded to conform to the religion of the empire, he boldly made a confession of his faith, and owned himself a christian. This confession, however, did not occasion his death, but an order for his banishment, which exiled him to a little city on the Lybian sea. On the death of the pro-consul who banished him, he returned to Carthage, but was soon after seized, and carried before the new governor, who condemned him to be beheaded; which sentence was executed on the 14th of September, A. D. 258.
THIS bishop was certainly a most valuable pastor of the church, a pious christian, an excellent philosopher, and an accurate preacher. Before we quit this article, we think it necessary to insert his own account of his conversion.
"WHILE (says he) I laid in darkness and uncertainty, I thought on what I had heard of, a second birth, proposed by the divine goodness; but could not comprehend how a man could receive a new life from his being immersed in water; cease to be what he was before, and still remain the same body. How, said I, can such a change be possible? How can he, who is grown old in a worldly way of living, strip himself of his former inclinations, and inveterate habits? Can he, who has spent his whole time in plenty, and indulged his appetite without restraint, ever be transformed into an example of frugality and sobriety? Or he who has always appeared in splendid apparel, stoop to the plain, simple, and unornamented dress of the common people? It is impossible for a man, who has borne the most honourable posts, ever to submit to lead a private and an obscure life: or that he who was never seen in public without a croud of attendants, and persons who endeavoured to make their fortunes by attending him, should ever bear to be alone. This (continues he) was my way of arguing; I thought it was impossible for me to leave my former course of life, and the habits I was then engaged in, and accustomed to [...] but no sooner did the life-giving water wash the spots of my soul, than my heart received the heavenly light of the Holy Spirit, which transformed me into a new creature; all my difficulties were cleared, my doubts dissolved, and my darkness dispelled. I was then able to do what before seemed impossible; could discern that my former life was earthly and sinful, according to the impurity of my birth; but that my spiritual birth gave me new ideas and inclinations, and directed all my views to God."
THE disciples of Cyprian, martyred in this persecution, were, Lucius, Flavian, Victoricus, Remus, Montanus, Julian, Primolus, Donatian.
AT Utica, a most terrible tragedy was exhibited▪ 300 christians were, by the orders of the pro-consul, placed round a burning lime-kiln. A pan of coals and incense being prepared, they were commanded either to sacrifice to Jupiter, or to be thrown into the kiln. Unanimously refusing, they [Page 35] bravely jumped into the pit, and were immediately suffocated.
FRUCTUOSUS, bishop of Tarragon, in Spain, and his two deacons, Augurius and Eulogius, were burnt for being christians.
ALEXANDER, Malchus, and Priscus, three christians of Palestine, with a woman of the same place, voluntarily accused themselves of being christians; on which account they were sentenced to be devoured by tygers, which sentence was executed accordingly.
MAXIMA, Donatilla, and Secunda, three virgins of Tuburga, had gall and vinegar given them to drink, were then severely scourged, tormented on a gibbet, rubbed with lime, scorched on a gridiron, worried by wild beasts, and at length beheaded.
PONTIUS, a native of the city of Simela, near the Alps, being apprehended as a christian, was tortured on the rack, worried by wild beasts, half burnt, then beheaded, and lastly thrown into the river▪ and Protus and Hyacinthus likewise suffered martyrdom for the sake of Christ.
IT is here proper to take notice of the singular but miserable fate of the emperor Valerian, who had so long and so terribly persecuted the christians.
THIS tyrant, by a stratagem, was taken prisoner by Sapores, emperor of Persia, who carried him into his own country, and there treated him with the most unexampled indignity, making him kneel down as the meanest slave, and treading upon him as a footstool when he mounted his horse, saying, in a vaunting manner, "This posture is a greater proof whi [...]h way the victory went, than all the pictures the Roman artists can draw."
AFTER having kept him, for the space of seven years, in this abject state of slavery, he caused his eyes to be put out, though he was then 83 years of age.
THIS not satiating his desire of revenge, he soon aft [...]r ordered his body to be flead alive, and rubbed with [...]alt, under which torments he expired; and thus fell one of the most tyrannical emperors of Rome, and one of the greatest persecutors of the christians.
A. D. 260, Gallienus, the son of Valerian, succeeded him; and, during his reign, the empire suffered many commotions, particularly earthquakes, pestilence, inundations, incursions of barbarians, and intestine broils.
GALLIENUS upon this reflecting, that when his father favoured the christians he prospered, and that when he persecuted them he was unsuccessful, he determined to relax the persecution; so that (a few martyrs excepted) the church enjoyed peace for some years. The chief of the few martyrs alluded to, was the following:
MARNIUS, a centurion, who being apprehended as a christian, had but three hours allowed him to deliberate, whether he would sacrifice to the pagan deities, or become a martyr? Being wavering during this interval, a christian prelate placed the gospel and a sword before him, and demanding which he would chuse, Marnius, without hesitation, took the sword.
GOING again to the governor, he made a noble confession of his faith, and was speedily after beheaded, in the year 202.
An Account of the Ninth general Persecution under the Roman Emperors.
A. D. 274, the emperor Aurelian commenced a persecution against the christians; the principal sufferers being
FELIX, bishop of Rome. This prelate was advanced to the Roman see in 274. He was the first martyr to Aurelian's petulancy, being beheaded on the 22d of December, in the same year.
AGAPETUS, a young gentleman, who sold his estate, and gave the money to the poor, was seized as a christian, tortured, and then beheaded at Praeneste▪ a city within a day's journey of Rome.
[Page 36]THESE are the only martyrs left upon record during this reign, as it was soon put a stop to by the emperor's being murdered by his own domestics at Byzantium.
AURELIAN was succeeded by Tacitus, who was followed by Probus, as the latter was by Carus: this emperor being killed by a thunder storm, his sons, Carnius and Numerian, succeeded him; and during all these reigns the church had peace.
DIOCLESIAN mounting the imperial throne, A. D. 284, at first shewed great favour to the christians. In the year 286, he associated Maximian with him, in the empire; and some christians were put to death before any general persecution broke out. Among these were
FELICIAN and Primus, two brothers. These christians were seized by an order from the imperial court: they owned themselves christians, and were accordingly scourged, tortured, and at length beheaded.
MARCUS and Marcellianus were twins, natives of Rome, and of noble descent. Their parents were heathens, but the tutors, to whom the education of the children was entrusted, brought them up as christians. Being apprehended on account of their faith, they were severely tortured, and then condemned to lose their heads.
THEIR friends obtained for them the respite of a month, when their father, mother, and all their relations, attempted to bring them back to paganism, but in vain; the calls of nature were overcome by piety, and religion got the better of worldly feelings.
THEIR constancy at length subdued their persuaders, and their parents and whole family became converts to a faith they had just before reprobated,
THE father of the two young men, named Tranquili [...]s, was sent for by the praefect to give him an account of the success of his endeavours. Appearing before the magistrate he confessed, that so far from having persuaded his sons to forsake the faith they had embraced, he was himself become a christian.
HERE he stopped till the magistrate had overcome his surprize, and then resuming his discourse, he used such powerful arguments that he made a convert of the praefect, who soon after sold his estate, resigned his command, and spent the remainder of his days in a pious retirement.
THE praefect, who succeeded the above-mentioned convert, had nothing of the disposition of his predecessor: he was morose and severe, and soon seized upon the whole of this christian family.
THEY were martyred by being tied to posts, and having their feet pierced with nails. After remaining in this situation for a day and night, their sufferings were put an end to by thrusting lances through their bodies.
ZOE, the wife of the gaoler, who had the care of the before-mentioned martyrs, being greatly edified by their discourses, had a desire to become a christian: this, as she was dumb with a palsy, she could only express by gestures.
PITYING her condition, they gave her full instructions in the faith, and told her to pray in her heart to God to relieve her from her disorder. She complied with their request, and was at length relieved; for her paralytic disorder by degrees left her, and her speech was restored.
THIS inforced her belief, and confirmed her a christian; and her husband, finding her cured, soon became a convert to christianity. These conversions made a great noise, and the converts were soon apprehended. Zoe was commanded to sacrifice to Mars, which refusing she was hanged upon a tree, and a fire of straw lighted under her. When her body was taken down it was thrown into a river, with a large stone tied to it, in order to sink it.
TIBERTIUS, a native of Rome, was descended from a considerable family.
BEING accused as a christian, he was commanded either to sacrifice to idols, or to walk upon burning coals. He chose the latter, and passed over them without damage, when Fabian passed sentence upon him that he should be beheaded: which sentence [Page 37] was performed in the month of August, A. D. 286, and his body was afterwards buried by some christians.
IN the year of Christ 286, a most remarkable affair occurred: a legion of soldiers, consisting of 6666 men, contained none but christians. This legion was called the Theban legion, because the men had been raised in Thebaus: they were quartered in the east till the emperor Maximian ordered them to march to Gaul, to assist him against the rebels of Burgundy.
THEY passed the Alps into Gaul, under the command of Mauritius, Candidus, and Exupernis, their worthy commanders, and at length joined the emperor.
MAXIMIAN, about this time, ordered a general sacrifice, at which the whole army were to assist; and likewise he commanded, that they should take oaths of allegiance, and swear, at the same time, to assist him in the extirpation of christianity in Gaul.
ALARMED at these orders, each individual of the Theban legion, absolutely refused either to sacrifice, or take the oaths prescribed. This so greatly enraged Maximian, that he ordered the legion to be decimated, that is every tenth man to be selected from the rest, and put to the sword.
THIS bloody order having been put into execution, those who remained alive were still inflexible, when a second decimation took place, and every tenth man of those living were again put to death.
THIS second severity made no more impression than the first had done; the soldiers preserved their fortitude and their principles, but by the advice of their officers, drew up a remonstrance to the emperor, in which they told him, "that they were his subjects and his soldiers, but could not at the same time forget the Almighty; that they received their pay from him, and their existence from God.— While your commands (said they) are not contradictory to those of our common master, we shall always be ready to obey, as we have been hitherto; but when the orders of our prince and those of the Almighty differ, we must always obey the latter. Our arms are devoted to the emperor's use, and shall be directed against his enemies; but we cannot submit to stain our hands with the effusion of christian blood: and how, indeed, could you, O emperor! be secure of our allegiance and fidelity, should we violate our obligation to our God, in whose service we were solemnly engaged before we entered in the army? You command us to search out and to destroy the christians: it is not necessary to look any farther for persons of that denomination, we ourselves are such, and we glory in the name. We saw our companions fall without the least opposition or murmuring, and thought them happy in dying for the sake of Christ. Nothing shall make us lift up our hands against our sovereign; we had rather die wrongfully, and by that means preserve our innocence, than live under a load of guilt: whatever you command we are ready to suffer; we confess ourselves to be christians, and therefore cannot persecute christians, nor sacrifice to idols."
A declaration like this, it might be presumed, would have softened the emperor, but it had the contrary effect: for, enraged at their perseverance and unanimity, he commanded, that the whole legion should be put to death; which was accordingly executed by the other troops, who cut them to pieces with their swords.
THIS affair happened on the 22d of September, A. D. 286; and such was the inveterate malice of Maximian, that he sent to destroy every man of a few detachments, that had been drafted from the Theban legion, and dispatched to Italy.
VICTOR, an old veteran soldier of another legion, met the executioners of this bloody business. As they appeared rather merry, he inquired into the cause of their jocularity, and being informed of the whole affair, he sharply reproved them for their barbarity. This excited their curiosity to ask him if he was of the same faith as those who had suffered? On answering in the affirmative, several of the soldiers fell upon him, and immediately dispatched him.
ALBAN, from whom St. Alban's, in Hertfordshire▪ received its name, was the first British martyr. That island had received the gospel of Christ from [Page 38] Lucius, the first christian king, but did not suffer by the rage of persecution for many years after.
ALBAN was originally a pagan, but being naturally of a very humane and tender disposition, he s [...]ltered a christian ecclesiastic, named Amphibalus, when some officers were in pursuit of him on account of his religion.
THE pious example, and edifying discourses of the refugee, made a great, impression on the mind of Alban; he longed to become a member of a religion which charmed him, and to imitate what he admired. The fugitive minister, happy in the opportunity, took great pains to instruct him; and, before his discovery, perfected Alban's conversion.
ALBAN now took a firm resolution to preserve the sentiments of a christian, or to die the death of a martyr. The enemies of Amphibalus having intelligence of the place where he was secreted, came to the house of Alban, in order to apprehend him.
ALBAN, desirous of protecting his guest and converter, changed cloaths with him, in order to facilitate his escape; and when the soldiers came, offered himself up as the person they were seeking for.
BEING carried before the governor, the deceit was immediately discovered; and Amphibalus being absent, that officer determined to wreak all his vengeance upon Alban.
THE prisoner was accordingly commanded to advance to the altar, and to sacrifice to the pagan deities; or threatened, in case of refusal, with the vengeance intended to be exercised against the person who had escaped by his contrivance.
UNTERRIFIED by these menaces, he declared that he would not comply with such idolatrous injunctions, but freely professed himself to be a christian.
THE governor ordered him to be scourged, which he bore with great fortitude, and seemed to acquire new resolution from his sufferings: he then was sentenced to be beheaded.
THE venerable Bede assures us, that, upon this occasion, the executioner suddenly became a convert to christianity, and intreated permission either to die for Alban, or with him. Obtaining the latter request, they were beheaded by a soldier, who voluntarily undertook the task of executioner. This happened on the 22d of June, A. D. 287, at Verulam, now St. Alban's, in Hertfordshire, where a magnificent church was erected to his memory, about the time of Constantine the Great. This edifice being destroyed in the Saxon wars, was rebuilt by Offa, king of Mercia, and a monastery erected adjoining to it, some remains of which are still visible, and the church is a noble Gothic structure.
FAITH was a christian female, of Acquitain, in France. Dacian, the Roman governor of Gaul, in the time of Maximian, resided at Agen, in Acquitain, and was very active in persecuting the christains.
FAITH being informed that there was a design to seize her, forestalled the intention, by surrendering herself up as a prisoner; and being inflexible in her faith, was ordered to be broiled upon a gridiron, and then beheaded; which sentence was executed in the year 287.
CAPACIUS was one who had concealed himself from the persecutors of christianity, but being informed of the fortitude of Faith, he openly avowed his religion, and delivered himself up to the governor, who had him first tortured, and then beheaded.
QUINTIN was a christian, and a native of Rome, but determined to attempt the propagation of the gospel in Gaul. He accordingly we [...]t to Picardy, attended by one Lucian: they preached together at Amiens; after which Lucian went to Beawaris, where he was martyred.
QUINTIN remained in Picardy, and was very zealous in his ministry. His continual prayers to the Almighty were, to increase his faith, and strengthen his faculties to propagate the gospel.
BEING seized upon as a christian, he was stretched [Page 39] with pullies till his joints were dislocated: his body was then torn with wire scourges, and boiling oil and pitch poured on his naked flesh: lighted torches were applied to his sides and arm-pits; and after he had been thus tortured he was remanded back to prison.
VARUS, the governor, being obliged to repair to Vermandois, ordered Quintin to be conducted thither under a strong guard, where he died of the barbarities he suffered, on the 31st of October, A. D. 287; and his body was sunk in the river Somme.
An Account of the Tenth gen [...]ral Persecution under the Roman Emperors, commonly called the Aera of the Martyrs.
MANY reasons have been assigned for the occasion of this persecution, particularly the great increase of the christians, whose numbers rendered them formidable; many of them having lost their humility, and given themselves up to vanity, by dressing gay, living sumptuously, building stately edifices for churches, &c. which created envy; and the hatred of Galerius, the adopted son of Dioclesian, who being stimulated by his mother, a bigoted pagan, never ceased persuading the emperor to enter upon the persecution, till he had accomplished his purpose.
THE fatal day fixed upon to commence the bloody work, was the 23d of February, A. D. 303, that being the day in which the Terminalia were celebrated, and on which, as the pagans boasted, they hoped to put a termination to christianity.
ON the day appointed the persecution began in Nicomedia, on the morning of which the praefect of that city repaired, with a great number of officers and assistants, to the church of the christians, where having forced open the doors, they seized upon all the sacred books, and committed them to the flames.
THE whole of this transaction was in the presence of Dioclesian and Galerius, who not contented with burning the books, had the church levelled with the ground. This was followed by a severe edict commanding the destruction of all other christian churches and books: and an order soon succeeded to render christians of all denominations outlaws, and consequently to make them incapable of holding any place of trust, profit, o [...] dignity, or of receiving any protection from the legal institutions of the realm.
THE publication of this edict occasioned an immediate martyrdom; for a bold christian not only tore it down from the place to which it was affixed, but execrated the name of the emperor for his injustice.
A provocatio [...] [...]ike this was sufficient to call down pagan vengeance upon his head; he was accordingly seized, severely tortured, and then burnt alive.
ALL the christian prelates were then apprehended, and imprisoned; and Galerius privately ordered the imperial palace to be set on fire, that the christians might be charged as the incendiaries, and a plausible pretence given for carrying on the persecution with the greatest severities.
A general sacrifice was commanded, which occasioned various martyrdoms. Among others, a christian, named Peter, was tortured, broiled, and then burnt; several deacons and presbyters were seized upon, and executed by various means; and the bishop of Nicomedia, named Anthimus, was beheaded.
NO distinction was made of age or sex; the name of christian was so obnoxious to the pagans, that all fell indiscriminately sacrifices to their opinions. Many houses were set on fire, and whole christian families perished in the flames; and others had stones fastened about their necks, and being tied together were driven into the sea. The persecution became general in all the Roman provinces, but more particularly in the east; and as it lasted ten years, it is impossible to ascertain the numbers martyred, or to enumerate the various modes of martyrdom: some were beheaded in Arabia; many devoured by wild beasts in Phoenicia; great numbers were broiled on gridirons in Syria; others had their bones broken, and in that manner were left to [Page 40] expire in Cappadocia; and several in Mesopotamia were hung with their heads downwards over slow fires, and suffocated.
IN Pontus, a variety of tortures were used, in particular, pins were thrust under the nails of the prisoners, melted lead was poured upon them; and various modes were adopted in tormenting the christians, the indecency of which could be only equalled by the savage barbarities practised in their execution.
IN Egypt, the christians were martyred by means of the four elements, some were buried alive in the earth, others were drowned in the waters of the Nile, many were hung up in the air till they perished, and great numbers received their death by being thrown into large fires.
RACKS, scourges, swords, daggers, crosses, poison, and famine, were made use of in various parts to dispatch the christians; and invention was exhausted to devise tortures against such as had no crime, but thinking differently from the votaries of superstition.
A city of Phrygia, consisting entirely of christians, was surrounded by a number of pagan soldiers to prevent any from escaping; who setting it on fire, all the inhabitants perished in the flames. But though the sufferings of the christians were many, their souls were serene: a perfect resignation to the chastisements of heaven being one of the greatest christian duties.
TIRED with slaughter, at length, several governors of provinces represented to the imperial court, that "it was unfit to pollute the cities with the blood of the inhabitants, or to defame the government of the emperors with the death of so many subjects." Hence many were respited from execution, but though they did not put them to death, as much as possible was done to render their lives miserable.
ACCORDINGLY, as marks of infamy, many of the christians had their ears cut off, their noses slit, their right eyes put out, their limbs rendered useless by dreadful dislocations, and their flesh scared in conspicuous places with red hot irons.
IT is necessary now to particularize the most conspicuous persons, who laid down their lives in martyrdom in this bloody persecution.
SEBASTIAN, a celebrated martyr, was born at Narbonne in Gaul, instructed in the principles of christianity at Milan, and afterwards became an officer of the emperor's guard at Rome. He remained a true christian in the midst of idolatry; unallured by the splendors of a court, untainted by evil examples, and uncontaminated by the hopes of preferment. Esteemed by the most eminent, beloved by his equals, and admired by his inferiors, he lived happily, and kept his faith and place, till the rigour of the persecution deprived him of the latter with his life, though not of the former.
HE was informed against, and betrayed to Fabian the Roman praetor, by Torquatus a pretended christian; but being of a rank too considerable to be put to death without the emperor's express orders, Dioclesian was acquainted with the whole affair.
THE emperor, on hearing the accusation, sent for Sebastian, and charged him with ingratitude in betraying the confidence reposed in him, and being an enemy to the g [...]ds of the empire and to himself.
SEBASTIAN replied, that his religion was of a good, not a pernicious tendency, and that it did not stimulate him to any thing against the welfare of the empire in general, or the emperor in particular, and that the greatest proof he could give of his fidelity, was the praying to the only true God for the health and prosperity of his imperial person. Incensed at this reply, the emperor ordered him to be taken to a field near the city, termed the Campus Martius, and there to be shot to death with arrows; which sentence was executed accordingly.
SOME pious christians coming to the place of execution, in order to give his body burial, perceived signs of life in him, and immediately moving him to a place of security, they in a short time effected his recovery, and prepared him for a second martyrdom; [Page 41] for as soon as he was able to go out, he placed himself intentionally in the emperor's way as he was going to the temple.
THE appearance of a person supposed to be effectually dead, greatly astonished the emperor, nor did the words of the martyr less surprize him; for he began with great severity to reprehend him for his various cruelties, and for his unreasonable prejudices against christianity.
As soon as Dioclesian had overcome his surprize, he ordered Sebastian to be seized, carried to a place near the palace, and beat to death; and that the christians should not either use means again to recover, or bury his body, he ordered that it should be thrown into the common sewer. Nevertheless, a christian lady, named Lucina, found means to remove it from the sewer, and bury it in the catacombs, or repositories of the dead.
THE christians, about this time, upon mature consideration, thought it unlawful to bear arms under a heathen emperor. Their reasons were many and substantial; the principal being,
1. THAT they thereby were frequently under the necessity of profaning the christian sabbath.
2. THAT that they were obliged, with the rest of the army, frequently to be present at idolatrous sacrifices, before the temples of idols.
3. THAT they were compelled to follow the imperial standards, which were dedicated to heathen deities, and bore their representatio [...]s.
THESE reasons induced many to refuse to enter into the imperial army, when called upon so to do; for the Roman constitution obliged all young men, of such a certain stature, to make several campaigns.
MAXIMILIAN, the son of [...]bius Victor, being p [...]inted [...]ut as a proper person to bear arms, was [...]dered by [...]ion, the pro-consul, to be me [...]sured, in order to be [...] in the s [...]rvice. Maximilian, however, [...]bsolutely refused to be inlisted, and [...] himself a christian.
BEING found of the standard heighth, Dion gave directions that he should be marked as a soldier, according to the usual custom. He, however, strenuously opposed this, and told Dion that he could not possibly engage in the service.
INCENSED at his conduct, the pro-consul plainly told him, that he should either serve as a soldier, or die for his disobedience. "Do as you please with me (replied Maximilian); behead me if you think proper; I am already a soldier of Christ, and cannot serve any other power."
PERCEIVING the inflexibility of the young man, Dion commanded his father to use his authority over him, in order to persuade him to comply; but Victor cooly replied, "My son knows best what he has to do."
THE pro-consul again demanded of Maximilian, with some acrimony, if he was yet disposed to receive the mark? To which the young man replied, he had already received the mark of Christ. "Have you! (exclaimed the pro-consul in a rage) then I shall quickly send you to Christ." "As soon as you please (answered Maximilian), that is all I wish or desire."
DION then seeming to soften, represented [...] him that it was a great pity he should be lost in the prime of his years. Maximilian replied, that he might die, but should not be lost; for though he left the world, his immortal soul would reside eternally with the Almighty. On which the pro-consul pronounced this sentence upon him, "That for disobedience in refusing to bear arms, and for professing the christian faith, he should lose his head." This sentence he heard with great intrepidity, and exclaimed, with apparent rapture, "God be praised."
AT the place of execution, he exhorted those that were christians to remain so; and such as were not, to embrace a faith which led to eternal glory.
TURNING to his father then, with a chearful countenance, he desired that the military habit intended for his wearing, might be given to the execu [...]ioner▪ and, after taking leave of him, said, he [Page 42] hoped they should meet again in the other world, and be happy to all eternity. He then received, at once, the fatal stroke, and the crown of martyrdom.
THE father beheld the execution with amazing fortitude, and saw the head of his heroic son severed from his body, without any [...]sible emotions, but such as seemed to proceed from a conscious pleasure, in being the [...] one whose piety and courage rendered him so shining an example for christians to imitate in fu [...]ure times.
VITUS, a Sicilian of considerable family, was brought up a christian; when his virtues increased with hi [...] years, his constancy s [...]pported him under afflictions, and his faith was superior to the most dangerous perils.
HIS father Hylas, who was a pagan, finding that he had been instructed in the principles of christianity by the nurse who brought him up, did all his endeavours to bring him back to paganism.
FAILING in his design▪ he forgot all the feelings of a parent, and informed against his son to Valerian, governor of Sicily, who was very active in persecuting the christians.
VITUS▪ [...] [...]ime of his b [...]ng app [...]hended upon the inform [...]tion of his [...]ather, [...] little more than twelve y [...]ars of age; Valerian therefore, on account of his tender age, thought to frighten him out of his faith. He was accordingly threatened with great anger, and ordered him to be scourged severely.
HAVING received this punishment, the governor sent him back to his father, thinking that what he had suffered would certainly make him change his principles: but in this he was mistaken; and Hylas, finding his son was inflexible, suffered nature, [...] sink under superstition, and determined to sacrifice his son to the idols.
VITUS, on being apprised of his design, escaped to Lucania, where being seized, he was by order of Valerian put to death, June 14, A. D. 303: but in what manner we are not informed.
CRESCENTIA, the nurse who brought him up as a christian, and a person who escaped with him, called Modestus, were martyred at the same time.
VICTOR was a christian of a good family at Marseilles, in France; he spent a great part of the night in visiting the afflicted, and confirming: the weak; which pious wo [...] he could not, consistent with his own safety, perform in the day time; and his fortune he spent in relieving the distresses of poor christians, thinking that riches were useless unless subservient to works of charity, and otherwise employed, were a bane to mankind.
HE was at length, however, seized by the emperor's orders, and being carried before the praefect, they advised him to embrace paganism and not forfeit the favour of his prince, on account of a dead man, as he stiled Christ. In answer to which he replied. "That he preferred the services of that dead man, who was in reality the Son of God, and was risen from the grave, to all the advantages he could receive from the emperor's favour: that he was a soldier of Christ, and would therefore take care that the post he held under an earthly prince, should never interfere with his duty to the King of heaven; and that as for the gods, whose worship they recommended to him, he could not think them any better than evil spirits."
HE was loaded with reproac [...]s for this [...], but being a man of rank, he was se [...]t to the emperor to receive his final sentence.
THE emperor, under the severest penal [...]ies, commanded him to sacrifice to the Roman idols. On his absolute refusal to comply, Maximian ordered him to be bound, and dragg [...]d through the streets. During the execution of this order▪ he was treated with all manner of cruelties and indignities, by the enraged populace.
REMAINING still inflexible, his courage was deemed obstinacy, and christian confidence called illgrounded and irrational: to which he replied, "That the ready disposition of the disciples of Christ to undergo any sufferings on that score, and the joy with which they met the most ignominious and painful deaths, were a sufficient proof of their [Page 43] assurance of the object of that hope." And added, "That he was ready to give an example of what he had said in his own person."
BEING by order stretched upon the [...]ck, he turned his eyes towards heaven, and prayed to God to endue him with patience; after which he underwent the tortures with most admirable fortitude. After the executioners were tired with inflicting torments on him, he was taken from the rack, and conveyed to a dungeon.
HIS confinement, however, became a fortunate circumstance, for he converted his gaolers, named Alexander, Felician, and Longinus. This affair coming to the ears of the emperor, he ordered them immediately to be put to death, and the gaolers were accordingly beheaded.
VICTOR was then again put to the rack, and unmercifully beaten with battoons, and then again sent to prison.
BEING a third time examined concerning his religion, he persevered in his principles; a small altar was then brought, and he was commanded to offer incense upon it immediately. Fired with indignation at the request, he boldly stepped forward, and with his foot overthrew both altar and idol.
[...] enraged the emperor Maximian, who was present▪ that he ordered the foot with which he had kicked the altar, to be immediately [...]ut off; and Victor was afterwards sentenced to be thrown into a mill, and crushed to pieces with the stones.
THIS cruel sentence was, in some measure, put into execution; Victor was thrown into the mill, but part of the apparatus breaking, he was d [...]wn from it terribly bruised▪ and the emperor not [...]aving patience to stay till it was mended, ordered his [...]e [...]d to be struck off, which was [...]xecuted [...]ccordingly, A. D. 303.
MAXIMUS, governor of Cilicia, being at Tarsus, three christians were brought before him by Dem [...] t [...]ur, a military officer.
TARAC [...]US being the eldest, and first in rank, was addressed first by Maximus, who asked him what he was? The prisoner replied, "A christian." This reply offending the governor, he again made the same demand, and was answered in a similar manner.
THE governor then told him, that he ought to sacrifice to the gods, [...] that was the only way to promotion, riches, and honours; and that the emperors themselves did what he recommended to him.
TO this Tarachus repli [...]d, that avarice was a sin, and gold itse [...] an idol as abominable as any other; for it promoted frauds, treacheries, robberies, and murders; it induced men to deceive each other, by which in time they deceived themselves, and bribed the weak to their own eternal destruction. As for promotion, he desired it not, as he could not in conscience accept of any place, office, or post, which would subject him to pay adoration to idols; and with regard to honours, he desired not greater than the honourable title of christian.
BUT with respect to the emperors themselves being pagans, he plainly said, that they were superstitiously deceived in adoring senseless idols, and evidently misled by the machinations of the devil himself.
FOR the boldness of this speech, his jaws were ordered to be broken, that the parts which uttered the words should suffer for their supposed impropriety. He was then stripped, scourged, loaded with chains, and thrown into a dismal dungeon, to remain there till the trials of the other prisoners.
PRO [...]US was then brought before Maximus, who, as usual▪ asked his name?
THE prisoner boldly replied, the most valuable name he could boast of was that of a christian; but that the usual appellation by which he was distinguished was Probus; that his father was a Thra [...]an, and that himself was born at Sida, in Pamphylia.
MAXIMUS replied to this in the following words: "Your name of christian will be of little service to yo [...], be therefore guided by me; sacrifice to the [Page 44] gods, engage my friendship, and the emperor's favour.
PROBUS nobly answered, "That as he had relinquished a considerable fortune to become a soldier of Christ, it might appear evident, that he neither cared for his friendship, or the emperor's favour."
HE was, by the governor's order, than scourged; and Demetrius, the officer, observing to him how his blood flowed, advised him to comply; but his only answer was, that those severities were agreeable to him. What! cries Maximu [...] does he still persist in his madness? To which Probus rejoined, "That character is badly bestowed upon one who refuses to worship idols, or what is worse, devils."
HAVING been only scourged on the back, he was now scourged on the belly, which he suffered with as much intrepidity as before, still repeating; "The more my body suffers, and loses blood, the more my soul will grow vigorous, and be a gainer." He was then committed to gaol, loaded with irons, and his hands and feet stretched upon the stocks.
ANDRONICHUS was next brought up for examination, when being asked the usual questions, he said, "I am a christian, a native of Ephesus, and descended from one of the first families in that city." After a great deal of altercation, in which the governor was unsuccessful in endeavouring to dissuade him from his fate, he was ordered to undergo punishments similar to those of Tarachus and Probus, and then to be remanded to prison.
AFTER being confined some days, the three prisoners were brought before Maximus again, who began first to reason with Tarachus, saying, that as old age was honoured from the supposition of its being accompanied by wisdom, he was in hopes that what had already past must, upon deliberation, have caused a change in his sentiments. Finding himself, however, mistaken, he ordered him to be tortured by various means; particularly fire was placed in the palms of his hands; he was hung up by his feet, and smoaked with wet straw; a mixture of salt and vinegar was poured into his nostrils; and he was again remanded to prison.
PROBUS being then called for, and asked if he would sacrifice, replied, "I come better prepared than before; for what I have already suffered, has only confirmed and strengthened me in my resolution. Employ your whole power upon me, and you will find, that neither you, nor your masters, the emperors, nor the gods whom you serve, nor the devil who is your father, shall oblige me to adore gods whom I know not."
THE governor then attempted to reason with him on religious subjects; for having a slender [...]ducation, he was proud of shewing his talents; for those who know little are fond of talking much, and by mistaking casuistry for reason, would fain deceive others as they do themselves. He launched forth into the most extravagant praises of the pagan deities, and as he enumerated them, described their respective powers, and separate virtues; and inferred, [...]om what himself had said, that such deities, pos [...]essed of such admirable qualities, ought to be worshipped. However, continues he, as your chief objection is against a plurality of gods, I will not press you to sacrifice to all of them; sacrifice only to Jupiter, the chief, the most powerful, and most invincible of our deities.
PROBUS, however, easily confuted his argumen [...]s, turned his casuistry into ridicule, and in particular said, "Shall I pay divine honours to Jupiter, to one who married his o [...]n sister to an infamous debauchee, as i [...] even acknowledged by your own poets and priests?"
INCENSED at this speech, the governor ordered him to be struck upon the mouth, for uttering what he called blasphemy: his body was then scared with hot irons; he was put to the rack, and afterwards scourged▪ his head was then shaved, and hot coals placed upon the crown; and after all th [...]se tortures, he was again sent to confinement.
ANDRONICUS being again brought before Maximus, the latter attempted to deceive him, by pretending that Tarachus and Probus had repe [...]ted of their obstinacy, and owned the gods of the empire. To this the prisoner answered; "Lay not, O governor, such a weakness to the charge of those, who have appeared here before me in this cause, [Page 45] nor imagine it to be in your power to shake my fixed resolution with artful speeches. I cannot believe that they have disobeyed the laws of their fathers, renounced the hopes in our God [...] and obeyed your extravagant orders: nor will I ever fall short of them in faith and dependance upon our common Saviour: thus armed, I neither know your gods, nor fear your authority; fulfil your threats, execute your most sanguinary inventions, and employ every cruel art in your power on me; I am prepared to bear it for the sake of Christ."
THIS answer occasioned him to be cruelly scourged, and his wounds were afterwards rubbed with salt. Being perfectly well again in a short time, the governor reproached the gaoler for having suffered some physician to at [...]end him. The gaoler, in his own defence, declared, that no person whatever had been near him, or the other prisoners, and that he would willingly forfeit his head if any allegation of the kind could be proved against him. Andronicus corroborated the testimony of the gaoler, and added, that the God whom he served was the most powerful of physicians, and the plant of grace the most salutary of vegetables.
THESE three worthy christians were brought to a third examination, when they retained their constancy, were again tortured, and a [...] length ordered for execution.
BEING brought to the amphitheatre▪ several beasts were let l [...]ose upon them; but none of the animals, though hungry, would touch them This so greatly irritated Maximus, that he seve [...]ly reprehended the keeper, and ordered him to produce a beast that would execute the business for which he was wanted. The keeper then brought out a large bear, that had that very day destroyed three men; but this voracious creature, and a fierce lioness, both refused to touch the prisoners.
FINDING the design of destroying them by the means of wild beasts ineffectual, Maximus ordered them to be slain by a sword, which was accordingly executed on the 11th of October, A. D. 3 [...]3. They all declared, previous to their martyrdom, that as death was the common lot of all men, they wished to met that for the sake of Christ, which they must of course fall a victim to on account of nature; and to resign that life to faith, which must otherwise be the prey of disease. These sentiments are noble, christian like, and philosophical; for as death is certain, the time and mode is not of that importance commonly imagined.
ROMANUS, a native of Palestine, was deacon of the church of Caesarea, at the time of the commencement of Dioclesian's persecution. Being at Antioch when the imperial order arrived for sacrificing to idols, he was greatly afflicted to see many christians, through fear, submit to the idolatrous mandate, and deny their faith to preserve their lives.
REPREHENDING some of the recreant christians for their conduct, he was informed against to the emperor, and soon after apprehended. Being brought to the tribunal, he boldly confessed himself a christian, and said he was ready to suffer any thing which he inflicted upon him on account of his faith.
BEING condemned for his faith, he was scourged, put to the rack, his body torn with hooks, his flesh cut with knives, his face scarified, his teeth beat from their sockets, and his hair plucked up by the roots. Thus cruelly mangled, he turned to the governor, and very calmly thanked him for what he had done, and for having opened him so many mouths to preach the doctrines of christianity; for, says he, every wound is a mouth, to sing the praises of the Almighty.
THE following circumstance, which happened upon th [...] occasion, is related by Prudentius, and others:
ROMANUS offered to stand to the decision of a young child, whose age must be free from malice, or any other vices; and to put the truth of the christian upon that test. As [...]piades (they add) accepted of the proposal, and agreed to put the merits of the cause to that issue; accordingly, a child of about seven years of age was called out of [...] being asked whether he [...]hought it [...] tr [...]e, that men ought to wors [...]ip but one God [...], or [...]. He answered, [Page 46] that cert [...]inly▪ whatsoever men affirm to be God, must be but one, and as this one is Christ, he must of necessity be God; for that there are many gods, continued the boy, we children cannot believe. The governor, amazed at this, was highly enraged with the child, and calling him little villain, and young traitor, asked him who taught him that lesson? To which the child replied, "My mother, with whose milk I sucked in this lesson, that I must believe in Christ." This so incensed the governor, that he ordered the infant to be horsed and most severely whipt; insomuch that the beholders could not refrain from tears, the mother of the child only excepted, who chid him for asking for a draught of water to be given to him, charging him to thrist for that cup which the infants of Bethlehem had drank of, and bidding him remember Isaac, who willingly offered his neck for the sacrifice to his father's sword. Whilst the woman was giving her son this lesson, the merciless executioner plucked the skin and hair from the crown of his head; his mother at the same time saying to him, "Though you suffer here, my child, you shall shortly be with him, who shall adorn thy naked head with a crown of eternal glory." Upon which the child smiled upon her and his executioners, and bore their stripes with man-like patience.
SOON after Romanus was ordered to be strangled, and the child to be beheaded; which sentences were executed on the 17th of November, A. D. 303.
MARCELLINUS was an ecclesiastic at Rome: being apprehended on account of his religion, he was ordered to be privately executed in the forest, and was beheaded there accordingly.
PETER, a christian, apprehended for the same cause, was executed at the same time and place.
MUCH about this period Smara [...]us, [...]arg [...]s, and Sy [...]i [...]cus, deacons of the chris [...]n church, were martyred; but the mode of their d [...]ths is not specified by martyrologists.
SUSANNA, the niece of Cai [...]s, bishop of Rome, was pressed by the emperor D [...]clesian to marry a noble Pagan, who was nearly [...] to him.
SUSANNA, however, refused the honour intended her, on account of her religion, which was that of a christian, which so greatly enraged the emperor, that she was beheaded by his order.
DOROTHEUS, the high chamberlain of the houshold to Dioclesian, was a christian, and took great pains to make converts. In his religious labours, he was joined by Gorgonius, another christian, and one belonging to the palace. They were both high in the emperor's favour, but they soon had an opportunity of evincing, that worldly honours and temporary pleasures, were nothing when set in competition with the joys of immortality; for being informed against, they were first tortured and then strangled.
PETER, an eunuch belonging to the emperor, was a christian of singular modesty and humility. His humility caused him to undertake any menial office to serve the afflicted; and his benevolence occasioned him to give whatever he possessed, to those who needed assistance; convinced that riches did not constitute happiness, and that want could give instructions which wealth could never bestow.
BEING informed against as a christian, and confessing the charge, he was scourged till his flesh was torn in a most terrible manner; and then salt and vinegar were thrown upon the wounds.
HAVING endured these tortures with the utmost tranquility, he was laid on a gridi [...]on, and broiled over a slow fire till he expired.
CYPRIAN, known by the title of the magician, to distinguish him f [...]m Cyprian, bishop of Carthage, was a native of Antioch. He received a liberal education in his youth, and particularly applied himself to astrology [...] after which he travelled for improvement through Greece, Egypt, India, &c.
HAVING finished his studies he s [...]led near Babylon, and being skilled in the [...] mys [...]eries, he employed his [...]alents in [...] to d [...]a [...] women from chastity and and c [...]ugal faith, and in persecuting the christians, and ridiculing christianity.
[Page 47]IN the course of time he became acquainted with Justina, a young lady of Antioch, whose birth, beauty, and accomplishments, rendered her the admiration of all who knew her.
THIS lady had been educated in idolatry, but being happily converted to christianity, she induced her father and mother to embrace the same faith. Her modesty was remarkable, and her prudence in avoiding the carnal conversation of men was extremely commendable. A Pagan gentleman falling in love with her, and not being able to obtain a favourable return to his addresses, applied to Cyprian for assistance.
CYPRIAN undertook the design, but with a treache [...]ous intent; for under the pretence of acting for his friend, he determined if possible, to possess the lady himself. To effect this, he employed all his skill, and essayed a variety of infernal contrivances; but his endeavours proving ineffectual, he was fully convinced that a superior power protected her from his machinations.
HIS reflections, on this account, awakened him to search into the truths of christianity, and his research became so beneficial, that he renounced the errors of paganism, and embraced a faith, of the excellency of which he could not fail to be convinced.
THE repentance of Cyprian was sincere; he determined to reform his conduct, and to make every amends in his power for the crimes he had committed. Eusebius, a christian, confirmed him in this resolution, and prevented him from falling into despair for past follies.
CYPRIAN burnt his books of astrology and magic, received baptism, and became animated with a powerful spirit of grace. The conversion of Cyprian had a great effect on the pagan gentleman who paid his addresses to Justina, and he in a short time embraced christianity.
DURING the persecution of Dioclesian, Cyprian and Justina were seized upon as christians, when the former was torn with pincers, and the latter chastised; and after suffering other torments, both were beheaded.
SERGIUS was an officer in the Roman army, and attended the emperor Maximian into Syria. Being accused as a christian, he was ordered to sacrifice to Jupiter. Refusing to perform any such idolatrous command, he was stripped of his military habit, and, by way of derision, dressed in woman's cloaths. He then was forced to walk a considerable way with nails in his sandals, and had a conclusion put to his sufferings by being beheaded.
BACCHUS, an officer of the same rank as Sergius, was apprehended at the same time, underwent similar sufferings, and was beheaded on the same day, A. D. 303.
EULALIA, a Spanish lady of a christian family, was remarkable in her youth for a sweetness of temper, and solidity of understanding, seldom found in the capriciousness of juvenile years. Being apprehended as a christian, the magistrate attempted, by the mildest means, to bring her over to paganism, but she answered him in so ironical a manner, and ridiculed the pagan deities with such asperity, that the judge, incensed at her behaviour, ordered her to be tortured.
HER sides were accordingly torn by hooks, and her breasts burnt in the most shocking manner, till the fire catching her head and face, she expired by the violence of the flame, in December, A. D. 303.
IN the year 304, the emperor Dioclesian falling [...], the persecution was carried on by Galerius, and the governors of the several provinces, when many fell victims to the infatuated zeal, or infernal malice of the persecutors▪ among whom are enumerated the following persons:
VINCENT, a Spanish christian, was brought up by Valerius, bishop of Saragossa, who, on account of his great merits, ordained him a deacon. When the persecution reached Spain, Da [...]an, the governor of Terragona, ordered Valerius the bishop, and Vincent the deacon, to be [...]ei [...]ed, loaded with irons, and imprisoned.
[Page 48]SOON after Dacian examined them with great asperity, and threatened them with death, unless they renounced their principles. Vincent undertaking to speak for both, as Valerius had an impediment in his speech, delivered himself with great freedom, and avowed their full determination to persist in the faith.
DACIAN, in a rage at his freedom of speech, declared, that unless he immediately burnt incense to the gods he despised, he should fa [...]l a sacrifice to the contempt he expressed.
THE prisoners being firm in their resolutions, Valerius was banished, and the whole of Dacian's rage directed against Vincent, who was racked, had his limbs dislocated, his flesh torn with hooks, and was laid on a gridiron, which had not only a fire placed over it, but spikes at the top, which run into his flesh. In this situation, while one side was broiling over the fire, the other was tormented with red hot irons, or salamanders; and then salt was thrown over the wounds.
THESE torments neither destroying him, nor changing his resolutions, he was remanded to prison, and confined in a small loathsome dark dungeon, which, to make it more disagreeable, was st [...]ewed with sharp flints, and pieces of broken glass. Orders were given not to suffer him to have any provisions whatever, and that the news of his death should be carried to Dacian as soon as known.
THE keepers, by the time they thought him fami [...]hed, entered the dungeon, when, instead of seeing only a corpse as they expected, they beh [...]ld, to their great astonishment, Vincent at prayers, his wounds healed, and his body in tolerable [...].
THIS speedy recovery and preservation had [...] an [...] keeper [...], that it [...] the [...] means of their conversion.
[...], however, [...] heart, and [...] to [...] of being [...] by [...] prepared for him of so severe a nature, as to make him sink under them.
HERE, however, his malice was again disappointed, for before the instruments could be prepared, God took him to himself, and he died with all the serenity of a good conscience, and as much calmness as if he had only sunk into a gentle slumber.
THE inveterate hatred conceived by Dacian against Vincent did not conclude with his death, for he ordered that his body should be exposed in the open fields to the birds of prey; but they not offering to touch it, he commanded that it should be thrown into the river, which was done accordingly, A. D. 304, his death happening on the 22d of January, in that year.
THE persecution of Dioclesian began particularly to rage in A. D. 304, when many christians were put to cruel tortures, and the most painful and igno [...]inious deaths: the most eminent and particular of whom we shall enumerate.
SATURNINUS, a Priest of Albitina, a town of Africa, used to officiate in his clerical capacity, preach, and administer the sacrament to a society of christians, who privately assembled at the house of Octavius Felix: for the severity of the times was such, that they could not publicly perform their religious duties.
BEING informed against, Saturninus, with four of his children, and sev [...]l [...] persons▪ were apprehended; and that their pu [...]ishment [...] more exem [...]l [...]y [...], they were se [...]t to [...], whe [...]e the [...] were examined [...].
ON the [...], [Page 49] tearing his flesh with hooks, burning with hot irons, &c.
AFTER being tortured, he was remanded to prison, and there starved to death.
THE four children of Saturninus, after being variously tormented, remained steady in their faith, on which they were sent back to the dungeon in which their father was confined, and shared the very same fate with their father.
EIGHT other christians were tortured on the same day as Saturninus, and much in the same manner. Two expired on the spot through the severity of their sufferings, and the other six being sent back to prison, were suffocated by means of the closeness of the dungeon.
DATIVUS, a noble Roman Senator; Thelico, a pious christian; Victoria, a young lady of considerable family and fortune, with some others of less consideration, had been all auditors of Saturninus, was seized at the time he was, tortured in a similar manner, and perished by the same means; sealing their testimony with their lives, and receiving the glorious crown of martyrdom as a reward for their sufferings in this transitory life.
AGAPE, Chionia, and Irene, three sisters, were seized upon at Thessalonica, when Dioclesian's persecution reached Greece. They had been educated in the christian faith, but had taken great precautions not to be seized on that account, being, from the softness of their natures, unwilling to meet the rage of the times.
HENCE they retired to a solitary place, and spent their hours in performing religious duties. Being, however, discovered and seized, they renounced their former timidity, blamed themselves for being so fearful, and begged of God to strengthen them against the great trial they had to undergo.
AGAPE being examined before Duleatius, the governor, was asked whether she was disposed to comply with the laws of the land, and obey the mandates of the emperor? She answered, "That being a christian, she could not comply with any laws which recommended the worship of idols and devils; that her resolution was fixed, and nothing should deter her from continuing in it to the last moment of her life."
CHIONIA being next examined, replied in the same manner as her sister had done, when the governor not being able to draw them from their faith, pronounced sentence of condemnation on them; pursuant to which they were burnt, and received a crown of martyrdom in the flames, March 25, A. D. 304.
IRENE was then brought before the governor, who fancied that the death of her sisters would have an effect upon her fears, and that the dread of similar sufferings would engage her to comply with his proposals. He therefore exhorted her to acknowledge the heathen deities, to sacrifice to them, to partake of the victims, and to deliver up her books relative to christianity.
SHE heard these propositions with indignation, and positively refused to comply with any of them; the governor asked her, Who it was that persuaded her, and her sisters, to keep those books and writings? She answered, "It was that God who commanded them to love him to the last; for which reason she was resolved to submit to be burned alive rather than give them up into the hands of his professed enemies."
THE governor finding that he could make no impression on her, ordered her to be exposed naked in the streets, which shameful order having been executed, she was burnt April 1, A. D. 304, at the same place where her sisters suffered.
AGATHO, a man of a pious turn of mind, with Cassice, Philippa, and Eutychia, were martyred about the same time; but the particulars have not been transmitted to us.
MARCELLINUS, bishop of Rome, who succeeded Caius in that see, was greatly perplexed during this persecution; and having strongly opposed paying divine honours to Dioclesian, who wished to exact them from the people, and to appear as a god, he was at length seized and committed to prison.
[Page 50]IN this situation his conduct was steady, his constancy immoveable, and his patience great. He suffered martyrdom, by a variety of tortures, in the year 304, comforting his soul till he expired with [...] [...]ospect of those glorious rewards it would receive by the tortures suffered in the body.
T [...]DOTUS, a Dalmatian, kept an inn at Ancyra. Being a christian, and of a very humane disposition, he devoted a great part of his time to visit the afflicted, and a great part of hi [...] property to relieve the poor; he assisted the sick in body, and converted the sick in soul, so that he was in every capacity a true servant of Christ.
THEOTE [...]NUS, the governor of these parts, whose cruelty could be equalled by nothing but his bigotry, received the mandate for persecuting the christians with great satisfaction, and wrote the emperor word that he would do his utmost endeavours to root out christianity from every place where he had the least power.
THE pagans being encouraged by the governor, began to info [...]m against, abuse, and persecute the christians. Great numbers were seized upon and imprisoned; their goods were destroyed, and their estates confiscated. Many fled into the woods or retired to caves, where some supported themselves by feeding upon such roots as they could casually find, and others perished by famine. Indeed, many were starved in the city, by means of the following singular stratagem: The governor gave strict orders, that no provisions whatever should be exposed to sale in the markets, without having been first consecrated to the idols; hence the christians were compelled to eat what had been offered to the devil, or to refrain from food and perish. The latter dreadful alternative was chosen by many, who heroically gave up their lives to preserve the purity of their faith.
DURING these critical times, Theodotus did all that he could to comfort the imprisoned, and buried the bodies of several who had been martyred, though it was forbidden, on pain of death. He likewise privately assisted many with such food as they might use with a safe conscience, for having laid in a great stock of corn and wi [...]e, he sold it out at prime cost.
A christian, named Polychronicus, being seized, forfeited his faith, in order to preserve his life, and compounded for a frail existence, by informing against his friend Theodotus, who [...]aring of his treachery, voluntarily surrendered himself to the governor.
ON his arrival in the court, he surveyed the divers instruments of torture with a smile, and seemed totally regardless of their effect.
BEING placed at the bar, the governor informed him, that it was still in his power to save himself, and to escape the torments prepared for disobedience, by sacrificing to the gods of the empire; "and (continued he) if you renounce your faith in Christ, I promise you my friendship, and the emperor's protection, and will constitute you one of the magistrates of the town."
THEODOTUS, in his answer, discovered great courage and eloquence; he absolutely refused to renounce his faith, declined the friendship of the governor, and protection of the emperor, upon the terms proposed, and treated the Pagan idols with the greatest ridicule.
ON hearing this, the Pagans in general were extremely clamorous for the prisoner to be immediately punished; and the priests in particular rent their clothes, and tore their [...]naplets, the badges of their offices, through rage. The governor, without hesitation, complied with their desire, when Theodotus was scourged, torn with hooks, and then placed upon the rack. After this, vinegar was poured into his wounds, his flesh was seared with burning torches, and his teeth were knocked out of their sockets. He was then remanded to prison, and by the way, pointing to his mangled body, he said to the people, "it was bu [...] just that christians should suffer for him who suffered for us all."
AT the expiration of five days, he was brought from prison, tortured, and then beheaded, A. D. 304.
VICTOR, a native of Ancyra, was accused by the priests of Diana, for having abused their goddess. For this imputed crime he was seized upon, and [Page 51] committed to prison, his house plundered, his family turned out of doors, and his estate confiscated.
BEING put to the rack, his resolution failed him, and he began to weaver in his faith, through the severity of his torments. Being carried back to prison, in order to make a full recantation, God punished him for his intended apostacy; for his wounds mortified, and put an end to his life in a few days.
SEVEN aged women of Ancyra, being apprehended for their faith, were examined before the governor, who on finding them stedfast in their religious principles, reviled their belief, ridiculed their age, and ordered them to be delivered over to some young libertines, that their virtue m [...]ght be insulted.
ONE of the debauchees, more bold and forward than the rest, seized upon the eldest of the women whose name was Tecusa, who thus addressed him: "What designs, child, can you have on us, who are worn out with age and infirmities? I am now more than three score and ten years old, my companions are not much younger; you may look on us as so many rotten carcases, as we shall soon be, for the governor after death refuses [...]s burial;" then lifting up her veil, she shewed him her grey hairs, and then went on: "You may, perhaps, have a mother of nearly the same age as myself, this should give you some respect to us." The young men, though entire libertines, were so [...]ffected with this speech, that they desisted and went their ways.
THE governor having failed in his design of having them prostituted, determined to [...]ompel them to assist in the idolatrous rites of wash [...]ng the goddesses Minerva and Diana; for it is [...]o be understood, that in Ancyra, it was the custom annually to wash the images of those heathen goddesses, and that the washing was considered as a material part of the adoration of them.
THESE seven christian women, whose names were [...]ecusa, Phamme, Claudia, Alexandria, Julitta, Euphrasia, and Matrona, were forced to the temple; but a [...]olutely refusing to wash the idols, the governor was so enraged that he ordered them all to have stones tied about their necks, and to be pushed into the water intended for th [...] washing, in which they gloriously expired.
TIMOTHY, a worthy christian, being carried before Urban, governor of Palestine, was sentenced to be burnt to death by a slow fire; which sentence was executed at Gaza, in the year 304, on the 19th day of August.
PHILIP, bishop of Herac [...]e [...], had, in every act of his life, appeared as a good christian; the chief of his disciples were Severus, a priest, and Hermes, a deacon; and these three did all i [...] their power to promote the cause of christ [...]nity.
THIS worthy bishop was advised to secrete himself, in order to avoid the storm of the persecution; but he reproved those who counselled him so to do, telling them that their merit would be enhanced by their sufferings, and that death had no terror for the virtuous.
AN officer named Aristomachus, being employed to shut up the christian churches in Heraclea, Philip took great pains to convince him, that the shutting up buildings made by hands could not destroy christianity, while the living temples of the Lord remained; for the true faith consisted not in the places where God is adored, but in the hearts of those who adore him.
Being however denied entrance into the church, where he used to preach, Philip took up his station at the door, and there exhorted the people to patience and perseverance.
THESE things caused him to be seized and carried before the governor, who severely [...] him, and then continued to speak sternly in th [...]se [...]: "Bring all the vessels used in your worship, and the scriptures which you read and teach the people, and surre [...]r them to me, before you are forced thereto by tortures." "If" (replied the bishop) "you take any pleasure in seeing us suffer, we are prepared for the worst you can do. This infirm body is in your power; use it as you please. The vessels you demand shall be delivered up, for God is not honoured by gold and silver, but by the fear of his power; the ornaments of the souls of his servants [Page 52] are more pleasing to him, than the decorations of churches: but as to the sacred books, it is neither proper for me to part with them, nor for you to receive them." This answer so much incensed the governor, that he ordered one Mucassor, a person particularly distinguished for inhumanity, to torture the prelate. Hermes, expressing himself freely against such barbarities, was likewise ordered to be scourged.
PROCEEDING to the place where the scriptures, and the church plate were kept, both were seized by the pagans; the church was unroofed, the doors were walled up, the plate was embezzled, and the scriptures were burnt.
PHILIP being taken to the market-place, was ordered to sacrifice to the Roman deities in general, and to a very handsome image of Hercules in particular; to which command, "Alas!" replied the prelate, "how unhappy are you, who are thus grossly mistaken in the nature of the deity, and so ignorant in the truth, as to worship your own workmanship: what value is there in gold, silver, bras [...], iron, or lead, which are dug out of the earth? You are unacquainted with the divinity of Christ, which is incomprehensible to human capacities▪ but what power can your idols boast, which are made by base mechanics, a drunken statuary, or a debauched carver, and tricked up by the arts of the taylor and the goldsmith? and yet these are your gods." And after some other observations on the absurdities of the pagan religion, he concluded, that from what he had already said, it appeared that the heathens worshipped what might lawfully be trod on, and made gods of such things as Providence had designed for their use.
[...] governor then tried the constancy of Hermes, out finding him as inflexible as the bishop, he committed them both to prison. Soon after this, the governor's time of ruling these parts b [...]ng expired, a new governor named Justin arrived; but he was to the full as cruel as his predecessor.
PHILIP was dragged by the feet through the streets, severely scourged, and then brought again to the governor, who charged him with obstinate r [...]sness, in continuing disobedient to the imperial decrees; but he boldly replied, "My present behaviour is not the effect of rashness, but proceeds from my love and fear of God, who made the world, and who will judge the living and the dead, whose commands I dare not transgress. I have hitherto done my duty to the emperors, and am always ready to comply with their just orders, according to the doctrine of our Lord Christ, who bids us give both to Caesar and to God their due▪ but I am obliged to prefer heaven to earth, and to obey God rather than man."
THE governor, on hearing this speech, imm [...]iately passed sentence on him to be burnt, which was executed accordingly, and the martyr expired, singing praises to God in the midst of the flames.
HERMES, for beha [...]ing in a similar manner; and Severus, who had surrendered himself up in order to suffer with his friends, both met with the same fate. Such were the effects of a diabolical zeal for the adoration of idols, and such the consequences of the blindness of pagan superstitions.
AGRICOLA, as we are informed by St. Ambrose, was a christian of so very amiable a disposition, that he even gained the esteem and admiration of the pagans. Being apprehended as a christian, he was crucified in imitation of the death of our Saviour: and his body, together with the cross, were buried in one grave, at Bologne, in Italy.
VITALIS, the servant and convert of the above martyr, Agricola, was seized upon the same account as his master, and being put to the torture, died under the hands of his tormentors, through the severity of his sufferings.
VICTORIUS, Carpophorus, Severus, and Seve [...]ianus, were brothers, and all four employed in places of great trust and honour in the city of Rome. Having exclaimed against the worsship of idols, they were apprehended, and scourged with the plumbetae, or scourges, to the ends of which were fastened leaden balls. This punishment was exercised with such excess of cruelty, that the pious brothers fell martyrs to its severity.
CHRYSOGONUS, a worthy christian of Aquileia, [Page]
Divers kinds of Tortures [...] on the Pri [...]itive Martyrs during the 10. •• Roman [...] Per [...]cu [...]on.
Cruelties inflicted on the Primitive Christians. their Bodies being tied to Stakes▪ thrust through [...] their nails with Thorns. [...] Jr.
[Page 53] was beheaded by order of Dioclesian, for having instructed a young lady of that city in the christian faith.
ANASTASIA, the young lady brought up by the foregoing martyr, was descended from an illustrious Roman family. Her mother, named Flavia, was a christian, and dying while her daughter was an infant, she bequeathed her to the care of Chrysogonus, with a strict injunction to instruct her in the principles of christianity. This Chrysogonus punctually performed; but the father of the young lady, who was a pagan, gave her in marriage to a person of his own persuasion, named Publius.
THE husband was of a good family, but bad morals, and having spent his wife's and his own patrimony, he had the b [...]seness to inform against her as a christian.
PUBLIUS however dying soon after, his wife was released; but continuing to perform many charitable actions to distressed christians, she was again apprehended, and delivered up to Florus, governor of Illyricum. Florus commanded that she should be put to the torture, when finding her constant in the faith, he ordered her to be burnt, which sentence was put in execution on December 25, A. D. 304. The event taking place about a month after the martyrdom of Chrysogonus, her instructor.
MOURIS and Thea, two christian women of Gaza, were martyred in that city some time in the year 304. The former died under the hands of her tormentors, and the latter perished in prison of the wounds she had received in being tortured.
TIMOTHY, a deacon of Mauritania, and Ma [...]ra his wife, had not been united together by the bands of wedlock above three weeks, when they were separated from each other by the persecution.
TIMOTHY being apprehended as a christian, was carried before Arrianus, the governor of Thebais▪ who did all in his power to allure him from his faith, and induce him to embrace idolatry.
FINDING his endeavours were vain, and knowing that Timothy had the keeping of the Holy Scriptures, the governor commanded him to deliver them up, that they might be burnt: to which Timothy answered, "Had I children, I would sooner deliver them up to sacrificed, than part from the word of God." The governor being much incensed at this reply, ordered his eyes to be put out with red hot irons, saying, "The books shall at least be useless to you, for you shall not see to read them."
HIS patience under the operation was so great, that the governor grew more exasperated; he, therefore, in order, if possible, to overcome his fortitude, ordered him to be hung up by the feet, with a weight tied about his neck, and a gag in his mouth.
THE worthy christian underwent this severity of treatment with the greatest courage, when some busy person acquainted the governor that he had been but newly married to a wife, of whom he was extremely fond. Arrianus was glad to hear this, as he thought that love might effect what menaces could not, and that an affection for his wife might prevail over that intrepid spirit which could sustain so many torments with such resolution.
MAURA was accordingly sent for, and promised a handsome rew [...]rd, with the life of her husband, if she could prevail upon him to sacrifice to the idols. This was a severe attack upon the principles of Maura: weak by nature, wavering in her faith, tempted by a bribe, and impelled by an unbounded affection for her husband, she undertook the impious task.
BEING conducted to him, she assailed his constancy with all the persuasive language of real affection. When the gag was taken out of his mouth, in order to give him an opportunity of replying, instead of consenting to his wife's intreaties, as they expected, he greatly blamed her mistaken love, and declared his resolution of dying for the faith. The consequence of which was, that Maura repea [...]ed her importunities, till the martyr, her husband, reproached her so strongly with her weakness, that she returned to his way of thinking, and resolved to imitate his courage and fidelity, and either to accompany, or follow him to glory. Timothy advised her to repair her fault by declaring that resolution [Page 54] to the [...], by whose order she had [...] shameful and sinful commission. Maura made some [...], at the first, to comply with his advic [...], to un [...]take this dangerous and arduous ta [...]. However, being further s [...]rengthened by his exhortations, and the grace of God, she went to Arrianus, and told him, that she was united to her husband in opinion as well as love, and was ready to suffer any thing to atone for her late crime, in wishing to make him an apostate.
THE governor, after trying in vain to alter her resolution, ordered her to be tortured, which was executed with great severity. After this Timothy and Maura were crucified near each other, A. D. 304, both receiving the crown of martyrdom with the greatest intrepidity.
SABINUS, bishop of Assisium, refusing to sacrifice to Jupiter, and pushing the idol from him, had his hands cut off by the order of the governor of Tuscany. After patiently suffering this barbarity, he was committed to prison, where he remained a considerable time without any assistance or relief but what he received from a christian widow, whose blind grandson had been by him restored to sight.
THE governor, who was himself afflicted with sore eyes, on hearing this intelligence, revolved its singularity in his mind, and began to consider the behaviour of the christians, and the tenets of christianity, in a more candid light than he had hitherto done. Sending for Sabinus, he informed him that he n [...] entertained very different sentiments to what he had hitherto done, both with respect to him and his faith; then throwing himself at the feet of Sabinus, he intreated him to afford assistance both to his inward and outward ailments, and to undertake the cure of his soul and body.
THE fervency with which he spoke convinced Sabinus of his sincerity. Having received proper instructions concerning the principles of christianity, he was baptized, and the disorder in his eyes soon disappeared.
THE conversion of the governor was followed by that of his whole family, and some of his friends.
THE tyrant Maximian being informed of th [...]s [...] circumstances, immediately sent one of his principal officers, named Lucius, to Assisium, who accor [...]ing to his instructions, ordered the governor and all his family to be beheaded.
SOON after their execution, Sabinus himself was scourged to death, in the month of December, A. D. 304.
MARCELLUS and Experantius, two ecclesiastics, who officiated under Sabinus, were scourged in a most dreadful manner, but remaining constant in their faith, their flesh was torn with hooks till they expired.
TIRED with the farce of state, and public business, the emperors Dioclesian and Maximian resigned the imperial diadem, and were succeeded by Constantius and Galerius; the former, a prince of the most mild and humane disposition, and the latter, equally remarkable for his cruelty and tyranny.
THESE divided the empire into two equal governments; Galerius ruling in the east, and Constantius in the west; and the people in the two governments felt the effects of the different dispositions of the two emperors; for those in the west were governed in the mildest manner, but such as resided in the east felt all the miseries of oppression.
WITH respect to the christians, to whom Galerius bore a most prejudiced and implacable hatred, we are informed, that "he not only condemned them to tortures, but to be bu [...]nt in slow fires, after this horrible manner: they were first chained to a post, then a gentle fire put to the soles of their feet, which contracted the c [...]llus till it fell off from the bone [...] then flambeaux just extinguished were put to all parts of their bodies, so that they might be torture [...] all over; and care was taken to keep them alive, by throwing of cold water in their faces, and giving them some thereof to wash their mouths, l [...]st their throats should be dried up with thirst, and cl [...]k them. Thus their miseries were lengthened out whole days, till, at last, their skins being consumed, and they just ready to expire, were thrown into a great fire, and had their bodies burnt to as [...]es; after [Page]
[...] CH [...]ISTIANS alive and cutting out their Tongues [...] during the 10 •• [...] ▪
[...] Torture [...].
[Page 55] which they were ground to powder, and thrown into some river."
AMONG the many martyred by the order of Galerius, we shall enumerate the most eminent.
AMPHIANUS was a gentleman of eminence in Lucia, and a scholar to Eusebius; pressing through the crowd while the proclamation for sacrificing to idols was read, he caught the governor Urbianus by the hand, and severely reproved him for his impiety.
THE governor being highly incensed at this freedom, ordered him to be put to the torture, and then thrown into the sea, in the waves of which he expired.
AEDESIUS, brother to the above martyr, was, for nearly the same offence, much about the same time, martyred in a similar manner at Alexandria.
JULITTA, a Lyconian of royal descent, but more celebrated for her virtues than noble blood, was a christian lady of great humility.
WHEN the edict for sacrificing to idols was published at Iconium, she withdrew from that city to avoid the bigoted rage of Domitian the governor, taking with her only her young son, Cyricus, and two women servants. She was, however, seized at Tarsus, and being carried before Alexander, the governor, she freely acknowledged that she was a christian.
FOR this confession her son was taken from her, and she was put to the rack, and tortured with great severity; but she bore all her sufferings with a true christian fortitude.
YOUNG Cyricus cried bitterly to get at his mother; when the governor observing the beauty, and being melted at the tears of the child, took him upon his knee, and endeavoured to pacify him. Nothing, however, could quiet Cyricus, he still called upon the name of his mother, and at length, in imitation of her words, lisped out, "I am a christian." This innocent exp [...]ession converted the governor's compassion into rage; he lost the man in the bigot, a [...]d throwing the child furiously against the pavement, dashed out its brains.
THE mother, who from the rack beheld the whole transaction, thanked the Almighty that her child was gone before her; and she should be without any anxiety concerning his future welfare, and certain that now no advantage could be taken of his tender years, to pervert his principles, and defraud him of his salvation.
TO complete the execution, Julitta had boiling pitch poured on her feet, her sides torn with hooks, and received the conclusion of her martyrdom, by being beheaded, April 16, A. D. 305.
PANTALEON, a native of Nicomedia, was taught most branches of human learning by his father, who was a pagan, and the precepts of the gospel by his mother, who was a christian.
APPLYING to the study of medicine, he became eminent in the knowledge of physic, and in process of time was appointed physician to the emperor Galerius.
HIS name in Greek signifies humane, and the appellation well-suited his nature, for he was one of the most benevolent men living. He assisted the poor, to the utmost of his fortune; and, by the help of God, his skill in physic was attended with the most astonishing success.
HIS reputation roused the jealousy of the pagan physicians, who accused him to the emperor. Galerius, finding him a christian, which he had not before known, ordered him to be tortured, and then beheaded, which was done July 27, A. D. 305.
HERMOLAUS, a venerable and pious christian, of a great age, and an intimate acquaintance of Pantaleon's, suffered martyrdom for his faith on the same day, and in the same manner as Pantaleon.
JULITTA, of Cappadocia, was a lady of distinguished capacity, great virtue, and uncommon courage: she was martyred on account of a lawsuit, of which Basil, bishop of Ca [...]sarea, gives us the following particulars:
[Page 56] [...] of the [...] in [...], who was [...] posse [...]ed [...] of her [...], and had seized both he [...] [...]. This oppressive usurper had found means to bribe the judges in his favour, and [...] persons to swear, that the land and goods in dispute were his property. Julitta, supported by the justness of her [...]ause, thought t [...]t she had nothing more to do, but to give the magistrates a plain and an ingenuous account of her ti [...]le. When the cause came to be tried, the defendant, instead of supporting his claim, or giving any answer to the plaintiff's plea, urged that the law would not suffer him to engage at that bar, with one of a different religion [...] so that he could not proceed in his defence, unles [...] the lady, who was the plaintiff, renounced christianity.
"THE judge was too well instructed not to second the motion, and gave it as his opinion, that what he insisted upon was according to the laws of the empire. He then ordered an altar to be brought in, and some fire to be put on it, and incense to be prepared, and then told the parties, that if they expected, either of them, [...]o enjoy any benefit of the laws, they must both of them offer incense to the gods.
"THE usurper, who was an heathen, immediately complied; but Julitta made it appear, that her faith was much dearer to her than her goods, or even than life itself. "No, said she, my affection to what is undoubtedly my own, shall never hinder me from sacrificing my all, and even my life, if required, rather than violate my fidelity to my God and Saviour." This declaration greatly incensed the judge, but Julitta went on with the same intrepidity, and thanked God for the assurance she had of an eternal inheritance, while what was her own upon earth was disputed, and unjustly taken from her. The magistrate made several attempts to persuade her to renounce her faith, but was always answered that she was the servant of Christ, and as such she could not listen to his proposals without horror; upon this she was condemned to be burnt: which sentence was executed accordingly, A. D. [...].
EUSTRATIUS, secretary to the governor of Arminia, was thrown into a fiery furnace, for exhorting some christians, who had been apprehended, to pers [...]vere in their faith. Auxeutius and Eugenius, two of Eustratius's adherents, were burnt at Nicopolis; Mardarius, another friend of his, expired u [...]der the hands of his tormentors; and Orestes, a military officer, was, for wearing a gold cross at his breast, broiled to death on a gridiron.
THEODORE, a Syrian by birth, a soldier by profession, and a christian by faith, set fire to the temple of Cybele, in Amasia, through an honest indignation at the idolatrous worship practised therein: for which being apprehended, he was severely scourged, and then burnt, February 18, A. D, 306.
DOROTHY a christian of Cappadocia, was, by the governor's order, placed under the care of two women, who had become apostates to the faith, with a view that she might be induced to follow their example.
HER discourses, however, had such an effect upon the two apostates, that they became re [...]converted, and were put to death for not succeeding. Soon after which Dorothy herself was tortured, and then beheaded.
PANCRATIUS, or Pancrass, was a native of Phrygia, but being made a christian and brought to Rome, by his uncle, he there suffered martyrdom, being beheaded soon after the decease of his uncle, who died a natural death.
BASILIDES, Nabor, Nazarius, and Cyrinus, four worthy christian officers at Rome, were thrown into prison for their faith, and being comdemned, were scourged with rods of wire, and then beheaded.
NICANDER and Marcian, two Roman military officers, being christians, were apprehended on account of their faith. As they were both me [...] of great abilities in their profession, the utmost endeavours were made to induce them to renounce christianity; but these endeavours being found ineffectual, they were orde [...]ed to be beheaded.
[Page 57]CROWDS of people attended the execution, among whom were the wives of the two sufferers. The consort of Nicander was a christian, and encouraged her husband to meet his fate with fortitude; but the wife of Marcian being a pagan, intreated her husband to save himself, for the sake of her and her child. Marcian reproved her for her idolatry and folly, but embraced her and the infant before the stroke was given. Nicander likewise took leave of his wife in the most affectionate manner, and then both, with great willingness, received the crown of martyrdom.
IN the kingdom of Naples, several martyrdoms took place: in particular, Januarius, bishop of Beneventum; Sosius, deacon of Misene; Proculus, another deacon; Eytyches and Acutius, two laymen; Festus, a deacon; and Desiderius, a reader, were all, on account of being christians, condemned, by the governor of Campania, to be devoured by wild beasts. The savage animals, however, not touching them, they were ordered to be beheaded, which sentence was put into execution immediately.
MARCELLUS, a centurian, of the Trajan legion, was posted at Tangier, and being a ch [...]istian suffered martyrdom, of which we have the following account:
"IT happened, that while he was there, the emperor's birth-day was kept with great solemnity, and the sacrifices to the pagan idols ma [...]e a considerable part of that solemnity. All t [...]e subjects of the empire were expected on that occasion, to conform to the blind religion of their prince; but Marcellus, who had been well instructed in the duties of his profession, expressed his detestation of those profane practices, by throwing away his belt, the badge of his military character, at the head of his company, declaring aloud, that he was a soldier of Christ, the eternal king. He then quitted his arms, and added, that from that moment he ceased to serve the emperor; and that he thus expressed his contempt of the gods of the empire, which were no better than deaf and dumb idols. "If (continued he) their emperial majesties impose the obligation of sacrificing to the [...] and their gods, as a necessary condition of their se [...]ice, I here throw up my commission, and quit the army."
HIS behaviour and speeches occasioned an order for his being beheaded, on a double score, viz. desertion from the army, and impiety against the gods of the empire. He heard the sentence with intrepidity, and received the crown of martyrdom with pleasure.
CASSIAN, secretary to the court which tried Marcellus, expressing his disapprobation of such severe proceedings, was ordered into custody; when avowing himself a christian, he met with the same fate, and suffered martyrdom in a similar manner.
QUIRINUS, bishop of Siscia, being carried before Matenius, the governor, was ordered to sacrifice to the pagan deities, agreeable to the edicts of various Roman emperors. To which he replied, "The emperors insist upon our sacrificing to their deities, against the express prohibition of God; to deities which we can by no means own, because they are, in reallity, nothing: whereas the power that that I serve is every where, above all things, supports, governs, and disposes of all things, as he pleases; for he is the sovereign master, and sole author of the universe." For this speech he was ordered to be severely beaten.
WHILE he was under the hand of the executioner, the governor was urgent with with him to sacrifice, and offered to make him a priest of Jupiter. To which Quirinus replied, That he was already engaged in the priestly office, while he thus offered a sacrifice to the true God. "I (says he) scarce feel my torments, and am ready to suffer still greater, that my example may shew those whom God has committed to my care, the way to the glory we wish for."
THE governor perceiving his constancy, sent him to goal, and ordered him to be heavily ironed; flattering himself, that the hardships of a goal, and the weight of his chains, might overcome his resolutions.
BEING deceived in his expectations, he was sent to Amantius, the principal governor of Permonia, [Page 58] now Hungary, who loaded him with chains, and carried him through the principal towns of the Danube exposing him to ridicule wherever he went.
ARRIVING at length at Sabaria, and finding that Quirinus would not renounce his faith, he ordered him to be cast into a river, with a stone fastened to his neck.
THIS sentence being put into execution, Quirinus floated about for some time, and exhorted the people in the most pious terms, concluding his admonitions with this prayer:
"IT is no new thing, O all-powerful Jesus, for thee to stop the course of rivers, or to cause a man to walk upon the water, as thou didst thy servant Peter: the people have already seen the proof of thy power in me; grant me now to lay down my life for thy sake, O my God."
ON pronouncing the last words, he immediately sunk and died, June 4, A. D. 308; and his body was afterwards taken up, and buried by some pious christians.
FIVE Egyptian Christians, who were upon a visit to their afflicted brethren in Caesaria, were apprehended and carried before Firmilian, the governor of Palestine, who on questioning them concerning whence they came, and what they were? was answered by one, in the name of the rest, that they were christians, and belonged to the glorious city of Jerusalem, speaking allegorically of the heavenly Jerusalem. The governor was surprised a [...] the answer, as he knew Vespasian, and his son [...], had destroyed the ancient Jerusalem; and that the inconsiderable town erected by Adrian upon the [...], was called Elia Capitolina: he therefore [...] more particularly concerning it. The christian, who had spoken before, again replied, and pursuing the allegory, described, with great force [...] imagination, the great beauty, riches, and s [...]ngth of the place. Firmilian still mistaking the christian's meaning, by understanding his words in a literal sense, was dreadfully alarmed; for not dreaming that a heavenly city was alluded to, [...]e fancied that the christians were strengthening and fortifying some place, in order to revolt from their [...] to the emperor. Full of this mist [...]ke, and enraged at the supposed disloyalty, he condemned the five prisoners to be cruelly tormented, and then beheaded; which sentence was executed Feb. 16, A. D. 309.
PAM [...]ILUS, a native of Phoenicia, of a considerable family, was a man of such extensive learning that he was called a second Origen. He was received into the body of the clergy at Caesarea, where he established a public library, and spent his time in the practice of every christian virtue. He copied the greatest part of the works of Origen, with his own hand, and, assisted by Eusebius, gave a correct copy of the Old Testament, which had suffered greatly by the ignorance or negligence of former transcribers. He likewise gave public lectures on religious and literary subjects, in an academy which he had erected for that purpose, till the year 307, when he was apprehended, and carried before Urban, the governor of Pelestine.
URBAN, thinking that a man of his abilities must be of great importance to any party, did all he could to induce him to embrace paganism. Finding his endeavours vain, he changed persuasions into menaces, and from intreating began to threaten.
PAMPHILUS maintaining his resolution, was ordered to be tortured severely, and then sent to prison, which was immediately put into execution.
[...] after, Urban, having displeased [...]e emperor, was displaced and beheaded: but another was appointed in his room, who was equally prejudiced against the christians.
UNDER the new governor, Pamphilus suffered martyrdom by being beheaded; together with Velens, a deacon of the church of Jerusalem; and Paul, a layman of Jamnia, in Palestine.
PORPHYRIUS, the servant of Pamphilus, was martyred by means of a straw fire, fo [...] only reque [...] ing leave to bury the body of his master and the other martyrs.
THE [...]ULUS, a venerable and faithful servant to Firmilian, the governor, being accused as a professor of the chistian faith, confessed the charge, [...] [Page 59] was, by order of his cruel master, crucified, on February 17, A. D. 309; and Julian, a Cappadocian, was burnt on the same day.
MARCELLU [...], bishop of Rome, being banished on account of his faith, fell a martyr to the miseries he suffered in exile, on the 16th of January, A. D. 310.
PETER, the 16th bishop of Alexandria, was martyred November 25, A. D. 311, by order of Maximus Caesar, who reigned in the east.
LUCIAN, a learned and eloquent Syrian, was a man of so benevolent a temper, that he disposed of the greatest part of his fortune in charitable actions. Being advanced to the clerical character in Antioch, he became a true servant of Christ, and a zealous pastor of the church. At length he was apprehended as a christian, imprisoned for the space of nine years, put to the rack, rolled upon sharp flints, nails, &c. and then being tortured to death, his body was thrown into the sea; but it was afterwards cast on shore, and received christian burial.
AGNES, a virgin of only thirteen years of age, was beheaded for being a christian; Valentine, a priest, suffered the same fate at Rome; and Erasmus, a bishop, was martyred in Campania.
COSMUS and Damian, Arabians, and brothers, were martyred in Cilicia; Adrian, an imperial officer, was beheaded for being a christian; Barbara, a young lady, was martyred at Nicomedi [...]; Lucy, a christian virgin, was put to death at Syracuse; and even Serena, the empress of Dioclesian, was beheaded for being a christian.
GORDIUS, a native of Sa [...]sarea, and a centurian in the Roman army, was first tormented and then burnt; Menas, an Egyptian soldier, was beheaded▪ and Barlaam, a noble martyr, as we are informed by Basillius, having endured the torments of the executioners, even to the very point of [...]; the tormentors at last brought him, and laid him upon the altar, where they used to offer sacrifices to their idols, and put frankincense into his hand, which they lighted, imagining that the heat and force of the fire would oblige him to scatter the burning incense on the altar, that they might thereby say that he had sacrificed. But in this they were disappointed, for the flame went round his hand, which appeared as if it had been covered with red hot embers, while he uttered this exclamation of the psalmist: "Blessed is the Lord my God, who teacheth my hands to war, and my fingers to fight." After which he surrendered his soul into the hands of Christ his Saviour.
POWER being given to the pagans to use the christians as bad as they thought proper, the doors of a church, in which a christian congregation were shut up, and the building being set on fire, every person perished in the flames. Many were severely beaten with sticks, cords, rods, whips, scourges, &c.
AT length, Constantine the Great determined to redress the grievances of the christians, for which purpose he raised an army of 30,000 foot, and 8000 horse, with which he marched towards Rome, against Maxentius, the emperor. But previous to his entering upon this expedition, we are informed, "That he considered that it was necessary to have some superior Being to confide in, besides his own strength; and as at that time there were many deities in the world, he was studious to learn which was the most worthy for him to fix upon as his protector, and tutelar guardian. He reflected on the fatal miscarriages of his predecessors, who had so violently maintained a multiplicity of gods, and reposed an entire confidence in their assistance. On the other hand he considered that while his own father adored only one God, he continually prospered, and had peace of mind. Hence he rejected the adoration of idols, and implored the assistance of the only true God; who heard his prayers, and answered them in a manner so suprising and miraculous, Eusebius, who relates this history, acknowledges that it would not have been credible, had he not received it from the emperor's own mouth, who publicly and solemnly ratified the truth upon his oath.
THE circumstances thus asserted are these:
"THE army being advanced near Rome, and the emperor employed in his devout ejaculations [Page 60] on the 27th day of October, about three o'clock in the afternoon, when the sun was declining, there suddenly appeared to him a pillar of light in the heavens, in the form of a cros with this plain inscription on or about it, ΤΟΥΤΩ ΝΙΚΑ, In this overcome. Constantine was greatly surprised at this strange sight, which was visible to the whole army, who equally wondered at it with himself. The officers and commanders, prompted by the augurs and aruspices, or soothsayers, looked upon it as an inauspicious omen, portending an unfortunate expedition; the emperor himself did not understand it, till at length our blessed Saviour appeared to him in a vision, with the cross in his hand, which he had shewed him in the day before, commanding him to make a royal standard, like that he had seen in the heavens, and cause it to be continually carried before his army, as an ensign both of victory and safety. Early the next morning, Constantine informed his friends and officers of what he had seen in the night, and sending for proper workmen, sat down by them, and described to them the form of the standard, which he then ordered them to make with the greatest art and magnificence; and accordingly they made it after this manner: a long spear, plated over with gold, with a traverse piece at the top, in the form of a cross, to which was fastened a four square purple banner, embroidered with gold, and beset with precious stones, which reflected an amazing lustre; towards the top was depicted the emperor between his two sons: on the top of the shaft, above the cross stood a crown, overlaid with gold and jewels, within which was placed the sacred symbol, namely, the two first letters of Christ in Greek, X. and P. struck one through the other: this device he afterwards bore not only upon his shields, but also upon his coins, many of which are still extant."
THEN engaging Maxentius, he defeated him, and entered the city of Rome in triumph. A law was now published in favour of the christians, in w [...]ich Licinius joined with Constantine, and a copy of it was sent to Maximu [...] in the east. Maximus, who was a bigotted pagan, greatly disliked the edict, but being afraid of Constantine, did not openly avow his disapprobation.
M [...]XIMUS at length invaded the territories of Licinius, but being defeated, he was so mortified, that he put an end to his life by poison.
LICINUL, however, was not a real christian in his heart, but rather affected to appear as such, through the dread of Constantine's power; for even after publishing several edicts in favour of the christians, he took occasion to put to death Blase, bishop of Sebaste, several bishops and priests of Egypt and Lybia, who were cut to pieces, and thrown into the sea; and forty soldiers of the garrison of Sebaste, who suffered martyrdom by fire, and sealed their faith in the fl [...]mes. These thing; offending Constantine the Great, he marched against Licinius, who was defeated by him, and afterwards slain by his own soldiers.
WE shall conclude our account of the tenth and last general persecution with the death of
ST. George, the titular saint and patron of England. St. George was born in Cappadocia, of christian parents, who brought him up according to the tenets of the gospel. His father dying when he was young, he travelled with his mother into Palestine, which was her native country. Here she claimed a patrimonial estate, which afterwards descended to her son. St. George being strong, active, and of a great spirit, took up the profession of a soldier, and was made a tribune or colonel. In this [...]ost he exhibited great proofs of his courage, and was accordingly promoted in the army of the emperor Dioclesian. During the persecution, St. George threw up his command, went boldly to the senate house, and avowed his being a christian, taking occasion at the same time to remonstrate against paganism, and p [...]int [...]u [...] the absurdity of worshipping idol [...]. This freedom so greatly provoked the senate, that St. George was ordered to be tortured, which he underwent with great constancy, and without any change in his religious principles. Exasperated at his fortitude and resolution, he was by the emperor's orders dragged through the streets, and beheaded the next day. The calendar commemorates him on the [...]d of April; many churches have been dedicated to him, and he is considered as the titular sain [...] and patron of England. The order of the Gart [...]r, instituted by Edward the [Page 61] Third, is dedicated to the Holy Trinity, the Blessed Virgin, St. George, and St. Edward the Confessor. This saint is represented on horseback, tilting at a dragon, which is only allegorical, and implies that he had, by his christian fortitude and faith, conquered the devil, or the dragon.
CHAP. III. Containing the PERSECUTIONS of the CHRISTIANS in Persia, under SAPORES; the PERSECUTIONS under the ARIAN Heretics; those under JULIAN the Apostate, the GOTHS, VANDALS, &c. and in various other parts of the WORLD.
An Account of the Persecutions of the Christians in Persia.
THE gospel having spread itself into Persia, the pagan priests were greatly alarmed, and dreaded the loss of that influence they had hitherto maintained over the people's minds and properties. Hence they thought it expedient to [...]omplain to the emperor, that the christians were enemies to the state, and held a treasonable correspondence with the Romans, the great enemies of Persia.
THE emperor, being naturally averse to christianity, easily believed what was said against the christians, and gave orders to persecute them in all parts of his empire. On account of this mandate ma [...]y fell martyrs to the ignorance and ferosity of the Pagans, the sufferings of the most eminent of whom we shall enumerate.
SIMEON, archbishop of Seleucia, with many other ecclesiasties, to the number of an hundred and twenty-eight, were apprehended and accused of having betrayed the affairs of Persia to the Romans.
THE emperor being greatly exasperated against them, order [...]d Simeon to be brought before him. Th [...] worthy archbishop coming into his presence, boldly acknowledged his faith, and nobly defended the cause of christianity. The emperor, being offended at his freedom, not only reproved him for it, but ordered him to kneel before him, as he had always done heretofore.
SIMEON answered, "That before, having the free admittance to his presence, he did not scruple to conform to the customary salutation of the country; but being now brought before him a prisoner, for the truth of his religion, and the sake of his God, it was not lawful for him to kneel, lest he should be thought to worship and to betray his faith, which he was fully resolved to defend with his last breath."
THE emperor then told him, that if he did not kneel, he, and all the christians in his dominions, should be put to death; but Simeon rejected with disdain the proposal to kneel, and told him he would abide the consequences. On this reply the emperor ordered him to be sent to prison till he had con [...]sidered in what manner to punish him.
A short time after Simeon, with his fellow-prisoners, was again examined, and commanded to worship the sun, agreeable to the Persian custom; but this they all unanimously refused. The emperor then sentenced them be beheaded, and they were executed accordingly.
U [...]HAZARES, an aged eunuch, who had been tutor to the emperor, and was in great estimation at [...], on observing Simeon, the fore [...]mentioned martyr, leading to prison, saluted him. Simeon, [Page 62] however, (as Usthazares had formerly been christian, and turned apostate from the faith to oblige the emperor) would not return his salute, but sharply reproved him for his apostacy. This so affected the eunuch, that he burst into tears, and exclaimed, "Ah! woe is me! How shall I hereafter look upon my God, whom I have denied, when Simeon, my old companion and familiar acquaintance, disdains to give me a gentle word, or to return my salute!"
THE emperor being told that his ancient tutor was greatly afflicted, sent for him, and asked him whether he desired or wanted any thing which could be corferred upon, or procured for him. To which the eunuch replied, That there was nothing that he wanted, which this earth could afford; but that his grief was of another kind, and for which he justly mourned, namely, that to oblige him he had denied his God, and had dissemblingly worshipped the sun, against his own conscience! for which, continued he, I am deserving of a double death, first, for denying of Christ, and secondly, for dissembling with my king; at the same time solemnly protesting, that he would nevermore forsake the Creator of the world, to worship the creatures which he had made.
THE emperor, being greatly offended at the explanation of the cause of his grief, ordered Usthazares to be beheaded. While he was going to the place of execution, he desired that a messenger might be sent to the emperor, to request the favour that it mi [...] be proclaimed, "That Usthazares did not die a traitor for any crime against the king or the sta [...]; but on that being a christian, he would not deny his God." This petition, we are informed, was granted, and accordingly performed; which was a great satisfaction to Usthazares, whose chief re [...]on for desiring it was, because his falling off from Christ, had caused [...] others to follow his example, w [...]o now [...] that he died for no crime but his r [...]gion, they might learn, like him, to return [...] Christ, and become fervent and constant in the faith. Usth [...]ares, being thus satisfied, cheerfully yielded [...] neck to the stroke of the executioner, and joyful [...] [...]ceived his crown of martyrdom.
ON the Good Friday, after the above execution, an edict was published, to put to death all who confessed themselves christians, on which occasion great multitudes suffered. About this time the empress of Persia falling sick, the sisters of Simeon, the archbishop, were accused by some of the magi, of being the occasion. This absurdity being believed, they were, by the emperor's order, sawed in quarters, and their quarters fixed upon poles, between which the empress passed as a charm to recover her.
ACEPSIMUS, and many other clergymen were seized upon, and ordered to adore the sun; which refusing, they were scourged, and then tormented to death, or suffered to remain in prison till they perished.
ATHALAS, a priest, though not put to death, was so miserably racked, that his arms were rendered useless; and he was ever after obliged to be fed like a child. In fine, by this edict, above 16,000 either suffered miserably by the torture, or were put to death.
CONSTANTINE the Great being informed of the persecutions in Persia, was exceedingly concerned, and began to ruminate in what manner he should redress their grievances, when an ambasio [...] arrived from the Persian emperor upon some political concerns.
CONSTANTINE re [...]eived the ambassador civilly, granted his demands, and wrote a letter to the Persian monarch in favour of the christians, in which he recounts the vengeance that had fallen on persecutors, and [...]he great success that had attended those who had refrained from persecuting the christians; and then referring to the tyra [...]s [...]d persecti [...] emperor of his own time, [...] [...]aid, " [...] s [...]bdued those solely by faith in Christ; for which God was my helper, who gave me victory in battle, and made me triumph over my enemies; and hath enlarged to me the bounds of the Romish [...]mpi [...] that it extends from the Western o [...]an, to almo [...] the uttermost parts of the [...]ast: for which purpo [...] I neither offered sacrifices to the ancient deitie [...], no [...] made use of charm or divination, but only praye [...] [Page 63] to Almighty God, and followed the cross of Christ: and how glad should I be to hear that the throne of Persia flourished, by embracing the christians! that so you with me, and they with you may enjoy all the felicity your souls could desire, as no doubt but you would, as God, the Almighty Creator of all things, would become your protector and defender.
"THESE men I commend to your kingly honor; I commit them unto you, desiring you to embrace them according to your humanity; for in so doing, you shall procure to yourself grace through faith, and shall bestow on me a benefit worthy of my thanks."
THE persecution by this means ended during the life of Sapores; but it was again renewed under the lives of his successors; the following being the principal sufferers.
HORMISDAS, a Persian nobleman, on being convicted of professing christianity, was ordered to attend the emperor's elephants naked. This ignominious task he performed for some time, when the emperor one day, looking out of a window which commanded the yard where the elephants were kept, saw Hormisdas, and perceived that he was prodigiously tamed. Determining to try him once more, he gave orders that a shirt should be put on him, and that he should be brought before him.
WH [...]N he came to the imperial throne, the emper [...]r asked him if he would now deny Christ. On this question being put, Hormisdas tore off his shirt, and [...]id, "If you think I will deny my faith for the sake of a shirt, take your gift again.' The emperor, on hearing this expression, banished him from Persia; and he died an exile.
SCENE [...], a christian nobleman, refusing to deny Christ, had his wife taken from him, and given to one of the meanest of the emperor's slaves; and what added to his mortification was, that he was ordered to wait upon his wife and the slave, which at l [...]ngth broke his heart.
THEODORET, a d [...]con, was [...]mprisoned for the space of two ye [...]r [...], and being r [...]leas [...]d, w [...]s ordered not to pr [...]ach the doctrine of christ. [...], however, the order, he did his utmost to propagate the gospel of Christ; for which being seized upon, he was miserably tormented, by having sharp reeds thrust under his nails; and then a knotty branch of a tree was forced up his body, and he expired in the greatest agonies.
BADEMUS, a christian of Mesopotamia, gave away his fortune to the poor, and determined to devote his life to religious retirement.
THIS inoffensive christian, together with seven others, were seized upon and cruelly tortured for being christians. The seven christians, who were apprehended with Bademus, received the crown of martyrdom, though the particular manner is not recorded, and Bademus himself, after having been four months in prison, was brought to the place of execution, and beheaded by Narses, an apostate christian, who was ordered to act as the executioner of this worthy man, in order to convince the emperor that he was sincere in the renunciation of his faith.
An Account of the Persecutions under the Arian Heretics.
THE author of the Arian heresy was Arius, a native of Lybia, and a priest of Alexandria, who, in A. D. 318, began to publish his errors. He was condemned by a council of the Lybian and Egyptian bishops, and that sentence was confirmed by the council of Nice, A. D. 325. After the death of Constantine the Great, the Arians found means to ingratiate themselves into the favor of Constantius, his son and successor in the ea [...]t; and hence a persecution was raised against the orthodox bishop and clergy. The celebrated Anthanasius, and other bishops, were banished, and their sees filled with Arians.
IN Egypt and Lybia thir [...]y bishops were [...], and many other [...] and, A. D. 330, [...] Alex [...]dria, under the [...] [Page 64] was assi [...]ed in [...]is diabolical malice by Catophonius, governor of Egypt; Sebastian, general of the Egyptian forces; Faustinus, the treasurer; and Herac [...]ius, a Roman officer.
THE persecution now raged in such a manner, that the clergy were driven from Alexandria, their churches were shut, and the severities practised by the Arian heretics, were as great as those that had been practised by the Pagan idolaters. If a man accused of being a christian, made his escape, then his whole family were massacred, and his effects confiscated.
THE orthodox christians, being now deprived of all places of public worship in the city of Alexandria, used to perform their devotions in a desert place at some distance from it. Assembling for this purpose on a Trinity Sunday, George, the Arian bishop, engaged Sebastian, the general, to fall upon them with his soldiers, while they were at prayers. On this occasion several fell a sacrifice to the popular fury of the troops, and received the crown of martyrdom for no other offence than performing necessary acts of piety. The modes of cruelty were various, and the degrees different; for they were beaten over their faces till all their features were disfigured; then they were lashed with twigs or palm trees newly cut, with such violence, that they expired unde [...] the blows, or by the mortification of the wou [...]s.
MANY, whose live [...] had been spared, were, however, banished to the desarts of Oasis, where they suffered unspeakable hardships; but their exile admitted of their indulgence of the most pious thoughts, and their sorrows were of a saluta [...]y nature.
SECUNDU [...] ▪ an orthodox priest, differing in point of doctrine from a prelate of the same name; the bishop, who [...]d imbibed all the heretical opinions of Arianism [...] determined to put Secundus to death, for rejecting opinions which he had thought proper to embrace. Ta [...]ing one Stephen with him, who was as much an A [...]ian as himself, they sought out Secundus privately, and being enable to make him change his opinion, they fell upon and mur [...]ered him: when the holy marty [...], just befor [...] he expired, called upon Christ to receive his soul, and to forgive his executioners.
NOT content with the cruelties exercised upon the orthodox christians in Alexandria, the principal persecutors applied to the emperor for an order to banish them from Egypt and Lybia, and to put their churches into possession of the Arians.
THEY obtained their request, and an order was sent for that purpose to Sebastian, the commander in chief of the Roman forces in those provinces.
AS soon as the general received the order, he signified the emperor's pleasure, to all the sub-governors and officers, and commanded, that the mandate should be immediately put into execution. Hence a great number of the clergy were seized, and imprisoned for examination; when it appearing that they adopted the opinions of Athanasius, an order was signed for their banishment into the most wild, uncultivated, and desert places. Thus were the orthodox clergy used, and many of the [...]ity were condemned to the mines, or compelled to work in the quarries. Some few indeed escaped to other countries, and several were weak enough to renounce their faith, in order to avoid the severities of the persecution.
PAUL, the bishop of Constantinople, was a Macedo [...]ian by birth, and was designed, from his birth, for a clerical life.
WHEN Alexander the predecessor of Paul was on his death bed, he was consulted by some of the clergy on the choice of a successor: when, we are informed, he told them, "That if they were disposed chuse a person of an examplary life, unexceptionable character, and thoroughly capable of instructing the people. Paul was the man; who, though young, had all the prudence and gravity of more advanced age; but if they had rather have a person of a well-composed appearance, acquainted with worldly affairs, and fit for the conversation of a court, they might then chuse Macedonius, who had all the proper qualifications." Macedonius was a deacon in the church of Constantinople, in which office he had spent many years, and gained g [...]eat experience: and the [...] prelate did both [Page 65] him and Paul justice in their different characters. Nevertheless the Arians, with their accustomed disingenuousness, gave out, that Alexander had bestowed great commendations on Macedonius for sanctity, and had only given Paul the reputation of elo [...]uence, and a capacity for business: it is true, indeed, he was a master in the art of speaking and persuading; but the sequel of his life and sufferings sufficiently evinced the absurdity of their de [...]ming him a man formed for the world. However, after some struggle, the orthodox carried their point, and Paul was consecrated.
MACEDONIUS being greatly offended at this presetence, did his utmost to calumniate the new bishop, and was very severe upon his moral character▪ but not gaining any belief, he dropped the charge, and reconc [...]l [...] himself to Paul. This, however, was not the case with Eusebius of Nicomedia, who resumed the accusations under two heads, viz.
1. THAT he had led a disorderly life before his consecration.
2. THAT he had been placed in the se [...] of Constantinople without the consent of the bishops of Nicomedia and Heraclea, two metropolitans, who ought to have been consulted upon that occasion.
TO support these accusations, Eusebius procured the emperor's authority, by representing, that Paul having been chosen during the absence of Constantius, the imperial dignity had been insulted. This artifice succeeded, and Paul being deposed, Eusebius was placed in his room.
PAUL having thus lost all his authority in the east, retired to the territories of Constans, in the west, where he was well received by the orthodox prelates and clergy. At Rome he visited Athanasius, and assisted at a council held there, by Julius, the bishop of that see. Letters being written by this council to the eastern prelates, Paul returned to Constantinople, but was no [...] restored to his bishopric till the death of Eusebius. The Arians, how ever, constituting Macedonius their bishop, by the title of bishop of Constantinople, a sedition, and a kind of civil war ensued, in which many lost their lives.
THE emperor Constantius, who was then at Antioch, hearing of these matters, laid the whole blame upon Paul, and ordered that he should be driven from Constantinople. Hermogenes, the officer who had received the emperor's order, attempted in vain to put it into execution; for the orthodox christians rising in defence of Paul, Hermogenes was killed in a scuffle that ensued.
THIS transaction greatly exasperated the emperor, who lest Antioch, though in the depth of winter, and immediately returned to Constantinople, with a design to punish the christians severely. But their submission and intreaties softened him, and he contented himself with banishing Paul and suspending Macedonius.
PAUL retired again to the territories of Constans, implored the protection of that emperor, and, by his intercession, was again vested in his see. On this occasion, we are informed, that "his re-establishment did but exasperate his enemies, who were at that time constantly employed, both in secret and open attempts against his life, against which the affections of his people were his only security; and being convinced that the emperor had no other motive for allowing his stay at Constantinople, but the dread of disobliging his brother, Paul could not think himself wholly restored to his bishopric, while things were in this situation; and being very much concerned at what the orthodox bishops suffered from the power and malice of the Arian faction, joined Athanasius, who was then in Italy, in soliciting a general council."
A council was accordingly held at Sardica, in Illyrium, in the year 347, at which were present one hundred bishops of the western, and seventy-three of the eastern empire. But disagreeing in many points, the Arian bishops of the east retired to Philippolis, in Thrace; and forming a meeting there, they termed ir the council of Sardica. From which place they pretended to issue out an excommunication against Julius, bishop of Rome; Paul, bishop o [...] Constantinople; Athanasius, bishop of Alexand [...]; and several other prelates.
IN A. D. [...]50, the emperor Cons [...]ans died, which gave the A [...]ns fresh courage, and they immediately [Page 66] applied to the emperor, Constantius, who being an Arian in his heart, wrote an order to praefect Philip, to remove Paul from the bishoprie of Constantinople, and banish him again, to restore Macedonius.
BEING exiled to Cucucus, he was confined in a small, loathsome, dark dungeon, where he was kept six days without food and then strangled. He met death with fortitude, as he was always perfectly resigned in misfortunes, and convinced of the vanity of this transitory life.
THE Arian party now prevailing, made Gregory of Cappadocia, a very obscure person, bishop of Alexandria, after having deposed Athanasius for his strict adherence to the orthodox faith. In the accomplishment of this affair, they were assisted by Philagerius, the governor of Egypt, who was an apostate, and who suffered them to commit all manner of outrages. Hence arming themselves with swords, clubs, &c. they broke into one of the principal churches of Alexandria, where great numbers of orthodox christians were assembled at their devotions: and falling upon them in a most barbarous manner, without the least respect to sex or age, the principal part of them were murdered.
POTAMO, the venerable bishop of Heraclea, who had formerly lost one of his eyes in Diocleasian's persecution, fell a martyr upon this occasion; being so cruelly scourged and beaten that [...]e expired of his wounds.
THE Arian mob then broke into many places, public and private, under a pretence of searching for Athanasius, and committed innumerable butcheries and barbarities; robbing orphans, plundering the houses of widows, dragging devoted virgins to private places to be the sacrifices of lust; imprisoning the clergy, and burning churches and dwelling houses belonging to orthodox christians, &c. &c.
An Account of the Persecution under JULIAN the Apostate.
JULIAN, commonly called the Apostate, was the son of Julius Constantius, and the nephew of Constantine the Great. He studied the rudiments of grammar under the inspection of Ma [...]donius an eunuch, and an heathen of Constantinople. His father sent him some time after to Nic [...]media, to be instructed in the christian religion, by the bi [...]shop Eusebius, his kinsman; but hi [...] principles were corrupted by the pernicious doctrines of Ecebolius the rhetorician, and Maximus the magician.
CONSTANTIUS dying in the year 361, Julian succeeded him, and had no sooner attained the imperial dignity, than he renounced christianity, and embraced paganism, which had for some years fallen into great disrepute. But he again restored idolatrous worship, by opening the several temples that had been shut up, rebuilding such as were destroyed, and ordering the magistrates and people to follow his example. He, however, made no public edicts against christianity, but tried to do that privately which other emperors had done openly. He recalled all banished pagans, allowed the free exercise of religion to every sect, but deprived all christians of offices at court, in the magistracy, or in the army. He was chaste, temperate, vigilant, laborious, and seemingly pious, so that by his hypocrisy and pretended virtues, he, for a time, did more mischief to christianity, than the most profligate libertine of his predecessors. Thus he attempted to undermine christianity by artifice instead of expelling it by force; and to make his measures the more effectual, he prohibited any christian from keeping a school or p [...]blic seminary of learning, and deprived all the [...] clergy of the privileges granted them by Constantine the Great.
HENCE was this persecution more dangerous than any of the former, as Julian aimed to sap the foundations of christianity, instead of attacking the superstructure, and under the mask of clemency, practised the greatest cruelty in wishing to d [...]lude many thousands of their eternal salvation.
THE christian faith was thus in more danger of being subverted than it ever had been before, by the means of a monarch, at once witty a [...]d wicked, learned and hypocritical; who, at first, made his attempts, not by the means of fire, sword, and poison, but by flattering gifts, and favours; not by using racks and tortures, but by bestowing [Page 67] offices and dignitie [...] ▪ and then, by prohibiting christian schools, [...]e compelled the children of the gospel either to remain illiterate, or become idolators.
OTHER methods taken by Julian were, to order that christians might be treated coldly apon all occ [...]sions, and in all parts of the empire, and to employ several [...] persons to turn them, and their principles, i [...]o ridicule. Many were likewise marty [...]ed in his reign; for though he did not publi [...] persecute them himself, he connived at their bei [...]g murdered by his governors and officers; and t [...]ough he affected never to patronize them for th [...]ir murders, he never offered to punish them for their delinquency. We shall recount the names, s [...]fferings, and martyrdoms of such as have been transmitted to the present times, that their example may inspire fortitude, and their lives give an [...]eful lesson to mankind in general.
BA [...]IL made himself first famous by his opposition to Arianism, which brought upon him the vengeance of the Arian Bishop of Constantinople, who issued out an order to prevent his preaching. He continued, however, to perform his duty at An [...]yra, the capital of Galatia. Enraged at his orthodox and manly proceeding, his enemies accused him of being an incendiary, and a disturber of the public peace; the monarch, however, was too intent on an expedition to Persia, to take notice of the accusation, and their malice at that time was disappointed.
BA [...]IL continued to preach strenuously against the idolatry of paganism on the one hand, and the errors of Arianism on the other: and earnestly exhorted the people to serve Chirst, in the purity of faith, and fervency of truth. By this conduct, both heathens and Arians were exasperated against him, and appeared equally desirous of accomplishing his destruction.
MEETING one day with a number of pagans going in procession to a sacrifice, he boldly expressed his abh [...]rrence of such idolatrous proceedings, and inveighed against such absurd worship, at once in a manly and decent manner. This freedom caused the people to seize him, and carry him before Saturninus, the governor, where they brought three accusations against him, viz. Reviling the gods, abusing the emperor, and disturbing the peace of the city.
ON hearing these accusations, which were equally malicious as groundless, Saturninus desired to know his sentiments from his own mouth; when finding him a strenuous christian, he ordered him first to be put to the rack, and then he committed him to prison.
THE governor wrote an account of his proceedings to the emperor, who was at this time very busy in establishing the worship of Cybele, the fictitious mother of the fabulous deities. Julian, upon receiving the letter, sent Pagosus and Elpidius, two apostates, to Ancyra, the city where Basil was confined, to employ both promises and threats to engage him to renounce his faith, and in case of their failure, to give him up totally to the power of the governor; for it was the policy of Julian to appear all moderation and clemency, and to suffer others, as much as possible, to seem the ostensible persons in acts of cruelty. In this affair, however, a future circumstance made the emperor forego his usual policy, and sacrifice his affected mercy to his resentment.
THE emperor's agents in vain tampered with Basil by means of promises, threats, and racks; he was firm in the faith, and remained in prison to undergo some other sufferings when the emperor came accidentally to Ancyra.
THE people no sooner knew of Julian's approach, than they met him in grand procession, and presented to him their idol, the goddess Hecate. The two agents then gave the emperor an ac [...]count of what Basil had suffered, and how firm he had been. Julian [...] on this, determined to examine Basil himself, when that holy man being brought before him, the emperor did every thing in his power to dissuade him from persevering in the faith. Basil not only continued as firm as ever▪ but, with a prophetic spirit▪ foretold the death of the emperor, and that he should be tormented in the other life
[Page 68]ENRAGED at what he heard, Julian lost his usual affectation of clemency, and told Basil, in great anger, that though he had an inclination to pardon him at first, yet he had now put it out of his power to save his life, by the insolence of his behaviour. He then commanded, that the body of basil should be torn every day in seven different parts, till his skin and flesh were entirely mangled. This inhuman sentence was executed with rigour, and the martyr expired under its severities, on the 28th day of June, A. D. 362.
DONATUS, bishop of Arezzo, and Hilarinus, a hermit, suffered about the same time for the faith; the first being beheaded, and the latter scourged to death.
GORDIAN, a Roman magistrate, having a christian before him for examination, was so charmed with the confession of his faith, that he not only discharged the prisoner, but became himself a christian. This so enraged the Roman praefect, that he ordered him to be scourged and beheaded; which sentence was executed, A. D. 362.
JOHN and Paul, two brothers, of a good family, and in high offices under the emperor, on being accused of professing christianity, were deprived of their posts, and allowed ten days to consider, whether they would renounce their faith and be promoted, or retain their faith and be martyred? Making choice of the latter alternative, they were both beheaded, A. D. 362.
ARTEMIUS, comman [...]er in chief of the Roman forces in Egypt, being a christia [...], had these two charges exhibited against him by the pagans.
1. THAT he had formerly demolished several idols in the reign of Constantine the Great.
2. THAT he had assisted the bishop of Alexandria in plundering the temples.
ON the exhibition of these charges, Julian, who was then at Antioch, ordered the general to repair thither, in order to answer to them. On Artemius's arrival, he owned the charges, and his faith: when he was first deprived of his commission, then of his estate, and [...] of his head.
CASSIAN, a schoolmaster of [...]mol [...], in the p [...]ovince of Romagn, refusing to sacrifice to the idols▪ was hurried before the judge; who being apprized of his profession, and informed that many of the boys had an aversion to him on account of the strictness with which he kept them to their studies, determined that they should have permission to murder their master. He was accordingly delivered, with his hands tied behind him, to the boys, who fell upon him with rods, whips, sticks, and stiles, o [...] the steel pencils which were then used in writing, and murdered him. This singular martyrdom happened on the 13th of August, A. D. 362.
BONOSUS and Maximilian, two officers of the Herculean guards, upon Julian's taking away Constantine the Great's standard of the cross of Christ, threw up their commissions. Being apprehended on account of their faith, they were carried before the governor of the east, who commanded them to sacrifice to the gods, and obey the emperor's orders; but they replied, that as they were no longer his soldiers, but the soldiers of Christ, they would do neither. The governor then had them separately examined, and finding them as inflexible when asunder, as when together, he ordered Bonosus to be beaten with whips that had leaden bullets at the ends of the thongs, and Maximilian to be scourged.
BEING remanded back to p [...]ison, they were allowed nothing but bread and water for subsistence, and the bread was marked with the seal of the em [...]peror, the impression of which was an idol; o [...] which account they refused to eat it. They wer [...] soon afterwards again examined, and then, accord [...]ing to the sentence pronounced upon them, be [...]headed.
BIBIANA was the daughter of Havian and Da [...]frosa, two christians. Flavian, her father, held a considerable post under the government, but being banished for his faith, died in exile. Dafrosa, her mother, was, for the same reason, ordered to be starved; but Apronianus, governor of Rome▪ thinking her two long in dying, had her beheaded.
BIBIANA, and her sister Demetri [...], [...]ter the [...] of their parents, were str [...]pped of all their [...], [Page]
[Page 69] and being brought before the governor, were ordered to renounce their religion. Demetria suddenly dropped down dead in the governor's presence, and Bibiana resolutely refused to renounce her faith, on which account she was scourged to death, December 2, A. D. 362.
THE persecution raged dreadfully about the latter end of the year 363; but as many of the particulars have not been handed down to us, it is necessary to remark in general, that in Palestine many were burnt alive, others were dragged by their feet through the streets naked till they expired; some were scalded to death, many stoned, and great numbers had their brains beaten out with clubs. In Alexandria innumerable were the martyrs who suffered by the sword, burning, crucifixion, and being stoned. In Arethusa, several were ripped open, and corn being put in their bellies, swine were brought to feed therein, who, in devouring the grain, likewise devoured the entrails of the martyrs; and, in Thrace, Emilianus was burnt at a stake; and Domitius murdered in a cave, whither he had fled for refuge.
THEODORUS, for his faith, and singing the praises of God, was apprehended and put to the tortures of a martyr, though not to death. After being taken from the rack, he was asked how he could so patiently endure such exquisite tortures? To which he returned this remarkable r [...]ply: "At the first I felt some pain, but afterwards there appeared to stand by me a young man, who wiped the sweat from my face, and frequently refreshed me with cold water, which so delighted me, that I regretted being let down from the rack."
MARCUS, bishop of Arethusa, having destroyed a pagan temple in that city, erected a christian church in its room, on which account he was accused to Julian, the emperor, as a christian. Being apprehended, his persecutors had no respect to his venerable person, but stripping him naked, most cruelly beat him. He was then thrust into a filthy jake, or sink, till he was almost suffocated; afterwards he was goaded with sharp pointed sticks; and lastly, he was hung up in a basket in the heat of the sun, after having been smeared all over with honey, in order to be tormented to death by wasps. As soon [...] he was hung up, they asked him if he would reb [...]ild their temple? To which he answered, that [...] would neither rebuild it nor advance a single doit towards its being rebuilt; upon which they left him, and he fell a martyr to the dreadful stings of those troublesome insects.
MAXENTIUS and Juventius, two christian officers, were put to death for reproving the emperor, on account of his idolatries; but the manner [...]f their deaths is not known.
WE shall now enter upon some detached particulars necessary to be preserved, and finish this account with the conclusion of the persecutions under Julian the apostate.
JULIAN intending an expedition against the Persians, set a large fine upon every one who refused to sacrifice to the idols, and by that means got a great sum towards defraying his expences from the christians.
IN collecting these fines, many of the officers exacted more than their due, and some of them tortured the christians to make them pay what they demanded, at the same time telling them in de [...]ision, "that wh [...] they were injured, they ought to take it patiently, for so their God had commanded them."
THE inhabitants of Caesarea were fined three hundred weight of gold, and several of the clergy obliged to serve in the wars, as a punishment for having overthrown the temples of Jupiter, Apollo, and Fortune.
AT Meris, in Phrygia, the governor having cleansed and opened a pagan temple, the christians in the night broke in, and demolished the idols. Next day the governor ordered all christians that accidentally came in the way to be seized, that he might make examples of them, and by this means was going to execute several innocent persons, But those who really perpetrated the fact, being too noble and just in their sentiments to suffer such an injustice, voluntarily delivered themselves [...]; when they were first of all scourged severely, [...] then broiled to death upon gridirons.
[Page 70]THE emperor, Julian the apostate, died of a wound which he received in his Persian expedition, A. D. 363, and even while expiring, uttered the most horrid blasphemies. He was succeeded by Jovian, who restored peace to the church.
AFTER the decease of Jovian, Valentinian succeeded to the empire, and associated to himself Valens, who had the command in the east.
VALENS was a great favourer of Arianism, and so incensed against the christians, that he ordered, on a certain day, all of them in Edessa to be slain, while they were at their devotions in their churches. The officers, however, being more compassionate than the emperor, privately gave notice to the christians not to assemble on the day appointed, so that they might escape death, and themselves be excused for non-performance of duty.
THE christians thanked the officers for their advice, but disregarded both that, and the emperor's menaces, sooner than they would neglect their duty. They accordingly repaired to church, and the troops being compelled, by the positiveness of the command, were put in motion to destroy them. As they marched along, a woman, with a child in her arms, broke through the ranks, when the officer ordered her to be brought before him, and asked her whither she was going? She replied, to church, wh [...]ther others were making all the haste they could. "Have you not heard (says the officer) of the emperor's order, to put to death all who are found there?" I have, said she, and for that cause I make the more haste. And whither, said the officer, do you lead that child? I take him, replied she, with me, that he also may be reckoned in the number of the martyrs." Upon this the humane officer returned to the emperor, and told him, that all the christians were prepared to die in defence of their faith, and represented to him how rash it would be to murder so great a multitude, and intreated the emperor to drop the design, at least for the present, which he at length [...]omplied with.
M [...]NEDEMUS, Urbanus, and Theodorus, with several other orthodox clergymen, to the number [...] fourscor [...], at Constantinople, petitioned the emperor, in a most humble manner, to relieve them from the oppressions, persecutions, and cruelties of the Arians. But the tyrant, instead of redressing their grievances, ordered them all to be [...] barked in a ship, and the ship set fire to; when this infernal and inhuman order being executed▪ they all perished in the flames.
An Account of the Persecutions of the Chr [...] tians by the GOTHS. &c.
MANY Scythian Goths having embr [...]ed christianity about the time of Constantine the Great, the light of the gospel spread i [...]self c [...]siderably in Scythia, though the two king [...] who ruled that country, [...] the majority of the peop [...], continued pagans. Fritegern, king of the [...] Goths, was an ally to the Romans; but [...], king of the East Goths, was at war [...] [...]em. The christians, in the dominions of the former, lived unmolested; but the latter, having been defeated by the Romans, wreaked his vengeance on his christian subjects.
SAPAS, a worthy christian, upon this occasion, was one [...]ho felt the enraged king's misplaced re [...]sentment. Sabas was humble and humane, mild and modest, yet fervent in worship, and zealous fo [...] the advancement of the church. Remarkable for his contempt of riches, and singular in shunning ever sensual enjoyment; the sanctity of his life, and the purity of his manners were such, as gave the greatest force to his doctrines. He convinced the rational, and confounded the obdurate: hence he became, at once, famous for his piety and doctrines.
ATHANARICK, in the year 370, gave orders, that all persons in his dominions should sacrifice to the pagan deities, and eat the meat which had been offered to the idols, or be put to death for disobedience. Some humane pagans, who had christian relations, endeavoured to save them by offering them meat which had not received the idola [...]rous consecration, while the magistrates were to be imposed on, and made to believe that all had been done according to their direction. But [Page]
[Page 71] Sabas too well knew St. Paul's principles, to imagine that the sin lay in eating: he knew that scandalizing the weak, and giving the enemies of the faith an advantage over them, was all that made that action criminal in christians, neither of which consequences would have been avoided by this, disguise. He not only refused to comply with what was proposed to him, but publicly declared, that those who sheltered themselves under that artifice, were not to be called christians.
SABAS being soon after apprehended on account of his faith, was carried before a magistrate, who inquired into his fortune and circumstances. Finding that what he had upon his back was the principal part of what he possessed, he was dismissed as a person of little or no consequence.
SABAS went to spend the ensuing Easter with Sansala, a christian priest of great piety: they lived in great tranquillity for three days, but on the third night they were both seized by a party of soldiers. The priest was allowed to dress himself, and to ride, but Sabas was obliged to leave his clothes behind him, and to walk; and, during the journey, they drove him through thorns and briars, beating him with great violence almost continually. This cruelty he bore without a [...] murmur, and in the ev [...]ning they extended him between two beams, faste [...]ing his legs to the one and his arms to the other; and in that posture left him for the night, while they retired to repose. The woman of the house, however, hearing how ill he had been used, went and released him; but though he was now at liberty, and his persecutors asleep, he did not avail himself of the opportunity to make his escape.
THE next morning the persecutors began to practise on th [...]se two worthy christians, and tampered with them to renounce their religion, and eat the meat consecrated to the idols. This, however, they joi [...]tly refused, and positively declared, that they were ready to meet the most cruel death, rather than comply with such detestable idolatry. Sansala was at length discharged, and Sabas ordered to be drowned; which sentence was put into execution, April 12, A. D. 372.
NICETAS was of a Gothic extraction, born near the banks of the Danube, and though he had been long a christian he never met with any molestation on that account, till the above-mentioned persecution began by Athanarick. That monarch ordered an idol to be drawn about on a chariot, through all the places where the christians lived: the chariot stopped at the door of every one who professed the gospel, and the christian inhabitants were ordered to pay it adoration. Upon a refusal, the house was immediately set on fire, and all within were burnt. This was the case with Nicetas, who on account of his religion, refusing to pay the respect demanded to the idol, had his house burnt, and himself consumed in it, September 15, A. D. 372.
EUSEBIUS, bishop of Samosata, makes a most distinguished figure in ecclesiastical history, and was one of the most eminent champions of Christ against the Arian heresy. The Arians having advanced Miletas to the see of Antioch▪ thinking him of their party, the instrument of his advancement was placed in the care of Eusebius. When Miletus preached his first sermon, the Arians, to their great surprize, found they had been greatly mistaken in him, for his doctrines were pure and orthodox.
ENRAGED at their disappointment, they persuaded the emperor to displace him, and likewise to get the instrument out of the hands of Eusebius. Mile [...]us was accordingly deposed, and the emperor sent to Eusebius to deliver the instrument. Eusebius's answer was that he could not give up a trust reposed in him by so great a number, without the express consent of all concerned in it. The emperor incensed at this reply, wrote to him on that subject, and assured him he had commissioned the bearer of his letter to cut off his right hand, if he refused to surrender the instrument in question; which threat was artfully added only to awe him into a compliance. Eusebius, however, knew the party was capable of any cruelty to promote their cause; but, without the least emotion, offered his hands, and declared he would lose them both rather than part with so flagrant a proof of Arian injustice. The emperor could not but be surprized at his resolution, [Page 72] and professed a high esteem for him ever after: so true it is that virtue can sometimes force even its declared enemies to love and praise it.
THE Arians from this time looked upon Eusebius as a most dangerous enemy. At the time Jovian [...] peace to the church, Miletus convened a council at Antioch, which consisted of Eusebius, and twenty-five other prelates, who unanimously confirmed the doctrines of the council of Nice.
WHEN the see of Caesarea became vacant, Eusebius was greatly instrumental in promoting Basil to it, on which occasion Gregory the younger calls him, "The pillar of truth, the light of the world, the fortress of the church, the rule of faith, the support of the faithful, and an instrument in the hands of God for bestowing favours on his people." When the Arians were the most vigilant to propagate their heresy, Eusebius was exceedingly assiduous in taking measures to prevent their success; and his zeal was always so governed by the rules of prudence, that his attempts seldom failed of success. It was not enough for our excellent prelate to screen his own flock from the insults of the common enemy, and maintain the faith in its purity agai [...]st all the endeavours of such as would corrupt the people; but knowing that several churches were, by the iniquity of the times, deprived of their pastors, he disguised himself; and thus made the tour of Syria, Phoenicia, and Palestine; fortified the pure against the solicitations of the heretics, ordained several priests and inferior ministers, wherever they were wanting; and, when he found any orthodox prelates in his travels, assisted them in consecrating bishops for the use of the widowed churches. It was impossible to conceal the hand that every day gave some fresh stroke to the Arian party, and sunk their interest wherever it was employed; so that the emperor, at their instigation, granted an order for banishing him into Thrace. He was at Samosata when the messenger came with this commission; it was late in the evening; and Eusebius, who was very well beloved by his people, begged he would make no noise, but conceal his business; "for, says he, if it takes air, the people will fall on you, throw you into the [...]iver, and then I shall be charged with your death." Eusebius was calm enough to go through his usual devotions, and when the night was far advanced he left his house on foot, attended only by one trusty servant, who carried a pillow and one book after him. Thus accommodated he took a boat, and went to Zeugina, about seventy miles down the river.
THE people, however, next day, missing Eusebius, and hearing which way he was gone, followed in a great number of boats, and ove [...]taking would have rescued him, at the same time intreating him with tears in their eyes not to abandon them.
EUSEBIUS was greatly touched with their affection, but said he must go according to the emperor's order, putting them in mind of the authority of St. Paul, for paying a due reverence and proper submission to the civil power. Finding they could not prevail, they accommodated him with every thing that could comfort him in his journey, and then left him to pursue his way to the place of his destination.
AT this time Thrace was a scene of confusion, by means of the war carried on between the Goths, and the emperor's forces▪ and in these contests, the life of Eusebius was frequently in danger. The emp [...]ror, in order to terminate the war with the greater expedition, resolved to march against the Goths in person; but first to engage the prayers of the christians, he gave peace to the church of Christ▪ and allowed the orthodox prelates to return to their churches. Th [...]s was Eusebius restored to his [...], which however he did not long enjoy, for an Arian woman threw a tile at him from the top of a house▪ which fractured his skull, and terminated his life in the year 380.
MARCE [...]LUS, bishop of Apamea, a prelate of great merit, was very active in attempting to suppress idolatry in his diocese, on which account his life was in continual danger, till Cynegius, the pr [...] fect, arrived with a considerable body of troops, which kept the pagans in awe. This officer's design was totally to abolish idolatry, to effect which he determined to destroy the temple of Jupiter; he however found this a more difficult attempt than he had imagined, for the building was so strong, the [Page 73] stones so unweildy, the cement so durable, and the iron cramps so massy, that he despaired of being able to accomplish the work; when a poor labouring christian, recommended by Marcellus, undertook to go through with what the praefect had given up, and the business was executed in the following manner:
THIS person examined the situat [...]on of the edifice, and finding it surrounded by a gallery, supported by stately pillars, ten yards in circumference, he judged it would be more to his purpose to weaken the foundation than pretend to attack the body of the building directly: with this view he dug at the bottom of the said pillars, and shored them with timber beams. When he had thus undermined three of the most considerable pillars, he set fire to the wood, which burning in sunder, the pillars fell, and drew twelve more with them, and brought down one whole side of the building; upon which the people flocked together f [...]om all parts of the town, and praised God, who ha [...] thus triumphed over his enemies.
THE bishop and praefect continued destroying a great number of idol temples, when being at a town called Aulo upon this business, while the troops were busy in demolishing the buildings, some pagans privately seized upon the bishop, and burnt him, A. D. 393.
A [...] Account of the Persecutions of the Christians under the Arian Vandals.
THE Vandals passing from Spain to Africa in the fifth century, under their leader Genseric, committed the most unheard of cruelties. They persecuted the christians wherever they came, and even laid waste the country as they passed, that the christians left behind, who had escaped them, might not be able to subsist.
THEY plundered the churches, and murdered the bishops and ministers by a variety of tortures. In particular, they poured stinking oil and vinegar down the throats of some tiil they expired; suffocated others by fil [...]ing their mouths with mud, and martyred many by stretching their limbs with cords till the veins burst, and sinews cracked. They also wreaked their vengeance on several of the clergy and nobility, whom they loaded with heavy burdens; and obliged them to carry their baggage; and if they did not travel fast enough, they pricked them on with sharp goads, insomuch that several died under their burdens. Reverend grey hairs found no instances of mercy, and guiltless infants felt the rage of their barbarity Stately buildings were burned or levelled with the earth: and the chief churches in Carthage employed in their own heretical worship, or put to profane uses; and where any castles held out against them, they brought great numbers of christians, and slew them, leaving their dead bodies lying under the walls, that the stench thereof might force the besieged to surrender.
HAVING seized and plundered the city of Carthage, they put the bishop, and all the clergy, into a leaky ship, and committed it to the mercy of the waves, thinking that they must all perish of course; but providentally the vessel arrived safe at Naples.
INNUMERABLE orthodox christians were beaten, scourged, and banished to Capsur, where it pleased God to make them the means of converting many of the Moors to christianity▪ but this coming to the ears of Genseric, he sent orders, that they and their new converts should be tied by the feet to chariots, and dragged about till they were dashed to pieces.
PAMPINIAN, the bishop of Mansuetes, was tortured to death with plates of hot iron; the bishop of Urice was burnt; the bishop of Habensa was banished for refusing to deliver up the sacred books which wer [...] in his possession; and a whole congregation, who were assembled in a church at their devotions, together with the clergyman who was preaching to them, were murdered by these barbarians breaking in upon them, and exercising the most indiscriminate cruelties.
THE Vandalian tyrant Genseric, having made an expedition into Italy, and plundered the city of Rome, returned to Africa, flushed with the success of his arms. The Arians took this occasion to persuade [Page 74] him to persecute the orthodox christians, as they assured him that they were friends to the people of Rome.
ARMOGASTUS was one who felt the rage of this persecution; Victor, the learned bishop of Vita, who was personally acquainted with Armogastus, and who likewise wrote the history of this persecution, informs us, that "his legs were tied, and his forehead bound with cords several times; which, though applied with no gentle hand, made not the least impression on his flesh, nor left any mark on his skin. After this, he was hung up by one foot; but in that posture seemed as much at his ease as if reposed on a soft bed. Theodoric, one of the king's sons, finding all attempts on his life had hitherto proved unsuccessful, ordered his head to be struck off. But Jocundas, an Arian priest, dissuaded him from that resolution, by telling him it would be much better to destroy him by slow and imperceptible means, and wear him out by degrees; whereas a violent death would procure him the reputation of a martyr among those of his own opinion, which could be of no service to the opposite cause. The prince sent him to the mines, and some time after removed him to a place near Carthage, where he was employed in looking after cattle. While Armogastus was thus engaged, he grew exceeding ill, and imagining that the end of his labours was near, he communicated his thoughts to Felix, a virtuous christian, employed in that prince's service. From him he received some consolation; but his disorder increasing daily soon deprived him of life, and he was buried by Felix according to his own direction."
ARCHINIMUS was a devout christian, upon whom all manner of artifices were employed in vain, to make him renounce his fait [...]. At length Genseric himself undertook to persuade him, but finding his endeavours ineffectual, he passed sentence upon him to be beheaded. He, however, privately ordered the executioner really to perform his office, if the prisoner seemed intimidated and afraid; "for then (said he) the crown of martyrdom will b [...] lo [...]t to him; but if he seems courageous, and willing to die (continued the king), strike not the stroke, for I do not intend that he shall have the honour of being deemed a martyr." The executioner [...] when they came to the place appointed [...] Archinimus resolved, and happy in the thought of dying for the sake of Christ, brought him back again [...] He was soon after this banished, and never heard of more, though it is conjectured that he was murdered privately by the king's order, as he thought the glory of dying publicly for the faith too great a favour.
EUGENIUS, bishop of Carthage, was eminent for his learning and piety, which brought upon him the hatred of the Arians in general, who took great pains to set the king Huneric against him, and the orthodox christians.
THEY succeeded but too well, for he banished above 5,000 into a dreadful desart, where many perished through hunger, or the inclemency of the weather. But being bent on persecuting the whole body of the orthodox christians, he sent an edict to Eugenius, which he commanded that he should read in the Cathedral on Ascension day, A. D. 483.
AS this edict ordered that all the orthodox bishops should me [...]t at Carthage on the first of the ensuing February, for the purpose of disputing with the Arian prelates, the king's stratagem evidently appeared to Eugenius, and several other bishops, particularly to Victor, bishop of Vita, the leared author of the original account of th [...]s persecution, for they well knew that he artfully [...] to establish Arianism under the appearance of candour and justice.
AFTER a considerable deliberation, they determined to send a petition to the king; which was written by Eugenius accordingly, and prese [...]ted by a person who had great interest at court. The substance of this petition was, that the African prelates did not decline the proposed conference out of a sense of the weakness of their cause, or a distru [...] of their own abilities to maintain the orthodox faith; but as the whole church was concerned in the dispute, they were of opinion that they could not e [...] gage in it without the bishops of Europe and Asia. To this Huneric replied, that what they desired was impossible, unless the whole world was in hi [...] hands. Upon which Eugenius desired his majesty would be pleased to write to Odoacer, king of Italy, and other princes in his interest; and allow him to send [Page 75] to the bishops, that the common faith might be thus authentically declared.
THE king, however, disregarding this remonstrance, insisted upon being obeyed; and then, previous to the time appointed, very artfully took an occasion to banish several of the most able and learned orthodox prelates, on various pretences; that the cause of truth might be weakened, and the Arians have the greater advantage.
WHEN the appointed time for the conference arrived, the orthodox clergy appointed ten of their number to act in the name of the rest. Cyrilla, an Arian, took the stile of patriarch upon the occasion, and was seated on a magnificent throne. The Arian prelates were allowed to sit near him, but the orthodox bishops were obliged to stand. They complained of this partial mode of behaviour, as an evident infringement of their liberty; on which the Arians took occasion to abuse them in a most illiberal manner. Eugenius, perceiving that thev did not intend to come to any candid decision, proposed to adjourn to some future day; but instead of complying with this, each orthodox prelate, by the king's order, as Cyrilla asserted, received an hundred blows with a stick. Eugenius protested against such violence, but in vain; the prelates were turned out of the place unheard, their churches were shut up, and the revenues of their bishoprics seized upon.
SOON after they were compelled to quit Carthage, when they lay without the walls of that city, exposed to all the inclemencies of the open air. The king pasing out of one of the gates, the orthodox clergy presented themselves before him, and modestly complained of the treatment they had received.
H [...]N [...]RIC, instead of redressing their grievances, ordered his guards to fall on them, and chastise them for their insolence, as he termed it. The soldie [...]s complied with the tyrant's request, and treated them as unmercifully as he could wish. The king ordered them to appear on a certain day at a place which he named.
AT the appointed time they assembled on the spot accordingly, when one of the king's officers shewed them a folded paper, and informed them that the king was inclined to forget what was past, and to restore them to their livings, provided they would swear to the truth of what that paper contained. The prelates, surprised at this unreasonable proposal, declared that they could not in conscience think of swearing to the truth of that to which they were total strangers. But if they were suffered to read the writing, and approve of the contents, they would readily take the oath.
THE officer replied, that was unnecessary; for he would tell them the contents, which were not of a religious but of a political nature, and only required them to swear they were willing prince Hilderic should succeed his father in the throne. Several of the prelates innocently thinking that there could be no harm in swearing they were willing a son should succeed his father, as that was but a piece of natural justice, offered to comply. But the rest, with greater precaution, and well knowing the Arian wiles, refused to take the oath, as they justly judged so simple a proposal would never have been made them, unless some deep artifice was concealed beneath it.
WHILE they were disagreeing upon this head, the officer took an advantage of their discord, and committed them to separate prisons, those who were willing to swear to one, and those who were unwilling to another. They had not been long in confinement before the mystery was unravelled, and the whole artifice explained by an order from the king for the banishment of both parties. Those who had been willing to swear were banished, under the pretence of offering to break an established precept of the Scripture, viz. "Swear not at all," Matt. v. 34. And those who had refused to swear, were banished as enemies to the legal succession. Thus did the crafty Arians accomplish the [...]uin of the prelates, by wresting a text of the gospe [...] to a wrong sense, and putting a piece of political sophistry to an improper use. The former were obliged to work as slaves in distant colonies, and the latter were sent to the island of Corsica to cut timber. Tripoli was the place to which Euge [...]nius was banished; where Anthony, a violent A [...]an bishop, threw him into a loathsome dungeon▪ [Page 76] and made him suffer every hardship that cruelty could devise, in order to destroy him by a lingering death. The dampness of the place gave Eugenius the palsy, which Anthony hearing of, went to the gaol, and finding him in a very weak condition laying on the floor, he poured some strong vinegar down his throat, with a design to have choaked him. It had, however, a contrary effect; for instead of suffocating, it promoted an immediate and copious perspiration, which was essentially serviceable in curing his palsy, and restoring him to health.
AFTER the decease of Huneric, his successor recalled Eugenius and the rest of the orthodox clergy; the Arians taking the alarm, persuaded him to banish them again, which he complied with, when Eugenius, being exiled to Languedoc, in France, died there of the hardships he underwent on the 6th of September, A. D. 505.
DIONYSIA, a lady of fortune, and a widow, being apprehended as an orthodox christian, was stripped naked, and exposed in a most indecent manner, and severely scourged. Her son, a young lad, being seized at the same time, seemed afraid of the torture, and looked pitifully at his mother, who ordered him not to fear any torments that could be inflicted on him, but to be constant to the faith in which she had brought him up.— When he was upon the rack, she again comforted him in these words:
"REMEMBER, O my child, that we were baptized in the name of the ever sacred Trinity; let us not loose the benefit thereof, lest it should hereafter be said, cast them into outer darkness, where there is weeping and gnashing of teeth: for that pain, which never endeth, is indeed to be dreaded, and that life, which endureth to eternity, to be desired." Whereupon the youth patiently persevered, and from the force of his torments resigned his soul to his God.
THE pious mother saw the death of her son with pleasure, and soon after received the crown of martyrdom herself.
THE Arian bishop of Carthage, named Cyrilla. was a most furious heretic, and a very great enemy to those christians who professed the faith in its purity. Having gained the ear of the king, he persuaded him that he could never expect prosperity in his undertakings, or hope to enjoy his kingdom in peace, while he suffered any of the orthodox christians to live.
THIS weak monarch, believing all that Cyrilla told him, sent for several of the most eminent christians, who were particularly obnoxious to that prelate. He, at first, attempted to draw them from their faith by flattery, and to bribe them from the hopes of future salvation, by the promise of immediate worldly rewards. Being firm and constant in their faith, they were proof against the former, and despised the latter; declaring resolutely against Arianism, and saying, we acknowledge but one Lord, one faith, and one baptism; you ma [...] therefore do whatever you please with our bo [...]ies, for it is better we should suffer a few temporary pain [...] ▪ than to endure everlasting torments.
THE king, being greatly exasperated at this freedom, sent them to a filthy dark dungeon, and ordered them to be put into irons. The keeper, however, not b [...]ing of the savage disposition too common to such as are entrusted with the care of gaols, suffered their friends to have access to them; by which they received great consolation, and became daily more and more confirmed in their resolution of dying for the sake of Ch [...]i [...]t.
THE king hearing of the indulgence given them by their keeper, was exceedingly angry, and sent orders that they should be more closely confined, and loaded with still heavier setters. He then began to ruminate in his mind by what means be should put them to death, and after resolving over and over all the mod [...]s of cruelty that he could recollect, he at length determined to imitate the mo [...]strous barbarity of the emperor Valens, who as we have already related, caused fourscore clergymen to be burnt together in a ship. Fixing upon this infernal precedent, he ordered these christians to be put on board a ship filled with combustible materials, and the vessels being set fire to, they received the crown of martyrdom. The names of several of the principal of these christians [...]ere, Rusticus, [Page 77] Severus, Liberatus, Boniface, Septimus, Servus, and Rogatus.
An Account of Persecutions from about the Middle of the Fifth, to the Conclusion of the Seventh Century.
PROTERIUS was made a priest by Cyril, bishop of Alexandria, who was well acquainted with his virtues, before he appointed him to preach. On the death of Cyril, the see of Alexandria was filled by Dioscorus, an inveterate enemy both [...]o the memory and family of his predecessor. Dioscorus, however, knowing the reputation of Proterius, did the utmost in his power to gain his confidence and interest; as he thought he might be of singular service to him in carrying on his designs.
PROTERIUS, however, was not to be corrupted, the welfare of the church sat next his heart, and no prospect of worldly preferment could bribe him to forego his duty.
DIOSCORUS being condemned by the council of Chalcedon for having embraced the errors of Eutyches, was deposed, and Proterius chosen to fill the vacant see, and approved of by the emperor. This occasioned a dangerous insurrection, for the city of Alexandria was divided into two factions; the one to espouse the cause of the old, and the other of the new prelate. A great deal of mischief was done on both sides, and Proterius was in the most imminent danger, from a set of chismatics who would neither obey the decisions of a council, nor the emperor's decree.
AS these disorders became serious, the governor of Th [...]bais marched at the head of a body of troops, in order to quell the sedition. The people, however, had worked up their imaginations to a kind of phrenzy▪ when they heard of the approach of the governor, they armed themselves, marched out of Alexandria, gave him battle, and defeated him. The intelligence of this affair so exasperated the emperor, that [...]e sent a detachment of two thousand men against them; the appearance of whom, and the prudence of the governor of Alexandria, whose name was Florus, soon restored peace to the city.
THE discontented party, however, still beheld Proterius with an eye of resentment; so that he was obliged to have a guard out of respect to his personal safety, and at length, though naturally of a sweet and mild temper, was compelled to excommunicate some of them, and obtain their banishment from Alexandria. Ecclesiastical history, however, informs us, that, "When emperor Marcian's death, which happened two years after, gave a new turn to affairs, the exiles returned to Alexandria, engaged in their usual cabals against Proterius, and seemed resolved to be revenged on him for what they had suffered in the last reign. Timothy, a priest, who was at the head of all the designs that had been formed against Proterius, employed every art to ruin his credit, drawing the people from his communion, and raising himself to that see. At last, taking the advantage of the absence of Dionysius, who commanded the forces of that province, and was then in the Upper Egypt, he seized on the great church, and was uncanonically and sacrilegiously consecrated by two bishops of his faction, that had been deposed for heresy. The usurper went on in the exercise of all the episcopal functions, and used the whole rigour of his pretended authority to oppress the orthodox, till the commander's return, who, upon hearing the disorders that had been committed, and that Timothy was the chief author of them, drove that incendiary out of the town."
THIS affair so enraged the Eutychians, that they determined to wreak their vengeance on Proterius, who fled to the [...]urch for sanctuary: but on Good Friday, A. D. 4 [...]7, a large body of them rushed into the church, and barbarously murdered the prelate; after which they dragged the body through the streets, [...] it, cut it to pieces, burnt it, and scattered the ashes in the air.
JULIA, a Carthaginian lady, was taken prisoner when the Vandals sacked that city. After being sold and resold as a slave, she became the property of a Syrian pagan, named Eusebius. Her master could not but admire a religion which inspired such resignation and patience in va [...]alage, and the [...] [Page 78] painful employments: thus it is plain, that the humility and purity prescribed by christianity will attract even the admiration of heathens.
THE master of Julia frequently took her with him upon his voyages: in one of these they touched upon the island of Corsica, where Eusebius joined in an idolatrous festival; but Julia kept at a distance.
THE heathens complained of this conduct as disrespectful to their gods, and informed the governor Felix of it, who sent for Eusebius, and demanded what young woman it was that had refused to join in worship to the gods?
EUSEBIUS replied, that the young woman was a christian, and that all his authority over her had proved too weak to prevail with her to renounce her religion; but that, as she was a very diligent and faithful servant, he could not think of parting with her.
FELIX then pressed him to exert himself on this occasion, and either to oblige her to assist at the pagan worship, or to part with her; and offered to give him his own price, or four of his best female slaves in exchange for her, which Eusebius absolutely refused, saying, that he would not part from her at any price.
FELIX finding the master inflexible, determined to get her into his power by artifice. To effect this, he invited Eusebius to an entertainment, and having intoxicated him, he sent for Julia in the name of her master.
THE innocent slave not suspecting the trap laid for her, came immediately, when the governor told her that he would procure her liberty, if she would sacrifice to the heathen gods. To which Julia replied, that while she was permitted to enjoy her religion, she was as free as she desired to be.
FELIX, not being able to prevail, ordered her to be severely beaten, which she bore with the utmost p [...]ti [...]nce. Finding her still resolute, he command [...]d, that the hair of her head should be pulled up by the roots. This barbarity having no greater effect than the former, he sentenced her to be hanged, which sentence was immediately put in execution.
JULIA was scarce dead when Eusebius recovered from his intoxication. As soon as he understood what had past, he was greatly afflicted, and in the first transports of his resentment had thoughts of complaining to the emperor, who being a christian, would have punished the perfidy of the governor. But reflecting again, that Felix had only acted with a zeal for the deities he himself adored, he determined to put up with the loss, and retire from a place which was become so disagreeable to him.
HERMENIGILDUS was a Gothic prince, being the eldest son of Leovigildus, king of the Goths, in Spain. This prince, who was originally an Arian, became a convert to the orthodox faith, by mea [...] of his wife Ingonda. When the king heard that his son had changed his religious sentiments, [...]e stripped him of the command at Seville, where he was governor, and threatened to put him to death, unless he renounced the faith he had newly embraced.
THE prince, in order to prevent the execution of his father's menaces, began to put himself into a posture of defence; and many of the orthodox persuasion in Spain declared for him. The king, exasperated at this act of rebellion, began to puni [...] all the orthodox christians who could be seized by his troops; and thus a very severe persecution commenced: he likewise marched against his [...] at the head of a very powerful army. The prince, knowing that he was unable to oppose the formidable force that his father was bringing against him, implored [...]he assistance of the Roman troops that were left [...] garrison those parts of Spain, which the emperor stil [...] possessed. The Roman commander engaged to assist Hermenigildus, but being bribe [...] by the king he broke his promise. Leovigild [...] then made it his business, as much as possible, [...] detach the orthodox christians from the interest [...] his son; and in this he had great success, for it [...] effected in 581, by convening the Arian prelates [...] Toledo, who abolished the practice of re-baptizing those that came over to their sect, and drew up [...] captious profession of faith which deceived [...] [Page 79] and prevailed upon them to quit the interest of Hermenigildus.
THE prince, thus forsaken by numbers of those whom he most confided in, was obliged to retreat towards Seville, in which city he soon after shut himself up, and sent to Constantinople for assistance from the emperor. The death of that monarch, however, prevented him from receiving any relief; for Maurice, who succeeded him, found his own hands too full to afford any succour to Hermenigildus. The king, who had information of every step which his son took, proceeded to Seville, and laid siege to it. The prince defended the place with great bravery, and even held out for the space of twelvemonths; but finding that the city must soon be taken, he privately made his escape, and fled to the Roman troops to beg protection. Being informed that they intended to give him up, he precipitately retired to Corduba, and from thence went to Asseto, which he fortified.
AFTER the escape of the prince from Seville that city surrendered, and the king having properly garrisoned it, pursued his son, laid siege to Asseto, and soon obliged it to surrender. The unfortunate prince being driven to this distress, flew to a church for sanctuary. The king having too much respect for the sanctity of the place to force him from it, sent an officer, named Reccaredus, to assure him of his pardon, upon his submitting to ask it. The prince believing his father to be sincere, immediately went to him, and threw himself most submissively at his feet. The king, however, instead of forgiving him, loaded him with chains, and carried him to Seville, where he endeavoured, both by promises and menaces, to make him renounce the orthodox faith.
THE prince remained constant to the truth; and at the feast of Easter, when the king sent an Arian bishop to him to administer the eucharist, Hermenigildus absolutely refused to receive it, which so enraged the king, that before he gave himself time to reflect, he ordered some of his guards to go and cut the prince to pieces, which they punctually performed, April the 13th, A. D. 586.
ANASTASIUS, a Persian, was brought up a pagan, and bore arms as a soldier under Cosroes, king of Persia, at the time that monarch plundered Jerusalem; and, among other things, carried off the very cross on which Christ was crucified. Anastasius could not imagine why the christians had such a veneration for a person who had died so mean a death as that of being crucified; for that mode of death was, by the Persians, held in the greatest contempt, and none but the very lowest and most despicable malefactors were executed in that manner. Applying to some christian captives, he was instructed in the whole christian mystery, and being charmed with the purity of a faith which inspired such fortitude, he left the army, and retired to Syria: here he learned the trade of a goldsmith, and then going to Jerusalem, he supported himself by that business; was baptized by Modestus, vicar-general of Jerusalem: and staid a week with Elias, his godfather.
WHEN that time was over, and he was now to quit the white clothes which he wore at his baptism, according to the then practice of the church, he desired the priest would put him in a way of renouncing the world entirely, and fulfilling the obligations of his profession without interruption. Elias recommended him to Justin, abbot of a seminary four miles from Jerusalem, who employed a proper person to instruct him in the Greek tongue, and to teach him the Psalms; and then admitted him into his religious community. Anastasius passed seven years in that house, where he divided his time between the most humble domestic employments, and the truly christian entertainments of the word of God, the lives of the fathers, and the acts of the martyrs. He was most sensibly affected with those monuments of pagan barbarity, and christian courage; and conceived a strong desire to lay down his life for Jesus Christ.
GOING to Caesarea, which was then in the hands of the Persians, he was taken up as a spy, and brought before Marzabanes, governor of that city, to whom he [...] that he was a christian, and was on that [...] sent to prison. When he had lain there some time, Marzabanes sent for him, and gave him fresh assurances of favour and promotion, [Page 80] if he would but renounce his religion: but he despised and rejected every mark of friendship and respect, that would endeavour to divorce him from his God; and the governor ordered him to be beaten till he should agree to his proposals. He then remanded him to prison, where he spent his time in prayer, and such labours as were imposed on him as part of his punishment. Justin being apprized of his sufferings, recommended him to the prayers of the whole community, and sent two of his people to encourage him to perseverance.
AT length, the governor wrote to the king concerning Anastasius, and on receiving an answer, told the prisoner, that he would give him his liberty if he would [...]enounce the christian religion, only before him and two witnesses, and that his renunciation should not be known. Anastasius heard this proposal with horror, and rejected it with disdain; when the governor sent him bound in chains to Persia, there to be dealt with as the king should direct.
THE king did all in his power to engage him to renounce his religion, but finding his endeavours in vain, he ordered him to be executed, which was performed in this manner: he was laid upon his back, with a piece of wood across his legs, pressed down with the whole weight of two lusty men; he was then severely beaten, hung up by one hand, with a weight fastened to his foot; and after being strangled, his head cut off, and sent to the king.
MARTIN, bishop of Rome, was born at To [...], in Italy. He was naturally inclined to virtue, and his parents bestowed upon him an admirable education. He had every liberal endowment that the sciences could bestow, and all the worthiness that a mortal could derive from the saving grace of the gospel. He took orders, and on the death of Theodore, bishop of Rome, was advanced to that important see, by an unanimous election, in which all parties gave him the fullest praises, and admitted, that he well merited a trust of such great consequence.
HIS character hath been thus drawn by a masterly hand:
"HIS compassion for the poor appeared in large contributions for their relief, and the offices of hospitality which he performed in favour of strangers. His fasts were rigorous and frequent, and prayer employed a very considerable part of his time. He was always ready to receive returning sinners; took no small pains to lead such through the pat [...] of repentance, as testified their sorrow by tear [...]; and comforted them by letting them see what reason they had to confide in God's infinite goodness. He loved his clergy with a brotherly tenderness, and honoured the episcopal character wherever it was found.
THE first trouble he recei [...]d in his episcopal capacity, was from a set of heretics, called Monothelites; who not daring, after the express decisions of the council of Chalcedon, to maintain the unity of nature in Christ, asserted artfully, that he had but one will and operation of mind. This sect was patronized by the emperor Heraclius; and the f [...]rst who attempted to stop the progress of these errors, was Sophronius, bishop of Jerusalem.
MARTIN, who perfectly coincided in sentiments with the bishop of Jerusalem, called a council [...] which consisted of 105 bishops, and they unanimously condemned the errors in question.
INCENSED at these proceedings, the emperor ordered Olympius, his lieutenant in Italy, to repair to Rome, and seize the bishop, provided it could be done without causing an insurrection. The lieutenant performed the journey; but on his arrival at Rome, he found the people too unanimous in their opinions, and the prelate too much beloved, to attempt any thing by open violence. Hence he had recourse to treachery▪ and suborned a ruffian to assassinate the bishop at the altar; but the fellow, after promising to execute the bloody deed, was seized with such horrors of mind, that he had not the power to perform his promise. Olympius, finding it would be very difficult to perform any thing against Martin, withdrew from Rome, and [Page 81] putting himself at the head of his troops, marched against the Saracens, who had made some inroads into Italy, but he died in the expedition.
OLYMPIUS was succeeded by Calliopas, who received express orders to seize the person of Martin, which, with the assistance of a considerable body of soldiers, he performed; at the same time shewing the clergy the imperial mandate, which commanded him to dispossess Martin of his bishopric, and carry him to Constantinople as a prisoner.
AFTER a very tedious voyage, and enduring innumerable hardships, he reached the imperial city of Constantinople, and was immediately thrown into prison. While in confinement, he wrote two epistles to the emperor to refute the calumnies forged against him with respect to his faith and loyalty. The substance of which was, that for a proof of the soundness of the former, he appeals to the testimony of the whole clergy, and his own solemn protestation to defend the truth as long as he lived. In answer to such objections as had been made against the latter, he declared he neither sent money, letters, or advice to the Saracens, but only remitted a sum for the relief of poor christians among those people: he concludes with saying, that nothing could be [...] false than what the heretics had alledged against him concerning the Blessed Virgin, whom he firmly believed to be the mother of God, and worthy of all honour [...] divine Son. In his [...] of his being [...] already related, and his [...] from [...] and hoping his [...], when [...] removed from this [...]."
[...] undergone were [...], that on the [...] was forced to be [...] he was unable [...], the judge [...] purpose. Martin began his defence, but as soon as he entered upon an investigation of the errors which he had combated, one of the senators stopped him, and said, that he was only examined respecting civil affairs, and consequently that ecclesiastical matters had nothing to do in his defence. The judge then prevented him from going on, and having broke up the court, went and reported the progress of the proceedings to the emperor.
MARTIN was now ordered to be exposed in the most public places of the town, to the ridicule of the people; to be divested of all the episcopal marks of distinction, and to be treated with the greatest scorn and severity. All these rigours he bore with a christian-like patience, and a degree of fortitude that only heaven can inspire.
AFTER laying some months in prison, [...]artin was sent to an island at some distance, and there cut to pieces, A. D. 655.
JOHN, bishop of Bergamo, in Lombardy, was a learned man, and a good christian. He did his utmost endeavours to clear the church from Arianism, and joining in this holy work with John, bishop of Milan, he was very successful against the heretics. Grimoald, however, an Arian, having usurped the throne of Lombardy, the orthodox christians feared that heresy would gain footing [...] once more, in Lombardy; but the bishop of Bergamo used such persuasive arguments with Grimoald, that he brou [...]ht him from the errors of Arianism to profes [...] the orthodox faith.
AFTER the death of Grimoald, and his son who succeeded him, Pantha [...]it [...]ame to the crown, and [...] errors which had been combated with suc [...] spirit by the orthodox clergy. The bishop of B [...]r [...]mo exerted himself strenuously [...]o prev [...]t the heresy from spreading, on which account he wa [...] assassinated on July 11, A. D. [...]83.
[...] was born in Ireland, and received from his parents [...] and christian education. His favorite study was theology, and he took great delight in perusing the holy scriptures. Hence an ardent [...] for the glory of God glowed within [Page 82] him, and he took great pains to bring many to the light of the gospel.
AS the narrow limits of his native island seemed too small for his unbounded zeal, he crossed the sea, together with eleven other persons, in order to make converts on the continent. On landing they directed their course to what is now called the Circle of Franconia, in Germany. Coming to the city of Wurtzbourg, they found the people in general, and their governor Gozbert, to be pagans; but from their good dispositions, conceived great hopes of converting them from idolatry and superstition to the gospel faith. Previous to making this attempt, however, he deemed it necessary to go to Rome, in order to obtain his mission from th [...] pontiff. He accordingly went thither, attended by o [...] Col [...]an a priest, and Totman a deacon, two of those who had accompanied him from Ireland, and found Conon in Peter's chair. He gave them a favourable reception, and being informed of Kilien's business at Rome, after some questions about his faith and doctrine, consecrated him bishop, with full permission to preach to the infidels wherever he found them. Thus authorized, Kilien returned to Wurtzbourg, where he opened his mission. He had not been long employed in those evangelical labours, when Gozbert sent for him, and desired to know the nature and tendency of this new religion, which he recommended so vigorously, and proposed so boldly. Our holy bishop had several conferences with the governor on that subject, and God gave such a blessing to his endeavours, that Gozbert received the faith, was baptized, and gave him free leave to preach wherever he had any power. As the example of great men seldom fails of influencing those of an inferior rank, that of Gozbert went very far in commanding the attention of his pagan subjects to what our prelate had to offer; and in less than two years much the greatest part of them became christians.
IT is to be observed, that Gozbert had married his brother's widow, for which Kilien, though he knew the sinfulness of the thing, did not chuse to rebuke him till he was thoroughly confirmed in his faith. When he thought him fully instructed in the principles of christianity, and well grounded in the purity of its precepts, he intreated the governor, as the last proof of the sincerity of his conversion▪ to quit that person whom he had hitherto looked upon as a wife, as he could not cohabit with her without committing sin. Gozbert, surprized at the proposal, told the bishop this was the hardest demand he had ever made upon him. "But (said he) since I have renounced my own inclinations and pleasures in so many particulars for the love of God, I will make the work complete, by complying with your advice in this too."
THE governor's wife being informed of this affair, determined to be revenged on those who had persuaded Gozbert into such a resolution. The missionaries were sensible of that wicked woman's design; and the only shield they had, consisted of prayer, patience, and resig [...]a [...]ion. She sent accordingly to the place where they usually assembled, and had them all beheaded. Kilien, and his companions, submitted without resistance, the former telling them, that they need not fear those who had no power of the soul, but could only kill the body, which, in a short time, would of itself decay. This happened, A. D. 689, and the martyrs were privately buried in the night, together with their clothes, books, &c.
SOME writers add what follows, as the sequel of this bloody affair: "Some days after this impious tragedy was acted, Gozbert, surprized that he had not seen Kilien lately, ordered diligent search to be made for him. Geilana, to stop the inquiry, gave out, that he and his companion had left the town, without giving any account of their motions. But the instrument of her revenge, the executioner [...] violently racked with remorse of conscience, [...]an about like a mad man, and declared that Kilien burnt him. Thus discovered, he was seized; and Gozbert was considering what to do with him, when a creature of the governess▪ a man of great eloquence and artifice, and a pretended convert, advised him to leave the God of the christians the task of doing himself justice on his enemies, and proposed the event as a t [...]st of his power.
GOZBERT was weak enough to [...]mpt God, by putting it on that issue. The murderer, being set at liberty, went raving mad, tore his own flesh with his teeth, and died in this miserable condition. [Page 83] Geilana was so perplexed in her conscience, that it tormented her till she expired; Gozbert's rashness and criminal condescension, was punished by violent death, and his whole race was cut off in a few years.
An Account of Persecutions from the early Part of the [...]ighth, to near the Conclusion of the tenth Century.
BONIFACE, archbishop of Mentz, and father of the German church, was an English [...]an, and is, in ecclesiastical history, looked upon as one of the brightest ornaments of his nation. Originally his name was Winfr [...]d, or Wi [...]ith, and he was born at Kirton, in Devonshire, then part of the West-Saxon kingdom. When he was only about six years of age, he began to discover a propensity to reflection, and seemed solicitous to gain information on religious subjects. Soon after, some evangelical missionaries came by chance to Kirton, and happened to fix their abode at his father's house. From these he understood, that the principal step to salvation was, to deny himself, and follow Christ. He considered seriously of what he heard, and, in process of time, determined to devote himself to a religious life. When he informed his father of his resolution, [...]he latter would willingly have dissuaded him from it; but finding him fully resolved, he permitted him to go and reside at a monastery in the city of Exeter. Wolfrad, the abbot, finding tha [...] he possessed a bright genius, as well as a strong inclination to study, had him removed to Nutscelle, a seminary of learning, in the diocese of Winchester, where he would have a much greater opportunity of attaining improvement than at Exeter. T [...]e abbot of Nutscelle, who was as much celebrated for his great learning as his christian virtues, took uncommon pains with his young pupil, who, in time, became a prodigy in profound literature, and divine knowledge; and was, at length, employed at Nu [...]scelle as a principal teacher.
THE ancient Saxon historians, who speak highly in his praise, tell us, that those who studied under him had no need to remove to any other place to finish what they had begun, for he gave them lessons in grammar, poetry, rhetoric, and philosophy; and explained the holy scriptures in the literal, moral, and mystical senses. But his example was as instructive as his lectures, and while he formed his scholars to learning by his dictates, he encouraged them to the practice of virtue, by the prudent conduct of his life.
THE abbot of Nutscelle, seeing him thus qualified for the priesthood, obliged him to receive that holy order, when he was about thirty years old. From that time he began to preach, and labour for the salvation of his fellow-creatures; in the progress of which he gave the first proofs of that apostolical zeal, that afterwards made such glorious conquests in a barbarous part of the world.
THERE being an important occasion to assemble a synod of bishops in the kingdom of the West-Saxons, it was judged expedient to depute one of their body to the archbishop of Canterbury, to inform him of the exigency of affairs. Upon conside [...]ng who was proper to be charged with such a commission, Boniface was proposed, and unanimously chosen by the synod; and the choice was approved of, and confirmed by the then reigning king of the West-Saxons.
BONIFACE discharged this trust with great prudence, and obtained the applause of every member of the synod; but far from being vain of the reputation he had acquired, he proposed to forsake his country, relations, and friends, in order to be of service to the faith, and extend christianity on the continent. At first, the abbot and monks of Nutscelle would have dissuaded him from his purpose; but finding him resolute, two of their number were ordered to assist him.
HE accordingly left Nutscelle, and arrived in Friezland about the year 716; but found that country in the utmost disorder and confusion. It had belonged to the crown of France, but was at that time in the possession of prince Radbord, who had established paganism in it, persecuted the christians, and was at war with Charles Martel, mayor of the palace of Austrastia.
[...] [Page 86]firmed Boniface in his power; and approved of all he had done in Germany, making him at the same time archbishop of Mentz, and metropolitan over thirteen bishoprics. He did not, however, lose his simplicity in grandeur, or forget his innocence in the parade of ecclesiastical dignity, but studied to preserve that humility, which is so pathetically recommended in Matt. v. 3, 12.
DURING the ministry of this meek prelate, Pepin was declared king of France. It was that prince's ambition to be crowned by the most holy prelate he could find, and Boniface was pitched on to perform that ceremony, which he did at Soissons in 752. The next year his great age, and many infirmities lay so heavy on him, that with the consent of the new king, the bishops, &c. of his diocese, he consecrated Lullus, his country man, and faithful disciple, and placed him in the see of Mentz. When he had thus eased himself of his charge, he recommended the church of Mentz to the care of the new bishop in very strong terms, desired he would finish the church at Fuld, and see him buried in it, for his end was near.
HAVING left these orders, he took boat to the Rhine, and went to Friezland, where he converted and baptized several thousand of the barbarous natives, demolished the temples, and raised churches on the ruins of those superstitious structures.
HAVING appointed a day for confirming a great number of new converts, he ordered them to assemble in an open plain near the river Bourde. Thither he repaired the day before; and pitching a tent, determined to remain on the spot all night, in order to be ready early in the morning.
SOME pagans, who were his inveterate enemies, having intelligence of this, poured down upon him, and the companions of his mission, in the night, in such a manner as sufficiently evinced their design of massacreing them. The servants of Boniface were for repelling the barbarians by force of arms; but he opposed the motion, told them, and his clergy, that the moment he had long wished for was now come, and exhorted his assistants in the ministry to prepare themselves for martyrdom. While he was thus employed, the pagans rushed in upon him, and killed him and fifty-two of his companions and attendants, on June 5, A. D. 755. Thus fell the great father of the Germanic church, the honour of England, and the glory of the age in which he lived.
FORTY-TWO persons of Armorian, in upper Phrygia, were martyred in the year 845, by the Saracens, the circumstances of which transaction are as follow:
IN the reign of Theophilus, the Saracens ravaged many parts of the eastern empire, gained several considerable advantages over the christians; and at length laid siege to the city of Armorian. The garrison bravely defended the place for a considerable time, and would, in all probability, have obliged their enemies to raise the siege, when the place was basely betrayed by a renegado. Great numbers were put to the sword; and two general officers, with some other persons of distinction, were carried prisoners to Bagdat, where they were loaded with heavy chains, and thrown into a dark dungeon.
THEY continued in prison for a considerable time without seeing any persons but their gaolers, or receiving any allowance greater than what would barely subsist them; the bare ground was their bed, and hope their only consolation. During this time, however, they only considered themselves as prisoners of war; but at length they were informed, that nothing could preserve their lives but renouncing their religion and embracing mahometanism.
TO induce them to comply, the caliph pretended a very great zeal for their welfare; and declared, that he looked upon converts in a more glorious light than conquests; and the gaining of souls, of much greater importance than the subduing of kingdoms. Agreeable to these maxims, after they had suffered all the hardships of a dark and noisome prison, and were reduced to a state that might oblige them to accept of relief on any terms, he sent some of the most ingenious and artful of the Mahometans, with money and clothes, and the promise of other advantages they might secure to themselves by a bare abjuration of christianity; which, according to the corrupt casuistry of those [Page 87] infidels, might be made without quitting their faith. But our martyrs, well instructed in the simplicity and sincerity of the gospel, rejected the proposal with horror and contempt. After this they were attacked with that fallacious and delusive argument which the Mahometans still use in favour of themselves, and their monstrous absurdities! they were desired to judge of the merits of the cause by the success of those who were engaged in it; and chuse that religion which they saw flourished most, and was best rewarded with the good things of this life, which they called the blessings of heaven. But our noble prisoners were proof against all these temptations; and argued strenuously against the authority of their false prophet. This incensed the Mahometans, and drew greater hardships upon the christians during their confinement, which lasted seven years. At the end of that time Boidizius, the renegado that had betrayed Armorian, brought them the welcome news of their sufferings being to conclude in martyrdom the next day. To which he added his advice to them to save their lives by dissimulation, a fault very excusable, he said, in their circumstances. But they knew what curse was denounced by Christ against such as deny him before men; and were therefore prepared to meet death in any shape, rather than commit that horrid crime.
AS soon as they were brought from their dungeon, they were again solicited to embrace the tenets of Mahomet; but neither threats nor promises, the denunciations of malice, nor allurement of rewards, could induce them to forsake the true faith, or prevail on them to espouse the doctrines of an impostor.
FINDING their resolution, and that their faith could not by any means be shaken, the caliph ordered them to be executed. Theodore, one of the number, had formerly received priest's orders, and officiated as a clergyman; but afterwards quitting the church, he had followed a military life, and raised himself by the sword to some considerable posts, which he enjoyed at the time of his being taken prisoner. The officer who attended the execution, being apprized of these circumstances, said to Theodore, "You might, indeed, pretend to be ranked amongst the christians, while you served in their church as a priest; but the profession you have taken up, which naturally engages you in bloodshed, is so contrary to your former employment, that you should not now think of passing upon us, for one of that religion. When you quitted the altar for the camp, you renounced Jesus Christ. Why then will you dissemble any longer with the world? Would you not act more conformable to your own principles, and make your conduct all of a piece, if you came to a resolution of saving your life by owing our great prophet?"
THEODORE, covered with a religious confusion at this strong reproach, but still full of courage, and unshaken in his faith, made the following answer: "It is true, said he, I did in some measure abandon my God when I engaged in the army, and scarce deserve the name of a christian. But the Almighty has given me the grace to see myself in a true light, and made me sensible of my fault; and I hope he will be pleased to accept my life, as the only sacrifice I can now offer to expiate my guilt. His mercies are infinite, and therefore I have room to hope my blood may be allowed to wash away my crimes. And in this I appeal to your own sentiments. If, in the same case, any one that had left your service, and rambled negligent of his duty for some time, should at last return and offer to lay down his life for you, would not you be inclined to forget all that was past, and receive him into your family again?"
THIS pious and manly answer confounded the officer, who only answered, that he should presently have an opportunity of giving that proof of his zeal for, and fidelity to, his master. Upon which, Theodore and the rest, to the number of forty-two, were beheaded.
FLORA and Mary, two ladies of distinction, suffered martyrdom at the same time. Flora was the daughter of an eminent Mahometan, at Seville, in Spain; from whence he removed to Corduba, where the Saracen king resided, and kept his court. Her father dying while she was young, Flora was left to the care of her mother, who, being a christian, brought her up in the true faith, and inspired her with sentiments of virtue and religion. A priest of Corduba, who personally knew both her and her [Page 88] mother, and who wrote the account of her martyrdom, hath given us the following portrait of her character: "Flora (says he) was a great proficient in the spiritual life, at an age when little is thought of but the world and its vanities; her whole thoughts seemed turned to Jesus Christ; her whole discourse was inflamed with the divine love; God was her sole care; her f [...]sts were rigorous; her devotion full of fervour; her concern for the poor most surprizing and edifying; and the precepts of the gospel were her constant study. Her brother being a professed enemy to christianity, with the addition of a barbarous and savage temper, Flora was for some time obliged to use no small caution in the practice of such virtues, as must have exposed her to a domestic persecution at least. She was too zealous to bear this restraint l [...]ng; for which reason she left Corduba, in comp [...]ny with her sister.
HER departure soon alarmed her brother, who guessed its motives, and, in revenge, informed against several christians of Corduba; for as he did not know whither his sister was gone, he determined to wreak his vengeance on such christians as were present.
FLORA being informed of these proceedings, considered herself as the cause of what the christians had suffered at Corduba, and having an interior conviction that God called her to fight for her faith, she returned to that city, and made her way directly to the persecutors, among whom she found her brother. "If, said our glorious martyr, I am the object of your enquiry, if the servants of God are tormented on my account, I now freely offer myself to your disposal. I declare, I believe Jesus Christ, glory in his cross, and profess the doctrine which he taught. This now is my confession; and I hope, through the divine mercy, that nothing you can do to me will be able to make me retract or alter it." None of the company seemed so much enraged at this declaration as her brother, who, after some threats, struck her; this violent proceeding was followed by attempts of a softer nature; for he endeavoured to gain her by expressions of concern, and pretended kindness. Finding her equally insensible to all he could say, he then informed against her, and undertook to prove her a christian before the judge. He insinuated, that Flora had been educated in the religion of Mahomet, but had renounced it at the suggestion of some christians, who inspired her with the utmost contempt for the great prophet. When she was called to answer to the charge, she declared she never owned Mahomet, but sucked the christian religion in with her milk, and was entirely devoted to the Redeemer of mankind. The magistrate, finding her resolution, delivered her to her brother, and gave him orders to use his utmost endeavours to make her a Mahometan. She, however, soon found an opportunity of escaping over a wall in the night, and of secreting herself in the house of a christian. At length, she withdrew to Tucci, a village of Andalusia, where she met with her sister, and they never separated again till her martyrdom.
MARY, who was martyred at the same time, was the daughter of a christian tradesman at Estremadura, who afterwards removed to a town near Corduba.
WHEN the persecution began under Abderrama, king of the Saracens, in Spain, Mary's brother was one who fell a victim to the rage of the infidels on that occasion. Mary, hearing of his martyrdom, and full of a generous confusion at being left behind by one so much younger than herself, gave a free loose to her grief, which proceeded not so much from the loss of her brother, as her not being allowed to enjoy the hap [...]iness then in his possession.
FULL of thes [...] thoughts she went to Corduba, where, going in [...]o a church▪ sh [...] [...]ound Flora, who had left h [...]r [...] on [...] motive, and was there recommending herself to th [...] [...] and rewarder of such vi [...]ories as christians then gained over infidels. Upon conv [...]ing together, and finding they acted on the same heroic principles, and proposed the same glorious end of their labours, they agreed to go together, and declare their faith before the judge. Accordingly, without farther hesitation, they proceeded to the magistrate, when Flora boldly told him, she looked on Mahomet as no better than a false prophet, an adulterer, and a magician.
MARY then told the magistrate, that she professed [Page 89] the same faith, and entertained the same sentiments as Flora, and that she was sister to Walabonzus, who had already suffered for being a christian. This behaviour so much enraged the magistrate, that he ordered them to be committed to close confinement for some time, and then to be beheaded: which sentence was executed on the 4th of November, A. D. 850.
PERFECTUS was born at Corduba, in Spain, and brought up in the christian faith. Having a quick genius, he made himself master of all the useful and polite literature of that age; and, at the same time, was not more celebrated for his abilities, than admired for his piety. At length he took priest's orders, and performed the duties of his office with great assiduity and punctuality.
WALKING one day in the streets of Corduba, some Arabians entered into conversation with him, and, among other questions, asked him his opinion both of Jesus Christ, and of Mahomet.
PERFECTUS gave them a very exact account of the christian faith, respecting the divinity of Christ, and the redemption of mankind; but begged to b [...] excused from delivering his sentiments concerning Mahomet. The Arabians pressed him to speak freely; but he declined it, saying, that what he should utter would not be agreeable to their ideas, and consequently that it would be disgusting to thei [...] ears; he therefore thought best to be silent, as he wished not to offend any one. Dissatisfied with this answer, they still intreated him to speak his thoughts, declaring at the same time, that they would not be offended at any thing he should say.
BELIEVING them sincere, and hoping this might be the favourable time allotted by God for their conversion, Perfectus let them know the christians looked on Mahomet as one of the false prophets foretold in the gospel, who were to seduce and deceive great numbers, to their eternal ruin. To illustrate this affe [...]tion, he placed before them some of the actions of that grand impostor; endeavoured to show them the impious doctrines, and abominable absurdities of the Alcoran; and ended with exhorting them, in very strong terms, to quit the miserable state in which they then were, and which would certainly be followed by eternal misery.
IT may be easily imagined, that the infidels could not hear a discourse like this without feeling some warmth, and conceiving an indignation against the speaker. They thou [...] proper, however, to disguise their resentments [...] that time, but were resolved not to let him escape without punishment. At first, indeed, they were unwilling to use any violence to him, because they had given him a solemn assurance he should come to no harm, for the liberty he took at their request; but zeal for their law, and its author, soon eased them of that scruple. They watched a favourable opportunity, seized on him, hurried him away to one of their chief magistrates, and accused him of blaspheming th [...]ir great prophet and legislator.
THE whole alleg [...]on having been heard, the judge ordered him to be put in chains, and closely confined in prison, till the feast of their Ramadan, or Lent, when he should be made a victim to Mahomet. He heard the determination of the judge with joy, and prepared for his martyrdom with great fervency.
WHEN the time arrived, he was led to the place of execution, where he again made a confession of his faith, declared Mahomet an impostor, and insisted, that the Alcoran was filled with absurdities and blasphemies. In consequence of this he was sentenced to be beheaded, and was accordingly executed, A. D. 850; after which his body was honourably interred by the christians.
WINCESLAUS, duke of Bohemia, was brought up in the faith of Christ, for his father Wrattislaus, the preceding duke, was a valiant prince, and a good christian; but Drahomira, his mother was a pagan, whose morals were as bad as her sentiments of religion; she consented, however, to entrust her mother, Ludmilla, with the education of her eldest son. That holy woman had resided at Prague ever since the death of Borivor her husband, the first duke of Bohemia, who embraced the faith of Christ; and Winceslaus was sent to that city, to be brought up as she pleased. Ludmilla undertook to form his heart to devotion and the love of God, and was [Page 90] assisted in that work by Paul her chaplain, a man of great sanctity and prudence, who likewise endeavoured to cultivate his mind with the first rudiments of learning. The mind of the young prince corresponded with their endeavours; and the grace of God, who had prepared him for their instructions, made the task very easy. At a convenient age he was sent to a college at Budweis, about sixty miles from Prague, where several young persons of the first rank were placed for their improvement in virtue and learning, and studied under the direction of an excellent master, a native of Neisse, in the duchy of Silesia.
AT the death of Wrattislaus, his son Winceslaus was very young; on which account Drahomira, his mother, declared herself regent during his minority. This princess, not having any one now to controul her, gave a free vent to her rage against christianity; and began her administration with an order for shutting up the churches. She repealed the laws in favour of the christians, and removed all magistrates of that denomination, supplying their places with pagans.
FINDING themselves thus encouraged, the pagans, upon any frivolous pretence, would murder the christians with impunity; and if a christian in his own defence killed a pagan, his life, and that of nine other christians, were to be the forfeit.
THE venerable Ludmilla was sensibly touched at these proceedings, and could not, without affliction, behold a religion trampled on which she professed, and which her consort had established with so much difficulty.
LUDMILLA could not think of any expedient to prevent the total extirpation of christianity in Bohemia, but persuading Winceslaus, young as he was, to assume the reins of government. Winceslaus at first declined engaging in this task, till maturer years had rendered him better qualified; but upon his grandmother's promising to assist him with her advice, and direct him in his conduct, he complied with her request: and, to prevent all future disputes, divided the country between himself and his younger brother Bolislaw, whose name a town in, and a considerable district of that country, still retains.
ON this change of affairs Drahomira attached herself to Bolislaw, who, like herself, was a pagan, and followed implicitly her maxims. With respect to the behaviour of Winceslaus after his assuming the sovereignty, and the fate of the aged and worthy Ludmilla, the annals of Bohemia furnish us with these particulars: "Winceslaus, pursuant to the impressions of virtue which he had received from his grandmother, and others employed in his education, was more careful than ever to preserve the innocence of his morals, and acquired some new degree of perfection every day. He was as humble, sober, and chaste, when master of his own motions, and in full possession of sovereign authority, as when under the government of those on whom he was taught to look as his superiors. He spent great part of the night in prayer, and the whole day in acts of piety; directing all his views to the establishment of peace, justice, and religion, in his dominions. He was assisted in these charitable and truly christian labours by able ministers; and nothing of consequence was done without the advice of Ludmilla. That excellent princess being informed that Drahomira, transported with rage at the success of her directions, had formed a design against her life, and that it would hardly be in her power to avoid the blow, was so far from being disturbed at the apprehensions of death, or desisting from what had made her odious to that wicked woman, that she exerted herself more vigorously than ever for the maintainance of religion, and confirming the prince in his resolutions. Being now assured that her death was near, and that several persons were actually employed to dispatch her the first convenient opportunity, she called all her servants together, acknowledged their fidelity in her service with a liberal hand, and distributed her goods and money among the poor. Thus divested of all she possessed in the world, she went to her chapel, received the holy eucharist, and then employed herself in prayer, recommended her soul to God, and expected his will with the utmost tranquillity and resignation. This was her situation, when two ruffians entered the chapel, seized o [...] her, and strangled her with her own veil."
THE young duke felt severely for the loss of his grandmother; and the more so, as he did not chuse to punish the offenders, well knowing that they [Page 91] had been instigated to what they did by his mother. He therefore addressed himself to God only, intreated the throne of grace for his mother's pardon and conversion, and patiently submitted to the dispensations of Providence.
AS many factions were stirred up in his dominions by means of his mother and brother, and as Winceslaus himself seemed of an unwarlike disposition, a neighbouring prince determined to invade that part of Bohemia which belonged to him. This was Radislaus, prince of Gurima, who entered Bohemia at the head of a considerable army, and immediately commenced hostilities. Winceslaus hearing of these proceedings, sent a message to the invader, to know what offence he had given him, and what terms he required to quit his dominions, and leave him at his repose.
RADISLAUS mistaking the temper of Winceslaus, looked upon this message to proceed from timidity; he therefore answered in a very haughty manner, made some frivolous excuses for having commenced the quarrel, and concluded, by insisting that Winceslaus should surrender to him all his dominions.
THIS unjust and insolent demand obliged Winceslaus to appear in arms in defence of himself and his people. He accordingly raised a considerable body of forces, and marched to oppose the enemy. When the two armies were drawn up, and ready to engage, Winceslaus desired a conference with Radislaus, which being complied with, he observed, that as it would be unreasonable and unjust to hazard the lives of so many innocent men, the most eligible method of putting an end to the dispute would be by single combat between themselves.
RADISLAUS heard this proposal with pleasure, and accepted it with joy, thinking that he was much more expert in the use of arms than his antagonist. They accordingly engaged in the sight of the two armies, and the victory seemed doubtful for some time, till, at length, it declared in favour of Winceslaus; when his antagonist was obliged, according to previous agreement, to relinquish his pretended claim, and retire into his own country.
BEING thus freed from the fears of a foreign enemy, Winceslaus had leisure to turn his thoughts to domestic reformation. He removed corrupt judges and venal magistrates, and filled their places with persons of integrity: he put an end to oppression in all its branches, and punished such nobles as tyrannized over their vassals. These regulations, though they relieved the poor and helpless, gave great offence to the great and rich, as they abridged their power of using those who depended on them ill, and, in some degree, took from them that self-importance, and assumed consequence, which is the pride of little minds. Hence many became factious, and ripe for mischief. The malecontents gave an odious turn to all his best actions; spoke slightingly, and even contemptibly, of his application to prayer, fasting, and other acts of religion, which they endeavoured to insinuate were low employments for a prince, and incompatible with the courage and policy necessary for the government of a state. His mother and brother were still the most inveterate of his enemies, who could not bear to see this growing prosperity of the patron of religion, and enemy of idolatry; and therefore resolved to take him off at any rate. Drahomira and Bolislaw were concerting measures for executing their black design, when they understood that Winceslaus had desired the pope to send some priests into his dominions, with whom he proposed to spend the remainder of his days in a religious retreat. This news suspended the execution of their conspiracy against him for some time; but, perceiving this affair did not come to a conclusion so soon as was necessary for satisfying their ambitious views, they re-assumed their criminal practices against him, and gained their ends in the following very black and treacherous manner:
BOLISLAW having been some time married, his princess proved pregnant, and, at length, brought him forth a son. This circumstance, which should have diffused joy throughout the family, furnished Drahomira and Bolislaw with an idea of the most horrid nature, and the innocent infant was made the object for perpetrating a deed of unexampled cruelty. The scheme concerted between the bigoted Bolislaw, and his wicked mother, was to get Winceslaus into their power. The birth of the child furnished them with a fair pretence; and a [Page 92] polite message was dispatched to the unsuspecting duke, to partake of an entertainment given upon the occasion. Winceslaus, not having the least surmise of their barbarous intent, repaired to the court of Bolislaw, where he was received with the greatest appearance of cordiality. He partook of the entertainment, and wore the face of festivity till it grew rather late at night, when he thought proper to retire before the rest of the company, as he was not fond of late hours, and as he never neglected his devotions to the Almighty, previous to his laying down to sleep.
AS soon as he was withdrawn, Drahomira urged Bolislaw not to trust their revenge to another hand, but to follow his brother instantly, and murder him. The bloody prince took his mother's sanguinary advice, and repairing to his brother's chamber, he found him kneeling, and in fervent prayer to the Almighty; when, unmoved by that pious appearance, he rushed upon him, and plunged a dagger to his heart. Thus, in A. D. 929, fell Winceslaus, the third duke of Bohemia, by as infernal an act of treachery as ever was recorded in the annals of any nation.
ADALBERT, bishop of Prague, was a Bohemian by birth. His parents were persons of rank, but more distinguished for their virtues and piety than for their opulence or lineage. They were happy in a son, whose dawning perfections gave them a pleasing hope, that he would one day become a shining ornament to his family. That he might fulfil their expectations, they gave him a complete education; but their joy was in some measure damped, by his falling into a dropsy, from which he was with difficulty recovered.
WHEN he was effectually cured, they sent him to Magdaburg, and committed him to the care of the archbishop of that city, who completed his education, and confirmed him in piety and virtue. The rapid progress which Adalbert made in human and divine learning, made him dear to the prelate, who, to the authority of a teacher, joined all the tenderness of a parent for his amiable pupil.
HAVING spent nine years at Magdaburg, he retired to his own country upon the death of the archbishop, and entered himself among the clergy at Prague. Dithmar, bishop of Prague, died soon after the return of Adalbert to that city; and, in his expiring moments, expressed such contrition for having been ambitious, and solicitous of worldly honours and riches, as surprized every one who heard it. Adalbert, who was among the number present, was so sensibly affected at the bishop's dying sentiments, that he received them as an admonition to the strict practice of virtue, which he afterwards exercised with the greatest attention, spending his time in prayer, and relieving the poor with a cheerful liberality.
A few days after the decease of Dithmar, an assembly was held for the choice of a successor, which consisted of the clergy of Prague, and the chief quality of Bohemia. Adalbert's character for every virtue that important post required, soon determined them to raise him to the vacant see, which they did on the 19th of February, 983. Messengers were immediately dispatched to Verona, to desire Otho II. would confirm the election. The emperor granted the request, ordered Adalbert to repair to court for investiture, gave him the ring and crosier, and then sent him to the archbishop of Mentz for consecration. The ceremony was performed on the 29th of June the same year; and he was received at Prague with all possible demonstrations of public joy. He divided the revenue of his see into four parts, according to the direction of the canons extant in the fifth century. The first was employed in the fabric, and ornaments of the church; the second went to the maintenance of the clergy; the third was laid out for the relief of the poor; and the fourth reserved for the support of himself and family; which was always made to include twelve indigent persons, to whom he allowed daily subsistence.
HE now performed his duty with the utmost assiduity, and spent a great portion of his time in preaching to and exhorting the people. His conduct was discreet and humane; and his manner neither too severe nor too indulgent; so that his flock were not terrified into despair, or flattered into presumption. But some things which he could not remedy gave him great uneasiness, particularly the having a plurality of wives, and selling the [Page 93] christians to the Jews, for trivial offences. Hence he determined to consult the pope, and made a journey to Rome. Accordingly, John, who then sat in the papal chair, received him with great cordiality, and having heard his grievance, advised him to give up his bishopric, rather than be the witness of enormities which he could not remedy. He determined to take the pope's advice, and to devote the remainder of his days to mortification, poverty, and silence; which design he began, by giving all his treasures to the poor. He was, however, before he entirely secluded himself from mankind, desirous of seeing the Holy Land, and set off accordingly, with three persons in his company.
IN their way they arrived at Mount Cassino, where the heads of the monastery of that place received them in a very friendly manner, and entertained them as well as the rules of their order would admit. Being apprized of the cause of their journey, when they were about to depart, the superior of the monastery addressed himself to Adalbert, and observed to him, that the journey he had undertaken would give him more trouble and uneasiness than he was aware of; that the frequent desire of changing place and travelling, often proceeded more from a restless disposition, and eager curiosity, than real religion, or solid devotion. "Therefore, said he, if you will listen to my advice, leave the world at once with sincerity, and settle in some religious community, without desiring to see more than you have already seen." Adalbert listened attentively, and came readily into the sentiments of the superior, which soon determined him to take up his residence in that monastery, where he then thought he might live entirely recluse, and, being unknown, might pass unhonoured to the grave. But in the latter particular he was mistaken; for the priests, by accident, coming to a knowledge of the rank and former dignity of their colleague, began to treat him with great deference and respect, which occasioned him to leave the place. Nilus, a Grecian, was then at the head of a community not far from Mount Cassino; Adalbert made his way to him, and begged to be received into his monastery. He assured him he would willingly comply with his request, if he thought the rule and practice of his religious family would be agreeable to a stranger; besides which, he told him that the house in which he and his people lived was given to them by those of Mount Cassino; and therefore it might not be safe for him to receive one that had left that community. When Nilus had thus excused himself, he advised him to return to Rome, and apply himself to Leo, an abbot of his acquaintance there, to whom he gave a letter of recommendation. Adalbert went to Rome, where he found Leo, who, before he would admit him, put his virtue and courage to proper trials, by speaking roughly to him, and giving him a terrible account of the labours and severities of the state in which he desired to engage. But, finding his resolution was not moved or weakened by the prospect of the most austere mortifications, he conducted him to the pope, and, with the consent of that pontiff and the whole college of cardinals, gave him the habit on Holy Thursday in the year 990. We have already said, that he had been attended only by three select persons ever since he had the pope's advice for resigning his bishopric; two of them left him now; but the third, who was his own brother Gaudentius, followed his example, and engaged in the same community. Adalbert, full of the most profound humility, took a particular pleasure in the lowest employments of the house, and lived here an excellent pattern of christian simplicity and obedience.
THE archbishop of Mentz, as metropolitan, was exceedingly afflicted at the disorders in the church of Prague, and wished for the return of the bishop, with whose retreat he was not▪ for some time, acquainted. At length, after five years absence, he heard that Adalbert was at Rome, when he sent a deputation to the pope to press his return to his diocese. The pope summoned a council to consider of the deputation, and after a warm dispute between the monks and the deputies, the latter carried their point, and Adalbert was ordered to return to his diocese; but, at the same time, had permission to quit his charge again, if he found his flock as incorrigible as before. The inhabitants of Prague met him, on his arrival, with great joy, and promised obedience to his directions; but they soon forgot their promises, and relapsed into their former [Page 94] vices, which obliged him, a second time, to leave them, and return to his monastery.
THE archbishop of Mentz sent another deputation to Rome, and desired that his suffragan might be again ordered back to his diocese. Gregory V. who was then pope, commanded him to return to Prague; and he obeyed, though with great reluctance.
THE Bohemians, however, did not look upon him as before, but deemed him the censor of their faults, and the enemy to their pleasures, and threatened him with death upon his arrival; but not having him yet in their power, contented themselves with falling on his relations, several of whom they murdered, plundered their estates, and set fire to their houses. Adalbert had intelligence of these outrageous proceedings, and could not judge it prudent to proceed on his journey. He therefore went to the duke of Poland, who had a particular respect for him, and engaged that prince to sound the Bohemians in regard to his return; but could get no better answer from that wretched people, than "that they were sinners, hardened in iniquity: and Adalbert a saint, and consequently not [...]it to live among them; for which reason he was not to hope for a tolerable reception at Prague." The bishop thought this message discharged him from any farther concern for that church, and began to direct his thoughts to the conversion of infidels; to which end he repaired to Dantzick, where he converted and baptized many, which so enraged the pagan priests, that they fell upon him, and dispatched him with darts, on the 23d of April, A. D. 997.
An Account of the Persecutions in the Eleventh Century.
ALPHAGE▪ archbishop of Canterbury, was descended from a considerable family in Gloucestershire, and received an education suitable to his illustrious birth. His parents were worthy christians, and Alphage seemed to inherit all their virtues. He was prudent and humble, pious and chaste: he made a rapid progress both in polite literature and scripture learning, and was, at once, the admired scholar, and devout christian: he strove to make the arts useful to the purposes of life, and to render philosophy subservient to the cause of religion. In order to be more at leisure to contemplate the divine perfections, he determined to renounce his fortune, quit home, and become a recluse. He accordingly retired to a monastery of Benedictines, at Deerhurst, in Gloucestershire, and soon after took the habit.
CONSIDERING that the principal business of a christian was to subdue his passions, and mortify his appetites, he lived with the utmost temperance, and spent the greatest part of his time in prayer. But not thinking the austerities he underwent in this monastery sufficiently severe, he retired to a lonely cell near Bath, and lived in a manner still more rigid and mortifying. Here he thought to remain unknown, but some devout persons finding out his retreat, his austere life soon became the subject of conversation in the neighbouring villages, where many flocked to him, and begged to be taken under his pastoral care. He yielded to their importunities, raised a monastery near his cell, by the contributions of several well-disposed persons; formed his new pupils into a community, and placed a prior over them. Having prescribed rules for their regulation, he again retired to his beloved cell, fervently wishing to pass the remainder of his days in religious security; when the following affair once more drew him from his retreat:
THE see of Winchester being vacant by the death of Ethelwold, it was no easy matter to agree upon the choice of a successor to that bishopric. The clergy had been driven out of the cathedral for their scandalous lives, but were admitted again by king Ethelred, upon certain terms of reformation. The monks, who had been introduced upon their expulsion, looked upon themselves as the chapter of that church; and hence arose a violent contest between them, and the clergy who had been readmitted, about the election of a bishop; while both parties were hot, and vigorously set upon promoting each their own man. This dispute at last ran so high, that Dunstan, archbishop of Canterbury, as primate of all England, was obliged to [Page 95] interpose in the affair, who consecrated Alphage to the vacant bishopric, to the general satisfaction of all concerned in the election, or interested in the affair.
ALPHAGE'S behaviour was a sufficient proof of his being equal to the dignity of his vocation. Piety flourished in his diocese; unity was established among his clergy and people; and the church of Winchester recovered its lustre in such a manner, as made the bishop the admiration of the whole kingdom.
DUNSTAN had an extraordinary veneration for Alphage, and when at the point of death, made it his ardent request to God, that he might succeed him in the see of Canterbury; which accordingly happened, though not till about eighteen years after Dunstan's death. In the course of that period the metropolitan church was governed by three successive prelates; the last of whom was Alfrick; upon whose decease, in 1006, Alphage was raised to the sea of Canterbury.
THE people belonging to the diocese of Winchester, were the only persons who did not sincerely rejoice at his promotion; for they were too sensible of the loss they sustained by his translation, not to regret his removal to Canterbury.
SOON after his being made archbishop, he went to Rome, and received the pall from pope John XVIII. and after his return to England, laboured assiduously to introduce the best regulations into the church.
AFTER Alphage had governed the see of Canterbury about forty years, with great reputation to himself, and benefit to his people, the Danes made an incursion into England. Ethelred, who then reigned, was a prince of a very weak understanding, and pusillanimous disposition. Too fearful to face the enemy himself, and too irresolute to furnish others with the means of acting in his stead, he suffered his country to be ravaged with impunity, and the greatest depredations to be committed, at the option of his enemies.
THE archbishop Alphage, upon this trying occasion, acted with great resolution and humanity: he went boldly to the Danes, purchased the freedom of several whom they had made captives; found means to send a sufficient quantity of food to others, whom he had not money enough to redeem, and even made converts of some of the Danes: but the latter circumstance made the Danes, who still continued pagans greater enemies to him than they would otherwise have been, and determined them to be revenged on him for occasioning a change in the sentiments of their companions. Edric, an English malecontent, and an infamous traitor, gave the Danes every encouragement, and even assisted them in laying siege to Canterbury. When the design of attacking this city was known, many of the principal people made a precipitate flight from it, and would have persuaded Alphage to follow their example. But he, like a good pastor, would not listen to such a proposal; he assured them he could not think of abandoning his flock, at a time when his presence was more necessary than ever, and was resolved to hazard his life in their defence, at this calamitous juncture. While he was employed in assisting and encouraging his people, Canterbury was taken by storm; the enemy poured into the town, and destroyed all that came in their way, by fire and sword. The monks did what they could to detain the archbishop in the church, where they hoped he might be safe. But his concern for his flock made him break from them, and run into the midst of the danger. He had the courage to address the enemy, and offer himself to their swords, as more worthy their rage than the people: he begged they might be saved, and that they would discharge their whole fury on him. They accordingly seized him, tied his hands, insulted, and abused him in a rude and barbarous manner; and obliged him to remain on the spot till his church was burnt, and the monks massacred. They then decimated all the inhabitants, both ecclesiastics, and laymen, leaving only every tenth person alive: so that they put 7236 persons to death, and left only four monks, and 800 laymen alive: after which they confined the archbishop in a dungeon, where they kept him close prisoner for several months.
DURING his confinement, they proposed to him to redeem his liberty with the sum of 3000 l. and persuade the king to purchase their departure out [Page 96] of the kingdom, with a further sum of 10,000 l. Alphage's circumstances would not allow him to satisfy the exorbitant demand: they bound him, and put him to severe torments, to oblige him to discover the treasure of his church; upon which they assured him of his life and liberty. The prelate knew, that what they insisted on was the inheritance of the poor, not to be thrown away upon the barbarous enemies of the christian religion; and therefore persisted in refusing to give them any account of it. They remanded him to prison again, confined him six days longer, and then taking him with them to Greenwich, brought him to a trial there. He still remained inflexible with respect to the church treasures; but exhorted them to forsake their idolatry, and embrace christianity. This so greatly incensed the Danes, that the soldiers dragged him out of the camp, and beat him unmercifully. Alphage bore this usage patiently, and even prayed for his persecutors. One of the soldiers, who had been converted and baptized by him, was greatly afflicted, that his pains should be so lingering, as he knew his death was determined on: he, therefore, with the fury of a desperate zeal, and a kind of barbarous compassion, cut off his head, and thus put the finishing stroke to his martyrdom, on April 19, A. D. 1012. This transaction happened on the very spot where the church at Greenwich, dedicated to him, now stands. After his death his body was thrown into the Thames, but being found the next day, it was buried in the cathedral of St. Paul's, by the bishops of London and Lincoln; from whence it was, in the year 1023, removed to Canterbury by Aethelmoth, the archbishop of that province.
GERARD, a Venetian, devoted himself to the service of God from his tender years; entered into a religious house for some time, and then determined to visit the Holy Land. Going into Hungary, he became acquainted with Stephen, the king of that country, who, at once, acted the parts of prince and preacher, and not only regulated his subjects by wholesome laws, but taught them religious duties. Finding Gerard every way qualified to instruct his people, he tried, by every means, to detain him in his kingdom; and, at length, founding several churches, he made Gerard bishop of that of Chonad.
GERARD had a very difficult task to perform; the people of his diocese were fond of, and accustomed to, idolatry; and their perverseness was equal to their immorality. The new bishop, however, assiduous in his charge, and full of zeal for the salvation of his flock, laboured diligently to bring them to a sense of their duty. He soon had the pleasure to find that his endeavours were not unsuccessful, for his sweetness of disposition won upon the people so much, that they could not help believing one whom they loved, or of placing a confidence in the doctrines of a man they had such great reason to reverence.
HIS conquests over idolatry were not confined to his own diocese, but extended to the adjacent country, where his doctrines successfully spread, and many became converts to the pure faith of Christ. Wherever the faith made its way by his ministry, he took care to establish ecclesiastical discipline for the preservation of religion, and made several useful regulations in the public service of the church. His exemplary conduct was at least as instructive as his sermons and exhortations, and went a great way in convincing his converts of the truth and dignity of their new profession: for who could doubt of the excellency of a religion, that raised him above the weaknesses and passions of human nature; and appeared divine, by placing him at a distance from all that flatters or delights the senses? He visited his diocese, and was remarkable for a [...] uncommon tenderness for the poor, especially such as had the misfortune of sickness, or were incapable of following their accustomed employments.
DURING the life of Stephen, Gerard received every kind of assistance which that excellent monarch could afford him; but on the demise of Stephen, his nephew Peter, who succeeded him, was of so different a temper, that Gerard was greatly perplexed during his government.
AT length, the tyranny of Peter exasperated his subjects so much against him, that they deposed him, and placed Ouvo on the throne. They, however, soon found, that they had changed from bad to worse; for Ouvo proved a greater monster of cruelty than his predecessor. At Easter, Ouvo repaired to Chonad, in order to receive the crown [Page 97] from the hands of Gerard. When he arrived at the place, the other prelates of the kingdom, who were assembled on that solemn occasion, assured the prince of their affections for his person, and promised to concur in his coronation; but Gerard absolutely refused to pay that compliment to a public and malicious enemy; and took the liberty of letting the intruder know, that he could not look on Peter's exclusion as regular, and consequently should not proceed to do any thing to the prejudice of his title: he then told him, that if he persisted in his usurpation, the Divine Providence would soon put an end to his life and reign. Ouvo, growing more insupportable than his predecessor, was brought to the scaffold in the year 1044; upon which Peter was recalled, and placed on the throne a second time; but his disposition and retirement had made no alteration in his temper, so that he was again deprived of the royal dignity after two years possession.
ANDREW, son of Ladislaus, cousin-german to Stephen, had then a tender of the crown made him, upon condition that he would employ his authority in extirpating the christian religion out of Hungary. The ambitious prince came into the proposal, and promised to do his utmost in re-establishing the idolatrous worship of his deluded ancestors. Gerard, being informed of this impious bargain, thought his duty obliged him to remonstrate against the enormity of Andrew's crime, and persuade him to withdraw his promise. In this view he undertook to go to that prince, attended by three other prelates, full of a like zeal for religion. The new king was at Alba Regalis, but as the four bishops were going to cross the Danube, they were stopped by a party of soldiers posted there by order of a man of quality in the neighbourhood, remarkable for his aversion to the christian religion, and to Stephen's memory. They bore an attack with a shower of stones patiently, when the soldiers proceeding to greater outrages, beat them unmercifully, and at length dispatched them with lances. Their martyrdoms happened in the year 1045.
STANISLAUS, bishop of Cracow, was descended from an illustrious Polish family. The piety of his parents was equal to their opulence, and the latter they rendered subservient to all the purposes of charity and benevolence. Stanislaus was their only child, and consequently the sole object of their parental affection. When he was of a proper age, they employed masters in several branches of learning to instruct him, and were happy to find, that his rapid improvement fully answered their most sanguine expectations. He had a penetrating genius, retentive memory, and solid understanding; hence study became his amusement, learning hi [...] delight, and books his beloved companions. Nor was his disposition inferior to his abilities; he was modest, mild, candid and grave, temperate in his meals, and moderate in his sleep; he voluntarily gave himself, in the dawn of youth, to such austerities, as might have given reputation to a professed hermit. [...] pursued his studies at home for some years, he was sent to a seminary of learning in Poland, and afterwards to the university of Paris, that his education might be completed in that celebrated [...] literature. After continuing seven years at Paris, he returned to his own country, and on the demise of his parents, became possessed of a plentiful fortune. Sensible that riches constituted no part of s christian's happiness, any farther than as they enabled him to assist the needy; he devoted most of his property to charitable uses, retaining only a small portion for his own sustenance.
HIS views were now solely directed to the ministry; but he remained for some time undetermined, whether he should embrace a monastic life, or engage among the secular clergy. He was at length pesuaded to the latter by Lambert Zula, bishop of Cracow, who gave him holy orders, and made him a canon of his cathedral. In this capacity he lived in a most pious and exemplary manner, and performed the duties of his function with unremitting assiduity and fervent devotion. Lambert could not help being charmed with the many virtues which so particularly distinguished Stanislaus, and would fain have resigned his bishopric to him. The reason he alledged for such resignation was his great age, but Stanislaus absolutely refused to accept of the see, for the contrary reason, viz. his want of years, for being then only thirty-six years old, he deemed that too early a time of life for a man to undertake the important care of a diocese. Lambert, however, made him his substitute upon various occasions, by [Page 98] which he became thoroughly acquainted with all that related to the bishopric. Lambert died on November 25, A. D. 1071, when all concerned in the choice of a successor declared for Stanislaus. But his former objection remained, and on account of his age, he declined the acceptance of the prelacy.
DETERMINED however to conquer his scruples, the king, clergy, and nobility unanimously joined in writing to pope Alexander II. who at their intreaty sent an express order that Stanislaus should accept the bishopric. Thus commanded, he obeyed, and exerted himself to the utmost in the improvement of his flock. He was equally careful with respect both to clergy and laity; and exhorted the former to shew a good example [...] much as he did the latter to imitate it. He kept a list of all the poor in his diocese, and by feeding the hungry, cloathing the naked, and administering remedies to the sick, he proved himself not only the godly pastor, but the bodily physician, and generous benefactor.
BOLISLAUS, the second king of Poland, had, by nature, many good qualities, but giving way too much to his passions, he ran into many enormities. He daily grew worse and worse, and from being deemed a good king, at length had the appellation of CRUEL bestowed on him. The nobility were shocked at his conduct, but did not care to speak to him concerning it, and the clergy saw his proceedings with grief, but were afraid to reprehend him. Stanislaus alone had the courage to tell him of his faults, when taking a private opportunity he freely displayed to him the enormity of his crimes.
THE king was greatly exasperated at this freedom, but, awed by the virtues of the bishop, dissembled his resentment, and appearing to be convinced of his errors, promised to reform his conduct. So far however from designing to perform his promise, he complained to some of his cycophants of the freedom that Stanislaus had taken with him; and they, to fl [...]tter his folly, condemned the boldness of the bishop. The king, soon after, attempted the chastity of a married lady, who rejected his offers with disdain; which piqued his pride so much, that he seized her by force, and violated her by compulsion. This greatly alarmed all the nobility: none knew how long his own wife, daughter, or sister might be safe; and each dreaded for the peace of his family. They, at length, assembled together, and calling the clergy to their assistance, intreated Peter, archbishop of Gresne, to remonstrate to the king on the impropriety and viciousness of his conduct; adding, that it was more particularly his business so to do, as primate of Poland.
THE archbishop, however, declined the dangerous task for though a man of some virtue, he was of a disposition uncommonly timid. Several other prelates sheltered themselves behind his refusal, and gave their fear the name of modesty, which would not permit them to undertake what their metropolitan had thought too great for his abilities. Stanislaus alone was, as before, the only one who had courage, and zeal sufficient, to perform what he looked upon as a most important and indispensable duty. He, therefore, put himself at the head of a select number of ecclesiastics, noblemen, and gentlemen; and, proceeding to court, addressed the king in a solemn and serious manner, and fully represented the heinousness of his crimes, and what would be the fatal consequences of his [...] ▪
THE king had scarce patience to hear him out; and, as soon as he had done speaking▪ flew into a violent passion, at once complaining of the wa [...] of respect to his royal dignity, and vowing revenge for what he called an insult to his person. Stanislaus, however, not in the least intimidated by his menaces, visited him twice more, and remonstrated with him in a similar manner, which so much exasperated the king, that he knew not how to contain himself.
THE nobility and clergy, finding that the admonitions of the bishop had not the desired effect upon the king▪ thought proper to interpose between them. The nobility intreated the bishop to refrain from any more exasperating a monarch of so ferocious and untractable a temper; and the clergy endeavoured to persuade the king not to be offended with Stanislaus for his charitable remonstrances. [Page 99] Neither, however, succeeded, for the king remained as obstinate, and the bishop as zealous, as ever. The haughty sovereign, at length, determined, at any rate, to get rid of a prelate, who, in his opinion, was so extremely troublesome. Hearing one day that the bishop was by himself, in the chapel of St. Michael, at a small distance from the town, he dispatched some soldiers to murder him. The soldiers readily undertook the bloody task; but when they came into the presence of Stanislaus, the venerable aspect of the prelate struck them with such awe, that they could not perform what they had promised. On their return, the king, finding they had not obeyed his orders, stormed at them violently, snatched a dagger from one of them, and ran furiously to the chapel, where, finding Stanislaus at the altar, he plunged the weapon to his heart. The prelate immediately expired, on the 8th of May, A. D. 1079, receiving a crown of martyrdom, as a reward for his zeal.
An Account of the PERSECUTIONS of the WALDENSES, in FRANCE.
POPERY having brought various innovations into the church, and overspread the christian world with darkness and superstition, some few, who plainly perceived the pernicious tendency of such errors, determined to shew the light of the gospel in its real purity, and to disperse those clouds which artful priests had raised about it, in order to blind the people, and obscure its real brightness.
THE principal among these was Berengarius, who, about the year 1000, boldly preached gospel truths, according to their primitive purity. Many, from conviction, assented to his doctrine, and were, on that account, called Berengarians. To Berengarius succeeded Peter Bruis, who preached at Thoulouse, under the protection of an earl, named Hildephonsus; and the whole tenets of the reformers, with the reasons of their separation from the church of Rome, were published in a book written by Bruis, under the title of ANTICHRIST.
BY the year of Christ, 1140, the number of the reformed was very great, and the probability of its increasing alarmed the Pope, who wrote to several princes to banish them their dominions, and employed many learned men to write against their doctrines.
A. D. 1147, Henry, of Thoulouse, being deemed their most eminent preacher, they were called Henericians; and as they would not admit of any proofs relative to religion, but what could be deduced from the scriptures themselves, the popish party gave them the name of Apostolics. At length, Peter Waldo, or Valdo, a native of Lyons, became a strenuous opposer of popery; and from him the reformed, at that time, received the appellation of Waldenses, or Waldoys.
PETER Waldo was a man eminent for his learning, piety, and benevolence; so that his doctrines were admired by great numbers, and he was followed by multitudes. The bishop of Lyons taking umbrage at the freedom with which he treated the Pope and the Romish clergy, sent to admonish him to refrain, in future, from such discourses. To which message Waldo returned this reply:— "That he could not be silent in a cause of such importance as the salvation of men's souls; wherein he must obey God rather than man."
WALDO'S principal accusations against the Pope and popery, were, that the Roman catholics affirm the church of Rome to be the only infallible church of Christ upon earth; and that the Pope is its head, and the vicar of Christ; that they hold the absurd doctrine of transubstantiation, insisting, that the bread and wine given in the sacrament, is the very identical body and blood of Christ which was nailed to the cross: that they believe there is a place called purgatory, where the souls of persons, after this life, are purged from the sins of mortality; and that the pains and penalties here inflicted may be abated according to the masses said by, and the money paid to the priests: that they teach, the communion of one kind, or the receiving the water only, is sufficient for the lay-people, though the clergy must be indulged with both bread and [Page 100] wine: that they pray to the Virgin Mary and saints, though their prayers ought to be immediately to God: that they pray for souls departed, though God decides the fate immediately on the decease of the person: that they will not perform the service of the church in a language understood by the people in general: that they place their devotion in the number of prayers, and not in the intent of the heart: that they forbid marriage to the clergy, though God allowed it; and that they use many things in baptism, though Christ used only water.
POPE Alexander the Third being informed of these transactions, excommunicated Waldo and his adherents, and commanded the bishop of Lyons to exterminate them, if possible, from the face of the earth; and hence began the papal persecutions against the Waldenses.
BEFORE we describe the sufferings and martyrdom of the Waldenses, it is necessary to shew their tenets, which will explain how, and for what reason, they differed from the church of Rome:
1. THAT holy oil is not to be mingled in baptism.
2. THAT prayers used over things inanimate, are superstitious.
3. FLESH may be eaten in Lent; the clergy may marry; and auricular confession is unnecessary.
4. CONFIRMATION is no sacrament; we are not bound to pay obedience to the Pope; ministers should live upon tithes; no dignity sets one clergyman above another, for their superiority can only be drawn from real worth.
5. IMAGES in churches are absurd; image-worship is idolatry; the Pope's indulgencies ridiculous; and the miracles pretended to be done by the church of Rome are false.
6. FORNICATION and public stews ought not to be allowed; purgatory is a fiction; and deceased persons, called saints, ought not to be prayed to.
7. EXTREME unction is not a sacrament; and masses, indulgencies, and prayers are of no service to the dead.
8. The Lord's prayer ought to be the rule of all other prayers.
WALDO himself remained three years undiscovered in Lyons, though the utmost diligence was used to apprehend him. Being, however, greatly beloved, he was not betrayed; but at length found an opportunity of escaping from the place of his concealment to the mountains of Dauphiny. Waldo soon after found means to propagate his doctrines in Dauphiny and Picardy, which so exasperated Philip, king of France, that he put the latter province, as the most obnoxious of the two, under military execution; destroying above 300 gentl [...] men's seats, erasing some walled towns, burning many of the reformed, and driving others into Flanders and Germany.
NOTWITHSTANDING these persecutions, the reformed religion seemed to flourish; and the Waldenses, in various parts, became more numerous than ever. Hence the pope accused them of heresy, and the monks with immorality; the [...] asserting that they had fallen into many errors, and the latter that they committed many bad practices. These slanders they, however, refuted in a modest publication, which at once defended the purity of their doctrines, and the piety of their lives.
THE pope, incensed at their increase, used all manner of arts for their extirpation; such as excommunications, anathemas, canons, constitutions, decrees, &c. by which they were rendered incapable of holding places of trust, honour, or pro [...]t▪ their lands were seized, their goods confiscated, and they were not permitted to be buried in consecrat [...] ground.
SOME of the Waldenses having taken refuge i [...] Spain, Aldephonsus, king of Arragon, at the instigation of the pope, published an edict, strictly ordering all Roman catholics to persecute th [...] wherever they could be found; and decreeing th [...] all who gave them the least assistance should be deemed traitors, and punished accordingly.
[Page 101]THE year after this edict Aldephonsus was severely punished by the hand of Providence; for his son was defeated in a great battle, and 50,000 of his men slain, by which a considerable portion of his kingdom fell into the hands of the Moors.
NOTWITHSTANDING all the cruelties of the papists, the reformed ministers preached boldly against the Romish church; and Peter Waldo, in particular, wherever he went, asserted,
- 1. THAT the pope was antichrist.
- 2. MASS was an abomination.
- 3. THE host was an idol.
- 4. PURGATORY was a fable.
THESE proceedings of Waldo, and the reformed, occasioned the first rise of Inquisitors; for pope Innocent III. authorized certain monks inquisitors to inquire for, and deliver over, the reformed to the se [...]ular power. The monks greatly abused this authority; for, upon the least surmise or information, they delivered over the reformed to the magistrate, and the magistrate delivered them to the executioner; for the process was short, as an accusation was deemed adequate to guilt, and a candid trial was never granted to the accused.
THE pope finding that these cruel means had not the intended effect, determined to try others of a more rational and mild nature. To this end he sent several learned monks to preach among the Waldenses, and to endeavour to argue them out of their opinions. Among these monks was one Dominic, who appeared extremely zealous in the cause of popery. This Dominic instituted an order, which, from him, was called the order of Dominican friars; and the members of this order have ever since been the principal inquisitors in the various inquisitions in the world. The power of the inquisitors was unlimited; they proceeded against whom they pleased without any consideration of age, sex, or rank. Let the accusers be ever so infamous, the accusation was deemed valid; and even anonymous informations sent by letter were thought sufficient evidence. To be rich was a crime equal to heresy; therefore many who had money were accused of heresy, or of being favourers of heretics, that they might be obliged to pay for their opinions. The dearest friends or nearest kindred could not, without danger, serve any one who was imprisoned on account of religion. To convey to those who were confined, a little straw, or give them a cup of water, was called favouring of the heretics, and they were prosecuted accordingly. No lawyer dared to plead even for his own brother, or notary register any thing in favour of the reformed; the malice of the papists, indeed, went beyond the grave, and the bones of many Waldenses, who had been long dead, were dug up in order to be burnt, as examples to the living. If a man on his death-bed was accused of being a follower of Waldo, his estates were confiscated, and the heir to them defrauded of his inheritance; and some were even obliged to make pilgrimages to the Holy Land, while the Dominicans took possession of their houses and property, and when the owners returned would often pretend not to know them.
ENRAUDUS, a knight, being accused of embracing the opinions of Waldo, was delivered to the secular power, and burnt at Paris, A. D. 1201. About the year 1228 such numbers of the reformed were apprehended, that the archbishops of Aix, Arles, and Narbonne, took compassion on them, and thus expressed themselves to the inquisitors: "We hear that you have apprehended such a multitude of the Waldenses, that it is not only impossible to defray the charge of their food and confinement, but to provide lime and stone to build prisons for them."
IN the year 1380, a monk inquisitor, named Francis Boralli, had a commission granted him by pope Clement the seventh, to search for and punish the Waldenses in Aix, Ambrune, Geneva, Savoy, Orange, Arles, Vien [...]e, Ambone, Venice, and Avignon.
BORALLI opened his commission at Ambrune, and summoned all the inhabitants to appear before him. Those who appeared, and were found to be of the reformed religion, were immediately delivered over to the secular power, and burnt; and those who did not appear were excommunicated for contumacy, and had their effects confiscated. In [Page 102] th [...] distribution of the effects, however, they provided well for the sons of the church; for the clergy had two-thirds of every man's property who was condemned, and the secular power only one-third. All the reformed inhabitants of the other places, named in the commission of this ecclesiastic, were equal sufferers; for devastations marked his journey, and his footsteps might be traced in blood.
IN the year 1400, the Waldenses, who resided in the valley of Pragela, were at the instigation of some priests, suddenly attacked by a body of troops, who plundered their houses, murdered many, and drove others into the Alps, where great numbers were frozen to death, it being in the depth of winter.
A. D. 1460, a persecution was carried on in Dauphiny against the Waldenses, by the archbishop of Ambrune, who employed a monk, named John Vayleti; and this monk proceeded with such violence, that not only the Waldenses but even many papists were sufferers. For if any papists expressed compassion or pity for the inoffensive people, who were so cruelly treated, they were sure to be accused of favouring the Waldenses, and to be punished for commiserating the miseries of their fellow-creatures. At length Vayleti's proceedings became so intolerable, that a great number of the papists themselves wrote a petition against him to [...]ewis the Eleventh, king of France. The monarch, on receiving this petition, granted the request of the petitioners, and sent and express order to the governor of Dauphiny to stop the persecution.
VAVLETI, however, by the order of the archbishop, still continued the persecution; for taking advantage of the last clause of the [...]dict, he pretended, he did nothing contrary to the king's precept, who had ordered punishment for such as affirmed any thing against the holy catholic faith. This persecution at length concl [...]ded with the death of the archbishop, which happened A. D. 1487.
POPE Innocent the eighth, A. D. 1488, determined to persecute the Waldenses. To this end he sent one Albert de Capitaneis, archdeacon of Cremona, to France. When Albert arrived in Dauphiny, he craved the assistance of the king's lieutenant to extermi [...]te the Waldenses from the valley of Loyse. The lieutenant very readily granted his assistance, [...] marched a body of troops to the place. When they arrived at the valley, they found that it had been deserted by the inhabitants, who had retired to the mountains, and hid themselves in caves, caverns, &c. The archdeacon and lieutenant immediately followed them with the troops, and catching many, they cast them headlong from precipices, by which they were dashed to pieces. Several, however, retired to the farther parts of the caverns, and knowing the intricacies better than the troops, they were able to conceal themselves. The archdeacon and lieutenant, not being able to come at them, ordered the mouths of the caves to be filled with faggots, which being lighted, those within were suffocated. On the cave's being afterwards searched, 400 infants were found smothered, either in their cradles or their mother's arms; and, upon the whole, about 3000 men, women, and children, were destroyed in this persecution.
HAVING completed this tragical work▪ the lieutenant and archdeacon proceeded with the troops to Pragelo and Frassaniere, in order to persecute the Waldenses in those parts. But these having heard of the fate of their brethren in the valley of Loy [...]e thought proper to arm themselves; and, by fortifying the different passes, and bravely disputing the passages through them, they so harrassed the troops▪ that the lieutenant was compelled to retire witho [...] effecting his purpose.
IN 1594, Anthony Fabri, and Christopher de S [...] lience, having a commission to persecute the Waldenses of Dauphiny, put some to death, sequestered the estates of others, and confiscated the goods an [...] chattels of many; but Lewis the Twelfth coming to the crown in 1598, on the decease of his pr [...]decessor, the Waldenses petitioned him for a restitution of their property. The king determined to have the affair impartially canvassed, and to thi [...] end sent a commissioner of his own, together with a commissary from the pope, to make the proper inquiries. The witnesses against the Waldenses having been examined, the innocence of those [...] [Page 103] pe [...]ple evidently appeared, and the king's commis [...]er in particular declared, "That he only desired to be as good a christian as the worst of them." When this favourable report was made to the king, he immediately gave orders that the Waldenses should have their property restored to them. The archbishop of Ambrune, having the greatest quantity of these poor people's goods, it was generally imagined that he would set a laudable example to others, by being the first to restore them. The archbishop, however, to the surprize of the people in general, and to the affliction of the Waldenses in particular, declared, that he would not restore any of the property alluded to, for they were incorporated with, and became part of his archbishopric itself. He, however, with an affectation of some small degree of candour, offered to relinquish several vineyards, of which he had dispossessed the Waldenses, provided, at the same time, the lords of Dauphiny would restore all they had taken from those poor people. This the lords absolutely refused, for they were as fond of keeping their illgot plunder as the archbishop himself.
THE Waldenses finding, by these mean subterfuges, and unjust proceedings, that they were not likely to recover any of their property, without something farther being done, again appealed to the king. The monarch having attended to their complaints, wrote to the archbishop; but that artful and avaricious prelate replied, "That at the commencement of the persecution the Waldenses had been excommunicated by the pope, in consequence of which their goods were distrained; therefore, till the sentence of excommunication was taken off, which had occasioned them to be seized, they could not be restored with propriety, or consistent with the respect due to the pontiff." This plea was allowed to be reasonable; and application was ineffectually made to the pope to remove the sentence of excommunication; for the archbishop, supposing this would be the case, had used all his interest at the court of Rome, to prevent such application from succeeding. Thus were, the poor Waldenses robbed of their property, only because they would not sacrifice their consciences to the will of their inhuman persecutors.
THE Waldenses having spread from Dauphiny into several other provinces, became very numerous in Provence. At their first arrival Provence was almost a desert, but by their great industry it soon abounded with corn, wine, oil, fruit, &c.
THE pope, by being often near them at his seat at Avignon, heard occasionally many things concerning their differing from the church of Rome. His intelligence greatly exasperated him, and he determined to have them persecuted on account of their religious tenets. Proceeding to some extremities, under the sanction of his ecclesiastical authority, only without consulting the king of France, the latter became alarmed, and sent his master of requests, and his confessor, to examine into the affair. On their return, they reported that the Waldenses were not such dangerous or bad people as they had been represented; that they lived with perfect honesty, were friendly to all, hurt none, caused their children to be baptized, had them taught the Lord's prayer, creed, and ten commandments; expounded the scriptures with purity, kept the Lord's day sacred, feared God, honoured the king, and wished well to the state. Then, said the king, they are much better christians than myself or my catholic subjects, and therefore they shall not be persecuted: the king was as good as his word, and sent orders to stop the persecution accordingly.
SOME time after, the inhabitants of Merindol received a summons, that the heads of the families of that town should appear before the ecclesiastical court. When they appeared, and confessed themselves Waldenses, they were ordered to be burnt, their families outlawed, their habitations laid waste, and the woods that surrounded the town to be cut down, two hundred paces each way; so that the whole should be rendered desolate. The king, however, being informed of this barbarous decree, sent to countermand the execution of it; but his order was suppressed by cardinal Tournon, and the greatest cruelties were consequently exercised.
THE president of Opede sent several companies of soldiers to burn some villages that were occupied by protestants, which they performed; and, without the least respect to sex or [...] murdered the men immediately, ravished the [...], cut off the [Page 104] breasts of mothers, and then suffered the infants to famish, &c. &c. The president likewise proclaimed, that none should give any manner of assistance, or sustenance, to the Waldenses.
GOING to another small town, the president found there only a boy, who had surrended himself to a soldier, for the other inhabitants had deserted the place. They boy he ordered to be shot by the soldier to whom he had surrendered, and then destroyed every house in the place.
AFTER this the president marched against Cabrieres, and began to cannonade it. At this time there were not above sixty poor peasants, with their families, in the town; and they sent him word, that he need not expend powder and shot upon the place, as they were willing to open the gates, and surrender, provided they might be permitted to retire, with their families, to Geneva, or Germany. This was promised them; but the gates were no sooner opened, than the president ordered all the men to be cut to pieces; which cruel command was executed with the utmost barbarity. Several women and children were crammed into a large barn, which was set fire to, and every one perished in the flames. Other women and children having taken refuge in a church, the president ordered one of his officers to go in and kill them all: the captain, at first, refused, saying, "Such unnecessary cruelty is unbecoming a military man." The president, being displeased at this reply, said, "I charge you, on pain of being accused of mutiny, immediately to obey my orders:" when the captain, afraid of the consequences of such a reply, thought proper to comply, and make a sacrifice of humanity to the fear of military punishment.
THE president then sent a detachment of his troops to ravage the town of Costa, which design was accomplished with the greatest barbarity, and cruelties were exercised, shocking both to modesty and nature.
AT length, the judgment of God overtook this monster of cruelty, the president; for he was, at once, afflicted with a dreadful bloody flux, and a painful stranguary. In this extremity he sent for a [...] from Arles, who, on examining his disorders, told him they were of a singular nature, and much worse than he had ever seen them on any other person. He then took an occasion to reprehend him for his cruelties, and told him, that unless he repented, he might expect that the hand of heaven would fall still heavier upon him. On hearing these words, the president flew into a violent passion, and ordered his attendants to seize upon the surgeon as an heretic.
THE surgeon was seized, but found means to escape, and soon after the president's disorder increased to a most terrible degree. As he before found some little ease from the surgeon, he again sent to him, for he had been informed of the place of his retirement▪ His message was accompanied with an apology for his former behaviour, and a promise of personal security. The surgeon forgiving what was past, went to him, but too late to be of any service; for he found the president raving like a madman, and crying out, that he had a fire within him. After storming and blaspheming for some time, he expired in the most dreadful agonies; and his body, in a few hours, became so offensive, that hardly any one could endure the stench.
JOHN de Roma, a monk, having a commission from the pope to search for heretics, he executed i [...] with great severity in Provence. The king of France hearing of his proceedings, sent an order t [...] the parliament of Provence to apprehend him; but the monk made his escape to Avignon, and thought to live luxuriously upon what he had plundere [...] from the Waldenses. But in this he was mistaken for some robbers soon after plundered him of th [...] greatest part of his ill-got wealth; and his grief o [...] this account brought on a violent disorder, which by turning him, even while living, into a mere m [...] of putrefection, soon put a period to his existence.
THE bishop of Aix, with some priests, being [...] Avignon together, were one day walking along th [...] streets with some courtezans. Seeing a man w [...] sold obscene pictures, they purchased several, [...] presented them to the women. Close by was [...] bookseller, who had a great number of bibles in [...] French language for sale. The bishop stepping [...] to him, said, "How darest thou be so bold as to [...] [Page]
[Page 105] French merchandize in this town?" The bookseller replied, with a kind of sneer, "My lord, do you not think that bibles are as good as those pictures which you have bought for the ladies?" Enraged at the sarcasm, the bishop exclaimed, "I'll renounce my place in paradise if this fellow is not one of the Waldenses. Take him away, take him away, take him away to prison." These expressions occasioned him to be terribly used by the rabble; and the next day he was brought before the judge, who, at the instigation of the bishop, condemned him to the flames. He was accordingly burnt, with two bibles hanging from his neck, the one before and the other behind.
An Account of the Persecutions of the Albigenses.
THE Albigenses were people of the reformed religion, who inhabited the country of Albi. They were condemned on the score of religion, in the council of Lateran, by order of pope Alexander the Third. Nevertheless they increased so prodigiously, that many cities were inhabited by persons only of their persuasion, and several eminent noblemen embraced their doctrines. Among the latter were Raymond, earl of Thoulouse, Raymond, earl of Foix, the earl of Beziers, &c. The pope, at length, pretended that he wished to draw them to the Romish faith by sound argument and clear reasoning, and for this end ordered a general disputation, in which, however, the popish doctors were entirely overcome by the arguments of Arnold, a reformed clergyman, whose reasons were so strong, that they were compelled to confess their force.
A friar, named Peter, having been murdered in the dominions of the earl of Thoulouse, the pope made the murder a pretence to persecute that nobleman and his subjects. To effect this, he sent persons throughout all Europe, in order to raise forces to act coercively against the Albigenses, and promised paradise to all that would come to this war, which he termed a Holy War, and bear arms for forty days. The same indulgences were likewise h [...]ld out to all who entered themselves for this purpose, as to such as engaged in crusades to the Holy Land.
THE pope then sent orders to all archbishops, bishops, &c. to excommunicate the earl of Thoulouse every sabbath and festival; at the same time absolving all his subjects from their oaths of allegiance to him, and commanding them to pursue his person, possess his lands, destroy his property, murder such of his subjects as continued faithful to him, &c. &c.
THE earl of Thoulouse hearing of these mighty preparations against him, wrote to the pope in a very candid manner, desiring not to be condemned unheard, and assuring him, that he had not the least hand in Peter's death; for that friar was killed by a gentleman, who immediately after the murder fled out of his territories, or otherwise he would have punished him as the crime deserved.
BUT arguments were in vain: for the pope, being determined on his destruction, was resolved not to hear reason. A formidable army, with several noblemen and prelates at the head of it, began their march against the Albigenses. The earl had only the alternative, to oppose force by force, or submit. As he despaired of success in attempting the former, he determined on the latter. The pope's legate being at Valence, the earl repaired thither, and said, "He was surprized that such a number of armed men should be sent against him, before the least proof of his guilt had been deduced. He therefore came voluntarily to surrender himself, armed only with the testimony of a good conscience, and hoped that the troops would be prevented from plundering his innocent subjects, as he thought himself a sufficient pledge for any vengeance they chose to take on account of the death of the friar."
TO this reasonable proposal the legate replied, that he was very glad the earl had voluntarily surrendered; but, with respect to the proposal he could not pretend to countermand the orders to the troops, unless he would consent to deliver up seven of his best fortified castles, as securities for his future behaviour.
[Page 106]THIS demand made the earl perceive his error in submitting, but it was too late; he knew himself to be a prisoner, and therefore sent an order for the delivery of the castles. The pope's legate had no sooner garrisoned these places, than he ordered the respective governors to appear before him. When they came, he said, "That the earl of Thoulouse having delivered up his castles to the pope, they must consider that they were now the pope's subjects, and not the earl's; and that they must therefore act conformable to their new allegiance."
THE governors were greatly astonished to see their lord thus in chains, and themselves compelled into a new allegiance, so much against their inclinations and consciences. But what afflicted them still more was the affronts afterwards put upon the earl; for he was stripped naked, except his drawers, led nine times round the grave of friar Peter, and severely scourged before all orders of people. Not contented with this, they obliged him to swear that he would be obedient to the pope during the remainder of his life, conform to the church of Rome, and make irreconcileable war against the Albigenses. The legate even went farther than this, and ordered him, by the oaths he had newly taken, to join the troops, and inspect the siege of Beziers. But thinking this too hard an injunction, he took an opportunity privately to quit the army, and determined to go to the pope, and relate all the ill usage he had received. The army, however, proceeded to besiege Beziers; and the earl of Beziers, who was likewise governor of that city, thinking it impossible to defend the place, came out, and presenting himself before the pope's legate, implored mercy for the inhabitants; intimating at the same time, that there were as many Roman catholics as Albigenses in the city. The legate replied, that all excuses availed nothing; that the place must be delivered up at discretion, or the most dreadful consequences should ensue.
THE earl of Beziers returning into the city, told the inhabitants he could obtain no mercy, unless the Albigenses would abjure their religion, and conform to the worship of the church of Rome. The Roman catholics pressed the Albigenses to comply with this request; but the Albigenses nobly answered, that they would not forsake their religion for the base price of their [...]ail life: that God was able, if he pleased, to defend them; but if [...] would be glorified by the confession of their faith, it would be a great honour for them to die for [...] sake. That they had rather displease the pope, who could but kill their bodies, than God, [...] could cast both body and soul into hell.
THE popish parties finding their importun [...] ineffectual, sent their bishop to the pope's [...], beseeching him not to include them in the [...] of the Albigenses; and representing, that [...] best means to win the latter over to the [...] catholic persuasion was by gentle means, and not [...] rigour. The legate, upon hearing this, flew [...] violent passion with the bishop, and declared, [...] "If all the city did not acknowledge their [...], they should taste of one curse without distinction [...] religion, sex, or age."
THE inhabitants refusing to yield upon [...] terms, a general assault was given, and the [...] taken by storm; when it is impossible for the [...] to paint a more horrid scene than [...] ensued. Every cruelty that barbarous [...] could devise was practised; nothing was to be [...] but the groans of men who lay weltering in [...] blood; the lamentations of mothers who [...] doubly wounded, wounded in the body by [...] spears of the soldiers, and to the soul, by havi [...] their children taken from them, and dashed [...] pieces before their faces. The plaints of [...] maidens and ravished matrons, the cries of helples [...] infants, and the execrations of the barbarians who committed these cruelties, added to the sounds of horror. The city being fired in various parts, [...] scenes of confusion arose; in several places [...] streets were streaming with blood; here [...] buildings appeared in clouds of smoke, and [...] large ranges of houses were seen in flames. [...] who hid themselves in the recesses of their [...], had only the dreadful alternative to [...] and perish in the flames, or rush out and fall by [...] swords of the soldiers. The bloody legate, [...] these infernal proceedings, seemed to enjoy the [...], and even cried out to the troops, [...] them, kill them all, kill man, woman, and [...] kill Roman catholics as well as Albigenses, [...] when they are dead the Lord knows how to [...] [Page 107] out his own." Thus the beautiful city of Beziers was reduced to a heap of ruins; and 60,000 persons of different ages, and both sexes, were murdered upon the occasion.
THE earl of Beziers and a few others made their escape, and went to Carcasson, which they put into the best posture of defence they could. The legate, not to lose an opportunity of spilling blood during the forty days which the troops were to serve, led them immediately against Carcasson [...] As soon as the place was invested, a furious assault was given, but the besiegers were repulsed with [...] slaughter; and upon this occasion the earl of Beziers gave the most distinguished proofs of his courage, saying, to encourage the besieged, "We had better die fighting than fall into the hands of such bigoted and bloody enemies."
IT is to be observed, that two miles from the city of Carcasson there was a small town of the same name, which the Albigenses had likewise fortified. The legate, being enraged at the repulse he had received from the city of Carcasson, determined to wreak his vengeance upon the town. The next morning he made a general assault; and, though the place was bravely defended, the legate took it by storm, put all within it to the sword, and then burnt the town.
DURING these transactions the king of Arragon arrived at the camp, and after paying his obedience to the legate, told him, he understood the earl of Beziers, his kinsman, was in the city of Carcasson, and that, if he would grant him permission, he would go thither, and endeavour to make him sensible of the duty he owed both to the pope and church. The legate readily acquiescing, the king immediately repaired to the earl, and, among other questions, asked him from what motives he shut himself up in that city, and against so great an army? The earl answered, it was to defend his life, goods, and subjects: that he knew the pope, under pretence of religion, resolved to destroy his uncle, the earl of Thoulouse, and himself; that he saw the cruelty which they had used at Beziers, even against the priests: adding also what they had done to the town of Carcasson, and that they must look for no mercy from the legate or his army; he, therefore, rather chose to die, defending himself with his subjects, than fall into the hands of so inexorable an enemy as the legate: that though he had in his city some that were of another religion, yet they were such as had not wronged any, were come to his succour in his greatest extremity, and for their good service he was resolved not to abandon them; that his trust was in God, the defender of the oppressed; and that he would assist them against those ill-advised men, who forsook their own houses to burn, sack, and kill other men without reason, judgment, or mercy.
THE king reported to the legate what the earl had said: the legate, after considering for some time, replied, "For your sake, sir, I will receive the earl of Beziers to mercy, and with him twelve others shall be safe, and be permitted to retire with their property; but as for the rest, I am determined to have them at my discretion."
THIS answer displeased the king; and when the earl heard it, he absolutely refused to comply with such terms. The legate then commanded another assault, but his troops were again repulsed with great slaughter, and the dead bodies occasioned a stench that was exceedingly offensive both to the besieged and besiegers.
THE legate, being chagrined at this second disappointment, determined to act by stratagem. He therefore sent a gentleman, who was well skilled in dissimulation and artifice, to the earl of Beziers, with a seeming friendly message. The design was, by any means, to induce the earl to leave the city, in order to have an interview with the legate; and to this end the gentleman was to promise, or swear, whatever he thought proper; for, says the legate, "Swear to what falsehoods you will in such a case, as I will give you absolution."
UNFORTUNATELY this infamous plot succeeded: for the earl, believing the promises made him of personal security, and crediting the solemn oaths that the perjured agent swore upon the occasion, left the city, and went with him. The legate no sooner saw him, than he told him "He was a prisoner, [Page 108] and must remain so till Carcasson was surrendered, and the inhabitants taught their duty to the pope."
THE earl, on hearing this, cried out that he was betrayed, and exclaimed against the treachery of the legate, and perjury of the person he had employed. His complaints, however, availed nothing, for he was ordered into close confinement, and the place summoned to surrender immediately.
THE people, on receiving the summons, and hearing of the captivity of the earl, were thrown into the utmost consternation, when one of the citizens begging to be heard, informed the rest, "That he had been formerly told by some old men, that there was a very capacious subterraneous passage, which led from thence to the castle of Cameret, at thr [...]e leagues distance. If (continued he) we can find this passage, we may all escape before the legate can be apprized of our flight."
THIS information was joyfully received; all were employed to search for the passage, and, at length, it was happily found. In the beginning of the evening the inhabitants began their flight, taking with them their wives, children, a few days provisions, and such moveables as were most valuable and portable. They reached the castle by the morning, and escaped to Arragon, Catalonia, and such other places as they thought would secure them from the power of the bloody legate.
IN the morning the troops were strangely astonished, not hearing any noise, nor seeing any man stirring in the city; yet they approached the walls with much fear, lest it should be but a stratagem to endanger them; but finding no opposition they mounted the walls, crying out, that the Albigens [...]s were fled; and thus was the city, with all the spo [...]s, taken, and the earl of Beziers committed to prison in one of the stronges [...] towers of Carcasson, where he soon after died.
THE legate being now in possession of the city, [...]lled all the prelates, and great lords of his army [...], telling them, that though it was requisite [...] shoul [...] be always a legate in the army, yet it [...] necessary that there should be a secular general, wise and valiant, to command in all their affairs, &c. This charge was first offered to the duke of Burgongue, then to the earl of Ennevers, and thirdly, to the earl of St. Paul; but they all refused it. At length, it was offered to Simon, earl of Montfort, who, after some excuses, accepted of it.
FOUR thousand men were left to garrison Carcasson, and the deceased earl of Beziers was succeeded in title and dignity by earl Simon, a bigoted Roman catholic, who threatened vengeance on the Albigenses, unless they conformed to the worship of the church of Rome.
THE king of Arragon, however, who was in his heart of the reformed persuasion, secretly encouraged the Albigenses, and gave them hopes, that if they acted with prudence, they might cast off the yoke of the tyrannical earl Simon. They took his advice, and while Simon was gone to Montpellier, they surprized some of his fortresses, and were successful in several expeditions against his officers.
THESE proceedings so enraged earl Simon, that returning f [...]om Montpellier, he collected together some forces, marched against the Albigenses, and ordered every prisoner he took to be immedately burnt. Failing, however, in some of his enterprizes, he grew disheartened, and wrote to every Roman catholic power in Europe, to send him some assistance, otherwise he should not be able to hold out against the Albigenses.
HAVING received some succours, he attacked the castle of Beron, and making himself master of it, ordered the eyes to be put out, and the noses to be cut off, of all the garrison, one person alone excepte [...], and he was deprived of one eye only, that he might conduct the rest to Cabaret.
BEING joined by some additional forces, earl Somon unde [...]ook the siege of Menerbe, which, on account of the want of water, was obliged to yield to him. The Lord of Termes, the governor, was put in prison, where he died: his wife, sister, and daughter, were burnt; and one hundred and eighty others were committed to the flames. Many [Page 109] other castles surrendered to the forces of earl Simon, and the inhabitants were butchered in a manner equally inhuman.
IT is now necessary to take some notice of the earl of Thoulouse, who by means of letters of recommendation from the king of France, after many difficulties, was reconciled to the Pope: at least the Pope pretended to give him remission for the death of friar Peter, and to absolve him from all other crimes he had committed.
THE legate, however, by the connivance of the Pope, did all he could to ruin the earl of Thoulouse. Some altercations having passed between them, the legate excommunicated the earl; and the Roman catholic bishop of Thoulouse, upon this encouragement, thought proper to send this imprudent message to the earl, "That as he was an excommunicated person, he commanded him to depart the city; for an ecclesiastic could not say mass with propriety, while a person of such a description was so near him."
THE earl was greatly exasperated at the bishop's insolence, and sent him an order immediately to depart from the place on pain of death. This order was all the prelate wanted, and was what he wished for, as it would give him some shadow of a reason to complain of that nobleman.
THE bishop with the canons of the cathedral church marched out of the city in solemn procession, barefooted and bareheaded, taking with them the cross, banner, host, &c. and proceeded in that manner to the legate's army. Here they were received with great respect as persecuted martyrs, and the legate thought this a sufficient excuse to proceed against the earl of Thoulouse, for having, as he termed it, relapsed from the truth. The legate attempted to get him into his power by stratagem, but the earl being apprized of the design, escaped the snare.
ENRAGED at his disappointment, the legate laid siege to the castle of Montferrand, which belonged to the earl, and was governed by Baldwin his brother. On the first summons, Baldwin no [...] only surrendered, but abjured his religion, and turned papist. This stroke, which severely afflicted the earl of Thoulouse, was followed by another that gave him still greater mortification; for his old friend the king of Arragon forsook his interest; and it was stipulated, that the king of Arragon's daughter should be married to earl Simon's oldest son. The legate's troops were then joined by the forces of Arragon, and those belonging to earl Simon, when they jointly laid siege to Thoulouse.
THE earl of Thoulouse determined to interrupt the besiegers by frequent sallies. In the first of these he met with a severe repulse; but in the second he took earl Simon's son prisoner, and in the third he unhorsed earl Simon himself. After several furious assaults given by the popish army, and some other successful sallies of the Albigenses, the earl of Thoulouse compelled his enemies to raise the siege. In their retreat they did much mischief in the countries through which they passed, and put many defenceless Albigenses to death.
THE earl of Thoulouse now did all he could to recover the friendship of the king of Arragon, and as the marriage ceremony between that monarch's daughter, and earl Simon's son, had not been performed, he intreated him to break off that preposterous match, and proposed another more proper, viz. that his own eldest son and heir to the earldom of Thoulouse, should wed the princess of Arragon, and that by this match their friendship should be again united and more firmly cemented.
THE king of Arragon was easily persuaded not only to come into this proposal, but to form a league with the principal Albigenses, and to put himself as captain-general at the head of their united forces, consisting of his own people, and of the troops of the earls of Thoulouse, Foix, and Comminges. The papists were greatly alarmed at these proceedings; earl Simon sent all over christendom to engage the assistance of the Roman catholic powers, and the Pope's legate began hostilities by entering the dominions of the earl of Foix, and committing the most cruel depredations.
THE army of the Albigens [...]s being ready to take the field, the king of Arragon began his operations by laying siege to Murat, a town near Thoulouse, [Page 110] belonging to the Roman catholics, strongly fortified, and pleasantly situated upon the river Garonne. Earl Simon, by forced marches, came to the assistance of the place; and unfortunately the king of Arragon, who kept up very little discipline in his army, was feasting and revelling, at a time when all his attention was requisite. Earl Simon suddenly attacked the Albigenses, while they were in confusion, when the united forces of the reformed were defeated, and the king of Arragon himself was slain. The loss of this battle was imputed to the negligence of the king of Arragon, who kept up no manner of order in his army, and was as fond of entertainment in a camp, as if he had been securely at peace in a palace.
FLUSHED with this victory, the popish commanders declared they would entirely root out and extirpate the whole race of the Albigenses; and earl Simon sent an insolent message to the earls of Thoulouse, Foix, and Comminges, to deliver to him all the castles and fortresses of which they were possessed. Those noblemen did not think proper to return an answer to the demand, but retired to their respective territories, in order to put them into the best posture of defence.
EARL Simon marched towards the city of Thoulouse, when the earl of Thoulouse, who had retired to Montalban, se [...]t word to the citizens of the former place, to make the best terms they could with the Roman catholics, as he was confident they could not hold out a siege; but at the same time recommended them to preserve their hearts for him, though they surrendered their persons to another. The citizens of Thoulouse, upon receiving this intimation, sent deputies to earl Simon, with offers of immediate surrender, provided the city itself, and the persons and properties of its inhabitants▪ should be perfectly safe, and protected from devastations or injury.
THESE conditions were agreed to immediately, and earl Simon, in order to ingratiate himself at court, wrote a letter to prince Lewis, the son of Philip, king of France, informing him that the city of Thoulouse had offered to surrender to him; but being willing that the prince should have the honour of receiving the keys, and taking the homage of the people, he begged that he would repair to the camp for that purpose.
PRINCE Lewis, pleased with the invitation, we [...]t directly to the army, and had the city of Thoulouse surrendered to him in form. The Pope's l [...] gate, however, was greatly displeased at the mild conditions granted to the people of Thoulouse, and insisted, that though the prince might take upon him the sovereignty of the place, and receive the homage of the people, yet the plunder belonged to the holy pilgrims (for so the popish soldiers employed in these expeditions were called); and that the place, as a receptacle of heretics, ought to be dismantled.
IN vain did the prince, and earl Simon, [...] against such harsh proceedings, so contrary [...] the conditions granted at the surrender of the pla [...]: the legate was peremptory, when earl Simon, [...] the prince, unwilling to come to an open [...] with him, gave up the point, and suffered him [...] do as he pleased. The legate immediately sent [...] holy pilgrims, as he termed them, to work, wh [...] they presently dismantled the city, and plunder [...] the inhabitants: thus the poor people were stripp [...] of all their property, at a time they thought the [...] selves perfectly secured by the articles of the treaty of surrender.
THE Pope's legate finding, that among the Albigenses were many lucrative places, which [...] o [...] course fall to the disposal of the prince, he d [...] termined, by an artifice, to deprive him of any a [...] vantage which might accrue from thence; for he thought the Romish church ought to engross [...] monopolize every thing that was valuable. To [...] end he gave absolution to the Albigenses, which though they had not in the least changed their r [...]l [...] gious opinions, he cunningly called reconcil [...] them to the church. The prince, not apprized [...] this stratagem, was going to put such of his [...] as he thought merited encouragement, into [...] possession of some places of profit; when, to [...] great astonishment, the legate informed him, [...] he had no power to dispose of those places. [...] prince demanded an explanation of his [...] "My meaning (replied the legate) is, that the [...] have received absolution, and being [...] [Page 111] to, are consequently under the protection of, the church; therefore, all places among, or connected with them, are in the disposal of the church only."
THE prince, though offended at this curious mode of reasoning, and highly displeased at the meanness of the subterfuge, thought proper, at that time, to dissemble his resentment. Determined, however, to quit the legate, he put the troops that were under his command in motion, and marched to attack some other fortresses; but he found, wherever he came, that the legate had played the same trick, and plainly perceived, if he continued his military operations, that when unsuccessful, he should bear all the blame, and when successful, the legate would run away with all the profit. These considerations convinced him of the folly of remaining longer in the army; he therefore left it in disgust, and returned to court.
EARL Simon now, with his own forces, those the prince had just quitted, and some other auxiliaries, undertook the siege of Foix, being provoked to it by two reasons, viz. the death of his brother, who was slain by the earl of Foix, who was of the reformed persuasion. He lay before the castle of Foix for the space of ten days, during which time he frequently assaulted it, but was as often repulsed. Hearing that an army of Arragonians were in full march towards him, in order to revenge the death of their king, he raised the siege of Foix, and went to meet them. The earl of Foix immediately sallied out and harrassed his rear, and the Arragonians attacking his front, gave him a total defeat, which compelled him to shut himself up in Carcasson.
THE Pope's legate called a council at Montpellier, for renewing the military operations against the Albigenses, and for doing proper honour to earl Simon, who was pre [...]ent; for the Arragonians not taking advantage of their victory, had neglected to block u [...] Carcasson. [...] which omission earl Simon had the liberty to repa [...] to Montpellier.
AT the council the legate, in the pope's name, paid many compliments to earl Simon, and declared, that he should be prince of all the countries that might in future be taken from the Albigenses; at the same time, by order of the pontiff, he stiled him, The active and dextrous soldier of Jesus Christ, and the invincible defender of the Catholic faith. But just as the earl was going to return thanks for these great honours, and fine encomiums, a messenger brought word, that the people, having heard earl Simon was in the council, had taken up arms, and were coming thither to destroy him as a common disturber.
THIS threw the whole council into great confusion; and earl Simon, though a minute before stiled an Invincible Defender of the Faith, was glad to jump out of a window, and steal away from the city by the most private passages.
THE affair becoming serious, according to the opinions of the papists, the Pope himself soon aft [...]r called a council, to be held at Lateran, in which great powers were granted to Roman catholic inquisitors, and many Albigenses were immediately put to death. This council of Lateran likewise confirmed to earl Simon all the honours intended him by the council of Montpellier, and empowered him to raise another army against the Albigenses.
EARL Simon immediately repaired to court, received his investiture from the French king, and began to levy forces. Having raised a considerable number of troops, he determined, if possible, to exterminate the Albigenses, when he received advice, that his countess was besieged in Narbonne, by the earl of Thoulouse. Earl Simon proceeded to the relief of his wife, when the Albigenses met him, gave him battle, and defeated him. He, however, found means to escape from the sight, and get into the castle of Narbonne.
DURING earl Simon's misfortunes, Thoulouse was recovered by the Albigenses; but the Pope still espousing earl Simon's cause, raised forces on his account, and enabled him, once more, to undertake the siege of that city. The earl assaulted the place furiously, but being repulsed with great loss, he seemed sunk in affliction; when the Pope's legate said, to comfort him, "Fear nothing, my lord, make another vigorous attack; let us by any [Page 112] means recover the city, and destroy the inhabitants; and those of our men who are slain in the fight, I will assure you shall immediately pass into paradise." One of Earl Simon's principal officers, on hearing this, said with a sneer, "Monsieur Cardinal, you talk with great assurance; but if the earl believes you, he will▪ as heretofore, pay dearly for his confidence."
EARL Simon, however, took the legate's advice, made another assault, and was again repulsed. To complete his misfortune, before the troops could recover from their confusion, the earl of Foix made his appearance at the head of a formidable body of forces, and attacked the already dispirited army of earl Simon, easily put them to the rout; when the earl himself narrowly escaped being drowned in the Garonne, into which he had hastily plunged, in order to avoid being taken.
THIS miscarriage almost broke earl Simon's heart; but the pope's legate bade him yet be of good chear, for he would raise him another army; which promise, with some difficulty, and three years delay, he at length performed, and that bigoted nobleman was, once more, enabled to take the field. He bent his whole force against Thoulouse, which he besieged for the space of nine months, when, in one of the sallies made by the besieged, his horse was wounded. The animal being in great anguish, ran away with him, and bore him directly under the ramparts of the city, when an archer taking aim, shot him in the thigh with an arrow; and a woman immediately after throwing a large stone from the wall, it struck him upon the head, and killed him instantly. Upon the death of the earl, the siege was raised; but the legate, greatly enraged to be disappointed of his wished for vengeance on the inhabitants of that devoted city, engaged the king of France in the cause, who sent his son to besiege it. The French prince, with some chosen troops, furiously assaulted Thoulouse, but meeting with a severe repulse, he grew sick of the enterprize, and abandoned Thoulouse to besiege Miromand. This place he soon took by storm, and put all the inhabitants, consisting of 5000 men, women, and children, to the sword.
THE legate, whose name was Bertrand, being very old, grew weary of following the army; but his passion for blood-spilling still remained, as appears by his epistle to the Pope, in which he begs to be recalled, on account of his age and infirmities; but intreats the pontiff to appoint a successor, who might continue the war with as much spirit and perseverance as he had done.
THE Pope recalled Bertrand according to his desire, and appointed Conrade, bishop of Portua, to be legate in his room. The new legate determined to tread in the steps of his predecessor, and to persecute the Albigenses with the greatest severity. Guido, earl of Monfort, the son and heir of earl Simon, undertook the command of the troops, and immediately laid siege to Thoulouse, before the walls of which he was slain. His brother Almerick succeeded to the command; but the spirited conduct of the besieged obliged him to raise the siege.
THE legate now prevailed upon the king of France to undertake the siege of Thoulouse in person, and reduce to the obedience of the church those obstinate heretics, as he thought proper to call the brave Albigenses. Hearing of the great preparations made by the king of France, the earl of Thoulouse sent the women, children, cattle, &c. into secret and secure places in the mountains, ploughed up the land, that the king's forces should not obtain any forage, and did all that a skilful general could perform to save his country, and distress the enemy. By these wise regulations the French army, soon after, entering the earldom of Thoulouse, suffered all the extremities of famine, which obliged the troops to feed on the carcases of horses▪ on dead dogs, cats, &c. which unwholesome foo [...] produced the plague. This complicated distres [...] broke the king's heart; nevertheless, his son, wh [...] succeeded him, determined to carry on the war, but was defeated by the earl of Thoulouse in three s [...] veral engagements.
THE king, the queen-mother, and three archbishops, however, raised another formidable ar [...]y▪ and had the art to persuade the earl of [...] to come to a conference, when he was treachero [...] seized upon, made a prisoner, forced to appe [...] [Page 113] bare-footed and bare-headed before his enemies, and compelled to subscribe to the following unreasonable and ignominious conditions:
1. THAT he should abjure the faith he had hitherto defended.
2. THAT he should be subject to the church of Rome.
3. THAT he should give his daughter Joan in marriage to one of the brothers of the king of France.
4. THAT he should maintain in Thoulouse six popish professors of the liberal arts, and two grammarians.
5. THAT he should take upon him the cross, and serve five years against the Saracens in the Holy Land.
6. THAT he should level the walls of Thoulouse with the ground.
7. THAT he should destroy the walls and fortifications of thirty of his other cities and castles, as the legate should direct.
8. THAT he should remain prisoner at the Louvre in Paris, till his daughter was delivered to the king's commissioners.
THESE hard conditions were followed by a severe persecution against the Albigenses (many of whom suffered for the faith); and express orders, that the [...] should not be permitted to read the sacred scriptures.
IN the year 1620 the persecution against the Albigenses was very great. At a town called Tell, while the minister was preaching to a congregation of the reformed, the papists attacked and murdered many of the people. A lady of considerable eminence, being exhorted to change her religion, if not for her own sake, at least for the sake of the infant she held in her arms, the lady, with an undaunted courage, said, "I did not quit Italy, my native country, nor forsake the estate I had there, for the sake of Jesus Christ, to renounce him here. With respect to my infant, why should I not deliver him up to death, since God delivered up his Son to die for us?" As soon as she had done speaking, they took the child from her, delivered it to a popish nurse to bring up, and then cut the lady to pieces.
DOMINICO Berto, a youth of sixteen, refusing to turn papist, was set upon an ass with his face to the tail, which he was obliged to hold in his hand for a bridle. In this condition he was lead to the market-place, amidst the acclamations of the populace; after which they cut off his nose, ears, and cheeks, and burnt holes in several parts of his body, till he expired.
AN Albigenses young lady, of a noble family, was seized by the papists, and carried through the streets with a paper mitre upon her head. After mocking, beating, and smearing her face with dirt, they bade her call upon the saints: to which she replied, "My trust and salvation is in Christ only; for even the Virgin Mary, without the merits of her Son, could not be saved." On hearing this, the multitude fell upon her, and murdered her.
An Account of the Persecutions in France, previous to, and during the Civil Wars of that Nation.
IN the third century, a learned man, named Almericus, and six of his disciples, were ordered to be burnt at Paris, for holding these tenets:
1. THAT God was no otherwise present in the sacramental bread, that in any other bread.
2. THAT it was idolatry to build altars, or shrines, to saints.
3. THAT it was ridiculous to offer incense to saints.
4. THAT it was absurd to kiss the relics of saints.
[Page 114]THE martydom of Almericus and his pupils, did not, however, prevent many from acknowledging the justness of his notions, and seeing the purity of the reformed religion, so that the faith of Christ continually increased, and in time not only spread itself over many parts of France, but diffused the light of the gospel over various other countries.
IN the year 1524, at a town in France, called Melden, one John Clark set up a bill on the church door, wherein he called the pope Antichrist. For this offence he was repeatedly whipped, and then branded in the forehead: his mother, who stood by at the time, cried with a loud voice, "Blessed be Christ, and welcome these [...]arks for his sake." Going afterwards to Metz, in Lorraine, he demolished some images, for which he had his right hand and nose cut off, and his arms and breasts torn by sharp pincers. He sustained these cruelties with amazing fortitude, and was even sufficiently cool to sing the 115th psalm, which expressly forbids idolatry.
AFTER having sung this psalm with admirable patience, he was thrown into the fire, and burnt to ashes.
MANY persons of the reformed persuasion, were, about this time, beaten, racked, scourged, and burnt to death, in several parts of France; but more particularly at Paris, Malda, and Limosin.
A native of Malda was bunrt in a slow fire for saying that mass was a plain denial of the death and passion of Christ. At Limosin, John de Cadurco, a clergyman of the reformed religion, was apprehended, degraded, and ordered to be burnt.
AT his degradation a friar undertook to preach a sermon upon the occasion; when opening the New Testament he pitched upon this text, in the first epistle o [...] St. Paul the apostle to Timothy, chap. iv. ver. 1. "Now the Spirit speaketh expressly, that in the l [...]tter times some shall depart from the faith, giving [...]eed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils." The friar began to expound this verse in favour of the Roman catholic persuasion, and in condemnation of the reformed religion, when John de Cadurco called to him, and begged, that before he proceeded in his sermon, he would read the two verses which followed that he had chosen for his text. The friar again opened the Testament, but on casting his eye on the passage, he stood mute and confounded. John de Cadurco then desired that the book might be handed to him; this request being complied with, he read thus, "Speaking lies in hypocrisy, having their conscience seared with a hot iron. Forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from meats, which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving of them which believe and know the truth." The Roman catholics plainly saw, but had not candour sufficient to own their error; but instead of thanking the person who pointed out their being wrong, they condemned him to the flames, and was burned accordingly.
AT Paris, Alexander Kanus, a reformed clergyman, was burnt in a slow fire; four men were committed to the flames for distributing about papers that ridiculed their saying mass. One had his tongue bored through for speaking ill of the Romish superstitions. Peter Gaudet, a Genoese, was burnt by the desire of his own uncle, a bigoted Roman catholic; and John Pointer, a surgeon, had his tongue cut out, and was then committed to the flames.
AT Arras, Foutanis, and Rutiers, many were martyred for being of the reformed religion; in particular, at the latter place, one Stephen Brune was condemned to be burnt for refusing to attend mass. When the fire was kindled, the flames were driven from him by a brisk gale of wind: this occasioned the executioner to heap more faggots round him, and pour oil on them. Still, however, the wind blew the flames in a contrary direction, when the executioner absurdly grew angry with Stephen Brune, and in his passion struck him on the head. Brune very calmly said in return, "As I am condemned only to be burnt, why do you strike me wit [...] a staff like a dog." This expression so greatly [...]raged the executioner, that he ran him through with a pike, and then burnt the body when dead.
AYMOND de Lavoy, a minister of Bourdeaux, had a complaint lodged against him by the Romish [Page 115] clergy of that city. On hearing this, his friends advised him to abscond; but he absolutely refused so to do, and told them, "That should he be absent himself, the people might well imagine what he had preached consisted only of dreams and fables, and not extracted from the pure word of God; but to prevent them from entertaining such a notion, he determined to seal his testimony of the truth with his blood." When he was seized upon, the people would have rescued him, but he desired them to forbear, saying, "Since it is the will of God that I should suffer for him, I will not resist his will." He remained nine months in prison on the information only, and patiently suffered all the inclemencies of a gaol. Being brought to trial, he was order [...]d to be racked; when in the extremity of the torture he comforted himself with this expression; "This body must once die, but the soul shall live; for the kingdom of God endureth for ever." At length he swooned away; but on recovering, prayed for his persecutors. The question was then put to him, "Whether he would embrace the Roman catholic persuasion; which positively refusing, he was condemned to be burnt. At the place of execution he said, "O Lord, make haste to help me; tarry not; despise not the work of thy hands." And perceiving some who used to attend his sermons, he addressed them thus, "My friends. I exhort you to study and learn the gospel; for the word of God abideth for ever. Labour to know the will of God, and fear not them that kill the body▪ but ha [...]e no power over the soul." The executioner then strangled him, and afterwards burnt his body.
WILLIAM Husson, an apo [...]ecary of Blois, went from that city to Rouen, and there privately distributed and scattered about several small pamphlets, explaining the tenets of the reformed church, and exposing the Romish superstitions. These books gave a general alarm, and a council being called, an order was issued for diligent search to be made for the author and distribut [...]r. With some difficul [...] it was at length discovered that Husson had brought them to Rouen, and that he was gone towards Di [...]pp [...]. Orders for a pursuit were given, and Husson being apprehended, was brought back to Rouen, where he confessed he was both author and distributer of the books in question. This confession occasioned his condemnation, when he was executed in the following manner. His tongue being cut out, his hands and feet were tied behind, and he was drawn up by a pulley to a gibbet, and then let down into a fire kindled beneath; in which situation he called upon the Lord, and soon expired.
FRANCIS Bribard, secretary to cardinal de Bellay, for speaking in favour of the reformed, had his tongue cut out, and was then burnt, A. D. 1544. James Cobard, a school-master in the city of St. Michael, was burnt, A. D. 1545, for saying, "That mass was useless and absurd; and about the same time, fourteen men were burnt at Malda, their wives being compelled to stand by and behold the execution.
A. D. 1546, Peter Chapot brought a number of bibles in the French tongue to France, and publicly sold them there; for which being apprehended, he was condemned to be burnt; which sentence was executed a few days after it was passed. Soon after a cripple of Meaux, a school-master of Fera, named Stephen Polliot, and a man named John English, were burned for the faith.
THE choice being offered to Michael Michelot, either to recant and be beheaded, or to persevere and be burned; he chose the latter, making use, at the same time, of these words: God, who has given me grace not to deny the truth, will give me strength to endure the fire." Many, about the same time were burnt at Paris, Bar, &c. and at Langres, five men and two women were, by the Roman catholics, committed to the flames for being of the reformed religion: when the youngest woman encouraged the other, saying, "This day shall we be married to Jesus Christ, and be with him for ever."
MONSIEUR Blondel, a rich jeweller, was, A. D. 1548, apprehended at Lyons, and sent to Paris; where he was burnt for the faith, by order of the high court, A. D. 154 [...]. Hubert, a youth of nineteen years of age, was committed to the flames at Dijon; as was Flo [...]ert V [...]note, in the same year.
A lady, named Ann Ard [...]ber [...] ▪ designing, on [Page 116] account of her faith, to retire to Geneva, was s [...]i [...] ed and sent to Paris. Being condemned, she was led to execution by a rope placed round her waist. This rope she called her wedding girdle; and as it was on a Saturday, she said, "I was once married to a man on a Saturday, and now I shall be married to God on the same day of the week." She was at length fastened to the stake, and burnt, meeting her fate with the most exemplary fortitude.
SOME singular circumstances happened immediately after the coronation of Henry the Second, king of France, which we shall relate. A taylor was apprehended for working on a saint's day; being asked why he gave such offence to religion, his reply was, "I am a poor man, and having nothing but my labour to depend upon; necessity requires that I should be industrious, and my conscience tells me there is no day but the sabbath which I ought to keep sacred from labour." Having expressed himself thus, he was committed to prison, and the affair being soon after rumoured at court, some of the nobles persuaded the king to be present at the trial. On the day appointed, the monarch appeared in a superb chair of state, and the bishop of Mascon was ordered to interrogate the prisoner. The Taylor, on perceiving the king, paid his obedience to him in the most respectful manner, saying, "I thank God for honouring me thus, and for permitting me to vindicate the light of his gospel before so great a prince." The prelate then questioned him concerning the tenets of his faith, when the clearness and spirit of his answers amazed all that heard him. The king was much affected and seemed to muse, when the bishop exclaimed, "He is an obstinate and impudent heretic; let him be taken back again to prison, f [...]om thence conveyed to the place of execution, and there burnt to death." As the king did not oppose what the bishop said, the officers proceeded to do as they were ordered; and, in the mean time, lest what the taylor had uttered might alarm the conscience of the king, the bishop artfully insinuated, "That the heretics (as he called the reformed) had many specious arguments in their mouths, which, at their first hearing, appeared conclusive, but on serious examination, they were found to be false and deceitful. He then used his utmost endeavours in persuading the king to be present at the execution, who at length consented▪ and repaired to a balcony which overlooked the place where persons under condemnation were usually put to death. When the taylor saw the king, he fixed his eyes stedfastly upon him, and even while the flames were consuming him, he kept gazing in such a manner, as threw the monarch into visible confusion, and obliged him to reti [...]e before the martyr gave up the ghost. The king was so shocked upon this occasion, that he could not recover his spirits for some time; and what added to his disquiet, was, his continually dreaming for many successive nights, that he saw the taylor with his eyes fixed upon him, in the same manner as during the execution.
A pious man, named Claudius, was burnt at Orleans; a Genoese youth, called Thomas, having rebuked a Roman catholic for profanely swearing▪ was informed against as an heretic, and committed to the flames at Paris: and three men at Lyons, being condemned for their religion, were conducted to the place of execution; two of them with ropes about their necks; but the third, having been an officer in the king's service, was exempted from that disgrace. He, however, told the officer, that he begged to be treated in the same manner as his companions, and desired they would indulge him with one of those precious collars about his neck, in honour of the Lord. His request was complied with: and after having sung a psalm with great fervency, they were all three burnt.
MATTHEW Dimonet, a converted libertine; Simon [...]al [...]e, a citizen of Geneva; and Nicholas Naile, a bookseller of Paris, were martyred by fire▪ for professing the reformed religion.
PETER Serre was originally a priest, but reflecting on the errors of popery, he, at length, embraced the reformed religion, and learned the trade of a shoe-maker, that by honest industry he might obtain a subsistence. Having a brother at Thoulouse, who was a bigoted Roman catholic, Serre, out of fraternal love, made a journey to that city, in order to dissuade him from his superstitions. The brother [...] wife not approving of his design, lodged a complaint against him. He was soon apprehended, and very candidly made a full declaration of his faith. The judge then asked him concerning his occupation: [Page 117] to which he replied, "I have of late practised the trade of a shoe-maker." Of late, said the judge, and what did you practise formerly? That I am almost ashamed to tell you, exclaimed Serre, because it was the vilest and most wicked occupation imaginable. The judge and all who were presen [...], from these words supposed he had been a murderer. or thief, and that what he spoke was through contrition for his past crimes. The judge, however, to put the matter beyond d [...]ubt, ordered him to explain precisely what he meant; when Serre, with tears in his eyes, cried, "O [...] I was formerly that abominable thing—A POPISH PRIEST." This reply surprized all who heard it, and so much exasperated the judge, that he condemned Serre to be first degraded, then to have his tongue cut, and afterwards to be publicly burnt; which sentence was punctually executed in all its parts.
IN the year 1554, two men of the reformed religion, with the son and daughter of one of them, were apprehended and committed to the castle of Niverne. On examination, they confessed their faith, and were ordered for execution: being smeared with grease, brimstone, and gunpowder, they cried, Salt on, salt on this sinful and [...] flesh. Their tongues were then cut out, and they were afterwards committed to the flames▪ which soon consumed them, by [...] of the combustible matter with which they were besmeared.
PHILIP Hamlin, a pri [...]st, was apprehended for having renounced the errors of popery, and embracing the reformed religion. Being condemned to the stake, the faggots were piled about him, when he began earnestly to exhort the people to quit the errors of the church of Rome. The officer, who presided at the execution, on hearing this, ordered the faggots to be immediately lighted, and that one should blow a trumpet while Hamlin was burning, that the people should not hear his voice, or be induced to change their opinions from what he might utter.
An Account of the Martyrdom of JOHN CALAS.
AS we are now treating of the persecutions in the kingdom of France, it may not be improper to look a little forward to modern tim [...]s, wherein we may see the same persecuting spirit of popery, that raged formerly, most strikingly exhibited in the martyrdom of John Calas.
THIS is one of the most singular affairs that ever happened, and by being transacted in a polished age, shews that neither experience, or improvement, can root out the inveterate prejudices of the Roman catholics; or render them less cruel, or inexorable, to the Protestants.
JOHN Calas was a merchant of the city of Thoulouse, where he had been settled, and lived in good repute, and had married an English woman of French extraction.
CALAS and his wife were protestants, and had five sons, whom they educated in the same religion; but Lewis, one of the sons, became a Roman catholic, having been converted by a maid-servant, who had lived in the family above thirty years. The father, however, did not express any resentment or ill-will upon the occasion, but kept the maid in the family, and settled an annuity upon the son. In October 1761, the family consisted of John Calas and his wife, one woman servant, Mark Anthony Calas, the eldest son, and Peter Calas, the second son. Mark Anthony was bred to the law, but could not be admitted to practise, on account of his being a protestant: hence he grew melancholy, read all the books which he could procure relative to suicide, and seemed determined to destroy himself. To this may added, that he led a dissipated life, was greatly addicted to gaming, and did all which could constitute the character of a libe [...]tine. On which account his father frequently reprehended him, and sometimes in terms of severity, which considerably added to the gloom that seemed to oppress him.
ON the 13th of October, 1761, Mr. Gober la Vaisse, a young gentlem [...]n about nineteen years of age, the son of La Vaisse, a celebrated advocate of Thoulouse, having been some time at Bourdeaux, came back to Thoulouse to see his father; but finding that he was go [...]e to his country house, at some distance from [...], he went to several places, endeavouring to [...] a horse to carry him thither. No horse, howev [...], was to be hired; and, about five o'clock in the evening, he was met by John Calas the father, and the eldest son Mark Anthony, [Page 118] who was his friend. Calas, the father▪ invited him to supper, as he could not set out for his father's that night, and La Vaisse consented. All three, therefore, proceeded to Calas's house together, and when they came thither, finding that Mrs. Calas was still in her own room, which she had not quitted that day, La Vaisse went up to see her. After the first compliments, he told her, he was to sup with her by her husband's invitation, at which she expressed her satisfaction, and a few minutes after left him, to give some orders to her maid. When that was done, she went to look for her son Anthony, whom she found sitting alone in the shop, very pensive: she gave him some money, and desired him to go and buy some Roquefort cheese, as he knew how to buy it good better than any other person in the family. She then returned to her guest La Vaisse, who very soon after went again to the livery stable, to see if any horse was come in, that he might secure it for the next morning.
IN a short time Anthony returned, having bought the cheese, and La Vaisse also coming back about the same time, the family and their guest sat down to supper, in a room up one pair of stairs; the whole company, consisting of Calas the father and his wife, Anthony and Peter Calas the sons, and La Vaisse the guest, no other persons being in the house, except the maid-servant, who has been already mentioned.
IT was now about seven o'clock: the supper was not long; but before it was over, or, according to the French expression, "when they came to the desert," Anthony left the table, and went into the kitchen, which was on the same floor, as he was accustomed to do. The maid asked him if he was cold? He answered, "Quite the contrary, I burn;" and then left her. In the mean time his friend and family left the room they had supped in, and went into a bed-chamber; the father and La Vaisse sat down together on a sofa; the younger son Peter in an elbow chair; and the mother in another chair; and, without making any iniquiry after Anthony, continued in conversation together till between nine and ten o'clock, when La Vaisse took his leave, and Peter, who had fallen asleep, was awakened to attend him with a light.
ON the ground floor of Calas's house was a shop and a warehouse; the latter of which was divided from the shop by a pair of folding doors. When Peter Calas and La Vaisse came down stairs into the shop, they were extremely shocked to see Anthony hanging in his shirt, from a bar which he had laid across the top of the two folding doors, having half opened them for that purpose. On discovery of this horrid spectacle, they shrieked out, which brought down Calas the father, the mother being seized with such a terror as kept her trembling in the passage above. The unhappy old man rushed forward, and taking the body in his arms, the bar, to which the rope that suspended him was fastened, slipped off from the folding door of the warehouse, and fell down. Having placed the body on the ground, he loosed and took off the cord in an agony of grief and anguish not to be expressed, weeping, trembling, and deploring himself and his child. The two young men, his second son and La Vaisse, who had not had presence of mind enough to attempt to take down the body, were standing by, stupid with amazement and horror. In the mean time the mother, hearing the confused cries and complaints of her husband, and finding no one come to her, found means to get down stairs. At the bottom she saw La Vaisse, and hastily demanded what was the matter. This question rouzed Calas in a moment, and instead of answering her, he urged her to go again up stairs, to which, with much reluctance, she consented; but the conflict of her mind being such as could not be long borne, she sent down the maid to know what was the matter. When the maid discovered what had happened, she continued below, either because she feared to carry an account of it to her mistress, or because she busied herself in doing some good office to her master, who was still embracing the body of his son, and bathing it in his tears. The mother, therefore, being thus left alone, went down, and mixed in the scene, that has been already described, with such emotions as it must naturally produce. In the mean time Peter had been sent for La Moire, a surgeon in the neighbourhood. La Moire was not at home, but his apprentice, Mr. Grosse, came instantly. Upon examination, he found the body quite dead; and upon taking off the neckcloth, which was of black tassata, he saw the mark of the cord, and immediately pronounced [Page 119] that the deceased had been strangled. This particular had not been told, for the poor old man, when Peter was going for La Moire, cried out, "Save at least the honour of my family; do not go and spread a report that your brother has made away with himself."
BY this time a croud of people were gathered about the house, and one Casing, with another friend or two of the family, were come in. Some of those who were in the street had heard the cries and exclamations of the father, the mother, the brother, and his friend, before they knew what was the matter; and having by some means heard that Anthony Calas was suddenly dead, and that the surgeon, who had examined the body, declared he had been strangled, they took it into their heads he had been murdered; and as the family were protestants, they presently supposed that the young man was about to change his religion, and had been put to death for that reason. The cries they had heard they fancied were those of the deceased, while he was resisting the violence that was offered him. The tumult in the street increased every moment: some said that Anthony Calas was to have abjured the next day; others, that protestants are bound by their religion to strangle or cut the throats of their children when they are inclined to become catholics. Others, who had found out that La Vaisse was in the house when the accident happened, very confidently affirmed, that the protestants, at their last assembly, appointed a person to be their common executioner upon these occasions, and that La Vaisse was the man, who, in consequence of the office to which he had been appointed, had come to Calas's house to hang his son.
THE poor father, therefore, who was overwhelmed with grief for the loss of his child, was advised by his friends to send for the officers of justice to prevent his being torn to pieces by the multitude, who supposed that he had murdered his son. This was accordingly done: a messenger was dispatched to the capitoul, one David, the first magistrate of the place; and another to an inferior officer, called an assessor. The capitoul was already set out, having been alarmed by the rumour of a murder before the messenger sent from Calas's got to his house. He entered Calas's house with forty soldiers, took the father, Peter the son, the mother [...] La Vaisse, and the maid, all into custody, and set a guard over them. He sent for M. de la Tour, a physician, and M. la Marque and Perronet, surgeons, who examined the body for marks of violence, but found none except the mark of the ligature on the neck: they found also the hair of the deceased done up in the usual manner, perfectly smooth, and without the least disorder: his clothes were also regularly folded up, and laid upon the counter, nor was his shirt either torn or unbuttoned.
NOTWITHSTANDING these appearances [...]e capitoul [...]hought proper to agree with the opinion of the mob, and took it into his head that old Calas had sent for La [...]aisse, telling him he had a son to be hanged; that La Vaisse had come to perform the office o [...] executione [...], and that he had received ass [...]stance from the [...] and brother.
IN consequence of these notions the capitoul ordered the body of the deceased to be carried to the town-house, with the clothes. The father and son were thrown into a dark dungeon; and the mother, La Vaisse, the maid, and Casing, were imprisoned in one that admitted the light. The next day, what is called the verbal process was taken at the town-house, instead of the spot where the body was found, as the law directs, and was dated at Calas's house to conceal the irregularity. This verbal process is somewhat like the coroner's inquest in England: witnesses are examined, and the magistrate makes his report, which is the same there as the verdict of the coroner's jury in England. The witnesses examined by the capitoul were, the physician and surgeons, who proved Anthony Calas to to have been strangled. The surgeons having been ordered to examine the stomach of the deceased, deposed also, that the food which was found there had been taken four hours before his death.
AS no proof of the supposed fact could be procured, the capitoul had recourse to a monitory, or general information, in which the crime was taken for granted, and all persons were required to give such testimony against it as they were able, particularizing the points to which they were to speak. This recites that La Vaisse was commissioned by [Page 120] the protestants to be their executioner in ordinary, when any of their children were to be hanged for changing their religion: it recites also, that when the protestants thus hang their children, they compel them to kneel, and one of the interrogatories was, whether any person had seen Anthony Calas kneel before his father when he strangled him: it re [...]ites likewise, that Anthony died a Roman catholic [...] and requires evidence of his catholicism.
TH [...]SE ridiculous opinions being thus adopted and pu [...]lished by the principal magistrate of a considerable city, the church of Geneva thought itself obliged to send attestations of its abhorrence of opinions so abominable and absurd, and of its astonishment that they should be suspected of such opinions by persons whose rank and office required them to have more knowledge and better judgement.
BUT before this monitory was published, the mob had got a notion, that Anthony Calas was the next day to have entered into the fraternity of the White Penitents. The capitoul immediately adopted this opinion also, without the least examination, and ordered Anthony's body to be buried in the middle of St. Stephen's church, which was accordingly done, forty priest's, and all the White Penitants, assisting in the funeral procession.
A few days after the interment of the deceased, the White Penitants performed a solemn service for him in their chapel: the church was hung with white, and a tomb was raised in the middle of it, on the top of which was placed a human skeleton, holding in one hand a paper, on which was written, "Abjuration of heresy," and in the other a palm, the emblem of martyrdom.
THE next day the Franciscans performed a service of the same kind for him; and it is easy to imagine how much the minds of the people were inf [...]amed by this strange folly of their magistrates and priests.
THE capitoul continued the prosecution with unrelenting severity; and though the grief and distraction of the family, when he first came to the house, were alone sufficient to have convinced any reasonable being that they were not the authors of the event which they deplored, yet having publicly attested that they were guilty in his monitory without proof, and no proof coming in, he thought fit to condemn the unhappy father, mother, brother, friend, and servant, to the torture, and put them all into irons on the 18th of November. Casing was enlarged upon proof that he was not in Calas's house till after Anthony was dead.
FROM these dreadful proceedings the sufferers appealed to the parliament, which immediately took cognizance of the affair, and annulled the sentence of the capitoul as irregular; but they continued the prosecution.
WHEN the trial came on, the hangman, who had been taken to Calas's house, and shewn the folding doors and the bar, deposed, that it was impossible Anthony should hang himself as was pretended. Another witness swore, that he looked through the key-hole of Calas's door into a room, where [...] men running hastily to and fro. A third [...], that his wife had told him, a woman named Maundrill had told her, that a certain woman unknow [...] had declared, she heard the cries of Anthony Cal [...]s at the farther end of the city.
UPON this evidence the majority of the par [...] ment were of opinion, that the prisoners were guilty, and therefore ordered them to be tried by the criminal court of Tho [...]lous [...].
AMONG those who presided at the trial, was one La Borde, who had zealous [...]y espoused the popular prejudices; and though it [...] manifest to demonstration that the prisoners wer [...] [...]ither all innocent [...] all guilty, he voted that the [...] should first s [...] fer the torture, ordinary and extraordinary, to di [...] cover his accomplices, and be then broken [...] upon the wheel; to receive the last s [...]roke when [...] had laid two hours, and then to be burnt to [...] ▪ In this opinion he had the concurrence of six others▪ three were for the torture alone; two were of opinion that they should endeavour to ascertain upon the spot whether Anthony could hang himself or [...] ▪ and one voted to acquit the prisoner. After [...] debates the majority was for the torture and [...] and probably condemned the father by way of experiment, [Page 121] whether he was guilty or not, hoping he would, in the agony, confess the crime, and accuse the other prisoners, whose fate, therefore, they suspended. It is, however, certain, that if they had evidence against the father that would have justified the sentence they pronounced against him, that very evidence would have justified the same sentence against the rest; and that they could not justly condemn him, for they were all in the house together when Anthony died. All concurred in declaring he hanged himself▪ that the persons accused could have had no motive to do such an act▪ nor could they have hanged him by violence, without the knowledge of the rest.
POOR Calas▪ however, an old man of 68, was condemned to this dreadful punishment alone. He suffered the torture with great constancy, and was led to execution in a frame of mind which excited the admiration of all that saw him.
TWO Dominicans (father Bourges and father Cold [...]g [...]es) who attended him in his last moments, wished "their latter end might be like his;" and declared, that they thought him not only wholly innocent of the crime laid to his charge, but an exemplary instance of true christian patience, sortitude, and ch [...]rity.
ONE single shriek, and that not very violent, escaped him [...] he received the first stroke; after that he uttered no complaint. Being at length placed on the wheel, to wait for the moment which was to end his life and his misery together, he expressed himself with an humble hop [...] of an happy immortality, and a compassionate regard for the judges who had condemned him. When he saw the executioner prepared to give him the last stroke, he made a fresh declaration of his innocence to father Bourges; but while the words were yet in his mouth, the capitoul, the author of this catastrophe, and who came upon the scaffold merely to gratify his desire of being a witness of his punishment and death, ran up to him, and bawled out, "Wretch, there are the faggots which are to reduce your body to ashes; speak the [...]ruth." Mr. Calas made no reply, but turned his head a little aside, and that moment the executioner did his office.
DONAT Calas, a boy of fifteen years of age, and the youngest son of the unfortunate victim, was apprentice to a merchant at Nismes, when he heard of the dreadful punishment by which seven, unfortunately prejudiced judges of Thoulouse, had put his worthy father to death.
THE popular out [...]ry against this family was so violent in Languedoc, that every body expected to see the children of Calas broke upon the wheel, and the mother burnt alive. Even the attorney general expected it. So weak, it is said, had been the defence made by this innocent family, oppressed by misfortunes, and terrified at the sight of lighted piles, wheels, and racks.
YOUNG Donat Calas was made to dread sharing the fate of the rest of the family, and was advised to fly into Switzerland: he went and found a gentleman, who, at first, could only pity and relieve him, without daring to judge of the rigour exercised against the father, mother, and brothers.
SOON after, one of the brothers, who was only banished, likewise threw himself into the arms of the same person, who, for more than a month, took every possible precaution to be assured of the innocence of the family. But when he was once convinced, he thought himself obliged, in conscience, to employ his friends, his purse, his pen, and his credit, to repair the fatal mistake of the seven judges of Thoulouse, and to have the proceedings revised by the king's council. This revision lasted three years, and it is well known what honour Messrs. de Grosne and Bacquancourt acquired by reporting this memorable cause. Fifty masters of the Court of Requests unanimously declared the whole family of Calas innocent, and recommended them to the benevolent justice of his majesty. The duke de Chois [...]ul, who never let slip an opportunity of signalizing the greatness of his character, not only assisted this unfortunate family with money, but obtained for them a g [...]atuity of 36,000 livres from the king.
ON the 9th of March, 1765, the arret was signed, which justified the family of Calas, and changed their fate. The 9th of March, 1762, was the very day on which the innocent and virtuous father of [Page 122] that family had been executed. All Paris ran in crouds to see them come out of prison, and clapped their hands for joy, while the tears streamed from their eyes.
THUS have we traced, through all its circumstances, one of the most singular affairs that ever the annals of superstition, or the history of bigotry produced; and lament, that a worthy and innocent man fell a sacrifice to that narrowness, which a popish education bestows, and which settled prejudices always convert to cruelty. Hence we may perceive, to what a depraved state the human mind may be reduced, when left to the guidance of the passions, or suffered to be the slave of enthusiasm. A sect, which would propagate its doctrines in blood, cannot be the favourers of truth: that persuasion alone can merit the sacred name of religion, which wishes to reform mankind.
GOSPEL purity will equally shun superstition and cruelty, as the mildness of Christ's tenets teaches only to comfort in this world, and procure salvation in the next. To persecute for being of a different opinion, is as absurd as to persecute for having a different countenance: if we honour God, keep sacred the pure doctrines of Christ, put a full confidence in the promises contained in the holy scriptures, and obey the political laws of the state in which we reside, we have an undoubted right to protection instead of persecution, and to serve heaven, as our consciences, regulated by the gospel rules, may direct.
CHAP. IV. Containing an HISTORICAL ACCOUNT of the PERSECUTIONS in SPAIN, PORTUGAL, ITALY, &c. &c.
An Account of the Rise, Progress, &c. of the INQUISITION.
WHEN the reformed religion began to diffuse the gospel light throughout Europe, pope Innocent the Third entertained great fear for the Romish church. Unwilling that the spirit of free inquiry should gain ground, or that the people should attain more knowledge than the priests were willing to admit, he determined to impede, as much as possible, the progress of reformation. He accordingly instituted a number of inquisitors, or persons who were to make inquiry after, apprehend, and punish heretics, as the reformed were called by the papists.
AT the head of these inquisitors was one Dominic, who had been canonized by the pope, in order to render his authority the more respectable. Dominic, and the other inquisitors, spread themselves into various Roman catholic countries, and treated the protestants with the utmost severity. In process of time, the pope, not finding these roving inquisitors so useful as he had imagined, resolved upon the establishment of fixed and regular courts of inquisition. After the order for these regular courts, the first office of inquisition was established in the city of Thoulouse, and Dominic became the first regular inquisitor, as he had before been the first roving iniquisitor.
COURTS of inquisition were now erected in several countries; but the Spanish inquisition became the most powerful, and the most dreaded of any. Even the kings of Spain themselves, though arbitrary in all other respects, were taught to dread the power of the lords of the inquisition; and the horrid cruelties they exercised, compelled multitudes, who differed in opinion from the Roman catholics, carefully to conceal their sentiments.
[Page 123]THE most zealous of all the popish monks, and those who most implicitly obeyed the church of Rome, were the Dominicans and Franciscans: these, therefore, the pope thought proper to invest with an exclusive right of presiding over, and managing the different courts of inquisition. The friars of those two orders were always selected from the very d [...]egs of the people, and therefore were not much troubled with punctilios of honour: they were obliged, by the rules of their respective orders, to lead very austere lives, which rendered their manners unsocial and brutish, and, of course, the better qualified them for the employment of inquisitors.
THE pope now thought proper to give the inquisitors the most unlimited powers, as judges delegated by him, and immediately representing his person: they were permitted to excommunicate, or sentence to death, whom they thought proper, upon the most slight information of heresy. They were allowed to publish crusades against all whom they deemed heretics, and enter into leagues with sovereign princes, to join those crusades with their forces.
IN 1244, their power was farther increased by the emperor Frederic the Second, who declared himself the protector and friend of all inquisitors, and published two very cruel edicts, viz.
1. THAT all heretics, who continued obstinate, should be burnt.
2. THAT all heretics, who repented, should be imprisoned for life.
THIS zeal in the emperor for the inquisitors, and the Roman catholic persuasion, arose from a report which had been propagated throughout Europe, that he intended to renounce Christianity, and turn Mahometan; the emperor, therefore attempted, by the heighth of bigotry, to contradict the report, and to shew his attachment to popery by cruelty.
THE officers of the inquisition are, three inquisitors, or judges, a fiscal proctor, two secretaries, a magistrate, a messenger, a receiver, a gaoler, an agent of confiscated possessions; several assessors, counsellors, executioners, physicians, surgeons, door-keepers, familiars, and visitors, who are all sworn to secrecy.
THE principal accusation against those who are subject to this tribunal, is heresy, which comprizes all that is spoken, or written, against any of the articles of the creed, or the traditions of the Romish church. The other articles of accusation are, renouncing the Roman catholic persuasion, and believing that persons of any other religion may be saved, or even admitting that the tenets of any but papists are, in the least, reasonable or proper. We shall mention two other things which incur the most severe punishments, and shew the inquisitors, at once, in an absurd and a tyrannical light, viz. To disapprove of any action done by the inquisition, or disbelieve any thing said by an inquisitor.
THE grand article, heresy, comprizes many subdivisions; and, upon a suspicion of any of these, the party is immediately apprehended: advancing an offensive proposition; failing to impeach others who may advance such; contemning church ceremonies; defacing idols; reading books condemned by the inquisition; lending such books to others to read; deviating from the ordinary practices of the Romish church; letting a year pass without going to confession; eating meat on fast-days; neglecting mass; being present at a sermon preached by an heretic; not appearing when summoned by the inquisition; lodging in the house of, contracting a friendship with, or making a present to an heretic; assisting an heretic to escape from confinement, or visiting one in confinement, are all matters of suspicion, and prosecuted accordingly. Nay, all Roman catholics were commanded, under pain of excommunication, to give immediate information, even of their nearest and dearest friends, if they judged them to be what was called heretics, or any ways inclining to heresy.
THOSE who gave the least countenance or assistance to protestants, are called fautors, or abettors of heresy, and the accusations against these usually turn upon some of the following points: comforting such as the inquisition have begun to prosecute▪ [Page 124] assisting, or not informing against such, if they should happen to escape; concealing, abetting, advising, or furnishing heretics with money; visiting, or writing to, or sending them subsistence; secreting, or burning books and papers, which might serve to convict them.
THE inquisition likewise takes cognizance of such as are accused of being magicians, witches, blasphemers, soothsayers, wizards, common swearers; and of such who read, or even possess the bible in the common language, the Talmud of [...]he Jews, or the Alcoran of the Mahometans.
UPON all occasions the inquisitors carry on their processes with the utmost severity, and punish those who offend them with the most unparalleled cruelty. A protestant has seldom any mercy shewn him; and a Jew, who turns christian, is far from being secure; for if he is known to keep company with another new-converted Jew, a suspicion immediately arises that they pr [...]vately practise together some Jewish ceremonies; if he keeps company with a person who was lately a protestant, but now professes popery▪ they are accused of plotting together; but if he associates with a Roman catholic, an accusation is often laid against him for only pretending to be a papist, and the consequence is, a confiscation of his effects as a punishment for his insincerity, and the loss of his life if he complains of ill usage.
A defence in the inquisition is of [...]ittle use [...] prisoner, for a suspicion only is deemed sufficient cause of condemnation, and the greater his wealth the greater his danger. The principal part of the inquisitors cruelties is owing to their [...]apacity: they destroy the life to possess th [...] property; and, under the pretence of zeal, plunder each obnoxious individual.
A prisoner to the inquisitors is never allowed to s [...]e the face of his accuser, or of the witnesses against him, but every method is taken, by threat [...] and tortures, to oblige him to accuse himself, and by that means corr [...]borate their evidence. If the jurisdiction of the inquisition is not fully allowed, vengeance is denounced against such as call it in qu [...]stion, or if any of its officers are opposed, those [...] oppose them are almost certain to be sufferers for their temerity; the maxim of the inquisition being, to strike terror, and awe those who are the objects of its power, into obedience. High birth, distinguished rank, great dignity, or [...]minent [...]mployments, are no protection from its severities; and the lowest officers of the inquisition can make the highest characters tremble.
SUCH are the circumstances which subject a person to the rage of the inquisition, and the modes of beginning the process are four in number.
1. To proceed by imputation, or prosecute on common report.
2. To proceed by information of any indifferent person who chuses to impeach another.
3. To found the prosecution on the information of those spies who are regularly retained by the inquisition.
4. To prosecute on the confession of the prisoner himself.
WHEN a person is summon [...]d to appear before the inquisition, the best method unless he i [...] sure of escaping by flight [...] is immediately to obey the summo [...]; for though really innocent, the least delay increases his criminality in the eye of the inquisi [...] [...] of the [...]r [...] is, that backwardness [...] guilt in the person sum [...] [...], it is the same as [...] for should such ever return, the most cruel death would be the certain consequence.
THE inquisitors [...]ver forget or forgive; length of time cannot [...] their [...] the humbl [...]st concessions, or most liberal presents obtain a pardo [...]: they carry the desire of revenge to the grave, and would have both the property and lives of those who have offended them. Hence when a person once ac [...]sed to the inquisition, after escaping, is re-taken, he ought seriously to prepare himself for martyrdom, and aim his soul against the fear of death. Every person, in such a situation ought to be composed for the awful occasion, without expectation of remedy.
[Page 125]WHEN a pos [...]ive accusation is given, the inquisitors direct an order under their hands to the executioner, who takes a certain number of familiars with him to assist in the execution. The calamity of a man under such circumstances, can scarce be described, he being probably seized when surrounded by his family, or in company with his friends. Father, son, brother, sister, husband, wife, must qui [...]ly submit; none dare resist or even speak; either would subject them to the punishment of the devoted victim. No respite is allowed to settle the most important affairs, but the prisoner is instantaneously hurried away.
HENCE we may judge how critically dangerous must be the situation of persons who reside in countries where there is an inquisitorial tribunal; and how carefully cautious all states ought to be who are not cursed with such an arbitrary court, to prevent its introduction. In speaking of this subject, an elegant author pathetically says, "How horrid a scene of perfidy and inhumanity? What kind of community must that be, whence gratitude, love, and mutual forbearance with regard to human frailties are banished! What must that tribunal be, which obliges parents not only to erase from their minds the remembrance of their own children, to extinguish all those keen sensations of tenderness and aff [...]tion wherewith nature inspires them, but even to extend their inhumanity so far as to force them to commence their accusers, and consequently to become the cause of the cruelties inflicted upon them▪ What ideas ought we to form to ourselves [...] tribunal, which obliges children not only to [...] every soft impulse of gratitude, love, and respect, due to those who gave them birth, but even for [...] them, and that under the most rigorous penalties, [...]o be spies over their parents▪ and to discover to [...] set of merciless inquisitors, the crimes, the erro [...] ▪ [...]nd even the little lapses to which they are exposed by human frailty. In a word, a tribunal which will not permit relations, when imprisoned in its horrid dungeons, to give e [...]ch other the succours, or perform the duties which religion enjoins, must be of an infernal stamp. What disorder and confusion must such conduct give rise to, in a tenderly affectionate family? An expression innocent in itself, and perhaps, but too true, shall, from an indiscreet zeal, or a [...] of fear, give infinite uneasiness to a family; shall ruin its peace entirely, and perhaps cause one or more of its members to be the unhappy victims of the most barbarous of all tribunals. What distraction must necessarily break forth in a house where the husband and wife are at variance, or the children loose and wicked! Will such children scruple to sacrifice a father, who endeavours to restrain them by his exhortations, by reproofs, or paternal corrections? Will not they rather, after plundering his house to support their extravagance and riot, readily deliver up their unhappy parent to all the horrors of a tribunal, founded on the blackest injustice? A riotous husband, or a loose wife, have an easy opportunity, assisted by means of the persecution in question, to rid themselves of one who is a check to their vices, by delivering him, or her, up to the rigours of the inquisition."
WHEN the inquisitors have taken umbrage against an innocent person, all expedients are used to facilitate condemnation; false oaths and testimonies, founded on perjury, are directed by the virulence of prejudice to find the accused guilty; and all laws, divine and human, all institutions, moral and political, are sacrificed to bigoted revenge.
WHEN a person accused is taken and imprisoned, his treatment is deplorable indeed. The gaolers first begin by searching him for books or papers which might tend to his conviction, or for instruments which might be employed in self-murder, or breaking from the place of confinement. But it is to be observed, that the obvious articles of the search are not the only things taken from a prisoner; for the conscientious gaolers make free with money, rings, buckles, apparel, &c. under various pretences, such as, that money or rings may be swallowed, to the great detriment of the prisoner's health, the prongs of buckles may be used to take away life; by means of a neckcloth or a pair of garters, a prisoner may hang himself, &c. &c. Thus he is robbed under the plausible pretext of humanity, and used ill through pretended tenderness.
WHEN the pris [...]ner has been searched under the name of ca [...]e, and robbed beneath the mask of justice, he is committed to prison by way of security. "He [...]e▪ says an authentic [...] conveyed to [Page 126] a dungeon, the sight of which must fill him with horror, torn from his family and friends, who [...] not allowed access, or even to send him one consolat [...]ry letter, or take the least step in his favour in order to prove his innocence. He sees himself instant [...] abandoned to his inflexible judges, to melancholy and despair, and even often to his most inveterate enemies, quite uncertain of his fate. Innocence on such an occasion is a weak [...], nothing being easier than to ruin an innocent person."
DEATH is usually the portion of a prisoner, the mildest sentence being imprisonment for life; yet the inquisitors proceed by degrees, at once subtle, slow, and cruel. The gaoler first of all insinuates himself into the prisoner's favour, by pretending to wish him well, and advise him well, and among other hints, falsely kind, tells him to petition for a hearing.
THIS is the worst thing a prisoner can do, for the mere petition is deemed a supposition of guilt, and he is persuaded to it only with a view to entrap him. When he is brought before the consistory, the first demand is, What is your request?
THE prisoner very naturally answers that he would have a hearing.
ONE of the inquisitors replies, your hearing is thi [...]—confess the truth—conceal nothing, and rely on our mercy.
IN the prisoner makes a confession of any trifling affair, they immediately found an indictment on it: if he is mute, they shut him up without light, or any food but a scanty allowance of bread and water till he overcomes his obstinacy as they call it; and if he declares he is innocent, they torment him, till he either dies with the torment, or confesses himself guilty.
UPON the re-examinations of such as confess, they continually say, "You have not been sincere, you tell not all—you keep many things concealed, and therefore must be remanded to your dungeon." When th [...]se who stood mute are called for examination, [...].
AFTER they have verbally answered▪ p [...]n, ink, and paper are given them, in order to produce a written answer, which it is required shall in every degree coincide with the verbal answer. If the verbal and the written answer differ, the prisoners are charged with prevarication, if one contains more than the other, with wishing to conceal certain circumstances; if they both agree, they are accused with premeditated artifice.
WHEN the person impeached is condemned, he is either severely whipped, violently tortured, sent to the gallies, or sentenced to death; and in either case the effects are confiscated. After judgment [...] procession is performed to the place of execution▪ which cer [...]mony is called, an [...] ▪ or Act of Faith.
THE following is an account of an Auto de Fe, performed at M [...]drid in the year 1682.
THE officers of the inquisition, preceded by trumpets, kettle-drums, and their bann [...], marched on the 30th of May, in cavalcade, to the palace of the great square, where they declared by proclamation, that on the [...]0th of June the sentence of the prisoners would be put in execution.
THERE had not been a spectacle of this kind at Madrid for several years before, for which reason it was expected by the inhabitants with as much impatience as a day of the greatest festivity.
ON the day appointed, a prodi [...]ious number of [Page 127] people appeared, dressed as splendid as their respective circumstances would admit. In the great square was raised a high scaffold▪ and thither, from seven in the morning till the evening, were brought criminals of both sexes; all the inquisitions in the kingdom sending their prisoners to Madrid.
OF these prisoners twenty men and women, with one renegado Mahometan, were ordered to be burned; fifty Jews and Jewes [...]es, having never before been imprisoned, and repenting of their crimes, were sentenced to a long confinement, and to wear a yellow cap; and ten others, indicted for bigamy, witchcraft, and other crimes, were sentenced to be whipped, and then sent to the gallies: these last wore large paste-board caps, with inscriptions on them, having a halter about their necks, and torches in their hands.
THE whole court of Spain was present on this occasion. The grand inquisitor's chair was placed in a sort of tribunal far above that of the king. The nobles here acted the part of the sheriffs officers in England, leading such criminals as were to be burned, and holding them when fast bound with thick cords: the rest of the criminals were conducted by the familiars of the inquisition.
AMONG those who were to suffer was a young Jewess of exquisite beauty, and but seventeen years of age. Being on the same side of the scaffold where the queen was seated, she addressed her, in hopes of obtaining a pardon, in the following pathetic speech: ‘Great queen! will not your royal presence be of some service to me in my miserable condition? Have regard to my youth; and, oh! consider, that I am about to die, for professing a a religion imbibed from my earliest infancy!’ Her majesty seemed greatly to pity her distress, but turned away her eyes, as she did not dare to speak a word in behalf of a person who had been declared an heretic.
NOW mass began, in the midst of which the priest came from the altar, placed near the scaffold, and seated himself in a chair prepared for that purpose.
THE chief inquisitor then descended from the amphitheatre, dressed in his cope, and having a mitre on his head. After bowing to the altar, he advanced towards the king's balcony, and went up to it, attended by some of his officers, carrying a cross and the gospels, with a book containing the oath by which the kings of Spain oblige themselves to protect the catholic faith, to extirpate heretics, and support, with all their power, the prosecutions and decrees of the inquisition.
ON the inquisitor's approach, and presenting this book to the king, his majesty rose up, bare-headed, and swore to maintain the oath, which was read to him by one of his counsellors: after which the king continued standing till the inquisitor was returned to his place; when the secretary of the holy office mounted a sort of pulpit, and administered a like oath to the counsellors and the whole assembly. The mass was begun about twelve at noon, and did not end till nine in the evening, being protracted by a proclamation of the sentences of the several criminals, which were all separately rehearsed aloud one after the other▪
AFTER this, followed the burning of the twenty-one men and women, whose intrepidity in suffering that horrid death was truly astonishing: some thrust their hands and feet into the flames with the most dauntless fortitude; and all of them yielded to their fate with such resolution, that many of the amazed spectators lamented that such heroic souls had not been more enlightened.
THE king's near situation to the criminals rendered their dying groans very audible to him: he could not, however, be absent from this dreadful scene, as it is esteemed a religious one; and his coronation oath obliges him to give a sanction by his presence to all the acts of the tribunal.
ANOTHER Auto de Fe is thus described by the reverend Doctor Gedde, "At the place of execution there are so many stakes set as there are prisoners to be burned, a large quantity of dry fur [...]e being set about them.
THE stakes of the protestants, or, as the inquisitors call them, the prosessed, are about four yards [Page 128] high, and have each a small board, whereon the prisoner is seated within half a yard of the top. The professed then go up a ladder betwixt two priests, who attend them the whole day of execution. When they come even with the forementioned board, they turn about to the people, and the priests spend near a quarter of an hour in exhorting them to be reconciled to the see of Rome. On their refusing, the priests come down, and the executioner ascending, turns the professed from off the ladder upon the seat, chains their bodies fast to the stakes, and leaves them.
THE priests then go up a second time to renew their exhortations, and if they find them ineffectual, usually tell them at parting, "That they leave them to the devil, who is standing at their elbow ready to receive their souls, and carry them with him into the flames of hell fire, as soon as they are out of their bodies."
A general shout is then raised, and when the priests get off the ladder, the universal cry is, "Let the dogs' beards be made;" (which implies, singe their beards) this is accordingly performed by means of flaming furzes thrust against their faces with long poles.
THIS barbarity is repeated till their faces are burnt, and is accompanied with loud acclamations. Fire is then set to the furzes, and the criminals are consumed."
NUMEROUS are the martyrs who have borne these rigours with the most exemplary fortitude: and we hope that every protestant, whose fate may expose him to the merciless tyranny of papists, will act consistent with the duty of a christian, when they consider the great rewards that await them.
WHAT we have already said may be applied to inquisitions in general, as well as to that of Spain in particular. The inquisition belonging to Portugal is exactly upon a similar plan to that of Spain, having been instituted much about the same time, and put under the same regulations, and the proceedings nearly resemble each oth [...]r: we shall therefore introduce an account of it in this place. The house, or rather palace, of the inquisition, is a noble edifice. It contains four courts, each about forty feet square, round which are about three hundred dungeons, or cells.
THE dungeons on the ground floor are allotted to the lowest class of prisoners, and those on the second story to persons of superior rank. The galleries are built of freestone, and hid from view both within and without by a double wall of about fifty feet high, which greatly increases the gloom, and darkens them exceedingly.
THE whole prison is so extensive, and contains so many turnings and windings, that none but those well acquainted with it can find the way through its various avenues. The apartments of the chief inquisitor are spacious, and elegant; the entrance is through a large gate, which leads into a court yard, round which are several chambers, and some large saloons for the king, royal family, and the rest of the court to stand and observe the executions during an Auto de Fe.
WITH respect to the dungeons where the prisoners are confined, they are not only gloomy in themselves, but as miserably furnished as can be imagined; the only accommodations being a frame of wood by way of bedstead, and a straw bed, mattrass, blankets, sheets, an urinal, wash hand bason, two pitchers, one for clean, the other for [...] water, a lamp, and a plate.
A testoon, or seven pence half penny English money is allowed every prisoner daily; and the principal gaoler, accompanied by two other officers, monthly visits every prisoner, to inquire how he would have his allowance laid out. This visit, however, is only a matter of form, for the gaole usually lays out the money as he pleases, and commonly allows the prisoner daily, viz. a porringe [...] of broth, half a pound of beef, a small piece of bread, and a trifling proportion of cheese.
THE above articles are charged to the prisoner at [...] rate of seventeen testoons in the mouth, four are allowed for brandy, or wine; two for fruit, making in the whole twenty-three; and the rest of the money, to make up the number of testoons for [Page 129] the month, are scandalously sunk in the articles of sugar and soap.
SOME, who find their allowance too little, petition the lords inquisitors for a greater portion, when the pe [...]ition is frequently granted; and in this particular the only ma [...]k of humanity hath been casually shew [...]; in all other circumstances they are inhuman, cruel, and severe. They not only exclude the prisoners from every intercourse with their relations or friends, make them suffer every inclemency of a gaol, or torture them in confinement, but even prohibit them from making the least noise by speaking loud, singing psalms or hymns, exclaiming, or even uttering the sighs which affliction naturally heaves from the breast.
GUARDS walk about continually to listen; if the least noise is heard, they call to, and threaten the prisoner; if the noise is repeated, a severe beating ensues, as a punishment to what is deemed the offending party, and to intimidate others. As an instance of this take the following fact: a prisoner having a violent cough, one of the guards came and ordered him not to make a noise; to which he replied, that from the violence of his cold, it was not in his power to forbear. The cough increasing, the guard went into the cell, stripped the poor creature nak [...]d, and beat him so [...]mercifully, that he soon after died of the blows.
IN this inquisition, as in that of Spain, if the prisoners plead their innocence, they are condemned [...]s obdurate, and their effects embezzled; if [...]ey pl [...]ad guilty, they are sentenced on their own confession, and their effects confiscated of course; and if they are suffered to escape with their lives, which is but seldom the case) as penitent criminals who have voluntarily accused themselves, they dare not reclaim their effects, as that would bring on them an accusation of being hypocritical and relaxed penitents, when a most cruel death would be the certain consequence.
A prisoner sometimes passes months without knowing of what he is accused, or having the least idea when he is to be tried. The gaoler at length informs him, that he must petition for a trial. This ceremony being gone through, he is taken bareheaded for examination. When they come to the door of the tribunal, the gaoler knocks three times, to give the judges notice of their approach. A bell is rung by one of the judges, when an attendant opens the door, admits the prisoner, and accommodates him with a stool.
THE prisoner is then ordered by the president to kneel down, and lay his right hand upon a book, which is presented to him close shut. This being complied with, the following question is put to him: Will you promise to conceal the secrets of the holy office, and to speak the truth?
I [...] he answers in the negative, he is remanded to his ce [...], and cruelly treated. If he answers in the affirmative, he is ordered to be again seated, and the examination proceeds; when the president asks a variety of questions, and the clerk minutes both them and the answers.
AFTER the examination is closed, the bell is again rung, the gaoler appears, and the prisoner is ordered to withdraw, with this exhortation; Tax your memory, recollect all the sins you have ever committed, and when you are again brought here, communicate them to the holy office.
THE gaoler and attendants being apprized that the prisoner hath made an ingenuous confession, and readily answered every question, make him a low bow, and treat him with an affected kindness, as a reward for his candour.
IN a few days he is brought to a second examination, with the same formalities as before. It is then demanded of him, If he has taken a serious review of his past life, and will divulge its various secrets, and the crimes and follies into which he has run at different times. If he refuses to confess any thing, many ensnaring questions are put to him, and the arts of casuistry are exhausted to draw some secret from him. But if he accuses himself of any crimes or follies, they are written down by the secretary, and a process extracted from them. The inquisitors often over-reach prisoners, by promising the greatest lenity, and even to restore their liberty, if they will accuse themselves. The unhappy persons, who are in their power, frequently fall into [Page 130] this snare, and are sacrificed to their own simplicity, and ill-placed confidence. Instances have been known of some, who relying on the faith of the judges, and believing their fallacious promises, have accused themselves of what they were totally innocent, in expectation of obtaining their liberty speedily; and thus, being duped by the inquisitors, they became martyrs to their own folly, and suffered death for fictitious transgressions.
ANOTHER artifice used by the inquisitors is this: if a prisoner has too much resolution to accuse himself, and too much sense to be ensnared by their sophistry, they proceed thus: a copy of an indictment against the prisoner is given him, in which, among many trivial accusations, he is charged with the most enormous crimes, of which human nature is capable. This, of course, rouzes his temper, and he exclaims against such falsities. He is then asked which of the crimes he can deny? He naturally singles out the most atrocious, and begins to express his abhorrence of them, when the indictment being snatched out of his hand, the president says, "By your denying only those crimes which you mention, you implicitly confess the rest, and we shall therefore proceed accordingly."
THE inquisitors make a ridiculous affectation of equity, by pretending that the prisoner may be indulged with a counsellor, if he chuses to demand one. Such a request is sometimes made, and a counsellor appointed, but upon these occasions, as the trial itself is a mockery of justice, so the counsellor is a mere cypher; for he is not permitted to say any thing that might offend the inquisitor, or to advance a syllable that might benefit the prisoner. Amazing profligacy, to turn that to a farce, which ought to be reverenced as a superior virtue.
FROM what has been said, it is evident, that a prisoner to the inquisitors is reduced to the sad necessity of defending himself against accusers he does not know, and of answering to the evidence of witnesses he does not see. The only person he is permitted to have a sight of upon his trial, exclusive of the judges and secretary, is the fiscal, who acts officially as the ostensible accuser, from the collected information of others. A desire of being informed of the real accuser's name, or to see the actual witnesses, avail nothing, those things he is told are always kept secret. Thus he is continued in suspence respecting his fate, and frequently interrogated, perhaps, for years together, before his trial is finally concluded. When that fatal time comes, if he is condemned to die, death is deferred for a considerable time. To put him out of his misery immediately would be too great a favour, and prevent the inquisitors from indulging their sanguinary dispositions with other sufferings which they intend to inflict. They begin by putting him to the torture, under the pretence of making the poor wretch discover his accomplices. For this purpose the tortures are various, and the torments inflicted excruciating to the last degree. Well might a late writer, speaking of these cruelties, exclaim, "O, that I was able to give some faint idea of that variety of tortures which the miserable victims are here forced to suffer; but no language can represent such a complicated scene of horrors. It is utterly impossible for any words to describe which of them is the most cruel and inhuman. Every one is so exquisite in its kind a [...] to surpass all imagination. What detestable monsters then must those judges be, who are the inventors, and perpetrators of such misery? They are shaped, it is true, like other men, but surely they seem to have a different kind of souls. They appear as little affected with the groans and agonies of their fellow-creatures as the cords, chains, racks, and tortures, which are applied to their writhing limbs. The hearts of these ecclesiastical butchers are grown callous, and, like those of common butchers, are so inured to the shedding of blood, and horrid sight of mangled carcasses, as to have lost all the impressions of sensibility, and every touch and feeling of humanity. Perpetual scenes of horror and distress become so familiar to their minds, that what would rend the very heart-strings of some men, make no more impression on their's than on a rock of adamant. Indeed, without such a fiend-like [...]emper, it would be impossible for any man to act the part of an inquisitor.
THE inquisitors allow the torture to be used only three times, but at those three it is so severely inflicted, that the prisoner either dies under it, or continues always after it a cripple, and suffers the severest pains upon every change of weather. We [Page 131] shall give an ample description of the severe torments occasioned by the torture, from the account of one who suffered it the three respective times, but happily survived the cruelties he underwent.
First Time of Torturing.
ON refusing to comply with the iniquitous demands of the inquisitors, by confessing all the crimes they thought proper to charge him with, he was immediately conveyed to the torture room, where no light appeared but what two candles gave. That the cries of the sufferers might not be heard by the other prisoners, this room is lined with a kind of quilting, which covers all the crevices and deadens the sound.
GREAT was the prisoner's horror on entering this infernal place, when suddenly he was surrounded by six wretches, who, after preparing the tortures, stripped him naked to his drawers. He was then laid upon his back on a kind of stand, elevated a few feet from the floor.
THEY began the operation by putting an iron collar round his neck, and a ring to each foot, which fastened him to the stand. His limbs being thus stretched out, they wound two ropes round each arm, and two round each thigh; which ropes being passed under the scaffold, through holes made for that purpose, were all drawn tight at the same instant of time, by four of the men, on a given signal.
IT is easy to conceive that the pains which immediately succeeded were intolerable; the ropes which were of a small size, [...]ut through the prisoner's flesh to the bone, making the blood gush out at eight different places thus bound at a time. As the prisoner persisted in not making any confession of what the inquisitors required, the ropes were drawn in this manner four times successively.
IT is to be observed, that a physician and surgeon attended, and often felt his temples, in order to judge of the danger he might be in; by which means his tortures were for a small space suspended, that he might have sufficient opportunity of recovering his spirits, to sustain each ensuing torture.
IN all this extremity of anguish, while the tender frame is tearing, as it were, in pieces, while at every pore it feels the sharpest pangs of death, and the agonizing soul is just ready to burst forth, and quit [...]ts wretched mansion, the ministers of the inquisition have the obduracy of heart to look on without emotion, and calmly to advise the poor distracted creature, to confess his imputed guilt, in doing which they tell him he may obtain a free pardon, and receive absolution. All this, however, was ineffectual with the prisoner, whose mind was strengthened by a sweet consciousness of innocence, and the divine consolation of religion.
WHILE he was thus suffering, the physician and surgeon were so barbarously unjust as to declare, that if he died under the torture, he would be guilty, by his obstinacy, of self-murder. In short, at the last time of the ropes's being drawn tight, he grew so exceedingly weak, by the circulation of his blood being stopped, and the pains he endured, that he fainted away; upon which he was unloosed, and carried back to his dungeon.
Second Time of Torturing.
THE barbarous savages of the inquisition, finding that all the torture inflicted, as above described, instead of extorting a discovery from the prisoner, only served the more fervently to excite his supplications to heaven for patience and power to persevere in truth and integrity, were so inhuman, six weeks after, as to expose him to another kind of torture, more severe, if possible, than the former; the manner of inflicting which was as follows: they forced his arms backwards, so that the palms of his hands were turned outward behind him; when, by means of a rope that fastened them together at the wrists, and which was turned by an engine, they drew them by degrees, nearer each other, in such a manner that the back of each hand touched, and stood exactly parallel to the other. In consequence of this violent contortion, both his shoulders became dislocated, and a considerable quantity of blood issued from his mouth. This torture was repeated thrice; after which he was again taken to the dungeon, and put into the hands of the physician and surgeon, who, in setting the dislocated bones, put him to the most exquisite pain.
Third Time of Torturing.
TWO months after the second torture, the prisoner, being a little recovered, was again ordered to the torture room; and there, for the last time, made to undergo another kind of punishment, which was inflicted twice without any intermission. The executioner fastened a thick iron chain twice round his body, which crossing upon his stomach, terminated at his wrists. They then placed him with his back against a thick board, at each extremity whereof was a pulley, through which there run a rope that catched the ends of the chain at his wrists.
THE executioner then stretching the end of this rope, by means of a roller placed at some distance behind him, pressed or bruised his stomach in proportion as the ends of the chain were drawn tighter. They tortured him in this manner to such a degree, that his wrists, as well as his shoulders, were quite dislocated. They were, however, soon set by the surgeons; but the barbarians, not yet satisfied with this series of cruelty, made him immediately undergo the like [...]rture a second time; which he sustained (though if possible attended with keener pains) with equal constancy and resolution.
AFTER this he was again remanded to his dungeon, attended by the surgeon to dress his bruises, and adjust the parts dislocated; and here he continued till their Auto de Fe, or gaol delivery, when he was happily discharged.
FROM the before-mentioned relation, it may easily be judged what dreadful agony the sufferer must have laboured under, at being so frequently put to the torture. Most of his limbs were disjointed; and so much was he bruised and exhausted, as to be unable, for some weeks, to lift his hand to his mouth; and his body became greatly swelled from the inflammation caused by such frequent dislocations. After his discharge he felt the effects of this cruelty for the remainder of his life, being frequently seized with thrilling and excruciating pains, to which he had never been subject, till after he had the misfortune to fall under the merciless and bloody lords of the inquisition.
FEMALES who fall into the hands of the inquisitors, have not the least favour shewn them on account of the softness of their sex, but are tortured with as much severity as the male prisoners, with the additional mortification of having the most shocking indecencies added to the most savage barbarities.
IF the above-mentioned modes of torturing force a confession from the prisoner, he is remanded to his horrid dungeon, and left a prey to the melancholy of his situation, to the anguish arising from what he has suffered, and to the dreadful ideas of future barbarities. If he refuses to confess, he is, in the same manner, remanded to his dungeon, but a stratagem is used to draw from him what the torture fails to do. A companion is allowed to attend him, under the pretence of waiting upon, and comforting his mind till his wounds are healed: this person, who is always selected for his cunning, insinuates himself into the good graces of the prisoner, laments the anguish he feels, sympathizes with him, and, taking advantage of the hasty expressions forced from him by pain, does all he can to dive into his secrets.
SOMETIMES this companion pretends to be a prisoner like himself, and imprisoned for similar charges. This is to draw the unhappy person into a mutual confidence, and persuade him in unbosoming his grief, to betray his private thoughts.
THESE snares frequently succeed, as they are more alluring by being glossed over with the appearance of friendship, sympathy, pity, and every tender passion. In fine, if the prisoner cannot be found guilty, he is either tortured, or harrassed to death, though a few have sometimes had the good fortune to be discharged, but not without having, first of all, suffered the most dreadful [...] cruelties. If he is found guilty, all his effects are confiscated, and he is condemned to be whipped, imprisoned for life, sent to the gallies, or put to death. These sentences are put in execution at an Auto de Fe, or gaol delivery, which is not held annually, or at any stated periods, but sometimes once in two, three, or even four years.
AFTER having mentioned the barbarities with [Page 133] which the persons of prisoners are treated by the inquisitors, we shall proceed to recount the severity of their proceedings against books.
AS soon as a book is published, it is carefully read by some of the familiars belonging to the inquisition. These wretched critics are too ignorant to have taste, too bigoted to search for truth, and too malicious to relish beauties. They scrutinize, not for the merits, but for the defects of an author, and pursue the slips of his pen with unremitting diligence. Hence they read with prejudice, judge with partiality, pursue errors with avidity, and strain that which is innocent into an offensive meaning.
THEY misunderstand, misapply, confound, and pervert the sense; and when they have gratified the malignity of their disposition, charge their blunders upon the author, that a prosecution may be founded upon their false conceptions, and designed misinterpretations.
THE most trivial charge causes the censure of a book: but it is to be observed, that the censure is of a three-fold nature, viz.
1. WHEN the book is wholly condemned.
2. WHEN the book is partly condemned, that is, when certain passages are pointed out as exceptionable, and ordered to be expunged.
3. WHEN the book is deemed incorrect; the meaning of which is, that a few words or expressions displease the inquisitors. These, therefore, are ordered to be altered, and such alterations go under the name of corrections.
FROM what has been said it is evident, that the inquisitors check the progress of learning, impede the increase of arts, nip genius in the bud, destroy the national taste, and continue the cloud of ignorance over the minds of the people.
A catalogue of condemned books is annually published under the three different heads of censures, already mentioned, and being printed on a very large sheet of paper, is hung up in the most public and conspicuous places. After which, people are obliged to destroy all such books as come under the first censure, and to keep none belonging to the other two censures, unless the exceptional passages have been expunged, and the corrections made, as in either case disobedience would be of the most fatal consequence: for the possessing or reading the proscribed books are deemed very atrocious crimes.
THE publisher of such books is usually ruined in his circumstances, and sometimes obliged to pass the remainder of his life in the inquisition.
Instances of the Barbarities exercised by the INQUISITIONS of Spain and Portugal, on various Persons, upon several Occasions, and at diff [...]rent Times, from the most genuine Historians, and the most authenticated Records.
I. FRANCIS ROMANES, a native of Spain, being of a mercantile turn of mind, was employed by the merchants of Antwerp, to transact some business for them at Breme. He had been educated in the Romish persuasion, but going one day into a protestant church, he was struck with the truths which he heard, and beginning to perceive the errors of popery, he determined to search farther into the matter.
READING the sacred scriptures attentively, and perusing the writings of some protestant divines, he plainly perceived how erroneous the principles were he had formerly embraced; and renounced the impositions of popery for the doctrines of the reformed church, in which religion appeared in all its genuine purity.
DETERMINING to give over worldly thoughts, and think of his eternal salvation, he studied religious truths more than trade, and purchased books rather than merchandize, convinced that the riches of the body are trifling to those of the soul.
HE now resigned his agency to the merchants of Antwerp, giving them an account at the same time [Page 134] of his conversion; and then resolving, if possible, to convert his parents, he went to Spain for that purpose. But the Antwerp merchants writing to the inquisitors, he was seized upon, imprisoned for some time, and then condemned to be burnt as an heretic.
HE was led to the place of execution in a garment painted over with devils, and had a paper mitre put upon his head, by way of derision. As he passed by a wooden cross, one of the priests bade him kneel to it; but he absolutely refused so to do, saying, It is not for christians to worship wood.
BEING placed upon a pile of wood the fire quickly reached him, when he lifted up his head suddenly; the priests thinking he meant to recant, ordered him to be taken down. Finding, however, that they were mistaken, and that he still retained his constancy, he was placed again upon the pile, where, as long as he had life and voice remaining, he kept repeating the se [...]enth psalm.
II. AT St. Lucar in Spain resided a carver named Rochus, whose principal business was to make images of saints and other popish idols. Becoming, however, convinced of the errors of the Romish persuasion, he embraced the protestant faith, left off carving images, and for subsistence followed the business of a seal engraver only. He had, however, retained one image of the virgin Mary for a sign; when an inquisitor passing by, asked if he would sell it; Rochus mentioned a price; the inquisitor objected to it, and offered half the money: Rochus replied, I would rather break it to pieces than take such a trifle. "Break it to pieces!" said the inquisitor, "break it to pieces if you dare!"
ROCHUS being provoked at this expression, immediately snatched up a chissel, and cut off the nose of the image. This was sufficient, the inquisitor went away in a rage, and soon after sent to have him apprehended. In vain did he plead that what he had defaced was his own property, and that if it was not proper to do as he would with his own goods, it was not proper for the inquisitor to bargain for the image in the way of trade. Nothing, however, availed him; his fate was decided: he was condemned to be burnt: and the sentence was executed accordingly.
III. DOCTOR Cacalla, his brother Francis, and his sister Blanch, were burnt at Valladolid, for having spoken against the inquisitors.
IV. AT Seville, a gentlewoman with her two daughters and her niece, were apprehended on account of their professing the protestant religion. They were all put to the torture: and when that was over, one of the inquisitors sent for the youngest daughter, pretended to sympathize with her, and pity her sufferings; then binding himself with a solemn oath not to betray her, he said, "If yo [...] will disclose all to me, I promise you I will procure the discharge of your mother, sister, cousin, and yourself.
MADE confident by his oath, and intrapped by his promises, she revealed the whole of the tenets they professed; when the perjured wretch, instead of acting as he had sworn▪ immediately ordered her to be put to the rack, saying, "Now you have revealed so much, I will make you reveal more." Refusing, however, to say any thing further, they were all ordered to be burnt, which sentence was executed at the next Auto de Fe.
V. THE keeper of the castle of Triano, belonging to the inquisitors of Seville, happened to be of a disposition more mild and humane than is usual with persons of his situation. He gave all the indulgence he could to the prisoners, and shewed them every favour in his power with as much secrecy as possible. At length, however, the inquisitors became acquainted with his kindness, and determined to punish him severely for it, that other gaoler [...] might be de [...]erred from shewing the [...] traces of that compassion which ought to glow in the breast of every human being. With this view they superceded, threw him into a dismal dungeon, and used him with such dreadful barbarity that he lost his senses.
HIS deplorable situation, however, procured him no favour, for frantic as he was, they brought hi [...] from prison at an Auto de Fe to the usual place of punishment, with a sambenito (or garment worn by [Page 135] criminals) on, and a rope about his neck. His sentence was then read, and ran thus: that he should be placed on an ass, led through the city, receive two hundred stripes, and then be condemned six years to the gallies.
THE poor frantic wretch, just as they were about to begin his punishment, suddenly sprung from the back of the ass, broke the cords that bound him, snatched a sword from one of the guards, and dangerously wounded an officer of the inquisition. Being overpowered by multitudes, he was prevented from doing farther mischief, seized, bound more securely to the ass, and punished according to his sentence. But so inexo [...]able were the inquisitors, that for the rash effects of his madness, an additional four years was added to his slavery in the gallies.
VI. A maid servant to another gaoler belonging to the inquisition was accused of humanity and detected in bidding the prisoners keep up their spirits. For these heinous crimes, as they were called, she was publicly whipped, banished her native place for ten years, and what is worse, had her forehead branded by means of red hot irons, with these words, A favourer and aider of heretics.
VII. JOHN Pontic, a Spaniard by birth, a gentleman by education, and protestant by persuasion, was, principally on account of his great estate, apprehended by the inquisitors, when the following charges were exhibited against him.
1. THAT he had said he abhorred the idolatry of worshipping the host.
2. THAT he shunned going to mass.
3. THAT he asserted the merits of Jesus Christ alone was a full justification for a christian.
4. THAT he declared there was no purgatory; and,
5. THAT he affirmed the pope's absolution not [...]o be of any value.
ON these charges his effects were confiscated to the use of the inquisitors, and his body was burnt to ashes to gratify their revenge.
VIII. JOHN Gonsal [...]o was originally a priest, but having embraced the reformed religion, he was now seized by the inquisitors, as were his mother, brother, and two sisters. Being condemned, they were led to execution, where they sung part of the 106th psalm.
AT the place of execution they were ordered to say the creed, which they immediately complied with, but coming to these words, "Th [...] holy catholic church," they were commanded to add the monosyllables "of Rome," which absolutely refusing, one of the inquisitors said, Put an end to their lives directly; when the executioners obeyed, and strangled them immediately.
IX. FOUR protestant women being seized upon at Seville, were tortured, and in process of time ordered for execution. On the way thither they began to sing psalms; but the officers of the inquisition, thinking that the words of the psalm reflected on themselves, put gags into all their mouths, [...]o make them silent. They were then burnt, and the houses where they resided were ordered to be razed to the ground.
X. FERDINANDO, a protestant schoolmaster, was apprehended by order of the inquisition, for instructing his pupils in the principles of protestantism; and after being severely tortured, was burnt.
XI. A monk, who had abjured the errors of popery, was imprisoned at the same time as the above Ferdinando; but through the [...]ear of death, and to procure mercy, he said he was willing to embrace his former communion. Ferdinando, hearing of this, got an opportunity to speak to him, reproached him with his weakness, and threatened him with eternal pardition. The monk, sensible of his crime, returned to, promised to continue in the protestant faith, and declared to the inquisitors that he solemnly renounced his intended recantation. Sentence [Page 136] of death was therefore passed upon him, and he was burnt at the same time as Ferdinando.
XII. JULIANO, a Spanish Roman catholic, on travelling into Germany, became a convert to the protestant religion.
BEING zealous for the faith he had embraced, Juliano undertook a very arduous task, which was to convey from Germany into his own country, a great number of bibles, concealed in casks, and packed up like Rhenish wine. This important commission he succeeded in so far as to distribute the books. A pretended protestant, however, who had purchased one of the bibles, betrayed him, and laid an account of the whole affair before the inquisition.
JULIANO was immediately seized upon, and strict inquiry being made for the respective purchasers of these bibles, eight hundred persons were apprehended upon the occasion. They were all indiscriminately tortured, and then most of them were sentenced to various punishments. Juliano was burnt, twenty were roasted upon spits, several imprisoned for life, some were publicly whipped, many sent to the gallies, and a few discharged.
XIII. JOHN Leon, a protestant taylor of Spain, travelled to Germany, and from thence to Geneva, where hearing that a great number of English protestants were returning to their native country, he, and some more Spaniards, determined to go with them. The Spanish inquisitors being apprized of their intentions, sent a number of familiars so expeditiously in pursuit of them, that they overtook them at a sea-port in Zealand, one of the United Provinces, (which was then under the jurisdiction of Spain) just before they had embarked. Having thus succeeded in their commission, the poor prisoners were heavily fettered, handcuffed, gagged, and had their heads and necks covered with a kind of iron net work. In this miserable condition they were conveyed to Spain, thrown into a dismal dungeon, almost famished with hunger, barbarously tortured, and then cruelly burnt.
XIV. A young lady having been put into a convent, absolutely refused to take the veil, or turn nun. On leaving the cloister she embraced the protestant faith, which being known to the inquisitors, she was apprehended, every method used to draw her back again to popery. This proving ineffectual, her inexorable judges condemned her to the flames, and she was burnt according to her sentence, persisting in her faith to the last.
XV. CHRISTOPHER Losada, an eminent physician, and learned philosopher, became extremely obnoxious to the inquisitors, on account of exposing the errors of popery, and professing the [...]enets of pro [...]testantism. For these reasons he was apprehended, imprisoned, and racked; but those severities not bringing him to confess the Roman catholic church to be the only true church, he was sentenced to the fire; the flames of which he bore with exemplary patience, and resigned his soul to that Creator by whom it was bestowed.
XVI. ARIAS, a monk of St. Isidore's monastery at Seville, was a man of great abilities, but of a vicious disposition. He sometimes pretended to forsake the errors of the church of Rome, and become a protestant, and soon after turned Roman catholic. Thus he continued a long time wavering between both persuasions, till God thought proper touch his heart, and shew him the great danger of inconstancy in religious matters. He now became a true protestant, and bewailed his former errors with contrition. The sincerity of his conversion being known, he was seized by the officers of the inquisition, severely tortured, and afterwards burnt at an Auto de Fe.
XVII. MARIA de Coceicao, a young lady who resided with her brother at Lisbon, was taken up by the inquisitors, and ordered to be put to the rack. The exquisite torments she felt staggered her resolution, and she fully confessed the charges against her.
THE cords were immediately slackened, and she was re-conducted to her cell, where she remained till she had recovered the use of her limbs, and was then brought again before the tribunal, and ordered to ratify her confession, and sign it. This she absolutely refused to do, telling them, that what she had said was forced from her by the excessive [Page]
[Page 137] pain she underwent. Incensed at this reply, the inquisitors ordered her again to be put to the rack, when the weakness of nature once more prevailed, and she repeated her former confession. She was immediately remanded to her cell till her wounds were again healed, when being a third time brought before the inquisitors, they in a stern manner ordered her to sign her first and second confessions. She answered as before; but added, "I have twice given way to the frailty of the flesh, and perhaps may, while on the rack, be weak enough to do so again; but depend upon it, if you torture me an hundred times, as soon as I am released from the rack I shall deny what was extorted from me by pain." The inquisitors ordered her to be racked a third time; and, during this last trial, she exceeded even her own expectations; bore the torments inflicted with the utmost fortitude, and could not be persuaded to answer any of the questions put to her. As her courage and constancy increased, the inquisitors imagined that she would deem death a glorious martyrdom, and therefore, to disappoint her expectations, they condemned her to a severe whipping through the public streets, and to a ten years banishment.
XVIII. JANE Bohorquia, a lady of a noble family in Seville, was a [...]prehended on the information of her sister, who had been tortured, and burnt for professing the protestan [...] religion, While on the [...]ack, through extremity of pain, that young lady confessed that she had frequently discoursed with her sister concerning protestantism, and upon this e [...]torted confession was Jane Bohorquia seized and imprisoned. Being pregnant at the beginning, they let her remain tolerably quiet till she was delivered, when they immediately took away the child, and p [...]t it to nurse, that it might be brought up a Roman catholic.
THE lady was not perfectly recovered from the weakness caused by her labour, when she was ordered to be racked, which was done with such seve [...]ity, that she expired a week after of the wou [...] and bruises she received. Upon this occasion [...]he inquisitors affected some remorse, and, in one of the printed acts of the inquisition, which they always publish at an Auto de Fe, they thus mention this [...] lady:
JANE Bohorquia was found dead in prison; after which, upon reviving her prosecution, the inquisitors discovered that she was innocent.—Be it therefore known, that no farther prosecutions shall be carried on against her, and that her effects, which were confiscated, shall be given to the heirs at law. Thus have the lords of the holy office of inquisition generously restored to her innocence, reputation, and estate. Strange inconsistency! to take the property, and torture the person before conviction of guilt, and then to compliment themselves for moderation, in returning what they had no right to seize, and forgiving one, who, by their own acknowledgement, had never offended them. One sentence, however, in the above ridiculous passage, wants explanation, viz. That no farther prosecution shall be carried on against her. This alludes to the absurd custom of prosecuting, and burning the bones of the dead: for when a prisoner dies in the inquisition, the process continues the same as if he was living; the bones are deposited in a chest, and if a sentence of guilt is passed, they are brought out at the next Auto de Fe; the sentence is read against them with as much solemnity as against a living prisoner, and they are at length committed to the [...]ames. In a similar manne [...] are prosecutions carried on against prisoners who escape; and when their persons are far beyond the reach of the inquisitors, they are burnt in effigy.
XIX. DR. Isaac Orobio, a learned physician, having beaten a Moorish servant for stealing, was accused by him of professing Judaism. Without considering the apparent malice of the servant, the inquisitors seized the master upon the charge. He was kept three years in prison before he had the least intimation of what he was to undergo, and then suffered the following six modes of torture:
1. A [...] put on him▪ and then drawn so [...] [...]irculation of his blood was nea [...]ly stoppe [...], [...] the breath almost pressed out of his body. A [...]er this the strings were suddenly loose [...]ed, when the air forcing its way hastily into his stomach, and the blood rushing into its channels, he suffered the most incredible pains.
2. HIS thumbs were tied with small cords so hard that the blood gushed from under the nails.
[Page 138]3. HE was seated on a bench with his back against a wall, wherein small iron pullies were fixed. Ropes being fastened to several parts of his body and limbs, were passed through the pullies, and being suddenly drawn with great violence, his whole frame was forced into a distorted heap.
4. AFTER having suffered for a considerable time the pains of the last mentioned position, the seat was snatched away, and he was left suspended against the wall in the most excruciating misery.
5. A little instrument with five knobs, and which went with springs, being placed near his face, he suddenly received five blows on the cheek, that put him to such pain as caused him to faint away.
6. THE executioners fastened ropes round his wrists, and then drew them about his body. Placing him on his back with his feet agains [...] the wall, they pulled with the utmost violence, till the cords had penetrated to the bone.
THE last torture he suffered three different times, and then lay 70 days before his wounds were healed. He was afterwards banished, and in his exile wrote the account of his sufferings, from which we have extracted the foregoing particulars.
XX. AN excellent penman of Toledo, in Spain▪ and a protestant, was fond of producing fine specimens of writings, and having them framed, to adorn the different apartments of his house. Among other curious examples of penmanship was a large piece, containing the Lord's prayer, creed, and ten commandments, thrown into verse, and finely written. This piece, which hung in a conspicuous part of the house, was one day seen by a person belonging to the inquisition, who observed that the versification of the commandments was not according to the church of Rome, but according to the protestant church, for the protestants retain the whole of the commandments as they are found in the bible, but the papists omit that part of the second commandment which forbids the worship of images. The inquisition soon had information of the whole, and this ingenious gentleman was seized▪ prosecuted, and burnt, only for ornamenting his house with a specimen of his skill and piety.
The Trial and cruel Sufferings of Mr. ISAAC MARTIN.
AS Mr. Martin's case is singular in itself, and amply explained, and as it was published under the immediate sanction of government, and Mr. Martin himself patronized by the highest characters both in church and state, we shall minutely enter into the particulars of it.
ABOUT Lent, in the year 1714, Mr. Martin arrived at Malaga, with his wife, and four children. On the examination of his baggage, his bible and some other books were seized, and effectually lo [...] to him.
IN about three months time he was accused of being a Jew. for these curious reasons, that his own name was Isaac, and one of his sons was named Abraham.
WHEN he heard of the accusation, which was laid in the Bishop's court, he informed the English consul of it, who said it was nothing but the malice of some of the Irish papists, whom he advised him always carefully to shun. The clergy sent to Mr. Martin's neighbours to know their opinion concerning him: the result of which inquiry [...] this; We believe him not to be a Jew, but [...] heretic.
THESE things convinced Mr. Martin that he had enemies at Malaga; but their malice did not appear formidable for some years. Being continually p [...]stered by priests, particularly those of the Irish nation, in order to change his religion, [...] determined to dispose of what he had, and retire from a place which was become so disagreeable.
AS soon as his resolution to leave Malaga had taken wind, at about nine o'clock at night a late hour in that country he heard a knocking at his door.
[Page 139]MR. Martin demanded who was there? The persons without said they wanted to enter. He desired they would come again the next morning; but they replied, if he would not open the door they would break it open; and they were as good as their word, for it flew off the hinges while they were speaking.
AS soon as the barrier was removed, about 15 persons entered, consisting of a commissioner, with several priests and familiars belonging to the inquisition. Mr. Martin would fain have gone to the English consul; but they told him the consul had nothing to do in the matter, and then said, where are your beads and fire-arms? To which he replied, I am an English protestant, and as such car [...]y no private arms, nor make use of beads.
HAVING taken away his watch, money, and other things, they carried him to the bishop's prison, and put on him a heavy pair of fetters. His distressed family was, at the same time, turned out of doors till the house was stripped; and when they had taken every thing away, they returned the key to his wife, that she and her children might solace themselves between the bare walls.
FOUR days after his commitment, Mr. Martin was told he must be sent to Grenada to be tried: he earnestly begged to see his wife and children before he went, but this was cruelly denied him.
BEING doubly fettered, he was mounted on a mule, and set out towards Grenada. By the way, the mule threw him upon a rocky part of the road, and almost broke his back. He was three days on the journey, as it is 72 miles of very rugged road from Malaga to Grenada.
ON his arrival at Grenada, he was detained at an inn till it was dark, for they never put any one into the inquisition during day-light. At night, Mr. Martin was taken to the inquisition, shewn up one pair of stairs, and led along a range of galleries till he arrived at a dungeon, which the gaoler unlocked, and staid with him till the under gaoler f [...]tched a lamp, and the things brought from Malaga by the carrier, which consisted of an old bed, a few clothes, and a box of books.
THE latter the gaoler nailed up, and said, they must remain in that state till the lords of the inquisition chose to inspect them, for prisoners were not allowed to read books.
THE gaoler then took an inventory of every thing which Mr. Martin had about him, even to his very buttons; and having asked him a great number of frivolous questions, he, at length, gave him these orders: "You must observe as great silence here, as if you were dead; you must not speak, nor whistle, nor sing, nor make any noise that can be heard; and if you hear any body cry, or make a noise, you must be still, and say nothing, upon pain of 200 lashes."
MR. Martin said he could not always be upon the bed, and asked if he might not have liberty to walk about the room; the gaoler replied he might, but it must be very softly. After having given him some wine, bread, and half a dozen walnuts, the gaoler left him till the morning.
IT was frosty weather at the time of Mr. Martin's imprisonment, so that he lay extremely cold; for the walls of the dungeon were between two and three feet thick, the floor was bricked, and a great deal of wind came through a hole of about a foot in length, and five inches in breadth, which served as a window.
THE next morning the gaoler came to light his lamp, and bade him light a fire in order to dress his dinner. He then took him to a turn, or such a wheel as is usually found at the doors of convents, where a person on the other side, whom you cannot see, turns your provisions round to you. He had then given him, half a pound of mutton, two pounds of bread, some kidney beans, a bunch of raisins, and a pint of wine.
THIS was the allowance for three days. He had likewise delivered to him for use, two pounds of charcoal, an earthen stove, a pipkin, some plates, a pitcher, an urinal, a broom, three baskets; one for bread, meat, and greens; a second for charcoal, and the other for dirt; and a wooden spoon.
IN a week's time Mr. Martin was ordered to an [Page 140] audience: he followed the gaoler, and coming to a large room found a man sitting between two crucifixes; and another with a pen in his hand, who was, as he afterwards learned, the secretary.
THE person between the two crucifixes was the chief lord inquisitor; he seemed about sixty years of age▪ and was very lean. As soon as he saw Mr. Martin, he ordered him to sit down upon a little stool that fronted him, when the following examination took place, which we shall mark by the signatures I. and M. the first letter implying Inquis [...]or, and the last Martin, agreeable to the respective questions and answers.
WHAT was you brought here for?
MY lord, I don't know.
CAN you speak Spanish?
I can speak Spanish, but not so well as English or French. If you please to send for an Irish or French priest, I should be glad; for I am afraid I have not Spanish enough to answer your lordship in some things that you may demand of me.
I find you speak Spanish enough; but what have you done? What is your name? What countryman are you? What religion are you of?
MY lord, I don't know what I have done. My name is Isaac Martin; I am an Englishman, and a protestant.
WILL you take an oath that you will answer the truth to what shall be demanded of you?
YES, my lord, I will.
WELL, put your hand on that crucifix, and swear by the cross.
MY lord, we swear upon scripture.
IT is no matter for scripture, put your hand upon the cross.
MR. Martin then put his hand to the cross, and the other gravely began thus:
YOU must tell me what your father and mother's names were:—What their father and mother's names were:—What brothers and sisters they had:—What brothers and sisters you have; where they were born; and what business they followed, or do follow.
MR. Martin answered all these questions to the best of his knowledge.
You say you are an Englishman; we have great belief in them; they are generally people that speak the truth; I hope you will.
MY lord, I don't know that I have done any thing that I should be afraid of: your lordship has given me my oath, and if you had not I should have told the truth.
WHERE was you born, Isaac? And in what parish?
MY lord, I and my family were all born in London, but in different parishes.
ARE you a scholar? Have you studied Latin?
NO, my lord, I have had but a common education.
WHAT do you call a common education in your country? You have been at school, what did you learn there?
MY lord, I learned to read, to write, and to cast accounts; that is what we call a common education.
WHAT sect are you of? For in England you have several religions, as you call them.
MY lord there are different opinions in England in matters of religion▪ I am of that which is called the church of England, and so was my father and mother.
WAS you baptized?
YES, my lord, I hope I am a christian.
HOW are you baptized in England?
WE are baptized in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.
DO you take the sacrament in your religion?
YES, my lord.
HOW do you take it?
MY lord, we take bread and wine, as our Saviour gave to his apostles.
DO you confess your sins to your clergy, as we do in the church of Rome?
NO, my lord, we confess them only to God Almighty.
DO you know the Lord's Prayer, the Belief, and the Commandments?
YES, my lord, and will give you an account of my religion if you please, and prove to you that I am a christian, though I have been called a Jew and an heretic.
WHAT do you believe in your religion?
MY lord, we believe the same creed that you have.
HAVE you any bishops in your religion? Have you been confirmed?
MY lord, we have archbishops and bishops, but I don't remember whether I have been confirmed.
ISAAC, you have been brought up in the dark; it is a pity, but you may enlighten yourself if you will.
MY lord, I hop [...] I have light enough to save myself if I live according to it.
HERE Mr. Martin, through anxiety of mind, began to shed tears, which the inquisitor perceiving, proceeded to speak with great seeming tenderness.
DON'T cry, nor don't be afraid; there is nobody put to death here, nor harm done to any body. I hope your case is not so bad but it may be remedied; you are among christians, and not among Turks.
MY lord, I know very well that I am among christians, and that the laws of christians are merciful; but I have been used as if I had committed murder.
WELL! have patience, you shall have justice done you. You must think of what you have done or said during the time you lived at Malaga, and confess; for that is the only way to get out of your troubles. But let us continue our examination: to be sure you was not brought here for nothing, was you?
MY lord, I don't know what I was brought here for.
YOU must think of that, and you must tell me how old you are; and likewise, as far as you can remember, what company you have kept, what business you have followed, what countries you have travelled in, and what languages you can speak.
MY lord, I have been a traveller many years, and have made many trading voyages; sometimes in one country, and sometimes in another, and can't remember how long I lived in every place, but I will tell you as well as I can.
IT is very well, Isaac, tell the truth.
MR. Martin then gave him a circumstantial account to the best of his memory.
IT is very well, Isaac, you have been a great traveller, you have been wild in your time.
YES, my lord, too wild; for if I had staid at home as I ought to have done, I should not have been in this misery.
IN your religion do you believe in the virgin [Page 142] Mary, the mother of God, and in the saints? Don't you worship them?
MY lord, we believe that the virgin Mary is the mother of Jesus Christ carnally, and believe she and the saints are happy, but do not worship them.
WHAT! don't you worship the mother of God, and the saints, that are always praying for us?
NO, my lord, we worship only one God in three persons, and nothing else.
It is a pity that he hath been brought up in heresy, he talks pretty well.
What a pity it is that England has left the true faith, and has embraced heresy: formerly it produced many saints, but now it produces only schisms and heretics; and your bishops and clergy are a strange sort of people to marry as they do.
I believe, my lord, England produces as many good men as ever it did.
HOLD your tongue, you know nothing of those affairs; think of what you have done during your residence at Malaga, and that you may consider of these things, retire to your dungeon: I will send for you another time.
MY lord, I hope your lordship will consider that I have a family; I beg therefore that your lordship will dispatch me as soon as possible.
I will do all I can to dispatch you; go and think upon what you have done or said. I hope your case is not very bad, and can be remedied, if you think upon what I have said to you.
AND thus concluded Mr. Martin's first examination, or audience, as it is called in the inquisition.
MR. Martin now tried to make a friend of the gaoler as much as possible, in order to pump what he could from him; but in this he could have but little success, for they are all sworn to secrecy. He, however, told him, that he was there for the good of his soul, and advised him, above all things, not to contradict the inquisitors.
SECOND AUDIENCE.
ABOUT a week after, Mr. Martin being called to a second audience, the following interrogatories and answers ensued.
Well, Isaac, how do you do? Do you remember what you have done, or said, whilst you lived at Malaga? Have you reflected on what I said to you?
Yes, my lord, but I cannot remember every thing that has happened in four years time.
WELL! let us hear what you have remembered.
MY lord, during my living at Malaga, I was attacked and insulted several times about my religion: I hope your lordship allows than an honest man ought to defend his religion?
YES, Isaac, he may defend it.
MY lord, it is what I have done, and the same liberty have the Spaniards in my country; for if a bishop should attack them in matters of religion, they have liberty to defend themselves.
HOW long have you been married?
SEVEN years.
WAS your wife maid, or widow, when you married her?
A widow, my lord.
WHAT quarrels have you had with different people, and who were they?
MR. Martin named four or five people with whom he had little squabbles.
DO you think those people your enemies? If you do, tell me what reason you have for thinking so?
MY lord, at my first arrival at Malaga, three Irishmen went to the bishop's court, to acquaint them that I was a Jew, though they hardly knew my name, or what religion I was of. Your lordship has heard it, I suppose. All the time that I lived at Malaga, they, upon divers occasions, shewed themselves my enemies. My friends oftentimes told me that they spoke ill of me behind my back; sometimes saying that I was a Jew, and sometimes an heretic; and that they would play me a trick one day, that I should not carry much money along with me if I left the place; and I find, my lord, that they have accomplished their design.
HAVE you had no words about religion? Have you not blasphemed against our holy faith?
NO, my lord, I am a better bred man than that. My religion does not permit such things: it is true, that I have had high words about religion when I have been attacked, but not to blaspheme your religion.
WELL! but what is the reason that you have so many enemies, can you tell?
I know no other reason, my lord, but that I am an English protestant, and had better business than they had, which caused them to envy me ever since I came to Malaga.
WELL! but Isaac, have you no inclination to be a good christian, and to be in the right way of salvation? You are a man of age and reason, and have a family: it is time to think of your soul.
MY lord, I hope God will save me in the religion I have been brought up in: I have no inclination to change my religion: Jesus Christ allows of no persecution; I hope, my lord, there is none here.
NO, Isaac, it is all voluntary; I would have you think upon it for the good of your soul, and your family. Do not you believe in the holy father the pope, that he is infallible, and that he can absolve people from their sins?
NO, my lord, I believe that he is no more than another bishop, and can absolve no more than another clergyman.
DON'T you believe in purgatory?
NO, my lord, I believe in no such thing.
WHAT, don't you believe there is a place called purgatory, where the souls of those that die are retained to be purified before they can go to heaven?
NO, my lord, I believe that the blood of Christ is sufficient to clease us from our iniquities.
POOR man, you have been brought up in heresy and ignorance from your youthful days. I am sorry for you, you will find yourself mistaken when it is too late. You have time to consider of it, and I would advise you to do it for your own good. Can you think of any thing else that you have done that they have sent you here for?
NO, my lord, I have had some few words with people, but I believe that has not any connection with this affair.
WHAT words had you with the Spaniards at Malaga.
MY lord, at first several desired me to speak the language for them, to help them to sell their goods to ships that came to load there; and I did, but there came so many, that I could not do business for myself, so that I desired them to excuse me and take somebody else; but they still importuned me so, that I was obliged to tell them that I would trouble myself no more about their business, and that I had business enough of my own to mind; at which they would sometimes fall into a passion, and generally reflect upon my religion, which I could not always digest.
VERY well, Isaac, have you any thing else to say relating to your affairs?
MY lord, I don't know what to say.
WELL, go to your dungeon, and think of what you have done; for it will be a great help to your rel [...]sement. I will do you what service I can, but you must do what you can to serve yourself, and think upon what I have said to you.
MR. Martin had soon after three other audiences, in all of which he was only asked the same questions as we have already inserted, which was to detect him in a falshood, if he had told one, and to discover if he prevaricated in any part of his story.
ONE morning, the head gaoler told Mr. Martin, that he must get his dungeon very clean, for he was to have a visit from one of the lords of the inquisition; at the same time he gave him some an [...]iseed to throw into the fire when he heard him coming, in order to take away the stench. On hearing a noise on the stair-case, he did so, and the inquisitor, whose name was Don Petro Leonor, soon after appeared.
THIS inquisitor asked a great number of frivolous questions with much pomposity; then making a transition to England, he very liberally abused king Henry the Eighth, queen Elizabeth, and king William, the latter of whom he affirmed to have been of no religion, because he had read such an assertion in a French book. Changing from these, he attacked the archbishops, bishops, clergy, and people of England in general, and after abusing them with great liberality, he walked away with the most important dignity.
A few days after, Mr. Martin was called to his sixth audience, when, after a few immaterial interrogatories, the inquisitor told him the charges against him should be read, and that he must give an immediate and prompt answer to each respective charge.
FIRST ACCUSATION.
THAT soon after your coming to Malaga, you went and abused the school-master for teaching your children the christian doctrine; telling him that you would teach them your own religion, and that you sent them to school to learn to read and write, and not to learn religion.
REPLY.
MY lord, I will confess the truth; I hope your lordship requires nothing else. I did go to the school-master, and told him, that I sent my children to learn to read and write, and not to learn prayers; that I would have them brought up in my religion, and would teach them how to pray, but I did not abuse him. I believe, my lord, I have the liberty to bring up my children in my own faith without being called to an account for it.
THE inquisitor seemed displeased at this reply, and bid the secretary write him down guilty of the first accusation.
SECOND ACCUSATION.
THAT at divers times it was remarked, that you did not pull off your hat, nor pay homage to images, but turned your back on them.
REPLY.
MY lord, in my religion we pay no respect to graven images. I profess myself to be a protestant, it is against my conscience to bow to any, and I am not obliged by the articles of peace so to do. I believe your lordship knows what the word protestant means.
THE inquisitor told him, that as he lived in a country where it was done, he ought to comply with the custom of the place in which he resided. The secretary was then ordered to record the answer.
THIRD ACCUSATION.
YOU once said, walking in your own apartment with an English captain, an heretic, like yourself, that purgatory was but an invention of the church of Rome to get money. There was one present who could speak your language, and heard you say so.
REPLY.
MY lord, I cannot remember every thing that I [Page 145] have said during four years time. It may be, that I have said such a thing; but if I did, it was not to a Roman catholic. If there was one in the room that heard me say so, he must be an Irishman, who was not very welcome there, for he came more as a spy than any thing else.
THE inquisitor asking if he thought he knew him, Mr. Martin named the person on whom his suspicion fell. The inquisitor then having blamed him for giving his tongue such liberties in Roman catholic countries, demanded if he was sorry for having said so; he replied, "My lord, if I have said amiss, I beg your lordship's pardon." When the inquisitor, turning to the secretary, said, Write down that the heretic begs pardon for the third accusation.
FOURTH ACCUSATION.
THAT you was once walking with another person, who pulled his hat off to a crucifix. You asked him why he pulled his hat off? He replied, to the crucifix; when you said, we have no such things in our country, and passed by without pulling off your hat.
REPLY.
MY lord, I remember the time very well; it is very true, I never pulled off my hat to a crucifix, unless it was carried in procession; and then I used to pull off my hat to it, not in respect to the image, but to cause no scandal.
GUILTY of this accusation by his own confession.
FIFTH ACCUSATION.
THAT you have spoken several times in religious disputes against our faith; and though you have been frequently admonished to embrace the Roman catholic persuasion, without which no man can be saved, you would never give ear to such salutary advice.
REPLY.
MY lord, at my first arrival in the inquisition you allowed that a man might defend his religion: it is what I have done. As for being admonished to change it, that has happened very often; but I have no inclination to change.
THE inquisitor then asked him if he could not defend his religion without speaking against the church of Rome? To which Mr. Martin made answer, that he really could not; "For (says he) in disputing with others, when they spoke against my religion, I naturally spoke against their's; and I brought proof of scripture for what I said."
HE was recorded as guilty of this charge by his own confession.
SIXTH ACCUSATION.
THAT being on board an English ship, with your wife and others, a certain female admonished your wife to change her religion, when you bade her be quiet and mind her own religion. This was on a Friday, and you ate meat without regarding the day. Do you remember that, Isaac?
REPLY.
YES, my lord, we were very merry drinking Florence wine and punch, and that woman was always talking of religion to my wife, though she hardly knew what she said, and at best knew but little of the matter. I desired her to be quiet, and told her we did not come on board to talk of religion, but to be merry. But she continued to talk on in the same manner, made us very uneasy, so that I bade her hold her tongue, and had a trifling quarrel with her. As for eating meat on a Friday, I generally do, and so did she, though she is a Roman catholic.
THE inquisitor turning to the secretary, expressed himself thus: Write down what the heretic says.
SEVENTH ACCUSATION.
THAT being in company with some English heretic captains at church, there were several people kneeling and praying to the image of the virgin Mary. The captains asked if they prayed to the image? You answered, Yes, they know no better, for they are brought up in ignorance.
REPLY.
MY lord, I have been divers times walking with captains. I do not remember this particular time: it may be that some person heard me say so; but I am sure I spoke English, and I suppose it must be an Irishman that heard me say so.
THE inquisitor was very severe upon this reply; but upon Mr. Martin's asking pardon, he said, "Secretary, write down that the heretic asks pardon; (but continues he, shaking his head) I wish asking pardon may do."
EIGHTH ACCUSATION.
THAT being walking with several merchants, the host passed by, when they took off their hats, and some kneeled; but you did not so much as take off your hat, which occasioned such great scandal, that some of the people were going to stab you.
REPLY.
MY lord, it is false: I have lived several years in Roman catholic countries, and know, that by the articles of peace, I am obliged to have my hat off on all occasions. During my residence at Malaga, I always took care not to cause any scandal; with respect to bowing or kneeling, I did not do it, nor am I obliged to do it, as it is expressly against my religion. As for people stabbing me, I have run those hazards many times on account of my religion.
THE secretary was ordered to write down, that he denied the accusation.
NINTH ACCUSATION.
YOU have been threatened divers times with the pope's authority in these countries, and you have said that you did not value him, and that he had no authority over you.
REPLY.
MY lord, it is true I have said so.
THIS answer occasioned the following curious altercation:
HOW came you to say so? Don't you value the holy father who is God on earth?
MY lord, talking with some people who were very troublesome about religion, they threatened me with the authority of the pope, and being an English protestant, I thought they had nothing to do with me.
WHAT! then you value nobody?
I beg your lorship's pardon; I value all mankind as being fellow-creatures; I value the pope as bishop of Rome, but not for what authority he has over me, for I believe he has not any.
YOU are mistaken; I see who is the head of the church.
MY lord, I see to my sorrow, that I was mistaken. Jesus Christ is the head of the church.
WHAT, then you allow no head upon earth?
NO, my lord.
HOLD your tongue; you are an unbeliever; he is God upon earth.
THE secretary was ordered to record Mr. Martin's several replies.
TENTH ACCUSATION.
THAT being walking with some captains of ships, there was a procession going by, when you bid them retire▪ and not mind it, though it was their design to see it; but you hindered them out of disrespect to the procession.
REPLY.
MY lord, processions are very frequent in Malaga. I have oftentimes been in company with captains who were never in Roman catholic countries before; and they, not knowing that people went in [Page 147] procession for devotion, would laugh, and not take their hats off: so that I desired them to retire to avoid confusion; I hope there is no harm in that, my lord.
ELEVENTH ACCUSATION.
THAT the procession (mentioned in accusation the tenth) went by, and the people kneeled down and worshipped; but you stood with your hat on, and took no notice of it.
REPLY.
MY lord, I remember nothing of the accusation, but believe it is false; or if I did not take off my hat, it was because the host was not there. But with respect to kneeling or bowing, I told your lordship I never do; your lordship tries me as a Roman catholic; I am a protestant; I gave a short account of my religion to your lordship at my first coming. Was I a Roman catholic, I should certainly be guilty.
THE answers to both the last accusations were ordered to be recorded.
TWELFTH ACCUSATION.
THAT being in your own house, an English captain asked you if you was a Jew; when you burst into a fit of laughter, and answered, you did not value what scandalous people said, for you was ready to give an account of your religion.
REPLY.
IT is true, my lord, I little valued what such scandalous people said, and was always ready to give an account of my faith. Nor did I think o [...] being sent here, that it might be examined whether I was a Jew or not, when the clergy are so numerous at Malaga.
THIRTEENTH ACCUSATION.
THAT you refused to give any thing to such as begged alms for the souls that are in purgatory, and violently huffed them from your door.
REPLY.
MY lord, it is true; but do they mention the reason why I did so?
THE inquisitor did not satisfy him, but bade him relate the reason, which he did, by informing him, that one person in particular, who went about begging alms for the souls in purgatory, did all he could to torment him, and the more Mr. Martin declared he would not disburse money for any such purpose, the more importunate the other became, calling him heretic, dog, and telling him that he would be damned, which at length overcame his temper, and made him, in some measure, return the fellow's abuse.
FOURTEENTH ACCUSATION.
THAT you have been heard to say you feared no ecclesiastical court of justice, nor even the inquisition itself, which you affirmed had nothing to do with you as an English protestant.
REPLY.
MY lord, I have oftentimes said so.
THE twelfth and thirteenth replies were recorded as delivered; but Mr. Martin being persuaded to intreat forgiveness for the fourteenth, the secretary was ordered to insert, "The heretic begs pardon."
FIFTEENTH ACCUSATION.
THAT you have had Jews in your house, without giving notice to the commissioners of the inquisition, that they might be taken up and prosecuted according to the laws of the country. How durst you do such things? Do you remember these circumstances?
REPLY.
YES, my lord, I do very well.
ON this confession of the fact, the following dialogue took place.
THEN let us hear what you have to say for yourself.
MY lord, there came a ship bound for Leghorn, with a passenger who came to my house: he spoke very good Spanish, and I believe, by his looks, was a Jew. He stayed with his captain about two hours at my house; I never saw him before or since. He might be a christian for what I know, but being bound for Leghorn, and speaking Spanish, I though he was a Jew: that is all I know of the man. God knows what religion he was of.
DO you know the person that has sent this accusation against you?
YES, my lord, I believe I do; his name is A. H. a man of very indifferent character.
SIXTEENTH ACCUSATION.
THAT it is confirmed by several people, that the said heretic, Isaac Martin, has, at divers times, shewn himself very disaffected against the holy faith of the church of Rome, and has hindered some people from embracing it; so that had it not been for the sake of his family, he would have been murdered long ago.
THE remainder of this accusation then goes in the first person, by way of petition from the accusers, thus:
WE recommend him to your holy office, as a dangerous and pernicious man against the holy faith of the church of Rome; and a great many report he is a Jew. We desire your tribunal will examine him with a great deal of strictness, according to the custom of your holy office, and give him such chastisement as your lordship shall think fit, as well in body as chattels.
WHEN the secretary had done reading this accusation, the inquisitor said, "Well! what have you to say for yourself? See what a character people give you! Sure you are a very wicked man!" To which Mr. Martin made
REPLY.
MY lord, I suppose those are very good christians that giv [...] me this character; God knows best what to do with them; there are none of them can say I ever [...]nged any body at Malaga. I have always professed myself to be a protestant; and for that reason, and no other, I have been brought here. I hope God will enable me to go through these afflictions. I am very well assured that your lordship knows I am no Jew. As for what character they give me, God knows best whether I deserve it or no. I have answered the truth to your examination to the best of my remembrance; and I believe your lordship knows it to be so, and know the people that informed against me are but people of a very indifferent character, which have always envied me ever since I lived at Malaga.
MOST of your accusers are your countrymen; sure they would not speak against you, if the things were not so.
MY lord, those whom you reckon my countrymen are the worst enemies I have: I deny them for countrymen; they are Irishmen: it is true that Ireland belongs to the crown of England; but these people have deserted from our army, and are enemies to my religion, king, and country, and the worst that an English protestant can have abroad. I wonder, my lord, that there is no merchant, [...] man of good repute, that has declared any thing against me.
HOLD your tongue, do you think that I will believe all you say? To be sure you have been a very wicked man by what is mentioned here, and you deny a great many things, and are so malicious, that you give what turn you please to things. I have heard of you four years ago; you are a [...] man, but we have tortures to make people speak truth.
MY lord, you may do what you please with me; I cannot help myself, for your lordship knows that I have declared the truth.
YOU shall have a lawyer to defend your cause, but I believe it is very bad.
[Page 149]A lawyer was then called in, to whom the inquisitor made an harrangue, telling him, that Mr. Martin was a strong heretic; that he had been examined, and denied many things of which he had been ac [...]used. He then ordered the lawyer to write to Malaga concerning him, and concluded by saying, his case is very bad, yet might be remedied; but he is obstinate, and will not have it so.— The lawyer, to all his lordship said, only bowed, and answered Yes or No; but he did not speak to Mr. Martin, though it was pretended he was to plead for him.
WHEN the lawyer was gone, the inquisitor said, "Go, you are guilty; you may repent of what you have said; if you do not, take care: sign these papers, which are what you confess." Mr. Martin having signed the papers, was remanded to his dungeon.
WHEN Mr. Martin's examination, upon the accusations against him, was resumed, (which was by his own desire) the proceedings were as follow:
WELL, Isaac, what have you to say in your defence? You have demanded an audience.
MY lord, I have nothing to say but what I have said already; I come to beg the favour of your lordship to dispatch me; I believe you have done examining me; I remember that it was desired I might be chastised both in body and wealth; I believe that my body has been chastised enough in suffering what I have suffered, and in being locked up in a dark dungeon by myself, where I live worse than a dog; as for what wealth God has given me, your lordship is welcome to it. If I am such a bad man as people report, fetter me, and send me, with my family, aboard any ship; let her be bound where she will, God will provide for us.
HOLD, Isaac, things are not done so soon as you think for; you have broken the articles of peace by your own confession.
MY lord, I am very sorry if I have; I desire your lordship would shew them to me, that I may know in what I am guilty.
I have them; you shall see them another time: there is a great deal to be said in your aff [...]r. Have you any thing else to say?
NO, my lord, I desire to be tried by them [the articles of peace]: you was pleased to tell me that you would quickly dispatch me.
GO, go to your dungeon, and think of what you have done.
MR. Martin, upon this occasion, says thus: "When I came to my dungeon I was resolved to ask no more audience, and wondered that such a man, who sat upon a throne between two crucifixes, attributing to himself holiness, and infallibility, should tell so many lies; and found, that there was no way of redemption, but by praying to God to give me strength to overcome the miseries that I was in, and in mercy to deliver me from their hands."
A few days after, the third inquisitor, named Don Joseph Egnaraz, came, with his secretary, to see Mr. Martin, when the following conversation ensued:
HOW do you do, Isaac? Have you any thing to say in your defence? Can I serve you in any thing, tell me?
MY lord, I have nothing to say but what I have said already: I think it is very hard to be kept here so long.
HARK ye, you Englishmen think we aim at your wealth, but you are mistaken, there is no such thing. You have confessed that you did not take your hat off to our images: you ought to do it, living in these christian countries, whether you believe in them or no; for it shews ill example if you do not.
MY lord, we protestants never do such things, it is against our religion and against our consciences so to do.
YOU must do all in this country, and it is a thing that ought to be done. See if I can serve you in any thing?
I [...] your lordship would be pleased to get me [Page 150] out of this misery, I should be very much obliged to you.
THERE is time for all things. You have been brought up in heresy, you are here for the good of your soul, you must enlighten yourself in the true faith; I will do you all the service I can; have you any thing else to say?
MY lord, I hope to be saved in the faith I am in.
WELL, think upon what I have said to you. Good by to you.
BEING again called up for the continuance of his trial, and the accusation against him, the following were the particulars.
WELL, Isaac, have you thought of any thing else in your affair, besides what you have already declared.
NO, my lord, I have nothing to say, unless I repeat what I have already, and I believe that will signify nothing.
HERE are several more accusations come against you that you must answer to.
IT is very well, my lord, I will answer to them as well as I can.
THE inquisitor read over the accusations, which consisted of what had already been answered, only altered, mangled, and displaced, with some additional articles. After having done reading, he said,
WELL, Isaac, what have you to say now?
MY lord, this is the same thing over again, only the accusations are altered and misplaced; I can quickly answer to them, and as for those that are added to them, they are almost all false, and the devil has invented them.
HOLD, Isaac, you talk strangely.
MY lord, I speak the truth; your lordship was pleased to tell me at my first coming that you would dispatch me very soon. I have been here above three months, and am no more likely to get out than the first day.
HOLD, hold; do you think that justice is done here as in your country, at random, and I don't know how? Here things are well examined, and justice is done, as it ought to be done.
MY lord, I believe we have good justice done in England, but I beg your lordship's pardon; I do not understand this way of justice.
I believe you do not, but it is no matter, remember, you are upon your oath, and answer to articles.
MUST I answer to those that I have answered already?
YES, you must; and take care what you say.
VERY well, my lord.
MR. Martin then made a second answer to the accusations already exhibited against him; when the inquisitor ordered the secretary to continue the trial, with the accusations which had not yet been brought forth.
SEVENTEENTH ACCUSATION.
THAT you hindered your family from being brought up in the christian faith, and if it was not for you they would be all Romans, and it is against the laws of the country to hinder them.
REPLY.
MY lord, it is false that my family had any inclinations to be Romans; neither can any law oblige them to be so, or hinder me from bringing them up in my religion. Your lordship, five weeks ago, told me, that you would shew me the articles of peace, and that I had broke them. Pray let me see them, my lord.
YOU shall see them another time. Answer to these articles.
MY lord, all my family are as I am; I could [Page 151] never perceive that they were inclined to change their religion.
WHAT! do you deny this accusation?
YES, my lord, I do; it is all false.
EIGHTEENTH ACCUSATION.
YOU used to shut your window shutters when the processions went by, to hinder your children from kneeling down, and would beat them if they shewed any inclinations to be Roman catholics.
REPLY.
MY lord, it is true that I have shut my shutters several times; for sometimes I had captains of ships in my house, that would not pull their hats off when they saw them. As for my children, they went to the window generally to laugh; and I oftentimes bade them not shew themselves till the procession went by, that no scandal might be given; and if I beat them, as it is said, I believe I have the liberty to do it if I please.
NO, you have not in some cases. How old are your children?
ONE is fifteen, another eight, and the other five years of age.
THEY are of age to be brought up in the christian faith.
I hope they are, my lord; but as for the two youngest, they can be brought up to any religion.
YOUR daughter, and your son Abraham are of age, and you are but their father-in-law: they may be brought up in the christian faith: you have nothing to do with them.
MY lord, I hope that they are christians; and I look upon them as if they were my own children.
SO then you would have them brought up in your religion?
YES, my lord.
NINETEENTH ACCUSATION.
THAT your daughter being of age, hath often said in the neighbourhood, that she would be a Roman catholic, but was afraid you would beat her; and that you had sometimes beat her upon that account.
MY lord, I have nothing to answer to such lies; it is as false as the devil is false.
WHAT! have you nothing to say, Isaac, to this article?
NO, my lord, I never knew my daughter inclinable to be a Roman, and I never did beat her upon that account. It is all false, and you may order your secretary to write down what you please.
TWENTIETH ACCUSATION.
THAT in Lent, and other fast days, you caused your family to eat meat, and forbad them to keep any fast days that were appointed by the church of Rome, and beat them if they did.
REPLY.
MY lord, those are poor accusations, and they are all false. I thank God my table afforded flesh and fish all the year round; I never troubled my head to see what the servants used to eat; and as for myself, wife, and children, we eat meat all the year, without any scruple of conscience. Your lordship knows that.
YOU English mind nothing but eating and drinking, and living at your ease, without doing any penance.
MY lord, I beg your pardon, we have souls to be saved as well as other nations. We are born in a plentiful country, and I believe we live as well as the people of any nation, and serve God as well.
YOUR country was a good country formerly; it produced a great many saints, but now produces no such thing.
MY lord, I believe there are no saints now, [Page 152] but I am persuaded it produces as many good men as ever it did.
HOLD your tongue, you are all lost men▪ you are fallen from the holy church, and there is no salvation for you if you do not return.
TWENTY-FIRST ACCUSATION.
THAT your children had often been at mass, and at prayers in the neighbourhood, and would have done it every day if you would have let them. But you beat them and hindered them being christians, and thereby endangered their souls.
REPLY.
MY lord, I never knew my children go to mass or prayers in the neighbourhood, or beat them upon that account; I hope God will save their souls in the religion to which they are brought up; though the church of Rome condemns them. The accusation is false.
WHY, you deny every thing almost.
I deny nothing but what is false, my lord▪
WELL, but you may forget, Isaac.
NO, my lord, I have nothing else to think of; and I do think these are very insignificant articles to alledge against me, if the things were as they say. But they are false, and I believe they are scandalous people that have invented them.
HOLD your tongue! How durst you speak so?
IT is very well, my lord, let your secretary write down any thing what you please; it is all false.
TWENTY-SECOND ACCUSATION.
THAT living at Lisbon you had several disputes about religion, and that you hid yourself for fear of being taken up by the inquisition as a Jew.
COME, answer▪ what have you to say to this article? It is of consequence.
REPLY.
MY lord, let your secretary write down what you please; I have nothing to answer to such scandalous reports. God knows that I am no Jew, and your lordship knows it very well. The devil has invented this to frighten me; bu [...] God, that knows every thing, will revenge my cause.
WELL! but, Isaac, you see what they write against you; and all your family's names are ancient, and of the Mosaical law.
MY lord, you have oftentimes reflected upon my name being Isaac, and my son's name being Abraham, but you don't talk of a child that I buried at Malaga, whose name was Peter; and one that I have whose name is Barnard, they are saints' names.
THOSE are all christian names.
AND so are the others, my lord: we don't mind whether we give our children names out of the Old or New Testament. Besides, my lord▪ neither Abraham, nor Isaac, nor Jacob were Jews.
YES, they were Jews; sure your'e mistaken.
I beg your lordship's pardon, I am not mistaken.
WHAT were they then? let us hear.
MY lord, they were Hebrews; they lived under the law of nature, as God inspired, and spoke to them; but were dead many years before God had given his laws to Moses.
HOLD your tongue, methinks you understand something of the Mosaical law.
MY lord, thank God, I understand some of the old, and some of the new laws; but not so mu [...] as I should. We have always the Old and the New Testament in our families, and we read in them to instruct us in our religion.
HOLD your tongue, you give a wrong [...] to scripture; your knowing so much has brought [Page 153] you here; you had better known less, and believed the true faith.
MY lord, I hope to be saved in what I believe; and if at Lisbon I was disputing of religion, it was not in defending the laws of Moses: for several Jews were burnt whilst I was there; therefore it proves, my lord, that the accusation is false, and that I would not run such hazards.
TWENTY-THIRD ACCUSATION.
THAT you bred schisms among the people, persuading them to turn heretics, and to leave the church of Rome, out of which no man can be saved.
REPLY.
I wish your lordship, or any body else, would tell me whom I persuaded to change their religion. You may accuse me of any thing; hell can't invent greater lies. I can't think, my lord, who could have sent such accusations against me. When I talked of religion, it was generally with clergymen, and not with common people; for I know that they are not capable of it, as they know but little of the matter.
THEY know enough, it is believing that saves us; and you won't believe, but deny almost every article.—Hold your tongue.
TWENTY-FOURTH ACCUSATION.
THAT your name being Isaac, and your son's name Abraham, you must be a Jew, or related to Jews.
REPLY.
MY lord, I have sufficiently answered upon this matter; this is nothing but repetitions: the Roman catholics, that are in Holland and Flanders, don't much mind whether their children have names out of the Old or out of the New Testament; and I knew a man at Malaga, who is a Flanderkin, and a Roman catholic, whose name is Jacob. As for my parents, I never knew any of them were Jews; let your secretary write what you please.
TWENTY-FIFTH ACCUSATION.
THAT you offered to dispose of your house, and to retire for fear of being taken up by the inquisition.
REPLY.
MY lord, it is true, that I offered to dispose of my house, but not for fear of the inquisition, for I never thought it had any thing to do with English protestants. If I had been afraid of it, I would never have come to live in the country: I had opportunities enough to go on board of English ships, and to retire if I had been afraid.
WHAT! then you thought the inquisition had nothing to do with English protestants? You are mistaken.
MY lord, I see I am, to my sorrow.
WHAT did you design to do after you had disposed of your house?
MY lord, to go to my own country, for I was tired of living abroad, especially at Malaga, where I could have no rest, but was daily affronted on account of my religion.
YOU have a tongue, that you made use of to defend yourself.
MY lord, I could not always bear their insolencies; but I find they have accomplished their design.
WELL, hold your tongue; you may help yourself still if you will.
TWENTY-SIXTH ACCUSATION.
THAT you took all opportunities of making game of the religion of the church of Rome.— Well! what have you to say to that?
REPLY.
MY lord, I don't deny that; being in company with some Roman catholics, as they have made game of my religion, I have made game of their's; but it was in joke, and not in a profane way.
RELIGION ought not to be mocked.
IT is very true, my lord; but I never scandalized them as they did me, upon the account of my religion.
WHAT did they usually say to you? Let's hear.
MY lord, you know that the church of Rome don't allow the heretics (as you call us) to be saved: in our faith we have charity for all men; we condemn nobody. I have oftentimes been told, that I and my family were damned, and that it was impossible for us to be saved. My lord, it is very hard to hear such words so often as I have. I sometimes gave them an answer that they did not like; for I could not always bear wha [...] they said. I hope to be saved through God's mercy, as well as they do.
SO, you say that when they made game of your religion, you made game of their's. Is not that what you say?
YES, my lord.
WELL! hold your tongue, you are a sly man▪ you give what turn you please to things, and deny almost every thing: you will repent this, if you don't take care. We have ways to make people confess who are obstinate. Sign these papers:— these are the articles you confess, and these are what you deny.—But I won't believe you; I have heard of you a long while ago, and know now that you are a cunning pernicious man against the Roman catholic faith.
MR. Martin being remanded to his dungeon, was shaved on Whitsun-eve (shaving is only allowed th [...]ee times a year in the inquisition); and the next day one of the gaolers gave him some frankincense to be put into the fire, as he was to receive a visit from the lords of the inquisition. Two of them accordingly came, asked many trivial questions, concluding them as usual, with, We will do you all the service we can. Mr. Martin complained greatly of their having promised him a lawyer to plead his cause; when, instead of a proper person, says he, "there was a man that you called a lawyer, but he never spoke to me, nor I to him: if all your lawyers are so quiet in this country, they are the quietest in the world, for he hardly said any thing but yes and no, to what your lordship said." To which one of the inquisitors gravely replied, "Lawyers are not allowed to speak here." At this the gaoler and secretary went out of the dungeon to laugh, and Mr. Martin could scarce refrain from smiling in their faces, to think that his cause was to be defended by a man, who scarce dared to open his lips. Mr. Martin, some time after, was ordered to dress himself very clean; as soon as he was ready, one of the gaolers came and told him, that he must go with him; but that first he must have a handkerchief tied about his eyes. This terribly frightened Mr. Martin, who now thought of nothing but the torture. The gaoler led him for some time, till he heard a voice say, Stop, and pull off your clothes. He was then examined to know if he had been circumcised, and consequently was a Jew. Finding that he had not been circumcised, he was remanded to his dungeon.
ABOUT a month after he was brought to a room filled with a great number of persons, had a rope put round his neck, and was led by it to the altar of the great church. Here his sentence was pronounced, which was, That for the crimes of which he stood convicted, the lords of the holy office had ordered him to be banished out of the dominio [...] of Spain, upon the penalty of 200 lashes, and being sent five years to the gallies; and that he should at present receive 200 lashes through the common streets of the city of Grenada.
MR. Martin was sent again to his dungeon that night, and the next morning the executioner came, stripped him, tied his hands together, put a rope about his neck, and led him out of the inquisition. He was then mounted on an ass, and received his 200 lashes, amidst not only the shouts, but peltings of the people: which latter greatly incommoded him. He remained a fortnight after this in [...], his back being very sore all the time; at length he was sent to Malaga, to his great joy. Here he was [Page 155] put in gaol for some days, till he could be sent on board an English ship: which had no sooner happened, than news was brought of a rupture between England Spain, and that ship, with many others, was stopped. Mr. Martin not being considered as a prisoner of war, was put on board a Hamburgh trader, and his wife and children soon after came to him; but he was obliged to put up with the loss of his effects, which had been embezzled by the inquisition: for this, however, he thought himself amply recompenced, by setting foot, once more, in his native country.
MR. Martin's case was published by the desire of, and authenticated by, the right honourable Mr. Secretary Craggs, the archbishop of Canterbury, the archbishop of York, the bishop of London, Winchester, Ely, Norwich, Sarum, Chichester, St. Asaph, Lincoln, Bristol, Bangor, Peterborough, &c. &c. &c.
Some private Enormities of the INQUISITION laid open, by a very singular Occurrence.
WHEN the crown of Spain was contested for in the beginning of the present century, by two princes, who equally pretended to the sovereignty, France espoused the cause of one competitor, and England of the other.
THE duke of Berwick, a natural son of James II. who abdicated England, commanded the Spanish and French forces, and defeated the English at the celebrated battle of Almanza. The army was then divided into two parts; the one consisting of Spaniards and French, headed by the duke of Berwick, advanced towards Catalonia; the other body, consisting of French troops only, commanded by the duke of Orleans, proceeded to the conquest of Arragon.
AS the troops drew near the city of Arragon, the magistrates came to offer the keys to the duke of Orleans; but he told them, haughtily, they were rebels, and that he would not accept the keys, for he had orders to enter the city through a breach.
HE accordingly made a breach in the wall with his cannon, and then entered the city through it, together with his whole army. When he had made every necessary regulation here, he departed to subdue other places, leaving a strong garrison, at once to over-awe and defend, under the command of his lieutenant-general M. De Legal. This gentleman, though brought up a Roman catholic, was totally free from superstition: he united great talents with bravery; and was, at once, the skilful officer, and accomplished gentleman.
THE duke, before his departure, had ordered that heavy contributions should be levied upon the city in the following manner.
1. THAT the magistrates and principal inhabitants should pay a thousand crowns per month for the duke's table.
2. THAT every house should pay one pistole, which would monthly amount to 18,000 pistoles.
3. THAT every convent and monastery should pay a donative, proportionable to its riches and rents.
THE two last contributions to be appropriated to the maintenance of the army.
THE money levied upon the magistrates and principal inhabitants, and upon every house, was paid as soon as demanded; but when the proper persons applied to the heads of the convents and monasteries, they found that the ecclesiastics were not so willing, as other people, to part from their cash.
Of the donatives to be raised by the clergy:
The college of Jesuits was to pay 2000 pistoles.
- Carmelites
- 1000
- Augustins
- 1000
- Dominicans
- 1000
M. De Legal sent to the jesuits a peremptory order to pay the money immediately. The superior of the jesuits returned for answer, that for the clergy to pay money to the army was against all ecclesiastical [Page 156] immunities; and that he knew of no argument which could authorize such a procedure. M. De Legal then sent four companies of dragoons to quarter themselves in the college, with this sarcastic message: "To convince you of the necessity of paying the money, I have sent four substantial arguments to your college, drawn from the system of military logic; and, therefore, hope you will not need any farther admonition to direct your conduct."
THESE proceedings greatly perplexed the jesuits, who dispatched an express to court to the king's confessor, who was of their order; but the dragoons were much more expeditious in plundering and doing mischief, than the courier in his journey: so that the jesuits, seeing every thing going to rack and ruin, thought proper to adjust the matter amicably, and paid the money before the return of their messenger. The Augustins and Carmelites taking warning by what had happened to the jesuits, prudently went and paid the money, and by that means escaped the study of military arguments, and of being taught logic by the dragoons.
BUT the Dominicans, who are all familiars of, or agents dependent on the inquisition, imagined, that very circumstance would be their protection; but they were mistaken, for M. De Legal neither feared nor respected the inquisition. The chief of the Dominicans sent word to the military commander, that his order was poor, and had not any money whatever to pay the donative; for, says he, the whole wealth of the Dominicans consists only in the silver images of the apostles and saints, as large as life, which are placed in our church, and which it would be sacrilege to remove.
THIS insinuation was meant to terrify the French commander, whom the inquisitors imagine [...] [...]ould not dare to be so profane as to wish for the possession of the prec [...]ous idols.
HE, however, sent word that the silver images would make admirable substitutes for money, and would be more in character in his possession, than in that of the Dominicans themselves, "For (says he) while you possess them, in the manner you do at present, they stand up in niches, useless and motionless, without being of the least use to mankind in general, or even to yourselves; but, when they come into my possession, they shall be useful, I will put them in motion; for I intend to have them coined, when they may travel like the apostles, be beneficial in various places, and circulate for the universal service of mankind."
THE inquisitors were astonished at this treatment, which they never expected to receive, even from crowned heads; they therefore determined to deliver their precious images in a solemn procession, that they might excite the people to an insurrection. The Dominican friars were accordingly ordered to march to De Legal's house, with the silver apostles and saints, in a mournful manner, having lighted tapers with them, and bitterly crying all the way, heresy, heresy.
M. De Legal hearing of these proceedings, ordered four companies of grenadiers to line the street which led to his house: each grenadier was ordered to have his loaded fuzee in one hand, and a lighted taper in the other; so that the troops might either repel force with force, or do honour to the farcical solemnity.
THE friars did all they could to raise a tumult, but the common people were too much afraid of troops under arms to obey them; the silver images were therefore, of necessity, delivered up to M. De Legal, who sent them to the mint, and ordered them to be coined immediately.
THE project of raising an insurrection having failed, the inquisitors determined to excommunicate M. de Legal, unless he would release their precious silver saints from imprisonment in the mint, be [...]fore they were melted down, or otherwise mutilated. The French commander absolutely refused [...]o release the images, but said they should certainly travel and do good; upon which the inquisitors drew up the form of excommunication, and ordered their secretary to go and read it to [...].
THE secretary punctually performed his commission, and read the excommunication deliberately and distinctly. The French commander heard it [Page 157] with great patience, and politely told the secretary he would answer it next day.
WHEN the secretary of the inquisition was gone, M. de Legal ordered his own secretary to prepare a form of excommunication, exactly like that sent by the inquisition; but to make this alteration, instead of his name, to put in those of the inquisitors.
THE next morning he ordered four regiments under arms, and commanded them to accompany his secretary and act as he directed.
THE secretary went to the inquisition, and insisted upon admittance; which, after a great deal of altercation, was granted. As soon as he entered, he read, in an audible voice, the excommunication sent by M. de Legal, against the inquisitors. The inquisitors were all present, and heard it with astonishment, never having before met with any individual who dared behave so bold. They loudly cried out against De Legal, as an heretic; and said, this was a most daring insult against the catholic faith. But, to surprize them still more, the French secretary told them, they must remove from their present lodgings; for the French commander wanted to quarter the troops in the inquisition, as it was the most commodious place in the whole city.
THE inquisitors exclaimed loudly upon this occasion, when the secretary put them under a strong guard, and sent them to a place appointed by M. de Legal to receive them. The inquisitors, finding how things went, begged that they might be permitted to take their private property, which was granted, and they immediately set out for Madrid, where they made the most bitter complaints to the king; but the monarch told them, he could not grant them any redress, as the injuries they had received were from his grandfather, the king of France's troops, by whose assistance alone he could be firmly established in his kingdom. "Had it been my own troops, (said he) I would have punished them; but as it is, I cannot pretend to exert any authority."
IN the mean time, M. de Legal's secretary set open all the doors of the inquisition, and released the prisoners, who amounted in the whole to 400; and among these were 60 beautiful young women, who appeared to form a seraglio for the three principal inquisitors.
THIS discovery, which laid the enormity of the inquisitors so open, greatly alarmed the archbishop, who desired M. de Legal to send the women to his palace, and he would take proper care of them; and at the same time he published an ecclesiastical censure against all such as should ridicule, or blame, the holy office of the inquisition.
THE French commander sent word to the archbishop, that the prisoners had either ran away, or were so securely concealed by their friends, or even by his own officers, that it was impossible for him to send them back again; and, therefore, the inquisition having committed such atrocious actions, must now put up with their exposure.
ONE of the ladies thus happily delivered from captivity, was afterwards married to the very French officer who opened the door of her dungeon, and released her from confinement. This lady related the following circumstances to her husband, and to M. Gavin, (author of the Master Key to Popery) from the latter of whom we have selected the most material particulars.
"I went one day (says the lady) with my mother, to visit the countess Attarass, and I met there Don Francisco Tirregon, her confessor, and second inquisitor of the holy office.
AFTER we had drank chocolate, he asked me my age, my confessor's name, and many intricate questions about religion. The severity of his countenance frightened me, which he perceiving, told the countess to inform me, that he was not so severe as he looked. He then caressed me in a most obliging manner, presented his hand, which I kissed with great reverence and modesty; and, as he went away, he made use of this remarkable expression: My dear child, I shall remember you till the next time. I did not, at the time, mark [...] sense of the words▪ for I was inexperienced in matters of gallantry, [...], at that time, but fifteen years old. Indeed, he unfortunately did remember me, for the very same night, when our whole family [Page 158] were in bed, we heard a great knocking at the door.
THE maid, who laid in the same room with me, went to the window, and inquired who was there? The answer was, THE HOLY INQUISITION. On hearing this I screamed out, Father! father! dear father, I am ruined for ever! My father got up, and came to me to know the occasion of my crying out; I told him the inquisitors were at the door. On hearing this, instead of protecting me, he hurried down stairs as fast as possible; and, lest the maid should be too slow, opened the street door himself; under such abject and slavish fears are bigotted minds! as soon as he knew they came for me, he fetched me with great solemnity, and delivered me to the officers with much submission.
I was hurried into a coach, with no other cloathing than a petticoat and a mantle, for they would not let me stay to take any thing else. My fright was so great, I expected to die that very night; but judge my surprize, when I was ushered into an apartment, decorated with all the elegance that taste, united with opulence, could bestow.
SOON after the officers left me, a maid servant appeared with a silver salver, on which were sweat-meats and cinnamon water. She desired me to take some refreshments before I went to bed; I told her I could not, but should be glad if she could inform me whether I was to be put to death that night or not.
"TO be put to death! (exclaimed she) you do not come here to be put to death, but to live like a princess, and you shall want for nothing in the world, but the liberty of going out; so pray don't be afraid, but go to bed and sleep easy; for tomorrow you shall see wonders within this house; and as I am chosen to be your waiting maid, I hope you'll be very kind to me."
I was going to ask some questions, but she told me [...]he must not answer any thing more till the next day, but assured me that nobody would come to disturb me: I am going (said she) about a little business, but I will come back presently, for my bed is in the closet next you [...]s; so she left me for about a quarter of an hour, and then returned. She then said, madam, pray let me know when you will be pleased to have your chocolate ready in the morning.
THIS greatly surprized me, so that without replying to her question, I asked her name;—she said, my name is Mary. Mary, then, said I, for heaven's sake, tell me whether I am brought here to die or not?—I have told you already, replied she, that you come here to be one of the happiest ladies in the world.
WE then went to bed, but the fear of death prevented me from sleeping the whole night; Mary waked, she was surprized to find me up, but soon rose, and after leaving me for [...]bout half an hour, she brought in two cups of chocolate, and some biscuit on a silver plate.
I drank one cup of the chocolate, and desired her to drink the other, which she did; when we had done, I said, Well, Mary, can you give any account of the reasons for my being brought here? To which she answered, Not yet, madam, you must have patience, and immediately slipped out of the room.
ABOUT half an hour after, she brought a great quantity of elegant clothes, suitable to a lady of the highest rank, and told me, I must dress myself. Among several trinkets which accompanied the clothes, I observed, with surprize, a snuff-box, i [...] the lid of which was a picture of Don Francisco Tirregon. This unravelled to me the mystery of my confinement, and at the same time rouzed my imagination to contrive how to evade receiving the present. If I absolutely refused it, I thought immediate death must ensue; and to accept it, was giving him too much encouragement against [...] honour. At length I hit upon a medium, and [...] ▪ Pray present my respects to Don Francisco Tirregon, and tell him, that, as I could not bring my clothes along with me last night, modesty [...] me to accept of these garments, which are requisite to keep me decent; but since I do not take snuff, I hope his lordship will excuse me in not accepting [...] box.
[Page 159]MARY went with my answer, and soon returned with Don Francisco's picture elegantly set in gold, and richly embellished with diamonds. This message accompanied it: "That his lordship had made a mistake; his intent not being to send me a snuff-box, but his picture." I was at a great loss what to do; when Mary said, pray, madam, take my poor advice; accept of the picture, and every thing else which his lordship sends you; for if you do not, he can compel you to what he pleases, and put you to death when he thinks proper, without any body being able to defend you. But if you are obliging to him, continued she, he will be very kind, and you will be as happy as a queen; you will have elegant apartments to live in, beautiful gardens to range in, and agreeable ladies to visit you: therefore, I advise you to send a civil answer, or even not to deny a visit from his lordship, or perhaps you may repent of your disrespect.
O, my God! exclaimed I, must I sacrifice my honour to my fears, and give up my virtue to his despotic power? Alas? what can I do? To resist, is vain. If I oppose his desires, force will obtain what chastity refuses. I now fell into the greatest agonies, and told Mary to return what answer she thought proper.
SHE said, she was glad of my humble submission, and ran to acquaint Don Francisco with it. In a few minutes she returned, with joy in her countenance, telling me his lordship would honour me with his company to supper. "And now give me leave, madam, (says she) to call you mistress, for I am to wait upon you. I have been in the holy office 14 years, and know all the customs perfectly well; but as silence is imposed upon me, under pain of death, I can only answer such questions as immediately relate to your own person. But I would advise you never to oppose the holy father's will; or if you see any young ladies about, never ask them any questions. You may divert yourself sometimes among them, but must never tell them any thing: three days hence you will dine with them; and at all time [...] you may have music, and [...]ther rec [...]ations. In [...], you will be so happy, that you will not wish to go abroad; and when your time is expired, the holy [...]athers will send you out of this count [...]y, and marry you to some nobleman." After saying these words she left me, overwhelmed with astonishment, and scarce knowing what to think. As soon as I recovered myself I began to look about, and finding a closet, I opened it, and perceived that it was filled with books: they were chiefly upon historical and profane subjects, but not any on religious matters. I chose out a book of history, and so passed the interval with some degree of satisfaction, till dinner time.
THE dinner was served up with the greatest elegance, and consisted of all that could gratify the most luxurious appetite. When dinner was over, Mary left me, and told me, if I wanted any thing I might ring a bell, which she pointed out to me.
I read a book to amuse myself during the afternoon, and at seven in the evening Don Francisco came to visit me in his night-gown and cap, not with the gravity of an inquisitor, but with the gaity of a gallant.
HE saluted me with great respect, and told me, That he came to see me in order to shew the great respect he had for my family, and to inform me, that it was my lovers who had procured my confinement, having accused me in matters of religion; and that the informations were taken, and the sentence pronounced against me, to be burnt alive in a dry pan, with a gradual fire; but that he, out of pity and love to my family, had stopped the execution of it.
THESE words were like daggers to my heart; I dropped at his feet, and said, "Ah, my lord! have you stopped the execution for ever?" He replied, "That belongs to yourself only," and abruptly wished me good night.
AS soon as he was gone I bu [...]st into tears, when Mary came and asked me what could make me cry so bitterly. To which I answered, Oh, Mary! what is the meaning of the dry pan and gradual fire? for I am to die by them.
MADAM, said she, never fear, you shall see, ere long, the dry pan and gradual fire, but they are made for those who oppose the holy father's will, not for you who are so good as to obey it. But [Page 160] pray, said she, was Don Francisco very obliging? I don't know, said I, for he frightened me out of my wits by his discourse: he saluted me with civility, but left me abruptly.
WELL, said Mary, you do not yet know his temper: he is extremely obliging to them that are kind to him; but if they are disobedient, he is as unmerciful as Nero, so, for your sake, take care to oblige him in all respects: and now, dear madam, pray go to supper and be easy. I went to supper, indeed, and afterwards to bed; but I could neither eat or sleep, for the thoughts of the dry pan and gradual fire deprived me of appetite, and banished drowsiness.
EARLY the next morning Mary said, that as nobody was stirring, if I would promise her secrecy, she would shew me the dry pan and gradual fire; so taking me down stairs, she brought me to a large room, with a thick iron door, which she opened. Within it was an oven, with fire in it at the time, and a large brass pan upon it, with a cover of the same, and a lo [...]k to it. In the next room there was a great wheel, covered on both sides with thick boards; opening a little window in the centre, Mary desired me to look in with a candle; there I saw all the circumference of the wheel set with sharp razors, which made me shudder.
SHE then took me to a pit, which was full of venemous animals. On my expressing great horror at the sight, she said, "Now, my good mistress, I'll tell you the use of these things. The dry pan is for heretics, and those who oppose the holy father's will and pleasure; they are put alive into the pan, being first stripped naked; and the cover being locked down, the executioner begins to put a small fire into the oven, and by degrees he augments it, till the body is reduced to ashes. The wheel is designed for those who speak against the pope, or the holy fathers of the inquisition; for they are put into that machine through the little door, which is locked after them, and then the wheel is turned swiftly, till they are all cut to pieces. The pit is for those who contemn the images, and refuse to give proper respect to ecclesiastical persons; for they are thrown into the pit, and so become the food of poisonous animals."
WE went back again to my chamber, and Mary said, that another day she would shew me the torments designed for other transgressors; but I was in such agonies at what I had seen, that I begged to be terrified with no more such sights. She soon after left me, but not without enjoining my strict obedience to Don Francisco; for if you do not comply with his will, says she, the dry pan and gradual fire will be your fate.
THE horrors which the sight of these things, and Mary's expressions, impressed on my mind, almost bereaved me of my senses, and left me in such a state of stupefaction, that I seemed to have no manner of will of my own.
THE next morning Mary said, now let me dress you as nice as possible, for you must go and with Don Francisco good-morrow, and breakfast with him. When I was dressed, she conveyed me through a gallery into his apartment, where I found that he was in bed. He ordered Mary to withdraw, and to serve up breakfast in about two hou [...] time. When Mary was gone, he commanded me to undress myself, and come to bed to him. The manner in which he spoke, and the dreadful ideas with which my mind was filled, so terribly frightened me, that I pulled off my clothes, without knowing what I did, and stepped into bed, insensible of the indecency I was transacting: so totally had the care of self-preservation absorbed all my other thoughts, and so intirely were the ideas of delicacy obliterated by the force of terror!
THUS, to avoid the dry pan, did I entail upon myself perpetual infamy; and to escape the so much dreaded gradual fire, give myself up to the flames of lust. Wretched alternative, where the only choice is an excruciating death, or everlasting pollution!
MARY came at the expiration of two hours, and served us with chocolate in the most submissive manner; for she kneeled down by the bed-side to present it. When I was dressed, Mary took me into a very delightful apartment, which I had never yet seen. It was furnished with the most costly elegance; but what gave me the greatest astonishment was, the prospect from its windows, of a beautiful [Page 161] garden, [...] meandering river. Mary told me, that the young ladies she had mentioned would come to pay their compliments to me before dinner, and begged me to remember her advice, in keeping a prudent guard over my tongue.
IN a few minutes a great number of very beautiful young ladies, richly dressed, entered the room, and successively embracing me, wished me joy. I was so surprized, that I was unable to answer their compliments; which one of the ladies perceiving, said, "Madam, the solitude of this place will affect you in the beginning, but when you begin to feel the pleasures and amusements you may enjoy, you will quit those pensive thoughts. We, at present, beg the honour of you to dine with us to-day, and henceforward three days in a week." I returned them suitable thanks in general terms, and so went to dinner, in which the most exquisite and savory dishes, of various kinds, were served up with the most delicate and pleasant fruits and sweet-meats. The room was long, with two tables on each side, and a third in the front. I reckoned fifty-two young ladies, the eldest not exceeding twenty-four years of age. There were five maid servants, besides Mary, to wait upon us; but Mary confined her attention to me alone. After dinner we retired to a capacious gallery, where some played on musical instruments, a few diverted themselves with cards, and the rest amused themselves with walking about. Mary, at length, entered the gallery, and said, Ladies, this is a day of recreation, and so you may go into whatever rooms you please, till eight o'clock in the evening.
THEY unanimously agreed to adjourn to my apartment. Here we found a most elegant cold collation, of which all the ladies partook, and passed the time in innocent conversation, and harmless mirth: but none mentioned a word concerning the inquisition, or the holy fathers, or gave the least distant hint concerning the cause of their confinement.
AT eight o'clock Mary rang a bell, which was a signal for all to retire to their respective apartments, and I was conducted to the chamber of Don Francisco, where I slept. The next morning Mary brought me a richer dress than any I had yet had; and as soon as I had retired to my apartment, all the ladies came to wish me good-morning, dressed much richer than the preceding day. We passed the time till eight o'clock in the evening, in much the same manner as we had done the day before. At that time the bell rung, the separation took place, and I was conducted to Don Francisco's chamber. The next morning I had a garment richer than the last, and they accosted me in apparel still more sumptuous than before. The transactions of the two former days were repeated on the third, and the evening in a similar manner.
ON the fourth morning Mary came into Don Francisco's chamber, and told me I must immediately rise, for a lady wanted me in her own chamber. She spoke with a kind of authority which surprized me; but as Don Francisco did not speak a syllable, I got up and obeyed. Mary then conveyed me into a dismal dungeon, not eight feet in length; and said, sternly, to me, This is your room, and this lady your bed-fellow and companion. At which word she bounced out of the room, and left me in the utmost consternation.
AFTER remaining a considerable time in the most dreadful agonies, tears came to my relief, and I exclaimed, "What is this place, dear lady; Is it a scene of enchantment, or is it a hell upon earth? Alas! I have lost my honour, and my soul for ever!"
THE lady took me by the hand, and said, in a sympathizing tone of voice, "Dear sister, (for this is the name I shall henceforth give you) forbear to cry and grieve, for you can do nothing by such an extravagant behaviour, but draw upon yourself a cruel death. Your misfortunes, and those of all the ladies you have seen, are exactly of a piece: you suffer nothing but what we have suffered before you; but we dare not shew our grief, for fear of greater evils. Pray take courage, and hope in God, for he will surely deliver us from this hellish place; but be sure you discover no uneasines [...] before Mary, who is the only instrument either of our torments, or comfort. Have patience until we [Page 162] go to bed, and then I will venture to tell you more of the matter.
MY perplexity and vexation were inexpressible; but my new companion, whose name was Leonora, prevailed on me to disguise my uneasiness from Mary. I dissembled tolerably well when she came to bring our dinners; but could not help remarking, in my own mind, the difference beween this repast, and those I had before partook of. This consisted only of plain, common food, and that of a scanty allowance, with only one plate, and one knife and fork for us both, which she took away as soon as we had dined.
WHEN we were in bed, Leonora was as good as her word; and upon my solemn promise of secrecy, thus began to open her mind to me:
"MY dear sister, you think your case is very hard, but, I assure you, all the ladies in the house have gone through the same. In time you will know all their stories, as they hope to know your's. I suppose Mary has been the chief instrument of your fright, as she has been of our's; and I warrant she has shewn you some horrible places, though not all; and that, at the very thought of them, you were so terrified, that you chose the same way we have done, to redeem yourself from death. By what hath happened to us, we know that Don Francisco hath been your Nero, your tyrant; for the three colours of our clothes are the distinguishing tokens of the three holy fathers. The red silk belongs to Don Francisco, the blue to Don Guerrero, and the Green to Don Aliaga; and they al-give those colours (after the farce of changing garments, and the short-lived [...]ecreations are over) to those ladies whom they bring here for their respective uses.
"WE are strictly commanded to express all the demonstrations of joy, and to be very merry for three days, when a young lady first comes amongst us, as we did with you, and as you must now do with others. But afterwards we live like the most wretched prisoners, without seeing any body but Mary, and the other maid-servants, over whom Mary hath a kind of superiority, for she acts as house-keeper. We all dine in the great hall three days in a week; and when any one of the inquisitors hath a mind for one of his slaves, Mary comes about nine o'clock, and leads her to his apartment.
"SOME nights Mary leaves the doors of our chambers open, and that is a token that one of the inquisitors hath a mind to come that night; but he comes so silent, that we are ignorant whether he is our patron or not. If one of us happens to be with child, she is removed into a better chamber till she is delivered; but during the whole of her pregnancy, she never sees any body but the person appointed to attend her.
"AS soon as the child is born it is taken away, and carried we know not whither; for we never hear a syllable mentioned about it afterwards. I have been in this house six years, was not fourteen when then the officers took me from my father's house, and have had one child. There are, at this present time, fifty-two young ladies in the house; but we annually lose six or eight, though we know not what becomes of them, or whither they are sent. This, however, does not diminish our number, for new ones are always brought in to supply the place of those who are removed from hence; and I remember, at one time, to have seen seventy-three ladies here together. Our continual torment is to reflect that when they are tired of any of the ladies, they certainly put to death those they pretend to send away; for it is natural to think, that they have too much policy to suffer their atrocious and infernal villainies to be discovered, by enlarging them. Hence our situation is miserable indeed, and we have only to pray that the Almighty will pardon those crimes, which we are compelled to commit. Therefore, my dear sister, arm yourself with patience, for that is the only palliative to give you comfort, and put a firm confidence in the providence of Almighty God."
THIS discourse of Leonora greatly affected me; but I found every thing to be as she told me in the course of ti [...]e, and I took care to appear as chearful as possible before Mary. In this manner I continued eighteen months, during which time eleven ladies were taken from the house; but in lieu of them we got nineteen new ones, which made our number just sixty, at the time we were so happily [Page 163] relieved by the French officers, and providentially restored to the joys of society, and to the arms of our parents and friends. On that happy day, the door of my dungeon was opened by the gentleman who is now my husband, who, with the utmost expedition, sent both Leonora and me to his father's; and (soon after the campaign was over) when he returned home, he thought proper to make me his wife, in which situation I enjoy a recompence for all the miseries I before suffered.
FROM the foregoing narrative it is evident, that the inquisitors are a set of libidinous villains, lost to every just idea of religion, and totally destitute of humanity. Those who possess wealth, beauty, or liberal sentiments, are sure to find enemies in them. Avarice, lust, and prejudice, are their ruling passions; and they sacrifice every law, human and divine, to gratify their predominant desire. Their supposed piety is affectation; their pretended compassion hypocrisy; their justice depends on their will; and their equitable punishments founded on their prejudices. None are secure from them; all ranks fall equally victims to their pride, their power, or their aversion.
SOME may suggest, that it is strange crowned heads, and eminent nobles, have not attempted to crush the power of the inquisition, and reduce the authority of those ecclesiastical tyrants, from whose merciless fangs neither their families or themselves are secure.
BUT astonishing as it is, superstition hath, in this case, always overcome common sense, and custom operated against reason. One prince, indeed, intended to abolish the inquisition, but he lost his life before he became king, and consequently before he had the power so to do; for the very intimation of his design procured his destruction.
THIS was that amiable prince Don Carlos, son of Philip the Second, king of Spain, and grandson of the celebrated emperor Charles V. Don Carlos possessed all the good qualities of his grandfather, without any of the bad ones of his father; and was a prince of great vivacity, admirable learning, and the most amiable disposition. He had sense enough to see into the errors of popery, and abhorred the very name of the inquisition. He inveighed publicly against the institution, ridiculed the affected piety of the inquisitors, did all he could to expose their atrocious deeds, and even declared, that if ever he came to the crown, he would abolish the inquisition, and exterminate its agents.
THESE things were sufficient to irritate the inquisitors against the prince: they, accordingly, bent their minds to vengeance, and determined on his destruction.
THE inquisitors now employed all their agents and emissaries to spread abroad the most artful insinuations against the prince; and, at length, raised such a spirit of discontent among the people, that the king was under the necessity of removing Don Carlos from court. Not content with this, they pursued even his friends, and obliged the king likewise to banish Don John, duke of Austria, his own brother, and consequently uncle to the prince; together with the prince of Parma, nephew to the king, and cousin to the prince, because they well knew that both the duke of Austria, and the prince of Parma, had a most sincere and inviolable attachment to Don Carlos.
SOME few years after, the prince having shewn great lenity and favour to the protestants in the Netherlands, the inquisition loudly exclaimed against him, declaring, that as the persons in question were heretics, the prince himself must necessarily be one, since he gave them countenance. In short, they gained so great an ascendancy over the mind of the king, who was absolutely a slave to superstition, that, shocking to relate, he sacrificed the feelings of nature to the force of bigotry, and for fear of incurring the anger of the inquisition, gave up his only son, passing the sentence of death on him himself.
THE prince, indeed, had what was termed an indulgence▪ that is, he was permitted to chuse the manner of his death Roman like, the unfortunate young he [...]o chose bleeding, and the hot bath; when the veins of his arms and legs being opened, he expired gradually, falling a martyr to the malice of the inquisitors, and the stupid bigotry of his father.
The Persecution of Dr. AEGIDIO.
DR. AEGIDIO was educated at the university of Alcala, where he took his several degrees, and particularly applied himself to the study of the sacred scriptures and school divinity. The professor of theology dying, he was elected into his place, and acted so much to the satisfaction of every one, that his reputation for learning and piety was circulated throughout Europe.
AEGIDIO however had his enemies, and these laid a complaint against him to the inquisitors, who sent him a citation, and when he appeared to it, cast him into a dungeon.
AS the greatest part of those who belonged to the cathedral church at Seville, and many persons belonging to the bishopric of Dortois, highly approved of the doctrines of Aegidio, which they thought perfectly consonant with true religion, they petitioned the emperor in his behalf. Though the monarch had been educated a Roman catholic, he had too much sense to be a bigot; and therefore sent an immediate order for his enlargement.
HE soon after visited the church of Valladolid, did every thing he could to promote the cause of religion, and returning home he soon after fell sick, and died in an extreme old age.
THE inquisitors, having been disappointed of gratifying their malice against him, while living, determined (as the emperor's whole thoughts were engrossed by a military expedition) to wreak their vengeance on him when dead. Therefore, soon after he was buried, they ordered his remains to be dug out of the grave; and a legal process being carried on, they were condemned to be burnt, which was executed accordingly.
The Persecution of Dr. CONSTANTINE.
DR. CONSTANTINE, an intimate acquaintance of the already mentioned Dr. Aegidio, was a man of uncommon natural abilities and profound learning; exclusive of several modern tongues, he was acquainted with the Latin, Greek, and Hebrew languages, and perfectly well knew not only the sciences called abstruse, but those arts which come under the denomination of polite literature.
HIS eloquence rendered him a pleasing, and the soundness of his doctrines a profitable, preacher; and he was so popular, that he never preached but to a crowded audience. He had many opportunities of rising in the church, but never would take advantage of them: for if a living of greater value than his own was offered him, he would refuse it, saying, I am content with what I have; and he frequently preached so forcibly against simony, that many of his superiors, who were not so delicate upon the subject, took umbrage at his doctrines upon that head.
HAVING been fully confirmed in protestantism by Dr. Aegidio, he preached boldly such doctrines only as were agreeable to gospel purity, and uncontaminated by the errors which had at various times crept into the Romish church. For these reasons he had many enemies among the Roman catholics, and some of them were fully determined on his destruction.
A worthy gentleman, named Scobaria, having erected a school for divinity lectures, appointed Dr. Constantine to be reader therein. He immediately undertook the task, and read lectures, by portions, on the Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and Canticles; and was beginning to expound the book of Job, when he was seized by the inquisitors.
BEING brought to examination, he answered with such precaution that they could not find any explicit charge against him, but remained doubtful in what manner to proceed, when the following circumstance occurred to determine them:
DR. Constantine had deposited with a woman, named Isabella Martin, several books, which to him were very valuable, but which he knew, in the eyes of the inquisition, were exceptionable.
THIS woman having being informed against as a protestant, was apprehended, and, after a small process, [Page 165] her goods were ordered to be confiscated. Previous, however, to the officers coming to her house, the woman's son had removed away several chests full of the most valuable articles; and among these were Dr. Constantine's books.
A treacherous servant giving intelligence of this to the inquisitors, an officer was dispatched to the son to demand the chests. The son, supposing the officer only came for Constantine's books and papers, said, I know what you come for, and I will fetch them to you immediately. He then fetched Dr. Constantine's books and papers, when the officer was greatly surprized to find what he did not look for. He, however, told the young man, that he was glad these books and papers were produced, but nevertheless he must fulfil the end of his commission, which was, to carry him and the goods he had embezzled before the inquisitors, which he did accordingly; for the young man knew it would be in vain to expostulate, or resist, and therefore quietly submitted to his fate.
THE inquisitors being thus possessed of Constantine's books and writings, now found matter sufficient to form charges against him. When he was brought to a [...] examination, they presented one of his papers, and asked him if he knew the handwriting? Perceiving it was his own, he guessed the whole matter, confessed the writing, and justified the doctrine it contained; saying, "In that, and all my other writings, I have never departed from the truth of the gospel, but have always kept in view the pure precepts of Christ, as he delivered ed them to mankind.
AFTER being detained upwards of two years in prison, Dr. Constantine was seized with a bloody flux, which put an end to his miseries in this world. The process, however, was carried on against his body, which, at the ensuing Auto de Fe, was publicly burnt.
The Martyrdom of NICHOLAS BURTON.
MR. BURTON was a merchant of London, who traded into Spain. Being at Cadiz, a familiar of the inquisition called upon him one day at his lodgings, pretending that he wanted to send a quantity of merchandize to London. Having asked as many questions as he thought proper, he departed, and Mr. Burton was next day taken into custody by one of the inquisitorial officers.
ON his examination the president demanded if he had, by words or writing, said or insinuated any thing disrespectful to the Roman catholic persuasion.
TO this Mr. Burton replied in the negative; saying, That he was sensible, in whatever country we were, respect ought to be paid to the religion of that country: that such knowledge to him was essential, who, as a merchant was obliged to visit various countries, and conform to the religious and civil ceremonies of all.
THIS defence, however, availed nothing; they proceeded to torture him, in order to gain information. Failing in this, they condemned him for invincible obstinacy, and at the next Auto de Fe he was burnt. When the flames first touched him, he bore the torments with such exemplary patience, and appeared with so smiling a countenance, that one of the priests, enraged at his serenity, said with great malice and absurdity, "The reason why he does not seem to feel is to me very evident; the devil has already got his soul, and his body is of course deprived of the usual sensations."
ABOUT the time of Mr. Burton's martyrdom, several others of the English in Spain were put to death by the inquisitors; particularly John Baker, William Burgate, and William Burgess were burnt, and William Hooker was stoned to death; freely giving up their lives for him, who shed his blood for them.
The Life of WILLIAM GARDENER.
WILLIAM GARDENER was born at Bristol, received a tolerable education, and was, at a proper age, placed under the care of a merchant, [...] Paget.
AT the age of twenty-six years, he was, by his [Page 166] master, sent to Lisbon, to act as factor. Here he applied himself to the study of the Portuguese language, executed his business with assiduity and fidelity, and behaved with the most engaging affability to all persons with whom he had the least concern. He conversed privately with a few, whom he knew to be zealous protestants; and, at the same time, cautiously avoided giving the least offence to any who were Roman catholics: he had not, however, hitherto gone into any of the popish churches.
A marriage being concluded between the king of Portugal's son and the Infanta of Spain, upon the wedding day the bridegroom, bride, and the whole court went to the cathedral church, attended by multitudes of all ranks of people, and among the rest William Gardener, who stayed during the whole ceremony, and was greatly shocked at the superstitions he saw.
THE erroneous worship which he had seen ran strongly in his mind; he was miserable, to behold a whole country sunk into such idolatry, when the truth of the gospel might be so easily obtained. He, therefore, took the inconsiderate, though laudable design, into his h [...]d, of making a reform in Portugal, or perishing in the attempt; and determined to sacrifice his prudence to his zeal, though he became a martyr upon the occasion.
TO this end he settled all his worldly affairs, paid his debts, closed his books, and consigned over his merchandize. On the ensuing Sunday he went again to the cathedral church, with a New Testament in his hand, and placed himself near the altar.
THE king and the court soon appeared, and a cardinal began mass: at that part of the ceremony in which the people adore the wafer, Gardener could hold out no longer, but springing towards the cardinal, he snatched the host from him, and trampled it under his feet.
THIS action amazed the whole congregation, and one person drawing a dagger, wounded Gardener in the shoulder, and would, by repeating the blow, have finished him, had not the king called to him to desist.
GARDENER being carried before the king, the monarch asked him what countryman he was: to which he replied, I am an Englishman by birth, a protestant by religion, and a merchant by occupation. What I have done is not out of contempt to your royal person, God forbid it should, but out of honest indignation, to see the ridiculous superstitions and gross idolatries practised here.
THE king, thinking that he had been stimulated by some other person to act as he had done, demanded who was his abettor; to which he replied, My own conscience alone. I would not hazard what I have done for any man living, but I owe that and all other services to God.
GARDENER was sent to prison, and a general order issued to apprehend all Englishmen at Lisbon. This order was in a great measure put into execution, (some few escaping) and many innocent persons were tortured to make them confess if they knew any thing of the matter; in particular, a person who resided in the same house with Gardener, was treated with unparalleled barbarity to make him confess something which might throw a light upon the affair.
GARDENER himself was then tormented in the most excruciating manner: but in the midst of all his torments he gloried in the deed. Being ordered for death, a large fire was kindled near a gibbet, Gardener was drawn up to the gibbet by pullies, and then let down near the fire, but not so close as to touch it; for they burnt or rather roasted him by slow degrees. Yet he bore his sufferings patiently, and resigned his soul to the Lord chearfully.
IT is observable that some of the sparks were blown from the fire, (which consumed Gardener towards the haven, burnt one of the king's ships of war, and did other considerable damage. The Englishmen who were taken up on this occasion were soon after Gardener's death, all discharged, except the person that resided in the same house with him. [Page 167] who was detained two years before he could procure his liberty.
An Account of the Life and Sufferings of Mr. WILLIAM LITHGOW, a Native of Scotland.
THIS gentleman was descended from a good family, and having a natural propensity to travelling, he rambled, when very young, over the northern and western islands; after which he visited France, Germany, Switzerland, and Spain. He set out on his travels in the month of March, 1609. and the first place he went to was Paris, where he stayed for some time. He then prosecuted his travels through Germany and other parts, and [...]t length arrived at Malaga in Spain, the sea [...] of all his misfortunes.
DURING his residence here, he contracted with the master of a French ship for his passage to Alexandria, but was prevented from going by the following circumstances. In the evening of the 17th of October, 1620, the English fleet, at that time on a cruise against the Algerine rovers, came to anchor before Malaga, which threw the people of the town into the greatest consternation, as they imagined them to be Turks. The morning, however, discovered the mistake, and the governor of Malaga perceiving the cross of England in their colours, went on board Sir Robert Mansell's ship, who commanded on that expedition, and after staying some time returned, and silenced the fears of the people.
THE next day many persons from on board the fleet came ashore. Among these were several well known by Mr. Lithgow, who, after reciprocal compliments, spent some days together in festivity and the amusements of the town. They then invited Mr. Lithgow to go on board, and pay his respects to the admiral. He accordingly accepted the invitation, was kindly received by him, and detained till the next day, whan the fleet sailed. The admiral would willingly have taken Mr. Lithgow with him to Algier [...] but having contracted for his passage to Alexandria, and his baggage, &c. being in the town, he could not accept the offer.
AS soon as Mr. Lithgow got on shore he proceeded towards his lodgings by a private way, (being to embark the same night for Alexandria) when, in passing through a narrow, uninhabited street, he found himself suddenly surrounded by nine serjeants, or officers, who threw a black cloak over him, and forcibly conducted him to the governor's house. After some little time the governor appeared, when Mr. Lithgow earnestly begged he might be informed of the caus [...] of such violent treatment. The governor only ans [...]ed, [...]y shaking his head, and gave orders that the prisoner should be strictly watched till he (the go [...]rnor) returned from his devotions; dir [...]cting, at the same time, th [...]t the captain of the town, the alcaid major, and [...]own notary, should be summoned to appear at his e [...]amination, and that all this should [...] done with the greatest secrecy▪ to prevent the knowled [...] [...] reaching the ears of the English merchants then residing in the town.
THESE orders were strictly discharged, and on the governor's return, he with the officers having seated themselves, Mr. Lithgow was brought before them for examination. The governor began by asking several questions, namely, of what country he was, whither bound, and how long he had been in Spain. The prisoner, after answering these, and other questions, was conducted to a closet, where, in a short space of time, he was visited by the town-captain, who inquired whether he had ever been at Seville, or was lately come from thence; and patting his cheeks with an air of friendship, conjured him to tell the truth: "For (said he) your very countenance shews there is some hidden matter in your mind, which prudence should direct you to disclose." Finding himself, however, unable to extort any thing from the prisoner, he left him, and reported the same to the governor and the other officers; on which Mr. Lithgow was again brought before them, a general accusation was laid against him, and he was compelled to swear that he would give true answers to such questions as should be asked him.
THE governor then proceeded to inquire the [Page 168] quality of the English commander, and the prisoner's opinion what were the motives that prevented his accepting an invitation from him to come on shore. He demanded, likewise, the names of the English captains in the squadron, and what knowledge he had of the embarkation, or preparation for it before its departure from England. The answers given to the several questions asked were set down in writing by the notary; but the [...]unto seemed surprized at his denying any knowledge of the sitting out of the fleet, particularly the governor, who said he lied, that he was a traitor and spy, and came directly to favour and assist in the design [...] that were projected against Spain; and that he had been for that purpose nine months in Seville, in order to procure intelligence of the time the Spanish navy was expected from the Indies. They exclaimed against his familiarity with the officers of the fleet, and many other English gentlemen, between whom, they said, unusual civilities had passed, but all these transactions had been carefully noticed.
BESIDES, to sum up the whole, and put the truth past all doubt, they said, he came from a council of war, held that morning on board the admiral's ship, in order to put in execution the orders assigned him. They upbraided him with being accessary to the burning of the island of St. Thomas, in the West Indies; "Wherefore (said they) these Lutherans, and sons of the devil, ought to have no credit given to what they say or swear."
IN vain did Mr Lithgow endeavour to obviate every accusation laid against him, and to obtain belief from his prejudiced judges. He begged permission to send for his cloak-bag, which contained his papers, and might serve to shew his innocence. This request [...]hey complied with, thinking it would discover some things of which they were ignorant. The cloak-bag was accordingly brought, and being opened, among other things, was found a licence from king James the First, under the sign manual, setting forth the bearer's intention to travel into Egypt; which was treated by the haughty Spaniards with great contempt. The other papers consisted of passports, testimonials, &c. of persons of quality. All these credentials, however, seemed rather to confirm than abate the suspicions of th [...]se prejudiced judges, who after se [...]ing all the prisoner's papers, ordered him again to withdraw.
IN the mean time a consultation was held to fix the place where the prisoner should be confined. The al [...]ade, or chief judge, was for putting him in the town prison; but this was objected to, particularly by the corrigidore, who said, in Spanish, "In order to prevent the knowledge of his confinement from reaching his countrymen, I will take the matter on myself, and be answerable for the consequences;" upon which it was agreed, that he should be confined in the governor's house with the greatest secrecy.
THIS matter being determined, one of the serjeants went to Mr. Lithgow, and begged his money, with liberty to search him. As it was needless to make any resistance, the prisoner quietly complied, the serjeant (after rifling his pockets of eleven duca [...]oon [...]) stripped him to his shirt; and searching his breeches, he found, inclosed in the waistband, two canvas bags, containing one hundred and thirty-seven pieces of gold. The serjeant immediately took the money to the corrigidore, who, after having told it over, ordered him to clothe the prisoner, and shut him up close till after supper.
ABOUT midnight the searjeant and two Turkish slaves released Mr. Lithgow from his then confinement, but it was to introduce him to one much more horrible. They conducted him through several passages, to a chamber in a remote part of the palace, towards the garden, where they loaded him with irons, and extended his legs by means of an iron bar above a yard long, the weight of which was so great that he could [...]ither stand nor sit, but was obliged to lie continually on his back. They left him in this condition for some time, when they returned with a refreshment of food, consisting of a pound of boiled mutton and a loaf, together with a small quantity of wine; which was not only the first, but the best and last of the kind, during his confinement in this place. After delivering these articles, the serjeant locked the door, and left Mr. Lithgow to his own private contemplations.
THE next day he received a visit from the governor, [Page 169] who promised him his liberty, with many other advantages, if he would confess being a spy; but on his protesting that he was entirely innocent, the governor left him in a rage, saying, He should see him no more till farther torments constrained him to confess; commanding the keeper, to whose care he was committed, that he should permit no person whatever to have access to, or commune with him; that his sustenance should not exceed three ounces of musty bread, and a pint of water every second day; that he should be allowed neither bed, pillow, nor coverlid. "Close up, said he, this window in his room with lime and stone; stop up the holes of the door with double mats: let him have nothing that bears any likeness to comfort." These, and several other orders of the like severity, were given to render it impossible for his condition to be known to those of the English nation.
IN this wretched and melancholy state did poor Lithgow continue without seeing any person for several days, in which time the governor r [...]ved an answer to a letter he had written, relative to the prisoner, from Madrid; and, pursuant to the instructions given him, began to put in practice the cruelties devised, which they hastened, because Christmas holy [...]days approached, it being then the forty-seventh day s [...]nce his imprisonment.
ABOUT two o'clock in the morning, he heard a noise of a [...]ach in the street, and some time after heard the opening of the prison doors, not having had any sleep for two nights; hunger, pain, and melancholy reflections having prevented him from taking any repose.
SOON after the prison doors were opened, the nine serjeants, who had first seized him, with the notary, entered the place where he lay, and without uttering a word conducted him in his irons, through the house into the street, where a coach waited, and into which they laid him at the bottom on his back, not being able to sit. Two of the serjeants rode with him, and the rest walked by the coach side, but all observed the most profound silence. They drove him to a vine-press house, about a league from the town, to which place a rack had been privately conveyed before; and here they shut him up for that night.
AT day-break the next morning, arrived the governor and alcade, into whose presence Mr. Lithgow was immediately brought to undergo another examination. The prisoner desired he might have an interpreter, which was allowed to strangers by the laws of that country, but this was refused, nor would they permit him to appeal to Madrid, the superior court of judicature. After a long examination, which lasted from morning till night, there appeared in all his answers so exact a conformity with what he had before said, that they declared he had learned them by heart, there not being the least prevarication. They, however, pressed him again to make a full discovery; that is, to accuse himself of crimes never committed, the governor adding, "You are still in my power; I can set you free if you comply: if not, I must deliver you to the alcade." Mr. Lithgow still persisting in his innocence, the governor ordered the notary to draw up a warrant for delivering him to the alcade to be tortured.
IN consequence of this he was conducted by the serjeants to the end of a stone gallery, where the rack was placed. The encaroudor, or executioner, immediately struck off his irons, which put him to very great pain, the bolts being so close rivetted, that the sledge hammer tore away above half an inch of his heel, in forcing off the bolt; the anguish of which, together with his weak condition (not having the least sustenance for three days), occasioned him to groan bitterly; upon which the merciless alcade said, "Villain, traitor, this is but the earnest of what you shall endure."
WHEN his irons were off he fell upon his knees, uttering a short prayer, that God would be pleased to enable him to be stedfast, and undergo courageously the grievous trial he had to encounter. The alcade and notary having placed themselves in chairs, he was stripped naked, and fixed upon the rack, the office of these gentlemen being to be witness of, and set down the confessions and tortures endured by the delinquent.
IT is impossible to describe all the various tortures [Page 170] inflicted upon him. Suffice it to say, that he lay on the rack for the space of five hours, during which time he received above sixty different tortures of the most hellish nature; and had they continued them a few minutes longer, he must have inevitably perished.
THESE cruel persecutors being satisfied for the present, the prisoner was taken from the rack, and his irons being again put on, he was conducted to his former dungeon, having received no other nourishment than a little warm wine, which was given him rather to prevent his dying, and reserve him for future punishments, than from any principle of charity or compassion.
AS a confirmation of this, orders were given for a coach to pass every morning before day by the prison; that the noise made by it might give fresh terrors and alarms to the unhappy prisoner, and deprive him of all possi [...]lity of obtaining the least repose.
HE continued in this horrid situation, almost starved for want of the common necessaries to preserve his wretched existence, till Christmas-day, when he received some relief from Mariane, waiting woman to the governor's lady. This woman having obtained leave to visit him, carried with her some refreshments, consisting of honey, sugar, raisins, and other articles: and so affected was she at beholding his situation, that she wept bitterly, and at her departure expressed the greatest concern at not being able to give him farther assistance.
IN this loathsome dungeon was poor Mr. Lithgow kept till he was almost devoured with vermin. They crawled about his beard, lips, eye-brows, &c. so that he could scarce open his eyes; and his mortification was increased by not having the use of his hands or legs to defend himself, from his being so miserably maimed by the tortures. So cruel was the governor, that he even ordered the vermin to be swept on him twice in every eight days. He, however, obtained some little mitigation of this part of his punishment, from the humanity of a Turkish slave that attended him, who, at times, when he could do it with safety, destroyed the vermin, and contributed every refreshment to him that laid in his power.
FROM this slave Mr. Lithgow at length received that information which gave him little hopes of ever being released, but, on the contrary, that he should finish his life under new tortures. The substance of this information was, that an English seminary priest, and a Scotch cooper, had been for some time employed by the governor to translate from the English into the Spanish language, all his books and observations; and that it was commonly said in the governor's house, that he was an arch heretic.
THIS information greatly alarmed him, and he began, not without reason, to fear that they would soon finish him, more especially as they could neither, by torture, or any other means, bring him so vary from what he had all along said at his different examinations.
TWO days after he had received the above information, the governor, an inquisitor, and a canonical priest, accompanied by two Jesuits, entered his dungeon, and being seated, after several idle questions, the inquisitor asked Mr. Lithgow if he was a Roman catholic, and acknowledged the pope's supremacy? He answered, that he neither was the one, nor did the other; adding, that he was surprized at being asked such questions, since it was expressly stipulated by the articles of peace between England and Spain, that none of the English subjects should be liable to the inquisition, or any way molested by them on account of diversity in religion, &c. In the bitterness of his soul [...]e made use of some warm expressions not suited [...] his circumstances: "As you have almost murdered me (said he) for pretended treason, so now you intend to make a martyr of me for my religion." He also expostulated with the governor on the [...] return he made the king of England, (whose subject he was) for the princely humanity exercised towards the Spaniards in 1588, when their [...] was shipwrecked on the Scotch coast, and thousands of the Spaniards found relief, who must have otherwise miserably perished.
THE governor admitted the truth of what Mr. Lithgow said, but replied with an haughty air, [Page 171] that the king, who then only ruled Scotland, was actuated mo [...]e by fear than love, and therefore did not deserve any thanks. One of the jesuits said, there was no faith to be kept with heretics. The inquisitor then rising, addressed himself to Mr. Lithgow in the following words: "You have been taken up as a spy, accused of treachery, and [...]rtured, as we acknowledge, innocently; (which appears by the account lately received from Madrid of the intentions of the English) yet it was the divine power that brought those judgements upon you, for presumptuously treating the blessed miracle of Loretto with ridicule, and expressing yourself in your writings irreverently of his holiness, the great agent and Christ's vicar upon earth; therefore you are justly fallen into our hands by their special appointment: thy books and papers are miraculously translated by the assistance of Providence influencing thy own countrymen."
THIS trumpery being ended, they gave the prisoner eight days to consider and resolve whether he would become a convert to their religion; during which time the inquisitor told him he, with other religious orders, would attend, to give him such assistance thereto as he might want. One of the jesuits said, (first making the sign of the cross upon his breast) "My son, behold, you deserve to be burnt alive; but by the grace of our lady of Loretto, whom you have blasphemed, we will both save your soul and body."
IN the morning, the inquisitor with the three ecclesiastics returned, when the former asked the prisoner what difficulties he had on his conscience that retarded his conversion; to which he answered, "he had not any doubts in his mind, being confident in the promises of Christ, and assuredly believing his revealed will signified in the gospels, as professed in the reformed catholic church, being con [...]ed by grace, and having infallible assurance thereby of the true christian faith." To these words the inquisitor replied, "Thou art no christian, but an absurd heretic, and without conversion a member of perdition." The prisoner then told him, it was not consistent with the nature and essence of religion and charity, to convince by opprobrious speeches, racks, and torments, but by arguments deduced from the scriptures; and that all other methods would with him be totally ineffectual.
THE inquisitor was so enraged at the replies made by the prisoner, that he struck him on the face, used many abusive speeches, and attempted to stab him, which he had certainly done had he not been prevented by the jesuits: and from this time he never again visited the prisoner.
THE next day the two jesuits returned, and putting on a very grave supercilious air, the superior asked him, what resolution he had taken? To which Mr. Lithgow replied, that he was already resolved, unless he could shew substantial reasons to make him alter his opinion. The superior, after a pedant [...] display of their seven sacraments, the intercession of saints, transubstantiation, &c. boasted greatly of their church, her antiquity, universality, and uniformity; all which Mr. Lithgow denied: "For (said he) the profession of the faith I hold hath been ever since the first days of the apostles, and Christ had ever his own church (however obscure) in the greatest time of your darkness."
THE jesuits, finding their arguments had not the desired effect, that torments could not shake his constancy, nor even the fear of the cruel sentence he had reason to expect would be pronounced and executed on him, after severe menaces, left him. On the eighth day after, being the last of their inquisition, when sentence is pronounced, they returned again, but quite altered, both in their words and behaviour. After repeating much the same kind of arguments as before, they, with seeming tears in their eyes, pretended they were sorry from their hearts he must be obliged to undergo a terrible death; but above all, for the loss of his most precious soul; and falling on their knees, cried out, "Convert, convert, O dear brother, for our blessed lady's sake convert!" To which he answered, "I fear neither death nor fire, being prepared for both."
THE first effects Mr. Lithgow felt of the determination of this bloody tribunal was, a sentence to receive that night eleven different tortures, and if he did not die in the execution of them, (which might be reasonably expected from the maimed and [Page 172] disjointed condition he was in) he was, after Easter holidays, to be carried to Grenada, and there burnt to ashes. The first part of the sentence was executed with great barbarity that night; and it pleased God to give him strength both of body and mind, to stand fast to the truth, and to survive the horrid punishments inflicted on him.
AFTER these barbarians had glutted themselves for the present, with exercising on the unhappy prisoner the most distinguished cruelties, they again put irons on, and conveyed him to his former dungeon. The next morning he received some little comfort from the Turkish slave before-mentioned, who secretly brought him in his shirt sleeve, some raisins and figs, which he licked up in the best manner his strength would permit with his tongue. It was to this slave Mr. Lithgow attributed his surviving so long in such a wretched situation; for he found means to convey some of these fruits to him twice every week. It is very extraordinary, and worthy of note, that this poor slave, bred up from his infancy, according to the maxims of his prophet and parents, in the greatest detestation of christians, should be so affected at the miserable situation of Mr. Lithgow, that he fell ill, and continued so for upwards of 40 days. During this period, Mr. Lithgow was attended by a negro woman, a slave, who found means to furnish him with refreshments still more amply than the Turk, being conversant in the house and family. She brought him every day some victuals, and with it some wine in a bottle.
THE time was now so far elapsed, and the horrid situation so truly loathsome, that Mr. Lithgow waited, with anxious expectation for the day▪ which, by putting an end to his life, would also end his torments. But his melancholy expectations were, by the interposition of Providence, happily rendered abortive, and his deliverance obtained from the following circumstances.
IT happened that a Spanish gentleman of quality came from Grenada to Malaga, who being invited to an entertainment by the governor, he informed him of what had happened to Mr. Lithgow, from the time of his being apprehended as a spy, and described the various sufferings he had endured. He likewise told him, that after it was known the prisoner was innocent, it gave him great concern. That on this account he would gladly have released him, restored his money and papers, and made some atonement for the injuries he had received; but that, upon an inspection into his writings, several were found of a very blasphemous nature, highly reflecting on our religion. That on his refusing to abjure these heretical opinions, he was turned over to the inquisition, by whom he was finally condemned.
WHILE the governor was relating this tragical tale, a Flemish youth (servant to the Spanish gentleman) who waited at table, was struck with amazement and pity at the sufferings of the stranger described. On his return to his master's lodgings he began to revolve in his mind what he had heard, which made such an impression on him, that he could not rest in his bed. In the short slumbers he had, his imagination painted to him the person described, on the rack, and burning in the fire. In this anxiety he passed the night; and when the morning came, without disclosing his intentions to any person whatever, he went into the town, and inquired for an English factor. He was directed to the house of one Mr. Wild, to whom he related the whole of what he had heard pass, the preceding evening, between his master and the governor; but could not tell Mr. Lithgow's name. Mr. Wild, however, conjectured it was him, by the servant's remembering the circumstance of his being a traveller, and his having had some acquaintance with him.
ON the departure of the Flemish servant, Mr. Wild immediately sent for the other English factors, to whom he related all the particulars relative to their unfortunate countryman. After a short consultation it was agreed, that an information of the whole affair should be sent, by express, to sir Walter Aston, the English ambassador to the king of Spain, then at Madrid. This was accordingly done, and the ambassador having presented a memorial to the king and council of Spain, he obtained an order for Mr. Lithgow's enlargement, and his delivery to the English factory. This order was directed to the governor of Malaga; and was [Page 173] received with great dislike and surprize by the whole assembly of the bloody inquisition.
MR. Lithgow was released from his confinement on the eve of Easter Sunday, when he was carried from his dungeon on the back of the slave who attended him to the house of one Mr. Busbich, where all proper comforts were given him. It fortunately happened, that there was at this time a squadron of English ships in the road, commanded by sir Richard Hawkins, who being informed of the past sufferings, and present situation of Mr. Lithgow, came the next day a-shore, with a proper guard, and received him from the merchants. He was instantly carried in blankets on board the Vanguard, and three days after was removed to another ship, by direction of the general sir Robert Mansel, who ordered that he should have proper care taken of him. The factory presented him with clothes, and all necessary provisions, besides which they gave him 200 reals in silver; and sir Richard Hawkins sent him two double pistoles.
BEFORE his departure from the Spanish coast, sir Richard Hawkins demanded the delivery of his papers, money, books, &c. but could not obtain any satisfactory answer on that head.
WE cannot help making a pause here to reflect, how manifestly Providence interfered in behalf of this poor man, when he was just on the brink of destru [...]tion; for by his sentence, from which there was [...]o appeal, he would have been taken, in a few days, to Grenada, and burnt to ashes: and that a poor ordinary servant, who had not the least knowledge of him, nor was any ways interested in his preservation, should risque the displeasure of his master, and hazard his own life, to disclose a thing of so momentous and perilous a nature, to a strange gentleman, on whose secrecy depended his own existence. By such secondary means does Providence frequently interfere in behalf of the virtuous and oppressed; of which this is a most distinguished example.
AFTER lying twelve days in the road, the ship weighed anchor, and in about two months arrived safe at Deptford. The next morning Mr. Lithgow was carried on a feather bed to Theobalds, in Hertfordshire, where, at that time, was the king and royal family. His majesty happened to be that day engaged in hunting, but on his return in the evening, Mr. Lithgow was presented to him, and related the particulars of his sufferings, and his happy delivery. The king was so affected at the narrative, that he expressed the deepest concern, and gave orders that he should be sent to Bath, and his wants properly supplied from his royal munificence. By these means, under God, after some time, Mr. Lithgow was restored, from the most wretched spectacle to a great share of health and strength; but he lost the use of his left arm, and several of the smaller bones were so crushed and broken, as to be ever after rendered useless.
NOTWITHSTANDING every effort was used, Mr. Lithgow never obtained any part of his money or effects, though his majesty, and the ministers of state, interested themselves in his behalf. Gondamore, the Spanish ambassador, indeed, promised that all his effects should be restored, with the addition of a 1000l. English money, as some atonement for the tortures he had undergone, which last was to be paid him by the governor of Malaga. These engagements, however, were but mere promises; and though the king was a kind guarantee for the well performance of them, the cunning Spaniard found means to elude the same. He had, indeed, too great a share of influence in the English council during the time of that pacific reign, when England suffered herself to be bullied into slavish compliance by most of the states and kings in Europe.
An Account of the Persecutions in ITALY.
WE shall now enter on an account of the persecutions in Italy, a country which has been, and still is,
1. THE center of popery.
2. THE seat of the pontiff.
3. THE source of the various errors which have spread themselves over other countries, deluded the [Page 174] minds of thousands, and diffused the clouds of superstition and bigotry over the human understanding.
IN pursuing our narrative we shall include the most remarkable persecutions which have happened, and the cruelties which have been practised,
1. BY the immediate order of the pope.
2. THROUGH the power of the inquisition.
3. AT the instigation of particular orders of the clergy.
4. BY the bigotry of the Italian princes.
An Account of the first Persecutions under the PAPACY in ITALY.
IN the 12th century, the first persecutions under the papacy began in Italy, at the time that Adrian, an Englishman, was pope, being occasioned by the following circumstances:
A learned man, and an excellent orator of Brixia, named Arnold, came to Rome, and boldly preached against the corruptions and innovations which had crept into the church. His discourses were so clear, consistent, and breathed forth such a pure spirit of piety, that the senators, and many of the people, highly approved of, and admired his doctrines.
THIS so greatly enraged Adrian, that he commanded Arnold instantly to leave the city, as an heretic. Arnold, however, did not comply, for the senators, and some of the principal people took his part, and resisted the authority of the pope.
ADRIAN now laid the city of Rome under an interdict, which caused the whole body of clergy to interpose; and, at length, persuaded the senators and people to give up the point, and suffer Arnold to be banished. This being agreed to, he received his sentence of exile, and retired to Germany, where he continued to preach against the pope, and to expose the gross errors of the church of Rome.
ADRIAN, on this account, thirsted for his blood, and made several attempts to get him into his hands; but Arnold, for a long time, avoided every s [...]are laid for him. At length, Frederic Barbarossa arriving at the imperial dignity, requested that the pope would crown him with his own hand. This Adrian complied with, and at the same time asked a favour of the emperor, which was to put Arnold into his hands. The emperor very readily delivered up the unfortunate preacher, who soon fell a martyr to Adrian's vengeance, being hanged, and his body burnt to ashes, at Apulia. The same fate attended several of his old friends and companions.
ENCENAS, a Spaniard, was sent to Rome to be brought up in the Roman catholic faith; but having conversed with some of the reformed, and read several treatises which they had put into his hands, he became a protestant. This, at length, being known, one of his own relations informed against him, when he was burnt by order of the pope, and a conclave of cardinals. The brother of Encenas had been taken up much about the same time, for having a New Testament, in the Spanish language, in his possession; but before the time appointed for his execution, he found means to escape out of prison, and retired to Germany.
FANINUS, a learned lay man, by reading controversial books, became of the reformed religion. An information being exhibited against him to the pope, he was apprehended, and cast into prison. His wife, children, relations, and friends, visi [...]d him in his confinement, and so far wrought upon his mind, that he renounced his faith, and obtained his release. But he was no sooner free from confinement, than his mind felt the heaviest of chai [...], the weight of a guilty conscience. His horror [...] were so great, that he found them insupportable, till he had returned from his apostacy, and declared himself fully convinced of the errors of the church of Rome. To make amends for his falling off, he now openly and strenuously did all he could to make converts to protestantism, and was pretty successful in his endeavours. These proceedings occasioned his second imprisonment; but he had his life offered him if he would recant ag [...]in. This proposal he rejected with disdain, saying, [...] [Page 875] he scorned life upon such terms. Being asked why he would obstinately persist in his opinions, and leave his wife and children in distress; he replied, I shall not leave them in distress, I have recommended them to the care of an excellent trustee. What trustee? said the person who had asked the question, with some surprize: to which Faninus answered, Jesus Christ is the trustee I mean, and I think I could not commit them to the care of a better. On the day of execution he appeared remarkably chearful, which one observing, said, It is strange you should appear so merry upon such an occasion, when Jesus Christ himself, just before his death, was in such agonies, that he sweat blood and water. To which Faninus replied: Christ sustained all manner of pangs and conflicts, with hell and death, on our accounts; and thus, by his sufferings, freed those who really believe in him from the fear of them. He was then strangled, and his body being burnt to ashes, they were scattered about by the wind.
DOMINICUS, a learned soldier, having read several controversial writings, became a zealous protestant, and retiring to Placentia, he preached the gospel in its utmost purity, to a very considerable congregation. At the conclusion of his sermon one day, he said, "If the congregation will attend tomorrow, I will give them a description of Anti-Christ, and paint him out in his proper colours."
A vast concourse of people attended the next day; but just as Dominicus was beginning his sermon, a civil magistrate went up to his pulpit, and took him into custody. He readily submitted; but as he went along with the magistrate, made use of this expression: I wonder the devil hath let me alone so long. When he was brought to examination, this question was put to him: Will you renounce your doctrines? To which he replied, My doctrines! I maintain no doctrines of my own; what I preach are the doctrines of Christ, and for those I will forfeit my blood, and even think myself happy to suffer for the sake of my Redeemer. Every method was taken to make him recant from his faith, and embrace the errors of the church of Rome; but when persuasions and menaces were found ineffectual, he was sentenced to death, and hanged in the market-place.
GALEACIUS, a protestant gentleman, who resided near the castle of St. Angelo, was apprehended on account of his faith. Great endeavours being used by his friends he recanted, and subscribed to several of the superstitious doctrines propagated by the church of Rome. Becoming, however, sensible of his error, he publicly renounced his recantation. Being apprehended for this, he was condemned to be burnt; and agreeable to the order, was chained to a stake, where he was left several hours before the fire was put to the faggots, in order that his wife, relations, and friends, who surrounded him, might induce him to give up his op [...]nions. Galeacius, however, now retained his constancy of mind, and intreated the executioner to put fire to the wood that was to burn him. This, at length, he did, and Galeacius was soon consumed in the flames, which burnt with amazing rapidity, and deprived him of sensation in a few minutes.
SOON after this gentleman's death, a great number of protestants were put to death in various parts of Italy, on account of their faith, giving a sure proof of their sincerity in their martyrdoms.
An Account of the Persecutions in CALABRIA.
IN the 14th century, many of the Waldenses of Pragela and Dauphiny emigrated to Calabria, and settling in some waste lands, by the permission of the nobles of that country, they soon, by the most industrious cultivation, made several wild and barren spots appear with all the beauties of verdure and fertility.
THE Calabrian lords were highly pleased with their new subjects and tenants, as they were honest, quiet, and industrious; but the priests of the country exhibited several negative complaints against them; for not being able to accuse them of any thing bad which they did do, they founded accusations on what they did not do, and charged them
WITH not being Roman catholics.
WITH not making any of their boys priests.
[Page 176]WITH not making any of their girls nuns.
WITH not going to mass.
WITH not giving wax tapers to their priests as offerings.
WITH not going on pilgrimages.
WITH not bowing to images.
THE Calabrian lords, however quieted the priests, by telling them, that these people were extremely harmless; that they gave no offence to the Roman catholics, and chearfully paid the tythes to the priests, whose revenues were considerably increased by their coming into the country; and who, of consequence, ought to be the last persons to complain of them.
THINGS went on tolerably well after this for a few years, during which the Waldenses formed themselves into two corporate towns, annexing several villages to the jurisdiction of them. At length, they sent to Geneva for two clergymen; one to preach in each town, as they determined to make a public profession of their faith. Intelligence of this affair being carried to pope Pius the Fourth, he determined to exterminate them from Calabria.
TO this end he sent cardinal Alexandrino, a man of a very violent temper, and a furious bigot, together with two monks, to Calabria, where they were to act as inquisitors. These authorised persons came to St. Xist, one of the towns built by the Waldenses, and having assembled the people, told them, that they should receive no injury, or violence, if they would accept of preachers appointed by the pope; but if they would not, they should be deprived both of their properties and lives; and that their intentions might be known, mass should be publicly said that afternoon, at which they were ordered to attend.
THE people of St. Xist, instead of attending mass, fled into the woods with their families, and thus disappointed the cardinal and his coadjutors. The cardinal then proceeded to La Garde, the other town belonging to the Waldenses, where, not to be served as he had been at St. Xist, he ordered the gates to be locked, and all the avenues guarded. The same proposals were made to the people of La Garde, as had been made to the inhabitants of St. Xist, but with this additional piece of artifice: the cardinal assured them that the inhabitants of St. Xist had immediately come into his proposals, and agreed, that the pope should appoint them preachers. This falsehood succeeded; for the people of La Garde, thinking what the cardinal had told them to be truth, said, they would exactly follow the example of their brethren at St. Xist.
THE cardinal having gained his point by deluding the people of one town, sent for two troops of soldiers, with a view to murder those of the other. He, accordingly, dispatched the soldiers into the woods, to hunt down the inhabitants of St. Xist like wild beasts, and gave them strict orders to spare neither age or sex, but to kill all they came near. The troops entered the woods, and many sell a prey to their ferocity, before the Waldenses were properly apprized of their design. At length, however, they determined to sell their lives as dear as possible, when several conflicts happened, in which the half-armed Waldenses performed prodigies of valour, and many were slain on both sides. The greatest part of the troops being killed in the different rencounters, the rest were compelled to retreat, which so enraged the cardinal, that he wrote to the viceroy of Naples for reinforcements.
THE viceroy immediately ordered a proclamation to be made throughout all the Neopolitan territories, that all out-laws, deserters, and other proscribed persons, should be freely pardoned for their respective offences, on condition of making a campaign against the inhabitants of St. Xist, and continuing under arms till those people were exterminated.
MANY persons, of desperate fortunes, came in upon this proclamation, and being formed into light companies, were sent to scour the woods, and to put to death all they could meet with of the reformed religion. The viceroy himself likewise joined the cardinal, at the head of a body of regular forces; and, in conjunction, they did all they could to harrass the poor people in the woods. [Page]
[Page 177] Some they caught, and hanged up upon trees, cut down boughs, and burnt them, or ripped them open, and left their bodies to be devoured by wild beasts, or birds of prey. Many they shot at a distance, but the gre [...]test number they hunted down by way of sport. A few hid themselves in caves; but famine destroyed them in their retreat; and thus all these poor people perished, by various means, to glut the bigoted malice of their merciless persecutors.
THE inhabitants of St. Xist were no sooner exterminated, than t [...]se of La Garde engaged the attention of the cardinal and viceroy. It was offered, that if they would embrace the Roman catholic persuasion, themselves and families should not be injured, but their houses and properties should be restored, and none would be permitted to molest them; but, on the contrary, if they refused this mercy, (as it was termed) the utmost extremities would be used, and the most cruel deaths the certain consequence of their non-compliance.
NOTWITHSTANDING the promises on one side, and menaces on the other, these worthy people unanimously refused to renounce their religion, or embrace the errors of popery. This exasperated the cardinal and viceroy so much, that 30 of them were ordered to be put immediately to the rack, as a terror to the rest▪
THOSE who were put to the rack were treated with such severity, that several died under the tortures: one Charlin, in particular, was so cruelly used, that his belly burst, his bowels came out, and he expired in the greatest agonies. These barbarities, however, did not answer the purposes for which they were intended; for those who remained alive after the rack, and those who had not felt the rack, remained equally constant in their faith, and boldly declared, that no tortures of body, or terrors of mind, should ever induce them to renounce their God, or worship images.
SEVERAL were then, by the cardinal's order, stripped stark naked, and whipped to death with iron rods; some were hacked to pieces with large knives; others were thrown down from the top of a large tower; and many were covered over with pitch, and burnt alive.
ONE of the monks who attended the cardinal, being naturally of a savage and cruel disposition, requested of him, that he might shed some of the blood of these poor people with his own hands; when his request being granted, the barbarous man took a large, sharp knife, and cut the throats of fourscore men, women, and children, with as little remorse as a butcher woul [...] [...] killed so [...] sheep. Every one of these bodies were then ordered to be quartered, the quarters placed upon stakes, and then fixed in different parts of the country, within a circuit of 30 miles.
THE four principal men of La Garde were hanged, and the clergyman was thrown from the top of his church steeple. He was terribly mangled, but not quite killed by the fall; at which time the viceroy passing by, said, Is the dog yet living? Take him up, and give him to the hogs: when, brutal as this sentence may appear, it was executed accordingly.
SIXTY women were racked so violently, that the cords pierced their arms and legs quite to the bone: when, being remanded to prison, their wounds mortified, and they died in the most miserable manner. Many others were put to death by various cruel means; and if any Roman catholic, more compassionate than the rest, interceded for any of the reformed, he was immediately apprehended, and shared the same fate, as a favourer of heretics.
THE viceroy being obliged to march back to Naples, on some affairs of moment which required his presence, and the cardinal having been recalled to Rome, the marquis of Butiane was ordered to put the finishing stroke to what they had begun; which he, at length, effected, by acting with such barbarous rigour, that there was not a single person of the reformed religion left living in all Calabria.
THUS were a number of inoffensive and harmless people deprived of their possessions, robbed of their property, driven from their homes, and [Page 178] at length, murdered, by various means, only because they would not sacrifice their consciences to the superstitions of others, embrace idolatrous doctrines which they abhorred, and accept of teachers whom they could not believe. Tyranny is of three kinds, viz. That which enslaves the person, that which seizes the property, and that which prescribes and dictates to the mind. The two first sorts may be termed civil tyranny, and have been practised by arbitrary sovereigns in all ages, who have delighted in tormenting the persons, and stealing the properties of their unhappy subjects. But the third sort, viz. prescribing and dictating to the mind, may be called ecclesiastical tyranny: and this is the worst kind of tyranny, as it includes the other two sorts; for the Romish clergy not only torture the bodies, and seize the effects of those they persecute, but take the lives, torment the minds, and, if possible, would tyrannize over the souls of the unhappy victims.
An Account of the Persecutions in the Vallies of Piedmont.
MANY of the Waldenses, to avoid the persecutions to which they were con [...]nually subjected in France, went and settled in the vallies of Piedmont, where they increased exceedingly, and flourished very much for a considerable time.
THOUGH they were harmless in their behaviour, inoffensive in their conversation, and paid tythes to the Romish clergy, yet the latter could not be contented, but wished to give them some disturbance: they, accordingly complained to the archbishop of Turin, that the Waldenses of the vallies of Piedmont were heretics, for these reasons:
1. THAT they did not believe in the doctrines of the church of Rome.
2. THAT they made no offerings for prayers for the dead.
3. THAT they did not go to mass.
4. THAT they did not confess, and receive absolution.
5. THAT that they did not believe in purgatory, or pay money to get the souls of their friends out of it.
UPON these charges the archbishop ordered a persecution to be commenced, and many fell martyrs to the superstitious rage of the priests and monks.
AT Turin, one of the reformed had his bowels torn out, and put in a bason before his face, where they remained, in his view, till he expired. At Revel, Catelin Girard being at the stake, desired the executioner to give him up a stone; which he refused, thinking that he meant to throw it at somebody; but Girard assuring him that he had no such design, the executioner complied: when Girard looking earnestly at the stone, said, When it is in the power of a man to eat and digest this solid stone, the religion for which I am about to suffer shall have an end, and not before. He then threw the stone on the ground, and submitted chearfully to the flames. A great many more of the reformed were oppressed, or put to death, by various means, till the patience of the Waldenses being tired out, they flew to arms in their own defence, and formed themselves into regular bodies.
EXASPERATED at this, the archbishop of Turin procured a number of troops, and sent against them; but in most of the skirmishes and engagements the Waldenses were successful, which partly arose from their being better acquainted with the passes of the vallies of Piedmont than their adversaries, and partly from the desperation with which they fought; for they well knew, if they were taken, they should not be considered as prisoners of war, but should be tortured [...] death as heretics.
AT length, Philip, the seventh duke of Savoy, and supreme lord of Piedmont, determined to interpose his authority, and stop these bloody wars, which so greatly disturbed his dominions. He was not willing to disoblige the pope, or affront the archbishop of Turin: nevertheless he sent them both messages, importing, that he could not any [Page 179] longer see his dominions over-run with troops, who were directed by priests instead of officers, and commanded by prelates in the place of generals; nor would he suffer his country to be depopulated, while he himself had not been even consulted upon the occasion.
THE priests, finding the resolution of the duke, did all they could to prejudice his mind against the Waldenses; but the duke told them, that though he was unacquainted with the religious tenets of these people, yet he had always found them quiet, faithful, and obedient, and therefore he was determined they should be no longer persecuted.
THE priests now had recourse to the most palpable and absurd falsehoods: they assured the duke that he was mistaken in the Waldenses, for they were a wicked set of people, and highly addicted to intemperance, uncleanness, blasphemy, adultery, incest [...] and many other abominable crimes; and that they were even monsters in nature, for their children were born with black throats, with four rows of teeth, and bodies all over hairy.
THE duke was not so devoid of common sense as to give credit to what the priests said, though they affirmed, in the most solemn manner, the truth of their assertions. H [...], however, sent twelve very learned and sensible gentlemen into the Piedmon [...]ese vallies, to examine into the real characters of the inhabitants.
THESE gentlemen, after travelling through all their towns and villages, and conversing with people of every rank among the Waldenses, returned to the duke, and gave him the most favourable account of those people: affirming, before the faces of the priests who vilified them, that they were harmless, inoffensive, loyal, friendly, industrious, and pious: that they abhorred the crimes of which they were accused; and that, should an individual, through depravity, fall into any of those crimes, he would, by their laws, be punished in the most exemplary manner. With respect to the children, the gentlemen said, the priests had told the most [...] and ridiculous falsit [...]es, for they were neither born with black throats, teeth in their mouths, or hair on their bodies, but were as fine children as could be seen. "And to convince your highness of what we have said, (continued one of the gentlemen) we have brought twelve of the principal male inhabitants, who are come to ask pardon in the name of the rest, for having taken up arms without your leave, though even in their own defence, and to preserve their lives from their merciless enemies. And we have likewise brought several women, with children of various ages, that your highness may have an opportunity of personally examining them as much as you please."
THE duke, after accepting the apology of the twelve delegates, con [...]ersing with the women, and examining the children graciously dismissed them. He then commanded the priests, who had attempted to mislead h [...]m, immediately to leave court; and gave strict orders, that the persecution should cease throughout hi [...] dominions.
THE Waldenses had enjoyed peace many years, when Philip, the seventh duke of Savoy, died, and his successor happened to be a very bigoted papist. About the same time, some of the principal Waldenses proposed, that their clergy should preach in public, that every one might know the purity of their doctrines; for hitherto they had preached only in private, and to such congregations as they well knew to consist of none bu [...] persons of the reformed religion.
ON hearing these proceedings, the new duke was greatly exasperated, and sent a considerable body of troops into the vallies, swearing, that if the people would not change their religion, he would have them [...]ead alive. The commander of the troops soon found the impracticability of conquering them with the number of men he had with him▪ he, therefore, sent word to the duke, that the idea of subjugating the Waldenses, with so small a force, was ridiculous; that those people were better acquainted with the country than any that were with him; that they had secured all the passes, were well armed, and resolutely determined to defend themselves; and, with respect to [...]eaing them alive, he said, that every skin belonging to those people [Page 180] would cost him the lives of a dozen of his subjects.
TERRIFIED at this information, the duke withdrew the troops, determining to act not by force, but by stratagem. He, therefore, ordered rewards for the taking of any of the Waldenses, who might be found straying from their places of security; and these, when taken, were either flead alive, or burnt.
THE Waldenses had hitherto only had the New Testament, and a few books of the Old, in the Waldensian tongue; but they determined now to have the sacred writings complete in their own language. They, therefore, employed a Swiss printer to furnish them with a complete edition of the Old and New Testament in the Waldensian tongue, which he did for the consideration of fifteen hundred crowns of gold, paid him by those pious people.
Pope Paul the Third, a bigoted papist, ascending the pontifical chair, immediately solicited the parliament of Turin to persecute the Waldenses, as the most pernicious of all heretics.
THE parliament readily agreed, when several were suddenly apprehended and burnt, by their order. Among these was Bartholomew Hector, a bookseller and stationer at Turin, who was brought up a Roman catholic, but having read some treatises written by the reformed clergy, he was fully convinced of the errors of the church of Rome; yet his mind was, for some time, wavering, and he hardly knew what persuasion to embrace.
AT length, however, he fully embraced the reformed religion, and was apprehended, as we have already mentioned, and burnt by order of the parliament of Turin.
A consultation was now held by the parliament of Turin, in which it was agreed, to send deputies to the vallies of Piedmont, with the following propositions:
1. THAT if the Waldenses would come to the bosom of the church of Rome, and embrace the Roman catholic religion, they should enjoy their houses, properties, and lands, and live with their families, without the least molestation.
2. THAT to prove their obedience, they should send twelve of their principal persons, with all their ministers and school-masters, to Turin, to be dealt with at discretion.
3. THAT the pope, the king of France, and the duke of Savoy, approved of, and authorized the the proceedings of the parliament of Turin, upon this occasion.
4. THAT if the Waldenses of the vallies of Piedmont refused to comply with these propositions, persecution should ensue, and certain death be their portion.
TO each of these propositions the Waldenses nobly replied in the following manner, answering them respectively.
1. THAT no considerations whatever should make them renounce their religion.
2. THAT they would never consent to commit their best and most respectable friends, to the custody and discretion of their worst and most inveterate enemies.
3. THAT they valued the approbation of the King of kings, who reigns in heaven, more than any temporal authority.
4. THAT their souls were more precious th [...] their bodies.
THESE pointed and spirited replies greatly exasperated the parliament of Turin: they continued, with more avidity than ever, to kidnap such Waldenses as did not act with proper precaution, who were sure to suffer the most cruel deaths. Among these it unfortunately happened, that they got hold of Jeffery Varnagle, minister of Angrogne, whom they committed to the flames as an heretic.
THEY then solicited a considerable body of troops of the king of France, in order to exterminate the reformed, entirely, from the vallies of [Page 181] Piedmont; but just as the troops were going to march, the protestant princes of Germany interposed, and threatened to send troops to assist the Waldenses, if they should be attacked. The king of France, not caring to enter into a war, remanded the troops, and sent word to the parliament of Turin, that he could not spare any troops at present to act in Piedmont. The members of the parliament were greatly vexed at this disappointment, and the persecution gradually ceased; for as they could only put to death such of the reformed as they caught by chance, and as the Waldenses daily grew more cautious, their cruelty was obliged to subside, for want of objects on whom to exercise it.
AFTER the Waldenses had enjoyed a few years tranquility, they were again disturbed by the following means: the pope's nuncio coming to Turin to the duke of Savoy upon business, told that prince, he was astonished he had not yet either rooted out the Waldenses from the val [...]ies of Piedmont entirely, or compelled them to enter into the bosom of the church of Rome. That he could not help looking upon such conduct with a suspicious eye, and that he really thought him a favourer of those heretics, and should report the affair accordingly to his holiness the pope.
STUNG by this reflection, and unwilling to be misrepresented to the pope, the duke determined to act with the greatest severity, in order to shew his zeal, and to make amends for former neglect by future cruelty. He, accordingly, [...]ssued express orders for all the Waldenses to attend mass regularly, on pain of death. This they absolutely refused to do, on which he entered the Piedmontese vallies, with a formidable body of troops▪ and began a most furious persecution, in which great numbers were hanged, drowned, ripped open, tied to trees, and pierced with prongs, thrown from pricipices, burnt, stabbed, racked to death, crucified with their heads downwards, worried by dogs, &c.
THOSE who fled had their goods plundered, and their houses burnt to the ground: they were particularly cruel when they caught a minister or a school-master, whom they put to such exquisite tortures, as are almost incredible to conceive. If any whom they took seemed wavering in their faith, they did not put them to death, but sent them to the gallies, to be made converts by dint of hardships.
THE most cruel persecutors, upon this occasion, that attended the duke, were three in number, viz. 1. Thomas Incomel, an apostate; for he was brought up in the reformed religion, but renounced his faith, embraced the errors of popery, and turned monk. He was a great libertine, given to unnatural crimes, and sordidly solicitous for the plunder of the Waldenses. 2. Corbis, a man of a very ferocious and cruel nature, whose business it was to examine the prisoners. 3. The provost of justice, who was very anxious for the execution of the Waldenses, as every execution put money into his pocket.
THESE three persons were unmerciful to the last degree; and wherever they came, the blood of the innocent was sure to flow. Exclusive of the cruelties exercised by the duke, by these three persons, and the army, in their different marches, many local barbarities were committed. At Pignerol, a town in the vallies, was a monastery, the monks of which [...] they might injure the reformed with impunity, began to plunder the houses, and pull down the churches of the Waldenses. Not meeting with any opposition, they next seized upon the persons of those unhappy people, murdering the men, confining the women, and putting the children to Roman catholic nurses.
THE Roman catholic inhabitants of the valley of St. Martin, likewise, did all they could to torment the neighbouring Waldenses: they destroyed their churches, burnt their houses, seized their properties, stole their cattle, converted their lands to their own use, committed their ministers to the flames, and drove the Waldenses to the woods, where they had nothing to subsist on but wild fruits, roots, the bark of trees, &c.
SOME Roman catholic ruffians having seized a minister as he was going to preach, determined to take him to a convenient place, and burn him. His parishioners having intelligence of the affair, the men armed themselves, pursued the ruffians, and seemed determined to rescue their minister; [Page 182] which the ruffians no sooner perceived, than th [...] stabbed the poor gentleman, and leaving him [...] tering in his blood, made a precipitate retr [...]. The astonished parishioners did all they could to recover him, but in vain; for the weapon [...] touched the vital parts, and he expired as they were carrying him home.
THE monks of Pignerol having a great inclination to get a minister of a town in the vallies, called St. Germain into their power, hired a band of ruffians for the purpose of apprehending him. These fellows were conducted by a treacherous person, who had formerly been a servant to the clergyman, and who perfectly well knew a secret way to the house, by which he could lead them without alarming the neighbourhood. The guide knocked at the door, and being asked who was there, answered in his own name. The clergyman, not expecting any injury from a person on whom he had heaped favours, immediately opened the door; but perceiving the ruffians, he started back, and fled to a back door; but they rushed in, followed and seized him. Having murdered all his family, they made him proceed towards Pignerol, goading him all the way with pikes, lances, swords, &c. He was kept a considerable time in prison, and then fastened to the stake to be burnt; when two women of the Waldenses, who had renounced their religion to save their lives, were ordered to carry faggots to the stake to burn him; and as they laid them down, to say, Take these, thou wicked heretic, in recompence for the pernicious doctrines thou hast taught us. These words they both repeated to him: to which he calmly replied, I formerly taught you well, but you have since learned ill. The fire was then put to the faggots, and he was speedily consumed, calling upon the name of the Lord as long as his voice permitted.
AS the troops of ruffians, belonging to the monks, did great mischief about the town of St. Germain, murdering and plundering many of the inhabitants, the reformed of Lucerne and Angrogne sent some bands of armed men to the assistance of their brethren of St. Germain. These bodies of armed men frequently attacked the ruffians, and often put them to the rout, which so terrified the monks, that they left their monastery of Pignerol for some time, till they could procure a body of regular troops to guard them.
THE duke, not thinking himself so successful as he at first imagined he should be, greatly augmented his forces; ordered the bands of ruffians, belonging to the monks, should join him; and commanded, that a general gaol delivery should take place, provided the persons released would bear arms, and form themselves into light companies, to assist in the extermination of the Waldenses.
THE Waldenses, being informed of these proceedings, secured as much of their properties as they could, and quitting the vallies, retired to the rocks and caves among the Alps; for it is to be understood, that the vallies of Piedmont are situated at the foot of those prodigious mountains, called the Alps, or the Alpine Hills.
THE army now began to plunder and burn the towns and villages wherever they came; but the troops could not force the passes to the Alps, which were gallantly defended by the Waldenses, who always repulsed their enemies; but if any fell into the hands of the troops, they were sure to be treated with the most barbarous severity.
A soldier having caught one of the Waldenses, bit his right ear off, saying, I will carry this member of that wicked heretic with me into my own country, and preserve it as a rarity He then stabbed the man, and threw him into a ditch.
A party of the troops found a venerable man upwards of an hundred years of age, together with his grand-daughter, a maiden, of about eighteen, in a cave. They butchered the poor old man in a most inhuman manner, and then attempted to ravish the girl, when she started away, and fled from them; but they pursuing her, she threw herself from a precipice, and perished.
THE Waldenses, in order the more effectually to be able to repel force by force, entered into a league with the protestant powers in Germany, and with the reformed of Dauphiny and Pragels. These were, respectively to furnish bodies of [Page 183] troops; and the Waldenses determined, when thus reinforced, to quit the mountains of the Alps, (where they must soon have perished, as the winter was coming on) and to force the duke's army to evacuate their native vallies.
THE duke of Savoy was now tired of the war; it had cost him great fatigue and anxiety of mind, a vast number of men, and very considerable sums of money. It had been much more tedious and bloody than he expected, as well as more expensive than he could at first have imagined, for he thought the plunder would have discharged the expences of the expedition; but in this he was mistaken, for the pope's nuncio, the bishops, monks, and other ecclesiastics, who attended the army and encouraged the war, sunk the greatest part of the wealth that was taken under various pretences. For these reasons, and the death of his duchess, of which he had just received intelligence, and fearing that the Waldenses, by the treaties they had entered into, would become more powerful than ever, he determined to return to Turin with his army, and to make peace with the Waldenses.
THIS resolution he executed, though greatly against the will of the ecclesiastics, who were the chief gainers, and the best pleased with revenge. Before the articles of peace could be ratified, the duke himself died soon after his return to Turin; but on his death-bed he strictly enjoined his son to perform what he had intended, and to be as favourable as possible to the Waldenses.
THE duke's son▪ Charles Emanuel, succeeded to the dominions of Savoy, and gave a full ratification of the peace to the Waldenses, according to the last injunctions of his [...]ther, though the ecclesiastics did all they could to persuade him to the contrary.
An Account of the Persecutions in Venice.
WHILE the state of Venice was free from inquisitors, a great number of protestants fixed their residence there, and many converts were made by the purity of the doctrines they professed, and the inoffensiveness of the conversation they used.
THE pope being informed of the great increase of protestantism, in the year 1542 sent inquisitors to Venice, to make an inquiry into the matter, and apprehend such as they might deem obnoxious persons. Hence a severe persecution began, and many worthy persons were martyred for serving God with purity, and scorning the trappings of idolatry.
VARIOUS were the modes by which the protestants were deprived of life; but one particular method, which was first invented upon this occasion, we shall describe: as soon as sentence was passed, the prisoner had an iron chain, which ran through a great stone, fastened to his body. He was then laid flat upon a plank, with his face upwards, and rowed between two boats to a certain distance at sea, when the boats separated, and he was sunk to the bottom by the weight of the stone.
IF any denied the jurisdiction of the inquisitors at Venice, they were sent to Rome, where, being committed purposely to damp prisons, and never called to an hearing, their flesh mortified, and they died miserably in gaol.
A citizen of Venice, Anthony Ricetti, being apprehended as a protestant, was sentenced to be drowned in the manner we have already described. A few days previous to the time appointed for his execution, his son went to him, and begged him to recant, that his life might be saved, and himself not left fatherless. To which the father replied, A good christian is bound to relinquish not only goods and children, but life itself for the glory of his Redeemer: therefore I am resolved to sacrifice every thing in this transitory world, for the sake of salvation in a world that will last to eternity. The lord [...] of Venice likewise sent him word, that if he would embrace the Roman catholic religion, they would not only give him his life, but redeem a considerable estate which he had mortgaged, and freely present him with it. This, however, he absolutely refused to comply with, sending word to the nobles, that he valued his soul beyond all other considerations; and being told that a fellow-prisoner, [Page 184] named Francis Sega, had recanted, he answered, If he has forsaken God, I pity him; but I shall continue stedfast in my duty. Finding all endeavours to persuade him to renounce his faith ineffectual, he was executed according to his sentence, dying chearfully, and recommending his soul fervently to the Almighty.
WHAT Ricetti had been told concerning the apostacy of Francis Sega was absolutely false, for he had never offered to recant, but stedfastly persisted in his faith: and was executed, a few days after Ricetti, in the very same manner.
FRANCIS Spinola, a protestant gentleman of very great learning, being apprehended by order of the inquisitors, was carried before their tribunal. A treatise on the Lord's Supper was then put into his hands, and he was asked if he knew the author of it. To which he replied, I confess myself to be the author of it, and at the same time solemnly affirm, that there is not a line in it but what is authorized by, and consonant to, the holy scriptures. On this confession he was committed close prisoner to a dungeon for several days.
BEING brought to a second examination, he charged the pope's legate, and the inquisitors, with being merciless barbarians, and then represented the superstitions and idolatries practised by the church of Rome in so glaring a light, that not being able to refuse his arguments, they sent him back to his dungeon, to make him repent of what he had said.
ON his third examination, they asked him if he would recant his errors? To which he answered, That the doctrines he maintained were not erroneous, being purely the s [...]me as those which Christ and his apostles had taught, and which were handed down to us in the Sacred Writings. The inquisitors then sentenced him to be drowned, which was executed in the manner already described. He went to meet death with the utmost serenity, seeming to wish for dissolution, and declaring, that the prolongation of this life did but tend to retard that real happiness which could be only expected in the world to come.
An Account of several remarkable Individuals, who were martyred in different parts of Italy, on Account of their Religion,
JOHN MOLLIUS was born at Rome, of reputable parents. At twelve years of age they placed him in the monastery of Grey Friars, where he made such a rapid progress in arts, sciences, and languages, that at eighteen years of age he was permitted to take priest's orders.
HE was then sent to Ferrara, where, after pursuing his studies six years longer, he was made theological reader in the university of that city. He now, unhappily, exerted his great talents to disguise the gospel truths, and to varnish over the errors of the church of Rome. After some years residence at Ferrara, he removed to the university of Bononia, where he became a professor. Having read some treatises written by ministers of the reformed religion, he grew fully sensible of the errors of popery, and soon became a zealous protestant in his heart.
HE now determined to expound, according to the purity of the gospel, St. Paul's epistle to the Romans, in a regular course of sermons. The concourse of people that continually [...] his preaching was surprizing; but when the priests found the tenor of his doctrines, they dispatched an account of the affair to Rome; when the pope sent a monk, named Cornelius, to Bononia, to expound the same epistle, according to the tenets of the church of Rome. The people, however, found such a disparity between the two preachers, that the audience of Mollius increased, and Cornelius was forced to preach to empty benches.
CORNELIUS wrote an account of his bad success to the pope, who immediately sent an order to apprehend Mollius, who was seized upon accordingly, and kept in close confinement. The bishop of Bononia sent him word, that he must recant, or be burnt: but he appealed to Rome, and was removed thither.
AT Rome he begged to have a public trial, but that the pope absolutely denied him, and commanded [Page 185] him to give an account of his opinions in writing, which he did under the following heads:
- Original sin.
- Free-will.
- The infallibility of the church of Rome.
- The infal [...]ility of the pope.
- Justification by faith.
- Purgatory.
- Transubstantiation.
- Mass.
- Auricular confession.
- Prayers for the dead.
- The host.
- Prayers to saints.
- Going on pilgrimages.
- Extreme unction.
- Performing service in an unknown tongue, &c.
AND all these he confirmed from scripture authority. The pope, upon this occasion, for political reasons, spared him for the present, but soon after had him apprehended, and put to death; he being first hanged, and his body burnt to ashes, A. D. 1553.
THE year after Francis Gamba, a Lombard, of the protestant persuasion, was apprehended, and condemned to death by the senate of Milan. At the place of execution, a monk presented a cross to him; to whom he said, My mind is so full of the real merits and goodness of Christ, that I want not a piece of senseless stick to put me in mind of him. For this expression his tongue was bored through, and he was afterwards burnt.
A. D. 1555, Algerius, a student in the university of Padua, and a man of great learning, having embraced the reformed religion, did all he could to convert others. For these proceedings he was accused of heresy to the pope, and being apprehended, was comitted to the prison at Venice, where being allowed the use of pen, ink, and paper, he wrote to his converts at Padua the following celebrated epistle:
LETTER From AL [...]IUS to his Converts at Padua.
I Cannot omit this opportunity of letting you know the [...] pleasure I feel in my confinement; to suffer for Christ [...] delectable, indeed; to undergo a little transitory pain in this world, for his sake, is cheaply purchasing a reversion of eternal glory, in a life that is everlasting.
HENCE, I have found honey in the entrails of a lion; a paradise in a prison; tranquillity in the house of sorrow: where others weep, I rejoice; where others tremble and faint, I find strength and courage. The Almighty alone confers these favours on me; be his the glory and the praise.
HOW different do I find myself from what I was before I embraced the truth in its purity; I was then dark, doubtful, and in dread; I am now enlightened, certain, and full of joy. He that was far from me is present with me; he comforts my spirit, heals my griefs, strengthens my mind, refreshes my heart, and fortifies any soul. Learn, therefore, how merciful and amiable the Lord is, who supports his servants under temptations, expels their sorrows, lightens their afflictions, and even visits them with his glorious presence, in the gloom of a dismal dungeon.
THE pope, being informed of Algerius's great learning, and surprizing natural abilities, thought it would be of infinite service to the church of Rome, if he could induce him to forsake the protestant cause. He, therefore, sent for him to Rome, and tried, by the most profane promises, to win him to his purpose. But finding his endeavours ineffectual he ordered him to be burnt, which sentence was executed accordingly.
A. D. 1559, John A [...]loysius, being sent from Geneva to preach in Calabria, was there apprehended as a protestant, carried to Rome, and burnt by order of the pope▪ and James Bovellus, for the same reason, was burnt at Messina.
A. D. 1560, pope Pius the Fouth ordered all the protestants to be severely persecuted throughout the Italian states, when great numbers of every age, sex, and condition, suffered martyrdom. Concerning the cruelties practised upon this occasion, a learned and humane Roman catholic thus speaks of them, in a letter to a noble lord. "I cannot, my lord, forbear disclosing my sentiments, with [Page 186] respect to the persecution now carrying on: I think it cruel and unnecessary; I tremble at the manner of putting to death, as it resembles more the slaughter of calves and sheep, than the execution of human beings. I will relate to your lordship a dreadful scene, of which I was myself an eye-witness: seventy protestants were cooped up in one filthy dungeon together; the executioner went in among them, picked out one from among the rest, blindfolded him, led him out to an open place before the prison, and cut his throat with the greatest composure. He then calmly walked into the prison again, bloody as he was, and with the knife in his hand selected another, and dispatched him in the same manner; and this, my lord, he repeated till the whole number were put to death. I leave it to your lordship's feelings to judge of my sensations upon the occasion; my tears now wash the paper upon which I give you the recital. Another thing I must mention, the patience with which they met death: they seemed all resignation and piety, fervently praying to God, and chearfully encountering their fate. I cannot reflect without shuddering, how the executioner held the bloody knife between his teeth; what a dreadful figure he appeared, all covered with blood, and with what unconcern he executed his barbarous office."
A young Englishman who happened to be at Rome, was one day passing by a church, when the procession of the host was just coming out. A bishop carried the host, which the young man perceiving, he snatched it from him, threw it on the ground, and trampled it under his feet, crying out, Ye wretched idolaters, that neglect the true God to adore a morsel of bread. This action so provoked the people, that they would have torn him to pieces upon the spot; but the priests persuaded them to let him abide by the sentence of the pope.
WHEN the affair was represented to the pope, he was so greatly exasperated that he ordered the prisoner to be burnt immediately; but a cardinal dissuaded him from this hasty sentence, saying, it was better to punish him by slow degrees, and to torture him, that they might find out if he had been instigated by any particular person to commit so atrocious an act.
THIS being approved, he was tortured with the most exemplary severity, notwithstanding which they could only get these words from him, It was the will of God that I should do what I did.
THE pope then past this sentence upon him:
1. THAT he should be led, by the executioner, naked to the middle, through the streets of Rome.
2. THAT he should wear the image of the devil upon his head.
3. THAT his breeches should be painted with the representation of flames.
4. THAT he should have his right hand cut off.
5. THAT after having been carried about thus in procession, he should be burnt.
WHEN he heard his sentence pronounced, he implored God to give him strength and fortitude to go through it. As he passed through the streets he was greatly derided by the people, to whom he said some severe things respecting the Romish superstition. But a cardinal, who attended the procession, over-hearing him, ordered him to be gagged.
WHEN he came to the church door, where he trampled on the host, the hangman cut off his right hand, and fixed it on a pole. Then two tormentors, with flaming torches, scorched and burnt his flesh all the rest of the way. At the place of execution he kissed the chains that were to bind him to the stake. A monk presenting the figure of a saint to him, he struck it aside, and then being chained to the stake, fire was put to the faggots, and he was soon burnt to ashes.
A little after the last mentioned execution, a venerable old man, who had long been a prisoner in the inquisition, was condemned to be burnt, and brought out for execution. When he was fastened to the stake, a priest held a crucifix to him, on which he said, "If you do not take that idol from my sight, you will constrain me to spit upon it." The priest rebuked him for this with great severity; [Page 187] but he bade him remember the first and second commandments, and refrain from idolatry, as God himself had commanded. He was then gagged, that he should not speak any more, and fire being put to the faggots, he suffered martyrdom in the flames.
An Account of the Persecutions in the Marquisate of SALUCES.
THE marquisate of Saluces, on the south side of the vallies of Piedmont, was in A. D. 1561, principally inhabited by protestants; when the marquis, who was proprietor of it, began a persecution against them at the the instigation of the then pope. He began by banishing the ministers, and if any of them refused to leave their flocks they were sure to be imprisoned, and severely tortured; however, he did not proceed so far as to put any to death.
SOON after the marquisate fell into the possession of the duke of Savoy, who sent circular letters to all the towns and villages, that he expected the people would all conform to go to mass.
THE inhabitants of Saluces, upon receiving this letter, returned for answer the following general epistle.
WE humbly intreat your permission to continue in the practice of the religion which we have always professed, and which our fathers have professed before us. In this we shall acquit our consciences, without offending any; for we are sensible that our religion is founded on the holy scriptures, by whose precepts we are commanded not to injure our neighbours.
"WE likewise implore your protection; for as Jews, infidels, and other enemies to Christ, are suffered to live in your dominions unmolested, we hope the same indulgence may be granted to christians, whose very faith obliges them to be harmless, honest, inoffensive, and loyal.
THE duke, after reading this letter, did not interrupt the protestants for some time; but, at length, he sent them word, that they must either conform to go to mass, or leave his dominions in fifteen days. The protestants, upon this unexpected edict, sent a deputy to the duke to obtain its revocation, or at least to have it moderated. But their remonstrances were in vain, and they were given to understand that the edict was absolute.
SOME were weak enough to go to mass, in order to avoid banishment, and preserve their property; others removed, with all their effects to different countries; and many neglected the time so long, that they were obliged to abandon all they were worth, and leave the marquisate in haste. Those, who unhappily staid behind, were seized, plundered, and put to death.
An Account of the Persecutions in the Vallies of Piedmont, in the seventeenth Century.
POPE Clement the Eighth sent missionaries into the vallies of Piedmont, to induce the protestants to renounce their religion; and these missionaries having erected monasteries in several parts of the vallies, became exceedingly troublesome to those of the reformed, where the monasteries appeared not only as fortresses to curb, but as sanctuaries for all such to fly to, as had any ways injured them.
THE protestants petitioned the duke of Savoy against these missionaries, whose insolence and illusage were become intolerable; but instead of getting any redress, the interest of the missionaries so [Page 188] far prevailed, that the duke published a decree, in which he declared, that one witness should be sufficient in a court of law against a protestant; and that any witness, who convicted a protestant of any crime whatever should be entitled to an hundred crowns.
IT may be easily imagined, upon the publication of a decree of this nature, that many protestants fell martyrs to perjury and avarice; for several villainous papists would swear any thing against the protestants for the sake of the reward, and then fly to their own priests for absolution from their false oaths. If any Roman catholic, of more conscience than the rest, blamed these fellows for their atrocious crimes, they themselves were in danger of being informed against, and punished as favourers of heretics.
THE missionaries did all they could to get the books of the protestants into their power, in order to burn them; when the protestants doing their utmost endeavours to conceal their books, the missionaries wrote to the duke of Savoy, who, for the heinous crime of not surrendering their bibles, prayer-books, and religious treatises, sent a number of troops to be quartered on them. These military gentry did great mischief in the houses of the protestants, and destroyed such quantities of provisions, that many families were thereby entirely ruined.
TO encourage, as much as possible, the apostacy of the protestants, the duke of Savoy published a proclamation, wherein he said, "To encourage the heretics to turn catholics, it is our will and pleasure, and we do hereby expressly command, that all such as shall embrace the holy Roman faith, shall enjoy an exemption from all and every tax for the space of five years, commencing from the day of their conversion." The duke of Savoy likewise established a court, called, The council for extirpating the heretics. This court was to enter into inquiries concerning the ancient privileges of the protestant churches, and the decrees which had been, from time to time, made in favour of the protestants. But the investigation of these things was carried on with the most manifest partiality; old charters were [...] to a wrong sense, [...] was used to pervert the meaning of every thing, which tended to favour the reformed.
AS if these severities were not sufficient, the duke, soon after, published another edict, in which he strictly commanded, that no protestant should act as a school-master, or tutor, either in public or private, or dare to teach any art, science, or language, directly or indirectly, to persons of any persuasion whatever.
THIS edict was immediately followed by another, which decreed, that no protestant should hold any place of profit, trust, or honour; and to wind up the whole, the certain token of approaching persecution came forth in a final edict, by which it was positively ordered, that all protestants should diligently attend mass.
THE publication of an edict, containing such an injunction, may be compared to unfurling the bloody flag; for murder and rapine were certain to follow. One of the first objects that attracted the notice of the papists, was Mr. Sebastian Basan, a zealous protestant, who was seized by the missionaries, confined, tormented for fifteen months, and then burnt.
PREVIOUS to the persecution, the missionaries employed kidnappers to steal away the protestants children, that they might privately be brought up Roman Catholics; but now they took away the children by open force, and if they met with any resistance, murdered the parents.
TO give greater vigour to the persecution, the duke of Savoy called a general assembly of the Roman catholic nobility and gentry, when a solemn edict was published against the reformed, containing many heads, and including several reasons for extirpating the protestants; among which were the following:
1. FOR the preservation of the papal authority.
2. THAT the church livings may be all under one mode of government.
3. TO make an union among all parties.
[Page 189]IN honor of all the saints, and of the ceremonies of the church of Rome.
THIS severe edict was followed by a most cruel order, published on January 25, A. D. 1655, under the duke's sanction, by Andrew Gastaldo, doctor of civil laws. This order set forth, "That every head of a family, with the individuals of that family, of the reformed religion, of what rank, degree, or condition soever, none excepted, inhabiting and possessing estates in Lucerne, St. Giovanni, Bibiana, Campiglione, St. Secondo, Lucernetta, La Torre, Fenile, and Bricherassio, should, within three days after the publication thereof, withdraw and depart, and be withdrawn out of the said places, and translated into the places and limits tolerated by his highness during his pleasure; particularly Bobbio, Angrogna, Villaro, Rorata, and the county of Bonetti.
"AND all this to be done on pain of death, and confiscation of house and goods, unless within the limited time they turned Roman catholics."
A flight, with such speed, in the midst of winter, may be conceived as no agreeable task, especially in a country almost surrounded by mountains. The sudden order affected all, and things, which would have been scarcely noticed at another time, now appeared in the most conspicuous light. Women with child, or women just lain-in, were not objects of pity on this order for sudden removal, for all were included in the command; and it unfortunately happened, that the winter was remarkably severe and rigorous.
THE papists, however, drove the people from their habitations at the time appointed, without even suffering them to have sufficient clothes to cover them; and many perished in the mountains through the severity of the weather, or for want of food. Some, however, who remained behind after the decree was published, met with the several treatment, being murdered by the popish inhabitants, or shot by the troops who were quartered in the vallies. A particular description of these cruelties is given in a letter, written by a protestant, who was upon the spot, and who happily escaped the carnage. "The army (says he) having got footing, became very numerous, by the addition of a multitude of the neighbouring popish inhabitants, who finding we were the destined prey of the plunderers, fell upon us with an impetuous fury. Exclusive of the duke of Savoy's troops, and the popish inhabitants, there were several regiments of French auxiliaries, some companies belonging to the Irish brigades, and several bands formed of outlaws, smugglers and prisoners, who had been promised pardon and liberty in this world, and absolution in the next, for assisting to exterminate the protestants from Piedmont.
"THIS armed multitude being encouraged by the Roman catholic bishops and monks, fell upon the protestants in a most furious manner. Nothing now was to be seen but the face of horror and despair; blood stained the floors of the houses, dead bodies bestrewed the streets, groans and cries were heard from all parts. Some armed themselves, and skirmished with the troops; and many, with their families▪ fled to the mountains. In one village they cruelly tormented 150 women and children after the men were fled, beheading the women, and dashing out the brains of the children. In the towns of Villaro and Bobbio, most of those that refused to go to mass, who were upwards of fifteen years of age, they crucified with their heads downwards; and the greater number of those who were under that age were strangled."
SARAH RASTIGNOLE DES VIGNES, a woman of 60 years of age, being seized by some soldiers, they ordered her to say a prayer to some saints; which she refusing, they thrust a fickle into her belly, ripped her up, and then cut off her head.
MARTHA CONSTANTINE, a handsome young woman, was treated with great indecency and cruelty by several of the troops, who first ravished, and then killed her, by cutting off her breasts. These they fried, [...]nd set before some of their comrades, who eat them without knowing what they were. When they had done eating, the others told them what they had made a meal of, in consequence of which a quarrel ensued, swords were drawn, and a battle took place. Several were killed in the fray, the greater part of whom were those concerned in the horrid massacre of the woman, and who had practised such an inhuman deception on their companions.
[Page 190]SOME of the soldiers seized a man at Thrassiniere, and ran the points of their swords through his ears, and through his feet. They then tore off the nails of his fingers and toes with red-hot pincers, tied him to the tail of an ass, and dragged him about the streets; and finally, fastened a cord round his head, which they twisted with a stick in so violent a manner as to wring it from his body.
PETER SIMONDS, a protestant, of about eighty years of age, was tied neck and heels, and then thrown down a precipice. In the fall the branch of a tree caught hold of the ropes that fastened him, and suspended him in the mid-way, so that he languished for several days, and at length miserably perished of hunger.
ESAY GARCINO, refusing to renounce his religion, was cut into small pieces; the soldiers, in ridicule, saying, they had minced him. A woman, named Armand, had every limb separated from each other, and then the respective parts were hung upon a hedge. Two old women were ripped open, and left in the fields upon the snow, where they perished; and a very old woman, who was deformed, had her nose and hands cut off, and was left to bleed to death in that manner.
A great number of men, women, and children were flung from the rocks, and dashed to pieces. Magdalen Bertino, a protestant woman of La Torre, was stripped stark naked, her head tied between her legs, and thrown down one of the precipices; and Mary Raymondet, of the same town, had her flesh sliced from her bones till she expired.
MAGDALEN PILOT, of Villaro, was cut to pieces in the cave of Castolus; Ann Charboniere had one end of a stake thrust up her body; and the other end being fixed in the ground, she was left in that manner to perish; and Jacob Perrin the elder, of the church of Villaro, and David, his brother, were flead alive.
AN inhabitant of La Torre, named Giovanni Andrea Michialin, was apprehended, with four of his children; three of them were hacked to pieces before him, the soldiers asking him, at the death of every child, if he would renounce his religion? which he constantly refused. One of the soldiers then took up the last and youngest by the legs, and putting the same question to the father, he replied as before, when the inhuman brute dashed out the child's brains. The father, however, at the same moment started from them, and fled: the soldiers fired after him, but missed him; and he, by the swiftness of his heels, escaped, and hid himself in the Alps.
Farther Persecutions in the Vallies of PIEDMONT, in the seventeenth Century.
GIGOVANNI PELANCHION, for refusing to turn papist, was tied by one leg to the tail of a mule, and dragged through the streets of Lucerne, amidst the acclamations of an inhuman mob, who kept stoning him, and crying out, He is possessed with the devil, so that neither stoning, nor dragging him through the streets, will kill him, for the devil keeps him alive. They then took him to the river side, chopped off his head, and left that and his body unburied, upon the bank of the stream.
MAGDALEN, the daughter of Peter Fontaine, a beautiful child of 10 years of age, was ravished and murdered by the soldiers. Another girl of about the same age, they roasted alive at Villa Nova; and a poor woman hearing the soldiers were coming towards her house, snatched up the cradle in which her infant son was asleep, and fled towards the woods. The soldiers, however, saw and pursued her, when she lightened herself by putting down the cradle and child, which the soldiers no sooner came to, than they murdered the infant, and continuing the pursuit, found the mother in a cave, where they first ravished, and then cut her to pieces.
JACOPO MICHELINO, chief elder of the church of Bobbio, and several other protestants, were hung up by means of hooks fixed in their bellies, and left to expire in the most excruciating tortures.
GIOVANNI ROSTAGNAL, a venerable protestant, upwards of fourscore years of age, had his nose and ears cut off, and slices cut from the fleshy parts of his body, till he bled to death.
[Page 191]SEVEN persons, viz. Daniel Saleagio and his wife, Giovanni Durant, Lodwich Durant, Bartholomew Durant, Daniel Revel, and Paul Reynaud, had their mouths stuffed with gunpowder, which being set fire to, their heads were blown to pieces.
JACOB BIRONE, a school-master of Rorata, for refusing to change his religion, was stripped quite naked; and after having been very indecently exposed, had the nails of his toes and fingers torn off with red hot pincers, and holes bored through his hands with the point of a dagger. He then had a cord tied round his middle, and was led through the streets with a soldier on each side of him. At every turning the soldier on his right hand side cut a gash in his flesh, and the soldier on his left-hand side struck him with a bludgeon, both saying, at the same instant, Will you go to mass? Will you go to mass? He still replied in the negative to these interrogatories, and being at length taken to the bridge, they cut off his head on the balustrades, and threw both that and his body into the river.
PAUL GARNIER, a very pious protestant, had his eyes put out, was then flead alive, and being divided into four parts, his quarters were placed on four of the principal houses of Lucerne. He bore all his sufferings with the most exemplary patience, praised God as long as he could speak, and plainly evinced, what confidence and resignation a good conscience can inspire.
DANIEL CARDON, of Rocappiata, being apprehended by some soldiers, they cut his head off, and having fried his brains, eat them. Two poor old blind women, of St. Giovanni, were burnt alive; and a widow of La Torre, with her daughter were driven into the river, and there stoned to death.
PAUL GILES, on attempting to run away from some soldiers, was shot in the neck: they then slit his nose, sliced his chin, stabbed him, and gave his carcase to the dogs.
SOME of the Irish troops having taken eleven men of Garcigliana prisoners, they made a furnace red-hot, and forced them to push each other in till they came to the last man, whom they pushed in themselves.
MICHAEL GONET, a man of 90, was burnt to death; Baptista Oudri, another old man was stabbed; and Bartholomew Frasche had holes made in his heels, through which ropes being put, he was dragged by them to the gaol, where his wounds mortified and killed him.
MAGDALENE DE LA PEIRE being pursued by some of the soldiers, and taken, was thrown down a precipice, and dashed to pieces. Margaret Revella, and Mary Pravillerin, two very old women were burnt alive; and Michael Bellino, with Ann Bochardno, were beheaded.
THE son and daughter of a counsellor of Giovanni, were rolled down a steep hill together, and suffered to perish in a deep pit at the bottom. A tradesman's family, viz. himself, his wife, and an infant in arms, were cast from a rock, and dashed to pieces; and Joseph Chairet, and Paul Carniero, were flead alive.
CYPRIANIA BUSTIA, being asked if he would renounce his religion, and turn Roman catholic, replied, I would rather renounce life, or turn dog: to which a priest answered, for that expression you shall both renounce life, and be given to the dogs. They, accordingly, dragged him to prison, where he continued a considerable time without food, till he was famished; after which they threw his corpse into the street before the prison, and it was devoured by dogs in a most shocking manner.
MARGARET SARETTA was stoned to death, and then thrown into the river; Antonio Bertina had his head cleft asunder; and Joseph Pont was cut through the middle of his body.
DANIEL MARIA, and his whole family, being ill of a fever, several papist ruffians broke into his house, telling him they were practical physicians, and would give them all present ease, which they did, by knocking the whole family on the head.
THREE infant children of a protestant, named Peter Fine, were covered with snow, and stifled; an elderly w [...]dow, named Judith, was beheaded; and a beautiful young woman was stripped naked, and had a stake driven through her body, of which she expired.
[Page 192]LUCY, the wife of Peter Besson, a woman far gone in her pregnancy, who lived in one of the villages of the Piedmontese vallies, determined, if possible, to escape from such dreadful scenes as every where surrounded her: she, accordingly, took two young children, one in each hand, and set off towards the Alps. But on the third day of the journey she was taken in labour among the mountains, and delivered of an infant, who perished through the extreme inclemency of the weather, as did the two other children: for all three were found dead by her, and herself just expiring, by the person to whom she related the above particulars.
FRANCIS GROS, the son of a clergyman, had his flesh slowly cut from his body into small pieces, and put into a dish before him: two of his children were minced before his sight; and his wife was fastened to a post, that she might behold all these cruelties practised on her husband and offspring. The tormentors, at length, being tired of exercising their cruelties, cut off the heads of both husband and wife, and then gave the flesh of the whole family to the dogs.
THE sieur Thomas Margher fled to a cave, when the soldiers shut up the mouth, and he perished with famine. Judith Revelin, with seven children, were barbarously murdered in their beds; and a widow, of near fourscore years of age, was hewn to pieces by soldiers.
JACOB ROSENO was ordered to pray to the saints, which he absolutely refused to do: some of the soldiers beat him violently with bludgeons to make him comply, but he still refusing, several of them tired at him, and lodged a great many balls in his body. As he was almost expiring, they cried unto him, Will you call upon the saints? Will you pray to the saints? To which he answered, No! No! No! when one of the soldiers, with a broad sword, clove his head asunder, and put an end to his sufferings in this world; for which undoubtedly, he is gloriously rewarded in the next.
A soldier, attempting to ravish a young woman, named Susanna G [...]acquin, she made a stout resistance, and in the struggle pushed him over a precipice, when he was dashed to pieces by the fall. His comrades, instead of admiring the virtue of the young woman, and applauding her for so nobly defending her chastity, fell upon her with their swords, and cut her to pieces.
GIOVANNI PULLIUS, a poor peasant of La Torre, being apprehended as a protestant by the soldiers, was ordered by the marquis of Pianessa, to be executed in a place near the convent. When he came to the gallows, several monks attended, and did all they could to persuade him to renounce his religion. But he told them, he never would embrace idolatry, and that he was happy in being thought worthy to suffer for the name of Christ. They then put him in mind of what his wife and children, who depended upon his labour, would suffer after his decease: To which he replied, I would have my wife and children, as well as myself, to consider their souls more than their bodies, and the next world before this: and with respect to the distress I may leave them in, God is merciful, and will provide for them while they are worthy of his protection. Finding the inflexibility of this poor man, the monks cried, Turn him off, turn him off; which the executioner did almost immediately, and the body being afterwards cut down, was flung into the river.
PAUL CLEMENT, an elder of the church of Rossana, being apprehended by the monks of a neighbouring monastery, was carried to the market-place of that town, where some protestants having just been executed by the soldiers, he was shewn the dead bodies, in order that the sight might intimidate him. On beholding the shocking objects, he said, calmly, You may kill the body, but you cannot prejudice the soul of a true believer; but, with respect to the dreadful spectacles which you have here shewn me, you may rest assured, that God's vengeance will overtake the murderers of those poor people, and punish them for the innocent blood they have spilt. The monks were so exasperated at this reply, that they ordered him to be hung up directly, and while he was hanging, the soldiers amused themselves in standing at a distance, and shooting at the body as at a mark.
DANIEL RAMBAUT, of Vill [...]ro, the father of a [Page 193] numerous family, was apprehended, and, with several others, committed to prison, in the gaol of Paysana. Here he was visited by several priests, who, with continual importunities, did all they could to persuade him to renounce the protestant religion, and turn papist; but this he peremptorily refused, and the priests finding his resolution, pretended to pity his numerous family, and told him, that he might yet have his life, if he would subscribe to the belief of the following articles:
1. THE real presence in the host.
2. TRANSUBSTANTIATION.
3. PURGATORY.
4. THE pope's infallibility.
5. THAT masses said for the dead will release souls from purgatory.
6. THAT praying to saints will procure the remission of sins.
M. RAMBAUT told the priests, that neither his religion, his understanding, or his conscience, would suffer him to subscribe to any of the articles, for the following reasons:
1. THAT to believe the real presence in the host, is a shocking union of both blasphemy and idolatry.
2. THAT to [...] the words of consecration performs what the papists call transubstantiation, by converting the wafer and wine into the real and identical body and blood of Christ, which was crucified▪ and which afterwards ascended into heaven, is too gross an absurdity for even a child to believe, who was come to the least glimmering of reason; and that nothing but the most blind superstition could make the Roman catholics put a confidence in any thing so completely ridiculous.
3. THAT the doctrine of purgatory was more inconsistent and absurd than a fairy tale.
4. THAT the pope's being infallible was an impossibility, and the pope arrogantly laid claim to what could belong to God only, as a perfect being.
5. THAT saying masses for the dead was ridiculous, and only meant to keep up a belief in the fable of purgatory, as the fate of all is finally decided, on the departure of the soul from the body.
6. THAT praying to the saints for the remission of sins, is misplacing adoration; as the saints themselves have occasion for an intercessor in Christ. Therefore as God only can pardon our errors, we ought to sue to him alone for pardon.
THE priests were so highly offended at M. Rambaut's answers to the articles to which they would have had him subscribe, that they determined to shake his resolution by the most cruel method imaginable: they ordered one joint of his fingers to be cut off every day, till all his fingers were gone: they then proceeded in the same manner with his toes; afterwards they alternately cut off, daily, a hand and a foot; but finding that he bore his sufferings with the most admirable patience, increased both in fortitude and resignation, and maintained his faith with stedfast resolution, and unshaken constancy, they stabbed him to the heart, and then gave his body to be devoured by dogs.
PETER GABRIOLA, a protestant gentleman of considerable eminence, being seized by a troop of soldiers, and refusing to renounce his religion, they hung a great number of little bags of gunpowder about his body, and then setting fire to them blew him up.
ANTHONY, the son of Samuel Catieris, a poor dumb lad who was extremely inoffensive was cut to pieces by a party of the troops; and soon after the same ruffians [...]tered the house of Peter Moniriat, and cut off the legs of the whole family, leaving them to bleed to death, as they were unable to assist themselves, or to help each other.
DANIEL BENECH being apprehended, had his nose slit, his ears cut off, and was then divided into quarters, each quarter being hung upon a tree; and Mary Monino had her jaw bones broke, and was then left to languish till she was famished.
MARY PELANCHION, a handsome widow, belonging to the town of Villaro, was seized by a party of [Page 194] the Irish brigades, who having beat her cruelly, and ravished her▪ dragged her to a high bridge which crossed the river, and stripped her naked in a most indecent manner, hung her by the legs to the bridge, with her head downwards towards the water, and then going into boats, they fired at her till she expired.
MARY NIGRINO, and her daughter, who was an idiot, were cut to pieces in the woods, and their bodies left to be devoured by wild beasts: Susanna Bales, a widow of Villaro, was immured till she perished through hunger; and Susanna Calvio running away from some soldiers and hiding [...]erself in a barn, they set fire to the straw and burnt her.
PAUL ARMAND was hacked to pieces; a child named Daniel Bertino was burnt; Daniel Michialino had his tongue plucked out, and was left to perish in that condition; and Andreo Bertino, a very old man, who was lame, was mangled in a most shocking manner, and at length had his belly ripped open, and his bowels carried about on the point of a halbert.
CONSTANTIA BELLIONE, a protestant lady, being apprehended on account of her faith, was asked by a priest if she would renounce the devil and go to mass; to which she replied, "I was brought up in a religion, by which I was always taught to renounce the devil; but should I comply with your desire, and go to mass, I should be sure to meet him there in a variety of shapes." The priest was highly incensed at what she said, and told her to recant, or she should suffer cruelly. The lady, however, boldly answered, that she valued not any sufferings he could inflict, and in spite of all the torments he could invent, she would keep her conscience pure and her faith inviolate. The priest then ordered slices of her flesh to be cut off from several parts of her body, which cruelty she bore with the most singular patience, only saying to the priest, what horrid and lasting torments will you suffer in hell, for the trifling and temporary pains which I now endure. Exasperated at this expression, and willing to stop her tongue▪ the priest ordered a file of musqueteers to draw up and fire upon [...]er, by which she was soon dispatched, and sealed her martyrdom with her blood.
A young woman, named Judith Mandon, for refusing to change her religion and embrace popery, was fastened to a stake, and sticks thrown at her from a distance, in the very same manner as that barbarous custom which was formerly practised on Shrove-Tuesday of sh [...]ing at co [...]ks as it was termed. By this inhuman proceeding, the poor creature's limbs were beat and mangled in a terrible manner, and her brains were at last dasired out by one of the bludgeons.
DAVID PAGLIA and Paul Genre, attempting to escape to the Alps, with each his son, were pursued and overtaken by the soldiers in a large plain. Here they hunted them for their diversion, goading them with their swords, and making them run about till they dropped down with fatigue. When they found that their spirits were quite exhausted, and that they could not afford them any more barbarous sport, by running, the soldiers hacked them to pieces, and left their mangled bodies on the spot.
A young man of Bobbio, named Michael Greve, was apprehended in the town of La Torre, and being led to the bridge, was thrown over into the river. As he could swim very well, he swam down the stream, thinking to escape, but the soldiers and mo [...] followed on both sides of the river, and kept stoning him, till receiving a blow on one of his temples, he was stunned, and consequently sunk and was drowned.
DAVID ARMAND was ordered to lay his head down upon a block, when a soldier, with a large hammer, beat out his brains. David Baridona being apprehended at Villaro, was carried to La Torre, where refusing to renounce his religion, he was tormented by means of brimstone matches being tied between his fingers and toes, and set fire [...] ▪ and afterwards, by having his flesh plucked off with red hot pincers, till he expired; and Giovanni [...], with his wife, were thrown into a pool of stagnant water, and compelled, by means of pitch-fork [...] [...] down their heads till they [...].
A [...] of soldiers went to the house of Joseph [...] they entered, fired in [...] [Page 195] the window, to give notice of their approach. A musquet ball entered one of Mrs. Garniero's breasts, as she was suckling an infant with the other. On finding their intentions, she begged hard that they would spare the life of the infant, which they promised to do, and sent it immediately to a Roman catholic nurse. They then took the husband and hanged him at his own door, and having shot the wife through the head, they left her body weltering in [...] blood, and her husband hanging on the gallows.
ISAIAH MONDON, an elderly man, and a pious protestant, fled from the merciless persecutors to a cleft in a rock, where he suffered the most dreadful hardships; for, in the midst of the winter, he was forced to lay on the bare stone, without any covering; his food was the roots he could scratch up near his miserable habitation; and the only way by which he could procure drink, was to put snow in his mouth till it melted. Here, however, some of the inhuman soldiers found him, and after having beaten him unmercifully, they drove him towards Lucerne, goading him with the points of their swords. Being exceedingly weakened by his manner of living, and his spirits exhausted by the blows he had received, he fell down in the road. They again beat him to make him proceed; when, on his knees, he implored them to put him out of his misery, by dispatching him. This they at last agreed to do▪ and one of them stepping up to him, shot him through the head▪ with a pistol, saying, There, hereti [...], take thy [...].
MARY REVEL, a worthy protestant, received a a shot in her back, as she was walking along the street. She dropped down with the wound, but recovering sufficient strength, she raised herself upon her [...], and [...] her hands towards heaven▪ [...] ▪ in a most fervent manner, to the Almighty▪ when a number of soldiers▪ who were near at hand, [...] a whole volley of shot at her, many of which took place, and put an end to her miseries in an [...].
[...] men, women, and children, [...] for two of the men [...] it was necessary, and by stealth procure provisions. These were, however, one day watched, by which the cave was discovered, and, soon after, a troop of Roman catholics appeared before it. The papists that assembled upon this occasion were neighbours, and intimate acquaintances of the protestants in the cave; and some of them were even related to each other. The protestants, therefore, came out, and implored them, by the ties of hospitality, by the ties of blood, and as old acquaintances and neighbours, not to murder them. But superstition overcomes every sensation of nature and humanity; so that the papists, blinded by bigotry, told them, they could not shew any mercy to heretics, and, therefore, had them all prepare to die. Hearing this, and knowing the fatal obstinacy of the Roman catholics, the protestants all fell prostrate, lifted their hands and hearts to heaven, prayed with great sincerity and fervency, and then bowing down, put their faces close to the ground, and patiently awaited their fate, which was soon decided, for the papists fell upon them with unremitting fury, and having cut them to pieces, left the mangled bodies and limbs in the cave.
GIOVANNI SALVACION, passing by a Roman catholic church, and not taking off his hat, was followed by some of the congregation, who fell upon and murdered him; and Jacob Barrel and his wife, having been taken prisoners by the earl of St. Secondo, one of the duke of Savoy's officers, he delivered them up to the soldiery, who cut off the woman's breasts, and the man's nose, and then shot both through the head.
ANTHONY GUIGUO, a protestant, of a wavering disposition, went to Periero, with an intent to renounce his religion, and embrace popery. This design he communicated to some priests, who highly commended it, and a day was fixed upon for his public recantation. In the mean time▪ Anthony grew fully sensible of his perfidy, [...] his conscience tormented him so much, night and day, that he determined not to recant, but to make his escape. This he effected, but being soon missed and pursued, he was taken. The troops on the way did all they could to bring him back to his design of recantation; but finding their endeavours ineffectual, they beat him violently on the road, when coming [Page 196] near a precipice, he took an opportunity of leaping down it, and was dashed to pieces.
A protestant gentleman, of considerable fortune, at Bobbio, being highly provoked by the insolence of a priest, retorted with great severity; and, among other things, said, that the pope was Antichrist, mass idolatry, purgatory a farce, and absolution a cheat. To be revenged, the priest hired five desperate ruffians, who, the same evening, broke into the gentleman's house, and seized upon him in a violent manner. The gentleman was terribly frightened, fell on his knees, and implored mercy; but the desperate ruffians dispatched him without the least hesitation.
A Narrative of the PIEDMONTESE WAR.
THE massacres and murders, already mentioned to have been committed in the vallies of Piedmont, nearly depopulated most of the towns and villages. One place only had not been assaulted, and that was owing to the difficulty of approaching it: this was the little commonalty of Roras, which was situated upon a rock.
AS the work of blood grew slack in other places, the earl of Christople, one of the duke of Savoy's officers, determined, if possible, to make himself master of it; and, with that view, detached three hundred men to surprize it secretly.
THE inhabitants of Roras, however, had intelligence of the approach of these troops, when captain Joshua Gianavel, a brave protestant officer, put himself at the head of a small body of the citizens, and waited in ambuscade to attack the enemy in a small defile.
WHEN the troops appeared, and had entered the defile, which was the only place by which the town could be approached, the protestants kept up a smart and well directed fire against them, and still kept themselves concealed behind bushes from the sight of the enemy. A great number of the soldiers were killed and the remainder receiving a continued fire, and not seeing any to whom they might return it, thought proper to retreat.
THE members of this little community then sent a memorial to the marquis of Pianessa, one of the duke's general officers, setting forth, "That they were sorry, upon any occasion, to be under the necessity of taking up arms; but that the [...]cret approach of a body of troops, without any reason assigned, or any previous notice sent [...] purpose of their coming, had greatly alarmed them; that as it was their custom never to suffer any of the military to enter their little community, they had repelled force by force, and should do so again; but in all other respects, they professed themselves dutiful, obedient, and loyal subjects to their sovereign the duke of Savoy."
THE marquis of Pianessa, that he might have the better opportunity of deluding and surprizing the protestants of Roras, sent them word in answer, "That he was perfectly satisfied with their behaviour, for they had done right, and even rendered a service to their country, as the men who had attempted to pass the defile were not his troops, or sent by him, but a band of desperate robbers, who had, for some time, infested those parts, and been a terror to the neighbouring country." To give a greater colour to his treachery, he then published a proclamation, which ran thus:
WHEREAS the inhabitants of Roras have bravely and loyally routed, killed, or expelled, a band of bloody robbers, and desperate outlaws, and thereby rendered an essential service to the country in general. Be it, therefore, known, that all persons are strictly ordered and commanded, in the duke's name, not to injure, molest, or disturb any of the inhabitants of Roras, but to do them every possible service, in return for the benefit which the state hath received from them.
[Page 197]YET, the very day after this plausible proclamation, and specious conduct, the marquis sent 500 men to possess themselves of Roras, while the people, as he thought, were lulled into perfect security, by h [...]s specious behaviour.
CAPTAIN GIANAVEL, however, was not to be deceived so easily: he, therefore, laid an ambuscad [...] for this body of troops, as he had for the former, and compelled them to retire with very considerable loss
THOUGH foiled in these two attempts, the marquis Pianessa determined on a third, which should be still more formidable; but first he imprudently published another proclamation, disowning any knowledge of the second attempt.
SOON after, 700 chosen men were sent upon the expedition, who, in spite of the fire from the protestants, forced the defile, entered Roras, and began to murder every person they met with, without distinction of sex or age. The protestant Captain Gianavel, at the head of a small body, though he had lost the defile, determined to dispute their passage through a fortified pass, that led to the richest and best part of the town. Here he was successful, by keeping up a continual fire, and by means of his men being all complete marksmen. The Roman catholic commander was greatly staggered at this opposition, as he imagined that he had surmounted all difficulties. He, however, did his endeavours to force the pass, but being able to bring up only twelve men in front at a time, and the protestants being secured by a breast-work, he found he should be baffled by the handful of men who opposed him.
ENRAGED at the loss of so many of his troops, and fearful of disgrace if he persisted in attempting what appeared so impracticable, he thought it the wisest thing to retreat. Unwilling, however, to withdraw his men by the defile at which he had entered, on account of the difficulty and danger of the enterprize, he designed to retreat towards Villaro, by another pass called Piampra, which, though hard of access, was easy of descent. But in this he met with a disappointment, for captain Gianavel having posted his [...] and here, greatly annoyed the troops as they [...], and even pursued their rear till they entered the open country.
THE marquis of Pianessa, finding that all his attempts were frustrated, and that every artifice he used was only an alarm-signal to the inhabitants of Roras, resolved to act openly, and therefore proclaimed, that ample rewards should be given to any one who would bear arms against the obstinate heretics of Roras, as he called them; and that any officer, who would exterminate them, should be rewarded in a princely manner.
THIS engaged captain Mario, a bigoted Roman catholic, and a desperate ruffian, to undertake the enterprize. He, therefore, obtained leave to raise a regiment in the following six towns: Lucerne, Borges, Famolas, Bobbio, Bagnal, and Cavos.
HAVING completed his regiment, which consisted of 1000 men, he laid his plan not to go by the defiles, or the passes, but to attempt gaining the summit of a rock, from whence he imagined he could pour his men into the town, without much difficulty or opposition.
THE protestants suffered the Roman catholic troops to gain almost the summit of the rock, without giving them any opposition, or ever appearing in their sight: but when they had almost reached the top, they made a most furious attack upon them; one party keeping up a well-directed and constant fire, and another party rolling down huge stones.
THIS stopped the career of the papist troops: many were killed by the musquetry, and more by the stones, which beat them down the precipices. Several fell sacrifices to their hurry, for by attempting a precipitate retreat, they fell down, and were dashed to pieces; and captain Mario himself narrowly escaped with life, for he fell from a craggy place into a river which washed the foot of the rock. He was taken up senseless, but afterwards recovered, though he was ill of the bruises for a long time; and, at length, fell into a decline at Lucerne, where he died.
ANOTHER body of troops was ordered from the camp at Villaro, to make an attempt upon Roras; but these were likewise defeated, by means of the protestants ambush-fighting, and compelled to retreat again to the camp at Villaro.
[Page 198]AFTER each of these signal victories, captain Gianavel made a suitable discourse to his men, causing them to kneel down, and return thanks to the Almighty for his providential protection; and usually concluded with the 11th psalm, where the subject is, placing confidence in God.
THE marquis of Pianessa was greatly enraged at being so much baffled by the few inhabitants of Roras: he, therefore, determined to attempt their expulsion, in such a manner as could hardly fail of success.
WITH this view he ordered all the Roman catholic militia of Piedmont to be raised and disciplined. When these orders were completed, he joined to the militia eight thousand regular troops, and dividing the whole into three distinct bodies, he designed, that three formidable attacks should be made at the same time, unless the people of Roras, to whom he sent an account of his great preparations, would comply with the following conditions:
1. To ask pardon for taking up arms.
2. To pay the expences of all the expeditions sent against them.
3. To acknowledge the infallibility of the pope.
4. To go to mass.
5. To pray to the saints.
6. To wear beards.
7. To deliver up their ministers.
8. To deliver up their school-masters.
9. To go to confession.
10. To pay loans for the delivery of souls from purgatory.
11. To give up captain Gianavel at discretion.
12. To give up the elders of their church at discretion.
THE inhabitants of Roras, on being acquainted with these conditions, were filled with an honest indignation; and, in answer, sent word to the marquis, that sooner than comply with them they would suffer three things, which, of all others, were the most obnoxious to mankind, viz.
- 1. THEIR estates to be seized.
- 2. THEIR houses to be burnt.
- 3. THEMSELVES to be murdered.
EXASPERATED at this message, the marquis sent them this laconic epistle:
YOU shall have your request, for the troops sent against you have strict injunctions to plunder, burn, and kill.
THE three armies were then put into motion, and the attacks ordered to be made thus: the first by the rocks of Villaro; the second by the pass of Bagnol; and the third by the defile of Lucerne.
THE troops forced their way by the superiority of numbers, and having gained the rocks, pass, and defile, began to make the most horrid depredations, and exercise the greatest cruelties. Men they hanged, burnt, racked to death, or cut to pieces; women they ripped open, crucified, drowned, or threw from the precipices; and children they tossed upon spears, minced, cut their throats, or dashed out their brains. One hundred and twenty-six suffered in this manner, on the first day of their gaining the town.
AGREEABLE to the marquis of Pianessa's orders, they likewise plundered the estates, and burnt the houses of the people. Several protestants, however, made their escape, under the conduct of captain Gianavel, whose wife and children were unfortunately made prisoners, and sent under a strong guard to Turin.
THE marquis of Pianessa wrote a letter to captain Gianavel, and released a protestant prisoner, that [Page 199] he might carry it him. The contents were, that if the captain would embrace the Roman catholic religion, he should be indemnified for all his losses since the commencement of the war; his wife and children should be immediately released, and himself honourably promoted in the duke of Savoy's army; but if he refused to accede to the proposals made him, his wife and children should be put to death; and so large a reward should be given to take him, dead or alive, that even some of his own confidential friends should be tempted to betray him, from the greatness of the sum.
TO this epistle the brave Gianavel sent the fo [...] lowing answer:
THERE is no torment so great or death so cruel, but what I would prefer to the abjuration of my religion: so that promises lose their effects, and menaces only strengthen me in my faith.
WITH respect to my wife and children, my lord, nothing can be more afflicting to me, than the thoughts of their confinement, or more dreadful to my imagination, than their suffering a violent and cruel death. I keenly feel all the tender sensations of husband and parent; my heart is replete with every sentiment of humanity; I would suffer my torment to rescue them from danger; I would die to preserve them.
BUT having said thus much, my lord, I assure you that the purchase of their lives must not be the price of my salvation. You have them in your power it is true; but my consolation is, that your power is only a temporary authority over their bodies: you may destroy the mortal part, but their immortal souls are out of your reach, and will live hereafter, to bear testimony against you for your cruelties. I therefore recommend them and myself to God, and pray for a [...] in your heart.
THIS brave protestant officer, after writing the above letter, retired to the Alps, with his followers; and being joined by a great number of other fugitive protestants, he harrassed the enemy by continual skirmishes.
MEETING one day with a body of papist troops, near Bibiana, he, though inferior in numbers, attacked them with great fury, and put them to the rout withou [...] [...]he loss of a man, though he himself was shot through the leg in the engagement, by a soldier who had hid himself behind a tree; but Gianavel perceiving from whence the shot came, pointed his gun to the place, and dispatched the person who had wounded him.
CAPTIAN GIANAVEL hearing that a captain Ja [...]hier had collected together a considerable body protestants, wrote him a letter, proposing a junctio [...] of their forces. Captain Jahier immediately agreed to the proposal, and marched directly to meet Gianavel.
THE junction being formed, it was proposed to attack a town, (inhabited by Roman catholics) called Gareigliana. The assault was given with great spirit, but a reinforcement of horse and foot having lately entered the town, which the protestants knew nothing of, they were repulsed: yet made a masterly retreat, and only lost one man in the action.
THE next attempt of the protestant forces was upon St. Secondo, which they attacked with great vigour, but met with a strong resistance from the Roman catholic troops, who had fortified the streets, and planted themselves in the houses, from whence they poured musquet-balls in prodigious numbers. The protestants, however, advanced, under covert of a great number of planks, which some held over their heads, to secure them from the shot of the enemy from the houses, while others kept up a well-directed fire; so that the houses and intrenchments were soon forced, and the town taken.
IN the town they found a prodigious quantity of plunder, which had been taken from the protestants at various times, and different places, and which were stored up in warehouses, churches, dwelling houses, &c. This they removed to a place of safety, to be distributed, with as much justice as possible, among the sufferers.
[Page 200]THIS successful attack was made with such skill and spirit, that it cost very little to the conquering party; the protestants having only 17 killed, and 26 wounded: while the papists suffered a loss of no less than 450 killed, and 511 wounded.
FIVE protestant officers, viz. Gianavel, Jahier, Laurentio, Genolet, and Benet, laid a plan to surprise Briqueras. To this end they marched in five respective bodies, and, by agreement, were to make the attack at the same time. The captains Jahier and Laurentio passed through two defiles in the woods, and came to the place in safety, under covert: but the other three bodies made their approaches through an open country, and, consequently, were more exposed to an attack.
THE Roman catholics taking the alarm, a great number of troops were sent to relieve Briqueras from Cavors, Bibiana, Fenile, Campiglione, and some other neighbouring places. When these were united, they determined to attack the three protestant parties, that were marching through the open country.
THE protestant officers, perceiving the intent of the enemy, and not being at a great distance from each other, joined their forces with the utmost expedition, and formed themselves in order of battle.
IN the mean time, the captains Jahier and Laurentio had assaulted the town of Briqueras, and burnt all the out-houses, to make their approaches with the greater ease; but not being supported as they expected by the other three protestant captains, they sent a messenger, on a swift horse, towards the open country, to inquire the reason.
THE messenger soon returned, and informed them that it was not in the power of the three protestant captains to support their proceedings, as they were themselves attacked by a very superior force in the plain, and could scarce sustain the unequal conflict.
THE captains Jahier and Laurentio, on receiving this intelligence, determined to discontinue the assault on Briquera and to proceed, with all possible expedition, to the relief of their friends on the plain. This design proved to be of the most essential service, for just as they arrived at the spot where the two armies were engaged, the papist troops began to prevail, and were on the point of flanking the wing, commanded by captain Gianavel. The arrival of these troops turned the scale in favour of the protestants; and the papist forces, though they fought with a most obstinate intrepidity, were totally defeated. A great number were killed and wounded on both sides, and the baggage, military stores, &c. taken by the protestants were very considerable.
CAPTAIN GIANAVEL, having information that three hundred of the enemy were to convoy a great quantity of stores, provisions, &c. from La Torre to the castle of Mirabac, determined to attack them on the way. He, accordingly, began the assault at Malbec, though with a very inadequate force. The contest was long and bloody, but the protestants, at length, were obliged to yield to the superiority of numbers, and compelled to make a retreat, which they did with great regularity, and but little loss.
CAPTAIN GIANAVEL advanced to an advantageous post, situated near the town of Villaro, and then sent the following information and commands to the inhabitants:
1. THAT he should attack the town in twenty-four hours.
2. THAT with respect to the Roman catholics who had borne arms, whether they belonged to the army or not, he should act by the law of retaliation, and put them to death, for the numerous depredations, and many cruel murders, they had committed.
3. THAT all women and children, whatever their religion might be, should be safe.
4. THAT he commanded all male protestants to leave the town, and join him.
5. THAT all apostates, who had, through weakness, abjured their religion, should be deemed enemies, unless they renounced their abjuration.
[Page 201]6. THAT all who returned to their duty to God, and themselves, should be received as friends.
THE protestants, in general, immediately left the town, and joined captain Gianavel with great satisfaction, and the few, who through weakness or fear had abjured their faith, recanted their abjuration, and were received into the bosom of the church. As the marquis of Pianessa had removed the army, and encamped in quite a different part of the country, the Roman catholics in Villaro thought it would be folly to pretend to defend the place with the small force they had. They, therefore, fled with the utmost precipitation, leaving the town, and most of their property, to the discretion of the protestants.
THE protestant commanders having called a council of war, resolved to make an attempt upon the town of La Torre, for four particular reasons, viz.
1. BECAUSE it was a place of great importance.
2. BECAUSE it contained a great quantity of military stores and provisions.
3. BECAUSE the inhabitants had been some of the most rigid of all the persecutors of the protestants.
4. BECAUSE it was garrisoned by troops drafted from the Irish brigades, who were the most cruel of all the troops, to the protestants whom they took prisoners.
THE papists being apprized of the design, detached some troops to defend a defile, through which the protestants must make their approach; but these were defeated, compelled to abandon the pass, and forced to retreat to La Torre.
THE protestants proceeded on their march, and the troops of La Torre, on their near approach, made a furious sally, but were repulsed with great loss, and compelled to seek shelter in the town. The governor now only thought of defending the place, which the protestants began to attack in form; but after many brave attempts, and furious assaults, the commanders determined to abandon the enterprize for several reasons, particularly, because they found the place itself too strong, their own number too weak, and their cannon not adequate to the task of battering down the walls.
THIS resolution being taken, the protestant commanders began a masterly retreat, and conducted it with such regularity, that the enemy did not chuse to pursue them, or molest their rear, which they might have done, as they passed the defiles.
THE next day they mustered, reviewed the army, and found the whole to amount to four hundred and ninety-five men. They then held a council of war, and planned an easier enterprize: this was to make an attack upon the commonalty of Crusol, a place inhabited by a number of the most bigoted Roman catholics, and who had exercised, during the persecutions, the most unheard of cruelties on the protestants.
THE people of Crusol, hearing of the design against them, fled to a neighbouring fortress, situated on a rock, where the protestants could not come at them, for a very few men could render it inaccessible to a numerous army. Thus they secured their persons, but were in too much hurry to secure their property, the principal part of which, indeed, had been plundered from the protestants, and now luckily fell again to the possession of the right owners. It consisted of many rich and valuable articles, and what, at that time, was of much more consequence, viz. A great quantity of military stores; four hundred head of cattle; six hundred sheep and goats; a greater number of cheeses, many sacks of flour, several butts of wine, and good store of raisins.
THE day after the protestants were gone with their booty, eight hundred troops arrived to the assistance of the people of Crusol, having been dispatched from Lucerne, Briqueras, Cavors, &c. But finding themselves too late, and that a pursuit would be in vain, not to return empty handed, they began to plunder the neighbouring villages, though what they took was from their friends. After collecting a tolerable booty, they began to divide it, but disagreeing about the different shares, they fell from words to blows, did a great deal of mischief, and then plundered each other.
[Page 202]ON the very same day in which the protestants were so successful at Crusol, some papists marched with a design to plunder and burn the little protestant village of Rocappiatta, but by the way they met with the protestant forces belonging to the captains Jahier and Laurentio, who were posted on the hill of Angrognia. A trivial engagement ensued, for the Roman catholics, on the very first attack, retreated in great confusion, and were pursued with much slaughter. After the pursuit was over, some of the straggling papist troops meeting with a poor peasant, who was a protestant, tied a cord round his head, and strained it till his skull was quite crushed.
CAPTAIN GIANAVEL and captain Jahier concerted a design together, to make an attack upon Lucerne; but captain Jahier not bringing his forces at the time appointed, captain Gianavel determined to attempt the enterprize himself.
HE, therefore, by a forced march, proceeded towards that place during the whole night, and was close to it by break of day. His first care was to cut the pipes that conveyed water into the town, and then to break down the bridge, by which alone provisions from the country could enter.
HE then assaulted the place, and speedily possessed himself of two of the out-ports; but finding he could not make himself master of the place, he prudently retreated with very little loss, blaming, however, captain Jahier, for the failure of the enterprize.
THE papists being informed that captain Gianavel was at Angrognia, with only his own company, determined, if possible, to surprize him. With this view, a great number of troops were detached from La Torre, and other places: one party of these got on the top of a mountain, beneath which he was posted; and the other party intended to possess themselves of the gate of St. Bartholomew.
THE papists thought themselves sure of taking captain Gianavel and every one of his men, as they consisted but of three hundred, and their own force was two thousand five hundred. Their design, however, was providentially frustrated, for one of the popish soldiers imprudently blowing a trumpet before the signal for attack was given, captain Gianavel took the alarm, and posted his little company so advantageously at the gate of St. Bartholomew, and at the defile by which the enemy must descend from the mountains, that the Roman catholic troops failed in both attacks, and were repulsed, with very considerable loss.
SOON after captain Jahier came to Angrognia, and joined his forces to those of captain Gianavel, giving sufficient reasons to excuse his already-mentioned failure. Captain Jahier now made several secret excursions with great success, selecting always some of the most active troops, belonging both to Gianavel and himself. One day he had put himself at the head of only forty-four men, to proceed upon an expedition, when entering a plain near Offac, he was suddenly surrounded by a large body of horse. Captain Jahier, and his men, fought desperately, though oppressed by odds, and killed the commander in chief, three captains, and fifty-seven private men, of the enemy. But captain Jahier himself being killed, with thirty-five of his men, the rest surrendered. One of the soldiers cut off captain Jahier's head, and carrying it to Turin, presented it to the duke of Savoy, who rewarded him with six hundred ducatoons.
THE death of this gentleman was a signal loss to the protestants, as he was a real friend to, and champion of, the reformed church. He possessed a most undaunted spirit, so that no difficulties could deter him from undertaking an enterprize, or dangers terrify him in its execution. He was pious without affectation, and humane without weakness; bold in the field, meek in a domestic life, of a penetrating genius, active in spirit; and resolute in all his undertakings.
TO add to the affliction of the protestants, captain Gianavel was, soon after, wounded in such a manner that he was obliged to keep his bed. They, however, took new courage from misfortunes, and determining not to let their spirits droop, attacked a body of popish troops with great intrepidity; the protestants were much inferior in numbers, but fought with more resolution than the papists, and at length routed them, with considerable [Page 203] slaughter. During the action, a serjeant, named Michael Bertino, was killed; when his son, who was close behind him, leaped into his place, and said, I have lost my father; but courage, fellow-soldiers, God is a father to us all.
SEVERAL skirmishes likewise happened between the troops of La Torre and Tagliaretto, and the protestant forces, which in general terminated in savour of the latter.
A protestant gentleman, named Andrion, raised a regiment of horse, and took the command of it himself. The sieur John Leger persuaded a great number of protestants to form themselves into volunteer companies; and an excellent officer, named Michelin, instituted several bands of light troops. These being all joined to the remains of the veteran protestant troops, (for great numbers had been lost in the various battles, skirmishes, fieges, &c.) composed a respectable army, which the officers thought proper to encamp near St. Giovanni.
THE Roman catholic commanders, alarmed at the formidable appearance, and increased strength of the protestant forces, determined, if possible, to dislodge them from their encampment. With this view they collected together a large force, consisting of the principal part of the garrisons of the Roman catholic towns, the draft from the Irish brigades, a great number of regulars sent by the marquis of Pianessa, the auxiliary troops, and the independent companies.
THESE having formed a junction, encamped near the protestants, and spent several days in calling councils of war, and disputing on the most proper mode of proceeding. Some were for plundering the country, in order to draw the protestants from their camp; others were for patiently waiting till they were attac [...]ed; and a third party were for assaulting the protestant camp, and trying to make themselves masters of every thing in it.
THE last of them prevailed, and the morning after the resolution had been taken was appointed to put it into execution. The Roman catholic troops were accordingly separated into four divisions, three of which were to make an attack in different places; and the fourth to remain as a body of reserve to act as occasion might require.
ONE of the Roman catholic officers, previous to the attack, thus harangued his men.
"FELLOW soldiers, you are now going to enter upon a great action, which will bring you fame and riches. The motives for your acting with spirit are likewise of the most important nature; namely, the honour of showing your loyalty to your sovereign, the pleasure of spilling heretic blood, and the prospect of plundering the protestant camp. So, my brave fellows, fall on, give no quarter, kill all you meet, and take all you come near."
AFTER this inhuman speech the engagement began, and the protestant camp was attacked in three places with inconceivable fury. The fight was maintained with great obstinacy and perseverance on both sides, continuing without intermission for the space of four hours; for the several companies on both sides relieved each other alternately, and by that means kept up a continual fire during the whole action.
DURING the engagement of the main armies, a detachment was sent from the body of reserve to attack the post of Castelas, which, if the papists had carried, it would have given them the command of the vallies of Perosa, St. Martino, and Lucerne; but they were repulsed with great loss, and compelled to return to the body of reserve, from whence they had been detached.
SOON after the return of this detachment, the Roman catholic troops, being hard pressed in the main battle, sent for the body of reserve to come to their support. These immediately marched to their assistance, and for some time longer held the event doubtful; but at length the valour of the protestants prevailed, and the papists were totally defeated, with the loss of upwards of three hundred men killed, and many more wounded.
WHEN the syndic of Lucerne, who was indeed a papist, but not a superstitious one, saw the great number of wounded men brought into that city, he exclaimed, Ah! I thought the wolves used to [Page 204] devour the heretics, but now I see the heretics eat the wolves. This expression being reported to M. Marolles, the Roman catholic commander in chief at Lucerne, he sent a very severe and threatening letter to the syndic, who was so terrified, that the fright threw him into a fever, and he died in a few days.
THIS great battle was fought just before the harvest was got in; when the papists, exasperated at their disgrace, and resolved on any kind of revenge, spread themselves by night in detached parties over the finest corn fields of the protestants, and set them on fire in sundry places. Some of these straggling parties, however, suffered for their conduct; for the protestants, being alarmed in the night by the blazing of the fire among the corn, pursued the fugitives early in the morning, and overtaking many put them to death. The protestant captain Bellin, likewise, by way of retaliation, went with a body of light troops, and burnt the suburbs of La Torre, making his retreat afterwards with very little loss.
A few days after, captain Bellin, with a much stronger body of troops, attacked the town of La Torre itself, and making a breach in the wall of the convent, his men entered, driving the garrison into the citadel, and burning both town and convent. After having effected this, they made a regular retreat, as they could not reduce the citadel for want of cannon.
An Account of the Persecutions of MICHAEL MOLINOS, a Native of Spain.
MICHAEL DE MOLINOS, a Spaniard of a rich and honourable family, entered, when young into priest's orders, but would not accept of any preferment in the church. He possessed great natural abilities, which he dedicated to the service of his fellow-creatures, without any view of emolument to himself. His course of life was pious and uniform; nor did he exercise those austerities which are comm [...] among the religious orders of the church of [...]
BEING of a contemplative turn of mind, he pursued the track of the mystical divines, and having acquired great reputation in Spain, and being desirous of propagating his sublime mode of devotion, he left his own country, and settled at Rome. Here he soon connected himself with some of the most distinguished among the literati, who so approved of his religious maxims, that they concurred in assisting him to propagate them; and, in a short time, he obtained a great number of followers, who, from the sublime mode of their religion, were distinguished by the name of Quietists.
IN 1675 Molinos published a book, entitled, Il Guida Spirituale, to which were subjoined recommendatory letters from several great personages. One of these was by the archbishop of Reggio; a second by the general of the Franciscans; and a third by father Martin de Esparsa, a jesuit, who had been divinity-professor both at Salamanca and Rome.
NO sooner was the book published, than it was greatly read, and highly esteemed, both in Italy and Spain; and this so raised the reputation of the author, that his acquaintance was coveted by the most respectable characters. Letters were written to him from numbers of people, so that a correspondence was settled between him, and those who approved of his method, in different parts of Europe. Some secular priests, both at Rome and Naples, declared themselves openly for it, and consulted him, as a sort of or [...]cle, on many occasions. But those who attached themselves to him with the greatest sincerity, were some of the fathers of the Oratory; in particular three of the most eminent, namely, Coloredi, Ciceri, and Petrucci. Many of the cardinals also courted his acquaintance, and thought themselves happy in being reckoned among the number of his friends. The most distinguished of them was the cardinal [...], a man of very great learning, who so highly approved of Molinos's maxims, that he entered into a close connection with him. They conversed [...]ogether daily, and notwithstanding the distrust a Spaniar [...] has naturally of a Frenchman, yet Molino [...], who was sincer [...] in his principles, opened his mind without reserve to the cardinal; and by this means a correspondence [Page 205] was settled between Molinos and some distinguished characters in France.
WHILST Molinos was thus labouring to propagate his religious mode, father Petrucci wrote several letters and treatises relative to a contemplative life; but he mixed in them so many rules for the devotions of the Romish church, as mitigated that censure he might have otherwise incurred. They were written chiefly for the use of the nuns, and therefore the sense was expressed in the most easy and familiar stile.
MOLINOS had now acquired such reputation, that the Jesuits and Dominicans began to be greatly alarmed, and determined to put a stop to the progress of this new method. To do this it was necessary to decry the author of it; and as heresy is an imputation that makes the strongest impression at Rome, Molinos and his followers were given out to be heretics. Books were also written by some of the Jesuits against Molinos and his method: but they were all answered with great spirit by Molinos.
THESE disputes occasioned such a disturbance in Rome, that the whole affair was taken notice of by the inquisition. Molinos and his book, and father Petrucci, with his treatises and letters, were brought under a severe examination; and the Jesuits were considered as the accusers. One of the society had, indeed, approved of Molinos's book; but the rest took care he should not be again seen at Rome. In the course of the examination both Molinos and Petrucci acquitted themselves so well, that their books were again approved, and the answers which the Jesuits had written were censured as scandalous.
PETRUCCI'S conduct on this occasion was so highly approved, that it not only raised the credit of the cause, but his own emolument; for he was soon after made bishop of Jesis, which was a new declaration made by the pope in their favour. Their books were now esteemed more than ever, their method was more followed, and the novelty of it, with the new approbation given after so vigorous [...] accusation by the Jesuits, all contributed to raise the [...]redit, and increase the number of the party.
THE behaviour of father Petrucci in his new dignity contributed to increase his reputation, so that his enemies were unwilling to give him any further disturbance; and, indeed, there was less occasion given for censure by his writings than those of Molinos. Some passages in the latter were not so cautiously expressed, but there was room to make exceptions to them; while, on the other hand, Petrucci so fully explained himself, as easily to remove the objections made to some parts of his letter.
THE great reputation acquired by Molinos and Petrucci, occasioned a daily increase of the quietists. All who were thought sincerely devout, or at least affected the reputation of it, were reckoned among the number. If these persons were observed to become more strict in their lives and mental devotions, yet there appeared less zeal in their whole deportment as to the exterior parts of the church ceremonies. They were not so assiduous at mass, nor so earnest to procure masses to be said for their friends; nor were they so frequently either at confession, or in processions.
THOUGH the new approbation given to Molinos's book by the inquisition had checked the proceedings of his enemies; yet they were still inveterate against him in their hearts, and determined if possible to ruin him. They insinuated that he had ill designs, and was, in his heart, an enemy to the Christian religion: that under pretence of raising men to a sublime strain of devotion, he intended to erase from their minds a sense of the mysteries of Christianity. And because he was a [...]paniard, they gave out that he was descended from a Jewish, or Mahometan race, and that he might carry in his blood, or in his first education, some seeds of those religions which he had since cultivated with no less art than zeal. This last calumny gained but little credit at Rome, though it was said an order was sent to examine the registers of the place where Molinos was baptized.
MOLINOS finding himself attacked with great vigour, and the most unrelenting malice, took every necessary precaution to prevent these imputation being credited. He wrote a treatise intitled, Frequent and Daily Communion, which was likewise approved by some of the most learned of the Romish [Page 206] clergy. This was printed with his Spiritual Guide, in the year 1675; and in the preface to it he declared, that he had not written it with any design to engage himself in matters of controversy, but that it was drawn from him by the earnest solicitations of many pious people.
THE Jesuits [...]ailing in their attempts of crushing Molinos's power in Rome, applied to the court of France, when, in a short time, they so far succeeded, that an order was sent to cardinal d'Estrees, commanding him to prosecute Molinos with all possible rigour. The cardinal, though so strongly attached to Molinos, resolved to sacrifice all that is sacred in friendship to the will of his master. Finding, however, there was not sufficient matter for an accusation against him, he determined to supply that defect himself. He therefore went to the inquisitors, and informed them of several particulars, not only relative to Molinos, but also Petrucci, both of whom, together with several of their friends, were put into the inquisition.
WHEN they were brought before the inquisitors, (which was in the beginning of the year 1684) Petrucci answered the respective questions put to him with so much judgment and temper, that he was soon dismissed; and though Molinos's examination was much longer, it was generally expected he would have been likewise discharged: but this was not the c [...]se. Though the inquisitors had not any just accusation against him, yet they strained every nerve to find him guilty of heresy. They first objected to his holding a correspondence in different parts of Europe; but of this he was acq [...]itted, as the matter of this correspondence could not be made criminal. They then directed their attention to some suspicious papers found in his chambe [...]; but Molinos so clearly explained their meaning, that nothing could be made of them to his pre [...]ce. At length, cardinal d'Estrees, after producing the order sent him by the king of France for pro [...]ecuting Molinos, said, he could prove against him more than was necessary to convince them he wa [...] guilty of heresy. To do this he perverted the meaning of some passages in Molinos's books and papers, and related many false and aggravating circumstances relative to the prisoner. He acknowledged he had lived with him under the appearance of friendship, but that it was only to discover his principles and intentions: that he had found them to be of a bad nature, and that dangerous consequence were likely to ensue; but in order to make a full discovery, he had assented to several things, which, in his heart, he detested; and that, by these means, he saw into the secrets of Molinos; but determined not to take any notice, till a proper opportunity should offer of crushing him and his followers.
IN consequence of d'Estree's evidence, Molinos was closely confined in the inquisition, where he continued for some time, during which period all was quiet, and his followers prosecuted their mode without interruption. But on a sudden the Jesuits determined to extirpate them, and the storm broke out with the most inveterate vehemence.
THE count Vespiniani and his lady, Don Paulo Rocchi, confessor to the prince Borghese, and some of his family, with several others, (in all seventy persons) were put into the inquisition, among whom many were highly esteemed both for their learning and piety. The accusation laid against the clergy was their neglecting to say the breviary; and the rest were accused of going to communion without first attending confession. In a word, it was said, they neglected all the exterior parts of religion, and gave themselves up wholly to solitude and inward prayer.
THE countess Vespiniani exerted herself in a very particular manner on her examination before the inquisitors. She said, she had never revealed her method of devotion to any mortal but her confessor, and that it was impossible they should know it without his discovering the secret; that, therefore, it was time to give over going to confession, if priests made this use of it, to discover the most secret thoughts entrusted to them; and that, for the future, she would only make her confession to God.
FROM this spirited spee [...]h, and the great noise made in conseq [...]ence of the countess's situation, the inquisitors thought it most prudent to dismiss both [Page 207] her and her husband, left the people might be incensed, and what she said might lessen the credit of confession. They were, therefore, both discharged, but bound to appear whenever they should be called upon.
BESIDES those already mentioned, such was the inveteracy of the Jesuits against the Quietists, that within the space of a month upwards of two hundred persons were put into the inquisition; and that method of devotion which had passed in Italy as the most elevated to which mortals could aspire, was deemed heretical, and the chief promoters of it confined in a wretched dungeon.
IN order, if possible, to extirpate quietism, the inquisitors sent a circular letter to cardinal Cibo, as the chief minister, [...] disperse it through Italy. It was addressed to all prelates, informing them, that whereas many schools and fraternities were established in several parts of Italy, in which some persons, under a pre [...]ence of leading people into the ways of the spirit, and to the prayer of quietness, instilled into them many abominable heresies, therefore a strict charge was given to dissolve all those societies, and to oblige the spiritual guide to tread in the known paths; and, in particular, to take care none of that fort should be suffered to have the direction of nunneries. Orders were likewise given to proceed, in the way of justice, against those who should be found guilty of these abominable errors.
AFTER this a strict inquiry was made into all the nunneries in Rome; when most of their directors and confessors were discovered to be engaged in this new method. It was found that the Carmelites, the nuns of the Conception, and those of several other convents, were wholly given up to prayer and contemplation: and that, instead of their beads, and other devotions to saints, or images, they were much alone, and often in the exercise of mental prayer: that when they were asked, why they had laid aside the use of their beads, and their ancient forms, their answer was, their directors had advised them so [...]o do. Information of this being given [...] the inquisition, they sent orders that all books written in the same strain with those of Molinos and Petrucci, should be taken from them, and that they should be compelled to return to their original form of devotion.
THE circular letter sent to cardinal Cibe produced but little effect, for most of the Italian bishops were inclined to Molinos's method. It was intended that this, as well as all other orders from the inquisitors, should be kept secret; but notwithstanding all their care, copies of it were printed, and dispersed in most of the principal towns in Italy. This gave great uneasiness to the inquisitors, who use every method they can to conceal their proceedings from the knowledge of the world. They blamed the cardinal, and accused him of being the cause of it; but he retorted on them, and his secretary laid the fault on both.
DURING these transactions, Molinos suffered great indignities from the officers of the inquisition; and the only comfort he received was, from being sometimes visited by father Petrucci.
THOUGH he had lived in the highest reputation in Rome for some years, he was now as much despised as he had been admired, being generally considered as one of the worst of heretics.
THE greater part of Molinos's followers, who had been placed in the inquisition, having abjured his mode, were dismissed; but a harder fate awaited Molinos, their leader.
AFTER laying a considerable time in prison, he was at length brought before the inquisitors, to answer to a number of articles exhibited against him from his writings. As soon as he appeared in court, a chain was put round his body, and a wax-light in his hand, when two friars read aloud the articles of accusation. Molinos answered each with great steadiness and resolution; and notwithstanding his arguments totally defeated the force of all, yet he was found guilty of heresy, and condemned to imprisonment for life.
WHEN he left the c [...]urt he was attended by a pr [...]st, who had borne him the greatest respect. On his [...]ival to the prison he entered the cell allotted for his confin [...]ment with great tranquillity; and on taking leave of the priest, thus addressed him:— [Page 208] Adieu, father, we shall meet again at the day of judgment, and then it will appear on which side the truth is, whether on my side, or on your's.
DURING his confinement he was several times tortured in the most cruel manner, till, at length, the severity of the punishments overpowered his strength, and finished his existence.
THE death of Molinos struck such an impression on his followers, that the greater part of them soon abjured his mode; and by the assiduity of the Jesuits, quietism was totally extirpated throughout the country.
An Account of the Persecutions in BOHEMIA under the PAPACY.
THE Roman pontiffs having usurped a power over several churches, were particularly severe on the Bohemians, which occasioned them to send two ministers, and four lay-brothers to Rome, in the year 977, to obtain redress of the pope. After some delay their request was granted, and their grievances redressed. Two things in particular they were permitted to do, viz. to have divine service performed in their own language, and to give the cup to the laity in the sacrament.
THE disputes however soon broke out again, the succeeding popes exerting their whole power to impose on the minds of the Bohemians; and the latter, with great spirit, aiming to preserve their religious liberties.
A. D. 1375, some zealous friends of the gospel applied to Charles, king of Bohemia, to call an oeconomical council, for an inquiry into the abuses that had crept into the church, and to make a full and thorough reformation. The king, not knowing how to proceed, sent to the pope for directions how to act; but the pontiff was so incensed at the affair, that his only reply was, Severely punish those rash and profane heretics. The monarch, accordingly banished every one who had been concerned in the application, and to oblige the pope, laid a great number of additional restraints upon the religious liberties of the people.
JOHN HUSS, and Jerom of Prague, two holy and pious men, being condemned by order of the council of Constance, fifty-eight of the principal Bohemian nobility interposed in their favour. Nevertheless they were cruelly burnt, and the pope, in conjunction w [...]th the council of Constance ordered the Romish clergy, every where, to excommunicate such as adopted their opinions, or commiserated their fate.
THESE orders occasioned great contentions between the papist, and reformed Bohemians, which was the cause of a violent persecution against the latter. At Prague the persecution was extremely severe, till, at length, the reformed being driven to desperation, attacked the senate-house, and threw twelve senators, with the speaker, out of the senate-house windows, whose bodies fell upon spears, which were held up by others of the reformed in the street, to recieve them.
BEING inforned of these proceedings, the pope came to Florence, and publicly excommunicated the reformed Bohemians, exciting the emperor of Germany, and all kings, princes, dukes, &c. to take up arms, in order to extirpate the whole race; and promising, by way of encouragement, full remission of all sins whatever to the most wicked person, if he did but kill one Bohemian protestant.
THIS occasioned a bloody war; for several popish princes undertook the extirpation, or at least expulsion, of the proscribed people; and the Bohemians, arming themselves, prepared to repel force by force, in the most vigorous and effectual manner. The popish army prevailing against the protestant forces at the battle of Cuttenburgh, the prisoners of the reformed were taken to three deep mines near that town, and several hundreds were cruelly thrown into each, where they miserably perished.
A merchant of Prague, going to Breslaw, in Silesia, happened to lodge in the same inn with several priests. Entering into conversation upon the subject of religious controversy, he passed many encomiums upon the martyred John Huss, and his [Page 209] doctrines. The priests taking umbrage at this, laid an information against him the next morning, and he was committed to prison as an heretic. Many endeavours were used to persuade him to embrace the Roman catholic faith; but he remained stedfast to the pure doctrines of the reformed church. Soon after his imprisonment, a student of the university was committed to the same gaol; when, being permitted to converse with the merchant, they mutually comforted each other. On the day appointed for execution, when the gaoler began to fasten the ropes to their feet, by which they were to be dragged through the streets, the student appeared to be quite terrified, and offered to abjure his faith, and turn Roman catholic if he might be saved. The offer was accepted, his abjuration was taken by a priest, and he was set at liberty. A priest applying to the merchant to follow the example of the student, he nobly said, "Lose no time in hopes of my recantation, your expectations will be vain; I sincerely pity that poor wretch, who has miserably sacrificed his soul for a few more uncertain years of a troublesome life; and, so far from having the least idea of following his example, I glory in the very thoughts of dying for the sake of Christ." On hearing these words, the priest ordered the executioner to proceed; and the merchant being drawn through the city, was brought to the place of execution, and there burnt.
P [...]CHEL, a bigoted popish magistrate, apprehended 24 protestants, among whom was his daughter's husband. As they all owned they were of the reformed religion, he indiscriminately condemned them to be drowned in the river Abbis. On the day appointed for the execution, a great concourse of people attended, among whom was Pichel's daughter. This worthy wife threw herself at her father's feet, bedewed them with tears, and in the most pathetic manner, implored him to commiserate her sorrow, and pardon her husband. The obdurate magistrate sternly replied, "Intercede not for him, child, he is a heretic, a vile heretic." To which she nobly answered, "Whatever his faults may be, or however his opinions may differ from your's, he is still my husband, [...] which, at a time like this, should [...] my whole consideration. Pichel s [...]ew into [...] passion, and said, "You are ma [...] cannot you after the death of this, have a much worthier husband?" No, sir, (replied she) my affections are fixed upon this, and death itself shall not dissolve my marriage vow. Pichel, however, continued inflexible, and ordered the prisoners to be tied with their hands and feet behind them, and in that manner to be thrown into the river. As soon as this was put into execution, the young lady watched her opportunity, leaped into the waves, and embracing the body of her husband, both sunk together into one watery grave. An uncommon instance of conjugal love in a wife, and of an inviolable attachment to, and personal affection for, her husband.
THE emperor Ferdinand, whose hatred to the Bohemian protestants was without bounds, not thinking he had sufficiently oppressed them, instituted a high court of reformers, upon the plan of the inquisition, with this difference, that the reformers were to remove from place to place, and always be attended by a body of troops.
THESE reformers consisted chiefly of Jesuits, and from their decisions there was no appeal, by which it may be easily conjectured, that it was a dreadful tribunal indeed.
THIS bloody court, attended by a body of troops, made the tour of Bohemia, in which they seldom examined or saw a prisoner, suffering the soldiers to murder the protestants as they pleased, and then to make a report of the matter to them afterwards.
THE first victim of their cruelty was an aged minister, whom they killed as he lay sick in bed; the next day they robbed and murdered another, and soon after shot a third, as he was preaching in his pulpit.
A nobleman and a clergyman, who resided in a protestant village, hearing of the approach of the high court of reformers and the troops, fled from the place, and secreted themselves. The soldiers, however, on their arrival, seized upon a school-master, and asked him where the lord of that place and the minister were concealed, and where they had hid their treasures. The school-master replied he could not answer either of the questions. They then stripped him naked, bound him with [Page 210] cords, and beat him most unmercifully with cudgels. This cruelty not extorting any confession from him, they scorched him in various parts of the body; when, to gain a respite from his torments, he promised to shew them where the treasures were hid. The soldiers gave ear to this with pleasure, and the school-master led them to a ditch full of stones, saying, Beneath those stones are the riches ye seek for. Eager after money, they went to work, and soon removed those stones, but not finding what they fought after, beat the school-master to death, buried him in the ditch, and covered him with the very stones he had made them remove.
SOME of the soldiers ravished the daughters of a worthy protestant before his face, and then tortured him to death. A minister and his wife they tied back to back, and burnt. Another minister they hung upon a cross beam, and making a fire under him, broiled him to death. A gentleman they hacked into small pieces; and they filled a young man's mouth with gunpowder, and setting fire [...]o it, blew his head to pieces.
AS their principal rage was directed against the clergy, they took a pious protestant minister, and tormented him daily for a month together, in the following manner, making their cruelty regular, systematic, and progressive.
1. THEY placed him amidst them, and made him the subject of their derision and mockery, during a whole day's entertainment, trying to exhaust his p [...]tience, but in vain, for he bore the whole with a true christian fortitude.
2. THEY spit in his face, pulled his nose, and pinched him in most parts of his body.
3. HE was hunted like a wild beast, till ready to expire with fatigue.
4. THEY made him run the gantlope between two ranks of them, each striking him with a twig.
5. HE was beat with their fists.
6. HE was beat with ropes.
7. THEY scourged him with wires.
8. HE was beat with cudgels.
9. THEY tied him up by the heels with his head downwards, till the blood started out of his nose, mouth, &c.
10. THEY hung him up by the right arm till it was dislocated, and then had it set again.
11. THE same was repeated with his left arm.
12. BURNING papers, dipped in oil, were placed between his fingers and toes.
13. HIS flesh was torn with red hot pincers.
14. HE was put to the rack.
15. THEY pulled off the nails of his right hand.
16. THE same repeated with his left hand.
17. HE was bastinadoed on his feet.
18. A slit was made in his right ear.
19. THE same repeated on his left ear.
20. HIS nose was slit.
21. THEY whipped him through the town upon an ass.
22. THEY made several incisions in his flesh.
23. THEY pulled off the toe nails of his right foot.
24. THE same repeated with his left foot.
25. HE was tied up by the loins, and suspended for a considerable time.
26. THE teeth of his upper jaw were pulled out.
27. THE same was repeated with his lower jaw.
28. BOILING lead was poured upon his fingers.
29. THE same repeated with his toes.
[Page 211]30. A knotted cord was twisted about his forehead in such a manner, as to force out his eyes.
DURING the whole of these horrid cruelties, particular care was taken that his wounds should not mortify, and not to injure him mortally till the last day, when the forcing out of his eyes proved his death.
INNUMERABLE were the other murders and depredations committed by those unfeeling brutes, and shocking to humanity were the cruelties which they inflicted on the poor Bohemian protestants. The winter being far advanced, however, the high court of reformers, with their infernal band of military ruffians, thought proper to return to Prague; but on their way meeting with a protestant pastor, they could not resist the temptation of feasting their barbarous eyes with a new kind of cruelty, which had just suggested itself to the diabolical imagination of one of the soldiers. This was to strip the minister naked, and alternately to cover him with ice and burning coals. This novel mode of tormenting a fellow-creature was immediately put in practice, and the unhappy victim expired beneath the torments, which seemed to delight his inhuman persecutors.
A secret order was soon after issued by the emperor, for apprehending all noblemen and gentlemen, who had been principally concerned in supporting the protestant cause, and in nominating Frederic, elector Palatine of the Rhine, to be king of Bohemia. These, to the number of fifty, were apprehended in one night, and at one hour, and brought from the places where they were taken, to the castle of Prague, and the estates of those who were absent from the kingdom were confiscated, themselves were made outlaws, and their names f [...]ed upon a gallows, as marks of public ignominy.
THE high court of reformers then proceeded to try the fifty, who had been apprehended, and two apostate protestants were appointed to examine them. These examinants asked a great number of unnecessary and impertinent questions, which so exasperated one of the noblemen, who was naturally of a warm temper, that he exclaimed, opening his breast at the same time, "Cut here, search my heart, you shall find nothing but love of religion and liberty: those were the motives for which I drew my sword, and for those I am willing to suffer death."
AS none of the prisoners would change their religion, o [...] acknowledge they had been in an error, they were all pronounced guilty; but the sentence was referred to the emperor. When that monarch had read their names, and an account of the respective accusations against them, he passed judgment upon all, but in a different manner, as his sentences were of four kinds, viz. death, banishment, imprisonment for life, and imprisonment during pleasure.
TWENTY being ordered for execution, were informed they might send for jesuits, monks, or friars, to prepare for the awful change they were to undergo; but that no protestants would be permitted to come near them. This proposal they rejected, and strove all they could to comfort and chear each other upon the solemn occasion.
ON the morning of the day appointed for the execution, a cannon was fired as a signal to bring the prisoners from the castle to the principal marketplace, in which scaffolds were erected, and a body of troops were drawn up to attend the tragic scene.
THE prisoners left the castle with as much chear fulness as if they had been going to an agreeable entertainment, instead of a violent death.
EXCLUSIVE of soldiers, jesuits, priests, executioners, attendants, &c. a prodigious concourse of people attended, to see the exit of these devoted martyrs, who were executed in the following order:
I. Lord SCHILIK.
THIS nobleman was about fifty years of age, and was possessed of great natural abilities. When he was told he was to be quartered, and his parts scattered in different places, he smiled with great serenity, saying, The loss of a sepulchre is but a trifling consideration. A gentleman who stood by, crying. [Page 212] Courage, my lord: he replied, I have God's favour, which is sufficient to inspire any one with courage: the fear of death does not trouble me; formerly I have faced him in fields of battle to oppose Anti-christ; and now dare face him on a scaffold, for the sake of Christ. Having said a short prayer, he told the executioner he was ready, who cut off his right hand and his head, and then quartered him. His hand and head were placed upon the high tower of Prague, and his quarters distributed in different parts of the city.
II. Lord Viscount WINCESLAUS.
THIS venerable nobleman, who had attained the age of seventy years, was equally respectable for learning, piety, and hospitality. His temper was so remarkably patient, that when his house was broke open, his property seized, and his estates confiscated, he only said, with great composure, The Lord hath given, and the Lord hath taken away. Being asked why he could engage in so dangerous a cause as that of attempting to support the elector Palatine Frederic, against the power of the emperor, he replied, I acted strictly according to the dictates of my conscience, and, to this day, deem him my king. I am now full of years, and wish to lay down life, that I may not be a witness of the farther evils which are to attend my country. You have long thirsted for my blood, take it, for God will be my avenger. Then approaching the block, he stroked his long grey beard, and said, Venerable hairs, the greater honour now attends ye, a crown of martyrdom is your portion. Then laying down his head, it was severed from his body at one stroke, and placed upon a pole in a conspicuous part of the city.
III. Lord HARANT.
LORD HARANT was a man of good sense, great piety, and much experience gained by travel, as he had visited the principal places in Europe, Asia, and Africa. Hence he was [...] from national prejudices, and had collected much knowledge.
THE accusations against this nobleman were, hi [...] being a protestant, and having [...]aken an oath of allegiance to Frederic, elector Palatine of the Rhine, as king of Bohemia. When he came upon the scaffold, he said, "I have travelled through many countries, and traversed various barbarous nations, yet never found so much cruelty as at home. I have escaped innumerable perils by sea and land, and surmounted inconceivable difficulties, to suffer innocently in my native place. My blood is likewise sought by those for whom I, and my forefathers, have hazarded our lives and estates; but, Almighty God! forgive them, for they know not what they do." He then went to the block, kneeled down, and exclaimed, with great energy, Into thy hands, O Lord! I commend my spirit; in thee have I always trusted; receive me, therefore, my blessed Redeemer. The fatal stroke was then given, and a period put to the temporary pains of this life.
IV. Lord FREDERIC DE BILE.
THIS nobleman suffered as a protestant, and a promoter of the late war: he met his fate with serenity, and only said, he wished well to the friends whom he left behind, forgave the enemies who caused his death, denied the authority of the emperor in that country, acknowledged Frederic to be the only true king of Bohemia, and hoped for salvation in the merits of his blessed Redeemer.
V. Lord HENRY OTTO.
WHEN lord Otto first came upon the scaffold, he seemed greatly confounded, and said, with some asperity, as if addressing himself to the emperor, "Thou tyrant Ferdinand, your throne is established in blood; but if you kill my body, and disperse my members, yet they shall still rise up in judgement against you." He then was silent, and having walked about for some time, seemed to recover his fortitude, and growing calm, said to a gentleman who stood near, I was, a few minutes since, greatly discomposed, but now I feel my spirits revive; God be praised for affording me such comfort; death no longer appears as the king of terrors, but seems to invite me to participate of some unknown joys. Kneeling before the block, he said, Almighty God! to thee I commend my soul, receive it for the sake of Christ, and admit it to the glory of thy presence. The executioner put this nobleman to [Page 213] considerable pain, by making several strokes before he severed the head from the body.
VI. The Earl of RUGENIA.
SUPERIOR abilities, and unaffected piety, distinguished this nobleman. On the scaffold he said, "We who drew our swords, fought only to preserve the liberties of the people, and to keep our consciences sacred: as we were overcome, I am better pleased at the sentence of death than if the emperor had given me life; for I find that it pleases God to have his truth defended, not by our swords, but by our blood." He then went boldly to the block, saying, I shall now be speedily with Christ, and received the crown of martyrdom with great courage.
VII. Sir GASPER KAPLITZ.
THIS gentleman was 86 years of age. When he came to the place of execution, he addressed the principal officer thus: behold a miserable ancient man, who hath often intreated God to take him out of this wicked world, but could not till now obtain his desire; for God reserved me till these years to be a spectacle to the world, and a sacrifice to himself: therefore God's will be done." One of the officers told him, in consideration of his great age, that if he would only ask pardon, he would immediately re [...]eive it. "Ask pardon! exclaimed he, I will ask pardon of God whom I have frequently offended; but not of the emperor to whom I never gave any offence: should I sue for pardon, it might justly be suspected I had committed some crime for which I deserved this condemnation. No, no, as I die innocent, and with a clear conscience, I would not be separated from this noble company of martyrs:" so saying, he chearfully resigned his neck to the block.
VIII. PROCOPIUS DORZECKI.
THIS gentleman on the scaffold said, "We are now under the emperor's judgment; but in time he shall be judged, and we shall appear as witnesses against him." Then taking a gold medal from his neck, which was struck when the elector Frederic was crowned king of Bohemia, he presented it to one of the officers; at the same time uttering these words, "As a dying man, I request, if ever king Frederic is restored to the throne of Bohemia, that you will give him this medal. Tell him, for his sake, I wore it till death, and that now I willingly lay down my life for God and my king." He then chearfully laid down his head, and submitted to the fatal blow.
IX. DIONYSIUS ZERVIUS.
THIS gentleman was brought up a Roman catholic, but had embraced the reformed religion for some years. When upon the scaffold the jesuits used their utmost endeavours to make him recant, and return to his former faith, but he paid not the least attention to their exhortations. Kneeling down he said, They may destroy my body, but cannot injure my soul, that I commend to my Redeemer: and then patiently submitted to martyrdom, being at that time fifty-six years of age.
X. VALENTINE COCKAN.
THIS was a person of considerable fortune and eminence, perfectly pious and honest, but of trifling abilities; yet his imagination seemed to grow bright, and his faculties to improve on death's approach, as if the impending danger refined the understanding. Just before he was beheaded, he expressed himself with such eloquence, energy, and precision, as greatly amazed those who knew his former deficiency in point of capacity.
XI. TOBIAS STEFFIK.
THIS gentleman was remarkable for his affability and serenity of temper. He was perfectly resigned to his fate, and a few minutes before his death spoke in this singular manner, "I have received, during the whole course of my life, many favours from God: ought I not therefore chearfully to take one bitter cup, when he thinks proper to present it? Or rather, ought I not to rejoice, that it is his will I should give up a corrupted life for that o [...] immortality?
XII. Dr. JESSENIUS.
THIS able student of physic was accused of having spoken disrespectful words of the emperor, of [Page 214] treason in swearing allegiance to the elector Frederic, and of heresy in being a protestant: for the first accusation he had his tongue cut out; for the second he was beheaded; and for the third, and last, he was quartered, and the respective parts exposed on poles.
XIII. CHRISTOPHER CHOBER.
THIS gentleman, as soon as he stepped upon the scaffold, said, "I come in the name of God, to die for his glory; I have fought the good fight, and finished my course; so, executioner, do your office." The executioner obeyed, and he instantly received the crown of martyrdom.
XIV. JOHN SHULTIS.
NO person ever lived more respected, or died more lamented, than this gentleman. The only words he spoke, before receiving the fatal stroke, were, "The righteous seem to die in the eyes of fools, but they only go to rest. Lord Jesus! thou hast promised that those that come to thee shall not be cast off. Behold, I am come; look on me, pity me, pardon my sins, and receive my soul."
XV. MAXIMILIAN HOSTIALICK.
THIS gentleman was famed for his learning, piety, and humanity. When he first came on the scaffold, he seemed exceedingly terrified at the approach of death. The officer taking notice of his agitation, he said, "Ah! sir, now the sins of my youth crowd upon my mind; but I hope God will enlighten me, lest I sleep the sleep of death, and lest mine enemies say, we have prevailed." Soon after he said, "I hope my repentance is sincere, and will be accepted, in which case the blood of Christ will wash me from my crimes. He then told the officer he should repeat the song of Simeon; at the conclusion of which the executioner might do his duty. He, accordingly, said, Lord! now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace, according to thy word, for mine eyes have seen thy salvation▪ at which words his head was struck off at one blow.
XVI. JOHN KUTNAUR.
WHEN this gentleman came to the place of execution, a jesuit said to him, "Embrace the Roman catholic faith, which alone can save and arm you against the terrors of death." To which he replied, "Your superstitious faith I abhor, it leads to perdition, and I wish for no other arms against the terrors of death, than a good conscience." The jesuit turned away, saying, sarcastically, The protestants are impenetrable rocks. You are mistaken, said Kutnaur, it is Christ that is the rock, and we are firmly fixed upon him.
THIS person not being born independent, but having acquired a fortune by a mechanical employment, was ordered to be hanged. Just before he was turned off, he said, "I die, not for having committed any crime, but for following the dictates of my conscience, and defending my country and religion."
XVII. SIMEON SUSSICKEY.
SUSSICKEY was father-in-law to Kutnaur, and, like him, was ordered [...]o be executed on a gallows. He went chearfully to death, and appeared impatient to be executed, saying, "Every moment delays me from entering into the kingdom of Christ."
XVIII. NATHANIEL WODNIANSKEY.
THIS person was hanged for having supported the protestant cause, and the election of Frederick to the crown of Bohemia. At the gallows, the jesuits did all in their power to induce him to renounce his faith. Finding their endeavours ineffectual, one of them said, If you will not abjure your heresy, at least repent of your rebellion? To which Wodnianskey replied, "You take away our lives under a pretended charge of rebellion; and, not content with that, seek to destroy our souls: glut yourselves with blood, and be satisfied, but tamper not with our consciences."
WODNIANSKEY'S own son then appro [...]hed the gall [...]ws, and said to his father, "Sir, [...] life should be offered to you on condition of apostacy, I intreat [Page 215] you to remember Christ, and reject such pernicious overtures." To this the father replied, "It is very acceptable, my son, to be exhorted to constancy by you; but suspect me not; rather e [...]vour to confirm in their faith, your [...]rothers, sisters, and children, and teach them to imitate that constancy, of which I shall leave them an example." He had no sooner concluded these words, than he was turned off, receiving the crown of martyrdom with great fortitude.
XIX. WENCESLAUS GISBITZKEY.
THIS person, during his whole confinement, had great hopes of life given him, which made his friends fear for the safety of his soul. He, however, continued stedfast in his faith, prayed fervently at the gallows, and met his fate with singular resignation.
XX. MARTIN FOSTER.
THIS was an ancient cripple; the accusations against whom were, being charitable to heretics, and lending money to the elector Frederic. His great wealth, however, seems to have been his principal crime; and that he might be plundered of his treasures, was the occasion of his being ranked in this illustrious list of martyrs.
General Persecutions in GERMANY.
THE general persecutions in Germany were principally occasioned by the doctrines and ministry of Martin Luther. Indeed, the pope was so terrified at the success of that courageous reformer, that he determined to engage the emperor, Charles the Fifth, at any rate, in the scheme to attempt their extirpation.
TO this end;
1. HE gave the emperor two hundred thousand crowns in ready money.
2. HE promised to maintain twelve thousand foot. and five thousand horse, for the space of six months, or during a campaign.
3. HE allowed the emperor to receive one half of the revenues of the clergy of the empire, during the war.
4. HE permitted the emperor to pledge the abbey-lands for five hundred thousand crowns, to assist in carrying on hostilities against the protestants.
THUS prompted and supported, the emperor undertook the extirpation of the protestants, against whom, indeed, he was particularly enraged himself; and, for this purpose, a formidable army was raised in Germany, Spain, and Italy.
THE protestant princes, in the mean time, fo [...] ed a powerful confederacy, in order to repel the impending blow. A great army was raised, an [...] the command given to the elector of Saxony, and the landgrave of Hesse. The [...]mper [...] forces were commanded by the emperor of Germany i [...] person, and the eyes of all Europe were turned on the event of the war.
AT length the armies met, and a desperate engagement ensued, in which the protestants were defeated, and the elector of Saxony, and landgrave of Hesse, both taken prisoners. This fatal blow was succeeded by a horrid persecution, the severities of which were such, that exile might be deemed a mild fate, and concealment in a dismal wood, pass for happiness. In such times a cave is a palace, a rock a bed of down, and wild roots delicacies.
THOSE who were taken experienced the most cruel tortures that infernal imaginations could invent; and, by their constancy evinced, that a real christian can surmount every difficulty, and despise every danger, to acquire a crown of martyrdom.
HENRY VOES and John Esch, being apprehended as protestants, were brought to examination: when Voes, answering for himself and the other, gave the following answers to some questions asked by a priest, who examined them by order of the magistracy.
WERE you not both, some years ago, Augustine friars?
YES.
HOW came you to quit the bosom of the church of Rome?
ON account of her abominations.
IN what do you believe?
IN the Old and New Testament.
DO you believe in the writings of the fathers, and the decrees of the councils?
YES, if they agree with scripture.
DID not Martin Luther seduce you both?
HE seduced us even in the very same manner as Christ seduced the apostles; that is, he made us sensible of the frailty of our bodies, and the value of our souls.
THIS examination was sufficient; they were both condemned to the flames, and, soon after, suffered with that manly fortitude which becomes christians, when they receive a crown of martyrdom.
HENRY SUTPHEN, an eloquent and pious preacher, was taken out of his bed in the middle of the night, and compelled to walk barefoot a considerable way, so that his feet were terribly cut. He desired a horse, but his conductors said, in derision, A horse for an heretic; no, no, heretics may go barefoot. When he arrived at the place of his destination, he was condemned to be burnt; but, during the execution, many indignities were offered him, as those who attended, not content with what he suffered in the flames, cut and slashed him in a most terrible manner.
MANY were murdered at Halle; Middleburg being taken by storm, all the protestants were put to the sword, and great numbers were burned at Vienna.
AN officer being sent to put a minister to death, pretended, wh [...]n he came to the clergyman's house, that his intentions were only to pay him a visit. The minister, not suspecting the intended cruelty, entertained his supposed guest in a very cordial manner. As soon as dinner was over, the officer said to some of his attendants, "Take this clergyman, and hang him." The attendants themselves were so shocked, after the civility they had seen, that they hesitated to perform the commands of their master; and the minister said, "Think what a sting will remain on your conscience, for thus violating the laws of hospitality." The officer, however, insisted on being obeyed, and the attendants, with reluctance, performed the execrable office of executioners.
PETER SPENGLER, a pious divine, of the town of Chalet, was thrown into the river, and drowned. Before he was taken to the banks of the stream, which was to become his grave, they led him to the market-place, that his crimes might be proclaimed; which were, not going to mass, not making confession, and not believing in transubstantiation. After this ceremony was over, he made a most excellent discourse to the people, and concluded with a kind of hymn of a very edifying nature.
A protestant gentleman being ordered to lose his head for not renouncing his religion, went chearfully to the place of execution. A friar came to him, and said these words in a low tone of voice, "As you have a great reluctance publicly to abjure your faith, whisper your confession in my ear, and I will absolve your sins." To this the gentleman loudly replied, "Trouble me not, friar, I have confessed my sins to God, and obtained absolution through the merits of Jesus Christ." Then turning to the executioner, he said, "Let me not be pestered with th [...]se men, but perform your duty." On which his head was struck off at a single blow.
WOLFGANG SOU [...]H, and John Huglin, two worthy [...], were burned, as was [...] of the university of Wertemburgh: [...] Carpenter, a [...], was hanged for refusing to [...].
[Page 217]THE persecutions in Germany having subsided many years, again broke out in 1630, on account of the war between the emperor, and the king of Sweden, for the latter was a protestant prince, and consequently the protestants of Germany espoused his cause, which greatly exasperated the emperor against them.
THE imperialists having laid siege to the town of Passewalk, (which was defended by the Swedes) took it by storm, committed the most horrid cruelties on the occasion. They pulled down the churches, burnt the houses, pillaged the properties, massacred the ministers, put the garrison to the sword, hanged the townsmen, ravished the women, smothered the children, &c. &c.
A most bloody tragedy was transacted at Magdeburg, in the year 1631. The generals Tilly and Pappenheim, having taken that protestant city by storm, upwards of 20,000 persons, without distinction of rank, sex, or age, were slain during the carnage, and 6,000 were drowned in attempting to escape over the river Elbe. After this fury subsided, the remaining inhabitants were stripped naked, severely scourged, had their ears cropped, and being yoked together like oxen, were turned adrift.
THE town of Hoxte [...] was taken by the popish army, and all the inhabitants as well as the garrison were put to the sword; when the houses being set on fire, the bodies were consumed in the flames.
AT Griphenburg, when the imperial forces prevailed, they shut up the senators in the senate-chamber, and, surrounding it by lighted straw, suffocated them.
FRANH [...]NDAL surrendered upon articles of capitulation, yet the inhabitants were as cruelly used as at other places, and at Heidelburg many were shut up in prison and starved.
THE cruelties used by the imperial troops, under count Tilly in Saxony, are thus enumerated.
HALF strangling, and recovering the persons again repeatedly.
ROLLING sharp wheels over the fingers and toes.
PINCHING the thumbs in a vice.
FORCING the most filthy things down the throat, by which many were choaked.
TYING cords round the head so tight that the blood gushed out of the eyes, nose, ears, and mouth.
FASTENING burning matches to the fingers, toes, ears, arms, legs, and even tongue.
PUTTING powder in the mouth and setting fire to it, by which the head was shattered to pieces.
TYING bags of power to all parts of the body, by which the person was blown up.
DRAWING cords backwards and forwards through the fleshy parts.
MAKING incisions with bodkins and knives in the skin.
RUNNING wires through the nose, ears, lips, &c.
HANGING protestants up by the legs, with their heads over a fire, by which they were smoak dried.
HANGING up by one arm till it was dislocated.
HANGING upon hooks by the ribs.
FORCING people to drink till they burst.
BAKING many in hot ovens.
FIXING weights to the feet, and drawing up several with pullies.
HANGING, stifling, roasting, stabbing, frying, racking, ravishing, ripping open, breaking the bones, rasping off the flesh, tearing with wild horses, drowning, strangling, burning, broiling, crucifying, immuring, poisoning, cutting off tongue, nose, ear, &c. sawing off the limbs, [Page 218] hacking to pieces, and drawing by the heels through the streets.
THESE enormous cruelties will be a perpetual stain on the memory of count Tilly, who not only permitted, but even commanded the troops to put them in practice. Wherever he came, the most horrid barbarities, and cruel depredations ensued: famine and conflagration marked his progress; for he destroyed all the provisions he could not take with him, and burnt all the towns before he left them; so that the full result of his conquests were murder, poverty, and desolation.
AN aged and pious divine they stripped naked, tied him on his back upon a table, and fastened a large fierce cat upon his belly. They then pricked and tormented the cat in such a manner, that the creature with rage tore his belly open, and gnawed his bowels.
ANOTHER minister, and his family, were seized by these inhuman monsters; when they ravished his wife and daughter before his face, stuck his infant son upon the point of a lance, and then surrounding him with his whole library of books, they set fire to them, and he was consumed in the midst of the flames.
IN Hesse Cassel some of the troops entered an hospital, in which were principally mad women, when stripping all the poor wretches naked, they made them run about the streets for their diversion and then put them to death.
IN Pomerania, some of the imperial troops entering a small town, seized upon all the young women, and girls of upwards of 10 years, and then placing their parents in a circle, they ordered them to sing psalms, while they ravished their children, or else they swore they would cut them to pieces afterwards. They then took all the married women who had young children, and threatened, if they did not consent to the gratification of their lusts, to burn their children before their faces in a large fire which they had kindled for that purpose.
A [...] of count Tilly's soldiers meeting with a [...] of merchants belonging to [...], who were returning from the great market of Strasburg, they attempted to surround them: all escaped, however, but ten, leaving their properties behind. The ten who were taken begged hard for their lives; but the soldiers murdered them, saying, You must die because you are heretics, and have got no money.
THE same soldiers met with two countesses, who, together with some young ladies, the daughters of one of them, were taking an airing in a landau. The soldiers spared their lives, but treated them with great indecency, and having stripped them all stark naked, bade the coachman drive on.
BY means and mediation of Great-Britain, peace was at length restored to Germany, and the protestants remained unmolested for several years, till some new disturbances broke out in the Palatinate, which were thus occasioned:
THE great church of the Holy Ghost, at Heidelburg, had, for many years, been shared equally by the protestants and Roman catholics, in this manner: the protestants performed divine service in the nave or body of the church; and the Roman catholics celebrated mass in the choir. Though this had been the custom time immemorial, the elector Palatine, at length, took it into his head not to suffer it any longer, declaring, that as Heidelburg was the place of his residence, and the church of the Holy Ghost, the cathedral of his principal city, divine service ought to be performed only according to the rites of the church of which he was a member. He then forbad the pro [...]stants to enter the church, and put the papists in possession of the whole.
THE [...] people applied to the protestant powers for redress, which so much exasperated the elector, that he suppressed the Heidelburg catechism. The protestant powers, however, [...] that [Page 219] they would treat their Roman catholic subjects with the greatest severity. Many violent disputes took place between the protestant powers, and those of the elector, and these were greatly augmented by the following incident: the coach of the Dutch minister standing before the door of the resident sent by the prince of Hesse, the host was by chance carrying to a sick person; the coachman took not the least notice, which those who attended the host observing, pulled him from his box, and compelled him to kneel: this violence to the domestic of a public minister was highly resented by all the protestant deputies; and, still more to heighten these differences, the protestants presented to the deputies three additional articles of complaint.
1. THAT military executions were ordered against all protestant shoe-makers who should refuse to contribute to the masses of St. Crispin.
2. THAT the protestants were forbid to work on popish holidays, even in harvest time, under very heavy penalties, which occasioned great inconveniences, and considerably prejudiced public business.
3. THAT several protestant ministers had been dispossessed of their churches, under pretence of their having been originally founded, and built by Roman catholics.
THE protestant deputies at length, became so serious, as to intimate to the elector, that force of arms should compel him to do the justice he deni [...]d to their representations. This [...] brought him to reason, as he well kn [...]w the impossibility of carrying on a war a [...]ainst the powerf [...]l st [...]tes who threatened him. He, therefore, agreed, that the use of the body of the church of the Holy Ghost should be restored to the protestan [...]. He restored the Heidelburg catechism, put the protestant mi [...]isters again in possession of the churches of which they had been dispossessed, all [...] the protestants to work on popish holidays▪ and ordered, th [...] no person should be mol [...]sted for not [...] when the host passed by.
THESE things he did [...] to [...] his resentment to his protestant s [...]bjects, in other circumstances where protestant states had no right to interfere, he totally abandoned Heidelburg, removing all the courts of justice to Manheim, which was intirely inhabited by Roman catholics. He likewise built a new palace there, making it his place of residence; and, being followed by the Roman catholics of Heidelburg, Manheim became a flourishing place.
IN the mean time the protestants of Heidelburg sunk into poverty, and many of them became so distressed, as to quit their native country, and seek an asylum in protestant states. A great number of these coming into England, in the time of queen Anne, were cordially received here, and met with a most humane assistance, both by public and private donations.
IN 1732, above 30,000 protestants were, contrary to the treaty of Westphalia, driven from the archbishopric of Saltzburg. They went away in the depth of winter, with scarce clothes to cover them, and without provisions, not having permission to take any thing with them. The cause of these poor people not being publicly espoused by such states as could obtain them redress, they emigrated to various protestant countries, and settled in places where they could enjoy the free exercise of their religion, without hurting their consciences, and live free from the trammels of popish superstition, and the chains of papal tyranny.
An Account of the Life, Sufferings, and Martyrdom of JOHN HUSS, who was burnt to Death at Constance ▪ in Germany ▪ for maint [...]ning the Doctrines of WICK [...], the English Reformist.
JOHN HUSS was born at Hussenitz, a village in Bohemia, about the year 1380. His parents gave him the best education their circumstances would admit: and having acquired a tolerable knowledge of the classics at a private school, he was removed to the university of Prague, where he soon gave strong proofs of his mental powers, and was remarkable for his diligence and application to study.
[Page 220]IN 1408, Huss commenced bachelor of divinity, and was after successively chosen pastor of the church of Bethlehem, in Prague, and dean and rector of the university. In these stations he discharged his duties with great fidelity, and became, at length, so conspicuous for his preaching, (which was in conformity with the doctrines of Wickliffe) that it was not likely he could long escape the notice of the pope, and his adherents, against whom he inveighed with no small degree of asperity.
THE English reformist Wickliffe had so kindled the light of reformation, that it began to illumine the darkest corners of popery and ignorance. His doctrines spread into Bohemia, and were well received by great numbers of people, but by none so particularly as John Huss, and his zealous friend and fellow-martyr, Jerom of Prague.
THE archbishop of Prague, finding the reformists daily increasing, issued a decree to suppress the farther spreading of Wickliffe's writings; but this had an effect quite different to what he expected, for it stimulated the friends of these doctrines to greater zeal, and almost the whole university united in propagating them
HUSS had considerable influence in the university, not only on account of his learning, eloquence, and exemplary life, but also on account of some valuable privileges he had obtained from the king in behalf of the Bohemians in that seminary, by which many Germans had been obliged to leave it, and retire to Leipsic, who afterwards became, on that account, his most inveterate enemies.
BEING strongly attached to the doctrines of Wickliffe, Huss strongly opposed the decree of the archbishop, who, however, at length obtained a bull from the pope, giving him commission to prevent the publishing of Wickliffe's doctrines in his province. By virtue of this bull, the archbishop condemned the writings of Wickliffe: he also proceeded against four doctors, who had not delivered up the copies of that divine, and prohibited them, notwithstanding their privileges, to preach to any congregation. Dr. Huss▪ with some other members of the university, protested against these proceedings, and entered an appeal from the sentences of the archbishop.
THE affair being made known to the pope, he granted a commission to cardinal Colonna, to cite John Huss to appear personally at the court of Rome, to answer the accusations laid against him, of preaching both errors and heresies. Dr. Huss desired to be excused from a personal appearance, and was so greatly favoured in Bohemia, that king Winceslaus, the queen, the nobility, and the university, desired the pope to dispense with such an appearance; as also that he would not suffer the kingdom of Bohemia to lie under the accusation of heresy, but permit them to preach the gospel with freedom, in their places of worship.
THREE proctors appeared for Dr. Huss before cardinal Colonna. They endeavoured to excuse his absence, and said, they were ready to answer in his behalf. But the cardinal declared Huss contumacious, and excommunicated him accordingly. The proctors appealed to the pope, who appointed four cardinals to examine the process: these commissioners confirmed the former sentence, and extended the excommunication, not only to Huss, but to all his friends and followers.
FROM this unjust sentence, Huss appealed to a future council, but without success; and, notwithstanding so severe a decree, and an expulsion in consequence from his church in Prague, he retired to Hussenitz, his native place, where he continued to promulgate his new doctrine, both from the pulpit, and with the pen.
THE letters which he wrote at this time were very numerous; and he compiled a treatise, in which he maintained, that reading the books of protestants could not be absolutely forbidden. He wrote in defence of Wickliffe's book on the Trinity; and boldly declared against the vices of the pope, the cardinals, and the clergy of those corrupt times. He caused a writing to be fixed on the church of Bethlehem, charging the Roman catholic clergy with the following errors:
1. OR saying that we ought to pay adoration to the pope.
2. THAT the priests can remit the pain and guilt of sin.
[Page]
The Bones of the Rev d. JOHN WICKLIFF Min [...] of Lutterworth Burnt and thrown into the River 41 Years after his Death.
The Martyrdom of M R JOHN SCHERTER ▪ who was also cruelly persecuted by the Papists.
[Page 221]3. THAT every one must obey his superiors, whether their commands are just or unjust.
4. THAT every excommunication, just or unjust, binds the excommunicated.
HE wrote also many other books, all of which were penned with such strength of argument, as greatly to facilitate the spreading of his doctrines.
THE persecutions against the protestants in England had been carried on for some time, and the most cruel scenes were exhibited. They now extended as far as Germany and Bohemia, where Dr. Huss, and Jerom of Prague, were particularly marked out to suffer death in the cause of religion.
IN the month of November, in the year 1414, a general council was assembled at Constance, in Germany, in order, as was pretended, for the sole purpose of determining a dispute then depending between three persons who contended for the papacy; but the real motive was, to crush the progress of the reformation.
JOHN HUSS was summoned to appear at this council; and, to encourage him, the emperor sent him a safe-conduct, giving him permission freely to come to, and return from the council. When Huss received this information, he told the persons who delivered it, "That he desired nothing more than to purge himself publicly of the imputation of heresy; and that he esteemed himself happy in having so fair an opportunity of it, as at the council to which he was summoned to attend."
TOWARDS the latter end of November, Huss set out on his journey to Constance, accompanied by two Bohemian noblemen, who were among the most eminent of his disciples, and who followed him merely through respect and affection. He caused some placarts, or writings, to be fixed upon the gates of the churches of Prague, in which he declared, that he went to the council to answer all allegations that might be made against him. He also declared, in all the cities through which he passed, that he was going to vindicate himself at Constance, and invited all his adversaries to be present on the occasion.
THE civilities, and even reverence, which Huss met with on his journey, were beyond imagination. The streets, and sometimes the very roads, were lined with people, whom respect, rather than curiosity, had brought together. He was ushered into the towns with great acclamations; and it may be said, that he passed through Germany in a kind of triumph. He could not help expressing his surprize at the treatment he received: "I thought (said he) I had been an outcast. I now see my worst friends are in Bohemia.
AS soon as Huss arrived at Constance, he immediately took lodgings in a remote part of the city. A short time after his arrival, came one Stephen Paletz, who was employed by the clergy at Prague to manage the intended prosecution against him. Paletz was afterwards joined by Michael de Cassis, on the part of the court of Rome. These two declared themselves his accusers, and drew up a set of articles against him, which they presented to the pope, and the prelates of the council.
IT has been already observed, that the attendance of Dr. Huss, at Constance, was, by the emperor's own request, who gave him a safe-conduct; notwithstanding which, according to the maxim of the council, that "Faith is not to be kept with heretics," when it was known that he was in the city, he was immediately arrested, and committed prisoner to a chamber in the palace.
THIS violation of common law and justice was particularly noticed by one of Huss's friends, who urged the imperial safe-conduct; but the pope replied, he never granted any safe conduct, nor was he bound by that of the emperor.
WHILE Huss was in confinement, the council acted the part of inquisitors. They condemned the doctrines of Wickliffe, and even ordered his remains to be dug up, and burnt to ashes; which orders were strictly complied with.
IN the mean time the nobility of Bohemia and [Page 222] Poland strongly interceded for Huss; and so far prevailed as to prevent his being condemned unheard, which had been resolved on by the commissioners appointed to try him.
WHEN he was brought before the council, the articles exhibited against him were read: they were upwards of forty in number, and chiefly extracted from his writings.
AFTER his examination, he was taken from the court and a resolution was formed by the council, to burn him as a heretic if he would not retract. He was then committed to a filthy prison, where, in the day time, he was so laden with fetters on his legs, that he could hardly move; and every night he was fastened by his hands to a ring against the walls of the prison.
AFTER continuing some days in this situation, many noblemen of Bohemia interceded in his behalf. They drew up a petition for his release, which was presented to the council by several of the most distinguished nobles of Bohemia: notwithstanding which, so many enemies had Huss in that court, that not the least attention was paid to it, and the wretched and persecuted reformer was compelled to bear with the punishment inflicted on him by that merciless tribunal.
A few days after the petition was presented, four bishops, and two lords, were sent by the emperor to the prison, in order to prevail on Huss to [...] a recantation. But he called God to witness, with tears in his eyes, that he was not conscious of having preached, or written, any thing against the truth of God, or the faith of his orthodox church. The [...] then represented the great wisdom and authority of the council: to which Huss [...], "Let them send the meanest person of that [...]uncil, who can convince me by arguments from the word of God, and I will submit my judgment to him." This christian and pious answer had no effect, because he would not take the authority and learning of the council upon trust, without the least shadow of an argument offered. The [...], therefore, finding they could not [...] impression on him, departed, greatly astonished [...] the strength of his perseverance.
ON the fourth of July Dr. Huss was brought, for the last time, before the council. After a long examination he was desired to abjure, which he refused without the least hesitation. The bishop of Lodi then preached a bloody persecuting sermon, (concerning the destruction of heretics) the prologue to his intended punishment. After the close of the sermon his fate was determined, his vindication disregarded, and judgment was pronounced. His books were condemned, and he was declared a manifest heretic: he was convicted of having taught many heresies and pernicious errors; of having despised the keys of the church and ecclesiastical censures; of having seduced and given scandal to the faithful by his obstinacy, and having rashly appealed to the tribunal of Christ. The council therefore censured him for being obstinate and incorrigible, and ordained, "That he should be degraded from the priesthood, his books publicly burnt, and himself delivered to the secular power."
HUSS heard this sentence without the least emotion. At the close of it he kneeled down with his eyes lifted towards heaven, and, with all the magnanimity of a primitive martyr, thus exclaimed:— "May thy infinite mercy, O my God! pardon this injustice of mine enemies. Thou knowest the injustice of my accusations: how deformed with crimes I have been represented; how I have been oppressed with worthless witnesses, and a false condemnation; yet O my God! let that mercy of thine, which no tongue can express, prevail with thee not to avenge my wrongs."
THESE excellent sentences were [...] as so many expressions of treason, and [...] inflame his adversaries. Accordingly, the bishop [...] [...] pointed by the council stripped him of his [...] ga [...] ments, degraded him, and [...] paper [...] on his h [...]d, on which was painted [...], with this inscription: "A ringleader of heretics."
OUR h [...]roic martyr received this [...] with [...] of unconcern, which seemed to give him dignit [...] rather than [...]. A serenity, [...] even a joy appeared in his looks, which [...] that his soul had cut off m [...]y stages of a tedious journey in [...] to the [...] of everlasting peace.
[Page 223]AFTER the [...]eremony of degradation was over, the bishops delivered Huss to the emperor, who put him into the hands of the duke of Bavaria. His books were burnt at the gates of the church; and on the 6th of July he was led to the suburbs of Constance, to be burnt alive.
ON his arrival at the place of execution, he fell on his knees, sung several portions of the Psalms, looked stedfastly towards heaven, and repeated these words: "Into thy hands, O Lord! do I commit my spirit: thou hast redeemed me, O most good and faithful God!"
WHEN the chain was put about him at the stake, he said, with a smiling countenance, "My Lord Jesus Christ was bound with a harder chain than this for my sake, and why then should I be ashamed of this old rusty one?"
WHEN the faggots were piled up to his very neck, the duke of Bavaria was so officious as to desire him to abjure. "No, (said Huss) I never preached any doctrine of an evil tendency; and what I taught with my lips I now seal with my blood." He then said to the executioner, "You are now going to burn a goose, (Huss signifying goose in the Bohemian language [...] but in a century you will have a swan whom you can neither roast nor boil." If he was prophetic, he must have meant Martin Luther, who shone about an hundred years after, and who had a swan for his arms.
THE flames were now applied to the faggots, when our martyr sung an hymn, with so loud and chearful a voice, that he was heard through all the cracklings of the combustibles, and the noise of the multitude. At length his voice was interrupted by the flames, which soon closed his existence.
An Account of [...] Life, Sufferings, and Martyrd [...]m of JEROM OF PRAGU [...], who was burnt to D [...]a [...]h at Constan [...]e in Germany ▪ for [...] the [...] of WICKLI [...] ▪ [...] English [...].
JEROM [...] PRAG [...] [...] th [...] companion of Dr. [...] may be said to be co-martyr [...] that university, where he particularly distinguished himself for his great abilities and learning. He likewise visited several other learned seminaries in Europe, particularly the universities of Paris, Heidelburg, Cologn, and Oxford. At the latter place he became acquainted with the works of Wickliffe, and being a person of uncommon application, he translated many of them into his native language, having, with great pains, made himself master of the English tongue.
ON his return to Prague he professed himself an open favourer of Wickliffe, and finding that his doctrines had made a considerable progress in Bohemia, and that Huss was the principal promoter of them, he became an assistant to him in the great work of reformation.
ON the 4th of April, 1415, Jerom arrived at Constance, about three months before the death of Huss. He entered the town privately, and consulting with some of the leaders of his party, whom he found there, was easily convinced he could not be of any service to his friend.
FINDING that his arrival at Constance was publicly known, and that the council intended to seize him, he thought it most prudent to retire. Accordingly, the next day he went to Iberling, an imperial town, about a mile from Constance. From this place he wrote to the emperor, and proposed his readiness to appear before the council, if he would give him a safe conduct; but this was refused. He then applied to the council, but met with an answer no less unfavourable than that from the emperor.
BEING thus disappointed, Jerom caused papers to be put up in all the public places in Constance, particularly on the doors of the cardinals houses, in which he professed his readiness to appear at Constance in the defence of his character and doctrine, both which, he said, had been greatly defamed. He also declared, that if any error should be proved against him, he would with great readiness retract it; begging only that the faith of the council might be given for his security.
NOT receiving any answer to the papers, he set out on his return to Bohemia. He had the pre [...]ntion [Page 224] to take with him a certificate, signed by several of the Behemian nobility then at Constance, testifying that he had used all prudent means in his power to procure a hearing.
JEROM, however, did not thus escape. He was seized at Hirsaw, by an officer belonging to the duke of Sultsbach, who, though unauthorized so to act, made little doubt of obtaining thanks from the council for so acceptable a service.
THE duke of Saltsbach, having Jerom now in his power, wrote to the council for directions how to proceed. The council, after expressing their obligations to the duke, desired him to send the prisoner immediately to Constance. The elector palatine met him on the way, and conducted him into the city, himself riding on horseback, with a numerous retinue, who led Jerom in fetters by a long chain; and immediately on his arrival he was committed to a loathsome dungeon.
JEROM was treated nearly in the same manner as Huss had been, only that he was much longer confined, and shifted from one prison to another. At length, being brought before the council, he desired that he might plead his own cause, and exculpate himself: which being refused him, he broke out into the following exclamation:
"What barbarity is this? For three hundred and forty days have I been confined in a variety of prisons. There is not a misery, there is not a want, which I have not experienced. To my enemies you have allowed the fullest scope of accusation: to me, you deny the least opportunity of defence. Not an hour will you now indulge me in preparing for my trial. You have swallowed the blackest calumnies against me. You have represented me as an heretic, without knowing my doctrine: as an enemy to the faith, before you knew what faith I professed: as a persecutor of priests, before you could have any opportunity of understanding my sentiments on that head. You are a general coun [...] in you center all this world can communicate of gravity, wisdom, and sanctity: but still you are [...], and men are seducible by appearances. The [...] your character is for wisdom, the greater [...] your care to be, not to deviate into folly. The cause I now plead is not my own cause: it is the cause of men: it is the cause of christians: it is a cause, which is to effect the rights of posterity, however the experiment is to be made in my person."
THIS speech had not the least effect: Jerom was obliged to hear his charge read, which was reduced under the following heads:
- 1. THAT he was a derider of the papal dignity.
- 2. AN opposer of the pope.
- 3. AN enemy to the cardinals.
- 4. A persecutor of the prelates.
- 5. AN hater of the christian religion.
TO these several charges Jerom answered with an amazing force of elocution, and strength of argument. "Now, (said he) wretch that I am! whither shall I turn me! To my accusers? My accusers are as deaf as [...]adders. To you, my judges? You are all prepossessed by the arts of my accusers." —After this speech Jerom was immediately remanded to his dungeon.
THE trial of Jerom was brought on the third day after his accusation, and witnesses were examined in support of the charge. The prisoner was prepared for his defence, which appears almost incredible, when we consider he had been three hundred and forty days shut up in loathsome prisons, deprived of day-light, and almost starved for want of common necessaries. But his spirit soared above these disadvantages, under which a man less animated would have sunk; nor was he more at a loss for quotations from fathers and ancient authors, than if he had been furnished with the finest library.
THE most bigoted of the assembly were unwilling he should be heard, knowing what effect eloquence is apt to have on the minds of the most prejudiced. At length, however, it was [...]arried by the majority, that he should have liberty to proceed in his defence, which he began in such an exalted strain of moving elocution, that the heart of [Page 225] obdurate zeal was seen to melt, and the mind of superstition seemed to admit a ray of conviction. He made an admirable distinction between evidence as resting upon facts, and as supported by malice and calumny. He laid before the assembly the whole tenor of his life and conduct. He observed that the greatest and most holy men had been known to differ in points of speculation, with a view to distinguish truth, not to keep it concealed. He expressed a noble contempt of all his enemies, who would have induced him to retract the cause of virtue and truth. He entered upon an high encomium on Huss; and declared he was ready to follow him in the glorious track of martyrdom. He then touched upon the most defensible doctrines of Wickliffe; and concluded with observing, that it was far from his intention to advance any thing against the state of the church of God: that it was only against the abuse of the clergy he complained: and that he could not help saying, it was certainly impious that the patrimony of the church, which was originally intended for the purpose of charity, and universal benevolence, should be prostituted to the pride of the eye, in feasts, foppish vestments, and other reproaches to the name and profession of christianity.
THE trial being over, Jerom received the same sentence, that had been passed upon his martyred countryman. In consequence of this he was, in the usual stile of popish affectation, delivered over to the civil power: but as he was a layman he had not to undergo the ceremony of degradation. They had prepared a cap of paper painted with red devils, which being put upon his head, he said, "Our Lord Jesus Christ, when he suffered death for me a most miserable sinner, he did wear a crown of thorns upon his head; and I, for his sake, will wear this cap."
TWO days were allowed him in hopes that he would recant; in which time the cardinal of Florence used his utmost endeavours to bring him over. But they all proved ineffectual: Jerom was resolved to seal his doctrine with his blood; and he suffered death with the utmost distinguished magnanimity.
IN going to the place of execution he sung several hymns; and when he came to the spot, which was the same where Huss had been burnt, he kneeled down, and prayed fervently. He embraced the stake with great chearfulness and resolution; and when the executioner went behind him to set fire to the faggots, he said, "Come here, and kindle it before my eyes; for if I had been afraid of it, I had not come to this place, having had so many opportunities of making my escape."
THE fire being kindled, he sung an hymn, but was soon interrupted by the flames; and the last words he was heard to say were these:
An account of the Persecutions in the NETHERLANDS.
THE light of the gospel having successfully spread over the Netherlands, the pope instigated the emperor to commence a persecution against the protestants; when many thousands fell martyrs to superstitious malice and barbarous bigotry; among whom the most remarkable were the following:
WENDELINUTA, a pious protestant widow, was apprehended on account of her religion, when several monks, unsuccessfully, endeavoured to persuade her to recant. As they could not prevail, a Roman catholic lady of her acquaintance desired to be admitted to the dungeon in which she was confined, and promised to exert herself strenuously towards inducing the prisoner to adjure the reformed religion. When she was admitted to the dungeon, she did her utmost to perform the task she had undertaken; but finding her endeavours ineffectual, she said, Dear Wendelinuta, if you will not embrace our faith, at least keep the things which you profess secret within your own bosom, and strive to prolong your life. To which the widow replied, Madam, you know not what you say; for with the heart we believe to righteousness, but with the tongue confession is made unto salvation. As she [Page 226] positively refused to recant, her goods were confiscated, and she was condemned to be burnt. At the place of execution a monk held a cross to her, and bade her kiss and worship God. To which she answered, "I worship no wooden god, but the eternal God who is in heaven." She was then executed, but through the before-mentioned Roman catholic lady, the favour was granted, that she should be strangled before the fire was put to the faggots.
TWO protestant clergymen were burnt at Colen; a tradesman of Antwerp, named Nicholas, was tied up in a sack, thrown into the river, and drowned; and Pistorius, a learned student, was carried to the market of a Dutch village in a fool's coat, and committed to the flames.
SIXTEEN protestants having received sentence to be beheaded, a protestant minister was ordered to attend the execution, This gentleman performed the function of his office with great propriety, exhorted them to repentance, and gave them comfort in the mercies of their Redeemer. As soon as the sixteen were beheaded, the magistrate cried out to the executioner, "There is another stroke remaining yet; you must behead the minister, he can never die at a better time than with such excellent precepts in his mouth, and such laudable examples before him." He was accordingly beheaded, though even many of the Roman catholic's themselves reprobated this piece of treacherous and unnecessary cruelty.
GEORGE SEHERTER, a minister of Saltzburg, was apprehended and committed to prison for instructing his flock in the knowledge of the gospel. While he was in confinement he wrote a confession of his faith; soon after which he was condemned, first to be beheaded, and afterwards to be burnt to ashes. In his way to the place of execution he said to the spectators, "That you may know I die a true christian, I will give you a sign." This was indeed verified in a most singular manner; for after his head was cut off, the body lying a short space of time with the belly to the ground, it suddenly turned upon the back, when the right foot crossed over the left, as did also the right arm over the left: and in this manner it remained till it was committed to the flames.
IN Louviana, a learned man, named Percival, was murdered in prison; and Justus Insprag was beheaded, for having Luther's sermons in his possession.
GILES TILLEMAN, a cutler of Brussels, was a man of great humanity and piety. Among others he was apprehended as a protestant, and many endeavours were made by the monks to persuade him to recant. He had once, by accident, a fair opportunity of escaping from prison, being asked why he did not avail himself of it, he replied, "I would not do the keepers so much injury, as they must have answered for my absence, had I got away." When he was sentenced to be burnt, he [...]ervently thanked God for granting him an opportunity, by martyrdom, to glorify his name. Perceiving, at the place of execution, a great quantity of faggots, he desired the principal part of them might be given to the poor, saying, a small quantity will suffice to consume me. The executioner offered to strangle him before the fire was lighted, but he would not consent, telling him, that he defied the flames; and, indeed, he gave up the ghost with such composure amidst them, that he hardly seemed sensible of their effects.
IN the years 1543 and 1544, the persecution was carried on throughout all Flanders in a most violent and cruel manner. Some were condemned to perpetual imprisonment, others to perpetual banishment: but most were put to death either by hanging, drowning, immuring, burning, the rack, or burying alive.
JOHN DE BOSCAN [...], a zealous protestant, was apprehended on account of his faith, in the city of Antwerp. On his trial he stedfastly professed himself to be of the reformed religion, which occasioned his immediate condemnation The magistrate, however, was afraid to put him to death publicly, as he was popular through his great generosity, and almost universally beloved for his inoffensive life, and exemplary piety. A private execution being determined on, an order was given to drown him in prison. The executioner, accordingly, put him into a large tub; but Boscane struggling, and getting his head above the water, the executioner [Page 227] stabbed him with a dagger in several places, till he expired.
JOHN DE BUISONS, another protestant, was, about the same time, secretly apprehended, and privately executed at Antwerp. The number of protestants being great in that city, and the prisoner much respected, the magistrates feared an insurrection, and for that reason ordered him to be beheaded in prison.
A. D. 1568, three persons were apprehended in Antwerp, named Scoblant, Hues, and Coomans. During their confinement they behaved with great fortitude and chearfulness, confessing that the hand of God appeared in what had befallen them, and bowing down before the throne of his providence. In an epistle to some worthy protestants, they express themselves in the following words: Since it is the will of the Almighty that we should suffer for his name, and be persecuted for the sake of his gospel, we patiently submit, and are joyful upon the occasion: though the flesh may rebel against the spirit, and hearken to the counsel of the old serpent, yet the truths of the gospel shall prevent such advice from being taken, and Christ shall bruise the serpent's head. We are not comfortless in confinement, for we have faith; we fear not affliction, for we have hope; and we forgive our enemies, for we have charity. Be not under apprehensions for us, we are happy in confinement through the promises of God, glory in our bonds, and exult in being thought worthy to suffer for the sake of Christ. We desire not to be released, but to be blessed with fortitude; we ask not liberty, but the power of perseverance; and wish for no change in our condition, but that which places a crown of martyrdom upon our heads.
SCOBLANT was first brought to his trial; when, persisting in the profession of his faith, he received sentence of death. On his return to prison, he earnestly requested the gaoler not to permit any friar to come near him; saying, "They can do me no good, but may greatly disturb me. I hope my salvation is already sealed in heaven, and that the blood of Christ, in which I firmly put my trust, hath washed me from my iniquities. I am now going to throw off this earthly mantle of clay, to be clad in robes of eternal glory, by whose celestial brightness I shall be freed from all errors. I hope I may be the last martyr to papal tyranny, and the blood already spilt found sufficient to quench the thirst of popish cruelty; that the church of Christ may have rest here, as his servants will hereafter." On the day of execution he took a pathetic leave of his fellow-prisoners. At the stake he fervently said the Lord's Prayer, and sung the fortieth Psalm: then commending his soul to God, he was burnt alive.
HUES, soon after, died in prison; upon which occasion Coomans wrote thus to his friends: "I am now deprived of my friends and companions; Scoblant is martyred, and Hues dead, by the visitation of the Lord: yet I am not alone; I have with me the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob; he is my comfort, and shall be my reward. Pray unto God to strengthen me to the end, as I expect every hour to be freed from this tenement of clay."
ON his trial, he freely confessed himself of the reformed religion, answered with a manly fortitude to every charge against him, and proved the scriptural part of his answers from the gospel. The judge told him the only alternatives were, recantation or death; and concluded by saying, "Will you die for the faith you profess?" To which Coomans replied, "I am not only willing to die, but to suffer the most excruciating torments for it: after which my soul shall receive its confirmation from God himself, in the midst of eternal glory." Being condemned, he went chearfully to the place of execution, and died with the most manly fortitude, and christian resignation.
WILLIAM NASSAU fell a sacrifice to treachery, being assassinated in the fifty-first year of his age, by Baltazar Gerard, a native of Franche Comte, in the province of Burgundy. This murderer, in hopes of a reward here and hereafter, for killing an enemy to the king of Spain, and an enemy to the catholic religion, undertook to destroy the prince of Orange. Having procured fire-arms, he watched him as he passed through the great hall of his palac [...] to dinner, and demanded a passport. The pri [...]ess of Orange, observing that the assassin spoke with an hollow and confused voice, asked [Page 228] who he was? saying, she did not like his countenance. The prince answered, it was one that demanded a passport, which he should presently have.
NOTHING farther passed before dinner, but on the return of the prince and princess through the same hall, after dinner was over, the assassin, standing concealed as much as possible by one of the pillars, fired at the prince, the balls entering at the left side, and passing through the right, wounding in their passage the stomach and vital parts. On receiving the wounds, the prince only said, Lord have mercy upon my soul, and upon this poor people, and then expired immediately.
THE lamentations throughout the United Provinces were general on account of the death of the prince of Orange: and the assassin, who was immediately taken, received sentence to be put to death in the most exemplary manner: yet such was his enthusiasm, or folly, that when his flesh was torn by red-hot pincers, he coolly said, If I was at liberty, I would commit such an action over again.
THE prince of Orange's funeral was the grandest ever seen in the Low Countries, and perhaps the sorrow for his death the most sincere, as he left behind him the character he honestly deserved, viz. that of the Father of his people.
TO conclude, multitudes were murdered in different parts of Flanders: in the city of Valence, in particular, fifty-seven of the principal inhabitants were butchered in one day, for refusing to embrace the Romish superstition; and great numbers were suffered to languish in confinement, till they perished through the inclemency of their dungeons.
An Account of the Persecutions in LITHUANIA.
THE persecutions in Lithuania began in 1648; and were carried on with great severity by the Cossacks and Tartars. The cruelty of the Cossacks was such, that even the Tartars, at last, grew ashamed of it, and rescued some of the intended victims from their hands.
THE barbarities exercised were these: skinning alive, cutting off hands, taking out the bowels, cutting the flesh open, putting out the eyes, beheading, scalping, cutting off feet, boring the shin bones, pouring melted lead into the flesh, hanging, stabbing, and sending to perpetual banishment.
THE Russians taking advantage of the devastations which had been made in the country, and of its incapability of defence, entered with a considerable army, and, like a flood, bore down all before them. Every thing they met with was an object of destruction; they razed cities, demolished castles, ruined fortresses, sacked towns, burnt villages, and murdered people. The ministers of the gospel were peculiarly marked out as the objects of their displeasure, though every worthy christian was liable to the effects of their cruelty.
AS Lithuania recovered itself after one persecution, succeeding enemies again destroyed it. The Swedes, the Prussians, and the Courlanders, carried fire and sword through it, and continual calamities, for some years, at [...]nded that unhappy district. It was then attacked by the prince of Transylvania, who had in his army, exclusive of his own Transylvanians, Hungarians, Moldavians, Servians, Wallachians, &c. These, as far as they penetrated, wasted the country, destroyed the churches, rifled the nobility, burnt the houses, enslaved the healthy, and murdered the sick.
A clergyman, who wrote an account of the misfortunes of Lithuania, in the seventeenth century, says, "In consideration of these extremities, we cannot but adore the judgment of God poured upon us for our sins, and deplore our sad condition. Let us hope for a deliverance from his mercy, and wish for restitution in his benevolence. Though we are brought low, though we are wasted, troubled, and terrified, yet his compassion is greater than our calamities, and his goodness superior to our afflictions. Our neighbours hate us at present, as much as our more distant enemies did before: they persecute the remnant of us still remaining, deprive us of our few churches lost, banish our preachers, abuse our schoolmasters, treat us with contempt, and oppress us in the most opprobrious manner. In all [Page 229] our afflictions the truth of the gospel shone among us, and gave us comfort; and we only wished for the grace of Jesus Christ, (not only to ourselves, but to soften the hearts of our enemies) and the sympathy of our fellow christians."
An Account of the Persecutions in POLAND.
IT hath been the fate of many pious people, in all ages of the world to bear the cross of Christ, and suffer persecutions on account of their opinions; for those who are born after the flesh have always been enemies to such as are born after the Spirit.
THE protestants of Poland were persecuted in a dreadful manner. The ministers in particular were treated with the most unexampled barbarity; some having their tongues cut out, because they had preached the gospel truths; others being deprived of their sight on account of having read the bible; and great numbers were cut to pieces for not recanting.
PRIVATE persons were put to death by various methods; the most cruel being usually preferred. Women were murdered without the least regard to their sex; and the persecutors even went so far as to cut off the h [...]ds of sucking babes, and fasten them to the breasts of the mothers.
EVEN the solemnity of the grave did not exempt the bodies of protestants from the malice of persecutors; for they sacrilegiously dug up the bodies of many eminent persons, and either cut them to pieces, and exposed them to be devoured by birds and beasts, or hung them up in conspicuous or public places.
THE city of Lesna particularly suffered in this persecution; for being besieged and taken, the inhabitants were all put to the sword.
An Account of the Persecutions in CHINA.
CHRISTIANITY was first established in China by three Italian missionaries, called Roger the Neapolitan, Pasis of Bologne, and Matthew Ricci of Mazerata, in the marquisate of Ancona. These entered China about the beginning of the sixteenth century, being well circumstanced to perform their important commission with success, as they had previously studied the Chinese language.
THESE three missionaries were very assiduous in the discharge of their duty; but Roger and Pasis returning to Europe in a few years, the whole labour fell upon Ricci, who aimed to establish christianity with a degree of zeal that was indefatigable.
RICCI, though much disposed to indulge his converts as far as possible, made great hesitation at their ceremonies, which seemed to amount to idolatry. At length, after eighteen years consideration, he began to soften his opinion, and tolerated all the parts of those customs which were ordered by the laws of the empire, but strictly enjoined his Chinese christians to omit the rest.
THIS was the condition of Christianity in China, when the christian church established there was governed only by Ricci, who, by his moderation, made innumerable converts. In 1630, however, this tranquillity was disturbed by the arrival of some new missionaries: these being unacquainted with the Chinese customs, manners, and language, and with the arguments on which Ricci's toleration was founded, were astonished when they saw christian converts prostrate before Confucius and the tables of their ancestors, and condemned the custom accordingly.
A warm controversy now ensued between Ricci, seconded by his converts, and the new missionaries; and the latter wrote an account of the whole affair to the pope, and the society for the propagation of the christian faith. The society soon pronounced, that the ceremonies were idolatrous and intolerable, and the pope confirmed the sentence. In this both the society and the pope were excusable, as the matter had been misrepresented to them; for the enemies of Ricci had affirmed, the halls, in which the ceremonies [Page 230] were performed, to be temples, and the ceremonies themselves idolatrous sacrifices.
THE sentence above-mentioned was sent over to China, but treated with contempt, and matters remained as they were for some time. At length, a true representation of the matter was sent over, setting forth, that the Chinese customs and ceremonies alluded to were entirely free from idolatry, being merely political, and tending only to the peace and welfare of the empire. The pope, finding that he had made himself ridiculous, by confirming an absurd sentence upon a false report, wanted to get rid of the affair, and therefore referred the representation to the inquisition, which reversed the sentence immediately, at the private desire of the pope, as may be naturally supposed.
THE christian church, for all these divisions, flourished in China till the death of the first Tartar emperor, whose successor was a minor. During this minority of the young emperor Cang-hi, the regents and nobles conspired to extirpate the christian religion. The execution of this design was begun with expedition, and carried on with severity, so that every christian teacher in China, as well as those who professed the faith, were struck with amazement. John Adam Schall, a German ecclesiastic, and one of the principals of the mission, was thrown into a dungeon in the year 1664, being then in the seventy-fourth year of his age, and narrowly escaped with his life.
THE ensuing year, viz. 1665, the ministers of state publicly and unanimously resolved, and made a decree specifying. viz.
1. THAT the christian doctrines were false.
2. THAT they were dangerous to the interest of the empire.
3. THAT they should not be practised under pain of death.
THE publication of this decree occasioned a furious general persecution, in which some were put to death, many were ruined, and all were, in some manner, oppressed. This decree was general, and the persecution universal accordingly throughout the empire; for, previous to this, the christians had been partially persecuted at different times, and in different provinces.
FOUR years after, viz. 1669, the young emperor was declared of age, and took the reigns of government upon himself, when the persecution immediately ceased by his order.
An Account of the Persecutions in JAPAN.
CHRISTIANITY was first introduced into the idolatrous empire of Japan, by some Portuguese missionaries in the year of our Lord 1552, and their endeavours in making converts to the light of the gospel met with a degree of success equal to their most sanguine wishes.
THIS continued till the year 1616, when the missionaries being accused of having concerned themselves in politics, and formed a plan to subvert the government, and dethrone the emperor, great jealousies subsisted till 1622, when the court ordered a dreadful persecution to commence against both foreign and native christians. Such was the rage of this persecution, that, during the first four years, no less than 20,570 christians were massacred. The public profession of christianity was prohibited under pain of death, and the churches were shut up by an express edict.
[...] who were informed against▪ as privately professing christianity, suffered martyrdom with great heroism. The persecution continued many years, when the remnant of the innumerable christians, with which Japan abounded, to the number of 37,000 souls, retired to the town and castle of Siniabara, in the island of Xinio, where they determined to make a stand, to continue in their faith, and to defend themselves to the very l [...]st extremity.
THE Japanese army pursued the christians, and laid siege to the place. The christians defended themselves with great bravery, and held out against the besiegers for the space of three months, but were at length compelled to surrender, when men, [Page 231] women, and children, were indiscriminately murdered; and christianity, in their martyrdom, entirely extirpated from Japan.
THIS event took place on the 12th of April, 1638, since which period no christians but the Dutch are allowed to land in the empire, and even they are obliged to conduct themselves with the greatest precaution, and to carry on their commerce with the utmost circumspection.
An Account of the Persecutions against the CHRISTIANS in ABYSSINIA, or ETHIOPIA.
TOWARDS the conclusion of the fifteenth century, and soon after the discovery of the Cape of Good Hope, some Portuguese missionaries made a voyage to Abyssinia, and were indefatigable in propagating the Roman catholic doctrine among the Abyssinians, who professed christianity before the arrival of the missionaries.
THE priests, employed in this mission, gained such influence at court, that the emperor consented to abolish the established rites of the Ethiopian church and to admit those of Rome. He soon after consented to receive a patriarch from Rome, and to acknowledge the pope's supremacy.
MANY of the most powerful lords, and a majority of the people who professed the primitive christianity, as first established in Abyssinia, opposed these innovations, and took up arms against the emperor. Thus, by the artifices of the court of Rome, and its emissaries, a most furious civil war was begun, and the whole empire thrown into commotion. This war was carried on through several reigns, its continuance being above 100 hundred years, and the court constantly siding with the Roman catholics, the primitive christians of Abyssinia were severely persecuted, and multitudes perished by the most inhuman means.
An Account of the Persecutions against the CHRISTIANS in TURKEY.
MAHOMET, (the impostor) in the infancy of his new religion, tolerated christianity through a political motive, as he was sensible, that even in those early times it had several powerful espousers among the princes, who were his cotemporaries. As a proof that this was his sole view, as soon as he found his doctrine was established on a more permanent situation, he altered his forbearance to a system of the most rigid and barbarous persecution; which diabolical plan he has particularly recommended to his misguided followers, in that part of his Alcoran, intitled, The Chapter of the Sword; and as proofs of the blind zeal his followers have adopted from his infernal tenets, the many bloody battles of the Turks with the whole of the professors of Christ's gospel, and their cruel massacres of them at various periods, sufficiently evince.
CO [...]TANTINE was, in the year 1453, besieged in Constantinople, by Mahomet the second, with an army of 300,000 men, when, after a bloody siege of about six weeks, on the 29th of May, 1453. it fell into the hands of the infidels, after being an imperial christian city for some centuries; and the Turks have, to this day, retained possession of it, as well as of the adjoining suburb of Pera.
ON entering Constantinople, the Turks exercised on the wretched christians the most unremitting barbarity, destroying them by every method the most hellish cruelty could invent, or the most unfeeling heart practise: some they roasted alive on spits; others they stayed alive, and in that horrid manner left to expire with hunger: many were sawed asunder, and others torn to pieces by horses. For full three days and nights the Turks were striving to exceed each other in the exercise of their shocking carnage, and savage barbarity; murdering, without distinction of age or sex, all they met, and brutishly violating the chastity of women, of every distinction and age.
DURING the year 1529, Solyman the First retook Buda from the christians, and began a most horrible persecution of the inhabitants; some [Page 232] had their eyes torn out, others their hands, ears, and noses cut off, and the children their privities, the virgins were deflowered, the matrons had their breasts cut off, and such that were pregnant had their wom [...]s ripped open, and their unborn babes thrown into the flames. Not content with this, he repeated these horrid examples all the way on his march to Vienna, which he ineffectually besieged, during which, this diabolical barbarian, having made a body of christians prisoners, he sent three of them into the city to relate the great strength of his army, and the rest he ordered to be torn limb from limb by wild horses in sight of their christian brethren, who could only lament by their cries and tears their dreadful fate.
IN many places the tender children were in sight of their wretched parents torn to pieces by beasts, others dragged at horses heels, some famished with hunger, and others buried up to their necks in earth, and in that manner left to perish. In short, were we to relate the innumerable massacres and deplorable tragedies acted by the infidels, the particulars would at least make a volume of themselves, and from their horrid simularity be not only shocking, but disgusting to the reader.
Persecutions and Oppressions in GEORGIA and MINGRELIA.
THE Georgians are christians, and being very handsome people, the Turks and Persians persecute them by the most cruel mode of taxation ever invented, viz. in lieu of money, they compel them to deliver up their children for the following purposes.
THE females to increase the number of concubines in the seraglios; to serve as maids of honour to sultanas, the ladies of bashaws, &c. and to be sold to merchants of different nations, by whom the price is proportioned to the beauty of the purchased fair one.
THE males are used as mutes and eunuchs in the seraglio, as clerks in the offices of state, and as soldiers in the army.
TO the west of Georgia is Mingrelia, a country likewise inhabited by christians, who are persecuted and oppre [...]d in the same manner as the Georgians by the Turks and Persians, their children being extorted from them, or they murdered for refusing to consent to the sale.
An account of the PERSECUTIONS in the STATES of BARBARY.
IN Algiers the christians are treated with particular severity; as the Algerines are some of the most perfidious, as well as the most cruel of all the [...]nhabitants of Barbary. By paying a most exorbitant fine, some christians are allowed the title of Free Christians; and these are permitted to dress in the fashion of their respective countries, but the christian slaves are obliged to wear a coarse grey suit, and a seaman's cap.
THE punishments among the Algerines are various, viz.
1. IF they join any of the natives in open rebellion, they are strangled with a bow-string, or hanged on an iron hook.
2. IF they speak against Mahomet, they must either turn Mahometans, or be impaled alive.
3. IF they turn christians again, after having changed to the Mahometan persuasion, they are roasted alive, or thrown from the city walls, and caught upon large sharp hooks, where they hang in a miserable manner several days, and expire in the most exquisite tortures.
4. If they kill a Turk, they are burnt.
5. Those christians who attempt to escape from slavery, and are re-taken, suffer death in the following manner, which is equally singular and brutal: the criminal is hung naked on a high gallows, by two hooks, the one fastened qu [...]te through the palm of one hand, and the other through the sole of the opposite foot, where he is left till death relieves him from his cruel sufferings.
[Page 233]OTHER punishments, for trifling crimes committed by the christians, are left to the discretion of the respective judges, who being usually of malicious and vindictive dispositions, decree them in the most inhuman manner.
IN Tunis, if a christian slave is caught in attempting to escape, his limbs are all broken; and if he murders his master, he is fastened to the tail of a horse, and dragged about the streets till he expires.
MOROCCO and Fez conjointly form an empire, and are together the most considerable of the Barbary states. In this empire christian slaves are treated with the greatest cruelty: the rich have exorbitant ransoms fixed upon them; the poor are hard worked, and half starved, and sometimes murdered by the emperor, or their masters, for mere amusement.
An Account of the Persecutions in SPANISH AMERICA.
THE bloody tenets of the Roman catholic persuasion, and the cruel disposition of the [...]otaries of that church, cannot be more amply displayed, or truly depicted, than by giving an authentic and simple narrative of the horrid barbarities exercised by the Spaniards on the innocent and unoffending natives of America. Indeed, the barbarities were such, that they would scarce seem credible from their enormity, and the victims so many, that they would startle belief by their numbers, if the facts were not indisputably ascertained, and the circumstances admitted by their own writers, some of whom have even gloried in their inhumanity, and, as Roman catholics, deemed those atrocious actions meritorious, which would make a protestant shudder to relate.
THE West-Indies, and the vast continent of America, were discovered by that celebrated navigator Christopher Columbus, 14 [...]2. This distinguished commander landed first in the large island of St. Domingo, or Hispaniola, which was at that time exceedingly populous; but this population was of little consequence, the inoffensive inhabitants being murdered by multitudes, as soon as the Spaniards gained a permanent footing in the island. Blind superstition, bloody bigotry, and craving avarice, rendered that, in a course of years, a dismal desart, which, at the arrival of the Spaniards, seemed to appear as an earthly paradise; so that at present there is scarce a remnant of the ancient natives remaining.
THE natives of Guatemala, a country of America, were used with great barbarity. They were formerly active and valiant, but from ill-usage and oppression grow slothful, and so dispirited, that they not only trembled at the fight of fire-arms, but even at the very looks of a Spaniard. Some were so plunged into despair, that after returning home from labouring hard for their cruel task-masters, and receiving only contemptuous language and stripes for their pains, they have sunk down in their cabins, with a full resolution to prefer death to such slavery; and, in the bitterness of their anguish, have refused all sustenance till they perished.
BY repeated barbarities, and the most execrable cruelties, the vindictive and merciless Spaniards not only depopulated Hispaniola, Porto-Rico, Cuba, Jamaica, and the Bahama islands, but destroyed above 12,000,000 of souls upon the continent of America, in the space of 40 years.
THE cruel methods by which they massacred and butchered the poor natives, were innumerable, and of the most diabolical nature.
THE Spaniards stripped a large and very populous town of all its inhabitants, whom they drove to the mines, leaving all the children behind them, without the least idea of providing for their subsistence, by which inhuman proceeding six thousand helpless infants perished.
WHENEVER the people of any town had the reputation of being rich, an order was immediately sent, that every person in it should turn Roman catholics: if this was not directly complied with, the town was instantly plundered, and the inhabitants murdered; and if it was complied with, a pretence [Page 234] was soon after made to strip the inhabitants of their wealth.
ONE of the Spanish governors seized upon a very worthy and amiable Indian prince, and in order to extort from him where his treasures were concealed, caused his feet to be burnt till the marrow dropped from his bones, and he expired through the extremity of the torments he underwent.
IN the interval, between the years 1514 and 1522, the governor of Terra Firma put to death, and destroyed, 800,000 of the inhabitants of that country.
BETWEEN the years 1523 and 1533, five hundred thousand natives of Nicaragua were transported to Peru, where they all perished by incessant labour in the mines.
IN the space of twelve years, from the first landing of Cortez on the continent of America, to the entire reduction of the populous empire of Mexico, the amazing number of 4,000,000 of Mexicans perished, through the unparallelled barbarity of the Spaniards. To come to particulars, the city of Cholula consisted of 30,000 houses, by which its great population may be imagined. The Spaniards seized on all the inhabitants, who refusing to turn Roman catholics, as they did not know the meaning of the religion they were ordered to embrace, the Spaniards put them all to death, cutting to pieces the lower sort of people, and burning those of distinction.
CHAP. V. Containing an Account of the PERSECUTIONS in GREAT-BRITAIN and IRELAND.
GILDAS, the most ancient British writer extant, who lived about the time that the Saxons left this island, has draw [...] a most shocking instance of the barbarity of those people.
THE Saxons, on their arrival, being heathens like the Picts and Scots, destroyed the churches and murdered the clergy wherever they came: but they could not destroy christianity, for those who would not submit to the Saxon yoke, went and resided beyond the Severn. Neither have we the names of those christian sufferers transmitted to us, especially those of the clergy.
THE most dreadful instance of barbarity under the Saxon government, was the massacre of the monks of Bangor, A. D. 58 [...]. These monks were in all respects different from those men who bear the same name at present.
IN the eighth century, the Danes, a roving crew of barbarians, landed in different parts of Britain, both in England and Scotland
AT first they were repulsed, but in A. D. 857, a party of them landed somewhere near Southampton, and not only robbed the people, but burnt down the churches, and murdered the clergy.
IN A. D. 868, these barbarians penetrated into the center of England, and took up their quarters at Nottingham; but the English under their king Ethelfrid, drove them from those posts, and obliged them to retire to Northumberland.
IN 870, another body of these barbarians landed in Norfolk, and engaged in battle with the English at Hertford. Victory declared in favour of the pagans, who took Edmund, king of the East Angles, prisoner, and after treating him with a thousand indignities, transfixed his body with arrows, and then beheaded him.
IN [...]ifeshire, in Scotland, they burnt many of the churches▪ and among the rest that belonging to the Culdees, at St. Andrew's. The piety of these men made them objects of abhorrence to the Danes, who, wherever they went, singled out the christian [Page 235] priests for destruction, of whom no less than 200 were massacred in Scotland.
IT was much the same in that part of Ireland now called Leinster; there the Danes murdered and burnt the priests alive in their own churches; they carried destruction along with them wherever they went, sparing neither age nor s [...]x, but the clergy were the most obnoxious to them, because they ridiculed their idolatry, and persuaded their people to have nothing to do with them.
IN the reign of Edward III. the church of England was extremely corrupted with errors and superstition▪ and the light of the gospel of Christ was greatly eclipsed and darkened with human inventions, burthensome ceremonies, and gross idolatry.
THE followers of Wickliffe, then called Lollards, were extremely numerous, and the clergy were vexed to see them increase, whatever power or influence they might have to molest them in an underhand manner, they had no authority by law to put them to death. However, the clergy embraced the fav [...]rable opportunity, and prevailed upon the king to suffer a bill to be brought into parliament, by which all Lollards who remained obstinate, should be delivered over to the civil power and burnt as heretics. This act was the first in this island for the burning of people for their religious sentiments; it passed in the year 1401, and was soon after put into execution.
THE first person who suffered in consequence of this cruel act was William Santree, or Sawtree, a priest, who was burnt to death in Smithfield.
SOON after this, lord Cobham, in consequence of his attachment to the doctrines of Wickliffe, was accused of heresy, and being condemned to be hanged and burnt, was accordingly executed in Lincoln's Inn-Fields, A. D. 1419.
THE next man who suffered under this bloody statute was Thomas Badley, a taylor, and a layman; and a letter having been tendered to him, which he refused, he was declared an obstinate heretic, and tied to the stake in Smithfield; where he was burnt alive, rejoicing i [...] the Lord his God.
THE next person we read of who was tried upon this abominable statute, was William Thorpe, a man of some knowledge, who adhered to all the doctrines taught by Wickliffe. He was brought many times before archbishop Arundel, and at last committed a close prisoner, where he died, but in what manner cannot now be ascertained.
ABOUT this time 36 persons, denominated Lollards, suffered death in St. Giles's, for no other reason than professing their attachment to the doctrines of Wickliffe. They were hung on gibbets, and faggots being placed under them, as soon as they were suspended, fire were set to them, so they were burnt while hanging. Only one of their names has been transmitted to us, which is that of sir Roger Archer, whom they distinguished from the rest by stripping him stark naked, and executing him in that indecent manner.
MUCH about the same time one Richard Turning was burned alive in Smithfield, and suffered with all that constancy, fortitude, and resignation, which have so much distinguished the primitive christians.
IN 1428, Abraham, a monk of Colchester, Milburn White, a priest, and John Wade, a priest, were all three apprehended on a charge of heresy.
SOON after father Abraham suffered at Colchester, and with him John Whaddon; both of whom died in a constant adherrence to the truth of the gospel. Milburn White and John Wade suffered also about the same time in London.
IN the year 1430. Richard [...]vedon, a wool-comber, and a citizen of London, was brought before the archbishop, and being declared an obstinate heretic, was burnt alive o [...] Tower-hill, for no other reason than that he embraced and professed the doctrines of Wickliffe.
IN the year 1431, Thomas Bagley, a priest, who had a living near Malden, [...]n Essex, was brought before the bishop of London, and b [...]ing d [...]clared an obstinate heretic, was condemned and burned alive in Smithfield.
IN the year 1439, Richard Wick, a priest [...] [...] [Page 236] burned alive on Tower-hill, for preaching the doctrines of Wickliffe.
IN 1440, some of the greatest persons in the kingdom were condemned to perpetual imprisonment for heresy, as being Lollards; among whom was the duchess of Gloucester, who had long been a follower of Wickliffe. It was otherwise, however, with Roger Only, a priest, who being condemned as an obstinate heretic, was burnt alive in Smithfield.
IN August, 1473, one Thomas Granter was apprehended in London; he was accused of professing the doctrines of Wickliffe, for which he was condemned as an obstinate heretic. This pious man being brought to the sheriff's house, on the morning of the day appointed for his execution, desired a little refreshment, and having eat some, he said to the people present, "I eat now a very good meal, for [...] have a strange conflict to engage with before I go to supper;" and having eaten, he returned thanks to God for the bounties of his all-gracious providence, requesting that he might be instantly led to the place of execution, to bear testimony to the truth of those principles which he had professed. Accordingly he was chained to a stake on Tower-hill, where he was burned alive, professing the truth with his last breath.
APRIL 28th, 1494, Joan Boughton, a lady of considerable rank, was burned in Smithfield for professing the doctrines of Wickliffe. This lady was a widow, and no less than 80 years of age.
IN 1498, the king being th [...]n at Canterbury, a priest was brought before him▪ accused of heresy, who was immediately ordered to be burnt alive.
IN the year 1499, one Babrar [...], a pious man, was brought before the bishop of Norwich, having been accused by some of the priests, with holding the doctrines of Wickliffe. He confessed he did believe every thing that was objected against him. For this he was condemned as an obstinate heretic, and a warrant was granted for his execution; accordingly he was brought to the stake at Norwich, where he suffered with great constancy.
IN 1506, one William Tilfery, a pious man, was burned alive at Amersham, in a close called Stoneyprat, and, at the same time, his daughter, Joan Clarke, a married woman, was obliged to light the faggots that were to burn her father.
THIS year also one father Roberts, a priest, was convicted of being a Lollard before the bishop of Lincoln, and burnt alive at Buckingham.
IN 1507, one Thomas Norris was burned alive for the testimony of the truth of the gospel, at Norwich. This man was a poor, inoffensive, harmless person, but his parish priest conversing with him one day, conjectured he was a Lollard. In consequence of this supposition he gave information to the bishop, and Norris was apprehended.
IN 1508, one Lawrence Guale, who had been kept in prison two years, was burnt alive at Salisbury, for denying the real presence in the sacrament. It appeared that this man kept a shop in Salisbury, and entertained some Lollards in his house: for which he was informed against to the bishop; but he abode by his first testimony, and was condemned to suffer as an heretic,
A pious woman was burnt at Chippen Sudburne, by order of the chancellor, Doctor Whittenham. After she had been consumed in the flames, and the people were returning home, a bull broke loose from a butcher, and singling out the chancellor from all the rest of the company, he gored him through the body, and on his horns carried away his entrails. This was seen by all the people, and it is remarkable, that the animal did not meddle with any other person whatever.
OCTOBER 18th, 1511. William Succling and John Bannister, who had formerly recanted, returned again to the profession of the faith, and were burned alive in Smithfield.
IN the year 1517, one John Brown, (who had recanted before in the reign of Henry VII▪ and borne a faggot round St. Paul's,) was condemned by Dr. Wonhaman, archbishop of Canterbury, and burnt alive at Ashford. Before he was chained to the stake, the archbishop Wo [...]haman, and Yester, [Page 237] bishop of Rochester, caused his feet to be burned in a fire till all the flesh came off, even to the bones. This was done in order to make him again recant, but he persisted in his attachment to the truth till the last.
MUCH about this time one Richard Hunn, a merchant taylor of the city of London, was apprehended, having refused to pay the priest his fees for the funeral of a child; and being conveyed to the Lollards' Tower, in the palace of Lambeth, was there privately murdered by some of the servants of the archbishop.
SEPTEMBER 24, 1518, John Stilincen, who had before recanted, was apprehended, brought before Richard Fitz-James, bishop of London, and on the 25th of October was condemned as an heretic. He was chained to the stake in Smithfield amidst a vast crowd of spectators, and sealed his testimony to the truth with his blood. He declared that he was a Lollard, and that he had always believed the opinions of Wickl [...]ffe; and although he had been weak enough to recant his opinions, yet he was now willing to convince the world that he was ready to die for the truth.
IN the year 1519, Thomas Mann was burnt in London, as was one Robert Celin, a plain honest man, for spe [...]king against image-worship and pilgrimages.
MUCH abo [...]t this time, was executed in Smithfield, in Lond [...]n, James Brewster, a native of Colchester. His [...]entiments were the same as the rest of the Lollards▪ or those who followed the doctrines of Wickliffe; [...] notwithstanding the innocence of his life, and t [...]e regularity of his manners, he was obliged to sub [...]it to papal revenge.
DURING this year, one Christopher, a shoemaker, was burned ali [...]e at Newbury, in Berkshire, for denying those po [...]ish articles which we have already mentioned. This man had got some books in English, which w [...]re sufficient to render him obnoxious to the Ro [...]ish clergy.
IN 1521, Thomas Bernard was burned alive at Norwich, for denying the real presence.
ABOUT the beginning of the year 1522, Mr. Wrigsham, a glover; Mr. Langdale, a hosier; Thomas Bond, Robert Harchers, and William Archer, shoemaker, with Mrs. Smith, a widow, were apprehended on Ash-Wednesday, and committed to prison. After examination, the bishop of Litchfield declared them to be heretics, and they were all condemned and burned alive at Coventry.
ROBERT SILKS, who had been condemned in the Bishop's court as an heretic, made his escape out of prison, but was taken two years afterwards, and brought back to Coventry, where he was burned alive. The sheriffs always seized the goods of the martyrs for their own use, so that their wives and children were left to starve.
IN 1532, Thomas Harding, who, with his wife, had been accused of heresy, was brought before the bishop of Lincoln, and condemned for denying the real presence in the sacrament. He was then chained to a stake, erected for the purpose▪ at Chesham in the Pell, near Bote [...]y; and when they had set fire to the faggots, one of the spectators dashed out his brains with a billet. The priests told the people, that whoever brought faggots to burn heretics should have an indulgence to commit sins for forty days.
DURING the latter end of this year, Worham, archbishop of Canterbury, apprehended one Hitten, a priest, at Maidstone; and after he had been long tortured in prison, and several times examined by the archbishop, and Fisher, bishop of Rochester, he was condemned as an heretic, and burned alive before the door of his own parish church.
THOMAS BILNEY, profes [...]or of civil law, at Cambridge, was brought before the bishop of London, and several other bishops, in the Chapter-house, Westminster, and being several times threatened with the stake and flames, he was weak enough to recant; but he repented severely afterwards.
FOR this he was brought before the bishops a second time, and condemned to death. Before he went to the stake he confessed his adherence to those opinions which Luther held▪ and, when at it, he smiled, and said, "I have had my storms in this [Page 238] world, but now my vessel will soon be on shore in heaven." He stood unmoved in the flames, crying out, "Jesus, I believe;" and these were the last words he was heard to utter.
A few weeks after Bilney had suffered, Richard Byfield was cast into prison, and endured some whipping, for his adherence to the doctrines of Luther: this Mr. Byfield had been some time a monk, at Barnes, in Surry, but was converted, by reading Tindal's version of the New Testament. The sufferings this man underwent for the truth were so great, that it would require a volume to contain them. Sometimes he was shut up in a dungeon, where he was almost suffocated, by the offensive and horrid smell of filth and stagnated water. At other times he was tied up by the arms, till almost all his joints were dislocated. He was whipped at the post several times, till scarce any flesh was left on his back; and all this was done to make him recant. He was then taken to the Lollard's Tower in Lambath palace, where he was chained by the neck to the wall, and once every day beaten in the most cruel manner by the archbishop's servants. At last he was condemned, degraded, and burnt in Smithfield.
THE next person that suffered was John Tewksbury. This was a plain simple man, who had been guilty of no other offence, against what was called the holy mother church, than that of reading Tindal's translation of the New Testament. At first he was weak enough to abjure, but afterwards repented, and acknowledged the truth. For this he was brought before the bishop of London, who condemned him as an obstinate heretic. He suffered greatly during the time of his imprisonment, so that when they brought him out to execution, he was almost dead. He was conducted to the stake in Smithfield, where he was burned, declaring his utter abhorrence of popery, and professing a firm belief that his cause was just in the sight of God.
MUCH about this time Valentine Treest, and his wife, were apprehended in Yorkshire, and having been examined by the archbishop, were deemed as obstinate heretics, and burnt.
THE next person who suffered in this reign was James Baynham, a reputable citizen in London, who had married the widow of a gentleman in the Temple. When chained to the stake he embraced the faggots, and said, "Oh, ye papists, behold! ye look for miracles; here now may you see a miracle; for in this fire I feel no more pain than if I were in bed; for it is as sweet to me as a bed of roses." Thus he resigned his soul into the hands of his Redeemer.
SOON after the death of this martyr, one Traxnel, an inoffensive countryman, was burned alive at Bradford, in Wiltshire, because he would not acknowledge the real presence in the sacrament, nor own the papal supremacy over the consciences of men.
IN the year 1533, John Frith, a noted martyr died for the truth. When he was brought to the stake in Smithfield, he embraced the faggots, and exhorted a young man, named Andrew Hewet, who suffered with him, to trust his soul to that God who had redeemed it. Both these sufferers endured much torment, for the wind blew the flames away from them, so that they were above two hours in agony before they expired.
AT the latter end of this year, one Mr. Thomas Bennet, a school-master, was apprehended at Exeter, and being brought before the bishop, refused to recant his opinions, for which he was delivered over to the secular power, and burned alive near that city.
IN the year 1538, one Collins, a madman, suffered death with his dog in Smithfield. The circumstances were as follow: Collins happened to be in church when the priest elevated the host; and Collins, in derision of the sacrifice of the mass, lifted up his dog above his head. For this crime Collins, who ought to have been sent to a mad-house, or whipped at the cart's tail, was brought before the bishop of London; and although he was really mad, yet such was the force of popish power, such the corruption in the church and state, that the poor madman, and his dog, were both carried to the stake in Smithfield, where they were burned to ashes, amidst a vast crowd of spectators.
[Page 239]THERE were some other persons who suffered the same year, of whom we shall take notice in the order they lay before us.
ONE Cowbridge suffered at Oxford, and altho' he was reputed to be a madman, yet he shewed great signs of piety when he was fastened to the stake, and after the flames were kindled around him.
ABOUT the same time one Purderve was put to death, for saying privately to a priest, after he had drank the wine, "He blessed the hungry people with the empty chalice."
AT the same time was condemned William Letton, a monk of great age, in the county of Suffolk, who was burned at Norwich for speaking against an idol that was carried in procession; and for asserting, that the sacrament should be administered in both kinds.
SOME time before the burning of these men, Nicholas Peke was executed at Norwich; and when the fire was lighted, he was so scorched that he was as black as pitch. Dr. Reading standing before him with Dr. Hearne, and Dr. Spragwell, having a white wand in his hand, struck him upon the right shoulder, and said, "Peke, recant, and believe in the sacrament." To this he answered, "I despise thee and it also;" and with great violence he spit blood, occasioned by the anguish of his sufferings. Dr. Reading granted forty days indulgence for the sufferer, in order that he might recant his opinions. But he persisted in his adherence to the truth, without paying any regard to the malice of his enemies; and he was burned alive, rejoicing that Christ had counted him worthy to suffer for his name's sake.
ON July 28th 1540, or 1541, (for the chronology differs) Thomas Cromwell, earl of Essel, was brought to a scaffold on Tower-hill, where he was executed with some striking instances of cruelty. He made a short speech to the people, and then meekly resigned himself to the axe.
IT is, we think, with great propriety, that this nobleman is ranked among the martyrs; for although the accusations preferred against him did not relate to any thing in religion, yet had it not been for his zeal to demolish popery, he might have to the last retained the king's favour. To this may be added, that the papists plotted his destruction, for he did more towards promoting the reformation, than any man in that age, except the good Dr. Cranmer.
SOON after the execution of Cromwell, Dr. Cuthbert Barnes, Thomas Garnet, and William Jerome, were brought before the ecclesiastical court of the bishop of London, and accused of heresy.
BEING before the bishop of London, Dr. Barnes was asked whether the saints prayed for us? To this he answered, that he would leave that to God; but (said he) I will pray for you.
ON the 13th of July, 1541, these men were brought from the Tower to Smithfield, where they were all chained to one stake; and there suffered death with a constancy that nothing less than a firm faith in Jesus Christ could inspire.
ONE Thomas Sommers, an honest merchant, with three others, was thrown into prison, for reading some of Luther's books; and they were condemned to carry these books to a fire in Cheapside; there they were to throw them into flames; but Sommers threw his over, for which he was sent back to the Tower, where he was stoned to death.
DREADFUL persecutions were at this time carried on at Lincoln, under Dr. Longland, the bishop of that diocese. At Buckingham, Thomas Bainard, and James Moreton, the one for reading the Lord's prayer in English, and the other for reading St. James's epistle in English, were both condemned, and burned alive.
ANTHONY PARSONS, a priest, together with two others, were sent to Windsor, to be examined concerning heresy; and several articles were tendered to them to subscribe, which they refused. This was carried on by the bishop of Salisbury, who was the most violent persecutor of any in that age, except Bonner. When they were brought to the stake, Parsons asked for some drink, which being [Page 240] brought him, he drank to his fellow-sufferers, saying, "Be merry, my brethren, and lift up your hearts to God; for after this sharp breakfast I trust we shall have a good dinner in the kingdom of Christ, our Lord and Redeemer." At these words Eastwood, one of the sufferers, lifted up his eyes and hands to heaven, desiring the Lord above to receive his spirit. Parsons pulled the straw near to him, and then said to the spectators, This is God's armour, and now I am a christian soldier prepared for battle: I look for no mercy but through the merits of Christ; he is my only Saviour, in him do I trust for salvation; and soon after the fires were lighted, which burned their bodies, but could not hurt their precious and immortal souls. Their constancy triumphed over cruelty, and their sufferings will be held in everlasting remembrance.
IN 1546, one Saitees, a priest, was, by order of bishop Gardiner, hanged in Southwark, without a council process; and all that was alledged against him was, that of reading Tindal's New Testament.
THIS year one Kirby was burned in Ipswich, for the testimony of the truth, for denying the real presence in the sacrament. When this martyr was brought to the stake, he said to one Mr. Wingfield, who attended him, "Ah! Mr. Wingfield, be at my death, and you shall say, there standeth a christian sufferer in the fire.
An account of a horrid plot, concerted by the Papists for d [...]stroying the City of London by Fire, in the Reign of King CHARLES II.
STIMULATED by revenge, and prompted by the force of superstitious principles, the papi [...]ts still dedicated their thoughts to every machination their invention could project, to obtain their wished for purposes, namely, the destruction of the protestants in this island.
HAVING failed in several efforts, they, at length, bethought th [...]mselves of a scheme for destroying the capital of the kingdom, which they flattered themselves mig [...]t be productive of facilitating their farther intentions of extirpating the protestants, and, once more, establishing popery in the English dominions.
THOUGH their scheme, in some measure, took place, yet it was not productive of the consequences they hoped and wished for. A great part of the city was, indeed, destroyed, the melancholy particulars of which we shall copy from the London Gazette, published a few days after:
Whitehall, Sept. 8, 1666.
"ON the second instant, at one o'clock in the morning, there happened to break out a sad and deplorable fire, at a baker's in Pudding-lane, near Fish-street, which falling out at that hour of the night, and in a quarter of the town so close built with wooden pitched houses, spread itself so far before day, and with such, distraction to the inhabitants and neighbours, that care was not taken for the timely preventing the further diffusion of it, by pulling down houses, as ought to have been; so that this lamentable fire, in a short time, became too big to be mastered by any engines, or working near it. It fell out most unhappily too, that a violent easterly wind fomented it, and kept it burning all that day, and the night following, spreading itself up to Gracechurch-street, and downwards to Cannon-street to the water-side, as far as the Three Cranes in the Vintry.
THE people, in all parts about it, were distracted by the vastness of it, and their particular care to carry away their goods. Many attempts were made to prevent the spreading of it, by pulling down houses, and making great intervals, but all in vain, the fire seizing upon the timber and rubbish, and so continuing itself even through those spaces, and raging in a bright flame all Monday and Tuesday, notwithstanding his majesty's own, and his royal highness's indefatigable and personal pains to apply all possible remedies to prevent it, calling upon, and helping the people with their guards, and a great number of nobility and gentry unwearied assisting therein, for which they were required with a thousand blessings from the poor distressed people.
BY the favour of God, the wind slackened a little on Tuesday night, and the flames meeting with [Page 241] brick buildings at the Temple, by little and little it was observed to lose its force on that side, so that on Wednesday morning we began to hope well, and his royal highness never despairing, or slackening his personal care, wrought so well that day, assisted in some parts by the lords of the council before and behind it, that a stop was put to it at the Temple church, near Holborn bridge, Pie-corner, Aldersgate, Cripplegate, near the lower end of Coleman street, at the end of Basinghall-street, by the Postern, at the upper end of Bishopsgate-street, and Leadenhall-street, at the standard in Cornhill, at the church in Fenchurch-street, near Clothmakers-hall in Mincing-lane, at the middle of Mark-lane, and at the Tower-dock.
ON Thursday, by the blessing of God, it was [...]olly be [...]t down and extinguished. But so as that [...]ing it unhappily burst out again afresh at the [...]mple, by the falling of some sparks (as is suppo [...]) upon a pile of wooden buildings; but his roy [...]ighness, who wa [...]ched there that whole night in person, by the great labours and diligence used, and especially by applying powder, to blow up the hou [...] about it, before day most happily mastered it.
HIS majesty then sat hourly in council, and ever since hath continued making rounds about the city, i [...] all parts of it where the danger and mischief was the greatest, till this morning that he hath sent his [...]ce the duke of Albemarle, whom he hath called for to assist him on this great occasion, to put his happy and successful hand to the finishing this me [...]rable deliverance.
DURING the progress of this dreadful conflagra [...], orders were given for pulling down various houses in the Tower of London, in order to preserve the grand magazine of gunpowder in that [...]tress; to the preservation of which, the violent [...] wind contributed more than the precaution.
MANY thousands of citizens, who, by this calamity, were deprived of their habitations, retired to the fields, destitute of all necessaries, and exposed to the inclemency of the weather, till a sufficient number of huts could be erected for their relief. In order to mitigate the distresses of the people, his majesty ordered a great quantity of naval bread to be distributed among them; and issued a proclamation, commanding the magistrates of the city to encourage the bringing of all kinds of provisions.
BY the certificate of Jonas Moore and Ralph Gatrix, the surveyors appointed to examine the ruins, it appeared, that this dreadful fire over-r [...]n 373 acres of ground within the walls, and burnt 13,200 houses, 89 parish churches, besides chappels; and that only eleven parish churches within the walls were left standing.
TO this account may also be added the magnificent buildings of St. Paul's cathedral, Guildhall, the Royal Exchange, Custom-house, and Blackwellhall; many hospitals and libraries, fifty-two halls of the city companies, and a great number of other stately edifices; together with three of the city gates, and the prisons of Newgate, the Fleet, the Poultry and Wood-street Comp [...]ers; the loss of which, by the best calculation, amounted to upwards of ten millions sterling. And notwithstanding all this destruction, yet only six persons lost their lives.
VARIOUS were the conjectures of the people on the cause of this singular calamity: at first some imagined it to be casual, but from a train of circumstances, it afterwards appeared to have been done from the malice and horrid contrivances of the papists. Several suspected persons were taken into custody; but no positive proof being produced against them, they were discharged.
THOUGH this diabolical scheme took place, in a great measure, to [...]ie wishes of the wicked contrivers, yet, instead of being prejudicial, it was in the end, productive of most unhappy consequences to the metropolis. It certainly, for a time, occasioned the most distinguished distress to the inhabitants, but it afforded an opportunity that never happened before, and in all human probability, never may again, of restoring the city with more uniformity, conveniency, and wholesomeness▪ than could be expected in a town of progressive growth. The streets were before narrow, crooked, and incommodious; the houses chiefly of wood, dark, [Page 242] close, and ill-contrived; with several stories projecting beyond each other, as they rose, over the narrow streets. The free circulation of the air was, by these means, obstructed; and the people breathed a stagnant unwholesome element, replete with foul effluvia, sufficient of itself to generate putrid disorders, and disposed to harbour any pestilential taint it might receive. All these inconveniences were removed, by the streets being made more open, and the buildings principally formed of brick; so that if, either by accident or otherwise, a fire should happen in future, its progress would be soon stopped, and the direful consequences which generally arise from such circumstances rendered trifling.
BESIDES the conveniences already mentioned, the fire of London was certainly productive of an advantage of the most valuable nature, namely, the extirpation of that contagious and destructive distemper the plague, which, but the year before, had brought thousands to their graves. This horrid disease had made great devastation among the inhabitants, not only of the metropolis, but different parts of the kingdom, at various periods; but, thank God, its baneful influence has never taken place here since the before-mentioned catastrophe, and there is great reason to suppose that the fire materially contributed to the production of so happy a circumstance.
TO perpetuate, however, the remembrance of so singular an occurrence, a monument was erected in that part of the city near which the fire began. It is esteemed the noblest modern column in the world; and may, in some respects, vie with the most celebrated of antiquity, which are consecrated to the names of Trajan and Antoninus.
An Account of the Persecution in Scotland during the Reign of King HENRY VIII.
THE first person we meet with who suffered in Scotland on the score of religion, was one Patrick Hamilton, a gentleman of an independent fortune, and descended from a very ancient and honourable family.
HAVING acquired a liberal education, and being desirous of farther improving himself in useful knowledge, he left Scotland, and went to the university of Wirtenberg, in Germany, in order to finish his studies.
DURING his residence here, he became intimately acquainted with those eminent lights of the gospel, Martin Luther and Philip Melancthon; from whose writings and doctrines he strongly attached himself to the protestant religion.
THE archbishop of St. Andrew's (who was a rigid papish) hearing of Mr. Hamilton's proceedings, caused him to be seized, and being brought before him, after a short examination relative to his religious principles, he committed him a prisoner to the castle, at the same time ordering him to be confined in the most loathsome part of the prison.
THE next morning Mr. Hamilton was brought before the bishop, and several others, for examination, when the principal articles exhibited against him were, his publicly disapproving of pilgrimages, purgatory, prayers to saints, for the dead, &c.
THESE articles Mr. Hamilton acknowledged to be true, in consequence of which he was immediately condemned to be burnt; and that his condemnation might have the greater authority, they caused it to be subscribed by all those of any note who were present, and to make the number as considerable as possible, even admitted the subscription of boys who were sons of the nobility.
SO anxious was this bigotted and persecuting prelate for the destruction of Mr. Hamilton, that he ordered his sentence to be put in execution on the afternoon of the very day it was pronounced. He was accordingly led to the place appointed for the horrid tragedy, and was attended by a prodigious number of spectators. The greatest part of the multitude would not believe it was intended he should be put to death, but that it was only done to frighten him, and thereby bring him over to embrace the principles of the Romish religion. But they soon found themselves mistaken.
WHEN he arrived at the stake he kneeled down, [Page 243] and, for some time, prayed with great fervency. After this he was fastened to a stake, and the fag [...]ts placed round him. A quantity of gunpowder having been fastened under his arms, was first set on fire, which scorched his left hand and one side of his face, but did no material injury, neither did it communicate with the fa [...]gots. In consequence [...]f this, more powder and combustible matter was brought, which being set on fire took effect, and the faggots being kindled, he called out, with an audible voice, "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit! How long shall darkness overwhelm this realm? And how long wilt thou suffer the tyranny of these men?"
THE fire burning slow put him to great torment; but be bore it with christian magnanimity. What gave him the greatest pain was, the clamour of s [...]me wicked men set on by the friars, who frequently cried, "Turn, thou heretic; call upon our lady; say, Salve Regina, &c." To whom he replied, "Depart from me, and trouble me not, ye messengers of satan." One Campbell, a friar, who was the ringleader, still continuing to interrupt him by opprobrious language; he said to him, "Wicked m [...]n, God forgive thee." After which, being prevented from farther speech by the violence of the smoke, and the rapidity of the flames, he resigned up his soul into the hands of him who gave it.
THIS stedfast believer in Christ suffered martyrdom in the year 1527.
ONE Henry Forest, a young inoffensive Benedictine, being charged with speaking respectfully of the above Patrick Hamilton, was thrown into prison; and, in confessing himself to a friar, owned that he thought Hamilton a good man; and that the articles for which he was sentenced to die, might [...]e defended. This being revealed by the friar, it was received as evidence; and the poor benedictine was sentenced to be burnt.
WHILST consultation was held, with regard to the manner of his execution, John Lindsay, one of the archbishop's gentlemen, offered his advice, to burn friar Forest in some cellar; for, said he, the smoke of Patrick Hamilton hath infected all those o [...] whom it blew.
THIS advice was taken, and the poor victim was rather suffocated than burnt.
THE next who fell victims for professing the truth of the gospel were, David Stratton and Norman Gourlay.
WHEN they arrived at the fatal spot, they both kneeled down, and prayed for some time, with great fervency. They then arose, when Stratton, addressing himself to the spectators, exhorted them to lay aside their superstitious and idolatrous notions, and employ their time in seeking the true light of the gospel. He would have said more, but was prevented by the officers who attended.
THEIR sentence was then put into execution, and they chearfully resigned up their souls to that God who gave them, hoping, through the merits of the great Redeemer, for a glorious resurrection to life immortal.—They suffered in the year 1534.
THE martyrdoms of the two before-mentioned persons were soon followed by that of Mr. Thomas Forret, who, for a considerable time, had been dean of the Romish church; Killor and Beverage, two blacksmiths; Duncan Simson, a priest; and Robert Forrester, a gentleman. They were all burnt together, on the Castle-hill at Edinburgh, the last day of February, 1538.
THE year following the martyrdoms of the before-mentioned persons, viz. 1539, two others were apprehended on a suspicion of heresy; namely, Jerom Russel, and Alexander Kennedy, a youth about eighteen years of age.
THESE two persons, after being some time confined in prison, were brought before the archbishop for examination. In the course of which Russel, being a very sensible man, reasoned learnedly against his accusers; while they in return made use of very opprobrious language.
THE examination being over, and both of them deemed heretics, the archbishop pronounced the dreadful sentence of death, and they were immediately delivered over to the secular power in order for execution.
[Page 244]THE next day they were led to the place appointed for them to suffer; in their way to which Russel, seeing his fellow-sufferer have the appearance of timidity in his countenance, thus addressed him: "Brother, fear not; greater is he that is in us, than he that is in the world. The pain that we are to suffer is short, and shall be light; but our joy and consolation shall never have an end. Let us, therefore, strive to enter into our Master and Saviour's joy, by the same strait way which he hath taken before us. Death cannot hurt us, for it is already destroyed by him, for whose sake we are now going to suffer.
WHEN they arrived at the fatal spot, they both kneeled down and prayed for some time; after which, being fastened to the stake, and the faggots lighted, they chearfully resigned their souls into the hands of him who gave them, in full hopes of an everlasting reward in the heavenly mansions.
IN 1543, the archbishop of St. Andrew's made a visitation into various parts of his diocese, when several persons were informed against at Perth for heresy. Among these the following were condemned to die, viz. William Anderson, Robert Lamb, James Finlayson, James Hunter, James Raveleson, and Helen Stark,
THE accusations laid against these respective persons were as follow:
THE four first were accused of having hung up the image of sir Francis, nailing rams horns on his head, and fastening a cow's tail on his rump; but the principal matter on which they were condemned was, having regaled themselves with a goose on a fast day.
JAMES RAVELESON was accused of having ornamented his house with the three crowned diadem of Peter, carved in wood, which the archbishop conceived to be done in mockery to his cardinal's cap.
HELEN STARK was accused of not having accustomed herself to pray to the virgin Mary, more especially during the time she was in childbed.
ON these respective accusations they were all found guilty, and immediately received sentence of death; the four men for eating the goose to [...] hanged; James Raveleson to be burnt; and the woman, with her sucking infant, to be put into [...] sack, and drowned.
THE four men, with the woman and child, suff [...] ed at the same time; but James Raveleson was not executed till some days after.
BESIDES the above-mentioned persons, many others were cruelly persecuted, some being bani [...] ed, and others being confined in loathsome d [...] geons. Among whom were Mr. John Knox, the celebrated Scottish reformist; and John Rogers, a pious and learned man, who was murdered in [...], and his body thrown over the walls into the street; after which a report was spread, [...] had met with his death by attempting to make his escape.
An account of the Life, Sufferings, and Death of Mr. GEORGE WISHART, who was strangled, and afterwards burned, in Scotland, for professing the Truth of the Gospel.
MR. GEORGE WISHART was born in Scotland, and after receiving a grammatical education at a private school, he left that place, and finished his studies at the university of Cambridge.
IN order to improve himself as much as possible in the knowledge of literature, he travelled into various parts abroad, where he distinguished himself for his great learning and abilities, both in philosophy and divinity.
AFTER being some time abroad he returned to England, and took up his residence at Cambridge, where he was admitted a member of Bennet [...]llege. Having taken up his degrees, he entered into holy orders, and expounded the gospel in [...] clear and intelligible a manner, as highly to delight his numerous auditors.
[Page 245]BEING desirous of propagating the true gospel in his own country, he left Cambridge in 1544, and [...] his arrival in Scotland he first preached at Mon [...]se, and afterwards at Dundee. In this last place [...] made a public exposition of the epistle to the Romans, which he went through with such grace and freedom, as greatly alarmed the papists.
IN consequence of this, (at the instigation of [...] Beaton, the archbishop of St. Andrew's) one [...]bert Miln, a principal man at Dundee, went to [...] church where Wishart preached, and in the [...] of his discourse publicly told him not to [...] the town any more, for he was determined [...] to suffer it.
THIS sudden rebuff greatly surprized Wishart, [...], after a short pause, looking sorrowfully on the [...] and the audience, said, "God is my [...], that I never minded your trouble but your [...]; yea, your trouble is more grievous to me [...] it is to yourselves: but I am assured, to refuse God's word, and to chase from you his messenger, [...] not preserve you from trouble, but shall bring [...] into it: for God shall send you ministers that [...] neither fear burning nor banishment. I have [...] you the word of salvation. With the [...] of my life I have remained among you: now [...] yourselves refuse me; and I must leave my [...] to be declared by my God. If it be long prosperous with you, I am not led by the spirit of [...]: but if unlooked-for trouble come upon you, [...]owledge the cause, and turn to God, who is [...] and merciful. But if you turn not at the [...] warning, he will visit you with fire and sword." At the close of this speech he left the pulpit, and [...].
AFTER this he went into the west of Scotland, [...]here he preached God's word, which was gladly [...] by many.
A short time after this Mr. Wishart received [...], that the plague was broke out in Dun [...]d [...]. It began four days after he was prohibited [...] preaching there, and raged so extremely▪ that it was almost beyond credit how many died in the space of 24 hours. This being related to him, he, notwithstanding the importunity of his friends to detain him, determined to go there, saying, "They are now in troubles, and need comfort. Perhaps this hand of God will make them now to magnify and reverence the word of God, which before they lightly esteemed."
HERE he was with joy received by the godly. He chose the east-gate for the place of his preaching; so that the healthy were within, and the sick without the gate. He took his text from these words, "He sent his word and healed them," &c. In this sermon he chiefly dwelt upon the advantage and comfort of God's word, the judgments that ensue upon the contempt or rejection of it, the freedom of God's grace to all his people, and the happiness of those of his elect, whom he takes to himself out of this miserable world. The hearts of his hearers were so raised by the divine force of this discourse, as not to regard death, but to judge them the more happy who should then be called, not knowing whether they might have such a comforter again with them.
AFTER this the plague abated; though, in the midst of it, Wishart constantly visited those that lay in the greatest extremity, and comforted them by his exhortations.
WHEN he took his leave of the people of Dundee, he said, "That God had almost put an end to that plague, and that he was now called to another place."
HE went from thence to Montrose, where he sometimes preached, but spent most of his time in private meditation and prayer.
IT is said, that before he left Dundee, and while he was engaged in the labours of love to the bodies, as well as to the soul [...], of those poor afflicted people, cardinal Beaton engaged a desperate popish priest, called John Weighton, to kill him; the attempt to execute which was as follows: one day, after Wishart had finished his sermon, and the people departed, the priest stood waiting at the bottom of the stairs, with a naked dagger in his hand under his gown. But Mr. Wishart having a sharp, piercing eye, and seeing the priest as he came from the pulpit, said to him, "My friend, what [Page 246] would you have?" and immediately clapping his hand upon the dagger, took it from him. The priest being terrified, fell on his knees, confessed his intention, and craved pardon. A noise being hereupon raised, and it coming to the ears of those who were sick, they cried, "Deliver the traitor to us, we will take him by force; and they burst in at the gate. But Wishart, taking the priest in his arms, said, Whatsoever hurts him shall hurt me; for he hath done me no mischief, but much good, by teaching more heedfulness for the time to come." By this conduct he appeased the people, and saved the life of the wicked priest.
SOON after his return to Montrose, the cardinal again conspired his death, causing a letter to be sent to him as if it had been from his familiar friend, the laird of Kinni [...]r, in which he was desired with all possible speed to come to him, because he was taken with a sudden sickness. In the mean time the cardinal had provided sixty men armed, to lie in wait within a mile and a half of Montrose, in order to murder him as he passed that way.
THE letter coming to Wishart's hand by a boy, who also brought him a horse for the journey, Wishart, accompanied by some honest men, his friends, set forward; but something particular striking his mind by the way, he returned back, which they wondering at, asked him the cause; to whom he said, "I will not go; I am forbidden of God; I am assured there is treason. Let some of you go to yonder place, and tell me what you find." Which doing, they made the discovery▪ and hastily returning, they told Mr. Wishart: whereupon he said, "I know I shall end my life by that blood-thirsty man's hands, but it will not be in this manner."
A short time after this he left Montrose, and proceeded to Edinburgh, in order to propagate the gospel in that city. By the way he lodged with a faithful brother, called James Watson, of Inner-Goury. In the middle of the night he got up, and went into the yard, which two men hearing, they privately followed him.
WHILE in the yard, he fell on his knees, and prayed for some time with the greatest fervency; after which he arose, and returned to his bed. Those who attended him, appearing as though they were ignorant of all, came and asked him where he had been? But he would not answer them. The next day they importuned him to tell them, saying, "Be plain with us, for we heard your mourning, and saw your gestures."
ON this he, with a dejected countenance, said, "I had rather you had been in your beds." But they still pressing upon him to know something, he said, "I will tell you; I am assured that my warfare is near at an end, and therefore pray to God with me, that I shrink not when the battle wax [...] most hot."
SOON after, cardinal Beaton, archbishop of St. Andrew's, being informed that Mr. Wish [...]rt [...] at the house of Mr. Cockburn, of Ormiston, in [...] Lothian, he applied to the regent to cause him [...] he apprehended; with which, after great [...], and much against his will, he complied.
IN consequence of this the cardinal immediately proceeded to the trial of Wishart, against whom [...] less than 18 articles were exhibited. Mr. Wisha [...] answered the respective articles with the greatest composure of mind, and in so learned and clear a manner, as greatly surprized most of those who were present.
AFTER the examination was finished, the archbishop endeavoured to prevail on Mr. Wishart [...] recant; but he was too firmly fixed in his religi [...] principles, and too much enlightened with the truth of the gospel, to be in the least moved.
ON the morning of his execution there came to him two friars from the cardinal; one of whom put on him a black linen coat, and the other brought several bags of gunpowder, which they tied about different parts of his body.
AS soon as he arrived at the stake, the executioner put a rope round his neck, and a chain about his middle; upon which he fell on his knees, and thus exclaimed:
"O thou Saviour of the world, have mercy upon me! Father of heaven, I commend my [...]pirit into thy holy hands."
[Page 247]AFTER this he prayed for his accusers, saying, "I beseech thee, Father of heaven, forgive them that have, from ignorance, or an evil mind, forged [...] of me: I forgive them with all my heart. I beseech Christ to forgive them, that have ignorantly [...]demned me."
HE was then fastened to the stake, and the faggots being lighted, immediately set fire to the powd [...] that was tied about him, and which blew into a [...] and smoke.
THE governor of the castle, who stood so near [...] he was singed with the flame, exhorted our [...]rtyr, in a few words, to be of good cheer, and to [...] pardon of God for his offences. To which he [...] ▪ "This flame occasions trouble to my body, [...]deed, but it hath in no wise broken my spirit. [...]t he who now so proudly looks down upon me [...] yonder lofty place, (pointing to the cardinal) [...], ere long, be as ignominiously thrown down, [...] now he proudly lolls at his ease." Which pre [...]ction was soon after fulfilled. The executioner [...] pulled the rope which was tied about his neck [...] great violence, so that he was soon strangled; and the fire getting strength, burnt with such rapi [...]y that in less than an hour his body was totally consumed.
THE next person who fell a martyr to popish [...]gotry, was one Adam Wallace, of Winton, in East-Lothian, who having obtained a true know [...]dge of the gospel of Christ, spent the gr [...]ter part of his time in endeavouring to propagate it among his fellow-creatures.
HIS conduct being noticed by some bigoted papists, an information was laid against him for heresy, [...] which he was apprehended, and committed to prison.
AFTER examination, sentence of death was passed upon him as an heretic; and he was immediately d [...]livered over to the secular power, in order for [...]ecution.
IN the evening of the same day, Wallace was vi [...]ited by several Romish priests, who endeavoured [...] prevail on him to recant; but he stood so stedfast in the faith he professed, and used such [...]orcible arguments in vindication of the true gospel, that they left him with some wrath, saying, "He was too abandoned to receive any impression."
THE next morning he was conducted to the Castle-hill at Edinburgh, when, being chained to the stake, and the faggots lighted, he chearfully resigned up his soul into the hands of him who gave it, in full assurance of receiving a crown of glory in the heavenly mansions.
THE last who suffered martyrdom in Scotland, for the cause of Christ, was one Walter Mill, who was burnt at Edinburgh in the year 1558.
THIS person, in his younger years, had travelled into Germany, and on his return was installed a priest of the church of Lunan in Angus; but, on an information of heresy, in the time of cardinal Beaton, he was forced to abandon his charge, and abscond. But he was soon apprehended▪ and comted to prison.
BEING interrogated by sir Andrew Oliphant, whether he would recant his opinions, he answered in the negative, saying, "He would sooner forfeit ten thousand lives, than relinquish a particle of those heavenly principles he had received from the suffrages of his blessed Redeemer.
IN consequence of this, sentence of condemnation was immediately passed on him, and he was conducted to prison in order for execution the following day.
THIS stedfast believer in Christ was 82 years of age, and exceeding infirm; from whence it was supposed, that he could scarcely be heard. However, when he was led to the place of execution, he expressed his religious sentiments with such courage, and at the same time composure of mind, as astonished even his enemies. As soon as he was fastened to the stake, and the faggots lighted, he addressed the spectators as follows:
THE cause why I suffer this day is not for any crime, (though I acknowledge myself a miserable sinner), but only for the defence of truth as it is in [Page 248] Jesus Christ; and I praise God who hath called me, by his mercy, to seal the truth with my life; which, as I received it from him, so I willingly offer it up to his glory. Therefore, as you would escape eternal death, be no longer seduced by the lies of the seat of antichrist; but depend solely on Jesus Christ, and his mercy, that you may be delivered from condemnation. And then added, "That he trusted he should be the last who would suffer death in Scotland, upon a religious account."
Thus did this pious christian chearfully give up his life, in defence of the truth of Christ's gospel, not doubting but he should be made a partaker of his heavenly kingdom.
An Account of the Persecutions against the Protestants in Ireland, distinguished by the Name of THE IRISH MASSACRE.
THOUGH the various attempts made by the Irish against the English usually go under the denomination of rebellion, yet they more properly deserve the epithet of persecution, as all their destructive efforts were particularly levelled at the protestants only, whom they were determined, if possible, totally to extirpate from the kingdom. They had, indeed, hitherto miscarried; but they at length hit upon a project that succeeded to their wishes, and produced a catastrophe that will remain in characters of blood to the latest posterity.
THAT the Romish clergy of Ireland were the principal fomenters of the rebellions in that kingdom, already mentioned, is particularly evident from their treacherous and disloyal behaviour under queen Elizabeth and king James I. they continually urging to the people the lawfulness of killing all protestants, who supported the right of the crown of England to Ireland; and assuring them, that all papists who should die fighting against the protestants, would go immediately to heaven.
THESE Irish ecclesiastics, under Charles I. were greatly increased by titular Romish archbishops, bishops, deans, vicars-general, abbots, priests, and friars; for which reason, in 1629, the public exercise of the popish rites and ceremonies was forbidden.
BUT notwithstanding this, soon after the Romish clergy erected a new popish university in the city of Dublin. They also proceeded to build monasteries and nunneries in various parts of the kingdom; in which places these very Romish clergy, and the chief of the Irish, had frequent meetings; and, from thence, used to pass, to and fro, to France, Spain, Flanders, Lorrain, and Rome; where the detestable plot of 1641 was hatching by the family of the O'Neals, and their followers.
A short time before the horrid conspiracy broke out, which we are now going to relate, the papists of Ireland had presented a remonstrance to the lords-justice of that kingdom, demanding the free exercise of their religion, and a repeal of all laws to the contrary; to which both houses of parliament in England solemnly answered, that they would never grant any toleration to the popish religion in that kingdom.
THIS farther irritated the papists to put in execution the diabolical plot concerted for the destruction of the protestants; and it failed not of the success wished for by its malicious and rancorous projectors.
THE design of this horrid conspiracy was, that a general insurrection should take place at the same time throughout the kingdom; and that all the protestants, without exception, should be murdered. The day fixed for this horrid massacre was, the 23d of October, 1641, the feast of Ignatius Loyola, the founder of the jesuits; and the chief conspirators, in the principal parts of the kingdom, made the necessary preparations for the intended conflict.
IN order that this detested scheme might the more infallibly succeed, the most distinguished artifices were practised by the papists; and their behaviour, in their visits to the protestants, at this time, was with more seeming kindness than they had hitherto shewn, which was done the more completely to effect the inhuman and treacherous designs then meditating against them.
THE execution of this savage conspiracy was delayed till the approach of winter, that the sending [Page 249] troops from England might be attended with greater difficulty. Cardinal Richlieu, the French minister, had promised the conspirators a considerable supply of men and money; and many Irish officers had given the strongest assurances, that they would heartily concur with their catholic brethren, as soon as the insurrection appeared.
THE day preceding that appointed for carrying this horrid design into execution was now arrived, when, happily for the metropolis of the kingdom, the conspiracy was discovered by one Owen O'Connelly, an Irishman, for which most signal service the English parliament voted him 500l. and a pension of 200l. during his life.
SO very seasonably was this plot discovered, even but a few hours before the city and castle of Dublin were to have been surprized, that the lords-justices had but just time to put themselves, and the city, in a proper posture of defence. The lord M cGuire, who was the principal leader here, with his accomplices, were seized the same evening in the city: and in their lodgings were found swords, hatchets, pole-axes, hammers, and such other instruments of death as had been prepared for the destruction and extirpation of the protestants in that part of the kingdom.
THUS was the metropolis happily preserved; but the bloody part of the intended tragedy was past prevention. The conspirators were all in arms all over the kingdom early in the morning of the day appointed, and every protestant who fell in their way was immediately murdered. No age, no sex, no condition was spared. The wife weeping for her butchered husband, and embracing her helpless children, was pierced with them, and perished by the same stroke. The old, the young, the vigorous, and infirm, underwent the same fate, and were blended in one common ruin. In vain did flight save them from the first assault: destruction was every where let loose, and met the hunted victims at every turn. In vain was recourse had to relations, to companions, to friends: all connections were dissolved, and death was dealt by that hand from which protection was implored and expected. Without provocation, without opposition, the astonished English▪ living in profound peace, and, as they though [...], [...] security, were massacred by their nearest neighbours, [...] whom they had l [...]ng maintained a continued intercourse of kindness and good offices. Nay, even death was the slightest punishments in human form: all the tortures which wanton cruelty could invent, all the lingering pains of body, the anguish of mind, the agonies of despair, could not satiate revenge excited without injury, and cruelly derived from no cause whatever. Depraved nature, even perverted religion, though encouraged by the utmost licence, cannot reach to a greater pitch of ferocity than appeared in these merciless barbarians. Even the weaker sex themselves, naturally tender to their own sufferings, and compassionate to those of others, here emulated their robust companions in the practice of every cruelty. The very children, taught by example, and encouraged by the exhortation of their parents, dealt their feeble blows on the dead carcases of the defenceless children of the English.
NOR was the avarice of the Irish sufficient to produce the least restraint on their cruelty. Such was their frenzy, that the cattle they had seized, and by rapine had made their own, were, because they bore the name of English, wantonly slaughtered, or, when covered with wounds, turned loose into the woods, there to perish by slow and lingering torments.
THE commodious habitations of the planters were laid in ashes, or levelled with the ground. And where the wretched owners had shut themselves up in the houses, and were preparing for defence, they perished in the flames, together with their wives and children.
SUCH is the general description of this unparallelled massacre; but it now remains from the nature of our work, that we proceed to particulars.
THE bigoted and merciless papists had no sooner began to imbrue their hands in blood, than they repeated the horrid tragedy day after day; and the protestants in all parts of the kingdom [...]ell victims to their fury by deaths of the most unheard-of nature.
THE ignorant Irish were more strongly instigated to execute the infernal business by the jesuits, priests, and friars, who, when the day for the execution of the plot was agreed on, recommended, in their prayers, diligence in the great design, which they said would greatly tend to the prosperity of the kingdom, and to the advancement of the catholic cause. They every where declared [...]o the common people, [Page 250] that the protestants were heretics, and ought not to be suffered to live any longer among them; adding that it was no more a sin to kill an Englishman than to kill a dog; and that the relieving or protecting them was a crime of the most unpardonable nature.
THE papists having besieged the town and castle of Longford, and the inhabitants of the latter, who were protestants, surrendering on condition of being allowed quarter, the besiegers, the instant the towns-people appeared, attacked them in the most unmerciful manner, their priest, as a signal for the rest to fall on, first ripping open the belly of the English protestant minister; after which his followers murdered all the rest, some of whom they hung, others were stabbed or shot, and great numbers knocked on the head with axes provided for the purpose.
THE garrison at Sligo was treated in like manner by O'Connor Slygah; who, upon the protestants quitting their holds, promised them quarter, and to convey them safe over the Curlew mountains, to Roscommon. But he first imprisoned them in a most loathsome gaol, allowing them only grains for their food. Afterwards, when some papists were merry over their cups, who were come to congratulate their wicked brethren for their victory over these unhappy creatures, those protestants who survived were brought forth by the White-friars, and were either killed, or precipitated over the bridge into a swift water, where they were soon destroyed. It is added, that this wicked company of White-friars went some time after, in solemn procession, with holy water in their hands, to sprinkle the river, on pretence of cleansing and purifying it from the stains and pollution of the blood and dead bodies of the heretics, as they called the unfortunate protestants who were inhumanly slaughtered at this very time.
AT Kilmore, Dr. Bedell, bishop of that see▪ had charitably settled and supported a great number of distressed protestants, who had fled from their habitations to escape the diabolical cruelties committed by the papists. But they did not long en [...]oy the consolation of living together▪ the good pr [...] lite was forcibly dragged from his episcopal residence, which was immediately occupied by Dr. [...] p [...]pish titular bishop of [...]lmore, who said mass in the church the Sunday following, and then seized on all the goods aad effects belonging to the persecuted bishop.
SOON after this the papists forced Dr. Bedell, his two sons, and the rest of his family, with some of the chief of the protestants whom he had protected, into a ruinous castle, called Lochwater, situated in a lake near the sea. Here he remained with his companions some weeks, all of them daily expecting to be put to death. The greatest part of them were stripped naked, by which means, as the season was cold, (it being the month of December) and the building in which they were confined open at the top, they suffered the most severe hardships.
THEY continued in this situation till the 7th of January, when they were all released. The bishop was courteously received into the house of Dennis O'Sheridan, one of his clergy, whom he had made a convert to the church of England; but he did not long survive this kindness.
DURING his residence here, he spent the whole of his time in religious exercises, the better to fit and prepare himself, and his sorrowful companions, for their great change, as nothing but certain death was perpetually before their eyes.
HE was at this time in the 71st year of his age, and being afflicted with a violent ague caught in his late cold and desolate habitation on the lake, it soon threw him into a fever of the most dangerous nature. Finding his dissolution at hand, he received it with joy, like one of the primitive martyrs just hastening to his crow [...] of glory.
AFTER address [...]ing his little flock, and exhorting them to patience, in the most pathetic manne [...], as they saw their own last day approaching: after having solemnly blessed his people, his family and his children, he finish [...]d the course of his ministry and life together, on the 7th [...], [...]42.
HIS friends and relations applied to th [...] in [...]ud [...]ng bishop, for leave to [...] difficulty obtained▪ he, at [...] ▪ that the church yard was holy ground, and should [...] longer defiled with heretic [...]: however, [...] [Page]
[Page 251] last granted, and though the church funeral service was not used at the solemnity, (for fear of the Irish papists) yet some of the better sort, who had the highest veneration for him when living, attended his remains to the grave. At his interment, they discharged a volley of shot, crying out, Requiescat in pace ultimus Anglorum: that is, "May the last of the English rest in peace." Adding, that as he was one of the best, so he should be the last English bishop found among them.
HIS learning was very extensive; and he would have given the world a greater proof of it, had he printed all he wrote. Scarce any of his writings were saved; the papists having destroyed most of his papers, and his library.
HE had gathered a vast heap of critical expositions of scripture, all which, with a great trunk full of [...] manuscripts, fell into the hands of the Irish. [...]ppily his Hebrew MS. was preserved, and is [...] in the library of Emanuel-College, Oxford.
IN the barony of Terawley, the papists, at the [...]stigation of their friars, compelled above 40 English protestants, some of whom were women and children, to the hard fate either of falling by the sword, or of being drowned in the sea. These chusing the latter, were accordingly forced, by the naked weapons of their inexorable persecutors, into the deep, where, with their children in their arms, they first waded up to their chins, and afterwards sunk down and perished together.
IN the castle of Lisgool upwards of 150 men, women, and children, were all burnt together; and at the castle of Moneah not less than 100 were all put to the sword. Great numbers were also murdererd at the castle of Tullah, which was delivered up to M cGuire on condition of having fair quarter; but no sooner had that base villain got possession of the place, than he ordered his followers to murder the people, which was immediately done with the greatest cruelty.
MANY others were put to deaths of the most horrid nature, and such as could have been invented only by daemons instead of men.
SOME of them were laid with the center of their backs on the axle-tree of a carriage, with their legs resting on the ground on one side, and their arms and head on the other. In this position one of the savages scourged the wretched object on the thighs, legs, &c. while another set on furious dogs, who tore to pieces the arms and upper parts of the body; and in this dreadful manner were they deprived of their existence.
GREAT numbers were fastened to horses tails, and the beasts being set on full gallop by their riders, the wretched victims were dragged along till they expired.
OTHERS were hung on lofty gibbets, and a fire being kindled under them, they finished their lives, partly by hanging, and partly by suffocation.
NOR did the more tender sex escape the least particle of cruelty that could be projected by their merciless and furious persecutors. Many wome [...] ▪ of all ages, were put to deaths of the most cruel nature. Some in particular were fastend to strong posts, and being stripped to their waists, the inhuman monsters cut off their right breasts with shears, which, of course, put them to the most excruciating torments; and in this position they were left till, from the loss of blood, they expired.
SUCH was the savage ferocity of these barbarians, that even unborn infants were dragged from the womb to become victims to their rage. Many unhappy mothers, were hung naked on the branches of trees, and their bodies being cut open, the innocent offsprings were taken from them, and thrown to dogs and swine. And to increase the horrid scene, they would oblige the husband to be a spectator before he suffered himself.
AT the town of Lissenskeath they hanged above 100 Scottish protestants, shewing them no more mercy then they did to the English.
M cGUIRE, going to the castle of that town, desired to speak with the governor, when being admitted, he immediately burnt the records of the county, which were kept there. He then demanded 1000l. of the governor, which having [Page 252] received, he immediately compelled him to hear mass, and to swear that he would continue so to do. And to complete his horrid barbarities, he ordered the wife and children of the governor to be hung up before his face; besides massacring at least 100 of the inhabitants.
UPWARDS of a thousand men, women, and children, were driven, in different companies, to Portendown bridge, which was broken down in the middle, and there compelled to throw themselves into the water; and such as attempted to reach the shore were knocked on the head.
IN the same part of the country, at least four thousand persons were drowned in different places. The inhuman papists, after first stripping them, drove them like beasts to the spot fixed on for their destruction; and if any, through fatigue, or natural infirmities, were slack in their pace, they pricked them with their swords and pikes; and to strike a farther terror on the multitude, they murdered some by the way. Many of these poor wretches, when thrown into the water, endeavoured to save themselves by swimming to the shore; but their merciless persecutors prevented their endeavours taking effect, by shooting them in the water.
IN one place one hundred and forty English, after being driven for many miles stark naked, and in the most severe weather, were all murdered on the same spot, some being hanged, others burnt, some shot, and many of them buried alive; and so cruel were their tormentors, that they would not suffer them to pray before they robbed them of their miserable existence.
OTHER companies they took under pretence of [...] [...]onduct, who, from that consideration, proceeded chearfully on their journey; but when the treacherous papists had go [...] them to a convenient spot, they butchered them all in the most cruel manner.
ONE hundred and fifteen men, women, and children, were conducted by order of sir Phelim O, Neal, to Porte [...]down bridge, where they were all forced into the river, and drowned. One woman, named Campbel, fi [...]ding no probability of escaping, suddenly clasped a papist chief in her arms, and held him so fast, that they were both drowned together.
IN Killoman they massacred forty-eight families, among whom twenty-two were burnt together in one house. The rest were either hanged, shot, or drowned.
IN Kilmore the inhabitants, which consisted of about two hundred families, all fell victims to their rage. Some of them sat in the stocks till they confessed where their money was; after which they put them to death. The whole county was one common scene of butchery, and many thousands perished in a short time by sword, famine, fire, water, and all other the most cruel deaths, that rage and malice could invent.
THESE bloody villains dispatched some immediately; but would by no means suffer them to pray. Others they imprisoned in filthy dungeons, putting heavy bolts on their legs, and keeping them there till they were starved to death.
AT Casel they put all the protestants into a loathsome dungeon, where they kept them together, for several weeks, in the greatest misery. At length they were released, when some of them were barbarously mangled, and left on the highways to perish at leisure; others were hanged, and some were buried in the ground upright, with their heads above the earth, the papists, to increase their misery, treating them with derision during their sufferings.
IN the county of Antrim they murdered nine hundred and fifty-four protestants in one morning; and afte [...]wards about twelve hundred more in that county.
AT a town called Lisnegary, they forced twentyfour protestants into a house, and then setting fire to it, burned them together, counterfeiting their outcries in derision to others.
AMONG other acts of cruelty, they took two children belonging to an English woman, and dashed out their brains before her face; after which they threw the mother into a river, and she was drowned. They served many children in the like manner, to the great affliction of their parents, and [...] disgrace of human nature.
[Page 253]IN Kilkenny all the protestants, without exception, were put to death; and some of them in so cruel a manner, as perhaps, was never before thought of.
THEY beat an English woman with such savage barbarity, that she had scarce a whole bone left; after which they threw her in a ditch; but not satisfied with this, they took her child, a girl about six years of age, and after ripping up its belly, threw it to its mother, there to languish till it perished.
THEY forced one man to go to mass, after which they ripped open his body, and in that manner left him. They sawed another asunder, cut the throat of his wife, and after having dashed out the brains of their child, an infant, threw it to the swine, who greedily devoured it.
AFTER committing these, and many other horrid cruelties, they took the heads of seven protestants, and among them that of a pious minister, all which they fixed up at the market cross. They put a gag into the minister's mouth, then slit his cheeks to his ears, and laying a leaf of a bible before it, bid him preach, for his mouth was wide enough. They did several other things by way of derision, and expressed the greatest satisfaction at having thus murdered, and exposed the unhappy protestants.
IT is impossible to conceive the pleasure these monsters took in exercising [...]heir cruelty, and to increase the misery of those who fell into their hands, when they butchered them they would say, "Your soul to the devil."
ON [...] of these miscreants would come into a house with his hands imbrued in blood, and boast that it was English blood, and that his sword had pricked the white skins of the protestants, even to the [...]ilts.
WHEN any one of them had killed a protestant, others would come and receive a gratification in cutting and mangling the body: after which they left it exposed to be devoured by d [...]gs; and when they had slain a number of them they would boast that the devil was beholden to them for sending so many souls to hell.
BUT it is no wonder they should thus treat the innocent christians, when they hesitated not to commit blasphemy against God, and his most holy word.
IN one place they burnt two protestant bibles, and then said they had burnt hell-fire. In the church at Powerscourt they burnt the pulpit, pews, chests, and bibles belonging to it. They took other bibles, and after wetting them with dirty water, dashed them in the faces of the protestants, saying, "We know you love a good lesson; here is an excellent one for you; come to-morrow, and you shall have as good a sermon as this."
SOME of the protestants they dragged by the hair of their heads into the church, where they stripped and whipped them in the most cruel manner, telling them, at the same time, "That if they came to-morrow, they should hear the like sermon."
IN Munster they put to death several ministers in the most shocking manner. One, in particular, they stripped stark naked, and driving him before them, pricked him with swords and darts till he fell down and expired.
IN some places they plucked out the eyes, and cut off the hands of the protestants, and in that manner turned them into the fields, there to wander out their miserable existence.
THEY obliged many young men to force their aged parents to a river, where they were drowned: wives to assist in hanging their husbands; and mothers to cut the throats of their children.
IN one place they compelled a young man to kill his father, and then immediately hanged him. In another, they forced a woman to kill her husband, then obliged the son to kill her, and afterwards shot him through the head.
AT a place called Glaslow, a popish priest, with some others, prevailed on forty protestants to be reconciled to the church of Rome. They had no sooner done this, than they told them they were in a good faith, and that they would prevent their falling from it, and turning heretics, by sending them out of the world, which they did by immediately cutting their throats.
[Page 254]IN the county of Tipperary upwards of thirty protestants, men, women, and children, fell into the hands of the papists, who, after stripping them naked, murdered them with stones, pole-axes, swords, and other weapons.
IN the county of Mayo about sixty protestants, fifteen of whom were ministers, were, upon covenant, to be safely conducted to Galway, by one Edmond Burke and his soldiers; but the inhuman monster by the way drew his sword as an intimation of his design to the rest, who immediately followed his example, and murdered the whole, some of whom they stabbed, others were run through the body with pikes, and several were drowned.
IN Queen's county great numbers of protestants were put to the most shocking deaths. Fifty or sixty were placed together in one house, which being set on fire, they all perished in the flames.
MANY were stripped naked, and being fastened to horses by ropes placed [...]ound their middles, were dragged through bogs till they expired.
SOME were hung by the feet to tenter-hooks driven into poles; and in that wretched posture left till they perished.
OTHERS were fastened to the trunk of a tree, with a branch at top. Over this branch hung one arm, which principally supported the weight of the body; and one of the legs was turned up, and fastened to the trunk, while the other hung strait. In this dreadful and uneasy posture did they remain, pleasing spectacles to their blood-thirsty persecutors, till they expired.
AT Clownes seventeen men were buried alive; and an Englishman, his wife, five children, and a servant maid, were all hung together, and afterwards thrown into a ditch.
THEY hung many by the arms to branches of trees, with a weight to their feet; and others by the middle, in which posture they left them till they expired.
SEVERAL were hung on windmills, and before they were half dead, the barbarians cut them in pieces with their swords. Others, both men, women, and children, they cut and hacked in various parts of their bodies, and left them wallowing in their blood to perish where they fell. One poor woman they hung on a gibbet, with her child, an infant about a twelvemonth old, the latter of whom was hung by the neck with the hair of its mother's head, and in that manner finished its short but miserable existence.
IN the county of Tyrone no less than three hundred protestants were drowned in one day; and many others were hanged▪ burned, and otherwise put to death.
DR. MAXWELL, rector of Tyrone, lived at this time near Armagh, and suffered greatly from these merciless savages. This person, in his examination, taken upon oath before the king's commissioners, declared, that the Irish papists owned to him, that [...]ey, at several times, had destroyed, in one place, 12,000 protestants, whom they inhumanly slaughtered at Glynwood, in their flight from the county of Armagh.
AS the river Bann was not fordable, and the bridge broken down, the Irish forced thither, at different times, a great number of unarmed, defenceless protestants, and with pikes and swords violently thrust above one thousand into the river, where they miserably perished.
NOR did the cathedral of Arm [...]gh escape the fury of these barbarians, it being maliciously set on fire by their leaders, and burnt to the ground. And to extirpate, if possible, the very race of those unhappy protestants, who lived in or near Armagh, the Irish first burnt all their houses, and then gathered together many hundreds of those innocent people, young and old, on pretence of allowing them a guard and safe conduct to Colerain; when they treacherously fell on them by the way, and inhumanly murdered them.
THE like horrid barbarities with those we have particularized, were practised on the wretched protestants in almost all parts of the kingdom: and, when an e [...]timate was afterwards made of the number [Page 255] who were sacrificed to gratify the diabolical souls of the papists, it amounted to one hundred and fifty thousand. But it now remains that we proceed to the particulars that followed.
THESE desperate wretches, flushed and grown insolent with success, (though by methods attended with such excessive barbarities as perhaps not to be equalled) soon got possession of the castle of Newry, where the king's stores and ammunition were lodged; and, with as little difficulty made themselves masters of Dundalk. They afterwards took the town of Ardee, where they murdered all the protestants, and then proceeded to Drogheda. The garrison of Drogheda was in no condition to sustain a siege, notwithstanding which, as often as the Iri [...]h renewed their attacks they were vigorously repulsed, by a very unequal number of the king's forces, and a few faithful protestant citizens under sir Henry Tichborne, the governor, assisted by the lord viscount Moore. The siege of Drogheda began on the 30th of November, 1641, and held till the 4th of March, 1642, when sir Phelim O'Neal, and the Irish miscreants under him were forced to retire.
IN the mean time ten thousand troops were sent from Scotland to the relief of the remaining protestants in Ireland, which being properly divided in the most capital parts of the kingdom, happily eclipsed the power of the Irish savages; and the protestants, for a time, lived in tranquillity.
IN the reign of king James II. they were again interrupted, for in a parliament held at Dublin in the year 1689, great numbers of the protestant nobility, clergy, and gentry of Ireland, were attainted of high treason. The government of the kingdom was▪ at that time, invested in the earl of Tyrconnel, a bigoted papist, and an inve [...]rate enemy to the protestants. By his orders they were again persecuted in various parts of the kingdom. The revenues of the city of Dublin were s [...]zed▪ and most of the churches converted into prison [...]. And had it not been for the resolution and uncommon b [...]a [...]ery of the [...] the city of Londonder [...]y, and the town of [...], there [...] not o [...] place remained for refuge to the distressed protestants in the whole kingdom: but all most have been given up to king James, and to the furious popish party that governed him.
THE remarkable siege of Londonderry was opened on the 18th of April, 1689, by twenty thousand papists, the flower of the Irish army. The city was not properly circumstanced to sustain a siege, the defenders consisting of a body of raw undisciplined protestants, who had fled thither for shelter, and half a regiment of lord Mountjoy's disciplined soldiers, with the principal part of the inhabitants, making in all only seven thousand three hundred and sixty-one fighting men.
THE besieged hoped, at first, that their stores of corn, and other necessaries, would be sufficient; but by the continuance of the siege their wants increased; and these became at last so heavy, that for a considerable time before the siege was raised, a pint of coarse barley, a small quantity of greens, a few spoonfuls of starch, with a moderate proportion of horse flesh, were reckoned a week's provision for a soldier. And they were, at length, reduced to such extremities, that they eat dogs, cats, and mice.
THEIR miseries increasing with the siege, many, through mere hunger and want, pined and languished away, or fell dead in the streets. And it is remarkable, that when their long expected succours arrived from England, they were upon the point of being reduced to this alternative, either to preserve their existence by eating each other, or attempting to fight their way through the Irish, which must have infallibly produced their destruction.
THESE succours were most happily brought by the ship Mountjoy, of Derry, and the Phoenix, of Colerain, at which time they had only nine lean horses left, with a pint of meal to each man. By hunger, and the fatigues of war, their seven thousand three hundred and sixty-one fighting men were reduced to four thousand three hundred, one-fourth part of whom were rendered unserviceable.
AS the calamities of the besieged were very great, so likewise were the terrors and sufferings of their protestant friends and relations; all of whom (even w [...]men and children) were forcibly driven from the country thirty miles round, and inhumanly reduced [Page 256] to the sad necessity of continuing some days and nights, without food or covering, before the walls of the town; and were thus exposed to the conti [...]nual fire both of the Irish army from without, and the shot of their friends from within.
BUT the succours from England happily arriving, put an end to their affliction; and the siege was raised on the 31st of July, having been continued upwards of three months.
THE day before the siege of Londonderry was raised, the Inniskilliners engaged a body of six thousand Irish Roman catholics, at Newton Butler, or Crown-Castle, of whom near five thousand were slain. This, with the defeat at Londonderry, dispirited the papists, and they gave up all farther attempts to persecute the protestants.
THE year following, viz. 1690, the Irish took up arms in favour of the abdicated prince, king James II. but they were totally defeated by his successor king William the Third. That monarch, before he left the country, reduced them to a state of subjection, in which they have ever since continued; and it is to be hoped will so remain as long as time shall be.
BY a report made in Ireland, in the year 1731, it appeared, that a great number of eclesiastics had, in defiance of the laws, flocked into that kingdom: that several convents had been o [...]ened by jesuits, monks, and friars: that many new and pompous mass-houses had been erected in some of the most conspicuous parts of their great cities, where there had not been any before; and that such swarms of vagrant, immoral Romish priests had appeared, that the very papists themselves considered them as a burthen.
BUT notwithstanding all this, the protestant interest at present stands upon a much stronger basis than it did a century ago. The Irish, who formerly led an unset [...]led and roving life, in the woods, bogs, and mountains, and lived on the depredation of their neighbours; they who, in the morning seized the prey, and at night divided the spoil, have, for many years past, become quiet and civilized. They taste the sweets of English society, and the advantages of civil government. They trade in our cities, and are employed in our manufactures. They are received also into English families; and are treated with great humanity by the protestants.
THE heads of their clans, and the chiefs of the great Irish families, who cruelly oppressed and tyrannized over their vassals, are now dwindled, in a great measure, to nothing; and most of the ancient popish nobility and gentry of Ireland have renounced the Romish religion.
IT is also to be hoped, that inestimable benefits will arise from the establishment of protestant schools in various parts of the kingdom, in which the children of the Roman catholics are instructed in religion and reading, whereby the mist of ignorance is dispelled from their eyes, which was the great source of the cruel transactions that have taken place, at different periods, in that kingdom.
IN order to preserve the protestant interest in Ireland upon a solid basis, it behoves all in whom that power is invested, to discharge it with the strictest assiduity and attention; for should it once again lose ground, there is no doubt but the papists would take those advantages they have hitherto done, and thousands might yet fall victims to their malicious bigotry.
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THE NEW AND COMPLETE BOOK of MARTYRS; OR, AN Universal History of Martyrdom: BEING FOX'S BOOK OF MARTYRS, Newly Revised and Corrected, with Additions and great Improvements.
BOOK I. CONTAINING A New, Copious, Complete▪ and Universal History of the Lives, Acts, Monuments, Trials, Persecutions, Sufferings, and Triumphant Deaths of the PROTESTANT MARTYRS, During the Reign of MARY the FIRST, commonly called, on account of her Superstition, Bigotry, and Persecuting Spirit, BLOODY QUEEN MARY.
INTRODUCTION: Being a Preliminary Discourse, giving an Account of the principal Errors, Rites, Ceremonies, and Superstitious Practices, of the ROMISH CHURCH.
BEFORE we enter upon those bloody tragedies that were acted in England, during the tyrannical reign of queen Mary, we think it necessary, especially for the information of the younger part of our readers, to give an account of the main errors, superstitious ceremonies, and human inventions, of the Romish church▪ in abhorrence of which, the f [...]rst Reformer [...] and blessed Martyrs, who made the sacred scriptures their sole guide, separated from that church, and resisting popish idolatry, even unto death, sealed the sacred truths of the everlasting gospel with their precious blood. To attempt a formal refutation of the various absurdities belonging to the Roman Catholic religion, would be foreign to the design of this work, and afford [...]tle entertainment: we shall however select those that are most material, and prove that they are me [...] effects of human invention, by contrasting them with passages taken from the word of God, the only true rule by which we can possibly [Page 258] judge in all matters of revealed religion. The Romish church affirms, that out of her communion there is no salvation; yet they receive, profess, and teach, as the true catholic faith, the following strange, unscriptural, and inhuman maxims, tenets, and carnal observances.
TRADITIONS.] The church of Rome having deprived the laity of the Bible, substitutes in its stead apostolical and ecclesiastical traditions; and obliges her disciples to admit for truth whatever she teaches them: But what do the holy scriptures say? "Why do ye transgress the commandment of God by your traditions?" Matt. xv.3, 9, &c. They also command us "to call no man master (inspiritual concerns); to try the spirits; and to beware of false teachers."
PRAYERS and DIVINE SERVICE in LATIN.] The Roman Catholics will not interpret the scriptures, otherwise than according to the sense of holy Mother Church, and the pretended unanimous consent of the Fathers: they assert also, that the scriptures ought not to be read publicly, nor indifferently by all; and that the common people may be enslaved by gross ignorance, they perform public worship in an unknown tongue, contrary to the rule laid down by the apostle, "That all things should be done to edification." St. Paul says, "If I pray in an unknown tongue, m [...] spirit prayeth, but my understanding is unfruitf [...]l." And, writing to Timothy, he reminds him, that "from a child hast thou known the scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto salvation, through faith, which is in Christ Jesus."
SEVEN SACRAMENTS.] Two only were instituted by Christ, to which the Romish church has added five more, making in all seven, necessary to salvation, namely, the Eucharist, Baptism, Confirmation, Penance, Extreme Unction, Orders, and Matrimony. To those two which Christ instituted, she has added a mixture of her own inventions; for in the sacrament of baptism, she uses salt, oil, or spittle; and in the sacrament of the Lord's supper, the laity have only the bread administered to them: and even that not after the manner ordained by Christ, who broke the bread and gave it to his disciples; instead of which, the church of Rome administers to her members▪ not bread, but a wafer, and that not broke, but put whole by the priest into the mouths of the communicants. These wafers are smaller than those made for the priests, who, with them, drink the sacramental wine alone, to which the rest of the congregation have as good a right, from the institution of our blessed Lord, who said, "Drink ye all of this," &c. Matt. xxvi.27.
THE MASS.] Roman Catholics believe it to be a true, proper, and propitiatory sacrifice, and therefore call it, the Sacrament of the Altar; whereas the death of Christ was a full and complete sacrifice, "in which he hath, by one offering, perfected for ever them that are sanctified. He himself is a priest for ever; who, being raised from the dead, dieth no more; and who, through the eternal Spirit, offered himself without spot to God." See St. Paul's Epistle to the Hebrews, Cha [...] ix. and x. It was on account of this gross absurdity, and the irreligious application of it, that our first reformers suffered, and so many were put to death in the reign of queen Mary.
TRANSUBSTANTIATION.] Roman Catholics profess, that in the most holy sacrament of the Lord's supper, there is really, and substantially, the body and blood, together with the soul and divinity of Christ; and that the whole substance of the bread is turned into his body, and the whole substance of the wine into his blood; which conversion, so contradictory to our senses, they call Transubstantiation, but at the same time they affirm, that under either kind or species only, one whole, entire Christ, and the true sacrament is receive [...]. But why are those words, "This is my body' to be taken in a literal sense, any more than those concerning the cup? Our Saviour says, "I am the true vine; I am the door." St. Paul says, "Our fathers drank of the rock that followed them, and that rock was Christ;" and, writing to the Corinthians, he affirms, that [...] he had fed them with milk." Can these passages [...]e taken literally? Why then must we be forced to interpret our Saviour's words in a literal sense, when the meaning is both clearer, and more natural, when taken in a figurative one? "Take, eat; thus, in like manner, shall my body be broken for you, for the remission of sins. This cup represents the signing of the New Testament with my blood, and as often as ye eat this bread, and drink this cup, [Page 259] ye do shew forth the Lord's death till he come." 1 Cor. xi.23, &c.
PURGATORY.] This, they say, is a certain place, in which, as in a prison, after death, those souls, by the prayers of the faithful, are purged, which in this life could not be fully cleansed; no, not by the blood of Christ: and notwithstanding it is asserted in the scriptures, that "if we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness," 1 John i.9. This place of purgatory is in the power of the pope, who dispenses the indulgence, and directs the treasury of his merits, by which the pains are mitigated, and the deliverance hastened. For the tormented sufferers, in this ideal inquisition, his monks and friars say masses, all of whom must be paid for their trouble; because, No penny, no pater-noster; by which bubble the church of Rome amasses great wealth.
IDOLATROUS and CREATURE-WORSHIP.] In all the Romish worship, the blessed virgin is a principal object of adoration. She is stiled queen of heaven, lady of the world, the only hope of sinners, queen of angels, patroness of men, advocate for sinners, mother of mercies; under which titles they desire her, by the power of a mother, to command her son. In some prayers, they invoke God to bring them to heaven by the merits and mediation of the virgin Mary and all her saints, and that they may enjoy perpetual soundness both of body and mind, by her glorious intercession. Hence it might be imagined by a papist, that the sacred writings were full of en [...]omiums on this pretended mother of God; whereas, on the contrary, we do not find Christ in any part of the scripture called the Son of Mary, nor that he at any time calls her mother; and when the woman cried, "Blessed is the womb that bore thee, and the paps that thou hast sucked;" "Yea, (returns our Lord) rather blessed are they that hear the word of God, and keep it." Nor does our Saviour own any relation but that of a disciple; for when his mother and brethren stood without, desiring to speak with him, Jesus answered, "Who are my mother and my brethren!" And looking round upon his disciples, he saith, "Behold my mother and my brethren; for whosoever shall do the will of my Father who is in heaven, the same is my brother, sister, and mother." Of the like strain are also their prayers to other saints and angels, by which they derogate from the honour of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ, and transfer his offices to others; though the Scriptures expressly assert, there is but one mediator between God and man, who is sufficiently able to deliver and save, to the uttermost, all who by faith come unto him. Nor must we omit under this head the idolatry of the mass, in the elevation of the host, to which the poor deluded people kneel down, and which they, whatever their artful priests pretend to the contrary, solemnly adore and worship, agreeable to an express article of their creed, and the command of one of their popes, who enjoins that the host is to be worshipped in Latera, whereby the second commandment is infringed, which the Romish church have endeavoured as much as possible to suppress, and in many of their little manuels they leave it quite out.
PAPAL SOVEREIGNTY.] This is politically supported by a pretended Infallibility; Auricular Confession, founded upon the priest's power to forgive sins; Indulgences; Pretended Relicks; Penance; Pardons; Strings of Beads, for Ave-Marys, and Pater-nosters; Celibacy; Merits and Works of Supererogation; Restrictions; Monkish Austerities; Religious Vows and Orders; Palms; Candles; decorated Images; Incense; Holy Water, or (as Mr. Fox in the Preface to his third volume, more properly calls it) Conjuring Water, Christening of Bells; hallowed Flow [...]rs and Bra [...]hes; Ag [...]nus Dei; Oblations; Consec [...]tions; with a variety of other devices, tricks, and impositions; to which may be added certain
LUDICROUS FORMS and CEREMONIES.] At the feast of Christmas, in commemoration of th [...] n [...]ivity of our blessed Lord, Roman Catholics have exhibited in their Churches a cradle, with an image of an infant in it, which is rocked with great seeming devotion; and on Good-Friday they have the figure of our Saviour on the cross, and then they perform the service which they call the Tenebress; having abundance of lighted candles, all of which they extinguish one by one, hereby celebrating the darkness at the time of our Saviour's crucifixion: after which the body is taken down from the cross and put into a sepulchre, and men stand to watch it; [Page 260] with more of the same childish mummery that might be related, as if the Son of God came down from heaven to furnish men with a subject for dramatic representation.
STRANGE and CRUEL MAXIMS.] Papists hold, that heretics (for so they call the protestants) may not be termed children, or kindred.
BY the heresy of the father, the child is freed from all obligations of natural obedience.
WHEN a christian king becomes an heretic, his subjects are forthwith freed from their allegiance.
IT i [...] not lawful for christians to tolerate any king, who draweth his subjects into heresy.
THEY ought to endeavour to depose him, and set up another in his place.
THEY ought to expel him the kingdom as the enemy of Christ. This is the undoubted judgment of the most learned, and agreeable to [...]postolical truth.
FAITH is not to be kept with heretics, and papists may have a dispensation, for the breach of oaths, or any secret practices against them, for the good of the Romish church; and it is lawful to torture, burn their bodies, or otherways kill them, for the good of their souls.
NOW the above scheme of popery, if duly attend [...]ed to, will convince every unprejudiced mind, that a mixture of paganism and judaism, absurdity and idolatry, run throughout the whole, and that it is a crafty design to establish a dominion over the consciences, persons, and properties▪ of its deluded professors; yet all these false doctrines, and irreligious practices, the wretched slaves of papal tyranny are obliged to swallow down; and to doubt of one single jota is, according to the priest, damnable▪ for says a Roman catholic, at the close of his creed,
I acknowledge the Holy Catholic and Apostolic Roman church to be the mother and mistress of all churches; and I promise and swear true obedience to the pope of Rome who is Christ's vicar, and successor to St. Peter, the prince of the apostles.
I also without doubt, receive and profess all other things delivered, defined, and declared by the holy synod of Trent; and all things contrary to them, with all heretics, condemned, rejected, and cursed by the church, I likewise reject, condemn, and curse.
LASTLY. This true Catholic Faith, without which no man can be saved, which at present I freely hold and profess, I will (by God's help) constantly retain and confess, entire and inviolable, to my latest breath, and take care, to the utmost of my power, that the same shall be taught, held, and professed by all under me, and whose care shall belong to me in my office; so help me God, and the holy Evangelists.
HAVING thus given an accout of the notorious corruptions and abuses which the Romish church has introduced into her complex system of absurdities and idolatries, we proceed to give a full and faithful display of the intolerant, cruel, and dreadful bloody spirit of popery, as exemplified in the persecutions, sufferings, and martyrdoms▪ of the persevering, holy, constant, and now blessed martyrs. Our general design is, to open the eyes of the lukewarm, to confirm weak and unlearned christians in their most holy faith, and to guard all who profess the faith of Christ, from the stratagems of those, who seek to draw them from the simplicity and truth of the everlasting gospel; and we submit the whole to the judgment of the candid reader, imploring that divine blessing, which is necessary to crown our labours, and every spiritual attempt, with such success, a [...] may redound to the glory of God, and the eternal welfare of all our fellow christians.
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CHAP. I. The ACCESSION of QUEEN MARY, and the various Alterations in RELIGION, Troubles in the STATE, and Persecutions in the CHURCH, that happened in ENGLAND, after her CORONATION, and in the First Year of her REIGN.
THE Roman Catholics assert, (and what will they not say to colour over their inhuman practices, and bloody deeds?) "That all those who suffered death, during the reign of Queen Mary, had been adjudged guilty of high treason, in consequence of their having stood up in defence of lady [...]ane Gray's title to the crown." To disprove this [...] no difficult matter, seeing every one, conversant [...] history, must know, that those who are tried on the statute of the 25th of Edward I. Chap. 26, [...] to be hanged and quartered; but with what assu [...]ance can even a papist affirm, that ever a man in [...]ngland was burned for high treason? We admit, [...]at some few suffered death in the ordinary process at common law, for their adherence to lady Jane; but none of those were burned. Why, if they were traitors, take them before the bishops, who have no power to judge in criminal cases? Nay, allowing the bishops to have had power to judge, yet their own bloody statute did not give them power to execute; otherwise, why were they obliged to certify [...] the chancellor, that the accused person was a heretic, before they could obtain a warrant for his execution? The proceedings against the martyrs are still extant, and they were carried on directly according to the forms prescribed by their own statute. We thought it necessary to promise thus much, that our British youth may not be led away by popish insinuations; for if they will but consider, they will be convinced, that the popish assertion is false. There was not one of those who were burned in England, ever accused of high treason, much less were they tried at common law. And this should teach young persons a history of transactions in their own country, particularly of their Blessed Martyrs, in order that they be able to detect the falsehoods advanced by Romish priests, and their numerous emissaries. Having said thus much, by way of caution, we shall, without farther preface, enter upon the narrative, which, as we have promised, shall be a NEW and COMPLETE HISTORY of the Acts and Monuments of our glorious Martyrs.
DURING the time that king Edward VI. was afflicted by a long illness, a marriage was proviled, concluded, and solemnized in the month of May, between the lord Guilford, son to the duke of Northumberland, and the lady Jane, daughter of the duke of Suffolk: whose mother, being then alive, was daughter to Mary, king Henry's second sister, who was first married to the French king, and afterwards to Charles, duke of Suffolk. The marriage being consummated, and the king growing every day worse, he was prevailed upon to set aside, by his last will and testament, his two sisters, Mary and Elizabeth, and to leave his crown to lady Jane, the duke of Suffolk's daughter.
TO this order subscribed all the king's council, and the chief of the nobility, the lord mayor and city of London, and almost all the judges and principal lawyers of the realm, except justice Hales of Kent, a true protestant, and upright judge, who having given his consent to the lady Mary's being queen, would upon no account therefore subscribe to the lady Jane. How he was rewarded for his integrity by Mary, will be seen in the sequel. But the objections made by others in the realm against lady Mary's reigning were, because they feared she would marry a foreigner, and by that means entangle the crown; and it was generally believed, that she would bring in the pope, and quite alter the religion used both in the days of her father king Henry, and in those of her brother Edward VI. which afterwards came to pass.
[Page 262]WHAT gave rise to this conjecture, was the great stubbornness she shewed in her brother's days, as evidently appears from those letters that passed between her, king Edward, and the council. Not long after this, through the violence of his illness, that most hopeful prince, Edward VI. departed this life; immediately after whose death, lady Jane Gray was, by the nobles, proclaimed queen, in London and other populous cities, and was there so acknowledged and called.
THERE was little difference in age between this young lady, and king Edward; but as to learning and knowledge of the languages, she was not only equal but superior to him, having had the advantage of a man of most excellent learning for her tutor; and had her fortune been equal to her fine wit and education, no doubt she would have been comparable, not only to the most eminent among women, but even to men of the University, who had taken several degrees there in the schools.
IN the mean time, while those things were upon the anvil, and working in London, lady Mary, having received advice of her brother's death, wrote to the lords of the council in the stile and manner following.
The Lady Mary's Letter to the Lords of the Council, claiming the Crown upn her Brother's decease.
WE greet you well, and have received sure advertisement, that our dearest brother the king, our late sovereign lord, is departed to God's mercy, which news how woeful they be unto our heart, he only knoweth, to whose will and pleasure we must and do humbly submit us and our wills. But in this so lamentable a case, that is to wit, now after his majesty's departure and death, concerning the crown and governance of this realm of England, with the title of France, and all things thereto belonging, what hath been provided by act or parliament, and the testament and last will of our dearest father, besides other circumstances advancing our right, you know, the realm, and the whole world knoweth, the rolls and records appear by the authority of the king our said father, and the king our said brother, and the subjects of this realm; so that we verily trust, that there is no good true subject that is, can, or would pretend to be ignorant thereof: and of our part we have of our [...]elves caused, and, as God shall aid and strengthen us, shall cause our right and title in this behalf to be published and proclaimed accordingly. And albeit this so weighty a matter seemeth strange, that our said brother dying upon Thursday at night last past, we hitherto had no knowledge from you thereof, yet we consider your wisdoms and prudence to be such, that having eftsoons [quickly] amongst you debated, pondered, and well weighed this present case with our estate, with your own estate, the commonwealth and all our honours, we shall and may conceive great hope and trust, with much assurance in your loyalty and service, and therefore for the time interpret and take things not to the worst: and that ye will, like noblemen, work the best. Nevertheless, we are not ignorant of your consultations, to undo the provisions made for our preferment, nor of the great bands and provisions forcible, wherewith ye be assembled and prepared, by whom, and to what end, God and you know, and nature cannot but fear some evil. But be it, that some consideration politic, or whatsoever thing else hath moved you thereto, yet doubt you not, my lords, but we can take all these your doings in gracious part, being also right ready to remit and fully pardon the same, and that freely to eschew bloodshed and vengeance against all those that can or will intend the same, trusting also assuredly you will take and accept this grace and virtue in good part as appertaineth, and that we shall not be inforced to use the service of other our true subjects and friends, which, in this our just and right cause, God, in whom our whole affiance is, shall send us. Wherefore, my lords, we require you, and charge you, and every of you, that of your allegiance which you owe to God and us, and to none other, for our honour and the surety of our person only employ yourselves, and forthwith, upon receipt hereof, cause our right and title to the crown and government of this realm to be proclaimed in our city of London and other places, as to your wisdom shall seem good, and as to this case appertaineth, not failing hereof, as our very trust is in you. And this our letter, signed with our hand, shall be your sufficient warrant on this behalf.
"Given under our signat, at our manor of Kening-hall, the 9th of July, 1553."
TO this Letter of the Lady Mary, the Lords of the Council returned the following Answer.
The Lords Answer to the Lady Mary's Lettter.
MADAM, we have received your letters, the 9th of this instant, declaring your supposed titles which you judge yourself to have to the imperial crown of this realm, and all the dominions thereunto belonging. For answer whereof, this is to advertise you, that forasmuch as our sovereign lady queen Jane is, after the death of our sovereign lord king Edward VI. a prince of most noble memory, invested and possessed with the just and right title to the imperial crown of this realm, not only by good order of ancient laws of this realm, but also by our late sovereign [Page 263] lord's letters patent, signed with his own hand, and sealed with the great seal of England, in presence of the most part of the nobles, counsellors, judges, with divers other grave and sage personages, assenting and subscribing to the same: we must therefore, as of most bound duty and allegiance, assent unto her said grace, and to none other, except we should (which faithful subjects cannot) fall into grievous and unspeakable enormities. Wherefore we can no less do, but, for the quiet both of the realm and you also, to advertise you, that forasmuch as the divorce made between the king of famous memory, king Henry VIII. and the lady Katherine your mother, was necessary to be had both by the everlasting laws of God, and also by the ecclesiastical laws, and by the most part of the noble and learned universities of Christendom, and confirmed also by the sundry acts of parliament remaining yet in their force, and thereby you justly made illegitimate, and unheritable to the crown imperial of this realm, and the rules, and dominions, and possessions of the same, you will upon just consideration hereof, and of divers other causes lawful to be alledged for the same, and for the just inheritance of the right line, and godly order taken by the late king our sovereign lord king Edward VI. and agreed upon by the nobles and great personages aforesaid, surcease by any pretence to vex and molest any of our sovereign lady queen Jane her subjects, from their true faith and allegiance due unto her grace: assuring you, that if you will for respect shew yourself quiet and obedient (as you ought,) you shall find us all and several ready to do you any service that we with duty may, and glad with your quietness to preserve the common state of this realm, wherein you may be otherwise grievous unto us, to yourself, and to them. And thus we bid you most heartily well to fare.
- Thomas Canterbury
- The Marquis of Winchester
- John Bedford
- Wm. Northampton
- Tho. Ely Chancellor
- Northumberland
- Henry Suffolk
- Henry Arundel
- Shrewsbury
- Pembroke
- Cobh [...]m
- R. Rich
- Huntington
- Darcy
- Cheyney
- R. Cotton
- John Gates
- W. Peter
- W. Cecil
- John Check
- John Mason
- Edward North
- R. Bowes."
ALL these persons, except the duke of Northumberland, and Sir John Gates, were afterwards by a special or general pardon discharged.
Lady Mary, after having received the above answer, and perceiving thereby the lords' minds, made haste privately out of London, relying chiefly upon the good will of the commons, and not destitute altogether of secret advertisements from some of the nobles. When the council heard of her sudden departure, and resolute conduct, and perceived that things went not according to their late expectations, they gathered speedily a body of troops together, and fixed upon the duke of Suffolk, for their general; but afterwards changing their minds, they thought it best to let the duke of Suffolk keep the Tower where lord Guilford and lady Jane then lodged, and to send the duke of Northumberland, with several other lords and gentlemen. In which expedition, notwithstanding the guards were very unwilling to march at first, yet, through the persuasion and importunity of the lord treasurer Cholmey, and others, they were at length induced to assist the duke, and to set forward with him.
THESE things thus agreed upon, the duke marched from London after the best manner, having both his times and journey prescribed him by the council, that he might not do any thing but upon warrant. In the mean time, lady Mary, fatigued with travelling up and down, and considering where to fix most for her advantage, withdrew at length into the quarters of Norfolk and Suffolk, where, on account of his having subdued the rebels in her brother's reign, she understood the name of Northumberland was very much hated; and procuring to herself aid and assistance, on every side, as she could, she kept herself close for a time within Fremingham castle.
AT this place first resorted to her the men of Suffolk, who being among the number of the most zealous reformers, promised her their support, but with this stipulation, that Mary should not attempt to alter that religion which, by laws and orders publicly enacted, was established in her brother king Edward's days, and which had been generally received by the consent of the whole realm. With this condition she readily complied, and knowing that faith is not to be kept with heretics, she scrupled not to promise them faithfully, upon the word of a queen, that no innovation should be made in religion; which promise had she as religiously [Page 264] kept, as they did willingly engage to protect and preserve her, at the expence of their lives, she had acted worthy of her high descent, and made her reign more stable through future tranquillity; for let a king or queen, or any private person, be ever so powerful, yet a breach of that promise is an ill supporter of peace and quietness, fear worse, cruelty worst of all.
HOWEVER, lady Mary, thus powerfully guarded and faithfully assisted, for the present, vanquished the duke and lady Jane's adherents. In consideration whereof, when the Suffolk protestants afterwards reminded their most gracious queen Mary of her promise, she made them the following severe, and ungrateful reply: "Forasmuch (said she) as you, being but the members, desire to rule your head, you shall one day well perceive, that members must obey their head, and not look to bear rule over the same." And with a view of striking greater terror into others, a certain gentleman, near Windham side, named Dobbe, for advertising her by a humble petition of her promise, was punished with standing three times in the pillory. Many others were likewise imprisoned, for having delivered her books and supplications, collected out of the scriptures, thereby exhorting her to continue in the true reformed religion then established.
BUT to return to the duke of Northumberland, who, having his warrant under the broad seal, proceeded on his march; but his short journeys, assigned him by commission, and the tedious delays in his rout, added an increasing strength to lady Mary's cause, especially as, at this time, the hearts of the people began to be much inclined to her; which, when the council at London perceived, and understood how the common people began to withdraw from them to her, as did also several of the nobility, they forthwith changed their measures, and proclaimed for queen lady Mary, eldest daughter to Henry VIII. appointed by the parliament to succeed, king Edward dying without issue. As to the duke of Northumberland, he was left destitute and forsaken at Cambridge. Upon this he proclaimed Mary queen; yet this piece of policy did him no service; for he was arrested, as were likewise some of his sons, and the earl of Huntington, with a few others; who were all sent to the Tower, as traitors to the crown.
THUS was lady Mary seated on the throne of England, who, to a disagreeable person and weak mind, had united bigotry, superstition, and cruelty. She seems to have inherited more of her mother's, than her father's qualities. Henry was fiery, rough, and ungovernable; but Catharine, with a severe and implacable rancour against protestants, assumed the character of a saint. It was the same with her daughter Mary, as appears from a letter in her own hand writing, now in the British Museum. In this letter, which is addressed to bishop Gardiner, she declares her fixed intention of burning every protestant; and it contains an insinuation, that, as soon as circumstances would permit, she would restore back to the church the lands that had been taken from the convents This was the strongest instance of her weakness that she could shew; for the convents had been demolished, except a few of their churches; and the rents were in the hands of the nobility, who, rather than part with them, would have overturned the government, both in church and state. But reason and bigotry cannot accord. That narrowness of spirit, which always distinguishes a weak mind from one that has been enlarged by education, pervaded all the actions of this princess. Unacquainted with the constitution of the country, and a slave to superstition, Mary thought to domineer over the rights of private judgment, and to trample on the privileges of mankind.
NO sooner had this queen, by the Suffolk protestants, the sword of authority put into her hand, than she began to employ it against those who had supported the title of lady Jane Gray. This devoted victim remained with her husband, lord Guildford, almost five months in the Tower, waiting her pleasure. But the duke of Northumberland, within a month after his confinement there, was condemned, brought to the scaffold, and beheaded, notwithstanding a promise made him of his life, if he would but renounce his religion and hear mass; which he not only did, but also exhorted the people to return to the Catholic faith. The Papists immediately published and sprea [...] abroad [Page 265] his recantation: but the duke, in consequence of his crimes arising from a sordid ambition, died unpitied; nay, he was insulted on the scaffold by those who remembered in what manner he had acted to their beloved Somerset. It may be proper to observe, this duke of Northumberland was not of the great Percy family, which at that time was under a cloud; but he was the grandson of that Dudley, who was executed in the year 1509, for having acted inconsistent with the common law.
THE execution of this nobleman was followed with that of sir Thomas Palmer, and sir John Gates; the former of whom confessed his faith in the reformed religion, and lamented that he had not lived more conformably thereto. Queen Mary having begun her reign with the blood of these men, and with hearing mass in the Tower, and having also released from thence Stephen Gardener; were sufficient indications to the protestant part of the nation, that she would not perform what she had promised the Suffolk men; and besides these ill omens, there were other things, which every day more and more discomforted the people, and which plainly declared the queen to bear no good will to the reformation. Gardiner was not only released, but made lord chancellor, and bishop of Winchester, by turning out Dr. Poynet; Bonner was made bishop of London, by displacing good Dr. Ridley; Dr. Day was promoted to the bishopric of Durham, by putting out Scory; Dr. Tonstal to the bishopric of Chichester; Dr. Heath to that of Worcester; Hooper w [...]s committed to the fleet; and Dr. Vesie was made bishop of Exeter, by displacing Miles Coverlade: all which changes, and transactions, being particularly noted, occasioned great heaviness to all good men, and, on the other hand, great rejoicing to the wicked. In which discord of minds, and diversity of affections, there was now to be seen a miserable prospect of things throughout the whole nations for they who could dissemble, cared not how matters went; but such as were conscientious, and had any regard to the truth, perceived fires to be already kindled, and which would be the destruction of many a sincere christian; which indeed afterwards came to pass. Mary having thus laid the foundation of her bloody reign, removed to Hampton-court from the Tower, and caused a parliament to be summoned, against the 10th of October next ensuing, of which more hereafter.
AMONGST the bishops who were removed, we noticed Dr. Ridley, bishop of London, a learned and pious prelate, who in the time of queen Jane, by order of the council, preached a sermon at Paul's Cross, declaring therein his opinion concerning the lady Mary, and dissuading them by alledging the inconveniences that might arise by admitting her to the crown, prophesying, as it were, before that, which afterwards came to pass, namely that she should bring in a foreign power to reign over them, and subvert the christian religion then happily established; shewing, moreover, that, the lady Mary being in his diocese, he, according to his duty, as being then her ordinary, had done his endeavours to reform her to this religion, and notwithstanding in all other points of civility she shewed herself gentle and tractible, yet in matters that concerned true faith and doctrine, she appeared perverse and obstinate; that he could conceive no other hopes of her, but that she would disturb and overturn all that had been planted and confirmed with so much industry in the reign of her brother king Edward. Soon after this sermon was preached, the lady Mary was proclaimed queen, whereupon Dr. Ridley forthwith repaired to salute her at Fremingham Castle, where he met with cold entertainment, and being deprived of all his dignity, was sent back upon a lame halting horse to the Tower.
THE Sunday following Mr. Rogers preached, discoursing very learnedly on the gospel for the day: whereupon queen Mary, perceiving things not to go forward according to her mind, forthwith devised and consulted with her council how to bring about by other means, what by open law she could not well accomplish; and accordingly directed forth a prohibition by proclamation, that no man should preach or read openly the word of God in churches, with several other things contained in the same proclamation, of which the following is a true copy.
A Prohibition of the Queen from Preaching, Printing, &c.
"THE Queen's Highness, well remembering what great inconveniences and dangers have grown to this her highness's realm in times past, through the diversity [Page 266] of opinions in question of religion, and hearing also that now of late, since the beginning of her most gracious reign, the same contentions be again much revived through certain false and untrue reports and rumours spread by some light and evil disposed persons; hath thought good to declare, to all her highness's most loving subjects, her most gracious pleasure in manner following:
"FIRST, her majesty, being presently by the only goodness of God settled in her just possession of the imperial crown of this realm, and other dominions thereunto belonging, cannot now hide that religion which God and the world knoweth she hath ever professed from her infancy hitherto. Which as her majesty is minded to observe and maintain for herself, by God's grace, during her time, so doth her highness much desire, and would be glad the same were of all her subjects quietly and charitably embraced.
"AND yet she doth signify unto all her majesty's loving subjects, that of her most gracious disposition and clemency, her highness mindeth not to compel any of her said subjects thereunto, until such time as further order by common assent may be taken therein: forbidding nevertheless all her subjects of all degrees, at their perils, to move seditions, or stir unquietness in her people, by interpreting the laws of this realm after their brains and fantasies, but quietly to continue for the time till (as before is said) further order may be taken, and therefore willeth and straitly chargeth and commandeth all her said good loving subjects, to live together in quiet sort, and christian charity, leaving those new found divelish terms of Papist or Heretic, and such like, and applying then whole care, study, and travail, to live in the fear of God, exercising their conversations in such charitable and godly doing, as their lives may indeed express that hunger and thirst of God's glory and holy word, which by rash talk and words many have pretended: and in so doing they shall best please God, and live without danger of the laws, and maintain the tranquility of the realm. Whereof as her highness shall be the most glad, so if any man shall rashly presume to make any assemblies of people, or at any public assemblies, or otherwise, shall go about to stir the people to disorder or disquiet, she mindeth, according to her duty, to see the same most severely reformed and punished according to her highness's laws.
"AND furthermore, forasmuch as it is also well known, that sedition and [...] rumours have been nourished and maintained in this realm, by the subtility and malice of some evil disposed persons, which take upon them, without sufficient authority, to preach and to interpret the word of God after their own brain in churches, and other places both public and [...] playing of interludes, and printing [...], ballads, rhimes, and other [...] in the [...] tongue, concerning doctrine, in [...] now in question and controversy, touching the high points and mysteries of the christian religion: which books, ballads, rhimes, and treatises, are chiefly by the printers and stationers set out to sale to her grace's subjects, of an evil zeal, for lucre and covetuousness of vile gain: her highness therefore straitly chargeth and commandeth all and every of her said subjects, of whatsoever state, condition, or degree they be, that none of them presume from henceforth to preach, or by way of reading in churches, or other public or private places, except in schools of the University, to interpret or teach any scriptures, or any manner of points of doctrine concerning religion, neither also to print any books, matter, ballad, rhime, interlude, process or treatise, nor to play any interlude, except they have her grace's special licence in writing for the same, upon pain to incur her highness's indignation and displeasure.
"AND her highness also further chargeth and commandeth all and every her said subjects, that none of them of their own authority do presume to punish, and to rise against any offender in the causes above-said, or any other offende in words or deeds in the late rebellion committed or done by the duke or Northumberland, or his complices, or to seize any of their goods, or violently to use any such offender by striking, or imprisoning, or threatening the same, but wholly to refer the punishment of such offenders unto her highness's public authority, whereof her majesty mindeth to see the due punishment according to the order of her highness's laws.
"NEVERTHELESS, as her highness mindeth not hereby to restrain and discourage any of her loving subjects, to give from time to time true information against any such offenders in the causes above-said, unto her grace or council, for the punishment of every such off [...]nder, according to the effect of her highness's laws provided in that part▪ so her said highness exhorteth and straitly chargeth her said subjects to observe her commandment and pleasure in every part aforesaid, as they will avoid her highness's said indignation and most grievous displeasure. The severity and rigour whereof as her highness shall be most sorry to have cause to put in execution; so doth she utterly determine not to permit such unlawful and rebellious doings of her subjects, whereof may ensue the danger of her royal estate, to remain unpunished, but to see her said laws touching these points to be thoroughly executed: which extremities she trusteth all her said subjects will foresee, dread, and avoid accordingly: her said highness straitly charging and commanding all mayors, sheriffs, justices of peace, bailiffs, constables, and all other public officers and ministers, diligently to see to the observing and executing of her said commandments and pleasure, and to apprehend all such as shall wilfully offend in this part, committing the same to the next [...]ail, there to remain without bail or mainprize, till upon certificate made to her highness, or her privy council, of their names and [...]; and upon examination had of their offences, some farthe [...] order shall be [Page 267] taken from their punishment to the example of others, according to the effect and tenor of the laws aforesaid.
"Given at our manor of Richmond, the 18th day of August in the first year of our most prosperous reign."
The Tumult at Paul's Cross, occasioned by Mr. Bourn's Sermon.
NEAR this period, or not long before, Mr. Bourn, a canon of St. Paul's, and who was afterwards made bishop of Bath, being appointed by Bonner, then bishop of London, to preach at Paul's Cross, he took occasion, from the gospel of the day, to speak largely in justification of Bonner, who was then present, by saying, that Bonner, four years ago, had preached from the same text, and in the same place, for which he was most cruelly and unjustly cast into that most vile dungeon the Marshalsea, where he was confined during king Edward's reign. His words had such an ill effect upon his hearers, as to cause them to murmur and stir in such sort, that the mayor and aldermen then present feared much an uproar; indeed, so great was the popular resentment, that one hurled a daggar at Mr. Bourn, but who the person was could not then be ascercained, though he was afterwards discovered. In short, the tumult became so violent, that the preacher was silenced, broke off his discourse, and durst no more appear in that place; for the matter of his discourse tended much to the dispraise of king Edward, which the people could in no wise endure. Then Mr. Bradford, being in the pulpit, stood forth, at the request of Mr. Bourn's brother, and spoke so mildly and effectually to the people, that with a few words he pacified them. This done, he and Mr. Rogers conducted Mr. Bourn betwixt them to the Grammar school door, where they left him safe; for which prudent and humane conduct, they were both, shortly after, rewarded with long imprisonment, and at last with fire in Smithfield.
BY reason of this tumult at Paul's Cross, there was an order forthwith dispatched from the lords of the council to the mayor and aldermen of London, that they should call a common-council the next day, and thereby charge every housholder to cause their children, apprentices, and other servants, to keep to their own parish churches upon holy days, and not to suffer their attempting in the least to violate or disturb the common peace; willing them likewise to signify to the said assembly the queen's determination uttered unto them August 12th, by her highness in the Tower, which was this, that notwithstanding her majesty's conscience was satisfied as to matters of religion, yet she graciously meant not to compel or force the consciences of others, only hoping God, through opening his word to them by godly, virtuous, and learned preachers, would so guide and direct them, as to bring them to be of the like religion with herself. At the same time it was ordered, that every alderman should straitway send for the curates of every parish within their liberties, and warn them not only to forbear preaching themselves, but likewise not to suffer any others to preach, or to make an open or solemn reading of the scriptures in their churches, unless such preachers, and public readers, were severally licensed by the queen: and in order to prevent any future riot, the day after Mr. Bourn had been driven from his pulpit, the queen's guard came to the Cross to attend the preacher; but the people having withdrawn themselves from the sermon, it was ordered by the mayor, that the ancients of all companies should be present, lest the preacher should be discouraged by his small auditory.
AN account of the Prohibition, Citations, and Commitments, of several Clergymen, and others, who either talked, or preached, against the queen's proceedings.
AUGUST, 1553. On the 5th of this month, one William Ru [...]ler was committed to the Marshalsea by the privy council, for speaking against Mr. Bourn, on account of his sermon at Paul's Cross, the Sunday before.
ON the 16th, Humphry Paulden was sent to the compter, for the like offence.
A letter was sent to the sheriffs of Buckingham and Bedford, for apprehending one Fisher, minister of Amersham; and another to the bishop of Norwich, not to suffer any preacher, or other, to preach or expound the scripture publicly, without special licence from the queen. And the same day Mr. Bradford, Vernon, and Beacon, preachers, were [Page 268] committed to the charge of the lieutenant of the Tower. Mr. Rogers also, the same day, was ordered to keep himself prisoner in his own house, not being allowed the liberty of conversing with any other but those of his own houshold.
ON the 22d two letters were sent to Coverdale, bishop of Exeter, and Hooper, bishop of Gloucester, commanding them to repair forthwith to court, and there to attend the council's pleasure. At which time the Rev. Mr. Fisher of Amersham appeared before the council, and was ordered to bring a copy of his sermon the next day.
ON the 24th, the Rev. John Melvin, a Scotchman, was sent to Newgate by the council.
ON the 28th, a letter was directed to the mayor of Coventry and the corporation, for apprehending Hugh Symonds, vicar of St. Michael's, in Coventry, and for sending him up to the council, with his examinations, and other matters they could charge him with. A commission was likewise inclosed to punish all such, who, by means of his preaching, had at any time talked against the queen's proceedings.
ON the 29th, John Hooper, bishop of Gloucester, and on the 31st, Coverdale, bishop of Exeter, appeared before the council, in obedience to the letters of the 22d instant.
SEPTEMBER, 1553. On the 1st of this month, the two bishops, Hooper and Coverdale, appeared again before the council, when the former was committed to the Fleet, and the latter ordered to attend the lords' pleasure.
ON the 2d, the Rev. Mr. Hugh Symonds attended at the council board, on account of a sermon he had preached, and was ordered to appear again the Monday following.
ON the 4th, a citation from the council was directed to Hugh Latimer, archbishop of Canterbur [...], commanding his appearance before them. And abouth the 5th, Peter Martyr came to London from Oxford, where, for a time, he had been commanded to keep his house▪ and found there the archbishop of Canterbury, who offered to defend the Book of Common Prayer, both by the scriptures and the fathers, assisted by Peter Martyr and others. But while they were in hopes of this event, the archbishop and others were imprisoned, and Peter Martyr permitted to return whence he came. The same day a letter was sent to the mayor of Coventry, with orders to set Hugh Symonds at liberty, if he would recant his sermon, otherwise to detain him, and give notice thereof to the council.
ON the 13th, archbishop Latimer appearing before the council, agreeable to their order of the 4th instant, he was by them sent to the Tower, attended by his servant Austin; and commanded to attend them the next day. Accordingly,
ON the 14th, the archbishop of Canterbury was brought before the lords, in the Star-chamber; where being charged with treason, and with distributing seditious bills to the disturbance of the state, he was immediately committed close prisoner to the Tower of London, there to remain at the queen's pleasure, till further justice and order.
ON the 15th, a letter was sent to the Rev. Mr. Horn, dean of Durham, requiring him to come before the council; and October 7th, another letter was sent to hasten his appearance.
ON the 16th instant, orders were sent down to the mayors of Dover and Rye, to suffer all French protestants to pass out of this realm, except such whose names were to be signified to them by the French ambassador.
OCTOBER, 1553. The coronation of Mary I. in the usual form, at Westminster, took place on the 1st day of this month, and dreadful were the consequences that followed; for on the 10th, the parliament began with a solemn mass of the Holy Ghost, celebrated with great pomp, after the popish manner, in the palace of Westminster; at which, according to custom, those bishops, not yet deposed, were to be present, namely, the archbishop of York, Dr. Taylor, bishop of Lincoln, and John Harley, bishop of Hereford; but when the bishops, Taylor and Harley, had taken their places among the lords, upon seeing mass begin they [Page 269] withdrew, not enduring the sight of such idolatrous foppery: for which cause the bishop of Lincoln being examined, and protesting his faith, was commanded to attend; who soon after fell sick, and died at Ankerwike; and bishop Harley, for being married, was expelled from parliament, and deprived of his bishopric. Mass being ended, the queen came to the parliament house, where she opened the session in the usual manner. A consultation was then held with the states of the realm, after which, all the statutes were repealed, that were made for reformation, in the reign of Henry VIII. and those in the time of Edward VI. for reading the Common Prayer, and administering the sacrament in the English tongue; and in this session, the attainder of the duke of Northumberland was also confirmed.
IN the mean time, several persons were very forward in erecting altars for masses, in churches; but such as favoured the reformation, or adhered to the laws made in King Edward's reign, were either marked, or apprehended; among whom was Sir James Hales of Kent, justice of the common-pleas; who, because he had given a charge, at a quarter sessions, upon the statutes of Henry VIII. and Edward VI. for the supremacy and reformation, was therefore imprisoned in the Fleet, where he was so cruelly handled, and terrified by the conversation of the warden in his hearing, of the torments preparing for heretics, that he intended to dispatch himself with a knife; but afterwards, submitting himself to the pleasure of the queen's council, he was willing to say what they desired him; after which compliance, his conscience so troubled him, that he sought for rest [...]om a violent death, and drowned himself in a river, about half a mile from his own house.
WHILE the parliament was employed in paving the way for the introduction of popish superstition, the clergy also had, after their usual manner, a convocation at St. Paul's church, London, where the queen appointed a disputation to be held, on the eighteenth of October. In this convocation, Mr. John Harpsfield, batchelor of divinity, preached a sermon to the clergy; after which, for the sake of order, they proceeded to the choice of a prolocutor or speaker. To this office Dr. Weston, dean of Westminster, was appointed by unanimous consent, and presented to the bishops, Mr. Pie, dean of Chichester, and Mr, Wimbisley, archdeacon of London, delivering at the same time an oration. Dr. Weston then made his congratulatory speech to the house, and was answered with another by bishop Bonner. They next enterred upon the disputation, concerning the matter of the sacrament instituted by Christ, at his last supper with his disciples, which disputation continued six days successively, wherein Dr. Weston was chief on the side of popery, who behaved himself outrageously in taunting and checking; insomuch, that they who disputed on the other side, in defence of the doctrines of the reformation, were compelled, some to fly, some to deny, some to die; but in the judgment of most men who heard the debate, they had the better in point of argument, as may appear by the report of the said disputation, a true copy, and faithful account whereof will be the subject of our next chapter.
CHAP. II. Containing a full and complete Account of a PUBLIC THEOLOGICAL DISPUTATION, about the REAL PRESENCE, and TRANSUBSTANTIATION, in (what Papists call) the SACRAMENT of the ALTAR, maintained in the Convocation-House, at St. Paul's, London, and appointed by the Queen's special command, October 18th, 1553.
The Report.
WHEREAS divers and uncertain rumours be spread abroad of the disputation had in the convocation house; to the intent that all men may know the certainty of all things therein done and said, as much as the memory of him that was present thereat can bear away, he hath thought good, at request, thoroughly to describe what was said therein on both parties of the matters argued and had in question, and of the entrance thereof.
The First Day. The subject for debate stated by the Prolocutor, in his address to the Convocation.
ON Wednesday, October 18, in the afternoon, the prolocutor, Dr. Weston, certified the house, it was the queen's pleasure, that the learned men there assembled should debate matters of religion, and for that end constitute laws, which her grace and the parliament would ratify. And because (said he) there was a book lately published, called the Catechism (which he produced) bearing the name of this honourable synod, and yet put forth without your consents, as I have learned, being a book very pestiferous, and full of heresies; and likewise an abominable book of Common Prayer; I thought it best, therefore, first to begin with the articles of the Catechism, concerning the sacrament of the altar, for confirming the natural presence of Christ in the same, and also transubstantiation: wherefore, it shall be lawful, on Friday next ensuing, for all men freely to speak their consciences in these m [...]ters, that all doubts may be removed, and they fully justified therein.
The Second Day's Act.
ON the 20th of October, being Friday, when it was expected they should have entered into disputation of the questions proposed, the prolocutor exhibiting two bills to the house, the one for the natural presence of Christ in the sacrament of the altar, and the other concerning the catechism, that it was not published by the consent of that house, and that they did not agree thereunto, requiring all them to subscribe to the same as he himself had done. Whereunto the whole house accordingly assented, except six, viz. the dean of Rochester, the dean of Exeter, the archdeacon of Winchester, archdeacon of Hereford, archdeacon of Stow, and one more. And whilst the rest were about subscribing to these two articles, John Philpot stood up and spoke first concerning the articles of the catechism, that he thought they were deceived in the title of the catechism, for that it bore the title of the synod before this, although as to publishing thereof several of them then present were not made privy thereunto; and that because this house had granted authority to certain persons appointed by the king's majesty to make ecclesiastical laws; and whatsoever ecclesiastical laws were thereupon published by the authority of them, or the major part of them, according to a statute in that behalf made and provided, it might well be said to be done by the consent of the synod of London, notwithstanding such as were members of this house now had no notice thereof before its promulgation. And therefore in this point he thought the publisher thereof had not in the least slandered the house, as they by their subscriptions were endeavouring to persuade the world, since they had one synodal authority for impowering them to make such spiritual laws, as they thought convenient and necessary.
[Page 271]AND moreover he said, that as to the article of the natural presence in the sacrament, it was both contrary to teason and learning, and very prejudicial to truth, for men to be moved to subscribe before the matter was thoroughly examined and discussed. But when he saw his allegations were to no purpose, being like a man astonished at so many ancient and learned men being purposely assembled to maintain old traditions, preferable to the truth of God's holy word, he made it his request to the prolocutor, that whereas on that side there were present so many learned men, as the like were not to be found again in the whole realm, and that on the other side, of those that had not subscribed there were not above five or six, and they far inferior to them both in age and learning: in order, therefore, that there might be an equality of persons concerned in this disputation, he desired that the prolocutor would intercede with the lords, that some of those men that were learned, and occasioned the publishing of the catechism aforesaid, might be admitted into the house to shew their learning that moved them to set forth the same, and that Dr. Ridley and Mr Rogers, with two or three more, might have the liberty of being present at this disputation, and associating with them
THIS request was thought reasonable, and was therefore proposed to the bishops, who returned this answer; That it was out of their power to call such persons to the house, since some of them were prisoners; but they said, they would petition the council in this behalf, and in case any of them were absent that ought to be of the house, they were for their being admitted as they desired. After this, they minding to have entered into disputation, there came a gentleman with a message from the lord great master, signifying unto the prolocutor, that the lord great master and the [...] of Devonshire would be present at the disputat [...]s, and therefore he deferred the same till Monday, at one o'clock in the afternoon.
The Third Day's Debate.
AT the time appointed, being Monday, October 23d, in the presence of many earls, lords, knights, and several gentlemen, both of the court and city, the prolocutor made a protestation, that the members of that house had appointed this public disputation, not to call the truth in question, to which they had already subscribed, except five or six, but that gainsayers, and heretics, might be resolved respecting their doubts, by their arguments, which they supposed would be sufficiently convincing to bring them over to their opinion.
THE prolocutor then demanded of Mr. Hadden, whether he would reason against the questions that had been proposed; and Mr. Hadden replied, he would not, because they could not have such learned co-adjutors as they desired. To which Mr. Elmar added, that they had done too much prejudice already to the truth, by their subscribing before the subjects to be debated were discussed, nor would it avail much to reason in defence of the true religion, against which they were now fully determined. Mr. Weston then, turning to Mr. Cheyney, desired to know, whether he (who believed with them the real presence) would propose his doubts concerning transubstantiation Mr. Cheyney answered, "I should be glad my doubts were resolved, that move me to disbelieve transubstantiation.
"The first of these arose from what St. Paul writes to the Corinthians, who, speaking of the body and blood of Christ, calls it bread after consecretion.
"THE second from a passage out of Origen, who, speaking of this sacrament, saith, that the material part thereof goeth down to the excrements.
"THE third is out of Theodoret, who, speaking of the sacramental elements, after consecration, affirmeth, that they go not out of their former substance, form, and shape. These, among several others, are the doubts I require to be resolved."
THEN the prolocutor having appointed Dr. Moreman to answer, he began with observing, that the sacrament is called by St. Paul bread indeed, by which he meant the form of bread; but Mr. Cheyney alledged, that Hesychius called the sacrament both bread and flesh.
[Page 272]YES, replied Moreman, Hesychius calleth it bread, because it was bread, not because it is so. Then, passing over Origen, he said, that men, mistook the authority of Theodoret, by interpreting a general into a special, as Peter Martyr had done, taking a Greek word, that signifies substance in its special signification, whereas, in the general, it may be applied to accidents, as well as substance; and therefore (said he) I answer Theodoret thus, that sacramental bread and wine do not go out of their former substance, form, and shape, that is, not out of their accidental substance and shape.
AFTER this, Mr. Cheyney sat down, and Mr. Elmar, who could not endure to hear so weak and childish an answer to so grave an authority, arose, declaring, that Moreman's answer to Theodoret was only an illusion, or mere subtile evasion, contrary to Theodoret'e meaning; for if the Greek word, that signifies substance, should, in the passage quoted, be taken for accident, then it was a superfluous word, especially, where there are two other Greek words, which sufficiently expound the accidents of the bread; and he proved out of the same author, by divers allegations, that the Greek word that signified substance in Theodoret, could not be so generally taken in that place; but Moreman still affirmed, that the Greek word that signified substance, must needs signify accidental substance properly. To whose obstinacy, since he could obtain no better proof, Elmar gave place.
UPON which, Mr. John Philpot stood up, and said, he could make it appear, from the whole subject matter, in the place alledging, and from the similitude Theodoret uses, for proving his purpose, that Moreman's explanation of the Greek word for substance, could by no means be taken in the sense he would interpret it: for, he observed, Theodoret was in that place urging against the heretic Eutiches, who denied two natures of substance to remain in Christ as one person, and that his humanity, after the accomplishment of the mystery of our salvation, ascending into heaven, and being joined to the divinity, was absorbed thereby; so that, according to his opinion, Christ was no more but of one divine substance only: against which opinion Theodoret writeth, and by the similitude, of the sacrament proveth the contrary against that heretic: for like as in the sacrament of the body of Christ, after the consecration, there is the substance of Christ's humanity, with the substance of the bread remaining as before, not being absorbed by the humanity of Christ, but by divine operation joined thereuto, even so, in the person of Christ, being now in heaven, of whom this sacrament is a representation, there being two several substances, his humanity and divinity, united in one hypostacy or person, which is Christ: the humanity not being absorbed by the conjunction of the divinity, but remaining in its former substance: and Theodoret's similitude, continued Mr. Philpot, would prove nothing, if the substance of the sacramental bread remained not as it did before. The heretic therefore, according to Dr. Moreman's interpretation, would have a strong argument to support his error; and to prove himself an orthodox christian, might say to Theodoret thus: Like as thou Theodoret, if thou wert of Dr. Moreman's mind, dost say that, after the consecration in the sacrament, the substance of the bread is changed into the human body of Christ, coming thereunto, so that in the sacrament there is but one substance of the humanity alone, and not the substance of bread as it was before; even so, likewise, may I affirm and conclude from thine own similitude, that the humanity ascending up by the power of God into heaven, and adjoined to deity, was absorbed, and turned into one substance with the deity; so that there remaineth but one divine substance in Christ, no more than in the sacramental signs of the Lord's supper, after the consecration, doth remain any more than one substance, according to your belief and construction. In attempting to answer this, Dr. Moreman was so closely pressed, that he began to stagger; which Philpot perceiving, spake in this manner, "Well, master Moreman, if you have no answer ready at present, consider of one, if you can conveniently, against our next meeting."
AT these words the prolocutor was exceedingly offended and troubled, telling him, that he should not brag there, but be fully answered. To which Philpot returned, "It is the only thing I desire, to be answered directly on this point of dispute▪ and I request of you, and of all the house here present, [Page 273] that I may be sufficiently answered, which I am sure you cannot do, taking Theodoret's authority, and similitude, as they ought to be taken." Whereupon, without any further reply, or answer to his reasoning, Philpot was commanded to be silent.
AFTER he had sat down, the dean of Rochester arose, offering to dispute against the real presence, wishing that the scriptures, and the ancient doctors, might be weighed, believed, and followed, in this point, And he thought a sufficient argument against it, was that saying of Christ, in St. Matthew, where he says, that the poor we should have always with us, but him we should not have always, which the dean said, was spoken concerning the natural presence of Christ's body, and therefore Christ cannot be naturally present on earth in the sacrament of the altar. To this the prolocutor answered, that we should not have Christ present always to exercise alms deeds, but upon the poor.
THE dean then prosecuted his argument, and quoted St. Austin to prove, that the same interpretation of the scripture alledged by Mr. Weston was no sufficient answer; for St. Austin, in the 50th treatise on St. John, speaketh thus on the same sentence; "When Christ said, Me ye shall not have always with you he spake of the presence of his body. For by his majesty, by his providence, by his unspeakable and invisible grace, that is fulfilled which is said of him, Behold I am with you until the consummation of the world. But in the flesh which the word took upon him, in that which was born of the virgin, in that which was apprehended by the Jews, which was crucified on the cross▪ which was let down from the cross, which was wrapped in cloths, which was hid in the sepulchre, which was manifested in the resurrection, you shall not have me always with you. And why? For after a bodily presence he was conversant with his disciples forty days, and they accompanying him, seeing and not allowing him, he ascended and is not here; for there he sitteth at the right hand of the Father; and yet here he is because he is not departed in the presence of his majesty After ano [...]her manner we have Christ always by the presence of his majesty; but after the presence of his flesh it is rightly said, you shall not verily [...] me always with you. For the church had him in the presence of his flesh a few days, and now by faith it apprehendeth him, and seeth him not with eyes."
TO this authority Dr. Watson answered, and said, he would answer St. Augustine by St. Augustine, and having a certain book in his hand of notes, he alledged out of the 70th treatise of St. John, that after that mortal condition and manner we have not now Christ on earth, as he was heretofore before his passion.
Mr. Philpot replied, saying, that Mr. Watson had not fully answered St. Augustine by St Augustine, for that in the place mentioned by the dean of Rochester, he doth not only treat of the mortal state of Christ's body before his passion, but also the immortal condition of the same after his resurrection: in which mortal body St. Augustine seemeth plainly to affirm, that Christ is not present upon the earth, neither in form visibly, neither in corporal substance invisibly, as in a few lines after the place above alledged, St. Augustine doth more plainly declare by these words, "Now these two manners of Christ's presence declared, which is by his majesty, providence, and grace, now present in the world, which before his ascension was present in the flesh; and which being now placed at the right hand of the Father, is absent from the world, I think there remains no further dispute about the matter.
THEREFORE, if St. Augustine allowed no other presence of Christ here on earth, but only his divine presence, and that his humanity was in heaven, we ought to confess and believe the same. But if we put a third presence of Christ, that is corporally to be present always in the sacrament of the altar, invisibly, according to your suppositions, whereof St. Augustine maketh no mention in all his works, you seem to judge that which St. Augustine did never comprehend.
WHY, said Watson, does not St. Augustine, in the place I alledged, make mention how St. Stephen, being in this world, saw Christ after his ascension.
IT is true, said Philpot, but he saw Christ as [Page 274] the scripture saith, in the heavens, being open, standing at the right hand of God the Father: at which Watson was silent.
THE dean proceeded to support his argument, and, to this end, read out of a book of annotations sundry authorities, to which Moreman, who was appointed to answer him, made no direct answer, but desired him to frame an argument, saying, the dean had recited many doctors' words, but had not made one argument. Thus challenged, the dean made the following argument from the institution of the sacrament; "Do this in remembrance of me; and thus ye shall shew forth the Lord's death till he come."
THE sacrament is the remembrance of Christ; therefore, the sacrament is not the very Christ; for as yet he is not come, for these words, "until he come," do plainly signify the absence of Christ's body. Then the prolocutor went about to shew, that these words, "until he come," did not import any absence of Christ on the earth, by other places of scripture, where the word, "until," was made use of: but directly to the purpose he answered nothing. In fine, the dean questioned Moreman, whether Christ did eat the pascal lamb with his disciples, or not? He answered, Yes. He further demanded, whether upon instituting the sacrament, he did eat the sacrament with them? Moreman answered, Yes. Then he asked what he did eat, and whether he did eat his own natural body, as they imagined it to be, or not? Which when Moreman had affirmed, then, said the dean, it is a great absurdity by you granted; and so he sat down.
AFTERWARDS the prolocutor demanded of Mr. Philpot, whether he would argue against the natural presence, or not? He answered, Yes, if he would hear his argument without interruption, and assign one to answer him, and not many, which occasioned confusion, and especially to him who had but a bad memory. By this time the night approached: on which account the prolocutor put an end to the disputation, and appointed Mr. Philpot to begin the same the next day, concerning the presence of Christ in the sacrament.
The FOURTH DAY'S DEBATE.
ON Wednesday, October 25th, Mr. John Philpot was prepared to enter upon the disputation, intending first, to have made an oration in Latin; which being known by the prolocutor, he commanded him to make no declaration or oration in Latin, but to deliver his arguments in English. This is contrary, said Philpot, to your order at the beginning of this disputation; for then you appointed that all the arguments should be made in Latin, and thereupon I have drawn and devised all mine arguments in Latin: and because you, Mr. Prolocutor, have said heretofore, openly in this house, that I have no learning, I intended to shew such learning as I have, in a brief oration, and short declaration of the questions now in controversy, thinking it so most convenient also, that in case I should speak otherwise in my declaration than should stand with learning, or than I were able to warrant, and justify God's word, it might the better be reformed by such as were learned of the house, so that the unlearned being present, might take the less offence thereat. But this prevailed nothing with the prolocutor, who still insisted upon his forming an argument in English, or else to hold his peace.
THEN said Philpot, you have much disappointed me, thus suddenly to go from your former order: but I will accomplish your commandments, leaving mine oration apart, and I will come to my arguments, which, as well as so sudden a warning will serve, I will make in English. But before I bring forth any argument, I will in one word declare what manner of presence I disallow in the sacrament, to the intent the hearers may the better understand to what end and effect mine arguments shall tend: not to deny utterly the presence of Christ in his sacrament, truly ministered according to his institution, but only to deny that gross and carnal presence, which you of this house have already subscribed unto, to be in the sacrament of the altar, contrary to the true and manifest meaning of the scriptures: that by transubstantiation of the sacramental bread and wine, Christ's natural body should, by virtue of the words pronounced by the priest, be contained and included under the forms or accidents of bread and wine. This kind of presence imagined by men, I do deny, and against this I will reason. But before he could make an end of what he was about, he was interrupted by the prolocutor, and commanded [Page 275] to descend to his argument: at whose unjust importunity Philpot being offended, and hoping to find remedy, fell down upon his knees before the earls and lords which were there present, being a great number, whereof some were of the queen's council, beseeching them that he might have liberty to prosecute his arguments without interruption, which was readily granted by the lords. But the prolocuto [...] making use of a point of the practice of prelates, would not condescend to it, but still cried, "Hold your peace, or else make a short argument." "I intend it," said Philpot, "if you will let me alone: but first I must ask a question of my respondent, Dr. Chedsey, concerning a word or two of your supposition, that is▪ of the sacrament of the altar, what he meaneth thereby." Dr. Chedsey answered, that, in their supposition, they took the sacrament of the altar, and the sacrament of the mass, to be all one. Then said Mr. Philpot, by Mr. Prolocutor's leave, I will speak plain English, and to be short, I say, that the sacrament of the altar, which ye reckon to be all one with the mass, once justly abolished, but now put in full force again, is no sacrament, neither is Christ in any manner present in it, and this he offered to prove before the queen, the council, or before six of the most learned men of that house, of a contrary opinion, and refused none: if, (said he) I shall not be able, by God's word, to maintain what I have asserted, and confound those six who shall withstand me in this point, let me be burned with as many faggots as can be found in London, before the court-gate. This he spake with the utmost zeal and courage.
AT this the prolocutor, with many others, were very much offended, demanding of him, whether he knew what he said. Yes, replied Mr. Philpot, I know very well what I say, and I desire that no man may be offended at it, for I speak no more than by the word of God I am able to prove; and praised be God, that the queen's grace hath granted us of this house (as our prolocutor hath informed us) the free liberty of declaring our opinions, agreeable [...]o our consciences in these matters of controversy in religion; and therefore I will here freely speak the dictates of my conscience▪ grounded upon God's holy [...] for the truth, although some of you [...] presen [...] do not like it.
THEN Mr. Weston, with others, taunted and reproved him, for speaking so indecently against the sacrament of the mass. The prolocutor also told him he was mad, and threatened to send him to prison.
MR. [...] hearing himself abused, and not permitted the free liberty to speak his mind, thus exclaimed, casting his eyes towards heaven, O Lord! what a world is this, that the truth of thy holy word cannot be spoken and endured! And while he said these words, being full of sorrow, the tears were seen to trickle from his eyes.
THE prolocutor, being moved by some that were about him, consented that he should make an argument, provided he would be brief. I will be as short, (said Philpot) as I can conveniently, in uttering all I have to say. And, first, I will lay the foundation of my arguments upon the authority of scripture, whereon all the buildings of our faith ought to be grounded; after which, I intend to confirm the same by the ancient fathers of the church. My first argument is drawn from the 28th chapter of St. Matthew, in which the angel says to Mary, who sought for Christ at the sepulchre, "He is risen, he is not here;" and again, St. Luke, chapter 23d, the angel asketh them, "Why seek ye the living among the dead?" In which places the scriptures testifieth, that Christ was risen, ascended into heaven, and now sitteth at the right hand of the Father: all which is spoken of his natural body; therefore, it cannot be on earth included in the sacrament, I will confirm this yet more effectually, from the 16th of St. John, where Christ saith, "I came from my Father into the world, and now I leave the world and go to my Father." Which coming and going he meant of his natural body; therefore we may consequently affirm, that it is not found in the world, nor can be in the sacrament.
BUT I expect here to be answered with a blind distinction; that he is visibly departed in his humanity, but remaineth invisibly in the sacrament; but that no such idle distinction can take away the force of my argument, will appear from the answer which Christ's disciples returned, saying, "Now thou speakest plainly, and utterest no proverb;" which words St. Cyril interpreting saith, that our Saviour [Page 276] spake without any ambiguity, or figure of speech, and therefore I do from thence conclude, that if Christ spake plainly, and without parable, then that obscure, dark, and imperceptible presence of Christ's natural body remaining in the sacrament invisibly upon earth, contrary to the plain words of Christ, ought not to be allowed: for nothing can be more uncertain, parabolical, and absurd, than so to say. I will now give attention to your answer, and then descend to confirm what I have said by ancient writers.
THEN Dr. Chedsey, reciting his argument as it was made, took upon him to answer every part thereof severally. First, to the saying of the angel, That Christ is not here, and, Why seek ye the living among the dead? He answered that these sayings pertained nothing to the presence of Christ's natural body in the sacrament, but that they were spoke of Christ's body being in the sepulchre, when the three Marys thought him to have been in the grave still. And therefore the angel said, Why do ye seek him that liveth among the dead? And to the authority of St. John, where Christ saith, Now I leave the world and go to my Father; he meant that of his ascension. And so likewise did Cyril, interpreting the saying of the disciples, that they knew plainly that Christ would visibly ascend into heaven▪ but that doth not exclude the invisible presence of his natural body in the sacrament. For St. Chrysostom, writing to the people of Antioch, doth affirm the same, comparing Elias and Christ together, and Elias's cloak, and Christ's flesh. "When Elias (saith he) was taken up in the fiery chariot, he left his cloak behind him unto his disciple Elis [...]ous. But Christ ascending into heaven, took his flesh with him, and left also his flesh behind him." From whence we may justly conclude, that Christ's flesh is visibly ascended into heaven, and abideth still invisibly in the sacrament of the altar.
TO this Philpot replied, and said You have not directly answered to the saying of the angel, Christ is risen, and is not here, because you have omitted that which was the chief point of all. For, said he, I proceed further, as thus, He is risen, ascended, and sitteth at the right hand of God the Father: therefore, he is not remaining on earth. Neither [...] your answer to Cyril, by me alledged, sufficient. But I will presently return to your interpretation of Cyril, and plainly declare it, after I have refuted the authority of Chrysostom, which is one of the chief principles that you alledged to make for your gross carnal presence in the sacrament; which being well weighed and understood, pertaineth nothing thereunto.
AT this the prolocutor startled, that one of the chief pillars in this point should be overthrown; and therefore he recited the said authority, first in Latin, and afterwards he turned it into English, and desired all that were present to remark the saying of Chrysostom, which he thought invincible on their own side. But I will make it appear (said Philpot) by and by, that it doth make little for your purpose. And as he was decl [...]ng his mind in this particular, the prolocutor inte [...]pted him, as he frequently did. With which Philpot being displeased, said, Mr. Prolocutor thinketh he is in a sophistry school, where he well knoweth the manner is, that when the respondent perceiveth, that he is like to be inforced with an argument, which he is not able to answer, he doth what he can, by cavilling, and interruption, to drive him from the same. This saying of Philpot was ill taken by the prolocutor and his adherents; and the prolocutor said, [...]hat Philpot could bring nothing to avoid that authority, but his own vain imagination. Hear, said Philpot, and afterwards judge; for I will do in this, as in all other authorities, wherewith you shall take upon you to refute any of my arguments that I have to prosecute, answering the same either by sufficient authorities of scripture or else by some other testimony of like authority with your's, and not of my own imagination; which▪ I do, I desire it to be of no credit.
AS to your authority from St. Chrysostom, I have two objections against that to propose; one drawn from scripture, the other from the very place of Chrysostom himself here by you alledged.
FIRST, where he seemeth to say, that Christ ascending took his flesh with him, and left his flesh also behind him; it is true; for the fl [...]sh Christ took with him was that which he received from the virgin Mary, and the flesh he left behind was not his natural body, but the members of his visible [Page 277] church; as St. Paul doth aptly testify, when he says, Eph. v. "We are flesh of his flesh, and bone of his bones." And if any one will reply, that he there treateth of the sacrament, and that this interpretation cannot so properly be applied to him in that place, then I will explain St. Chrysostom another way by himself, for a few lines be [...]fore those now quoted, are these words: "That Christ, after he ascended into heaven, left to us, indued with his sacraments, his flesh in mysteries, that is, sacramentally; and that mystical flesh Christ leaveth as well to his church in the sacrament of baptism, as in the the sacramental bread and wine." "As many (saith St. Paul) as are baptized in Christ, have put on Christ." Hence you may perceive, that St. Chrysostom makes nothing for your gross carnal presence in the sacrament, as you wrongly interpret him.
NOW in the mean time, while Mr. Philpot was speaking, Mr. Pie, whispering the prolocutor in the car, urged him to silence Philpot, fearing, if he held on longer, he would wholly overthrow their opinion of the carnal presence, seeing he had already given one of its main supporters such a blow. The prolocutor, therefore, said to Mr. Philpot, that he had reasoned long enough, and that some other should supply his room, at which Mr. Philpot, being much displeased, said, Why, sir, I have a dozen arguments to propose concerning this matter, and I have as yet scarce gone over the first; for being hitherto hindered, through your frequent interruptions, I have not, for confirmation, quoted any ancient writers, though I could a great man [...]. Well, returned the prolocutor, you shall sp [...]k no more now, and I command you to be silent. You perceive, said Mr. Philpot, that I am able to controvert your fals [...] supposition, and therefore you command me to be silent. If you will not give place, said Mr. Weston, I will send you to prison. This is not, replied Philpot, according to your promise made in this house, nor yet to your bra [...]s made at Paul's Cross, that men should be answer [...]d in this disputation to whatever they can say, sinc [...] of a dozen arguments you will not suffer me [...]o prosecute one. Here Mr. Pie took upon him to promise, that he should be answered another day. But Mr. Philpot, seeing he could not proceed as he designed, was justly offended thereat, and concluded with the following words:—"A sort of you here, who hitherto have lurked in [...]orners, and dissembled with God and the world, are now gathered together to suppress the sincere truth of God's holy word, and to set forth every false device, which by the catholic doctrine of the scripture ye are not able to maintain."
THEN stood up Mr. Elmar, chaplain to the duke of Suffolk, whom Mr. Moreman took upon him to answer; but Mr. Elmar's allegations so incumbered his respondent, that he desired a day to overlook them, for at that instant he was without a proper answer.
THE prolocutor now called upon Mr. Haddon, dean of Exeter, and a chaplain to the duke of Suffolk, who prosecuted Mr. Elmar's argument. Dr. Watson, who attempted to answer him, was so confounded, that he was not able to explain sufficiently the word Mysterium (Mystery). But as he seemed to doubt therein, Mr. Haddon took out of his bosom a Latin author, to confirm what he had advanced, and, shewing the same to Dr. Watson, asked him, whether he thought that translation to be a just one, or that the printer were in fault: to which Watson replied, there may be a fault in the printer, for I am not remembered of this word. Then Mr Haddon took out of his bosom a Greek book, wherein he pointed to the same word, which Mr. Watson could not deny. The further arguments that were made use of, we shall omit declaring, because they were mostly in Greek, as were those also of Mr. Elmar's.
THEN Mr. Perne stood up, and argued against transubstantiation, confirming the authorities alledged by the two former speakers. When the prolocutor, interrupting, said, "I wonder, Mr. Porne, at your speaking thus, for no longer than last Friday you subscribed to the contrary." For which censure Mr. Elmar blamed the prolocutor, telling him, that he ought not to reprehend any man, because, said he, this house is a house of free liberty for every man to speak according to his conscience, and because but yesterday he promised this liberty to any man, notwithstanding he had subscribed.
NIGHT now approaching, and the time being expired, the prolocutor, though he praised them [Page 278] for their learning, concluded with observing, that, all reasoning set apart, the order of Holy Church must be received, and all things ordered thereby.
The Fifth Day's Debate.
ON Friday, October 27th, the prolocutor opened the debate, with observing, that the convocation had spent two days in disputing about one father, which was Theodoret, and about one Greek word, ( [...]usia) and now they were assembled to answer all things that could be objected, therefore he desired they would shortly propound their arguments. Upon this Mr. Haddon dean of Exeter, requested leave to oppose Mr. Watson, who, with Morgan and Harpsfi [...]d, were appointed to answer him. Mr. Haddon then demanded, if any substance of bread and wine remained after consecration? To which Watson replied, by asking another question, namely, whether he thought there was a real presence of Christ's body or not? Mr. Haddon said, it was not agreeable to order, that one, who was appointed to be respondent should be opponent; nor should he, whose business was to object, answer. Mr. Haddon then proceeded to shew, from the words of Theodoret, that the substance of bread and wine remained: for his words are, "The same they were before the sanctification, which they are after." Mr. Watson said, that Theodoret meant not the same substance, but the same essence. Whereupon they were driven again to a discussion of the Greek word above-mentioned; and Mr. Haddon proved it to mean a substance, both by its etymology, and by the words of Theodoret; for, said he, [...]usia cometh from the particle on, which descendeth to the verb [...], and so cometh the noun [...]usia, which signifieth substance. Mr. Watson said, it had not that signification only: but, in that place, Mr. Haddon proved, it could not signify otherwise. He then asked Watson, when the bread and wine became symbols? Watson answered, After consecration, and not before. Then Mr. Haddon raised out of his author the following syllogism (being an argument of three propositions.)
(1) THEODORET saith, that the same thing the bread and wine were, before they were symbols, the same they remain still, in nature and substance, after they are symbols,
(2) BREAD and wine they were before.
(3) THEREFORE, bread and wine they are after.
MR. WATSON, when he could not answer, had recourse to the shameful subterfuge of discrediting the authority of Theodoret, by saying, he was a Nestorian; at the same time, turning to Mr. Cheyney, who stood by, he desired to answer him, intimating, that he was more fit, than Mr. Haddon, to dispute upon this point, because he had granted and subscribed to the real presence. Being thus addressed with an insinuation that required an immediate reply, Mr, Cheyney applied to the house, and requested the patience of those honourable men to hear him, hoping so to open the matter, that the truth should appear; protesting, that he was no obstinate nor stubborn man, but would be conformable to all reason; and if they, by their learning, which he acknowledged to be much more than his, could answer his reasons, then he would be ruled by them, and say as they said; for he would be no author of schism, nor hold any thing contrary to the holy mother, the church, which is the spouse of Christ. Dr. Weston liking this very well, commended him highly, telling him, that he was a very learned and sober man, and well experienced in all good learning, and in the doctors; and finally a man, for his knowledge, fit to dispute in that place; I pray you hear him, quoth he. Then Mr. Cheyney desired those that were present to pray to God with him in two words, and to say, Vinc [...]t veritas, "Let truth take place, and have the victory;" and all that were present cried with a loud voice, Vinc [...]t veritas, Vincat veritas.
DR. WESTON told them it was hypocritical, and that they had better say, Vicit veritas, "Truth hath gotten the victory." Mr. Cheyney said again, If you will give me leave, I will come to the point, that you may truly say so. Then addressing himself particularly to Mr. Watson, he began after this manner.
YOU said that Mr. Haddon was not fit to dispute, because he had not granted the natural and [Page 279] real presence; but I say you are much less fit to answer, because you, take away the substance of the sacrament. Watson said, that he had subscribed to the real presence, and should not go away from that: so said the prolocutor and the other priests; so that for a long time he could not have leave to proceed, till the lords desired that he should be heard. He now explained what he meant by subscribing to the real presence, far otherwise than they supposed. He then prosecuted Haddon's argument, proving that the Greek word before discussed was a substance, using the the same reason that Haddon did; and when he had received the same answer that was made to Haddon, he told them it was but a poor refuge, when they could not answer, to deny the author, and proved the author to be a catholic doctor; that being proved, he further confirmed what was said of the nature and substance. The similitude of Theodoret is this, said he, as the tokens of Christ's body and blood, after the invocation of the priest, do change their names, and yet continue the same substance; so the body of Christ after his ascension, changed his name, and was called immortal, yet it had his former fashion, figure, and circumscription, and, to speak in one word, the same substance of his body. Therefore, if in the former part of the similitude you deny the same substance to continue, th [...]n in the latter part of the similitude, which agreeth with it, I will deny the body of Christ, after [...] ascension, to have the former nature and substance. But that were a great heresy: therefore it [...] also a great heresy to take away the substance of bread and wine after consecration. In answer to this, Watson was obliged to say, that the substance of the body, in the former part of the similitude brought in by him, did signify quantity, and other accidents of the sacramental tokens which are seen, and not the very substance of the same; and therefore Theodoret says, Those things which are seen. For according to philosophy, the accidents of things are seen, and not the substances.
CHEYNEY then appealed to the nobility, and desired that they would give no credit to them in so saying: for if they think as they [...]ach, after your lordships have ridden forty miles on horseback (as your business sometimes may require) you shall not be able to say at night, that you saw your horses all the day, but only the colour of them: and by this reason Christ must go to school, and learn of Aristotle how to speak. For when he saw Nathaniel under the fig-tree, if Aristotle had stood by, he would have said, No, Christ, thou didst not see him, but the colour of him. Then said Watson, suppose it were granted that Theodoret was on the other side, where there were one of that opinion, there were an hundred on the other.
THE prolocutor here perceiving, that Mr. Watson was closely attacked, called upon Mr. Morgan to help him out, who said, that Theodoret did no more than what he might lawfully do; for, first, he granted the truth, and then, for fear of such as were not fully instructed in the faith, he spake mystically: he granted the truth, by calling the bread and wine, the body and blood of Christ; after which he seems to give somewhat of the senses and to reason: but that Theodoret was of the same opinion with them, will appear from his words that follow, which are the cause of what went before; therefore he says, The immortality, &c. whereby it seemeth, that he meant the divine nature, and not the human. Morgan was then detected in misapplying the text; for the book had not this word [for] and the Greek word did rather signify [truly], whence it plainly appeared, that it was the beginning of a new matter, and not a sentence rendering a cause of that he had said before.
WATSON now repeated what he had before said: "Suppose Theodoret be on your side, of whom we never beard in print, before two or three years ago▪ yet he is but one; and what is one against the consent of the whole church?" Cheyney affirmed, that not only Theodoret was of his opinion, that the substance of bread and wine do remain, but many others also, particularly Irenaeus, who making mention of this sacrament, says thus: "When the cup which is mingled with wine, and the bread which is broken, do receive the word of God, it is made the Eucharist of the body and blood of Christ, by which the substance of our flesh is nourished, and doth consist." From whence I infer, that if the thanksgiving do nourish our body, then there is some substance besides Christ's body. To [Page 280] this both Watson and Morgan replied, observing that [by which,] in that sentence of Irenaeus, was to be referred to the next antecedent, that is, to the body and blood of Christ; and not to the wine which is in the cup, and the bread which is broken. Mr. Cheyney said, that it was not the body of Christ which nourished our bodies; and granting that the flesh of Christ nourisheth to immortality, yet it doth not make for their argument, although it might be true; no more than that answer which was made to my allegation out of St. Paul, The bread which we break, &c. with many others; whereunto you answered, that bread was not to be taken there in its proper signification, that is, not for that it was bread, but for that it had been so; any more than the [...]od of Aaron was taken for a serpen [...], [...] had been a serpent. After this, Mr. [...] [...]esychius, and used the same reason that he did concerning the burning of symbols; and asked them, what was burnt? Mr. Watson said, we must not enquire no [...] ask, but if there wa [...] any fault, impute it to Christ. Then said Mr Cheyney, whence came those ashes, if not from substance? or can any substance arise from accidents?
HERE Mr. Harpsfield was called in to the assistance of Watson, and to hear what he could say to this matter; who began with a fair preamble about the omnipotency of God, and the weakness of human reason as to the comprehensio [...] and attainme [...]t of religious matters; and said, that whatsoever we saw, felt, or tasted, it was not convenient to trust our senses — The very pith and marrow of popery this.) He also related a curious legend out of St. Cyprian, how a woman saw the sacrame [...] burning in her coffer; and that which burned thus, said Harpsfield, burneth here, and becometh ashes; but what that was which burnt, he could not tell. Mr. Cheyney continued still to force them with this question—What was it that was burnt?— [...]t was either, said he, the substance of bread, or else the substance of the body of Christ, wh [...]ch was too great an absurdity to grant. At length they answered; it was a miracle▪ at which Mr. Cheyney smiling, said, that he would then say no more.
THEN Dr. Weston, the p [...]olocator, asked the company, whether those men had been sufficiently answered, or not? To which certain priests said, Yes; but as to the great multitude of people, these exclaimed—No, no [...] they were not heard; and the clamour was so great, that it was heard almost to the end of St. Paul's: whereat Dr. Weston, being much incensed, answered sharply, that he asked not the judgment of the rude multitude, and unlearned people, but such as were members of that house. Having said this with much acrimony, be asked Mr. Haddon and his fellow-disputants, whether they would answer them other three days? Mr. Haddon, Cheyney, and Elmar answered, No. Upon which the archdeacon of Winchester, Mr. Philpot, stood up, and said, they should be answered; and though all others refused to answer, yet he would not; but offered to answer them all in turns: with whose offer the prolocutor being dissatisfied▪ railed at him, saying that he should go to Bedlam; to whom the archdeacon returned gravely this [...] swer, that he deserved much more to be sent thither, who behaved himself so furiously in the disputation, without any indifferent equality.
TO this Dr. Weston made no reply, but rising up addressed the house, saying▪ All the compa [...] here have subscribed, these men whom you see one excepted. What their reasons are you have he [...]re. We have answered them three days, upon promis [...], (which was a false assertion for no such promise was made that they should answer us again, as long as the order of disputation continued, and, if they be able to defend their doctrine, let them do so.
THEN stood up Mr. [...]mar, and shewed how va [...] a man Mr. Weston wa [...] ▪ for he affirmed they never promised to dispute▪ but only to declare and testify to the world their consciences. For when they [...] required to subscribe, they refused, alledging▪ that they would shew good reasons which moved them, that they could not, agreeable to their [...], subscribe; as they had partly done already, and were able to do more effectually. Therefore, continued he, it hath been ill called a disputation, and they are much to blame who called it so. We meant not to dispute, nor now intend to answer, before our arguments, which we have to propound, be s [...]ved, according as it was appointed: for, b [...] [Page 281] answering, we should but incumber ourselves and profit nothing, since the matter is already decreed on, and d [...]termined, whatsoever we may prove by dispute to the contrary.
The Sixth Day's Debate.
ON Monday following, October the 30th, the prolocutor demanded of M [...]. Philpot, whether, in the questions, before propounded, he would answer their objections or not? To whom he made this answer; that he would willingly do so, if, according to their former determination and promise, they would first answer fully some of his arguments, of which he had a dozen, not half the first being decided; and if they would answer but one of his arguments sufficiently, he would reply to all the objections they could bring. The prolocutor bid him state his argument, and it should be resolutely controverted by some of them; whereunto Morgan was appointed. Mr. Philpot then proceeded. On Wednesday last, said he, I was forced to silence before I had half prosecuted my argument, the sum of which was, that the human body of Christ was ascended into heaven, and placed at the right hand of God the Father: wherefore, after the imagination of man, it could not be situated upon earth invisibly in the sacrament of the altar. The argument was denied by Morgan; but for proof hereof, Philpot said, that this was what he had to confirm his first argument with, if they would have suffered him the other day, as he hoped they would now. He thus proceeded with his argument.
(1) O [...] self-same nature receiveth not in itself any thing that is contrary to itself.
(2) BUT the body of Christ is a human nature, distinct from the deity, and is a proper nature of itself.
(3) [...]GO, therefore it cannot receive any thing that is contrary to that nature, and that varieth from itself.
BUT bodily to be present, and to be absent bodily, to be on earth, and to be in heaven, and all at one present time, are things contrary to the nature of an human body. Therefore, it cannot be said of the human body of Christ, that the self-same body is both in heaven, and also on the earth at one instant, either visibly or invisibly. Morgan denied the first part of the argument, which Philpot supported out of Vigilius, an ancient writer; yet still Morgan c [...]villed thereat, and said it was no scripture, and desired him to prove the same from scripture. Philpot deduced the same from St. Paul, who says, that "Christ is like unto us in all points, except sin; therefore, like as one of our bodies cannot receive in itself any thing contrary to the nature of a body, as to be in St. Paul's church and at Westminster in one instant, or to be at London visibly, and at Lincoln invisibly at one time; so, in like manner, the body of Christ cannot be in more places than one, which is in heaven, and consequently is not included or contained in the sacrament of the altar. But, said the prolocutor, it is not true, that Christ was like unto us in all points, since he was not conceived by the seed of man as we are. Philpot replied, that Christ's conception was prophesied before by the angel to be supernatural, but after he had received our nature by the operation of the Holy Ghost in the virgin's womb, he became in all points like unto us, except sin.
THEN Morgan affirmed, that these words of St. Paul did not plainly prove his purpose. Well, said Philpot, I perceive you answer only by cavilling, yet I am not destitute of other scriptures, though you refuse the testimony of so ancient and catholic a doctor as Vigilius is. St. Peter, making mention of Christ in the 3d chapter of the Acts, says, "Whom heaven must receive, until the consummation of all things," &c. which words are spoken of his humanity; and if heaven must hold Christ, then can he not be here on earth, in the sacrament, as is pretended. Morgan laughing at this, and giving no direct answer, Harpsfield, one of the bishop of London's chaplains, stood up, and demanded of Mr. Philpot, whether he would of necessity force Christ to any place, or not? Philpot returned, that he would no otherwise force Christ of necessity to any place, than what the words of the Holy Ghost teach, namely, that Christ's human body must abide in heaven until the day of judgment. To which Harpsfield replied, Do you know that God is a God omnipotent: Yes, said Philpot, I know that right well▪ but as to Christ's omnipotency, [Page 282] what he can do, is not our question, but rather, what he actually doth: he may make worlds; but doth he therefore so? It were no good consequent to conclude, because he may or can do this or that, therefore he doth do it.
SYLLOGISTIC ARGUMENT.
ONLY so much is to be believed of God's omnipotency, as is in the word expressed.
THAT Christ's body is both in heaven, and here also really in the sacrament, is not expressed in the word.
ERGO, (therefore) it is not to be believed, that the body of Christ, being in heaven, is here in the sacrament.
WHY, returned the prolocutor, then you will put Christ in prison in heaven. To which Philpot answered, Do you reckon heaven to be a prison? God grant us all to come to that prison.
AFTER this, Harpsfield affirmed, that the Latin word, oportet, in St. Peter, (in English, must) did not import, as Philpot would infer, a necessity, which might be made appear from other places of scripture, as in the first to Timothy, where St. Paul saith, A bishop must be the husband of one wife. Here the word oportet doth not mean necessity, but a possibility, that he, who never was married, may be a bishop. To which Philpot replied, that the two passages he compared were not alike; and that in comparing the scriptures we must not consider the bare words, but rather their import; and in one place, quoted by him, St. Paul declares of what quality a bishop ought to be; but in the other St. Peter refers to the place where Christ must necessarily be until the end of the world; which we ought to believe to be true. And this comparison of the Latin word, oportet, is no more an answer to my argument, than if I was to say of you, now being here, you must needs be here, which importeth such a necessity for the time, that you can no otherwise but be here; yet you would endeavour, in words, to avoid this necessity with another oportet in another sense, as for instance, you must be a good man, where must doth not indeed imply any such necessity, but that you may be an evil man. Thus your reasoning is not conclusive, and by no means an answer to my argument.
THE prolocutor, to help the matter out, if possible, brought up another oportet, saying, Oportet hareses esse; must heresies needs be therefore, because of this word oportet? Certainly, returned Philpot, it cannot otherwise be, if you will add what immediately followeth, ut qui electi sunt manifestentur, meaning, "that such as be the elect of God may be manifest and known." But, said the prolocutor, the time hath been that no such heresies were. I know not of any such time, said Philpot; for since the time of Abel and Cain heresies have been, and then began. Then said the prolocutor, Will you not now answer Morgan an argument or two? I will, said Philpot, if I may have my arguments first answered fairly, according to truth and learning. What! said the prolocutor, will you never be answered? How I am answered, returned Philpot, let all here present judge, especially men of learning, and with what cavilling you have trifled with me. First, to the ancient authority of Vigilius, you have answered nothing, except denying what he saith to be scripture. Secondly, to the words of St. Peter, in the Acts, ye have answered, by demanding, whether I would keep Christ in prison, or not? Let men now judge if this be a sufficient answer, or not? Upon this Morgan stood up again, and asked Philpot, whether he would be ruled by the universal church, or not? Ye [...], said Philpot, if it be the true catholic church; and since you speak so much of the church, I would have you declare what the church is. The church, said Morgan, is diffused and dispersed throughout the whole world. That is a diffuse definition, said Philpot, for I am yet as uncertain as I was before, what you mean by the church; but is it not what was grounded and founded on the word of God, as St. Paul saith upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets? What! quoth Moreman, was the scripture before the church? Yes, answered Philpot. But I will prove the contrary, returned Moreman; and I will begin at the time of Christ. The church of Christ was before any scripture written: for Matthew was the first who wrote a gospel, about a dozen years after Christ: therefore, the church was before the scripture. Philpot denied his argument; [Page 283] and shewed it to be a fallacy; for he took the scripture to be only that which was written by men in letters: whereas in truth, all prophecy uttered by the Spirit of God, was counted to be scripture, before it was written in paper and ink, for it was written in the hearts, and graven in the minds, yea, and inspired in the mouths of good men, and of the apostles, by the Spirit of Christ. The salutation of the angel was the scripture of Christ, or the word of God, before it was written. Moreman cried, Fie, fie! wondering that the scripture of God should be counted scripture before it was written, and affirmed, he had no knowledge who said so. To whom Philpot replied, that as to knowledge in this matter, for the trial of truth, about the questions in controversy, he would wish himself no worse matched than with Moreman.
AT this the prolocutor was highly offended, saying to Philpot, it was speaking arrogantly, to compare himself with such a worshipful learned man as Mr. Moreman was, being himself a man unlearned, yea, a madman, fitter to be sent to Bedlam, than to be among such learned and grave men as were there, and a man who never would be answered, and one who troubled the whole house; and therefore he commanded him to come no more into that house, of whom he demanding, whether they would agree thereunto, or not, a great company answered, Yes, Philpot returned, he might think himself happy, who was out of their company.
THEN Morgan rose up, and whispered the prolocutor in the ear; and the prolocutor spoke to Philpot again, and said, lest thou shouldst slander the house, and say, that we will not suffer you to declare your mind, we are content you shall come into the house as you have done before, so that you be apparelled with a long gown and a tippet, as we be, and that you shall not speak but when I command you. Then, said Philpot, I had rather be absent altogether.
THUS they reasoned pro and con, till at length, about the 13th of December, queen Mary took up the matter, and sending to Bonner, bishop of London, commanding him to dissolve and break up the convocation.
The following is a Translation of the QUEEN'S PRECEPT to BONNER, Bishop of LONDON, for dissolving the CONVOCATION.
"MARY, &c. To the Rev. Father in God, Edmund, Lord Bishop of London, sendeth greeting. Whereas there is now held at Paul's, London, the convocation of the clergy belonging to the province of Canterbury; we, by and with the consent of our council, and for divers other causes and considerations particularly moving us thereunto, have hereby thought fit the said convocation should be dissolved. And therefore we strictly charge and command you, forthwith to dissolve or cause to be dissolved the said convocation, as shall seem to you most fit and convenient: signifying withal on our part to all and several the bishops, archdeacons, deans, and all other spiritual persons, that they and every of them do obey and comply with this our command, as becometh them so to do.
"Witness ourself at Westminster, the 13th day of December, in the first year of our reign."
TRANSACTIONS of the PRIVY COUNCIL, and PARLIAMENT, during the Time of the above DISPUTATION.
NOVEMBER, 1553. On the 20th of this month, the mayor Coventry sent up unto the lords of the council, Baldwin Clarke, J. Careless, Thomas Wilcocks, and Richard Estelin, for their behaviour upon Alhallows-day before; whereupon Careless and Wilcocks were committed to the Gate-house, and the other two to the Marshalsea.
THE same day, Sir Christopher Heydon, and sir William Farmer, were ordered, by a letter from the council, to apprehend the Rev. John Huntington, for making a rhime against Dr. Stokes, and the sacrament, who appearing before the council, on the 3d of December following, was, upon his humble submission, and promise of amendment in doctrine and living, again suffered to depart.
IN the days of Henry VIII. and Edward his successor, several noblemen and others were committed to the Tower; some charged with treason, as lord Courtney, and the duke of Norfolk; some for the [Page 284] pope's supremacy, and suspicious letters tending to sedition, as Tonstal, bishop of Durham, and others, who were all continued prisoners there, till queen Mary granted them a pardon, and restored them to their former dignities. Among these was Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, whom she not only set at liberty, but also advanced him to be high chancellor of England. Lord Courtney she created earl of Devonshire, and shewed him so much favour, that it was suspected by some she would marry him. At the same time she also released that bloody persecutor, Bonner, from the Marshalsea, and restored him to the bishopric of London, displacing Dr. Ridley, with divers other good bishops, as Cranmer from Canterbury, also the archbishop of York, with a great number of archdeacons, deans▪ &c. in short, all those of the clergy who were either married, or would constantly adhere to the reformed religion, were removed from their livings; and others, advocates for popery, put in the same, as cardinal Pool, (who was invited to England) Gardiner, White, Day, Troublefield, &c.
AND whereas a rumour was spread abroad, that Cranmer had recanted, and caused mass to be said at Canterbury, in order therefore to clear himself, he published a declaration of his truth and constancy in those particulars, protesting that he neither had done so, nor intended it, adding, that, if the queen pleased, he, with Peter Martyr, and certain others whom he would chuse, would, in public disputation, vindicate the doctrines of the reformation, against all persons whomsoever. But while he expec [...]d to obtain leave for such a disputation, he, with other bishops, were laid fast in the Tower. But Peter Martyr was permitted to depart the realm, and he went to Argentine. At length, in this month of November, Dr. Cranmer, notwithstanding he had earnestly refused to subscribe to the king's will in disinheriting his sister Mary, was arraigned in the Guild-hall of London, and attainted of treason, with the lady Jane Gray, and three of the duke of Northumberland's sons, who were remanded back to the Tower, at the intreaty of certain persons, and there kept for a time. But the archbishop, being acquitted of treason, stood only in the action and case of doctrine, which they called heresy, whereat he was very much pleased and joyful.
THIS being done, the people, and especially the clergy, perceiving the queen so strongly inclined to the old religion, popery, they likewise, to shew their forwardness to comply with the queen's humour, began to set up the pageants of St. Katherine and St. Nicholas, and their service in Latin, after their old solemnity, with their gay gar-deviance, and gray-amices, or vestments.
DECEMBER, 1553. About the beginning of this month, the parliament broke up, having first repealed all such statutes as were either made of premunire, or concerned any alteration of religion, and administration of the sacraments, in the reign of Edward VI. And in this session the parliament were acquainted with the queen's intended marriage with king Philip, the emperor's son. In the mean time, cardinal Pool, having been sent for by Mary, was requested by the emperor to stay with him, to the intent, (as some think) that his presence in England should not be a bar to the marriage between his son and the queen; to accomplish which, he sent a most splendid embassy, with full power; which had such good success, that, after a few days, the marriage of queen Mary, with the emperor's son, Philip, was made up, and completed.
WYAT'S REBELLION—QUEEN MARY'S ORATION—LADY JANE'S Letters, Words, and Behaviour, before her execution— BONNER'S Instructions to the Clergy of his Diocese— MARY'S Letter to BONNER—Her Articles to the Ordinary—Her PROCLAMATION—A CONVOCATION summoned— BONNER'S ORATION—And a Conversation between Dr. RIDLEY and Secretary BOURNE.
ON the 13th of January, 1554, Dr. Crome was committed to the Fleet, for preaching without licence, on Christmas-day; and on the 21st, Thomas Wooton, Esq. was committed close prisoner to the Fleet, for matters of religion.
EARLY in this month the marriage of the queen was made public; but the news of this event was ill received both by the common people, and several of the nobility; and on this account, as also for religion, conspiring among themselves, raised a rebellion, whereof sir Thomas Wyat was one of the chief promoters, who said in Kent, (what others plainly perceived) that the queen and council would, by her marriage with a foreigner, bring upon this realm most miserable servitude, and establish the popish religion.
JANUARY 25th. Intelligence was received at London, of the insurrection in Kent; and of the duke of Suffolk having fled into Warwickship: and Leicestershire, with a view of raising forces in those countries. The queen, therefore, caused them both, with the Carews of Dovenshire, to be proclaimed traitors; and at the same time sent Thomas, duke of Norfolk, into Kent, who being, near Rochester bridge, forsaken of those who went with him, returned to London, no blood having been shed on either side.
THE duke of Suffolk having fled into Warwickshire, the earl of Huntington was sent against him, who entering the city of Coventry before the duke, disappointed him of his purpose. In his distress, the duke confided in a servant of his▪ in Astley park; but the traitor having betrayed him▪ he was apprehended, sent up to London, and committed to the Tower. In the mean time, sir Peter hearing of this, fled into France, but the other conspirators were taken; and Wyat advanced towards London in the beginning of February. The queen, having heard of his coming, repaired to Guildhall, in the city, where she made a vehement oration against Wyat; the substance and effect whereof here followeth, as near as out of her own mouth could be penned.
An ORATION delivered by QUEEN MARY, in GUILDHALL, LONDON.
I AM come unto you in mine own person, to tell you that which already you see and know, that is, how traitorously and rebelliously a number of Kentishmen have assembled themselves against both us and you. Their pertence (as they said at the first) was for a marriage determined for us: to the which, and to all the articles thereof, ye have been made privy. But since we have caused certain of our privy council to go again unto them, and to demand the cause of this their rebellion, and it appeared then unto our said council, that the matter of the marriage seemed to be but a Spanish cloak to cover their pretended purpose against our religion, for that they arrogantly and traitorously demanded to have the governance of our person, the keeping of the Tower, and the placing of our counse [...]lors.
NOW, l [...]ving subjects, what I am, [...]e right well know [...] I am your queen, to whom at my coronation, when I was wedded to the realm, and laws of the same (the spousal ring whereof I have on my finger, which never hitherto was, nor hereafter shall be l [...]ft [...]) you promised your allegiance and obedience unto me. And that I am the right and [...] inheritor of the crown of this realm of England, [...] all christendom to witness. My father, [...], possessed the same regal state, which now [...] is d [...] scended, [Page 286] unto me: and to him always ye shewed yourselves most faithful and loving subjects, and therefore I doubt not but ye will shew yourselves likewise to me, and that ye will not suffer a vile traitor to have the order and governance of our person, and to occupy our estate, especially being so vile a traitor as Wyat is: who most certainly, as he hath abused mine ignorant subjects which be on his side, so doth he intend and purpose the destruction of you, and to spoil your goods. And I say to you in the word of a queen, I cannot tell how naturally the mother loveth the child, for I was never the mother of any; but certainly, if a princess and governess may as naturally and earnestly love her subjects, as the mother doth love the child, then assure yourselves, that I, being your lady and mistress, do as earnestly and tenderly love and favour you. And I thus loving you, cannot but think that you as heartily and faithful [...]y love me, and then I doubt not, but we shall give these rebels a short and speedy overthrow.
AS concerning the marriage, ye shall understand, that I enterprized not the doing thereof without advice, and that by the advice of all our privy council, who so considered and weighed the great commodities that might ensue thereof, that they not only thought it very honourable, but also expedient, both for the wealth of the realm, and also of you our subjects. And as touching myself, I assure you, I am not so bent to my will, neither so precise nor affectionate, that either for mine own pleasure I would chuse where I lust, or that I am so desirous, as needs I would have one. For God, I thank him, to whom be the praise therefor, I have hitherto lived a virgin, and doubt nothing, but with God's grace, I am able so to live still. But if, as my progenitors have done before, it may please God that I might leave some fruit of my body behind me, to be your governor, I trust, you would not only rejoice thereat, but also, I know, it would be to your great comfort. And certainly, if I either did think or know, that this marriage were to the hurt of any of you my commons, or to the impeachment of any part or parcel of the royal state of this realm of England, I would never consent thereunto, neither would I ever marry while I lived. And in the word of a queen, I promise you, that if it shall not probably appear to all the nobility and commons in the high court of Parliament, that this marriage shall be for the high benefit and commodity of the whole realm, then will I abstain from marriage while I live.
And I now, good subjects, pluck up your hearts, and like tru [...] men, stand fast against these rebels, both our enemies and yours, and fear them not; for I assure you, I fear them nothing at all. And I will leave with you my lord Howard, and my lord treasurer, who shall be assistants with the mayor for your defence.
IT is to be observed, that it having been reported, the queen was coming into the city with armed men, this rumour so terrified the Londoners, lest they should be there entrapped, and put to death, that great numbers of them made out at the gate before she entered in. It is also to be noted, that when the queen had ended her oration (which she seemed to have learnt perfectly without book) at the conclusion thereof, Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, who stood by her, cried to the people, with great admiration, "O how happy are we, to whom God hath given such a wise and learned queen!"
TWO days after this, on the 3d of February, lord Cobham was committed to the Tower, and sir Thomas Wyat entered Southwark; when, finding no access that way into the city, he marched with his army by Kingston, and came through the Strand to Ludgate. Returning from thence, he was opposed at Temple-bar, and there surrendered himself to sir Clement Parson, who brought him to court; and, with him, the remains of his army (for sir George Harper, and almost half of his men, had deserted him at Kingston-bridge) were also taken, and about one hundred killed. A great number of the captives were hanged; and Wyat was executed on Tower-hill, and then quartered. His head being set up upon Hay-hill, was taken away from thence, and great search made for the same.
ON the 12th of February, the unfortunate Lady Jane Gray was beheaded. Two days before her death, Mr. Feckman, otherwise Howman, was sent to her from the queen, to converse with her, and endeavour to turn her from the doctrine of Christ and the reformation to Mary's popish religion. The substance of their conversation is thus related.
A CONVERSATION between Mr. FECKNAM and Lady JANE GRAY, a short time before she was beheaded.
Madam, I lament your heavy case, and yet I doubt not, but that you bear out this sorrow of your's with a constant and patient mind.
You are welcome unto me, sir, if your coming be to give christian exhortation. And as for my heavy case, (I thank God) I do so little lament it, that rather I account the same for a more manifest declaration of God's favour towards me, [Page 287] than ever he shewed me at any time before. And therefore there is no cause why either you, or others which bear me no good will, should lament or be grieved with this my case, being a thing so profitable for my soul's health.
I am here come to you at this present time sent from the queen and her council, to instruct you in the true doctrine of the right faith: although I have so great confidence in you, that I shall have, I trust, little need to travel with you much therein.
Forsooth I heartily thank the queen's highness, which is not unmindful of her humble subject: and I hope likewise, that you no less will do your duty therein both truly and faithfully, according to that you were sent for.
What is then required of a christian man?
That he should believe in God the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, three Persons and one God.
What, is there nothing else to be required or looked for in a christian, but to believe in him?
Yes, we must love him with all our heart, and all our soul, and with all our mind, and our neighbour as ourself.
Why, then, faith neither justifieth, nor saveth.
Yes verily, faith (as St. Paul saith) only justifieth.
Why, St. Paul saith, If I have all faith without love, it is nothing.
True it is; for how can I love him whom I trust not? Or how can I trust him whom I love not? Faith and love go both together, and yet love is comprehended in faith.
How shall we love our neighbour?
To love our neighbour, is to feed the hungry, to clothe the naked, and give drink to the thirsty, and to do to him as we would do to ourselves.
Why, then, it is necessary unto salvation, to do good works also, and it is not sufficient only to believe.
I deny that, and I affirm that faith only saveth: but it is meet for a christian, in token that he followeth his master Christ, to do good works, yet may we not say that they profit to our salvation. For when we have done all, yet we are unprofitable servants, and faith only in Christ's blood saveth us.
How many sacraments are there?
Two: the one the sacrament of baptism, and the other the sacrament of the Lord's supper.
No, there are seven.
By what scripture find you that?
Well, we will talk of that hereafter. But what is signified by your two sacraments?
By the sacrament of baptism, I am washed with water and regenerated by the Spirit, and that washing is [...]oken to me that I am the child of God. The sacrament of the Lord's supper offered unto me, is a sure seal and testimony that I am, by the blood of Christ which he shed for me on the cross, make partaker of the everlasting kingdom.
Why what do you receive in that sacrament? Do you not receive the very body and blood of Christ?
No surely, I do not so believe. I think that at the supper I neither receive flesh nor blood, but bread and wine: which bread when it is brok [...]en, and the wine when it is drank, putteth me in remembrance how that for my sins the body of Christ was broken, and his blood shed on the cross, and with that bread and wine, I receive the benefits [Page 288] that come by the breaking of his body, and shedding of his blood for our sins on the cross.
Why, doth not Christ speak these words, Take, eat, this is my body? Require you [...]ny plainer words? Doth he not say it is his body?
I grant he saith so; and so he saith, I am the vine, I am the door; but he is never the more the door, nor the vine. Doth not St. Paul say, He calleth things that are not as though they were? God forbid that I should say, that I eat the very natural body and blood of Christ: for then either I should pluck away my redemption, or else there were two bodies, or two Christs. One body was tormented on the cross, and if they did eat another body, then had he two bodies: or if his body were eaten, then it was not broken upon the cross; or if it were broken upon the cross, it was not eaten of his disciples.
Why? Is it not as possible that Christ by his power could make his body both to be eaten and broken, as to be born of a woman without seed of man, and to walk upon the sea, having a body, and other such like miracles as he wrought by his power only?
Yes verily, if God would have done at his supper any miracles, he might have done so: but I say, that then he minded no work nor miracle, but only to break his body, and shed his blood on the cross for our sins. But I pray you to answer me this one question: Where was Christ when he said, Take, eat, this is my body? Was he not at the table when he said so? He was at that time alive, and suffered not till the next day. What took he, but bread? what brake he, but bread? and what gave he, but bread? Look, what he took, he brake: and look, what he brake, he gave and look, what he gave, they did eat: and yet all this while he himself was alive, and at supper before his disciples, or else they were deceived.
You ground your faith upon such authors as say and unsay both in a breath, and not upon the church, to whom you ought to give credit.
No, I ground my faith on God's word, [...] not upon the church; for if the church be a good church, the faith of the church must be tried by God's word, and not God's word by the church, nor yet my faith. Shall I believe the church because of antiquity? or shall I give credit to the church that taketh away from me the half part of the Lord's supper, and will not let any man receive it in both kinds? which things if they deny to us, then deny they to us part of our salvation. And I say, that it is an evil church, and not the spouse of Christ, but the spouse of the devil, that altereth the Lord's supper, and both taketh from it, and addeth to it. To that church (say I) God will add plagues, and from that church will he take their part out of the book of life. Do they learn that of St. Paul, when he ministered to the Corinthians in both kinds? Shall I believe this church? God forbid.
That was done for a good intent of the church, to avoid an heresy that sprang up from it.
Why? shall the church alter God's will and ordinance for good intent? How did king Saul? The Lord God defend.
WITH these and such like persuasions he endeavoured, but to no purpose, to turn her to the popish religion. They reasoned about many other things, but these were the chief.
THEN Fecknam took his leave, saying, that he was sorry for her [...] for I am sure, quoth he, that we two shall never m [...]et.
True it is, said she, that we shall never meet, except God turn your heart. For I am assured, unless you repent and turn to God, you are in an evil case: and I pray God, in the bowels of his mercy, to send you his Holy Spirit: for he hath given you his great gift of utterance, if it pleased him also to open the eyes of your heart.
LETTER I. From Lady JANE to her FATHER.
ALTHOUGH it hath pleased God to hasten my death by you, by whom my life should rather have been lengthened; yet can I so patiently [Page 289] take it, as I yield God more hearty thanks for [...]rtening my woful days, than if all the world had been given unto my possession, with life length [...]ed at my own will. And albeit I am well assured of your impatient griefs, redoubled manifold ways, both in bewailing your own woe, and especially (as I hear) my unfortunate state; yet, my dear father, (if I may without offence rejoice in my own mishaps) meseems in this I may account myself blessed, that washing my hands in the innocency of my fact, my guiltless blood may try before the Lord, Mercy to the innocent. And yet though I must needs acknowledge, that being constrained, and as you wot well enough, continually assayed, in taking upon me I seemed to consent, and therein grievously offended the queen and her laws: yet do I assuredly trust, that this my offence toward God is so much the less, in that being in so royal estate as I was, mine enforced honour blendid never with mine innocent heart: and thus, good father, I have opened unto you the state where in I at present stand. Whose death at hand, although to you perhaps it may seem right woful, to me there is nothing that can be more welcome, than from this vale of misery to aspire to that heavenly throne of all joy and pleasure with Christ our Saviour. In whose stedfast faith (if it may be lawful for the daughter so to write to the father) the Lord that hitherto hath strengthened [...], so continue you, that at the last we may meet in heaven with the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost.
IN the time of Edward VI. when her father flourished in freedom and prosperity, he had belonging to him a certain learned man, a student and graduate of the university of Oxford, who was then his chaplain, and appeared to be a sincere preacher of the gospel, according to the doctrines of the reformed religion, at that time set forth and received; but shortly after, when the state of religion began to be altered by queen Mary, he altered his profession with the times, and from a protestant, was transformed into a pretended friend and defender of the pope's religion and his proceedings. The pious and christian lady Jane, seeing such a change in a person whom she thought sincere, was much grieved, but chiefly lamented the dangerous state of his soul in so cowardly ap [...]statizing from the truth; on which account, she wrote her mind to him in the following sharp and strongly pointed letter, which appeared to proceed from an earnest and zealous heart; and she prayed that God would be pleased to make it effectual, by reducing him to repentance, and engaging him to take better hold of that, whereon depended the eternal welfare of his own soul.
LETTER II. From LADY JANE to Mr. HARDING, (late Chaplain to her Father the Duke of Suffolk) then fallen from the Truth of God's holy Word.
SO oft as I call to mind the dreadful and fearful saying of God, "That he which layeth hold upon the plough and looketh back, is not meet for the kingdom of heaven;" and, on the other side, the comfortable words of our Saviour Christ to all those that, forsaking themselves, do follow him: I cannot but marvel at thee, and lament thy case, which seemed sometime to be the lively member of Christ, but now the deformed imp of the devil; sometime the beautiful temple of God, but now the stinking and filthy kennel of Satan; sometime the unspotted spouse of Christ, but now the unshame faced paramour of Antichrist; sometime my faithful brother, but now a stranger and apostate; sometime a stout christian soldier, but now a cowardly run-away. Yea, when I consider these things, I cannot but speak to thee, and cry out upon thee, Thou seed of Satan, and not of Judah, whom the devil hath deceived, the world hath beguiled, and the desire of life subverted, and made thee of a christian an infidel. Wherefore hast thou taken the testament of the Lord in thy mouth? Wherefore hast thou preached the law and the will of God to others? Wherefore hast thou instructed others to be strong in Christ, when thou thyself doest so shamefully shrink, and so horribly abuse the testament and law of the Lord? When thou thyself preachest not to steal, yet most abominably stealest, not from men, but from God, and committing most heinous sacrilege, robbest Christ thy Lord of his right members, thy body and soul, and chusest rather to live miserable with shame in the world, than to die, and gloriously, with honour, reign with Christ, in whom even death is life? Why doth thou now shew thyself most weak, when [Page 290] indeed thou oughtest to be most strong? The strength of a fort is unknown before the assault, bu [...] thou yieldest thy hold before any battery be made. O wretched and unhappy man, what art thou but dust and ashes? And wilt thou resist thy Maker that fashioned and framed thee? Wilt thou now forsake him that called thee from the custom-gathering among the Romish antichristians, to be an ambassador and messenger of his eternal word? He that first framed thee, and since thy first creation and birth preserved thee, nourished and kept thee, yea, and inspired thee with the spirit of knowledge (I cannot say of grace) shall he not now possess thee? Darest thou deliver up thysef to another, being not thine own, but his? How c [...]st thou, having knowledge, or how darest thou neglect the law of the Lord, and follow the vain traditions of men; and, whereas thou hast been a public professor of his name, become now a defacer of his glory? Wilt thou refuse the true God, and worship the invention of man, the golden calf, the whore of Babylon, the Romish religion, the abominable idol, the most wicked mass? Wilt thou torment again, rent, and tear the most precious body of our Saviour Christ, with thy bodily and fleshly teeth? Wilt thou take upon thee to offer any sacrifice unto God for our sins, considering that Christ offered up himself (as St. Paul saith) upon the cross, a lively sacrifice once for all? Can neither the punishment of the Israelites (which, for their idolatry, they so oft received), nor the terrible threatenings of the prophets, nor the curses of God's own mouth, fear thee to honour any other God than him? Dost thou so regard him that spared not his dear and only Son for thee, so diminishing, yea, utterly extinguishing his glory, that thou wilt attribute the praise and honour due unto him to the idols, which have mouths and speak not, eyes and see not, ears and hear not; which shall perish with them that made them?
WHAT saith the prophet Baruch, where he recited the epistle of Jeremy, written to the captive Jews? Did he not forewarn them, that in Babylon they should see gods of gold, silver, wood, and stone, borne upon men's shoulders, to cast a fear before the heathen? "But be ye not afraid of them, (saith Jeremy) nor do as others do. But when you see others worship them, say you in your hearts, It is thou, O Lord, that oughtest only to be worshipped: for as for those gods, the carpenter framed them and polished them, yea, guilded be they, and laid over with silver and vain things, and cannot speak." He sheweth, moreover, the ab [...]se of their dealings, how the priests took off their ornaments, and apparelled their women withal; how one holdeth a sceptre, another a sword in his hand, and yet can they judge in no matter, nor defend themselves, much less any other, from either battle or murder, nor yet from knawing of worms, nor any other evil thing. These and such like words speaketh Jeremy unto them, whereby he proveth them to be but vain things, and no gods. And at last he concludeth thus, "Confounded be all they that worship them." They were warned by Jeremy, and thou as Jeremy hast warned others, and art warned thyself by many scriptures in many places. God saith, he is a jealous God, which will have all honour, glory, and worship, given to him only. And Christ saith in the fourth of Matthew, to Satan which tempted him, even to the same Beelzebub, the same devil which hath prevailed against thee: "It is written (saith he) thou shalt honour the Lord thy God, and him only shalt thou serve."
THESE and such like do prohibit thee and all christians to worship any other God, than which was before all worlds, and laid the foundations both of heaven and earth: and wilt thou honour a detestable idol, invented by Romish popes, and the abominable college of crafty cardinals? Christ offered himself up once for all, and wilt thou offer him up again daily at thy pleasure? But thou wilt say, thou doest it for a good intent. O sink of sin! Oh child of perdition! Dost thou dream therein of a good intent, where thy conscience beareth thee witness of God's threatened wrath against thee? How did Saul? who, for that he disobeyed the word of the Lord for a good intent, was thrown from his worldly and temporal kingdom. Shalt thou then, that dost deface God's honour, and rob him of his right, inherit the eternal and heavenly kingdom? Wilt thou for a good intent dishonour God, offend thy brother, and danger thy soul, for which Christ hath shed his most precious blood? Wilt thou for a good intent pluck Christ out of heaven, and make his death void, [Page 291] and deface the triumph of his cross by offering him up daily? Wilt thou, either for fear of death, or hope of life, deny and refuse thy God, who enriched thy poverty, healed thy infirmity, and yields to thee his victory, if thou couldst have kept it? Dost thou not consider, that the thread of thy life hangeth upon him that made thee, who can [...]as his will is▪ either twine it harder to last the longer, or untwine it again to break the sooner? Dost thou not then remember the saying of David, a notable king, to teach thee a miserable wretch, in his 104th Psalm, where he saith thus: "When thou takest away thy Spirit, O Lord, from men, they die and are [...]ned again to their dust: but when thou lettest thy breath go forth, they shall be made, and thou shalt renew the face of the earth." Remember the saying of Christ in his gospel: "Whosoever seeketh to save his life, shall lose it: but whosoever will lose his life for my sake, shall find it." And in the same place: "Whosoever loveth father or mother above me, is not meet for me. He that will follow me, let him forsake himself, and take up his cross, and follow me." What cross? the cross of infamy and shame, of misery and poverty, of affliction and persecution, for his name's sake. Let the oft falling of those heavenly showers pierce thy stony heart. Let the two-edged sword of God's holy word shee [...] asunder the sinews of worldly respects, even to the very marrow of thy carnal heart, that thou mayst once again forsake thyself and embrace Christ. And like as good subjects will not refuse to hazard all in defence of their earthly and temporal governor, so fly not, like a white livered milk sop, from the standing wherein thy chief captain hath set thee in array of this life. [...]ight manfully, come life, come death: thy quarrel is God's, and undoubtedly the victory is ours.
BUT thou wil say, I will not break unity. What, not the unity of Satan and his members? Not the uni [...]y of darknes [...] ▪ the argument of Antichrist and his [...], thou deceivest thyself with a fond imag [...]tion of such an unity as is [...] the enemies of Christ. Were not the false prophets in an unity▪ Were not Joseph's brethren and Jacob's sons in an unity? Were not the [...], as the Amaleki [...]s, the Per [...]zz [...]tes, and Jebusites, in an unity? Were not the scribes and pharisees in an unity? Doth not king David testify, "They have cast their heads together, and are confederate against the Lord?" Yea, thieves, murderers, conspirators, have their unity. But what unity? Tully saith of amity, There is no amity but with the good. But mark, my friend, yea, friend, if thou be not God's enemy: there is no unity but where Christ knitteth the knot among such as be his. Yea, be well assured, that where his truth is not resident, there it is verified that he himself saith: "I came not to send peace on earth, but a sword," &c. but to set one against another, the son against the father, and the daughter against the mother-in-law. Deceive not thyself therefore with the glittering and glorious name of unity; for Antichrist hath his unity, yet not in deed but in name. The agreement of ill men is not an unity, but a conspiracy. Thou hast heard some threatenings, some cursings, and some admonitions out of the scripture, to those that love themselves above Christ. Thou hast heard also the sharp and bitter words to those that deny him for love of life. Saith he not, "He that denieth me before men, I will deny him before my Father in heaven?" And to the same effect writeth St. Paul, "It is impossible (saith he) that they which were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were partakers of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted of the good word of God, if they fall and slide away, crucifying to themselves the Son of God afresh, and making of him a mocking-stock, should be renewed again by repentance." And again, saith he, "If we shall willingly sin, after we have received the knowlege of his truth, there is no oblation left for sin, but the terrible expectation of judgment, and fire which shall devour the adversaries." Thus St. Paul writeth, and thus thou readest, and dost thou not quake and tremble?
WELL, if these terrible and thundering threatenings cannot stir thee to cleave unto Christ, and forsake the word; yet let the sweet consolations and promises of the scriptures, let the example of Christ and his apostles, holy martyrs and confessors, encourage thee to take faster hold of Christ. Hearken what he saith: "Blessed are you, when men revile you, and persecute you for my sake: rejoice [Page 292] and be glad, for great is your reward in heaven; for so persecuted they the prophets that were before you." Hear what the prophet Isaiah saith: "Fear not the curse of men, be not afraid of their blasphemies, for worms and moths shall eat them up like cloth and wool, but my righteousness shall endure for ever, and my saving health from generation to generation. What art thou then (said he) that fearest a mortal man, the child of man, which fadeth away like the flower, and forg [...]test the Lord that made thee, that spread out the heavens, and laid the foundation of the earth? I am the Lord thy God, that makes the sea to rage and be still, whose name is the Lord of hosts: I shall put my word in thy mouth, and defend thee with the turning of an hand." And our Saviour Christ saith to his disciples: "They shall accuse you, and bring you before princes and rulers for my name's sake, and some of you they shall persecute and kill; but fear you not, (saith he) nor care you what you shall say: for it is the Spirit of your Father that speaketh within you. Even the very hairs of your head are all numbered. Lay up treasure for yourselves (saith he) where no thief cometh, nor moth corrupteth. Fear not them that kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul; but fear him that hath power to destroy both soul and body. If ye were of the world, the world would love his own: but because ye are not of the world, but I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hateth you."
LET these and such like consolations, taken out of the scriptures, strengthen you to God-ward: let not the examples of holy men and women go out of your mind, as of Daniel and the rest of the prophets, of the three children, of Eleazarus that constant father, of the seven of the Maccabees children, of Peter, Paul, Stephen, and other apostles and holy martyrs in the beginning of the church; as of good Simeon, archbishop of Soloma, and Zetrophone, with many others under Sapores the king of the Persians and Indians, who despised all torments devised by the tyrants for their Saviour's sake. Return, return again unto Christ's war, and as becometh a faithful warrior, put on that armour that St. Paul teacheth to be most necessary for a christian man. And above all things take to you the shield of faith, and be you provoked by Christ's own example to withstand the devil, to forsake the world, and to become a true and faithful member of his mystical body, who spared not his own body for our sins.
THROW down yourself with the fear of his threatened vengeance, for this so great and heinous an offence of apostacy: and comfort yourself on the other part with the mercy, blood, and promise of him that is ready to turn unto you, whensoever you turn unto him. Disdain not to come again with the lost son, seeing you have so wandered with him. Be not ashamed to turn again with him from the swill of strangers, to the delicates of your most benign and loving Father, acknowledging that you have sinned against heaven and earth: against heaven, by staining the glorious name of God, and causing his most sincere and pure word to be evil spoken of through you: against earth, by offending so many of your weak brethren, to whom you have been a stumbling block through your sudden sliding. Be not abashed to come home again with Mary, and weep bitterly with Peter, not only with shedding the tears of your bodily eyes, but also pouring out the streams of your heart, to wash away out of the sight of God the filth and mire of your offensive fall. Be not abashed to say with the publican, Lord be merciful unto me a sinner. Remember the horrible history of Julian of old, and the lamentable case of Spira of late, whose case (methinks) should be yet so green in your remembrance, that being a thing of our time, you should fear the like inconvenience, seeing you are fallen into the like offence.
LAST of all, let the lively remembrance of the last day be always before your eyes, remembering the terror that such shall be in at that time, with the runagates and fugitives from Christ, which setting more by the world than by heaven, more by their life, than by him that gave them life, did shrink, yea, did clean fall away from him that forsook not them: and contrariwise, the inestimable joys prepared for them that fear no peril, nor dreading death, have manfully fought, and victoriously triumphed over all the power of darkness, over hell, death and damnation, through their most redouted captain Christ, who now stretcheth out his arms to receive you, ready to fall upon your neck and kiss [Page 293] you, and last of all to feast you with the dainties and delicates of his own precious blood: which undoubtedly, if it might stand with his determinate purpose▪ he would not scruple to shed again, rather than you should be lost. To whom with the Father and the Holy Ghost, be all honour, praise, and glory everlasting. Amen.
LETTER III. Which Lady JANE sent to her SISTER, the Lady KATHERINE, the night before she suffered, written at the end of the New Testament in Greek.
I Have here sent you a book, which although it be not outwardly trimmed with gold, yet inwardly is more worth than precious stones. It is the book (dear sister) of the law of the Lord. It is his testament and last will, which he bequeathed unto us wretches; which shall lead you to the path of eternal joy; and, if you with a good mind to read it, and with an earnest mind do purpose to follow it, it shall bring you to an immortal and everlasting life. It shall teach you to live, and learn you to die. It shall win you more than you should have gained by the possession of your woful father's lands. For as, if God had prospered him, you should have inherited his lands; so if you apply diligently this book, seeking to direct your life after it, you shall be an inheritor of such riches, as neither the covetous shall withdraw from you, neither thief shall steal, neither yet the moths corrupt. Desire with David, good sister, to understand the law of the Lord God. Live still to die, that you by death may purchase eternal life. And trust not that the tenderness of your age shall lengthen your life; for as soon (if God call) goeth the young as the old; and labour always to learn to die. Defy the world, deny the devil, despise the flesh, and delight yourself only in the Lord. Be penitent for your sins, and yet despair not: be strong in faith, and yet presume not; and desire with St. Paul to be dissolved and to be with Christ, with whom even in death there is life. Be like the good servant, and even at midnight waking, least when death cometh and stealeth upon you as a thief in the night, you be with the evil servant, found sleeping: and lest, for lack of oil, you be found like the five foolish women, and like him that had not on the wedding garment, and then ye be cast out from the marriage. Rejoice in Christ, as I do. Follow the steps of your master Christ, and take up your cross: lay your sins on his back, and always embrace him. And as touching my death, rejoice as I do, (good sister) that I shall be delivered of this corruption, and put on incorruption. For I am assured, that I shall, for losing a mortal life, win an immortal life, the which I pray God grant you, and send you his grace to live in his fear, and to die in the true christian faith, from the which (in God's name) I exhort you, that you never swerve, neither for hope of life, nor for fear of death. For if you will deny his truth, to lengthen your life, God will deny you, and shorten your days. And if you cleave unto him, he will prolong your days to your comfort and his glory: To which glory God bring me now, and you hereafter, when it pleaseth him to call you. Fare you well, good sister, and put your only trust in God, who only must help you.
A PRAYER, Made by Lady JANE in the Time of her Trouble.
O LORD, thou God and Father of my life, hear me poor and desolate woman, which flyeth unto thee only, in all troubles and miseries. Thou, O Lord, art the only defender and deliverer of those that put their trust in thee: and therefore, I being defiled with sin, incumbered with affliction, unquieted with troubles, wrapped in cares, overwhelmed with miseries, vexed with temptations, and grievously tormented with long imprisonment of this vile mass of clay my sinful body, do come unto thee (O merciful Saviour) craving thy mercy and help, without which so little hope of deliverance is left, that I may utterly despair of any liberty. Albeit it is expedient, that, seeing our life standeth upon trying, we should be visited sometime with some adversity, whereby we might both be tried whether we be of the flock or no, and also know thee and ourselves the better: yet thou that saidst thou would not suffer us to be tempted above our power, be merciful unto me now a miserable wretch, I beseech thee; which, with Solomon, do cry unto thee, humbly desiring thee, that I may neither be too much puffed up with prosperity, neither too much pressed down with adversity, lest I, being too full, should deny thee my God, or being too low brought, should despair, and blaspheme thee my Lord and Saviour. O [Page 294] merciful God, consider my misery best known unto thee; and be thou now unto me a strong tower of defence, I humbly require thee. Suffer me not to be tempted above my power; but either be thou a deliverer unto me out of this great misery▪ or else give me grace patiently to bear thy heavy hand and sharp correction. It was thy right hand that delivered the people of Israel out of the hands of Pharaoh, which for the space of four hundred years did oppress them, and keep them in bondage. Let it therefore likewise seem good to thy fatherly goodness, to deliver me sorrowful wretch (for whom thy Son Christ shed his precious blood on the cross) out of this miserable captivity and bondage, wherein I am now. How long wilt thou be absent? for ever? O Lord, hast thou forgotten to be gracious, and hast thou shut up thy loving kindness in displeasure? Wilt thou be no more intreated? Is thy mercy clean gone for ever, and thy promise come utterly to an end for evermore? Why dost thou make so long tarry? Shall I despair of thy mercy, O God? far be that from me. I am thy workmanship created in Christ Jesus; give me grace therefore to tarry thy leisure, and patiently to bear thy works, assuredly knowing, that as thou canst, so thou wilt deliver me, when it shall please thee, nothing doubting or mistrusting thy goodness towards me; for thou knowest better what is good for me than I do: therefore do with me in all things what thou wilt, and plague me what way thou wilt. Only in the mean time arm me, I beseech thee, with thy armour, that I may stand fast, my loine being girded about with verity, having on the breastplate of righteousness, and shod with the shoes prepared by the gospel of peace; above all things taking to me the shield of faith, wherewith I may be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked, and taking the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is thy most holy word, praying always with all manner of prayer and supplication, that I may refer myself wholly to thy will, abiding thy pleasure, and comforting myself in those troubles that it shall please thee to send me: seeing such troubles be profitable for me, and seeing I am assuredly persuaded that it cannot be but well all that thou dost. Hear me, O merciful Father, for his sake, whom thou wouldst should be a sacrifice for my sins; to whom with thee and the Holy Ghost, be all honour and glory. Amen.
The BEHAVIOUR and DYING WORDS of Lady JANE, upon the Scaffold.
WHEN she mounted the scaffold, she spake to the spectators in this manner. "Good people, I am come hither to die, and by a law I am condemned to the same. The fact against the queen's highness was unlawful, and the consenting thereunto by me; but touching the procurement and desire thereof by me or on my behalf, I do wash my hands thereof in innocency before God, and the face of you, good christian people, this day:" and therewith she wrung her hands wherein she had her book. "Then (said she) I pray you all good christian people, to bear me witness that I die a true christian woman, and that I do look to be saved by no other means, but only by the mercy of God in the blood of his only Son Jesus Christ: and I confess, that when I did know the word of God, I neglected the same, loved myself and the world, and therefore this plague and punishment is happily and worthily happened unto me for my sins: and yet I thank God that of his goodness he hath thus given me a time and respite to repent: and now, good people, while I am alive, I pray you assist me with your prayers." And then kneeling down, she turned to Fecknam, saying, "Shall I say this psalm?" and he said, Yea. Then she said the psalm of Miserer [...] mei Deus, in English, in a most devout manner throughout to the end; and then she stood up, and gave her maid, Mrs. Ellen, her gloves and handkerchief, and her book to Mr. Bruges; and then she untied her gown, and the executioner pressed upon her to help her off with it, but she desiring him to let her alone, turned towards her two gentlewomen, who helped her off therewith, and also with her frowes, paast, and neckerchief, giving to her a fair handkerchief to put about her eyes.
THEN the executioner kneeled down and asked her forgiveness, whom she forgave most willingly. Then he desired her to stand upon the straw, which doing, she saw the block. When she said, I pray you dispatch me quickly. Then she kneeled down, saying, Will you take it off before I lay me down? and the executioner said, No, madam. Then she tied the handkerchief about her eyes, and feeling for the block▪ she said, What shall I do? Where is it? One of the standers by guided her thereunto, she laid her head down upon the block, and then stretching forth her body, said, "Lord, into thy hands I commend my spirit;" and so finished her life, in the year of our Lord 1554, the 12th day of February, about the 17th year of her age.
THUS died the lady Jane, and on the same day the lord Guildford her husband, one of the duke of Northumberland's sons, was likewise beheaded, two [Page 295] innocents in comparison of them that sat upon them. For they were both very young, and ignorantly accepted that which others had contrived, and by open proclamation consented to take from others, and give to them.
TOUCHING the condemnation of this pious lady, it is to be noted, that judge Morgan, who gave sentence against her, soon after he had condemned her, fell mad, and in his raving cried out continually to have the lady Jane taken away from him; and so he ended his life.
ON the 21st day of the same month, Henry duke of Suffolk was beheaded on Tower-hill, the fourth day after his condemnation: about which time many gentlemen and yeomen were condemned, whereof some were executed at London, and some in the country. In the number of whom was the lord Thomas Gray, brother to the said duke, being apprehended not long after in North-Wales, and executed for the same. Sir Nicholas Throgmorton very narrowly [...].
ON the 24th day of February, in the same year, Bonner, bishop of London, sent a commission, directed to all the pastors and curates of his diocese, for the taking of the names of all such as should refuse to come to auricular confession of the Lent following, and to the receiving at Easter. The copy of which here followeth.
The INSTRUCTIONS of BONNER, bishop of LONDON, sent to all the CURATES of his Diocese.
EDMUND, by the permission of God, bishop of London, to all parsons, vicars, curates, and ministers of the church, within the city and diocese of London, sendeth grace, peace, and mercy in our Lord everlasting. Forasmuch as by the order of the ecclesiastical laws and constitutions of this realm, and the laudable usage and custom of the whole catholic church, by many hundred years agone, duly and [...] observed and kept, all faithful people, being [...] age and discretion, are bound once in the year at least (except reasonable cause excuse them) to be confessed to their own proper curate, and to receive the sacrament of the altar, with due preparation and devotion: and forasmuch also as we be credibly informed, that sundry evil disposed and undevout persons, given to sensual pleasures, and carnal appetites, following the lusts of their body, and neglecting utterly the health of their souls, do forbear to come to confession according to the said usage, and to receive the sacrament of the altar accordingly, giving thereby pernicious and evil example to the younger sort, to neglect and contemn the same: We minding the reformation thereof for our own discharge, and desirous of good order to be kept, and good example to be given; do will and command you by virtue hereof, that immediately upon receipt of this our commandment, ye and every each of you within your cure and charge, do use all your diligence and dexterity to declare the same, straitly charging and commanding all parishioners, being of lawful age and discretion, to come before Easter next coming, to confession, according to the said ordinance and usage, with due preparation and devotion, to receive the said sacrament of the altar, and that ye do note the names of all such as be not confessed unto you, and do not receive of you the said sacrament, certifying us, or our chancellor or commissary thereof, before the 6th day of April next ensuing the date hereof; that so we, knowing thereby who did not come to confession, and receiving the sacrament accordingly, may proceed against them, as being persons culpable, and transgressors of the said ecclesiastical law and usage. Further also certifying us, our said chancellor or commissary, before the day aforesaid, whether you have your altars set up, chalice-book, vestments, and all things necessary for mass, and the administration of sacraments and sacramentals, with procession, and all other divine service prepared and in readiness, according to the order of the catholic church, and the virtuous and godly example of the queen's majesty. And if ye so have not, ye then with the churchwardens cause the same to be provided for, signifying by whose fault and negligence the same want or fault hath proceeded, and generally of the not coming of your parishioners to church, undue walking, talking, or using of themselves there irreverently in the time of divine service, and of all other open faults and misdemeanors, not omitting thus to do, and certify as before, as you will answer upon your peril for the contrary.
Given at London the 23d of February, in the year of our Lord 1554.
ON the fourth of March following the queen sent a letter to Bonner, bishop of London, with certain articles annexed thereunto, to be put into speedy execution, containing as follows:
Queen
MARY'S Letter to
BONNER, bishop of London.
RIGHT reverend father in God, right trusty and well-beloved, we greet you well. And whereas heretofore in the time of the late reign of our most dear brother king Edward the sixth, whose soul God pardon, divers notable crimes, excesses and faults, with sundry kinds of heresies, simony, adultery, and other enormities have been committed within this our realm, and other our dominions, the same continuing yet hitherto in like disorder since the beginning of our reign, without any correction or reformation at all, and the people both of the laity and also of the clergy, and chiefly of the clergy, have been given to much insolency and ungodly rule, greatly to the displeasure of Almighty God, and very much to our regret and evil acceptation, and t [...] no little slander of other christian realms, and in a manner to the subversion and clean defacing of this our realm; and remembering our duty to Almighty God, to be to foresee (as much as in us may be) that all virtue and godly living shall be embraced, flourish and increase; and therewith also that all vice and ungodly beheaviour should be banished and put away, or at the leastwise (so nigh as might be) so bridled and kept under, that godliness and honesty might have the upper hand; understanding by very [...] report and public fa [...]e, to our no small he [...]iness and discomfort, that within your diocese. [...] not exempted as exempted places, th [...] like [...] and evil behaviour hath been done and used, [...] also to continue and increase, unl [...] due [...] be had and made to reform the same; which earnestly in very deed we [...]o mind and [...] to the uttermost all the ways we can possible, tru [...]ing of God's [...] and help in that behalf. For [...] cause [...] [...] other most just considerations us [...], we send unto you certain articles of such [...] matters, as among other things be most necessary now to [...] in execution by you and your officers, extendi [...] to the end by us desired, and the reformation [...]: wherein ye shall be charged with our special [...]mandment, by these our letters, to the intent you and your officers may the more earnestly and boldly proceed thereunto, without fear of any presumption to be noted in your part, or danger to be incurred of any such our laws, as by our doing of that is in the said articles contained, might any wise grieve you, whatsoever be threatened in any such case. And therefore we straitly charge and command you, and your said officers, to proceed to the execution of the said articles, without all tract and delay, as ye will answer to the contrary.
Given under our signet, at our palace of Westminster, the third day of March, the first year of our reign.
ARTICLES sent from the QUEEN unto the ORDINARY, commanding [...]oth him and his officers to see them put in Execution throughout the whole Diocese.
FIRST, That every bishop and his officers, with all others having ecclesiastical jurisdiction, shall with all speed and diligence, and all manner of way [...] to them possible, put in execution all such canon [...] and ecclesiastical laws, heretofore in the time of king Henry the eighth used within this realm of England, and the dominions of the same, not being directly and expressly contrary to the laws and [...] tutes of this realm.
Item, THAT no bishop, or any of his officers, or other person aforesaid, hereafter in any ecclesiastical writing, in process or othe [...] extrajudicial acts, do use to put in this clause or sentence, [supported by royal authority.]
Item, THAT no bishop, or any of his officers, or other person aforesaid, do hereafter exact or demand in the admission of any person to any ecclesiastical promotion, order, or office, any [...] [...]uching [...] primacy or succession, as of late in fe [...] years pas [...]ed hath been accustomed and used.
Item, THAT every bishop and his officers, [...] all other persons aforesaid, have a vigilant eye [...] [...] use special diligence and foresight, that no person be admitted or received to any ecclesiastical function, benefice, or office, being a sacramentary, infected or defamed with any notable kind of heresy, or other great crime; and that the said bishop do [Page]
[Page 297] stay, and cause to be stayed, as much as lieth in him, that benefices and ecclesiastical promotions do not notably decay, or take hindrance, by passing or confirming unreasonable leases.
Item, THAT every bishop, and all other persons aforesaid, do diligently travel for the repressing of heresies and notable crimes, especially in the clergy, duly correcting and punishing the same.
Item, THAT every bishop, and all other persons aforesaid, do likewise travel for the condemning and repressing of corrupt and naughty opinions; unlawful books, ballads, and other pernicious and hurtful devices, engendering hatred amongst the people, and discord among the same. And that schoolmasters, preachers, and teachers, do exercise and [...]se their offices and duties without teaching, preach [...], or setting forth any evil and corrupt doctrine, [...] that doing the contrary, they may be by the bishop and his said officers punished and removed.
Item, THAT every bishop, and all other persons [...]foresaid, proceeding summarily, and with all cele [...]ity and speed, may and shall deprive or declare deprived and remove, according to their learning and discretion, all such persons from their benefices and [...]cclesiastical promotions, who contrary to the state of their order, and the laudable custom of the church, have married and used women as their wives, or otherwise notably and slande [...]usly disordered or abused themselves: sequestering also, during the [...] process, the fruits and profits of the said bene [...]es and ecclesiastical promotions.
Item, THAT the said bishop, and all other persons aforesaid, do use more [...]enity and clemency with such as have married, whose wives be dead, than with other whose women do yet remain alive. And likewise such priests, as with the consent of their wives or women openly in the presence of the bishop do profess to abstain, to be used more favourably. In which case, after the penance effectually done, the archbishop, according to his discretion and wisdom, may upon just consideratio [...] receive and admit them again to their former administration, so it be not in the same place, appointing them such a portion to live upon, to be paid out of their benefice whereof they be deprived, by discretion of the said bishop or his officer, as he shall think may be spared of the said benefice.
Item, THAT every bishop, and all other persons aforesaid, do foresee that they suffer not any religious man, having solemnly professed chastity, to continue with his woman or wife, but that all such persons, after deprivation of their benefice or ecclesiastical promotion, be also divorced every one from his said woman, and due punishment otherwise taken for the offence therein.
Item, THAT every bishop, and all other persons aforesaid, do take order and direction with the parishioners of every benefice, where priests do want, to repair to the next parish for divine service, or to appoint for a convenient time, till other better provision may be made, one curate to serve in the room of another, in divers parishes, and to allot to the curate for his labour some portion of the benefice that he so serveth.
Item, THAT all and all manner of processions of the church be used and frequented, and continued after the old order of the church, in the Latin tongue.
Item, THAT all such holy days and fasting days be observed and kept, as were observed and kept in the latter time of king Henry the eighth.
Item, THAT the laudable and honest ceremonies which were w [...]nt to be used, frequented, and observed in the church, be also hereafter frequented, used, and observed.
Item, THAT childr [...] be christened by the priest, and confirmed by the bishop, as heretofore hath been accustomed and used.
Item, TOUCHING [...]ch persons as were heretofore promoted to any ord [...], after the new sort and fashion of orders: con [...]ring they were not ordered in very deed, the bishop of the diocese, finding otherwise sufficiency and ability i [...] those men, may supply that thing which wanted i [...] them before, [...]nd then according to his discretion [...]dmit them to minister.
[Page 298] Item, THAT by the bishop of the diocese an uniform doctrine be set forth by Homilies, or otherwise, for the good instruction and teaching of all people: And that the said bishop and other persons aforesaid, do compel the parishioners to come to their several churches, and there devoutly to hear divine service, as of reason they ought.
Item, THAT they examine all schoolmasters and teachers of children, and finding them suspected in any wise, to remove them, and place catholic men in their rooms, with a special commandment to instruct their children, so as they may be able to answer the priest at the mass, as hath been accustomed.
Item, THAT the said bishop, and all other the persons aforesaid, have such regard, respect, and consideration of and for the setting forth of the premises, with all kind of virtue, godly living, and good example, with repressing also and keeping under of vice and unthriftiness, as they and every of them may be seen to favour the restitution of true religion; and also to make an honest acc [...]un [...] and reckoning of their office and cure, to the hono [...] of God, our good content and profit of this our realm, and the dominions of the same.
A like charge also, with articles, [...] sent from queen Mary to the lord mayor of London, the fourth day of March, in the same year, who, upon receiving the same, directed his commandment to the aldermen, every one severally in his ward, as followeth:
By the LORD MAYOR.
ON the queen our most [...]racious and most benign sovereign lady's behalf, we most straitly charge and command you, that ye the said aldermen fail not personally to call before your own person in such place within your said ward, as to you shall seem most convenient and meet, upon Wednesday next coming, which shall be the seventh day of this present month, at seven o'clock in the morning of the same day, all and every the housholders both poor and rich of your said ward, and then and there openly and plainly for your own discharge, and for the eschewing the perils that to you might otherwise be justly imputed and laid, do not only straitly admonish, charge, and command, in the queen our said sovereign lady's name and behalf, all and every the said housholders, that both in their own persons, and also their wives, children, and servants, being of the age of twelve years and upwards, and every of them, do at all and every time or times from henceforth, and namely, at the holy time of Easter now approaching, honestly, quietly, obediently, and catholicly, use and behave themselves like good and faithful christian people, in all and every thing and things touching and concerning the true faith, profession, and religion of his catholic church, both according to the laws and precepts of Almighty God, and also their bounden duty of obedience towards our sovereign lady the queen, her laws and statutes, and her highness's most good example and gracious proceeding according to the same, and according also to the right, wholesome, charitable and godly admonition, charge, and exhortation, late set forth and given, by the right reverend father in God, the bishop of London, our diocesan and ordi [...]nary, to all the parsons, vicars, and curates, within his diocese; but also, that they and every of them do truly, without delay, advertise you of the names and surnames of all and every person and persons, that they, or any of them, can or may at any time hereafter know, perceive or understand to transgress or offend, in any point or article concerning the premises, at their utmost perils. That ye, immediately after such notice thereof to you given, do forthwith advertise us thereof. Fail ye not thus to do with all circumspection and diligence, as ye wi [...]l answer to our said most dread sovereign lady the queen for the contrary at your like peril. Given at the Guild-hill of the city of London, the 5th day of March, in the first year of the reign of our said sovereign lady the queen.
AND likewise do you give to every of the said housholders straitly in commandment, that they or their wives depart not out of the said city, until this holy time of Easter be past.
ABOUT the same year and time that Bonner published his prescript or charge, there came from the queen another proclamation, commanding all foreigners and strangers to depart this realm. The [Page 299] copy of which proclamation, which related chiefly to religion and doctrine, is as followeth.
A Copy of the QUEEN'S PROCLAMATION for driving Foreigners and Strangers out of the Realm.
"THE queen our sovereign lady, understanding that a multitude of evil disposed persons, being born out of her highness's dominions in other sundry nations, flying from the obeysance of the princes and rulers under whom they be born, (some for heresy, some for murder, treason, robbery, and some for other horrible crimes,) be resorted into this her majesty's realm and here have made their demurrer, and yet be commorant and lingering, partly to eschew such condign punishment as their said horrible crimes deserve, and partly to dilate, plant, and sow the seeds of their malicious doctrine and l [...]wd conversation among the good subjects of this her said realm, on purpose to infect her good subjects with the like, insomuch as besides innumerable heresies, which divers of the same being heretics have preached and taught within her highness's said realm, it is assuredly known unto her majesty, that not only their secret practices have not failed to stir, comfort, and aid divers of her highness's subjects to this most unnatural rebellion against God and her grace, but also some other of them desist not still to practise with her people forthwith to rebel: her majesty therefore, having (as aforesaid) knowledge and intelligence hereof, hath for remedy herein determined and most straitly chargeth and commandeth, that all and every such person and persons born out of her highness's dominions, now commorant or resident within this realm, of whatsoever nation or country, being either preacher, printer, bookseller, or other artificer, or of whatsoever calling else, not being denizen or merchant known using the trade of merchandize, or servant to such ambassadors as be li [...]gers here from the princes and states joined in league with her grace, shall within twenty-four days of this proclamation, avoid the realm upon pain of most grievous punishment by imprisonment, and forfeitu [...]e and conf [...]ation of all their goods and moveables, and also to be delivered unto their natural [...] or rulers, against whose persons or laws they have offended. G [...]ing to all mayors, sheriffs, bailiffs, constables, and all other her ministers, officers, and good [...], straitly also in charge, if they know any such person, [...] the queen's highness's dominions (except [...]) that shall, after the time and day limited [...] proclamation, tarry within this realm, that they shall apprehend the said person or persons, and commit him or them to ward, there to remain without bail or mainprize, till her grace's pleasure or her council's be signified unto them for the further ordering of the said person or persons. And that if any of her said officers, after the twenty-four days, apprehend, take o [...] know of any such, they shall with all diligence immedia [...]ely certify her said council thereof, to the intent order may be forthwith given for their punishment accordingly."
UPON this proclamation, not only the strangers who were received into the realm, for the sake of religion, in king Edward's time, (among whom were Peter Martyr, and John Alasco, the king of Poland's Uncle) but many Englishmen also fled, some to Friezland, some to Cleveland, some into high Germany; where they were diversly scattered into different companies and congregations, at Wesel, Frankfort, Basil, Zurich, Geneva, and other places; wherein, by the providence of God, near eight hundred persons were all sustained, and entertained, with much greater kindness, by strangers abroad, than they could be in their own country at home.
IN the month of March likewise, the lord Courtney, earl of Devonshire, and the queen's sister, by a political trick of Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, were committed to the Tower, under a pretended suspicion of their having been consenting to Wyat's conspiracy. This Gardiner had always been a capital enemy to lady Elizabeth, and by means of Wyat's rebellion, the jesuitical bishop hoped to gather something, whereby he might accuse both that princess and lord Courtney; but the same day si [...] Thomas Wyat was executed, he desired the lieutenant of the Tower to conduct him to the presence of lord Courtney; where, before the lieutenant and the sheriffs, kneeling down he besought lord Courtney's forgiveness, for that he had falsely accused both him and the lady Elizabeth▪ and when carried from thence to the scaffold, he there, publicly, in the face of all the spectators, declared, that the lady Elizabeth and lord Courtney were entirely innocent, and had not the least knowledge of, nor the least concern in the Kentish insurrection. At which confession, Dr. Weston, standing by, had the assurance to add [...]ess the people, saying, "Believe him not, good people, for he confessed otherwise to the council."
NOT long after this, a certain apprentice, living in St. Lawrance-lane, named Cut▪ as he was drinking with Denham, a plasterer, happened to say, that sir Thomas Wyat had cleared lady Elizabeth, [Page 300] and lord Courtney, of consenting to his rising; which words being brought to, (by what means was not known) sir Andrew Judd was immediately se [...]t by the bishop to the lord mayor, commanding him to bring the said apprentice to the star-chamber, he being accused for saying, that Wyat was constrained by the council to accuse lady Elizabeth and lord Courtney. When this man was brought to the star-chamber, Gardiner, setting aside all other matters in hand, began with declaring, how miraculously almighty God had brought the queen to the crown, the whole realm being in a manner against her; which event he had brought to pass, for the singular intent and purpose, that this realm being overspread with heresies, she might reduce the same again to the true catholic faith; and as to the lady Elizabeth, having taken her into favour, she had loved her tenderly, and also the lord Courtney, who had been long detained in prison, whom she had set at liberty, bestowing great benefits upon him; yet, notwithstanding all this, they had both most unnaturally and traitorously conspired against her with that heinous traitor Wyat, as (said he) by the confession of Wyat, and the letters sent to and fro, may plainly appear: but there were some in the city of London who reported, that Wyat was constrained by the council, to accuse lady Elizabeth, and lord Courtney; and you, (said he to the Mayor) my lord, have not seen the same punished. "The party is here, returned the lord mayor." Take him with you, (said Gardiner) and punish him according to his desert; and further, my lord, take heed to your charge; the city of London is a whirlpool and sink of all evil rumours, where they be bred, and from thence spread into all parts of the realm. When he had said this, lord Shandois, lieutenant of the Tower, who stood by at the same time, in order to flatter the bishop in his tale, thus spoke; "My lords, this is a truth that I shall tell you. Being lieutenant of the Tower, when Wyat suffered, he desired me to bring him to lord Courtney; which when I had done, he fell down on his knees before him in my presence, and desired him to confess the truth of himself, which he had done before, and submit himself to the queen's majesty's mercy."
THUS much (says Mr. Fox) I thought fit to declare of the matter, to the intent, that the reader, perceiving the bishop's proceedings in the premises, and comparing the same with the testimony of the sheriffs, who were present the same time when sir Thomas Wyat asked the lord Courtney forgiveness, may better judge of the whole case and matter, for which the lady Elizabeth and the lord Courtney were so long in trouble.
QUEEN MARY after this, partly fearing the Londoners, by reason of Wyat's conspiracy, and partly perceiving most of the city, for the sake of religion, not greatly to favour her proceedings, in order to shew her displeasure, and to their hindrance, summonsed a parliament to be held at Oxford, with a view also of gratifying that city, where both the university, town, and country, had shewn themselves very obedient and forward, especially in restoring the catholic religion. For this purpose, great provision was made, as well by the queen's officers, as by the townsmen of Oxford, and the country round about. But her majesty's mind soon changed, and in April following, the same parliament was held at Westminster; where the queen, among other matters, proposed her marriage with king Philip, which was agreed upon; and likewise the pope's supremacy, which was agreed upon; and likewise the restoring of the pope's supremacy, which could not be obtained. At the same time when this parliament was summonsed, the queen likewise summonsed a convocation of the bishops and clergy, writing unto Bonner, (whom she had made vicegerent in the room of Cranmer, then in the Tower) in the following stile, different from that of Henry VIII. and Edward VI.
"MARY, by the grace of God, of England, France, and Ireland, queen, defender of the faith; to the Rev. father in God, Edmund, lord bishop of London, sendeth greeting, &c."
HERE the queen's title is altered, the latter part being omitted, namely, "Of the churches of England and Ireland, supreme," because in this session of parliament the supremacy was taken from the crown of England, and restored to the pope: and bishop Bonner giving his certificate upon the same, leaves out Autoritate, &c. "By the authority of our most illustrious queen impowered;" which part of the bishop's title, in the same parliament, [Page 301] was likewise repealed and taken away. It is also to be observed, that on opening the convocation, Bonner, bishop of London, made a certain exhortation, or oration, to the clergy then assembled, wherein he set forth the most incomparable and superangelical order of priesthood, as will appear from the following fragment, collected by some present, which is well worthy the reader's notice, both because the author of it should not be forgot, and because the estimation of the blessed order should lose nothing of its pre-eminence; an order, which, according to bishop Bonner, standeth above angels and kings.
BONNER'S ORATION, in praise of PRIESTHOOD.
WHEREFORE it is to be known, that priests and elders be worthy of all men to be worshipped for the dignity sake which they have of God, as in Matthew xvi. "Whatsoever ye shall loose upon earth, &c. and whatsoever ye shall bind," &c. For a priest by some means is like Mary the Virgin, and is shewed by three points; as the blessed Virgin by five words did conceive Christ, as it is said, Luke i. Fiat mihi secundum verbum tuum: that is to say, "Be it unto me according to thy word:" so the priest by five words doth make the body of Christ. Even as immediately after the consent of Mary, Christ was whole in her womb; so immediately after the speaking of the words of consecration, the bread is substantiated into the very body of Christ. Secondly, As the Virgin carried Christ in her arms, and laid him in an ox-stall after his birth; even so the priest, after the consecration, doth lift up the body of Christ, and placeth it, and carrieth it, and handleth it with his hands. Thirdly, As the blessed Virgin was sanctified before she had conceived; so the priest being ordained and anointed before he doth consecrate, because without orders he could consecrate nothing; therefore the lay-man cannot do that thing, although he be ever so holy, and do spenk the self-same words of consecration. Therefore here is to be known, that the dignity of priests by some means passeth the dignity of angels, because there is no power given to any of the angels to make the body of Christ. Whereby the least priest may do on earth, what the highest and greatest angel in heaven cannot do, as St. Bernard saith, "O worshipful dignity of priests, in whose hands the son of God is, as in the womb of the Virgin he was incarnate [...]" St. Augustine saith, That angels in the consecration of the sacred host do serve him, and the Lord of heaven descendeth to him. Whereupon St. Ambrose upon St. Luke saith, "Doubt thou not the angels to be where Christ is present upon the altar." Wherefore priests are to be honoured before all kings of the earth, princes, and nobles. For a priest is higher than a king, happier than an angel, maker of his Creator. Wherefore, &c.
WE have here before observed, that Dr. Ridley was removed from Fremingham to the Tower; while there, being one day invited to the lord lieutenant's table, he had a conference, or conversation, with secretary Bourne, Mr. Fecknam, (the queen's commissioners,) and others, concerning the controversies in religion; the sum whereof, as penned by Dr. Ridley himself, is as follows.
A CONVERSATION that passed in the TOWER, at the LORD LIEUTENANT'S TABLE, between Dr. RIDLEY, SECRETARY BOURNE, and Mr. FECKNAM.
MR. THOMAS BRIDGES said, at his brother's, the lord lieutenant's table, I pray you, doctors, for my information, tell me what an heretic is. Secretary Bourne said, I will tell you who is an heretic; whoso stubbornly and stiffly maintaineth an untruth he is an heretic. You mean, sir, said I, an untruth in matters of religion, and concerning our faith. Yes, that is true, said he; and in this we are soon agreed. Then said Mr. Fecknam, whom they called master dean of St. Paul's, sitting at the upper end of the table, I will tell you by St. Augustine who is an heretic; "He that either for the sake of princes, or for the sake of filthy lucre, sets on foot or propagates wrong notions, he is an heretic." Sir, said I, I think St. Augustine addeth the third number, which is, "Or for the sake of vain glory." You say even true, master doctor, said he, and thus far we did agree all three.
MR. FECKNAM began again, saying, Whoso doth not believe what the scripture affirmeth, but will obstinately maintain the contrary, he is an heretic: as in the sacrament of the altar, Matthew doth affirm there to be Christ's body, Mark doth affirm it, Luke affirmeth it, Paul affirmeth it, and none denieth [Page 302] it: therefore to hold the contrary, is heresy. It is the same body and flesh that was born of the virgin; and this is confirmed by unity, antiquity, and universality. For none before Berengarius did ever doubt of this, and he was an heretic, as master doctor there knoweth full well; I do take to witness his own conscience, said he.
IN truth, said the secretary, Mr. Fecknam hath spoken well. These are great matters unity, antiquity, and universality. Do not you think so, Dr. Ridley?
HERE, while I seemed unwilling to talk, one of the commissioners said, Peradventure Dr. Ridley doth agree with Mr. Fecknam, and in that case there needs not much debating of the matter.
SIR, said I, in some things I do, and shall agree with him; and in some things which he has spoken, to be plain, I do not agree with him at all. Masters, said I, ye are (as I understand) the queen's commissioners here, and if ye have commission to examine me in these matters, I shall declare unto you plainly my faith; if ye have not, then I shall pray you either to give me leave to speak my mind freely, or else to hold my peace.
THERE is none here, said the secretary, that doth not favour you: and then every man shewed what favour they bare towards me, and how glad they would be of an agreement.
TAKING this shew of courtesy for a licence to speak my sentiments freely, I thus proceeded:
TO Mr. Fecknam's arguments of the manifold affirmations where no denial was, I answered: Where is a multitude of affirmations in scripture, and where is one affirmation, all is one concerning the truth of the matter; for that which any one of the evangelists spake, inspired by the Holy Ghost, was as true as that which is spoken of them all. It is as true what John saith of Christ, "I am the door of the sheep," as if all had said it. For it is not in scripture as in witness of men, where the number is credited more than one, because it is uncertain with what spirit he doth speak. And where Mr. Fecknam spake of so many, affirming, without any negation, &c. Sir, said I, all they do affirm the thing which they meant. Now if ye take their words, to leave their meaning, then do they affirm what ye take, but not what they meant. If in talk with you, I should so utter my mind in words, that ye by the same do, and may plainly perceive my meaning, and could, if you would be captious, cavil at my words, and writhe them to another sense. I would think ye were no gentle companions to talk with, except ye would take my words as ye perceived I did mean.
MR. FECKNAM perceiving whereunto my discourse tended, said, What circumstances can you shew that shall move me to think of any other sense than as the words plainly say, "This is my body which shall be betrayed for you?"
SIR, said I, even the next sentence that followeth, viz. "Do this in my remembrance." And also by what reason ye say the bread is turned into Christ's carnal body, by the same I may say, that it is turned into his mystical body. For as that saith of it, "This is my body which shall be betrayed for you;" so Paul, who spake by Christ's Spirit, saith, "We being many, are all but one bread and one body, inasmuch as we are partakers of one bread.
HERE he called one bread, one loaf, said the secretary.
YES, said I, one loaf, one bread, all is one with me.
BUT what say you of the universality, antiquity, and unity, that Mr. Fecknam spoke of▪
I assure you, said I, I think them weighty matters, and to be considered well. As for unity, the truth is before God, I do believe it, and embrace it, so it be with varity, and joined to our head Christ, and such an one as St. Paul speaketh of, saying, "One faith, one God, one baptism." And for antiquity, I am also persuaded that to be true which Irenaeus saith, That which is first is true. In our religion Christ's faith was first truly taught by Christ himself, by his apostles, and by many good men, that from the beginning did succeed next unto [Page 303] them; and for this controversy of the sacrament, I am persuaded that those old writers, which wrote before the controversy, and the usurping of the see of Rome, do all agree, if they be well understood in this truth.
NOW as for universality, it may have two meanings; one to understand that to be universal, which from the beginning in all ages hath been allowed; another to understand universality for the multitude of our age, or of any other singular age.
NO, no, said Mr. Secretary, these three do always agree, and where there is one, there is all the rest: and here he and I changed many words. To be short in this matter, we did not agree.
THERE was none, said Mr. Fecknam, before [...]erengarius, Wickliffe, and Huss, and now in our days Carolostadius and O [...]colampadius. Carolostadius saith, Christ pointed to his own body, and not to the sacrament, and said, This is my body. And Melancthon writeth to one Miconius (Miconius? said I) these or the like words: "I can find no grounded reason to cause me to dissent from the belief of our fore-fathers." Sir, said I, it is certain that others before them have written of this matter, and whole books treat of it alone, as Bertram, &c.
BERTRAM? said the secretary, what man was he? and who was he? and how do you know, &c. with many more questions.
SIR, said I, I have read his book; he propoundeth the same which is now in controversy, and answereth so directly, that no man may doubt but that he affirmeth, that the substance of bread remaineth still in the sacrament, and wrote unto Carolus Magnus.
NAY, said he, but observe, he wrote to Henricus, and not to Carolus; for no author maketh any such mention of Bertram.
YES, I replied, Trithemius, in his catalogue of famous writers, speaketh of him; and though Trithemus was but of late time, yet he speaketh of them that were of antiquity. Here, after much discourse about Bertram, what authors can you mention, said Mr. Secretary, who make of the sacrament a figure?
SIR, said I, you know (I think) that Tertullian, in plain words, speaketh thus; This is my body; that is to say, a figure of my body. And Gelasius saith plainly, that the substance of bread remaineth. And Origen likewise, That which is sanctified, as touching the matter or substance, passeth away into the draught. Upon this Mr. Secretary said to me, you know very well as any man, &c. And here, if I would, I might have been set in a foolish paradise of his commendation of my learning, and a man of much reading. But this I would not take at his hand. He set me not up so high, but I brought myself as low again; and here was much ado.
AS for Melancthon (said I) whom Mr. Fecknam spake of, I marvel that ye will alledge him, for we are more nigh an agreement here in England, than the opinion of Melancthon is to you: for in this point we all agree here, that in the sacrament there is but one material substance, and Melancthon, as I think, saith there are two.
TRUE, said Mr. Secretary; Melancthon's opinion is so. But you have heard, that the sacrament was i [...] old time so reverenced, that many were then forbidden to be present at the ministration thereof: Catec [...]meni, and many more.
YES, sir, there were some called Audientes, some Poenite [...], some Catechumeni, and some Energumeni, which were commanded to depart.
NOW, then, (said he) how can you make but a figure or a sign of the sacrament, as that book doth which is set forth in my lord of Canterbury's name? I know you can tell who made it; did not you make it? and here was much murmuring of the rest, as though they would have given me the glory of the writing of that book; which yet was said of some there to contain the most heinous heresy that ever was.
MR. Secretary, said I, that book was made by a great learned man, and one who is able to do the like again: as for me I assure you (be not deceived in me) I was never able to do or write any such like [Page 304] thing; he surpasseth me no less than the learned master his young scholar.
BUT, sir, methinks it is not charitable to suppose any man doth so lightly esteem the sacrament, as to make of it only a figure; for your [but] maketh it a mere figure, without any more profit, which that book doth often deny, as appeareth to all readers plainly.
YES, said he, that they do.
SIR, I replied, of a truth they do not; as for myself, I assure you, I say, that whosoever receiveth the sacrament, receiveth therewith either life o [...] death.
THE scripture saith not so, returned Mr. Secretary.
SIR, said I, although not in the same sound of words, yet it doth in the same sense, and St. Augustine saith it in the sound of words also: for Paul saith, "The bread which we break, is it not the partaking or fellowship of the body of Christ? And St. Augustine, Eat life, drink life.
THEN said Mr. Pope, what can ye make of it when ye say, "There is not the real body of Christ, which I do believe, &c. and I pray God, I may never believe other. How can it bring (as ye say) either life or death, when Christ's body is not there."
SIR, I replied, when you hear God's word truly preached, if you do believe it, and abide in it, you shall and do receive life withal; and if you do not believe it, it doth bring unto you death: and yet Christ's body is still in heaven, and not carnal in every preacher's mouth.
TELL me, said he, how can you answer to this, "Which shall be given for you." Was the figure of Christ's body given for us?
NO, sir, but the very body itself, whereof the sacrament is a sacramental figure.
HOW say you then, said he, to, "Which shall be given for you?"
CERTAINLY, Tertullian's exposition maketh it plain, for he saith, "The body is a figure of the body." Now add, "Which shall be given for you;" and it agreeth exceeding well.
FAITH, said he, I would give forty pounds that you were of a good opinion. For I assure you, I have heard you, and had an affection to you.
I thank you, Mr. Pope, for your heart and mind, and you know I were a very fool, should I in this matter dissent from you, if that, in my conscience, the truth did not inforce me so to do. For I know, (as you do also) it is somewhat out of my way, if I would esteem worldly gain.
WHAT say you, said he, to Cyprian? Doth he not say plainly, The bread which the Lord did deliver being changed, not according to the form, but according to the nature thereof, by the omnipotent word is made flesh.
TRUE, sir, so he doth say, and I answer even the same which once by chance I preached at Paul's-Cross in a sermon, for the which I have been as unjustly and untruly reported of as any poor man hath been. For there I speaking of the sacrament, and inveighing against them that esteemed it no better than a piece of bread, told even the same thing of Poenitentes, Audientes, Catechumeni, Energumeni, that I spake of before: and I bad them depart as unworthy to hear the mystery; and then I said to those that were worthy, Cyprian the Martyr shall tell you how it is that Christ calleth it, saying, "Bread is the body, meat, drink, flesh," because unto this material substance is given the property of the thing whereof it beareth the name: and I then took occasion to utter, as the time would permit, that the material substance of bread doth remain. Mr. Fecknam (who, as is reported to me, did belye me openly in the same matter at Paul's-Cross) when he heard this, coloured as red as scarlet, and answered not a word.
YOU know well, said Mr. Secretary, that Origen and Tertullian were not catholic, but erred.
SIR, I replied, all the doctors are thought to have erred in some points; yet, I never heard, that it was [Page 305] ever laid either to Origen's charge, or to Tertullian, that ever they were thought to have erred in this matter of the sacrament.
WHAT, said Mr. Cholmley, late chief justice, doth not Christ plainly say, that it is his very flesh, and his very blood, and we must needs eat him, or else we can have no life? Sir, said I, if you will hear how St Augustine expounded that place, you shall perceive that you are mistaken. And then I began to tell St. Augustine's mind in his book of the doctrine of christianity. Yes, yes, said Mr. Secretary, that is true, St. Augustine doth it figuratively indeed.
FORTY years ago, said Mr. Fecknam, all were of one opinion in this matter.
FORTY years ago, I observed, all held that the bishop of Rome was supreme head of the universal church.
MR. SECRETARY said that was but a positive law.
A positive law! no, sir, the pope would not have it so: for it is in his decrees, that he challenged it by Christ's own word. For his decree saith, The church of Rome was advanced above all other churches in the world, not by any synodical constitutions, nor any councils, but by the lively voice of the Lord, according as the Lord said to Peter, Thou art Peter, &c. And in another place he interpreteth, Thou art Cephas, that is to say, the head.
TUSH, it was not counted an article (said Mr. Secretary) of our faith.
YES, said I, if you call that an article of our faith, which is believed under pain of damnation. For he saith, We do absolutely determine, declare, and pronounce, that every creature is subject to the obedience of the said bishop of Rome upon necessity of salvation.
AND here when we spake of laws and decrees, Mr. Roger Cholmley thought himself much wronged that he could not be suffered to speak, the rest were so ready to interrupt him▪ and then he told a long tale, what laws were by kings in England made against the bishop of Rome, and was vehement to tell how they of the clergy did always fly t [...] him. And here, because he seemed [...] speak of [...] things beside our purpose, whereof [...] speak before, he was answered of his fellows, and I let them talk.
[...] departed in peace, and Mr. Secretary [...] in the end, that of their conversation there should come to me no harm. And [...]fter I had lamented the want of my books, he said, they were all once given him: but since [...] know (said he) who hath them now, write me th [...] names of such as you would have, and I will speak for you the best I can.
UPON the articles before-mentioned, and inqu [...] sition made upon the same, divers ministers were divorced from their wives. Amongst whom was one John Draper, and Joan Gold his wife, in the diocese of London, troubled and vexed for the same by Bonner, bishop of London, who sent for a commission with a process to sequester and sepa [...]e them, enjoining also penance to the poor woman.
MANY others were also divorced the same time against their wills; and some were contented of their own accord, to be separated from their wives: as of Chichester one, (who, because he soon recovered again, shall be here nameless) another named Edmund Alstone, another Alexander Bull, amongst whom also was Dr. Standish, with many others.
March, 1554. On the 10th, a letter was sent to the lieutenant of the Tower to deliver the bodies of Dr. Cranmer the archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Ridley, and Mr. Latimer, to sir John Williams, to be conveyed by him to Oxford.
ON the 26th of the same month, a letter was directed to sir Henry Doel, and one Foster, to arrest the bodies of the Rev. Dr. Taylor, of Hadley, and of Henry Askew, and to send them up to [...]he council.
CHAP. IV. An authentic Account of a PUBLIC DISPUTATION, appointed by the QUEEN'S special Command, in a CONVOCATION held at ST. MARY'S CHURCH, in OXFORD, with the Order, Manner, Condemnation, and all other Circumstances appertaining to the said DISPUTATION.
ABOUT the tenth of April, Cranmer, archbishop of Canterbury, Ridley bishop of London, and Hugh Latimer, sometime bishop of Worchester, were conveyed as prisoners from the Tower to Windsor; and from thence to the university of Oxford, there to dispute with the divines and learned men of both the universities, Oxford and Cambridge, about the presence, substance, and sacrifice of the sacrament. The names of the university doctors, and graduates, appointed to dispute against them, were these; of Oxford, Dr. Weston, prolocutor, Dr. Tresham, Dr. Cole, Dr. Oglethrope, Dr. Pie, Mr. Harpsfield, and Mr. Fecknam. Of Cambridge, Dr. Young, vice-chancellor, Dr. Glin, Dr. Seaton, Dr. Watson, Dr. Sedgewick, Dr. Atkinson, &c. The articles or questions whereupon they should dispute were these:
1. WHETHER the natural body of Christ be really in the sacrament, after the words spoken by the priest, or not?
2. WHETHER in the sacrament, after the words of co [...]ration, any other substance do remain, than the substance of the body and blood of Christ?
3. WHETHER in the mass there be a sacrifice propitiatory for the sins of the quick and the dead?
TOUCHING the order and manner of all which things there done, with the notes, arguments, and all circumstances thereunto pertaini [...]g, to deduce the matter from the beginning, leaving out nothing (as near as we may) that shall seem necessary to be added: First, Here is to be understood, that upon Saturday the 7th day of April, the heads of the colleges in Cambridge being assembled together, letters coming down from Stephen Gardiner, lord chancellor, were read with articles therewith annexed, that should be disputed upon at Oxford: the contents of which three articles are sufficiently expressed before. Whereupon in the said congregation of the aforesaid university of Cambridge, there was granted first a grace in this form, proposed by a senior proctor; "May it please you to have an instrument made, that the doctrine of these foresaid articles is sound and catholic, and consonant with the verity of the right meaning faith, and that the same may be approved by your consent and voices?" Secondly, In the said congregation, another grace was given and granted, that Dr. Young being vice-chancellor, Dr. Glin, Dr. Atkinson, Dr. Scot, and Mr. Sedgewick, should go to Oxford to defend the said articles against Canterbury, London, and Latimer: also to have letters to the Oxford-men▪ sealed with their common seal. Item, Another grace was granted to Mr. Sedgewick to be actual doctor, being threupon immediately admitted. The foresaid letters being then drawn out, the third day after, (which was the 11th day of April) were read in the foresaid congregation-house, and there sealed.
THE day after, being the 12th of the same month, the doctors of that university, set forward to Oxford, where they arrived on the 13th of April, and lodged all at the Cross-inn, with one Wakecline, some time a servant to bishop Bonner.
SOON after their coming, Dr. Crooke presented them with wine for their welcome; and shortly after, two of their beadles came from the vice-chancellor of Oxford, and presented the vice chancellor of Cambridge with a dish of apples and a gallon of wine: after whom Mr. Pie and Fecknam came next to welcome them. Then after consultation concerning the delivery of their letters, and instrument of grace which was in Dr. Seaton and Dr▪ [Page 307] Watson's keeping) they all went to Lincoln college to Dr. Weston the prolocutor, and to Dr. Tresham the vice-chancellor, to whom they delivered their letters, declaring what they had done touching the articles, letters, and graces. Half an hour after eight they returned to their inn again; but first concluded on a procession, sermon, and convocation, on the day following, and that the doctors of Cambridge should be incorporated with the university of Oxford, and that the doctors of Oxford should be incorporated with the university of Cambridge. The same day, the three prisoners were separated, Dr. Ridley to the house of Mr. Irish, Mr. Latimer to another, and Dr. Cranmer remained still in Bocardo, a prison in Oxford.
ON Saturday, April 14th, at eight o'clock, the vice-chancellor of Cambridge, with the other doc [...]or of the same university, repairing to Lincoln college again, found the prolocutor above in the chapel, with a company of the house singing mass for the dead, and tarried the [...]e until the end. Then having consulted together in the masters room, about nine they all came to the university church, called St. Mary's, where, after a short consultation in a chapel, the vice-chancellor, the prolocutor, &c. of Oxford, caused the vice-chancellor of Cambridge, and the rest of the doctors of that university, to send their [...] robes brought from Cambridge, save that Dr. Seaton and Watson borrowed of the Oxford men. By this time the regents, in the congregation-house, had granted all the Cambridge doctors their graces, to be incorporate there; and so they went up and were immediately admitted, Dr. Ogleth [...]pe presenting them, and the proctor reading the statute, and giving them their oaths.
THAT done, they all came into the quire, and there held the convocation of the university▪ they had mass of the Holy Ghost solemnly sung before them by the quire-men of Christ's church: but first the cause of the convocation was opened in English, partly by the vice-chancello [...] ▪ and partly by the prolocutor, declaring that they were sent by the queen, and wherefore they were sent, and caused Mr. Say the register openly to read the commission. That done, the vice-chancellor read the Cambridge letters openly, and then concluded, that three notaries, Mr. Sey for the convocation, a beadle of Cambridge for that university, and one Mr. White for Oxford, should testify of their doing, and then ordered the said notaries to provide parchment, that the whole assembly might subscribe to the articles, except those that had subscribed before in the convocation house at London and Cambridge; and so the vice-chancellor began first, the rest of the Oxford men after him, as many as could in the mass time.
MASS being done, they went in procession: first, the quire in their surplices followed the cross; then the first-year regents and proctors: then the doctors of law, and their beadles before them; then the doctors of divinity of both universities intermingled, the divinity and arts-beadles going before them; the vice-chancellor and prolocutor going together. After them batchelors of divinity, regents and non-regents, in the [...] array; and last of all, the batchelors of law and art; after whom followed a great company of scholars and students not graduate: and thus they proceeded through the street to Christ's-church, and there the quire sung a psalm, and after that a collect was read. This done, the commissioners, doctors, and many others, went to Lincoln college, where they dined with the mayor of the town, one alderman, four beadles, Mr. Sey, and the Cambridge notary. After dinner they all went again to St. Mary's church; and there, after a short consultation in a chapel, all the commissioners came into the quire, and sat on seats before the altar, to the number of thirty-three persons: and first they sent to the mayor, that he should bring in Dr. Cranmer, who within a while was brought to them with a number of trusty bill-men.
THE reverend archbishop, when he was brought before the commissioners, paid his respects to them with much humility, and stood with his staff in his hand, who, notwithstanding having a stool offered him, refused to sit. Then the prolocutor sitting in the midst in a scarlet gown, began with a short preface or oration in praise of unity, and especially in the church of Christ; declaring withal, Dr. Cranmer's bringing up, and taking degrees in Cambridge, and also how he was promoted by king Henry, and had been his counsellor and a catholic [Page 308] man, one of the same unity, and a member thereof in times past, but of late years did separate and cut off himself from it, by teaching and setting forth erroneous doctrine; making every year a new faith: and therefo [...] it pleased the queen's grace, to send them of the convocation and other learned men, to bring him to this unity again, if it might be. Then he shewed him how they of the convocation-house had agreed upon certain articles, whereunto they desired him to subscribe.
TO this preface the archbishop answered very wittily, modestly, and learnedly, shewing that he was very glad of an unity, forasmuch as it was the preserver of all common-wealths, as well of the heathen, as of the christians; and so he humoured the matter with one or two stories of the Romans' common-wealth. Which when he had done, he said, that he was very glad to come to an unity, so that it were in Christ, and agreeable to his holy word.
HAVING thus spoken his full mind, the prolocutor caused the articles to be read to him, and asked if he would grant and subscribe to them. Then the archbishop of Canterbury read them over three or four times, and touching the first article, he asked what they meant by these terms, "true and natural?" Do you not mean, said he, a sensible body? Some answered, The same that was born of the virgin: some said one thing, some another. Then the archbishop of Canterbury denied it utterly; and when he had looked upon the other two, he said they were all false, and against God's holy word: and therefore he would not agree, he said, in that unity with them. Which done, the prolocutor first willing him to write his mind of them that night, said moreover that he should dispute on them, and caused a copy of the articles to be delivered him, assigning him to answer thereunto on Monday next, and so charged the mayor with him again, to be had to Bocardo, where he was kept before; offering moreover unto him, to name what books he would occupy, and he should have them brought to him. The archbishop was greatly commend [...]d of every body for his modesty: insomuch that some masters of arts were seen to weep for him, which in judgment were contrary to him.
THEN was Dr. Ridley brought in, who hearing the articles read to him, immediately replied, they were all false, and said further, that they sprang out of a bitter and sour root. His answers were sharp, witty, and very earnest. Then they laid to his charge a sermon that he made when he was bishop of Rochester, wherein (they said) he spake for transubstantiation. He denied it utterly, and asked whether they could bring out any that heard him, which would say and affirm the same with them. They could bring no proof of it all▪ After that, he was asked of one, whether he desired not my lord chancellor that now is, to stick to the mass, and other things? He said, that my lord would say no such things or words of him; for if he did, he reported not the truth of him.
THEN he was asked, whether he would dispute or no? He answered, "That as long as God gave him life, he should not only have his heart, but also his mouth and pen to defend his truth; but he required time and books." They said he could not, and that he should dispute on Thursday, and till that time he should have books. He said it was unreasonable that he might not have his own books, and time also. Then they gave him the articles, and desired him to write his mind of them that night; after which, they commanded the mayor to have him from whence he came.
LAST of all came in Mr. Latimer, with a handkerchief, and two or three caps on his head, his spectacles hanging by a string at his breast, and a staff in his hand, and was set in a chair; for so was he suffered by the prolocutor. After his denial of the articles, when he had appointed Wednesday for disputation, he alledged age, sickness, disuse, and lack of books, saying, "That he was almost as meet to dispute, as to be a captain of Calic [...]: but he would, he said, declare his mind either by writing or word, and would stand to all they could lay upon his back;" complaining moreover, "That he was permitted to have neither pen nor ink, nor yet any book but only the New-Testament there in his hand, which he said he had read over seven times deliberately, and yet could not find the mass in it, neither the marrow-bones nor sinews of the same." At which words the commissioners were not a little offended, and Dr. Weston said, "That [Page 309] he would make him grant, that it had both marrow-bones and sinews in the New Testament." To whom Mr. Latimer said again, "That you will never do, Mr. Doctor;" and so forthwith they put him to silence: so that when he was desirous to tell what he meant by those terms, he could not be suffered. There was so great a press and throng of people, that one of the beadles swooned by reason thereof, and was carried into the vestry. After this, bringing home the prolocutor first, the Cambridge men, viz. Dr. Young, vice-chancellor, Seaton, Glin, Atkinson, Scot, Watson, and Sedgewick, went to the Cross inn to supper. And this was on Saturday the 14th of April.
AT nine o'clock, on Sunday morning, Mr. Harpsfield preached at St. Mary's, the university church, where divers of the doctors, in their robes, were placed in due order of precedency. After sermon, they all dined at Magdalen college, and supped at Lincoln college, with the prolocutor Dr. Weston; whither Dr. Cranmer sent his answer upon the articles, in writing.
ON Monday, being the 16th of April, Mr. Say, and Mr. White, notaries, went about in the morning to get subscriptions to the articles. And at eight, the prolocutor, with all the doctors and the vice-chancellor, met together at Exeter college, from whence they proceeded to the divinity school, the place for disputation; and when the vice-chancellor, the prolocutor and doctors were placed, and four appointed to minute down the arguments, set at a table in the midst, four notaries also sitting with them, Dr. Cranmer came to the answerer's place, the mayor and aldermen sitting by him, and the disputation began with a short Pr [...]cludium, or introductory harangue from the prolocutor. This being ended. Dr. Chedsey began first to argue, but was interrupted frequently by the prolocutor and others▪ in short, every man said somewhat, as the prolocutor would suffer, disorderly, sometimes in Latin, sometimes in English, so that three hours were spent before Dr. Young, the vice-chancellor of Cambridge, began, who also was frequently interrupted. Thus the disputation continued until almost two o'clock, with this applause from the audience▪ [...] veritas "Truth hath overcome." Then were all the arguments written by the four appointed, delivered into the hands of Mr. Say, register. As for the prisoner, he was had away by the mayor, and the doctors dined together at the university college.
THUS much concerning the general order and manner of these disputations, with such circumstances as there happened, and things there done, as well before the disputation, and in the preparation thereof, as also in the time of their disputing. Now followeth an account of the orations, arguments, and answers, used and brought forth in the said disputation, on both sides
The ARGUMENTS, REASONS, and ALLEGATIONS, used in this DISPUTATION.
ON Monday, Dr. Weston, with all the residue of the visitors, censors, and opponents, repairing to the divinity school, each one installed themselves in their places. Dr. Cranmer with a rout of rusty bills was brought thither, and set in the answerer's place, with the mayor and aldermen sitting by him: where Dr. Weston, prolocutor, apparelled in a scarlet gown, after the custom of the university, began the disputation with this oration:
"YOU are assembled hither, brethren, this day to confound the detestable heresy of the verity of the body of Christ in the sacrament," &c. At which words thus pronounced, unawares, by the prolocutor, several of the learned men there present considering, and well weighing, the words b [...] him uttered, burst out into a great laughter, as though, even in the entrance of the disputation, he had betrayed himself and his religion, by terming the opinion of the verity of Christ's body in the sacrament a detestable heresy. The rest of his oration tended to this effect, "That it was not lawful, by God's word, to [...]all these questions into controversy; for such as doubted of the words of Christ, might well be thought to doubt both of the truth and power of God." Whereunto Dr. Cranmer, desiring leave, thus answered;
"We are assembled (said he) to discuss these doubtful controversies, and to lay them open before the eyes of the world; whereof ye think it unlawful [Page 310] to dispute. It is indeed no reason that we should dispute of that which is determined upon before the truth be tried. But if these questions be not called into controversy, surely my answer then is looked for in vain." This was the sum of his answer; and this done, he prepared himself for disputation.
THEN Chedsey the first opponent began in this manner.
REV. Mr. Doctor, these three conclusions are put forth unto us at present to dispute upon;
1. IN the sacrament of the altar, is the natural body of Christ, conceived of the virgin Mary, and also his blood, present really under the forms of bread and wine, by virtue of God's word pronounced by the priest.
2. THERE remaineth no substance of bread and wine after the consecration, nor of any other substance, but the substance of God and man.
3. THE lively sacrifice of the church is in the mass propitiatory, as well for the quick as the dead.
THESE are the arguments whereupon this our present controversy doth rest. Now to the end we might not doubt how you take the same, you have already given unto us your opinion thereof. I term it your opinion, in that it disagreeth from the catholic. Wherefore thus I argue.
Your opinion differeth from scripture.
ERGO, You are deceived.
I deny the antecedent.
Christ, when he instituted his last supper, spake to his disciples, "Take, eat, this is my body which shall be given for you."
BUT this true body was given for us:
ERGO, His true body is in the sacrament.
THE right form of this argument is thus to be framed.
THE same which was given for us in the sacrament.
BUT his true body was given for us:
ERGO, His true body is in the sacrament.
His true body is truly present to them that truly receive him; but spiritually. And so it is taken in a spiritual sense. For when he said, "This is my body," it is all one as if he had said, "This is the breaking of my body, this is the shedding of my blood." As often as you shall do this, it shall put you in remembrance of the breaking of my body, and the shedding of my blood; that as truly as you receive this sacrament, so truly shall you receive the benefit promised by receiving the same worthily.
Your opinion differeth from the church, which saith that the true body is in the sacrament.
ERGO, Your opinion therein is false.
I say and agree with the church, that the body of Christ is in the sacrament effectually, because the passion of Christ is effectual.
Christ, when he spake these words, "This is my body," spake of the substance, but not of the effect.
I grant that he spake of the substance, and not of the effect after a sort: and yet it is most true that the body of Christ is effectually in the sacrament. But I deny that he is there truly present in bread, or that under the bread is his original body. And because it would be too tedious (he said) to make discourse of the whole, he delivered up there his opinion thereof to Dr. Weston, written at large, with answers to every one of their three propositions; which he desired Dr. Weston, sitting there on high, to read openly to the people; this he promised to do; but it is not the first promise that such papists have broken. But though the copy of this writing was not read by the prolocutor, we have drawn out the contents thereof, which are as follow:
Dr. CRANMER'S EXPLICATION of the foregoing CONCLUSIONS, exhibited by him.
IN the assertions of the church and of religion, trifling and new-fangled novelties of words, so much as may be, are to be eschewed, whereof ariseth nothing but contention and brawling about words; and we must follow, so much as we may, the manner of speaking of the scripture.
IN the first conclusion, if ye understand by this word [really] re ipsa ▪ that is, in very deed and effectually; so Christ, by the grace and efficacy of his passion, is indeed and truly present to all true and holy members.
BUT if ye understand by this word [really] corporaliter, that is, corporally; so that by the body of Christ is understood a natural and organical substance, the first proposition doth vary, not only from the usual phrase of scripture, but also is clean contrary to the holy word of God, and christian profession: since both the scripture doth testify by these words, and also the catholic church hath professed from the beginning, that Christ has left the world, and sits at the right hand of the Father till he come to judgment.
AND likewise I answer to the second question; that is; That it swerveth from the accustomed manner and speech of scripture.
THE third conclusion, as it is intricate and wrapped in all doubtful and ambiguous words, and differing also much from the true speech of the scripture, so as the words thereof seem to import no open sense, is most contumelious against our only Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus, and a violating of his precious blood, which, upon the altar of the cross, is the only sacrifice and oblation for the sins of all mankind.
By this your interpretation which you have made upon the first conclusion, this I understand, the body of Christ to be in the sacrament only by way of participation: insomuch as we communicating thereof, do participate the grace of Christ; so that you mean hereby only the effect thereof. But our conclusion standeth upon the substance, and not the efficacy only, which shall appear by the testimony both of scripture, and of all the fathers a thousand years after Christ.
AND first to begin with the scripture, let us consider what is written in Matt. xxvi. Mark xiv. Luke xxii. and 1 Cor. xi. Matthew saith, As they sat at supper, Jesus took bread, &c. In Mark there is the same sense, although not the same words, who also for one part of the sacrament speaketh more plainly, Jesus taking bread, &c. After the same sense also writeth Luke: And when Jesus had taken bread, &c. In the mouth of two or three witnesses, saith the scripture, standeth all truth. Here we have three witnesses together, that Christ said, that to be his body which was given for many, and that to be his blood which should be shed for many; whereby is declared the substance, and not only the efficacy alone thereof. Ergo, It is not true that you say, there to be not the substance of his body, but the efficacy alone thereof.
Thus you gather upon mine answer, as though I did mean of the efficacy, and not of the substance of the body; but I mean of them both, as well of the efficacy as of the substance. And forasmuch as all things come not readily to memory, to a man that shall speak extempore, therefore for the more ample and fuller answer in this matter, this writing here I do exhibit.
Archbishop CRANMER's EXPLICATION delivered by him to the PROLOCUTOR in writing.
OUR Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, at the time of his Maunday, preparing himself to die for our cause, that he might redeem us from eternal death, to forgive us all our sins, and to cancel out the hand-writing that was against us; that we through ungrateful oblivion should not forget his death, therefore, at the time of his holy supper did institute a perpetual memory of this his death, to be celebrated among christians in bread and wine, according as it is said, "Do this in remembrance of me. And so often as ye eat this bread and drink this cup, you shall shew forth the Lord's death till he come." And this remembrance or sacrament of his holy passion, that is of his body slain, and blood shed, he would all christians to frequent [Page 312] and celebrate in bread and wine, according as he said, "Take, eat, and drink ye all of this." Therefore whosoever for man's tradition denieth the cup of Christ's blood to laymen, they manifestly militate against Christ, forbidding that which Christ commandeth to be done, and are like those scribes and pharisees of whom the Lord spake; "Ye hypocrites, ye have rejected the commandments of God for your traditions. Well did Esaias prophesy of you, saying, This people honoureth me with their lips, but their heart is far from me. Without cause do they worship me, teaching the doctrines and precepts of men." The sacrament and mystical bread being broken and distributed after the institution of Christ, and the mystical wine being likewise taken and received, are not only sacraments of the flesh of Christ wounded for us, and of his blood-shedding, but also most certain sacraments for us, and (as a man would say) seals of God's promises and gifts, and also of that holy fellowship which we have with Christ and all his members. Moreover they are to us memorials of that heavenly food and nourishment, wherewith we are nourished unto eternal life, and the thirst of our burning conscience quenched, and finally, whereby the hearts of the faithful are replenished with unspeakable joy, and corroborated and strengthened unto all works of godliness. "We many are (saith St. Paul) one bread, and one body, all we which do participate of one bread, and one cup." And Christ saith, "Eat ye, this is my body." And, "Drink ye, this is my blood." And, "I am the living bread which came down from heaven. He that eateth me, shall also live for ever. Not as your fathers did eat manna in the desart, and are dead: he that eateth me, shall also live for ever."
THUS therefore true bread and true wine remain still in the eucharist, until they be consumed of the faithful, to be signs, and as seals unto us annexed unto God's promises, making us certain of God's gifts towards us. Also Christ remaineth in them, and they in Christ, which eat his flesh, and drink his blood, as Christ himself hath promised: "They that eat my flesh, and drink my blood, abide in me, and I in them." Moreover, he abideth also in them which worthily receive the outward sacrament, neither doth he depart so soon as the sacrament is consumed, but continually abideth, feeding and nourishing us so long as we remain bodies of that head, and members of the same. I acknowledge not here the natural body of Christ, which is only spiritual, unintelligible, and insensible, having no distinction of members and parts in it: but that body only I acknowledge and worship, which was born of the virgin, which suffered for us, which is visible, palpable, and hath all the form, and shape, and parts of the true natural body of man. Christ spake not these words of any uncertain substance, but of the certain substance of bread, which he then held in his hands, and shewed his disciples when he said, "Eat ye, this is my body:" and likewise of the cup, when he said, "Drink ye, this is my blood:" meaning verily of that bread which by nature is usual and common with us, which is taken out of the fruit of the ground, compacted by the unity of many grains together, made by man, and by man's hand brought to that visible shape, being of round compass, and without all sense or life, which nourisheth the body, and strengtheneth the heart of man: of this same bread (I say) and not of any uncertain and wandering substance, the old fathers say that Christ spake these words, "Eat ye, this is my body." And likewise also of the wine, which is the creature and fruit of the vine pressed out of many clusters of grapes, and maketh man's heart merry, of the very same wine (I say) Christ spake, "Drink ye, this is my blood." And so the old doctors do call this speaking of Christ, tropical, figurative, anagogical, allegorical, which they do interpret after this sort, that although the substance of bread and wine do remain, and be received of the faithful, yet notwithstanding Christ changed the appellation thereof, and called the bread by the name of his flesh, and the wine by the name of his blood, not that it is so in very deed, but signified in a mystery. So that we should consider, not what they are in their own nature, but what they import to us and signify, and should understand the sacrament not carnally, but spiritually, and should attend not to the visible nature of the sacraments, neither have respect only to the outward bread and cup, thinking to see there with our eyes no other things [...] only bread and wine; but that lifting up our minds we should look up to the blood of Christ with our faith, should touch him with our mind, and receive him with our inward man, and that being like eagles in this life, we should fly up into heaven in our hearts, [Page 313] where that Lamb is resident at the right hand of his Father, which taketh away the sins of the world, by whose stripes we are made whole, by whose passion we are filled at his table, and whose blood we are receiving out of his holy side, do live for ever, being made the guests of Christ, having him dwelling in us through the grace of his true nature, and through the virtue and efficacy of his whole passion, being no less assured and certified, that we are fed spiritually unto eternal life by Christ's flesh crucified, and by his bloodshed, the true food of our minds, than that our bodies are fed with meat and drink in this life: and hereof this said mystical bread on the table of Christ, and the mystical wine, being administered and received after the institution of Christ, are to us a memorial, a pledge, a token, a sacrament, and a seal.
AND therefore it is that Christ saith not thus: This is my body, eat ye: but after he had bidden them eat, then he said, This is my body, which shall be given for you. Which is to be understood as though he had said, In eating of this bread, consider you that this bread is no common thing, but a mystical matter; neither do you attend to that which is set before your bodily eyes, but what feedeth you within: consider and behold my body crucified for you, that eat and digest in your minds, chew you upon my passion, be fed with my death, this is the true meat, this is the drink that moisteneth, wherewith you being truly fed, and replenished, shall live for ever. The bread and wine when set before your eyes are only declarations of me, but I myself am the eternal food. Wherefore whensoever at this my table you shall behold the sacraments, have not regard so much to them, as consider ye what I promise to you by them, which is myself to be meat for you of eternal life.
THE only oblation of Christ (wherewith he offered himself to God the Father once to death, upon the altar of the cross, for our redemption) was of such efficacy, that there is no more need of any sacrifice for the redemption of the whole world, but all the sacrifices of the old law he took away, performing that in very deed, which they did signify and promise. Whosoever therefore shall fix the hope of his salvation in any other sacrifice, he falleth from the grace of Christ, and is contumelious against the blood of Christ. For "He was wounded for our transgressions, and was broken for our iniquities. All we like sheep have wandered astray. Every man hath turned after his own way, and the Lord hath laid all our iniquities upon him. For he hath entered once for all into the holy place by the blood, not of goats or calves, but by his own blood, finding eternal redemption: And hath entered into heaven, to appear now in the sight of God for us, not to offer himself often-times (for so should he have suffered many times), but now hath he appeared once to put away sin, through his own oblation. And as it is appointed to all men once to die, so also Christ once was offered: who offering up one oblation for sins, sitteth now for ever on the right hand of God. For by one oblation hath he made perfect for ever those that are sanctified. For where is remission of sins, there is now no oblation for sin," but this only sacrifice of Christ; whosoever shall seek any other sacrifice propitiatory for sin, maketh the sacrifice of Christ of no validity, force, or efficacy. For if it be sufficient to remit sins, what need is there of any other? For the necessity of another argueth and declareth this to be insufficient. Almighty God grant that we may truly lean to the one sacrifice of Christ, and that we to him again may repay our sacrifices of thanksgivings, of praise, of confessing his name, of true amendment, of repentance, or mercifulness towards our neighbours, and of all other good works of charity. For by such sacrifices we shall declare ourselves neither ungrateful to God, nor altogether unworthy of his holy sacrifice of Christ. And thus you have out of the testimonies of holy scripture, and of the ancient doctors of the church, the true and sincere use of the Lord's holy supper, and the fruit of the true sacrifice of Christ. Which whosoever through captious or wrested interpretations, or by men's traditions, shall go about, otherwise than Christ ordained them, to alter or transubstantiate, he shall answer to Christ in the latter day, when he shall understand (but then too late) that he hath no participation with the body and blood of Christ, but that out of the supper of eternal life he hath eaten and drunken eternal damnation to himself.
Because we will not consume and spend the time in waste, this your writing which you exhibit, hereafter shall be read in this place. [Page 314] In the mean season let us now fall to the arguments.
The scriptures in many places do affirm, that Christ gave his natural body, Matth xxvi. Mark xiv. Luke xxii.
ERGO, I do conclude that the natural body is in the sacrament.
TO your argument I answer: If you understand by the body natural [ organicum], that is, having such proportion and members as he had living here, then I answer negatively.
FURTHERMORE, concerning the evangelists, this I say and grant, that Christ took bread, and called it his body.
The text of scripture maketh against you, for the circumstances thereunto annexed doth teach us, not only there to be the body, but also teacheth us what manner of body it is, and saith, The same body which shall be given.
THAT thing is here contained, that is given for us.
BUT the substance of bread is not given for us.
ERGO, The substance of bread is not here contained.
I understand not yet what you mean by this word [contained]. If you mean really, then I deny your major.
The major is the text of scripture. He that denieth the major, denieth the scripture. For the scripture saith, This is my body which is given for you.
I grant he said it was his body which should be given, but he said it was not his body which is here contained; but the body (saith he) that shall be given for you. As though he should say, This bread is the breaking of my body, and this cup is the shedding of my blood. What will [...] say the [...]? [...] the bread the breaking of his body, and the cup the shedding of his blood really? If you say so, I deny it.
If you ask what is the thing therein contained; because his apostles should not doubt what body it was that should be given, he saith, This is my body which shall be given for you, and my blood which shall be shed for many. ERGO, Here is the same substance of the body, which the day after was given, and the same blood which was shed. And here I urge the scripture, which teacheth that it was no phantastical, no feigned, no spiritual body, nor body in faith, but the substance of the body.
You must prove that it is contained, but Christ said not which is contained. He gave bread, and called that his body. I stick not in the words of scripture, but in your word, which is feigned and imagined by yourself.
When Christ took bread and brake it, what gave he?
He gave bread; the bread sacramentally, and his body spiritually; and the bread there he called his body,
This answer is against the scripture, which saith, that he gave his body.
It did signify that which he did eat.
They did not eat the body as the Capernaites did understand it, but the self-same body which was given for the sins of the world. Ergo, It was his body which should be given, and his blood which should be shed.
IN some other copies (says Mr. Fox) I Find this argument to be made by Chedsey.
THE same body is in the sacrament, which was given for us on the cross.
BUT bread was not given for us on the cross.
ERGO (therefore) bread is not given in the sacrament.
I deny the major, which is, that the same natural body is given in the sacrament, which was given on the cross, except you understand it spiritually. And after he denied also the argument as utterly void, as he might well do, the major in the second figure being not universal.
WHEN Mr. Chedsey had put forth his argument, and prosecuted the same, and Dr. Cranmer answered as before is shewed, Dr. Oglethorpe, one of those doctors which the prolocutor called Censores (who sat as arbiters to order the disputation) said on this wise.
You come in still with one evasion or starting hole to flee to. He urgeth the scriptures, saying that Christ gave his very body. You say, that he gave his body in bread. Quomodo praedicatur corpus? qualis est corpus? qualis est praedicatio? panis est corpus.
You should say, Quale corpus. I answer to the question: it is the same body which was born of the virgin, was crucified, ascended; but tropically, and by a figure. And so I say, Panis est corpus, is a figurative speech, speaking sacramentally, for it is a sacrament of his body.
This word [body] being praedicatum, doth signify substance.
BUT substantia is not predicated denominatively.
ERGO, It is an essential predication, and so it is his true body, and not the figure of his body.
Substania may be predicated denominatively in an allegory, or in a metaphor, or in a figurative locution.
It is not a likely thing that Christ hath less care for his spouse the church, than a wise housholder hath for his family in making his will or testament.
Your reason is drawn out of affairs of men, and not taken out of the holy scriptures.
But no housholder maketh his testament after that sort,
Yes, there are many that so do. For what matter is it so it be understood and perceived? I say, Christ did use figurative speech in no place more than in his sacraments, and specially in this of his supper.
No man of purpose doth use tropes in his testament, for if he do, he deceiveth them that he comprehendeth in his testament: therefore Christ useth none here.
YES, he may use them well enough. You know not what tropes are.
The good man of the house hath respect that his heirs, after his departure, may live in quiet and without wrangling.
BUT they cannot be in quiet if he do use tropes.
THEREFORE (I say) he useth no tropes.
I deny your minor.
Augustine, in his book intitled. De Unitate Ecclesiae, chap. x. hath these words following:
"WHAT a thing is this, I pray you, when the last words of one lying upon his death-bed are heard who is ready to go to his grave, no man saith that he hath made a lye, and he is not accounted his heir which regardeth not those words. How shall we then escape God's wrath, if either not believing, or not regarding, we shall reject the last words both of the only Son of God, and also of our Lord and Saviour, both ascending into heaven, and beholding from thence, who despiseth, who observeth them not, and so shall come from thence to judge all men."
The argument is thus formed.
WHOSOEVER saith that the testator lyeth, is a wicked heir.
BUT whosoever saith that Christ spake by figures, saith that he did lye.
ERGO, Whosoever saith that Christ here spake by figures, is a wicked heir.
I deny the minor. As who say it is necessary, that he which useth to speak by tropes and figures should lye in so doing.
Your judgment is disagreeing with all [...]hurches.
Nay, I disagree with the papistical church.
This you do through the ignorance of logic.
Nay, this you say through the ignorance of the doctors.
I will go plainly to work by scriptures. What took he?
Bread.
What gave he?
Bread.
What brake he?
Bread.
What did he eat?
Bread.
He gave bread, therefore he gave not his body.
He gave not his body, therefore it is not his body verily, and in deed, and in truth.
I deny the argument.
This argument holdeth, a disparatis. It is bread: Ergo, It is not the body. And it is such an argument or reason, as cannot be dissolved.
The like argument may be made: He is a rock: Ergo, He is not Christ.
It is not alike.
He gave not his body indeed: Ergo, It was not his body indeed.
He gave his death, his passion, and the sacrament of his passion. And in very deed, settting the figure aside, formally it is not his body.
Why, then, the scripture is false.
Nay, the scripture is most true.
This saith Chrysostom, Homil. 61, ad pop. Antioch. "Needful it is, dear friends, to tell you what the miracle of the mysteries is, and wherefore it is given, and what profit there is of the thing. We are one body, and members of his flesh and of his bones. We that be in the mystery, let us follow the thing which was spoken. Wherefore that we may become this thing, not only by love, but also that we may become one with that flesh indeed, that is brought to pass by this food, which he gave unto us, minding to shew his great good will that he hath towards us: and therefore he mixed himself with us, and united his own body with us, that we should be made all as one thing together, as a body joined and annexed to the head, for this is a token of most ardent and perfect love. And the same thing Job also insinuating, said of his servants, of whom he was desired above measure, insomuch that they, shewing their great desire towards him, said, Who shall give unto us to be filled with his flesh. Therefore also Christ did the same, who, to induce us into a greater love towards him, and to declare his desire towards us, did not only give himself to be seen of them, but also to be handled, and eaten. Parents many times give their children to others to be fed; but I do not so, saith Christ, but feed you with my own flesh, and set myself before you. I am become your brother; I took flesh and blood for you. Again, my flesh and blood, by the which I am made your kinsman, I deliver unto you.
OUT of which words of St. Chrysostom I make▪ said Weston, this argument.
(1) THE same flesh whereby Christ is made our brother and kinsman, is given of Christ to us to be eaten.
(2) CHRIST is made our brother and kinsman, by his true, natural, and organical flesh.
[Page 317](3) THEREFORE, this true, natural, and organical flesh is given to us to be eaten.
I grant the consequence and the consequent.
THEREFORE we eat it with our mouth.
I deny it, we eat it through faith.
HE gave us the same flesh to eat, whereby he became our brother and kinsman.
BUT he became our brother and kinsman, by his true, natural, and organical flesh
THEREFORE, he gave his true, natural, and organical flesh to be eaten.
I grant he took and gave the same true, natural, and original flesh wherein he suffered, and yet he feedeth us spiritually, and that flesh is received spiritually.
He gave us the same flesh which he took of the virgin.
BUT he took not the true flesh of the virgin spiritually, or in a figure.
THEREFORE, he gave his true natural flesh, not spiritually.
Christ gave to us his own natural flesh, the same wherein he suffered, but feedeth us spiritually.
Chrysostom is against you, who saith, "Let it come into thy remembrance with what honour thou art honoured, at what table thou fittest at: for with the same thing we are nourished, which the angels do behold and tremble at: neither are they able to behold it without great fear, for the brightness which cometh thereof: and we are brought and compact into one heap or mass with him, being together one body of Christ, and one flesh with him. Who shall speak the powers of the Lord, and shall declare forth all his praises? What pastor hath ever nourished his sheep with his own members? Many mothers have put forth their infants after their birth to other nurses: which he would not do, but feedeth us with his own body, and conjoineth and uniteth us to himself."
Whereupon I gather this argument.
LIKE as mothers nurse their children with milk, so Christ nourisheth us with his body.
BUT mothers do not nourish their infants spiritually with their milk:
THEREFORE, Christ doth not nourish those that be his spiritually with his blood.
He gave us the wine for his blood.
If he gave the wine for his blood, as you say, then he gave less than mothers do give.
BUT Chrysostom affirmeth, that he gave more than mothers give.
THEREFORE he gave not the wine for his blood.
You prevent mine answer. He gave wine, yet the blood is considered therein. As for example: when he giveth baptism, we consider not the water, but the Holy Ghost, and remission of sins. We receive with the mouth of the sacrament; but the thing and the matter of the sacrament we receive by faith.
When Christ said, Eat ye, whether meant he by the mouth or by faith?
He meant that we should receive the body by faith, the bread by the mouth.
Nay, the body by the mouth.
That I deny.
I prove it out of Chrysostom, writing upon the 50th psalm.
"SHE that is a mother, shameth sometime to play the nurse. But Christ our nurse doth not so play with us. Therefore instead of meat he feedeth us with his own flesh, and instead of drink he feedeth [Page 318] us with his own blood." Likewise upon the xxvi. chap. of Matthew, the [...]3d Homily, he saith, "For it shall not be enough for him to become man, and in the mean time to be whipped; but he doth bring us into one mass or lump with himself (as I may so call it), and maketh us his body, not by faith alone, but also in very deed."
I grant we make one nature with Christ. But that to be done with the mouth I deny.
Chrysostom, 2 Cor. chap. xiii. Hom. 29. hath these words, "No little honour is given to our mouth, receiving the body of the Lord."
This I say, that Christ entereth into us both by our ears and our eyes. With our mouth we receive the body of Christ, and tear it with our teeth, that is to say, the sacrament of the body of Christ. Wherefore I say and affirm, that the virtue of the sacrament is much: and therefore Chrysostom many times speaketh of sacraments no otherwise, than of Christ himself, as I could prove if I might have liberty to speak, by many places of Chrysostom, where he speaketh of the sacrament of the body of Christ.
WITH which word of the sacrament of the body, &c. Dr. Cole being highly offended, denied it to be the sacrament of the body of Christ, save only of the mystical body which is the church.
And why should we doubt to call it the sacrament of the body of Christ, offered upon the cross, seeing both Christ and the ancient fathers do so call it?
How gather you that of Chrysostom?
Chrysostom declareth himself, "O miracle, O the good will of God towards us, which sitteth above at the right hand of the Father, and is holden in men's hands at the time of sacrifice, and is given to feed upon, to them that are desirous of him! And that is brought to pass by no subtility or craft, but with the open and beholding eyes of all the standers-by."
THUS you hear Christ is seen here on earth every day, is touched, is torn with the teeth, that our tongue is red with his blood; which no man having any judgment will say or think to be spoken without trope or figure.
What miracle is it if it be not his body, and if he speak only of the sacrament, as though it were his body?
BUT hearken what Chrysostom saith, "I shew forth that thing on earth unto thee, which is worthy the greatest honour. For like as in the palace of kings, neither the walls, nor the sumptuous bed, but the body of kings sitting under the cloth of estate, and royal seat of majesty, is of all things else the most excellent: so is in like manner the King's body in heaven, which is now set before us on earth. I shew thee neither angels nor archangels, nor the heaven of heavens, but the very Lord and Master of all these things. Thou perceivest after what sort thou dost not only behold, but touchest, and not only touchest, but eatest that which on the earth is the greatest and chiefest thing of all other, and when thou hast received the same, thou goest home; wherefore cleanse thy soul from all uncleanness."
UPON this I conclude, that the body of Christ is shewed us upon the earth.
What? upon the earth? He is seen here with the eyes of our mind only, with faith and spirit.
What is it that seemeth worthy of the highest honour on earth? The sacrament, or the body of Christ?
Chrysostom speaketh of the sacrament, and the body of Christ is shewed forth in the sacrament.
Therefore, the sacrament is worthy greatest honour.
I deny your argument.
That thing is shewed forth, and is now on the earth, which is worthy highest honour.
[Page 319]BUT only the body of Christ is worthy highest honour.
THEREFORE, the body of Christ is now on earth.
I answer, The body of Christ is on the earth, in the sacrament, only so as the Holy Ghost is in the water of baptism.
Chrysostom saith, Ostendo, "I shew forth," which noteth a substance to be present.
That is to be understood sacramentally.
He saith, Ostendo in terra, "I shew forth on earth," declaring the place where.
That is to be understood figuratively.
He is shewed forth, and is now on the earth, &c. as before.
Your major and conclusion are one and the same.
But the major is true: Ergo, the conclusion is also true.
THAT thing is on the earth, which is worthy of highest honour.
BUT no figure is worthy of highest honour.
THEREFORE, that which is on earth is no figure.
HERE Weston called upon Dr. Cranmer, to answer one part bidding him to repeat his words; which when he went about to do, such was the noise and uproar in the divinity school, that his mild voice could not be heard. For when he went about to declare to the people how the prolocutor did not we [...] English the words of Chrysostom, using for ost [...]itur in terra, "he is shewed forth on the earth," [...] in terra, "he is on the earth," whereas Chrysostom hath not est, nor any such word of being on the earth, but only of shewing, as the grace of the Holy Ghost, in baptisme ostenditur, "is shewed forth in baptism▪" and oftentimes he did inculcate this word ostenditur. Th [...] the prolocutor stretching forth his hand, set on the rude people to cry out at him, filling all the school with hissing, clapping of hands, and noise, calling him unlearned, unskilful and impudent. Which impudent and reproachful words this reverend [...]an most patiently and meekly did abide, as one that had been inured with the sufferings of such like reproaches. And when the prolocutor, not yet satisfied with rude and unseeming demeanour, did urge and call upon him to answer the argument, then he desired the notary to repeat his words again.
That which is worthy most high honour, here I shew forth to thee on earth.
THE body of Christ is worthy highest honour.
ERGO, He shewed forth the body of Christ here on earth.
That is shewed forth here on earth which may be seen, which may be touched, and which may be eaten; but these things be not true of the body.
Why should not these things be true of the body of Christ?
The major out of Chrysostom is true, meaning in the sacraments: for, in the sacrament, the true body of Christ, and not the figurative body, is set forth.
Shew me somewhat on earth worthy greatest honour.
I cannot but in the sacrament only.
Therefore, the sacrament is worthy greatest honour.
So it is.
Judges let it be written.
I pray you, let my answer be written likewise: I affirm that the body of Christ is shewed forth unto us. It is our faith that seeth Christ.
Ostendo tibi, "I shew to thee," saith Chrysostom, not to thy faith.
He speaketh sacramentally.
Therefore, Chrysostom lyeth: for he saith, "I Chrysostom do shew;" but he can shew nothing sacramentally.
By force of argument we are brought to this point, that the body of Christ is proved to be on earth, not only sacramentally, but in very deed also, by this reason, that it is worthy of highest honour. The reason is indissoluble.
I never heard a more vain argument, and it is most vain; also it hath my answer unto it.
Will you affirm, that it is absurd which Chrysostom saith, that the body of Christ is touched?
I touch the body of Christ in the sacrament, as Thomas touched Christ.
THOMAS touched Christ, saying, "My Lord and my God!
THEREFORE, that which he touched was the Lord, the God.
[THIS argument, as I received it out of the notary's book (says Mr. Fox,) is not formal, seeing it should conclude in the third figure thus:
AS Thomas touched the body of Christ, so we touch it in the sacrament.
THOMAS touched the body of Christ corporally:
THEREFORE, we touch the body of Christ corporally in the sacrament.]
I deny your argument. He touched not God, but him who was God. Neither is it [...]ound doctrine to affirm, that God is touched.
This is because of the union; so that God is said to be touched, when Christ, who is both God and Man, is touched.
TERTULLIAN, speaking of the resurrection of the body, saith, "Let us consider as concerning the proper form of the Christian man, what great prerogative this vain and foul substance of our's hath with God. Although it were sufficient to it, that no soul could ever get salvation, unless it believe while it is in the flesh: so much the flesh availeth to salvation; by the which flesh it cometh, that whereas the soul so is linked unto God, it is the said flesh that causeth the soul to be linked: yet the flesh moreover is washed, that the soul may be cleansed; the flesh is anointed, that the soul may be consecrated; the flesh is signed, that the soul may be defended; the flesh is shadowed by the imposition of hands, that the soul may be illuminated with the Spirit; the flesh doth eat the body and blood of Christ, that the soul may be fed of God." Whereupon I gather this argument.
THE flesh eateth the body of Christ.
ERGO, The body of Christ is eaten with the mouth.
PHOCEUS also, 1 Cor. chapter xi. upon these words, "Is guilty of the body and blood," declareth, "That like as Judas betrayed him, and the Jews were fierce and spiteful against him; so do they dishonour him, who receive his holy body with their impure hands, and as the Jews did hold him then, do now receive him with impure mouths. And whereas he often maketh mention of the body and blood of the Lord, he declareth, that it is not simply man that is sacrificed, but even the Lord himself, being the maker of all things, hereby (as it were) making them afraid."
THEREFORE, the body of Christ is touched with the hands.
You vouch two authors against me upon sundry things. First, I must answer Tertullian, and then the other.
They tend both to one meaning.
Unto Tertullian I answer, (because our disputation is wandering and uncertain) that he calleth that the flesh which is the sacrament. For although God works all things in us invisibly beyond men's reach, yet they are so manifest, that they [Page 321] may be seen, and perceived of every sense. Therefore he setteth forth baptism, unction, and last of all the supper of the Lord unto us, which he gave to signify his operation in us. The flesh liveth by the bread, but the soul is inwardly fed by Christ.
Stick to those words of Tertullian, "The body eateth, that the soul may be fed.
The flesh eateth the body of Christ, that the soul may be fed therewith.
Here you see two kinds of food, of the soul and of the body.
He saith, that not only the soul, but the flesh also is fed.
The soul is fed with the body of Christ, the body with the sacrament.
Is the soul fed with the body of Christ, and not with the sacrament?
Read that which followeth, and you shall perceive, that by things external, an operation internal is understood. Inwardly we eat Christ's body, and outwardly we eat the sacrament. So one thing is done outwardly, another inwardly. Like as in baptism the external element, where the body is washed, is one; the internal thing, whereby the soul is cleansed, is another.
The soul is fed by that which the body eateth.
BUT the soul is fed by the flesh of Christ.
ERGO, The body eateth the flesh of Christ.
We eat not one thing outwardly and inwardly. Inwardly we eat Christ's body: outwardly we eat the sacrament.
I will repeat the argument.
THE flesh eateth Christ's body, that the soul may be fed therewith.
THE soul is not fed with the sacrament, but with Christ's body.
ERGO, The flesh eateth the body of Christ.
The sacrament is one thing, the matter of the sacrament is another. Outwardly we receive the sacrament; inwardly we eat the body of Christ.
This disputation is taken in hand, that the truth might appear. I perceive that I must go another way to work than I had thought. It is a common saying, against those who deny principles, we must not dispute; therefore, that we may agree of the principles, I demand, whether there be any other body of Christ, than his instrumental body?
There is no natural body of Christ, but his organical body.
Again, I demand, whether sense and reason ought to give place to faith?
They ought.
Thirdly, whether Christ be true in all his words?
Yes, he is truth itself.
Fourthly, whether Christ, at his supper, minded to do that which he spake, or no?
In saying he spake, but in saying he made not, but made the sacrament to his disciples.
Answer according to the truth, whether did Christ that as God and man which he spake, when he said, "This is my body?"
This is sophistical cavilling. There is some deceit in these questions.
I demand, whether Christ by these words wrought any thing, or no?
He did institute the sacrament.
But answer, whether he did work any thing?
He did work in instituting the sacrament.
Now I have you; for before you said, it was a figurative speech.
BUT a figure worketh nothing.
THEREFORE, it is not a figurative speech. A lyar ought to have a good memory.
I understood your sophistry before. You by working understand converting into the body of Christ: but Christ wrought the sacrament, not in converting, but in instituting.
Woe be to them, who made Christ a deceiver. Did he work any other thing than he spake, or the self-same thing?
He wrought the sacrament, and by these words he signified the effect.
A figurative speech is no working thing.
BUT the speech of Christ is working.
THEREFORE, it is not figurative.
It worketh by instituting, not by converting.
The thing signified in the sacrament, is it not that sacrament?
It is. For the thing is ministered in a sign. He followeth the letter that taketh the thing for a sign. Augustine separateth the sacrament from the thing. The sacrament (saith he) is one, and the thing of the sacrament another.
Stick to this argument.
IT is a figurative speech.
ERGO, It worketh nothing.
But the speech of Christ is a working thing.
ERGO, It is not figurative.
Oh how many crafts are in this argument! they are mere fallacies; I said not, that the words of Christ do work, but Christ himself; and he worketh by a figurative speech.
If a figure work, it maketh of bread the body of Christ.
A figurative speech worketh not.
A figurative speech by your own confession, worketh nothing.
BUT the speech of Christ in the supper (as you grant) wrought somewhat.
ERGO, The speech of Christ in the supper was not figurative.
I answer, These are mere sophisms. The speech doth not work, but Christ by the speech doth work the sacrament.
I look for scriptures at your hands, for they are the foundation of disputations.
Are not these words of scripture, This is my body? The word of Christ is of strength; and by the Lord's words the heavens were made. He said, This is my body: Ergo, He made it.
He made the sacrament, and I deny your argument.
If he wrought nothing, nothing is left there. He said, This is my body. You say, contrary to the scriptures, it is not the body of Christ, and fall from the faith.
You interpret the scriptures contrary to all the old writers, and feign a strange sense.
Ambrose saith, "Thou hast read of the works of all the world; that he spake the word, and they were made; he commanded and they were created. Cannot the word of Christ, which made of nothing that which was not, change those things that are, into that they were not? For it is no less matter to give new things, than to change natures. But why use we arguments? Let us use [Page 323] his own examples, and let us confirm the truth of the mystery by example of his incarnation. Did the use of nature go before, when the Lord Jesus was born of Mary? If you seek the order of nature, conception is wont to be made by a woman joined to a man. It is manifest therefore, that, contrary to the order of nature, a virgin did conceive: and this body that we make, is of the virgin. Why seekest thou here the order of nature in the body of Christ, when against the order of nature the Lord Jesus was conceived of a virgin? It was the true flesh of Chirst which was crucified, and which was buried: Therefore it was truly the sacrament of him. The Lord Jesus himself crieth, This is my body. Before the blessing of the heavenly words, it is named another kind: but after the consecration, the body of Christ is signified. He calleth it his blood. Before consecration it is called another thing: after consecration it is called blood; and thou sayest, Amen; that is, It is true. What the mouth speaketh, let the inward mind confess: what the word soundeth, let the heart perceive."
THE same Ambrose, in his fourth book of sacraments, the fourth chapter, saith thus: "This bread is bread before the words of the sacrament; when the consecration cometh to it, of bread it is made the flesh of Christ. Let us confirm this therefore; How can that which is bread, by consecration be the body of Christ? By what words then is the consecration made, and by whose words? By the words of our Lord Jesus. For touching all other things that are said, praise is given to God, prayer is made for the people, for kings, and for the rest: when it cometh that the reverend sacrament must be made, then the priest useth not his own words, but the words of Christ: therefore the word of Christ maketh this sacrament. What word? that word by which all things were made. Dost thou not see then how strong in working the word of Christ is?" Ambrose saith, that the words are of strength to work.
You omit those words following, which make the sense of Ambrose plain. Read them.
"Heaven was not, the sea was not, the earth was not, but hea [...] him that said: He spake the word, and they were made; he commanded, and they were created. Therefore to answer thee, it was not the body of Christ before consecration, but after the consecration; I say to thee, that now it is the body of Christ."
All these things are common. I say, that God doth chiefly work in sacraments.
How doth he work?
Nay his power, as in baptism.
Nay, by the word he changeth the bread into his body. This is the truth, acknowledge the truth, give place to the truth.
O glorious words! You are full of words.
Nay, O glorious truth! You make no change at all.
But I make a great change; as in those who are baptized, is there not a great change, when the bond slave of the devil is made the son of God? So it is also in the sacrament of the supper, when he receiveth us into his protection and favour.
If he work in the sacraments, he worketh in this sacrament.
God worketh in his faithful, not in the sacraments.
In the supper, the word [...] are directed to the bread; in baptism to the Spirit. He said not. The water is the Spirit; but of the bread he said, "This is my body."
He calleth the Spirit a dove, when the Spirit descended in the likeness of a dove.
He doth not call the Spirit a dove; but he saith, that he descendeth as a dove. He was seen in the likeness of a dove. As in baptism the words are directed to him who is baptized, so in the supper, the words are directed unto the bread.
Nay, it is written, "Upon whomsoever [Page 324] thou shalt see the Spirit descending." He calleth that which descendeth the Holy Spirit. And Augustine calleth the dove the Spirit. Hear what Augustine saith in 1 John "What meant he by the dove, that is, by the Holy Ghost? forsooth to teach who sent him."
He understandeth of the Spirit descending as a dove: the Spirit is invisible. If you mind to have the truth heard, let us proceed. Hear what Ambrose saith: "You see what a working power the word of Christ hath. Therefore if there be so great power in the Lord's word, that those things which were not, begin to be, how much more of strength is it, to work, that those things that were, should be changed into another thing?"
AND in the fifth chapter he saith, "Before it is consecrated, it is bread: but when the words of Christ come to it, it is the body of Christ."
BUT hear what he saith more; "Take ye, eat ye, this is my body. Before the words of Christ, the cup is full of wine and water; when the words of Christ have wrought, there is made the blood of Christ which redeemed the people," What can be more plain?
What can be less to the purpose? The words are of strength to work in this sacrament, as they are in baptism.
The words (as Ambrose saith) are of strength to work. What do they work? Ambrose saith, they make the blood which redeemed the people.
THEREFORE, the natural blood is made.
The sacrament of his blood is made. The words make the blood to them who receive it: not that the blood is in the cup, but in the receiver.
There is made the blood which redeemed the people.
The blood is made, that is, the sacrament of the blood, by which he redeemed the people: [ Fit,] "It is made," that is to say, [ [...]enditur.] "It is shewed forth there:" and Ambrose saith, we receive in a similitude. "As thou hast received the similitude of his death, so also thou drinkest the similitude of his precious blood."
He saith in a similitude, because it is ministered under another likeness. This is the argument.
(1) THERE is made blood which redeemed the people.
(2) BUT the natural blood redeemeth the people.
(3) THEREFORE, there is the natural blood of Christ.
YOU answer, that words make it blood to them that receive it; not that blood is in the cup, but because it is made blood to them that receive it. That all men may see how falsely you would avoid the fathers, hear what Ambrose saith in the sixth book and first chapter.
"PERADVENTURE thou wilt say, how be they true? I which see the similitude, do not see the truth of the blood. First of all I told thee of the word of Christ, which so worketh, that it can change and turn kinds ordained by nature. Afterwards, when the disciples could not abide the words of Christ, but hearing that he gave his flesh to eat, and his blood to drink, they departed. Only Peter said, Thou hast the words of eternal life, whither should I go from thee? Lest therefore more should say this thing, as though there should be a certain horror of blood, and yet the grace of redemption should remain; therefore in a similitude thou receivest the sacrament, but indeed thou obtainest the grace and power of his nature."
These words of themselves are plain enough. (And he read this place again,) "Thou receivest the sacrament for a similitude." But what is that he saith, Thou receivest for a similitude? I think he understandeth the sacrament to be the similitude of his blood.
That you may understand that truth dissenteth not from truth, to overthrow that which [Page 325] you say of that similitude; hear what Ambrose saith:
"IF the heavenly word did work in other things, doth it not work in the heavenly sacraments? Therefore thou hast learned, that of bread is made the body of Christ, and that the wine and water is put into that cup, but by consecration of the heavenly word it is made blood. But thou wilt say peradventure, that the likeness of blood is not seen. But it hath a similitude. For as thou hast received the similitude of his death, so also thou drinkest the similitude of his precious blood, so that there is no horror of blood, and yet it worketh the price of redemption. Therefore thou hast learned, that that which thou receivest is the body of Christ."
He speaketh of sacraments, sacramentally. He calleth the sacraments by the names of the things; for he useth the signs of the things signified: and therefore the bread is not called bread, but his body; for the excellency and dignity of the thing signified by it. Ambrose speaketh the same sense, when he saith, "For a type or figure whereof we receive the mystical cup of his blood, for the safeguard of our souls and bodies."
A type! He calleth not the blood of Christ a type or sign; but the blood of bulls and goats, in that respect, was a tpye.
This is new learning: you never read this among the fathers.
But Ambrose saith so.
He calleth the bread and the cup a type or sign of the blood of Christ, and of his benefit.
Ambrose understandeth it for a type of his benefit, that is, of redemption, not of the blood of Christ, but of his passion.
He saith expressly that the cup is a type of Christ's blood.
You have corrupted Justine, Emissenus, and Duns, by false translations: (the contrary of which Cranmer fairly proved, and also, you have set forth a catechism in the name of the synod of London, and yet there are fifty to witness, that though they were of the number of the convocation, yet they never heard one word of this catechism.
I was ignorant of the setting to of that title; and as soon as I had knowledge thereof, I did not like it; therefore I complained to the council, and was answered by them, that the book was so intitled, because it was set forth in the time of the convocation.
Moreover, you have in Duns translated In Romana ecclesia, pro ecclesia catholica: "In the church of Rome," for, "The catholic church."
Yes, but he meant the Romish church.
Moreover you have depraved St. Thomas, namely, where he hath these words: " In quantum vero est sacrif [...]cium, habet vim satisfactivam: Sed in satisfactione attenditur magis affectio [...]fferentis, quam quantitas oblationis. Unde Dominus dicit apud Lucam de vidua quae obtulit duo aera, quod pius omnibus misit. Quamvis ergo haec oblatio ex sui quantitate sufficie [...] ad satisfaciendum pro omni p [...]ena: tamen sui satisfactoria illis pro quibus offertur, vel etiam offerentibus, secundum quantitatem suae devotionis, & non pro tota p [...]ena." That is, "Inasm [...]ch as it is a sacrifice, it hath the power of satisfaction: But in satisfaction the affection of the offerer is more to be considered than the quantity of the oblation. Wherefore the Lord said in Luke's gospel, of the widow which offered two mites, that she cast in more than they all. Therefore altho' this oblation of the quantity of itself will suffice to satisfy for all pain, yet it is made satisfactory to them, for whom it is offered, or to the offerers, according to the quantity of their devotion, and not for all the pain."
YOU have turned it, " Quod sacrificium sacerdotis habet vim satisfactivam," &c. That is, "That the sacrifice of the priest hath power of satisfaction," &c. And therefore in this place you have chopped in this word [ sacerdotis] of the priest, whereas in the translation of all the New Testament you have not set it, but where Christ was put to death. And again, where St. Thomas hath [ pro omni p [...]ena] for all pain, your book omitteth many things there.
[Page 326]THUS you see, brethren, the truth stedfast and invincible; you see also the craft and deceit of heretics; the truth may be pressed, but it cannot be oppressed; therefore cry altogether, Vincit veritas, "The truth overcometh."
THIS disorderly disputation, sometimes in English, at others in Latin, continued almost till two o'clock. Which being finished, and the arguments written, and delivered into the hands of Mr. Say▪ the prisoner, Dr. Cranmer, was had away by the mayor, and the doctors dined sumptuously together, at the university college.
A SECOND DISPUTATION at OXFORD, between Dr. RIDLEY, BISHOP of LONDON, Dr. SMITH, and others.
THE next day, being April 12th, Dr. Ridley was brought forth to dispute; against whom Dr. Smith was appointed principal opponent. It may be proper to observe of Dr. Smith, that he had often changed his sentiments; but not from a principle of conscience, or real conviction, as will appear from his articles by him recanted, and likewise by his own letter, sent a little before, in Edward's reign, to Dr. Cranmer, then archbishop of Canterbury, from Scotland: which letter is placed here as a preface before his arguments, as a testimony against him, whereby our readers may understand how devoutly he magnified those very men, against whom he now disputeth so busily. Read his epistle, and judge.
The SPEECH of Dr. WESTON, PRO [...]OCUTOR, at the Commencement of the DISPUTATION.
WE have begun this day our school, by God's good speed I trust, and are entering into a controversy, whereof no question ought to be [Page 327] moved concerning the verity of the body of our Lord Jesus Christ in the eucharist. Christ is true, which said the words. The words are true which he spake, yea, truth itself that cannot fail. Let us therefore pray unto God to send down unto us his Holy Spirit which is the true interpreter of his word; which may purge away errors, and give light that verity may appear. Let us also ask leave and liberty of the church to permit the truth received to be called this day in question, without any prejudice to the same. Your parts thereof shall be to implore the assistance of Almighty God, to pray for the prosperity of the queen's majesty, and to give us quiet and attentive ears. Now go to your question.
DR. SMITH. This day (right learned Mr. Doctor) three questions are propounded, whereof no controversy among christians ought to be moved, to wit:
1. WHETHER the natural body of Christ our Saviour, conceived of the virgin Mary, and offered for man's redemption upon the cross, is verily and really in the sacrament by virtue of God's word spoken by the priests, &c.
2. WHETHER in the sacrament, after the words of consecration, there be any other substance, &c.
3. WHETHER in the mass be a sacrifice propitiatory, &c.
TOUCHING which questions, although you have publicly declared your judgment on Saturday last; yet I will again demand your answer on the first question; upon which I stand here now to hear what may be answered.
Dr. RID [...]Y'S INTRODUCTORY DECLARATION, or PROTES [...]ATION, previous to the DISPUTATION.
I Received of you the other day, right worshipful Mr. Prolocutor, and you my reverend masters, commissioners from the queen's majesty and her honourable council, three propositions; whereunto ye commanded me to prepare against this day, what I thought good to answer concerning the same.
NOW whilst I weighed with myself how great a charge of the Lord's flock was of late committed unto me, for which I am certain I must once render an account to my Lord God, (and how soon he only knoweth) and that moreover, by the commandment of the apostle Peter, I ought to be ready always to give a reason of the hope that is in me, with meekness and reverence, unto every one that shall demand the same: besides this, considering my duty to the church of Christ, and to your worships, being commissioners by public authority; I determined with myself to obey your commandment, and so openly to declare unto you my mind touching the aforesaid propositions. And albeit, plainly to confess unto you the truth in these things which ye now demand of me, I have thought otherwise in time past than now I do, yet (God I call to record upon my soul, I lye not) I have not altered my judgment, as now it is, either by constraint of any man, or laws, either for the dread of any dangers of this world, either for any hope of commodity; but only for the love of the truth revealed unto me by the grace of God (as I am undoubtedly persuaded) in his holy word, and in the reading of the ancient fathers.
THESE things I do rather recite at this present, because it may happen to some of you hereafter, as in times past it hath done to me: I mean, if ye think otherwise of the matters propounded in these propositions than I now do, God may open them unto you in time to come.
BUT howsoever it shall be, I will in a few words do that which I think ye all look I should do; that is, as plainly as I can, I will declare my judgment herein▪ Howbeit, of this I would ye were not ignorant, that I will not indeed wittingly and willingly speak in any point against God's word, or dissent in any one jot from the same, or from the rules of faith, or christian religion: which rules that same most sacred word of God prescribeth to the church of Christ, whereunto I now and for ever submit myself and all my doings. And because the matter I have now taken in hand is weighty, and ye all well know how unready I am to handle it accordingly, as well for lack of time, as also lack of books; therefore here I protest, that I will publicly this day require of you, that it may be lawful for me concerning all mine answers, explications, and confirmations, to add or diminish whatsoever shall [Page 328] seem hereafter more convenient and meet for the purpose, through more sound judgment, better deliberation, and more exact trial of every particular thing. Having now, by the way of preface and protestation, spoken these few words, I will come to the answer of the propositions, propounded unto me, and so to the most brief explication and confirmation of my answers.
Reverend Mr. Doctor, concerning the lack of books, there is no cause why you should complain. What books soever you will name, you shall have them: and as concerning the judgment of your answers to be had of yourself with farther deliberation; it shall (I say) be lawful for you until Sunday next, to add un [...]o them what you shall think good yourself. My mind is, that we should use short arguments, lest we should make an infinite process.
There is another thing besides, which I would gladly obtain of your hands. I perceive that you have writers and notaries here present. By all likelihood our disputations shall be published; I beseech you for God's sake, let me have liberty to speak my mind freely, and without interruption, not because I have determined to protract the time with a solemn preface, but lest it may appear that some be not satisfied. God knows I am no orator, nor have I learned rhetoric to set colours on the matter.
Among this whole company, it shall be permitted you to take two notaries for your part.
I will chuse two, if there be any here with whom I am acquainted.
Here are two which Mr. Cranmer had yesterday. Take them if you please.
I am content with them; I trust they are honest men.
The FIRST PROPOSITION.
IN the sacrament of the altar, by the virtue of God's word spoken of the priest, the natural body of Christ born of the virgin Mary, and his natural blood, is really present under the forms of bread and wine.
Bishop RIDLEY'S Answer.
IN [...]atters appertaining to God, we may not speak according to the sense of man, nor of the world: therefore this proposition or conclusion is framed after another manner of phrase, or kind of speech, than the scripture useth. Again, it is very obscure and dark, by means of sundry words of doubtful signification. And being taken in the sense which the schoolmen teach, and at this time the church of Rome doth defend, it is false and erroneous, and plainly contrary to the doctrine which is according to godliness.
The EXPLICATION.
HOW far the diversity and newness of the phrase in all this first proposition is from the phrase of the holy scripture, and that in every part almost, it is so plain and evident to any one who is but meanly exercised in holy writ, that I need not now (especially in this company of learned men) spend any time therein, except the same shall be required of me hereafter.
FIRST, There is a double sense in these words, "By virtue of God's word," for it is doubtful what word of God this is, whether it be that which is read in the evangelists, or in Paul, or any other. And if it be that which is in the evangelists, or [...]n St. Paul, what that is. If it be in none of the [...], then how it may be known to be God's word, and of such virtue that it should be able to work so gr [...]t a matter.
AGAIN, there is a doubt of these words▪ "of the priest▪" whether no man may be called a priest, but he which hath authority to make a propitiatory sacrifice for the quick and the dead▪ and how it may be proved that this authority was committed of God to any man, but to Christ alone.
IT is likewise doubted, after what order the sacrificing priest shall be, whether after the order of Aaron, or else after the order of Melch [...]sedek. [Page 329] For as far as I know, the holy scripture doth allow no more.
Let this be sufficient.
If we lack time at this present, there is time enough hereafter.
These are but evasions, or starting holes; you consume the time in vain.
I cannot start far from you, I am captive and bound.
That which you have spoken may suffice at this present.
Let me alone, I pray you, for I have not much to say behind.
Proceed.
Moreover, there is ambiguity in this word [really,] whether it be taken as the logicians term it " transcendenter," that is, most generally, and so it may signify any manner of thing which belongeth [...]o the body of Christ, by any means; after which sort we also grant Christ's body to be really in the sacrament of the Lord's supper, (as in disputation, if occasion be given, shall be declared) or whether it be taken to signify the very same thing, having body, life, and soul, which was assumed and taken of the word of God, into the unity of person. In which sense, seeing the body of Christ is really in heaven, because of the true manner of his body, it may not be said to be here on the earth. There is yet a further doubtfulness in these words, [under the forms of bread and wine,] whether the forms be there taken to signify only the accidental and outward shews of bread and wine; or therewithal the substantial natures thereof, which are to be seen by their qualities, and perceived by the exterior senses.
NOW the error and falseness of the proposition, after the sense of the Roman church and schoolmen, may hereby appear, in that they affirm the bread to be transubstantiated and changed to the flesh assumed of the word of God, and that (as they say) by virtue of the word, which they have devised by a certain number of word [...], and cannot be found in any of the evangelists, or in St. Paul, and so they gather that Christ's body is really contained in the sacrament of the altar. Which position is grounded upon the foundation of the transubstantiation; which foundation is monstrous, against reason, and destroyeth the analogy or proportion of the sacraments: and therefore this proposition also, which is built upon this rotten foundation, is false, erroneous, and to be counted as a detestable heresy of the sacramentaries.
We lose time.
You shall have time enough.
To reasoning. You shall have some other day for this matter.
I have no more to say concerning my explication. If you will give me leave and let me alone, I will but speak a word or two for my confirmation.
Say on.
The CONFIRMATION of the aforesaid ANSWER.
THERE ought no doctrine to be established in the church of God, which dissenteth from the word of God, from the rule of faith, and draweth with it many absurdities that cannot be avoided.
BUT this doctrine of the first proposition is such.
THEREFORE, it ought not to be established and maintained in the church of God.
THE major, or first part of my argument, i [...] plain; and the minor, or second part, is proved thus:
THE doctrine maintaineth a real, corporal, and carnal presence of Christ's flesh assumed and taken of the word, in the sacrament of the Lord's supper, and that not by virtue and grace only, but also by the whole essence and substance of the body and flesh of Christ.
[Page 330]BUT such a presence disagreeth from God's word, from the rule of faith, and cannot but draw with it many absurdities.
THEREFORE, the second part is true.
THE first part of this argument is manifest, and the second may yet farther be confirmed thus.
You consume time, which might be better bestowed on other matters. Opponent, I pray you, to your arguments.
I will here reason with you upon transubstantiation, which you say is contrary to the rule and analogy of faith. The contrary whereof I prove by the scriptures and the doctors. But before I enter argumentation with you, I demand first, whether in the sixth chapter of John, there be any mention made of the sacrament, or of the real presence of Christ in the sacrament?
It is against reason that I should be hindered to prosecute that which I have to speak in this assembly, being not so long, but that it may be comprehended in few words.
Let him read on.
First of all this presence is contrary to many places of holy scripture.
SECONDLY, It varieth from the articles of the faith.
THIRDLY, It destroyeth and taketh away the institution of the Lord's supper.
FOURTHLY, It maketh precious things common to profane and ungodly persons; for it casteth that which is holy unto dogs, and pearls unto swine.
FIFTHLY, It forceth men to maintain many monstrous miracles without necessity and authority of God's word.
SIXTHLY, It giveth occasion to the heretics, who erred concerning the two natures of Christ, to defend their heresies thereby.
SEVENTHLY, It falsifieth the sayings of the godly fathers; it falsifieth also the catholic faith of the church, which the apostles taught, the martyrs confirmed, and the faithful (as one of the fathers saith) do retain and keep until this day. Wherefore the second part of my argument is true.
The PROBATION of the Antecedent, or former Part of this ARGUMENT, by the Parts thereof.
THIS carnal presence is contrary to the word of God, as appeareth, John xvi. "I tell you the truth. It is profitable to you that I go away, for if I go not away, the comforter shall not come unto you." Acts iii. "Whom the heavens must receive until the time of restoring all things which God hath spoken." Matt. ix. "The children of the bridegroom cannot mourn so long as the bridegroom is with them: but now is the time of mourning." John xvi. "But I will see you again, and your hearts shall rejoice." John xiv. "I will come again and take you to myself." Matt. xxiv. "If they shall say unto you, Behold here is Christ, or there is Christ, believe them not: for wheresoever the dead carcase is, thither the eagles will resort."
IT varieth from the articles of the faith; he ascended into heaven, and sitteth at the right hand of God the Father, from whence (and not from any other place, saith St. Augustine) he shall come to judge both the quick and the dead.
IT destroyeth and taketh away the institution of the Lord's supper, which was commanded only to be used and continued until the Lord himself should come. If therefore he be really present in the body of his flesh, then must the supper cease: for a remembrance is not of a thing present, but a thing past and absent. And there is a difference between remembrance and presence, and (as one of the fathers saith) a figure is in vain where the figured is present.
IT maketh precious things common to profane and ungodly persons, and constraineth men to confess many absurdities. For it affirmeth, that whoremongers and murd [...]rs▪ yea, and (as some of them hold opinion) the wicked and faithless, mi [...]e, rats, and dogs, also may receive the very real and corporal [Page 331] body of the Lord, wherein the fulness of the Spirit of light and grace dwelleth; contrary to the manifest words of Christ in six places and sentences of the sixth chapter of St. John.
IT confirmeth also and maintaineth that beastly kind of cruelty of the anthropophagi, that is, the devourers of man's flesh: for it is a more cruel thing to devour a quick man, than to slay him.
He requireth time to speak blasphemies. Leave your blasphemies.
I little thought to have had such reproachful words at your hands.
All is quiet. Go to your arguments, Mr. Doctor.
I have not many things more to say.
You utter blasphemies with a most impudent face; leave off, I say, and get you to the argument.
It forceth men to maintain many monstrous miracles, without any necessity and authority of God's word. For at the coming of this presence of the body and flesh of Christ, they thrust away the substance of bread, and affirm that the accidents remain without any subject, and instead thereof they place Christ's body without his qualities and the true manner of a body. And if the sacrament be reserved so long until it mould, and worms breed, some say that the substance of bread miraculously returneth again, and some deny it. Others affirm, the real body of Christ goeth down into the stomach of the receivers, and doth there abide so long only as they shall continue to be good.
BUT now (my brethren) think not, because I disallow that presence which the first proposition maintaineth (as a presence which I take to be forged, fantastical, and besides the authority of God's word, perniciously brought into the church by the Romanists) that I therfore go about to take away the true presence of Christ's body in his supper rightly and duly ministered, which is grounded upon the word of God, and made more plain by the commentaries of the faithful fathers. They that think so of me, the Lord knoweth how far they are deceived. And to make the same evident unto you, I will in few words declare what true presence of Christ's body in the sacrament of the Lord's supper I hold and affirm, with the word of God and the ancient fathers.
I say and confess with the evangelist Luke, and with the apostle P [...]l, that the bread, on which thanks are given, is the body of Christ in the remembrance of him and his death, to be set forth perpetually of the faithful until his coming.
I say and confess the bread which we break to be the communion and partaking of Christ's body, with the ancient and faithful fathers.
I say and believe that there is not only a signification of Christ's body set forth by the sacrament, but also that therewith is given to the godly and faithful the grace of Christ's body, that i [...], the food of life and immortality. And this I hold with Cyprian.
I say also with St. Augustine, that we [...] life and we drink life: with Emisene, that we feel the Lord to be present in grace: with Athanasius, that we receive celestial food, which cometh from above: the propriety of natural communion, with Hilarius: the nature of flesh and benediction which giveth life in bread and wine, with Cyril; and with the same Cyril, the virtue of the very flesh of Christ, life and grace of his body, the property of the only begotten, that is to say, life, as he himself in plain words expoundeth it.
I confess also with Basil, that we receive the mystical advent and coming of Christ, grace and virtue of his very nature; the sacrament of his very flesh, with Ambrose; the body by grace, with Epiphanius; spiritual flesh, but not that which was crucified, with Hieron; grace flowing into a sacrifice, and the grace of the Spirit, with Chrysostom; grace and invisible verity, grace and society of the members of Christ's body, with Augustine.
FINALLY, with Bertram (which was the last of all these) I confess, that Christ's body is in the sacrament [Page 332] in this respect; namely, (as he writeth) because there is in it the Spirit of Christ, that is, the power of the word of God, which not only feedeth the soul, but also cleanseth it. But of these I suppose it may clearly appear unto all men, how far we are from that opinion, whereof some go about falsely to slander us to the world, saying, we teach that the godly and faithful should receive nothing else.
The SECOND PROPOSITION.
AFTER the consecration there remaineth no substance of bread and wine, neither any other substance, than the substance of God and man.
The ANSWER.
THE second conclusion is manifestly false, directly against the word of God, the nature of the sacrament, and the most evident testimonies of the godly fathers; and it is the rotten foundation of the other two conclusions propounded by you, both of the first, and also of the third. I will not therefore now tarry upon any further explication of this answer, being contented with that which is already added before to the answer of the first proposition.
The FIRST ARGUMENT for the CONFIRMATION of this ANSWER.
IT is very plain by the word of God, that Christ did give bread unto his disciples, and called it his body.
BUT the substance of bread is another manner of substance, than is the substance of Christ's body, God and man.
THEREFORE the conclusion is false.
THE second part of my argument is plain, and the first is proved thus:
The SECOND ARGUMENT.
THAT which Christ did take, on the which he gave thanks, and the which he brake, he gave to his disciples, and called it his body.
BUT he took bread, gave thanks on bread, and brake bread.
ERGO, The first part is true. And it is confirmed with the authority of the fathers, Irene, Tertullian, Origen, Cyprian, Epiphanius, Jerome, Augustine, Theodoret, Cyril, Rabanu [...], and Bede. Whose places I will take upon me to shew most manifest in this behalf, if I may be suffered to have my books, as my request is.
BREAD is the body of Christ.
ERGO, It is bread.
The THIRD ARGUMENT.
AS the bread of the Lord's table is Christ's natural body, so is his mystical body.
BUT it is not Christ's mystical body by transubstantiation.
ERGO, It is not his natural body by transubstantiation.
THE second part of my argument is plain, and the first is proved thus: As Christ who is the verity, spake of the bread, "This is my body which shall be betrayed for you," speaking there of his natural body: even so Paul, moved with the same Spirit of truth, said, "We though we be many, yet are we all one bread, and one body, which be partakers of one bread."
The FOURTH ARGUMENT.
WE may believe bread no more to be transubstantiate into the body of Christ, than the wine into his blood.
BUT the wine is not transubstantiate into his blood.
ERGO, Neither is that bread therefore transubstantiate into his body.
THE first part of this argument is manifest, and the second part is proved out of the authority of God's word in Matthew and Mark, "I will not drink of the fruit of the vine," &c. Now the fruit of the vine was wine, which Christ drank and gave to his disciples to drink. With this sentence [Page 333] agreeth plainly the place of Chrysostom on the xx. chapter of Matthew. As Cyprian doth also, affirming that there is no blood, if wine be not in the cup.
The FIFTH ARGUMENT.
THE words of Christ spoken upon the cup, and upon the bread, have the like effect and working.
BUT the words spoken upon the cup, have not virtue to transubstantiate.
THEREFORE, it followeth, that the words spoken upon the bread have no such virtue.
The SIXTH ARGUMENT.
THE circumstances of the scripture, the analogy and proportion of the sacraments, and the testimony of the faithful fathers, ought to rule us in taking the meaning of the holy scripture touching the sacrament.
BUT the words of the Lord's supper, the circumstances of the scripture, the analogy of the sacraments, and the sayings of the fathers, do most effectually and plainly prove a figurative speech in the words of the Lord's supper.
ERGO, A figurative sense and meaning is specially to be received in these words, "This is my body."
THE circumstances of the scripture are, "Do this in remembrance of me. As oft as ye shall eat of this bread, and drink of this cup, ye shall shew forth the Lord's death. Let a man prove himself, and so eat of this bread, and drink of this cup. They came together to break bread; and they continued in breaking of bread. The bread which we break, &c. For we being many, are all one bread and one body," &c.
THE analogy of the sacraments is necessary: for if the sacraments had not some similitude, or like [...]ness of the things whereof they be sacraments, they could in no wise be sacraments. And this similitude in the sacrament of the Lord's supper is taken three manner of ways.
1. THE first consisteth in nourishing, as ye shall read in Rabana, Cyprian, Augustine, Irene, and most plainly in Isidore out of Bertram.
2. THE second in uniting and joining of many into one, as Cyprian teacheth.
3. THE third is a similitude of unlike things; where, like as the bread is turned into one body, so we, by the right use of this sacrament, are turned through faith into the body of Christ.
THE sayings of the fathers declare it to be a figurative speech, as it appeareth in Origen, Tertullian, Chrysostom in an unfinished work, Augustine, Ambrose, Basil, Gregory, Nazianzen, Hilary, and most plainly of all in Bertram. Moreover, the sayings and places of all the fathers, whose names I have before recited against the assertion of the first proposition, do quite overthrow transubstantiation. But of all most evidently and plainly, Irene, Origen, Cyprian, Chrysostom to Cesarius the monk, Augustine against Adamatus, Gelasius, Cyril, Epiphanius, Chrysostom again on the xx. Matthew, Rabana, Damascene, and Bertram.
HERE, right worshipful Mr. Prolocutor, and ye the rest of the commissioners, it may please you to understand, that I do not lean to these things only, which I have written in my former answers and confirmations, but that I have also, for the proof of that I have spoken, whatsoever Bertram, a man learned, of sound and upright judgment, and ever counted a catholic for these seven hundred years until this our age, hath written. His treatise, whosoever shall read and weigh, considering the time of the writer, his learning, godliness of life, the allegations of the ancient fathers, and his manifold and most grounded arguments, I cannot (doubtless) but much marvel, if he have any fear of God at all, how he can with good conscience speak against him in this matter of the sacrament. This Bertram was the first that brought me from the common error of the Romish church, and caused me to search more diligently and exactly both the scriptures and the writings of the old ecclesiastical fathers in this matter. And this I protest before the face of God, who knoweth I lye not in the things I now speak.
The THIRD PROPOSITION.
IN the mass is the lively sacrifice of the church, propitiable and available for the sins as well of the quick as of the dead.
The ANSWER to this PROPOSITION.
I answer to this third proposition as I did to the first. And moreover I say, that being taken in such sense as the words seem to import, it is not only erroneous, but withal so much to the derogation and defacing of the death and passion of Christ, that I judge it may and ought most worthily to be counted wicked and blasphemous against the most precious blood of our Saviour Christ.
The EXPLICATION.
CONCERNING the Romish mass which is used at this day, or the lively sacrifice thereof, propitiatory and available for the sins of the quick and the dead, the holy scripture hath not so much as one syllable.
THERE is ambiguity also in the [...]ame of [mass,] what it signifieth, and whether at this day there be any such indeed as the ancient fathers used; seeing that now there be neither Catechists nor Poenitentes to be sent away.
AGAIN, touching these words, [the lively sacrifice of the church,] there is doubt whether they are to be understood figuratively and sacramentally, for the sacrament of the lively sacrifice (after which sort we deny it not to be in the Lord's supper) or properly and without any figure; of the which manner there was but one only sacrifice, and that once offered, namely upon the altar of the cross.
MOREOVER, in these words, [as well as,] it may be doubted whether they be spoken in mockage; as men are wont to say in sport, of a foolish and ignorant person, that he is apt as well in conditions as in knowledge; being apt indeed in neither of them both.
THERE is also a doubt in the word [propitiable,] whether it signify here that which taketh away sin, or that which may be made available for the taking away of sin, that is to say, whether it is to be taken in the active, or in the passive signification.
NOW the falseness of the proposition, after the meaning of the schoolmen and the Romish church, and impiety in that sense which the words seem to import, is this; that they leaning to the foundation of their fond transubstantiation, would make the quick and lively body of Christ's flesh, (united and knit to the divinity) to lie hid under the accidents and outward appearances of bread and wine; and they building upon this foundation, do hold, that the same body is offered unto God by, the priest, in his daily massings, to put away the sins of the quick and the dead; whereas, by the apostle to the Hebrews, it is evident, that there is but one oblation, and one only true and lively sacrifice, of the church, offered upon the altar the cross, which was, is, and shall be for ever, the propitiation for the sins of the whole world▪ and where there is remission of the same, there is (saith the apostle) no more offering for sin.
ARGUMENTS confirming his ANSWER.
(1) NO sacrifice ought to be done, but where the priest is meet to offer the same.
(2) ALL other priests are unmeet to offer propitiatory sacrifices, save only Christ.
(3) THEREFORE, no other priests ought to sacrifice for sin, but Christ alone. See Heb. chap. v.
THE second part of my argument is thus proved.
(1) No honour in God's church ought to be taken, where a man is not called, as Aaron was.
(2) It is a great honour in God's church to sacrifice for sin.
(3) THEREFORE no other priest but Christ ought to sacrifice for sin, who only was called to that honour.
THAT no man is called to this degree of honour, but Christ alone, is evident: for there are but two orders of priesthood allowed in the word of God; [Page 335] namely, the order of Aaron, and that of Melchisedek: but now the order of Aaron is come to an end, by reason that it was unprofitable; and of the order of Melchisedek there is but one priest alone, even Christ the Lord, who hath a priesthood that cannot pass to any other. See Heb. chap. vii.
FIRST ARGUMENT.
(1) THAT thing is in vain, and to no effect, where there is no necessity it should be done.
(2) TO offer up any more sacrifice propitiatory for the quick and the dead, there is no necessity; for Christ our Saviour did that fully and perfectly once for all.
(3) ERGO, To do the same in the mass, is in vain.
SECOND ARGUMENT.
(1) AFTER that eternal redemption is found and obtained, there needeth no more daily offering for the same.
(2) BUT Christ coming an high bishop, &c. found and obtained for us eternal redemption.
(3) ERGO, There needeth now no more daily oblation for the sins of the quick and the dead.
THIRD ARGUMENT.
(1) ALL remission of sins cometh only by shedding of blood.
(2) IN the mass there is no shedding of blood.
(3) ERGO, In the mass there is no remission of sins: and so it followeth also that there is no propitiatory sacrifice.
FOURTH ARGUMENT.
IN the mass, the passion of Christ is not in verity, but in a mystery representing the same: yea, even there where the Lord's supper is duly ministered.
BUT where Christ suffereth not, there is he not offered in verity: for the apostle saith, "Not that he might offer up himself often times (for then must he have suffered often times since the beginning of the world:") now where Christ is not offered, there is no propitiatory sacrifice.
ERGO, In the mass there is no propitiatory sacrifice: "For Christ appeared once in the latter end of the world, to put sin to flight by the offering up of himself. And as i [...] appointed to all men that they shall once die, and then cometh the judgment; even so Christ was once offered, to take away the sins of many. And unto them that look for him shall he appear again without sin unto salvation." See Heb. chap. ix.
FIFTH ARGUMENT.
WHERE there is any sacrifice that can make the comers thereunto perfect, there ought men to cease from offering any more expitiatory and propitiatory sacrifices.
BUT in the New Testament there is one only sacrifice now already long since offered, which is able to make the comers thereto perfect for ever.
ERGO, In the New Testament they ought to cease from offering any more propitiatory sacrifices.
SENTENCES of SCRIPTURE, [...]ending to the same END and PURPOSE; from whence also may be gathered other manifest ARGUMENTS.
"BY the which will (saith the apostle) we are sanctified, by the offering up of the body of Jesus Christ once for all." And in the same place, "But this man, after that he had offered one sacrifice for sin, sitteth forever at the right hand of God, &c. For with one offering hath he made perfect for ever them that are sanctified, and by himself hath he purged our sins." I beseech you to mark these words, [by him,] the which, well weighed, will without doubt put an end to all controversy. See Heb. chap. x.
THE apostle plainly denieth any other sacrifice to remain for him that treadeth under his feet the blood of the testament, by the which he was made holy. Christ will not be crucified again, he will not his death to be had in derision. "He hath reconciled [Page 336] us in the body of his flesh." Mark, I beseech you, he saith not, in the mystery of his body; but in the body of his flesh." See Coloss. chap. i.
"If any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous, and he is the propitiation for the sins of the whole world," 1 John, chap. ii.
I know that all these places of the scripture are avoided by two manner of subtle evasions: the one is, by the distinction of the bloody and unbloody sacrifice; as though our unbloody sacrifice of the church were any other than the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving; than a commemoration, a shewing forth, and a sacramental representation of that one only bloody sacrifice, offered up once for all.
THE other is, by depraving and wresting the sayings of the ancient fathers unto such a strange kind of sense, as the fathers themselves indeed never meant. For what the meaning of the fathers was, is evident by that which St. Augustine writeth in his epistle to Boniface, and in the 83d chapter of his ninth book against Faustus the Manichee, besides many other places; likewise by Eusebius, Emisene, Cyprian, Chrysostom, Fulgentius, Bertram, and others, who do wholly agree together in this unity in the Lord, that the redemption, once made in verity for the salvation of men, continueth in full effect for ever, and worketh without ceasing unto the end of the world; that the sacrifice once offered cannot be consumed; that the Lord's death and passion is as effectual, the virtue of that blood once shed, as fresh at this day for the washing away of sins, as it was even the same day that it flowed out of the blessed side of our Saviour: and finally, that the whole substance of our sacrifice, which is frequented of the church in the Lord's supper, consisteth in prayers, praise, and giving of thanks, and in remembering and shewing forth of that sacrifice once offered upon the altar of the cross: that the same might continually be had in reverence by mystery, which once only, and no more, was offered for the price of our redemption.
THESE are things (right worshipful Mr. Prolocutor, and ye the rest of the commissioners) which I could presently prepare, to the answering of your three propositions, being destitute of all help in this shortness of time, sudden warning, and want of books. Wherefore I appeal to my first protestation, most humbly desiring the help of the same (as much as may be) to be granted unto me. And because ye have lately given most unjust and cruel sentence against me, I do here appeal (so far forth as I may) to a more indifferent and just censure and judgment of some other superior competent, and lawful judge, and that accor [...]g to the approved state of the church of England. Howbeit, I confess, that I am ignorant what that is at this present, through the trouble and alteration of the state of the realm. But if this appeal may not be granted to me upon earth, then do I [...]y (even as to my only refuge and alone haven of health) [...] the sentence of the eternal judge, that is, of the Almighty God, to whose most merciful justice towards us, and most just mercifulness, I do wholly commit myself and my cause, nothing at all despairing of the defence of mine advocate and alone Saviour Jesus Christ, to whom, with the everlasting Father, and the Holy Spirit, the sanctifier of us all, be now and for ever all honour and glory. Amen.
WE shall now proceed to the
ARGUMENTS and ANSWERS between DR. SMITH, and BISHOP RIDLEY.
You have occasioned me to go otherwise to work with you, than I had thought to have done. Methinks, in your supposition, you did abuse the testimonies of scripture concerning the ascension of Christ, to take away his presence in the sacrament, as though this were a strong argument in your favour.
CHRIST did ascend into heaven.
ERGO, He is not in the sacrament.
NOW therefore I will go about to disprove this reason of your's.
CHRIST'S ascension is no bar to his real presence in the sacrament.
[Page 337]ERGO, You are deceived, whereas you do ground yourself upon those places.
You import as though I had made a strong argument by Christ's going up into heaven. But howsoever mine argument is made, you collect it not rightly. For it doth not only stay upon his ascension, but upon his abiding there also.
Christ's going [...] to heaven, and his abiding there, hinder not his real presence in the sacrament.
ERGO, You are deceived.
Of Christ's real presence there may be a double understanding: if you take the real presence of Christ according to the real and corporeal substance which he took of the virgin, that presence being in heaven, cannot be on the earth also. But if you mean a real presence, according to some thing that appertaineth to Christ's body, certainly the ascension and abiding in heaven hinder not at all that presence. Wherefore Christ's body after that manner is here present to us in the Lord's supper; by grace I say, as Epiphanius speaketh it.
I will cut off from henceforth all equivocation and doubt. For whensoever we speak of Christ's body, we mean that which he took of the virgin.
Christ's ascension and abiding in heaven cannot stand with his presence.
Christ appeared corporally and really on the earth, for all his ascension and continual abode in heaven unto the day of doom.
ERGO, His ascension and abiding in heaven, are no bar to his real presence in the sacrament.
Mr. Doctor, this argument is nothing worth. I do not straightly tie Christ up in heaven, that he may not come into the earth at his pleasure. For when he will, he may come down from heaven, and be on the earth, as i [...] liketh himself. Howbeit, I do affirm, That it is not possible for him to be both in heaven and earth at one time.
Mark, I pray you, my masters that be here, diligently, what he answereth. First he saith, That the sitting of Christ at the right hand of his Father, is a bar to the real presence of his body in the sacrament, and then afterwards he flieth from it again.
I would not have you think that I do imagine or dream upon any such manner of sitting, as these men here sit in the school.
Ergo, It is lawful for Christ then to be here present on the earth, when he will himself.
Yea, when he will, it is lawful indeed.
Ergo, He ascending into heaven, doth not restrain his real presence in the sacrament.
I do not gainsay, but that it is lawful for him to appear on the earth when he will: but prove you that he will.
Then your answer dependeth upon the will of Christ, I perceive: therefore, I will join again with you in that short argument.
CHRIST, notwithstanding he doth always abide in heaven after his ascension, was seen really and corporally on earth.
ERGO, Notwithstanding his ascension and continual sitting at the right hand of his Father, he may be really and corporally in the sacrament.
If the notaries should so record your argument, as you have framed it, you peradventure would be ashamed of it hereafter.
Christ after his ascension was seen really and corporally upon the earth.
ERGO, Notwithstanding his ascension and abiding with his Father, he may be corporally in the sacrament.
I grant the antecedent, but I deny the consequence.
Do you grant the antecedent?
Yes, I grant the antecedent. I am content to let you have so much. Because I know that there be certain ancient fathers of that opinion. I am well content to let you use that proposition as true. And I will frame the argument for you.
HE was seen on earth after his ascension.—
Nay, nay, I will frame it myself.
CHRIST after his ascension was seen really and corporally on earth, albeit he do abide in heaven continually.
ERGO, Notwithstanding his ascension and continual abiding at the right hand of the Father, he may be really and corporally on the earth.
Let us first agree about the continual sitting at the right hand of the Father.
Doth he so sit at the right hand of his Father, that he doth never forsake the same?
Nay, I do not bind Christ in heaven so straightly. I see you go about to beguile me with your equivocations. Such equivocations are to be distinguished. If you mean by his sitting in heaven, to reign with his Father, he may be both in heaven and also on earth. But if you understand his sitting to be after a corporal manner of sitting, so is he always permanent in heaven. For Christ to be corporal here on earth, when corporally he is resident in heaven, is clean contrary to the holy scriptures, as Austine saith; "The body of Christ is in heaven, but his truth is dispersed in every place."
NOW, if continually he abide in heaven after the manner of his corporal presence, then his perpetual abiding there stoppeth or hindereth that the same corporal presence of him cannot be in the sacrament.
Acts iii. we read that Christ shall sit perpetually at the right hand of God, until the consummation of the world.
I perceive you are come here to this issue, whether the body of Christ may be together both on earth and in heaven. I will tell you, that Christ in very deed is both on earth and in heaven together, and at one time, both one and the same natural Christ, after the verity and substance of his very body: Ergo, &c.
I deny the antecedent.
I prove it by two witnesses. First by Chrysostom: "Do we not offer every day? we do so indeed, but doing it for remembrance of his death. And this offering is one, and not many. And how is it one, and not many, which was offered in the holy place? This sacrifice is a pattern of that: the self same we always offer, not now as offering one lamb to-day, and another to-morrow, but always one and the same lamb. Wherefore here is but one sacrifice; for else by this means, seeing there be many sacrifices in many places, be there many Christs? Not so, but one Christ in all places, both perfect here, and perfect there, one only body." Now thus I argue.
WE offer one thing at all times.
THERE is one Christ in all places, both here complete and there complete.
ERGO, By Chrysostom there is one body both in heaven and earth.
I remember the place well. These things make nothing against me.
One Christ is in all places, here full and there full.
One Christ is in all places; but not one body in all places.
One body, saith Chrysostom.
BUT not after the manner of bodily substance he is in all places, nor by circumscription of [Page 339] place. For ( hic [...] illic,) "here and there," in Chrysostom, do assign no place, as Augustine saith; "The Lord is above, but the truth of the Lord is in all places."
You cannot so escape. He saith not the verity of Christ is one; but one Christ is in all places, both here and there.
One sacrifice is in all places, becau [...] of the unity of him whom the sacrifice doth signify: not that the sacrifices be all one and the same.
Ergo▪ By your saying it is not Christ, but the sacrifice of Christ.
BUT Chrysostom saith▪ "One body and one Christ is there, and not one sacrifice.
I say, that both Christ and the sacrifice of Christ is there: Christ by Spirit, grace, and verity; the sacrifice by signification.
THUS much I grant with Chrysostom, that there is one host or sacrifice, and not many: and this our host is called one by reason of the unity of that one, which one only all our hosts do represent. That only host was never any other but that which was once offered on the altar of the cross, of which all our hosts are but sacramental examples.
AND where you alledge out of Chrysostom, that Christ is offered in many places at once, both here full Christ, and there full Christ; I grant it to be true, that is, that Christ is offered in many places at once, in a mystery and sacramentally, and that he is full Christ in all those places, but not after the corporal substance of our flesh which he took, but after the benediction which giveth life; and he is given to the godly receivers in bread and wine, [...] Cyril speaketh, concerning the oblation of Christ, whereof Chrysostom here speaketh, he himself doth clearly shew what he meaneth thereby, in saying by the way of correction, "We always do the self same, howbeit by the recorda [...]ion or remembrance of his sacrifice.
The second witness is Bernard, who saith, in a sermon on the supper of our Lord, "How cometh this to us, most gentle Jesus, that we silly worms creeping on the face of the earth, that we, I say, who are but dust and ashes, may deserve to have thee present in our hands, and before our eyes, who both together, full and whole, dost [...]it at the right hand of the Father, and who also in the moment of one hour, from the rising of the sun to the going down of the same, [...]t present one and the self-same in many and divers places▪"
These words of Bernard make for you nothing at all. But I know that Bernard was in such a time, that in this matter he may worthily be suspected. He hath many good and faithful sayings; as also in the same place by you alledged. But yet he followed in such an age, as when the doctrine of the holy supper was perverted. Notwithstanding I will so expound him, rather than reject him, that he shall make nothing for you. That we have Christ in a mystery, in a sacrament, under a veil or cover. In the mean time, here now he saith, That the verity of Christ is every-where. The verity of Christ is both here and there, and in all places.
What do you call verity? He saith not the verity of Christ, but the verity of the body of Christ.
The verity of the body of Christ is the true faith of the body of Christ: after that verity he is with them which truly believe upon him.
Christ is one and the [...]ame in divers places. I urge these words, [in divers places,] and yet I am not satisfied.
Christ was seen really and corporally on the earth after his ascension, and continually sitting at the right hand of the Father.
ERGO, The ascension and perpetual sitting in heaven hinder nothing, but that he may be really and corporally in the sacrament.
If by perpetual sitting you mean the residence of his body in heaven, your reason containeth manifest contradiction.
Th [...]se two have no contradiction in them at all, both to sit continually at his Father's [Page 340] right hand, and also to be seen here really on earth after his ascension. First, You will allow, that Christ sitteth in heaven at the right hand of his Father. For so it is written, Acts v. "Heaven must needs receive him until the time of the restoring of all, &c." Secondly, He was also seen of Paul here corporally on earth.
WHEREFORE these two do import, as ye see, no contradiction.
What hindereth, but that Christ, if it please him, and when it pleaseth him, may be in heaven and on earth, and appear to whom he will? And yet notwithstanding you have not yet proved that he will so do. And though Christ continually shall be resident in heaven until the judgment, yet there may be some intermission, notwithstanding. But this controversy, as I said, is amongst all the ancient doctors and writers. And that Christ hath been seen, that they grant all: but whether he was then on earth or in heaven, that is doubtful.
I will prove that he would appear on earth
HE so would, and also did appear here on earth after his ascension: Ergo, &c.
He appeared I grant; but how he appeared, whether then being in heaven or in earth, that is uncertain. So he appeared to Stephen, being then corporally sitting in heaven. For, speaking after the true manner of man's body, when he is in heaven, he is not at the same time on earth; and when he is on earth, he is not the same time corporally in heaven.
Christ hath been both in heaven and on earth all at one time.
ERGO, You are deceived in denying that.
I do not utterly deny Christ here to have been seen on earth. Of uncertain things I speak uncertainly.
He was seen of Paul, as being born before his time, after his ascending up to heaven, 1 Cor. xv.
BUT his vision was a corporal vision.
ERGO, He was seen corporally upon the earth after his ascending into heaven.
He was seen really and corporally indeed: but whether being in heaven or earth, is a doubt. And of doubtful things we must judge doubtfully. Howbeit, you must prove that he was in heaven at the same time, when he was corporally on earth.
I would know of you, whether this vision may inforce the resurrection of Christ?
I account this a sound and firm argument to prove the resurrection. But whether they saw him in heaven or on earth, I am in doubt: and to say the truth, it maketh no great matter. Both ways the argument is of like strength. For whether he were seen in heaven, or whether he were seen on earth, either of both maketh sufficiently for the matter. Certain it is, he rose again; for he could not have been seen, unless he had risen again.
Paul saw him as he was here conversant on earth, and not out of heaven, as you affirm.
You run to the beginning again: that you take for granted, which you should have proved.
You make delays for the purpose.
say not so, I pray you. Those that hear us are learned: they can tell both what you oppose, and what I answer well enough, I warrant you.
He was seen after such sort, as that he might be heard.
ERGO, He was corporally on the earth, or else how could he be heard?
He that found means for Stephen to behold him in heaven, even he could bring to pass well enough, that Paul might hear him out of heaven.
SMITH as others saw him, so Paul saw him.
[Page 341]OTHERS did see him visibly and corporally on earth.
ERGO, Paul saw him visibly and corporally on earth.
I grant he was seen visibly and corporally: but yet you have not proved that he was seen on earth.
He was seen of him as of others.
BUT he was seen of others being on earth, and appeared visibly to them on earth.
ERGO, He was seen of Paul on earth.
Your controversy is about [ existens in terra,] that is, "being on earth:" if [ existere,] "to be," be referred as unto the place, I deny that Christ after that sort was on earth. But if it be referred as to the verity of the body, then I grant it. Moreover, I say, that Christ was seen of men on earth after his ascension, is certain: for he was seen of Stephen; he was also seen of Paul. But whether he descended unto the earth, or whether he being in heaven did reveal or manifest himself to Paul, when Paul was wrapt into the third heaven, I know that some contend about it: and the scripture as far as I have read or heard, doth not determine it. Wherefore we cannot but judge uncertainly of those things which be uncertain.
We have Egesippus and Linus against you, who testify that Christ appeared corporally on the earth to Peter after his ascension. "Peter overcome with the requests and mournings of the people, who desired him to get him out of the city, because of Nero's lying in wait for him, [...] without company to convey himself away from thence: And when he was come to the gate, he seeth Christ come to meet him, and worshipping him, he said, Master, whither walk you? Christ answered, I am come to be crucified." Linus, writing of the passion of Peter hath the self-same story. St. Ambrose hath the same likewise, and also Abdias, scholar to the apostles, who saw Christ before his ascending into heaven. With what face therefore dare you affirm it to be a thing uncertain, which these men do manifestly witness to have been done?
I laid before that the doctors in that matter did vary.
Do you think this story is not certain, being approved by so ancient and probable authority?
I do so think, because I take and esteem not their words for scripture. And though I did grant you that story to be certain, yet it maketh not against me.
Such things as are certain, and approved of them, you do reject as things uncertain.
The story of Linus is not of so great authority; although I am not ignorant that Eusebius so writeth also in the story of the church. And yet I account not these men's reports so sure as the canonical scriptures. But if at any time he had to any man appeared here on the earth after his ascension, that doth not disprove my saying. For I go not about to tie Christ up in fetters, (as some do untruly report of us) but that he may be seen upon the earth according to his divine pleasure, whensoever it pleaseth him. But we affirm, That it is contrary to the nature of his manhood, and the true manner of his body, that he should be together and at one instant both in heaven and earth, according to his corporal substance. And the perpetual sitting at the right hand of the Father, may (I grant) be taken for the stability of Christ's kingdom, and his continual or everlasting equality with his Father in the glory of heaven.
Now whereas you boast that your faith is the very faith of the ancient church; I will shew here that it is not so, but that it doth directly strive against the faith of the old fathers. I will bring in Chrysostom for this point. "Eliseus received the mantle, as a right great inheritance. For it was indeed a right excellent inheritance, and more precious than any gold beside. And the same was a double Elias: he was both Elias above, and Elias beneath. I know well, you think that just man to be happy, and you would gladly be every one of you as he is. What will you then say, if I shall declare unto you a certain other thing, which all we that are indued with these holy mysteries do receive much more than that? Elias indeed left his mantle to his scholar: but the Son of God ascending did leave here his [Page 342] flesh unto us. Elias left it, putting off the same: but Christ both left it to us, and as [...]nded also to heaven, having it with him."
I grant that Christ did both▪ that is, both took up his flesh with him ascending up, and also did leave the same behind him with us, but after a two fold manner, and respect. For he took his flesh with him, after the true and corporal substance of his body and flesh: again, he left the same in mystery to the faithful in the supper, to be received after a spiritual communication, and by grace. Neither is the same received in the supper only, but also at other times, by hearing the gospel, and by faith. For, the bread which we break, is the communication of the body of Christ: and generally, unless ye eat the flesh of the Son of Man, and drink his blood, ye shall have no life in you.
Chrysostom saith, "O miracle, O the good will of God! He that sitteth above at the sacrifice time, is contained in the hands of men." O miracle, O the gentleness of God! He that sitteth above with the Father, is handled with the hands of all men at the very same moment of time, and doth himself deliver himself to them that are desirous to take and embrace him."
He that sitteth there is here present in mystery and grace, and is holden of the godly, such as communicate him, not only sacramentally with the hand of the body, but much more wholsomely with the hand of the heart, and by inward drinking is received; but by the sacramental signification he is holden of all men.
Where is then the miracle, if he be only present through his grace and mystery only.
Yes, there is a miracle, good sir; Christ is not idle in his sacraments. Is not the miracle great, when bread, which is wont to sustain the body, becometh food to the soul? He that understandeth not that miracle, understandeth not the force of that mystery. God grant we may every one of us understand his truth, and obey the same.
Chrysostom calleth it a miracle, that Christ sitteth at the right hand of God in heaven, and at the same time is hold in the hands of men [...] not that he is handled with the hands of men: only in a mystery, and is with [...] through grace. Therefore while you deny that, you are altogether deceived, and stray far from the truth.
The former part of Chrysostom is not to be let slip. Let me, before I begin, ask this one question of you. Is it not a great matter that Elias left his cloak or mantle, and the gift of his prophecy to his scholar?
Yes surely, it is a great matter.
Did not Elias then leave great grace?
He did so.
But Christ left a far greater grace than Elias: for he could not both leave his cloak and take it with him: Christ doth both in his flesh.
I am well content to grant, that Christ left much greater things to us than Elias to Eliseus, although he be said to have left his double spirit with him: for that the strength and grace of the body of Christ, which Christ ascending up here left us, is the only salvation and life of all men which shall be saved; which life Christ hath here left unto us, to be received by faith through the hearing of the word, and the right administration of the sacraments. This virtue and grace Chrysostom, after the phrase and manner of John the evangelist, calleth Christ s flesh.
But Christ performed a great matter. He carried up, and left behind. You understand not the comparison. The comparison is in this, That Elias left his mantle, and carried it not with him; Christ left his flesh behind him, and carried it with him also.
True it is, and I myself did affirm no less before. Now where you seem to speak many things, indeed you bring no new thing at all. Let there be a comparison between grace and grace, then Christ gave the far greater grace, when he did insert on graft us into his flesh.
If you will give me leave, I will ask you this question: If Chrysostom would have meant so, that Christ left his body in the eucharist, what plainer words think you, or more evident could he have used than these?
These things be not of so great force, as they bear a great shew outwardly. He might also have used grosser words, if he had listed to have uttered his mind so grossly: for he was an eloquent man. Now he speaketh after the manner of other doctors, which of mystical matters speak mystically, and of sacraments, sacramentally.
The comparison lieth in this; That which was impossible to Elias, is possible with Christ.
I grant that was possible to Christ, which was to the other impossible. Elias left his cloak: Christ both left his flesh, and took it with him.
Elias left behind him, and could not take with him: Christ both left behind him, and also took with him: except you will say the comparison here made to be nothing.
He took up his flesh with him to heaven, and left here the communion of his flesh on earth.
You understand in the first place his flesh for very true flesh; and in the second place for grace, and communion of his flesh: and why do you not understand it in the second place also for his true flesh? I will make it evident how blockish and gross your answer is.
These be taunts and reproaches, not beseeming, as I think, the modesty of this school.
Elias left his cloak to his disciples: but the Son of God going up to heaven, left his flesh. But Elias certainly left his cloak behind, and Christ likewise his flesh, and yet ascending he carried the same with him too. By which words we make this reason:
CHRIST left his flesh to his disciples, and yet for all that he took the same up with him.
ERGO, He is present here with us.
HERE Dr. Weston speaking to the people in English, said unto them, Dr. Ridley answereth it [...]ter this manner:
HE carried his flesh into heaven, and he left here the communion of his flesh behind. Assuredly the answer is too unlearned.
I am glad you speak in English. Surely, I wish that all the whole world might understand your reasons and my answers. He left his flesh. This you understand of his flesh, and I understand the same of grace. He carried his flesh into heaven, and left behind the communion of his flesh unto us.
Ye judges, what think you of this answer?
It is a ridiculous and very we [...] answer.
Well, I take your words patiently for Christ's cause.
WESTON here citeth, "We are sprinkled with the blood of Christ."
Mr. Doctor, it is the same blood, but yet spiritually received, and indeed all the prophets were sprinkled with the same blood, but yet spiritually I say, and by grace. And whosoever they be that are not sprinkled with this blood, they cannot be partakers of the everlasting salvation.
Here (speaking again to the people) I bring Bernard unto you. "Even from the west unto the east, from the north unto the south, there is one and the self same Christ in many and divers places."
The answer is soon made, that one Christ is here and in divers places. For God, according to his majesty, and according to his providence, [...] St. Austin saith, is every-where with the godly, according to his indivisible and unspeakable grace. Or else, if ye would understand Bernard according to the corporal presence, how monstrous, or huge, [Page 344] and giant like a body would you then make Christ's body to be, which would reach even from north to south, from west to east?
Nay, nay, you make a monstrous answer, and unlearned.
Before I come in with those reasons which I had purposed to bring against you, I am minded to come again to Mr. Doctor's argument, by which you being brought into the b [...]iars, seemed to doubt of Christ's presence on the earth. To the proof of which matter I will bring nothing else, than that which was agreed upon in the catechism of the synod of London, set out not long ago by you.
Sir, I give you to understand, before you go any further, that I did sat out no catechism.
Yes, you made one subscribe to it, when you were a bishop in your ruff.
I compelled no man to subscribe.
Yes, truly, you are the very author of that heresy.
I put forth no catechism.
Did you never consent to the setting out of those things which you allowed?
I grant that I saw the book; but I deny that I wrote it. I perused it after it was made, and I noted many things for it. So I consented to the book: I was not the author of it.
The catechism is so set forth, as tho' the whole convocation house had agreed to it. Cranmer said yesterday, that you made it.
I think surely, that he would not say so.
The catechism hath this clause; "If visibly on the earth."
I [...], That those articles were set out, I both knowing and consenting to them. Mine own hand will testify the same, and Mr. Cranmer put his hand to them likewise, and gave them to others afterwards▪ Now, as for the place which you alledged out of it, that may easily be expounded, and without any inconvenience.
Christ is the power and virtue of his Father.
ERGO, He was not of so little strength, that he could not bring to pass whatsoever he would himself.
Granted.
Christ was the wisdom of the Father.
ERGO, What he spoke he spoke wisely, and so as every man might understand: neither was it his mind to speak one thing instead of another.
All this I grant.
Christ was likewise the very truth: Ergo, He made and performed indeed that which he intended to make. And likewise it is, that he doth neither deceive, nor could be deceived, nor yet would go about to deceive others.
Hilarius hath these words, "All God's words or sayings are true, and neither idly placed, nor unprofitably; but fiery, and wonderful fiery, without all doubtfulness of superfluous vanity, that there may be nothing thought to be there which is not absolute and proper."
He is the truth of the Father: Ergo, He can neither deceive, nor yet be deceived; especially I mean when he spoke at his latter end, and his testament.
Christ is the very truth of the Father: and I perceive well to what scope you drive your reason. This is but a far fetch compass of words. If these words of Christ, "This is my body," which you mean, be rightly understood, they are most true.
H [...] took, he brake, he gave, &c. What took he?
Bread, his body.
What brake he?
Bread.
What gave he?
Bread.
Gave he bread made of wheat, and material bread?
I know not whether he gave bread of wheat; but he gave true and material bread.
I will prove the contrary by scripture.
(1) HE delivered to them that which he bade them take.
(2) BUT he bade not them take material bread, but his own body.
(3) ERGO, He gave not material bread, but his own body.
I deny the minor. For he bade them take his body sacramentally in material bread: and after that sort it was both bread which he bade them take, because the substance was bread, and it was also his body, because it was the sacrament of his body, for the sanctifying and the coming of the Holy Ghost, which is always assistant to those mysteries which were instituted of Christ, and lawfully administered.
What is he that so saith, By the coming unto of the Holy Spirit?
I have Theophylact for mine author for this manner of speaking. And here I bring him, that ye may understand that phrase not to be mine, upon Matthew xxvi. Furthermore, the said Theophylact writing upon these words, "This is my body," sheweth, that the body of the Lord is bread, which is sanctified on the altar.
That place of Theophylact maketh openly against you. For he saith in that place, that Christ said not, This is the figure of my body, but my body. For, saith he, by an unspeakable operation it is transformed, although it seem to us to be bread.
It is not a figure, that is to say, " Non tantum est figura;" that is, "It is not only a figure of his body."
Where have you that word [ tantum] "only."
It is not in that place, but he hath it in another, and Augustine doth so speak many times, and other doctors also.
He saith it is no figure, and you say it is a figure.
And the same Theophylact saith moreover, that the converting or turning of the bread is made into the Lord's flesh.
THAT which Christ gave, we do give.
BUT that which he gave was not a figure of his body.
ERGO, We give no figure, but his body.
[Concerning the authority of Theophylact, what he thought, and might have spoken of that author, Doctor Ridley did not then speak, nor could conveniently (as he himself afterwards declared, reporting and writing with his own word the disputations in the prison) because of the uproars and clamours, which were so great, and he of so many called upon, that he could not answer as he would, and what he thought touching the authority of Theophylact, but answered simply to that which is brought out of that author in this manner.]
I grant, the bread to be converted and turned into the flesh of Christ, not by transubstantiation, but by a sacramental conversion or turning. It is transformed, saith Theophylact, in the same place, by a mystical benediction, and by the accession or coming of the Holy Ghost unto the flesh of Christ. He saith not, by expulsion or driving away the substance of bread, and by substituting or putting [Page 346] in its place the corporal substance of Christ's flesh. And where he saith, It is not a figure of the body, we should understand that saying, as he himself doth elsewhere add, [only], that is, it is no naked or bare figure only. For Christ is present in his mysteries, neither at any time, as Cyprian saith, doth the Divine Majesty absent himself from the divine mysteries.
You put in [only], and that is one lye. And I tell you farther, Peter Martyr was fain to deny the author, because the place was so plain against him. But mark his words, how he saith, It is no figure, but his flesh.
To take his words, and not his meaning, is to do injury to the author.
No other doctor maketh more against you: for his words are, "Turned from one element into another." And shewing the cause why it is in the form of bread, he saith▪ "Because we are infirm, and abhor to eat raw flesh, specially the flesh of man; therefore it appeareth bread, but it is flesh."
That word hath not that strength which you seem to give it. You strain it overmuch, and yet it maketh not so much for your purpose. For the same author hath in another place, "We are tra [...]s [...]len [...]t [...]d▪ or transformed into the body of Christ." And so by that word, in such meaning as you speak of, I could prove as well that we are transformed indeed into the very body of Christ.
Learned doctor, thus you expound the p [...]ace, "This is my body;" that is, a figure of my body.
Although I know there be some that so expound it, yet that exposition is not full to express the whole.
My sheep hear my voice, and follow me.
BUT all the sheep of Christ hear this voice, "This is my body," without a figure.
THEREFORE, The voice of Christ here hath no figure.
The sheep of Christ follow the voice of Christ, unless they be seduced and deceived through ignorance.
But the Fathers took this place for no figurative speech.
Yet they do all number this place among figurative and tropical speeches.
Justine Martyr, in his second apology, hath this passage (which place Cranmer hath corrupted). "For we do not take this for common bread and drink, but like as Jesus Christ our Saviour incarnate by the word of God, had flesh and blood for our salvation; even so we are taught, the food wherewith our flesh and blood is nourished by alteration, when it is consecrated by the prayer of his word, to be the flesh and blood of the same Jesus incarnate."
DR. CRANMER hath thus translated it: "Bread, water, and wine, are not to be taken as other common meats and drinks be, but they are ordained purposely to give thanks to God, and therefore are called Eucharistia, and likewise the body and blood of Christ; and that it is lawful for none to eat and drink of them, but such as profess Christ, and live according to the same; and yet the same meat and drink is changed into our flesh and blood, and nourisheth our bodies."
O good Mr. Doctor, go sincerely to work: I know that place, and I know how [...].
O what upright d [...]l [...]ng is this▪ I have the self same place of Justine here copied out. You know your self who are skilful in Greek, how the words here be removed out of the right place, and without any just cause.
I stand still upon mine argument. What say you.
If you will that I should answer to Justine, then you must hear. I have but one tongue, I cannot answer at once to you all.
Christ gave us his very and true flesh to be eaten.
BUT he never gave it to be eaten but in his last supper, and in the sacrament of the altar.
ERGO, There is the very flesh of Christ.
If you speak of the very true flesh of Christ, after the substance of his flesh taken in the womb of the virgin Mary, and not by grace and spiritually, I then do deny the first part of your reason. But if you understand it of the true flesh, after grace and spiritual communication, I then grant the first part, and deny the second. For he giveth unto us truly his flesh, to be eaten of all that believe in him. For he is the very and true meat of the soul, wherewith we are fed unto everlasting life, according to his saying, "My flesh is meat indeed," &c.
"I have desired with my hearty desire [...] this paschal with you." What paschal, I pray you, desired he to eat? Did he understand by this paschal the Judaical lamb? or that which he gave afterwards in his own supper?
I suppose that the first he understood of the Judaical passover, and afterwards of the eucharist.
Tertullian is agains [...] you, who saith,
"HE desired to eat this passover.
BUT the Judaical passover was not [...], but strange from Christ.
THEREFORE, he meant not the Judaical passover."
The Judaical passover was not strange from Christ, but his own: for he is Lord of all; as well of the Judaical passover, as of his own supper.
TERTULLIAN may her [...] play with an analogical sense. I know Cyprian hath these [...], "He began then to institute the holy eucharist, but both were Christ's."
Augustine, in Psalm xcvi. writing upon these words, "Worship his foot-stool," &c. "I ask (saith he) what is the foot-stool of his feet? and the scripture telleth me, The earth is the foot-stool of my feet. And I turn myself to Christ, because I seek him here on the earth, and find how, without impiety, the foot-stool of his feet may be worshipped; for he took earth of earth, in that he is flesh and earth; and of the flesh of Mary he took flesh, because in the same flesh he here walked; and he also give the same flesh to us to be eaten unto salvation. But no man eateth that flesh, except he hath worshipped before. And so it is found, how such a foot-stool of the Lord is to be worshipped, so that not only we sin in not worshipping, but also do sin in not worshipping the same."
HE gave to us his flesh to be eaten, the which he took of the earth, in which also here he walked, &c.
BUT he never gave his flesh to be eaten, but when he gave it at his supper, saying, "This is my body."
ERGO, In the eucharist he gave his flesh.
You do alledge the place of Austin, where he saith, that Christ gave his flesh to be eaten which he took of the earth, and in which here he walked, inferring herefrom, that Christ never gave the same his flesh to be eaten, but only in the eucharist. I deny your minor; for he gave it both in the eucharist to be eaten, and also otherwise, as well in the word, as also upon the cross.
What if Augustine say, that Christ did not only give himself to us in a figure, but gave his own very flesh indeed and really?
I never said that Christ gave only a figure of his body. For indeed he gave himself in a real communication, that is▪ he gave his flesh after a communication of his flesh.
You say, Christ gave not his body, but a figure of his body.
I say not so; I say he gave his own body verily. But he gave it by a real, effectual, and spiritual communication.
I see that you evade all scriptures and fathers; I will go to work with you after another manner.
CHRIST hath here his church known on earth, of which you were once a child, although now you speak contumeliously of the sacraments.
This is a grievous reproach, that you call me a shifter away of the scripture, and of the doctors: as touching the sacraments, I never yet spake contumeliously of them. I grant that Christ hath here his church on earth: but that church did ever receive and acknowledge the eucharist to be a sacrament of the body of Christ, yet not the body of Christ really, but the body of Christ by grace.
Then I ask this question; Whether the catholic church hath ever, or at any time, been idolatrous?
The church is the pillar and st [...]y of the truth, that never yet hath been idolatrous in respect of the whole: but peradventure in respect of some part thereof, which sometimes may be seduced by evil pastors, and through ignorance.
That church ever hath worshipped the flesh of Christ in the eucharist.
BUT the church hath never been idolatrous.
ERGO, It hath always judged the flesh of Christ to be in the eucharist,
And I also worship Christ in the sacrament, but not because he is included in the sacrament, like as I worship Christ also in the scriptures, not because he is really included in them. Notwithstanding▪ I say, that the body of Christ is present in the sacrament, but yet sacramentally and spiritually, according to his grace giving life, and in that respect really, that is, according to his benediction giving life.
FURTHERMORE, I acknowledge, gladly, the true body of Christ to be in the Lord's supper, in such sort as the church of Christ (which is the spouse of Christ, and is taught of the Holy Ghost, and guided by God's word) doth acknowledge the same. But the true church of Christ doth acknowledge a presence of Christ's body in the Lord's supper to be communicated to the godly, by grace, and spiritually, as I have often shewed, and by a sacramental signification, but not by the corporal presence of the body of his flesh.
Austin saith, "Some there were who thought us, instead of bread and of the cup, to worship Ceres and Bacchus."
FROM wh [...]nce I gather, that there was an adoration of the sacrament among the fathers; and Erasmus in an epistle to the brethren of Low-Germany, saith, that the worshipping of the sacrament was before Austin and Cypr [...]n.
We do handle the signs reverently: but we worship the sacrament as a sacrament, not as a thing signified by the sacrament.
What is the symbol of sacrament?
Bread.
Ergo, We worship bread.
There is a deceit in this word [ adoramus.] We worship the symbols, when reverently we handle them. We worship Christ wheresoever we perceive his benefits. But we understand his benefit to be the greatest in the sacrament.
So I may fall down before the bench here, and worship Christ: and if any man ask me what I do, I may answer, I worship Christ.
We adore and worship Christ in the eucharist. And if you mean the external sacrament; I say, that also is to be worshipped as a sacrament.
So was the faith of the primitive church.
Would to God we would all follow the faith of that church.
Think you that Christ hath now his church?
I do so.
But all the church adoreth Christ, verily and really in the sacrament.
You know yourself that the eastern church would not acknowledge transubstantiation, as appeareth in the council of Florence.
That is false. For in the same they did acknowledge transubstantiation, although they would not intreat of the matter, for that they ha [...] not in their commission so to do.
Nay, they would determine nothing of the matter, when the article was prop [...]unded unto them.
I [...] was not because they did not acknowledge the [...], but because they had no commission [...]o to do.
Reverend [...] ▪ I will prove and declare, that the body of Christ is truly and really in the [...] whereas the holy fathers, both of [...] church, have written both many things and no less manifest of the same matter, yet [...] only Chrysostom.
THAT which is in the cup, is the same that flowed from the side of Christ.
BUT true and pure blood did flow from the side of Christ
ERGO, His true and pure blood is in the cup.
It is his true blood which is in the chalice, I grant, and the same which sprang from the side of Christ. But how? It is blood indeed, in which it sprang from his side. For here is the blood, but by way of a sacrament.
I say, like as the bread of the sacrament and of thanksgiving is called the body of Christ given for us; so the cup of the Lord is called the blood which sprang from the side of Christ. But as the sacramental bread is called the body, because it is the sacrament of his body: even so likewise the cup is called the blood which flowed out of Christ's side, because it is the sacrament of that blood which flowed out of his side, instituted by the Lord himself for ou [...] singular advantage; namely, for our spiritual nourishment: like as baptism is ordained in water to spiritual regeneration.
The sacrament of the blood is not blood.
The sacrament of the blood is the blood, and that is attributed to the sacrament, which is spoken of the thing of the sacrament.
That which is in the chalice, is the same which flowed out of Christ's side.
BUT there came out very blood.
ERGO, There is blood in the chalice.
The blood of Christ is in the chalice indeed, but not in the real presence, but by grace, and in a sacrament.
That is very well. Then we have blood in the chalice.
It is true, but by grace, and in a sacrament.
O my masters! I take this for no judgment: I will stand to God's judgment.
Good sir, I have determined to have respect of the time, and to [...]stain from all those things which may hinder the progress of our disputation; and therefore first I ask this question; when Christ said in the sixth of John, "He that eateth my flesh," &c. doth he signify in those words [...]he eating of his true and natural flesh, or else of the bread and symbol?
I understand that place of the very flesh of Christ to be eaten, but spiritually: and further I say, that the sacrament also pertaineth unto the spiritual eating. For without the spirit to eat the sacrament is to [...]at [...]t unprofitably. For whoso eateth not spiritually, he eateth his own condemnation.
I ask then, whether the eucharist be a sacrament?
The eucharist, taken for a sign or symbol, is a sacrament.
Is it instituted of God?
It is instituted of God.
Where?
In the supper.
With what words is it [...] a sacrament?
By the words and deeds which Christ said and did, and commanded us to do the same.
It is a thing commonly received of all, that the sacraments of the new law give grace to them that worthily receive.
True it is, that grace is given by the sacrament, but as by an instrument. The inward virtue and Christ give the grace through the sacrament.
What is a sacrament?
I remember there may be many definitions of a sacrament in Augustine: but I will take that which seemeth most fit to this purpose. A sacrament is a visible sign of invisible grace.
Ergo, Grace is given to the receivers.
The uni [...]n or conjunction with Christ through the Holy Ghost is grace, and by the sacrament we are made members of the mystical body of Christ, for by the sacrament part of the body is grafted in the head.
But there is a difference between the mystical body, and natural body.
There is (I grant you) a difference, but the head of them both is one.
The eucharist is a sacrament of the New Testament.
ERGO, It hath a promise of grace.
BUT no promise of grace is made of bread and wine.
ERGO, Bread and wine are not the sacraments of the New Testament.
I grant that grace pertaineth to the eucharist, according to this saying, "The bread which we break, is it not the communication or partaking of the body of Christ?" And like as he that eateth, and he that drinketh unworthily of the sacrament of the body and blood of the Lord, eateth and drinketh his own damnat [...]n▪ even so he that eateth and drinketh worthily, eateth life, and drinketh life. I grant also, that there is no pro [...]se made to bread and wine. But in [...]smuch as they are sanctified, and made the sacraments of the body and blood of the Lord▪ they [...] a promise of grace annex [...]d unto them▪ [...], of spiritual partaking of the body of Christ to be communicated and given, not to the bread and wine, but to [Page 351] them who worthily receive the sacrament.
If the substance of bread and wine do remain, then the union betwixt Christ and us is promised to them that take bread and wine.
BUT that union is not promised to bread and wine, but to the receivers of the flesh and blood. John 6. "He that eateth my flesh," &c.
ERGO, The substance of bread and wine remaineth not.
The promise undoubtedly is made to the flesh and blood, but the same is to be received in the sacrament through faith.
Every sacrament hath a promise of grace annexed unto it.
ERGO, The bread and wine are not sacraments.
True it is, every sacrament hath grace annexed unto it instrumentally. But there are divers understandings of this word [ [...]abet] "hath." For the sacrament hath not grace included in it; but to those that receive it well, it is turned to grace. After that manner the water in baptism hath grace promised, and by that the Holy Spirit is given; not that grace is included in water, but that grace cometh by water.
This promise is made to the flesh and blood of Christ, and not to the bread and wine.
ERGO, The sacrament is not bread and wine, but the body and blood of Christ.
There is no promise made to him that taketh common bread and common wine, but to him that receiveth in the sanctified bread▪ and bread of the communion, there is a large promise of grace made; neither is the promise given to the symbol [...], but to the thing of the sacrament. But the thing of the sacrament is the flesh and blood.
Every sacrament of the New Testament giveth grac [...], promised of God to those that worthily receive it.
This sacrament hath a promise of grace made to those who receive it worthily, because grace is given by it, as by an instrument, not that Christ hath transfused grace into bread and wine.
But this promise which is made, is only to those that worthily receive the flesh and blood; not the bread and wine.
That proposition of your's hath a double understanding. There is no promise made to them that receive common bread, as it were; but to those that worthily receive the sanctified bread, there is a promise of grace made, as Origen doth testify.
Where is that promise made?
"The bread which we brake, is it not a communication of the body of Christ?" And, "We being many are one bread, one body of Christ."
What doth he mean by bread in that place?
The bread of the Lord's table; the communion of the body of Christ.
Hear what Chrysostom saith upon that passage: "The bread which we break, is it not the communication of Christ's body? Wherefore did he not say, participation? Because he would signify some great matter, and that he would declare a great convenience and conjunction betwixt the same. For we do not communicate by participation only, and receiving, but also by co-uniting. For, like as that body is co united to Christ, so also we by the same bread are united to him."
Let Chrysostom have his manner of speaking, and his sentence. If it be true, I reject it not. But let it not be prejudicial to me to name it true bread.
"All (saith Chrysostom) which sit together at one board, do communicate together of one true body. What do I call (saith he) this communicating? We are all the self same body. What doth bread signify? The body of Christ. What ate they that receive it? The body of Christ. For [Page 352] many are but one body." Chrysostom doth interpret this place against you: "All we be one bread, and one mystical body, which do participate together one bread of Christ."
All we be one mystical body, which do communicate of one Christ in bread, after the efficacy of regeneration or quickening.
Of what manner of bread speaketh he?
Of the bread of the Lord's table.
Is that bread one?
It is one, of the church being one, because one bread is set forth upon the table: and so of one bread all together do participate, which communicate at the table of the Lord.
See how absurdly you speak. Do you say, all which be from the beginning to the end of the world?
All, I say, which at one table together have communicated in the mysteries might well so do. But the heavenly and celestial bread is likewise one also, whereof the sacramental bread is a mystery: the which being one, all we together do participate.
A perverse answer. Which all? Mean you all christian men?
I do distribute this word [All]: for all were wont together to communicate of the one bread divided into parts. All, I say, which were one congregation, and which all did communicate together at one table.
What? Do you then exclude then from the body of Christ all them who did not communicate, being present?
But Cyprian saith, "Bread which no multitude doth consume." Which cannot be understood but only of the body of Christ.
Also Cyprian in this place did speak of the true body of Christ, and not of material bread.
Nay, rather he did there treat of the sacrament in that treatise De Caena Domini, writing upon "the supper of the Lord."
Truth it is, that I grant he treateth there of the sacrament: but also he doth mix something therewithal of the spiritual eating.
When the Lord saith, "This is my body," he useth no tropical speech.
ERGO. You are deceived.
I deny your antecedent.
I bring here Augustine in ps. xxxiii. expounding these words, Fere [...]atur [...] [...]anibus suis, "He was carried in his own h [...]ds." "How may this be understood to be done in one man? For no man is carried in his own hands, but in the hands of another. How this may be understood of David after the letter, we do not find; of Christ we find it. For Christ was borne in his own hands, when he saith, "This is my body," for he carried that same body in his own hands," &c.
AUGUSTINE here did not see how this place after the letter could be understood of David, because no man can carry himself in his own hands. Therefore, saith he, this place is to be understood of Christ after the letter. For Christ carried himself in his own hands in his supper, when [...]e gave the sacrament to his disciples, saying, "This is my body."
I deny your argument, and will explain the same. Austin could not find, after his own understanding, how this could be understood of David after the letter. Austin diff [...]s here from [...] in this exposition, but I [...] from him. But let this exposition of Austin be granted to you, although I know this place of scripture be otherw [...]se read of other men, after the veri [...]y of the H [...]r [...]w text, and it is also otherwise to be expounded. Yet to grant to you this exposition of Austin, I say, yet notwithstanding it maketh nothing against my [Page 353] assertion: for Christ did bear himself in his own hands, when he gave the sacrament of his body to be eaten of his disciples.
ERGO, It is true of Christ after the letter, that he was borne in his own hands.
He was borne literally, and after that letter which was spoken of David: but not after the letter of these words, "This is my body."
I grant, that St. Austin saith, it is not found literally of David, that he carried himself in his own hands, but that it is found of Christ. But this word, [ ad literam,] "literally," you do not well refer to that which was borne, but rather it ought to be referred to him that did bear it. St. Augustine's meaning is this; that it is not read any where in the Bible, that this carnal David, the son of Jesse, did bear himself in his hands, but of that spiritual David that overthrew Goliah the devil; that is, of Christ our Saviour, the son of the virgin, it may well be found literally, that he bare himself in his own hands after a certain manner, namely, in carrying the sacrament of himself. And not, that St. Augustine hath these words, Quodam modo, "after a certain manner;" which manifestly declare how the doctor's meaning is to be taken.
When then was he borne in his own hands, and after what letter?
He was borne in the supper sacramentally, when he said, "This is my body."
Every man may bear in his own hands a figure of his body.
BUT Austin denieth that David could carry himself in his hands.
ERGO, He speaketh of no figure of his body.
If Austin could have found in all the scripture, that David had carried the sacrament of his body, then he would never have used that exposition of Christ.
But he did bear himself in his own hands:
ERGO, He did not bear a figure only.
He did bear himself, but in a sacrament: and Austin afterwards added Quodam modo, that is, sacramentally.
You understand not what Austin meant, when he said, Quodam modo; for he meant that he did bear his very true body in that supper, not in figure and form of a body, but in form and figure of bread.
ERGO, You are holden fast, neither are you able to escape out of this labyrinth.
DR. WESTON repeated this place again in English. Which done, Dr. Tresham began thus to speak, moved (as it seemed to Mr. Ridley) with great zeal, and desired that he might be instead of John Baptist, in converting the hearts of the fathers, and in reducing the said bishop Ridley again to the mother church. Now at the first, not knowing the person, he thought he had been some good old man, which had the zeal of God, although not according to knowledge, and began to answer him with reverence. But afterwards he smelled a fox under a sheep's cloathing.
"God Almighty grant that it may be fulfilled in me, that was spoken by the prophet Malachi of John Baptist, which may turn the hearts of the fathers to the children, and the hearts of the children to their fathers, that you may at length be converted. The wise man saith, Son, honour thy father, and reverence thy mother. But you dishonour [...] father in heaven, and pollute your mother the holy church here on earth, while ye set not by it."
These bye-words do pollute your school.
If there were an Arian which had that subtle wit that you have, he might soon shift off the authorities of the scripture and fathers.
Either dispute, or else hold your peace, I pray you.
I bring a place here out of the council of Lateran, the which council representing the universal [Page 354] church, wherein were congregated three hundred bishops, and seventy metropolitans, besides a great multitude of others, decreed, That bread and wine, by the power of God's word, was transubstantiate into the body and blood of the Lord. Therefore, whosoever saith contrary, cannot be a child of the church, but an heretic.
Good sir, I have heard what you have cited out of the council of Lateran, and remember that there was a great multitude of bishops and metropolitans, as you said: but yet you have not numbered how many abbots, priors, and friars were in that council, who were to the number of eight hundred.
ONE of the scribes. What, will you deny then the authority of that council for the multitude of those priors?
No sir, not so much for that cause, as for that especially, because the doctrine of that council agreed not with the word of God, as it may well appear by the acts of that council, which was holden under Innocent the third, a man (if we believe the histories) most pernicious to the church and common-wealth of Christ.
What, do you not receive the council of Lateran? Whereupon he with certain others cried, Write, write.
No sir, I receive not that council; write, and write again.
Evil men do eat the natural body of Christ.
ERGO, The true and natural body of Christ is on the altar.
Evil men do eat the very true and natural body of Christ sacramentally, and no further, as St. Augustine saith: but good men do eat the very true body both sacramentally, and spiritually by grace.
I prove the contrary by Augustine, "Like as Judas, to whom the Lord gave the morsel, did offend; not in taking a thing that was evil, but in receiving it after an evil manner," &c. And a little after, "Because some do not eat unto salvation, it followeth not therefore, that it is not his body."
It is the body to them, that is, the sacrament of the body: and Judas took the sacrament of the Lord to his condemnation. Austin hath distinguished these things well in another place, where he saith, "The bread of the Lord, the bread the Lord. Evil men eat the bread of the Lord, but not bread the Lord. But good men eat both the bread of the Lord, and bread the Lord."
Paul saith, the body, and you say, the sacrament of the body.
Paul meaneth so indeed.
You understand it evil concerning the sign: for the fathers say, that evil men do eat him which descended from heaven.
They eat him indeed, but sacramentally. The fathers use many times the sacrament for the matter of the sacrament; that same place maketh against you; and here he cited the place.
I bring Theophylact, who saith, "That Judas did taste the body of the Lord. The Lord did shew the cruelty of Judas, which, when he was rebuked, did not understand, and tasted the Lord's flesh," &c.
This phrase to divines is well known, and used of the doctors. He tasted the flesh of the Lord,
that is, the sacrament of the Lord's flesh.
Chrysostom saith▪ That the same punishment remaineth to them who receive the body of th [...] Lord unworthily, as to them who crucified him.
That is, because they defile the Lord body: for evil men do eat the body of Christ sacr [...]mentally, but good men eat both the sacrament [...] the matter of the sacrament.
You reject the council of Lateran, b [...]cause [Page 355] (you say) it agreeth not with God's word. What say you then to the council of Nice? The words of the council are these, "Let us not look a-low by the ground upon the bread and the drink set before us, but lifting up our mind let us faithfully believe, there upon the holy table to lie the Lamb of God taking away the sins of the world, being sacrificed of the priests."
That council was collected out of ancient fathers, and is to me a great authority: for it saith, "That bread is set upon the altar, and having our minds lifted up, we must consider him which is in heaven." The words of the council make for me.
[ Exalta mente,] "with a mind exalted;" that is, not as brute beasts at the rack or manger, having an eye only upon the thing that is set before them. The Lamb of God lieth on the table, saith the council.
The Lamb of God is in heaven, according to the verity of the body; and here he is with us in a mystery, according to his power, not corporally.
But the Lamb of God lieth on the table.
It is a figurative speech, for in our mind we understand him which is in heaven.
But he lieth there, as the Greek word imports.
He lieth there, that is, he is there present, not corporally, but he lieth there in his operation.
He lieth, but his operation lieth not.
You think very grossly of the sitting or lying of the celestial Lamb on the table of the Lord. For we may not imagine any such sitting or lying upon the table, as the reason of man would judge: but all things are here to be understood spiritually. For that heavenly Lamb is (as I confess) on the table, but by a spiritual presence, by grace, and not after any corporal substance of his flesh taken out of the virgin Mary.
AND indeed the same canon doth plainly teach, that the bread which is set on the table is material bread; and therefore it (the canon I mean) commandeth that we should not creep on the ground in our thoughts, to those things which are set before us: as who should say, what other things are they (as much as pertaineth to their true substance) than bread and wine? but rather, saith the canon, lifting up our minds into heaven, let us consider with faith the Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world, sitting or lying upon the table. For a lifted up faith, saith he, seeth him which sitteth on the right hand of God the Father, after the true manner of a body set by grace on the Lord's table, and taking away the sins of the world. For I think you mean not so, as though the Lamb did lie there prostrate with his members spread upon the table.
I bring another place out of the council of Nice: "None of the apostles said, this is a figure of the body of Christ▪ none of the reverend elders [...]id, the un [...]loody sacrifice of the altar to be a figure.
ERGO, [...] deceived.
This [...] of Nice. For I have read over t [...]is [...] many times.
THEN came in another whom Mr. Ridley knew not, and said, "The universal church both of the Greeks and Latins, of the east and of the west, have agreed in the council of Florence, uniformly, in the doctrine of the sacrament, that in the sacrament of the altar there is the true and real body.
I deny the Greek and the east church to have agreed either in the council at Florence, or at any time else, with the Romish church, in the doctrine of transubstantiation of bread into the body of Christ. Fo [...] there was nothing in the council of Florence, wherein the Greeks would agree with the Romanists; however I confess, it was left for every church to use, as they were wont, leavened or unleavened bread.
HERE cried out Dr. Cole, and said, they agreed together concerning transubstantiation of bread into [Page 356] the body of Christ Dr. Ridley said that could not be.
THEN started up another, unknown to Dr. Ridley, but thought to be one of the scribes, who affirmed with him, that indeed there was nothing decreed concerning transubstantiation; the council left that as a matter not meet nor worthy to disturb the peace and concord of the church. To whom Dr. Ridley answered again, that he said the truth.
What say you to that council, where it is said, that the priest doth offer an unbloody sacrifice of the body of Christ?
I say, it is well said, if it be rightly understood.
But he offered an unbloody sacrifice.
It was called unbloody, and is offered after a certain manner, and in a mystery, and as a representation of that bloody sacrifice, and he doth not lye, which saith Christ to be offered.
I with one argument will throw down to the ground your opinion, out of Chrysostom, Hom. xxiv. in 1 Cor. And I will teach, not only a figure and a sign, or grace only, but the very same body, which was here conversant on the earth, to be in the eucharist.
(1) WE worship the self-same body in the eucharist, which the wise men did worship in the manger.
(2) BUT that was his natural and real body, not spiritual.
(3) ERGO, The real body of Christ is in the eucharist.
AGAIN, the same Chrysostom saith, "We have not here the Lord in a manger, but on the altar. Here a woman holdeth him not in her hands, but a priest."
We worship, I confess, the same true Lord and Saviour of the world, which the wise men worshipped in the manger; howbeit we do it in a mystery, and in the sacrament of the Lord's supper, and that in spiritual liberty, as saith St. Austin, l. 3. De Doctrina Christiana; not in carnal servitude; that is, we do not worship servilely the signs for the things; for that should be, as he also saith, a part of a servile infirmity. But we behold with the eyes of faith him present after grace, and spiritually set upon the table; and we worship him which sitteth above, and is worshipped of the angels. For Christ is always assistant to his mysteries, as the said Augustine saith. And the Divine Majesty, as Cyprian saith, doth never absent himself from the divine mysteries; but this assistance and presence of Christ, as in baptism it is wholly spiritual, and by grace, and not by any corporal substance of the flesh, even so it is here in the Lord's supper, being rightly and according to the word of God duly ministered.
That which the woman did hold in her womb, the same holdeth the priest.
I grant the priest holdeth the same thing, but after another manner. She did hold the [...] body; the priest holdeth the mystery of the body.
HERE Weston again repeated his argument out of Chrysostom in English.
I say that the author meant it spiritually.
A THIRD DISPUTATION at OXFORD, April 18, 1554, between the Rev. Dr. HUGH LATIMER, Bishop of WORCESTER, and others, his opponents.
BISHOP Latimer was brought out to dispute upon Wednesday, April 18. This disputation began at eight o'clock, and was conducted in much [Page 357] the same manner as those preceding, except that most part of it was in English: for the bishop alledged, that he was out of use with the Latin, and unfit for that place.
MR. SMITH of Oriel college, Dr. Cartwright, Mr. Harpsfield, and others, replied to him, with many cruel insinuations and bitter taunts. The old bishop escaped no hissings, and scornful laughings, which those who had went before had patiently endured. Being very faint, he desired that he might not long tarry; nor durst he drink for fear of vomiting. The disputation ended before eleven of the clock. Dr. Latimer was not suffered to read what he had, as he observed, painfully written: but it was exhibited up, and the prolocutor, after having read part thereof, proceeded unto the disputation. ☞
The EXORDIUM, or PREFACE, of Dr. WESTON, Prolocutor, unto the following DISPUTATION.
MEN and brethren, we are come together this day (by the help of God) to vanquish the strength of the arguments, and dispersed opinions of adversaries, against the truth of the real presence of the Lord's body in the sacrament. And therefore, you father, if you have any thing to answer, I do admonish that you answer in short and few words.
I pray you, good master prolocutor, do not exact that of me, which is not in me; I have not these twenty years much used the Latin tongue.
Take your ease, father.
I thank you sir, I am well; let me here protest my faith; for I am not able to dispute; and afterwards do your pleasure with me.
The PROTESTATION of BISHOP LATIMER, given in writing to DR. WESTON.
THE conclusions whereunto I must answer, are these:
1. THE first is, That in the sacrament of the altar by the virtue of God's word pronounced by the priest, there is really present the natural body of Christ, conceived of the virgin Mary, under the kinds of the appearance of bread and wine; in like manner his blood.
2. THE second is, That after consecration there remaineth no substance of bread and wine, nor any other substance, but the substance of God and Man.
3. THE third is, That in the mass there is the lively sacrifice of the church, which is propitiable, as well for the sins of the quick, as of the dead.
CONCERNING the first conclusions, I think it is set forth with certain new found terms that are obscure, and do not sound according to the speech of scripture. But however I understand it, this I do answer plainly, (though not without peril) that to the right celebration of the Lord's supper, there is no other presence of Christ required, than a spiritual presence: and this presence is sufficient for a christian man, as a presence by which we abide in Christ, and Christ abideth in us, to the obtaining of eternal life, if we persevere. And this same presence may be called most fitly a real presence, that is, a presence not feigned, but a true and faithful presence. Which thing I here rehearse, [Page 358] lest some sycophant, or scorner, should suppose me, with the anabaptists, to make nothing else of the sacrament, but a naked and bare sign. As for that which is feigned of many concerning their corporal presence, I for my part take it for a papistical invention; therefore I think it ought utterly to be rejected.
CONCERNING the second conclusion, I dare be bold to say, that it hath no ground in God's word, but is a thing invented and found out by man, and therefore to be taken as false; and I had almost said, as the mother and nurse of the other errors. It were good for my lords and masters of the transubstantiation, to take heed lest they conspire with the Nestorians, for I do not see how they can avoid it.
THE third conclusion (as I understand it) seemeth subtily to sow sedition against the offering which Christ himself offered for us in his own proper person, according to these words of St. Paul, Heb. i. where he saith, "That Christ his own self hath made purgation of our sins." And afterwards, "That he might (said he) be a merciful and faithful bishop, concerning those things which are to be done with God, for the taking away of our sins." So that the expiation or taking away of our sins may be thought to depend on this, that Christ was an offering bishop, than that he was offered, were it not that he was offered of himself: and therefore it is needless that he should be offered of any other. I will speak nothing of the wonderful presumption of man, to dare to attempt this thing without a manifest vocation, especially in that it tendeth to the overthrowing and making fruitless (if not wholly, yet partly) of the cross of Christ; for truly it is no base or mean thing to offer Christ. And therefore well may a man say to my lords and masters the offerers, By what authority do ye this? and who gave you this authority? Where? When? A man cannot (saith the baptist) take any thing, except it be given him from above: much less then may any man presume to usurp any honour, before he be thereto called. Again, If any man sin, (saith St. John) we have, not a master, or offerer, at home, who can sacrifice for us at mass, but we have (saith he) an advocate Jesus Christ, who once offered up himself long ago: of which offering the efficacy and effect is for ever, so that it is needless to have such offerers.
WHAT meaneth Paul, when he saith, "They that serve at the altar, are partakers of the altar?" and so addeth; "So the Lord hath ordained, that they that preach the gospel, shall live by the gospel." Whereas he should have said, The Lord hath ordained, that they that sacrifice at mass, should live of their sacrificing, that there might be a living assigned to our sacrificers now, as was before Christ's coming to the Jewish priests. For now they have nothing to alledge for their living, as they that be preachers have. So that it appeareth, that the sacrificing priesthood is changed by God's ordinance into a preaching priesthood, and the sacrificing priesthood should cease utterly, saving inasmuch as all christian men are sacrificing priests.
THE supper of the Lord was instituted to provoke us to thanksgiving, for the offering which the Lord himself did offer for us, much rather than that our offerers should do there as they do. "Feed (saith Peter) as much as ye may the flock of Christ:" nay, rather let us sacrifice as much as we may for the flock of Christ. If the matter be as men now make it, I can never wonder enough, that Peter would or could forget this office of sacrificing, which at this day is in such a price and estimation, that to feed is almost nothing with many. If thou cease from feeding the flock, how shalt thou be taken? Truly catholic enough. But if thou cease from sacrificing and massing, how will that be taken? At the least, I warrant thee, thou shalt be called an heretic.
AND whence, I pray you, come these papistical judgments? Except perchance they think a man feedeth the flock in sacrificing for them: and then what needeth there any learned pastors? For no man is so foolish, but soon he may l [...]arn to sacrifice and mass it.
THUS I have taken the more pains to write, because I refused to dispute, in consideration of my debility thereunto: that all men may know, how that I have so done not without great pains, hav [...]ng not any man to help me, as I have never before been debarred to have. O sir, you may chance [Page 359] to live till you come to this age and weakness that I am of. I have spoken in my time before two kings more than once, two or three hours together, without interruption; but now that I may speak the truth, (by your leave) I could not be suffered to declare my mind before you, no, not by the space of a quarter of an hour, without revilings, checks, rebukes, taunts, such as I have not felt the like, in such an audience, all my life long. Surely it cannot but be an heinous offence that I have given. But what was it? Forsooth, I had spoken of the four marrow-bones of the mass. The which kind of speaking I never read to be a sin against the Holy Ghost.
I could not be allowed to shew what I meant by my metaphor: but, sir, now by your favour I will tell you what I mean.
THE first is the popish consecration, which hath been called a God's body-making.
THE second is transubstantiation.
THE third is massal oblation.
THE fourth, adoration.
THESE chief and principal portions parts, and points, incident to the mass, and most esteemed in the same, I call the marrow-bones of the mass; which indeed you, by force, might, and violence intrude, in sound of words, in some of the scripture, with racking and cramping, injuring and wronging the same: but else, indeed, plain out of the scripture, as I am thoroughly persuaded, altho' in disputation I now could do nothing to persuade the same to others, being both unapt to study, and also to make a shew of my former study in such readiness as should be requisite to the same.
I have heard much talk of Dr. Weston in my time: but I never knew your person to my knowledge, till I came before you as the queen's majesty's commissioner. I pray God send you so right judgment, as I perceive you have great wit, great learning, with many other qualities. God give you gra [...]e ever well to use them, and ever to have in remembrance, that he that dwelleth on high, locketh on the low things on the earth; and that there is no council against the Lord; and also that this world hath been, and yet is a tottering world. And again, that though we must obey the princes, yet that hath this limitation, namely, in the Lord. For whosoever obey them against the Lord, they be the most pernicious to them, and the greatest adversaries that they have: for they so procure God's vengeance upon them, if God be the only ruler of things.
THERE are some so corrupt in mind, the truth being taken from them, that they think gain to be godliness; great learned men, and yet men of no learning, but of railing, and raging, about questions, and strife of words. I call them men of no learning, because they know not Christ, how much else soever they know. And on this sort we are wont to call great learned clerks, being ignorant of Christ, unlearned men; for it is nothing but plain ignorance, to know any thing without Christ: whereas whoso knoweth Christ, the same hath knowledge enough, although in other knowledge he be to seek. The apostle Paul confesseth of himself to the Corinthians, that he did know nothing but Jesus Christ crucified. Many men babble many things of Christ, who yet know not Christ; but, pretending Christ, do craftily colour and darken his glory. Depart from such men, saith the apostle Paul to Timothy.
IT is not out of the way to remember what St. Augustine saith. The place where, I do not now remember, except it be against the epistles of Petilian; "Whosoever (saith he) teacheth any thing necessarily to be believed, which is not contained m the Old and New Testament, the same is accursed." Oh! beware of this curse, if you be wise. I am much deceived if Basilius have not such like words; "Whatsoever (saith he) is besides the holy scripture, if the same be taught as necessarily to be believed, that is sin." Oh, therefore, take heed of this sin!
THERE are some that speak many false things more probable, and more like to the truth, than the truth itself. Therefore Paul giveth a watch-word▪ "Let no man (saith he) deceive you with probability and persuasions of words." But what mean you, saith one, by this talk so far from the [Page 360] matter? Well, I hope, good masters, you will suffer an old man a little to play the child, and to speak one thing twice. O Lord God! you have changed the most holy communion into a private action; and you deny to the laity the Lord's cup, contrary to Christ's commandment: and you do blemish the annunciation of the Lord's death till he come: for you have changed the common prayer, called the divine service, with the administration of the sacraments, from the vulgar and known language, into a strange tongue, contrary to the will of the Lord revealed in his word. God open the door of your heart, to see the things you should see herein. I would fain obey my sovereign as any in this realm: but in these things I can never do it with an upright conscience. God be merciful unto us. Amen.
Then you refuse to dispute? Will you here then subscribe?
No, good master, I pray be good to an old man. You may, if it please God, be once old, as I am: you may come to this age, and to this debility.
You said upon Saturday last, that you could not find the mass, nor the marrow-bones thereof, in your book: but we will find a mass in that book.
No, good Mr. Doctor, you cannot.
What find you then there?
A communion.
Which communion, the first or the last?
I find no great diversity in them; they are one supper of the Lord: but I like the last very well.
The first you do not approve of?
I do not well remember wherein they differ.
Then cak [...] bread, and loaf bread, are all one? You call it the supper of the Lord; but you are deceived in that; for they had done the supper before, and therefore the scripture saith, "After they had supped." St. Paul findeth fault with the Corinthians, that some of them were drunken at this supper; and you know, no man can be drunken at your communion.
The first was called [ Coena Judaica] "The Jewish Supper," when they did eat the paschal lamb together; the other was called [ Coena Dominica] "The Lord's Supper."
That is false; for Chrysostom denieth that. St. Ambrose on the x. chap. of the 1 Cor. saith, "The mystery of the sacrament, given as they were at supper, is not the supper of the Lord." Also Gregory Nazianzene saith the same. And the first supper was called Agapee: can you tell what that is?
I understand not Greek: yet I think it meaneth charity.
Mr. Opponent begin.
Because I perceive that this charge is laid upon my neck to dispute with you; to the end that the same may go forward after a right manner and order, I will propose three questions, so as they are put forth unto me. And first I ask this question of you, although the same indeed ought not to be called in question: but such is the condition of the church, that it is always vexed of the wicked. I ask, I say, whether Christ's body be really in the sacrament?
I trust I have obtained of Mr. Prolocutor, that no man shall exact that thing of me which is not in me. And I am sorry that this worshipful audience should be deceived of their expectation for my sake. I have given up my mind in writing to Mr. Prolocutor.
Whatsoever you have given up, it shall be registered among the acts.
Disputation requireth a good memory; my memory is gone, and marvellously weakened, and never the better, I think, for the prison.
How long have you been in prison?
Three quarters of this year.
And I was in prison six years.
The more pity, sir.
How long have you been of this opinion?
It is not long, sir, that I have been of this opinion.
The time hath been when you said mass full devoutly.
Yes, I crave God's mercy heartily for it.
Where learned you this new fangleness.
I have long sought for the truth in this matter of the sacrament, and have hot been of this mind more than seven years: and my lord of Canterbury's book hath especially confirmed my judgement herein. If I could remember all therein contained, I would not fear to answer any man in this matter.
There are in that book six hundred errors.
You were once a Lutheran.
No, I was a papist: for I never could perceive how Luther could defend his opinion without transubstantiation. The Tygurines once did write a book against Luther, and I often desired God, that he might live so long as to answer them.
Luther in his book, "Of private mass," says, "That the devil reasoned with him, and persuaded him that the mass was not good," fol. 14. So that Luther said mass, and the devil dissuaded him from it.
I do not take in hand to defend Luther's sayings or doings. If he were here, he would defend himself well enough. I told you before that I am not meet for disputations. I pray you, read mine answer, wherein I have declared my faith.
Do you believe this, as you have written?
Yes.
Then have you no faith.
Then would I be sorry, sir.
I [...] is written, "Except you shall eat the flesh of the Son of Man, and drink his blood, ye shall have no life in you." Which when the Capernaites, and many of Christ's disciples heard, they said, "This is a hard saying," &c. Now that the truth may the better appear, here I ask of you. Whether Christ, speaking these words, did mean of his flesh to be eaten with the mouth, or of the spiritual eating of the same?
I answer (as Augustine understandeth) that Christ meant of the spiritual eating of his flesh.
Of what flesh meant Christ, his true flesh, or no?
Of his true flesh, spiritually to be eaten in the supper by faith, and not corporally.
Of what flesh meant the Capernaites?
Of his true flesh also; but to be eaten with the mouth.
They, as you confess, did mean his true flesh to be eaten with the mouth. And Christ also (as I shall prove) did speak of the receiving of his flesh with the mouth.
ERGO, They both did understand it of the eating of one thing, which is done by the mouth of the body.
I say, Christ meant not of the bodily mouth; but of the mouth of the spirit, mind, and heart.
I prove the contrary, that Christ understandeth it of the eating with the bodily mouth. For whereas custom is a good interpreter of things, [Page 362] and whereas the acts put in practice by Christ, do certainly declare those things which he first spake; Christ's deeds in his supper, where he gave his body to be taken with the mouth, together with the custom which hath been ever since the time of that eating which is done with the mouth, doth evidently intimate that Christ did understand his words, here cited by me, out of the vi. of John, of the eating with the mouth.
He gave not his body to be received with the mouth, but he gave the sacrament of his body to be received with the mouth: he gave the sacrament to the mouth, his body to the mind.
But my reason doth conclude, That Christ spoke concerning his flesh to be received with the corporal mouth: for otherwise (which God forbid) he had been a deceiver, and had been offensive to the Capernaites and his disciples, if he had not meant in this point as they thought he meant: for if he had thought as you do feign, it had been an easy matter for him to have said, Ye shall not eat my flesh with your mouth, but the sacrament of my flesh; that is to say, Ye shall receive with your mouth not the thing itself, but the figure of the thing, and thus he might have satisfied them: but so he said not, but continued in the truth of his words, as he was wont. Therefore Christ meant the self same thing that the Capernaites did, I mean concerning the thing itself to be received with the mouth, namely, that his true flesh is truly to be eaten with the mouth. Moreover, forasmuch as you do expound [ Corpus Christi] "The body of Christ," [ Sacramentum corporis Christi,] "The sacrament of the body of Christ," and hereby do suppose that we obtain but a spiritual union, or union of the mind between us and Christ, plain it is, that you are deceived in this thing, and do err from the mind of the fathers: for St. Hilary affirmeth, by plain and express words, that we are corporally and carnally joined together. To be short, I myself have heard you preaching at Greenwich before king Henry the eighth, where you did openly affirm, That no christian man ought to doubt of the true and real presence of Christ's body in the sacrament, forasmuch as he had the word of scripture on his side, "This is my body," whereby he might be confirmed. But now there is the same truth; the word of scripture hath the self same thing which it then had; therefore why do you deny at this present that, whereof it was not lawful once to doubt before when you taught it?
Will you give me leave to speak?
Speak Latin, I pray you, for you can do it, if you will, readily enough.
I cannot speak Latin so long and so largely. Mr. Prolocutor hath given me leave to speak English. And as for the words of Hilary, and other fathers, I think they make not so much for you. But he that shall answer the doctors, had not need to be in my case, but should have them in readiness, and know their purpose. Melancthon saith, If the doctors had foreseen that they should have been so taken in this controversy, they would have written more plainly.
I will reduce the words of Hilary into the form of a syllogism.
(1) SUCH as is the unity of our flesh with Christ's flesh, such, yea greater, is the unity of Christ with the Father.
(2) BUT the unity of Christ's flesh with our's, is true and substantial.
(3) ERGO, The unity of Christ with the Father is true and substantial.
I understand you not.
I know your learning well enough, and how subtle you be: I will use a few words with you, and that out of Cyprian on the Lord's supper. The Old Testament doth forbid the drinking of blood; the New Testament doth command the drinking and tasting of blood: but where doth it command the drinking of blood?
In these words, "Drink ye all of this."
Then we taste true [...]lood.
We do taste true blood spiritually; and this is enough.
Nay, the Old and New Testaments in this do differ; for the one doth command, and the other doth forbid to drink blood.
It is true as touching the matter, but not as touching the manner of the thing.
Then there is no difference between the drinking of blood in the New Testament, and that of the Old; for they also drank spiritually.
And we drink spiritually also, but a more precious blood.
Augustine upon the xlv. Psalm, saith, "Drink boldly the blood which ye have poured out."
ERGO, It is blood.
I never denied it, nor ever will I go from it, but that we drink the very blood of Christ indeed, but spiritually: for the same St. Augustine saith, "Believe, and thou hast eaten."
Nay, to believe, is not to drink or eat. You will not say, I pledge you, when I say, I believe in God.
Is not [ Manducare] "To eat," in your learning put for [ Credere] "To believe?"
I remember, my lord chancellor demanded Mr. Hooper to answer these questions, Whether [ Edere] "To eat," were [ Credere] "To believe," and [ Altare] "An altar," were Christ in all the scripture, &c. And he answered, Yes.
THEN said my lord chancellor, "We have an altar, of which it is not lawful to eat," is as much as to say, "We have a Christ, in whom we may not believe."
"Believe, and thou hast eaten," is spoken of the spiritual eating.
It is true, I do allow your saying; I take it so also▪
We are commanded to drink blood in the new law.
ERGO, It is very blood.
We drink blood, so as appertaineth to us to drink to our comfort, in sacramental wine. We drink blood sacramentally: he gave us his blood to drink spiritually; he went about to shew, that as certainly as we drink wine, so certainly we drink his blood spiritually.
Do not you seem to be a papist, which do bring in new words, not found in the scripture? Where find you that, "sacramentally," in God's book?
It is necessarily gathered from scripture.
The Old Testament doth forbid the tasting of blood, but the New doth command it.
It is true, not as touching the thing, but as touching the manner thereof.
Hear, ye people, this is the argument:
THAT which was forbidden in the Old Testament, is commanded in the New.
To drink blood was forbidden in the Old Testament, and commanded in the New.
[This argument, because the major thereof is not universal, is not formal, and may well be retorted against Weston thus.
No natural or moral thing, forbidden materially in the Old Testament, is commanded in the New.
To drink man's natural blood is forbidden materially in the Old Testament.
ERGO, To drink man's natural blood materially is not commanded in the New.]
It is commanded spiritually to be drunk; I grant it is blood drunk in the New Testament, but we receive it spiritually.
It was not forbidden spiritually in the old law.
The substance of blood is drunk, but not in one manner.
It doth not require the same manner of drinking.
It is the same thing, not the same manner. I have no more to say.
"O the madness of Judas! He made bargain with the Jews for thirty pence to sell Christ, and Christ offered him his blood which he sold."
I grant he offered to Judas his blood which he sold, but in a sacrament.
Because you can defend your doctors no better, you shall see what worshipful men ye hang upon, and one that hath been of your mind shall dispute with you. Mr. Cartwright, I pray you, dispute.
Reverend father, because it is given me in commandment to dispute with you, I will do it gladly. But first understand, before we go any further, that I was in the same error that you are in: but I am sorry for it, and do confess myself to have erred: I acknowledge mine offence, and I wish and desire God that you may also repent with me.
Will you give me leave to tell what hath caused Mr. Doctor here to recant? It is merely "The pain of the law," which hath brought you back, and converted you, and many more; which hindereth many from confessing God. And this is a great argument; there are few here can dissolve it.
That is not my case, but I will make you this short argument, by which I was converted from mine errors.
(1) IF the true body of Christ be not really in the sacrament, all the whole church hath erred from the apostle's time.
(2) BUT Christ would not suffer his church to err.
(3) ERGO, It is the true body of Christ.
The Popish church hath erred, and doth err. I think for the space of six or seven hundred years, there was no mention made of any eating but spiritually: for, before these five hundred years, the church did ever confess a spiritual eating. But the Romish church begat the error of transubstantiation. My lord of Canterbury's book handleth that very well, and by him I could answer you if I had him.
Linus and all the rest do confess the body of Christ to be in the sacrament: and St. Augustine also upon the 99th Psalm, upon this place, "Worship his footstool," &c. granteth that it is to be worshipped.
We do worship Christ in the heavens, and we do worship him in the sacrament: but the massing worship is not to be used.
Do you think that Cyril was of the ancient church?
I do think so.
He saith, That Christ dwelleth in us corporally: these are Cyril's words of the mystical benediction.
That [corporally] hath another understanding, than you do grossly take it.
CYRIL saith, that Christ dwelleth corporally in us, but he saith not that Christ dwelleth corporally in the bread. Which dwelling of Christ in us, is as our dwelling is also in Christ, not local or corporal, but spiritual and heavenly. Corporally therefore is to be taken in the same sense, as St. Paul saith the fulness of divinity to dwell in Christ corporally, that is, not lightly nor accidentally, but perfectly and substantially, with all his virtue and power, &c. And so dwelleth Christ corporally in us also.
The solution of this is in my lord of Canterbury's book.
Cyril was no papist, and yet these are his words, "Christ dwelleth in us corporally?" But you say, he dwelleth in us spiritually.
I say both, that he dwelleth in us corporally and spiritually, according to his meaning: spiritually by faith, and corporally by taking our flesh upon him. For I remember, I have read this in my lord of Canterbury's book.
Because your learning is let out to farm, and shut up in my lord of Canterbury's book, I will recite unto you a place of St. Ambrose, concerning the preparation for the mass, where he saith, "We see the chief priest coming unto us, and offering blood," &c.
LIKEWISE both Augustine in the 38th Psal. and Chrysostom concerning the incomprehensible nature of God, vol. 3. say, "Not only men," &c.
I am not ashamed to acknowledge mine ignorance, and these testimonies are more than I can bear away.
Then you must leave some behind you for lack of carriage.
But as to Chrysostom, he hath many figurative speeches, and emphatical phrases in many places; as in that which you have now recited: but he saith not, For the quick and the dead; he taketh the celebration for the sacrifice.
You shall hear Chrysostom again, upon the 9th chapter of the Acts, "What say you? The host in the hands of the priest," &c. He doth not call it a cup of wine.
You have mine answer there in a paper; and yet he calleth it not a propitiatory sacrifice.
You shall hear it to be so: and I bring another place of Chrysostom out of the same treatise, "It was not rashly instituted by the apostles," &c.
He is too precious a thing for us to offer; he offereth himself.
Here in another place of Chrysostom to the people of Antioch, and also to the Phillippians, he saith, "There should be a memory and sacrifice for the dead."
I do say, that the holy communion beareth the name of a sacrifice, because it is a sacrifice memorative.
What say you to the sacrifice of the dead?
I say that it needeth not, and it availeth not.
Augustine in his Enchiridon, saith, "We must not deny that the souls of the dead are relieved by the devotion of their friends who are living, when the sacrifice of the Mediator is offered for them." Where he proveth the verity of Christ's body, and praying for the dead. And it is said, that the same Augustine said mass for his mother.
But that mass was not like your's, which thing doth manifestly appear in his writings, which are against it in every place. And Augustine is a reasonable man, he requireth to be believed no further than he bringeth scripture for his proof, and agreeth with God's word.
In the same place he proveth a propitiatory sacrifice, and that upon an altar, and no oyster-board.
It is the Lord's table, and no oyster-board. It may be called an altar, and so the doctors call it in many places: but there is no propitiatory sacrifice, but only Christ. The doctors might be deceived in some points, though not in all things; I believe them when they say well.
Is it not a shame for an old man to lye? You say, you are of the old fathers' faith where they say well, and yet you are not.
I am of their faith when they say well; I refer myself to my lord of Canterbury's book wholly herein.
Then you are not of Chrysostom's faith, nor of St. Augustine's faith.
I have said, when they say well, and bring scripture, I am of their faith; and further Augustine requireth not to be believed.
Origen, Hom. xiii, upon Leviticus.
I have but one word to say; The sacramental bread is called a propitiation, because it is a sacrament of the propitiation. What is your vocation?
My vocation is at this time to dispute; otherwise I am a priest, and my vocation is to offer.
Where have you that authority given you to offer.
[ Hoc facite] "Do this," for [ facite] in that place is taken for [ offerte] that is, "offer ye."
Is [ facere] nothing but [ sacrificare] "to sacrifice?" Why, then no man must receive the sacrament, but priests only: for there may none other offer but priests.
ERGO, Th [...] may none receive but priests.
Your argument is to be denied.
Did Christ then offer himself at his supper?
Yes, he offered himself for the whole world.
Then if this word [ facite] "do ye," signify [ sacrificate] "sacrifice ye," it followeth, as I said, that none but priests only ought to receive the sacrament, to whom it is only lawful to sacrifice: and where find you that, I pray you?
Forty years ago, whither could you have gone to have found your doctrine?
The more cause we have to thank God, that hath now sent the light into the world▪
The light▪ Nay, light and lewd preachers; for you could not tell what you might have. Ye altered and changed so often your communions and altars, and all for this one end, to spoil and rob the church.
These things pertain nothing to me, I must not answer other men's deeds, but only for mine own.
Well, Mr. Latimer, this is our intent, to wish you well, and to exhort you to come to yourself, and remember, that without Noah's ark there is no health. Remember what they have been, that were the beginners of your doctrine: none but a few flying apostates, running out of Germany for fear of the faggot. Remember what they have been who have set forth the same in this realm: a sort of fling brains and light heads, who were never constant in one thing, as it was to be seen in the turning of the table, where like a sort of apes they could not tell which way to turn their tails, looking one day west, and another day east; one that way, and another this way. They will be like (they say) to the apostles, they will have no churches; a hovel is good enough for them. They come to the communion with no reverence. They get them a tankard, and one saith, I drink, and I am thankful; the more joy of thee, saith another. And in them was it true that Hilary saith, "We make every year and every month a faith." A runagate Scot did take away the adoration or worshipping of Christ in the sacrament, by whose procurement that heresy was put into the last communion-book; so much prevailed that one man's authority at that time. You never agreed with the Tygurines, or Germans, or with the church, or with yourself. Your stubbornness cometh of a vain glory, which is to no purpose: for it will do you no good when a faggot is in your beard. And we see all, by your own confession▪ how little cause you have to be stubborn, for your learning is in feoffers hold. The queen's grace is merciful, if you will turn.
You shall have no hope in me to turn. I pray for the queen daily, even from the bottom of my heart, that she may turn from this religion.
Here you all see the weakness of heresy against the truth: he denieth all truth, and all the old fathers.
HERE too our readers may see whether this boasting prolocutor obtained a glorious victory or not, over his insulted opponents, and how slender his pretensions for a triumph on that account. But no wonder he should claim the victory, disputing as he did, not without his tippling-cup at his elbow; nor without frequent smiles from those who applauded the strength of his arguments; especially at that time, in the course of Dr. Ridley's disputation, when Weston, holding the cup, or beer-pot, in his hand, said to the opponent, "Urge this, urge this; for this makes for us;" which words occasioned much laughter among the auditors.
THUS we have given a full account of those disputations, that were maintained against three worthy confessors and martyrs of the Lord, wherein may be seen the disorderly usage of the university men, their unmannerly deportment in the divinity school, the tumult of a rude multitude, the passion, fierceness, and interruption of the grave doctors, the full ground of the reasonings, the censure of the partial judges, the foul language, and indecent railing of the prolocutor, with his vain blast of triumph at the conclusion of each debate, by which he shewed himself both actor, moderator, and judge. We need not wonder then that this victorious conqueror, having the law in his own hands, should say of himself, Vic [...] veritas, though he said not one true word, nor ever made a true conclusion, almost throughout the several disputations.
THE day after these were closed, being the 19th of April, it happened that Mr. Harpsfield was called upon, to dispute for his form, to be made a doctor of divinity; on which occasion Dr. Cranmer was again brought forth, and permitted, among the rest, to deliver an argument or two in defence of his cause, as the sequel will shew.
A DISPUTATION with Mr. HARPSFIELD, BATCHELOR of DIVINITY, when answering for his FORM, to be made DOCTOR.
I Am not ignorant what a weighty matter it is to intreat of the whole order and trade of the scriptures: and most hard it is too, in the great con [...]ntion of religion, to shew the ready way whereby the scriptures may best be understood; for the often reading of them doth not bring the true understanding of them. What other thing is there then? Verily this is the ready way, not to follow our own heads and senses, but to give over our judgment unto the holy catholic church, who hath of old years the truth, and always delivered the same to her posterity: but if the often reading of scriptures, and ever so painful comparing of places, should bring the true understanding, then divers heretics might prevail even against whole general councils. The Jews did greatly brag of their knowledge of the law, and of the Saviour that they waited for. But what availed it them? Notwithstanding, I know right well, that divers places of the scripture do much warn us of the often reading of the same, and what fruit doth thereby follow; as, "Search the scriptures, for they do bear witness of me," &c. "The law of the Lord is pure, able to turn souls." And that saying of St. Paul, "All scripture inspired from above, doth make that a man may be instructed to all good works." Howbeit, doth the law of the Jews convert their souls? Are they by reading instructed to every good work? The letter of the Old Testament is the same that we have.
THE heretics also have ever had the same scriptures, which we have that be catholics. But they are served as Tantalus that the poets speak of, who, in the plenty of things to eat and drink, is said to be oppressed with hunger and thirst. The swifter that men [...] seek the scriptures without the catholic church, the deeper they fall, and find hell for their labour St. Cyprian, never swerving from the catholic church, saith, "He that doth not acknowledge the church to be his mother, shall not have God to his Father." Therefore it is true divinity to be wise with the church, where Christ saith, "Unless ye eat my flesh, and drink my blood, ye have no life in you."
IF he had [...] of only eating bread and drinking wine, no [...]ing had been more pleasant to the Capernaites, neither would they have forsaken him. The [...] nothing to the [...] that do so take it. [...] Capernaites did imagine [Page 368] Christ to be given in such sort as he lived. But Christ spake high things; not that they should have him as flesh in the market▪ but to consider his presence with the Spirit, under the forms whereby it is given. As there is an alteration of bodies by courses and times of ages, so there is no less variety in eating of bodies.
THESE things which I have recited briefly, Mr. Harpsfield did set out with many more words; and hereupon Dr. Weston disputed against him.
Christ's real body is not in the sacrament.
ERGO, You are deceived.
I deny the antecedent.
John xvi. "I speak the truth unto you: it behoveth me that I go away from you. For unless I do depart, the comforter cannot come," &c.
I will make this argument.
(1) Christ is so gone away, as he did send the Holy Ghost.
(2) BUT the Holy Ghost did verily come into the world.
(3) ERGO, Christ is verily gone.
He is verily gone, and yet remaineth here.
St. Augustine saith, that these words, "I will be with you even to the end of the world," are accomplished, [ secundum majestatem] "according to his majesty:" but [ secundum pr [...]sentiam carnis non est hic] "By the presence of his flesh he is not here." The church hath him not in flesh, but by belief.
We must diligently weigh that there are two natures in Christ; the divine nature, and human nature. The divine nature is of such sort, that it cannot chuse but be in all places. The human nature is not such, that of force it must be in all places, although it be in divers after a divers manner. So where the doctors do intreat of his presence by majesty, they do commend the majesty of the divine nature, not to hinder us of the natural presence here in the sacrament.
He saith further, "Ye shall not have me always with you," is to be understood in the flesh.
The presence of the flesh is to be considered, that he is not here as he was wont to live in conversation with them, to be seen, talked withal, or in such sort as a man may give him any thing: after that sort he is not present.
But what say you to this of Augustine, "He is not here?
I do answer out of St. Augustine upon John, Tractat. 25, upon these words, "I go to the Father, ye shall not see me;" that is, "such as I am now." Therefore, I do deny the manner of his presence.
I will overthrow St. Augustine with St. Augustine, who saith this also, "How may a man hold Christ? send thy faith, and thou holdest him."
So he sheweth, that by sending our faith, we do hold Christ.
Indeed no man holdeth Christ, unless he believe in him; but it is another thing to have Christ merciful and favourable unto us, and to have him present in the sacrament.
THERE St. Augustine speaketh of holding him by faith, as he is favorable unto us.
Nay, he speaketh there how the fathers had him in the flesh, and teacheth that we have him not so in the flesh, as they had him a long time, saying, "Your fathers did hold Christ present in the flesh: do you hold him in your heart?" What words can be more plain? Further he saith, "He is gone and is not here: he hath left us, and yet hath not forsaken us. He is here in majesty, and gone touching the flesh."
I do understand Augustine thus, that Christ is here in his flesh to them that receive him worthily: to such as do not worthily receive him, to them he is not present in the flesh. I judge, St. Augustine meaneth so. We have him, and we have him not. We have him in receiving him worthily, otherwise not.
I will prosecute another argument. Cyril doth say, "By the majesty of his divinity he is ever here, but the presence of his flesh hath he taken away."
The sense of Cyril is thus to be understood. The most true flesh of Christ is at the right hand of the Father. Thus the fathers taught, and so they believed. Thus said Cyril; thus said Augustine: and because this is the foundation of our faith, they did oftentimes teach it. Therefore, when they prove this, (the body to be in heaven) they do not make against the presence in the sacrament.
So unless ye can plainly shew, that the fathers do directly say he is not in the sacrament, you make nothing against me: for I have shewed why the fathers so spake. They did teach the great difference between the divine nature, and the human nature, as I have before said.
I will then prove, that he is not in the sacrament. Vigilius against the heretic Eutiches, upon these words, "Ye shall not have me always with you," saith, "The Son of God, as touching his humanity, is gone from us; by his divinity he remaineth with us." And the same Vigilius in his fourth book saith, "He that is in heaven, is not on earth;" speaking of Christ.
I will shew you the reason of these words. The heretic Eutiches did believe that the divine nature of Christ was fastened on the cross, and believed that Christ had no natural body. To this Vigilius said, That the human nature was taken up and ascended, which could not so have done, unless he had a body. This he said, not to take away the presence in the sacrament.
For what had he to refer this sentence to the sacrament? He never did so much as dream of the sacrament.
Cyril saith, "Although he be absent from us in body, yet are we governed by his Spirit."
By these words he gave us a chearfulness to aspire upwards, seeking from thence our help. For as touching his conversation, he is not so in the sacrament as one meet to be lived withal. But let him not teach us, that he is not there to feed us: for after that sort he is there.
You have satisfied me with your answers, in doing the same learnedly, and catholicly. But now to another argument.
(1) CHRIST is now so absent from the earth by his body, as he was absent from heaven when he lived here.
(2) BUT when he did live bodily on earth, the same natural body was out of heaven.
(3) ERGO, Now whilst this natural body is in heaven, it is not on the earth.
I deny your major.
These are Fulgentius's words, touching his human substance: "He was absent from heaven, when he descended from heaven; and touching the same substance, now he is in heaven, he is not on the earth: but concerning the divine nature, he never forsook either heaven or earth."
AFTER these words, not waiting Harpsfield's answer, he offered Mr Cranmer to dispute; who began in this wise.
I have heard you right learnedly and eloquently treat of the dignity of the scripture, which I do commend and wonder thereat. But whereas you refer the true sense and judgment of the scriptures to the catholic church, you are herein much deceived; especially, since, under the name of the church, you appoint such judges as have [Page 370] judged corruptly, and contrary to the true sense of scripture. I wonder, likewise, why you attribute so little to the diligent reading the scriptures, and comparing of passages, seeing the scriptures do so much commend the same, in divers places, as also in those which you yourself have already alledged. And as touching your opinion of these questions, it seemeth to me neither to have any ground of the word of God, nor of the primitive church. And, to say the truth, the schoolmen have spoken differently of them, nor do they agree concerning them among themselves. Wherefore, minding here to shew my judgment also, I must first desire you to answer a few questions; which being done, we shall the better proceed in our disputation. Moreover I must desire you to bear with my mistake [...] in the Latin tongue, which, through long disuse, is not now so familiar with me as it hath been. My first question, having chiefly a regard to the truth above all things, is this: "How Christ's body is in the sacrament, according to your mind or determination?"
TO which a certain doctor answered; He is there as touching his substance, but not after the manner of his substance.
He is there in such sort or manner, as he may be eaten.
My next question is, "Whether he hath his quantity and qualities, form, figure, and such like properties?"
Are these your questions? I may likewise ask you, "When Christ passed through the virgin's womb, A [...] ruperit [...]?
UPON these questions there were various opinions. A buzzing was heard among the doctors, who knew not what to answer. Some thought one way; some another; nor could these learned doctors agree on this matter. After they had contended a [...], Dr. Cranmer said, You put off questions with questions. I ask one thing, and you answer another. Again I ask, "Whether he have those properties, which he had on earth?"
No, he hath not all the quantities and qualities belonging to a body.
Stop, Mr. Tresham; I will answer you, doctor, in the words of Damascene, "The bread is transformed," &c. But if thou wilt inquire how? "The manner is impossible to be described."
Do you appoint me a body, and cannot tell what manner of body? Either he hath not his quantity, or else you are ignorant how to answer it.
These are vain questions, and it is not meet to spend the time on them.
Hear me a-while: Lanfrancus, sometime bishop of Canterbury, doth answer in this wi [...]e unto Berengarius upon such like questions, Salubriter credi possunt, fideliter qu [...]ri n [...]n possunt; i. e. "They may be well believed, but never faithfully asked."
If you think good to answer it, some of you declare it.
He is there as pleaseth him to be there.
I would be contented with that answer, if that your appointing a carnal presence had not driven me of necessity to have inquired for disputation's sake, how you place him there, since you will have a natural body.
But I say▪ Christ's body was passible and not passible at one instant.
You may ask as well other questions, how he is in heaven? whether he sit or stand? and whether he be there as he lived here?
You yourself, by putting a natural presence, do force me to the question▪ "How he is here?" Therefore next I do ask this question, "Whether good and evil men do eat the body in the sacrament?"
Yes, they do so, even as the sun doth shine upon kings palaces, and on dung-heaps.
Then do I inquire, " [...] long Christ tarrieth in the eater?"
These are curious questions, not proper to be asked.
I have taken them out of your schools and schoolmen, which you yourselves do most use: and there also do I learn to ask, "How far he goeth into the body?"
We know that the body of Christ is received to nourish the whole man, both body and soul.
How long doth he abide in the body?
St. Augustine saith, our flesh goeth into his flesh. But after he is once received into the stomach, it maketh no matter for us to know how far he doth pierce, or whether he is conveyed.
You were wont to lay to our charge, that we added to the scripture▪ saving always, that we should fetch the truth out of the scripture, and now you yourself bring questions out of the schoolmen, which you have disallowed in us.
I say, that I am constrained to ask these questions, because of this carnal presence which you imagine: and yet I know right well, that these questions are answered out of the scriptures. As to my last question, "How long he abideth in the body?" &c. the scripture answereth plainly, that Christ doth so long dwell in his people, as they are his members. Whereupon I make this argument.
(1) THEY which eat the flesh of Christ, do dwell in him, and he in them.
(2) BUT the wicked do not remain in him, nor he in them.
(3) ERGO, The wicked do not eat his flesh, nor drink his blood.
I will answer unto you as St. Augustine saith, not that howsoever a man do eat, he eateth the body; but he that eateth after a certain manner.
I cannot tell what manner ye appoint, but I am sure that evil men do not eat the flesh and drink the blood of Christ, as Christ speaketh in the sixth of John.
In the sixth of John, some things are to be referred to the godly, and some to the ungodly.
Whatsoever he doth treat of there concerning eating, doth pertain unto good men.
If you do mean only of the word [eating▪] it is true; if concerning the thing▪ it is not so; and if your meaning be of that which is contained under the word [eating,] it may be so taken, I grant.
Now to the argument: "He that eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, dwelleth in me▪ and I in him." Doth not this prove sufficiently, that evil men do not eat what the good do?
You must add, He that eateth worthily.
I speak of the same manner of eating that Christ speaketh of.
Augustine, to the brethren in the wilderness, says, "There is a certain manner of eating." Augustine speaketh of two manners of eating; [Page 372] the one of them that eat worthily, the other that eat unworthily.
All things in the sixth of John are not to be referred to the sacrament; but to the receiving of Christ by faith. The fathers do agree, that there is no reference made to the supper of the Lord, before they come unto, "The bread which I give, is my flesh," &c.
Nay, but manna is treated of both before and after.
I will apply another answer. This argument hath a kind of poison in it, which must be thus bitten away; that manna and this sacrament are not both one. Manna hath not its efficacy of itself, but of God.
But they that did take manna worthily, had fruit thereby: and so by your assertion, he that doth eat of the flesh of Christ worthily, hath his fruit by that. Therefore the like doth follow of them both, and so there should be no difference between manna and this sacrament, by your reason.
When it is said, that they which did eat manna are dead, it is to be understood, that they did want the virtue of manna.
They then which do eat either of them worthily, do live.
They do live which do eat manna worthily, not by manna, but by the power of God given by it. The other which do eat this sacrament, do live by the same.
Christ did not treat of the cause, but the effect which followed: he doth not speak of the cause whereof the effect proceedeth.
I do say, the effects are divers, life, and death, which do follow the worthy and unworthy eating thereof.
Since you will needs have an addition to it, we must use both in manna and in the sacrament, indifferently, either worthily or unworthily. Christ spake absolutely of manna and of the supper; so that, after that absolute speaking of the supper, wicked men can in no wise eat the flesh of Christ, and drink his blood.
FURTHER, Augustine upon John, Tract. xxvi. upon these words, "He that eateth," &c. saith, "There is no such virtue in common meats, as in the Lord's body. For whoso eateth other meats, hath still hunger, and needeth to be satisfied daily, but he that doth eat the flesh of Christ, and drinketh his blood, doth live forever." But you know, wicked men do not so.
ERGO. Wicked men do not receive.
St. Augustine meaneth. That he who eateth Christ's flesh, &c. after a certain manner, should live forever. Wicked men do eat, but not after that manner.
Only they which participate Christ are of the mystical body.
BUT evil men are not of the mystical body.
ERGO, They do not participate Christ.
Your wonderful gentle behaviour and modesty, good Dr. Cranmer, is worthy much commendation: and that I may not deprive you of your right and just deserving, I give you most hearty thanks in my own name, and in the name of all my brethren, At which saying all the doctors gently put off their caps, Then Dr. Weston did oppose the respondent on this wise.
Tertullian doth call the sacrament the sign and figure of the Lord.
ST. AUGUSTINE to Dardanus▪ saith, "The Lord did not stick to say, This is my body, when he gave a sign of his body."
BESIDES this, he giveth rules how to understand the scriptures, saying. If the scriptures seem to command some heinous thing, then it is figurative, as by example. "To eat the flesh, and drink the blood, is a tropical speech."
Tertullian did write in that place against Marcion an heretic, who denied Christ to have a true body, and said, he had only a fantastical body. He went about to shew, that we had Christ both in heaven and on earth; and though we have the true body in the sacrament, yet he would not go about so to confound him, as to say, that Christ was truly in the sacrament: for that heretic would have thereat rather marvelled, than believed it. Therefore he shewed him, that it was the figure of Christ: and a figure cannot be but of a thing that is, or hath been extant.
TO the text of Augustine, the church hath never taught the contrary. There is an outward thing in the sacrament, which sometimes hath sundry names. For it may be called a figure in this declaration, That body which is in the sacrament, is a figure of Christ dwelling in heaven.
TO the third, That which is wrought by Augustine, for example, about the understanding of the scriptures, is thus to be understood, as tending to a general manner of eating; so, To eat the flesh, and drink the blood, may be a figurative speech to exclude Anthropophagiam, that is, "The eating of man's flesh." The which is, when we eat man's flesh, cut in morsels, as we eat common meat; so as we neither have, nor eat Christ in the sacrament.
I understand your short and learned answer, which doth sufficiently satisfy me. But now to the second question, which is of transubstantiation.
THE scripture calleth it bread.
ERGO, It is bread.
In the name of bread all is signified which we do eat.
Theodoret, an ancient writer, in his first dialogue, says, "That Christ changed not the nature, but called it his body."
He doth there speak of a symbol, which is the outward form of the sacrament. He meaneth, that doth tarry in its own nature.
Theodoret also, in his second dialogue of those kinds of bread and wine, saith, "They go not out of their own nature, but they tarry in their own substance."
They are understood to be of the same substance, into which they are turned.
But what say you to this? "They remain in their former substance."
Symbola manent, that is, "The outward signs do tarry"
But what is meant here by this word, [a symbol?]
The outward form or shape only of the nature.
Then you cannot call them a substance.
Yes, sir, every thing hath a certain substance in its kind.
That is true, but accidents are not substances in their kind.
They are something in their kind.
Chrysostom to Caesarius the monk, saith, "Like as before it is consecrated, it is bread; so after it is consecrated, it is delivered from the name of bread, and is endued with the name of the Lord's body, whereas the nature doth remain."
Where read you this pla [...] I pray you?
Here in Peter Martyr I find it; I have his book in my hand.
The author shall be of more credit, before I make so much of him as to frame an answer unto it.
Indeed I know not well where he findeth it. But Gelasius saith, That the nature of bread and wine do tarry.
What is that Gelasius?
A bishop of Rome.
Then he allowed the mass.
Yes, and oftentimes said it; and purgatory he also allowed, and prayer for the dead, relicks, and invocation to the saints.
Then he meant nothing against transubstantiation.
It doth appear so indeed. But Origen faith, "That the material bread doth tarry, and is conveyed into the privy, and is eaten of worms."
Tush, tush, this place appeartaineth unto holy bread.
What, doth it appertain unto holy bread?
Yes, unto holy bread.
By what means can you shew how this miraculous work bringeth Christ into the sacrament?
By the scriptures I prove it, which say, "This is my body."
It doth rejoice us all not a little, that you have so well maintained the sound doctrine of the sacrament of the altar, wherein you have faithfully cleaved to the catholic church▪ as a [...] only stay of our religion: by which means you have proved yourself meet to be authorised further towards the practising of the scripture.
AND here, I do openly witness, that I do thoroughly consent with you, and have, for disputation's sake only, brought these arguments against you, which you have right learnedly satisfied: and now all things being done, after our form and manner, we will end this disputation, saying, In oppositum est sacra theologia, In oppositum est, &c,
THUS have ye heard, in these disputations about the holy supper of the Lord, the reasons and arguments of the doctors, the answers and resolutions of the bishops, and the vanity of the prolocutor, triumphing before the victory, with, "The truth hath overcome;" who rather should have exclaimed, "Power hath overcome;" as it happeneth always, where the greater part overcometh the better. For else, if power had not helped the prolocutor more than truth, there had been a small victory. But so it is, where judgments be partial, there all things turn to victory, though it be ever so mean and simple, as in this disputation doth well appear. For, on the side of the opponent, scarce any argument was rightly framed in true mood and figure; neither could the respondents be permitted to speak for themselves; and when they answered any thing, it was condemned as soon as they began to speak. Besides, such disturbance, tumults, and confusion (more like a conspiration, than a fair debate, without form and order) were in the school, during the whole time, that the respondents could not utter their minds; neither would the opponents be satisfied with any reasons, which they constantly opposed with evasive delusions. Concerning the disturbance that prevailed, it will plainly appear, from what Bishop Ridley has reported in the following narrative.
The REPORT and NARRATIVE of Dr. RIDLEY, sometime BISHOP of LONDON, concerning the irregular and misconducted DISPUTATION with him and his Fellow-Prisoners, BISHOP CRANMER and BISHOP LATIMER.
I Never yet, since I was born, saw or heard any thing done or handled more vainly and tumultuously, than the disputation which was with me in the schools at Oxford▪ Yea, verily▪ I could never have thought that it had been possible to have found amongst men accounted to be of knowledge and learning in this realm, am so brazen-fac [...]d and shameless, so disorderly and vainly to behave themselves more like stage-players in interludes to set forth a pageant, than to grave divines in schools to dispute. The s [...]rbonicle clamours (which at Paris I have seen in ti [...]es past, when popery most reigned) might be worthily thought (in comparison of these ostentatious proceedings) to have had much modesty. And no great marvel, seeing they which should have been moderators, and ove [...]see [...]s of others, and which should have given good examples in words and gravity; they themselves, above all others, gave worst example, and did, as it were, blow the trump to the rest, to [...]ave, roar, rage, and cry out. By reason whereof, (good christian reader) manifestly it may appear, that they never sought for any truth or verity, but only for the glory of the world, and their own bragging victory. But lest, by the innumerable railings and reproachful [...]unts, where with [Page 375] I was baited on every side, our cause, yea rather God's cause and his church's, should be evil spoken of, and slandered to the world through false reports, and untrue examples given out of disputation, and so the verity might sustain some damage, I thought it no less than my duty to write mine answers; to the intent, that whosoever is desirous to know the truth thereof, may by this perceive as well those things which were chiefly objected, as summarily that which was answered of me unto each of them. Howbeit (good reader) I confess this to be most true, that it is impossible to set forth either all that was, God knoweth, tumultuously and confusedly objected of their parts, being so many, speaking many times all together so thick, that one could not well hear another, neither all that was answered on my behalf to them so sundry and divers opponents.
Moreover, a great part of the time appointed for the disputations, was vainly consumed in opprobrious checks and reviling taunts, with hissing and clapping of hands, and that in the English tongue, to procure the people's favour withal. All which things, when I with great grief of heart did behold, protesting openly, that such excessive and outrageous disorder was unseemly for those schools, and men of learning and gravity, and that they which were the do [...]rs and stirrers of such things, did nothing else but betray the slenderness of their cause, and their own vanities. I was so far off by this humble complaint, from doing any good at all, that I was inforced to hear such rebukes, checks, and taunts, for my labour, as no person of any honesty, without blushing, could abide to hear the like spoken of a most vil [...] [...]arlet, against a most wretched ruffian.
At the first beginning of the disputation, when I should have first confirmed mine answer to the first proposition, in few words, and that (after the manner and law of schools) before I could make an end of my first probation, which was not very long, even the doctors themselves cried out, "he speaketh blasphemies, he speaketh blasphemies." And when I on my knees besought them, and that heartily, that they would vouchsafe to hear me to the end, (whereat the prolocutor being moved, cried out on high, "Let him read it, [...]et him read it,") yet, when I began to read again, there followed immediately such shouting, such a noise and tumult, such confusion of voices, crying, "Blasphemies, blasphemies," as to my remembrance I never heard or read the like, except it be that one, which was in the Acts of the Apostles, stirred up of Demetrius the silve [...]smi [...]h, and others of his occupation, crying out against Paul, "Great is Diana of the Ephesians, Great is Diana of the Ephesians▪" and except it be a certain disputation which the Arians had against the orthodox, and such as were of godly judgment in Africa, where it is said, that such as the president and rulers of the disputation were, such was the end of the disputations. All were in a hurly-burly, and so great were the slanders which the Arians cast out, that nothing could quietly be heard. So writeth Victor in the second book of his history.
The which cries and tumults of them against me so prevailed, that I was absolutely forced to leave off reading of my probations, although they were short. If any man doubt of the truth hereof, let the same ask any one that was there, and not utterly perverted in popery, and I am assured, he will say, I speak the least. But to complain of these things further, I will cease.
And further, speaking of this disputation, he concluded with these words: "And thus was ended this most glorious disputation of the most holy fathers, sacrificers, doctors, and masters, which fought most manfully as ye may see, for their god and goods, for their faith and felicity, for their country and kitchen, for their beauty and belly, with triumphant applauses and favour of the whole university.
AFTER the disputation of Mr. Latimer was ended, on the Friday following, April 20th, the commissioners sat in St. Mary's church, as they did the Saturday before, and Dr. Weston used particular dissuasions with every one of them, and would not suffer them to answer in any wise, but directly and peremptorily, as his words were, to say whether they would subscribe or no. And first to Dr. Cranmer he said, He was overcome in disputations. To whom the bishop answered, That whereas Dr. Weston said, he hath answered and opposed▪ and could neither maintain his own errors, no▪ overturn the truth; all that he said was false: for he was not suffered to oppose as he would, nor could answer as he was required, unless he would have brawled with them, so thick their reasons came one after another, four or five frequently interrupting him, that he could not speak. Mr. Ridley and Mr Latimer were asked what they would do: they replied, that they would stand to what they had said. Then they were all called together, and sentence read over them, that they were no members of the church: and therefore they, their favourers, and patrons, were condemned as heretics. And in reading of it, they were asked, Whether they would turn or no? But they bade them read on in the name of God, for they were not minded to turn. So they were all three condemned.
AFTER which sentence of condemnation being awarded against them, they answered again each in his turn, in manner and effect of words as followeth; the archbishop speaking first.
"From this your judgment and sentence I appeal to the just judgment of God Almighty, trusting to be present with him in heaven, for whose presence in the altar I am thus condemned"
"Although I be not of your company, yet doubt I not but my name is written in another place, whither this sentence will send us sooner, than we should by the course of nature have come."
"I thank God most heartily, that he hath prolonged my life to this end, that I may in this case glorify God by that kind of death."
DR. WESTON's answer unto Latimer. "If you go to heaven in this faith, then I will never come thither, as I am thus persuaded."
AFTER sentence was pronounced, they were separated one from another; namely, the archbishop was returned to Bocardo, Dr. Ridley to the sheriff's house, Mr. Latimer to the bailiff's.
ON Saturday following, they had a mass with a general procession and great solemnity. Dr. Cranmer was caused to behold the procession out of Bocardo, Dr. Ridley out of the sheriff's house. Latimer also being brought to see it from the bailiff's house, thought that he should have gone to burning, and spake to one Augustine, a catchpola, to make a quick fire: but when he came to Carfox, (Oxford market place, where four ways meet) he ran as fast as his old bones would carry him, to one Spencer's shop, and would not look towards it. Dr. Weston carried the host; and four doctors supported the canopy over him, and his breaden God.
Immediately after the sentence, Bishop Ridley wrote to Dr. Weston in the following manner.
MR. Prolocutor, you remember, I am sure, how you promised me openly in the schools, after my protestation, that I should see how my answers were there taken and written of the notaries, whom you appointed (for I objected not to any) to write what should be said, and to have had licence to have added unto them, or to have altered them, as upon more deliberation should have seemed me best. You granted me also, at the delivery of my answer unto your first proposition, a copy of the same. These promises are not performed. If your sudden departure be any part of the cause thereof, yet, I pray you, remember that they may be performed; for performance of promise is to be looked for at a righteous judge's hands. Now I send you here my answers in writing to your second and third propositions, and do desire and require earnestly a copy of the same, and I shall by God's grace procure the pains of the writer to be paid for, and satisfied accordingly. Mr. Prolocutor, in the time of my answering in the schools, when I would have confirmed my sayings with authorities and reasons, you said then openly, that I should have time and place to say and bring whatsoever I could, another time; and the same your saying was then and there confirmed by others of the commissioners: Yes, and (I dare say) the audience also thought then that I should have had another day, to have brought and said what I could for the declaration and confirmation of mine assertions. Now that this was not done, but so suddenly sentence given before the cause was perfectly heard, I cannot but marvel, &c.
ON Monday next ensuing, April 23, Dr. Weston took his journey up to London, with the Letters certificatory from the university to the queen, by whom the archbishop (Dr. Cranmer) directed his letters supplicatory unto the council; which letters, after the prolocutor had received, and had carried them well near halfway to London, by the way he opened the same, and seeing the contents thereof, sent them back again, refusing to carry them. Likewise bishop Ridley, hearing of the prolocutor's going to London, wrote to him his letters, wherein he desired him to carry his answers up to certain bishops in London; the form of which letters, first of Dr. Ridley, then of the archbishop, and lastly, another letter of Dr. Ridley to the archbishop, here in order followeth.
BISHOP RIDLEY's LETTER to Dr. WESTON, the PROLOCUTOR.
MR. Prolocutor, I desire you, and in God's name require you, that you truly bring forth and shew all my answers, written and subscribed with mine own hand, unto the higher house of the convocation, and especially to my lord chancellor, my lords of Durham, Ely, Worcester, Norwich, and Chichester; and also to shew and exhibit this my writing unto them, which in these few lines here I write unto you; and that I did make this request unto you by this my writing, know you, that I did take witness of them by whom I send you this writing, and also of those which were then with them present, viz. [Page 377] the two bailiffs of Oxford, and of Mr. Irish, alderman then there called to be a witness.
A LETTER, Written by DR. CRANMER, Archbishop of CANTERBURY, to the COUNCIL, which DR. WESTON refused to deliver.
IN right humble wise sheweth unto your honourable lordships, Thomas Cranmer, late Archbishop of Canterbury, beseeching the same to be a means for me unto the queen's highness for her mercy and pardon. Some of you know by what mean [...] I was brought and trained unto the will of our late sovereign lord king Edward the sixth, and what I spake against the same, wherein I refer me to the reports of your honours and worships. Furthermore, this is to signify unto your lordships, that upon Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday last past, were open disputations here in Oxford against me, Mr. Ridley, and Mr. Latimer, in three matters concerning the sacrament: First of the real presence. Secondly, of transubstantiation. And thirdly, of the sacrifice of the mass. Upon Monday against me; upon Tuesday against Dr. Ridley; and upon Wednesday against Mr. Latimer. How the other two were ordered, I know not, for we were separated, so that none of us knoweth what the other said, nor how they were ordered. But as concerning myself I can report: Dr. Chedsey was appointed to dispute against me; but the disputation was so confused that I never knew the like, every man bringing forth what he liked without order: and such haste was made, that no answer could be suffered to be taken fully to any argument, before another brought a new argument. And in such weighty matters the disputation must needs be ended in one day, which can scantly be ended in three months. And when we had answered them, they would not appoint us one day to bring forth our proofs, that they might answer us, being required by me thereunto, whereas I myself have more to say, than can be well discussed, as I suppose, in twenty days. The means to resolve the truth, had been to have suffered us to answer fully to all that they could say, and then they again to answer us fully to all that we can say. But why they would not answer us, what other cause can there be, but that either they feared their matter, that they were not able to answer us, or else for some consideration they made such haste, not to seek the truth, but to condemn us, that it must be done in post-haste before the matters could be thoroughly heard: for in haste we were all three condemned of heresy. Thus much I thought good to signify unto your lordships, that you may know the indifferent handling of matters, leaving the judgment thereof unto your wisdoms. And I beseech your lordships to remember me, a poor prisoner, unto the queen's majesty, and I shall pray, as I do daily unto God, for the long preservation of your good lordships in all godliness and felicity. April 23.
A LETTER, From Dr. RIDLEY, Bishop of LONDON, to Dr. CRANMER, Archbishop of CANTERBURY.
I Wish you might have seen these mine answers before I had delivered them, that you might have corrected them. But I trust, in the substance of the matter we do agree fully, both led by one spirit of truth, and both walking after one rule of God's word. It is reported, that serjeant Morgan, the chief justice of the common pleas, is gone mad. It is said also, that justice Hales hath recanted, perverted by Dr. Moreman. Item, That Mr. Rogers, Dr. Crome, and Mr. Bradford shall be had to Cambridge, and there be disputed with, as we were here; and that the doctors of Oxford shall go likewise thither, as Cambridge men came hither. When you have read mine answers, send them again to Austen, except you will put any thing to them. I trust, the day of our delivery out of all miseries, and of our entrance into perpetual rest, and unto perpetual joy and felicity, draweth nigh: the Lord strengthen us with his mighty spirit of grace. If you have nothing to write with, you must make your man your friend. And this bearer deserveth to be rewarded; so he may, and will do your pleasure. My man is trusty, but it grieveth both him and me, that when I send him with any thing to you, your man will not let him come up to see you, as he may to Mr. Latimer, and your's to me. I have a promise to see how my answers were written in the schools, but as yet I cannot come by it. Pray for me, I pray for you, and so shall I continue to do. The Lord have mercy on his church, and enlighten the eyes of the magistrates, that God's extreme plagues light not on this realm of England. TURN, OR BURN.
CHAP. V. Proceedings of the PAPISTS against the PROTESTANTS.—The DUKE of SUFFOLK Beheaded. —Mr. MANTEL's Apology.—A CAT with a Shaven Crown hanged in CHEAPSIDE.—A DECLARATION of Mr. BRADFORD and Others.—The MARRIAGE of QUEEN MARY with the EMPEROR's Son, PHILIP, PRINCE of SPAIN.—PO [...]MS written on this Occasion. Events that followed the Solemnization of the Marriage.—The BISHOP of WINCHESTER's Sermon; and BONNER's visitation.—His Outrage upon Sir THOMAS JOSSELIN.
HAVING finished our account of the disputations, between the Roman catholics and protestant divines of the reformed religion, at Oxford, we shall now prosecute the historical narration, respecting various transactions in this tumultuous time of queen Mary. And because so many things happened in different parts of the realm, that it is difficult to preserve the due order of time in reciting them all, we shall therefore return again to the month of July, 1553, in which month, as we have before shewed, the duke of Northumberland was brought to London, by the earl of Arundel, on St. James's day, July 25th; and these are the names of those who were committed with the duke to the Tower:
THE earl of Warwick, the earl of Huntington, lord Ambrose, and lord Henry Dudley, lord Hastings, who was delivered again the same night; sir John Gates, sir Henry Gates, Andrew Dudley, sir Thomas Palmer, and Dr. Sands, chancellor of Cambridge.
JULY 26, the lord marquis of Northampton, the bishop of London, lord Robert Dudley, and sir Richard Corbet, were brought and committed to the Tower.
JULY 27, the lord chief justice of England, and the lord Mountacute chief justice of the common pleas, were committed to the Tower.
JULY 28, the Duke of Suffolk and sir John Cheek were committed to the Tower.
JULY 30, the lord Russel was committed to the sheriff of London's custody.
JULY 31, the earl of Rutland was committed to the Fleet; and on the same day the duke of Suffolk was delivered out of the Tower again.
Upon Thursday, August 3, the queen entered into the city of London at Aldgate, and so to the Tower, where she remained seven days, and then removed to Richmond.
AUGUST 4, Dr. Day was delivered out of the Fleet; and the day after, the lord Ferris was committed to the Tower, and Dr. Bonner delivered out of the Marshalsea. The same Day at night Dr. Cocks was committed to the Marshalsea, and one Mr. Edward Underhill to New gate. Also the same day Dr. Tonstal and Stephen Gardiner were delivered out of the Tower, and Gardiner received into the queeen's privy council, and made lord chancellor.
AUGUST 7, Henry Dudley, captain of the guard at Guines, who before had been sent to the French king by his cousin the duke of Northumberland, after the dispatch of his embassage with the French king, returned to Guines and was this day brought to the Tower.
AUGUST 7, Dirige in Latin was sung within the Tower by all the king's chapel, and the bishop of Winchester was chief minister, the queen being present and most of the council.
[Page 379]AUGUST 8, the king's body was brought to Westminster, and there buried; where Dr. Day, bishop of Chichester, preached. The same day a mass of Requiem was sung within the Tower by the bishop of Winchester, who had on his mitre; and did all things as in times past was done; the queen being present.
UPON Tuesday the duke of Norfolk came out of the Tower, with whom the dutchess of Somerset was also delivered.
AUGUST 11, Dr. Bourne preached at Paul's Cross: of which mention has been made.
IN the week following, commandment was given throughout the city, that no apprentices should come to the sermon, nor bear any knife or dagger.
AUGUST 16, Mr. Bradford, Mr. Beacon, and Mr. Vernon, were committed to the Tower: with whom also Mr. Sampson should have been committed, and was sought for the same time, at Mr. Elsing's house in Fleet-street, where Mr. Bradford was taken: and because he was not found, the bishop of Winchester was greatly displeased with the messenger.
AUGUST 18, the duke of Northumberland, the marquis of Northampton, and the earl of Warwick, were arrainged at Westminster, and condemned the same day, the duke of Norfolk that day being the high judge.
AUGUST 19, sir Andrew Dudley▪ sir John Gates, sir Henry Gates, and sir Thomas Palmer, were arrainged at Westminster, and condemned the same day, the lord marquis of Winchester being high judge.
UPON which day a letter was sent unto sir Henry [...] Brown, and Edmund Brown, esqui [...] ▪ [...]aying them to commit to ward all such as shall contemn the queen's order of religion, or shall keep themselves from church, there to remain until they be conformable, and to signify their names to the council.
AUGUST 20, Dr. Watson, the bishop of Winchester's chaplain, preached at St. Paul's Cross, at whose sermon were present the marquis of Winchester, the earl of Bedford, the earl of Pembroke, the lord Rich, and 200 of the guard with their halberds, lest the people should have made any stir against the preacher.
AUGUST 21, the duke of Northumberland, the marquis of Northampton, sir Andrew Dudley, sir John Gates, and sir Thomas Palmer, heard mass within the Tower, and after mass they all five received the sacrament in one kind only, as in the popish time was used. On which day also queen Mary set forth a proclamation, signifying to the people, that she could not hide any longer the religion which she from her infancy had professed, &c. prohibiting, in the said proclamation, printing and preaching; the tenor of which has been given before.
AUGUST 22, the duke of Northumberland, sir John Gates, and sir Thomas Palmer, were beheaded at Tower-hill. The same day certain noble personages heard mass within the Tower, and likewise after mass received the sacrament in one kind.
AUGUST 27, Dr. Chedsey preached at Paul's Cross, and the day same the archbishop of Canterbury, sir Thomas Smith, and the dean of St. Paul's were cited to appear the week following before the queen's commissioners, in the bishop's consistory within St. Paul's.
IN the mean time it was noised abroad by running rumours falsely and craftily devised, either to establish the credit of the mass, or else to bring Thomas Cranmer, archbishop of Canterbury, out of credit, that he, to [...] favour with queen Mary, should promise to say mass, after the old custom, for king Edward, and that he had already said mass at Canterbury, &c. Wherefore, to stop the slanders of those rumours, the said Thomas, archbishop of Canterbury, the seventh day of September, set forth a letter, which was also printed, in behalf of himself, the copy of which letter here followeth:
A DECLARATION of Dr. THOMAS CRANMER, Archbishop of Canterbury, wherein he clears himself from the Stain of certain Calumnies, falsely raised upon him.
AS the devil, Christ's ancient adversary, is a lyar, and the father of lyes, even so hath he stirred up his servants and members to persecute Christ and his true word and religion with lying: which he ceaseth not to do most earnestly at this present time. For whereas the prince of famous memory, king Henry VIII. seeing the great abuses of the Latin mass, reformed some things therein in his life time; and after, our late sovereign lord [...] Edward VI. took the same wholly away, for the manifold and great errors and abuses of the same, and restored in the place thereof Christ's holy supper, according to Christ's own institution, and as the apostles used the same in the primitive church, the devil goeth about now by lying to overthrow the Lord's supper again, and to restore his Latin satisfactory mass, a thing of his own invention and device. And to bring the same more easily to pass, some have abused the name of me Thomas, archbishop of Canterbury, reporting abroad, that I have set up the mass at Canterbury, and that I offered to say mass at the burial of our late sovereign prince king Edward VI. and that I offered to say mass before the queen's highness, at St. Paul's church, and I know not where. And although I have been well exercised these twenty years, to suffer and bear evil reports and lyes, and have not been much grieved thereat, but have borne all things quietly; yet when untrue reports and lyes turn to the hindrance of God's truth, they are in no wise to be suffered. Wherefore these be to signify unto the world, That it was not I that set up the mass at Canterbury, but it was a false, flattering, lying, and dissembling monk, (one Dr. Thornton,) which caused mass to be set up there without mine advice or counsel. (The Lord recompense him in that day!) And as for offering myself to say mass before the queen's highness, or in any other place, I never did it, as her grace well knoweth. But if her grace will give me leave, I shall be ready to prove, against all that will say the contrary, that all that is contained in the holy communion, set out by the most innocent and godly prince king Edward VI. in his high court of Parliament, is conformable to that order which our Saviour Christ did both observe, and command to be observed, and which his apostles, and the primitive church used many years; whereas the mass, in many things, not only hath no foundation of Christ, his apostles, nor the primitive church, but is manifestly contrary to the same, and containeth many horrible abuses in [...]. And although many, either unlearned or malicious, do report, that Peter Martyr is unlearned; yet, if the queen's highness will grant thereunto, I, with the said Peter Martyr, and other four or five which I shall chuse, will, by God's grace, take upon us to defend, not only the common prayers of the church, the ministration of the sacraments, and other rites and ceremonies, but also all the doctrine and religion set out by our sovereign lord king Edward VI. to be more pure, and according to God's word, than any other that hath been used in England these thousand years: so that God's word may be judge, and that the reasons and proofs of both parties may be set out in writing, to the intent, as well that all the world may examine and judge thereon, as that no man shall start back from his writing. And where they boast of the faith, that hath been in the church these fifteen hundred years, we will join with them in this point; and that the same doctrine and usage is to be followed, which was in the church fifteen hundred years past: and we shall prove, that the order of the church, set out at this present, in this realm, by act of Parliament, is the same that was used in the church fifteen hundred years past; and so shall they be never able to prove their's.
ON Thursday, September 7, lord Mountacute, chief justice, and lord chief baron were delivered out of the Tower.
SEPTEMBER 13, the reverend father, Hugh Latimer, bishop of Worcester, was committed to the Tower.
SEPTEMBER 14, the archbishop of Canterbury, Mr. Cranmer, was committed to the Tower.
SEPTEMBER 26, one Mr. Gray of Cambridge, called before him one Mr. Garth, for that he would not suffer a boy of Peter-house to help him to say mass, in Pembroke-hall, which was before any law was established for that behalf.
ON Thursday, September 28, the queen came to the Tower of London, and upon the Saturday following, she rode from the Tower through the city, where were made many pageants to receive her, and so she was triumphantly brought to Whitehall. Among these pageants stood a certain man upon the top of the eagle, on St. Paul's steeple, with a flag in his hand.
UPON Sunday, October 1, the queen's highness went from Whitehall to Westminster [...]bbey, accompanied with most part of the nobility of this realm, namely, the duke of Norfolk, the earl of Arundel, the earl of Shrewsbury▪ the marquis of Winchester, the earls of Derby, Bedford, Worcester, [Page 381] Cumberland▪ Westmoreland, Oxford, Sussex, Devonshire, Pembroke, the lord Dacres of the north, lord Ferris, lord Cobham, lord Abergavenny, lord Wentworth, lord Scroope, lord Rich, lord Vaus, lord Howard, lord Conias, lord Morley, lord Paget, and the lord Willoughby; with other nobles, and all the ambassadors of divers countries, the mayor of London, with all the aldermen. Also out of the Abbey, to receive her coming, came three silver crosses, and to the number of about fourscore singing men, all in very rich and gorgeous copes. Amongst whom was the dean of Westminster, and divers of the queen's chaplains, which bare every one some ensign in their hands, and after them followed ten bishops, all mitred, and their crosier st [...]es in their hands, and rich copes upon them every one. And in this order they returned from Westminster-hall, before the queen to the Abbey, where she was crowned by Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, and lord chancellor of England. At the time of the coronation, Dr. Day, bishop of Chichester made a sermon to the queen's majesty, and to the rest of the nobility.
ALSO there was a general pardon proclaimed within the Abbey at the time of her coronation, out of which proclamation all the prisoners of the Tower and of the Fleet were excepted, and 62 more: whereof Mr. Whitchurch and Mr. Grafton were two.
OCTOBER 3, the vice chancellor of Cambridge did challenge one Mr. Pierson, for that he ministered still the communion in his own parish, and did receive strangers of other parishes to the same, and would not say mass. Whereupon, within two days after he was clean discharged from farther ministering in his cure.
UPON the Wednesday following, the archbishop of York was committed to the Tower.
UPON Thursday, October 5, 1553, the queen rode to the parliament in her robes, and all the nobility with her; and when they were set in the parliament-house, the bishop of Winchester made to them a solemn oration, and serjeant Pollard was chosen speaker. The same day the bishops of Lincoln, Hereford, and Westchester, were discharged from the parliament and convocation.
ALSO October 10, the earl of Huntington was delivered out of the Tower.
UPON Sunday after, October 15, Mr. Laurence Saunders preached at Alhallows in Bread-street, in the morning: where he fully declared the abomination of the mass, with divers other matters; whereof more shall be heard by God's leave hereafter, when we come to his story. In doing which, as he shewed himself to be God's faithful minister, so is he sure not to be defrauded of God's faithful promise, who saith, Matt. x. "Whosoever shall confess me before men, him will I confess also before my Father which is in heaven." But about noon the same day, he was sent for by the bishop of London, and committed to the Marshalsea.
UPON the Sunday following, October 20, Dr. Weston preached at Paul's-Cross, who in the beginning of his sermon desired the people to pray for the souls departed, on this wise: "You shall pray for all them that be departed, that be neither in heaven nor hell, but in a place not sufficiently purged to come to heaven, that they may be relieved by your devout prayers." He named the Lord's table an oyster board. He said, that the catechism in Latin, lately published, was an abominable heresy, and likened the setters out of the same to Julian the apostate, and the book to a dialogue wrote by the said Julian, wherein Christ and Pilate were the speakers; with many other things. This sermon Mr. Corverdale learnedly confuted in writing, which (says Mr. Fox) remaineth yet in my hands to be seen.
IN the week following began the public disputations at St. Paul's, whereof sufficient hath been said.
OCTOBER 26, the vice-chancellor of Cambridge went to Clare-hall, and in the presence of Dr. Walker, displaced Dr. Madew, and placed Mr. Swyborne in the mastership there, by virtue of the lord chancellor's letters, for that he was married.
OCTOBER 28, the papists in King's college, Cambridge, had their whole service again in the Latin tongue, contrary to the law, then not repealed.
[Page 382]OCTOBER 31, the vice-chancellor of Cambridge did sharply reprove and threaten one Mr. Thrackold, for that he challenged the said vice-chancellor, who had suffered master Bovell (contrary to the statutes then in force) quietly without punishment to depart, notwithstanding he refused to swear to the supremacy of the queen, and the abrogation of the bishop of Rome.
NOVEMBER 3, the vice-chancellor sent for the curate of the round parish in Cambridge, commanding him not to minister any more in the English tongue, saying, he would have one uniform order of service throughout the town, and that in Latin, with mass, which was established the twelfth day of this month.
NOVEMBER 6, Mr. Pollard preached at St. Michael's, and in his sermon approved purgatory.
NOVEMBER 28, the archdeacon's official visited in Hinton, where he gave in charge to imprison all such as did disturb the queen's proceedings, in hindering Latin service, the setting up of their altars, and saying of mass, or any part thereof: whereby it was easy to see how these good fellows meant to proceed, having the law once on their side, who thus readily, against a manifest law, would attempt the punishment of any man.
DECEMBER 15, there were two proclamations at London; the one for repealing of certain acts made by king Edward, and for the setting up of the mass the 20th of December following. The other was, that no man should interrupt any of those who would say mass.
THE parliament beginning about the 5th of October, continued till the 5th of December. In which parliament were dissolved, as well all the statutes made of Praemunire in the time of king Henry VIII. &c. as also other laws and statutes concerning religion and administration of sacraments, decreed under king Edward VI. In which parliament was appointed, that on December 20, then next ensuing, the same year 1553, the old form and manner of church-service, used in the last year of king Henry, should again be restored.
DECEMBER 31, the lord marquis of Northampton was delivered out of the Tower.
ABOUT this time, a priest of Canterbury said mass on one day, and the next day after, he came into the pulpit, and desired all the people to forgive him; for he said he had betrayed Christ, not as Judas did, but as Peter did, and there made a long sermon against the mass.
JANUARY 2, 1554, four ambassadors came into London, from the emperor, and were honourably received. Their names were La Countie de Egmont, Le Countie de Lalen, Monsieur Corire, Le Chancellor Nigre.
ABOUT this time a great number of new bishops, deans, &c. were chose, more than were made at one time since the conquest; namely, Dr. Holyman, bishop of Bristol; Dr. Coates, bishop of Westchester; Dr. Hopton, bishop of Norwich; Dr. Bourne, bishop of Bath; Dr. White, bishop of Lincoln; Dr. Mores, bishop of Rochester; Dr. Morgan bishop of St. David's; Dr. Poole, bishop of St. Asaph; Dr. Brooks, bishop of Gloucester; Dr. Moreman, coadjutor to the bishop of Exeter, and after his decease bishop of Exeter; Dr. Glin, bishop of Bangor; Mr. Fecknam, dean of St. Paul's; Dr. Reynold's, dean of Bristol, with others.
JANUARY 12, the vice-chancellor of Cambridge called a congregation general, wherein amongst other things he shewed, that the queen would have there a mass of the Holy Ghost upon the 18th of February then next following, for that it was her birth-day; which was fulfilled the day appointed, and that very solemnly.
SATURDAY, January 13, Dr. Crome was committed to the Fleet: also, the Sunday following, one Mr. Addington was committed to the Tower. The same Sunday likewise, the bishop of Winchester declared openly in the court, that the marriage between the queen's majesty and the king of Spain was concluded; and the day following, January 15, the mayor with the aldermen and certain commons were at the court, and there they were commanded by the lord chancellor to prepare the city ready to [Page 383] receive the said king of Spain: who declared unto them what a catholic, mighty, prudent, and wise prince the said king was, with many other commendations of him.
SATURDAY, January 20, the court of the first-fruits and tenths was dissolved.
THURSDAY night, January 25, the lord marquis of Northampton was again committed to the Tower, and sir Edward Warner with him; who were brought to the Tower by the mayor.
ON Saturday following, January 27, justice Hales was committed to the Marshalsea; and the same day Mr. Rogers was committed to Newgate. Saturday, Sunday, and Monday following, the Londoners prepared a number of soldiers, by the queen's command, to go into Kent against the commons; whereof were chief captains, the duke of Norfolk, the earl of Wormwood, sir Henry Jerningham, sir George Howard, and ten other captains; which soldiers when they came to Rochester-bridge, where they should have set upon their enemies, most of them (as it is said) left their own captains, and came wholly to the Kentish men; and so the aforesaid captains returned to the court both void of men and victory, leaving behind them six pieces of ordnance and treasure.
ABOUT the latter end of January, the duke of Suffolk, with his brethren, departed from his house at Shene, and went into Leicestershire; after whom the earl of Huntington was sent, to take him and bring him to London, who proclaimed the said duke a traitor by the way as he rode.
UPON the 15th day of February, being Thursday, within the city of London, about nine o'clock in the forenoon, strange sights were seen. Two suns both shining at once, the one a good way distant from the other; at the same time was also seen a rainbow, with the arch reversed. Both these fights were seen as well at Westminster, in Cheapside, on the south side of St. Paul's, as in many other places, and that by a great number of honest men. Also certain aldermen went out of Guild-hall to behold the sight.
CONCERNING the rising of Mr. Wyat, with sir William Cobham, and others in Kent, and their coming to London in the month of February; also of the queen's coming to Guild-hall, and her oration there made; and of the taking of the said Wyat and his company; likewise of the apprehension of the duke of Suffolk, with his brother lord John Gray; and the next day after, of the beheading of the lord Guilford, and lady Jane, which was February 12; and how, the day before, lord William Howard, and sir Edward Hastings, were sent for the lady Elizabeth; and how, the same Sunday, sir Henry Isely, Mr. Culpepper, and Mr. Winter, were committed to the Tower; the bishop of Winchester, the same day, February 11th, preaching before the queen, and persuading her to use no mercy towards these Kentish men, but severe execution; all which was in the month of February: because most of these matters have been briefly touched before, or else may be found in other chronicles, I will cease to make any further mention of them: having somewhat notwithstanding to declare touching the arraignment and death of the duke of Suffolk.
SATURDAY, February 17, the duke of Suffolk was arraigned at Westminster, and the same day condemned to die by his peers; the earl of Arundel was chief judge for this day.
SUNDAY the 18th, sessions was held in London, which had not been before on a Sunday.
MONDAY 19th, lord Cobham's three sons, and four other men, were arraigned at Westminster: of which sons the youngest was condemned, whose name was Thomas; the other two came not to the bar; and the other four men were condemned.
TUESDAY 20th, lord John Gray was arraigned at Westminster, and condemned the same day, and other three men, whereof one was named Nailer.
WEDNESDAY 21st, lord Thomas Gray, and sir James Croft, were brought through London to the Tower, with a number of horsemen.
THURSDAY 22d, sir Nicholas Throgmorton was committed to the Tower.
[Page 384]FRIDAY 23d, 1554, the duke of Suffolk was beheaded on Tower-hill, the order of whose death here followeth,
The devout Behaviour of the DUKE of SUFFOLK, on the Day of his EXECUTION.
ABOUT nine o'clock in the forenoon, Henry Gray duke of Suffolk, was brought forth from the Tower unto the scaffold on Tower-hill, and in his coming thither, there accompanied him Dr. Weston as his spiritual father, notwithstanding, as it seemed, against the will of the said duke. For when the said duke went up to the scaffold, the said Weston, being on the left hand, pressed to go up with him; the duke with his hand put him down again off the stairs; and Weston taking hold of the duke, forced him down likewise. And as they ascended the second time, the duke again put him down. Then Weston said, That it was the queen's pleasure he should do so. Wherewith the duke casting his hands abroad, ascended up the scaffold, and paused a long time after. And then he said, "Masters, I have offended the queen, and her laws, and thereby am justly condemned to die, and am willing to die, desiring all men to be obedient, and I pray God that this my death may be an example to all men, beseeching you all to bear me witness, that I die in the faith of Christ, trusting to be saved by his blood only, and by no other trumpery, the which died for me, and for all them that truly repent, and stedfastly trust in him. And I do repent, desiring you all to pray to God for me; and when you see my breath depart from me, you will pray to God that he may receive my soul." And then he desired all men to forgive him, saying that the queen had forgiven him.
THEN Dr. Weston declared with a loud voice, that the queen's majesty had forgiven him. With that several of the standers by said with good and audible voices, Such forgiveness God send thee! (meaning Dr. Weston.) Then the duke kneeled down upon his knees, and said the Psalm, Miserere mei Deus, unto the end, holding up his hands, and looking up to heaven. And when he had ended the Psalm, he said, "Into thy hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit," &c. Then he arose and stood up, and delivered his cap and his scarf unto the executioner. Then the said executioner kneeled down, and asked the duke forgiveness. And the duke said, "God forgive thee, and I do: and when thou doest thine office, I pray thee do it well, and send me out of this world quickly, and God have mercy on thee." Then stood there a man and said, "My lord, how shall I do for the money that you do owe me?" And the duke said, "Alas, good fellow, I pray thee, trouble me not now, but go thy way to my officers." Then he tied a handkerchief about his face, and kneeled down and said, "Our Father which art in heaven," &c. unto the end. And then he said, "Christ have mercy upon me," and laid down his head on the block, and the executioner took the ax, and at the first blow struck off his head, and held it up to the people, &c.
THE same day several prisoners had their pardon, and came through the city with their halters about their necks, in number about two hundred and forty.
SATURDAY, February 24th, sir William Bentlow was committed as prisoner to the master of the horse. This sir William was at this time one of lady Elizabeth's gentlemen.
SUNDAY 25th, sir John Rogers was committed to the Tower.
IN this week, all such priests, within the diocese of London, as were married, were divorced from their livings, and commanded to bring their wives within a fortnight, that they might be likewise divorced from them: this the bishop did of his own power.
FEBRUARY 27th, certain gentlemen of Kent were sent into that county to be executed, among whom we find the two Mantels, two Knevets, and Bret. Mr. Rudston also, and others were condemned, and would have been executed, but they had their pardon.
AS to Mr. Mantel, senior, it is to be noted, that, when under the gallows, upon his being turned off, the rope broke Upon which, they urged him to recant, and receive the sacrament of the altar, promising him the queen's pardon; but this worthy [Page 385] gentleman rejected their insidious counsel, and chose rather to die, than to live, by dishonouring God.
IT was reported of this Mr. Mantel, but falsely, that he had recanted; to clear himself from which aspersion, he wrote the following apology.
The APOLOGY of Mr. MANTEL, senior, March 20th, 1554.
PERCEIVING that already certain false reports are raised of me concerning my answer in the behalf of my belief, while I was prisoner in the Tower of London, and considering how sore a matter it is to be an occasion of offence to any of those little ones that believe in Christ; I have thought it the duty of a christian man, as near as I can (with the truth), to take away this offence. It pleased the queen's majesty to send unto me Dr. Bourne, unto whom at the first meeting I acknowledged my faith in all points to agree with the four creeds, that is, the common creed, the creed of Nicene, Quicunque vult, and Te Deum laudamus.
FURTHER, as concerning confession and penance, I declare that I could be content to shew unto any learned minister of Christ's church any thing that troubled my conscience, and of such a man I would most willingly hear absolution pronounced.
TOUCHING the sacrament of the altar (as he termed it), I said, that I believed Christ to be there present as the Holy Ghost meant, when these words were written, "This is my body."
FURTHER, when this would not satisfy, I desired him to consider, that I was a man condemned to die by law, and that it was more meet for me to seek a readiness and preparation for death. And inasmuch as I dissented not from him in any article of the christian faith necessary to salvation, I desired him for God's sake no more to trouble me with such matters, as which to believe, is neither salvation; nor not to believe, damnation. He answered, that if I dissented but in the least matter from the catholic church, my soul was in great danger; therefore much more in this great matter, alledging this text, "He that offendeth in the least of these, is guilty of them all." Yes, said I, "It is true of these commandments of God." To this I desired him to consider it was not my matter, nor could I in these things hold disputation, nor minded so to do; and therefore to take these few words for a full answer, that I not only in the matter of the sacrament, but also in all other matters of religion, believe as the holy catholic church of Christ (grounded upon the prophets and apostles) believeth. But upon this word [Church] we agreed not; for I took exception at the antichristian popish church.
THEN fell we in talk of the mass, wherein we agreed not; for I, both for the occasion of idolatry, and also the [...] subversion of Christ's institution, thought it naught; and he, on the contrary, upon certain considerations, supposed it good. I found fault that it was accounted a sacrifice propitiatory for sin, and at certain other applications of it. But he said that it was not a propitiatory sacrifice for sin (for the death of Christ only was the sacrifice), and this but a commemoration of the same. Then, if you think so, (certain blasphemous collects left out) I could be content (were it not for offending my poor brethren that believe in Christ, which know not so much) to hear your mass. See, said he, how vain-glory toucheth you. Not so, sir, I am not now, I thank God, in case to be vain-glorious.
THEN I found further fault with it, that it was not a communion. Yes, saith he, one priest saying mass here, and another there, and the third in another place, &c. is a communion. This agreeth not, said I, with these words of Paul, "Ye come not after a better manner, but after a worse." Yes, and it is a communion too, said he, when they come together. Now draweth on the time, said he, that I must depart from you to the court, to say mass before the queen, and must signify unto her in what case I find you, and methinks I find you sore seduced. Then I said, I pray you report the best: for I trust you find me not obstinate. What shall I say? are you content to hear mass, and to receive the sacrament of the mass? I beseech you, said I, signify unto her majesty, that I am neither obstinate nor stubborn; for time and persuasion may alter me, but as yet my conscience is such, that I can neither hear mass, nor receive the sacrament after that sort. Thus, after certain requests made to the queen's majesty concerning other matters, he departed.
THE next day he came to me again, and brought with him St. Cyprian's works; for so I had required him to do the day before, because I would see his sermon on mortality. He had in this book turned and interlined certain places both concerning the church and the sacrament, which he asked me to read. I read as much as my time would serve, and at his next coming I said, that I was wholly of Cyprian's mind in the matter of the sacrament. Dr. Weston and Dr. Mallet came after to me, whom I answered much after that sort as I did the other. Dr. Weston brought in the place of St. Cyprian, another book on the same subject. I asked of him how the word [Nature] was taken in the convocation-house, in the disputation upon the place of Theodoret.
TO be short, Dr. Bourne came often unto me, and I always said unto him, that I was not minded, nor able to dispute in matters of religion: but I believed as the holy catholic church of Christ, grounded upon the prophets and apostles, doth believe: and namely in the matter of the sacrament, as the holy fathers, St. Cyprian [Page 386] and St. Augustine, do write, and believed; and this answer and none other they had of me in effect; what words soever have been spread abroad of me, that I should be conformable to all things, &c. The truth is, I never heard m [...]ss, nor received the sacrament during the time of my imprisonment.
ONE them he asked me to be confessed. I said, I am content. We kneeled down to pray together in a window. I began without Benedicite, desiring him not to look at my hand for any superstitious particular enumeration of my sins. Therewith he was called away to the council; and I was s [...]t at liberty. Thus much I bear only for my life, as God knoweth. If in this I have offended any christian, from the bottom of my heart I ask them forgiveness. I trust God hath forgiven me, who knoweth that I durst never deny him before men, lest he should deny me before his heavenly Father.
THUS I have left behind me written with my own hand the effect of all the talk, especially of the worst that ever I granted unto, to the uttermost I can remember, as God knoweth. All the whole communication I have not written; for it were both too long and too foolish so to do. Now I beseech the living God, which hath received me to his mercy, and brought to pass, that I die stedfast and undefiled in his truth, at utter defiance and detestation of all papistical and antichristian doctrine; I beseech him, I say, to keep and defend all his chosen, for his name's sake, from the tyranny of the bishop of Rome, that antichrist, and from the assault of all his satellites. God's indignation is known: he will try and prove who are his. Amend your lives. Deny not Christ before men, lest he deny you before his heavenly Father. Fear not to lose your lives for him; for ye shall find them again. God hold his merciful hand over this realm, and avert the plagues imminent from the same. God save the queen, and send her knowledge in his truth. Amen. Pray, pray, pray ye christians, and comfort yourselves with the scriptures.
TRANSACTIONS in the Second Year of QUEEN MARY's REIGN.
SATURDAY, March 3d, sir Gawen Carew and M. Gibbes, were brought through London to the Tower with a company of horsemen.
March 17th, every housholder in London was commanded to appear before the aldermen of their ward, and there were commanded, that they, their wives, and servants▪ should prepare themselves for confession, and receive the sacrament at Easter, and that neither they, nor any of them, should depart out of the city until Easter was past.
THE Sunday following, March 18th, lady Elizabeth, the queen's sister, of whom mention was made before, was brought to the Tower.
UPON Easter eve, March 2 [...]th, the lord marquis of Northampton, the [...] Cobham, and sir William Cobham, were delivered out of the Tower.
MARCH 25, being Easter-day, in the morning, at St. Pencrase in Cheap, the crucifix with the pyx [the vessel in which the host was kept] were taken out of the sepulchre, before the priest rose to the resurrection: so that when after his accustomed manner, he put his hand into the sepulchre, and said very devoutly, "He is risen, he is not here," he found his words true, for he was not there indeed. Whereupon being half dismayed, they consulted among themselves, whom they thought to be the likeliest to do this thing: in which consultation they remembered one Marsh, who a little before had been put from that parsonage, because he was married, to whose charge they laid it. But when they could not prove it, being brought before the mayor, they then burthened him to have kept company with his wife, since that they were by commandment divorced. Whereunto he answered, That he thought the queen had done him wrong, to take from him both his living and his wife: which words were then noted, and taken very grievously, and he and his wife were both committed to separate compters, notwithstanding that he had been very sick.
APRIL 8, a cat was hanged upon a gallows, at the cross, in Cheapside, apparelled like a priest ready to say mass, with a shaven crown: her two forefeet were tied over her head, with a round paper like a wafer-cake, put between: whereon arose great ill will against the city of London. For the queen and the bishops were very angry; and the same afternoon there was a proclamation issued, that whosoever could bring forth the party that did hang up the cat, should have twenty nobles, which was afterwards increased to twenty marks, but none could, or would earn them.
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[Page 387]AS to the first occasion of setting up this gallows in Cheapside, here is to be understood, that after the bishop of Winchester's sermon above mentioned, made before the queen, for the speedy execution of Wyat's soldiers, immediately upon the same, February 13, there were several gibbets set up in divers parts of the city; namely, two in Cheapside, one at Leadenhall, one at Billingsgate, one at St. Magnus church, one in Smithfield, one in Fleet-street, four in Southwark, one at Aldgate, one at Bishopsgate, one at Aldersgate, one at Newgate, one at Ludgate, one at St. James's park corner, one at Cripplegate: all which remained for the terror of others, from February 13, to [...], and then at the coming in of king Philip they were taken down.
APRIL 11, sir Thomas Wyat was beheaded and quartered on Tower hill, where he spoke these words concerning the lady Elizabeth, and the earl of Devonshire: "Concerning, said he, what I have said of others in my examination, to charge any others as partakers of my doings, I accuse neither my lady Elizabeth's grace, nor my lord of Devonshire. I cannot accuse them, neither am I able to say, that to my knowledge they knew any thing of my rising." And when Dr. Weston told him, that his confession was otherwise before the council, he answered: "That which I said then, I said; but that which I say now, is true."
TUESDAY, April 27, sir James Croft and Mr. Winter were brought to Guildhall, with whom also was brought sir Nicholas Trogmorton, and there arraigned of treason, for that he was suspected to be of the conspiracy with the duke of Suffolk and the rest, against the queen: where he so learnedly and wisely behaved himself, as well in clearing his own case, as also in opening such laws of the realm as were then alledged against him that the jury which were [...] this matter, could not in conscience [...] not guilty; for which, the said [...] of the quest, being substantial [...] were each bound in the sum of 500 [...] b [...]fore the queen's council at a day [...] to answer such things [...] should be laid against them. Which jury appeared accordingly before the council in the Star chamber, upon Wednesday, April [...]: from whence▪ after certain questioning, they were [...] Emanuel Lucar and Mr. Whetstone to the Tower, and the other ten to the Fleet.
CONCERNING the condemnation of Dr. Cranmer, Dr. Ridley, and Mr. Latimer, which was the 20th of this month, and also of their disputations, having said enough before, we need not here rehearse the same.
ON Friday after their condemnation, April 27, the lord Thomas Gray, brother to the late duke of Suffolk, was beheaded on Tower-hill.
SATURDAY, April 28, sir James Croft and Mr. Winter were again brought to Guildhall, where sir James Croft was arrainged and condemned; and because the day was far spent, Mr. Winter was not arraigned.
THURSDAY, May 17, William Thomas was arraigned at Guildhall, and the same day condemned, who the next day after was hanged, drawn, and quartered. His accusation was, for conspiring the queen's death; which how true it was I have not to say. This is certain, that he made a godly end, and wrote many fruitful exhortations, letters, and sonnets, in the prison, before his death.
IN the month of May it was given out, that a solemn disputation should be held at Cambridge, between Mr. Bradford, Mr. Saunders, Mr. Rogers, and others of that side, and the doctors of both universities on the other side, like as had been before in Oxford. Whereupon the godly preachers who were in prison, having notice thereof, notwithstanding they were destitute of their books, and not ignorant of the purpose of their adversaries, and how the cause was prejudged before also, how the disputations were confusedly handled at Oxford; nevertheless, they thought not to refuse the offer of disputation, so that they might be quietly heard; and therefore wisely pondering the [...] with themselves, by a public consent▪ [...] of prison a declaration of their mind by [...] ▪ the [...] of May. Wherein first, as touching the disputation, although they knew that they should do no good, because all things were pre-determined be [...]fore▪ yet nevertheless, they would not deny to [...], if the disputation might be either before [...] [Page 388] queen, or before the council, or before the parliament, or if they might dispute by writing; for else, if the matter were brought to the doctors' handling in their own schools, they had sufficient proof, they said, by the experience of Oxford, what little good would be done at Cambridge; and, consequently, declaring the faith and doctrine of their religion, and exhorting the people withal to submit themselves with all patience and humility, either to the will or punishment of the higher powers, they appealed, in the end, from them to be their judges in this behalf, and so ended their protestation: the copy and contents whereof I thought not unfit here to be inserted.
A COPY of the DECLARATION drawn up by MR. BRADFORD, MR. SAUNDERS, and several Others.
BECAUSE we hear that it is determined of the magistrates, and such as be in authority, especially of the clergy, to send us speedily out of the prisons of the King's Bench, the Fleet, the Marshalsea, and Newgate, where at this present we are, and of long time some of us have been, not as rebels, traitors, seditious persons, thieves, or transgressors of any laws of this realm, inhibitions, proclamations, or commandments of the queen's highness, or of any of the councils, (God's name be praised therefore!) but only for the conscience we have to God, and his most holy word and truth, upon most certain knowledge; because, we say, we hear that it is determined, we shall be sent to one of the universities of Cambridge or Oxford, there to dispute with such as are appointed in that behalf: in that we purpose not to dispute otherwise than by writing, except it may be before the queen's highness and her council, or before the parliament-houses; and therefore perchance it will be noised abroad, that we are not able to maintain, by the truth of God's word, and the consent of the true and catholic church of Christ, the doctrine we have generally and severally taught, and some of us have written and set forth, whereby the godly and simple may be offended, and somewhat weakened; we have thought it our bounden duty, now whilst we may by writing, to publish and notify the causes why we will not dispute otherwise than is above said, to prevent the offences which might come thereby.
FIRST, Because it is evidently known unto the whole world, that the determinations of both the universities in matters of religion, especially wherein we should dispute, are directly against God's word, yea, against their own determination in the time of our late sovereign lord and most godly prince, king Edward: and further it is known, they are our open enemies, and have already condemned our causes, before any disputation had of the same.
SECONDLY, Because the prelates and clergy do not seek either us or the truth, but our destruction and their glory. For if they had sought us, (as charity requireth) then would they have called us forth hereabouts before their laws were so made, that frankly and without peril we might have spoken our consciences. Again, If they had sought for the truth, they would not have concluded controversies before they had been disputed; so that it easily appeareth, that they seek their own glory and our destruction, and not us and the truth: and therefore we have good cause to refuse disputation, as a thing which shall not further prevail than to the setting forth of their glory, and suppression of the truth.
THIRDLY, Because the censors and judges (as we hear who they be) are manifest enemies to the truth, and that which is worse, obstinate enemies, before whom pearls are not to be cast, by the commandment of our Saviour Jesus Christ, and by his own example. That they be such, their doings of late at Oxford, and in the convocation-house in October last past, do most evidently declare.
FOURTHLY, Because some of us have been in prison these eight or nine months, where we have had no books, no paper, no pen, no ink, or convenient place for study, we think we should do evil, thus suddenly to descend into disputation with them, which may alledge, as they list, the fathers and their testimonies, because our memories have not that which we have read, so readily as to reprove, when they shall report and wrest the authors to their purpose, or to bring forth what we may have there for our advantage.
FIFTHLY, Because in disputation we shall not be permitted to prosecute our arguments, but be stopt when we should speak; one saying this, another that, the third his mind, &c. as was done to the godly learned fathers, especially Dr. Ridley, at Oxford, who could not be permitted to declare his mind and meaning of the propositions, and had oftentimes half a dozen at once speaking against him, always hindering him to prosecute his argument, and to answer accordingly: we will not speak of the hissing, scoffing, and taunting, which wonderfully then was used. If on this sort, and much worse, they handled these fathers, much more will they be shamelessly bold with us, if we should [...] into disputation with them.
SIXTHLY, Because the notaries, that shall receive and write the disputations, shall be of their appointment, and such as either do not or dare not favour the truth, and therefore must write either to please them, or else they themselves, (the censors and judges we mean) at their pleasure will put to, and take from that which is written by the notaries; [Page 389] who cannot, or must not have in their custody that which they write, longer than the disputation endureth, as their doings at Oxford declare. No copy nor scroll could any man have by their good will. For the censors and judges will have all delivered into their hands. Yea, if any man was seen there to write, as the report is, the same man was sent for, and his writings taken from him: so must the disputation serve only for the glory, not of God, but of the enemies of his truth.
FOR these causes we all think it so necessary not to dispute with them, as if we did dispute we should do that which they desire and purposely seek, to promote the kingdom of Antichrist, and to suppress (as much as may be) the truth. We will not speak of the offence that might come to the godly, when they should hear, by report of our enemies, our answers and arguments framed (you may be sure) for their fantasies, to the slandering of the truth.
THEREFORE we publish, and by this writing notify unto the whole congregation and church of England, that for these aforesaid causes we will not dispute with them, otherwise than with the pen, unless it be before the queen's highness and her council, or before the houses of the parliament, as is above said. If they will write, we will answer, and by writing confirm and prove out of the infallible truth, even the very word of God, and by the testimony of the good and most ancient fathers in Christ's church, this our faith and every piece thereof, which we, in a summary way, do write and send abroad purposely, that our good brethren and sisters in the Lord may know it: and to seal up the same, we are ready, through God's help and grace, to give our lives to the halter or fire, or otherwise, as God shall appoint: humbly requiring, and in the bowels of our Saviour Jesus Christ, beseeching all that fear God, to behave themselves as obedient subjects to the queen's highness and the superior powers, which are ordained of God under her, rather after our example to give their heads to the block, than in any point to rebel, or once to mutter against the Lord's annointed; we mean our sovereign lady queen Mary, into whose heart we beseech the Lord of mercy plentifully to pour the wisdom and grace of his Holy Spirit, now and for ever. Amen.
FIRST, We confess and believe all the canonical books of the Old Testament, and all the books of the New Testament, to be the very true word of God, and to be written by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost, and are therefore to be heard accordingly, as the judge in all controversies and matters of religion.
SECONDLY, We confess and believe, that the catholic church, which is the spouse of Christ, as a most obedient and loving wife, doth embrace and follow the doctrine of these books in all matters of religion, and therefore is she to be heard accordingly; so that those who will not hear this church, thus following and obeying the word of her husband, we account as heretice and schismatics, according to this saying, "If he will not hear the church, let him be to thee as a heathen."
THIRDLY, We believe and confess all the articles of faith and doctrine set forth in the symbol of the apostles, which we commonly call the creed, and in the symbols of the council of Nice, kept in the year 324 of Constantinople, in the year 384 of Ephesus, in the year 432 of Chalcedon, in the year 454 of Toletum the first and fourth. Also in the symbols of Athanasius, Ireneus, Tertullian, and of Damascus, which was about the year of our Lord 376, we confess and believe (we say) the doctrine of the symbols generally and particularly: so that whosoever doth otherwise, we hold the same to err from the truth.
FOURTHLY, We believe and confess concerning justification, that as it cometh only from God's mercy through Christ, so it is perceived and had of none, which be of years of discretion, otherwise than by faith only: which faith is not an opinion, but a certain persuasion wrought by the Holy Ghost in the mind and heart of man, whereby as the mind is illuminated, so the heart is ready to submit itself to the will of God unfeignedly, and so sheweth forth an inherent righteousness, which is to be discerned, in the article of justification, from the righteousness which God endueth us withal, justifying us; although inseparably they go together. And this we do not for curiosity or contention sake, but for conscience sake, that it might be quiet, which it can never be, if we confound without distinction forgiveness of sins, and Christ's justice imputed to us, with regeneration and inherent righteousness. By this we disallow the papistical doctrine of free-will, of works of supererogation, of merits, of the necessity of auricular confession, and satisfaction towards God.
FIFTHLY, We confess and believe concerning the exterior service of God, that it ought to be according to the word of God; and therefore in the congregation all things public ought to be done in such a tongue as may be most to edify, and not in Latin, where the people understand not the same.
SIXTHLY, We confess and believe that God only by Christ Jesus is to be prayed unto and called upon; and therefore we disallow invocation, or prayer to saints departed this life.
SEVENTLY, We confess and belive, that as a man departeth this life, so shall he be judged in the last day generally, and in the mean season is entered either into the sta [...]e of the blessed for ever [...]or damned for ever, and therefore is either past all help, or else needs no help of any in this life. By reason whereof we affirm purgatory, masses of Scal [...] [Page 390] [...], trentals, and such suffrages as the popish church [...] obtrude as necessary, to be the doctrine of Antichrist.
EIGHTHLY, We confess and believe of the sacraments of Christ, which are baptism and the Lord's supper, that they ought to be ministered according to the institution of Christ, concerning the substantial parts of them; and that they be no longer sacraments, than they be had in use, and used to the end for which they were instituted.
AND here we plainly confess, that the mutilation of the Lord's supper, and the subtraction of the one kind from the lay people, is antichristian. And so is the doctrine of transubstantiation of the sacramental bread and wine, after the words of consecration, as they are called.
ITEM, The adoration of the sacrament with honour due unto God: the reservation and carrying about of the same.
ITEM, The mass to be a propitiatory sacrifice for the quick and dead, or a work that pleaseth God.
ALL these we believe and confess to be Antichrist's doctrine: as is the prohibition of marriage, as unlawful to any state. And we doubt not, by God's grace, but we shall be able to prove all our confessions here to be most true, agreeable to God's word, and consent of the catholic church, which followeth, and hath followed, the governance of God's Spirit, and the judgment of his word.
AND this through the Lord's help we will do, either in disputation by word before the queen's highness and her council, or before the parliament houses, of whom we doubt not but to be indifferently heard, or else with our p [...]s, whensoever we shall be thereto, by them that have authority, required and commanded.
IN the mean season, as obedient subjects, we shall behave ourselves towards all that be in authority, and not cease to pray to God for them, that he would govern them all, generally and particularly, with the Spirit of wisdom and grace. And so we heartily desire, and humbly pray all men to do, in no point consenting to any kind of rebellion or sedition against our sovereign lady the queen's highness: but where they cannot obey, without offending God, there to submit themselves with all patience and humility to suffer as the will and pleasure of the higher powers shall judge; as we are ready, through the goodness of the Lord, to suffer whatsoever they shall adjudge us unto, rather than we will consent to any doctrine contrary to this which we here confess, unless we shall be justly convinced thereof, either by writing or by word, before such judges as the queen's highness and her council, or the parliament houses shall appoint. For the universities and clergy have condemned our causes already by the bigger, but not by the better part, without all disputation of the same; and therefore most justly we may, and do appeal from them to be our judges in this behalf, except it may be in writing, that to all men the matter may appear. The Lord of mercy endue us all with the Spirit of truth and grace, and of perseverance therein unto the end. Amen.
- Robert Menaven, alias Robert Ferrar.
- Rowland Taylor
- John Philpot
- John Bradford
- John Wigorne
- Glouc. Episcopus, alias John Hooper
- Edward Crome
- John Rogers
- Laurence Saunders
- Edmund Laurence
- J. P.
- T. M.
TO these things abovesaid, I Miles Coverdale, late of Exon, do consent and agree, with these mine afflicted brethren being prisoners, signed with my own hand.
AND thus much concerning this present declaration subscribed by these preachers, which was on the 8th day of May.
ON the 19th of the said month, lady Elizabeth, the queen's sister, was brought to the Tower, and committed to the custody of sir John Williams, afterwards lord Williams of Tame, by whom her highness was gently and courteously treated: who afterwards was had to Woodstock, and there committed to the keeping of sir Henry Benifield, knight, of Oxborough, in Norfolk; who, on the other side, both forgetting her estate, and his own duty, as it is reported, shewed himself more hard and straight unto her, than either cause was given on her part, or reason of his own should have led him; of which we shall treat more at large hereafter, the Lord willing.
FRIDAY, July 20, king Philip arrived at Southampton. The prince himself was the first that landed; who immediately as he set foot upon the land, drew out his sword, and carried it naked in his hand. A little without the town the mayor of Southampton, with certain commoners, met him, and delivered the keys of the town unto the prince, who removed his sword, naked as it was, out of his right hand into his left, and so received the keys of the mayor without any word speaking, or countenance of thankfulness, and after a while delivered the keys to the mayor again. At the towngate the earl of Arundel and the lord Williams met him, and so he was brought to his lodging
[Page 391]WEDNESDAY following, July 25, being St. James's day, Philip prince of Spain, and Mary queen of England, were solemnly married in the cathedral church at Winchester, by the bishop of Winchester, in the presence, of a great number of noblemen of both realms. At the time of this marriage, the emperor's ambassador being present, openly pronounced, that, in consideration of that marriage, the emperor had granted and given unto his son the kingdom of Naples, &c.
WHEREUPON the first of August following, there was a proclamation, that from that time forth the stile of all manner of writing should be altered, and this following used:
"Philip and Mary, by the grace of God, king and qeeen of England, France, Naples, Jerusalem, and Ireland, defenders of the faith, princes of Spain and Sicily, archdukes of Austrich, dukes of Milan, Burgundy, and Brabant, Counties of Haspurge, Flanders, and Tyrol."
OF this marriage as the papists chiefly seemed to be very glad, so several of them, after divers studies to shew forth their inward affections, made interludes and pageants; some drew forth genealogies, deriving his pedigree from Edward the Third, and John of Gaunt. Among others, Mr. White then bishop of Lincoln, (his poetical vein being drunk with joy of the marriage) made certain verses; a translation whereof we have here inserted.
The GENEALOGY of PHILIP and MARY, whereby both Princes are shewn to have descended from JOHN OF GAUNT, Son of EDWARD III. King of ENGLAND and FRANCE.
Other VERSES of Mr. WHITE, Bishop of Lincoln, concerning the Marriage of PHILIP and MARY.
ANSWER to Mr. WHITE, Bishop of LINCOLN, by the Bishop of NORWICH.
Another ANSWER by the same AUTHOR.
Other VERSES answering to bishop WHITE, made by J. C.
Other VERSES answering likewise.
AFTER the consummation of the marriage, the king and queen removed from Winchester to several other places, and by easy journies came to Windsorcastle, where he was installed with the order of the garter, on Sunday August 12; at which time, an herald took down the arms of England at Windsor, and in the place of them would have set up the arms of Spain, but he was commanded to set them up again by certain lords. From thence they both removed to Richmond, and, by water, to London, and landed at the bishop of Winchester's house, through which they passed both into Southwark-park, and so to Southwark-house, called Suffolk-place, [...] they lay that night, being the 18th of August.
THE next day the king and queen rode from Suffolk-place (accompanied with a great number, as well of noblemen as gentlemen) through the city of London to Whitehall: and at London-bridge, as he entered at the draw-bridge, was a vain great spectacle set up, two images representing two giants, one named Corineus, and the other Gogmagog, [Page 393] holding between them certain Latin verses, which for the vain ostentation of flattery I overpass.
AS they passed over the bridge, there was a number of ordnance-shot off at the Tower, such, as by old mens' report, the like hath not been heard or seen these 100 years.
FROM London-bridge they passed the conduit in Gracechurch-street, which was finely painted, and among other things, the nine worthies, whereof king Henry VIII. was one. He was painted in harness, having in one hand a sword, and in the other hand a book, whereon was written Verbum Dei, "The word of God," delivering the same book, as it were, to his son king Edward, who was painted in a corner by him.
BUT this gave great offence: for the bishop of Winchester, lord chancellor, sent for the painter, and not only called him knave for painting a book in king Henry's hand, and especially for writing thereupon Verbum Dei, but also rank traitor and villain, saying to him that he should rather have put the book into the queen's hand, who was also painted there, for that she had reformed the church religion, with other things according to the pure and sincere word of God indeed. The painter answered, and said, That if he had known that had been the matter wherefore his lordship sent for him, he could have remedied it, and not troubled his lordship. The bishop answered, That it was the queen's majesty's will and commandment that he should send for him: and so commanding him to wipe out the book and Verbum Dei too, he sent him home. The painter departed, but fearing least he should leave some part either of the book, or of Verbum Dei, in king Henry's hand, he wiped away a piece of his fingers withal.
HERE I pass over other pageants shewed to him in passing through London, with the flattering verses in Latin, wherein were blazed out in one place the five Philips, as the five worthies of the world, Philip of Macedon, Philip the emperor, Philip the bold, Philip the good, Philip prince of Spain and king of England.
IN another piece of poetry, king Philip was resembled by an image representing Orpheus, and all English people resembled to brute and savage beasts, following after Orpheus's harp, and dancing after king Philip's pipe. Not that I reprehend the art of the Latin verses, which was fine and cunning, but that I pass over the matter, having weightier things in hand; and also the fight at St. Paul's church side, of him that came down upon a rope tied to the battlements, with his head before, neither staying himself with his hand nor foot; which shortly after cost him his life.
BUT one thing by the way I cannot let pass, touching the rood newly set up against this time, to welcome king Philip into St. Paul's church. The setting up of which rood was this, and may make as good a pageant as the best.
IN the 2d year of Mary, Bonner, bishop of London, in his royalty, and all his prebendaries about him, in St. Paul's quire, the rood (or cross) laid along upon the pavements, and also the doors of St. Paul's being shut, the bishop, with others, said and sung divers prayers by the rood: that being done, they anointed the rood with oil in divers places, and after anointing, crept unto it, and kissed it.
AFTER that, they took the said rood and weighed it up, and set it in its old accustomed place, and all the while they were doing thereof, the whole quire sang Te Deum, and when that was ended, they rang the bells, not only for joy, but also for the notable and great fact they had done therein.
NOT long after this, a merry fellow came into St. Paul's, and spied the rood, with Mary and John now set up; whereto, among a great sort of people, he made low courtsey, and said, Sir, your mastership is welcome to town. I had thought to have talked further with your mastership, but that you be here clothed in the queen's colours. I hope that you be but a summer's bird, in that you are dressed in white and green.
THE prince, being in the church of St. Paul's, after Dr. Harpsfield had finished his oration in Latin, set forward through Fleet-street, and so came to White-hall, where he with the queen remained [Page 394] four days after, and from thence removed unto Richmond.
AFTER this, all the lords had leave to depart into their countries, with strait commandment, to bring all their harness and artillery into the Tower of London with all speed. Now remained there no English lord at the court, but the bishop of Winchester. From Richmond they removed to Hampton-court, where the hall-door within the court was continually shut, so that no man might enter.
ABOUT the 8th of September, bishop Bonner began his visitation, who charged six men, in every parish, to enquire (according to their oaths) and to present before him, the 30th of September, all such persons as either had or should offend in any of his articles, which he had set forth, to the number of 37. Of the which visitation of Bonner, I have somewhat more largely to treat.
SEPTEMBER 17, was a proclamation in London, that all vagabonds and all masterless men, as well strangers as Englishmen, should depart the city within five days: and straitly charging all innholders, victuallers, taverners, and al [...]house-keepers, with all others who sell victuals, that they (after the said five days) should not sell any meat, drink, or any kind of victuals to any serving man whatsoever, unless he brought a testimonial from his master, to declare whose servant he was, and were in continual houshold with his said master, upon pain of the law if they offended herein.
UPON the Sunday following, the bishop of Winchester, lord chancellor of England, preached at St. Paul's Cross, at whose sermon were present all the council that were at the court; namely, the marquis of Winchester, the earl of Arundel, lord North, sir Anthony Brown, Mr. Rochester, Mr. Walgrave, Mr. Englefield, lord Fitzwater, and secretary Peter, and the bishops of London, Durham, and Ely, which three sat under the bishop's arms. The gospel whereof he made his sermon, is written in the xxii. chapter of Matthew, where the Pharisees came unto Christ, and among them one asked Christ which was the greatest commandment; Christ answered, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, &c. and thy neighbour [...] as thyself, in these two is comprehended the law and the prophets."
AFTER his long declaration of these words, speaking very much of love and charity, at last he had occasion upon St. James's words, to speak of the true teachers, and of the false teachers; saying, that all the preachers in king Edward's time, preached nothing but voluptuousness, and filthy and blasphemous lies, affirming their doctrine to be that false doctrine whereof St. James speaketh in his third chapter, saying, that it was full of perverse zeal, earthly, full of discord and dissention, that the preachers afore-named would report nothing truly, and that they taught that it was lawful for a man to put away his wife for adultery, and marry another, and that if a man vowed to-day, he might break it to morrow at his pleasure, with many other things which I omit. And when he spake of the sacrament, he said, that all the church from the begining have confessed Christ's natural body to be in heaven, and here to be in the sacrament, and so concluded that matter: and then willed all men to say with Joseph's brethren, "We have all sinned against our brother;" and so, said he, have I too. Then he declared what a noble king and queen we have, saying, that if he should go about to shew that the king came hither for no necessity or need, and what he had brought with him, it would be superfluous, seeing it is evidently known, that he hath ten times as much as we are in hope and possession of, affirming him to be as wise, sober, gentle, and temperate a prince as ever reigned in England, and if it were not so proved, then to take him for a false lyar for his so saying: exhorting all men to make much of him, and to win him whilst we had him, and so should we also win all such as he hath brought with him: and so concluded.
TUESDAY, October 7, twenty carts came from Westminster, loaden (as it was noised) with gold and silver, and certain of the guard with them through the city to the Tower, and it was received [Page 395] in by a Spaniard, who was the king's treasurer, and had custody of it within the Tower. It was matted about with mats, and mailed in little bundles about two feet long, and almost half a foot thick, and in every cart were six of those bundles. What it was indeed, God knoweth, for it is to us uncertain.
ABOUT the same time, or a little before, upon Corpus-Christi day, the procession being made in Smithfield, where, after the manner, the priest, with his box, went under the canopy, by chance there came by the way a certain simple man, named John Street, a joiner, of Coleman-street, who having some haste in his business, and finding no other way to pass through, by chance went under the canopy by the priest. The priest seeing the man so to presume to come under the canopy, be [...]g belike afraid, and worse feared than hurt, let [...] pyx fall down. The poor man, being straightway apprehended, was had to the compter, the priest accusing him before the council, as though he had come to slay him; whereas the poor man, as himself hath since declared unto us, had no such thought ever in his mind. When from the compter, he was had unto Newgate, where he was cast into the dungeon, there chained to a post, where he was cruelly and miserably handled, and so extremely dealt withal, that being but simple before, he was now out of his wits altogether, and so upon the same had to Bedlam. Whereupon the brief chronicle of London in this point is not to be credited, which untruly reported that he feigned himself in Newgate to be mad: which we in writing of this history, by due inquisition of the party, have found to be cont [...]y▪
ABOUT the 5th of October, divers, as well housholders, as servants, and apprentices, were apprehended and taken, and committed to sundry prisons, for having and selling of certain books, which were sent into England by the preachers that fled into Germany and other countries; which books touched a great number so near, that within one fortnight there were little less than threescore imprisoned for this matter: among whom was Mr. Brown, a goldsmith, Mr. Sp [...]rk, a drape [...] Randal Tirer, a stationer, Mr. Beston, a merchant, with many others.
SUNDAY, October 14, the old bishop of Durham preached in the shrouds.
October 18, the king came from Westminster to St. Paul's church, accompanied with a great number of noblemen, and there he was received under a canopy, at the west door, and so came into the chancel, where he heard mass, which a Spanish bishop and his own chaplain sung; and that done, he returned to Westminster to dinner.
FRIDAY, October 26, certain men, whereof I spake before, which were of Mr. Throgmorton's jury, being in number eight (for the other four were delivered out of prison, having submitted themselves), whereof Mr. Emanuel Lucas, and Mr. Whetstone were chief, were called before the council in the Star-chamber: where they all affirmed that they had done all things in that matter according to their knowledge, and with good consciences, even as they should answer before God at the day of judgment. When Mr. Lucas said openly before all the lords, that they had done in the matter like honest men, and true and faithful subjects, and therefore they humbly besought the lord chancellor, and the other lords, to intercede with the king and queen, that they might be discharged and set at liberty, and said that they were all contented humbly to submit themselves to their majesties, saving and reserving their truth, consciences, and honesty. Some of the lords said, that they deserved to pay a 1000l. a-piece, and others said, that Mr. Lucas and Mr. Whetstone deserved to pay a 1000 marks a-piece, and the rest 500l. a-piece. At last, sentence was given by the lord chancellor, that they should pay a thousand marks a-piece, and that they should go to prison again, and there remain till further orders were taken for their punishment.
TUESDAY, October 30, the lord J. Gray was delivered out of the Tower, and set at liberty.
SUNDAY, November 4, five priests did penance at Paul's-Cross, who were content to put away their wives, and take upon them again to minister. Each of them had a taper in his hand, and a rod, wherewith the preacher did dispel them.
[Page 396]WEDNESDAY, November 7, the lord Paget, and sir Edward Hastings, master of the horse, were sent as ambassador [...], I know not whither, but, as it was judged, to Cardinal Poole, who lay all that summer before at Brussels: and it was thought they were sent to accompany and conduct him into England, where at that time he was nominated and appointed bishop of Canterbury.
FRIDAY, November 9, Mr. Barlow, late bishop of Bath, and Mr. Cardmaker, were brought before the council, in the Star-chamber, where after communication they were committed to the Fleet.
SATURDAY, November 10, the sheriffs of London had orders to take an inventory of every one of their goods, which were of Mr. Throgmorton's jury, and to seal up their doors, which was done the same day. Mr. Whetstone, Mr. Lucas, and Mr. Kytely, were adjudged to pay 1000l. a-piece, and the rest 1000 marks a-piece, to be paid within one fortnight after. From this payment were exempted only four, who submitted themselves, whose names are these, Mr. Loe, Mr. Poynter, Mr. Beswike, and Mr. Carter.
MENTION has been made of the visitation of Edmund Bonner, bishop of London, which begun (as is said) about the month of September; for the better preparation whereof were set forth certain articles, to the number of 37; which articles, partly for the tediousness of them, partly for that Mr. Bale in a certain treatise hath sufficiently painted out the same in proper colours, partly also, because I will not infect this book with them, I pass them over, proceeding in the progress of this bishop in his visitation in the county of Essex; who passing thro' the said county of Essex, being attended with divers worshipful of the shire, (for so they were commanded) arrived at Sterford in Hertfordshire, where he rested certain days, solacing himself after that painful peregrination, with no small feasting and banqueting with his attendants, at the house of one Parsons, his nephew, whose wife he commonly called his fair niece; (fair she was indeed) and he took there great pleasure to hear her play upon the virginals, wherein she excelled, insomuch that at every dinner (sitting by his sweet side) she arose and played three several times at his request, of his good and spiritual devotion towards her. After some days were passed in this fashion, he proceeded in his popish visitation toward Hadham, his own house and parish, not more than two miles from Sterford, being there most solemnly rung out, as in all other places where he passed. At length drawing near unto Hadham, when he heard no stirring there in honour of his holiness, he grew into some choler, and the nearer he approached, the hotter was his fit: and the quieter the bells were, the unquieter was his mood. Thus rode he on, chafing and fuming with himself· "What meaneth (saith he) that knave the clerk, that he ringeth not? and the parson, that he meeteth me not?" with other passionate expressions. There this patient prelate, coming to the town, alighted, calling for the key of the church, which was then all unready, since, as they pretended, he had come two hours before his time; whereupon he grew from choler to plain melancholy, so as no man willingly would deal with him to qualify the raging humour so far incorporated in his breast. At last, the church door being opened, the bishop entered, and finding no sacrament hanging up, no rood-loft decked after the popish precept, (which had commanded about the same time a well favoured rood, cross, or image, and of tall stature, universally in all churches to be set up) curtailed his small devotions, and fell from cholar and melancholy to madness in the greatest degree, swearing and raging, with an hunting oath or two, (and by no small oaths) that in his own church, where he hoped to have seen the best order, he found most disorder, to his honour's most heavy discomfort, as he said, calling the parson (whose name was Dr. Bricket) knave and heretic; who there humbled himself, and yielded, as it were, to his fault, saying, He was sorry his lordship was come before that he and his parish looked for him, and therefore could not do their duties to receive him accordingly: and as for those things which were lacking, he trusted in short time hereafter he should compass that which hitherto he could not bring about. Therefore if it pleased his lordship to come to his poor house, where his dinner was prepared, he would satisfy him in those things, which his lordship thought amiss. Yet this reasonable answer neither could satisfy, nor asswage his unreasonable passion. For the catholic prelate utterly defied him and his cheer, commanding him out of his sight, [Page 397] saying, as his bye-word was, "Before God thou art a knave, avaunt heretic," and therewithal, whether thrusting, or striking at him, so it was, that with his hand he gave sir Thomas Josselin (who then stood next the bishop) a good blow upon the ear; whereat, being somewhat astonished, sir Thomas said, What meaneth your lordship? have you been trained in Will Somer's school, to strike him who standeth next you? The bishop, still in a rage, either heard not, or would not hear. Upon which Mr. Fecknam, dean of St. Paul's, addressing the knight, said, "O Mr. Josselin, you must bear with my lord, for truly his long imprisonment in the Marshalsea, and the misusing of him there hath altered him, that in these passions he is not master of himself, no [...] will it avail to give him counsel until his heat be passed, and then assure yourself Mr. Josselin, my lord will be sorry for those abuses, and that misconduct which he cannot now see in himself." To whom sir Thomas merrily replied, "So it seems, Mr. Fecknam, that now he is come forth from the Marshalsea, he is ready to go to Bedlam." At which conceit some laughed, and more smiled, because the nail was hit so truly upon the head. The bishop appeared not in the least abashed at his own folly; and it is no wonder he was not ashamed to strike a stranger, who spared not the burning of so many good men.
THIS combat being finished, the martial prelate presently taketh him to his horse again, notwithstanding he at first intended to tarry at Hadham three or four days, and had made provisions in his own house accordingly; but leaving his dinner, he rode that night with a small company of his household to Ware, to the great wonder of all the country, who looked not for his coming till three days after.
BUT though the bishop posted hastily away, his retinue thought it most prudent to tarry behind: and his doctors and chaplains, a few excepted, dined at Dr. Bricket's, as merrily as the bishop rode to Ware chasingly. Now the causes which induced him to leave a good dinner, were supposed to be, that his lordship was offended at not receiving those solemnities he was accustomed to be saluted withal in other places, and because his wooden god was not elevated seemly in the rood-loft to entertain strangers; on which account he took occasion to quarrel with Dr. Bricket; for the bishop had issued out his precept, that in every parish a rood, (a cross, crucifix, and other images) should be erected, both well favoured, and tall in stature: which brings to my mind (says Mr. Fox) what happened in a certain town in Lancashire, near to Lancaster, called Cockram, where the parishioners and church-wardens, having at the same time a like charge for the erecting of a rood in their parish church, had made their bargain, and were at a price with one that could cunningly carve and paint such idols, for the framing of their rood; who, according to his promise, made them one, and set it up in their church. This done, he demanded his money: but they misliking his workmanship, refused to pay him; whereupon he arrested them, and the matter was brought before the mayor of Lancaster, who was a very fit man for such a purpose, and an old favourer of the gospel, which is rare in that country. Then the carver began to declare how they covenanted with him for the making of a rood with the appurtenances, ready carved and set up in their church, which he according to his promise had [...]: and now demanding his money, they refuse [...] to pay him. Is this true? quoth the mayor [...] the wardens. Yes, sir, said they. And why do you not pay the poor man his due? quoth he▪ May it please you, master mayor, quoth they, because the rood we had before was a well-favoured man, and he promised to make us such another: but this that he hath set up now, is the worst favoured thing that ever you set your eyes on, gaping and grinning in such sort, that none of our children dare once look him in the face, or come near him. The mayor thinking that it was good enough for that purpose, if it had been worse, My masters, quoth he, howsoever you like the rood, the poor man's labour hath been never the less, and it is a pity that he should have any hindrance or loss thereby. Therefore I will tell you what you shall do: pay him the money you promised him, and go your ways home and look on it, and if it will not serve for a god, make no more ado, but clap a pair of horns on his head, and so he will make an excellent devil. This the parishioners took exceeding well; the poor man had his money, and divers laughed well thereat: but so did not the Babylonish priests.
[Page 398]THIS mayor continued a protestant almost 50 years, and was the only reliever of Mr. March, the martyr, (whose story followeth hereafter) with meat, drink, and lodging, while he lay in Lancaster-castle, the space of three quarters of a year, before he was had to Chester to be burned, &c.
CHAP. VI. BISHOP BONNER's MANDATE.—The QUEEN's supposed PREGNANCY.—CARDINAL POOLE's ORATION.—The SUBMISSION of the LORDS and COMMONS to the QUEEN.—A LETTER to the POPE from CARDINAL POOLE.—ORDERS and PRAYERS on Account of MARY's CONCEPTION.—LETTERS of MR. HOOPER, BISHOP of WORCESTER.—TRANSACTIONS of the PRIVY COUNCIL, &c. in 1555.—A SUPPLICATION of the Persecuted MINISTERS to the KING and QUEEN.
ABOUT this time came forth a precept, or mandate, from Bonner, Bishop of London, to all bishops and curates within his diocese, for abolishing of such scripture passages and writings as had been painted upon church-walls in king Edward's days; the copy whereof is inserted here, that the present generation may see the wicked proceedings of their impious zeal, or rather their malicious rage against the Lord and his word; as also against the edifying of christian people; and hence will appear, not only how blasphemously they spake against the holy scriptures, but likewise how studiously they sought by all manner of means to keep the people still in ignorance.
A MANDATE of BISHOP BONNER, to abolish the SCRIPTURE and WRITINGS painted upon CHURCH-WALLS.
EDMUND, (by God's permission) bishop of London, to all and every parsons, vicars, clerks, and lettered, within the parish of Hadham, or within the precinct of our diocese of London, wheresoever being, sendeth greeting, grace, and benediction.
BECAUSE some children of iniquity, given up to carnal desires and novelties, have by many ways enterprizing to banish the ancient manner and order of the church, and to bring in and establish sects and heresies; taking from thence the picture of Christ, and many things besides instituted and observed of ancient time laudably in the same, placing in the room thereof such things, as in such a place it behoved them not to do, and also have procured as a stay to their heresies (as they thought) certain scriptures wrongly applied to be painted upon the church-walls, all which persons tend chiefly to this end; that they might uphold the liberty of the flesh, and marriage of the priests, and destroy, as much as lay in them, the reverent sacrament of the altar, and might extinguish and enervate holy days, fasting-days, and other laudable discipline of the catholic church, opening a window to all vices, and utterly closing up the way unto virtue: wherefore we being moved with a christian zeal, judging that the premises are not to be longer suffered, do, for discharge of our duty, commit unto you jointly and severally, and by the tenor hereof do straitly charge and command you, that after the receipt hereof, with all speed convenient, you do warn, or cause to be warned, first, second, and third time, and peremptorily, all and singular church-wardens and parishioners whosoever within our aforesaid diocese of London, wheresoever any such scriptures or paintings have been attempted, that they abolish and extinguish such manner of scriptures, so that by no means they be either read or seen, and therein to proceed moreover as they shall see good and laudable in this behalf. And if, after the said monition, the said church-wardens and parishioners shall be found remiss and negligent, or culpable, then you jointly and severally shall see the aforesaid scriptures to be razed, abolished, and extinguished forthwith: citing all and singular those church-wardens and parishioners, (whom we also for the same do cite here by the tenor hereof) that all and singular the church-wardens and parishoniers [Page 399] being slack and negligent, culpable therein, shall appear before us, our vicar general and principal official, or our commissary special in our cathedral church of St. Paul at London, in the consistory there, at the hour appointed for the same, the sixth day next after their citation, if it be a court-day, or else at the next court-day after ensuing, where either we or our official or commissary shall sit; there to say and alledge for themselves some reasonable cause, if they have or can tell of any, why they ought not to be excommunicated, or otherwise punished for such their negligence, slackness, and fault, to say and to alledge, and further to do and receive, as law and reason requireth. And what you have done in the premises, do you certify us, or our vicar, principal official, and such our commissary, diligently and duly in all things, and through all things, or let him among you thus certify us, which hath taken upon him to execute this mandate. In witness whereof we have set our seals to these presents Dated in the bishop's palace at London, the 25th day of the month of October, in the year of our Lord 1554, and of our translation the 16th.
ABOUT this time the Lord Chancellor sent M. Christopherson unto the university of Cambridge, with these three articles, which he enjoined them to observe.
THE first, that every scholar should wear his apparel according to his degree in the schools.
THE second was touching the pronunciation of the Greek tongue.
THE third, that every preacher there should declare the whole stile of the king and queen in their sermons.
IN this university of Cambridge, and also of Oxford, by reason of introducing these things, especially for the alteration of religion, many wise and learned men departed from the universities: of whom, some of their own accord gave over, some were thrust out of their fellowships, some were miserably handled: insomuch that in Cambridge, in the college of St. John, there were 24 places void together, in whose rooms were taken in 24 others, which neither in virtue nor religion were to be compared to those that were before. And no less miserable was the estate of Oxford, by reason of the time, and the strait-dealing of the visitors, who for setting forward their papistical proceedings, had no regard or respect to the forwardness of good wits, and the maintenance of good letters, beginning then more and more to flourish in that university.
NOR must we pass over in silence the famous exhortation of Dr. Tresham, who supplying the room of the sub-dean in Christ-church, after he had called the students of the college together, with great eloquence and art, began to commend the dignity of the mass unto them, declaring, that there was stuff enough in the scripture to prove the mass good. Then to allure them to the catholic service of the church, he used these reasons, declaring that there were a goodly company of copes, that were appointed to Windsor, but he had found the queen so gracious unto him, that they should come to Christ's-church. Now, if they like honest men would come to church, they should wear them on holy days. And besides all this, he would get them the lady bells of Bampton, and that should make the sweetest ring in all England. And as for holy water to sprinkle, he had already the fairest that was within the realm. Wherefore he thought that no man would be so mad to forego these commodities, &c.
HENCE appeareth what want of discretion is in the fathers of popery, and into what idle follies such men do fall, whom, if it be his pleasure, may the Lord convince, and open their eyes to see their gross ignorance. But to proceed with our narrative.
ON Monday, November 22d, the parliament met; at the opening whereof, both the king and queen rode to the house of lords in their robes, having two swords borne before them: the earl of Pembroke bore the king's sword, and the earl of Westmoreland the queen's. They had also two caps of maintenance borne before them, whereof the earl of Arundel bore one, and the earl of Shrewsbury the other.
WEDNESDAY, 21st, Cardinal Poole landed at Dover, on which day an act passed for his restitution in blood, utterly repealing, as false and most slanderous, that act made against him in the reign of Henry VIII: and on the next day, November 22d, the king and queen came to the parliament-house to give the royal assent to this act, and to establish the same against his coming.
[Page 400]SATURDAY, 24th, the cardinal came by water to London, and so to Lambath-house, which was ready prepared against his coming.
WEDNESDAY, 18th, there was a general procession in St. Paul's, for joy that the queen had conceived and quick with child, as was declared in the letter sent from the council to the bishop of London. At this procession, ten bishops, and all the prebendaries of St. Paul's were present, and also the lord mayor with the aldermen, and a great number of the commons of the city in their best array. The following is a copy of the council's letter.
A LETTER, From the COUNCIL to EDMUND BONNER, BISHOP of LONDON, concerning QUEEN MARY's CONCEPTION.
AFTER our hearty commendations unto your good lordship: whereas it hath pleased Almighty God amongst other his infinite benefits of late most graciously poured upon us and this whole realm, to extend his benediction upon the queen's majesty in such sort, as she is conceived and quick of child: whereby her majesty (being our natural liege lady, queen, and undoubted inheritor of this imperial crown) good hope of certain succession in the crown is given unto us, and consequently the great calamities (which for want of such succession might otherwise have fallen upon us and our posterity) shall by God's grace be well avoided, if we thankfully acknowledge this benefit of Almighty God, endeavouring ourselves with earnest repentance to thank, honour and serve him, as we are most bounden: these are not only to advertise you of these good news, to be by you published in all places within your diocese, but also to pray and require you, that both yourself do give God thanks with us for this his especial grace, and also give order that thanks may be openly given by singing of Te Deum in all the churches within your said diocese; and that likewise all priests and other ecclesiastical ministers, in their masses, and other divine services, may continually pray to Almighty God so to extend his holy hand over her majesty, the king's highness, and this whole realm, as this thing, being by his omnipotent power graciously thus begun, may by the same be well continued and brought to good effect, to the glory of his name. Whereupon, albeit we doubt not, ye would of yourself have had special regard without these our letters, yet for the earnest desire we have to have this thing done out of hand, and diligently continued, we have also written these our letters, to put you in remembrance; and so bid your lordship most heartily well to fare. From Westminster, the 27th of November, 1554.
- S. Winton
- Arundel
- F. Shrewsbury
- Edward Darby
- Henry Sussex
- John Bathon
- R. Rich
- Thomas W [...]tthom
- John Huddilstone
- R. Southwell.
THE same day, in the afternoon, cardinal Poole came to the parliament house, which at that time was kept in the great chamber of the court at Whitehall, for that the queen was then sick, and could not go abroad: where the king and queen's majesty sitting under the cloth of state, and the cardinal sitting on the right hand, with all the other estates of the parliament being present, the bishop of Winchester, being lord chancellor, began in this manner:
MY lords of the upper house, and you my masters of the nether house; here is present the right reverend father in God my lord cardinal Poole, come from the apostolic see of Rome, as ambassador to the king and queen's majesties, upon one of the weightiest causes that ever happened in this realm, and which pertaineth to the glory of God, and your universal benefit. The which ambassage their majesties' pleasure is to be signified unto you all by his own mouth, trusting that you will receive and accept it in as benevolent and thankful wise as their highnesses have done, and that you will give a [...] attentive and inclinable ear unto him.
THE lord chancellor having ended, the cardinal began his oration, wherein he declared the causes of his coming, and what were his desires and requests. In the mean time, the court gate was kept shut until he made an end of his oration.
The ORATION of CARDINAL POOLE, in the PARLIAMENT HOUSE.
MY lords all, and you that are in the commons of this present parliament assembled, which in effect is nothing else but the state and body of the whole realm▪ as the cause of my coming hither hath been most wisely and gravely declared by my lord chancellor, so, before I enter upon the particularities of my commission, I have somewhat touching myself, and to give most humble and hearty thanks to the king and queen's majesties, and after them to you all, which of a man exiled and banished from [Page 401] this commonwealth, have restored me to be a member of the same, and of a man having no place either here, or elsewhere, within this realm, have admitted me in a place, where to speak and to be heard. This I protest unto you all, that though I was exiled my native country without just cause, as God knoweth, yet the ingratitude could not take from me the affection and desire that I had to profit and do you good. I [...] the offer of my service might have been received, it was never to seek; and where that could not be taken, you never fa [...]led of my prayer, nor ever shall.
BUT leaving the rehearsal thereof, and coming more [...] to the matter of my commission, I signify unto you all, that my principal travel is for the restitution of this noble realm to the ancient nobility, and to declare unto you, that the see apostolic, from whence I come, had a special respect to this realm above all other, and not without cause, seeing that God himself, as it were by providence, hath given this realm prerogative of nobility above others: which to make more plain unto you, it is to be considered that this [...] first of all islands received the light of Christ's [...]. For [...], it was the first that embraced the christian [...].
[...]
[...]
[...] great learned man, who first brought learning to that university, whereby it seemeth that the greatest part of the world derived the light of religion from England.
ADRIAN the Fourth, being an Englishman, converted Norway from infidelity, which Adrian afterwards, upon great affection and love that he bare to this realm, being his native country, gave to Henry II. king of England, the right and seignory of the dominion of Ireland which pertaineth to the see of Rome.
I will not rehearse the manifold benefits that this realm hath received from the apostolic see, nor how ready the same hath been to relieve us in all our necessities. Nor will I rehearse the manifold miserie [...] and calam [...]ies that this realm hath suffered by swerving from that unity. And even as in this realm, so also in all other countries, which, refusing the unity of the catholic faith, have followed [...]ntastical doctrine, the like plagues have happened. Let Asia and the empire of Greece be a spectacle unto the world, who, by swerving from the unity of the church of Rome, are brought into captivity and subjection of the Turks. All stories are full of the like examples. And to come unto the later time, look upon our neighbours in Germany, who, by swerving from this unity, are miserably afflicted with diversity of sects, a [...]d divided into factions.
WHY should I rehearse unto you the tumults and [...] sion of blood that hath happened there of late days▪ [...] trouble you with the rehearsal of those plagues that [...] happened since this innovation of religion, whereof you [...]ve felt the bitterness, and I have heard the report? Of all which matters I can say no more, but such was the misery of the time. And see how far forth this [...] went. For those that live under the Turks, may freely live after their conference, and so was it not lawful [...].
IF m [...]n examine well upon what grounds th [...]s [...] [...] began, they shall well find the root of this [...] other mischiefs, was [...], and that the lust and [...] affection of one man confounded all laws both [...]. And notwithstanding all th [...]se devices and [...] within this realm against the church [...] they needed not to have lost you, but that th [...] [...] as friends to reconcile you, than a great [...]. For they wanted not [...] mighty [...] in all Europe to [...] that [...]. Than mark the [...] these [...] to rise a great fac [...] of riches [...] came to great misery and lack. [...] [...] confound the wisdom of the wise, and [...] unjust [...] to [...], and that thing which seemed to be [...] for relief, was cause of plain ruin and decay. [...] see that goodness of God, which at no time failed us, but most [...] offered his grace, when it was of our parts [...] diserved.
[Page 402]AND when all light of true religion seemed utterly extinct, the churches defaced, the altars overthrown, the ministers corrupted; even like as in a lamp the light being covered, yet it is not quenched, even so in a few remained the confession of Christ's faith, namely, in the breast of the queen's excellency, of whom, to speak without adulation, the saying of the prophet may be verified, "Behold, she is as one forsaken!"
AND see how miraculously God of his goodness preserved her highness, contrary to the expectation of man, that when numbers conspired against her, and policies were devised to disinherit her, and armed power prepared to destroy her; yet, she being a virgin helpless, naked, and unarmed, prevailed and had the victory over tyrants; which is not to be ascribed to any policy of man, but to the almighty great goodness and providence of God, to whom the honour is to be given. And therefore it may be said, Give glory to God. For in man's judgment, on her grace's part was nothing in appearance but despair.
AND yet for all these practices and devices of ill men, here you see her grace established in her estate, being your lawful queen and governess, born among you, whom God hath appointed to reign over you, for the restitution of true religion, and extirpation of all errors and sects. And to confirm her grace the more strongly in this interprize, lo! how the providence of God hath joined her in marriage with a prince of like religion; who being a king of great might, armour, and force, yet useth towards you neither armour nor force but seeketh you by the way of love and amity; in which respect great cause you have to give thanks to Almighty God, that hath sent you a catholic governess It shall be therefore your part again to love, obey, and serve them.
AND as it was a singular favour of God to conjoin them in marriage, so it is not to be doubted but that he shall send them issue, for the comfort and surety of this commonwealth.
OF all princes in Europe, the emperor hath travelled most in the cause of religion, as it appeareth by his acts in Germany; yet happily, by some secret judgment of God, he hath not atchieved the end. With whom in my journey hitherwards I had conference touching my ambassy; whereof, when we had understanding, he shewed a great appearance of most earnest joy and gladness, saying, "That it rejoiced him no less of the reconcilement of this realm unto christian unity, than that his son was placed by marriage in the kingdom; and most glad he was of all, that the occasion thereof should come by me being an Englishman born, which is (as it were) to call home ourselves. I can well compare him to David, who, though he were a man elect of God, yet, for that he was contaminate with blood and war, could not build the temple of Jerusalem, but left the finishing thereof to Solomon, who was a peace-making king. So may it be thought, that the appeasing of controversies of religion in christianity, is not appointed to this emperor, but rather to his son, who shall perform the building that his father had begun. Which church cannot be perfectly built, unless universally in all realms we adhere to one head, and do acknowledge him to be the vicar of God, and to have power from above: for all power is of God, according to the saying, "There is no power, but comes from God." And therefore I consider that all power being in God, yet for the conservation of quiet and godly life in the world, he hath derived that power from above into the parts here in earth; which is, into the imperial and ecclesiastical. And these two powers, as they be several and distinct, so have they two several effects and operations. For secular princes, to whom the temporal sword is committed, are ministers of God to execute vengeance upon transgressors and evil livers, and to preserve the well-doers and innocent from injury and violence. Which power is represented in these two most excellent persons, the king and queen's majesties here present, who have this power committed unto them immediately from God, without any superior in that behalf.
THE other power is of ministration, which is the power of the keys, and order in the ecclesiastical state, which is by the authority of God's word, examples of the apostles, and of all holy fathers from Christ hitherto, attributed and given to the apostolic see of Rome, by special prerogative. From which see I am here deputed legate and ambassador, having full and ample commission from thence, and have the keys committed to my hands: I confess to you I have the keys, not as mine own keys, but as the keys of him that sent me, and yet cannot open: not for want of power in me to give, but for certain impediments in you to receive, which must be taken away before my commission can take effect. This I protest before you, my commission is not of prejudice to any person. I come not to destroy, but to build; I come to reconcile, not to condemn; I am not come to compel, but to call again; I am not come to call any thing in question already done, but my commission is of grace and clemency to such as will receive it. For as touching all matters that are past, they shall be as things cast into the sea of forgetfulness.
BUT the means whereby you shall receive this benefit, is to revoke and repeal those laws and statutes, which were impediments, blocks, and bars to the execution of my commission. For like as I myself had neither place nor voice to speak here among you, but was in all respects a banished man, till such time as ye had repealed those laws that lay in my way, even so cannot you receive the benefits and grace offered from the apostolic see, until the abrogation of such laws, whereby you have disjoined and dissevered yourselves from the unity of Christ's church.
IT remaineth therefore that you, like true christians, and [Page 403] provident men for the weal of your souls and bodies, ponder what is to be done in this so weighty a cause; and so to frame your acts and proceedings, as they may first tend to the glory of God, and next to the conservation of your commonwealth, surety, and quietness.
THE next day the three estates assembled again in the great chamber of the court at Westminster; where the king, queen, and the cardinal being pre [...]sent, they did exhibit (all kneeling) a supplication to their highnesses; the tenor whereof followeth.
The SUPPLICATION and SUBMISSION of the LORDS and COMMONS, assembled in PARLIAMENT, to their MAJESTIES MARY and PHILIP.
WE the lords spiritual and temporal, and the commons of this present parliament assembled, representing the whole body of the realm of England and dominions of the same, in our own names particularly, and also of the said body universally, in this supplication directed to your majesties with most humble suit, that it [...], by your gracious intercession and means, be exhibited to [...] [...]ost reverend father in God, the lord cardinal Pool [...], [...], but specially hither from our most holy father pope Julius the third, and the see apostolic of Rome, do declare ourselves very sorry and repentant for the chism and disobedience committed in this realm and dominions of the same, against the said see apostolic, either by making, agreeing or executing any laws, ordinances, or commandments against the supremacy of the said see, or otherwise doing or speaking that might impugn the same: offering ourselves, and promising by this our supplication, that for a token and knowledge of our said repentance, we are, and shall be always ready, under and with the authority of your majesties, to the uttermost of our power, to do that which shall be in us for the abrogation and repealing of the said laws and ordinances in this present parliament; as well for ourselves, as for the whole body whom we represent.
WHEREUPON we most humbly beseech your majesties, as persons undefiled in the offence of this body towards the the said see, which nevertheless God by his providence hath made subject unto your majesties, so to set forth this our most humble suit, that we may obtain from the see apostolic, by the said most reverend father, as well particularly as universally, absolution, release, and discharge from all danger of such censures and sentences, as by the laws of the church we be fallen in; and that we may, as children repentant, be received into the bosom and unity of Christ's church; so as this noble realm, with all the members thereof, may in unity and perfect obedience to the see apostolic, and pope for the time being, serve God and your majesties, to the furtherance and advancement of his honour and glory. Amen.
THE supplication being read, the king and queen delivered the same unto the cardinal, who, (perceiving the effects thereof to answer his expectation) did receive the same most gladly from their majesties: and after he had in a few words given thanks to God, and declared what great cause he had to rejoice above all others, that his coming from Rome into England had taken such happy success, he, by the pope's authority, did give them this absolution following:
OUR Lord Jesus Christ, who with his most precious blood hath redeemed and washed us from all our sins and iniquities, that he might purchase unto himself a glorious spouse without spot or wrinkle, and whom the Father hath appointed head over all his church, he by his mercy absolve you. And we by apostolic authority given unto us (by the most holy l [...]d pope Julius third, his vicegere [...]t on earth) do absolve and deliver you, and every of you, w [...]th the whole realm an [...] dominions thereof, from all heresy and schism, and from [...] and every judgment, censures, and [...] for that cause [...]; and also we do restore you [...] the unit [...] mother the holy church, as in our letters mor [...] [...] shall appear: in the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.
HAVING finished this business, they went into the chapel, and there singing Te Deum, with great solemnity, declared the joy that for this reconciliation was pretended.
THE report of which was with great speed sent unto Rome; as well by the king and cardinal's letters, which hereafter follow, as also otherwise. Whereupon the pope caused three processions to be made at Rome, and thanks to be given to God, with great joy, for the conversion of England to his church; and therefore praising the cardinal's diligence, and the devotion of the king and queen, on Christmas eve, by his bulls he set forth a general pardon to all such as did truly rejoice for the same.
KING PHILIP's LETTER to POPE JULIUS.
MOST holy father, I wrote yesterday unto Don John Maurique, that he should declare by word of mouth, or else write, to your holiness, in what good state the matter [Page 404] of religion stood in this realm, and of the submission to your holiness, as to the chief. As this day, which is the feast of St. Andrew, late in the evening, we have done God that service (to whose only goodness we must impute it, and to your holiness, who have taken so great pains to gain these souls) that this realm with full and general consent of all them that represent the state, being very penitent for what was past, and well bent for that they come to do, submitted themselves to your holiness, and to that holy see; whom, at the request of the queen and me, your legate did absolve. And forasmuch as the said Don John shall signify unto your holiness all that passed in this matter, I will write no more thereof, but only that the queen and I, as most faithful and devout children of your holiness, have received the greatest joy and comfort thereof, that may be expressed with tongue; considering that besides the service done to God hereby, it hath chanced in the time of your holiness, to place as it were in the lap of the holy catholic church such a kingdom as this. And therefore I think I cannot be thankful enough for that it is done this day. And I trust in him, that your holiness shall always understand, that the holy see hath not had a more obedient son than I, nor more desirous to preserve and increase the authority of the same. God guide and prosper the most holy personage of your holiness as I desire.
CARDINAL POOLE's LETTER to the POPE.
THOSE things which I wrote unto your holiness of late of that hope which I trusted would come to pass, that in a short space this realm would be reduced to the unity of the church, and obedience of the apostolic see, though I did write then not without great cause; yet nevertheless I could not be void of all fear, not only for that difficulty which the minds of our countrymen did shew, being so long alienated from the see apostolic, and for the old hatred which they had borne so many years to that name: but much more I feared, lest the first entry into the cause itself should be put off by some other matter or convention coming betwixt.
FOR the avoiding whereof, I made great means to the king and queen, which little needed▪ for their own godliness, forwardness▪ and earnest desire to bring the thing to pass, far surmounted my great and earnest expectation. This day in the evening, being St. Andrew's day, (who first brought his brother Peter to Christ) it is come to pass, by the providence of God, that this realm is reclaimed to give due obedience unto Peter's seat and your holiness, by whose means it may be conjoined to Christ the head, and his holy body, which is the church. The thing was done and concluded in parliament (the king and queen being present) with such full consent and great rejoicing, that incontinently, after I had made my oration, and given the benediction, with a great joy and shout there was divers times said, Amen, Amen. Which doth evidently declare that that holy seed, although it had been long oppressed, yet was not utterly quenched in th [...]; which [...] was declared in the nobility. Returning home to my house, these things I wrote unto your holiness, upon the sudden rejoicing that I had so luckily brought to pass so weighty a matter by the divine providence, thinking to have sent my letters by the king's post, who (as it was said) should have departed shortly; but afterwards changing my purpose, when I had determined to send one of mine own men, I thought good to add thus much to my letters, for the more ample gratulation and rejoicing at that good chance; which thing as it was right great gladness to me, through the event of the same (being itself very great and so holy, so profitable to the whole church, so healthful to this my country which brought me forth, so honourable to the same which received me), so likewise I took no less rejoicing of the princes themselves, through whose virtue and godliness the matter did take success and perfection. Of how many, and how great things may the church (which is the spouse of Christ, and our mother) make her account through those her children? Oh notable [...] of godliness! Oh ancient faith! which undoubtedly doth [...]o manifestly appear in them both, that whoso seem them, [...] needs (whether he will or no) say the same which the prophet spake of the first children of the church: "These are the seed which the Lord hath blessed. This is the Lord's planting to glory in." How holily did your holiness with all your authority and earnest affection favour this marriage! which truly seemeth to express a great similitude of the highest king, which being heir of the world, was sent down by his Father from the regal sent, to be spouse and son of the virgin, and by this means to comfort all mankind: for even so this king himself, the greatest heir of all men which are in the earth, leaving his father's kingdoms that are most great, is come into this little kingdom, and is become both the spouse and son of this virgin, (for he so behaveth himself as though he were a son, whereas indeed he is a husband) that he might, as he hath in effect already [...], shew himself an alder and helper go reconcile this people to Christ and his body, which is the church. Which things, seeing they are so, what may not our mother the church herself look for at his hands, that hath brought this to pass, to convert the hearts of the fathers towards their sons, and the unbeliever [...] to the wisdom of the righteous! which virtue [...]ly doth wonderfully shine in him. But the queen, which at that time, when your holiness sent me legate unto her, did rise up as a rod springing out of trees of myrrh, and is frankincense out of the desert: she, I say, which a little before was forsaken of all men, how wonderfully doth she now shine! What a savour of myrth and frankincen [...] doth she give unto her people! which (as the prophet saith of the mother of Christ) brought forth before she laboured, before [Page 405] she was delivered, brought forth a man-child: who ever heard of such a thing? and who hath seen the like of this? shall the earth bring forth in one day, or shall a whole nation be brought forth together? But she hath now brought forth a whole nation before the time of [...]at delivery, whereof we are in most great hope.
HOW great cause is given us to rejoice? how great cause have we to give thanks to God's mercy, your holiness, and the emperor's majesty, which have been causers of so happy and so godly a marriage; by which we being reconciled, are joined to God the Father, to Christ, and to the church? Of the which although I cannot comprehend in words the joy that I have taken, yet I cannot keep silence of it. And to this my rejoicing this also was joined, (which when I had perceived by the letters of the reverend archbishop of Consine, your holiness's nuncio with the emperor's majesty, brought me marvellous great gladness) that your said holiness began to restore to the ancient beauty those things, which in the church of Rome, through the corruption of times were deformed, which truly, when it shall be finished▪ then indeed may we well cry out with the prophet, and speak unto your holiness with these words: "Put off the stole of sorrow and vexation and put on comeliness, which thou hast of God in everlasting glory. For thy name shall be named of God everlasting, peace of righteousness, and honour of godliness; and then it shall be said, Look about and see thy sons gathered together from the sun-rising, to [...] down of the same, rejoicing in the holy word." Those is nothing truly (to speak of the children gathered together in the west, which prepare themselves to meet their mother) which they had rather see, than her apparelled (that I may use the words of the prophet) in the garment of righteousness, wherewith God adorned her in times [...]st. This one thing remaineth, that your holiness's joy, and the joy of all the universal church may be perfected, which together with us her [...] children, cease not to pray to God for it. The Almighty God preserve your holiness long to continue [...] for the profit of his church. From London, the last of November, 1554.
ON Sunday, December 2d. Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, and lord chancellor of England, preached at Paul's-Cross, at which sermon the king and cardinal Poole were present. He took for his text the [...] chapter of the epistle of St. Paul to the Romans, "This also we know the season, brethren, that we should now awake out of sleep, for now is our salvation nearer than when we believed," &c.
FIRST, He shewed how the saying of St. Paul was verified upon the Gentiles, who had a long time slept in dark ignorance, not knowing God: therefore St. Paul, said he, to stir up their heavy dulness, willed them to awake out of their long sleep, because their salvation was nearer, than when they believed. In amplifying this matter, and comparing our times with their's, he took occasion to declare what difference the Jewish sacraments had from those of the Christians, wherein he used these words:
"Even as the sacrament of the Jews did declare Christ to come, so do our sacraments declare Christ to be already come: but Christ to come, and Christ to be come, is not all one. For now that he is come, the Jews' sacraments are done away, and our's only remain which declare that he is already come, and is nearer us, than he was to the fathers of the old law; for they had him but in signs, but we have him in the sacrament of the altar, even his very body. Wherefore now also it is time that we awake out of our sleep, who have slept, or rather dreamed these twenty years past, as shall more easily appear by declaring at large some of the properties and effects of a sleep or a dream. And first, As men int [...]ing to sleep, do separate themselves from company, and desire to be alone; even so have we separated ourselves from the see apostolic of Rome, and have been alone, unlike any other realm in Christendom.
SECONDLY, As in sleep men dream sometimes of killing, sometimes of maiming, sometimes of drowning or burning, sometimes of such beastliness as I dare not name, but will spare your ears; so we have in this our sleep, not only dreamed of beastliness, but we have done it indeed. For in this our sleep hath not one brother destroyed another? Hath not half our money been wiped away at one time? And again, those that would defend their conscience, were slain, and others also otherwise troubled; besides infinite other things, which you all know, as well as I, whereof I appeal to your own consciences. Further, in a man's sleep all his senses are stopped, so that he can neither see, smell, nor hear; even so, whereas the ceremonies of the church were instituted to move and stir up our senses, they being taken away, were not our senses (as ye would say) stopped, and we fast asleep? Moreover, when a man would [Page 406] gladly sleep, he will put out the candle, lest peradventure it may hinder his sleep, and awake him: so of late all such writers as did hold any thing with the apostolic see, were condemned and forbidden to be read: and images (which were laymen's books) were cast down and broken.
THE sleep hath continued with us these twenty years, and we all that while without a head. For when king Henry did first take upon him to be head of the church, it was then no church at all. After whose death, king Edward (having over him governors and protectors, which ruled as they listed) could not be head of the church, but was only a shadow or sign of a head, and at length it came to pass, that we had no head at all; [...] ▪ not so much as our two archbishops. For on the one side, the queen being a woman, could not be head of the church; and on the other side, they [...] both convicted of one crime, and so deposed. Thu while we desired to have a supreme head among us, it came to pass that we had no head at all. When the tumult was in the north, in the time of king Henry VIII. (I am sure) the king was determined to have given over the supremacy again to the pope; but the hour was not then come, and therefore it went not forward, lest some would have said, that he did it for fear.
AFTER this, Mr. Knevet and I were sent ambassadors unto the emperor, to desire him that he would be a means between the pope's holiness and the king, to bring the king to the obedience of the see of Rome, but the time was not yet come. For it might have been said, that it had been done for a civil policy. Again, in the beginning of king Edward's reign, the matter was moved, but the time was not yet: for it would have been said, that the king (being but a child) had been bought and sold. Neither in the beginning of the queen's reign was the hour come; for it would have been said, that it was done in a time of weakness. Likewise when the king first came, if it had been done, they might have said it had been by force and violence. But now, even now, the hour is come, when nothing can be objected, but that it is the mere mercy and providence of God. Now hath the pope's holiness, pope Julius III. sent unto us this most reverend father, cardinal Poole, an ambassador from his side▪ What to do? not to revenge the injuries done by us against his holiness, but to give his benediction to those that defamed and persecuted him.
AND that we may be the more meet to receive the said benediction, I shall desire you that we may always acknowledge ourselves offenders against his holiness; I do not exclude myself from the number; I will "weep with them that weep, and rejoice with them that rejoice." And I shall desire you, that we may defer the matter no longer, for now the hour is come. The king and queen's majesties have already restored our holy father the pope to his supremacy; and the three estates assembled in the parliament, representing the whole body of the realm, have also submitted themselves to his holiness, and his successors for ever; wherefore let us not any longer stay. And even as St. Paul said to the Corinthians, that he was their father, so may the pope say, that he is our father: for we received our doctrine first from Rome, therefore he may challenge us as his own. We have all cause to rejoice, for his holiness hath sent hither and prevented us, before we sought him: such care hath he for us. Therefore let us say, "This is the day which the Lord hath made, we will rejoice and be glad in it." Rejoice in this day, which is of the Lord's working, that such a noble birth is come, yea, such a holy father (I mean my lord cardinal Poole) which can speak unto us as unto brethren, and not as unto strangers, who hath been a long time absent. And let us now awake, who have so long slept, and in our sleep have done so much mischief to the sacraments of Christ, denying the blessed sacrament of the altar, and pulled down the altar, which thing Luther himself would not do, but rather reproved them that did, examining them of their belief in Christ."
THIS was the sum of his sermon before his prayers, wherein he prayed first for pope Julius the third, with all his college of cardinals, the bishop of London, with the rest of that order; then for the king and queen, and the nobility of this realm; and lastly, for the commons of the same, with the souls departed, lying in the pains of purgatory. [Page 407] This ended, the time being late, they began in St. Paul's to ring their evening song, whereby the preacher could not be well heard, which caused him to make an end of his sermon.
ABOUT this time a messenger was sent from the parliament to the pope, to desire him to confirm and establish the sale of abbey lands and chauntry lands: for the lords and the parliament would grant nothing in the pope's behalf, before their purchases were fully confirmed.
THURSDAY, December 6, the whole convocation, both bishops and others, were sent for to Lambeth to the cardinal, who the same day forgave them all their perjurations, schisms, and heresies, and they all there kneeled down, and received his absolution; and after an exhortation and gratulation for their conversion to the catholic church, made by the cardinal, they departed.
WEDNESDAY, December 12, five of the eight men which lay in the Fleet, that were of Mr. Throgmorton's jury, were discharged, and set at liberty upon paying a fine of 220l. a-piece: and the other three put up a supplication, therein declaring, that their goods did not amount to the sum that they were appointed to pay; upon which declaration, paying 40l. a-piece, they were delivered out of prison on the 21st of December.
SATURDAY, December 22, the parliament had a strict command, that none of them should depart into the country this Christmas, nor before the parliament were ended. Which command was very contrary to their expectations; for as well many of the Lords, as also many of the commons, had sent for their horses, and had them brought hither.
FRIDAY, December 28, the prince of Piedmont came to the court at Westminster.
ON New-year's day, 1555, at night, several honest men and women of the city, to the number of thirty, and Mr. Rose, a minister, were taken as they were in a house in Bow-church-yard, at the communion, and the same night were all committed to prison. And on the third of January following, Mr. Rose was before the bishop of Winchester, the lord chancellor, and from thence the same day committed to the Tower, after some communication between the bishop and him.
THE same day the act of supremacy passed in the parliament, and at night a great tumult was at Westminster, between some Spaniards and Englishmen, whereof a great mischief had like to have ensued, by means of a Spanish friar, who got into the church, and rung the alarum. The occasion was about two prostitutes then in the cloyster at Westminster, with a sort of Spaniards, whereof whilst some played the knaves with them, others kept the entry of the cloyster with dags in harness. In the mean time, some of the dean's men came into the cloyster, and the Spaniards discharged their dags, and hurt some of them. By and by the noise of this came into the streets, so that the whole town was up almost, but never a stroke was stricken. Notwithstanding the noise of this doing with the dean's men, and also the ringing of the alarum, made much ado, and a great number to be sore afraid.
WE have before mentioned the council's letter sent to bishop Bonner, signifying the good news of queen Mary to be not only conceived, but also quick with child, which was on the 28th of November. Of this child great talk at this time began to rise in every man's mouth, especially amongst such as seemed to carry Spanish hearts in English bodies. In which number here is not to be forgotten, nor defrauded of his commendation for his worthy affection towards his prince and her issue, one sir Richard Southwell, who being the same time in the parliament house, when, as the lords were occupied in other affairs and matters of importance, suddenly starting up, for fulness of joy burst out in these words following: "Tush, my masters, said he, why talk ye of these matters? I would have you take some order for our master that is now coming into the world apace, lest he find us unprovided," &c. By which words, and also by the aforesaid letters of the council, and the common talk abroad, it may appear what an assured opinion was then conceived in men's heads, of queen Mary being with child. Insomuch that at the same time, and in the same parliament, there was a bill exhibited, and the following act made upon the same.
The WORDS of the ACT.
ALBEIT, we the lords spiritual and temporal, and the commons in the present Parliament assembled, have firm hope and confidence in the goodness of Almighty God, that like as he hath hitherto miraculously preserved the queen's majesty from many great imminent perils and dangers▪ even so he will of his infinite goodness give her highness strength, the rather by our continual prayers, to pass well the danger of deliverance of child, wherewith it hath pleased him (to all our great comforts) to bless nor: yet forasmuch as all things of this world be uncertain, and having before our eyes the dolorous experience of this inconstant government, during the time of the reign of the late king Edward the sixth, do plainly see the manifold inconveniences, great dangers and perils that may ensue in this whole realm, if for [...]ight be not used to prevent all evil chances, if they should happen: for the eschewing hereof, we the lords spiritual and temporal, and the commons in this present Parliament assembled, for and in consideration of a most special trust and confidence that we have and repose in the king's majesty, for and concerning the politic government, order, and administration of this realm, in the time of the young years of the issue or issues of her majesty's body to be born. If it should please God to call the queen's highness out of this present life, during the tender years of such issue or issues, (which God forbid) according to such order and manner, as hereafter in this present act his highness's most gracious pleasure is, should be declared and set forth, have made our humble suit, by the [...] of the queen's highness, that his majesty would vouchsafe to accept and take upon him the rule, order, education, and government of the said issue or issues to be born, as is aforesaid: upon which our [...], being of his said majesty most graciously accepted, it hath pleased his highness not only to declare, That like as for the most part his majesty verily trust [...]th that Almighty God (who hath hitherto preserved the queen's majesty, to give this realm in good all hope of [...] in the blood royal of the [...] her highness with his graces and benediction, to see the [...] of her body well brought [...], and able to govern; (wherefore neither all this [...], nay all the world beside, should or could receive more comfort than his majesty should or would) yet [...] should happen, his majesty at our humble [...] only to accept and take [...] of the education, [...], order, and government of such [...] of the most happy marriage shall [...] between the queen's highness and him; but also, during the time of such government, would by all ways and means, [...], and employ himself to advance the weal both public and private of this realm and dominion thereunto belonging, according to the said trust in his majesty reposed, with no less good will and affection, [...] his highness had been naturally born amongst us. In [...] whereof, be [...] the king and the [...] of the lords spiritual and temporal, and the commons in this present parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, &c. [As it is to be seen in the act more at large ratified and confirmed by the same parliament, to the same intent and purpose.]
THUS we see how man doth purpose, but God disposeth as pleaseth him. For all this great labour, provision, and order, taken in the parliament house for their young master long-looked for, coming so surely into the world, in the end, appeared neither young master, nor young mistress, that any man yet to this day can hear of. Furthermore, as the labour of the lay-sort was herein deluded; so no less rediculous was it to behold, what little effect the prayers of the papists had with Almighty God, who travelled no less with their processions, masses, and collects, for the happy deliverance of this young master to come, as what follows will shew.
A PRAYER by DR. WESTON, DEAN of WESTMINSTER, to be daily said for the QUEEN's DELIVERANCE.
O Most righteous Lord God, which for the offence of the first woman, hath threatened unto all women a common, sharp, and inevitable ma [...]diction, and hath enjoined them that they should conceive in sin, and being conceived, should be subject to many and grievous torments; and finally, be delivered with the danger and jeopardy of their lives; we beseech thee for thine exceeding great goodness and bottomless mercy, to mitigate the strictness of that law. Asswage thine anger for a while, and cherish in the bosom of thy favour and mercy our most gracious queen Mary, being now at the point of being delivered. So help her, that without danger of her life she may overcome the sorrow, and in due season bring forth a child, in body beautiful and comely, in mind noble and valiant. So that afterwards, she, forgetting the trouble, may with joy la [...]d and praise the [...] of thy mercy, and, together with us, praise and bless both thee and thy holy name world without end. This, O Lord, we desire thee, we beseech thee, and most heartily crave of thee. Hear us, O Lord, and grant us our petition: Let not the enemies of thy faith, and of thy church [...], Where is their God?
Another solemn PRAYER for KING PHILIP and QUEEN MARY's CHILD, that it may be a MALE-CHILD, WELL-FAVOURED, WITTY, &c.
O Most mighty Lord God, who regard [...] the prayer of the humble, and despisest not their [...]; bow down from thine high habitation of the heavens, the eyes [Page 409] of thy mercy unto us wretched sinners, bowing the knees of our hearts, and with many and deep sighs bewailing our sins and offences humbly with eyes intent, and hands displayed, praying and beseeching thee, with the shield of thy protection, to defend Mary thy servant, and our queen, who hath none other helper but thee, and whom, through thy grace, thou hast willed to be conceived with child, and at the time of her travail graciously with the help of thy right hand deliver her, and from all danger, with the child in her conceived, mercifully preserve.
IT hath seemed good in thy sight, merciful Father, by thy servant Mary to work these wonders; that is to say, in her hands to vanquish and overthrow the stout enemy, and to deliver us thy people, out of the hands of heretics, infidels, enemies to thee, and to the cross of thy beloved Son Jesus Christ, that of thy servant thou mightest speak in far countries. Therefore for these wonderful works, which thou dost to thy servants, thou art magnified, Lord God, for ever, and we thy people bless thee the God of heaven, which hath wrought upon us this great mercy, and hath excluded from us the heretic, the enemy of truth, the persecutor of thy church. We know, that we have grievously, Lord, sinned, that we have been deceived by vanity, and that we have forsaken thee our God. Our iniquities are multiplied on our heads, and our sins are increasing up to heaven: and we ourselves having offended, and our princes and our priests, for these our sins, have deserved an hypocrite to our prince, our sins have deserved a tyrant to our governor, that should bring our life to bitterness. We are not worthy to have so gentle and merciful a queen, so godly a ruler, and finally, so virtuous a prince; at the very beginning of whose reign, a new light, as it were, of God's religion seemed to us for to spring and rise. The Jews did bless the widow Judith with one voice, saying, Thou art the glory of Jerusalem, thou art the joy of Israel, thou art the honour of our people, for that thou hast loved chastity, and thou shalt be blessed for ever.
AND we the English people with one agreeable consent do cry, Thou Mary art the glory of England, our joy, the honour of thy people, for that thou hast embraced chastity; thine heart is strengthened, for the hand of our Lord hath comfo [...]ed thee, and therefore thou shalt be blessed for ever. But bow down, O most merciful Father, thine ear, and open thine eyes, and behold our affliction, and our humble confession. Thou knowest, Lord, that against Philip, not by human, but by thy ordinance our king, and against thy servant Mary, by thy providence our queen, the restorers and maintainers of thy testament of the faith, and most constant defenders of thy church; thou knowest, I say, that against these our two governors, the enemies of thy holy testament, and the church, thy [...], be most rank rebels and spiteful murmurers, walking after their lusts, whose mouth speaketh words of pride, to the end they may set up the kingdom of heretics and s [...]b [...]smatics. By the power of their hands they would change thy promises, and destroy thine inheritance, and stop and shut up the mouths of them that praise thee, and extinguish the glory of thy catholic church and altar.
IT is manifest and plain, how many contentions, how many conspiracies and seditions, how great wars, what tumults, how many, and how great troublesome vexations, how many heresies and schisms, (for these are the most ready devices, and evident tokens of heretics) for our sins do hang over us, if thy servant be taken from this life: for we acknowledge that our Lord is omnipotent, who hath pitched his dwelling-place in the midst of his people, to the intent to deliver us out of the hands of our enemies. Turn therefore thy countenance unto us; shew unto us, O Lord, thy face. Punish us for our sins according to thy will and pleasure, only now deliver us. We bowing the knees of our heart, beseech thee, that thou wilt not reserve unto us punishment for ever, and we shall praise thee all the days of our life. Hear our cry, and the prayer of thy people, and open to them the treasure of thy mercy, thy gracious favour, the spring of lively water. Thou that hast begun, make in the hand of thy servant a perfect work. Suffer not, we pray thee, the faithless rebels to say of thy servant and her counsellors, that they have devised matters which they cannot perform. And grant unto thy servant an happy and an easy travail. For it is not impossible to thy power, nor indecent to thy justice, nor unwonted to thy mercy.
IT is well known unto us, how marvellously thou didst work in Sarah of the age of 90 years, and in Elizabeth the barren, and also far stricken in age: for thy council is not in the power of men. Thou Lord that art the searcher of hearts and thoughts, thou knowest that thy servant never lusted after man, never gave herself to wanton company, nor made herself partaker with them that walk in lightness: but she consented to take an husband with thy fear, and not with her lust. Thou knowest that thy servant took an husband not for carnal pleasure, but only for the desire and love of posterity, wherein thy name might be blessed for ever and ever. Give therefore unto thy servants, Philip our king, and Mary our queen, a male issue, which may sit in the seat of thy kingdom. Give unto our queen thy servant, a little infant, in fashion and body comely and beautiful, in pregnant wit, notable and excellent.
GRANT the same to be in obedience like Abraham, in hospitality like Lot, in chastity and brotherly love like Joseph, in meekness and mildness like Moses, in strength and valour like Sampson. Let him be found faithful as David after thy heart. Let him be wise among kings as the most wise Solomon. Let him be like Job, a simple and an upright man, fearing God, and eschewing evil. Let him finally be garnished wih the comeliness of all virtuous conditions, and in the same let him wax old and live, that he may see his children's children to the third and fourth generation. And give unto our sovereign lord and lady, king Philip and queen Mary, thy blessings and long life upon earth; and grant that of them may come kings and [Page 410] queens, which may stedfastly continue in faith, love, and holiness. And blessed be their seed of our God, that all nations may know, thou art only God in all the earth, which art blessed for ever and ever. Amen.
Another PRAYER for QUEEN MARY, and her SUPPOSED CHILD.
O Almighty Father, who didst sanctify the blessed virgin and mother Mary in her conception, and in the birth of Christ our Saviour thine only Son; also by thine omnipotent power didst safely deliver the prophet Jonah out of the whale's belly: defend, O Lord, we beseech thee, thy servant Mary, our queen, with child conceived, and so visit her in and with the godly gift of health, that not only the child thy creature, within her contained, may joyfully come from her into this world, and receive the blessed sacraments of baptism and confirmation, enjoying therewith daily increase of all princely and gracious gifts both of body and soul; but that also she the mother, through thy special grace and mercy, may in time of her travail avoid all excessive grief and pain, and abide perfect and sure from all peril and danger of death, with long and prosperous life, through Christ our Lord. Amen.
TUESDAY, January 10th, nineteen members of the lower-house, with their speaker, came to White-hall to the king, and offered him the government of the realm, and of the issue, if the queen should fail, which was confirmed by act of parliament within ten days after.
WEDNESDAY, 26th, the parliament was dissolved. In this parliament the bishop of Rome was established, and all such laws as were made against him since the twentieth year of king Henry VIII. were repealed, and cardinal Poole, bishop Pates, Lilly, and others, were restored to their blood. Also an act was made, that whoever should speak any thing against the king or queen, or that might move any sedition or rebellion, at the first time to have one of his ears cut off, or to forfeit an hundred marks; and at the second time, to have both his ears cut off, or else to forfeit an hundred pounds: and whosoever should write, cypher, or print any of the premises, to have their right hand cut off.
LIKEWISE in this parliament three statutes were revived for trial of heresy: one made in the fifth year of Richard II. another in the second year of Henry IV. and the third in the second year of Henry V. Also the affair of Mr. Rose, and others that were with him, was communed of in this parliament, and upon that occasion an act was made, that certain evil prayers should be treason against the queen's highness. The prayers of these men were thus: "God turn the heart of queen Mary from idolatry, or else shorten her days."
AT the apprehending of Mr. Rose, and his companions, word was brought thereof to bishop Hooper, being then in the Fleet; whereupon the bishop sent a letter of consolation to the said prisoners: the copy whereof is as follows:
The ANSWER of BISHOP HOOPER, to a LETTER sent unto him, concerning certain PRISONERS, taken in Bow Church Yard.
THE grace of God be with you, Amen. I perceive by your letter, how that upon New-year's-day at night, there were taken a godly number of christians, whilst they were praying. I do rejoice in that men can be so well occupied in this perilous time, and flee unto God for remedy by prayer, as well for their own lacks and necessities, as also charitably to pray for them that persecute them. So doth the word of God command all men to pray charitably for them that hate them, and not to revile any magistrate with words, or to mean him any evil by force or violence. They also may rejoice that in well-doing they were taken to the prison. Wherefore I have thought it good to send them this little writing of consolation; praying God to give them patience, charity, and constancy in the truth of his most holy word. Thus fare you well, and pray to God to send his true word into this realm again amongst us, which the ungodly bishops have now banished.
JANUARY 4th, 1555.
BISHOP HOOPER's LETTER of CONSOLATION to the aforesaid PRISONERS.
THE grace, favour, and consolation, and aid of the Holy Ghost, be with you now and ever. Amen. Dearly beloved in the Lord, ever since your imprisonment I have been marvellously moved with great affections and passions, as well of mirth and gladness, as of heaviness and sorrow. Of gladness in this, that I perceived how ye be bent and given to prayer and invocation of God's help in these dark and wicked proceedings of men against God's glory. I have been sorry to perceive the malice and wickedness of men to be so cruel, devilish, and tyrannical, to persecute the people of God for serving of God, saying and hearing of the holy Psalms, and the word of eternal life. These cruel doings do declare, that the popish church is [Page 411] more bloody and tyrannical, than ever was the sword of the heathens and gentiles.
WHEN I heard of your taking, and what you were doing, wherefore and by whom ye were taken, I remembered how the christians in the primitive church were used by the cruelty of unchristened heathens, in the time of Trajan the emperor, about seventy-seven years after Christ's ascension into heaven: and how the christians were persecuted very sore, as though they had been traitors and movers of sedition. Whereupon the gentile emperor Trajan required to know the true cause of christian men's trouble. A great learned man, called Pliny, wrote unto him, and said, "It was because the christians said certain Psalms before day unto one called Christ, whom they worshipped for God." When Trajan the emperor understood it was for nothing but for conscience and religion, he caused, by his commandments every where, that no man should be persecuted for serving of God. But the pope and his church hath cast you into prison, being taken even doing the work of God, and one of the most excellent works required of christian men; that is to wit, whilst ye were in prayer, and and not in such wicked and superstitious prayers as the papists use, but in the same prayer that Christ hath taught you to pray. And in his name only ye gave God thanks for that ye have received, and for his sake ye asked for such things as ye want. O glad may ye be, that ever ye were born, to be apprehended whilst ye were so virtuously occupied. Blessed be they that suffer for righteousness' sake. For if God had suffered them that took your bodies, then to have taken your life also, now had you been following the Lamb in perpetual joys, away from the company and assembly of wicked men. But the Lord would not have you so suddenly so to depart, but reserveth you gloriously to speak and maintain his truth to the world.
BE ye not careful what ye shall say, for God will go out and in with you, and will be present in your hearts, and in your mouths to speak his wisdom, although it seemeth foolishness to the world. He that hath begun this good work in you, continue you into the same unto the end; and pray unto him that ye may fear him only, that hath power to kill both body and soul, and to cast them into hell-fire. Be of good comfort. All the hairs of your head are numbered, and there is not one of them can perish, except your heavenly Father suffer it to perish. Now ye are in the field, and placed in the front of Christ's battle. Doubtless it is a singular favour of God, and a special love of him towards you, to give you this foreward and pre-eminence, a sign that he trusteth you before others of his people. Wherefore (dear brethren and sisters) continually fight this fight of the Lord. Your cause is most just and godly, ye stand for the true Christ (who is after the flesh in heaven) and for his true religion and honour, which is amply, fully, sufficiently, and abundantly contained in the Holy Testament, sealed with Christ's own blood. How much are ye bound to God, who puts you in trust with so holy and just a cause!
REMEMBER what lookers-on you have to see and behold you in your sight, God and all his angels, who are ready always to take you up into heaven, if ye be slain in his fight. Also you have standing at your backs all the multitude of the faithful, who shall take courage, strength, and desire to follow such noble and valiant christians as you are. Be not afraid of your adversaries: for ne that is in you, is stronger than he that is in them; shrink not, although it be in pain to you; your pains are not now so great, as hereafter your joys shall be. Read the comfortable chapters of the Romans viii.x.xv. Hebrews xi.xii. And upon your knees thank God that ever ye were accounted worthy to suffer any thing for his name's sake. Read the second chapter of St. Luke's Gospel, and there you shall see how the shepherds that watched upon their sheep all night, as soon as they heard that Christ was born at Bethlem, by and by went to see him. They did not reason nor deba [...]: with themselves, who should keep the wolf from the sheep in the mean time, but did as they were commanded, and committed their sheep unto him, whose pleasure they obeyed. So let us do now we are called, commit all other things to him that calleth us. He will take heed that all things shall be well. He will help the husband, he will comfort the wife, he will guide the servants, he will keep the house, he will preserve the goods; yea, rather than it should be undone, he will wash the dishes, and rock the cradle. Cast therefore all your care upon God, for he careth for you.
BESIDES this, you may perceive by your imprisonment, that your adversaries' weapons against you are nothing but flesh, blood, and tyranny. For if they were able, they would maintain their wicked religion by God's word: but for lack of that, they would violently compel us, as they cannot by holy scripture persuade, because the holy word of God, and all Christ's doings, are contrary unto them. I pray you, pray for me, and I will pray for you. And although we be asunder after the world, yet in Christ (I trust) for ever joining in the spirit, and so shall meet in the palace of the heavenly joys, after this short and transitory life is ended. God's peace be with you. Amen.
JANUARY 14th, 1555.
UPON Friday, January 18th, all the council went to the Tower, and set at liberty most part of the prisoners, among whom were the late duke of Northumberland's sons, Ambrose, Robert, and Henry, sir Andrew Dudley, sir John Rogers, sir James Crofts, sir Nicholas Throgmorton, sir Nicholas Arnal, sir George Harper, sir Edward Warner, sir William Sentlow, sir Gawen Carew, Mr. Gibbes, Cuthbert Vaughan, with many others.
[Page 412]TUESDAY, 22d, all the preachers, who were in prison, were called before the bishop of Winchester, lord chancellor, and certain others, at the bishop's house, in St. Mary Overy's. From whence (after communication, being asked whether they would convert, and enjoy the queen's pardon, or else stand to that they had taught; they all answered they would stand to that they had taught) they were committed to straighter prison than before, with charge that none should speak with them: of whom, one James George, the same time, died in prison, being there in bonds for religion and righteousness' sake; who therefore being exempted burial in the popish church-yard, was buried in the fields.
WEDNESDAY, 23d, all the bishops, with the rest of the convocation-house, were before the cardinal at Lambath, where he desired them to repair every man where his cure and charge lay, exhorting them to treat their flock with all mildness, and to endeavour to win the people rather by gentleness, than by extremity and rigour, and so let them depart.
FRIDAY, 25th, being the day of conversion of St. Paul, there was a general and solemn procession through London, to give God thanks for their conversion to the catholic church: wherein (to set out their glorious pomp) there were fourscore and ten crosses, one hundred and sixty priests and clerks, who had every one of them copes upon their backs, singing loudly. There followed also, for the better estimation of the fight, eight bishops; and last of all came Bonner, bishop of London, carrying the popish pyx under a canopy.
THERE were also present the mayor, and aldermen, and all the livery of every occupation. Moreover the king also himself, and the cardinal, came to St. Paul's church the same day. From whence after mass they returned to Westminster again. As the king was entering the church, at the steps going up to the choir, all the gentlemen that of late were set at liberty out of the Tower, kneeled before the king, and offered him themselves and their services.
AFTER the procession, there was also commandment given to make bonfires at night. Whereupon did rise among the people a doubtful talk why all this was done: some saying it was, that the queen; being with child, might have a safe delivery▪ others thought, that it was for joy that the realm was joined again to the see of Rome.
MONDAY, 28th, the bishop of Winchester, and the other bishops, had commission from the cardinal to sit upon, and order, according to the laws, all such preachers and heretics (as they termed them) as were in prison: and according to this commission, the same day the bishop of Winchester, and the other bishops, with certain of the council, sat in St. Mary Overy's church, and called before them bishop Hooper, Mr. Rogers, and Mr. Cardmaker, who were brought thither by the sheriffs▪ from whence, after communication, they were committed to prison till the next day, but Cardmaker submitted himself.
TUESDAY, 29th, Hooper, Rogers, Dr. Taylor, and Bradford, were brought before them, where sentence of excommunication, and judgment ecclesiastical, were pronounced, upon bishop Hooper, and Mr. Rogers, by the bishop of Winchester, who sat as judge in Caiaphas's seat, and drove them out of the church, according to their law and order. Dr. Taylor and Bradford were committed to prison till the next day.
WEDNESDAY, 30th, Dr. Taylor, Dr. Crome, Mr. Bradford, Mr. Saunders, and Dr. Ferrar, sometime bishop of St. David's, were before the said bishops, when Dr. Taylor, Mr. Saunders, and Mr. Bradford, were likewise excommunicated; and, sentence being pronounced upon them, they were committed to the sheriffs. Dr. Crome desired two months respite, which was granted him; and Mr. Ferrar was again committed to prison till another time. All these men shewed themselves to be learned, as indeed they were: but what availeth either learning, reasoning, or truth itself, where arbitrary will alone beareth rule?
AFTER the examination and condemnation of these good men and preachers, commissions and inquisitors were sent abroad into all parts of the realm: by reason whereof▪ a great number of the most godly and true christians (out of all the quarters, but [Page 413] especially Kent, Essex, Norfolk, and Suffolk) were apprehended, brought up to London, cast into prison, and afterwards (most of them) either consumed cruelly by fire, or else through evil handling died in prisons, and were buried on the dung-hills, in the fields, or in some back-side of the prison.
THE following record is a general supplication of those unhappy prisoners, presented unto the king and queen, during the sitting of parliament.
Unto the KING and QUEEN's most excellent MAJESTIES, and to their Most Honourable and High COURT of PARLIAMENT.
IN most humble and lamentable wise complain unto your majesties, and to your high court of parliament, your poor desolate and obedient subjects, H. F. T. B. P. R. S. &c. That whereas your said subjects living under the laws of God, and of this realm, in the days of the late most noble king Edward the Sixth, did in all things shew themselves true, faithful, and diligent subjects, according to their vocation, as well in the sincere ministering of God's most holy word, as in due obedience to the higher powers, and in the daily practice of such virtues and good demeanor, as the laws of God at all times, and the statutes of the realm did then allow: your said subjects nevertheless, contrary to all laws of justice, equity, and right, are in very extreme manner, not only cast into prison (where they have remained now these 15 or 16 months) but their livings also, their houses and possessions, their goods and books, taken from them, and they slandered to be most heinous heretics, their enemies themselves being both witnesses, accusers, and judges, belying, slandering, and misreporting your said subjects at their pleasure; whereas your said subjects, being straitly kept in prison, cannot yet be suffered to come forth, and make answer accordingly.
IN consideration whereof, may it please your most excellent majesties, and this your high court of parliament, graciously to tender the present calamity of your said poor subjects, and to call them before your presence, granting them liberty, either by mouth or writing in the plain English tongue, to answer before you, or before indifferent arbiters to be appointed by your majesties, unto such articles of controversy in religion as their said adversaries have already condemned them of, as of heinous heresies: provided, that all things may be done with such moderation and quiet behaviour, as becometh subjects and children of peace, and that your said subjects may have the free use of all their own books, and conference together among themselves.
WHICH thing being granted, your said subjects doubt not b [...]t it shall plainly appear, that your said subjects are true and faithful christians, and neither heretics, neither teachers of heresy, nor cut off from the true catholic universal church of Christ: yea, that rather their adversaries themselves be unto your majesties as were the charmers of Egypt to Pharoah, Zedechias and his adherents unto the king of Israel, and Barjesus to the proconsul Sergius Paulus. And if your said subjects be not able by the testimony of Christ, his prophets, apostles, and godly fathers of his church, to prove, that the doctrine of the church, homilies, and service taught and set forth in the time of our late most godly prince and king, Edward the sixth, is the true doctrine of Christ's catholic church, and most agreeable to the articles of the christian faith; your said subjects offer themselves then to the most heavy punishment, that it shall please your majesties to appoint.
WHEREFORE, for the tender mercy of God i [...] Christ, (which you look for at the day of judgment) your said poor subjects in bonds most humbly beseech your most excellent majesties, and this your high court of parliament, benignly and graciously to hear and grant this their petition, tending so greatly to the glory of God, to the edifying of his church, to the honour of your majesties, to the commendation and maintenance of justice, right, and equity, both before God and man. And your said subjects, according to their bounden duty, shall not cease to pray unto Almighty God for the gracious preservation of your most excellent majesties long to endure.
WHAT the cruel sufferings, persecutions, tortures, and agonizing deaths were, which these, and numberless others subjects of the bloody queen Mary, endured from her hands, and those of her no less bloody instruments, the bishops Bonner and Gardiner, shall (God willing) be the substance of the next book; but before we enter upon this mournful recital, we think, a short sketch of the death and character of the principal actor in the horrid tragedy, will be acceptable to our readers, and this we shall take from Barnard's New History of England, whose authority we prefer to others, on account of his justly established character for candour, moderation, and a scrupulous impartiality.
"IT was not long (says this modern historian, p. 324.) before Mary felt the effect of public hatred, excited by her malevolence and cruel disposition. She had flattered herself with an imaginary conception, and, finding her mistake, she fell into a profound melancholy. Her health (p. 327.) had been, for some time, in a declining state; and on [Page 414] mistaking her dropsy for a pregnancy, she had used an improper regimen, which daily increased her disorder. Every reflection was now a subject of torment, begun in this world, and struck a dagger in her heart. The corroding worm, that never dies, began to gnaw its vital strings. The consciousness of having incurred the hatred of her subjects; the idea of Elizabeth's succeeding to the crown; her fears that the catholic religion would be exposed to danger: her dejection for the loss of Calais, with which she was deeply affected; and above all, her grief for the loss of her husband, who, she knew, intended soon to return to Spain, to settle there during the remainder of his life: these melancholy reflections preying upon her mind, with the greatest violence, threw her into a complication of disorders, attended with a lingering fever, of which she died, November 17th, 1558, in the forty-third year of her age, after a short, cruel, and unhappy reign of five years, four months, and eleven days. She was interred at Westminster, in the chapel of her grandfather Henry VII. Some writers have been of opinion, that this unworthy queen had a serious sense of religion, but can we call that profession, however distinguished by the sacred, peaceful name of religion, which prompts men to be guilty of savage cruelty, and is destitute of all the social virtues? There are, we acknowledge, a few devout pieces extant, composed by Mary, Styrpe has preserved three of her meditations and prayers; and, at the desire of queen Catharine Parr, she began to translate Erasmus's paraphrase on St. John; but after she had made a small progress in it, she left the rest to Dr. Mallet, her chaplain. Erasmus says that she wrote very good Latin letters, but her French ones are poor performances. Styrpe has printed one from the Cotton library, in answer to a haughty mandate from her husband, on his resolving to marry the lady Elizabeth to the duke of Savoy, against the inclinations of the queen, and that princess: in which he bids the former examine her conscience, whether her repugnance does not proceed from obstinacy; and insolently tells her, that if any parliament went contrary to his request, he should lay the blame on her. The mortified Mary, in a most [...]bject manner, the most wretched stile, submitting intirely to his will, professes to be more bounden to him, than any wife to a husband, notwithstanding his ill usage of her. Other letters of this queen are preserved in Hayne's state papers: we wish we could add also a few of her virtues: but we shall here drop the curtain, her true portrait having been faithfully delineated in the history of her reign.
THIS curtain it is our duty, as faithful witnesses of Jesus Christ, to draw up; and our protestant readers will see exhibited a tragedy of the most crimson hue; God's faithful professors murdered in cold blood [...] women and infants put to the most cruel tortures; a faithful company of martyrs sealing the truth with their blood; all under the reign of a popish, bigotted, and obstinate queen, who was a disgrace to her sex, a dishonour to the English nation; and who, on account of her savage inhumanity, was justly branded by her subjects with the infamous epithet of Bloody Queen Mary.
THE NEW AND COMPLETE BOOK of MARTYRS; OR, AN Universal History of Martyrdom: BEING FOX's BOOK OF MARTYRS, Newly Revised and Corrected, with Additions and great Improvements.
BOOK II. CONTAINING An HISTORICAL ACCOUNT of the LIVES, ACTS, MONUMENTS, PERSECUTIONS, SUFFERINGS, and TRIUMPHANT DEATHS, of the PROTESTANT REFORMERS; With the particular Processes, and Names of all those Good, Pious, and Faithful Martyrs, both Men and Women, who were Imprisoned, Tortured, and who sealed the Faith of our Most Holy Religion with their Blood, in the Cruel Reign of MARY I commonly called BLOODY QUEEN MARY.
CHAP. I. The LIFE, EXAMINATIONS, WRITINGS, and CONDEMNATION, of the REV. Mr. JOHN ROGERS; and also the LIFE and MARTYRDOM of the REV. Mr. LAURENCE SAUNDERS; who were burned, the former in SMITHFIELD, February 4th, the latter at COVENTRY, February 8th, 1555.
THE REV. Mr. John Rogers, vicar of St. Sepulchre's, and reader of St. Paul's, London, was educated in the university of Cambridge, and at length was chosen chaplain to the English factory at Antwerp, in Brabant; there he became acquainted with Mr. William Tindal, whom he assisted in his translation of the New Testament, and with Mr. Miles Coverdale, who, with several other worthy protestants, had been driven out of England, on account of the persecutions for five articles, in the latter end of the reign of Henry VIII. By means of conversing with these worthy and pious servants of God. Mr. Rogers came to the knowledge of the scriptures, and finding, according to those sacred oracles, that matrimony was both honest and honourable, he entered into that state, and went with his wife to Wittenburg, in Saxony, where, through indefatigable study and application, in a short time he attained to such a knowledge of the Dutch language, as to be capable of taking charge of a christian congregation in that part of Europe.
HAVING cast off all popish superstitions, idolatry, and restrictions, this aged minister served his cure faithfully and diligently for many years, until such time that it pleased God to dispel the mists of popish darkness from his native country, and restore the glorious light of the pure gospel of Christ, by the introduction of his chosen servant Edward VI. to the throne of England.
MR. ROGERS then, being orderly called, left his living in Saxony, and came into England to preach [Page 416] the gospel without any previous condition, appointment, or establishment whatever: but after having laboured in the vineyard of his master for a time, with great success, Dr. Ridley, then bishop of London, gave him a prebend in his cathedral church of St. Paul's; of which he was afterwards chosen by the dean and chapter, one of the divinity-lecturers, or a reader of divinity in that church. Here he continued till queen Mary, soon after her accession, banished the true religion, and again introduced the superstition and idolatry of the church of Rome, with all the horrid cruelties of blood-thirsty Antichrist.
WHEN queen Mary was in the Tower of London, imbibing Gardiner's pernicious counsels, Mr. Rogers preached at Paul's-Cross, confirming those doctrines which he and others had there taught in king Edward's days, and exhorted the people, with peculiar energy, to continue stedfast in the same, and to beware of the false tenets of pestilent popery. For this sermon the preacher was summoned before the council, then filled with popish and bloody bishops; before whom he pleaded his own cause in so pious, bold, and yet prudent a manner, as to obviate their displeasure for that time, and he was dismissed. But after Mary's proclamation, to prohibit the preaching of the doctrines of the reformed religion, Mr. Rogers, for a contempt of the same, was again summoned before a council of bishops, who, after having debated upon the nature of his offence, ordered him to keep close prisoner in his own house, from which he never departed, though he had many fair opportunities to escape. He saw the recovery of the true religion, at that time, desperate; he knew he should not want a living in Germany, sufficient for the wants of a large family, consisting of a wife and ten children; but all these considerations could not move him: he determined resolutely, after he had been called to answer for Christ's cause, not to desert it; and resolved to hazard his life in support of the truth.
IN this state of confinement he remained a considerable time, till at the instigation of the cruel Bonner, bishop of London, he was removed from his own house to Newgate, and placed among the common felons. What passed between him and the adversaries of Christ, during the time of his imprisonment, is not certainly known: but the following examinations he left in his own hand-writing: and it is the will of God they should be handed down to us, and remain a perpetual testimony in the cause of true religion.
The FIRST EXAMINATION of the Rev. Mr. JOHN ROGERS, before the LORD CHANCELLOR, GARDINER, Bishop of Winchester, and others of the COUNCIL of BISHOPS, January 22d, 1555.
FIRST, the lord chancellor said unto me thus: Sir, you have heard the state of the realm in which it standeth now.
No, my lord, I have been kept in close prison, and except there have been some general things said at the table, when I was at dinner or supper, I have heard nothing; and there have I heard nothing, whereupon any special thing might be grounded.
THEN said the lord chancellor, General things, mockingly: you have heard of my lord cardinal's coming, and that the parliament hath received his blessing, not one resisting it, except one man which did speak against it. Such an unity, and such a miracle hath not been seen. And all they, of which there are eight score in one house, (said one that was by, whose name I know not) have with one assent received pardon of their offences, for the schism that we have had in England, in refusing the holy father of Rome to be head of the catholic church. How say you? are you content to unite yourself to the faith of the catholic church with us, in the state in which it is now in England? will you do that?
The catholic church I never did nor will dissent from.
Nay, but I speak of the state of the catholic church, in that wi [...]e in which we stand now in England, having received the pope to be supreme head.
I know none other head but Christ of [Page 417] his catholic church, neither will I acknowledge the bishop of Rome to have any more authority than any other bishop hath by the word of God, and by the doctrine of the old and pure catholic church, four hundred years after Christ.
Why didst thou then acknowledge king Henry the eighth to be supreme head of the church, if Christ be the only head?
I never granted him to have any supremacy in spiritual things, as are the forgiveness of sins; giving of the Holy Ghost; authority to be a judge above the word of God.
Yea, said he, and Tonstall bishop of Durham, and N. bishop of Worcester, if thou hadst said so in his days,
thou hadst not been alive now.
Which thing I denied, and would have told how he was said and meant to be supreme head. But they looked and laughed one upon another, and made such a business, that I was constrained to let it pass. There lieth also no great weight thereupon; for all the world knoweth what the meaning was. The lord chancellor also said to the lord William Haward, that there was no inconvenience therein, to have Christ to be supreme head, and the bishop of Rome also: and when I was ready to have answered, that there could not be two heads of one church, and have more plainly declared the vanity of that his reason, the lord chancellor said, What sayest thou? make us a direct answer whether thou wilt be one of this catholic church or not, with us in that state in which we are now?
My lord, without fail I cannot believe, that ye yourselves do think in your hearts that he is supreme head in forgiving of sins, &c. (as is before said) seeing you, and all the bishops of the realm have now twenty years long preached, and some of you also written to the contrary, and the parliament hath so long ago condescended unto it. And there he interrupted me thus:
Tush, that parliament was with most great cruelty constrained to abolish and put away the primacy from the bishop of Rome.
With cruelty? why then I perceive that you take a wrong way with cruelty to persuade men's consciences. For it should appear by your doings now, that the cruelty then used hath not persuaded your consciences. How would you then have our consciences persuaded with cruelty?
I talk to thee of no cruelty, but that they were so often and so cruelly called upon in that parliament, to let the act go forward; yea, and even with force driven thereunto, whereas in this parliament it was uniformly received.
Here my lord Paget told me more plainly, what my lord chancellor meant. Unto whom I answered: My lord, what will you conclude thereby? that the first parliament was of less authority, because that few condescended unto it? And this last parliament of great authority, because more condescended unto it? It goeth not, my lord, by more or lesser part, but by the wiser, truer, and godlier part: and I would have said more, but the lord chancellor interrupted me with his question, willing me once again to answer him. For, said he, we have more to speak with than thee, which must come in after thee. And so there were indeed ten persons more out of Newgate, besides two that were not called. Of which ten, one was a citizen of London, who granted unto them, and nine were contrary: who all came to prison again, and refused the cardinal's blessing, and the authority of his holy church, saying that one of these nine was not asked otherwise than thus, whether he would be an honest man as his father was before him: he answering yes, was discharged by the friendship of my lord William Haward, as I have understood. He bade me tell him what I would do; whether I would enter into the one church with the whole realm as it is now, or not? No, said I, I will first see it proved by the scriptures. Let me have pen, ink, and books, &c. and I shall take upon me plainly to set out the matter, so that the contrary shall be proved to be true, and let any man that will, confer with me by writing.
Nay, that shall not be permitted [Page 418] thee; thou shalt never have so much proffered thee as thou hast now, if thou refuse it, and will not now condescend and agree to the catholic church. Here are two things, mercy and justice: if thou refuse the queen's mercy now, then shalt thou have justice ministered unto thee.
I never offended, nor was disobedient unto her grace, and yet I will not refuse her mercy. But if this shall be denied me to confer by writing, and to try out the truth, then it is not well, but too far out of the way. Ye yourselves (all the bishops of the realm) brought me to the knowledge of the pretended primacy of the bishop of Rome, when I was a young man twenty years past; and ye will now without collation have me to say and do the contrary? I cannot be so persuaded.
If thou wilt not receive the bishop of Rome to be supreme head of the catholic church, then thou shalt never have mercy, thou mayest be sure. And as touching conferring and trial, I am forbidden by the scriptures to use any conferring and trial with thee. For St. Paul teacheth me, that I should shun and eschew an heretic after one or two monitions, knowing that such an one is overthrown, and is faulty, inasmuch as he is condemned by his own judgment.
My lord, I deny that I am an heretic: prove you that first, and then alledge the aforesaid text. But still the lord chancellor played on one string, saying:
If thou wilt enter into one church with us, &c. tell us that; or else thou shalt never have so much proffered thee again as thou hast now.
I will find it first in the scripture, and see it tried thereby, before I receive him to be supreme head.
Why, do you not know what is in your creed: "I believe in the holy catholic church?"
I find not the bishop of Rome there. For [catholic] signifieth not the Romish church: it signifieth the consent of all true teaching churches of all times, and all ages. But how should the bishop of Rome's church be one of them, which teacheth so many doctrines that are plainly and directly against the word of God? Can that bishop be the true head of the catholic church, that doth so? That is not possible.
Shew me one of them, one; let me hear one.
I remembered myself, that amongst so many, I were best to shew one; and said, I will shew you one.
Let me hear that; let me hear that.
The bishop of Rome and his church, say, read, and sing, all that they do in their congregations in Latin, which is directly and plainly against the 1st to the Corinthians, the xiv. chapter.
I deny that; I deny that is against the word of God. Let me see you prove that: how prove you that?
Thus I began to say the text from the beginning of the chapter, "He that speaketh in an unknown tongue," &c. To speak with tongues, is to speak with a strange tongue, as Latin or Greek, &c. and so to speak, is not to speak unto men, but to God. But ye speak in Latin, which is a strange tongue, wherefore ye speak not unto men, but unto God (meaning God only at the most). This he granted, that they spake not unto men but unto God.
Well, then it is in vain unto men.
No, not in vain. For one man speaketh in one tongue, and another in another tongue; and all well.
Nay, I will prove then, that he speaketh neither to God nor to man, but unto the wind.
I was willing to have declared how [Page 419] and after what sort these two texts do agree (for they must agree, they are both the sayings of the Holy Ghost, spoken by the apostle Paul), as to wit, to speak not to men, but unto God, and to speak unto the wind; and so to have gone forward with the proof of my matter begun: but here arose a noise and a confusion. Then said the lord chancellor:
To speak unto God, and not unto God, were impossible.
I will prove them possible.
No, said my lord Haward to my lord chancellor: now I will bear you witness that he is out of the way: for he granted first, that they which speak in a strange speech, speak unto God: and now he saith the contrary, that they speak neither to God nor to man,
I have not granted nor said (turning me to my lord HAWARD) as you report. I have alledged the one text, and now I come to the other. They must agree, and I can make them agree. But as for you, you understand not the matter.
I understand so much, that that is not possible.
THIS is a point of sophistry, quoth secretary Bourne.
THEN the lord chancellor began to tell the lord Haward, that when he was in High-Dutchland, they at Hale, which had before prayed and used their service all in Dutch, began then to turn part into Latin, and part into Dutch.
Yes, and at Wittenberg too.
Yes (but I could not be heard for the noise), in an university, where men for the most part understand the Latin, and yet not all in Latin. And I would have told the order, and have gone forward both to have answered my lord, and to have proved the thing that I had taken in hand; but perceiving their talk and noise to be too clamorous, I was fain to think this in my heart, suffering them in the mean while to talk one of them one thing, and another another. Alas! neither will these men hear me if I speak, neither yet will they suffer me to write. There is no remedy, but let them alone, and commit the matter to God. Yet I began to go forward, and said, that I would make the text to agree, and prove my purpose well enough.
No, no; thou canst prove nothing by the scripture. The scripture is dead; it must have a lively expositor.
No, the scripture is alive. But let me go forward with my purpose.
All heretics have alledged the scriptures for them; and therefore we must have a lively expositor for them.
Yes, all heretics have alledged the scripture for them; but they were confuted by the scriptures, and none other expositor.
But they would not confess that they were overcome by the scriptures; I am sure of that.
I believe that: and yet they were overcome by them, and in all councils they were disputed with, and overthrown by the scriptures. And here I would have declared how they ought to proceed in these days, and so have come again to my purpose, but it was impossible: for one asked one thing, another said another; so that I was fain to hold my peace, and let them talk. And even when I would have taken hold on my proof, the lord chancellor ordered me to prison again; and away, away, said he, we have more to talk withal: if I would not be reformed (so he termed it), away, away. Then up I stood, for I had kneeled all the while.
THEN sir Richard Southwell, who stood by in a window, said to me, Thou wilt no [...] born in this cause when it cometh to the purpose; I know well that.
Sir, I cannot tell, but I trust in my [Page 420] Lord God, yes, lifting up mine eyes unto heaven.
THEN my lord of Ely told me much of the queen's majesty's pleasure and meaning, and set out with large words, saying, That she took them that would not receive the pope's supremacy, to be unworthy to have her mercy, &c.
I said I would not refuse her mercy; and yet I never offended her in all my life: and that I besought her grace, and all their honours, to be good to me, reserving my conscience.
No? quoth they then, a great many of them, and especially secretary Bourne, a married priest, and not have offended the law?
I said, I had not broken the queen's law, nor yet any point of the law of the realm therein: for I married where it was lawful.
Where was that? said they: thinking that to be unlawful in all places.
In Dutchland. And if ye had not here in England made an open law that priests might again: for I brought a wife and eight children with me: which thing ye might be sure that I would not have done, if the laws of the realm had not permitted it before.
THEN the [...] was a great noise, some saying that I was come too soon with such a sort; I should find a sour coming of it: and some one thing, and some another. And one said (I could not well perceive who) that there was never a catholic man or country, that ever yet granted that a priest might have a wife.
I said, the catholic church never denied marriage to priests, nor yet to any other man: and therewith was I going out of the chamber, the serjeant which brought me thither, having me by the arm.
THEN the bishop of Worcester turned his face towards me, and said, that I knew not where that church was or is.
I said, yes, that I could tell where it was: but therewith the serjeant went with me out of the door.
THIS was the very true effect of all that was spoken unto me, and of all that I answered thereunto.
AND here would I gladly make a more perfect answer to all former objections, as also a due proof of that which I had taken in hand; but at this present I was informed, that I should to-morrow come to further answer. Wherefore I am compelled to leave out that which I would most gladly have done, desiring here the hearty and unfeigned help of the prayers of all Christ's true members, the offspring of the true unfeigned catholic church, that the Lord God of all consolation will now be my comfort, aid, strength, buckler, and shield: as also of all my brethren that are in the same case and distress, that I and they all may despise all manner of threats and cruelty, and even the bitter burning fire, and the dreadful dart of death, and stick like true soldiers to our dear and loving captain Christ, our only Redeemer and Saviour, and also the only true head of the church, that doth all in us all, which is the very property of an head (and is a thing that all the bishop [...] of Rome cannot do), and that we do not traitorously run out of his tents, or out of the plain field from him, in the most jeopardy of the battle, but that we may persevere in the fight (if he will not otherwise deliver us) till we be most cruelly slain of his enemies. For this I most heartily, and at this present with weeping tears, most instantly and earnestly desire and beseech you all to pray: and also if I die, to be good to my poor and most honest wife, being: poor stranger, and all my little souls, her's and my children. Whom, with all the whole faithful and true catholic congregation of Christ, the Lord of life and death, save, keep, and defend, in all the troubles and assaults of this vain world, and bring at the last to everlasting salvation, the true and sure inheritance of all sincere christians. Amen. Amen.
January 27, at night.
The SECOND EXAMINATION of the Rev. Mr. JOHN ROGERS, on the 28th of January, 1555.
BEING asked again by the lord chancellor, whether I would come into one church, with the bishops and whole realm, as now was concluded by parliament (in which all the realm was converted to the catholic church), I answered, that I had, and would be able, by God's grace, to prove that all the doctrines, which I had ever taught, were true and catholic, both from the scriptures and the authority of the fathers, who lived in the fourth century. He answered, that should not, might not, and ought not to be granted me: for I was but a private man, and might not be heard against the determination of the whole realm. When a parliament, said he, hath concluded a thing, should any single, or private person, have authority to discuss, whether they had done right or wrong? No, that may not be.
I replied shortly, that all the laws of men might not, neither could rule the word of God, but that they all must be discussed and judged thereby▪ and neither my conscience, nor any christian man's, could be satisfied with such laws at disagreed from that word: and so was willing to have said much more. Bu [...] the lord chancellor began a long tale to very small purpose, concerning mine answer; that there was nothing in me wherefore I should be heard, but arrogancy, pride, and vain-glory. I also granted mine ignorance to be greater than I could express, or than he took it: but yet that I feared not, by God's assistance and strength, to be able by writing to perform my word; neither was I (I thanked God) so utterly ignorant as he would make me; but all was of God, to whom be thanks rendered. Proud man was I never, nor yet vain-glorious. All the world know well, where and on which side pride, arrogancy, and vain-glory were. It was a poor pride, that was or is in us, God knoweth.
THEN he said, that I, at the first dash, condemned the queen and the whole realm to be of the church of Antichrist. I answered, That the queen's majesty (God save her grace) would have done well enough, if it had not been for his counsel. He said, the queen went before him, and it was her own motion. I said, I neither could, nor would I ever believe it.
THEN said Dr. Aldrise, bishop of Carlisle, that they the bishops would bear him witness. Yes, said I, that I believe well: and with that the people laughed; for that day there were many: but on the morrow they kept the doors shut, and would let none in, but the bishop's adherents and servants. Then Mr. Comptroller, and secretary Bourne, would have stood up also to [...]ear witness, and did.
I said it was no great matter; and to say the truth, I thought that they were good helpers thereunto themselves: but I ceased to say any more, knowing that they were too strong and mighty of power, and that they should be believed before me, yes, and before our Saviour Christ, and all his prophets and apostles too, in these day [...].
AFTER many words, he asked me what I thought concerning the blessed sacrament, and stood up, and put off his cap, and all his fellow bishop [...] (of which there were a great sort, new men, of whom I knew few), whether I believed in the sacrament to be the very body and blood of our Saviour Christ, that was born of the Virgin Mary, and hanged on the cross, really and substantially.
I answered, I had often told him that it was a matter in which I wa [...] no [...], and therefore suspected my brethren to be of a contrary opinion. Notwithstanding, even as the most part of your doctrine in other points is false, and the defence thereof only by force and cruelty▪ so in this matter I think it to be as false as the rest. For I cannot understand [really and substantially] to signify otherwise than corporally: but corporally Christ is only in heaven, and so cannot Christ be corporally also in your sacrament. And here I somewhat set out his charity after this sort: My l [...]d, said I, you have dealt with me most cruelly: for you have put me in prison without law, and kept me there now almost a year and a half: for I was almost half a year in my house, where I was obedient to you, God knoweth, and spake with no man. And now have I been a full y [...]r in Newgate, [...] and charges, having a wife and ten children to provide [Page 422] for, and have not received a penny from my livings, which was against the law.
HE replied, that Dr. Ridley, who had given them me, was an usurper; and therefore I was the unjust possessor of them.
WAS the king then an usurper, said I, who gave Dr. Ridley the bishopric?
YES, said he, and began to set out the wrongs that the king had done to the bishop of London, and to himself also. But yet I do misuse my terms, said he, to call the king usurper. But the word was gone out of the abundance of the heart before, and I think that he was not very sorry for it in heart. I might have said more concerning that matter, but I did not.
I asked him wherefore he put me in prison. He said, because I preached against the queen.
I answered, that it was not true; and I would be bound to prove it, and to stand to the trial of the law, that no man should be able to disprove it, and thereupon would set my life. I preached, I confessed, a sermon at the Cross, after the queen came to the Tower: but therein was nothing said against the queen, I take witness of all the audience, which not small. I alledged also, that he had, after an examination, let me go at liberty after the preaching of that sermon.
BUT you did read lectures after, said he, against the commandment of the council?
THAT I did not, said I: let that be proved, and let me die for it. Thus have you now against the law of God and man handled me, and never sent for me, never conferred with me, never spoke of any learning, till now that you have gotten a whip to whip me with, and a sword to cut off my head, if I will not condesecend to your mind. This charity doth all the world understand.
I might and would have added, if I could have been suffered to speak, that it had been time enough to take away men's livings, and then to have imprisoned them, after that they had offended laws: for they are good citizens which break not laws, and worthy of praise, and not of punishment. But their purpose is to keep men in prison, until they may catch them in their laws, and so kill them. I could and would have added the example of Daniel, who by a crafty devised law was cast into the lion's den. I might also have declared, that I most humbly desired to be set at liberty, sending my wife to him with a supplication, being great with child, and with her eight honest women, or thereabout, to Richmond, at Christmas was a twelve-month, while I was yet in my house.
I wrote likewise two supplications to him out of Newgate, and sent my wife many times to him. Mr. Gosnold also, that worthy man, who is now departed in the Lord, laboured for me, and so did divers other worthy men also take pains in the matter. These things declare my lord chancellor's antichristian charity, which is, that he hath and doth seek my blood, and the destruction of my poor wife and ten children.
THIS is a short sum of the words which were spoken on the 28th of January, in the afternoon, after that Mr. Hooper had been the first, and Mr. Cardmaker the second in examination before me. The Lord grant us grace to stand together, fighting lawfully in his cause, till we be smitten down together, if the Lord's will be so. For there shall not a hair of our heads perish against his will. Whereunto the same Lord grant us to be obedient unto the end, and in the end, Amen: sweet, mighty, and merciful Lord Jesus, the Son of David and of God: Amen, Amen, let every true christian say and pray.
THEN the clock being as I guessed, about four, the lord chancellor said, that he and the church must yet use charity with me, (what manner of charity it is, all true christians do well understand, the same that the fox doth with the chickens, and the wolf with the lambs) and gave me respite till to-morrow, to see whether I would recollect, and whether I would return to the catholic church again, (for so he called his antichristian false church, and repent, and they would receive me to mercy.
I said th [...] I was never out of the true catholic [Page 423] church, nor would be: but into his church would I, by God's grace, never come.
WELL, said he, then is our church false and antichristian?
YES, said I.
AND what is the doctrine of the sacrament?
FALSE; and I cast my hands abroad.
THEN one said that I was a player. To whom I answered not; for I took no notice of his mock.
COME again, said the lord chancellor, to-morrow, between nine and ten.
I am ready to come again, whensoever you call.
AND thus was I brought up by the sheriffs to the compter in Southwark, Mr. Hooper going before me, and a great multitude of people being present, so that we had much ado to go in the streets. Thus much was done January 28.
The THIRD EXAMINATION, and CONDEMNATION, of the Rev. Mr. JOHN ROGERS, on [...]he 29th of JANUARY, 1555.
THE next day, January 29, we were sent for in the morning about nine o'clock, and by the sheriffs fetched from the compter in Southwark, to St. Mary Overy's; and when Mr. Hooper was condemned, as I understood afterwards, then seat they for me. My lord chancellor said:
ROGERS, here thou wast yesterday, and we gave thee liberty to remember thyself last night, whether thou would [...] come to the holy catholic church of Christ again or not. Tell us now what thou hast determined, whether thou wilt be repentant and sorry, and wilt return again and take mercy.
MY lord, said I, I remember well what you yesterday said to me, and desire you to give leave to declare my mind, what I have to say thereunto; and that done, I shall answer to your demanded question.
WHEN I yesterday desired that I might be suffered by the scripture and authority of the first, best, and purest church, to defend my doctrine by writing, (meaning not only of the primacy, but also of all the doctrine that ever I had preached) you answered, that it might not, and ought not to be granted me, for I was a private person; and that the parliament was above the authority of all private persons, and therefore the sentence thereof might not be found faulty and useless by me, being but a private person. Yet, my lord, I am able to shew examples, that one man hath come into a general council, and after the whole had determined and agreed upon one act or article, some one man coming in afterwards, hath by the word of God proved so clearly that the council had erred in decreeing the said article, that he caused the whole council to change and alter their act or article before determined. And of these examples, I am able to shew two. I can also shew the authority of St. Augustine; that when he disputed with an heretic, he would neither himself, nor yet have the heretic to lean unto the determination of two former councils, of which the one made for him, and the other for the heretic that disputed against him: but said, that he would have the scriptures to be their judge, which were common and indifferent for them both, and not to either of them.
I could also shew the authority of a learned lawyer, Panormitanus, who saith, That unto a simple lay-man that bringeth the word of God with him, there ought more credit to be given, than to a whole council gathered together. By these things will I prove that I ought not to be denied to speak my mind, and to be heard against a whole parliament, bringing the word of God for me, and the authority of the old church 400 years after Christ, albeit that every man in the parliament had willingly and without respect of fear and favour agreed thereunto, which thing I doubt not a little of; especially seeing the like had been permitted in the old church, even in general councils, yea, and that in one of the chiefest councils that ever was, unto which neither any acts of this parliament, nor yet any of the late general councils of the bishops of Rome ought to be compared. For if Henry VIII. were alive, and should call a parliament, and begin to determine a [Page 424] thing, (and here I would have alledged the example of the act of making the queen a bastard, and of making himself the superior head; but I could not, being interrupted by one, whom God forgive) then would you (pointing to my lord chancellor) and ye, and all (pointing to the rest of the bishops) say, Amen: yea, and it please your grace, it is meet that it be so enacted.
HERE my lord chancellor would suffer me to speak no more; but bade me sit down, mockingly, saying, That I was sent for to be instructed of them, and I would take upon me to be their instructor.
MY lord, said I, I stand, and sit not: shall I not be suffered to speak for my life?
SHALL we suffer thee to tell a tale, and prate? said he. And with that he stood up, and began to face me, after his old arrogant proud fashion, for he perceived that I was in a way to have touched them somewhat, which he thought to hinder by dashing me out of my tale, and so he did: for I could never be suffered to come to my tale again, no not to one word of it; but he had much like communication with me as he had the day before, and, as his manner is, taunt upon taunt, and check upon check. For in that case, being God's cause, I told him he should not make me afraid to speak.
See what a spirit this fellow hath, saith he, finding fault at mine accustomed earnestness, and hearty manner of speaking.
I have a true spirit, agreeing to, and obeying the word of God, and further have said, that I was never the worse, but the better, to be earnest in a just and true cause, and in my master Christ's matters; but I could not be heard. And at length he proceeded towards his excommunication and condemnation, after that I had told him, that his church of Rome was the church of Antichrist, meaning the false doctrine and tyrannical laws, with the maintenance thereof by cruel persecutions used by the bishops of the said church (of which the bishop of Winchester, and the rest of his fellow bishops that are now in England, are the chief members): of laws I mean, said I, and not all men and women which are in the pope's church. Likewise, when I was said to have denied their sacrament (whereof he made his wonted reverent mention, more to maintain his kingdom thereby, than for the true reverence of Christ's institution; more for his own and his popish generation's sake, than for religion or God's sake; I told him after what order I did speak of it, (for the manner of his was not agreeing to my words, which are before recited in the communication that we had January 28, (wherewith he was not contented, but asked the audience, whether I had not simply denied the sacrament. They would have said, and did what he desired, for most of them were of his own servants on this day. At last I said, I will never deny what I said, that your doctrine of the sacrament is false; but yet I tell you after what order I said it.
TO be short, he read my condemnation before me, particularly mentioning therein but two articles; first, that I affirmed the Romish catholic church to be the church of Antichrist; and that I denied the reality of their sacrament. He caused me to be degraded and condemned, and put into the hands of the laity, and so he gave me over into the sheriff's hands, which were much better than his.
THE following is a copy of the sentence of condemnation. passed upon the Rev. Mr. John Rogers, by Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, at St. Mary Overy's church, Southwark, January 29th, 1555; which we have here inserted to the intent, that the same may be referred to, as being the common form of all condemnatory sentences used by popish bishops against the Martyrs, throughout the whole of this history.
The SENTENCE CONDEMNATORY, passed upon the Rev. Mr. JOHN ROGERS, in a COUNCIL, of BISHOPS, whereof WINCHESTER was PRESIDENT, January 29th, 1555.
IN the name of God, Amen: We Stephen, by the permission of God, bishop of Winchester, lawfully and rightly proceeding with all goodly favour by authority and virtue of our office, against thee John Rogers, priest, otherwise called Matthew, before us personally here present, being accused and detected, and notoriously slandered of heresy, having [Page 425] heard, seen, and understood, and with all diligent deliberation weighed, discussed, and considered the merits of the cause, all things being observed, sitting in our judgment seat, the name of Christ being first called upon, and having only God before our eyes, because by the acts enacted, propounded and exhibited in this matter, and by thy own confession judicially made before us, we do find that thou hast taught, holden and affirmed, and obstinately defended divers errors, heresies, and damnable opinions, contrary to the doctrine and determination of the holy church, as namely these; "That the catholic church of Rome is the church of Antichrist. Item, That in the sacrament of the altar there is not substan [...]ially or re [...]lly the natural body and blood of Christ." The which aforesaid heresies and damnable opinions, being contrary to the law of God, and determination of the universal and apostolical church, thou hast arrogantly, stubbornly, and wittingly maintained, held and affirmed, and also defended before us, as well in this judgment, as also otherwise, and with the like obstinacy, stubbornness, malice and blindness of heart, both wittingly and willingly hast affirmed, that thou wilt believe, maintain and hold, affirm and declare the same: We therefore, S. Winchester, bishop, ordinary, and diocesan aforesaid, by the consent and assent as well of our reverend brethren the lords bishops here present and assistant, as also by the counsel and judgment of divers worshipful lawyers and professors of divinity, with whom we have communicated in this behalf, do declare and pronounce thee the said John Rogers, otherwise called Matthew, through thy demerits, transgressions, obstinacies and wilfulness, (which through manifold ways thou hast incurred by thine own wicked and stubborn obstinacy) to have been and to be guilty of the detestable, horrible, and wicked offences of heretical pravity and execrable doctrine, and that thou hast before us sundry times spoken, maintained, and wittingly and stubbornly defended the said cursed and excerable doctrine in the sundry confessions, asser [...]ions, and recognitions here judicially before us of [...]entimes repeated, and yet still dost maintain, affirm and believe the same, and that thou [...]st been, and art lawfully and ordinarily convicted in this behalf: We therefore, I say, albeit following the example of Christ, "which would not the death of a sinner, but rather that he should convert and live;" we have gone about oftentimes to correct thee, and by all lawful means that we could, and all wholesome admonitions that we did know, to reduce thee again unto the true faith and unity of the universal catholic church, notwithstanding have found thee obstinate and stiffnecked, willingly continuing in thy damnable opinions and heresies, refusing to return again unto the true faith and unity of the holy mother church; and as the child of wickedness and darkness, so to have hardened thy heart, that thou wilt not understand the voice of thy shepherd, which with a fatherly affection doth seek after thee, nor wilt be allured with his fatherly and godly admonitions: We therefore, Stephen, the bishop aforesaid, not willing that thou which art wicked shouldst now become more wicked, and infect the Lord's flock with thine heresy, (which we are greatly afraid of) with sorrow of mind, and bitterness of heart, do judge thee, and definitively condemn thee the said John Rogers, otherwise called Matthew, thy demerits and faults being aggravated through thy damnable obstinacy, as guilty of most detestable heresies, and as an obstinate impenitent sinner, refusing penitently to return to the lap and unity of the holy mother church, and that thou hast been and art by law excommunicated, and do pronounce and declare thee to be an excommunicate person. Also we pronounce and declare thee, being a heretic, to be cast out from the church, and left unto the judgment of the secular power, and now presently so do leave thee as an obstinate heretic, and a person wrapped in the sentence of the great curse, to be degraded worthily for thy demerits (requiring them notwithstanding, in the bowels of our Lord Jesus Christ, that this execution and punishment worthily to be done upon thee, may so be moderated, that the rigour thereof be not too extreme, nor yet the gentleness too much mitigated, but that it may be to the salvation of thy soul, to the extirpation, terror, and conversion of the heretics to the unity of the catholic faith) by this our sentence definitive which we here lay upon and against thee, and do with sorrow of heart promulgate in this form aforesaid.
AFTER this sentence was read, bishop Gardiner sent Mr. Hooper and me to the Clink, there to remain till night; and when it was dark, they carried us▪ Mr. Hooper going before with one sheriff, and [Page 426] I coming after with the other, with bills and weapons enough, out of the Clink, and led us through the bishop's house, and St. Mary Overy's churchyard, and so into Southwark, and over the bridge in procession to Newgate, through the city. But I must observe, that when the bishop had read the condemnation, he declared that I was in the great curse, and what a dangerous matter it was to eat and drink with us that were accursed, or to give us any thing; for all that did so, should be partakers of the same great curse.
WELL, my lord, said I, here I stand before God and you, and all this honourable audience, and take him to witness, that I never knowingly, or willingly taught any false doctrine; and therefore have I a good conscience before God and all good men: I am sure that you and I shall come before a judge that is righteous, before whom I shall be as good a man as you; and I nothing doubt but I shall be found there a true member of the true catholic church of Christ, and everlastingly saved. And as for your false church, you need not to excommunicate me from it, I have not been found in it th [...]se twenty years, the Lord be thanked; but now you have done what you can, my lord, I pray you yet grant the one thing.
WHAT is that? said he.
THAT my poor wife, being a stranger, may come and speak with me so long as I live; for she hath ten children, and somewhat I would counsel her, what were the best for her to do.
NO, said he, she is not thy wife.
YES, my lord, and hath been these eighteen years.
SHOULD I grant her to be thy wife? said he.
CHUSE you, whether you will or not; she shall be so nevertheless.
SHE shall not come at thee.
THEN I have tried out all your charity, said I. You make yourself highly displeased with the matrimony of priests, but you maintain open whoredom: as in Wales, where every priest hath his whore openly dwelling with, and lying by him; even as your holy father suffereth all the priests in Dutchland, and in France, to do the like. Thereto he answered not, but looked as it were asquint at it; and thus I departed and saw him no more.
The WRITINGS of the Rev. Mr. ROGERS, while in Prison, containing the Substance of what he intended, might he have been permitted to plead in his Defence, when examined by the Bench of Popish Bishops.
DEARLY beloved, ye have heard what was said: now hear what I purposed the night before to have said, if I could have been permitted. Two things I purposed to have touched upon. The one, how it was lawful for a private man to reason and write against a wicked act of parliament, or ungodly council, which the lord chancellor the day before denied me; the other was to prove, that prosperity was not always a token of God's love.
AND this I purposed to speak of, because the lord chancellor boasted of himself, that he was delivered forth of prison, as it were by miracle, and preserved of God to restore true religion, and to punish me and such others, whom he termed heretics. Concerning these two points, in this manner I purposed to have proceeded. It is not unknown to you, that king Henry VIII. in his time made his daughter, the queen that now is, a bastard: he abolished the authority of the bishop of Rome: he pulled down abbeys: and all this he did by the consent of parliament.
KING Edward VI. in his time made lawful the marriage of priests, turned the service into English, abolished the idolatrous mass, with all like superstitious trumpery, set up the holy communion, and all by consent of parliament.
THE queen that now is, hath repealed the act that made her a bastard; hath brought in the bishop of Rome, and set him in his old authority; beginneth to set up abbeys again; hath made the [...] of priests unlawful; hath turned the English service [Page 427] into Latin again; hath set up mass again, and pulled down the holy communion: and all this is done by consent of parliament.
IF the acts of parliament, made in king Henry's time, and in king Edward's, had their foundation upon God's word, whereupon all positive law ought to be grounded; then these which are established in the queen's time, being clean contrary to the others, as they are not warranted by God's word, so are they wicked, and therefore to be spoken and written against of all men, as well of private as of public persons.
IF your acts, my lord chancellor, which you have lately coined, (I call them your's, because you only bear the sway, devise, and decree what you list, and all other men are forced to follow) be good, and according to God's word, then the former acts were naught, which thing you seem to say, in utterly taking of them away, and setting up of the contrary▪ if the former were naught, why then did you consent unto them, and confirm them to be good by your voluntary and advised writing? as it appeareth, and will to the world's end, in your book "Of true obedience," where you prove the queen a bastard, and the bishop of Rome to be an usurper, and to have no authority in the realm of England.
YOU must needs confess, that the most part of your acts of parliament in these latter days have been according to the fantasies of a few. King Henry in his time established by parliament in a manner what he pleased, and many things that might well have been amended.
IN king Edward's days, the dukes of Somerset and Northumberland bare a great sway in things, and did not all things sincerely. Even so, since the queen, that now is, came to the government of the realm, all things are ordered by your device and head, and the whole parliament-house is led as you please; by reason whereof they are compelled to condescend to things both contrary to God's manifest word, and also to their own consciences; so great is your cruelty.
FOR to bring your wicked purposes to pass, and to establish your antichristian kingdom, (which, I trust, the Lord with the breath of his mouth will speedily blow over) you have called three parliaments in one year and an half, that what you could not compass by subtil persuasion, you might bring to pass by tyrannical threatning: for if you had not used cruel force in your doings, you had never brought to pass such things as this day you have, to the utter defacing and abolishing of God's true religion, and to the casting away and destruction of your natural country, so much as in you lieth.
AND as it is most true, that acts of parliament have in these latter days been ruled by the fantasies of a few; and the whole parliament-house, contrary to their minds, was compelled to such things as a few have conceived: so it must needs be granted, that the papists at all times were most ready to apply themselves to the present world, and like men-pleasers to follow the fantasies of such as were in authority, and turn with the state, which way soever it turned. Yes, if the state should change ten times in one year, they would ever be ready at hand to change with it, and so follow the cry, and rather utterly forsake God, and be of no religion, than they should forego lust or living, for God or for religion.
KING HENRY by parliament, according to God's word, put down the pope▪ the clergy consented, and all men openly by oath refused his usurped supremacy, knowing, by God's word, Christ to be the head of the church, and every king in his realm to have, under and next unto Christ, the chief sovereignty.
KING EDWARD also by parliament, according to God's word, set the marriage of priests at liberty, abolished the popish and idolatrous mass, changed the Latin service, and set up the holy communion; the whole clergy consented hereunto; many of them set it forth by their preaching; and they all by practising confirmed the same.
NOTWITHSTANDING, now when the state is altered, and the laws changed, the papistical clergy, with other worldlings, as men neither fearing God neither flying worldly shame, neither yet [Page 428] regarding their consciences, oaths or honesty, like wavering weather-cocks turn round about, and putting on harlot's foreheads, sing a new song, and cry with an impudent mouth, Come again, come again to the catholic church, meaning the antichristian church of Rome, which is the synagogue of Satan, and the very sink of all superstition, heresy, and idolatry.
OF what force, I pray you, may a man think these parliaments to be, which scarcely stand a year in strength? Or what credit is to be given to these law-makers, who are not ashamed to establish contrary laws, and to condemn that for evil, which before (the thing itself and the circumstances remaining all one) they affirmed and decreed to be good. Truly you are so ready, contrary to all right, to change and turn for the pleasure of man, that at length, I fear, God will use you like changelings, and both turn you out of his kingdom, and out of your own country.
YE charge the gospel-preachers with the undoing of this realm: nay, it is the turning papists, which have not only set to sale their country like traitors, but also troubled the simple people, so that they cannot tell what they may believe. For that which they affirmed in king Edward's days, now they cry against it, as it were most abominable heresy. This fault, I trust, you shall never find at our hands.
THEREFORE to conclude that which I purposed, forasmuch as the acts of parliament of these latter times are one contrary to another, and those which you now have established in your time are contrary to God's most manifest word, as is the usurped supremacy of the bishop of Rome, the idolatrous mass, the Latin service, the prohibiting of lawful marriage, (which St. Paul calleth the doctrine of devils) with many other things: I say, it is not only lawful for any private man, which bringeth God's word for him, and the authority of the primitive and best church, to speak and write against such unlawful laws; but it is his duty, and he is bound in very conscience to do it. Which thing I have proved by divers examples before, and now will add but one other, which is written in the fifth of the Acts, where it appeareth that the high priests, elders, scribes, and pharisees, decreed in their council, and gave the same commandments to the apostles, that they should not preach in the name of Christ, as you have also forbidden us; notwithstanding when they were charged therewithal, they answered, We ought rather to obey God than man: even so do we answer you; God is more to be obeyed than man; and your wicked laws cannot so tongue-de us, but we will speak the truth.
THE apostles were beaten for their boldness, and they rejoiced that they suffered for Christ's cause. You have also provided rods for us, and bloody whips: yet when you have done that which God's hand and counsel hath determined that you shall do, be it life or death, I trust that God will so assist us by his holy spirit and grace, that we shall patiently suffer it, and praise God for it: and whatsoever become of me and others, which now suffer for speaking and professing of the truth, yet be you sure, that God's word will prevail and have the upper hand, when your bloody laws and wicked decrees, for want of sure foundation, shall fall in the dust: and that which I have spoken of your acts of parliament, the same may be said of the general councils of these latter days, which have been within these five hundred years, where the Antichrist of Rome, by reason of his usurped authority, ruled, and decreed such things as made for his gain, not regarding God's glory: and therefore are they to be spoken, written, and cried out against of all such as fear God and love his truth.
AND thus much I purposed to have said concerning the first point.
NOW touching the second point. That whereas my lord chancellor had the day before said his pleasure of them that ruled the realm while he was in prison, and also rejoiced as though God had made this alteration, even for his sake, and his catholic church, as he called it, and to declare as it were by miracle, that we were before in a schism and heresy, and the realm was now brought unto an unity, and to a truth▪ to which I was fully purposed to have spoken. Secondly, my lord, whereas you, yesterday, so much dispraised the government of them that ruled in innocent king [Page 429] Edward's days, may it please your lordship to understand, that we poor preachers, whom you so evil treat, did most boldly and plainly rebuke their evil government in many things, especially their covetousness, and neglect to live after the gospel, as also their negligence to occasion others to live thereafter, with more things than I can now rehearse. This all London can testify with us. I would also have told him, what I myself for my part did once at Paul's-Cross, concerning the mis-use of abbeys, and other church goods: and I am right well assured, that never a papist of them all did ever so much therein as I did, I thank the Lord therefore: I was also, as is well known, fain to answer before all the council, and many of my brethren did the like, so that we, for the not rebuking of their faults, shall not answer before God, nor be blameworthy before men. Therefore let the gentlemen and courtiers themselves, and all the citizens of London, testify what we did.
BUT, my lord, you could not abide them, for that which they did unto you, and for that they were of a contrary religion unto you. Wherefore in that you seem so inveterate against them, it is neither any just or public cause, but it is your own private hate that maketh you to report so evil of their governance, and you may now say what you please of them, when they are partly dead and gone, and partly, by you, put out of office.
BUT what shall be said of you when your fall shall follow, you shall then hear. And I must say my conscience to you: I fear, you have, and will, with your governance, bring England out of God's blessing into a warm sun. I pray God you do not.
I am an Englishman born, and, God knoweth, do naturally wish well to my country. And my lord, I have often proved that the things, which I have much feared would come to pass, have indeed followed I pray God I may fail of my guessing in this behalf: but truly, that will not be with expelling the true word of God out of the realm, and with the shedding of innocent blood.
AND as touching your rejoicing, as though God had set you aloft to punish us by miracle, (for so you report and brag openly of yourself) and to minister justice, if we will not receive your holy father's mercy, and thereby do declare your church to be true, and our's false; to that I answer thus: God's works are wonderful, and are not to be comprehended and perceived by man's wisdom, nor by the wit of the most wise and prudent.
BUT here they will cry out. Lo these men will be still John Baptist, the apostles, and prophets, &c.
I answer, We make not ourselves like unto them, in the singular virtues and gifts of God given unto them; as of doing miracles, and of many other things. The similitude and likeness of them and us consisteth not in all things, but only in this, that is, that we be like them in doctrine, and in the suffering of persecution and infamy for the same.
WE have preached their very doctrine, and no other thing: that we are able sufficiently to declare by their writings; and by writing for my part, I have proffered to prove the same, as is often said. And for this cause we suffer the like reproach, shame, and rebuke of the world, and the like persecution, losing of our lives and goods, forsaking (as our master Christ commandeth) father, mother, sister, brethren, wives, children, and all that there is, being assured of a joyful resurrection, and to be crowned in glory with them, according to the infallible promises made unto us in Christ, our only and sufficient mediator, reconciler, priest, and sacrifice, which hath pleased the Father, and quieted and pacified his wrath against our sins, and made us without spot or wrinkle in his fight by imputation, although we, of and in ourselves, are blotted with many filthy sins, which if the great mercy granted in Christ did not put away, by not imputing them unto us of his unspeakable mercy and love to save us, they would have brought us to everlasting damnation: and herein, and in no other, do we affirm ourselves to be like unto our head Christ, and all his apostles, prophets, martyrs, and saints. And herein ought all christian men to be like them, and herein are all true christian men and women like them, every one according to the measure of the fa [...]th that God hath dealt unto them, and to the diversity [Page 430] of the gifts of the Spirit given unto them. But let us now consider, that if it be God's good will and pleasure to give his own beloved heart, that is, his beloved church, and the members thereof, into the hands of their enemies, to chasten, try, and prove them, and to bring them to the true unseigned acknowledging of their own natural stubbornness, disobedience towards God and his commandments, as touching the love of God and of their brethren or neighbours, and their natural inclination, readiness, and desire to love creatures, to seek their own lust, pleasures, and things forbidden of God, to obtain a true and earnest repentance, and sorrowfulness thereof, and to make them sigh and cry for forgiveness of the same, and for the aid of the Spirit, daily to mortify and kill the said evil desires and lusts: yea, and often falling into gross outward sins, as did David, Peter, Magdalen, and others, to rise again also, with a mighty crying for mercy, with many other causes. Let us also consider, what he hereafter doth with the same enemies, into whose hands he hath given his render beloved dearlings to be chastened and tried: whereas he but chasteneth and crosseth them for a small while, according to his good pleasure, as all fathers do with their children, Heb. xii. Prov. iii. he utterly destroyeth, yea, and everlastingly damneth the unrepentant enemies. Let Herod tell me what he got by killing James and persecuting Peter and his church. Verily God thought him not worthy to have death ministered unto him by men or angels, or any worthy creatures; but those small, yet vile vermin, lice and worms, must consume and kill his beastly, vile, and tyrannous body. Pharaoh and Nebuchadnezzar, for all their pride and most mighty power, must at length let God's dearlings go freely away out of their land, yea, out of their bands and tyranny. For when it could not be obtained of their hands, that God's congregation might have true mercy ministered unto them, but the counterfeit mercy of these our days, that is to say, extreme cruelty, and even the most horrible and cruel death, God arose and awoke out of his sleep, and destroyed those enemies of his flock with a mighty hand, and stretched-out arm. Pharaoh did with most great and intolerable labours and burdens oppress and bring under the poor Israelites, and yet did the courtiers undoubtedly noise abroad, that the king was merciful unto them, to suffer them to live in the land, and to set them to work, that they might get them their livings. If he should thrust them out of his land, whither should they go, like a sort of vagabonds and runagates? This title and name of mercy would that tyrant have, and so did his flattering false courtiers spread his vain praise abroad. Have not we the like example now-a-days? O that I had now time to write certain things pertaining to our Winchester's mercy! How merciful he hath been to me and my good brethren, I will not speak of, neither yet unto the duke of Suffolk's most innocent daughter, and to her as innocent husband. For although their fathers were faulty, yet had their youth and lack of experience deserved a pardon by all true merciful men's judgments. O that I had time to paint out this matter aright▪ but there are many alive that can do it much better when I am dead. Pharaoh had his plagues: and his most flourishing land was, in consequence of his counterfeit mercy, which was indeed right cruelty and tyranny, utterly destroyed. And think you that bloody butcherly bishop of Winchester, and his most bloody brethren shall escape? Or that England shall for their offences, and especially for the maintenance of their idolatry, and wilful following of them, not abide as great brunts? yes undoubtedly.
AFTER Mr. Rogers had been long and straitly imprisoned, and lodged in Newgate among thieves, often examined, and very uncharitably treated, and at length unjustly and most cruelly condemned by Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester: on the fourth of February, being Monday in the morning, he was suddenly warned by the keeper of Newgate's wife, to prepare himself for the fire; who being then sound asleep, could scarce be awaked. At length being raised and awaked, and bid to make haste, Then, said he, if it be so, I need not tie my points; and so was had down, first to bishop Bonner to be degraded; which being done, he craved of Bonner but one petition; and Bonner asking what that should be? Mr. Rogers replied, that he might speak a few words with his wife before his burning. But that could not be obtained of him. Then, said he, you declare what your charity i [...]: and so he was brought into Smithfield by Mr. Chester and Mr. Woodroofe, then sheriffs of London, there to be burnt; where he shewed the most constant patience, not using many words, for he could not be permitted, [Page 431] but only exhorting the people constantly to remain in that faith and true doctrine which he before had taught, and they had learned, and for the confirmation whereof he was not only content patiently to suffer and bear all such bitterness and cruelty as had been shewed him, but also most gladly to resign up his life, and to give up his flesh to the consuming fire, for the testimony of the same.
IN few words, to comprehend the whole order of his life, doings and martyrdom: First, this good man, Mr. Rogers, was committed to prison, and there continued a year and half. In prison he was chearful and earnest in all he went about. Wrote much; his examinations he penned with his own hand, which else had never come to light. Wherein is to be noted, by the way, a memorable working of God's providence. You heard how Mr. Rogers craved of bishop Bonner, going to his burning, that he might speak a few words with his wife, which could not be granted. What these words were it is for no man certainly to determine. It may be supposed that his purpose was, amongst other things, to signify unto her of the book of his examinations and answers, which he had written and privily hid in a secret corner of the prison where he lay. But where man's power lacketh, see how God's providence worketh. For that notwithstanding that during the time of his imprisonment, there was strict search made to take away his letters and writings; yet after his death, his wife and one of her sons, called Daniel, coming into the place where he lay, to seek for his books and writings, and now ready to go away, it chanced her son, casting his eye aside, to spy a black thing, (for it had a black cover, probably because it should not be known) lying in a dark corner under a pair of stairs. Who desiring his mother to see what it was, found it to be the book written with him own hand, containing his examinations and answers, with other matters above specified. In the latter end whereof, this also was contained; which because it concerneth a prophetical fore-warning of things pertaining to the church, I thought (says Mr. Fox) to place the same in his own words, as they are written, which are these: "If God look not mercifully upon England, the seeds of utter destruction are sown in it already by these hypocritical tyrants, and antichristian prelates, popish priests, and double traitors to their natural country. And yet they speak of mercy, of blessing, of the catholic church, of unity, of power, and strengthening of the realm. This double dissimulation will shew itself one day when the plague cometh, which undoubtedly will fight upon these crown-shorn captains, and that shortly, whatsoever the godly and the poor realm suffer in the mean while by God's sufferance and will.
"SPITE of Nebuchadnezzar's beard, and maugre his heart, the captive, thrall, and miserable Jews must come home again, and have their city and temple built up by Zerubbabel, Esdras, and Nehemiah, &c. and the whole kingdom of Babylon must go to ruin and be taken of strangers, the Persians and Medes. So shall the dispersed English flock of Christ be brought again into their former state, or to a better, I trust in the Lord God, than it was in innocent king Edward's days; and our bloody Babylonical bishops, and the whole crown-shorn company brought to utter shame, rebuke, ruin, decay, and destruction. For God cannot, and undoubtedly will not, suffer for ever their abominable lying, false doctrine, their hypocrisy, blood-thirst, whoredom, idleness, their pestilent life, pampered in all kind of pleasure, their vain boasting pride, their malicious, envious, and poisoned stomachs, which they bear towards his poor and miserable christians. Peter truly warneth, that "If judgment beginneth in the house of God, what shall be the end of them that believe not the gospel? If the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and sinful appear?" Some shall have their punishment here in this world and in the world to come; and they that do escape in this world, shall not escape everlasting damnation. This shall be your end, O ye wicked papists, make ye merry as long as ye may."
AMONGST other words and sayings, which may seem prophetically to be spoken by him, this also may be added, and is notoriously to be marked, that he spake, being then in prison, to the printer of Mr. Fox's book, who then also was laid up for like cause of religion: "Thou," said he, "shalt live to see the alteration of this religion, and the gospel to be freely preached again." And therefore have me commended to my brethren, as well in exile as others, and bid them be circumspect in [Page 432] displacing the papists, and putting good ministers into churches, or else their end will be worse than our's. And for lack of good ministers to furnish ch [...]rches, his device was, (Mr. Hooper also agreeing to the same) that for every ten churches, some one good and learned superintend [...]nt should he appointed, which should have under him faithful readers, such as might well be got, so that popish priests should clean be put out, and the bishop once a year to oversee the profiting of the parishes; and if the minister did not his duty, as well in profiting himself in his book, and his parishioners in good instructions, so that they may be trained by little and little to give a reckoning how they do [...] then he to be expelled, and another put in [...] place: and the bishop to do the like with the superintendant: this was his counsel and request: shewing moreover, and protesting in his commendations to his brethren by the printer aforesaid, that if they would not do so, their end, he said, would be worse than theirs.
BESIDES divers things, touching Mr. Rogers, this is not to be forgotten, how in the days of king Edward VI. there was a controversy among the bishops and clergy, for wearing of priests caps, and other attire belonging to that order. Mr. Rogers being of that number which never went otherwise than in a round cap, during all the time of king Edward, affirmed that he would not agree to that decreement of uniformity, but upon this condi [...]on, that if they would needs have such an uniformity of wearing the cap, tippet, &c. then it should also be decreed withal, that the papists, for a difference betwixt them and others, should be constrained to wear upon their s [...]eeves a chalice with an host upon it. Whereupon if they would consent, he would agree to the other; otherwise he would not, he said, consent to the setting forth of the same, nor ever wear the cap, as indeed he never did
ON the 4th of February, as we have before observed, Mr. Rogers was taken out of Newgate, to be led to the place of execution, when the sheriff asked him, if he would recant his opinions? To this he answered, "That what he had preached, he would seal with his blood." Then, said the sheriff, thou art an heretic. To which Mr. Rogers replied, "That shall be known at the day of jud [...]ment." Well, said Mr. Woodroofe, I will never pray for thee. But I will pray for you, said Mr. Rogers; and so he was brought the same day, Monday February 4th, by the sheriffs towards Smithfield, saying the Psalm Mis [...]rere by the way, all the people wonderfully rejoicing at his constancy, with great praises and thanks to God for the same. And there, in the presence of Mr. Rochester, comptroller of the queen's houshold, sir Richard Southwell, both the sheriffs, and a great number of people, he was burnt to ashes, washing his hands in the flames as he was burning. A little before his burning, his pardon was brought, if he would have recanted; but he utterly refused it. He was the first martyr, of all the blessed company that suffered in queen Mary's time, that gave the first adventure upon the fire. His wife and children, bring eleven in number, te [...] able to go, and one sucking at her breast, met him by the way as he went towards Smithfield▪ this sorrowful sight of his own flesh and blood could nothing move him, but he constantly and chearfully took his death with wonderful patience, in the defence of the gospel of Christ.
The LIFE and MARTYRDOM of the Rev. Mr. LAURENCE SAUNDERS, who was burned at COVENTRY, February 8th, 1555.
AFTER queen Mary, by public proclamation, in the first year of her reign, had prohibited the sincere preaching of God's holy word, several pious ministers, who had the cure and charge of souls committed to them, did notwithstanding, according to their duty, feed their flock faithfully, not as preachers authorized by public authority, (as the godly order of the realm was in the happy days of blessed king Edward) but as the private pastors of particular flocks, among whom Laurence Saunders was one, a man of good parentage. His bringing up was in learning from his youth, in places meet for that purpose, as in the school of Eaton. From whence (according to the manner there used) he was chosen to go to the king's college in Cambridge, where he continued a scholar three whole years, and profited in knowledge and learning very much for that time: shortly after, he did forsake the university, and went to his parents, upon whose advice he minded to become a merchant, for that his mother, who was a gentlewoman of good estimation, being [Page 433] lest a widow, and having a good portion for him among his other brethren, she thought to set him up wealthily and so he coming up to London, was bound [...] with a merchant, named sir William [...] [...]fterwards chanced to be sheriff of London the same year that Saunders was burnt at Coventry.) Thus, by the mind of his friends, Laurence should needs have been a merchant; but Almighty God, who hath his secret working in all things, saw better for his servant, as it fell out in the end: for although that Saunders was bound by indenture, yet the Lord so wrought inwardly in his heart, th [...] he could find no liking in his vocation: so that when his other fellows were busily occupied about their trade, he would secretly withdraw himself into some privy corner, and there fall into solitary lamentations, as one not pleased with that kind of life.
IT happened that his master, being a good man, and hearing his 'prentice thus in his secret prayers inwardly to mourn by himself, called him unto him, to know what the cause was of his solitariness and lamentations: who then perceiving him not to fancy that kind of life, (for so Saunders declared unto him) and perceiving also his whole purpose to be bent to the study of books, and spiritual contemplation, like a good man, directed his letters unto his friends, and giving him his indentures, set him free. Thus Mr. Laurence Saunders being ravished with the love of learning, and especially with the reading of God's word, tarried not long in the traffic of merchandize, but shortly returned to Cambridge again to his study, where he began to add to the knowledge of the Latin, the study of the Greek tongue, wherein be profited very much in a little time; therewith also he joined the study of the Hebrew. Then he gave himself wholly to the study of the holy scripture, to furnish himself for the office of a preacher.
IN study he was diligent and painful, in godly life he declared the fruits of a well exercised conscience; he prayed often, and with great fervour, and in his prayers, as also at other times, he had his part of spiritual exercises, in which, when any special assault did come, he felt present relief: then was his company marvellous comfortable. For as his exercises were special teachings, so in the end they proved singular consolations: wherein he became so expert, that within short space he was able to comfort others who were in affliction, by the consolation wherewith the Lord did comfort him. Thus continued he in the university, till he became master of arts, and a long space after.
IN the beginning of king Edward's reign, when God's true religion was introduced, after licence obtained, he began to preach, and was so well liked of them who then had authority, that they had appointed him to read a divinity lecture in the college at Fothringam, where, by doctrine and life, he edified the pious, drew many ignorant to the true knowledge of God, and stopped the mouths of adversaries. He married about that time, and in the married state led a life unblameable before all men. The college of Fothringam being dissolved, he was placed to be a reader in the minster at Litchfield: where he so behaved himself in teaching and living, that his very adversaries did give a full report as well of his learning as of his piety. After a certain space, he departed from Litchfield to a benefice in Leicestershire, called Church-langton, where he keeping residence, taught diligently, and kept a liberal house. From thence he was orderly called to take a benefice in the city of London, named Alhallows in Bread-street. Then he was minded to give over his cure in the country: and therefore after he had taken possession of his benefice in London, he departed from thence into the country, clearly to discharge himself thereof. And even at that time began the broil about the claim that queen Mary made to the crown, by reason whereof he could not accomplish his purpose.
IN this trouble, and even among the beginners of it, (such I mean as were for the queen) he preached at Northampton, nothing meddling with the state, but boldly uttered his conscience against popish doctrines, which were like to spring up again in England, as a just: plague for the little love which the English nation did bear to the blessed word of God, which had been so plentifully offered unto them. The queen's party who were there, and heard him, were highly displeased with him for his sermon, and for it kept him among them as a prisoner. But partly for love of his brethren and friends, who were chief doers for the queen among them, partly [Page 434] because there was no law broken by his preaching, they dismissed him. He, seeing the dreadful day [...] at hand, inflamed with the fire of godly real, preached with diligence at both those benefices, as time could serve him, seeing he could resign neither of them now, but into the hands of a papist.
THUS passed he his time in preaching, until that proclamation was put forth, of which mention has been made, at which time he was at his benefice in the country, where he (notwithstanding the proclamation) taught diligently God's truth, confirming the people therein, and arming them against false doctrines, until he was not only commanded to cease, but also with force resisted, so that he could not proceed there in preaching. Some of his friends, perceiving such fearful menacing, counselled him to fly out of the realm, with he refused to do. But seeing he was with violence kept from doing good in that place, he returned towards London to visit the flock, of which he had there the charge.
ON Saturday, October 14th, as he was coming nigh to the city of London, sir John Mordant, a counsellor to queen Mary, did overtake him, and asked him whither he went. I have, said Saunders, a cure in London, and now I go to instruct my people, according to my duty. If you will follow my counsel, said Mr. Mordant, let them alone, and come not at them. To this Saunders answered: How shall I then be discharged before God, if any be sick, and desire consolation, if any want good counsel, and need instruction? or if any should slip into error, and receive false doctrine? Did you not, said Mordant, preach such a day, and named the day, in Bread-street, London? Yes verily, said Saunders, that same is my cure. I heard you myself, said Mr. Mordant: and will you preach now there again? If it please you, said Saunders, to-morrow you may hear me again in that same place, where I will confirm, by the autho [...]ity of God's word, all that I said then, and whatsoever before that time I taught them.
I would counsel you, said the other, not to preach. If you can and will forbid me by lawful authority, then I must obey, said Saunders. Nay, said he, I will not forbid you, but I do give you counsel. And thus entered they both the city, and departed each from the other. Mr. Mordant, of an uncharitable mind, went to give warning to Bonner, bishop of London, that Saunders would preach in his cure the next day. Saunders resorted to his lodging, with a mind bent to do his duty. Where because he seemed to be somewhat troubled, one who was there about him, asked him how he did. In very deed, said he, I am in prison, till I be in prison; meaning, that his mind was unquiet until he had preached, and that he should have quietness of mind though he were put in prison.
THE next day, which was Sunda [...] in the afternoon, he made a sermon in his parish, treating on that place which St. Paul writeth [...] Corinthians, "I have coupled you to one man, that ye should make yourselves a chaste virgin unto Christ. But I fear lest it come to pass, that as the serpent beguiled Eve, even so your wi [...] should be corrupt from the singleness which ye had towards Christ." He recited the sum of that true christian doctrine, thro' which they were coupled to Christ, to receive of him free justification through faith in his blood. The papistical doctrine he compared to the serpent's deceiving: and lest they should be deceived by it, he made a comparison between the voice of God, and the voice of the popish serpent; descending to more particular declaration thereof, as it were to let them plainly see the difference that is between the order of the church service, set forth by king Edward in the English tongue, and comparing it with the popish service then used in the Latin tongue.
THE first he said was good, because it was according to the word of God, 1 Cor. xiv. and the order of the primitive church. The other, he said, was evil, and though in that evil, be intermingled some good Latin words, yet was it but as a little honey or [...] mingled with a great deal of poison. This was the sum of his sermon.
IN the afternoon he was ready in his church to have given another exhortation to his people. But the bishop of London interrupted him by sending an officer for him. This officer charged him, upon p [...]in of disobedience and contumacy, forthwith to come to the bishop his master. Thus, as the apostles were brought out of the temple, where they [Page 435] were teaching, unto the rulers of the priests, so was Laurence Saunders brought before the bishop of London, who had in his company the aforenamed sir John Mordant and some of his chaplains. This bishop laid no more to Laurence Saunders's charge, but treason for breaking the queen's proclamation, heresy and sedition for his sermon.
THE treason and sedition, his charity was content to let slip until another time. But an heretic he would now prove him, and all those, he said, who did teach and believe that the administration of the sacrame [...] and all orders of the church are most pure, which do come most nigh to the order of the primitive church. For the church was then but in her infancy, and could not abide that perfection which was afterwards to be furnished with ceremonies. And for this cause Christ himself, and after him the apostles, did in many things bear with the rudeness of that church. To this Laurence Saunders answered with the authority of St. Augustine, "That ceremonies were even from the beginning invented and ordained for the rude infancy and weak infirmity of man, and therefore it was a token of the more perfection of the primitive church, that it had few ceremonies, and of the rudeness of the papistical church, beca [...]se it had so many ceremonies, partly blasphemous, partly unsavoury and unprofitable.
AFTER much talk concerning this matter, the bishop desired him to write what he believed of transubstantiation. Laurence Saunders did so, saying. My lord, you do seek my blood, and you shall have it: I pray God that you may be so baptized in it, that you may thereafter loathe blood sucking, and become a better man. This writing the bishop kept for his purpose, even to cut the writer's throat, as shall appear hereafter. The bishop, when he had his will, sent Laurence Saunders to the lord chancellor, [...]s Annas sent Christ to [...]: and like favour found Saunders as Christ his master did before him▪ But the chancellor being not at home, Saunders was con [...]trained to tarry for him the space of four [...] outer chamber, where he found a chaplain of the bishop's very merrily disposed, with certain gentlemen playing at tables, with divers others of the same family or house occupied there in the same exercise.
ALL this time Saunders stood very modestly and soberly at the screen or cub-board bare-headed, sir John Mordant his guide or leader walking up and down by him: who (as I said before) was then one of the council. At last the bishop returned from the cou [...] whom, as soon as he was entered, a great many suiters met and received; so that [...]fore he could get out of one house into another, [...]alf an hour was passed. At last he came into the chamber where Saunders was, and went through into another chamber: where in the mean time, sir John Mordant gave him a writing, containing the cause, or rather the accusation of the said Saunders: which when he had perused, where is the man? said the bishop. Then Saunders, being brought forth to the place of examination, first most lowly and meekly kneeled down, and made courtesy before the table where the bishop sat; unto whom the bishop spoke on this wise:
HOW happeneth it, said he, that, notwithstanding the queen's proclamation to the contrary, you have attempted to preach?
SAUNDERS denied not that he did preach; saying, that forasmuch as he saw the perilous times now at hand, he did but (according as he was admonished, and warned by Ezekiel the prophet) exhort the flock and parishioners to persevere and stand stedfastly in the doctrine which they had learned; saying also, that he was moved thereunto by the place of the apostle, wherein he was commanded rather to obey God than man; and moreover, that nothing more moved him thereunto than his own conscience.
A goodly conscience, surely, said the bishop. This your conscience could make our queen a bastard, or misbegotten; would it not, I pray you.
WE, said Saunders, do not declare, or say that the queen is base, or misbegotten, neither go about any such matter. But for that, let them care whose writings are yet in the hands of men, witnessing the same, not without the great reproach and shame of the author: privily taunting the bishop himself, who had before (to get the favour of Henry VIII.) written and set forth in print a book of true obedience, wherein he had openly declared queen Mary to be a bastard: now Mr. Saunders going forward [Page 436] in his purpose, said, We do only profess and teach the sincerity and purity of the word; which, though it be now forbidden us to preach with our mouths, yet notwithstanding, I do not doubt, but that our blood hereafter shall manifest the same. The bishop being touched, said, Carry away this [...] fool to prison. Unto whom Mr. Saunders answered, that he did give God thanks, which [...]d given him at the last a place of rest and quietness, where he might pray for the bishop's conversion.
FURTHERMORE, he that did lie with him afterwards in prison, in the same bed, reported, that he heard him say, that even in the time of his examination he was wonderfully comforted, insomuch as not only in spirit, but also in body, he received a certain taste of that holy communion of saints, whilst a most pleasant refreshing did issue from every part and member of the body unto the seat and place of the heart, and from thence did ebb and flow to and fro unto all the parts again.
MR. SAUNDERS continued in prison one year and three months. In all which space he sent several letters to divers men; as one to Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer; another to his wife, and also to others, certifying them both of the public calamity of the time, and also of his private afflictions, and of his sundry conflicts with his adversaries: and in writing to his friend, he speaketh of Dr. Weston's conferring with him in prison. In the mean time, Gardiner, the chancellor, sent him to the prison of the Marshalsea, where he was kept prisoner one year and a quarter. During which time he sent a letter, part of which is as follows, to Gardiner, bishop of Winchester.
LETTER I. Which the Rev. Mr. SAUNDERS sent to Bishop GARDINER, exculpating himself from CERTAIN CHARGES laid against him.
TOUCHING the cause of my imprisonment, I doubt whether I have broken [...] proclamation. In my doctrine I did not, forasmuch as at that [...] was permitted by the proclamation to use, according to our co [...]iences, such service as was then established. My doctrine was then agreeable unto my conscience and the [...]ame [...] then used. The act which I did [...] of God's word in his own parish, called Alhallows in Bread-street, in the city of London) was such as being indifferently weighed, sounded to no breaking of the proclamation, or at least no wilful breaking of it, forasmuch as I caused no bell to be [...]ung, neither occupied I any place in the pulpit, after the order of sermons or lectures. But be it that I did break the proclamation, this long time of continuance in prison may be thought to be more than a sufficient punishment for such a fault.
TOUCHING the charging of me with my religion, I say with St. Paul; this I confess, "That after the way which [...]ey call heresy, so worship I the God of my forefathers, believing all things which are written in the law and the prophets, and have hope towards God," &c. [...]. And herein study I to have always a clear conscience towarde God and towards men, so that God I call to witness, I have a conscience. And this my conscience is not grounded upon vain fantasy, but upon the infallible verity of God's word, with the witnessing of his chosen church agreeable unto the same.
IT is an easy thing for them which take Christ for their true pastor, and be the very sheep of his pasture, to discern the voice of their true shepherd, from the voice of wolves, hirelings, and strangers: forasmuch as Christ saith, "My sheep hear my voice," John x. yea, and thereby they shall have the gift to know the right voice of the true shepherd, and so to follow him, and to avoid the contrary, as he also saith, "The sheep follow the shepherd, for they know his voice: a stranger they will not follow, but will fly from him, for they know not the voice of a stranger." Such inward inspiration doth the Holy Ghost put into the children of God, being indeed taught of God, but otherwise unable to understand the true way of their salvation. And altho' the wolf (as Christ saith) cometh in sheep [...] clothing, yet by their fruits ye shall know them. That the Romi [...]h religion is ravening and wolfish, is apparent in three principal points.
FIRST, It robbeth God of his due and only honour.
SECONDLY, It taketh away the true comfort of conscience, in obscuring, or rather bu [...]ing of Christ and his office of salvation.
THIRDLY, It spoileth God of his true worship and service [...] spirit and truth, appointed in his commandments, [...]d d [...]eth men unt [...] that inconvenience, against which Christ with the prophet Isaiah doth speak sha [...]ply: "This p [...]ple honoureth me with their lips, but their [...] me. They worship me in [...]ain, teaching [...] and precepts of men." And in another plac [...], "Ye [...]st [...] the commandments of God, to maintain your own traditions."
WHEREFOR [...] I [...] conscience weighing the Romish religion, [Page 437] and by indifferent discussing thereof finding the foundation unstedfast, and the building thereupon but vain: and on the other side, having my conscience framed after a right and uncorrupt religion, ratified and fully established by the word of God, and the consent of his true church, I neither may, nor do intend, by God's gracious assistance, to be pulled one jot from the same; no, though an angel out of heaven should preach another gospel than that which I have received of the Lord.
AND although that for lack either of such d [...]ep knowledge and profound judgment, or of readily uttering what I do know and judge, as required in an excellent clerk, I shall not be able sufficiently to answer, for the convinci [...] of the gainsayer: yet nevertheless this my protestation shall be of me premised, that for the respect of the grounds and causes before considered, albeit I cannot conceive all that is to be conceived, neither can discuss all that is to be discussed, nor can effectually express all that can be expressed in the discourse of the doctrine of this most true religion, whereunto I am professed: yet I do bind myself, as by my humble simplicity, by faith in generality, to wrap my belief in the credit of the same, that no authority of that Romish religion repugnant thereunto, shall by any means remove me from the same, though it may be that our adversaries will labour to beguile us with inticing words, and seek to spoil us through philosophy and deceitful vanity, after the traditions of men, and after the ordinances of the world, and not after Christ, &c.
AND thus much of Mr. Saunders's letter, so much as remaineth thereof: it is sufficient to understand, how good was his cause and state, being prisoner for Christ's cause. For the defence whereof, he wholly bestowed and so resigned himself, that he forbad his wife to sue for his delivery▪ and when others of his friends had by suit almost obtained it, he discouraged them, so that they did not follow their [...], as by his letter following may appear.
LETTER II. From the Rev. Mr. SAUNDERS to his WIFE.
GRACE, mercy, and peace in Christ our Lord, intirely beloved wife, even as unto my [...] soul and body, so do I daily in my hearty prayer with unto you; for I do daily, twice at least, in this sort remember you. And I do not doubt, dear wife, but that both I and you, as we are written in the book of life, so we shall together enjoy the same everlastingly, through the grace and mercy of God our d [...]r father, in his Son our Christ. And for this present life, let us wholly appoint ourselves to the will of our good God, to glorify him either by life or by death; and even that same merciful Lord make us worthy to honour him eith [...]r way as pleaseth him. Amen. I am chearful, I thank my God and my Christ, in whom and through whom I shall (I know) be able to fight a good fight, and finish a good course, and then receive the crown, which is laid up in store for me, and all the true soldiers of Christ. Wherefore, wife, let us, in the name of our God, fight lustily to overcome the flesh, the devil, and the world. What our harness and weapons [...]e in this kind of fight, look in the sixth chapter unto the Ephesians, and pray, pray, pray. I would that [...] [...]ake no suit for me in any wise. Thank you know whom, for her most sweet and comfortable putting me in remembrance of my journey whither I am passing. God send us all good speed, and a joyful meeting. I have too few such friends to further me in that journey, which is indeed the greatest friendship. The blessing of God be with you all. Amen.
THE constancy of this faithful servant of Christ, even unto the death, is sufficiently manifested and declared by his valiant contest with those two powerful enemies, Antichrist and Death: to neither of these did he give place, and in the end got the victory over them both. One of his conflicts was with Dr. Weston, in the Marshalsea, of which he thus writeth to one of his friends.
"DR. WESTON came to confer with Mr. Grimoad: what he hath concluded with him I know not: I wish it may be to God's glory. Amen. Mr. Weston of his gentleness visited me, and offered me friendship in his worldly wily sort, &c. I had not so much good manners as to take it at his ha [...]d: for I said, that I was well enough, and ready chearfully to abide any extremity, to keep thereby a good conscience. You are asleep in sin, said he. I would awake, said I, and do not forget Vigilate et crate, i. e. "Watch and pray." What church was there thirty years past, said he? What church was there, said I, in Elias's time? Joan of Kent, said he, was of your church. No, said I, we did condemn her as an heretic. Who was of your church said he, thirty years past? Such, said I, as the Romish Antichrist, and his rabble, have reputed and condemned as heretics. Wickliff, said he, Thorp, Oldcastle, &c. Yes, said I, with many more. The bishop of Rome hath, said he, a long time played a part in your railing sermons▪ but now, be ye sure, he must play another manner of part. The more pity, said I, and yet some comfort it is to see how that the most learned, wisest, and holiest of you all▪ have heretofore had him to play [Page 438] a part likewise in your sermons and writings, tho' now, to please the world, you do turn with the weather-cock. Did you ever, said he, hear me preach against the bishop of Rome? No, said I, for I never heard you preach. But I think you have been no wiser than others, &c. with more about the sacrament. Pray, pray. God [...] your family, and bless it."
IN order more fully to shew what blessed taste this good man and heroic martyr had of God's holy Spirit, we shall here insert two more of his letters, which he wrote in the Marshalsea, the first of which is addressed to Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer, prisoners for the like cause of Christ in Oxford.
LETTER III. From the Rev. Mr. SAUNDERS, to Archbishop CRANMER, Bishop RIDLEY, and the Rev. Mr. LATIMER, then Prisoners in Oxford.
IN my most humble wise I salute you, most reverend fathers in Christ Jesus our Lord. Immortal thanks and everlasting praises be given unto our Father of mercies, "which hath made us meet to be partakers of the Inheritance of the saints in light, which hath delivered us from the power of darkness, and hath translated us into the kingdom of his beloved Son, by whom we have redemption through his blood," &c. Coloss. i. & iii. O most happy estate, that in an unspeakable wise our life is hid with Christ in God: but whensoever Christ which is our life shall shew himself, then shall we also appear with him in glory. Coloss. iii.4. In the mean season, as our sight is but in a glass, even in a dark speaking, so we walk in faith, not after outward appearance: which faith although for want of outward appearance, reason reputeth but as vain, yet the chosen of God do know the effect thereof, to bring a more substantial state and lively fruition of very felicity and perfect blessedness, then reason can reach, or senses receive. By this faith we have in our possession all good things, yea even those "which the eye hath not seen, and the ear hath not heard, neither can enter into the heart of man," &c. 1 Cor. ii.9. Then if hereby we do enjoy all good things, it followeth, that we must needs possess, have, and enjoy you, most reverend fathers, who are no small part of our joy and good things given us of God.
WE heretofore have had the fruition of you by bodily presence to our inexplicable benefit, praised be that our most gracious God therefore. And now in spirit we have the experience of unspeakable comfort by your reverend fatherhoods, for that in this so glorious sort ye are become a town set upon a hill, a candle upon a candlestick, a spectacle unto the world, both to the angels and unto men. Matt. v. So that as we to our great comfort do feel, you also may assu [...]dly, with St. Paul, 2 Cor. iv. say, that the things which happen unto us, do tend to the furtherance of the gospel; so that our bonds in Christ are manifest, not only throughout all the judgment-hall, but in all Europe; insomuch that many of the brethren in the Lord, being encouraged thro' our bonds, dare more boldly speak the word without fear, Phil. i. And herein as you have with St. Paul greatly to rejoice, so we rejoice with you, and we do indeed with you give thanks for this worthy excellent favour of our God towards you, that Christ is thus magnified in you, yea, and hereafter shall be magnified in your bodies, whether it be through life or death. Of which thing truly we are assured in our prayers for you, and ministering of the Spirit, Phil. ii. And although for your own parts, Christ is unto you in life and death advantage, and that your desire is (as indeed it were better for you) to be loosed, and to be with Christ, yet for the church of Christ were it much more necessary, that ye should abide in the flesh. Yea, that merciful God, even for Christ's sake, grant that you may abide and continue for the furtherance of the church, and increas [...] of faith, that the rejoicing thereof may be the more abundant through Christ by your restoring. Amen, Amen.
BUT if it seem better otherwise unto the divine wisdom, that by speedy death he hath appointed you to glorify him, the Lord's will be done. Yea, even as we do rejoice both on your behalfs, and also on our own, that God is magnified by life, and should be more abundantly glad for the continuance thereof; so we shall no less rejoice to have the same wrought by death. We shall give thanks for this honour given unto you, rejoicing that ye are accounted worthy to suffer for the name of Christ, and that "it is given to you of God, not only that ye should believe in him, but also that ye should suffer for his sake." And herein we shall have to rejoice in behalf of the church of Christ, whose faith may be the faster fixed upon God's verity, being confirmed with three such worthy witnesses. O thanks be to God for this his unspeakable gift!
AND now, most reverend fathers, that you may understand the truth of us, and our estate how we stand in the Lord; I do assure your reverences, partly by what I perceive by such of your brethren as be here in bonds with me, partly by what I hear of them which be in other places, and partly by the inward experience which I, most unworthy, have of God's good comfort, (more abundance whereof I know there is in others) you may be assured (I say) by God's grace, that you shall not be frustrated of your hope of our constant continuance in the chearful confession of God's everlasting verity. For even as we have received the word of truth, even the gospel of our salvation, wherein we believing are sealed with the holy Spirit of promise, [Page 439] which is the earnest of our inheritance (which Spirit certifieth our spirit, that we are the children of God, and therefore God hath sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, Abba, Father), so after such portion as God measureth unto us, we with the whole church of Christ, and with you reverend fathers, receiving the same spirit of faith, according as it is written, "I believed, and therefore I have spoken," 1 Cor. iv. we also believe, and therefore speak. For which we in this dangerous bondage and other afflictions, having even such a sight as we have seen in you, and have heard of you, are in no wise afraid of our adversaries.
AND forasmuch as we have such an office, even as God hath had mercy on us, we go not out of kind, but even with you, after our little power, we labour to maintain the faith of the gospel, knowing most certainly, that though "we have this measure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of this power might be God's, and not our's, 2 Cor. iv. yet shall we not be dashed in pieces; for the Lord will put his hand under us. When "we are troubled on every side, yet are we not without shift: when we are in poverty, we are not utterly without something: when we suffer persecution, we are not forsaken therein: when we are cast down, yet we shall not perish:" but to communicate with our sweet Saviour Christ in bearing the cross, it is appointed unto us, that even with him also we shall be glorified: for it is a true saying; "If we be dead with him, we shall also live with him; if we be patient, we shall also reign with him: if we deny him, he shall also deny us," 1 Tim. ii. Wherefore are we of good cheer, "always bearing about in our body the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life of Jesus might appear also in our body: for we know, that he which raised up the Lord Jesus, shall raise up us also by the means of Jesus, and shall join us to himself together with you," 2 Cor. iv. Wherefore we are not wearied; but though our outward man perish, yet the inward ma [...] is renewed day by day. For our tribulation which is [...]omentary and light, prepareth an exceeding and eternal weight of glory unto us, while we look not on the things which are seen, but on the things which are not seen. For the things which are seen, are temporal; but the things which are not seen, are eternal.
WE testify unto you, reverend fathers, that we draw these matters with joy out of the wells of the Saviour. And I trust we shall continually with you bless the Lord, and give thanks unto the Lord out of the wells of Israel; we trust to be merry together at that great supper of the Lamb, whose spouse we are by faith, and there to sing that song of everlasting Hallelujah, Amen. Yea, come Lord Jesus. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you, Amen.
LETTER IV. From the Rev. Mr. LAURENCE SAUNDERS to his WIFE.
GRACE and comfort in Christ Jesus, our only comfort in all extreme assaults, Amen. Fain would this flesh make strange of that which the spirit doth embrace. Oh! Lord, how loth is this loitering sluggard to pass forth in God's path? It fancieth much fear, and were it not for the force of faith, and of hope, great likelihood there were of fainting by the way. But blessed, and everlastingly blessed be that heavenly Father of our's, who in his Christ, our sufficient Saviour, hath vouchsafed to shine in our hearts, that he giveth us the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ: and having "this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power might be God's, and not our's; we are (according to his good will) troubled on every side, yet are we not without shift; we are in poverty, but yet not without what is sufficient; we s [...]ffer persecution, but are not forsaken therein; we are cast down, nevertheless we perish not; we bear in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life of Jesus might also appear in our body." Wherefore by the grace of our Christ we shall not be wearied, neither be dismayed by this our probation through the fire of affliction, as tho' some strange thing had happened unto us: but by his power we shall rejoice, inasmuch as we are partakers of Christ's passion, that when he doth appear, we may be merry and glad, knowing that "our tribulation, which is momentary and light, prepareth an exceeding and eternal weight of glory unto us, while we look not on the things which are seen, but on the things which are not seen. They that sow in tears shall reap in joy. For he that goeth on his way weeping and scattering his good seed, shall doubtless come again with joy, and bring his whole sheaves with him." Then, then shall the Lord wipe away all tears from our eyes. Then, then shall be brought to pass that saying which is written, "Death is swallowed up in victory. Death, where is thy sting? Hell, where is thy victory? Yea, thanks be to God, which hath given the victory thro' our Lord Jesus Christ. Amen."
IN the mean season it remaineth for us to follow St. Peter's advice: "Let them (saith he) that are troubled, according to the will of God, commit their souls to him with well-doing, as a faithful creator and maker." He is our maker, we are his handy-work and creatures, whom now when he hath made, he doth not leave and forsake, as the shipwright doth the ship, leaving it at all adventures to be tossed in the tempest, but he comforteth us his creatures, and in him we live, move, and have our being: yea, not only that, but now that he hath in his dear Christ repaired us, being before utterly decayed, and redeem [...] us, purging [Page 440] us unto himself as a peculiar people by the blood of his Son; he hath put on a most tender good will and fatherly [...] to fo [...]get us: unto whom by such promises he hath [...]light [...] such faith, that though it were possible that the mother could forget her infant, and not be tender-hearted to the child of her womb ye [...] may not it be, that his faithful believers should be fo [...]gotten of him. He exhorteth us to cast all our care on him, and saith, that assuredly he careth for us. And what though for a season he doth suffer us to be tossed in the turbulent tempests of temptation, and seemeth as in much anger to have given us over, and forgotten us? Let not us for all that leave off to put our trust in him, but let us with godly Job conclude in ourselves and say, "Even though he kill me, yet will I put my trust in him." Let us with the blessed Abraham in hope, even contrary to hope, by belief lean unto that our loving Lord, who, though for our probation he suffereth us to be afflicted, yet "will he not be always chi [...]ling, neither keepeth he his anger for ever: for he knoweth whereof we are made; he remembereth that we are but dust. Wherefore, look how high the heaven is in comparison of the earth, so great is his mercy towards them which fear him. Look how wide the east is from the we [...] so far hath he set our sins from us. Yea, like as a [...] [...]tieth his own children, even so is the Lord merciful un [...]o them that fear him." Oh! what great cause of rejoicing have we in our most gracious God? We cannot but burst forth in the praising of such a bountiful benefactor, and say with the same Psalmist; "Praise the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me praise his holy name. Praise the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits."
Dear wife, riches I have none to leave behind me, wherewith to endow you after the worldly manner: but th [...] treasure of tasting how sweet Christ is unto hungry co [...]sciences, (whereof I thank my Christ, I do feel part, and would feel more) that I bequeath unto you, and to the rest of my beloved in Christ, to retain the same in sense of heart always. Pray, pray. I am merry, and I trust I shall be merry, in spite of all the devils in hell. I utterly refuse myself, and resign myself unto my Christ, in whom I know I shall be strong, as he seeth needful. Pray, pray, pray.
WHEN Mr. Saunders was in prison, an order was sent to the keeper, that no person should speak with him; but his wife coming to the prison-gate with her young child in her arms, to visit her husband, the keeper, though he durst not, on account of his charge, suffer her to come into the prison, yet took the infant out of her arms, and brought him unto his father. Mr. Saunders, seeing the child, said. That he rejoiced more to have such a boy, than he should if two thousand pounds were given him. And to the stande [...] by, who praised [...] goodliness of the child, he said, "What [...] fearing God, would not lose this life, rather, than by prolonging it, [...]he should adjudge this boy to be a bastard, his wife a wh [...]re, and himself a whoremonger? Yea, if there [...] other cause, for which a man of my estate should lose his life, yet who would not give it, to vouch this child to be legitimate, and his marriage to be lawful and holy."
I do, good reader, (says Mr. Fox) recite this saying, not only to let you see what he thought of priests' marriage; but chiefly to let all married couples and parents learn to bear in their boso [...] true affection: natural, but yet seasoned with the true salt of the Spirit, unfeignedly and thoroughly mortified to do the natural works and offices of married couples and parents, so long as with their doings they may keep Christ with a free confessing faith in a clear conscience: otherwise both they and their own lives are so to be forsaken, as Christ required them to be denied, and given in his cause.
AFTER this good and faithful martyr had been kept in prison one year and a quarter, the bishops at length called him, as they did his fellow-prisoners, openly to be examined; and the purport of his examination, as written by himself, here followeth:
The EXAMINATION of the Rev. Mr. SAUNDERS before the QUEEN'S COUNCIL, GARDINER, Bishop of Winchester, the then Chancellor, and other Bishops, being present.
In this Examination the Lord Chancellor thus spake:
IT is not unknown that you have been a prisoner, for such abominable heresies and false doctrine as have been sown by you; and now it is thought good that mercy be shewed to such as seek for it. Wherefore if now you will shew yourself conformable, and come home again, mercy is ready. We must say that we have fallen in manner all: but now we are risen again, and returned to the catholic church; you must rise with us, and come home unto it. Give us forthwith a direct answer.
My lord, and my lords all, may it please your honours to give me leave to answer with deliberation.
Leave off your painting and pride of speech: for such is the fashion of you all, to please yourselves in your glorious words. Answer yes, or no.
My lord, it is no time for me now to paint. And as for pride, there is no great cause why it should be in me; my learning I confess to be but small; and as for riches or worldly wealth I have none at all▪ Notwithstanding, it standeth me in hand to answer your demand circumspectly, considering that one of these two extreme perils are like to fall upon me, the losing of a good conscience, or the losing of this my body and life. And I tell you truth, I love both life and liberty, if I could enjoy them without the hurt of my conscience.
Conscience? you have none at all, but pride and arrogancy, dividing yourselves by singularity from the church.
The Lord is the knower of all men's consciences. And where your lordship layeth to my charge this dividing myself from the church, (as you do mean, and is now among you concluded upon, and I do understand) I do assure you that I live in the faith wherein I have been brought up since I was fourteen years of age; being taught that the power of the bishop of Rome is but usurped, with many other abuses springing thereof. Yes, this I have received even at your hands that are here present, as a thing agreed upon by the catholic church and public authority.
But have you received by consent and authority all your heresies of the blessed sacrament of the altar?
My lord, it is less offence to cut off an arm, hand, or joint of man, than to cut off the head. For the man may live though he doth lose an arm, hand, or joint; but he cannot without his head. Now you, all the whole sort of you, had agreed to cut off the supremacy of the bishop of Rome, whom now you will have to be the head of the church again.
And if it please your lordship, I have his hand against the blessed sacrament. How say you to that?
What I have written, that I have written, and farther I will not accuse myself. Nothing have you to burden me withal, for breaking of your laws since they were in force.
Well, you are obstinate, and refuse liberty.
My lord, I may not buy my liberty at such a price: but I beseech your honours to be means to the queen's majesty for such a pardon for us, that we may live and keep our consciences unclogged, and we shall live as most obedient subjects. Otherwise, I must say for myself, that by God's grace I will abide the utmost extremity that man may do against me, rather than act against my conscience.
Ah sirrah, you will live as you like. The Donatists did desire to live in singularity: but indeed they were not fit to live on earth: no more are you, and that you shall understand within these seven days; and therefore away with him.
Welcome be it, whatsoever the will of God shall be, either life or death. And I tell you truly, I have learned to die. But I exhort you to beware of shedding of innocent blood▪ Truly it will cry. The Spirit of God rest upon all your honours, Amen. This is the sum and form of my first examination. Pray, &c.
THIS examination being ended, the officers led him out of the place, and stayed until the rest of his fellow-prisoners were likewise examined, that they might have them altogether to prison. Laurence Saunders, standing among the officers, seeing there a great multitude of people, spoke freely, warning them all of that which by their falling from Christ to Antichrist they deserved; and therefore exhorting them by repentance to rise again, and to embrace [Page 442] Christ with stronger faith, to confess him to the end, in the defiance of Antichrist, sin, death, and the devil: so should they retain the Lord's favour and blessing.
THE copies of his other examination and excommunication came to the hands of such as do keep them still in secret. But in them, as he defended Christ's cause stoutly, so warned he the pharisaical bishops and papists of their hypocrisy and tyranny, and cleared himself of their unjust accusations.
HAVING been excommunicated and delivered over to the secular power, he was brought by the sheriff of London to the Compter, a prison in his own parish of Bread-street, whereat he rejoiced greatly, both because he found there a fellow-prisoner, Mr. Cardmaker, with whom he had much christian and comfortable discourse; and because out of prison, as before out of a pulpit, he might have an opportunity of preaching to his parishioners.
ON the 4th day of February, Bonner, bishop of London, came to the prison to degrade him; which when he had done, Mr. Saunders said to him, "I thank God I am none of your church."
THE day following in the morning, the sheriff of London delivered him to certain of the queen's guard, which were appointed to carry him to the city of Coventry, there to be burned. The first night they came to St. Alban's, where Mr. Grimoald (a man who had more store of good gifts, than of great constancy) did speak with him.
AFTER Mr. Saunders had given him a lesson meet for his lightness, he took a cup in his hand, and asked him if he would pledge him of that cup, of which he would begin to him. Grimoald, shewing by his shrugging and shrinking what he was, said, Of that cup which is in your hand I will pledge you: but of that other which you mean, I will not promise you. Well, said Mr. Saunders, my dear Lord Jesus Christ hath drunk to me of a more bitter cup than mine shall be, and shall I [...] pledge my most sweet Saviour? Yes, I hope.
WHEN they were arrived at Coventry, a poor shoemaker, who used to serve him with shoes, came to him, and said, O my good master, God strengthen and comfort you. Good shoemaker, (Mr. Saunders replied) and I desire thee to pray for me, for I am the most unfit man for this high office, that ever was appointed to it but my gracious God and dear Father is able to make me strong enough. The same night he was put into the common jail among other prisoners, where he slept little, but spent the night in prayer, and instructing of others.
THE next day, being the 8th of February, he was led to the place of execution in the park, without the city, going in an old gown and a shirt, bare-footed, and often times fell f [...]t on the ground, and prayed. When he was come nigh to the place, the officer appointed to see the execution done, said to Mr. Saunders, that he was one of them that marred the queen's realm with false doctrine and heresy, wherefore thou hast deserved death; but yet if thou wilt revoke thine heresies, the queen hath pardoned thee; if not, yonder fire is prepared for thee. To whom Mr. Saunders answered, It is not I, nor my fellow-preachers of God's truth that have hurt the queen's realm, but it is yourself, and such as you are, which have always resisted God's holy word; it is you who have and do marr the queen's realm. I do hold no heresies, but the doctrine of God, the blessed doctrine of Christ; that hold I, that believe I, that have I taught, and that will I never revoke. With that, this tormenter cried, Away with him. And away from him went Mr. Saunders, with a chearful courage, towards the fire. He fell on the ground, and prayed: he rose up again and took the stake to which he should be chained, in his arms, and kissed it, saying, Welcome the cross of Christ, welcome everlasting li [...]e: and being fastened to the stake, and fire put to him, full sweetly he slept in the Lord.
WELL might the apostle say, that if we only in th [...]s life have h [...]pe, we are of all men the most miserable. And what will the reader think, when he is told that this martyr was of a timid disposition? And yet here we see with what constancy he died. This is a strong proof that there must be [...]n almighty [Page 448] power, working through faith in the hearts of those who are punished for the truth.
MR. SAUNDERS often told his friends, that many would suffer, if ever Mary ascended the throne. He knew the temper of that princess, and probably it was that which made him expect sufferings. It is for the benefit of succeeding ages, that God gives strength to the heart of man to suffer. It is to promote many valuable purposes, by teaching us to set a proper value on the many national blessings we enjoy in the present age; and there is no way of making a better use of them, than to live in the practice of every virtuous and religious duty; to bless the Almighty for having delivered us from a worse than Egyptian darkness; for certainly popery, both in its spirit and tendency, can be called by no other name. We live in an age when, perhaps, our own wickedness has so much displeased God, that he has suffered the enemy to sow tares among us.
TO what other cause can we ascribe the increase of popery, which has not been confined to the capital, but has even extended to the remotest parts of the kingdom? In Scotland, where, about thirty years ago, there were not, perhaps, two hundred papists, there are now as many thousands.
WE must impute much of this to our own remissness in our duty. The popish priests use all the means they can think of to seduce our people, and they even have recourse to bribes. They get money from their gentry, part of which they give away to the poor; and those who are, in a manner, unprincipled in religion, will soon turn to any thing.
ANOTHER method used by them is, to spread amongst the poor small treatises on religious subjects; and these are generally filled with such bewildering notions, that the vulgar are easily caught in the s [...]are. Why should we not be as exact in preserving our people from these wolves in sheep's cloathing? Let us take an example from this pious martyr, whose life was a comment on his doctrine, and who lived as he preached. This will do more towards suppressing popery and deism, than the best discourses that can be formed.
SOME modern unbelievers have said, that the martyrs had good hearts, but confused heads; and to this they have added, that they were madmen. Supposing we should turn the argument against the deists, by begging the question, and asking them, whether Socrates, whom they so much glory in, was a madman, for asserting that there was but one divine being? For this crime (if it was one) Socrates suffered death, by being condemned to drink the hemlock. Now let any man read the Phaedon of Plato, and then let him answer whether Socrates did not die an enthusiast.
WHEN his friend came to visit him the day before he suffered, and told him the ship would return that day which would decide his fate: Socrates told him, that the ship would not arrive that day, for he had had a dream, which informed him of the contrary. Was not this a real sign of weakness, or rather of superstition? Nay, did not Socrates with his last words desire, that a cock should be offered up to Esculapius? Did ever a christian martyr make such a speech, when all the horrors of death presented themselves to his view? The answer is obvious, there is not an instance of it upon record. Thus the deist's argument falls to the ground.
IT is also said, they had good hearts, but their heads were not clear. Let us admit the assertion to be true, and let us consider the circumstances from which it took its rise. The whole truth will appear from a careful attention to the following things:
FIRST, Many of these men had, from motives of conscience, left that system of superstition in which they had been educated, and embraced the truth perhaps in a more violent manner than was consistent with that calmness of reflection, which must, at all times, conduct those to the knowledge of the truth, who would willingly obey the gospel. Under such circumstances men's minds must have been confused; they loved knowledge perhaps, but it was not in their power to find out the road that led towards it.
SECONDLY, It may be observed, that however desirable it may be to have a head well informed, it is much better to have a good heart. A man may [Page 444] have much knowledge, and at the same time be destitute of piety. There have been many learned [...] who were strangers to religion; there have been sufferers for the truth, who knew but little of what is commonly called human knowledge. Men may speak these things, at this distance of time, in what manner they please; but if they look back to history, they will be enabled to form more just opinions.
LASTLY, Let them consider the circumstances of the times: light breaking out from darkness is apt to bewilder the rational faculties; and men are frequently led into extravagancies, without any intention to deceive. Indeed, the martyrs knew they had nothing to expect but sufferings, and therefore they thought they might, with a becoming propriety, avow their sentiments. It was their duty to do so, and it will remain a monument of their everlasting honour, that they were sincere in all their declarations.
THIS may serve to shew, that all the objections which, from time to time, have been brought against the martyrs, are extremely insignificant, and not worthy of a serious answer. Let those who live in the present age emulate the conduct of these men, and let them never forget, that however respectful knowledge may be, yet piety is much better. Those who really love God, never make any display, in an ostentatious manner, of religion; but those who have no religion at heart, have generally a great deal of it in their mouths.
AND the better to understand what the grace of Christ worke [...] in his servants, and again, how weak man is in himself without the assistance of divine grac [...], we shall here relate a conversation which passed between Mr. Saunders, in the beginning of his troubles, and Dr. Pendleton; to which we shall su [...]join a few more letters of the Rev. Mr. Saunders, full of godly instruction and consolation.
A CONVERSATION between the Rev. Mr. LAURENCE SAUNDERS and Dr. PENDLETON, in the beginning of QUEEN MARY'S Reign.
AT the change of religion in this realm, and the beginning of queen Mary's reign, doctor Pendleton and Mr. Saunders, men known to the world, not only to be learned, but also earnest preachers of God's word in the time of blessed king Edward, met together in the country, where by occasion they were at that time, and as the case required (by reason of the persecution that was then at hand) sell to debate what was best for them to do in so dangerous a season. Whereunto Mr. Saunders, whether through very frailty of his weak fle [...], that was loth to taste the bitter cup, though his spirit were ready thereunto; or whether it were upon the mistrust of his own strength, that he might receive the greater power from above; or whether it were not for any one of the said causes alone▪ but for both together, or such like; seemed so fearful and feeble spirited, that he shewed himself in appearance, like either to fall quite from God and his word, which he had taught, or at least, to fly the land, rather than to stick to his profession. Whereas Dr. Pendleton took upon him to comfort Mr. Saunders all that he might, (who on the contrary side appeared not so big of body, but as bold in courage, nor so earnest before in the pulpit, but as ready now to seal the same with his blood) admonishing him, as he could do it very well, not to forsake cowardly his flock when he had most need [...]o defend them from the wolf; neither having put his hand to God's plough, to start now aside and give it over; nor yet (what is worst of all) having once forsaken Antichrist, to fall either himself, or suffer others by his example to return to their vomit again.
AFTER which, and such like persuasions, bidding him be of good comfort, and to take a good heart unto him; What! man, (said he) there is a great deal more cause in me to be afraid th [...]n in you, forasmuch as you see, I carry a greater mass of flesh upon my back than you do, and being so laden with a heavier lump of this vile carcase, ought therefore of nature to be more frail than you: and yet, said he, I will see the last drop of this grease of mine melted away, and the last particle of this flesh consumed to ashes, before I will forsake God and his truth. Whereunto the other answered but little, wishing that God would give him more strength than he then felt in himself, acknowledging his own weakness; but consented notwithstanding, though it were somewhat faintly, to join with him [Page 445] in the profession of the gospel, and so to go up to London, and set forth the same; whereupon they gave each other their hands.
NOW when they were come to London, behold, what a great change was there between these two persons! The poor, feeble, and faint-hearted Saunders, by the goodness of Almighty God, taking heart of grace to him, seeking the same in humility, boldly and stoutly confirmed his flock out of the pulpit, where his charge lay, mightily beating down Antichrist, and zealously preaching Christ his master, for which he afterwards suffered most willingly, as is before declared. Whereas, on the other side, Dr. Pendleton the proud (who as it appeared by the sequel, had been more stout in words than constant in deeds, and a greater boaster than a good warrior) no sooner came to London than he changed his mind, and played the apostate, preaching instead of sound doctrine nothing almost but errors and lies, advancing Antichrist, and overthrowing Christ with all his might: so his former boldness came to nothing, unless it were a contrary key, becoming of a faithful pastor, a false runagate; and of a true preacher, a sworn enemy to God's everlasting testament; to the great offence of his brethren, the hurt of his flock, and the utter undoing, without God's [...] mercy, of his own soul. Wherein is especially to be considered the deep and marvellous judgment of God, who as he can and doth make strong whom he pleaseth, when he seeth his time, and most commonly such as appear most feeble: so on the other hand, he throweth down others, seem they ever so stout, stand they ever so much in their own conceits. Wherefore let him that standeth take heed he fall not, and let us pray continually to Almighty God, though we have faith, that he will help and increase our faith, that in him it may be made strong, which of itself is so weak, that it is soon overthrown.
WHILE this good man was confined in prison, he did not pass his time in unfruitful idleness, but still from time to time did visit his friends, (as is said) and especially his wife, with many letters; some of which we thought not improper here to insert.
LETTER V. From the Rev. Mr. LAURENCE SAUNDERS, to Bishop FERRAR, Dr. TAYLOR, Mr. BRADFORD, and Mr. PHILPOT.
GRACE, mercy, and peace in Jesus Christ our Lord, &c. Good fathers, and dear brethren, be thankful unto our most gracious God, which hath preserved us, and shall (I doubt not) from blaspheming his blessed name: yea, not only that, but also "Out of the mouths of very babes and sucklings shall be set forth his praise." They offer us our liberty and pardon, so that we will rise with them into that faith which we with them were fallen from. Yes, or no, must be answered in haste. They will not admit any needful circumstances, but all (as heretofore) most detestable and abominable. Rise with them we must unto the unity. And pardon, I say, of me must not so dearly be purchased. A pardon I desire, to live with an unclogged conscience. The Donatists, they say, sought for such singularity, but they were not meet [...] live in a commonwealth, no more be you, as you shall shortly understand. Wherefore away with him: yea, the time was named within this se'nnight. There are twelve hours in the day. Death shall be welcome, say I, as being looked for long since; and yet to do justice ye were best, for Abel's blood cried, ye know what. The Spiri [...] of God be upon you, and save your honours. Thus departed I from them. Pray, pray. I am a child, I cannot speak. My brother Philpot shall shew you more herein. By him send me word what you have done. Farewel, and pray, pray. I would gladly meet with my good brother Bradford on the backside about eleven o'clock. Before that time I cannot start out, we have such out-walkers, but then will they be at dinner.
LETTER VI. From the Rev. Mr. LAURENCE SAUNDERS to his WIFE, and others of his Pastoral Flock, written in the Compter, the last day of January, 1555, after his Condemnation.
THE grace of Christ, with the consolation of the Holy Ghost, to the keeping of the faith and [...] [...]ood conscience, confirm, and keep you for ever vessels to God's glory. Amen.
OH! what worthy thanks can be given to our gracious God for his unmeasurable mercies plentifully poured upon us? And I most unworthy wr [...]ch cannot but p [...]r forth [Page 446] at this present, even from the bottom of my heart, the bewailing of my great ingratitude and unkindness towards so gracious a God and loving Father. I beseech you all, as for my other many sins, so especially for that sin of my unthankfulness; crave pardon for me in your earnest prayers, commending me to God's great mercies in Christ.
TO number these mercies in particular, were to number the drops of water which are in the sea, the sands on the shore, the stars in the sky. O my dear wife, and ye the rest of my friends, rejoice with me, I say rejoice with thanksgiving for this my present promotion, in that I am made worthy to magnify my God, not only in my life, by my stow mouth and uncircumcised lips, bearing witness unto his truth, but also by my blood to seal the same, to the glory of my God, and confirming of his true church: and as yet I testify unto you, that the comfort of my sweet Christ doth drive from my mind the fear of death. Bu [...] if Christ doth for my trial leave me alone a little to myself, alas! I know in what case I shall be then: but if for my proof he do so, yet I am sure he will not be long or far from me. He is a very tender-hearted Joseph; though he speak roughly to his brethren, and handle them hardly, yea, threaten grievous bondage to his best beloved brother Benjamin; yet can he not contain himself from weeping with us, and upon us. Such, such a brother is our Christ unto all. Wherefore hasten to go unto him as Jacob did with his sons and family, leaving their country and acquaintance. Yea, this our Joseph hath obtained for us, that Pharaoh the infidel shall minister unto us chariots, wherein at ease we may be carried to come unto him: as we have experienced how our adversaries do help us unto our everlasting bliss by their speedy dispatch: yea, and how all things have been helping hereunto; blessed be our God. Be not afraid. Fear rather the everlasting fire: fear the serpent which hath that deadly sting, of which by bodily death they shall be brought to taste which are not grafted in Christ, wanting faith and a good conscience, and so are not acquainted with Christ the killer of death. But oh, my dear wife and friends! we, we whom God hath delivered from the power of darkness, and hath translated into the kingdom of his dear Son, by putting off the old man, and by faith putting on the new, even our Lord Jesus Christ, his wisdom, holiness, righteousness, and redemption; we, I say, have to triumph against the terrible spiteful serpent the devil, sin, hell, death, and damnation. For Christ, our brazen serpent, hath pulled away the sting of this serpent, so that now we may boldly, in beholding it spoiled of its sting, triumph; and with our Christ and all his elect say, "Death where is thy sting? Hell, where is thy victory? Thanks be to God, who hath given us the victory, through our Lord Jesus Christ."
WHEREFORE be merry, my dear wife, and all my dear fellow heirs of the everlasting kingdom, always remember the Lord. Rejoice in hope, be p [...]tient in tribulation, continue in prayer; and pray for us now appointed to the slaughter, that we may be unto our heavenly Father a fat offering, and an acceptable sacrifice. I may hardly writ▪ to you. Wherefore let these few words be a witness of my commendations to you and all them which love us in the faith; and namely, unto my flock, among whom I am resident by God's providence, but as a prisoner.
AND although I am not so among them, as [...] have be [...], to preach to them out of a pulpit, yet doth God now preach unto them by me, by this my imprisonment and captivity which now I suffer among them for Christ's gospel's sake, bidding them b [...]ware of the Romish antichristian religion and kingdom, requiring and charging them to abide in the truth of Christ, which is shortly to be sealed with the blood of their pastor; who though unworthy of such a ministry, yet Christ thei [...] high pastor is to be regarded, whose truth hath been taught them by me, is witnessed by my chains, and shall be by my death, through the power of that high pastor. Be not careful, good wife, cast your care upon the Lord, and commend me unto him in repentant prayer, as I do you and our Samuel; whom, even at the stake, I will offer as myself unto God. Farewel all in Christ, in hope to be joined with you in joy everlasting. This hope is put up in my bosom, Amen, Amen. Pray, pray.
LETTER VII. To Mrs. LUCY HARRINGTON.
GRACE and mercy, &c. It happeneth oftentimes that abundance of matter bringeth with it much vehemency of friendly affection, maketh men dumb, and even then chiefly when there is most eager purpose of speaking, silence doth suppress, and causeth the party so affected imperfectly to express what he goeth about to utter. Such impediment by much matter, mingled with fervency of affection, feel I sometimes in myself, hindering the utterance, either by tongue or writing, of the abundance of the heart. The love of our most gracious God and heavenly Father, bestowed upon us in the merits of Christ our Saviour, who may, by conceit of mind, comprehend, passing indeed all understanding' Much less may the same by any means be expressly uttered. And as such heavenly blessings, which by faith we fetch from above, are inexplicable, so it is hard to utter, when the faithful are set o [...] fire by love, their readiness to reach forth and to give by charity, as by faith they have received. "But, alas! we carry this treasure in earthen vessels." Many times faith is feeble, and then love loseth her favour. Pray we therefore, Lord increase our faith, and love forthwith will be on fire. And immortal thanks be given unto our God, who in our Christ hath bestowed upon us the first fruits of his Spirit, who crieth in our hearts, Abba, Father. And, as St. Paul saith, "Seeing we have the sam [...] Spirit of [...]aith, according as it is written; I believed, and therefore have I spoken: we also believe, and therefore we speak." Yea, G [...]d knoweth, this Spirit putteth us in a mind to speak, but in attempting [Page 447] thereof we are driven with Moses to say, "O Lord, I am slow in speech and of uncircumcised lips; and with Jeremy, "O Lord, I cannot speak."
BUT though this infancy restraineth the opening of such abundance of heart, in my tender christian duty to be declared towards you, yet I beseech you, let this be settled in your understanding; that as St. Paul expresseth unto his Corinthians, they wer [...] in his heart either to live or to die, with many other such sayings uttered unto them and the Galatians, expressing his vehement affection towards them; so in some part I would be like affected towards all God's children, and especially towards you whom I know in Christ, and to whom I will not say how much I am indebted. I thank you for your great friendship and tender good will towards my wife: yea, that good gracious God recompense you, which may worthily with the more countervail the same, and fulfil that which lacketh of thankful duty in us. And because of that which heretofore I have conceived of you, and o [...] your more than natural love towards me and mine; I make myself thus bold to lay this burden upon you, even the care and charge of my said poor wife; I mean, to be unto her a mother and mistress to rule and direct her by your discreet counsel. I know she conceiveth of you the same that I do, and is thankful unto God for such a friend; and therefore I beseech you even for Christ's sake, put never from you this friendly charge over her, whether I live longer, or shortly depart. But to charge you otherwise, thanks be to God, neither I nor she have any such extreme need: if we had, I would be as bold with you [...] my own mother. I beseech you, give my hearty [...] unto Mr. Fitz [...] Williams, and my good lady, with thanks also for my poor wife and child: the Lord recompense them.
LETTER VIII. To his WIFE, exhorting her with him to commend their Child SAMUEL to the Blessing of GOD.
GRACE and comfort, &c. Wife, you shall do best not to come often unto the grate where the porter may see you. Put not yourself in danger where it needs not; you shall, I think, shortly come far enough into danger by keeping faith and a good conscience: which, dear wife, I trust you do not [...] to make reckoning and account upon, by exercising your inward man in meditation of God's most holy word, being the sustenance of the soul, and also by giving yourself to humble prayer, for these two things are the very means how to be made members of our Christ meet to inherit his kingdom.
DO this, dear wife, in earnest, and not leaving off, and s [...] we two shall with our Christ and all his chosen children, enjoy the merry w [...]rld in that everlasting immortality; whereas here will nothing else be found but extreme misery, even of them which most greedily seek this worldly wealth: and so, if we two continue God's children grafted in our Christ▪ the same God's blessing which we receive shall also settle upon our Samuel. Though we do shortly depart hence and leave the poor infant (to our seeming) at all adventures, yet shall he have our gracious God to be his God: for so hath he said, and he cannot lye; I will be thy God, saith he, and the God o [...] thy seed. Yea, if you leave him in the wilderness destitute of all help, being called of God to do his will, either to die for the confession of Christ, or any work of obedience; that God which heard the cry of the little poor infant of Hagar, Sarah's handmaiden, and did succour it, will do the like to your child, or any other fearing him, and putting your trust in him.
AND if we lack saith, as we do indeed many times, let us call for it, and we shall have the increase both of it and also of any other good grace needful for us; and be merry in God, in whom also I am very merry and joyful. O Lord, what great cause of rejoicing have we, to think upon that kingdom, which he vouchsafeth for his Christ's sake freely to give us, forsaking ourselves and following him▪ Dear wife, this is truly to follow him, even to take up the cross and follow him; and then as we suffer with him here, so shall we reign with him everlastingly, Amen.
LETTER IX. To his WIFE, Mr. HARRINGTON, and other FRIENDS.
GRACE and comfort, &c. Dear wife, rejoice in our gracious God, and his and our Christ; and give thanks most humbly and heartily to him for this day's work, that in any part I most unworthy wretch should be made worthy to bear witness unto his everlasting verity, which Antichrist with his main force, I perceive, and by most impudent pride and boasting will go about to suppress. Remember God always, my dear wife, and so shall God's blessing light upon you and your Samuel. O remember always my words for Christ's sake; be chearful, grudge not against God, and pray, pray. We are all merry [...] thanks be unto our God, who in his Christ hath given us great cause to be merry, by whom he hath prepared for us such a kingdom, and doth and will give unto us some little taste thereof, even in this life, and to all such as are desirous to take it. "Blessed (saith our Christ) are they which hunger and thirst after righteousness, for such shall be satisfied." Let us go▪ yea, let us run to seek such treasure, and that with whole purpose of heart to cleave unto the Lord, to find such riches in his heavenly word through his Spirit obtained by prayer. My dear friends and brethren, Mr. Harrington and Mr. Hurland, pray, pray. "The spirit is ready, but the flesh is weak." When I look upon myself, being astonished and confounded, what have I else to say but those words of Peter, "Lord, go from me, for I am a sinful man?" But then I feel that sweet comfort, "The [Page 448] word of the Lord is a lanthorn unto my feet, and a light unto my paths:" and this is my comfort in my trouble. Then am I bold with the same Peter to say, "Lord, to whom shall we go? Thou hast the words of everlasting life." This comfort have I, when the giver thereof doth give it. But I look for battles, which the root of unfaithfulness, which I feel in me, will most eagerly give unto my conscience, when we come once to the combat. We are (I think) within the sound of the trump of our enemies. Play ye that are abroad the part of Moses, "Praying in all places, lifting up pure hands:" and God's people shall prevail: yea, our blood shall be their perdition who do most triumphantly spill it, and we then being in the hands of our God, shall shine in his kingdom, and shall stand in great stedfastness against them which have dealt extremely with us: and when these our enemies shall thus see us, they shall be vexed with horrible fear, and shall wonder at the hastiness of the sudden health▪ and shall say with themselves, having inward sorrow and mourning for very anguish of mind: "Th [...]se are they whom we some time had in derision and jested upon: we fools thought their lives to be very madness, and their end to be without honour: but lo! how are they accounted among the children of God." The blessing of God be with you all, &c.
LETTER X. To his WIFE, a little before his Martyrdom.
GRACE and comfort in Christ, Amen. Dear wife, be merry in the mercies of our Christ, and also you my dear friends. Pray, pray for us every body. We are shortly to be dispatched hence unto our good Christ, Amen, Amen. Wife, I would have you send me my shirt, which you know whereunto it is consecrated. Let it be sewed down on both sides, and not open. O my heavenly Father, look upon me in the face of thy Christ, or else I shall not be able to abide thy countenance; such is my filthiness. He will do so, and therefore I shall not be afraid what sin, death, hell, and damnation can do against me, O wife, always remember the Lord. God bless you, yea, he will bless thee, good wife, and thy poor boy also: only cleave unto him, and he will give thee all things. Pray, pray, pray.
TO the foregoing letters of the Rev. Mr. Saunders, which were dispersed among the faithful congregation of Christ, we shall add two other letters, written by Mr. Edward Saunders, the justice, his brother, and sent to our martyr while in prison; to the intent that our readers may see, how in these two brethren, joined in consanguinity, but divided in religious sentiments, the word of the Lord was verified in them, which saith, "Brother shall [...] up and be against brother," &c.
LETTER I. From Justice SAUNDERS to his Brother, the Rev. Mr. LAURENCE SAUNDERS, prisoner in the Compter.
AFTER my most hearty commendations, these are to ascertain you, that I have spoken with Mr. Basset, who hath shewed me, that four pounds (all deductions being allowed) is the whole that hath come to his hands of the profit of the prebendary at York, the which you shall have, altho' as he thinketh, it was not due unto you by reason of your deprivation before it was due. As concerning your conscience in religion, I beseech God it may be lightened by the Holy Ghost, and that you also may have the grace of the Holy Ghost to follow the counsel of St. Paul to Timothy, ch. ii. "To handle rightly the word of truth." Wherein you dissenting from many holy and catholic men, especially in the sacrament, it maketh me in my conscience to condemn your's. For although I have not hitherto fancied to read Peter Martyr, and other such, &c. yet have I had great desire to see Theophylact and divers others of this sort and opinion▪ both notable and holy fathers, (if any credit be to be given to the writings of our ancient fathers before us) and surely the sentences and judgments of two or three of them have more confirmed my conscience, than three hundred of the Zuinglians, or as many Lutherans can or should do. Th [...] in haste, willing to relieve you, to the end you might convert, if you shall need towards your finding, if you shall require it of me, you shall unfeignedly find my money ready, as knoweth our Lord, who sends us all things good for us. Scribbled this Thursday by your brother and petitioner to God.
LETTER II. From the same to the [...]ame▪ wherein the Justice endeavours to gain over his Brother to Popery, by sending him the Meditations of St Bernard.
AS nature and brotherly love with godly charity requireth, I send you by these letters most hearty commendation, being sorry for your fault and disobedient handling of yourself towards my lord chancellor, who, I assure you, mindeth your good and preservation, if you can so consider and take it. I would be glad to know whether you have not had with you of late some learned men to talk with you by my lord chancellor's appointment, and how you can frame yourself to reform your error in the opinion of the most blessed and our most comfortable sacrament of the altar. Wherein I assure you, I was never in all my life better [Page 449] affected than I am at this present, using to my great comfort hearing of mass and somewhat before the sacrament time, the meditation of St. Bernard, set forth in the third leaf of this present book. The accustomable using whereof I am fully professed unto, during my life, and to give more faith unto that confession of holy Bernard, than to Luther, &c. or Latimer, &c. for that the antiquity, the universality of the open church, and the consent of all saints and doctors do confirm the same, ascertaining you, that I have been earnestly moved in my own conscience these ten or twelve days past, and also between God and myself, to move you to the same, most earnestly desiring you, and as you tender my natural, godly, and friendly love towards you, that you would read over this book this holy time, at my request, although you have already seen it, and let me know wherein you cannot satisfy your own conscience. Thus fare you well for this time.
CHAP. II. The LIFE and MARTYRDOM of JOHN HOOPER, Bishop of WORCESTER and GLOUCESTER, who was burned for maintaining and defending the TRUE RELIGION, February 9th, 1555.
JOHN HOOPER, student and graduate in the university of Oxford, after the study of the sciences, wherein he had abundantly profited and proceeded, was stirred with fervent desire to the love and knowledge of the scriptures. Growing more and more, by God's grace, in ripeness of spiritual understanding, and shewing withal some sparkles of his fervent spirit, being then about the beginning of the six articles, in the time of king Henry VIII. fell quickly into displeasure, and hatred of certain doctors at Oxford, who by and by began to stir coals against him, whereby, and especially by the procurement of Dr. Smith, he was compelled to quit the university; and removing from thence, was retained in the house of Sir Thomas Arundel, and there was his steward, till the time that Sir Thomas Arundel, having intelligence of his opinions and religion, which he in no case did favour, and yet exceedingly favouring the person and conditions of the man, found the means to send him with a message to the bishop of Winchester, writing his letter privily to the bishop, by conference of learning to do some good unto him, but in any case requiring him to send home his servant to him again.
WIN [...]H [...]STER, after long conference with Mr. Hooper, four or five days together, at length perceiving, that neither he could do that good which he thought to him, nor that he would take any good at his hand, according to Mr Arundel's request, he sent home his servant again, right-well commending his learning and wit, but yet bearing in his breast a grudge against Mr. Hooper.
NOT long after this, as malice is always working mischief, intelligence was given to Mr. Hooper to provide for himself, for danger was working against him: whereupon Mr. Hooper left Mr. Arundel's house, and borrowing a horse of a certain friend (whose life he had saved a little before from the gallows), took his journey to the sea-side to go to France, sending back the horse again by one, who indeed did not deliver him to the owner. Mr. Hooper being at Paris, tarried there not long, but in a short time returned to England again, and was retained by Mr. Sentlow, till the time [...]hat he was again molested and fought for; whereby he was compelled (under the pretence of being captain of a ship going to Ireland) to take to the seas, and so escaped (although not without extreme peril of drowning) thro' France, to the higher parts of Germany. Where, commencing acquaintance with learned men, he was by them friendly and [Page 450] lovingly entertained, both at Basil, and especially at Zurich, by Mr. Bullinger, being his singular friend. Where also he married his wife, who was a Burgonian, and applied very studiously to the Hebrew tongue.
AT length, when God saw it good to stay the bloody time of the six articles, and to give us king Edward to reign over this realm, with some peace and rest unto the church, amongst many other English exiles, who then repaired homeward, Mr. Hooper also, moved in conscience, thought not to absent himself, but seeing such a time and occasion, offered to help forward the Lord's work, to the uttermost of his ability. And coming to Mr. Bullinger, and other of his acquaintance in Zurich, (as duty required) to give them thanks for their singular kindness and humanity towards him many ways declared, with like humanity again purposed to take his leave of them at his departing, and so he did. Unto whom Mr. Bullinger (who had always a special favour to Mr. Hooper) spake on this wise; "Mr. Hooper, (saith he) although we are sorry to part with your company for our own cause, yet much greater cause have we to rejoice, both for your sake, and especially for the cause of Christ's true religion, that you shall now return out of long banishment into your native country again, where not only you may enjoy your own private liberty; but also the cause and state of Christ's church by you may fare the better, as we doubt not but it will. Another cause moreover why we rejoice with you and for you, is this; that you shall remove not only out of exile into liberty, but you shall leave here a barren, a four, and an unpleasant country, rude and savage, and shall go into a land flowing with milk and honey, replenished with all pleasure and fertility. Notwithstanding, with this our rejoicing one fear and care we have, le [...]t you being absent, and so far distant from us, or else coming to such abundance of wealth and felicity, in your new welfare and plenty of all things, and in your flourishing honours, where you shall come peradventure to be a bishop, and where ye shall find so many new friends, you will forget us your old acquaintances and well-wishers. Nevertheless, howsoever you shall forget and shake us off, yet this persuade yourself, that we will not forget our old friend and fellow Mr. Hooper. And if you will please not to forget us, then I pray let us hear from you."
WHEREUNTO Mr. Hooper answering again, first gave to Mr. Bullinger and the rest hearty thanks, for that their singular good will and undeserved affection, appearing not only now, but at all times towards him; declaring moreover, that as the principal cause of his removing to his country was the matter of religion; so touching the unpleasantness and barrenness of that country of their's, there was no cause therein why he could not find in his heart to continue all his life there, as soon as in any place in the world, and rather than in his own native country, if there were nothing else in his conscience that moved him so to do. And as touching the forgetting of his old friends, although, said he, the remembrance of man's country naturally doth delight him, neither could he deny but God had blessed his country of England with many great commodities; yet neither the nature of the country, nor pleasure of the commodities, nor newness of friends should ever induce him to the oblivion of such friends and benefactors, whom he was so entirely bound unto: and therefore you shall be sure, said he, from time to time to hear from me, and I will write unto you how it goeth with me. But the last news of all I shall not be able to write; for there, said he, (taking Mr. Bullinger by the hand) where I shall take most pains, there shall you hear of me to be burned to ashes; and that shall be the last news, which I shall not be able to write to you, but you shall hear of me, &c.
TO this also may be added another like prophetical demonstration, foreshewing the manner of his martyrdom wherewith he should glorify God, which was this: when Mr. Hooper being made bishop of Worcester and Gloucester, should have his arms given him by the herald, as the manner is here in England, every bishop to have his arms assigned unto him (whether by the appointment of Mr. Hooper, or by the herald, I have not certainly to say) but the arms which were to him allotted was this, A lamb in a fiery bush, and the sun beams from heaven descending down upon the lamb▪ rightly denoting, as it seemed, the order of his sufferings, which afterwards followed.
[Page 451]BUT to proceed: when Mr. Hooper had taken his farewel of Mr. Bullinger, and his friends in Zurich, he repaired again into England in the reign of king Edward the sixth, and coming to London, used continually to preach, most times twice, at least once every day.
IN his sermons, according to his accustomed manner, he corrected sin, and sharply inveighed against the iniquity of the world, and corrupt abuses of the church▪ the people in great flocks and companies daily came to hear his voice, as the most melodious sound and tune of Orpheus's harp, insomuch, that oftentimes when he was preaching, the church would be so full, that none could enter further than the doors thereof. In his doctrine he was earnest, in tongue eloquent, in the scriptures perfect, in pains indefatigable.
MOREOVER, besides his other gifts and qualities, this is in him to be admitted, that even as he began, so he continued unto his life's end. For neither could his labour and pains-taking break him, promotion change him, nor dainty fare corrupt him. His life was so pure and good, that no kind of slander (although some went about to revile him) could fasten any fault upon him. He was of body strong, his health whole and sound, his wit very pregnant, his invincible patience able to sustain whatsoever sinister fortune and adversity could do. He was constant of judgment, spare of diet, sparer of words, and sparest of time. In house-keeping very liberal, and sometimes more free than his living would extend unto. Briefly, of all those virtues and qualities required of St. Paul in a good bishop, in his epistle to Timothy, I know not one in this good bishop lacking. He bare in co [...] ance and talk always a certain reserve and [...] grace, which might peradventure be wished [...] time to have been a little more popular and vulgar-like i [...] him; but he knew what he had to do [...] himself.
ONCE an honest citizen, having in himself a certain conflict of conscence, came to his door for counsel, but being abashed at his austere behaviour, durst not come in, but departing, seeking remedy for his troubled mind at other men's hands, which he afterwards, by the help of Almighty God, did find and obtain. Therefore, in my judgment, such as are appointed and made governors over the flock of Christ, to teach and instruct them, ought so to frame their life, manners, countenance, and external behaviour, as neither to shew themselves too familiar and light, whereby to be brought into contempt; nor on the other side again, that they appear more lofty and rigorous, than appertaineth to the edifying the simple flock of Christ. Nevertheless, as every man hath his peculiar gift wrought in him by nature, so this disposition of fatherly gravity in this man neither was excessive, nor did he bear that personage that was in him, without great consideration. For it seemed to him peradventure, that this licentious and unbridled life of the common sort ought to be chastened, not only with words and discipline, but also with the grave and severe countenance of good men.
AFTER he had practised himself in this popular and common kind of preaching; at length, and that not without the great profit of many, he was called to preach before the king's majesty, and soon after made bishop of Gloucester by the king's commandment. In that office he continued two years, and behaved himself so well, that his very enemies (except it were for his good doings, and sharp correction of sin) could find no fault with him, and after that he was made bishop of Worcester.
BUT I cannot tell what sinister and unlucky contention concerning the ordering and consecration of bishops, and of their apparel, with such other like tri [...]es, began to disturb the good beginning of this bishop. For notwithstanding that godly reformation of religion that begun in the church of England, besides other ceremonies more ambitious than profitable, or tending to edification, they used to wear such garments and apparel as the popish bishops were wont to do: first a chymer [...], and under that a white [...]ochet, then a mathematical cap with four angels, dividing the whole world into four parts. These trifles, tending more to superstition than otherwise, as he could never abide, so in no wise could he be persuaded to wear them. For this cause he made supplication to the king's majesty, most humbly desiring his highness, either to discharge him of the bishopric, or else to dispense with him for such ceremonial orders. Whose petition [Page 452] the king granted immediately, writing his letter to the archbishop after this purport.
KING EDWARD VI. his LETTER to the Archbishop of CANTERBURY, and other Bishops.
RIGHT reverend father, and right trusty and well-beloved, we greet you well. Whereas we, by the advice of our council, have called and chosen our right well-beloved and well worthy, Mr. John Hooper, professor of divinity, to be our bishop of Gloucester, as well for his great knowledge, deep judgment, and long study both in the scriptures, and prophane learning, as also for his good discretion, ready utterance, and honest life for that kind of vocation: to the intent all our loving subjects, which are in his said charge, and elsewhere, might by his sound and true doctrine learn the better their duty towards God, their obedience towards us, and love towards their neighbours: from consecrating of whom we understand you do stay, because he would have you omit and let pass certain rites and ceremonies offensive to his conscience, whereby ye think ye should fall in premunire of laws; we have thought good, by the advice aforesaid, to dispense and discharge you of all manner of dangers, penalties, and forfeitures, you shall [...]un and be in any manner of way, by omitting any of the same. And these our letters shall be your sufficient warrant and discharge therefore.
- ED. SOMERSET
- W. WILTSHIRE
- W. NORTH
- W. PAGET
- AN. WINGFIELD
- N. WOOTON.
A LETTER from the Earl of WARWICK, to the Archbishop of CANTERBURY, to this effect, that Mr. HOOPER might not b [...] burdened with the Oath, used commonly in the Consecration of Bishops.
AFTER my most hearty commendations to your grace, these may be to desire the same, that in such reasonable things, wherein this bearer, my lord elect of Gloucester, craveth to be borne withal at your hands, you would vouchsafe to shew him your grace's favour, the rather at this my instance: which thing partly I have taken in hand by the king's majesty's own motion. The matter is weighed by his highness, none other but that your grace may easily condescend unto. The principal cause is, that you would not charge this said bearer with an oath burdensome to his conscience. And so for l [...]ck of time I commit your grace to the tuition of Almighty God. From Westminster, July 23, 1550.
BUT notwithstanding this grant of the king, and also the earl's letter aforesaid, the bishops still stood earnestly in defence of the aforesaid ceremonies, saying, it was but a small matter, and that the fault was in the abuse of the things, and not in the things themselves; adding moreover, that he ought not to be so stubborn in so light a matter, and that his wilfulness therein was not to be suffered.
TO be short, while both parties thus contended about this matter more than reason would, in the mean time occasion was given, as to the true christians to lament, so to the adversaries to rejoice. In conclusion, this theological contention came to this end, that, the bishops having the upper hand, Mr. Hooper was fain to agree to this condition, that sometimes he should in his sermon shew himself apparelled as the other bishops were. Wherefore, being appointed to preach before the king, as a new player in a strange apparel, he cometh forth on the stage. His upper garment was a long scarlet chymere down to the foot, and under that a white linnen rochet, that covered all his shoulders. Upon his head he had a geometrical, that is, a four-squared cap, albeit that his head was round. What cause of shame the strangeness hereof was that day to that good preacher, every man may easily judge. But this private injury and reproach, in respect of the public profit of the church, which he only sought, he bore and suffered patiently.
IT now remaineth to record the godly reconciliation of these good men, in time of persecution, as appeareth from the following letter, sent from bishop Ridley to the bishop of Gloucester, of which, as it was written in Latin, the following is a faithful translation into English.
A LETTER of RECONCILIATION from Bishop RIDLEY, to JOHN HOOPER, Bishop of GLOUCESTER.
TO my dear brother and reverend fellow elder in Christ, John Hooper, grace and peace. My dearly beloved brother and fellow elder, whom I reverence in the Lord, pardon me I beseech you, that hitherto since your captivity and mine, I have not saluted you by my letters: whereas I do indeed confess, I received from you (such was your gentleness) two letters at sundry times: but yet at such time as I could not be suffered to write to you again; or if I might, yet was I in doubt how my letters might safely [Page 453] come into your hands. But now, my dear brother, forasmuch as I understand by your words, which I have but superficially seen, that we thoroughly agree and wholly consent together in those things which are the grounds and substantial points of our religion, against which the world so furiously rageth in these our days, howsoever in time past by certain bye-matters and circumstances of religion, your wisdom and my simplicity (I grant) hath a little jarred, each of us following the abundance of his own sense and judgment; now, I say, be you assured, that even with [...] whole heart, God is my witness▪ in the bowels of Christ I love you in the truth and for the truth's sake, which abideth in us, and, as I am persuaded, shall by the grace of God, abide in us for evermore.
AND because the world, as I perceive, brother, ceaseth not to play his pageant, and busily conspireth against Christ our Saviour, with all possible force and power, exalting high things against the knowledge of God; let us join hands together in Christ, and, if we cannot overthrow, yet to our power, and as much as in us lieth, let us shake those high altitudes, not with carnal, but with spiritual weapons; and with [...]l, brother, let us prepare ourselves to the day of our dissolution, by the which, after the short time of this bodily affliction, by the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ we shall triumph together with him in eternal glory.
I pray you, brother, salute in my name your reverend fellow prisoner, and venerable father, D. C. by whom, since the first day that I heard of his most godly and fatherly constancy, in confessing the truth of the gospel, I have conceived great consolation and joy in the Lord. For the integrity and uprightness of that man, his gravity and innocency, all England, I think, hath known long ago. Blessed be God therefore, which in such abundance of iniquity and decay of all godliness, hath given unto us, in this reverend old age, such a witness for the truth of his gospel. Miserable and hard-hearted is he, whom the godliness and constant confession of so worthy, so grave, and innocent a man, will not move to acknowledge and confess the truth of God.
I do not now, brother, require you to write any thing to me again: for I stand much in fear, lest your letters should be intercepted before they can come to my hands. Nevertheless know you, that it shall be to me great joy to hear of your constancy and fortitude in the Lord's quarrel. And albeit I have not hitherto written unto you, yet have I twice, as I could, sent unto you my mind touching the matter which in your letters you required to know. Neither can I yet, brother, be otherwise persuaded: I see methinks so many perils, whereby I am earnestly moved to counsel you not to hasten the publishing of your works, especially under the title of your own name. For I fear greatly, lest by this occasion both your mouth should be stopped hereafter, and all things taken from the rest of the prisoners, whereby otherwise, if it so please God, they may be able to do good to many. Farewel in the Lord, my most dear brother; and if there be any more in prison with you for Christ's sake, I beseech you, as you may, salute them in my name. To whose prayers I do most humbly and heartily commend myself and my fellow-prisoners and concaptives in the Lord, and yet once again, and for ever in Christ, my most dear brother, farewel.
AFTER this discord, and not a little vexation about vestures, at length, Mr. Hooper entering into his diocese, did there employ his time which the Lord lent him under king Edward's reign, with such diligence, as may be a spectacle to all bishops who shall ever hereafter succeed him, not only in that place, but in whatsoever diocese through the whole realm of England: so careful was he in his cure, that he left neither pains untaken, nor ways unsought, how to train up the flock of Christ in the true word of salvation, continually labouring in the same. Other men commonly are wont, for lucre or promotion's sake, to aspire to bishoprics, some hunting for them, and some purchasing or buying them, as men use to purchase lordships; and when they have them, are loth to leave them, and thereupon also loth to commit that thing by worldly laws, whereby to lose them.
TO this so [...] of men, Dr. Hoop [...]r w [...] quite contrary, who abhorred nothing more [...], labouring always to sa [...]e and [...]eserve the [...] of his flock; who, being bishop [...] two dioceses, [...] and guided either of then and [...] though he had in charge but one fa [...]ily [...] his houshold, no gardener in his garden, nor husbandman in his vineyard, was more or better occupied, than he in his diocese amongst his flock, going about his towns and villages in teaching and preaching to the people there. The time that he had to spare from preaching, he bestowed either in hearing public causes, or else in private study, prayer, and visiting of schools: with his continual doctrine he adjoined due and discreet correction, not so much severe to any, as to those who for abundance of riches and wealthy state, thought they might do what they pleased. And doubtless he spared no kind of people, but was indifferent to all, as well rich as poor, to the great shame of many in th [...]se days; whereof we see so many addicted to the [Page 454] pleasing of the great and rich, that in the mean time they have no regard to the meaner sort, whom Christ hath bought as dearly as the other. But to return to Dr. Hooper, whose life was such, that [...]o the church and all churchmen, it might be a light and example, to the rest a perpetual lesson and sermon. Finally, how virtuous and good a bishop he was, you may conceive and know evidently by this, that even as he was hated by none but of them who were evil, yet the worst of them all could not reprove his life in any one particular. Nor was this good bishop less exemplary in his private, than in his public character. At home, in his domestic concerns, he exhibited an example of a worthy prelate's life; for he bestowed the most part of his care upon the flock and congregation of Chri [...]t, for which also he spent his blood: yet nevertheless there was nothing wanting in him, [...]o bring up his own children in learning and good manners; insomuch that it is difficult to say, wheth [...] [...] deserved m [...]e praise for his fatherly usage at [...]ome, or for his public conduct abroad. For every-where he kept one religion in one uniform doctrine and integrity. So that if you entered into the bishop's pa [...]ce, you would suppose yourself to have entered into some church or temple. In every corner thereof there was the beauty of virtue, good example, honest conversation, and reading of the holy scriptures. There was not to be seen in his house any courtly rioting or idleness; no pomp, no dishonest word, no swearing, could there be heard. As to the revenues of both his bishopri [...]s, if any thing surmounted thereof, he saved nothing, but bestowed it in hospitality. Twice I was (says Mr. Fox) in his house in Worcester, where, in his common-hall, [...] saw a table spread with good store of meat, and beset full of beggars and poor people: and I asking his servants what this meant, they told me, that every day their lord and master's manner was, to have at dinner a certain number of the poor of said city by course, who were served by four at a mess, with wholesome me [...]ts: and when they were served, (being before examined by him or his deputies, of the Lord's prayer, and the articles of their faith, and ten commandments) then he himself sat down to dinner, and not before. In this manner Dr. Hooper executed the office of a most careful and vigi [...]t pastor, for the space of two years and more, so long as the state of religion in king Edward [...] time did safely flourish and take place: and would to God th [...] all other bishops would use the like diligence, care, and observance in their function. After this, in the reign of queen Mary, religion being subverted and changed, this good bishop was one of the first who was sent for by a pursuivant to be at London; and that for two causes:
FIRST, To answer to Dr. Heath, then appointted bishop of that diocese, who was deprived thereof in king Edward's days, for being a papist.
SECONDLY, To render an account to Dr. Bonner, bishop of London, for that he in king Edward's time was one of his accusers, in that he shewed himself not conformable to such ordinances as were prescribed to him by the king and his council, openly at St. Paul's Cross. And although the said bishop Hooper was not ignorant of the evils which should happen towards him, (for he was admonished by certain of his friends to get away, and shift for himself) yet he would not prevent them, but tarried still, saying, "Once did I flee, and take me to my feet; but now, because I am called to this place and vocation, I am thoroughly persuaded to tarry, and to live and die with my sheep."
WHEN at the day of his appearance, the [...] September, he was come to London, before he could see Dr. Heath and Dr. Bonner, he was intercepted, and commanded, violently, against his will, to appear before the queen and her council, to answer to certain bonds and obligations, wherein they said he was bound unto her. And when he came before them, Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, received him very opprobriously, railing, and rating of him, and accused him of his religion. He again freely and boldly answered, and cleared himself. But he was commanded to ward, (it being declared unto him at his departure, that the cause of his imprisonment was only for certain sums of money, for which he was indebted to the queen, and not for religion). This, how false and untrue it was, shall in its place mo [...]e plainly appear.
THE next year, being March 19, 1554, he was [Page 455] called again to appear before Winchester, and others of the queen's commissioners: where, what for the bishop, and what for the unruly multitude, when he could not be permitted to plead his cause, he was deprived of his bishoprics. Which how, and in what order it was done, may here be seen from the testimony and report of one, who being present at the doing, committed the same to writing.
The REPORT of a PERSON of good credit, declaring the cause of depriving DR. JOHN HOOPER, Bishop of GLOUCESTER and WORCESTER, of his Bishoprics, March 19, 1554.
FORASMUCH as a rumour in spread abroad of the conversation at my lord chancellor's, between him with other commissioners there appointed, and Dr. Hooper, quite contrary to the truth, and therefore to be judged rather to be risen of malice, for the discrediting of the truth by false suggestions and evil reports, than otherwise: I thought it my duty, being present thereat myself, in writing to set forth the whole effect of the same; partly that the verity thereof may be known to doubtful people; and partly also to advertise them, how uncharitably Dr. Hooper was handled at their hands, who with all humility used himself towards them, desiring, that with patience he might have been permitted to speak: so that had I been in a doubt, which of these two religions to have credited, either that set forth by the king's majesty that is dead, [...] else that now maintained by the queen's maje [...]y▪ their irreverent behaviour towards Dr. Hooper, would have moved [...]e more to credit his doctr [...]e, than that which they with railing and cruel word [...] defended, considering that Christ was so handled before. And that this which I have written here▪ was the effect of their discourse, as I acknowledge it to be true myself, so I appeal to all the hearers' consciences who were then present (so they put affection away) for the witness of the same.
The FIRST EXAMINATION of Bishop HOOPER, before the Bishops of WINCHESTER, LONDON, DURHAM, LANDA [...]F, and CHICHESTER, who were appointed Commissioners; according to the Report of the above-mentioned good man.
AT Dr. Hooper's coming in, the lord chancellor asked whether he was married.
Yes, my lord, and will not be unmarried, till death unmarry me.
That is matter enough to deprive you.
It is not, my lord, except you do against the law.
THE matter concerning marriage was no more talked of then for some time: but as well the commissioners, as such as stood by, began to make such outcries, and laughed, and used such gestures as were unseemly for the place, and for such a matter. Dr. Day, bishop of Chichester, called bishop Hooper hypocrite, with vehement words, and scornful countenance. Bishop Tonstall called him beast; so did Smith, one of the clerks of the council, and several others that stood by. At length the bishop of Winchester said, that all m [...]n might live chaste who would, and brought in this text, "There are those that have become [...] for the kingdom of heaven," Matt. xix.12.
BISHOP HOOPER said, that text proved not that all men could live chaste, but such to whom it was given; and read the context that goeth before. But there was a clamour and cry, mocking and scorning, with calling him beast, that the text could not be examined. Then bishop Hooper said, that it did appear by the old canons, that marriage was not forbidden unto priests, and named the decrees. But the bishop of Winchester sent for another part, namely, the Clementines, or the Extravagants▪ But bishop Hooper said, that book was not i [...] which he named.
THE bishop of Winchester replied, You shall not have any other, until you be judged by this. And then began such a noise, tumult, and sp [...]king together of a great many that favoured not the cause, that nothing was done or spoke orderly or charitably. Afterwards, judge Morgan began to rail at bishop Hooper a long time, with many opprobrious and foul words of his doing at Gloucester, in punishing of men, and said, there was never such a tyrant as he was. After that, Dr. Day, bishop of Chichester said, that the [...] of Ancyra, which was before the council of Nice, was against the marriage of priests.
[Page 456]UPON which the lord chancellor cried out, and many with him, that bishop Hooper had never read the councils.
YES, my lord, said he, and my lord of Chichester, Dr Day, knoweth, that the great council of Nice, by the means of one Paphnutius, decreed, That no minister should be separated from his wife. But such clamours and cries were used, that the Nice was not attended to.
AFTER long brutish talk, Tonstall, bishop of Durham, asked bishop Hooper, whether he believed the corporal presence of the sacrament? Who said plainly, that there was none such, neither of the council did he believe any such thing.
THEN the bishop of Durham would have read out of a book, (what book it was I cannot tell) but there was such a noise and confused talk on ev [...]ry side, that he did not read. Then the bishop of Winchester asked Dr. Hooper, What authority moved him not to believe the corporal presence? He said, the authority of God's word, and alledged this text, "Whom heaven must hold until the latter day." But the bishop of Winchester would have made that text to serve nothing for his purpose, and said, he might be in heaven, and in the sacrament also.
DR. HOOPER would have opened the text, but all those that stood next about the bishop prevented his speaking with clamours and cries, so that Dr. Hooper was not permitted to say any thing against the bishop. Whereupon they bade the notaries write, That he was married, and said, that he would not go from his wife; and that he believed not in the corporal presence in the sacrament; wherefore he was worthy to be deprived of his bishopric.
THIS is the truth of the matter (as far as I can remember) of the confused and troublesome conversation between them, and except hasty and uncharitable words, it is the whole of their discourse at that time.
An ACCOUNT of the severe TREATMENT of Bishop HOOPER, during near eighteen months confinement in the FLEET, written with his own hand, January 7, 1554.
THE first of September 1553, I was committed unto the Fleet, from Richmond, to have the liberty of the prison; and within six days after I paid five pounds sterling to the warden for fees, for my liberty; who immediately upon payment thereof, complained unto Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, and so I was committed to close prison one quarter of a year in the Tower-chamber of the Fleet, and used extremely ill. Then by the means of a good gentlewoman, I had liberty to come down to dinner and supper, not suffered to speak with any of my friends: but as soon as dinner and supper were done, to repair to my chamber again. Notwithstanding, whilst I came down thus to dinner and supper, the warden and his wife picked quarrels with me, and complained untruly of me to their great friend the bishop of Winchester.
AFTER one quarter of a year and somewhat more, [...]a [...]ington the warden and his wife, fell out with [...] for the wick [...]d mass: and thereupon the warden refor [...] to the bis [...] [...] Winchester, and obtained to put me into the wards where I have continued a long time, having nothing appointed to me for my bed, but a little p [...]d of straw and a rotten covering, with a tick and a few f [...]thers therein, the chamber being vile and stinking, until by God's means good people sent me bedding to lie on. On one side of which prison, is the sink and filth of the house, and on the other the town ditch, so that the stench of the house hath infected me with sundry diseases.
DURING wh [...]ch time I have been sick, and the doors, bars, hasp [...], and chains being all closed, and made fast upon me, I have mourned, called and cried for help; but the warden when he hath known me many times ready to die, and when the poor men of the wards have called to help me, hath commanded the doors to be kept fast, and charged that none of his men should come at me, saying, Let him alone, it were a good riddance of him. And, amongst many other times, he did thus October 18, 1553▪ as many can witness.
I paid always like a baron to the said warden, as well in fees, as for my board, which was twenty shillings a weak, besides my man's table, until I was wrongfully deprived of my bishoprics, and since that time, I have paid him as the best gentlemen doth in his house; yet hath he used me worse, and more vilely, than the veriest slave that ever came to the hall commons, (common side of the prison).
THE said warden hath also imprisoned my man, William Downton, and stripped him out of his clothes to search for letters, and could find none, but only a little remembrance of good people's names, that gave me their aims to relieve me in prison; and to undo them also, the warden [Page 457] delivered the same bill unto the said Stephen Gardiner, God's enemy and mine.
I have suffered imprisonment almost eighteen months, my goods, my livings, friends, and comfort taken from me; the queen owing me, by just account, fourscore pounds or more. She hath put me in prison, and giveth nothing to keep me, neither is there suffered any one to come at me, whereby I might have relief. I am with a wicked man and woman, so that I see no remedy (saving God's help, but I shall be cast away in prison before I come to judgment. But I commit my just cause to God, whose will be done, whether it be by life or death,
Second Examination of Dr. JOHN HOOPER, Bishop of Gloucester and Worcester, before the intolerant GARDINER, Bishop of Winchester.
THE twenty-second of January, 1555▪ Babington, the warden of the Fleet, was commanded to bring Mr. Hooper before the bishop of Winchester, with other bishops and commissioners at the said Winchester's house, at St. Mary Overy's: where the bishop of Winchester, in the name of himself and the rest, moved Mr. Hooper earnestly to forsake the evil and corrupt doctrine (as he termed it) preached in the days of king Edward the sixth, and to return to the unity of the catholic church, and to acknowledge the pope's holiness to be head of the same church, according to the determination of the whole parliament, promising, that as he himself, with other his brethren, had received the pope's blessing, and the queen's mercy; even so mercy was ready to be shewed to him and others, if he would arise with them, and condescend to the pope's holiness.
BISHOP HOOPER answered, That forasmuch as the pope taught doctrines altogether contrary to those of Christ, he was not worthy to be accounted as a member of his church, much less to be head thereof; wherefore he would in no wise condescend to any such usurped jurisdiction, neither esteemed he the church, whereof they call him head, to be the catholic church of Christ: for the church only heareth the voice of her spouse Christ, and flieth strangers. Howbeit (saith he) if in any point to me unknown, I have offended the queen's majesty, I shall most humbly submit myself to her mercy, if mercy may be had with safety of conscience, and without the displeasure of God.
ANSWER was made, that the queen would shew no mercy to the pope's enemies. Whereupon Babington was commanded to carry him to the Fleet again: who did so, and shifted him from his former chamber into another, near to the warden's own chamber, where he remained six days: and in the mean time his former chamber was searched by Dr. Martin and others, for writings and books, which Dr. Hooper was thought to have wrote, but none was found.
Third Examination of Bishop HOOPER, before the Bishop of Winchester, and other Commissioners.
JANUARY 28th, the bishop of Winchester, and other commissioners sat in judgment at St. Mary Overy's, where bishop Hooper appeared before them in the afternoon, and there, after much reasoning and disputation, he was commanded aside, till the Rev. Mr. Rogers (who was then come) had been likewise examined. Examinations being ended, the two sheriffs of London were commanded, about four o'clock, to carry them to the Compter in Southwark, there to remain till to-morrow at nine o'clock, to see whether they would relent and come home again to the catholic church. So bishop Hooper went before, with one of the sheriffs, and Mr. Rogers came after with the other; and being out of the church door, Dr. Hooper looked back, and stayed a little till Mr. Rogers drew near, unto whom he said, Come brother Rogers, must we two take this matter first in hand, and begin to fry these faggots? Yes, sir, said Mr. Rogers, by God's grace. Doubt not, said Dr. Hooper, but God will give strength. So going forwards, there was such a press of people in the streets, who rejoiced at their constancy, that they had much ado to pass.
BY the way, the sheriff said to the bishop, I wonder you was so hasty and quick with my lord chancellor, and did use no more patience: he answered, Mr. Sheriff, I was nothing at all impatient, although I was earnest in my master's cause, and it standeth me so in hand, for it goeth upon life and death, not the life and death of this world only, but also of the [Page 458] world to come. Then they were committed to the keeper of the Compter, and appointed to separate chambers, with command that they should not be suffered to speak one with another, neither any other permitted to come to them that night.
UPON the next day following, January 29, at the hour appointed, they were brought again by the sheriffs before the said bishop and commissioners in the church, where they were the day before. And after long and earnest talk, when they perceived bishop Hooper would by no means condescend unto them, they condemned him to be degraded, and read unto him his condemnation. That done, the Rev. Mr. Rogers was brought before them, and treated in like manner; and both were delivered to the secular power, the two sheriffs of London, who were ordered to carry them to the Clink, a prison not far from the bishop of Winchester's house, and there to remain till night.
WHEN it was dark, bishop Hooper was led by one of the sheriffs, with many bills and weapons, through the bishop of Winchester's house, and over London-bridge, through the city to Newgate, and by the way some of the serjeants were sent before, to put out the costermongers' candles, who used to sit with lights in the streets: either fearing, that the people would have made some attempt to have taken him away from them by force, if they had seen him go to that prison; or else, being burdened with an evil conscience, they thought darkness to be a most fit season for such a business.
BUT notwithstanding this device, the people having some foreknowledge of his coming, many of them came forth to their doors with lights, and saluted him, praising God for his constancy in the true doctrine which he had taught them, and desiring God to strengthen him in the same to the end. The bishop required the people to make their earnest prayers to God for him, and so went through Cheapside to the place appointed, and was delivered as close prisoner to the keeper of Newgate, where he remained six days, nobody being permitted to come to him, or talk with him, saving his keepers, and such as should be appointed thereto.
DURING this time, Bonner, bishop of London, and others at his appointment, as Fecknam, Chedsey, Harpsfield, &c. resorted several times unto him, to try if, by any means, they could persuade him to relent, and become a member of their antichristian church. All the ways they could devise, they attempted. For, besides the disputations and allegations of testimonies of the scriptures, and of ancient writers wrested to a wrong sense, according to their accustomed manner; they used also all outward gentleness and significations of friendship, with many great promises of worldly wealth; not omitting also most grievous threatenings, if with gentleness they could not prevail; but they found him always the same man, stedfast and immoveable. When they perceived that they could by no means reclaim him to their purpose, with such persuasions and offers as they used for his conversion, then went they by false rumours and reports of recantations (for it is well known that they and their servants did first spread it abroad) to bring him, and the doctrine of Christ which he professed, in discredit with the people. Which being thus spread abroad, and believed by some of the weaker sort, by reason of the often resort of the bishop of London and others, it increased more, and at last came to bishop Hooper's ears, who was greatly grieved thereat, that the people should give credit to such false rumours, having so simple a ground; as may appear by the following letter, which he wrote upon that occasion.
A LETTER, From Bishop HOOPER, concerning false Rumours spread abroad of his Recantation.
THE grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with all them, who unfeignedly look for the coming of our Saviour Christ. Amen.
DEAR brethren and sisters in the Lord, and my fellow-prisoners for the cause of God's gospel, I do much rejoice and give thanks unto God for your constancy and perseverance in afflictions, unto whom I wish continuance unto the end. And as I do rejoice in your faith and constancy in afflictions that be in prison; even so do I mourn and lament to hear of our dear brethren that yet have not felt such dangers for God's truth, as we have and do feel, and are daily likely to suffer more, yea, the very extreme and vile death [Page 459] of the fire: yet such is the report abroad, (as I am credibly informed) that I John Hooper, a condemned man for the cause of Christ, should now after sentence of death, (being prisoner in Newgate, and looking daily for execution) recant and abjure that which heretofore I have preached. And this talk ariseth from this, that the bishop of London and his chaplains resort unto me. Doubtless, if our brethren were as godly as I could wish them, they would think, that in case I did refuse to talk with them, they might have just occasion to say that I was unlearned, and durst not speak with learned men, or else proud and disdained to speak with them. Therefore to avoid just suspicion of both, I have, and do daily speak with them when they come, not doubting but they report that I am neither proud nor unlearned. And I would wish all men to do as I do in this point. For I fear not their arguments, neither is death terrible unto me, praying you to make true report of the same, as occasion shall serve; and that I am more confirmed in the truth which I have heretofore preached by their coming.
THEREFORE, you that may send to the weak brethren, pray them that they trouble me not with such reports of recantations as they do. For I have hitherto left all things of the world, and suffered great pains and imprisonment, and I thank God I am as ready to suffer death, as a mortal man can be. It were better for them to pray for us, than to credit or report such rumours that are untrue. We have enemies enough of such as know not God truly. But yet the false report of weak brethren is a double cross. I wish you eternal salvation in Jesus Christ, and also require your continual prayers, that he which hath begun in us, may continue it to the end.
I have taught the truth with my tongue, and with my pen heretofore, and hereafter shortly shall confirm the same by God's grace with my blood. From Newgate, Febr. 2, 1555.
MONDAY morning, Bonner, bishop of London, came to Newgate, and degraded bishop Hooper; the sentence of his degradation here followeth.
The Degradation of Dr. HOOPER, Bishop of Gloucester and Worcester.
IN the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. Amen. Whereas by a definitive sentence from the reverend father in Christ, Stephen, by divine permission, lord bishop of Winchester, against you John Hooper, presbyter of his jurisdiction, on account of heresy and offence notoriously committed within his diocese of Winchester, and of late j [...]stly and legally proved; it plainly appears to us, Edmund, bishop of London, that you the aforesaid J [...]hn Hooper have been and still continue to be an open, obstinate, and incorrigible heretic; and it also appears by the aforesaid sentence, that you have been declared and pronounced an heretic of this sort, and have likewise incurred the sentence of the greater excommunication; and it plainly and fully appears that you are to be deposed and degraded from your order, and for these your demerits are to be delivered to the secular power, according to the tenor of the aforesaid sentence, to which we refer ourselves in this affair. We therefore, the aforesaid Edmund, bishop of London, as it concerns us and the university to do our alternate endeavours, in whose diocese you John Hooper have committed the same heresy then, and often times both before and after; for these, I say, and the aforesaid considerations, and that we may execute the aforesaid sentence in a better and more efficacious manner, have thought fit to proceed to the actual degradation of you the aforesaid John Hooper, (your crime and justice so requiring) and so we do really proceed according to the direction of the law, and the laudable custom of former times, that we may rightly and legally [...]eliver you to the secular power, who are unwilling to continue in the pale of the church; and that this ought to be done, we do by these presents declare and pronounce in this our sentence.
AFTER the sentence of degradation thus declared, now let us see the form and manner of their degrading, which here also followeth. But first is to be no [...]ed, that they, degrading this blessed bishop, did not proceed against him as a bishop, but only as against a priest, as they termed him: for such as he was, these Baalamites accounted no bishop.
The Form and Manner of the said Degradation.
THE fourth day of February, the year abovementioned, in the chapel of Newgate, Gardiner, bishop of London, there sitting with his notary and several other witnesses, Alexander Andrew the gaoler came in, bringing with him bishop Hooper and the Rev. Mr. Rogers, being condemned before by the lord chancellor, where the said bishop of London, at the request of the bishop of Winchester, proceeded to the degradation of Mr. Hooper and Mr. Rogers, after this form and manner: first, he put upon him all the vestures and ornaments belonging to a priest, with all other things to the same order apper [...]aining, as though (being revested) they should solemnly execute their office. They b [...]ing thus apparelled and revested, the bishop beginneth to pluck off, first the outermost vesture, and so by degree and order coming down to the lowest vesture, which they had only in taking Benet and Collet; and so being stript and deposed, he deprived them of all order, benefit, and privilege belonging to the clergy; and consequently that being done, pronounced, decreed, and declared that the said parties so d [...]gr [...]ded, to be given personally to the secular power▪ as the [Page 460] sheriffs being for that year, Mr. David Woodrooffe, and Mr. William Chester; who receiving first the Rev. Mr. Rogers at the hands of the bishop, had him away with them, bringing him to the place of execution where he suffered. The witnesses there present were Mr. Harpsfield, archdeacon of London, Robert Cosin, and Robert Willerton, canons St. Paul's, Thomas Montague, and George How, clerks, Tristram Swadock, and Richard Clumney, sumner, &c.
THE same Monday at night, February 4, his keeper gave the bishop a hint that he should be sent to Gloucester to suffer death, whereat he rejoiced very much, lifting up his eyes and hands unto heaven, and praising God that he saw it good to send him amongst the people, over whom he was pastor, there to confirm with his death the truth which he had before taught them; not doubting but the Lord would give him strength to perform the same to his glory: and immediately he sent to his servant's house for his boots, spurs, and cloak, that he might be in readiness to ride when he should be called.
THE next day following, about four o'clock in the morning, before day, the keeper with others came to him and searched him, and the bed wherein he lay, to see if he had written any thing, and then he was led by the sheriffs of London, and their officers, from Newgate to a place appointed, not far from St. Dunstan's church in Fleet-street, where six of the queen's guard were appointed to receive, to carry him to Gloucester, there to be delivered unto the sheriff, who with the Lord Shandois, Mr. Wicks, and other commissioners, were appointed to see execution done. Which guard brought him to the Angel, where he brake his fast with them, eating his meat at that time more liberal than he had used to do a good while before. About break of day he leaped chearfully on horseback without help, having a hood upon his head, under his hat, that he should not be known, and so he took his journey joyfully towards Gloucester; and by the way the guard inquired of him, where he was accustomed to bait or lodge, but always carried him to another inn.
ON the Thursday following, he came to a town in his diocese called Cirencester, 15 miles from Gloucester, about eleven o'clock, and there dined at a woman's house who had always hated the truth, and spoken all the evil she could of bishop Hooper. This woman, perceiving the cause of his coming, shewed him all the friendship she could, and lamented his case with tears, confessing that she before had often reported, that if he were put to the trial, he would not stand to his doctrine.
AFTER dinner he rode forwards, and came to Gloucester about five o'clock, and a mile without the town was much people assembled, who cried and lamented his state; insomuch that one of the guard rode post into the town, to require aid of the mayor and sheriffs, fearing lest he should have been taken from them. The officers and their retinue repaired to the gate with weapons, and commanded the people to keep their houses, &c. but there was no man that once gave any signification of a rescue or violence. He lodged at one Ingram's house in Gloucester, and that night (as he had done all the way) he did eat his meat quietly, and slept his first sleep soundly, as it was reported by the guard and others. After his first sleep, he continued in prayer until morning; and all the day, except a little time at meals, and when conversing with such as the guard permitted to speak to him, he spent in prayer.
SIR Anthony Kingston, at one time Dr. Hooper's good friend, was appointed by the queen's letters to attend at his execution. As soon as he saw the bishop, he burst into tears. At first sight, Dr. Hooper did not know him; the knight therefore addressing the bishop, said, "Why, my lord, do you not know me, an old friend of your's, Anthony Kingston?"
YES, sir Anthony Kingston, I do know you well, and am glad to see you in health, and do praise God for the same.
B [...]T I am sorry to see you, my lord, in this case; for as I understand, you are come hither to die. But, alas▪ consider that life is sweet, and death is bitter. Therefore seeing life may be had, desire to live; for life hereafter may do good.
INDEED it is true Mr. Kingston, I am come hithe [...] to end this life, and to suffer death here, because I will not gainsay the truth that I have heretofore [Page 461] taught amongst you in this diocese, and elsewhere; and I thank you for your friendly counsel, although it be not so friendly as I could have wished it. True it is, that death is bitter, and life is sweet: but, alas! consider that the death to come is more bitter, and the life to come is more sweet. Therefore for the desire and love I have to the one, and terror and fear of the other, I do not so much regard this death, nor esteem this life, but have settled myself, through the strength of God's holy Spirit, patiently to pass through the torments and extremities of the fire now prepared for me, rather than to deny the truth of his word, desiring you and others, in the mean time, to commend me to God's mercy in your prayers.
WELL, my lord, returned sir Anthony, then I perceive there is no remedy, and therefore I will take my leave of you: and I thank God that ever I knew you, for God did appoint you to call me, being a lost child: and by your good instructions, where before I was both an adulterer and a fornicator, God hath brought me to the forsaking and detesting of the same.
IF you have had the grace so to do, I do highly praise God for it: and if you have not, I pray God you may have, and that you may continually live in his fear. After these and many other words, they took leave of each other, Mr. Kingston with bitter tears, Dr. Hooper with tears also trickling down his cheeks. At his departure, bishop Hooper told him, that all the troubles he had sustained in prison, had not caused him to utter so much sorrow.
THE same day in the afternoon, a blind boy, after long intercession made to the guard, obtained leave to be brought into Dr. Hooper's presence. The same boy not long before had suffered imprisonment at Gloucester for confessing of the truth. Dr. Hooper, after he had examined him of his faith, and the cause of his imprisonment, beheld him stedfastly, and (the water appearing in his eyes) said unto him, "Ah! poor boy, God hath taken from thee thy outward sight, for what reason he best knoweth: but he hath given thee another sight much more precious, for he hath endued thy soul with the eye of knowledge and faith. God give thee grace conti [...]nually to pray unto him, that thou lose not that sight, for then wouldst thou be blind both in body an soul."
AFTER him another came, whom the bishop knew to be a papist, and a wicked man, who appeared to be sorry for Dr. Hooper's troubles, saying, Sir, I am sorry to see you thus. To see me! Why art thou sorry? To see you (said the other) in this case▪ for I hear say, you are come hither to die. Be sorry for thyself, man, (said Dr. Hooper) and lament thine own wickedness; for I am well, I thank God, and death to me, for Christ's sake, is welcome.
THE same night the bishop was committed by the guard, (their commission being then expired) into the custody of the sheriffs of Gloucester, Jenkins and Bond, who, with the mayor and aldermen, repaired to Dr. Hooper's lodging, and at the first meeting saluted him, and took him by the hand. Unto whom Dr. Hooper spake in this manner. "Mr. Mayor, I give most hearty thanks to you, and to the rest of your brethren, that you have vouchsafed to take me, a prisoner, and a condemned man, by the hand; whereby, to my rejoicing, it is very apparent that your old love and friendship towards me is not altogether extinguished: and I trust also that all the things I have taught you in times past, are not utterly forgotten, when I was your bishop and pastor. For which most true and sincere doctrine, because I will not now account it falshood and heresy, as many other men do, I am sent hither (as I am sure you know) by the queen's commands, to die, and am come where I taught it, to confirm it with my blood. And now, Mess. Sheriffs, I understand by these good men, and my good friends (meaning the guard) at whose hands I have found so much favour and gentleness on the road hither, as a prisoner could reasonably require, (for which also I most heartily thank them) that I am committed to your custody, as unto them that must see me brought to-morrow to the place of execution. My request therefore to you shall be only, that there may be a quick fire, shortly to make an end; and in the mean time I will be as obedient unto you, as you yourselves could wish. If you think I do amiss in any thing, hold up your finger, and I have done. For I am not come hither as one forced or compelled to die; for it is well known, I might have had [Page 462] my life with worldly gain; but as one willing to offer and give my life for the truth, rather than to consent to the wicked papistical religion of the bishop of Rome, received and set forth by the magistrates in England, to God's high displeasure and dishonour; and I trust, by God's grace, to-morrow to die a faithful servant of God, and a true obedient subject to the queen."
THESE, and such like words in effect, bishop Hooper used to the mayor, sheriffs, and aldermen, whereat many mourned and lamented. Notwithstanding, the two sheriffs went aside to consult, and were determined to have lodged him in the common gaol of the town, called Northgate, if the guard had not made earnest intercession for him; who declared at large, how quietly, mildly, and patiently, he had behaved himself on the way, adding thereto, that any child might keep him well enough, and that they themselves would rather take pains to watch with him, than that he should be sent to the common prison. So it was determined at length he should still remain at Robert Ingram's house; and the sheriffs and the serjeants and other officers did appoint to watch with him that night themselves. His desire was, that he might go to bed that night betime, saying, that he had many things to remember: and so he did at five o'clock, and slept one sleep soundly, and spent the rest of the night in prayer. After he had got up in the morning, he desired that no man should be suffered to come into the chamber, that he might be solitary till the hour of execution.
ABOUT eight o'clock came sir John Bridges, lord Shandois, with a great band of men, sir Anthony Kingston, sir Edmund Bridges, and other commissioners appointed to see execution done. At nine, Dr. Hoope [...] prepared himself to be in readiness, for the time was at hand. Immediately he was brought down from his chamber by the sheriffs, who were accompanied with bills, and other weapons. When he saw the multitude of weapons, he spake to the sheriffs on this wise; Mess. Sheriffs (said he) I am no traitor, neither needed you to have made such a business to bring me to the place where I must suffer: for if you had suffered me I would have gone alone to the stake, and troubled none of you. Afterwards looking on the multitude of people that were assembled, being by estimation to the number of 7000, (for it was market-day, and many came to see his behaviour) he spake unto those who were about him, saying, "Alas! why are these people assembled and come together? Peradventure they think to hear something of me now, as they have in times past: but alas! speech is prohibited me. Notwithstanding, the cause of my death is well known unto them. When I was appointed here to be their pastor, I preached unto them true and sincere doctrine, and that out of the word of God: because I will not now account the same to be heresy and untruth, this kind of death is prepared for me." Having said this, he went forward, led between two sheriffs, (as it were a lamb to the place of slaughter) in a gown of his host's, his hat upon his head, and a staff in his hand to stay himself withal; for the grief of the Sciatica, which he had taken in prison, caused him somewhat to halt. All the way, being straitly [...]harged not to speak, he could not be perceived once to open his mouth; but beholding the people, who mourned bitterly for him, he would sometimes lift up his eyes towards heaven, and look very chearfully upon such as he knew: and he was never known, during the time of his being amongst them, to look with so chearful and ruddy a countenance as he did at that present. When he came to the place appointed where he should die, he smilingly beheld the stake and preparation made for him, which was near unto the great elm-tree over-against the college of priests, where he was wont to preach. The place round about the houses, and the boughs of the tree were filled with spectators; and in the chamber over the college gate stood the priests of the college. Then he kneeled down (forasmuch as he could not be suffered to speak unto the people) to prayer, and b [...]ckoned six or seven times unto one whom he well knew, that he might hear his prayer, and report faithfully the same. When this person came to the good bishop, he (pouring tears upon his shoulders and in his bosom) continued his prayer for the space of half [...] hour; which prayer was drawn from the whole creed
[Page 463]NOW after he was entered into his prayer, a box was brought and laid before him upon a stool, with his pardon (or at least-wise it was feigned to be his pardon) from the queen, if he would turn. At the sight whereof he cried, If you love my soul, away with it. The box being taken away, the lord Shandois said, Seeing there is no remedy, dispatch him quickly. Mr Hooper replied, Good my lord, I trust your lordship will give me leave to make an end of my prayers.
THEN the lord Shandois said to sir Edmund Bridges' son, who gave ear before to Mr. Hooper's prayer, at his request: Edmund, take heed that he do nothing else but pray: if he do, tell me, and I shall quickly dispatch him.
IN the mean time, one or two persons, uncalled, stepped up, who heard the bishop speak the words following.
Bishop HOOPER'S PRAYER.
LORD, I am hell, but thou art heaven; I am a sink of sin, but thou art a gracious God and a merciful redeemer. Have mercy therefore upon me a most miserable and wretched offender, after thy great mercy, and according to thine inestimable goodness. Thou art ascended into heaven, receive me hence to be partaker of thy joys, where thou fittest in equal glory with thy Father. For well knowest thou, Lord, wherefore I am come hither to suffer, and why the wicked do persecute this thy poor servant; not for my sins and transgressions committed against thee, but because I will not allow their wicked doings, to the contaminating of thy blood, and to the denial of the knowledge of thy truth, wherewith it did please thee by thy Holy Spirit to instruct me: which, with as much diligence as a poor wretch might, (being thereto called) I have set forth to thy glory. And well seest thou, my Lord and G [...]d, what terrible pains and cruel torments are prepared for thy creature; such, Lord, as without thy strength none is able to bear, or patiently to pass. But all things that are impossible with man, are possible with thee. Therefore strengthen me of thy goodness, that in the fire I break not the rules of patience; or else assuage the terror of the pains, as shall seem most to thy glory.
AS soon as the mayor saw those men, who reported the foregoing words, they were commanded away, and could not be suffered to hear any more. Prayer being done, bishop Hooper prepared himself for the stake, and put off his host's gown, and delivered it the sheriffs, requiring them to see it restored unto the owner, and put off the rest of his apparel unto his doublet and hose, wherein he would have burned. But the sheriffs would not permit that, (such was their greediness) unto whose pleasures (good man!) he very obediently submitted himself; and his doublet, hose, and waistcoat were taken off. Then being in his shirt, he took a point from his hose himself, and trussed his shirt between his legs, where he had a pound of gun-powder in a bladder, and under each arm the like quantity delivered him by the guard. So desiring the people to say the Lord's prayer with him, and to pray for him, (who performed it with tears, during the time of his pains) he went up to the stake; when he was at it, three irons, made to him thereto, were brought; one for his neck, another for his middle, and the third for his legs. But he refusing them said, "You have no need thus to trouble yourselves. I doubt not, God will give me strength sufficient to abide the extremity of the fire, without bands: notwithstanding, suspecting the frailty and weakness of the flesh, but having assured confidence in God's strength, I am content you do as you shall think good."
THEN the hoop of iron prepared for his middle was brought, which being made somewhat too short, (for his belly was swoln with imprisonment) he shrank and put in his belly with his hand, until it was fastened: but when they offered to have bound his neck and legs with the other too hoops of iron, he refused them, and would have none, saying, I am well assured I shall not trouble you.
THUS being ready, he looked upon, the people, of whom he might be well seen, (for he was both tall, and stood also upon a high stool) and beheld round about him, that in every corner there was nothing to be seen but weeping and sorrowful people. Then lifting up his eyes and hands to heaven, he prayed in silence. By and by, he that was appointed to make the fire, came to him, and did ask him forgiveness. Of whom he asked why he should forgive him, saying, that he never knew any offence he had committed against him. O sir, said the man, I am appointed to make the fire. Therein said Mr. Hooper, thou dost nothing offend me: God forgive thee thy sins, and do thine office I pray thee. [Page 464] Then the reeds were cast up, and he received two bundles of them in his own hands, embraced them, kissed them, put one of them under each arm, and shewed with his hand how the rest should be bestowed, and pointed to the place where any were wanting.
COMMAND was now given that the fire should be kindled. But because there were not fewer green faggots, than two horses could carry, it kindled not speedily, and was a pretty while also before it took the reeds upon the faggots. At length it burned about him, but the wind having full strength in that place (and being a lowring cold morning) it blew the flame from him, so that he was in a a manner little more than touched by the fire.
WITHIN a space after, a few dry faggots were brought, and a new fire kindled with faggots, (for there were no more reeds) and that burned at the nether parts, but had small power above, because of the wind, saving that it did burn in his hair, and scorch his skin a little. In the time of which fire, even as at the first flame, he prayed, saying mildly, and not very loud, (but as one without pains) O Jesus, son of David, have mercy upon me, and receive my soul. After the second fire was spent, he wiped both his eyes with his hands, and beholding the people, he said with an indifferent loud voice, For God's love, good people, let me have more fire: and all this while his nether parts did burn; but the faggots were so few, that the flame did not burn strongly at his upper parts.
THE third fire was kindled within a while after, which was more extreme than the other two: and then the bladders of gun-powder brake, which did him little good, they were so placed, and the wind had such power. In this fire he prayed with a loud voice, Lord Jesus have mercy upon me! Lord Jesus have mercy upon me! Lord Jesus receive my spirit! And these were the last words he was heard to utter. But when he was black in the mouth, and his tongue swoln, that he could not speak, yet his lips went till they were shrunk to the gums: and he knocking his breast with his hands, until one of his arms fell off, and then knocked still with the the other, while the fat, water, and blood dropped out at his finger ends, untill by renewing of the fire his strength was gone, and his hand did cleave fast in knocking to the iron upon his breast. So immediately, bowing forwards, he yielded up his spirit.
THUS was he three quarters of an hour or more in the fire; even as the lamb, patiently bearing the extremity thereof, neither moving forwards, backwards, nor to any side; but having his neither parts burned, and his bowels fallen out, he died as quietly as a child in his bed: and he now reigneth as a blessed martyr in the joys of heaven, prepared for the faithful in Christ before the foundations of the world: for whose constancy all christians are bound to praise God.
A POEM by CONRADE GESNER, on the Martyrdom of Dr. JOHN HOOPER, Bishop of GLOUCESTER and WORCESTER.
LETTER I. From Bishop HOOPER, when in Prison, to some of his Friends.
THE grace of God be with you, Amen. I did write unto you of late, and told you what extremity the parliament had concluded concerning religion, suppressing the truth, and setting forth the untruth, intending to cau [...] all men by extremity to forswear themselves, and to take again, for the head of the church, him that is neither head nor member of it, but a very enemy, as th [...] word of Go [...] and all ancient writers do record: and for lack of law and [Page 465] authority, they will use force and extremity, which have been the arguments to defend the pope and popery, since their authority first began in the world. But now is the time of trial, to see whether we fear more God or man. It was an easy thing to hold with Christ whilst the prince and world held with him: but now the world hateth him, it is the true trial who be his.
WHEREFORE in the name, and in the virtue, strength, and power of his Holy Spirit, prepare yourselves in any case to adversity and constancy. Let u [...] not run away when it is most time to fight; remember none shall be crowned, but such as fight manfully; and he that endureth to the end shall be saved. Ye must now turn all your thoughts from the peril you see, and mark the felicity that followeth the peril; either victory in this world of your enemies, or else a surrender of this life to inherit the everlasting kingdom. Beware of beholding too much the felicity or misery of this world, for the consideration and too earnest love or fear of either of them draweth from God.
WHEREFORE think with yourselves as touching the felicity of this world, it is good; but yet no otherwise than as it standeth with the favour of God. It is to be kept; but yet so far forth as by keeping of it we lose not God. It is go [...] abiding and tarrying still among our friends here; but yet so, that we tarry not therewithal in God's displeasure, and hereafter dwell with the devils in fire everlasting. There is nothing under God but may be kept, so that God, being above all things we have, be not lost.
OF adversity judge the same. Imprisonment is painful, but yet liberty upon evil conditions is more painful. The prisons stink; but yet not so much as sweet houses, where the fear and true honour of God is wanting. I must be alone and solitary: it is better so to be and have God with me, than to be in company with the wicked. Loss of goods is great: but loss of God's grace and favour is greater. I am a poor simple creature, and cannot tell how to answer before noble, learned, and wise men: it is better to make answer before the pomp and pride of wicked men, than to stand naked in the sight of all heaven and earth before the just God at the latter day. I shall die then by the hands of the cruel man: he is blessed that loseth his life full of miseries, and findeth the life of eternal joys. It is pain and grief to depart from goods and friends: but yet not so much, as to depart from grace and heaven itself. Wherefore there is neither felicity nor adversity of this world, that can appear to be great, if it be weighed with the joys or pains in the world to come.
I can do no more, but pray for you; do the same for me, for God's sake. For my part, (I thank the heavenly Father) I have made mine accounts, and appointed myself unto his will; and as he will, so I will by his grace. For God's sake, as soon as ye can, send my poor wife and children some letter from you, and my letter also which I sent of late to D. As it was told me she never had a letter from me since the coming of M. S. unto her, the more to [...] the messengers, for I have written divers times. The Lord comfort them, and provide for them; for I [...] do nothing in worldly things. She is a godly and wise woman. If my meaning had been accomplished, she should have had necessary things: but what I meant. God can perform, to whom I commend both her and you all. I am a precious jewel now being close and daintily kept: for neither mine own man, nor any of the servants of the house may come to me, but my keeper alone, a simple rude man, God knoweth; but I am nothing careful thereof. Fare you well.
LETTER II. From the same to certain GODLY PROFESSORS, instructing them how to behave in the time of Trial, under a woful alteration and change of RELIGION.
THE grace, mercy, and peace of God the Father through our Lord Jesus Christ, be with you, my dear brethren, and with all those that unfeignedly love and embrace his holy gospel, Amen.
IT is told me, that the wicked idol, the mass, is established again by law, and passed in the parliament-house. Learn the truth of it, I pray you, and what penalty is appointed in the act to such as speak against it: also whether there be any compulsion to constrain men to be at it. The statute thoroughly known, such as be abroad and at liberty may provide for themselves, and avoid the danger the better. Doubtless there hath not been seen before our time such a parliament as this is, that as many as were suspected to be favourers of God's word, should be banished out of both houses. But we must give God thanks for that truth he hath opened in the time of his blessed servant king Edward VI. and pray unto him that we deny it not, nor dishonour it with idolatry; but that we may have strength and patience rather to die ten times than deny him once. Blessed shall we be, if ever God makes us worthy of that honour to shed our blood for his name's sake: and blessed then sh [...]l we think the parents which brought us into the world, that we should from this mortality be carried into immortality. If we follow the command of St. Paul, that saith, "If ye then be risen again with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God;" we shall neither depart from the vain transitory goods of this world, nor from this wretched and mortal life, with so great pain as others do.
[Page 466]LET us pray to our heavenly Father, that we may know and love his blessed will, and the glorious joy prepared for us in time to come, and that we may know and hate all things contrary to his blessed will, and also the pain prepared for the wicked in the world to come. There is no better way to be used in this troublesome time for your consolation, than many times to have assemblies together of such men and women as be of your religion in Christ, and there to take and renew amongst yourselves the truth of your religion, to see what you are by the word of God, and to remember what you were before you came to the knowledge thereof, to weigh and confer the dreams and false lies of the preachers that now preach, with the word of God that retaineth all truth; and by such talk and familiar resorting together, you shall the better find out all their lies that now go about to deceive you, and also both know and love the truth that God hath opened unto us. It is much requisite that the members of Christ comfort one another, make prayers together, confer one with another; so shall you be the stronger, and God's Spirit shall not be absent from you, but in the midst of you, to teach you, to comfort you, to make you wise in all godly things, patient in adversity, and strong in persecution.
YOU [...] how the congregation of the wicked, by helping one another, make their wicked religion and themselves strong against God's truth and his people. If you may have some learned man, that can out of the scripture speak unto you of faith, and true honouring of God, also that can shew you the descent of Christ's church from the beginning of it until this day, that you may perceive by the life of our fore-fathers these two things: the one that Christ's words, who said that all his must suffer persecution and trouble in the world, be true: the othe [...], that none of all his, before our time, escaped trouble: then shall you perceive, that it is but a folly for one that professes Christ truly, to look for the love of the world.
THUS shall [...] learn to bear trouble, and to exercise your religion, an [...] [...]eel indeed that Christ's words be true, "In the world you shall suffer persecution." And when you shall feel your religion indeed, say, you be no better than your fore-fathers; but be glad, that you may be counted soldiers for this war: and pray to God when come together, that he will use and order you and your doings in these three ends, which you must take heed to: the first, that you glorify God; the next, that you edify the church and congregation; the third, that you profit your own souls.
IN all your doings beware you be not deceived. For although this time be not so bloody and tyrannous, as the time of our fore-fathers, that could not bear the name of Christ, without danger of life and go [...]s; yet is our time more perillous both for body and soul. Therefore of us Christ said, "Think ye when the Son of man cometh, he shall find faith upon earth▪ He said not, Think ye, ye shall find any man or woman christened, and in name a christian? but he spake of the faith that saveth the christian man in Christ: and doubtless the scarcity of faith is now more (and will, I fear increase) than it was in the time of the greatest tyrants that ever were; and no marvel why. Read the sixth chapter of St. John's Revelation, and ye shall perceive amongst other things, that at the opening of the fourth seal came out a pale horse, and he that sat upon him was called death, and hell followed. This horse is the time wherein hypocrites and dissemblers entered into the church under the pretence of true religion, as monks, friers, nuns, massing-priests, with such others, that hath killed more souls with heresy and superstition, that all the tyrants, that ever killed bodies by fire, sword, o [...] banishment, as it appeareth by his name that sitteth upon the horse, who is called Death: for all that love not Christ, and trust to these hypocrites, live to the devil in everlasting pain, as is declared by him that followeth the pale horse which is hell.
THESE pale hypocrites have stirred the earthquakes, that is to say, the princes of the world, against Christ's church, and have also darkened the sun, and made the moon bloody, and have caused the stars to fall fr [...]m heaven, that is to say, have darkened with mine, [...] do darken (as you hear by their sermons) the clear sun of God's most pure word: the moon, which be God's true preachers, which fetch only light at the sun of God's word, are turned into blood, prisons, and chains, that their light cannot shine into the world as they would: whereupon it cometh to pass, that the stars, that is to say, christian people, fall from heaven, that is, from God's most true word to hypocrisy, most devilish superstition, and idolatry. Let some learned man shew you all the articles of your belief and monument of christian faith, from the time of Christ hitherto, and you shall perceive that there was never mention of such articles as these hypocrites teach. God bless you, and pray for me as I do for you.
LETTER III. To Dr. ROBERT FERRAR, Bishop of St DAVID'S, the Rev. Dr. ROWLAND TAYLOR, the Rev. Mr. JOHN BRADFORD, and Arch-deacon PHILPOT, Prisoners in the King's Bench, Southwark.
THE grace of God be with you, Amen. I am advertised by divers, as well such as love the truth, as also by such as yet be not come into it, that you and I shall be carried shortly to Cambridge, there to dispute for the faith, and for the religion of Christ, (which is most true) that we have and do profess. I am (as I doubt not you be) in Christ ready, not only to go to Cambridge, but also to suffer, by God's help, death itself in the maintenance thereof. [Page 467] Weston and his accomplices have obtained forth the commission already, and speedily (most like) he will put it in execution. Wherefore, dear brethren, I do advertise you of the thing before for divers causes. The one to comfort you in the Lord, that the time draweth near and is at hand, that we shall testify before God's enemies God's truth. The next, that you should prepare yourselves the better for it. The third, to shew you what ways I think ourselves were best to use in this matter, and also to hear of you your better advice, if mine be not good. Ye know, such as shall be censors and judges over us thirst for our blood, and whether we, by God's help, overcome after the word of God, or by force, and subtility of our adversaries be overcome, this will be the conclusion; our adversaries, will say, they overcome, and you perceive how they report of those great learned men and godly personages at Oxford.
WHEREFORE I mind never to answer them, except I have books present, because they use not only false allegation of the doctors, but also a piece of the doctors against the whole course of the doctors mind. The next, that we may have sworn notaries, to take things spoken indifferently: which will be very hard to have, for the adversaries will have the oversight of all things, and then make their's better than it was, and our's worse than it was. Then if we see that two or three, or more will speak together, or with scoffs and taunts illude and mock us; I suppose it were best to appeal, to be heard before the queen and the whole council, and that would much set forth the glory of God. For many of them know already the truth, many of them err rather of zeal than malice, and the others that be obdurate should be answered fully to their shame, (I doubt not) although to our smart and blood-shedding. For of this I am assured, that the commissioners appointed to hear us and judge us, mean nothing less than to hear the cause indifferently; for they be enemies unto us and our cause, and be at a point already to give sentence against us: so that if it were possible with St. Stephen to speak so that they could not resist us, or to use such silence and patience as Christ did, they will proceed to revenging.
WHEREFORE, my dear brethren, in the mercy of Jesus Christ, I would be glad to know you [...] advice this day or tomorrow; for shortly we shall be gone, and I verily suppose that we shall not company together, but he kept one apart from another. They will deny our appeal, yet let us challenge the appeal, and take witness thereof, of such as be present, and require for indifferency of hearing and judgment, to be heard either before the queen and the council, or else before all the parliament, as they were used in king Edward's days. Further, for my part I will require both books and time to answer. We have been prisoners now three quarters of a year, and have lacked our books; and our memories by close keeping and ingratitude of their parts, be not so present and quick as their's be. I trust God will be with us, yea, I doubt not but he will▪ and teach us to do all things in his cause godly and constantly. If our adversaries, that shall be our judges, may have their purpose, we shall dispute one day, be condemned the next day, and suffer the third day. And yet is there no law to condemn us, (as far as I know) and so one of the convocation-house said this week to Dr. Weston. To whom Weston made this answer, It mattereth not (quoth he) for a law, we have our commission to proceed with them; when they be dispatched, let their friends sue the law.
NOW how soon a man may have such a commission at my lord chancellor's hand, you know. It is as hard to be obtained as an indictment for Christ at Caipha's hand. Besides that the bishops having the queen so upon their sides, may do all things both without the advice, and also the knowledge of the rest of the lords of the temporality; who at this present have found out the mark that the bishops shot at, and doubtless be not pleased with their doings. I pray you help, that our brother Saunders and the rest in the Marshelsea may understand these things, and send me your answer betime. Judas sleepeth not; neither know we the day nor the hour. The Lord Jesus Christ with the Holy Spirit comfort and strengthen us all. Amen.
LETTER IV. From the Bishop to his Wife ANNE HOOPER, whereby all the true Members of Christ may take Comfort and Courage to suffer Affliction for the Profession of his holy Gospel.
OUR Saviour Jesus Christ (dearly beloved, and my godly wife) in St. Matthew's gospel said unto his disciples, that it was necessary scandals should come: and that they could not be avoided, he perceived as well by the condition of those that should perish and be lost for ever in the world to come, as also by their affliction that should be saved. For he saw the greatest part at the people would contemn and neglect whatsoever true doctrine or godly ways should be shewed unto them, or else receive and us [...] it as they thought good to serve their pleasures, without any profit to their souls, not caring whether they lived as they were commanded by God's word or not; but would think it sufficient to be counted to have the name of a christian man, with such works and fruits of his profession and christianity, as his fathers and elders, after their custom and manner, esteem and take to be good fruits and faithful works, and will not try them by the word of God. These men, by the just judgment of God, be delivered unto the craft and subtlety of the devil, that they may be kept by one scandalous stumbling-block or other, that they never come unto Christ, who came to save those that were [...]o [...]t, as you may see how God delivereth wicked men up unto their own [Page 468] lusts, to do one mischief after another, careless, until they come into a reprobate mind, that forgetteth itself, and cannot know what is expedient to be done, or to be left undone, because they close their eyes, and will not see the light of God's word offered unto them: and being thus blinded, they prefer their own vanities before the truth of God's word. Where such corrupt minds be, there are also corrupt notions and choice of God's honour: so that the mind of man taketh falsehood for truth, superstition for true religion, death for life, damnation for salvation, hell for heaven, and persecution of Christ's members for God's service and honour. And as these men wilfully and voluntarily reject the word of God; even so God most justly delivereth them up to blindness of mind and hardness of heart, that they cannot understand, nor yet consent to any thing that God would have preached, and set forth to his glory, after his own will and word: wherefore they hate it mortally, and of all things most detest God's holy word. And as the devil hath entered into their hearts, that they themselves cannot nor will come to Christ, to be instructed by his holy word; even so can they not abide any other man to be a christian man, and to lead his life after the word of God, but hate him, persecute him, rob him, imprison him, yea, and kill him, whether he be man or woman, if God suffer it. And so much are these wicked men blinded, that they regard no law, whether it be God's or man's, but persecute such as never offended, yea, do evil to those that have prayed daily for them, and wish them God's grace.
IN their blind fury they have no respect to nature. For the brother persecuteth the brother, the father the son, and most dear friends, in devilish slander and offence, are become most mortal enemies. And no marvel; for when they have chosen sundry masters, the one the devil, the other God, the one shall agree with the other, as God and the devil agree between themselves. For this cause (that the more part of the world doth use to serve the devil under cloaked hypocrisy of God's title) Christ said, it is expedient and necessary, that scandals should come, and many may be advised to keep the little babes of Christ from their heavenly Father. But Christ saith, Wo be unto him by whom the offence cometh: yet is there no remedy, man being of such corruption and hatred towards God, but that the evil shall be deceived, and persecute the good; and the good shall understand the truth, and suffer persecution for it unto the world's end. For as he that was born after the flesh, persecuted in times past him that was born after the Spirit, even so it is now. Therefore forasmuch as we live in this life amongst so many great perils and dangers, we must be well assured by God's word how to bear them, and how patiently to take them as they be sent to us from God. We must also assure ourselves, that there is no other remedy for christians in the time of trouble, than Christ himself hath appointed us. In St. Luke he giveth us this commandment, Ye shall possess your lives in patience, saith he. In whi [...]h words he giveth us both commandment what to do, and also great comfort and consolation in all troubles. He showeth what is to be done, and what is to be hoped for in trouble: and when troubles happen, he biddeth us be patient; and in no case violently nor seditiously to resist our persecutors, because God hath such care and charge of us, that he will keep in the midst of all troubles the very hairs of our head, so that one of them shall not fall away without the will and pleasure of our heavenly Father. Whether the hair therefore tarry on the head, or fall from the head, it is the will of the Father. And seeing he hath such care for the hairs of our head, how much more doth he care for our life itself? Wherefore let God's adversaries do what they list, whether they take life or take it not, they can do us no hurt: for their cruelty hath no further power than God permitteth them; and that which cometh unto us by the will of our heavenly Father can be no harm, no loss, neither destruction unto us, but rather gain, wealth, and felicity. For all troubles and adversity that chance to such as be of God, by the will of the heavenly Father, can be none other but gain and advantage.
THAT the spirit of man may feel these consolations, the giver of them, the heavenly Father, must be prayed unto for the merits of Christ's passion: for it is not the nature of man that can be contented, until it be regenerated and possessed with God's Spirit, to bear patiently the troubles of the mind or of the body. When the mind and heart of a man seeth on every side sorrow and heaviness, and the worldly eye beholdeth nothing but such things as be troubles, and wholly bent to rob the poor of what he hath, and also take from him his life: except the man weigh these brittle and uncertain treasures that be taken from him, with the riches of the life to come, and this life of the body with the life in Christ's blood, and so for the love and certainty of the heavenly joys contemn all things present, doubtless he shall never be able to bear the loss of goods, life, o [...] any other thing of this world.
THEREFORE St. Paul giveth a godly and necessary lesson to all men in this short and transitory life, and therein sheweth how a man may best bear the iniquities and troubles of this world; "If ye be risen again with Christ, (saith he) seek the things which are above, where Christ sitteth at the right hand or God the Father." Wherefore, the christian man's faith must be always upon the resurrection of Christ, when he is in trouble; and in that glorious resurrection he shall not only see continual and perpetual joys and consolation, but also the victory and triumph over all persecution, trouble, sin, death, hell, and the devil, and all other tyrants and persecutors of Christ, and of Christ's people▪ the tears and weeping of the faithful dried up, their wounds healed, their bodies made immortal in joy, their fouls for ever praising the Lord, in conjunction and society everlasting with the blessed company of God's elect in perpetual joy. But the words of St. Paul in that place, if they be not marked, shall do little profit to the reader or hearer, and give him no patience at all in this impatient and cruel world.
[Page 469]IN this first part St. Paul commandeth us, "to think or set our affections on things above." When he biddeth us seek the things that are above, he requireth that our minds never cease from prayer and study in God's word, until we see, know, and understand the vanities of this world, the shortness and misery of this life▪ and the treasures of the world to come, the immortality thereof, the joys of that life, and so never cease seeking, until such time as we know certainly and be persuaded, what a blessed man he is, that seeketh the one and sindeth it, and careth not for the other tho' he lose it; and in seeking, to have right judgment between the life present and the life to come, we shall find how little the pains, imprisonment, slanders, lies, and death itself is in this world, in respect of pains everlasting, the prison infernal, and dungeon of hell, the sentence of God [...]s just judgement, and everlasting death.
WHEN a man hath▪ by seeking the word of God, found out what the things above be, then must he (as St. Paul saith) set his affections upon them. And this commandment is more hard than the other. For man's knowledge many times seeth the best, and knoweth there is a life to come, better than this life present, (as you may see how daily men and women can praise and commend, yea, and wish for heaven, and to be at rest there) yet they set not their affections upon it: they do more affect and love indeed a trifle of nothing in this that pleaseth their affection, than the treasure of all treasures in heaven, which their own judgment saith is better than all worldly things. "Wherefore we must set our affections on the things that be above;" that is to say, when any thing worse than heaven, upon the earth, offereth itself to be our's, if we will give our good wills to it, and love it in our hearts, then ought we to see by the judgment of God's word, whether we may have the world without offence to God, and such things as be for this worldly life without his displeasure. If we cannot, St. Paul's commandment must take place▪ "Set your affections on things that are above." If the riches of this world may not be gotten nor kept by God's law, neither our lives be continued without the denial of his honour, we must set our affections upon the riches and life that is above, and not upon things that are on the earth. Therefore this second commandment of St. Paul requireth, that our minds judge heavenly things to be better than things upon the earth, and the life to come better than the life present; so we should chuse them before the other, and prefer them, and have such affection to the best, that in no case we set the worst before it, as the most part of the world doth and hath done, for they chuse the best and approve it, and yet follow the worst.
BUT these things, my godly wife, require rather thought, meditation, and prayer, than words or talk. They are easy to be spoken of, but not so easy to be used and practised. Wherefore seeing they be God's gifts, and none of our's, to have as ou [...] own when we would, we must seek them at our heavenly Father's hand, who [...]th, and is privy how poor and wretched we be, and how naked, how spoiled, and destitute of all his blessed gifts we be by reason of sin. He did command therefore his disciples, when he shewed them that they should take patiently the state of this present life full of troubles and persecution, to pray that they might well escape those troubles that were to come, and be able to stand before the Son of Man. When you find yourself too much oppressed (as [...]ery man shall be sometimes with the fear of God's judgment) use the 77th Psalm that beginneth, "I will cry unto God with my voice, and he shall hearken unto me." In which Psalm is both godly doctrine and great consolation unto the man or woman that is in anguish of mind.
USE also in such trouble the 88th Psalm, wherein is contained the prayer of such a man, that was brought to extreme anguish and misery, and being vexed with adversaries and persecutions, saw nothing but death and hell. And although he felt in himself, that he had not only man, but also God angry towards him; yet he by prayer humbly resorted unto God.
WE must not also murmur against God, but always say his judgments are right and just, and rejoice that it pleaseth him by troubles to use us as he used heretofore such as he most loved in this world. "Be glad, and rejoice, for your reward is great in heaven." His promises shall (by God's grace) work both consolation and patience in afflicted christians. And when our Saviour Christ hath willed men in trouble to be content and patient, because God in the end of trouble in Christ hath ordained eternal consolation; he useth also to take from us all shame and rebuke, as though it were not an honour to suffer for Christ, because the wicked world doth curse and abhor such poor troubled christians. Wherefore Christ placeth all his honourably, and saith, "Even so persecuted they the prophets that were before you." We may also see with whom the afflicted for Christ's sake be esteemed, by St. Paul to the Hebrews, where the number of the blessed and glorious company of saints appear now to our faith in heaven, in joy: yet in the letter, for the time of this life, in such pains and contempt as was never more. Let us therefore consider both them and all other things of the world since the fall of man, and we shall perceive nothing to come to perfection, but with such confusion and disorder to the eye of the world, as though things were rather lost for ever, than like to come to any perfection at all. For of godly men, who ever came to heaven (no not Christ himself) until such time as the world had thought verily, that both he and all his had been clean destroyed and cast away: as the wise man saith of the wicked people, "We thought them to be fools, but they are in peace."
WE may learn by things that nourish and maintain us, both meat and drink, what loathsomeness and (in a manner) abhorring they come unto, before they work their perfection in us. From life they are brought to the fire, and clean altered from what they were when they were alive; from [Page 470] the fire to the trencher and knife, and all hacked; from the trencher to the mouth, and as small ground as the teeth can grind them; and from the mouth into the stomach, and there so boiled and digested before they nourish, that whosoever saw the same, would loath and abhor his own nourishment, before it came to its perfection.
IS it then any marvel if such christians as God delighteth in, be so mangled and defaced in this world, which is the kitchen and mill to boil and grind the flesh of God's people in, till they atchieve their perfection in the world to com [...]? And as a man looketh for the nutriment of his meat when it is full digested, and not before: so must he look for his salvation when he has passed this troublesome world, and not before. Raw flesh is not meat wholesome for man: and unmortified men and women be no [...] creatures meet for God. Therefore Christ saith, that his people must be broken, and all be torn in the mill of this world, and so shall they be most fine meal unto the heavenly Father. And it shall be a christian man's part, and the duty of a mind replenished with the Spirit of God, to mark the order of God in all his things, how he dealeth with them, and how they suffer, and be content to let God do his will upon them, as St. Paul saith, "They wait until the number of the elect be fulfilled, and never be at rest, but look for the time when God's people shall appear in glory".
WE must therefore patiently suffer, and willingly attend upon God's doings, although they seem clean contrary, after our judgment, to our we [...]lth and salvation▪ as Abraham did, when he was bid to offer up his son Isaac, in whom God promised the blessing and multiplying of his seed. Joseph at the last came to that which God promised him, although in the mean time, after the judgment of the world, he was never like to be (as God said he should be) lord over his brethren. When Christ would make the blind man to see, he put clay upon his eyes, which after the judgement of man, was a means rather to make him double blind, than to give him his sight; but he obeyed, and knew that God could work his desire, what means soever he used contrary to man's reason▪ and as touching this world, he useth all his after the same sort. If any smart, his people be the first▪ if any suffer shame, they begin; if any be subject to slander, it is those that he loveth: so that he sheweth no fare or favour, nor love, almost in this world outwardly to them, but layeth clay upon their sore eyes that be sorrowful; yet the patient man seeth, (as St. Paul saith) life hid under th [...]se miseries and advertities, and sight under the [...] clay; and in the mean time he hath the testimony of a [...] conscience, and believeth God's promises to be his consolation in the world to come, which is more worthy unto him, than all the world is worth besides: and blessed as the man in whom God's Spirit beareth record that he is a child of God, whatsoever troubles he suffer in this troublesome world.
AND judge things indifferently, my good wife, the troubles be not yet generally, as they were in our good father's time, soon after the death and resurrection of our Saviour Jesus Christ, whereof in St. Matthew. Of which place you and I have taken many times great consolation, and especially of the latter part of the chapter, wherein is contained the last day and end of a [...]l troubles (I doubt not) both for you and me, and for such as love the coming of our Saviour Christ [...] judgment. Remember therefore that place, and mark it again, and you shall in this time se [...] this great consolation, and also learn much patience. Were there ever such troubles, as Christ threatened upon Jerusalem? Was there since the beginning of the world such affliction? Who was then best at ease? The apostles that suffered in body persecution, and gathered of it ease and quietness in the promises of God. And no marvel, for Christ saith, "Lift up your heads, for your redemption is at hand▪" that is to say, your eternal rest approacheth and draweth near. The world is stark blind, and more foolish than fool [...]shness itself, and so are the people of the world. For wh [...]n God saith, trouble shall come, they will have ease. And when God saith, be merry and rejoice in trouble▪ we lam [...]nt and mourn, as though we were cast-away. But this our flesh (which is never merry with virtue, nor sorry with vice; never laugheth with grace, no [...] ever weepeth w [...]th sin) holdeth fast with the world, and letteth God slip. But, my dearly beloved wife, you know how to perceive and to beware of the vanity and crafts of the devil well enough in Christ. And that you may the better have patience in the Spirit of God, read again the 24th of St. Matthew, and mark what difference is between the destruction of Jerusalem, and the destruction of the whole world, and you shall see, that then there were l [...]ft alive many of [...]enders to repent: but at the latter day there shall be [...] judgment, and sentence (never to be revoked) of et [...]rnal life and eternal death upon all men [...] and yet towards the end of the world we have nothing so much extremity as they had then, but even as we are able to bear. So doth the merciful Father lay upon us now imprisonment, (and [...] I suppose for my part shortl [...], death) now spo [...] of goods▪ loss of friends, and the greatest loss of all, the knowledge of God's word. God's will be done. I wish in Christ Jesus our only Mediator and Saviour, your [...] and consolation, that you may [...] for ever and ever, whereof in Christ I doubt not; to whom, for his most bless [...]d and pa [...]nful passion, I commit you. Amen▪ Octob [...] 13. 1553.
LETTER V. To a PIOUS WIDOW.
THE grace of God, and the comfort of his Holy Spirit be with you, and all them that un [...]ign [...]dly love his holy gospel, Amen. I thank [...] your most loving remembrance▪ and alth [...]gh I [...] re [...]mpense the same, yet do I wish with all [...]y heart, that God would do it, requiring you not to forget your duty [Page 471] towards God in these perilous days, in which the Lord will try us. I trust you do increase, by reading of the scriptures, the knowledge you have of God, and that you diligently apply yourself to follow the same: for the knowledge helpeth not, except the life be according thereunto. Further, I do heartily pray you, to consider the state of your widowhood, and if God shall p [...]t it in your mind to change it, remember the saying of St. Paul, 1 Cor. vii. "It is lawful for the widow or maiden to marry whom they list, so it be in the Lord:" that is to say, to such a one as is of Christ's religion. Dearly beloved in Christ, remember these words, for you shall find thereby great joy and comfort, if you change your state. Whereof I will, when I have better leisure, (as now I have none at all) further advertise you. In the mean time I commend you to God, and the guiding of his good Spirit, who establish and confirm you in all well-doing, and keep you blameless to the day of the Lord. Watch and pray, for this day is at hand.
LETTER VI. From the Bishop of GLOUCESTER, to all his Brethren, Relievers, and Helpers, in the City of LONDON.
THE grace of God be with you, Amen. I have received from you (dearly beloved in our Saviour Jesus Christ) by the hands of my servant William Down [...] ▪ your liberality, for the which I most heartily thank you, and I praise God highly in you and for you, who hath moved your hearts to shew this kindness towards me, praying him to preserve you from all famine, scarcity, and lack of the truth of his word, which is the lively food of your souls, as you preserve my body from hunger, and other necessities which should happen unto me; were it not cared for by the [...] and charity of godly people. Such as have taken all worldly goods and lands from me, and spoiled me of all that I had, and have imprisoned my body, and appointed not a halfpenny to feed or relieve me withal: but I do forgive them and pray for them daily in my poor prayer unto God, and from my heart I wish their salvation, and quietly and patiently bear their injuries, wishing no farther extremity to be used towards us. Yet if the contrary seem best unto our heavenly Father, I have made my reckoning, and fully resolved myself to suffer the uttermost that they are able to do against me, yea, death itself, by the aid of Christ Jesus, who di [...]d the mo [...] [...]vile death of the cross for us wretches and miserable sinners. But of this I am assured, that the wicked world, with all their force and power, shall not touch one of the haus of our heads without leave and licence of our heavenly Father, [...] will be don [...] in all things. If he will [...], [...]se be it▪ [...] he will [...], death be it. Only we pray, that our wills may be subject unto his will, and then although both we and all the world see no other thing but death, yet if he think life best, we shall not die, no, although the sword be drawn out over our heads: as Abraham thought to kill his son Isaac, yet when God perceived that Abraham had surrendered his will to God's will, and was content to kill his son, God then saved his son.
DEARLY beloved, if we are contented to obey God's will, and for his commandment's sake to surrender our goods and our lives to be at his pleasure, it maketh no matter whether we keep goods and life, or lose them. Nothing can hurt us that is taken from us for God's cause, nor can any thing at length do us good, that is preserved contrary to God's commandment. Let us wholly suffer God to use us and our's after his holy wisdom, and beware we neither use nor govern ourselves to his will by our own wisdom: for if we do, our wisdom will at length prove foolishness. It is kept to no good purpose, that we keep contrary unto his commandments. It can by no means be taken from us, that he should tarry with us. He is no good christian that ruleth himself and his, as worldly means serve: for he that so doth shall have as many changes as chanceth in the world. To-day with the world he shall like and praise the truth of God, to-morrow as the world will, so will he like and praise the falshood of man; to-day with Christ, and to-morrow with Antichrist. Wherefore, d [...]ar breth [...]n, as touching your behaviour towards God, use both your inward spirits and your outward bodies, your inward and your outward man (I say) not after the manners of men, but after the infallible word of God.
RESTRAIN from evil in both; and glorify your heavenly Father in both. For if you think you can inwardly in the heart serve him, and yet outwardly serve with the world in external service the thing that is not God, you deceive yourselves; for both the body and the soul must together concur in the honour of God, as St. Paul plainly teacheth, 1 Cor. vi. For if an honest wife be bound to give both heart and body to faith and service in marriage, and if an honest wife's faith in the heart cannot stand with a whorish or defiled body outwardly; much less can the true faith of a christian, in the service of christianity, stand with the bodily service of external idolatry: for the mystery of marriage is not so honourable between man and wife, as it is between Christ and every christian man, as St. Paul saith.
THEREFORE, dear brethren, pray to the heavenly Father, that as he spared not the soul nor the body of his dearly beloved Son, but applied both of them with extreme pain, to work our salvation both of body and soul; so he will give us all grace to apply our bodies and souls to be servants unto him: for doubtless he requireth as well the one as the other, and cannot be discontented with the one and well-pleased with the other. Either he hateth both, or loveth both; he divideth not his love to one, and his hatred to the other. Let us not therefore, good brethen, [Page 472] divide ourselves, and fay our souls serve him, whatsoever our bodies do to the contrary for civil order and policy.
BUT, alas! I know by myself, what troubleth you, that is, the great danger of the world, that will revenge (you think) your service to God with sword and fire, with loss of goods and lands. But, dear brethren, weigh of the other side, that your enemies shall not do so much as they would, but as much as God shall suffer them, who can trap them in their own counsels, and destroy them in the midst of their furies. Remember you be the workmen of the Lord, and called into his vineyard, there to labour till the evening-tide, that you may receive your penny, which is more worth than all the kingdoms of the earth. But he that calleth us into his vineyard, hath not told us how sore and how fervently the sun shall trouble us in our labour: but hath bid us labour, and commit the bitterness thereof unto him; who can and will so moderate all afflictions, that no man shall have more laid upon him, than in Christ he shall be able to bear. Unto whose merciful tuition and defence I commend both your souls and bodies. September 2, anno 1554.
LETTER VII. To a MERCHANT, from whom the Bishop received great Consolation and Comfort, during the time of his Imprisonment in the FLEET.
GRACE, mercy, and peace in Christ Jesus our Lord. I thank God and you for the great help and consolation I have received in the time of adversity by your charitable means; but most rejoiced that you be not altered from truth, although falsehood cruelly seeketh to destroy her. Judge not, my brother, truth by outward appearance; for truth now worse appeareth, and more vilely is rejected than falsehood. Leave the outward shew, and see by the word of God what truth is, and accept truth and dislike her not, though man call her falsehood. As it is now, so it hath been heretofore, the truth rejected and falsehood received. Such as have professed truth, for truth have smarted, and the friends of falsehood laughed them to scorn. The trial of both hath been by contrary success: the one having the condemnation of truth by man, but the condemnation of falsehood by God, flourishing for a time, with endless destruction; the othe [...] afflicted a little season, but ending with immortal joys. Wherefore, dear brother, ask and demand of your book, the testament of Jesus Christ, in those woful and wretched days, what you should rely up on for a certain truth, and whatsoever you hear taught, [...] it by your book, whether it be true or false. The days are dangerous and full of peril, not only for the world and worldly things, but for heaven and heavenly things. It is a trouble to lose the treasure of this life, but yet a very pain, if it be kept with the offence of God. Cry, call, pray, and in Christ daily require help, succour, mercy, wisdom, grace, and defence, that the wickedness of this world prevail not against us. We began well, God preserve us until the end. I would write more often unto you, but I do perceive you are at so much charges with me, that I fear you would think when I write, I crave. Send me nothing till I send to you for it: and so tell the good men your partners: and when I need, I will be bold with you. December 3, 1554.
LETTER VIII. From the same, to Mrs. WILKINSON, a Woman hearty in God's Cause, and who afterwards died in Exile, at Franckfort.
THE grace of God, and the comfort of his Holy Spirit be with you. Amen.
I am very glad to hear of your health, and do thank you for your loving tokens. But I am a great deal more glad to hear how christianly you avoid idolatry, and prepare yourself to suffer the extremity of the world, rather than to endanger yourself to God. You do as you ought to do in this behalf; and in suffering of transitory pains, you shall avoid perman [...]nt torments in the world to come. Use your life, and keep it with as much quietness as you can, so that you offend not God. The case that cometh of his displeasure, turneth at length to unspeakable pains; and the gains of the world, with the loss of his favour, are beggary and wretchedness. Reason is to be amended in this cause of religion; for it will chuse and follow an error with the multitude, if it may be allowed, rather than turn to faith and follow the truth with the people of God. Moses found the same fault in himself, and did amend it, chusing rather to be afflicted with the people of God, than to use the liberty of the king's daughter, that accounted him as her son. Pray for contentment and peace of the spirit, and rejoice in such troubles as shall happen to you for the truth's sake: for in that [...] saith, You are happy. Pray also for me, I pray you, that I may do in all things the will of our heavenly Father: to whose tuition and defence I commend you.
LETTER IX. To Mr. HALL and his WIFE, whom the Bishop stiles his Dear Friends in God, and exhorts to stand fast in the Truth.
THE grace of God be with you, Amen. I think you for your loving and gentle friendship at all times, [Page 473] praying to God to shew unto you such favour, that whatsoever trouble and adversity happen, you go not back from him. These days are dangerous and full of peril: but yet let us comfort ourselves in calling to remembrance the days of our forefathers, upon whom the Lord sent such troubles, that many hundreds, yea, many thousands, died for the testimony of Jesus Christ, both men and women, suffering with patience and constancy as much cruelty as tyrants could devise, and so departed out of this miserable world to the bliss everlasting, where they now remain for ever, looking always for the end of this sinful world, when they shall receive their bodies again in immortality, and see the number of the elect associated with them in full and consummate joys: and as virtuous men suffering martyrdom, and tarrying a little while in this world with pains, by and by rested in joys everlasting; and as their pains ended their sorrows, and began ease, so did their constancy and stedfastness animate and confirm all good people in the truth, and gave them encouragement even to suffer the like, rather than to close with the world and consent unto wickedness and idolatry. Wherefore, my dear friends, seeing God of his part hath illuminated you with the same gift and knowledge of true faith, wherein the apostles and evangelists, and all martyrs suffered most cruel death; thank him for his grace in knowledge, and pray unto him for strength and perseverance, that through your own fault you be not ashamed or afraid to confess it. Yet you are in the truth, and the gates of hell shall never prevail against it, nor Antichrist with all his imps can prove it to be false. They may kill and persecute, but never overcome. Be of good comfort, and fear God more than man. This life is short and miserable; happy are they that can spend it to the glory of God. Pray for me, as I do for you, and commend me to all good men and women. December 22, 1554.
LETTER X. To Mrs. ANNE WARCOP, whom the Bishop stiles his Dearly beloved Sister in the LORD.
THE grace of God be with you, Amen. I thank you for your loving token. I pray you burden not yourself too much. It were meet for [...] rather to bear a pain, than to be a hindrance to many. I did rejoice at the coming of this bearer, to understand of your constancy, and how that you are fully resolved, by God's grace, rather to suffer extremity, than to go from the truth of God which you have professed. He that gave you grace to begin so infallible a truth, will follow you in the same unto the end. But, my loving sister, as you are travelling this perilous journey, take this lesson with you, practised by wise men; whereof you may read in the second of St. Matthew's gospel. Such as travelled to find Christ, followed only the star, and as long as they saw it, they were assured they were in the right way, and had great mirth in their journey. But when they entered into Jerusalem, whereas the star led them not thither, but unto Bethlehem, and there asked the citizens the thing that the star shewed before; as long as they tarried in Jerusalem, and would be instructed where Christ was born; they were not only ignorant o [...] Bethlehem, but also lost the sight of the star that led them before. Whereof we learn, in any case, whilst we are going in this life to seek Christ that is above, to beware that we lose not the star of God's word, that is the only mark that sheweth us where Christ is, and which way we may come unto him. But as Jerusalem stood in the way, and was an impediment to these wise men; so doth the synagogue of Antichrist, that beareth the name of Jerusalem, which by interpretation is called the vision of peace, and amongst the people now is called the catholic church, stand in the way that pilgrims must go by through this world to Bethlehem, the house of saturity and plentifulness, and is an impediment to all christian travellers; yea, and except the more grace of God be, will keep the pilgrims still in her, that they shall not come where Christ is at all. And to stay them indeed, they take away the star of light, which is God's word, that it cannot be seen: as you may see how the celestial star was hid from the wise men, when they asked of the pharisees at Jerusalem, where Christ was born. You may see what great dangers happened unto these wise men, whilst they were learning of liars where Christ was. First, they were out of their way, and next they lost their guide and conductor, the heavenly star. Christ is mounted from us into heaven, and there we see [...] him, (as we say) let us go thitherward by the star of his word, and beware we happen not to come into Jerusalem, the church of men, and ask for him. If we do, we go out of the way, and loose also our conductor and guide that only leadeth us straight thither.
THE poets write in fables, that Jason, when he fought with the dragon in the isle of Co [...] his, was preserved by the medicines of Medea, and so won the golden fleece. And they write also that Phaeton, whom they fain to be the son and heir of the hig [...] god Jupiter, would needs upon a day have the conduction of the sun round about the world; but, as they feigned, he missed of the accustomed course: whereupon when he went too high, he burned heaven; and when he went too low, he burned the earth and the water. These profane histories do shame us that are christian men. Jason against the poison of the dragon used only the medicine of Medea. What a shame is it for a christian man against the poison of the devil, heresy, and sin, to use any other remedy than Christ and his word? Phaeton, for lack of knowledge, was afraid of every sign of the Zodiack, that the sun passed by: wherefore he went now too low, and now too high▪ and at length fell down and drowned himself in the sea. Christian men for lack of knowledge, and for fear of such dangers as they must needs pass by, go clean out of order, and at length fall into the pit of hell.
SISTER, take heed; you shall in your journey towards [Page 474] heaven meet with many a monstrous beast: have salve of God's word therefore ready. You shall meet husband, children, lovers, and friends, that shall, if God be not with them, (as God be praised he is, I would it were with all other alike) be very lets and impediments to your purpose. You shall meet with slander and contempt of the world, and be accounted ungracious and ungodly; you shall hear and meet with cruel tyranny to do you all extremities; you shall now and then see the troubles of your own conscience, and feel your own weakness; you shall hear that you be cursed by the sentence of the catholic church, with such like terrors: but pray to God, and follow the star of his word, and you shall arrive at the port of eternal salvation, by the merits only of Jesus Christ: to whom I commend you, and all your's most heartily.
TO these letters of bishop Hooper, we shall annex one written by the famous Henry Bullinger, of whom mention has been made in the beginning of the bishop's life.
A LETTER, From the learned HENRY BULLINGER, chief Superintendant in the City of Zurich, in Switzerland, to Bishop Hooper.
TO the most Rev. Father, Dr. John Hooper, Bishop of Worcester and Gloucester, and now a prisoner for the gospel of Jesus Christ, my fellow elder, and most dear brother in England. The heavenly Father grant unto you, and to all those which are in bonds and captivity for his name's sake, grace and peace through Jesus Christ our Lord, with wisdom, patience, and fortitude of the Holy Ghost.
I have received from you two letters, my most dear brother, the former in the month of September of the year past, the latter in the month of May in this present year, both written out of prison. But I doubting lest I should make answer to you in vain, whilst I f [...]ared that my letters should never come into your hands, or else increase and double your sorrow, did refrain from the duty of wr [...]ng. In which thing I doubt not but you will have me excused, especially seeing you did no [...] vouchsafe▪ no not once in a whole year, to answer to my whole wh [...]res▪ rather than letters, whereas I continued still notwithstanding in writing unto [...] as also at this present, after I heard you were cast in prison, I did not refrain from continual prayer, beseeching our heavenly Father, through our [...] Jesus Christ, to [...] you and your [...]-prisoners, faith and [...] the [...]. Now is that thing [...] unto you, my broth [...], the which we did oftentimes pr [...]ph [...]sy unto ourselves, at your being with us, should come to pass, especially when we [...] talk of the power of Antichrist, and of his felicity and victories. For you know the saying of Daniel, his power shall be mighty, but not in his strength, and he shall wonderfully destroy and make havock of all things, and shall prosper and practise, and he shall destroy the mighty and the holy people after his own will. You know what the Lord warned us of before-hand by Matthew, in the 10th chapter, by John in the 15th chapter, and the 16th, and also what that chosen vessel St. Paul hath written in the second of Timothy and the third chapter. Wherefore I do nothing doubt (by God's grace) of your faith and patience, whilst you know that those things which you suffer are not unlooked for, or come by chance; but that you suffer them in the best, truest, and most holy quarrel: for what can be more true and holy than our doctrine, which the papists, those worshippers of Antichrist, do persecute? All things touching salvation we attribute unto Christ alone, and to his holy institutions, as we have been taught of him and of his disciples: but they would have even the same things to be communicated, as well to their Antichrist, and to his institutions. Such we ought no less to withstand, than we read that Elias withstood the Baalites. For if Jesus be Christ, then let them know, that he is the fulness of his church, and that perfectly: but if Antichrist be king and priest, then let them exhibit unto him that honour. How long do they halt on both sides? Can they give unto us any one that is better than Christ? or who shall be equal with Christ, that may be compared with him, except it be he whom the apostle calleth the adversary? But if Christ be sufficient for his church, what needeth this patching and piecing? But I know well enough, I need not use th [...] disputations with you, who are sincerely taught, and have taken root in Christ, being persuaded that you have all things in him, and that we in him are made perfect.
GO forward therefore constantly to confess Christ, and to defy Antichrist, being mindful of this most holy and most true saying of our Lord Jesus Christ: He that overcometh shall possess all things, and I will be his God and he shall be my son; but the fearful, and the unbelieving, and the murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone, which is the second death. The first death is soon overcome, although a man must burn for the Lord's sake: for they say well that do affirm this our fire to be scarcely a shadow of that which is prepared for unbelievers, and them that fall from the truth. Moreover, the Lord granteth unto us, that we may easily overcome by his power the first [...], the which he himself did [...] and overcome, promising withal such joys as shall never have an end, unspeakable, and passing all understand, the which we shall possess as soon as ever w [...]d part hence. For so again saith the angel of the Lord: If [...] man worship the beast and his ima [...]e, and receive h [...]s [...] in his [...], or [...] his hand, the same shall drink [...] the wrath of God▪ yea, of the wine which is poured into the cup of his wrath, [Page 475] and shall be tormented in fire and brimstone before the holy angels, and before the Lamb: and the smoke of their torment shall ascend evermore, and they shall have no rest day nor night, which worship the beast and his image, and whosoever receiveth the print of his name. Here is the patience of saints; here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus. To this he addeth by and by; I heard a voice saying to me, Write, blessed are the dead that die in the Lord, from henceforth, or speedily, they be blessed, John v. even so saith the Spirit; for they rest from their labours, and their works do follow them: for our labour shall not be frustrate or in vain.
THEREFORE seeing you have such a large promise, be strong in the Lord, fight a good fight, be faithful to the Lord unto the end: consider that Christ the Son of God is your captain, and fighteth for you, and that all the prophets, apostles, and martyrs, are your fellow-soldiers. They that persecute and trouble us, are men sinful and mortal, whose favour a wise man would not buy with the value of a farthing: and besides that, our life is frail, short, brittle, and transitory. Happy are we, if we depart in the Lord, who grant unto you, and to all your fellow-prisoners, faith and constancy. Commend me to the most reverend fathers and holy confessors of Christ, Dr. Cranmer, bishop of Canterbury, Dr. Ridley, bishop of London, and the good old father Dr. Latimer. Them and all the rest of the prisoners with you for the Lord's cause, sal [...]te in my name, and in the name of all my fellow-ministers, the which do speak unto you the grace of God, and constancy in the truth.
CONCERNING the state of our church, it remaineth even as it was when you departed from us into your country. God grant we may be thankful to him, and that we do not only profess the faith with words, but also express the same effectually with good works, to the praise of our Lord. The word of God increaseth daily in that part of Italy that is near unto us, and in France.
IN the mean while the godly sustain grievous persecutions, and with great constancy and glory, through torments they go unto the Lord. I and all my houshold, with my son-in-law and kinsmen, are in good health in the Lord. They do salute you, and pray for your constancy, being sorrowful for you and the rest of the prisoners. There came to us English students, both godly and learned. They are received of our magistrate. Ten of them dwell together, the rest remain here and there with good men. Amongst others, Mr. Thomas Lever is dear unto me, and familiar. If there be any thing wherein I may do any service to your wife and children, they shall have me wholly at commandment: whereof I will write also to your wife, for I understand she abideth at Franckfort. Be strong and merry in Christ, waiting for his deliverance, when, and in what sort it shall seem good unto him. The Lord Jesus shew pity upon the realm of England, and illuminate the same with his Holy Spirit, to the glory of his name, and the salvation of souls. The Lord Jesus preserve and deliver you from all evil, with all them that call upon his name. Farewel, and farewel eternally. The 10th of October, Anno 1554, from Zurich,
CHAP. III. HISTORY of the LIFE, SUFFERINGS, and MARTYRDOM, of the Rev. Dr. ROWLAND TAYLOR, Vicar of HAD [...]Y ▪ in SUFFOLK, under the cruel Tyranny of STEPHEN GARDINER, Bishop of WINCHESTER, and in the bloody Reign of MARY I. This valiant MARTYR was burned at ALDHAM-COMMON, February 9. 1555.
[...] of Hadley was one of the first that received the word of God, at the preaching of the Rev. Thomas Bilney; by whose industry the gospel of Christ took such root there, that a great number became exceedingly well learned in the holy scriptures, as well women as men.
IN this parish, Dr. Rowland Taylor was a vicar, a man of eminent learning, and who had been admitted to the degree of doctor of the civil and canon law.
HIS attachment to the pure and uncorrupted principles of Christianity recommend him to the favour and friendship of Dr. Cranmer, archbishop of Canterbury, with whom he lived a considerable [Page 476] time, till through his interest he obtained the living of Hadley. This charge he attended with the utmost diligence and assiduity, recommending and enforcing the doctrines of the gospel not only by his judicious discourses from the pulpit, but also by the whole tenor of his life and conversation. His [...]aith was sound and consequently productive of good works; that faith indeed which in scripture is deemed the gift of God, is always known by it's fruits, according to James ii.26. "For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also."
THUS continued Dr. Taylor promoting the inerest of the great Redeemer, and the souls of mankind, both by his preaching and example during the reign of king Edward VI. but on his demise and the succession of queen Mary to the throne, he escaped not the cloud that burst on so many beside; for two of his parishioners, Foster, an attorney, and Clark, a tradesman, out of blind zeal, resolved that mass should be celebrated in all its superstitious forms, in the parish church of Hadley, on Monday before Easter; nay, they had even caused an altar to be built in the chancel for that purpose, which being pulled down by the protestant inhabitants, they erected another, and prevailed with the minister of an adjacent parish to celebrate mass in the passion-week.
THE doctor being employed in his study, was alarmed at the ringing of bells at an unusual time, but went to the church to enquire the cause. He found the great doors fast, but lifting up the l [...]tch of the chancel-door, he entered and was not a little surprised, to see a priest in his habit prepared to celebrate mass, guarded by a party of men under arms, to prevent interruption.
DR. TAYLOR being vicar of the parish, demanded of the priest the cause of such proce [...]ing without his knowledge or consent; and how he dared profane the temple of God with abominable idolatries. Foster, the lawyer, insolently replied▪ "Thou traitor, how darest thou to int [...]cept the execution of the [...] orders." but the doctor und [...]ntedly denied [...] of traitor, and asserted his mission as a minister of Christ, and del [...]gation to that part of his flock, commanding the priest, as a wolf in sheep's clothing, to depart, nor infect the pure church of God with popish idolatry. A very violent altercation then ensued, between Foster the lawyer, and Dr. Taylor, the former asserting the queen's prerogative, and the other the authority of the canon-law, which commanded that no mass be said, but at a consecrated altar.
THE priest, intimidated by the intrepid behaviour of the protestant minister, would have departed without saying mass, but Clark said to him, Fear not, you have a supre altare, (which is a consecrated stone, commonly about a foot square, which the popish priests carry instead of an altar, when they say mass in gentlemen's houses) proceed and do your duty.
THEY then forced the doctor out of the church, celebrated mass, and immediately informed the lord chancellor, bishop of Winchester, of his behaviour, who summoned him to appear before him, and answer the complaints that were alledged against him.
THE doctor, upon receipt of the summons, chearfully prepared to obey the same; and on some of his friends advising him to fly beyond sea, in order to avoid the cruelty of his [...]veterate enemies, he told them that he was determined to go to the bishop, being ready and willing to declare the motives of his behaviour to the popish emissaries, and defend the doctrines he had taught, as well as persuaded that he could not die in a better cause; so having committed his people to the care of a pious and faithful minister of Christ, he repaired to London, and waited on the bishop.
NOW when bishop Gardiner saw Dr. Taylor, he▪ according to his common custom, reviled him, calling him knave, traitor, heretic, with many other vil [...]nous reproaches, which Dr. Taylor heard patiently, and it last said unto him▪
MY lord, I am neither traitor nor hereti [...], but a true sub [...]ect, and a faithful christian man, and a [...] [...] ▪ according to your cammandment, to know what is the cause that your lordship hath sent for me.
THEN, said the bishop, art thou come, thou villian? [Page 477] How darest thou look me in the face for shame? Knowest thou not who I am?
YES, said Dr. Taylor, I know who you are, Dr. Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, and lord chancellor, and yet but a mortal man. But if I should be afraid of your lordly looks, why fear you not God, the Lord of us all? How dare you for shame look any christian man in the face, seeing you have forsaken the truth, denied our Saviour Christ and his word, and done contrary to your own oath and writing? With what countenance will you appear before the judgment seat of Christ, and answer to your oath made first unto king Henry the eighth, and afterwards unto king Edward the sixth, his son.
THE bishop answered, that was Herod's oath unlawful; and therefore worthy to be broken: I have done well in breaking it; and I thank God, I am come home again to our mother, the catholic church of Rome, and so I would thou shouldst do.
DR. TAYLOR answered, Should I forsake the church of Christ, which is founded upon the true foundation of the apostles and prophets, to approve those lies, errors, superstition, and idolatries, that the popes and their company at this day so plasphemously do approve? nay, God forbid. Let the pope and his followers return to our Saviour Christ and his word, and thrust out of the church such abominable idolatries as he maintaineth, and then will christian men turn unto him. You wrote truly against him, and were sworn against him.
I tell thee, said the bishop of Winchester, it was Herod's oath, unlawful; and therefore ought to be broken, and not kept: and our holy father the pope hath discharged me of it.
THEN said Dr. Taylor, But you shall not be so discharged before Christ, who doubtless will require it at your [...]ands, as a lawful oath made to our liege and sovereign lord the king, from whose obedience no man can quit you.
I see, said the bishop, thou art an arrogant knave, and a very fool.
MY lord, Dr. Taylor replied, leave off your railing at me, which is not seemly for such a one in authority as you are. For I am a christian man, and you know, that "He that saith to his brother, Racha, is in danger of a council, and he that saith, Thou fool, is in danger of hell fire."
THE bishop answered, You are false, and liars all the sort of you.
NAY, said Dr. Taylor, we are true men, and know that it is written, "The mouth that lieth, slayeth the soul;" and again, "Lord God, thou shalt destroy all that speak lies." And therefore we abide by the truth of God's word, which you, contrary to your own consciences, deny and forsake.
THOU art married, said the bishop. Yes, I thank God I am, and have had nine children, and all in lawful matrimony, and blessed be God that ordained matrimony, and commanded that every man, that hath not the gift of continency, should marty a wife of his own, and not live in adultery or whoredom.
THEN said the bishop, Thou hast resisted the qeeen's proceedings, and would not suffer the minister of Aldam, Mr. John Averth, a virtuous and devout priest, to say mass in Hadley. Dr. Taylor answered, My lord, I am vicar of Hadley, and it is against all right, conscience, and laws, that any man should come into my charge, and presume to infect the flock committed unto me, with venom of the popish idolatrous mass.
WITH that the bishop waxed very angry, and said, Thou art a blasphemous heretic indeed, that blasphemest the blessed sacrament, (and put off his cap) and speakest against the holy mass, which is made a sacrifice for the quick and the dead.
DR. TAYLOR answered, Nay, I blaspheme not the blessed sacrament which Christ instituted, but I reverence it as a true christian man ought to do, and confess, that Christ ordained the holy communion in the remembrance of his death and passion, which when we keep according to his ordinance, we, through saith, eat the body of Christ, and drink his blood, giving thanks for our redemption, and this is our sacrifice for the quick and the dead, to give [Page 478] thanks for his merciful goodness shewed to us, in that he gave his Son Christ to die for us.
THOU sayest well, said the bishop. It is all that thou hast said, and more too; for it is a propitiatory sacrifice for the quick and the dead.
THEN answered Dr. Taylor, Christ gave himself to die for our redemption upon the cross, whose boby there offered was the propitiatory sacrifice full, perfect, and sufficient unto salvation for all them that believe in him. And this sacrifice did our Saviour Christ offer in his own person once for all, neither can any priest any more offer him, nor need we any more propitiatory sacrifice: and therefore I say with Chrysostom, and all the doctors: Our sacrifice is only memorative, in the remembrance of Christ's death and passion, a sacrifice of thanksgiving; and therefore the fathers called it Eucharistia: and no other sacrifice hath the the church of God.
IT is true, said the said bishop, the sacrament is called Eucharistia, a thanksgiving, because we there give thanks for our redemption; and it is also a sacrifice propitiatory for the quick and the dead, which thou shalt confess ere thou and I have done. Then the bishop called his men, and said, Have this fellow hence, and carry him to the King's-Bench, and charge the keeper he be straitly kept.
DR. TAYLOR kneeling down, held up both his hands and said, "Good Lord, I thank thee; and from the tyranny of the bishop of Rome, and all his detestable errors, idolatries, and abominations, good Lord deliver us: and God be praised for good king Edward." So they carried him to prison to the King's-Bench, where he lay prisoner almost two years.
THIS is the sum of their first discourse, as mentioned in a letter that Dr. Taylor wrote to a friend of his, thanking God for his grace, that he had confessed his truth, and was found worthy for truth to suffer prison and bonds, beseeching his friends to pray for him, that he might presevere constant unto the end.
BEING in prison, Dr. Taylor spent all his time in prayer, reading the holy scriptures, writing, preaching, and exhorting the prisoners, and such as resorted to him, to repentance, and amendment of life, and within a few days after, several other learned and godly men in sundry counties of England were committed to prison for religion, that almost all the prisons in England were become chistian schools and churches; so that there was no greater comfort for protestants, than to come to the prison [...] to behold their virtuous deportment, and to hear their prayers, preachings, most godly exhortations, and consolations.
WHEN Dr. Taylor was come into the King's-Bench, he found therein the virtuous and vigilant preacher of God's word, Mr. Bradford; which man for his innocent and pious living, his devout and virtuous preaching, was worthily counted a miracle of his time, as even his adversaries must needs confess. Finding this man in prison, he began to exhort him to faith, strength, and patience, and to persevere constant unto the end. Mr. Bradford hearing this, thanked God that he had provided him such a comfortable fellow-prisoner; and they both together praised God, and continued in prayer, reading, and exhorting one another; insomuch that Dr. Taylor told his friends that came to visit him, that God had most graciously provided for him, to send him to that prison where he found such an angel of God, to be in his company to comfort him.
AFTER that Dr. Taylor had lain some time in prison, he was cited to appear in the arches of Bow-church, to answer unto such matter as should be there objected against him. At the day appointed he was led thither, his keeper waiting upon him. Where when he came, he stoutly and strongly defended his marriage, affirming by the scriptures of God, by the doctors of the primitive church, by both laws civil and ca [...]on, that it is lawful for priests to marry, and that such as have not the gift of continency are bound in pain of damnation to marry. This he did so plainly prove, that the judge could give no sentence of divorce against him, but gave sentence he should be deprived of his benefice, because he was married.
YOU do me wrong then, said Dr. Taylor, and alledged many laws and constitutions for himself, but [Page 479] all availed not; for he was again carried to prison and his livings taken away, and given to another. As for Hadley benefice, it was given or sold (I know not which) to one Mr. Nowealle, whose great virtues were altogether unlike to Dr, Taylor's, his predecessor, as the poor parishioners full well have found.
AFTER a year and three quarters, or thereabouts, the papists got certain old laws, which were annulled by Henry VIII. and Edward VI. to be again revived by parliament; so that now they might, by authority, cite whom they would, upon their own suspicion, and charge him with what articles they pleased, and, except they in all things agreed to their purpose, burn them. When these laws were once established, they sent for Dr. Taylor, with several other prisoners, who were convened before the chancellor and other commissioners in January.
AFTER having been several times before the chancellor, with whom he had warmly contended, the following articles were exhibited against him:
(1) MAINTAINING the validity and legality of the marriage of priests.
(2) DENYING the presence of Christ's natural body and blood in the sacrament of the altar, or that it was a propitiatory sacrifice both for the quick and dead, or that it ought to be worshipped with divine honour.
(3) AFFIRMING his holiness the pope to be Antichrist, and popery antichristianity.
A RECAPITULATION out of Dr. TAYLOR'S causes, whereby our Readers may plainly see, how the Papists act against found Knowledge and sacred Truth, in forbiding Priests to marry.
1. THEY know that matrimony in the Old Testament, agreeable to its first institution, indifferently permitted to all men without any exception.
2. THEY know that in the Old Testament, both priests, levites, prophets, patriarchs, and all others actually had their wives.
3. THEY know that matrimony was permitted and instituted by God for two principal ends: to wit, for procreation, and avoiding of sin.
4. THEY know that in the Old Testament, God not only instituted and permitted matrimony to be free, but also induceth and appointed men to marry and take wives, in these words, "it is not good for a man to be alone," &c.
5. THEY know that in the New Testament St. Paul permitteth the state of matrimony free to all men, having not the gift of continency, and forbiddeth none.
6. THEY know that in the New Testament the said St. Paul not only permitteth, but also expressly willeth and chargeth men, having not the gift, to marry, saying, "For avoiding fornication, let every man have his wife," &c.
7. THEY know that in the New Testament the said St. Paul not only permitteth and commandeth, but also commendeth and praiseth the state of matrimony, calling it honourable, and the bed-company to be undefiled, &c.
8. THEY know that in the New Testament, Christ himself not only was not conceived nor born of the virgin before she was espoused in matrimony, but also that both he and his blessed mother did beatify and honour the state of matrimony with their presence▪ yea, in the same began his first miracle.
9. THEY know both by the Old Testament and New, that marriage is no impediment to walk in the obedience of God's commandments; for both Abraham carried into the land of Canaan his old, yea, barren wife, the virtuous woman Sarah, with him: and also to Isaac, Jacob, Moses, David, and others, their marriage was no impediment to them to walk with God; neither to other levites, bishops, and priests, in the time of both the Old Testament, and of the New. Again, neither was it an hindrance to Peter, Philip, and others, both to have their wives with them, and also to supply the office of apostleship.
[Page 480]10. THEY know both by the Old Testament and New, that sinful fornication and adultery depriveth man of God's favour and graces of the Holy Ghost, which graces especially be requisite in men of the church.
11. THEY know in their own secret con [...]ience, and by experience, that neither they who enjoin this vow of chastity, nor they who take it, do observe the vow of chastity. Whereupon rise inconveniences more than can be expressed; but the Lord above knoweth all, besides the secret murders, peradventure, of many a poor infant, &c.
12. THEY know by St. Cyprian, Epist. 11. and St. Augustine to Julian in his book on marriage, that a vow is no impediment sufficient to hinder matrimony, or to divorce the same.
13. THEY know that St. Chrysostom affirmeth it to be an heresy to say, that a bishop may not have a wife.
14. THEY know that St. Ambrose says, Integrity will have no commandment, but counsel only to be given touching the observing of virginity.
15. THEY know that before the time of pope Hildebrand, that is, during the time of 1000 years after Christ, marriage was never restrained, by any forcible necessity of vow, from men of the church.
16. THEY know that St. Paul calleth it the doctrine of devils, to forbid meats and marriage, which God hath left free, with thanksgiving, for necessity of man and woman.
WHEN Dr. Taylor had with great spirit and courage answered for himself, and rebuked his adversaries for breaking their oath made before to king Henry, and to king Edward his son, and for betraying the realm into the power of the Roman bishop; they perceiving, that in no case he could be drawn to their wills and purpose, that is, to turn with them from Christ to Antichrist, committed him thereupon to prison again, where he remained till the end of January.
The FOURTH and LAST EXAMINATION of Dr. ROWLAND TAYLOR, who with Mr. BRADFORD and Mr SAUNDERS were brought before the Bishop of WINCHESTER and other Prelates.
IN January, 1555, the Rev. Dr. Taylor, Mr. Bradford, and Mr. Saunders, were again called to appear before the bishop of Winchester, [...] bishop [...] of Norwich, London, Salisbury, and Durham, and there were again charged with her [...] sy and schism, and therefore a determinate answer was required, whether they would submit themselves to the Roman bishop, and abjure their errors, or else they would according to their laws proceed to their condemnation.
WHEN Dr. Taylor, Mr. Bradford, and Mr. Saunders, heard this, they answered boldly, that they would not depart from the truth which they had preached in king Edward's days, neither would they submit themselves to the Romish Antichrist; but they thanked God for so great mercy, that he would call them to be worthy to suffer for his word and truth.
WHEN the bishops saw them so bold, and immoveably fixed in the truth, they read the sentence of death upon them, which when they heard, they most joyfully gave God thanks, and said unto the bishops: "We doubt not but God the righteous judge will require our blood at your hands; and the proudest of you all shall repent this receiving again of Antichrist, and your tyranny that you now shew against the flock of Christ.
DR. TAYLOR being condemned, was committed to the Clink, and the keepers were charged to keep him straitly: for you have now another manner of charge, said the lord chancellor, than you had before; therefore look you, take heed to it.
WHEN the keeper brought him towards the prison, the people flocked about to gaze upon him; unto whom he said, God be praised, good people, I am come away from them undefiled, and will confirm the truth with my blood. He was confined in the Clink till it was toward night, and then he was removed into the Poultry Compter.
[Page 481]WHEN Dr. Taylor had lain in the Compter a week or thereabouts, on the fourth of February, 1555, Edward Bonner, bishop of London, with others, came to degrade him, bringing with them such ornaments as do appertain to their massing-mummery. Now being come, he called for the said Dr. Taylor to be brought unto him; the bishop being then in the chamber where the keeper of the Compter and his wife lay. So Dr. Taylor was brought down from the chamber above that, to the said Bonner. And at his coming the bishop said, Doctor, I wish you would remember yourself, and turn to your mother holy church, so may you do well enough, and I will sue for your pardon. Whereunto Dr. Taylor answered, I wish you and your fellows would turn to Christ. As for me, I will not turn to Antichrist. Well, said the bishop, I am come to degrade you: wherefore put on these vestures. No, said Dr. Taylor, I will not. Wilt thou not, said the bishop? I shall make thee ere I go. Said Dr. Taylor, you shall not, by the grace of God. Then he charged him upon his obedience to do it, but he would not.
SO he ordered another to put them upon his back, and being thoroughly furnished therewith, he set his hands to his side, walking up and down, and said; How say you, my lord, am not I [...] goodly fool? How say you, my masters? If I were in Cheapside, should I not have boys to laugh at these apish toys, and trumpery? So the bishop scraped his fingers, thumbs, and the crown of his head, with the rest of such like childish observances.
AT last, when he would have given Dr Taylor a stroke on the breast with his crosier-staff, the bishop's chaplain said, My lord, strike him not, for he will certainly strike again. Yes, by St. Peter will I, said Dr. Taylor. The cause is Christ's, and I were no good christian, if I would not fight in my master's quarrel. So the bishop laid his curse upon him, but struck him not. Then said Dr. T [...]ylor. Though you do curse me, yet God doth bless [...]: I have the witness of my conscience, that you have done me wrong and violence, and yet I pray God, if it be his will, forgive you. But from the tyranny of the bishop of Rome, and his detestable enormities, good Lord deliver us. And [...]n his g [...]ing up to his chamber, he sti [...]l said, God deliver me from you, God deliver me from you. And when he came up, he told Mr. Bradford (for they both lay in one chamber) that he had made the bishop of London afraid; for, saith he, laughingly, his chaplain gave him counsel not to strike me with his crosier-staff, for that I would strike again; and, by my troth, said he, rubbing his hands, I made him believe I would so indeed.
THE night after he was degraded, his wife and his son Thomas resorted unto him, and were by the gentleness of the keepers permitted to sup with him. For this difference was ever found between the keepers of the bishop's prison, and the keepers of the king's prisons; that the bishops' keepers were ever cruel, blasphemous, and tyrannous like their masters; but the keepers of the king's prisons shewed, for the most part, as much favour as they possibly might.
WHEN Dr. Taylor's wife, his son, and John Hull his servant, came to sup with him, at their coming, they kneeled down and prayed, saying the litany.
AFTER supper walking up and down, he gave God thanks for his grace, that had so called him, and given him strength to abide by his holy word: and turning to his son Thomas, "My dear son, said he, Almighty God bless thee, and give thee his Holy Spirit, to be a true servant of Christ, to learn his word, and constantly to stand by his truth all thy life long. And, my son, see that thou fear God always. Flee from all sin, and wicked living: be virtuous, serve God with daily prayer, and apply to thy book. In any wise see that thou be obedient to thy mother, love her and serve her: be ruled by her now in thy youth, and follow her good counsel in all things Beware of lewd company, of young men that fear not God, but follow their lewd lusts and vain appetites. Fly from whoredom, and hate all filthy living, remembering that I thy father do die in the defence of holy marriage. Another day, when God shall bless thee, love and cherish the poor people, and count that thy chief riches are, to be rich in alms: and when thy mother is waxen old, forsake her not; but provide for her to thy power, and see that she lack nothing: for so will God bless thee, and give [Page 482] thee long life upon earth and prosperity: which I pray God to grant thee."
THEN turning to his wife, "My dear wife, said he, continue stedfast in the fear and love of God; keep yourself undefiled from their popish idolatries and superstitions. I have been unto you a faithful yoke-fellow, and so have you been unto me, for which I pray God to reward you, and doubt not, dear wife, but God will reward it. Now the time is come that I shall be taken from you, and you discharged of the wedlock bond towards me: therefore I will give you my counsel what I think most expedient for you. You are yet a child-bearing woman, and therefore it will be most convenient for you to marry. For doubtless you shall never be at a convenient stay for yourself and your poor children, nor out of trouble till you be married. Therefore as soon as God will provide it, marry with some honest faithful man that feareth God. Doubt you not, God will provide an honest husband for you, and he will be a merciful father to our children, whom I pray you bring up in the fear of God, and in learning, to the utmost of your power, and keep them from this Romish idolatry." When he had thus said, they with weeping tears prayed together, and kissed one another: and he gave to his wife a book of the church-service, set out by king Edward, which he in the time of his imprisonment daily used. And unto his son Thomas he gave a Latin book, containing the notable sayings of the old martyrs, gathered out of the Ecclesiastical history; and in the end of that book he wrote his testament and last farewel, as here followeth.
The LAST WILL and TESTAMENT of Dr. ROWLAND TAYLOR, Vicar of HADLEY, in SUFFOLK.
I Say to my wife, and to my children; The Lord gave you unto me, and the Lord hath taken me from you, and you from me: blessed be the name of the Lord. I believe they are blessed who die in the Lord. God careth for sparrows, and for the hairs of our heads. I have ever found him more faithful and favourable, than is any father or husband. Trust ye therefore in him by the means of our dear Saviour Christ's merits: believe, love, fear, and obey him: pray to him, for he hath promised to help. Count me not dead, for I shall certainly live, and never die. I go before, and you follow after, to our long home. I go to the rest of my children, Susan, George, Ellen, Robert, and Zachary: I have bequeathed you to the only Omnipotent.
I say to my dear friends of Hadley, and to all others who have heard me preach, that I depart hence with a quiet conscience, as touching my doctrine, for which I pray you thank God with me. For I have, after my little talent, declared to others those lessons that I gathered out of God's book, the blessed Bible. Therefore if I, or an angel from heaven should preach to you any other gospel than that ye have received, God's great curse be upon that preacher.
BEWARE for God's sake that ye deny not God, neither decline from the word of faith, lest God decline from you, and so ye do everlastingly perish. For God's sake beware of popery, for though it appear to have in it unity, yet the same is vanity and antichristianity, and not in Christ's faith and verity.
BEWARE of the sin against the Holy Ghost, now after such a light opened so plainly and so simply, truly, thoroughly, and generally to all England.
THE Lord grant all men his good and holy Spirit, increase of his wisdom, contemning the wicked world, hearty desire to be with God and the heavenly company, through Jesus Christ, our only mediator, advocate, righteousness, life, sanctification, and hope, Amen, Amen. Pray, pray.
ROWLAND TAYLOR departing hence in sure hope, without all doubting of eternal salvation, I thank God my heavenly Father, through Jesus Christ my certain Saviour, Amen.
February 5, 1555.
"THE Lord is my light and my salvation: whom then shall I fear?" Psalm xxvii.1.
[Page 483]"GOD is he that justifieth: who is he that can condemn?" Rom. viii.33, 34.
"IN thee, O Lord, have I trusted, let me never be confounded." Psal. xxxi.1.
ON the morning after Dr. Taylor had supped with his wife in the Compter, which was the fifth day of February, the sheriff of London with his officers came by two o'clock, and brought forth Dr. Taylor, and without any light led him to the Woolpack, an inn without Aldgate. Dr. Taylor's wife, suspecting that her husband would that night be carried away, watched all night in St. Botolph's church-porch without Aldgate, having with her two children, the one named Elizabeth, of thirteen years of age, (who being left without father or mother, Dr. Taylor had charitably brought up from three years old) the other named Mary, Dr. Taylor's own daughter.
WHEN the sheriff and his company came against St. Botolph's church, Elizabeth cried, saying, O my dear father! mother, mother, here is my father led away. Then his wife said, Rowland, Rowland, where art thou? For it was a very dark morning, that the one could not see the other. Dr. Taylor answered, Dear wife, I am here, and stopped. The sheriff's men would have led him forth; but the sheriff said, Stay a little, masters, I pray you, and let him speak to his wife, and so they staid.
THEN she came to him, and he took his daughter Mary-in his arms; and he, his wife, and Elizabeth, kneeled down and said the Lord's prayer. At which sight the sheriff wept much, and so did several others of the company. After they had prayed, he rose up and kissed his wife, and shook her by the hand, and said, Farewel, my dear wife, be of good comfort, for I am quiet in my conscience. God shall stir up a father for my children. And then he kissed his daughter Mary, and said, God bless thee, and make thee his servant: and kissing Elizabeth, he said, God bless thee. I pray you all stand strong and stedfast unto Christ and his word, and beware of idolatry. Then said his wife, God be with thee, dear Rowland, I will with God's grace meet thee at Hadley.
AND so he was led forth to the Woolpack, and his wife followed him. As soon as they came to the Woolpack, he was put into a chamber, wherein he was kept with four yeomen of the guard, and the sheriff's men. Dr. Taylor, as soon as he was come into the chamber, fell down on his knees, and gave himself wholly to prayer. The sheriff then seeing Dr. Taylor's wife there, would in no case grant her to speak any more with her husband, but gently desired her to go to his house and take it as her own, and promised her she should lack nothing, and sent two officers to conduct her hither. Notwithstanding, she desired to go to her mother's, whither the officers led her, and charged her mother to keep her there till they came again.
DR. TAYLOR remained at the Woolpack, kept by the sheriff and his company, till eleven of the clock; at which time the sheriff of Essex was ready to receive him: and they set him on horseback within the inn, the gates being shut.
AT coming out of the gates, John Hull stood at the rails with Thomas, Dr. Taylor's son. When Dr. Taylor saw them, he called them, saying, Come hither, my son Thomas. And John Hull lifted the child up, and set him on the horse before his father: and Dr. Taylor put off his hat, and said to the people that stood there looking on him, Good people, this is mine own son, begotten of my body in lawful matrimony; and God be blessed for lawful matrimony. Then he lifted up his eyes towards heaven and prayed for his son, laid his hat upon his head and blessed him, and so delivered the child to John Hull, whom he took by the hand and said, Farewel John Hull, the faithfullest servant ever man had. And so they rode forth, the sheriff of Essex, with four yeoman of the guard, and the sheriff's men leading them.
WHEN they were come almost to Burntwood, one Arthur Faysy, a man of Hadley, who formerly had been Dr. Taylor's servant, met with them, and he, supposing him to have been at liberty, said, Master, I am glad to see you again at liberty, and came to him and took him by the hand. Sir, returned the sheriff, he is a prisoner; what hast thou to do with him? I crave your mercy, said Arthur, I knew not [Page 484] so much, and I thought it no offence to talk to a true man. The sheriff was very angry with this, threatened to carry Arthur with him to prison; notwithstanding he bid him get quickly away, and so they rode forth to Burntwood; where they caused to be made for Dr. Taylor a close hood, with two holes for his eyes to look out at, and a slit for his mouth to breathe at. This they did, that no man should know him, nor he speak to any man. Which practice they used also with others. Their own consciences told them, that they led innocent lambe to the slaughter. Wherefore they feared, lest if the people should have heard them speak, or have seen them they might have been much more strengthened by their pious exhortations to stand stedfast in God's word, and to fly the superstitions and idolatries of the papacy.
ALL the way Dr. Taylor was joyful and merry, as one that accounted himself going to a most pleasant banquet or marriage. He spoke many notable things to the sheriff and yeomen of the guard that conducted him, and often moved them to weep through his much earnest calling upon them to repent, and to amend their evil and wicked living. Oftentimes also he caused them to wonder and rejoice, to see him so constant and stedfast, void of all fear, joyful in heart, and glad to die. Of these yeomen of the guard, three used him very friendly, but the fourth (whose name was Holmes) used him very unkindly, and churlishly.
AT Chelmsford the sheriff of Suffolk met them, there to receive him, and to carry him into Suffolk. Being at supper, the sheriff of Essex very earnestly besought him to return to the popish religion, thinking with fair words to persuade him, and said, Good Doctor, we are right sorry for you, considering what the loss is of such a man as you might be. God hath given you great learning and wisdom; wherefore you have been in great favour and reputation in times past with the council and highest of this realm. Besides this, you are a man of goodly personage, in your best strength, and by nature like to live many years, and without doubt, you would in time to come be in as good reputation as ever you were, or rather better, for you are well beloved of all men, as well for your virtues as for your learning: and it were great pity you should cast away yourself willingly, and so come to such a painful and shameful death. You would do much better to revoke your opinions, and return to the catho [...] universal church of Rome, acknowledge the pope's holiness to be the supreme head of the ch [...]h, and reconcile yourself to him. Yow may do well yet if you will: doubt you not but you shall find favour at the queen's hands. I and all these your friends, will be suitors for your pardon, which, no doubt, you will obtain; this council I give you, good Doctor, of a good heart, and good-will towards you: and thereupon I drink to you. In like manner said all the yeomen of the guard, Upon that condition, Doctor, we will all drink to you.
WHEN they had all drank to him, and the [...]up was come to him, he staid a little, as one studying what answer he might give. At the last thus he answered and said, Mr. Sheriff, and my masters all, I heartily thank you for your good-will; I have hearkened to your words, and marked well your counsels. And to be plain with you, I do perceive that I have been deceived myself, and am like to deceive a great many of Hadley of their expectation. With that word they all rejoiced. Yes, Doctor, said the sheriff, God's blessing on your heart; hold you there still. It is the most comfortable word that we heard you speak yet. What? should you cast away yourself in vain? Play a wise man's part, and I dare warrant you will find favour. Thus they rejoiced very much at the word, and were very merry.
AT last, Good Doctor, said the sheriff, what meant you by this, that you say you have been deceived yourself, and think you shall deceive many in Hadley? Would you know my meaning plainly, said he? Yes, said the sheriff, tell it us plainly.
THEN said Doctor Taylor, I will tell you how I have been deceived, and, as I think, I shall deceive a great many. I am, as you see, a man that hath a very great carcass, which I thought should have been buried in Hadley church-yard, if I had died in my bed, as I well hoped I should have done▪ but herein I see I was deceived; and there are a [Page 485] great number of worms in Hadley church-yard, which should have had jolly feeding upon this carrion, which they have looked for many a day. But now I know we be deceived, both I and they; for this carcass must be burned to ashes, and so they shall lose their bait and feeding, that they looked to have had of it.
WHEN the sheriff and his company heard him say so, they were amazed and looked one on another, marvelling at the man's constant mind, that thus without all fear made but a jest of the cruel torment, and death now at hand prepared for him. Thus was their expectation clean disappointed. And in this appeareth what was his meditation in wealth and prosperity; namely, that he should shortly die, and feed worms in his grave; which meditation if all our bishops, and spiritual men had used, they had not for all wordly glory forsaken the word of God and truth, which they in king Edward's days had preached and set forth, nor yet to maintain the bishop of Rome's authority, have committed so many to the fire as they did.
BUT let us return to Dr. Taylor, who at Chelmsford was delivered to the sheriff of Suffolk, and by him conducted to Hadley, where he suffered. When they were come to Lanham, the sheriff staid there two days▪ and thither came to him a great number of gentlemen and justices, who were appointed to aid the sheriff. These gentlemen endeavoured very much to reduce Dr. Taylor to the Romish religion, promising him his pardon, which, said they, we have here for you. They promised him great promotions, even a bishopric if he would take it: but all their labour and flattering words were in vain. For he had not built his house upon the sand in peril of falling at every puff of wind, but upon the sure and immoveable rock, Christ. Wherefore he abode constant and immoveable to the end.
AFTER two days, the sheriff and his company led Dr. Taylor towards Hadley, and coming within two miles of the town, he desired to light off his horse to make water: which done, he leapt, as men commonly do in dancing. Why, Doctor, said the sheriff, how do you now? He answered, Well, God be praised, good sheriff, never better: for now I know I am almost at home. I lack not past two stiles to go over, and I am even at my father's house. But Mr. Sheriff, said he, shall we not go through Hadley? Yes, said the sheriff. Then said he, O good Lord, I thank thee, I shall yet once ere I die see my flock, whom thou Lord knowest I have most heartily loved, and truly taught: good Lord bless them, and keep them stedfast in thy word and truth.
WHEN they were come to Hadley, and riding over the bridge, at the bridge-foot waited a poor man with five small children: who when he saw Doctor Taylor, he and his children fell down upon their knees, and held up their hands, and cried with a loud voice, and said, O dear father and good shepherd Dr. Taylor, God help and succour thee, as thou hast many a time succoured me and my poor children. Such witness had the servant of God of his virtuous and charitable alms given in his lifetime. For God would now the poor should testify of his good deeds to his singular comfort, to the example of others, and confusion of persecutors and adversaries. For the sheriff and others that led him to death, were wonderfully astonished, and and rebuked the poor man for so crying. The streets of Hadley were beset on both sides the way with men and women of the town and country, who waited to see him: whom when they beheld so led to death, with weeping eyes and lamentable voices they cried, saying one to another, Ah good Lord! there goeth our good shepherd from us, that so faithfully hath taught us, so fatherly hath cared for us, and so godly hath governed us! O merciful God! what shall we poor scattered lambs do? What shall come of this most wicked world? Good Lord strengthen him, and comfort him: with such other most lamentable and piteous voices. Wherefore the people were rebuked by the sheriff and his men, that led him. And Dr. Taylor repeatedly said to the people; I have preached to you God's word and truth, and am come this day to seal it with my blood.
COMING against the alms-houses, which he well knew, he cast to the poor people money, which remained out of what had been given him in the time of his imprisonment. As for his living, they took it from him at his first going to prison, so that he [Page 486] was sustained all the time of his imprisonment by the charitable alms of good people that visited him.
THEREFORE the money that now remained he put into a glove, ready for the same purpose, and gave it to the poor alms-men standing at their doors to see him. And coming to the last of the alms-houses, and not seeing the poor that dwelt there ready at their doors as the others were, he asked, Is the blind-man and blind-woman that dwelt here, alive? It was answered, Yes, they are within. Then he threw the glove and all in at the window, and rode on.
THUS this good father and provider for the poor now took his leave of those, for whom all his life he had a singular care and love. For this was his custom, once in a fortnight at least, to call upon sir Anthony Doyl, and others of the rich cloth-makers, to go with him to the alms-houses, and there to see how the poor lived; what they lacked in meat, drink, clothing, bedding, or any other necessaries. The like did he also to other poor men that had many children, or were sick. Then would he exhort and comfort them, and where he found cause, rebuke the unruly, and what they wanted, that gave he after his power: and what he was not able, he caused the rich and wealthy men to minister unto them. Thus shewed he himself in all things an example to his [...]ock, worthy to be followed; and taught by his deeds, what a great treasure alms is to all such as chearfully for Christ's sake do bestow them.
WHEN Dr. Taylor was arrived at Aldham-Common, the place where he should suffer, seeing a great multitude of people, he asked, What place [...]s this, and what meaneth it that so much people are gathered hither? It was answered▪ It is Aldham-Common, the place where you must suffer; and the people are come to look upon you. Then said he, Thanked be God, I am even at home, and so alighted from his horse, and with both his hands rent the hood from his head.
NOW was his head notched and clipped much like as a man would clip a fool's; which cost the good bishop Bonner had bestowed upon him, when he degraded him. But when the people saw his reverend and ancient face, with a long white beard, they burst out with weeping tears, and cried, saying, God save thee, good Dr. Taylor! Jesus Christ strengthen thee, and help thee! the Holy Ghost comfort thee! with such other like good wishes. Then would he have spoken to the people, but the yeomen of the guard were so busy about him, that as soon as he opened his mouth, one or other thrust a tipstaff into his mouth, and would in no wise permit him to speak.
THEN he desired licence of the sheriff to speak; but the sheriff denied it to him, and bade him remember his promise to the council.
WELL, said Dr. Taylor, promise must be kept. What this promise was is unknown: but common fame was, that after he and others were condemned, the council sent for them, and threatened they would cut their tongues out of their heads, except they would promise, that at their deaths they would ke [...]p silence, and not speak to the people. Wherefore they, desirous to have the use of their tongues, to call upon God as long as they might live, promised silence. For the papists feared much, lest this change of religion, from truth to lies, from Christ's ordinance to th [...] popish traditions, should not so quietly have been received as it was, especially this burning of the peachers: but they measuring others minds by their own, feared lest any tumult or [...]proar might have been stirred, the people having so just a cause not to be contented with their doings, or else (as they most feared) that the people should more have been confirmed, by their pious exhortations, to stand stedfast against their vain popish doctrine and idolatry. But thanks be to God, who gave to his witnesses, faith and patience, with stout and manly hearts to despise all torments: neither was there so much as any one man that shewed any sign of disobedience towards the magistrates. They shed their blood gladly in defence of the truth, so leaving example unto all men of true and perfect obedience: which is to obey God more than men, and if need require it, to shed their own blood rather than to depart from God's truth.
Dr. TAYLOR perceiving that he could not be suffered [Page 487] to speak, sat down, and seeing one named Soyce, he called him, and said, Soyce, I pray thee come and pull of my boots, and take them for thy labour: thou hast long looked for them, now take them. Then he rose [...], and put off his clothes unto his shirt, and gave them away. Which done, he said with a loud voice, Good people, I have taught you nothing but God's holy word, and those lessons that I have taken out of God's blessed book, the Holy Bible: and I am come hither this day to seal it with my blood. With that word, Homes, yeoman of the guard, who used Dr. Taylor very cruelly all the way, gave him a great stroke upon the head, and said, Is that the keeping of thy promise, thou heretic? Then he, seeing they would not permit him to speak, kneeled down and prayed, and a poor woman that was among the people stepped in and prayed with him; but her they thrust away, and threatened to tread her down with their horses: notwithstanding, she would not remove, but abode and prayed with him. When he had prayed, he went to the stake and kissed it, and set himself into a pitch-barrel, which they had set for him to stand in, and so stood with his back upright against the stake, with his hands folded together, and his eyes towards heaven, and continually prayed.
THEN they bound him with chains, and the sheriff called one Richard Donningham a butcher, and commanded him to set up the faggots: but he refused to do it, and said, I am lame, sir, and not able to lift a faggot. The sheriff threatened to send him to prison: notwithstanding, he would not do it.
THEN he appointed one Mulleine of Carsey, a man for his virtues fit to be a hangman, and Soyce a very drunkard, and Warwick, who, in king Edward's days, lost one of his ears for his seditious talk, amongst whom was also one Robert King, a deviser of interludes, who was there present, and had doings there with the gun-powder; what he meant and did therein (he himself said he did it for the best and for quick dispatch) the Lord knoweth, who shall judge all. More of this I have not to say.
THESE four were appointed to set up the faggots, and to make the fire, which they most diligently did; and this Warwick cruelly cast a faggot at him, which struck him on his head, and cut his face, that the blood ran down. Then said Dr. Taylor, O friend, I have harm enough, what needed that?
SIR John Shelton standing by, as Dr. Taylor was speaking, and saying the Psalm Miserere in English, struck him on the lips; You knave, said he, speak Latin, I will make thee. At last they kindled the fire; and Dr. Taylor, holding up both his hands, called upon God, and said, Merciful Father of heaven, for Jesus Christ my Saviour's sake, receive my soul into thy hands. So he stood still without either crying or moving, with his hands folded together, till Soyce with an halberd struck him on the head that his brains fell out, and the corps fell down into the fire.
THUS rendered this man of God his blessed soul into the hands of his merciful Father, and to his most dear Saviour Jesus Christ, whom he most intirely loved, faithfully and earnestly preached, obediently followed in living, and constantly glorified in death.
THEY that were present and familiarly conversant with Dr. Taylor, reported of him, that they never did see in him any fear of death, but especially, and above all the rest who besides him suffered at the same time, always shewed himself merry and chearful in the time of his imprisonment, as well before his condemnation, as after: he kept one countenance and like behaviour. Whereunto he was the rather confirmed by the company and presence of Mr. John Bradford, who was in the same prison and chamber with him.
THE morning when he was called up by the sheriff to go to his burning, being suddenly awaked out of his sound sleep, he sat up in his bed, and, putting on his shirt, had these words, speaking somewhat thick after his accustomed manner; Ah vile thieves, ah vile thieves, rob God of his honour? Afterwards being risen and tying his points, he cast his arms about a great beam which was in the chamber between Mr. Bradford's bed and his; and there hanging by the hands, said to Mr. Bradford, O Mr. Bradford, what a notable sway I should give if I were hanged! meaning for that he was a corpulent [Page 488] and big man. These things I thought good here to note, to set forth and declare to those who shall read this history, what a notable and singular gift of spirit and courage God had given to this blessed martyr.
ABOUT the time Dr. Taylor was deprived of his benefice of Hadley, Sir Robert Bracher a pretended protestant in king Edward's days, and afterwards a deadly enemy to the same religion, was one of them that so unmercifully thrust Dr. Taylor's wife and children out of the doors, as she herself hath testified: and notwithstanding the same, since became a protestant again.
A LETTER, From the Rev. Dr. ROWLAND TAYLOR, to his WIFE.
DEAR WIFE, I pray God to be ever with us, through Christ, our only Mediator, Amen.
I am glad that Hadley has skill in judging of such packing ware as was brought thither, the first of May last. The preacher, or rather packer, said, as I hear, that the scripture is full of dark sentences; but it is called of David a candle to our feet, and a light to our paths. Our Saviour calleth his word, the light which evil doers do flee from and hate, lest their deeds should be reproved thereby. St. Paul would have [...]s walk as children of light; and not, in any wise, to continue in ignorance or darkness.
NOW as to the packs of this peacher, I fear they were, as all other wares be, changed into stocks, even his very finest packing stuff against justification by faith only, and for the corporal presence of Christ's body, for praying for souls departed, and for auricular confession. Abraham's justification by faith, by grace, by promise, and not by works, is plainly set forth in the epistle to the Romans, chap. iv. and to the Galatian, chap. iii. and Abraham's works of obedience, in offering up his son so long after his justification, must needs be taken as a fruit of a good tree justifying before m [...]n, and not of justification before God; for then had man to glory in, then did Christ die in vain.
AND whereas chap. vi. of St. John, was alledged to prove, that Christ did give his body corporally in his supper, even as he had promised in the same chapter, it is most untrue, for he only gave his body sacramentally, spiritually, and effectually in his supper to the faithful apostles, and corpo [...]lly he gave it in a bloody sacrifice for the life of the world upon the cross once for all. There in his own person, in his own natural body, he bore all our sins. By whose stripes we are healed, as St. Peter sheweth, 1 Peter ii, and Isa. liii. Indeed receiving Christ's sacrament accordingly as it was instituted, we receive Christ's body and Christ's blood, even as I said before th [...] [...]postles did.
BUT the popish mass is another matter. The mass, as it is now, is but one of Antichrist's youngest daughters, in which the devil is rather present and received, than our Saviour, the second person in the Trinity, God and Man. O Lord God, heavenly Father, for Christ's sake, we beseech thee to turn again England to the right way it was in, in king Edward's time.
BUT to return again to the packer, rather than preacher, he bringeth St. Chrysostom, where he maketh a comparison between Christ's flesh and Elias's cloak cast down to Elizeus, when Elias was taken up in the fiery chariot; at length he saith, that Christ, ascending up to heaven, took his flesh with him, and also left his flesh behind him on earth.
THE meaning is, he did ascend with his flesh, and left a memorial cloak of the same body and flesh, which he calleth his flesh, as he in the sacramental phrase calleth bread his body, because it representeth his body: and as in like manner of sacramental speech, a lamb was called the passover, the circumcision, God's covenant. He took up his flesh corporally, and left his flesh in mystery and sacrament spiritually. Or it may be said, that he left his flesh upon earth, that is, his mystical body, his faithful people; whom St. Paul calleth the members of his body, of his flesh, of his bones, Ephes. v. In the xlix. chapter of Genesis, there is no word of Christ's sacrament, but there is a prophesy of Christ's passion. And where he speaketh there of grapes and wine, it is what is spoken of Christ in another place, where he saith, "I alone did tread the wine-press," meaning thereby, that Christ alone suffered painful passion for the remission of sins, and for the consolation of his faithful soldiers.
IT is not true, as the packer said, that Christ's infinite power may make his body to be in a thousand places at once, as a loaf in a thousand bellies: for then may Christ divide the parts of his body, as a loaf is divided, and so consumed, and then might scripture be false, appoin [...]ing Christ's body to be but in one place, Acts iii. Phil. iii. Heb. iii. The articles of our faith tell us sufficiently where Christ's body is. It was never in two places at once, neither ever shall be, neither ever can be corporally and naturally, neither ever was, is, can, o [...] shall be eaten so with any corporal mouths, as the Capernaites and the papists most erroneously and heretically do judge. If our Saviour Jesus Christ hath no other body natural than is made of the substance of bread, and is in a thousand places at once, as I have oft [...]n said in Hadley, we are not yet redeemed, neit [...]er shall our [Page 489] bodies rise again, and be made like unto his glorious body. We are sure that our Saviour Christ's body is made of none other substance than of his mother the blessed virgin Mary's substance. We are sure that he taketh not the nature of angels, much less of bread. He only taketh on him the seed of Abraham, Heb. ii. In all things like unto us, sin only excepted. And this is a comfortable doctrine to us christians, believing stedfastly, as the true catholic faith is, that Christ hath but two natures, perfect God, and perfect man. Upon this rock Christ's church is built, and the gates of hell shall never prevail against it, Matt. xvi.
I speak nothing now of auricular confession, and praying for souls departed, because I do not hear what authors the packer brought in for this purpose. Sure I am, that he can bring no authentical and canonical warrant for such his pack-ware. He may say what he will of Hebricians and Grecians, and the flesh under forms, and not above forms, or above the board. He may conjure and convey, pass and repass, even what he will in such clouds and mists. He reproved the scriptures as full of darkness, and yet is full of darkness himself. He did wittily, to bring proofs out of Jewry, Turkey, and other strange places, for his round white cake, for that such his pedlary pelf-pack is contrary to the plain simplicity of Christ's supper. He glanced at priests' marriage. He might against that have brought as ancient a doctor as any alledged out of Hebrew, for his mass and wafer cake, that is Dr. Devil. 1 Tim. 4.
I wonder that he did not confute and confound St. Paul for the sentences written above the altar, of which he made mention in the pulpit. For he and his fellows are so profound, so excellent, so glorious, and triumphant clerks, that they can easily prove a man an ass, and writers in the bible ignorant, simple, full of errors, full of heresies, and beggarly fools. Yet they will be called loving, faithful, and true christian people, defenders of the holy mother the church: but truly they take part with the prince of darkness, with Antichrist, with Jezebel, Apoc. ii. They will not be called Papists, Pharisees, Jews, Turks, Heretics, and so forth: but whatsoever they will be called, God's religion had never more evident adversaries, and that in all the chief points of it; no not then, when our Saviour Christ whipt such merchants out of the temple, calling them a company of thieves, Matt. xxi. God give them grace to repent. God be thanked that the nobility something of late hath spied and stopped their tyranny. O unhappy England! O more ungrateful people! sooner bewitched than the foolish Galatians. We have now no excuse.
WE have undoubtedly seen the true trace of the prophetical, apostolical, primitive catholic church. We are warned to beware, lest we are led out of that way, society, and rule of religion. Now we shall shew what countrymen we are, whether spiritual an heavenly, or carnal and worldly. We had as true knowledge as ever was in any country, or at any time, since the beginning of the world, God be praised therefore. If Hadley, being so many years persuaded in such truth, will now forsake the same, and defile itself with the cake-god, idolatry, and other antichristianity thereunto belonging, let it surely look for many and wonderful plagues of God shortly. Though another have the benefice, yet, as God knoweth, I cannot but be careful for my dear Hadley. And therefore as I could not but speak, after the first abominable mass begun there, I being present no more, cannot but write now being absent, hearing of the wicked profanation of my late pulpit by such a wiley wolf. God's love, mercy, goodness, and favour, hath been unspeakable, in teaching us the right way of salvation and justification: let us all have some zeal, some care how to serve him according to his good will written. The God of love and peace be ever in Hadley, through Christ our only advocate. Amen.
CHAP. IV. An Affecting Narrative, and Historical Account of the several PROTESTANTS, namely, Judge HALES, THOMAS TOMKINS, WILLIAM HUNTER, THOMAS CAUSTON, THOMAS HIGBED, WILLIAM PYGOT, STEPHEN KNIGHT, and JOHN LAURENCE; who was persecuted, tormented, and most of them burned, under the bloody Tyranny of BONNER, Bishop of LONDON.
STEPHEN GARDINER, having condemned and burned several great and learned men, he presumed, that these examples would deter any one from speaking against, and opposing the popish religion, and his tyrannical proceedings; but in this imagination he found himself deceived: for within [Page 490] eight or nine days after sentence had passed against bishop Hooper and others, being the 8th of February, six other good christians were likewise brought before the bishops, to be examined for the same cause of religion. Stephen Gardiner seeing this became discouraged; and from that day meddled no more in such kind of condemnations; but referred the whole of this cruel business to Bonner, bishop of London; who supplied that part, as in the further process of this history will evidently appear. Bishop Bonner having taken the matter in hand, called before him in his consistory at St. Paul's (the lord mayor, and several aldermen sitting with him) the six persons, upon the 8th day of February, and on the next day, being the 9th, read the sentence of condemnation upon them, as appeareth in bishop Bonner's own registers: such quick speed these men could make in dispatching their business at once. But because the death of these condemned martyrs did not follow before the next month of March, we will defer the prosecuting of their matter, till we come to the time and day of their suffering.
WHAT was the cause that their execution was so long deferred after their condemnation, we cannot precisely say, unless peradventure the sermon of Alphonsus, the Spanish friar, and the king's confessor▪ did some good; for when those six persons were cast upon Saturday the 9th of February, upon the day following, the 10th of February, the said Alphonsus preached before the king; in which sermon he did earnestly inveigh against the bishops for burning of men, saying plainly that they learned it not in scripture, to burn any for his conscience; but the contrary, that they should live and be converted: with many other things more to the same purport.
FEBRUARY 14, Dr. Robert Ferrar, bishop of St. David's, was sent towards St. David's, there to be condemned and executed. Touching whose martyrdom, forasmuch as it fell not before the month of March, we will defer the history thereof till we come to the day and time of his sufferings.
ON the 14th day of February, the lord chancellor, and other bishops, caused the image of Thomas Becket to be set up over the mercer's chapel door, in Cheapside, London, in the form and s [...]ape of a bishop, with mitre and cross. But within two days after his erection, his two blessing fingers were first broken away, and on the next day (being the 17th of February) his head also was taken off: whereupon arose great trouble, and many were suspected: among whom one Mr. John Barnes, mercer, dwelling over-against the said chapel, was vehemently by the lord chancellor charged withal, as the doer thereof, and the rather for that he was a professor of the truth. Wherefore he and three of his servants were committed to prison; and at his delivery, although it could not be proved upon him, he was bound in a great sum of money, as well to build it up again as often as it should be broken down, as also to watch and keep the same. And therefore the image was again set up the 2d day of March ensuing; but the 14th day of the same month, i [...] the night, the head was again the second time broke off: which thing was so heinously taken, that the next day, being the 15th, there was a proclamation made in London, that whosoever would tell who did strike off his head, (though he were of counsel, and not the principal doer) he should have not only his pardon, but also one hundred crowns of gold, with hearty thanks. But it was not known who did it.
FEBRUARY 18th, queen Mary at length, after long delay, made full answer to the king of Denmark's letters, who had written before two letters to the queen, in the behalf of Mr. Cove [...]dale▪ for his deliverance, who at that time went under sureties, and was in great danger, had he not been rescued by the suit and letters of the said king of Denmark.
THE matter and copy of his suit and letters, as they came to our hands, we have here set forth and expressed, whereby the singular love of this good king, towards the truth of God's word, and the professors thereof, might the better appear to the world.
FIRST, This virtuous and pious king Christianus, hearing of the captivity of Miles Coverdale, of whom he had had some knowledge before▪ (being there in Denmark in king Henry the eighth's time) and lamenting his dangerous case, and partly thro' the intercession of Mr. Machabaeus, superintendant [Page 491] in Denmark, who was somewhat related to Mr. Cover dale's wife, made intercession by letter, to queen Mary, desiring and requesting the said Miles Coverdale to be sent unto him. The date of which his letters was about the month of May, 1554. The copy whereof, now translated into English, here followeth.
LETTER I. From CHRISTIANUS, King of DENMARK, to MARY I. Queen of ENGLAND, &c. in behalf of the Rev. Dr. MILES COVERDALE, Bishop of EXETER.
CHRISTIANUS, by the grace of God, King of Denmark, Norway, &c. to the most noble and most mighty princess and lady Mary, queen of England, France, and Ireland, our most dea [...]ly-beloved cousin, wisheth prosperity. Most noble princess, considering the mutual affinity and alliance, not only of our royal name, but also of our kind [...]ed, especially for that it has for a long continuance of time been propagated and preserved on both sides in these our realms, as well as for the mutual commerce and faithfulness which has been kept up by us in all kind offices; we cannot but write to your majesty in regard to the piety and excellent literature of the truly reverend Mr. John Machabaeus, doctor and egregious professor of divinity, our well-beloved subject and minister, being moved hereto by his humble supplications and intreaties; who has declared to us, that in the late disorder and commotion of the kingdom of England (which that it has happened we are hear [...]ly sorry, and now hope it will prove for the better) ou [...] Miles Coverdale, late of the diocese of Exon, of piou [...] and laudable memory, constituted bishop by the authority of the last king your majesty's brother, and our dearly-beloved co [...]sin, that he [the said Miles [...]] is now involved in most dreadful cal [...]mity, in prison, and d [...]nger of his life, [...] no heniou [...] offence committed, but by reason of the fatal destruction of the times. Which things thi [...] our trusty s [...]bject Machabaeus, being a-kin O him, and (which is more grievous) like him in piety, learning, and moralit [...], as a kind brother, reckons to appertain to himself. And there [...]e he implores our assistance to bestow upon him that favour and kindness he deserves, by endeavouring to [...]id him from his afflictions because he is innocent. We are indeed (and not without reason) moved with compassion on the man, whom for his merit we greatly respect, and chiefl [...] for the testimony he gives of the innocence and integrity of the imprisoned prelate; of which indeed there is so much the more reason to hope, because (though many guilt [...] persons have already suffered death) you have still preserved him alive. Wherefore we have been easily p [...]s [...]aded earnestly to beseech your majesty for our sake to deal gently with your prisoner, Mr. Coverdale, and that it may please you to deliver him as well from the imputation of villainy, as from the fierceness of punishment, and that the offences of the times, whereat it is likely he is also troubled, through our intreaty, especially this being the first time, may be by you graciously forgiven: so far at least, that if peradventure in this state of affairs his presence seem grievous to you, he may with his friends be safely dismissed to our dominions. The granting of which will be taken as a very great favour by us, and will redound to your majesty's clemency throughout your flourishing kingdoms: which that they may be always prosperous, and profitable to your majesty, we heartily pray: and will do our endeavour, when we have understood what regard you pay to our royal amity and friendship, the more earnestly to labour to re [...] liate those favours, by expressing our gratitude in all kind offices to your majesty and your whole realm.
GOD grant that for his glory and the public safety, your majesty may be crowned with prosperous success in all things, and may yourself be in perpetual security.
TO this letter of the king, queen Mary answered again, declaring that the said Miles Coverdale was not imprisoned for religion, but for a certain debt; so neither plainly granting, nor expressly denying his request, but using a colourable excuse for shifting off the matter, as appeareth by his second letter sent to the queen, dated September 24, as followeth.
LETTER II. From the same to the same, in behalf of the Rev. Dr. MILLS COVERDALE.
CHRISTIANUS, by the grace of God, king of Denmark, Norway, &c. to the most noble princess and lady Mary, queen of England, France, and Ireland, our most d [...]a [...]ly beloved sister, and cousin, wisheth prosperity with good success of all things.
WE have received your majesty's letter, whereby answer is rendered, and that very graciously, unto our petition which we made for the safeguard of Mr. Coverdale, late called bishop of Exon. So that we perceive, though he be in danger for another cause than was signified unto us before, yet your majesty will so regard our intercession, that [Page 492] Coverdale himself shall understand it to have done him good. To which regal promise, seeing we (as reason would we should do) attribute so much, that trusting unto the same, we doubt not, whereas he being in captivity, his friends, whom we especially tender, are therefore in heaviness and care, your good promise doth call them from such sorrow and solicitude, to the hope and expectation of his assured welfare: we could not do otherwise, but render thanks unto your majesty for such your ready and gracious good will, not only in respect of this benefit, but also of the conversation and keeping of perpetual amity between us and our realms, and so, as much as in us lieth, to omit nothing that might conduce to the nourishing and continuance of these fortunate beginnings. Neither had we ever any doubt concerning the clemency and moderation of your goodness, whom we heartily beseech Almighty God ever more to prosper, unto the glory of his name, and profit of the common-wealth. Wherefore seeing your majesty writeth, that Mr. Coverdale is in danger for certain accounts of money, and not for any other more grievous offence, we have cause on his behalf to rejoice: and therefore we doubt so much the less, that at our request he shall graciously have his deliverance given him, and be out of danger. For as touching the bishopric, by reason whereof he came in debt, we understand he yielded it up, that no payment might thereof be required, specially seeing he is reputed neither to have enjoyed it long, nor to have had at any time so great commodity of it. Moreover, though it be possible to find some perplexity in the account, or happily some other cause, yet your majesty's letters, offering such favour and benignity, have taken from us all carefulness and doubt: insomuch, that we think your majesty, as much as may be, will have more respect unto our honour, than to that which might of him be required. And therefore we purpose not to trouble your majesty by repeating of our petition, but to declare how greatly we esteem it, that your majesty would gratify us herein: whereof we plainly hope for an end, that Coverdale himself shall shortly in our presence make declaration concerning the benefit of his welfare obtained of your majesty. And of this we desire your majesty to be specially assured again, that we will not only omit no occasion or opportunity to requite this benefit, but also to establish and amplify our mutual love and amity between us and our realms on either side. Almighty God preserve your majesty in prosperous health and felicity.
IT was a great while before the queen made answer to these letters. At length after great suit made, the next year, February 18, she answered again in this wise.
Queen MARY'S ANSWER, to the King of Denmark's LETTERS.
TO the most serene prince Christianus, by the grace of God, king of Denmark, &c. duke of Sleswick, &c. earl of Oldenburgh, &c. our most dear brother and friend.
MARY, by the grace of God, queen of England, France, Naples, Jerusalem, Ireland, &c. to the most serene prince Christianus, by the same grace of God, king of Denmark, Norway, and of the Vandals; duke of Sleswick, Holston, Stormar, and Detmarsh; earl of Oldenburgh and Delmenhorst, &c. our most dear friend and brother, wisheth health and increase of prosperity. When we understood by your letters (which this messenger has brought us) your desire of obtaining leave for Mr. Coverdale to depart from our kingdom into your's, we readily granted your desire; and although he is our born subject, and is not as yet discharged from a debt which he lawfully owes to our exchequer, yet we have regarded your desire before our own debt, and shall for our mutual friendship at all times when opportunity serves endeavour to gratify your majesty. May God long preserve your serene highness in health.
Given at our Court at Westminster, February, 18, 1555.
ON February 19, there was a certain intimation set forth, and printed in the name of bishop Bonner, wherein was contained a general monition, and strict charge given to every man and wowan within his diocese, to prepare themselves against Lent, then near approaching, to receive the glad tidings of peace and reconciliation sent from the pope, Julius III. by Poole, his cardinal and legate.
The DECLARATION of the Bishop of London, to be published to the LAY-PEOPLE of his Diocese, concerning their RECONCILIATION.
EDMUND, by the permission of God, bishop of London, unto all and singular the lay-people of his diocese, doth send greeting in our Saviour Jesus Christ.
WHEREAS this noble realm of England, dividing itself from the unity of the catholic church, and from the agreement in religion with all other christian realms, hath been, besides many other miseries and plagues, which God's indignation hath poured upon it, grie [...]ously also vexed, and sore infected with many and sundry sorts of sects of heretics, as Arians, Anabaptists, Libertines, Zuinglians, Lutherans, and many others, all which sects are most repugnant, and contrary one against another, and all against God's truth, and Christ's catholic faith; whereupon hath grown such [Page 493] slander to the realm, such malice and disagreement among ourselves, the inhabitants thereof, such treasons, tumults, and insurrections against our prince, such blasphemy and dishonour unto God, as no man's tongue or pen is able to express: it hath pleased the goodness of God to cast his eye of mercy and clemency upon us, and to move the pope's holiness to send his most godly messenger, the most reverend father in God, the lord cardinal Poole, legate to bring us the glad tidings of peace and reconciliation, and to reduce and bring home unto the fold the lost sheep that were gone astray: whose message, as it hath been honourably received of the king and queen's majesties, even so the lords spiritual and temporal, and commons at the last parliament, have received it, revoking all laws which in the time of schism were promulgated against the authority of the pope's holiness, and restoring the same, and the church of Rome to all that power which they had in this realm before the said schism; which reconciliation was also most gladly and joyfully embraced, as well of all the clergy and convocation of the province of Canterbury, as also of many other persons, and being so great and necessary to be extended to every person of the realm, it hath pleased the said lord legate's grace to give and impart unto me the said bishop of London, for my said diocese, and to all such as I shall appoint in that behalf, power and authority to absolve and reconcile all and every person thereof, as well of the clergy and laity, and as well men as women, who will renounce their errors, and, being penitent, will humbly require to be restored to the unity of the catholic church, as by the letters of the said lord legate's grace sent unto me, and from me sent unto every of the archdeacons within my diocese, more at large may and doth appear. And forasmuch as in mine own person, as well for the multitude of people, as distance of places, I cannot minister this benefit unto every private person myself, and for that also the holy time of Lent is now at hand, in which every true christian man ought to come unto his own pastor and curate, to be of him confessed, and to receive at his hand wholesome council, penance, and absolution; these are therefore as well to give knowledge unto every one of you, as also to signify and declare, that for that purpose, I have by the said authority chosen, named, and deputed, and so by these presents do chuse and depute all and singular pastors and curates, having cure of souls within my diocese, and being themselves reconciled herein, that they and every of them, by authority hereof, shall have full power and authority to absolve all such as be lay-persons of their parishes from heresy and schism, and from the censures of the church, into which they are fallen by occasion thereof also, and to reconcile to the church all such who shall declare themselves penitent, and desirous to enjoy the benefit of the said reconciliation. And whereas divers pastors and curates in sundry parishes peradventure be not able to satisfy the minds, and to app [...]ase the consciences of some of their parishioners in cases that shall trouble them, I have therefore given also authority to every archdeacon of my diocese with his archdeacon [...]y, to name and appoint certain of the best learned in every deanery of their archdeaconry, to supply that lack, so that every man so troubled may repair to any one of them within the said deanery, whom he shall like best, to be instructed and appeased in that behalf. And also I have appointed, that if this being done, there shall yet remain any scruple in the party's conscience, and himself not satisfied, then the said party shall repair unto one of my archdeacons or chaplains, unto whom his mind shall be most inclined, or else to repair unto mine own self, to be resolved in his said scruple or doubt, and to receive and take such order therein, as to one of the said archdeacons, or unto me, shall therein appear to be most expedient.
FURTHER certifying and declaring unto you, that I have given commandment herein to all my archdeacons, that they admonish and command every pastor and curate within their archdeaconries, that they, having knowledge hereof, do on the first holiday next then following, at the mass time, when the multitude of people is present, declare all these things unto the parishioners, and exhort them that they esteem this grace accordingly, and reconcile themselves to the church before the first Sunday after Easter next ensuing: which thing I also do command by the tenor hereof, with intimation that the said time being once past, and they not so reconciled, every one of them shall have process made against him, according to the canons, as the cause shall require: for which purpose the pastors and curates of every parish shall be commanded by the archdeacon, to certify to me in writing of every man and women's name that is not so reconciled.
FURTHER, herewith I do signify and declare unto you, that our holy father Pope Julius III. of that name, like a most tender and natural father, hearing of the return and recovery of his prodigal child, this realm of England, hath himself made much joy and gladness hereat, and also all other true christian realms have done the like. Exhorting you therefore in our Lord not to be unthankful yourselves, or negligent in this behalf, but diligently to seek for it, joyfully to embrace it, and fruitfully to use it, remembering withal the monition and charge which came from me the last year, concerning your coming to confession in Lent, and receiving the sacrament at Easter: which monition to all effects and purposes I have now here repeated and renewed, charging you, and also all your curates therewith. And because it is all our duties earnestly and devoutly to pray for the prosperous state of our sovereigns, the king and the queen of this realm, I do finally require and pray you, as heartily as I can, to pray for their majesties accordingly; and especially that it may please Almighty God, to send unto her grace a good time, and to make her a glad mother, which cannot be but unto us all great joy, much comfort, and inestimable profit. Given at London the 19th day of February, in the year of our Lord God, after the computation of the church of England, 1554, and of my translation the 16th.
The FORM of ABSOLUTION, to be kept by the Pastors and Curates in private Confessions, concerning this RECONCILIATION.
OUR Lord Jesus Christ absolve you, and by the apostolic authority to me granted and committed, I absolve you from the s [...]ntences of excommunication, and from all other censures and pains, into which you are fallen by reason of heresy, or schism, or any other ways: and I restore you unto the unity of our holy mother the church, and the communion of all sacraments, dispensing with you for all manner of irregularity: and by the same authority I absolve you from all your sins, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.
A remarkable and affecting Account of JUDGE HALES, whom the Cruelty of GARDINER drove to an Act of Desperation.
IN the life of bishop Hooper, mention was made of judge Hales, of whom we shall more particularly speak in this place; beginning with the conference between the bishop of Winchester and him, declaring withal how false the excuse is of the papists, who so precisely by the law, defend themselves, and say that in all their doings they did nothing but by the law, to bear them out. Which if it be so, how did they to Anne Askew? What law had they, when they had condemned her, afterwards to rack her? By what law did they call up Mr. Hooper, and imprison him for the queen's debt, when the queen owed him fourscore pounds, and kept him a year and a half in prison, and gave him never a penny? By what law did Bishop Bonner condemn and burn Richard Mekins, a lad of 15 years, when the first jury had acquitted him, and he at the stake revoked all heresies, and praised the said Bonner to be a good man; and also having him in prison, would not suffer his father and mother to come to him, to comfort their own child? What law had they to put Mr. Rogers in prison, when he did neither preach nor read lectures after the time of the queen's prohibition, and when they had kept him in his own house half a year, being not deprived of his living, yet would not let him have a shilling of his own livings to relieve him, his wife, and eleven children? By what law was Thomas Tomkins's hand burnt, and afterwards his body consumed to ashes? What good law or honesty was there to burn three poor women at Guernsey, with the infant child falling out of the mother's womb, when they all before their death had recanted their words and opinions, and were never abjured before? So here likewise in this case, what order or right of laws did Stephen Gardiner follow in troubling and imprisoning judge Hales, when he had done nothing either against God's law or man's, in proceeding by order of law against certain presumptuous persons, who both before the law, and against the law then in force, took upon them to say their mass? The truth of all which fully appears in the following facts and records.
A CONFERENCE between STEPHEN GARDINER, Bishop of WINCHESTER, the then LORD CHANCELLOR, and Judge HALES, he being in Westminsterhall, with other Judges, to take his Oath, October 6th, 1553.
MR. Hales, you are to understand, that as the queen's highness hath heretofore conceived a good opinion of you, especially for that you stood both faithfully, and lawfully in her cause of just succession, refusing to set your hand to the book among others that were against her grace in that behalf; so now, through your own late deserts against some of her highness's proceedings, you stand not well in her grace's favour; and therefore before you take any oath, it will be necessary for you to clear yourself.
I pray you, my lord, for what cause.
Information is given, that you have indicted several priests in Kent for saying mass.
My lord, it is not so, I indicted none; but certain indictments of the like nature were brought before me at the last asszes there held, and I gave order therein as the law required. For I have professed the law, against which, in cases of justice, I will never, God willing, proceed, nor in any wise dissemble, but with the same shew forth my conscience; and if it were to do again, I would do no less than I did.
Yes, Mr. Hales, your conscience [Page 495] is known well enough; I know you want not conscience.
My lord, you may do well to search your own conscience, for mine is better known to myself than to you: and to be plain, I did as well use justice in your said mas [...] case by my conscience, as by law, wherein I am fully bent to stand trial to the uttermost that can be objected. And if I have herein done any injury or wrong, let me be judged by the law; for I will seek no better defence, considering that it is chiefly my profession.
Why, Mr. HALES, although you had the rigour of the law on your side, you might have had regard to the queen's highness's present doings in that case. And further, although you seem to be more than precise in the law, yet I think you would be very loth to yield to the extremity of such advantage as might be gathered from your proceedings in the law, as you have sometimes taken upon you in place of justice; and if it were well tried, I believe you should not well be able to stand honestly thereto.
My lord, I am not so perfect, but I may err for want of knowledge. But both in conscience, and such knowledge of the law as God hath given me, I will do nothing but I will maintain it, and abide in it: and if my goods and all that I have be not able to counterpoise the case, my body shall be ready to serve the turn; for they be all at the queen's highness's pleasure.
Ah sir, you be very quick and stout in your answers. But as it should seem, that which you did was more of favouring the opinion of your religion against the service now used, than for any occasion or zeal for justice, seeing the queen's highness doth set it forth as yet, wishing all her subjects to embrace it accordingly: and where you offer both body and goods in your trial, there is no such matter required at your hands▪ and yet you shall not have your own will neither.
My lord, I desire not an obstinate will, but to shew my love to God, and obedience to the queen's majesty, in whose cause willingly for justice sake, all other respects set apart, I did of late, as your lordship knoweth, adventure as much as I had. And as for my religion, I trust it be such as pleaseth God, wherein I am ready to adventure as well my life as my substance, if I be called thereunto. And so instead of my own power and will, the Lord's will, will be fulfilled.
Seeing you be at this point, Mr. Hales, I will presently make an end with you. The queen's highness shall be informed of your opinion and declaration. And as her grace shall thereunto determine, you shall have knowledge. Until such time you may depart as you came, without your oath; for as it appeareth, you are scarce worthy the place appointed.
I thank your lordship: and as for my vocation, being both a burden and a charge more than ever I desired to take upon me; whensoever it shall please the queen's highness to ease me thereof, I shall most humbly with due content obey the same; and so he departed from the bar.
A few days after, Mr. Hales, at the command of the bishop, was committed to the King's-Bench, where he remained constant until Lent; then he was removed to the Compter in Bread-street, and from thence to the Fleet.
BEING in the Fleet, what it was that he had granted the bishops, by their fraudulent assaults and persuasions, (namely, of Dr. Day, bishop of Chester, and of judge Portman, as it is thought, overcome at last) I have not to say. This is certain, that shortly after, he was brought to great repentance and terror of conscience: insomuch, that for very anguish of heart he was ready to kill himself with his penknife when he was in prison.
IT happened when supper-time came that he should be called down, but he having little or no stomach to eat or drink, went immediately to bed, where he lay all night sobbing and groaning, and took little rest or sleep. At length when morning came, about six o'clock, he sent his servant for a cup of beer, under pretence as though he was thirsty and desirous to drink; whether this cause were true or feigned, is unknown; but his man was scarce got out of the chamber, when he with his [Page 496] penknife had wounded himself in divers places of his body, and, no doubt, intended to destroy himself; but his man meeting the butler, just when he had passed the chamber-door, the latter was desired to fill the drink, and he taking the cup, the other returned again unto his master, at the very time when he was working his own destruction; whereby Mr. Hales was hindered of his purpose. When the bishop of Winchester had knowledge of it, he straightway thereby took occasion to blaspheme the doctrine of the gospel, which he openly called the doctrine of desperation. Mr. Hales being within a while after recovered of those wounds, and delivered out of prison, returned home to his house; where he, either for the greatness of his sorrow, or for want of good counsel, or for that he would avoid the necessity of hearing mass, having all things set in order, a good while before that, pertaining to his last will and testament, casting himself into a shallow river, was drowned therein.
THE unhappy end of this worthy judge was the cause of great sorrow and grief to all good men, and it likewise gave occasion to some divines to doubt with themselves, whether he was reprobate or saved. But notwithstanding God's judgments be secret, and we likewise in doubt upon what intent he did thus punish himself; neither again is any man certain, whether he did repent or not before the last breath went out of his body; I think (saith Mr. Fox) their opinion is more indifferent herein, who do rather disallow the example of the deed, than despair of his salvation.
OTHERWISE, if we will judge all those to hell that have departed the world after this sort, how many examples have we, in the first persecutions of the church, of those men and women, who being registered in the works of worthy writers, have notwithstanding their praise and commendation? Or what shall we think of those young men, who being sought for to do sacrifice to idols, did cast themselves down headlong, and break their own necks, to avoid such horrible pollutions of themselves? What shall we say of those virgins of Antioch, who, to the end they might not defile themselves with uncleanliness and idolatry, through the persuasion of their mother, casting themselves headlong into a river together with their mother, did destroy themselves, although not in the same water, yet after the same manner of drowning as this Mr. Hales did? What shall we say of the other two sisters, who for the same reason did violently throw themselves into the sea, as Eusebius doth record? In whom though perchance there was no less confidence to bear out the pains which should be ministered unto them by the wicked, yet, their good desire to keep their faith and religion unspotted was commended and praised.
WE mention these examples neither to excuse nor to defend the heinous act of judge Hales, which we could wish might be drowned in oblivion: and because we do not know, nor are we able to comprehend the bottomless depth of the graces and mercies which are in Christ Jesus our Saviour, we will leave therefore the final judgment of him, to the determination of him who is appointed judge both of the quick and dead.
A VERSE on Judge HALES.
The MARTYRDOM of the SIX PRISONERS before mentioned, namely, TOMKINS, PYCOT, KNIGHT, LAURENCE, HUNTER, and HIC [...]D.
I. The HISTORY and MARTYRDOM of THOMAS TOMKINS, a Weaver in Shoreditch, who, having first his Hand burned by the bloody Bishop of LONDON, was afterwards burnt in Smithfield, March 16th, 1555.
THIS plain honest christian was by trade a weaver, and lived in the parish of Shoreditch, till he was summoned before the inhuman Bonner, [Page 497] and confined with many others, who renounced the errors of popery, in a prison in that tyrant's house at Fulham.
UNDER his confinement, he was treated by the bishop, not only unbecoming a prelate, but even a man: for the savage, because Tomkins would not assent to the doctrine of transubstantiation, had bruised him in the face, and plucked off the greatest part of the hair of his head.
ON another occasion, this scandal to humanity, because our martyr remained inflexible, nor would deviate in the least point from the pure and uncorrupted truths of the gospel, in the presence of several who came to visit him at his seat at Fulham, took this poor honest man by the fingers, and held his hand directly over the flame of a wax candle, having three or four wicks, supposing that, being terrified by the smart and pain of the fire, he would leave off the defence of the doctrine which he had received.
TOMKINS thinking no otherwise, but there presently to die, began to commend himself unto the Lord, saying, O Lord into thy hands I commend my spirit, &c. In the time that his hand was burning, the same Tomkins afterwards reported to one James Hinse, that his spirit was so wrapt, that he felt no pain. In which burning he never shrunk, till the veins shrunk, and the sinews burst, and the waters did spurt in Mr. Harpsfield's face: insomuch that Mr. Harpsfield, moved with pity, desired the bishop to stay, saying, that he had tried him enough.
AFTER that Thomas Tomki [...]s had been half a year in prison, about the [...]th of February he was brought with several others before bishop Bonner sitting in his consistory, to be examined. To whom first was brought forth a certain bill or schedule subscribed [...]a [...] appeareth with his own hand, the 5th day of the same month, containing these words following.
"THOMAS TOMKINS of Shoreditch, and of the diocese of London, hath believed and doth believe, that in the sacrament of the altar, under the forms of bread and wine, there is not the very body and blood of our Saviour Jesus Christ in substance, but only a token and remembrance thereof, the very body and blood of Christ being only in heaven and no where else.
WHEREUPON he was asked, whether he did acknowledge the same subscription to be of his own hand. To which he granted, confessing it so to be. This being done, the bishop went about to persuade him with fair words, rather than with reasons, to relinquish his opinions, and to return again to the unity of the catholic church, promising if he would do so, to remit all that was past. But he constantly refused so to do. When the bishop saw he could not so convince him, he brought forth and read to him another writing, containing articles and interrogatories, whereunto he should come the next day and answer; in the mean time he should deliberate with himself what to do: and so the next day, being the 9th day of March, at eight o'clock in the morning to be present in the same place again, to give his determinate answer what he would do in the premises, and then either to revoke and reclaim him [...]elf, or else in the afternoon of the same day to come again and have justice (as he called it) administered unto him. The copy of which articles here followeth.
THOU dost believe, that in the sacrament of the altar, under the forms of bread and wine, there is not by the omnipotent power of Almighty God, and his holy word, really, truly, and in very deed, the very true and natural body of our Saviour Jesus Christ as touching the substance thereof, which was conceived in the womb of the virgin Mary, and hanged upon the cross, suffering death there for the life of the world.
I do so believe.
THOU dost believe, that after the consecration of [Page 498] the bread and wine prepared for the use of the sacrament of the altar, there doth remain the substance of material bread and material wine, not changed nor altered in substance by the power of Almighty God, but remaining as it did before.
I do so believe.
THOU dost believe, that it is an untrue doctrine, and a false belief, to think or say, that in the sacrament of the altar there is, after consecration of the bread and wine, the substance of Christ's natural body and blood, by the omnipotent power of Almighty God, and his holy word.
I do so believe.
THOU dost believe that thy parents, kinsfolks, friends, and acquaintance, and also thy godfathers and godmothers, and all people did err, and were deceived, if they did believe, that in the sacrament of the altar there was, after consecration, the body and blood of Christ, and that there did not remain the substance of material bread and wine.
I do so believe.
THE next day being the 9th of February, at eight o'clock before noon, Thomas Tomkins was brought again before the bishop and his other assistants, where the aforesaid articles were propounded unto him: whereunto he answered as followeth:
TO the first he said, that he did so believe, as in the same is contained.
TO the second he said, that it was only bread and a participation of Christ's death and passion, and so do the scriptures teach.
TO the third he said, he did believe it was a false doctrine, to believe and think as is contained in this article.
TO the fourth, he did also believe the same.
AFTER this answer, he did also subscribe his name to the said articles. Whereupon, the bishop drawing out of his bosom another confession subscribed with Tomkins's own hand, and also that article that was the first day objected against him, caused the same to be openly read, and then willed him to revoke and deny his said opinions, which he utterly refused to do; and therefore he was commanded to appear before the bishop again in the same place at two in the afternoon.
AGREEABLE to this mandate, being brought before the bloody tribunal of bishops, and pressed to recant his errors and return to the mother-church; he maintained his fidelity, nor would he swerve in the least from the articles he had signed with his own hand. Having therefore declared him an obstinate and damnable heretic, they delivered him up to the secular power, and he was burned in Smithfield, March 6th, 1555, triumphing in the midst of the flames, and adding to the noble company of martyrs, who had preceded him, through the path of the fiery trial to the realms of immortal glory.
II. The History and Martyrdom of WILLIAM HUNTER, an Apprentice in London, aged Nineteen Years, who was pursued to Death by JUSTICE BROWN, and burned March 27th, 1555.
THIS adherent to the cause of Christ had been trained to the doctrines of the reformation from his earliest youth, being descended from religious parents, who carefully instructed him in the principles of true religion.
WHEN queen Mary succeeded to the crown, orders were issued to the priests of every parish, to summons all their parishioners to receive the communion at mass, the Easter after her accession; and Hunter who was then nineteen years of age, refusing to obey the summons, was threatened to be brought before the bishop.
HIS master fearful of incurring ecclesiastical censure, desired him to leave him for a tim [...]; upon which he quitted his service, went do [...]n to Brentwood, and resided with his father ab [...]t six weeks.
[Page 499]ONE day finding the chapel open, he entered and began to read in the English Bible, which lay upon the desk; but was severely reprimanded by an officer of the bishop's court, who said to him, William, why meddlest thou with the Bible? Understandest thou what thou readest? Canst thou expound scripture? He replied, I presume not to expound scripture; but finding the Bible here, I read for my comfort and edification.
THE officer then informed a neighbouring priest of the liberty the young man had taken in reading the Bible; the priest therefore severely chid him, saying, Sirrah, who gave thee leave to read the Bible and expound it?
HE answered as he had done to the officer, and on the priest's telling him, that it became him not to meddle with the scriptures, he frankly declared his resolution to read them as long as he lived, as well as reproved the vicar for discouraging persons from that practice, which the scriptures so strongly enjoined.
THE priest then upbraided him as an heretic; he denied the charge, and being asked his opinion concerning the corporal presence in the sacrament of the altar; he replied, that he esteemed the bread and wine but as figures, and looked upon the sacrament as an institution in remembrance of the death and sufferings of our blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
WILLIAM HUNTER was then openly declared an heretic, for not believing the sacrament of the altar, and the vicar threatened to complain of him to the bishop.
A neighbouring justice, named Brown, having heard that he maintaind heretical principles, sent for his father and inquired of him concerning his son; the old man assured him that he had left him, that he knew not whither he was gone: and on the justice's threatening to imprison him, unless he caused him to be apprehended and brought before him; he said with tears in his eyes, Would you have me seek out my son to be burned?
THE old man however was obliged to go, in pretence at least, in quest of him, and by accident meeting him, was asked by him, if he was seeking for him; he replied with tears, he was, and told him that it was by command of the justice who threatened to imprison him.
THE son, to prevent his father from incurring any danger, said that he was ready to accompany him home, on which they returned together.
THE following day, he was taken by the constable, kept in the stocks four and twenty hours, and then brought before the justice; who called for a Bible, turned to the 6th chapter of St. John, and desired him to give his opinion of the meaning of it, as it related to the sacrament of the altar.
HAVING given the same explanation as he had done to the priest, and persisting in his denial of the corporal presence in the eucharist, the justice upbraided him with damnable heresy, and wrote to the bishop of London acquainting him with the same, to whom this valiant young martyr was conducted by a constable.
AFTER Bonner had read the letter, and the constable returned home again, the bishop caused William to be brought into a chamber, where he began to reason with him in this manner:—I understand, William Hunter, by Mr. Brown's letter, how that you have had certain communications with the vicar of Welde, about the blessed sacrament of th [...] altar, and how that you could not agree: whereupon Mr. Brown sent for thee to bring thee to the catholic faith, from which, he saith, that thou art gone. Howbeit if thou wilt he ruled by me, thou shalt have no harm for any thing that thou hast said or done in this matter.
WILLIAM answered, saying, I am not fallen from the catholic faith of Christ, I am sure, but do believe it, and confess it with all my heart.
WHY, said the bishop, how sayest thou to the blessed sacrament of the altar? Wilt thou not recant thy saying, which thou confessedst before Mr. Brown, that Christ's body is not in the sacrament of the altar, the same that was born of the virgin Mary?
[Page 500]TO which William answered, saying, My lord, I understand that Mr. Brown hath certified you of the talk which he and I had together, and thereby you know what I said to him, which I will not recant by God's help. Then said the bishop, I think thou art ashamed to bear a faggot, and recant openly; but if thou wilt recant thy sayings, I will promise thee that thou shalt not be put to open shame: but speak the word now here between me and thee, and I will promise thee it shall go no further, and thou shalt go home again without any hurt.
WILLIAM answered and said, My lord, if you let me alone, and leave me to my conscience, I will go to my father and dwell with him, or else with my master again, and so if nobody will disquiet nor trouble my conscience, I will keep my conscience to myself.
THEN said the bishop, I am content, so that thou wilt go to the church, and receive, and go to confession, and so continue a good catholic christian. No, said William, I will not do so for all the good in the world.
THEN, said the bishop, if you will not do so, I will make you sure enough, I warrant you. William answered, You can do no more than God will permit you. Well, said the bishop, wilt thou not recant indeed by any means? No, returned William, never while I live, God willing.
UPON this the bishop commanded his men to put William in the stocks in his gate-house, where he sat two days and nights, only with a crust of brown bread and a cup of water.
AT the two days end the bishop came to him, and finding the cup of water and the crust of bread still by him upon the stocks, said to his men, Take him out of the stocks, and let him break his fast with you. Then they let him out of the stocks, but would not suffer him to eat with them, but called him heretic. And he said, he was as loth to be in their company, as they were to be in his.
AFTER breakfast the bishop sent for William▪ and demanded whether he would recant or no. But William made answer, that he would never recant that which he had confessed before men, as concerning his faith in Christ.
THEN the bishop said that he was no christian, but he denied the faith in which he was baptized. But William answered, I was baptized in the faith of the Holy Trinity, which I will not go from, God assisting me with his grace.
THEN the bishop sent him to the convict prison, and commanded the keeper to lay irons upon him as many as he could bear; and moreover asked him, how old he was; and William said that he was nineteen years of age.
WELL, said the bishop, you will be burned before you be twenty years old, if you will not yield yourself better than you have done yet. William answered, God strengthen me in his truth: and then he parted, the bishop allowing him a half-penny a day to live on in bread or drink.
THUS he continued in prison three quarters of a year. In which time he had been before the bishop five times, besides the time when he was condemned in the consistory in St. Paul's, the 9th day of February; at which time his brother, Robert Hunter, was present.
THEN the bishop calling William, asked him if he would recant, and so read to him his examination and confession, as is above related: and then rehearsed how that William confessed he did believe, that he received Christ's body spiritually, when he did receive the communion. Dost thou mean, said the bishop, that the bread is Christ's body spiritually?
WILLIAM answered I mean not so, but rather when I receive the holy communion rightly and worthily, I do feed upon Christ spiritually through faith in my soul▪ and am made partaker of all the benefits which Christ hath brought unto all faithful believers thro' his precious death, passion▪ and r [...]surrection, and not that the bread is his body, either spiritually or corporally.
THE [...] [...] the bishop to William, Dost [...] not think (holding up his cap) that for example here of [Page 501] my cap, thou mayst see the squareness and colour of it, and yet that not to be the substance, which thou judgest by the accident?
WILLIAM answered, If you can separate the accidents from the substance, and shew me the substance without the accidents, I could believe. Then said the bishop, Thou wilt not believe that God can do any thing above man's capacity. Yes, said William, I must needs believe that; for daily experience teacheth all men that thing plainly: but our question is not what God can do, but what he will have us to learn in his holy supper.
THE bishop said, I always have found thee at this point, and I see no hope to reclaim thee unto the catholic faith, but thou wilt continue a corrupt member, and then pronounced sentence upon him, that he should go from that place to Newgate for a time, and so from thence to Burntwood, where, said he, thou shalt be burned.
THEN the bishop called for another, and so when he had condemned them all, he called for William Hunter, and reasoned with him, saying, If thou wilt yet recant, I will make thee a free man in the city, and give thee forty pounds in good money to set up thine occupation withal▪ or I will make thee steward of my house, and set thee in office; for I like thee well, thou hast wit enough, and I will prefer thee if thou recant.
BUT William answered, I thank you for your great offers▪ notwithstanding, my lord, said he, if you cannot persuade my conscience with scriptures, I cannot find in my heart to turn from God for the love of the world▪ for I count all worldly things but l [...]ss and [...]ung, in respect of the love of Christ.
THEN said the bishop▪ If thou diest in this mind, thou art condemned for ever. William answered, God judgeth righteously, and justifieth them whom man condemneth unjustly.
THUS William and the bishop parted, William and the rest being committed to Newgate, where they remained [...] a mo [...]th, who afterwards were sent down▪ William to Burntwood, and the others unto divers places of the country. Now when William was come down to Burntwood, which was the Saturday before the annunciation of the Virgin Mary that followed on the Monday after, William remained till the next Tuesday, because they would not put him to death then, for the holiness of the day.
IN the mean time William's father and mother came to him, and desired heartily of God that he might continue to the end in that good way which he had begun, and his mother said to him, that she was glad that ever she was so happy to bear such a child, which could find in his heart to lose his life for Christ's name's sake.
THEN William said to his mother, For the little pain I shall suffer, which will soon be at an end, Christ hath promised me, mother, a crown of joy; may you not be glad of that? With that his mother kneeled down on her knees, saying, I pray God strengthen thee, my son, to the end: yea, I think thee as well bestowed as any child that ever I bare.
AT which words Mr. Higbed took her in his arms, saying, I rejoice (and so said the others) to see you in this mind, and you have good cause to rejoice. And his father and mother both said, that they always were of that mind, and praying for him, that as he had begun to confess Christ before men, he might likewise continue so to the end. William's father said, I was afraid of nothing but that my son should have been killed in the prison by hunger and cold, the bishop was so hard to him. But William confessed, after a month that his father was charged with his board, that he lacked nothing, but had meat and clothing enough, yea even out of the court, both money, meat, clothes, wood and coals, and all things necessary.
THEY continued in the inn, being the Swan in Burntwood, whither resorted many people of the country to see those good men which were there; and many of William's acquaintance came to him, and reasoned with him, and he with them, exhorting them to come away from the abomination of popish superstition and idolatry.
THUS passing away Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, on Monday at night it happened, that William [Page 502] had a dream, which was this: That he was at the place where the stake was pitched, where he should be burned, which (as he thought in his dream) was at the town's end where the butts stood, which was so indeed; and also he dreamed, that he met with his father as he went to the stake, and also that there was a priest at the stake, who went about to have him recant. To whom he said, (as he thought in his dream) Away false prophet; that he exhorted the people to beware of him, and such as he was: which things came to pass. It happened that William made a noise to himself in his dream, which caused Mr. Higbed and the others to awake him out of his sleep, to know what he wanted. When he awaked, he told them his dream in order as is said.
NEXT morning the sheriff Mr. Brocket called to set forward to the burning of William Hunter; and the sheriff's son came to him, and embraced him in his right arm, saying, William, be not afraid of these men which are here with bows, bills, and weapons, ready prepared to bring you to the place where you shall be burned. To whom he replied, I thank God I am not afraid; for I have reckoned what it will cost me already.
THEN the sheriff's son could speak no more to him for weeping.
HUNTER then plucked up his gown, and went forward chearfully, the sheriff's servant taking him by one arm, and his brother by another; and going along he met with his father according to his dream, and he said to his son weeping, God be with thee, son William. And William said, God be with you, good father, and be of good comfort; for I hope we shall meet again when we shall be merry. He said, I hope so, William; and so departed. He then went to the place where the stake stood, even according to his dream, where all things were not ready; and taking a wet broom faggot, he kneeled down thereon, and read the 51st Psalm, till he came to these words, "The sacrifice of God is a contrite spirit, a contrite and a broken heart, O God, thou wilt not despise."
THEN said Mr. Tyrill of the Braches, called William Tyrill, Thou liest, heretic, thou readest false; for the words are an humble spirit. But William said, The translation saith a contrite heart. Yes, quoth Mr. Tyrill, the translation is false, you translate books as you please yourselves▪ like heretics. Well, said William, there is no great difference in those words. Then said the sheriff, Here is a letter from the queen: if thou wilt recant, thou shalt live; if not, thou shalt be burned. No, said William, I will not recant, God willing. He then rose up and went to stake, and stood upright to it. And one Richard Ponde, a bailiff, came and made the chain fast about him.
THEN said Mr. Brown, Here is not wood enough to burn a leg of him: said William, Good people, pray for me; and make speed and dispatch me quickly: and pray for me while you see me live, good people, and I will pray for you likewise.
NO, said Mr. Brown, pray for thee! I will pray no more for thee, than I will pray for a dog. To whom William answered, Mr. Brown, now you have that which you sought for, and I pray God it be not laid to your charge in the last day; howbeit I forgive you. Then Mr. Brown said, I ask no forgiveness of thee. Well, said William, if God forgive you, I shall not require my blood at your hands.
THEN said William, Son of God shine upon me; and immediately the sun in the element shone out of a dark cloud so full in his face, that he was constrained to look another way; whereat the people mused, because it was so dark a little time before. Then William took up a faggot of broom, and embraced it in his arms.
THEN the priest, which William dreamed of, came to his brother Robert with a popish book to carry to William that he might recant, which book his brother would not meddle with.
WILLIAM seeing the priest, and perceiving how he would have shewed him the book, said, Away thou false prophet: beware of them, good people, and come away from their abominations, lest you be partakers of their plagues Then the priest said, Look how thou burnest here, so shalt thou burn in hell. William answered, Thou liest thou false prophet; away thou false prophet, away.
[Page 503]THERE was a gentleman present who said, I pray God have mercy upon his soul. The people said, Amen, Amen. Immediately the fire was made.
THEN William cast his psalter into his brother's hand, who said, William, think on the holy passion of Christ, and be not afraid of death.
AND William answered, I am not afraid. Then lift he up his hands to heaven, and said, Lord, Lord, Lord, receive my spirit; and casting down his head again into the smothering smoke, he yielded up his life for the truth, sealing it with his blood to the praise of God.
III. The HISTORY and MARTYRDOMS of WILLIAM PYGOT, STEPHEN KNIGHT, and the Rev. JOHN LAWRENCE: the two former were burned March 28th, the one at BRAINTREE, the other at MALDEN in ESSEX: and the latter at COLCHESTER, March 29th, 1555.
THESE two pious layman, and one protestant divine, having been pointed out by the emissaries of Bonner and Gardiner, information was given to those savage prelates, that they maintained religious opinions contrary to the doctrine and practice of the holy mother church. In consequence of this they were all three summoned to appear before bishop Bonner, at his consistory court, at London, where they were severally questioned concerning their faith of the corporal presence in the sacrament.
HAVING respectively answered and subscribed that they were not substantially, but figuratively, the body and blood of Christ in that holy ordinance, they were severely reprimanded by the court, admonished to recant their heretical opinions, and for that time dismissed.
A few days after they were again examined concerning the same tenet, when they made the like declaration as before; in consequence of which the bishop addressed himself to the two laymen, and with an affected concern for their spiritual and temporal interests, warmly exhorted them to reject their heresies, and not expose themselves to death here, and damnation hereafter, by obstinately persisting in disobedience to the holy see: but these plain and honest christians were too well grounded in the doctrines of Christ's pure gospel, to be moved from their adherence to the true faith. They, therefore, told the bishop, that they could not recant consistently with the dictates of their consciences, nor would they abjure the opinions to which they had subscribed.
AFTER this bishop Bonner entered into argument with the Rev. Mr. Lawrence alone, and having demanded of what order he was, he answered, that he was admitted to the priest's orders eighteen years past, that he was some time a black friar, and that he was betrothed to a maid, whom he intended to mar [...]y.
THE bishop then asked him his opinion of the corporal presence in the sacrament: to which he replied, that it was an institution of our blessed Lord, in commemoration of his death and sufferings; and that those were grea [...]y deceived, who believed that his body was verily prese [...] in the same, saying, that he had long before ascended into heaven, and was placed at the right hand of the glorious majesty of the Father.
MR. LAWRENCE was, for the present, dismissed; but a few days after he, with Pygot and Knight, was again summoned before the bishop, who, with his usual hypocrisy, exhorted them to recant, embrace the Roman catholic faith, and not be the wilful cause of their own destruction. But no arguments could induce them to recede in a single point; all of them declaring, they would abide by their opinions, because they were founded on the word of God; whereas the other was merely of human invention.
FROM this frank declaration, bishop Bonner proceeded to pass sentence on them as irreclaimable heretics; and then degraded Mr. Lawrence with the usual ceremonies. After which, they were all three delivered to the sheriff, who conducted them to Newgate, where they remained with joy together, until they were carried down into Essex, and there the 28th day of March, the said William Pygot was burned at Braintree, and Stephen Knight at Maiden, who at the stake, kneeling [Page 504] upon the ground, said this prayer which here followeth.
O Lord Jesus Christ, for whose love I leave willingly this life, and desire rather the bitter death of thy cross, with the loss of all earthly things, than to abide the blasphemy of thy most holy name, or to obey men in breaking thy holy commandment: thou seest, O Lord, that where I might live in worldly wealth to worship a false God, and honour thine enemy, I chuse rather the torment of the body, and the loss of this life, and have counted all things but vile, dust, and dung, that I might win thee; which death is dearer unto me, than thousands of gold and silver. Such love, O Lord, hast thou laid up in my breast, that I hunger for thee, as the wounded deer desireth the soyl. Send thy holy comforter, O Lord, to aid, comfort, and strengthen this weak peace of earth, which is empty of all strength of itself. Thou rememberest, O Lord, that I am but dust, and able to do nothing that is good; therefore, O Lord, as of thine accustomed goodness and love thou hast invited me to this banquet, and accounted me worthy to drink of thine own cup amongst thine elect; even so give me strength, O Lord, against this raging element, which as to my sight it is most irksome and terrible, so to my mind it may at thy commandment (as an obedient servant) be sweet and pleasant, that through the strength of thy Holy Spirit, I may pass through the rage of this fire into thy bosom, according to thy promise, and for this mortal receive an immortal, and for this corruptible put on incorruption: accept this burnt sacrifice and offering, O Lord, not for the sacrifice, but for thy dear Son's sake my Saviour, for whose testimony I offer this free-will offering with all my heart and with all my soul. O heavenly Father, forgive me my sins, as I forgive all the world. O sweet Son of God my Saviour, spread thy wings over me. O blessed and Holy Ghost, through whose merciful inspiration I am come hither, conduct me into everlasting life. Lord, into thy hands I commend my spirit. Amen.
THE next day, being the 29th of March, the said John Lawrence was brought to Colchester, and there being not able to go, (for his legs were much worn with heavy irons in prison, and also his body weakened with low keeping) was taken to the fire in a chair, and so sitting, was in his constant faith consumed with fire.
WHEN he was burning, the young children came about the fire, and cried, as well as young children could speak, saying, Lord, strengthen thy servant. and keep thy promise: which thing, as it is rare, so it is no small manifestation of the glory of God, which wrought this in the hearts of these little ones; nor yet a little commendation to their parents, who from their youth brought them up in the knowledge of God and his truth.
IV. The HISTORY of the FAITH, CONFESSION, and MARTYRDOM, of Mr. THOMAS CAUSTON, and Mr, THOMAS HIGBED, two worthy Gentlemen of Essex, who were burned, under the Tyranny of the bloody BONNER, the first at RAYLY, and the last at HORNDEN-ON-THE-HILL, both in the County of ESSEX, March 26th, 1555.
MR. HIGBED and Mr. CAUSTON, two gentlemen in the county of Essex, the one at Hornden on the Hill, the other of the parish of Thundurst, being zealous and religious in the true service of God; as they could not dissemble with the Lord, nor flatter with the world, so in time of blind superstition and wretched idolatry, they [...] not long lie hid and obscure in such a number of malignant adversaries, accusers, and servants of this world; but at length they were perceived, and discovered to Edmund Bonner, bishop of London, by whose command they were committed to the officers of Colchester, to be safely kept, and with them also a servant of Thomas Causton, who was nothing inferior to his master in true piety.
BISHOP BONNER perceiving these two gentlemen to be of good estate, and of great estimation in that country, lest any tumult should thereby arise, came thither himself, accompanied with Mr. Fe [...]knam and several others, thinking to reclaim them to his religion: so that great labour and diligence was taken therein, as well by terrors and threatenings, as by large promises and flatterings, and all fair means, to reduce them again to the unity (as they termed it) of the mother church.
IN fine, when nothing could prevail to make them to assent to their doings, at length they came to this point, that they required certain respite to consult with themselves what was best to do. Which time of deliberation being expired, and they remaining still constant and immoveable in their professed doctrine, and setting out also their confession in writing, the bishop seeing no good to be done in tarrying any longer there, departed thence, [Page 505] and carried them both with him to London, and with them certain other prisoners also, who about the same time were apprehended in those parts.
AT length, when no persuasions would serve, they were brought forth to open examination at the consistory in St. Paul's, February 17, 1555, where they were demanded as well by the said bishop, as also by the bishop of Bath and others, whether they would recant their errors and perverse doctrine, as they termed it, and so come to the unity of the popish church. But on their refusing so to do, the bishop assigned them to appear again the next day, being the 18th of February.
ON which day, among many other things there said and passed, he read unto them several certain articles, and gave them respite until the next day to answer unto the same, and so committed them again to prison. The copy of which articles here followeth.
FIRST, That thou Thomas Causton (or Thomas Higbed) hast been and art of the diocese of London, and also of the jurisdiction now of me E [...]m [...]nd, bishop of London.
ITEM, That thou wast in time past, according to the order of the church of England, baptized and christened.
Item, That thou hast godfathers and godmother, according to the said estate.
ITEM, That the said godfathers and godmother did then promise for thee, and in thy name, the faith and religion that then was used in the realm of England.
ITEM, That that faith and religion which they did profess and make for thee, was accounted and taken to be the faith and religion of the church, and of the christian people: and so it was in very deed.
ITEM, Thou coming to the age of discretion, that is to say, to the age of 14 years, didst not dislike nor disallow that faith, that religion, or promise then used and approved, and promised by the said godfathers and godmother, but for a time didst continue in it, as others (taking themselves for christian people) did likewise.
ITEM, That at that time, and also before, it was taken for a doctrine of the church, catholic and true, and every-where in Christendom then allowed for catholic and true, and to be the profession of christian men, to believe, that in the sacrament of the altar, under the forms of bread and wine, after the consecration, there was and is by the omnipotent power and will of Almighty God, and his word, without any substance of bread and wine there remaining, the true and natural body and blood of of our Saviour Jesus Christ in substance, which was born of the virgin Mary, and suffered upon the cross, really, truly, and in very deed.
ITEM, That at that time thy father and mother, all thine ancestors, all thy kindred, acquaintance and friends, and thy said godfathers and godmother did then so believe, and think in all the same as the said church did therein believe.
ITEM, That thyself hast had no just cause or lawful ground to depart or swerve from the said religion or faith, nor any occasion at all, except thou wilt follow and believe the erroneous opinion or notion, that hath been against the common order of the church, brought in by certain disordered persons of late, at the uttermost within these thirty or forty years last past.
ITEM, That thou dost know, or credibly hast heard, and dost believe, that John Hooper, late bishop of Gloucester, Laurence Saunders, priest, John Rogers, priest, Rowland Taylor, priest, John Lawrence, priest, William Pygot, Stephen Knight, William Hunter, and Thomas Tomkins, have been heretofore reputed, taken, and accounted as heretics, and also condemned as heretics, and so pronounced openly and manifestly; especially in holding and believing certain damnable opinions, against the verity of Christ's body and blood in the sacrament of the altar; and all the same persons have suffered pains of death by fire, for the maintenance and defence of their said opinions and misbelief.
[Page 506]ITEM, That thou dost know, or credibly hast heard, and dost believe, that Thomas Cranmer, late archbishop of Canterbury, and Nicholas Ridley, naming himself bishop of London, Robert Ferrar, late bishop of St. David's, and Hugh Latimer, sometime bishop of Worcester, have been, and are at this present reputed, accounted, and taken as heretics and misbelievers, in maintaining and holding certain damnable opinions against the verity of Christ's body and blood in the sacrament of the altar.
ITEM, That thou hast commanded and praised all the said persons so erring and believing (or at leastwise some of them) secretly, and also openly, taking and believing them to be faithful and catholic people, and their said opinions to be good and true, and the same to the best and uttermost of thy power thou hast allowed, maintained, and defended at sundry times.
ITEM, That thou having heard, known, and understood all the premises thus to be as is aforesaid, hast not regarded all or any part thereof, but contrary to the same and every part thereof, hast attempted and done, condemning, transgressing, and breaking the promise, faith, religion, order, and custom aforesaid, and hast become, and art an heretic and misbeliever in the premises, denying the verity of Christ's body and blood in the sacrament of the altar, and obstinately affirming, that the substance of the material bread and wine are there remaining, and that the substance of Christ's body and blood, taken of the virgin Mary, are not there in the said sacrament really and truly.
ITEM, That all the premises be true, notorious, famous, and manifest, and that upon all the same, there have and be amongst the said good people of the city of London, and diocese of the same, in great multitude, commonly and publicly, a common and public fame and opinion, and also in all places where thou hast been, within the said diocese of London.
THESE articles being given to them in writing by the bishop, the next day was assigned to them to give up and exhibit their answers unto the same.
ON the 1st of March, the said Thomas Causton and Thomas Higbed, gentlemen, being brought before the bishop in the consistory, they there exhibited their answers to the articles aforesaid; the tenor of which answers here followeth.
TO the 1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th articles they answer, and confess the same to be true.
TO the fifth, until this clause [and so was it in very deed] they answer and believe the same to be true. And unto that clause [and so was it in very deed], they answer negatively, and believe that it was not in very deed.
TO the sixth, seventh, and eighth, they answer and believe the same to be true.
TO the ninth, they answer and say, that they think they have a just and lawful cause and ground to swerve and go from the said faith and religion, because they have now read more scripture, than either themselves, or their parents and kinsfolk, godfathers or godmothers have read or seen heretofore in that behalf.
TO the tenth, they answer, say, and believe, that the said persons articulate, have been named, taken, and counted for heretics, and so condemned for heretics; yet about three years past they were taken for good christian persons. And forasmuch as these respondents did never hear them preach concerning the sacrament of the altar, they say that they preached well, in that they said and preached that Christ is not present really and truly in the sacrament, but that there is remaining the substance of bread and wine.
TO the eleventh, they answer and say, that however others do repute and take the said persons, yet these respondents themselves did never, nor yet do so account and take them. And further they say, that in case the said persons named in this article have preached, that in the sacrament of the altar is very material wine, and not the substance of Christ's body and blood under the forms of bread and wine, then they preached well and truly, and these respondents themselves do so believe.
[Page 507]TO the twelfth, they answer and say, that where other people have dispraised the said persons, and disallowed their opinions, these respondents (for ought that they at any time have heard) did like and allow the said persons, and their sayings.
TO the thirteenth, they answer and say, that they have not broken or condemned any promise made by their godfathers and godmothers for them at their baptism, and that they are no heretics nor misbelievers, in that they believe that there remaineth only bread and wine in the sacrament of the altar, and that Christ's natural body is not there, but in heaven; for they say, that the scriptures so teach them.
TO the fourteenth, they answer and believe, that the premises before by them confessed be true, notorious, and manifest.
AFTER these answers exhibited and perused, the bishop spake unto them after this manner; beginning first (as he did before) with Thomas Causton: because you shall not be suddenly trapped, and that men shall not say that I go about to seek snares to put you away; I have hitherto respited you, that you should weigh and consider with yourself your state and condition; and that you should, while you have time and space, acknowledge the truth, and return to the unity of the catholic church. Then the bishop, reading their former articles and answers to the same, asked them if they would recant: which when they denied, they were again dismissed, and commanded to appear the Wednesday after, at two o'clock in the afternoon, there to receive their definitive sentence: which (as it seemeth) was yet deferred.
THE next Friday, being the 8th of March, the said Tomas Causton, was first called to examination before the bishop, Mr. Fecknam and Dr. Stempe being in his palace, and there had read unto him his foresaid articles with his answers thereunto, and after some exhortations to recant his former profession, and to be conformable to the unity of their mother church, they promised him (so doing) willingly to receive him again thereunto. To whom he answered, You go about to catch us in snares and gins. But mark, by what measure you measure us, look you to be measured with the same again at God's hands. The bishop still persuaded him to recant. To whom he answered, No, I will not abjure. You said that the bishops that were lately burned are heretics: but I pray God make me such a heretic as they were.
THE bishop then leaving Mr. Causton, called for Mr. Higbed: using with him the like persuasions that he did with the other: but he answered, I will not abjure. For I hare been of this mind and opinion that I am now, these sixteen years, and do what you can, you shall do no more than God will permit you to do, and with what measure you measure us, look for the same again at God's hands.
FECKNAM asked him his opinion in the sacrament of the altar. To whom he answered, I do not believe that Christ is in the sacrament as you will have him, which is of man's making: both their answers thus severally made, they were again commanded to depart for that time, and to appear the next day in the consistory at St. Paul's, between the hours of one and three o'clock in the afternoon.
THE ninth of March, they were both brought thither: where the bishop caused Mr. Thomas Causton's articles and answers first to be read openly, and after persuaded him to recant and abjure his heretical opinions, and to come home now at the last to their mother the catholic church, and save himself.
BUT Mr. Thomas Causton answered again, and said, No, I will not abjure; for I came not hither for that purpose: and therewithal did exhibit in writing unto the bishop (as well in his own name, as also in Mr. Thomas Higbed's name) a confession of their faith, to which they would stand: and required leave to read the same, which (after great suit) was obtained, and so he read it openly in the hearing of the people, as followeth.
1. FIRST, we believe and profess in baptism, to forsake the devil and all his works and pomps, and the vanities of the wicked world, with all the sinful lusts of the flesh.
2. WE believe all the articles of our christian faith.
3. WE believe, that we are bound to keep God's holy will and commandments, and to walk in the same all the days of our life.
4. WE believe, that there are contained in the Lord's prayer all things necessary both for body and soul, and that we are taught thereby to pray to our heavenly Father, and not to any saint or angel.
5. WE believe, that there is a catholic church, even the communion of saints, "built upon the foundation of the prophets and apostles, (as St. Paul saith) Christ being the head corner-stone. For which church Christ gave himself, to make it to himself a glorious congregation without fault in his sight."
6. WE believe, that this church of herself, and by her own merits, is sinful, and must needs say, Father forgive us our sins: but through Christ and his merits, she is freely forgiven: "For he in his own person (saith St. Paul) hath purged her sins, and made her faultless in his sight. Besides whom, there is no Saviour, saith the prophet: Neither is there salvation, saith St. Peter, in any other name."
7. WE believe as he is our only Saviour, so he is our only Mediator. For the apostle St. Paul saith, "There is one God, one Mediator between God and man, even the Man Jesus Christ." Wherefore seeing none hath this name God and Man but Jesus Christ, therefore there is no Mediator but Jesus Christ.
8. WE believe, that this church of Christ is and hath been persecuted, by the words of Christ, saying, "As they have persecuted me, so shall they persecute you: for the disciple is not above his master. For it is not only given unto you to believe in Christ, (saith St. Paul) but also to suffer for his sake. For all that will live godly in Christ Jesus, must suffer persecution."
9. WE believe, that the church of Christ teacheth the word of God truly and sincerely, putting nothing to, nor taking any thing from it: and also doth minister the sacraments according to the primitive church.
10. WE believe, that this church of Christ suffereth all men to read the scriptures, according to Christ's commandment, saying, "Search the scriptures, for they testify of me." We read also in the Acts, that when St. Paul preached, the audience daily searched the scriptures, whether he preached truly or no. Also the prophet David teacheth all men to pray with understanding: "For how shall the unlearned (saith St. Paul) say Amen, at the giving of thanks, when they understand not what is said?" And what is more allowed than true faith, which (St. Paul saith) "cometh by hearing of the word of God?"
11. WE believe, that the church of Christ teacheth that God ought to be worshipped according to his word, and not after the doctrine of men. "For in vain (saith Christ) you worship me, teaching nothing but the doctrine of men." Also we are commanded of God by his prophet, saying, "Walk not in the traditions and precepts of your elders: but walk (saith he) in my precepts: do what I command you: put nothing thereunto, neither take any thing from it." Likewise (saith Christ) "You shall forsake father and mother, and follow me." Whereby we learn, that if our elders teach otherwise than God commanded, in that point we must forsake them.
12. WE believe, that the supper of the Lord ought not to be altered and changed, forasmuch as Christ himself, being the wisdom of the Father, did institute it. For it is written, "Cursed is he that changeth my ordinances, and departeth from my commandments, or taketh any thing from them."
[Page 509]NOW we find by the scriptures, that this holy supper it sore abused.
FIRST, In that it is given in one kind, where Christ gave it in both.
SECONDLY, in that it is made a private mass, where Christ made it a communion. for he gave it not to one alone, but to all the apostles in the name of the whole church.
THIRDLY, In that it is made a sacrifice for the quick and the dead, whereas Christ ordained it for a remembrance of the everlasting sacrifice which was in his own body offered on the altar of the cross once for all, as the holy apostle saith, "Even the full and perfect price of our redemption: and where there is remission of sin, (saith he) there is no more sacrifice for sin."
FOURTHLY, In that it is worshipped contrary to the commandment. saying, "Thou shalt worship nothing that is made with hands.
FIFTHLY, In that it is given in an unknown tongue, whereby the people are ignorant of the right use thereof, how Christ died for our sins, and rose again for our justification, by whom we are set at peace with God, and received into his savour and mercy by his promise, whereof this sacrament is a sure seal and witness.
BESIDES this, it is hanged up, and shut in a box, many times so long, that worms breed in it, and so it putrifieth: whereby the rude people have an occasion to speak irreverently thereof, which otherwise would speak reverently.
THEREFORE they that thus abuse it, bring up the slander, and not we, which pray daily to God to restore it to the right use, according to Christ's institution.
NOW concerning Christ's words, "This is my body," we deny them not: but we say, that the mind of Christ in them must be searched out by other open scriptures, whereby we may come to the spiritual understanding of them, which shall be most to the glory of God: for as the holy apostle saith, "There is no scripture that hath any private interpretation." Besides this, the scriptures are full of the like figurative speeches: as for example: Christ saith, "This cup is the New Testament of my blood." "The rock is Christ," saith St. Paul. "Whosoever receiveth a child in my name, (saith our Saviour Jesus Christ) receiveth me." Which sentences must not be understood after the letter, lest we do err as the Capernaites did, which thought that Christ's body should be eaten with their teeth, when he spake of the eating thereof. Unto whom Christ said, "Such a fleshly eating of my body profiteth nothing: it is the spirit that quickeneth; the flesh profiteth nothing: for my words are spirit and life."
THUS we see that Christ's words must be understood spiritually, and not literally. Therefore he that cometh to this worthy supper of the Lord, must not prepare his jaw, but his heart, neither tooth nor belly; but "Believe (saith St, Augustine) and thou hast eaten it;" so that we must bring with us a spiritual hunger, and as the apostle saith, "Try and examine ourselves, whether our conscience do testify unto us, that we do truly believe in Christ, according to the scriptures;" whereof if we be truly certified, being new born from our old conversation in heart and mind, will, and deed, then may we boldly with this marriage garment of our faith come to the feast.
IN consideration whereof we have invincible scriptures, as of Christ himself; "This do in remembrance of me." And St. Paul; "As often (saith he) as you eat of this bread, and drink of this cup, you shall remember the Lord's death until he come." Here is no change, but bread still. And St. Luke affirmeth the same. Also Christ hath made a just promise, saying, "Me you shall not have always with you, I leave the world, and go to my Father; for if I should not depart, the Comforter which I will send, cannot come unto you," So according to his promise he ascended, as the evangelists testify. Also St. Peter saith, "That heaven shall keep him until the last day also."
NOW as touching his omnipotent power, we confess and say with St. Auguistine, that Christ is both God and Man. In that he is God, he is every [Page 510] where; but in that he is Man, he is in heaven, and can occupy but one place: whereunto the scriptures do agree. For his body was not in all places at once when he was here; for it was not in the grave when the woman sought it, as the angel saith: neither was it at Bethany where Lazarus died, by Christ's own words, saying, "I am glad I was not there." And thus we conclude with the scriptures, that Christ is in his holy supper sacramentally and spiritually in all them that worthily receive it, and corporally in heaven, both God and Man.
AND further, we make here our protestation before God (whom we call to record in this matter) that this which we have said, is neither of stubbornness, nor wilful mind, as some judge of us; but even of very conscience, truly (we trust) grounded on God's holy word. For before we took this matter in hand, we b [...]ought God from the bottom of our hearts, that we might do nothing contrary to his holy and blessed word. And in that he has thus shewed his power in our weakness, we cannot sufficiently praise him, unto whom we give hearty thanks, through Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen.
WHEN they had thus delivered and read their confession, the bishop still persisting sometimes in fair promises, sometimes threatening to pronounce judgment, asked them whether they would stand to this their confession, and other answers? To whom Causton said, Yes, we will stand to our answers written with our hands, and to our belief therein contained. After which answer the bishop began to pronounce sentence against him.
THEN he said, that it was much rashness, and without love or mercy to give judgment without an swering to their confession by the truth of God's word, whereunto they submitted themselves most willingly. And therefore I, said Causton, (because I cannot have justice at your hand, but that you will thus rashly condemn me) do appeal from you to my lord cardinal.
THEN Dr. Smith said, that he would answer their confession. But the bishop (not suffering him to speak) desired Harpsfield to say his mind, who taking their confession in his hand, neither touched nor answered one sentence thereof.
WHICH done, the bishop pronounced sentence, first against the said Thomas Causton, and then calling Thomas Higbed, caused his articles and answers likewise to be read. In the reading whereof Higbed said, Ye speak blasphemy against Christ's passion, and ye go about to trap us with your subtleties and snares. And though my father and mother, and other kinsfolk did believe, as you say, yet they were deceived in so believing.
AND further, where you say, that my lord Cranmer (late archbishop of Canterbury) and others specified in the said articles, be heretics, I do wish that I were such an heretic as they were, and be. Then the bishop asked him again, whether he would turn from his error, and come to the unity of their church? To whom he said, No: I would you should recant; for I am in the truth, and you in error.
WELL, (said the bishop) if you will return, I will gladly receive you.
NO, (said Higbed) I will not return as you will have me, to believe in the sacrament of the altar of your God.
WHEREUPON the bishop proceeded, and gave judgment upon him, as he had done before upon Thomas Causton. They were then both delivered to the sheriffs, and so by them sent to Newgate, where they remained the space of fourteen days, praised be God, not so much in afflictions as in consolations.
FOR the increase of which they earnestly desired all their good brethren and sisters in Christ to pray, that God for his Son's sake, would continue that great mercy, which already he had begun in them, so that they might persevere unto the end, to the praise of the eternal God, and comfort of all their brethren.
FOURTEEN days, after their condemnation, being expired, they were the 23d of March taken from Newgate, at four o'clock in the morning, and so led through the city to Aldgate, where they were delivered unto the sheriff of Essex, and there being fast bound in a cart, were shortly after brought to their several appointed places of burning: that is to say, [Page 511] Thomas Higbed to Hornden on the Hill, and Thomas Causton to Rayly (both in the county of Essex) where they did most constantly, the 26th day of the same month, seal their faith with shedding their blood by most cruel fire, to the glory of God, and great rejoicing of the godly.
AT the burning of which Mr. Higbed, justice Brown was also present, and divers gentlemen in the shire were commanded to be present, for fear lest they should be taken from them. And thus much touching the apprehension, examination, confession, condemnation, and burning of these two godly and constant martyrs of God.
CHAP. V. The Examinations, Condemnation, and Martyrdom, of Dr. ROBERT FARRAR, Bishop of St. DAVID'S, in WALES; who gave his Life for the Truth, and was burned in the Marketplace of the Town of CAERMARTHEN, March 30th, 1555.
THIS worthy and learned prelate having in the former reign, as well as since the accession of Mary, been remarkably zealous in promoting the reformed doctrines, and exploding the errors of popish idolatry; was summoned, among others, before the popish and persecuting bishop of Winchester, (who was then likewise lord chancellor) and other commissioners set apart for the abominable work of devastation and massacre.
HIS principal accusers and persecutors were, George Constantine Walter, his servant; Thomas Young, chaunter of the cathedral, afterwards archbishop of York; Dr. Rowland Merrick, afterwards bishop of Bangor; Thomas Lee, and Hugh Rawlins, &c. at whose instance, Hugh Rawlins, a priest, and Thomas Lee, brother-in-law to the said George Constantine, did exhibit to the king's most honourable council, the following articles and informations, which, with the bishop's answer to the same, we here think good to insert.
A true Copy of Articles and Informations exhibited by HUGH RAWLINS, and THOMAS LE [...], against Dr. ROBERT FARRAR, Bishop of St. David's.
1. IMPRIMIS, When the said bishop first came to his diocese, he appointed his chancellor by his letters of commission, omitting the king's majesty's stile and authority, and grounded his said commission upon foreign usurped laws and authority, by force of which authority his said chancellor did visit certain deanries of his said diocese, and admonished the chaunter and chapiter of the cathedral church of St. David's aforesaid, against a certain day and place, for like intent and purpose, contrary to the king's highness's laws and statutes, and in derogation of his highness's supremacy.
2. ITEM, That the said chaunter and chapiter, perceiving the fault of the said commission, took the same from the register into their custody, refusing to appear by virtue thereof, and by secret and charitable ways and means, did admonish the said bishop of the unlawfulness and faults of the said commission, and of the danger he had incurred for granting and executing the same; opening also unto him the effect of the statute made in the 28th year of our late sovereign lord Henry VIII. Which admonitions notwithstanding, the said bishop neglecting the same, and continuing in his malicious doing, or inexcusable ignorance; about the 20th day of August, in the fourth year of the reign of our sovereign lord that now is, did confer unto one John Evans, the vicarage of Pembrin, instituting him by authority of the old foreign usurped law, making no mention of the king's highness's authority, in contempt and derogation of the same.
3. ITEM, Whereas the chancellor and vicar general [Page 512] to the said bishop, did upon a lawful title, and by the king's highness's supreme authority, admit and institute one John Gough into the rectory of Haskard with the appurtenances, and gave out in the king's name under his highness's seal ecclesiastical appointed for that office, with the test of the said bishop, and subscription of the said chancellor, a mandate to induct accordingly; by virtue whereof the said John Gough was inducted by the official there into the real possession of the same rectory, with the rights and appurtenances to the same belonging; whereupon the register of the said diocese, at the request of the aforesaid chancellor, did signify the premises, with all the circumstances, before divers persons to the fore-named bishop: who notwithstanding did institute and cause to be inducted, one Harry Goddard, unto the same parsonage, making no mention of the king's majesty's authority nor supremacy; in contempt and derogation of the same his highness's crown and dignity, and in extolling the foreign usurped authority, contrary to the form of the statute, &c.
4. ITEM, The said bishop, immediately after the unlawful institution and induction of Goddard, molested the said John Gough, lawfully instituted and inducted as before, citing him from place to place, objecting no matter unto him of long season, till at length he articled: so taking upon him the cognition of the title of the whole fruits and patronage, in contempt of the king's highness's regal crown and statutes of this realm.
5. ITEM, He hath commonly made his collations and institutions, as he did his first commission, in his own name and authority, without expressing the king's supremacy.
6. ITEM, He made under his seal one collation, two institutions, three mandates to induct, in one vacation of one benefice, three several persons, without order of law, or revocation of any of them, giving to every one like authority, title, and right. Whereby except good foresight, as well of justices of the peace, as of the friends, had not been, there had ensued much inconvenience amongst the partakers of the intitled incumbents in that behalf.
7. ITEM, The same bishop decreeing caveats to be made in benefices, thereby knowing the titles litigious, instituted and caused to be inducted without trial of any title or due order of law.
8. ITEM, He directed his mandates of induction unto private men, and not to the archdeacon nor his officials; contrary to the law and custom used in that behalf. Notwithstanding he hath been counselled to the contrary by learned men.
9. ITEM, Having no manner of knowledge nor practice in the law, he sitteth every day in harvest, and other times, upon causes, without the assistance of the learned in the law, having with him only an unlearned boy, who is no notary, to his scribe, neither observing the law, nor yet reasonable order: and therefore doth no good, but trifleth the time, as may appear by his acts, if he have them to shew.
10. ITEM, He and his officers, by his knowledge, used to dispense with marriages, to be solemnized without banns, contrary to the laws and ordinances in that behalf.
11. ITEM, Whereas one Thomas Prichard, a chaplain of his, solemnized matrimony in a private house without banns, and that between a priest and a sister of her's that was appointed to be married with the said priest that day; he also being a parson, and leaving his cure unserved that day being Sunday: and notwithstanding that one of the king's council in the marches of Wales informed the said bishop of the same misdemeanors, requiring due reformation thereof, he hath done nothing therein, but put the same chaplain in office, and made him commissary general since that time, bearing a special favour to the rest of the offenders.
12. ITEM, Whereas one Meredith ap Thomas his houshold-servant, was accused by one Sage Hughes, to have been father of her child; the said bishop, without acquittal of his servant, caused him to sue the parents of the said Sage of infamy, first in his principal consistory, and from thence before a commissary of his, being his houshold chaplain, and at last took the matter before himself, railing against all his officers, because they proceeded not after his partial affection, and against the law, that honest [Page 513] men of Caermarthen, where he sat upon the cause, judged him to be, or at the least to have been distracted of his wit; and by his partial handling, the cause remaineth unfinished, and the child without a father.
13. ITEM, Whereas one Jenkin Ph. accused William Chambers, a servant of the bishop's that found this William in an adulterous manner with his wife, by reason whereof the bishop expelled the wife out of his house, the said infamy not purged, the said parties have been both again in the bishop's house and service since that time, to the evil example of others.
14. ITEM, By his unlawful sequestration of the fruits of the benefices of Langattock and Lanvihangel, by the indiscreet handling of the same, there were raised the number of four hundred people or more, who made much disturbance, to the great danger of the inhabitants thereabout, had it not been pacified by the discreet means of sir John Vaughan, knight.
15. ITEM, By his unlawful collation of the prebend of Lanbister to one Stephen Green, a chaplain of his, by covenant and promise to maintain the suit, by whose crafty and indiscreet handling of the same, there was raised in the county of Radnor, the 19th day of August last past, about three or four hundred men to like danger, but that the matter was stayed by John Bradshaw, Rice ap Glin, and Stephen ap Rice, justices of the same county; who with great danger to themselves and their's, pacified the matter, committing an hundred of the offenders to ward.
16. ITEM, Such as he owes displeasures unto, he citeth from place to place, and day to day, only for their vexation, laying no matter against them; and being divers times required the copy of his proceedings against them, to the intent they might answer accordingly, and be at their lawful defence; he denied to all such persons the copies of his proceedings.
17. ITEM, He and his officers wink at the manifest and open crimes of his favourers and adherents, to the evil example of the whole diocese, and abuse the censure of excommunication and suspension, making it an instrument of revenge against such as they do not favour.
18. ITEM, Having received payment of the king's majesty's subsidy, due in Oct. the fourth year of his grace's reign, of the foresaid chaunter of the cathedral church of St. David's, and Rowland Meyrike, two of the residentaries there, before Christmas last, he unjustly, of a premeditated mind and purpose, afterwards certified them for recusants, to their ruin, if they had not been admonished of his cruel purpose, and provided lawful defence for the same.
19. ITEM, The said bishop celebrating matrimony in his own person, dispensed, contrary to the book of ordinance, with the parties married, for not receiving the holy communion; the parties both being young and lusty persons, having no reasonable cause wherefore they should abstain. At which celebration the bishop communicated not himself. And further the communion was celebrated by a chaplain of his, with superstitious blowings, kneelings, and knockings both by the chaplain that ministered, and by all the company, only one other priest communicating for the manner.
20. ITEM, Where the official of the archdeacon of Caermarthen, in his visitation within Caermarthen, found, contrary unto the said ordinance, an altar set up in the body of the church, for the celebration of the communion, and caused the said altar to be taken away, and a table to be set in the middle of the church; the bishop after the same commanded the vicar of Caermarthen to set the table without the chancel again for the ministration of the communion.
21. ITEM, He being often in Caermarthen, and other places in the chancel at the time of the holy communion, not only tarried there himself, neither communicating nor ministering bare-headed and uncovered, reverently kneeling; but also permitting the people there to continue, the chancel and choir full, kneeling and knocking their breasts. Which manner is yet used in all the diocese, without any reformation or gainsay of him or any his officers.
22. ITEM, Whereas superstitious praying upon [Page 514] beads is not only ungodly, but reproved in the king's majesty's injunctions; the said bishop meeting many with beads in their hands never rebuked any of them.
23. ITEM, The said bishop being in the pulpit, and seeing divers corpses within the church, with a great number of lights upon them, never spoke against any of them.
24. ITEM, Whereas the ordinance willeth, that no children be baptized but upon the Sunday, or holy-day, (only cases of necessity excepted) he, having two children himself born without danger, caused one of them to be baptized on the week day. And by his example, without any contradiction o [...] motion of reformation, it is used, as it hath been accustomed, in all the diocese commonly, contrary to the book of ordinance in that behalf.
25. ITEM, From his first coming into the diocese, he hath had, and yet hath his only study, labour, and practice, to survey land, and to look for mines, &c. neglecting his own bounden duty to apply to his book and preaching.
26. ITEM, He keepeth no manner of hospitality, but hath his servants' table in one parlour with him, lest any strangers should approach his servants being at their meat.
27. ITEM, He is commonly talking not of godliness, but of worldly matters, as baking, brewing, inclosing, ploughing, mining of mill-stones, discharging of tenants, and such like, not only at his table, but also most commonly at other places.
28. ITEM, That he hath warned divers tenants out of their lands, which they and their ancestors have enjoyed for their rents, these hundred years and more, and occupied with tillage; which he said he would inclose, and being sued to by poor men, because of quietness, he answered, The crows shall eat the corn, rather than ye shall have any profit thereof.
29. ITEM, When the vicars choral of St. David's, for relief of their hospitality, had an island of his called the Bishop's-isle, for 40s. rent, which he let to a chaplain of his for 5l. by the year; and where, at the suit of the said vicars it was granted by the bishop in the whole chapter, that the vicars should have it for years at 40s. rent, and pay 20l. entry; he now covetously, and against his promise openly made, denieth the same, except the vicars would give 50l.
30. ITEM, He caused the curate of St. David's to warn the tenants out of their said lands in the pulpit, to the great offence of the people, who were wont to have God's word preached there; and so they said to the curate at that time.
31. ITEM, To the ploughing of a pasture not above ten days work, in lent, anno 1549, he had 32 ploughs in one day, and those ploughs the priest bade in the church, contrary to the statute of Gomortha in that behalf provided, and to the evil example of gentlemen in that country.
32. ITEM, Where the king's majesty, of godly remembrance, Henry VIII. appointed at Brecknock a school-master, usher, reader of divinity, a minister, and certain scholars, and for the maintenance thereof appointed 40l. and 12l. of the pensions and revenues of Brecknock: the bishop finding it so furnished, has neither reader nor minister there, covetously converting their stipends to his own use.
33. ITEM, The bishop was twice in one day presented in the great court, held in the court of Caermarthen, for inclosing and covetously incroaching on the king's high-way.
34. ITEM, He covetously continueth purchasing of lands, buying of cattle, merchandise, and other things, being indebted a notable sum to the king's majesty, as may appear by his accounts in the court of tenths and first fruits.
35. ITEM, Whereas one Lewis John Tho. Bool, putting from him his lawful wedded wife, upon Christmas-eve last, without banns, had marriage solemnized with a concubine of his in a church within three miles of the bishop's abode at that time: the bishop since knowing the premises, has not only of a covetous mind entered into a familiary with the said Lewis, and bought a piece of land of him, but also [Page 515] ever since has (to have his lands cheap) left both the parties and priest unpunished, using him so familiarly, that whereas a sumner cited the parties to appear among other criminals for the same fact, the bishop commanded the said sumner to let him alone, and so they all remain unpunished.
36. ITEM, Whereas the whole chapter of St. David's, (as it was thought) was in assured amity with the bishop, they all being his officers or chaplains, he procured them to be impleaded with a writ of quo warranto in the King's-bench, keeping the writ with him secretly, at least three months, not delivering it but only ten days before the day of their appearance, the parties being seven days journey from London.
37. ITEM, He is a wilful wrong doer, and troubler of men in their rights, entering upon their lawful possessions, stirring thereby much contention, and so notably known to the offence of the country.
38. ITEM, Whereas the bishop aforesaid was appointed in August, 1547, and consecrated in September following, he never came into the diocese himself, nor sent or appointed any officer there before the month of April, 1548, to the great disorder of the king's majesty's subjects, lack of reformation, and administration of justice.
39. ITEM, During his visitation, the said bishop did not endeavour himself to see reformation, but rode surveying of lands, appointing vain inclosures, and such other things. Which are no parts of the office to him committed, nor yet proper at that time.
40. ITEM, The visitation finished, he neither appointed his officers to examine the clergy of the places of scripture to them appointed to be studied in the same visitation, nor has hitherto effectually gone about any good reformation, according to the ordinances of this realm.
41. ITEM, The bishop since his coming to the diocese never administered the communion, saving only twice that he ordained certain deacons; but in every thing (save that he sometimes preaches) ordereth himself like no minister, nor man of his vocation.
42. ITEM, He hath so alienated himself from study, that he preaches indiscreetly, discrediting the office, not only untruly reporting the scriptures, but also preaching the ten commandments in one place in declaration of the eighth of them, for lack of stuff, the pith of his matter was matrimony of priests.
43. ITEM, The 13th day of September last, he ordained certain deacons, and making his exhortation, he taught that a man was not bound to forgive, but to him that asketh forgiveness: and being admonished by a letter better to declare the same, because that divers were offended with that doctrine; he hath hitherto deferred so to do, to the maintenance of malicious hearts in these parts.
44. ITEM, Since the first day of August, 1549, unto the feast of Candlemas last, he hath preached but two or three sermons, of which one was preached at Aberguilly upon St. Stephen's day last, to a great audience that understood no English, being but a mile from Caermarthen, an English town, and chief of his diocese.
45. ITEM, Since his ordinary visitation which was finished in July 1548, he hath neither preached, nor caused to be preached in the towns of Tinby, Pembroke, nor Haverford, being English towns, not much distant from the place of his abode.
46. ITEM, The churches appropriated to the bishop have no paraphrases in English, and few of them Bibles.
47. ITEM, The churches of the diocese for the most part, and the clergy almost every one, lack paraphrases, notwithstanding there hath been these two years, and yet be a great number of them to be sold in the diocese.
48. ITEM, To declare his folly in riding, he useth a bridle with white studs and snaffle, white Scottish stirrups, with spurs, a Scottish pad, with a little staff of three quarters long, which he hath not only used superstitiously these four or [...]ve years, in conversation oftentimes boasting wha [...] [...]ountries he has compassed and measured with the same staff.
49. ITEM, He hath made a vow, that he will never [Page 516] wear a cap: for he says, it is comely wearing of a hat, and so cometh in his long gown and hat, both into the cathedral church, and to the best town of his diocese, sitting in that sort in the king's great sessions, and in his consistories, making himself a mock to the people.
50. ITEM, He said that he would go to the parliament on foot: and to his friends that dissuaded him, alledging that it is not meet for a man in his place; he answered, I care not for that, it is no sin.
51. ITEM, Having a son, he went before the midwife to the church, presenting the child to the priest, and giving his name Samuel, with a solemn interpretation of the name, appointing also two godfathers and two godmothers, contrary to the ordinances, making his son a monster, and himself a laughing-stock throughout all the country.
52. ITEM, He daily useth whistling to his child, and says that he understood his whistle when he was but three days old. And being advertised by his friends, that men laughed at his folly, he answered; They whistle to their horses and dogs, and I am contented: they might also be contented that I whistle to my child, and so whistleth to him daily, all friendly admonition neglected.
53. ITEM, In his ordinary visitation, among other his surveys, he surveyed Milford Haven, where he espied a seal-fish tumbling. And he crept down to the water side, and continued whistling there the space of an hour, persuading the company that laughed at him, that by his whistling he made the fish to tarry there.
54. ITEM, Speaking of scarcity of herrings, he laid the fault to the covetousness of fishers, who in the time of plenty took so many, that they destroyed the breeders.
55. ITEM, Speaking of the alteration of the coin, he wished that what metal soever it was of, the penny should be in weight worth a penny of the same metal.
56. FOR a conclusion, The said bishop in all his doings, since he came to his diocese, hath behaved himself most unmeet for a man of his vocation, being for a minister of justice, an abuser of the authority to him committed; for a teacher of the truth, and reformer of superstition, a maintainer of superstition without any doctrine of reformation; for a liberal and hospitable, an insatiable covetous man; for a diligent overseer, wilful and negligent; for an example of godly wisdom, given wholly to folly; for merciful, a cruel revenger; and further, for a peace maker, a sower of discord. And so in all his behaviour a discrediter and slanderer of his vocation, and a deceiver of all men, that had hope he should do any reformation. For he yet hath neither brought into his diocese, nor hath belonging unto him, any learned preacher. But such learned preachers as he found in the diocese at his entry, he so vexeth and disquieteth, that they cannot attend to apply their preaching for the defence of their livings, against his quarrelsome inventions, and unjust pretensions.
AFTER these wrangling articles and informations were given up, then the bishop was called for to answer, the hearing whereof was committed unto Dr. Wotton, and sir John Mason, knight, who likewise received the bishop's answers to the aforesaid articles, the copy and effect of which answers hereafter follow.
The ANSWER of Dr. ROBERT FARRAR, Bishop of St. DAVID'S, to the ARTICLES ministered against him.
TO the 1st article he says, That after lawful admonition in the king's majesty's name and authority, from the said bishop (being then at London) given to the chaunter and chapter of St. David's, for visitation at a certain day there to be entered; the said bishop himself for such purpose coming into the diocese, knowing also that the chaunter, and one of the canons of that church, and late before commissaries in that diocese, had not only by their own evil examples and winking at the faults of others, or neglecting to correct the same, left there among priests and others much detestable whoredom; but had also spoiled the cathedral church of crosses, chalices, and censers, with other plate, jewels, and ornaments of the [Page 517] church, to the value of four or five hundred marks or more, for their own private lucre, (the church remaining even yet very vile, and in great decay) and had also made further under their chapter seal many blanks, to the number of twelve or more, vacant seats, without the king's mijesty's licence or knowledge; therefore he brought with him one Edmund Farlee, batchelor of law, commended by Dr. Young and Dr. Nevison to him, as a man sufficient in faithful truth, and learning, to be his chancellor. To whom he granted and sealed a commission for that purpose, giving credit to him in his faculty, conce [...]ng the draught and form thereof. But the king's majesty's stile of supremacy was fully set forth in the same commission. Whether there were any default of formal words in setting forth of the king's authority therein, he is not certain; for he committed the doing thereof to his chancellor, who was commended to him for a learned man. And the bishop says, that he never did ground the commission upon any foreign usurped laws or authority: neither did his said chancellor by force of such authority visit any deanry of the said diocese, nor gave any admonition to the chaunter and chapter there, by force of that commission, for any like intent or purpose, but only offered in the king's majesty's name and authority (to the said bishop committed) to enter visitation of the chaunter and chapter of the cathedral church, at another day to be executed by the bishop himself, for the reformation of the chapter church, and ministers there, according to the king's gracious ordinances and injunctions in that behalf. But the aforesaid chaunter and canon of the church, before the fight of any commission, stubbornly answered the said chancellor, that they would not receive him, nor any other to visit them, except he were of their chapter. And further, desiring to see his commission, he delivered the same into their hands, who would not deliver it him again. And so it may appear that he did nothing by force of that commission.
2. TO the 2d articles he says, That they opened not unto him the danger of any statute, to his knowledge and remembrance. Nevertheless, he not knowing any default in the said commission, and certainly minding with all diligence the faithful execution of his office of preaching, and visiting the whole diocese in his own person, by the king's majesty's authority, for the conservation of God's peace and the king's, in that dangerous time of rebellion, then beginning to arise in other places, did neglect and laid aside the stubborn behaviour and wicked doings of the said chaunter and canon, and agreed with them, omitting all contempts and reproaches towards him and his said chancellor, and all manner of contention by them done, fearing else that through their unquietness some tu [...]lt might have risen among the people there; and did also make the said chaunter his chancellor, and canon his commissary, according to their ambitious desires, to appease their malice in that dangerous time. And further he says, that he made collation to sir John Evans of the vicarage of Penbrin, what day or time he remembereth not, by any old foreign usurped authority, but by the king's authority only, making full mention of the king's stile and authority in the same collation.
3. and 4. To the 3d and 4th he says, That whereas he had granted to George Constantine the office of a register, who brought unto him a commission for the chancellorship, to be sealed and delivered to the aforesaid chaunter of St. David's, desiring the said bishop to seal it, he utterly refused so to do, because the said George had put therein a clause of admitting clerks into benefices: which authority the said bishop would not in any wise grant, reserving the examination and admission of clerks only to himself, for the avoiding of wicked bribery and partiality. Whereupon the said George and the chaunter promised the said bishop by their faith and truth, before three or four honest witnesses, not to execute that clause of institution into benefices, but only to those clerks whom the bishop did first examine and admit, and send unto them to be instituted and inducted; upon which promise the bishop sealed the said commission, and after that time the parsonage of Haskard being void, and by reason of lapse devolved to the bishop's gift for that time, he conferred it on one Henry Goddard, with a collation of institution by the king's authority, not extolling any foreign usurped authority. In which collation or institution is fully mentioned the renunciation of the bishop of Rome, and all foreign power and authority, with the full stile [Page 518] of his majesty's supremacy. And this collation of the church of Huskard he gave, before he understood or knew that his chancellor had given out the like, and he surely thinketh his collation was the first. That notwithstanding, the said George Constantine, and the said chaunter having a vowson determined by reason of lapse, admitted and instituted one John Gough, to the said parsonage of Haskard, by virtue of their expired vowson, and sealed his institution with a wrong seal, (because they had not the right seal of office to that purpose) contrary to their former earnest promise, and the bishop's right, and without any manner of warning or fore-knowledge thereof to him given; which thing by them untruly done, the said George Constantine nevertheless came to the bishop's house and there did write with his own hand the letters of induction for the said Henry Goddard, priest, comprising in the same the whole sum of the institution or collation which the said bishop had made, and the same George did seal the said letters of induction with his own hand, finding no manner of fault therein, nor making any word or mention of his and the chaunter's former wrong doing, but so departed for that time. And afterwards he came again, and shewed the bishop what they had done before concerning the parsonage aforesaid. And further, the said defendant saith, that he did not molest the said John Gough, but lawfully did call him in the king's majesty's name, not for any title of patronage, but to know whether he was parson of Haskard, and how he was thereto admitted, instituted, and inducted, and by what authority he presumed to preach there, without the king's majesty's licence, with other like lawful demands; whereunto he sturdily refused to give answer, and saith, that the article contained in his accusation, namely, "Item, He is interrogated under what title he holds the rectory of Haskard," was not ministered unto the party in that sort, so far as he knoweth, but in these words or like, "How did he get admission into the rectory," &c.
5. TO the 5th he saith, That albeit George Constantine, register, did wilfully withdraw his bounden service due to the king's highness, and to the said defendant in the king's name, refusing to attend either by himself, or his sufficient deputy for writing of records and other instruments, yet the said defendant made his collations and institutions in his own name, not by his own authority, nor by another, save only the king's authority, according as he hath declared in his answer to the first article, expressing in them the king's supremacy with the bishop's own name and seal of office, as he ought to do, according to the provision of the king's statute in such a case.
6. TO the 6th he saith, That the vicarage of Penbrin being void he, as right patron thereof to his knowledge, conferred it to John Evans, clerk, with letters of institution and induction; and after, when the king's presentation came to him for one David Jenkin, clerk, he desired fourteen days respite at that time, either to shew ancient record for his right, and then the matter to stand to the determination of the law, or else if he shewed not, both he and his clerk to give place to the king's clerk, which condition was by sir Thomas Jones, knight, Dr. Meyrick, and the said David Jenkin, received; and an institution with an induction was made conditionally to be put in the hands of sir Thomas Jones, knight, for safe custody of the king's clerks' behalf, after the fourteen days to be executed at the hands of the said defendant, if he failed to shew. Within which time the said defendant did shew an old ancient record, declaring the full right of patronage on the said defendant's behalf, and so that institution and induction was never by the said defendant put in execution. Nevertheless, the said David Jenkin (contrary to his promise and oath, giving thereupon his right hand to the said sir Thomas Jones, knight) took advantage by the said writing, without knowledge of the said defendant. After which time the lord chancellor, by his letters written to the said defendant, advertised him, to admit one John ap Powell, clerk, presented by virtue of the vowson which the lord chancellor judged to be good▪ and so to be admitted notwithstanding his former presentation, whereby he would not bar the other man's right. And so this defendant made one collation, two institutions, and three mandates, doing no wrong thereby to his knowledge. And further (he saith) that there was no business nor unquietness about the possession of the said vicarage, but this defendant giving place, was content to lose his right for that time.
[Page 519]7. TO the 7th he saith, That as he now remembereth, he never decreed any caveats to be made in benefices, neither did institute nor cause to be inducted any into benefices, being known to him litigious.
8. TO the 8th he saith, That because the archdeacons be absent from their offices, and have not had faithful diligent officials, he hath directed his mandates to them or their officials, or to other lawful persons in that behalf so far as he knoweth.
9 and 10. The 9th and 10th articles he denieth as very untrue.
11. TO the 11th, the saith, that whereas sir Thomas Jones, knight, advertised him, that Thomas Prichard had celebrated matrimony in a private house, betwixt a certain priest and woman, whose sister had refused the same, the said Prichard leaving his own cure unserved on that Sunday, this defendant did put the same Thomas Prichard to penance for so doing, marrying them without banns. And whereas he made the said Thomas Prichard, who is a batchelor of law, his commissary, it was for the respect of learning in the law, thereby faithfully to execute his office according to justice. And the said defendant did never favour nor bear with any man wittingly in his wrong doings. He confesseth that the matrimony was solemnized in a private church, and that the cure was that day unserved.
12. TO the 12th he saith, That it is slanderous and utterly untrue. And that one John Hughes, priest, made Sage Hughes (daughter to his stepmother) a harlot at eleven years of age, and after married openly to another man, being minister thereof himself. After which doing he took her away from her husband again, and kept her alledging a former contract. And when the said John Hughes was lawfully convicted before the said bishop, in open court at Caermarthen, of that his abominable adultery, claiming the king's pardon thereof, yet the said Sage confessed, that he had to do with her the night before that day of appearance. Which later crime he denied. Nevertheless she proved with child, affirming, both before the birth and after, the child to be his, the midwife and others being witnesses thereof. Yet notwithstanding, George Constantine, as a wicked encourage [...] of the said priest in his naughty doings, with the help of the aforesaid chaunter, first uttered [...] Meredith Thomas was father of the said child: which matter was ordered in the ecclesiastical court according to justice, without any partial affection of the said bishop, or of any other to his knowledge.
13. TO the 13th he saith, It is utterly false so far as he knoweth.
14. TO the 14th he saith, That by lawful sequestration in the king's majesty's name, he committed the custody of the fruits of Langatnoke and Lanvihangel to two honest men, for the behoof of the king's first fruits and tenths, and of the next inincumbent, and further he did not meddle nor minister any cause of unquietness in that behalf.
15. TO the 15th he saith, That he made a collation, (lawful, as he supposeth) of the prebend of Lanbister, to Stephen Greene, his chaplain, without any covenant or colour, and further he did not meddle in that behalf.
16. TO the 16th he saith, All is untrue as far as he knoweth.
17. TO the 17th he saith, It is untrue for his own part, and his officers, as far as he knoweth.
18. TO the 18th he saith, It is untrue as far as he knoweth, and that he did certify the recusants justly, as he thinketh, because they refused wilfully to pay the king's whole subsidy of their whole dividends, as it standeth in the king's book, pertaining to the canons resident.
19. TO the 19th he saith, That after a travel of fourteen miles, being not able fasting to celebrate the communion, in a chapel within the house of sir Thomas Jones, knight, one of the kings majesty's honourable council of the marches of Wales, this defendant celebrated matrimony without receiving the communion for the causes abovesaid, betwixt Mr. Griffith Rice, and the daughter of the said sir [Page 520] Thomas Jones, according to the king's ordinances. And Thomas Prichard, priest administered the holy communion there without any superstition, to this defendant's knowledge: and the married persons not disposed to receive the holy communion, he could not compel them against their consciences, and saith, that he did not dispense with them, as it is contained in the article.
To the slanderous and untrue CHARGE of maintenance of SUPERSTITION, &c. he saith, that he did not maintain any SUPERSTITION, contrary to the King's Ordinances and Injunctions, but abhorring in his Heart all SUPERSTITION, hath travelled and doth travel to abolish the same by True Doctrine, and doing as much as he can, with the King's Peace, among his People there.
20. TO the 20th he saith, That George Constantine, in the third year of his majesty's reign, not regarding the dangerous time of rebellion in other places, rashly caused to be pulled down, without any authority known to this defendant, the communion altar in Caermarthen church, by his own presumptuous mind, appointing the use thereof in another place of the church, not without grudge of the people. Wherefore the bishop fearing tumult, commanded the vicar to set up the communion table (for the time) near to the place where it was before.
21. TO the 21st he saith, That he has been divers times in the quire of Caermarthen, and hath tarried there in the communion time, not communicating himself, and that in every church where he cometh on the holy-day to preach, or to pray, he kneeled in the quire bare-headed, as well at matins before the communion, as at evening song after, without any superstition: he thinketh it not necessary for the communion's sake to leave kneeling to Christ. But he hath diligently taught the people not to kneel nor knock to the visible shew, or external shew of the sacrament. And the choirs of Caermarthen and other places there, are not close at the sides, so that the people may come in and go out at their pleasure. Moreover the king's ordinances do not authorize him to rebuke the people for knocking on their breasts, in token of repentance of their sins; nor for kneeling, in token of submission to God for mercy in Christ.
22. TO the 22d he saith, That in the time of the rebellion in Devonshire and Cornwall, threatening to come into Wales, he teached the people the true form of prayer, according to God's holy word, and declaring the prayer upon the beads to be vain and superstitious, yet durst nor for fear of tumult forcibly take from any man his beads, without authority. And touching the not reproving of such as he should meet, wearing beads, he remembereth not that he hath so done, unless it were in the rebellion time, at which time he durst not rebuke such offenders.
23. TO the 23d he saith, That he being in the pulpit, his face towards the people, did not see the lights, if any were set up about the corpse behind his back till after that he came down from the pulpit. But he with George Constantine and the aforesaid chaunter, fitting in the church, in Caermarthen, to [...]ear causes, and seeing the vicar with other priests, with song and lights bringing a corpse up to the church, called forthwith the vicar and priests, and rebuked them in open court, as cormorants and [...]avens, flying about the dead carcass for lucre and sake.
24. TO the 24th he saith, That he caused the one child being born with great peril of death to the mother, and itself lying for dead a certain space after, to be christened on the working day: the other child was christened on the working day, because both father and mother, and all other people there were in peril of death by reason of the sudden sweat, which all men feared at that time. And touching the rest of the accusation, which is, that by that example, it is used after the old accustomed fashion, he knoweth no such thing.
To the CHARGE of COVETUOUSNESS be saith, His doings prove the contrary, as his Neighbours know.
25. AND the 25th article he utterly denieth.
26. TO the 28th he saith, That his hall at Aberguilly [Page 521] being ruinous, he useth for his hall a great chamber adjoining, for himself and his servants, and all manner of strangers, and besides twenty persons in his house daily. What other hospitality he keepeth, honest neighbours can testify.
27. TO the 27th he saith, That his talk is according to his hearers, that is to say, reverently and truly of faith, love, and honest life, according to scripture to like auditors; and to other irreverent and rash turmoilers of scripture and holy doctrine, he doth talk of honest worldly things with godly intent; and that he doth not most commonly talk of such things as are expressed in this article, but when he hath honest occasion so to do.
28. The 28th he saith, is untrue, and that he hath warned no man out of his lands; but where he is destitute of necessary provision▪ and would have part of his own domain from certain freeholders, having it only from year to year at pleasure, he cannot obtain it without brawling. Wherefore he suffereth them to keep it even still, against right and reason. And touching the rest, that he had rather the crows should eat it, &c, he never spake any such word.
29. TO the 29th he saith. That whereas his predecessor bishop Barloe, did let to farm the isle of Ramsey to one William Brown, after whose hands this defendant received it into his own possession, the vicars of St. David's being dispossessed of it long before; he did let it over to Strephen Green, for 40s. the ground, as it was before, and 3 [...] more for seals, coneys▪ and fowls there: and he knoweth of no right the vicar's choral had therein, who did refuse when this defendant did diligently upon reasonable conditions offer the same unto them: and this defendant made no promise unto them, as is contained in the article.
30. TO the 30th he saith▪ He knoweth not but that he advertized his bailiff to warn the freeholders, and others having his d [...]main in rent, during pleasure, to leave it at a lawful day to this defendant's necessary use▪ but did not cause the curate to do as is contained in the article to his remembrance.
31. TO the 31st he saith, That he knoweth not what the priest bade in the church, nor how many ploughs there came, undesired of this defendant. But he knoweth certainly, that he desired no man's labour but for his money.
32. TO the 32d he saith, That he knoweth not any such appointment of schools and revenues there, but he found there (after the departing of bishop Barloe) a schoolmaster, an usher being a priest, and twenty scholars, which he hath hitherto maintained better than he found it, to his knowledge: he did never convert any penny thereof to his own use, albeit he might lawfully have done the same.
33. THE 33d he saith, is all untrue, so far as he knoweth.
34. TO the 34th article he saith, He never purchased more than three parcels, whereof one was 2s. 8d. by the year; the second, 3s. 4d. and the third, 1l. 6s. 8d. or thereabout, by the year; the rest he denieth.
35. TO the 35th he saith, That he never bought of Lewis John Thomas, his good land cheap, but after 40 years purchase, not knowing at that time any such thing as is contained in the article against the said Lewis John Thomas. Neither bade he the sumner to [...]et him alone, but as soon as he heard any thing of it, commanded the sumner to cite him; and so he was cited in this defendant's house, occasioning him to break his bargain: to which Lewis the defendant said these words. If you would give me your land with a house full of gold, I cannot, no [...] will I suffer you to keep a woman. Then the said Lewis affirming the latter woman to be his wife, and the first unknown to the defendant, he brought the said Lewis to the consistory for trial, where it hangeth yet and also by lawful process excommunicated the first woman, for that she would not by any means appear in the court to claim or to confess marriage with the said Lewis, and so she standeth this day at the point of Significavit.
36. TO the 36th he saith, That whereas the chaunter, and R. M. with other canons there, would not obey the king's godly injunctions, concerning the finding of a school for poor men's children, a [Page 522] lecture of divinity, sermons on the Sundays, repairing of their church and mansion houses, decent order and ministration there; but stubbornly counted themselves (with the chaunter) to be a body politic, without regard of the bishop and his lawful monitions, being himself named in their shire statutes a deacon, having also their dean-stall in the choir with a prebend thereunto annexed, and the chief place in the chapter-house, with a key of their chapter-seal, being also by the king's majesty's commission appointed their ordinary: yet would they not in any wise deliver unto him a book of their statutes, for the better knowledge of his and their duties, nor shew unto him their records and monuments, for declaration of the king's right and his. For which cause this defendant, by writ of quo warranto ▪ lawfully called them to answer, which yet lieth asleep, to the loss of the king's majesty's right. The time of delivery of the said writ▪ he remembereth not.
37. THE 37th, he saith, is all false, as far as he knoweth.
To the CHARGE of WILFUL NEGLIGENCE he saith that he hath used to his power Willing Diligence.
38. TO the 36th he saith, That he being attendant (according to his bounden duty) to serve the king's highness during the time of the parliament, from the first unto the last day; then immediately after repaired into his diocese, and he might not trust R. M. the chaunter, and George Constantine to execute faithfully the jurisdiction, because they had before (through their slanderous life, and not punishing misdoers) left the country in great enormity of filthy whoredom. And saith, further, that one cause why he appointed not an officer, &c. was for that he lacked his letters of authority of jurisdiction.
39 and 40. THE 39th and 40th, he saith are untrue.
41. TO the 4 [...]st he saith▪ That how often he did minister the communion he doth not remember▪ but in all other things so far as he knoweth, he hath studied to order himself according to his vocation, and as far as he believeth, acted like a minister.
42. TO the 42d he saith, That he hath not alienated himself from study, neither preached indiscreetly, nor reported the scriptures untruly to his knowledge: (but he hath been very much hindered both from study and preaching, by the malicious, crafty, and covetous behaviour of the forenamed persons.) And that he did set forth the doctrine of honest marriage, as well of all other men as of priests, even as the scripture then rehearsed did minister occasion.
43. TO the 43d he saith, That reciting the words of Luke, "If thy brother have offended against thee, blame him, and if he repent, forgive him, and if he have offended against thee seven times in one day, and seven times in the day he be converted unto thee, saying, I am sorry, forgive him:" he said farther these words in effect▪ It appeareth by this place of scripture, that we are not bound (except he repent) to forgive him; but we are bound to pray to God to forgive him, and to give him grace to repent, that he may forgive him.
44. TO the 44th he saith▪ That he hath preached right often at Caermarthen, as well as at other places▪ and, he saith, that a great number at Aberguilly do understand English very well.
45. TO the 45th he saith, That after he had preached first at Brecknock, Caerma [...]then▪ Swansey, Laugharne, Tinby, Pembroke, Hereford, St. David's, Cardigan, with other notable towns; he hath since that time preached to [...] g [...]eat many other poor churches, but not in Tinby nor Pembroke: but for Hereford he standeth in doubt. And whereas he brought with him at the first a learned preacher, of godly life, the ungodly stubborn behaviour of the persons before [...]ned, wearied him away. And whereas he had engaged another learned man to come into his diocese to preach, George Constantine by his discouragement advised him from this defendant.
46. TO the 4 [...]th he saith, That in all his churches appropriated, there is both Bible and paraphrases so far as he knoweth▪. and if the priests there would not shew him the lack thereof, yet should the officials declare it unto him▪ that [...] might be amended (by his will) without delay.
[Page 523]47. TO the 47th he saith, That George Constantine covetously ingrossed into his hands a great number of paraphrases; and this defendant hath admonished the clergy to buy every one, for his discharge: and if the said George being official of two archdeaconries, and other officials in their office would declare unto him what churches do lack Bibles and paraphrases, [...]e would cause it to be amended as much as in him lieth.
To the CHARGE of FOLLY he saith, That his desire is in true simple manner of his Words, Deeds, and Honest Behaviour, through God's Grace, to shew Godly Wisdom.
48. TO the 48th he saith, that he thinketh no folly in the decent colour or fashion with honest use of saddle, bridle, stirrups, staff, and other like necessary or convenient things; and saith, that he used a saddle made after the Scottish fashion, with stirrups of iron unvarnished, and like spurs; and black bridle without studs, the bit and snaffle white as other men's are.
49. TO the 49th he saith, That when he goeth abroad in winter, he weareth a hat to bear off rain and snow, and in summer to shadow him from the sun, without any vow of superstition or offence to the people.
50. TO the 50th he saith, That all is one to him, to ride or walk, as cause requireth▪ and whether he said as is contained in the article or not, he remembereth not. Howbeit he doth use to go on foot.
51. TO the 51st he saith, That after lawful prayer it pleased God to give him a son begotten and born in honest marriage; whom he therefore caused to be named Samuel, presenting him to the minister to be received into Christ's church as a poor member of Christ: by the holy sacrament of baptism was this done openly in the cathedral church, with earnest gravity, and without offending any man; and also two wives, being before at variance, desired both to be godmothers, which were both received to make unity between them, not knowing any law to the contrary, nor any offence thereby conceived of the people.
52. TO the 52d he saith, That he doth use with gravity all honest loving entertainment to his child, to encourage him hereafter willingly at his father's mouth, to receive wholesome doctrine of the true fear and love of God: and saith, that he hath whistled to his child, but said not that the child understood it, and that he answered to one that found fault with it, as is contained in the article.
53. TO the 53d he saith, That he was never surveyor, but went to see Milford-Haven for honest purpose, and not to survey it; and for that he at the sight of a seal whistled in his fist, such as meant folly might turn it to their purpose. But it is not true that he stood whistling an hour to the fish, nor that any fault was found with it, nor any such answer made by him to his knowledge.
54. TO the 54th he saith, That if he did say, the destroying of the fry hindereth plenty of fish, he thinketh the same not against reason: but he remembereth not to have said as is contained in the article.
55. TO the 55th he saith, That he remembereth not that ever he said as they alledge.
56. TO the slanderous, untrue, and ungodly conclusion he saith, That George Constantine▪ with other his adversaries before-armed, and their adherents, not regarding the fear of God, and their [...]ounden duty of loving obedience towards God and the king, and his true ministers, have too much slanderously with false tongues, contumelious words, and spiteful deeds, laboured by all means to discredit and deface the king's gracious authority to him committed; who [...] diocese, hath endeavoured himself to show his faithful ministry by his true honest doing, and to use his authority according to his [...]ocation to God's glory and the king's honour. And that he hath been diligent in teaching of truth, reforming of superstition, free of hospitality, diligent in overseeing with godly wisdom, peace, and mercifulness, as he trusteth in God, may be truly approved. And he is able justly to charge his adversaries with all the faults herein by them most unjustly and slanderously against him objected. And he doth marvel greatly, [Page 524] that George Constantine, with other his adherents, are not ashamed maliciously to object (for the intent to slander him) molesting of preachers found there. For truth it is that he hath molested none, but hath justly brought under Significabit, one Morice a preacher, living lewdly, for his stoborn behaviour and malicious contempts, even yet continuing in his wilful contempt and irregularity. And he hath (to his knowledge) justly certified Hugh Rawlins, parson of Tinby, for his wilful refusal o [...] two other parsonages, shamefully deceiving the king's majesty by colour of commission, as appeareth [...]y the same. And as for the railing, contemptuous preaching of Rowland Meyrick, and the unlearned arrogant preaching of the chaunter, he referreth to descreet hearers, which were offended thereat, as they shewed this defendant. And this deponent brought into his diocese both learned preachers, and learned men in the law, to his very great charges, which men George Constantine with his adherents hath wearied away.
AFTER these answers were exhibited by the virtuous and good bishop against the frivolous articles of his said adversaries, Hugh Rawlins and Thomas Lee; then came in for witness, upon the said articles and informations, Gorege Constantine, and the chaunter of St. David's: against whom the bishop first laid exceptions, then also exhibited matters justificatory, in order to exculpate himself. The whole process was long and tedious, and during the whole time of the examination of witnesses, the bishop was obliged to continue in London upon the allegation of his adversaries, which was, that if the bishop should depart into his diocese, he would hinder them of their proofs. About three weeks after the return [...] witnesses having been examined▪ publication of their witnesses was granted; after which it was a fortnight before the the bishop could obtain a copy of their depositions, the whole thereof being so voluminous.
THEN the bishop required time to make exceptions, and to justify, and to have a commission, which was granted: yet it is objected, that the bishop was appointed so to travel with the expedition of his matter, that he should have sued out his commission, and have made return thereof at Allhallow-tide; but there was no such decree put in writing. And it was not possible for the bishop to do it in so short a time, for the following reasons.
1st, IT was the latter end of July ere he came home to St. David's, where he began his visitation, which before was appointed.
2d, HE was by force of law constrained to answer at the bar daily, during all the time of the great sessions at Caermarthen, in defence of his just cause against the pretended matter of Praemunire, which his adversaries of mere malice have procured against him.
3dly, THE said adversaries, to molest him further, did privily pack a quest of ignorant persons of no reputation, and indicted him upon the words of Rawlins's information, as appeareth by a copy of the indictment, intending thereby to make the matter sound more heinous, notwithstanding that the same cause dependeth before the king's high council undetermined.
4thly, HE was appointed by the commissioners, before his departure from [...] to pay 200l. (which was arrearages) into the courts of first fruits and tenths, at Bartholomew day then next following; which payment he made accordingly, notwithstanding that his adversaries wrought means to have made him break his day; namely, one Edward Harbert, gent. who hath a personage of his to farm, kept back his rent to the very last day, because that money should not help to serve his turn; and so by crafty cavilling detaineth it still in his hand with a year's rent and a half more; for the said Edward Harbert is an adherent of the said bishop's adversaries.
5thly, THE book of their depositions is so great, that it requireth a long time to peruse. And also the greatest part of their witnesses were utterly unknown by the bishop and all his; and also dwelling in so many sundry places of the diocese among the mountains and elsewhere, scarcely within the circuit of 200 miles.
ITEM, Another great sessions held at Caermarthen in the month of October last, during which time he was attendant there, as is aforesaid. All [Page 525] which causes considered, being also in the time of his ordinary visitation, which he did execute himself, he could not make ready his exceptions in shorter time.
THE bishop dispatched his man towards London, October 23, who ever since hath been and is attendant in the same suit, for the obtaining the commission for proof of this matter against his adversaries.
THUS we have related the first trouble of this good bishop in king Edward's days, to give other bishops warning to be more circumspect, whom they should trust and have about them, Briefly, in few words to conclude this process, bishop Farrar, partly upon the importunate suit of his adversaries, partly upon the finister and unfortunate fall of the good duke of Somerset, by whom he had been before promoted and maintained, having but small favour shewed, was detained in prison till the death of king Edward, and the coming in of queen Mary and the popish religion, whereby a new trouble rose upon him, being now accused and examined for his faith and doctrine. The process of which his trouble here likewise followeth.
AFTER that Dr. Farrar, bishop of St. David's, had been long detained in custody under sureties, in the reign of king Edward, not for any just cause for his part deserved, but by reason that he had been promoted by the duke of Somerset, and now after his full he found fewer friends to support him against such as wanted his bishopric; at length after the decease of king Edward, by the coming in of queen Mary, the state of religion begun to be changed and altered: whereby a new trouble rose upon him, being now accused and examined, not for any matter of P [...]emunire, but for his faith and doctrine. Whereupon he was called before the bishop of Winchester, with bishop Hooper, Mr. Rogers, Mr. Bradford, Mr. Saunders, and others, the 4th of February. On which day he should also with them have been condemned; but his condemnation was deferred, and he sent to prison again, where he continued till February 14. What his examinations and answers were before the said bishop of Winchester, so much as remained and came to our hands, we have here annexed.
An Examination of Dr. FARRAR, Bishop of St. David's, before STEPHEN GARDINER, Bishop of Winchester, and others.
AT his first coming and kneeling before my lord chancellor, the bishop of Durham, and the bishop of Worcester, who sat at the table; and Mr. Rochester, Mr. Southwel, Mr. Bourne, and others standing at the table's end, the lord chancellor said unto him.
Sir, have you heard how the world goeth here?
I know not.
What say you? do you not know things abroad, notwithstanding you are a prisoner?
No, my lord, I know not.
Lo, what a froward fellow is this!
If it please your lordship, how should I know any thing abroad, being a prisoner?
Have you not heard of the coming in of the lord cardinal?
I know not my lord cardinal; but I heard that a cardinal was come in, but I did not believe it, and I believe it not yet.
I pray your lordship (said the bishop of Worcester) tell him yourself, that he may know what is done.
The queen's majesty and the parliament have restored religion into the same state it was in at the beginning of the reign of king Henry VIII. You are in the queen's debt, and her majesty will be good unto you if you will return unto the catholic church.
In what state I am concerning my debts to the queen's majesty in the court of Exchequer▪ my lord treasurer knoweth: and the last time that I was before your honour, and the first time also, I shewed you that I had made an oath, never to consent nor agree, that the bishop of Rome should have any power or jurisdiction within this realm: and [Page 526] further I need not reh [...]arse unto your lordship, you know it well enough.
YOU were once abjured for heresy (said Mr. Bourne) in Oxford.
That was I not.
You were.
I was never, it is not true.
You went from St. David's to Scotland.
That I did not.
You did.
That did I never, but I went from York into Scotland.
Ah, so said I; you went with Barloe.
That is true, but never from St. David's.
You carried books out of Oxford, to the archbishop of York, lord Lee.
That I did not,
You did.
I did not, but I carried old books from St. Oswald's to the archbishop of York.
You supplanted your master.
That I never did in my life.
By my faith you did.
Really I never did in my life, but did shield and save my master from danger, and that I obtained of king Henry VIII. for my true service, I thank God therefore.
MY lord (said Mr. Bourne to my lord chancellor) he hath an ill name in Wales as ever any man had.
That is not so. Whoever says so, shall never be able to prove it.
He has defrauded the queen of divers sums of money.
That is utterly untrue; I never defrauded king nor queen of one penny in my life, and you shall never be able to prove what you say.
Thou art a false knave.
THEN bishop Farrar stood up unbidden, (for all that while he kneeled) and said, No, my lord, I am a true man, I thank God for it. I was born under king Henry VII. I served king Henry VIII. and king Eward VI. truly, and have served the queen's majesty, that now is, truly with my poor heart and word: more I could not do, and I never was false, nor shall be by the grace of God.
How sayest thou, wilt thou be reformable?
My lord, if it please your honour, I have made an oath to God, and to king Henry VIII. and also to king Edward, and in that to the queen's majesty, which I can never break while I live▪
You have made another oath before.
No, my lord, I never made an oath before.
You made a vow.
That did I not.
You made a profession to live without a wife.
No, my lord, i [...] it please your honour, that did I never; I made a profession to live chaste, not without a wise.
You were sworn to him that was master of your house.
That was I never.
Well, you are a forward knave: we will have no more to do with you, seeing that you will not come; we will be short with you, and that you shall know within a week.
I am as it pleaseth your honour to call me; but I cannot break my oath which your lordship yourself made before me, and gave in example, which confirmed my conscience. Then I can never break that oath whilst I live, though I die for it.
Well, says he, he standeth upon his oath: call another.
MY lord chancellor then did ring a little bell, and Dr. Farrar said, I pray God save the king and queen's majesties, long to continue in honour to God's glory and their comforts, and the comfort of the whole realm; and I pray God save all your honours, and so departed.
AFTER this examination bishop Farrar remained in prison till the 14th of February, and then was sent down into Wales, there to receive sentence of condemnation. Who then, upon the 26th of February, in the church of Caermarthen, being brought by [...] Leyson, esq sheriff of the county of Caermarthen, was there personally presented before Henry, bishop of St. David's, and Constantine the public notary; which Henry there and then discharged the said sheriff, and received him into his own custody, committing him to the keeping of Owen Jones, and thereupon declared unto the [...] Dr. Farrar, the great mercy and clemency that the king and queen's highness's pleasure was to be offered unto him, which he [...] did offer [...]nto the said Dr. Farrar; that is to say. That i [...] he would submit himself to the laws of this realm▪ and conform himself to the unity of the universal catholic church, he should be received and pardoned; after that, Dr. Farrar giving no answer to the premises, the said bishop ministered unto him the following articles.
1. WHETHER he believed the marriage of priests lawful by the laws of God, and holy church, or no?
2. WHETHER he believed that in the blessed sacrament of the altar, after the words of consecration duly pronounced by the priest, the very body and blood of Christ is really and substantially contained, without the substance of bread and wine?
UNTO which articles the bishop required Dr. Farrar to answer upon his allegiance.
TO which he said he would answer, when he saw a lawful commission, and would make no further answer at that time. Whereupon the said bishop taking no advantage upon the same answer, committed him to the keeper, to be kept in prison until a new monition, and in the mean time to deliberate with himself for his further answer to the premises.
SECOND APPEARANCE of Bishop FARRAR, before HENRY MORGAN, the pretended Bishop of St. DAVID'S, GEORGE CONSTANTINE, his Register, and OTHERS, the last day of February. 1555.
MORGAN, pretended bishop of St. David's, sitting as judge, ministered unto bishop Farrar, there personally present before him, certain articles and interrogatories in writing: which being openly read and ministered unto him, the said bishop Farrar refused to answer, till he might see his lawful commission and authority. Whereupon the pretended bishop of St. David's did pronounce him obstinate, and for the punishment of this his contumacy to be counted pr [...] confess [...], and did so pronounce him in writing. Which being done, he committed the said bishop to the custody of Owen Jones, until Monday next, being the 4th of March, then to be brought again into the same place, between one and two.
THIRD APPEARANCE of Dr. FARRAR. Bishop of St. DAVID'S.
THE day and place appointed, the said bishop appearing again before the pretended bishop, humbly submitting himself as ready to answer to the articles and positions above mentioned, g [...]atly required the copy of articles, and a competent term to be assigned unto him, to answer for himself: [Page 528] which being granted, and the Thursday next being appointed unto him between one and three, to answer precisely and fully; he was committed again to custody, as above.
FOURTH APPEARANCE of Dr. FARRAR, Bishop of St. DAVID's.
ON Thursday the 7th of March, the bishop personally again appeared, where he exhibited a certain bill in writing, containing in it his answer unto certain articles objected and ministered unto him before. Then after Henry the pretended bishop of St. David's offered him again the same articles as before, the tenor whereof tendeth to this effect.
FIRST, That he willed him being a priest to renounce matrimony.
SECONDLY, To grant the natural presence of Christ in the sacrament, under the forms of bread and wine.
THIRDLY, That the mass is a propitiatory sacrifice for the quick and the dead.
FOURTHLY, That general councils lawfully congregated never did, nor never can err.
FIFTHLY, That men are not justified before God by faith only, but that hope and charity are also necessarily required to justification.
SIXTHLY, That the catholic church, which only hath authority to expound scriptures, to define controversies of religion, and to ordain things appertaining to public discipline, is visible, and like a city set upon a mountain, for all men to understand.
TO these articles thus objected to him, he refused to subscribe, affirming that they were invented by man, and pertain nothing to the catholic faith. After this, the pretended bishop delivered unto him a copy of the articles, assigning him Monday next following, to answer and subscribe to the same, either affirmatively or negatively.
FIFTH APPEARANCE of Dr. FARRAR, Bishop of St. DAVID's.
UPON Monday, March 11, he appearing again before the bishop, and the aforesaid notary George Constantine, exhibited in a written paper his mind and answer to the aforesaid articles, which the bishop had twice objected against him before, to which articles and answers he did subscribe. Upon that the bishop assigned the next Wednesday in the forenoon to hear his final and definitive sentence.
The SIXTH and LAST APPEARANCE of Dr. FARRAR, Bishop of St. DAVID's.
ON the Wednesday following, Dr. Farrar personally there appearing, was demanded by Henry, the pretended bishop of St. David's, whether he would renounce and recant his heresies, schisms, and errors, (as he called them) which hitherto he had maintained, and if he would subscribe to the catholic articles, otherwise than he had done before.
AFTER this, Dr. Farrar did exhibit a certain schedule, written in English, and remaining in the acts; appealing withal by express word of mouth from the bishop, as from an incompetent judge, to cardinal Poole.
NOTWITHSTANDING all which, the said bishop proceeding in his rage, pronounced the definitive sentence against him contained in writing, and there left in the acts; by which sentence he pronounced him an heretic excommunicate, and to be given up to the secular power, namely, to Mr. Leyson, sheriff of the town of Caermarthen.
THIS good bishop being condemned and degraded, was committed to the secular power, and not long after was brought to the place of execution in the town of Caermarthen, where he in the market place, in the south-side of the market-cross, the 30th day of March, being Saturday next before Passion-Sunday, most constantly sustained the torments of the fire.
CONCERNING whose constancy▪ this is moreover [Page 529] to be added, that one Richard Jones, a knight's son, coming to Dr. Farrar a little before his death, seemed to lament the painfulness of the death he had to suffer; unto whom the bishop answered again to this effect, saying, That if he saw him once stir in the pains of his burning, he should then give no credit to his doctrine. And as he said, so he right well performed the same; for so patiently he stood, that he never moved, till one Richard Gravel, with a staff, struck him down.
CHAP. VI. The HISTORY and MARTYRDOM of RAWLINS WHITE, aged 60, a Fisherman in WALES, who was burned at CARDIFF, in the same Month as was Bishop FARRAR: reported by J. DANE, who was almost continually with him during his Troubles and Sufferings unto his DEATH. Also, a LETTER from Bishop GARDINER to Bishop BONNER, concerning celebrating the POPE'S FUNERAL; with other Public Occurrences in the Months of March and April, 1555.
RAWLINS WHITE was by his calling and occupation a fisherman, living and continuing in the said trade for the space of twenty years at least, in the town of Cardiff, being one of a very good name amongst his neighbours. As touching his religion at first, it cannot otherwise be known, but that he was a great partaker of the supe [...]stition and idolatry that then was used in the reign of Henry VIII. But after that God of his mercy had raised up the light of his gospel, through the blessed government of king Edward VI. Rawlins White began partly to mislike that which before he had embraced, and to have some good opinion of that which before by the iniquity of the times had been concealed from him; and the rather to bring this good purpose and intent of his to pass, he began to be a diligent hearer, and a great searcher out of the truth.
BECAUSE the good man was altogether unlearned, and withal very simple, he knew no ready way how he might satisfy his great desire. At length it came into his mind to take a special remedy to supply his necessity, which was this: He had a little boy, his own son, which child he sent to school, to learn to read English; now after the little boy could read indifferently well, his father every night after supper, summer and winter, would have the boy to read part of the holy scripture▪ and now and then of some other good book. In which kind of virtuous exercise the old man had such delight and pleasure, that, as it seemed, he rather practised himself in the study of the scripture, than in the trade or science which before time he had used: so that within a few years in the time of king Edward, through the help of his little son, and through much conference besides, he profited and went forward in such sort, that he was able not only to resolve himself touching his own former blindness and ignorance, but was also able to admonish and instruct others: and therefore when occasion served, he would go from one place to another, visiting such as he had best hope in. By which his doing, he became in that country both a notable and open professor of the truth, being at all times and in all such places, not without the company of his little boy, whom (as I have said) he used as an assistant to this good purpose. And to this his great industry and endeavour in the holy scripture, God did also add in him a singular gift of memory, so that by the benefit thereof he would and could do that in vouching and rehearsing of the text, which men of riper and more profound knowledge, by their notes and other helps of memory, could hardly accomplish. Insomuch that he would, upon the alledging of scripture, very [Page 530] often cite the book, the leaf, yea, and the very sentence; such was the wonderful working of God in this simple and unlearned man.
NOW when he had thus continued in his profession the space of five years, king Edward died, upon whose decease queen Mary succeeded, and with her all kind of superstition crept in. Which thing being once perceived, Rawlins White did not altogether use open instruction and admonition, (as before he was wont) and therefore oftentimes in some private place or other he would call his trusty friends together, and with earnest prayer and great lamentations, pass away the time, so that by his virtuous instruction [...], being without any blemish of error, he converted a great number, which number (no doubt) had greatly increased, had not the cruel storm of persecution been. The extremity and force whereof at last so pursued this good man, that he looked every hour to go to prison; whereupon many who had received comfort by his instructions, did resort unto him, and by all means possible began to persuade him to shift for himself, and to dispose of his goods by some reasonable order to the use of his wife and children, and by that means he should escape that danger, which was imminent over his head.
BUT Rawlins, nothing abashed for his own part, nor moved with these their persuasions, thanked them most heartily for their good will, and told them plainly that he had learned one good lesson touching the confession and denial of Christ; advertising them, that if he upon their persuasions should presume to deny Christ, Christ in the last day would deny and utterly condemn him: and therefore (said he) I will, by his grace, confess and bear witness of him before men, that I may find in him everlasting life.
NOTWITHSTANDING which answer, his friends were very importunate with him. Howbeit he continued still in his good purpose so long, till at last he was taken by the officers of the town, as a man suspected of heresy, upon which apprehension he was convened before the bishop of Landaff that then was, the said bishop being then at his house near Chepstow: by whom, after divers combats and conflicts with him and his chaplains, this good father Rawlins White was committed to prison in Chepstow. But this his keeping, whether it were by the bishop's means, because he would rid his hands of him, or through the favour of his keeper▪ was not so severe and extreme, but that (if he had pleased) he might have escaped oftentimes.
AT last he was removed from Chepstow to the castle of Cardiff, where he continued for the space of one whole yea [...] ▪ during which time, this reporter resorted to him very often, with money and other relief from this reporter's mother, (who was a great favourer of those that were in affliction in those days) and other of his friends: which he received not without great thanks and praises given to the name of God. And notwithstanding he was thus troubled and imprisoned to his own undoing in this world, and the utter decay of his poor wife and children; yet was his heart so set on the furtherance and instruction of others in the way of salvation, that he was never in quiet, but when he was persuading or exhorting such of his familiar friends as commonly came unto him. Insomuch that on Sundays and other times of leisure, when his friends came to visit him, he would pass away the time in prayer and exhortations, admonishing them always to beware of false prophets who come in sheep's cloathing.
WHEN he had continued in Cardiff castle for the space of one whole year, the time of his further trial was at hand. Whereupon the bishop of Landaff caused him to be brought again from the castle of Cardiff unto his own house near Chepstow; and while he continued there, the bishop endeavoured by various means to reduce him to some conformity. But when he found his threatening words and flattering promises ineffectual, the bishop desired him to advise and determine with himself, either to recant his opinions, or else to suffer the rigour of the law, and thereupon gave him a day of determination: which day being come, the bishop with his chaplains went into his chapel, with a great number of the neighbours that had the curiosity to see their proceedings. When the bishop and his retinue were placed in order, poor Rawlins White was brought before them. The bishop (after much deliberation in addressing himself, as it seemed, and silence forewarned the rest that were present) [Page 531] made a lo [...]g discourse to him, declaring the cause of his [...] sent for, which was, that he was a man well known to hold heretical opinions, and that by his instructions many were led into error. In the end, he exhorted him to consider his own state wherein he stood: for, (said the bishop) Rawlins, you have oftentimes since your first trouble, both here in my house, and elsewhere, been warned touching your opinions, and you seem altogether obstinate and wilful. Now hereupon we thought good to send for you, to see if there were any conformity in you: so that the matter is come to this point, That if you will shew yourself repentant for that which you have done against God and the law, we are ready to use favour towards you; but if by no means we can persuade you touching your reformation, we are minded at this time to minister law unto you, and therefore advise with yourself what you will do.
WHEN the bishop had made an end, this good father Rawlins spake boldly to him, and said, My lord, I thank God I am a christian man, and I hold no opinions contrary to the word of God; and if I do, I desire to be reformed out of the word of God, as a christian man ought to be. Many more words were between the bishop and Rawlins, which this reporter doth not well remember. But in the end, when Rawlins would in no wise recant his opinions, the bishop told him plainly, that he must proceed against him by the law, and condemn him as an heretic.
PROCEED in your law in God's name, said Rawlins; but for an heretic you shall never condemn me while the world stands. But (said the bishop to his company) before we proceed any further with him, let us pray to God that he would send some spark of grace upon him, and it may so chance, that God through our prayers will here turn his heart. When Rawlins heard the bishop say so. Ah, my lord, said he, now you deal well and like a godly bishop, and I thank you most heartily for your great charity and gentleness. Christ saith, Where two or three be gathered together in my name, I will be in the midst of them: and there be more than two or three of you. Now if it be so that your request be godly and lawful, and that ye pray as ye should pray, without doubt God will hear you. And therefore, my lord, do you pray to your God, and I will pray to my God; I know that my God will both hear my prayer, and perform my desire.
THE bishop with his company then prayed; and Rawlins turning himself to a pew that stood somewhat near him, fell down upon his knees, covering his face with his hands: when they had prayed a-while, the bishop with his company arose from prayer. And then also arose Rawlins, and came before the bishop▪
THEN said the bishop, Now Rawlins, how is it with thee? Wilt thou revoke thy opinions, or no? Surely, my lord, Rawlins you left me, and Rawlins you find me, and by God's grace, Rawlins I will continue. Certainly if your petitions had been just and lawful, God would have heard them: but you honour a false God, and pray not as you should pray, and therefore God has not granted your desire. But I am a poor simple man, as you see, and God has heard my complaint, and I trust he will strengthen me in his own cause.
THE bishop, when he perceived that this hypocrisy of their's took no effect, then with sharp words he reproved him, and forthwith was ready to read the sentence; but upon some advice given to him by his chaplains that were there present, he thought best first to have a mass, thinking, that indeed, by so doing some wonderful change would have been wrought in Rawlins, and thereupon a priest began mass.
IN the mean time poor Rawlins betook himself to prayer in a secret place, until the priest came to the sacring, as they term it, which is a principal part of their idolatry. When Rawlins heard the sacringbell ring, he rose out of his place, and came to the choir door, and there standing a while, turned himself to the people, speaking these words; Good people, if there be any brethren amongst you, or at the least, if there be but one brother amongst you, the same one bear witness at the day of judgment, that I bow not to this idol (meaning the host that the priest held over his head).
MASS being ended, Rawlins was called for again; [Page 532] to whom the bishop used many persuasions; but the blessed man continued so stedfast in his former profession, that the bishop's discourse was altogether in vain, and to no purpose. Whereupon the bishop caused the definitive sentence to be read. Which being ended, Rawlins was dismissed, and from thence he was by the bishop's commandment carried again to Cardiff, there to be put into the prison of the town, called Cockmarel, a very dark, loathsome, and most vile dungeon.
RAWLINS passed away the time in prayer, and chiefly in singing of psalms: which kind of godly exercise he always used both at Cardiff castle, and in all other places.
HAVING continued a prisoner in Cockmarel prison at Cardiff, some time, about three weeks before the day wherein he suffered, the head officers of the town, that had the charge of his execution, were determined to burn him because they would be sooner rid of him; although they had no writ of execution awarded, as by the law they should have. Whereupon one H. Lewes, the recorder of the town, that then was, seeing they went about to burn him without any warrant by writ, came to them and told them, That if they did burn him before they had the writ, for burning of heretics, the wife of the said Rawlins would upon just cause, by law, call their doings into question.
IMMEDIATELY upon this advertisement, they sent to London for the writ above-named: upon the receipt whereof they made speed to the execution. The day being at hand, wherein the good father should perform and accomplish the last act of this his worthy conflict, he was the night before engaged in preparing himself.
NOW when Mr. Rawlins perceived his time was no less near than it was reported, he sent forthwith to his wife, and desired her by the messenger, that in any wife she should make ready and send unto him his wedding garment, meaning a shirt, which afterwards he was burned in. This request, or rather commandment of his, his wife with grief of heart did perform, and early in the morning did send it him, which he received most gladly and joyfully.
THE hour of his execution being come, this good and constant martyr was brought out of prison, having on his body the long shirt, which he called his wedding garment, and an old russet-coat which he was wont to wear. Besides this, he had upon his legs an old pair of leather buskins. And thus being brought out of prison, he was accompanied, or rather guarded, with a great number of bills and weapons. Which sight when he beheld, Alas! (said he) what meaneth all this? By God's grace I will not run away: with all my heart and mind I give God most hearty thanks, that he hath made me worthy to abide all this for his holy name's sake.
SO he came to a place, in his way, where his poor wife and children stood weeping, and making great lamentation: the sudden sight of whom so pierced his heart, that the very tears trickled down his face. But he soon after, as though he had misliked this infirmity of his flesh, began to be as it were altogether angry with himself: insomuch, that striking his breast with his hand, he used these words. Al [...] flesh, hinderest thou me so? Wouldst thou fain prevail? Well, I tell thee, do what thou canst, thou shalt not, by God's grace, have the victory.
BY this time the poor innocent came to the altar of his sacrifice, and there found a stake ready set up, with some wood towards the making of the fire. Which when he beheld, he set forward very boldly▪ but in going towards the stake, he fell down upon his knees and kissed the ground; and in rising again, a little earth sticking on his nose, he said these words, Earth unto earth, and dust unto dust; thou art my mother, and unto thee I shall return. Then went he very chearfully and very Joyfully, and set his back close unto the stake; and when he had stood there a-while, he cast his eye upon this reporter, and called him unto him, and said, I feel a great fighting between the flesh and the spirit and the flesh would very fain have his swing; and [...]erefore I pray you, when you see me any thing tempted, hold your finger up to me, and I trust I shall remember myself.
AS he was thus standing with his back close unto the stake, a smith came with a great chain of i [...]on; whom when he saw, he cast up his hand, and with a loud voice, gave God great thanks. Then as the [Page 533] smith was making it fast to the other side, Rawlins said unto him, I pray you good friend knock in the chain fast; for it may be that the flesh would strive mightily; but God of his great mercy give me strength and patience to abide the extremity.
NOW when the smith had made him fast to the stake, the officers began to lay on more wood, with a little straw and reeds: wherein the good old man was no less occupied then the best; for as far as he could reach his hands, he would pluck the straw and reeds, and lay it about him in places most convenient for his speedy dispatch. Which thing he did with such a chearful countenance and familiar gesture, that all men there present were astonished at it.
WHEN all things were ready, directly over-against the stake, in the face of Rawlins White, there was a standing erected, whereon stept up a priest, addressing himself to the people, which were many in number, because it was market-day. When Rawlins perceived him, and considered the cause of his coming, he reached a little straw unto himself, made two little stays, and set them under his elbows. Then went the priest forward in his sermon, wherein he spake of many things touching the authority of the church of Rome. In the mean time Rawlins gave such good ear and attention, that he seemed nothing at all moved or disquieted. At last, the priest came to the sacrament of the altar, and there he began to inveigh against Rawlins's opinions: in which harangue he cited the common place of scripture, and thereupon made a learned interpretation.
NOW when Rawlins perceived, that he went about not only to preach and teach the people false doctrine, but also to confirm it by scripture, he suddenly started up, and beckoned his hands to the people▪ saying twice, Come hither good people, and hear not a false prophet preaching: and then said unto the preacher, Ah! thou wicked hypocrite, dost thou presume to prove thy false doctrine by scripture? Look in the text what followeth; Did not Christ say, "Do this in remembrance of me?" After which words, the priest being rather amazed than interrupted, forthwith held his peace.
THEN some that stood by cried out, Put fire; set to fire; which being done, the straw and reeds cast up a great and sudden flame. In which flame this good man bathed his hands so long, until such time as the sinews shrunk, and fat dropped away, saving that once he did, as it were, wipe his face with one of them. All this while, which was somewhat long, he cried with a loud voice, O Lord, receive my spirit, until he could not open his mouth. At last, the extremity of the fire was so vehement against his legs, that they were consumed almost before the rest of his body was hurt, which made the whole body fall over the chain into the fire sooner than it would have done. Thus died this good old man for the testimony of God's truth, being now rewarded, no doubt, with the crown of eternal life.
IT is further recorded of the said good father Rawlins, by this reporter, that as he was going to his death and suffering at the stake, he seemed in a manner to be altered in nature. For as before he was wont to go stooping, or rather crooked, through the infirmity of age, having a sad countenance and a very feeble complexion, and withal very soft in speech and gesture, now he went and stretched himself not only upright, but also bore withal a most pleasant and comfortable countenance, and had great courage and boldness both in speech and behaviour.
IT is also said by this reporter, that a little before the fire flashed up to his body, many of his friends came up to him, and took him by the hand, amongst whom the reporter of this story held him so long by the hand, till the flame arose and forced them to part. In the mean time, the priest, of whom I spake before, cried out and said, That it was not lawful for any man to take him by the hand, because he was an heretic, and condemned by the church. The chief cause of his trouble was his opinion concerning the sacrament of the altar. He was, at the time of his death, about 60 years of age.
Transactions in the PRIVY COUNCIL, and PUBLIC OCCURRENCES, in the Months of March and April, 1555.
MARCH 28th, the queen summoned into her presence four of her privy council, namely, William, lord marquis of Winchester, high-treasurer [Page 534] of England; sir Robert Rochester, knight, the queen's comptroller; sir William Peter, knight, secretary; and sir Francis Inglefield, knight, master of the wards: to whom she thus spoke:
"YOU are here of our council, and we have ordered you to be called unto us, to the intent you might hear of me my conscience, and the resolution of my mind▪ concerning the lands and possessions, as well of monasteries as of other churches whatsoever, being now presently in my possession.
"FIRST, I do consider, that the said lands were taken away from the churches aforesaid in the time of schism, and that by unlawful means, such as are contrary both to the law of God and of the church: for which cause my conscience doth not suffer me to detain them; and therefore I here expressly refuse either to claim or to retain the same lands for mine, but with all my heart freely and willingly, without any covenant or condition, here and before God I do surrender and relinquish the said lands and possessions, or inheritances whatsoever, and do renounce the same with this mind and purpose, that order and disposition thereof may be taken, as shall seem best to our most holy lord the pope, or else his legate the lord cardinal, to the honour of God, and the wealth of this our realm.
"YOU may object to me, that considering the state of my kingdom, and the dignity thereof, my crown imperial cannot be honourably maintained and furnished without the possessions aforesaid; yet notwithstanding I set more by the salvation of my soul, than by ten kingdoms; and therefore the said possessions I utterly refuse here to hold after that sort and title, and give most hearty thanks to Almight God, who hath given me an husband likewise minded, with no less good affection in this behalf, than myself.
"WHEREFORE I charge and command, that my chancellor (with whom I have conferred my mind in this matter before) and you four, do resort together to-morrow to the most reverend lord legate, and signify to him the premises in my name, and give your attendance upon him for the more full declaration of the state of my kingdom, and of the aforesaid possessions accordingly, as you yourselves do understand the matter, and can inform him in the same."
WE must here observe, that in the preceding month, February 19th, the bishop of Ely, with lord Montague, and 140 horse, were sent as ambassadors from the king and queen to Rome. For what cause, is not expressed; but by conjecture, it may be well supposed to be for the same cause of abbey-lands, as by the sequel thereof may probably appear. For it was not long after, the pope did set forth in print a bull of excommunication for all manner of such persons, without exception, as kept any of the church or abbey-lands; by virtue of which bull, the pope excommunicated as well such as had any of the abbey lands, as also all such princes, bishops, and noblemen, justices of peace, and others in office, who had not, or did not forthwith put the same bull in execution. This execution (God be thanked) was never put in practice. For neither the bishop of Winchester, nor any of the pope's clergy, would greatly stir in that matter, perceiving the nobility to be too strong for them; and therefore were contented to stay for a more convenient opportunity; and that those who held lands should not, at the first coming out of the bull, be [...]asperated too much against them, they subtilly abused the pulpits, and dissembled with the people, affirming that the said pope's late bull, set forth in print for restitution of abbey-lands, was not meant for England, but for other foreign countries: when in truth the meaning of that bull was only for England, and no country else, as both by the intimation of queen Mary, and by many other conjectures, evidently appear. Whereby it is easy to understand what the purpose: of those men was to do, if time, which they observed, might have served their devotion. But to let this matter pass of the pope's bull, the time now serveth to treat of pope Julius's death, forasmuch as he made his exit about the latter end of March.
UNDER this Julius, flourished the archbishop of Beneventanus, a Florentine, named Johannes a Casu, dean of the pope's chamber, and chief legate to the Venetians; who well declaring the fruit of that filthy see, so far forgot both honesty and nature, that he was not ashamed to play the filthy sodomite himself, and to boast openly of the same; but also took upon him most impudently in Italian metre, to all men's ears, to set forth the praise and commendation of [Page 535] that beastly iniquity, saying, That he himself never used other; and this book was printed at Venice by one Trojanus Navus; and yet the pope could suffer this so great iniquity and shameful beastliness, even under his nose in his own chamber, who could not abide the true doctrine of Christ in christian books.
AMONGST other pranks and deeds of this [...], in his jubilee, and in the synod of Trent, and in confirming of the idol of Lauretane, this is also reported of him in his life, that he delighted greatly in pork-flesh and peacocks. Upon a time when he was admonished by his physician to abstain from all swines-flesh, for that it was hurtful to the gout, and yet would not follow his counsel; the physician afterwards gave warning to his steward, that he should set no more pork-flesh before him. Whereupon when the pope perceived the said pork-flesh to be lacking in his accustomed service: Where, said he, is my pork? And when his steward had answered that his physician had forbidden any pork to be served▪ the pope burst out into a great rage, and said these words, Bring me, said he, my pork-flesh, in the despight of God.
AT another time, at dinner, pointing to a peacock upon his table, which he had not touched; Keep, said he, this cold peacock for me against supper, and let me sup in the garden: for I shall have guests. So when supper came, and amongst other hot peacocks, he saw not his cold peacock brought to his table: the pope, after his wouted manner, most horribly blaspheming God, fell into an extreme rage. Whereupon one of his cardinals, sitting by, desired him, saying, Let not your holiness, I pray you, be moved with a matter of so small weight. Then pope Julius answering again, What, said he, if God was so angry for an apple, that he cast our first parents out of paradise for the same, why may not I, being his vicar, be angry then for a peacock, since a peacock is a greater matter than an apple? Behold here, good reader, by this pope, the holiness of that blasphemous see, and yet what affection was borne to the same in England, by the dirges, (a service for the dead used by the papists) [...]earses, and funerals, commanded to be had and celebrated in all churches by the queen and her council, as will appear by the following letters and orders.
A LETTER From the Bishop of WINCHESTER (being Lord Chancellor) unto BONNER, Bishop of London, concerning the celebrating of the Pope's Funeral.
AFTER my hearty commendations to your lordship, the king and queen's majesty having certain knowledge of the death of the pope's holiness, thought good there should be as well solemn obsequies said for him throughout the realm, as also these prayers (which I send you here inclosed) used at mass-time in all places at this time of vacation; and therefore ordered me to signify their pleasures unto you in this behalf, that thereupon you might proceed to the full accomplishment thereof, by putting the same in due execution within your own dioc [...]se, and sending word to the rest of the bishops, to do the like in their's.
THUS doubting not but that your lordship will use such diligence in this matter at this time, as shall be necessary, I bid your lordship heartily well to fare. From my house at Asher, the 10th of April, 1555.
Prayer commanded to be used in the Funeral Masses for the Po [...], the Apostolic See being Vacant.
WE beseech thee, O Lord, of thy great pity to grant to the holy Roman church a bishop, whose care towards us may be always acceptable to thee, and that he may be revered by the people for his good government, to the glory of thy name, through our Lord.
A Secret Prayer.
MAY thy abundant pity, O Lord, towards us, grant that we may rejoice to have obtained a bishop of our holy mother church acceptable to thy majesty, through our Lord.
After the Communion.
MAY thy wonderful grace, O Lord, rejoice us (being refreshed with the sacrament of thy precious body and blood) in the choice of a bishop [Page 536] who may instruct thy people in virtue, through our Lord.
IN obedience to this command, on Wednesday, in Easter week, there were hearses set up, and dirges sung for the said Julius in several places. At which time a woman going into St. Magnus' church, at the bridge-foot in London, and there seeing an hearse and other preparation, asked what it meant: some that stood by, said that it was for the pope, and that she must pray for him. Nay, said she, that I will not, for he needeth not my prayers: and seeing he could forgive us all our sins, I am sure he is clean himself: therefore I need not to pray for him.
SOME who stood by, heard her speak these words, and upon their information she was put into the cage at London bridge.
The Sudden Death of Mr. NIGHTINGALE, a Priest, of Crondal, in Kent, who was made Chief Penitentiary of that Deanery by Cardinal Poole.
ALMIGHTY GOD by many and sundry ways hath admonished men of all nations in these latter years to embrace, and not violently to resist the light of his gospel; as first, by preaching of his word: secondly, by the blood of the martyrs: and thirdly, by terrible examples from time to time shewed upon his adversaries. In the number of whom cometh here to be remembered, the notable working of God's hand upon a certain priest in Kent, named Nightingale, parson of Crondal, near Canterbury, who upon Shrove-Sunday, which was about the 3d day of the said month of March, rejoicing greatly at the alteration of religion, began to make a sermon to his parishioners, taking his theme out of the words of St. John: "He that saith he hath no sin, is a liar, and the truth is not in him," &c. and upon the same very impertinently declared to them all such articles as were set forth by the pope's authority, and by the commandment of the bishops of this realm; saying moreover unto the people in this wise, Now, masters and neighbours, rejoice and be merry, for the prodigal sort is come▪ I know that most part of you be as I am, for I know your hearts well enough. And I shall tell you what hath happened in this week past: I was before my lord cardinal Poole, and he made me as free from sin as I was at the font-stone: and on Thursday last being before him, he hath appointed me to notify (I thank him for it) the same unto you. And I will tell you what it is. Then reading the pope's bull of pardon that was sent into England, he said, he thanked God that he had lived to see that day; adding moreover, that he believed by the virtue of that bull he was as clean from sin as the night he was born: and immediately upon the same fell suddenly down out of the pulpit, and never stirred hand nor foot. Testified by Robert Austen of Chatham, who both heard and saw the same, and is witnessed also by the country round about.
ON the 2d of April, John Awcock died in prison, and was buried in the fields, as the manner of the papists was, to deny christian burial to such as di [...] out of their popish antichristian church.
HAVING now entered into the month of April, we will set down in order out of the public records what happened in the said month. The 1st of April, 1555, a letter was sent to the sheriff of Kent, to apprehend Thomas Woodgate and William Maynard, for preaching secretly, and to send them up to the council.
THE 7th day of the said month, another letter was sent to the sheriff for the apprehension of one Ha [...] wich, who went about with him, preaching from place to place.
THE 15th of April, a letter was directed to sir Nicholas Hare, and sir Thomas Cornwallis, requiring them to examine Mr. Flower, alias Branch, what he meant by wearing about his neck this motto, Deum time, idolum fuge. "Fear God, beware of idolatry;" and whom else he knew to wear the like; praying them also to speak to Bonner, bishop of London, speedily to proceed against him for his religion according to the laws, and that the justices of peace of Middlesex should likewise proceed against him for shedding of blood in the church, according to the statute, so as if he continued in his opinion, he might be executed at the farthest by the latter end of this week, and that his right hand be struck off the day before his execution, or the same day.
[Page 537]THE 22d of April, there was a like letter sent to the justices of peace of Middlesex, with a writ for the execution of the said Flower, commanding them to see his hand struck off before his burning.
THE 29th of April, Mr. Robert Horneby, servant then to lady Elizabeth, was convened before the council for his religion: and standing constantly to the truth, notwithstanding their threats and other persuasions, was therefore committed to the Marshalsea.
CHAP. VII. The History of the Life, Examination, and Martyrdom, of the Rev. Mr. GEORGE MARSH, who was burned for professing the Truth of the GOSPEL, at West-Chester, April 24th, 1555.
GEORGE MARSH was born in the parish of Deane, in the county of Lancaster, and was well brought up in learning and honest trade of living by his parents; who afterwards, about the 25th year of his age, took to wise and honest maiden of the country: with whom he continued, earning their living upon a farm, having children between them lawfully begotten: and then God taking his wife out of this world, he (leaving his houshold and children in good order) went unto the university of Cambridge, where he studied▪ and much increased in learning, and was a minister of God's holy word and sacraments, and for a while was cura [...]e to the Rev. Mr. Saunders, as himself reporteth. In which condition of life he continued for a space, earnestly setting forth God's true religion, to the d [...]facing of Antichrist's false doctrine, by his godly readings and sermons▪ as well there and in the parish of Deane, as elsewhere in Lancashire.
AT length, he was apprehended, and kept close prisoner in Chester, by George Cotes, then bishop of that see, within the precinct of the bishop's house▪ about the space of four months, being not permitted to have relief and comfort of his friends; but charge being given unto the porter, to mark who they were that asked for him, and to signify their names unto the bishop▪ as by the particular description of his story, testified and recorded with his own pen, more evidently will appear in what followeth.
The First Examination of the Rev. Mr. GEORGE MARSH, before the Earl of Darby and others, written by himself.
ON the Monday before Palm-Sunday, which was the 12th of March, it was told me at my mother's house, that Roger Wrinstone, with other of Mr. Barton's servants, did make diligent search for me in Bolton; and when they perceived that I was not there, they gave strict charge to Robert Ward and Robert Marsh, to find and bring me to Mr. Barton the next day following, with others, to be brought before the honourable earl of Derby, to be examined in matters of religion, &c.
I knowing this, by my friends, was diversely affected; my mother, and other my friends advising me to fly, and to avoid the peril, which thing I had intended, after a week then next ensuing, if this in the mean while had not chanced; seeing that if I were taken, and would not recant in matters of religion, (as they thought I would not, and as God strengthening and assisting me in his Holy Spirit I never will) it would not only have put them to great sorrow, heaviness, and losses, with costs and charges, to their shame and rebuke in this world, but also my own self, after troubles and painful imprisonment, unto shameful death.
THIS considered, they advised and counselled me to depart and fly the country, as I intended to have [Page 538] done, if this had not happened. To whose counsel my weak flesh would gladly have consented, but my spirit did not fully agree; thinking and saying thus [...]o myself, that if I fled away, it would be thought, reported, and said, that I did not only fly the country, and my nearest and dearest friends, but much rather from Christ's holy word, according as these years past I had with my heart, or at least with mine outward living professed, and with my word and mouth taught, according to the small talent given me of the Lord. I being thus with their counsel and advice, and the thoughts and counsels of my own mind, drawn as it were divers ways, went from my mother's house, saying, I would come again at evening.
IN the mean time I ceased not by earnest prayer to ask and seek counsel of God, (who is the giver of all good gifts) and of other my friends, whose pious judgments and knowledge I much trusted to. After this I met with one of my friends on Deane-moor, about sun setting, and after we had consulted together of my business, not without hearty prayer, we departed. I not fully determining what to do, but taking my leave of my friend, said, I doubt not but God (according as our prayer and trust was) would give me such wisdom and counsel, as should be most to his honour and glory, the profit of my neighbours and brethren in the world, and obtaining my eternal salvation by Christ in heaven.
THIS done, I returned to my mother's house again, where several of Mr. Barton's servants had been seeking after me; who, when they could not find me, strictly charged my brother and William Marsh to seek me that night, and to bring me to Smethehills the next day; who being so charged, were gone to seek me in Adderton, or elsewhere.
THUS intending before to have been all night with my mother, but then considering that my tarrying there would disquiet her with her houshold, I departed from thence, and went beyond Deane church, and there tarried all night with an old friend of mine, taking little rest, and consulting much with myself of my trouble.
AT my first awaking▪ one c [...]me to me from a faithful friend of mine with letters, who said thus: My friend's advice was that I should in no wise fly, but abide and boldly confess the faith of Jesus Christ. At whose words I was so confirmed and established in my conscience, that from thenceforth I consulted no more, whether it were better to fly or to tarry, but was at a point with myself, that I would not fly, but go to Mr. Barton who did seek for me, and there present myself, and patiently bear such cross as it should please God to lay upon my shoulders. Whereupon my mind before being much disquieted and troubled, was now merry and at ease.
I arose early in the morning, and after I had said the English litany (as my custom was) with other prayers, kneeling on my knees by my friend's bed side, I prepared myself to go toward Smethehills; and as I was going thither, I went into the houses of Henry Widdowes, of my mother-in-law, of Ralph Yeton, and of the wife of Thomas Richardson, desiring them to pray for me, and have me commended to all my friends, and comfort my mother, and be good to my little children; for (as I supposed) they should not see my face any more before the last day; and so took my leave of them, not without tears shed on both sides, and came to Smethehills about nine o'clock, and presented myself to Mr. Barton; who shewed me a letter from the earl of Derby, wherein he was commanded to send me with others [...].
WHEREUPON no charged my brother and William Marsh to bring and deliver me the next day by ten o'clock, before the said earl or [...]. I made earnest suit, with o [...]er special frien [...] which I had there at the same tim [...] to Mr. Barton, that he would take some one, or all of them, bound by recognizance or otherwise, for my appearing before the said earl or his council, that my brother and William Marsh might be at home, because it was the chief time of seeding, and their plough [...] could not go if they were not at home▪ but nothing could be obtained.
SO we went to my [...] ▪ and there I dined and shifted part of my [...] praying▪ took my leave of my [...], and both the [...] [...], [Page 539] and departing from them, went towards Lathum, and lay all night within a mile and a half of it. The next day, which was Wednesday, we arose, prayed, and came to Lathum betimes, and tarried there till four o'clock in the afternoon.
THEN was I called by Roger Mekinson, to my lord and his council, and was brought in to the chamber of presence, where were present sir William Nores, sir [...]ierce Alee, Mr. Sherburn, the parson of Grapnal, Mr. Moore, with others. Where when I had tarried a little while, my lord turned himself towards me, and asked what was my name: I answered, Marsh.
THEN he asked, wh [...]her I was one of those that sowed evil seed and dissention amongst the people: which thing I denied, desiring to know my accusers, and what could be laid against me: but that I could not know.
THEN, said he, he would with his council examine me themselves, and asked me whether I was a priest; I said, No. He asked me what had been my living. I answered, I was a minister, served a cure, and kept a school. Then said my lord to his council, This is a wonderful thing: before he said he was no priest, and now he confesseth himself to be one. I answered, By the laws now used in this realm, (as far as I do know) I am none.
THEY asked me who gave me orders, or whether I had taken any. I answered, I received orders of the bishop of London and Lincoln.
THEN said they one to another, those are of these new [...]; and asked me what acquaintance I had with them? I answered, I never saw them but at the time when I received orders.
THEY asked me how long I had been curate, and whether I had ministered with a good conscience. I answered, I had been curate but one year, and had ministered with a good conscience, I thanked God; and if the laws of the realm would have suffered me, I would have ministered still; and if they at any time hereafter would suffer me to minister after that sort, I would minister again.
AT which they murmured, and the parson of Grapnal said, this last communion was the most devilish thing that ever was devised. Then they asked me what my belief was.
I answered, I believed in God the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, according as the scriptures of the Old and New Testaments do teach, and according as the four symbols or creeds, that is to wit, the creed commonly called the Apostles, the creed of the council of Nice, of Athanasius, and of Austin, and Ambrose, do teach.
AFTER a few words, the parson of Grapnal said, But what is thy belief in the sacrament of the altar?
I answered, I believed that whoever, according to Christ's institution, did receive the holy sacrament of Christ's body and blood, did eat and drink Christ's body, and with all the benefits of his death and resurrection to their eternal salvation; for Christ, said I, is ever present with his sacrament.
THEY asked me, whether the bread and wine, by virtue of the words pronounced by the priest, were changed into the flesh and blood of Christ, and that the sacrament, whether it were received or reserved, was the very body of Christ.
WHEREUNTO I made answer, I knew no further than I had shewed already. For I said my knowledge was imperfect; desiring them not to ask me such hard and unprofitable questions, whereby to bring my body into danger of [...]ath, and to suck my blood. Whereat they were not a little offended, saying, they were no blood-suckers, and intended nothing to me but to make me a good christian.
AFTER many other questions, which I avoided as well as I could, remembering the saying of St. Paul, "Foolish and unlearned questions avoid, knowing they do but ingender strife;" my lord commanded me to come to the board, and gave me pen and ink in my hand, and commanded me to write my answers to the questions of the sacrament above-named; and I wrote as I had answered before. Whereat he being much offended, commanded me to write a more direct answer, saying, I should not chuse but do it.
[Page 540]THEN I took the pen and wrote, that further I knew not. Whereat he being sore grieved, after many threatenings, said, I should be put to a shameful death like a traitor, with other like words; and sometimes giving me fair words, if I would turn and be conformable as others were, how glad he would be.
IN conclusion, after much ado, he commanded me to ward, in a cold, windy stone-house, where was little room: there I lay two nights without any bed, saving a few great canvas tent clothes, and so continued till Palm-Sunday, occupying myself as well as I could in meditation, prayer, and study; for no man could be suffered to come to me but my keeper twice a day, when he brought me meat and drink.
Second Examination of the Rev. Mr. GEORGE MARSH.
ON Palm-Sunday after dinner, I was sent for to my lord and his council, (saving for William Nores and sir Pierce Alec were not then present) amongst whom were sir John Beram, and the vicar of Prescot. So they examined me once again of the sacrament. And after I had communed apart with the vicar of Prescot a good while concerning that matter, he returned with me to my lord and his council, saying, That the answer which I had made before, and then did make, (as it is above written) was sufficient for a beginner, and as one which did not profess a perfect knowledge in the matter, until such time as I had learned further. Wherewith the earl was very well pleased, saying, he doubted not but by the means and help of the vicar of Prescot I would be conformable in other things: and after many fair words he commanded I should have a bed, with fire, and liberty to go amongst his servants, on condition I would do no harm with my communication amongst them.
AND so after much other communication I departed, much more troubled in my mind than before, because I had not with more boldness confessed Christ, but in such sort as mine adversaries thereby thought they should prevail against me; whereat I was much grieved: for hitherto I went about as much as in me lay, to [...] myself out of their hands, if by any means without open denying of Christ and his word that could be done.
THIS considered, I cried more earnest to God by prayer, desiring him to strengthen me with his Holy Spirit, with boldness to confess him; and to deliver me from their enticing word [...], and that I might not be spoiled through their philosophy and deceitful vanity, after the traditions of men and ordinances of the world, and not after Christ.
A day or two after I was sent for to the vicar of Prescot, and the parson of Grapnal; where our communication was concerning the mass: and he asked what offended me in the mass. I answered, the whole mass did offend me, first because it was in a strange language, whereby the people were not edified, contrary to St. Paul's doctrine, 1 Cor. xiv. and because of the manifold and intolerable abuses and errors contained therein, contrary to Christ's priesthood and sacrifice.
THEN they asked me in what place thereof; and I named several; which places they went about with gentle and far sought interpretations to mitigate, saying, those places were understood far otherwise than the words did purport, or than I did take them.
I answered, I did understand them as they did purport, and as their own books do comment and gloss upon them.
THEY said, The sacrifice or oblation did not in the mass signify any thing else, than either a sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving, or else a memorial of a sacrifice or oblation. So they caused a mass-book to be sent for, and shewed me where in some places of the mass was written, A sacrifice of praise. Whereto I answered, that it followed not therefore that in all places it signified a sacrifice or oblation of praise or thanksgiving; and although it did, yet was not a sacrifice of praise or thanksgiving to be off [...]ed for the people.
AFTER this, Mr. George Marsh was sent to Lancaster castle, and being brought with other prisoners unto the sessions, was made to hold up his hand with the malefactors; at which time the earl of Derby h [...]d this conversation with him.
A CONVERSATION between the Rev. Mr. GEORGE MARSH, and the Earl of DERBY.
I Said unto my lord, I had not dwelled in the country the three or four years past, and came home but lately to visit my mother, children, and others of my friends, and meant to have departed out of the country before Easter then next, and to have gone out of the realm. Wherefore I tru [...]ted, seeing nothing could be laid against me, wherein I had offended against the laws of this realm, his lordship would not with captious questions examine me, to bring my body into danger of death, to the great discomfort of my mother, but suffer me to avoid peaceably, seeing I might have fled out of the country, and yet of my own will came to his lordship.
HE said to his council, he had heard tell of me before at London; and intended to make search for me, and take me either in Lancashire or at London, and asked me in what land I would have gone.
I answered, I would have gone either into Almain, or else into Denmark. He said to his council, in Denmark they used such heresy as they have done in England; but as for Almain, he said the emperor had destroyed them.
SO after such like words, I said unto him, my trust was that his lordship being of the honourable council of the late king Edward, consenting and agreeing to acts concerning faith towards God and religion, under great pain, would not so soon after consent to put poor men to shameful deaths, as he had threatened me for embracing the same with so good a conscience.
HE answered, that he, with the lord Windsor and lord Dacres, with one wore whose name I have forgot, did not consent to those acts, and that the names of them [...]our would be seen, as long as the parliament house stood. Then my lord did rehearse the misfortune of the dukes of Northumberland and Suffolk, with others, because they favoured not the true religion; and again the prosperity of the queen's highness, because she favoured the true religion, thereby gathering the one to be go [...]d, and of God; and the other to be wicked, and of the devil; and said that the duke of Northumberland confessed so plainly.
The Rev. GEORGE MARSH, to the Reader.
FORASMUCH as not only when I was at Lathum, but also since I d [...]parted thence, I hear that there be divers reports and opinions of the cause of my imprisonment, as well at Lathum as at Lancaster, (as I am informed by credible persons) some saying it was only because I would not do open penance; and some because I could not agree with my lord and his council concerning the sacrament of Christ's body and blood, and the manner of Christ's presence there; some because I would not grant it sufficient, and according to Christ's institution, for the lay-people to receive the said sacrament under one kind only: I thought it good, dearly beloved in Christ, and my bounden duty, to certify you by my own hand writing, of my examination and handling at Lathum, and to tell you the truth as near as I could, to quiet your mind in this behalf; and therefore I have written with my own hand the certainty of those things, as near as I could, here above expressed, not omitting any thing at all concerning religion, whereof they did examine me. Howbeit I perceive in some things I keep not the same order in writing that thing which was asked by them, and answered by me, before or after, as it was in very deed in all points, saving this, telling the truth as near as I can, desiring you to accept in good worth this my good will, and to pray for me and all them that be in bonds, that God would assist us with his Holy Spirit, that we may with boldness confess his holy name; and that Christ may be magnified in our bodies, that we may stand full and perfect in all the will of God; to whom be all honour and glory world without end, Amen.
AFTER remaining some weeks in confinement at Lancaster, he was removed to Chester, and placed in the bishop's liberty, where his lordship frequently conferred with him, and used his utmost endeavours to bring him to an acknowledgement of the corporal presence in the sacrament of the altar, the mass, confession, and in short, of all the tenets and practices of the church of Rome.
WHEN the bishop found he would not assent to a single point, he remanded him back to prison; and in a few days summoned him before him in the cathedral church of Chester, where, in the presence of the mayor, chancellor, and principal inhabitants of that city, both laity and clergy, he caused him to take a solemn oath to answer truly to such articles as might be alledged against him.
The FIRST APPEARANCE of the Rev. Mr. GEORGE MARSH, before Dr. COTES, Bishop of CHESTER.
WITHIN a few days the Rev. Mr. Marsh was sent for by Dr. Cotes, then bishop, to app [...] before him in his hall, nobody else being presen [...] and then he asked him certain questions concerning the sacrament: to whom he made such answers as the bishop seemed therewith to be content, saving that he utterly denied transubstantiation, and allowed not the abuse of the mass, nor that the lay-people should receive under one kind only, [Page 542] contrary to Christ's institution; in which point the bishop went about to persuade him; howbeit (God be thanked) all in vain. Other discourse he had with him to submit himself to the universal church of Rome; and when he saw he could not prevail, he sent him to prison again: and after being there, came to him divers times Mr. Massey, a fatherly old man, Mr. Wrench, a schoolmaster, Mr. Henshaw, the bishop's chaplain, and the archdeacon, with many more; who with all plausibility of words, philosophy, and deceitful vanity, after the tradition of men, but not after Christ, went about to persuade him to submit himself to the church of Rome, and to acknowledge the pope to be head thereof, and to interpret the scriptures no otherwise than that church did; with many such like arguments and persuasions of fleshly wisdom.
TO whom the said Mr. George Marsh answered, that he did acknowledge and believe one holy catholic and apostolic church, without which there is no salvation, and that this church is but one, because it ever hath, doth, and shall confess and believe one only God, and him only worship, and one only Messiah, and in him only trust for salvation: which church also is ruled and led by one spirit, one word, and one faith; and that this church is universal and catholic, because it ever hath been since the world's beginning, is, and shall endure to the world's end, and comprehending within it all nations, kindreds, languages, degrees, states, and conditions of men; and that this church is built only upon the foundation of the prophets and apostles, Jesus Christ himself being the head corner stone, and not upon the Romish laws and decrees, the bishop of Rome being the supreme head.
AND where they said the church did stand in ordinary succession of bishops, being ruled by general councils, holy fathers, and the laws of holy church, and so continued for the space of fifteen hundred years and more; he made answer, that the holy church, which is the body of Christ, and therefore most worthy to be called holy, was before any succession of bishops, general councils, or Romish decrees▪ nei [...]her was it bound to any time or place, ordinary succession▪ general councils, or traditions of fathers; nor had it any supremacy over empires and kingdoms; but it was a poor simple flock, dispersed and scattered abroad, a sheep without a shepherd in the midst of wolves or as a flock of orphans and fatherless children; and that this church was led and ruled by the only laws, councils, and word of Christ, he being the supreme head of this church, and assisting, succouring, and defending her from all assaults, errors and persecutions, wherewith she is ever encompassed about.
HE shewed and proved unto them also, by the flood of Noah, the destruction of Sodom, the Israelites departing out of Egypt, by the parable of the sower, of the king's son's marriage, of the great supper, and by other plain sentences of scripture, that this church was of no estimation, and little in comparison with the church of hypocrites, and wicked worldlings.
The SECOND APPEARANCE of the Rev. Mr. GEORGE MARSH, before the Bishop of CHESTER.
AFTER that the said bishop had taken his pleasure in punishing this his prisoner, and often reviling him with the odious names of heretic, &c. he caused him to be brought forth into a chapel in the cathedral church of Chester, called our Lady's chapel, at two o'clock in the afternoon, and Fulk Dutton, mayor of the said city, Dr. Wall, and other priests assisting him, placed not far from the bishop; George Wensloe, chancellor, and one John Getham, register, sat directly over against him.
THEN they caused the said Mr. Marsh to take an oath, to answer truly unto such articles as should be objected against him. Upon which oath taken, the chancellor laid to his charge, that he had preached and openly published most heretic [...]l and blasphemous doctrines, within the parishes of Deane, Eccles, Bolton, Berry, and many other places within the bishop's diocese, in the months of January, February, or some other time of the year last, proceeding directly against the pope's authority, and catholic church of Rome, the blessed mass, the sacrament of the altar, and many other articles. Unto all which he answered, that he neither heretically nor blasphemously p [...]ached or spoke [Page 543] against any of the said articles; but simply and truly, as occasion served, and (as it were thereunto forced in conscience) maintained the truth touching the same articles, as he said all you now present did acknowledge the same in the time of the late king Edward VI.
THEN they examined him severally of every article, and bade him answer yes or no, without equivocation; for they were come to examine, and not to dispute at present.
THEN he answered them every modestly, accordingly to the doctrine by public authority received, and taught in this realm at the death of king Edward; which answers were every one written by the register to the uttermost that could make against him. After this, the company for that time broke up, and he was returned to prison again.
The THIRD and LAST APPEARANCE of the Rev. Mr. GEORGE MARSH, before Dr. COTES.
THE bishop was now determined, if Mr. Marsh would not relent and abjure, to pronounce sentence definitive against him. Wherefore he bade the said George Marsh to be well advised what he would do, for it stood upon his life: and if he would not at that present forsake his heretical opinions, it would (after the sentence given) be too late, though he would ever so gladly desire it.
THEN the chancellor first asked him, Whether he were not of the bishop's diocese? To which he answered, that he knew not how large his diocese was at Cambridge. But they asked, whether he had not lately been at Deane parish in Lancashire, and there abode? He answered, Yes.
THEN the chancellor read all his answers that he made in that place at his former examination, and at every one he asked him whether he would stick to the same or no? To which he answered again, Yes, yes. Said the chancellor▪ in your last examination▪ amongst many other damnable and schismatical heresies, you s [...]id, That the church and doctrine taught, and set forth in king [...] time, was the true church, and the doctrine of the true church, and that the church of Rome was not the true and catholic church.
SO said I, replied Mr. Marsh, and I believe it to be true. Here also others took occasion to ask him (for that he denied the bishop of Rome's authority in England) whether Linus, Anacletus, and Clement, that were bishop's of Rome, were not good men; and he answered, Yes, and divers others; but he said, they claimed no more authority in England, than the bishop of Canterbury doth at Rome; and I strive not with the place, neither speak I against the person of the bishop, but against his doctrine, which in most points is repugnant to the doctrine of Christ.
THOU art an arrogant fellow indeed, said the bishop. In what article is the doctrine of the church of Rome repugnant to the doctrine of Christ?
TO whom Mr. Marsh answered, Oh, my lord, I pray you judge not so of me. I stand now upon the point of my life and death; and a man in my case hath no cause to be arrogant, neither am I, God is my record. And as concerning the disagreement of the doctrine, among many other things, the church of Rome erreth in the sacrament. For where Christ in the institution thereof did as well deliver the cup as the bread, saying, "Drink ye all of this;" and St. Mark reporteth, that they did drink of it: in like manner St. Paul delivered it unto the Corinthians. And in the same sort also it was used in the primitive church for the space of many hundred years. Now the church of Rome doth take away one part of the sacrament from the laity. Wherefore if I could be persuaded in my conscience by God's word, that it were well done, I could gladly yield in this point.
THEN said the bishop, There is no disputing with a heretic. Therefore when all his answers w [...]re read, he asked him whether he would stand to the same, being as they were full of heresy, or else forsake them, and come unto the catholic church.
To whom he made this full answer, That he held no heretical opinion, but utterly abhorred all [Page 544] kind of heresy, although they most untruly did so slander him. And he desired all the people there to bear him witness, (if any hereafter should slander him, and say that he held any greivous heresy) that in all articles of religion he held no other opinion than was by law established, and publicly taught in England at the death of king Edward the sixth; and in the same pure religion and doctrine he would by God's grace, stand, live, and die. Here the chancellor spake to one Leach, who stood near to Mr. Marsh, and bade him stand farther from him; for his presence did him no good.
THIS being done, the bishop took a writing out of his bosom, and began to read the sentence of condemnation: but when he had read almost half thereof, the chancellor called him, and said, Good my lord, stay, stay: for if you proceed any farther, it will be too late to call it again, and so the bishop stayed. Then his popish priests, and many other of the ignorant people, called upon Mr. Marsh, with many earnest words, to recant; and amongst others, one Pulleyn, a shoe-maker, said to him, For shame man remember thyself, and recant. They bade him kneel down and pray, and they would pray for him: so they kneeled down, and he desired them to pray for him, and he would pray for them.
THE bishop then asked him again, whether he would not have the queen's mercy in time; and he answered, he did gladly desire the same, and did love her grace as faithfully as any of them; but yet he durst not deny his Saviour Christ, lest he lose his mercy everlasting, and so win everlasting death.
THEN the bishop put his spectacles on, and read forward his sentence about five or six lines, and there again the chancellor with flattering words and smiling countenance called to the bishop, and said, yet, good my lord, once again stay, for if that word be spoken, all is past, no relenting will then serve; and the bishop (pulling off his spectacles) said, I would stay if it would be.
HOW sayest thou, said he, wilt thou recant? Many of the priests and ignorant people bade him do so, and call to God for grace; and pulling him by the sleeve, bade him recant and save his life. To whom he answered, I would as fain live as you, if in so doing I should not deny my master Christ, and then he would deny me before his Father in heaven.
THEN the bishop read out his sentence unto the end, and afterwards said unto him, Now I will no more pray for thee than I will for a dog. Mr. Marsh answered, That notwithstanding he would pray for his lordship; and after this the bishop delivered him unto the sheriffs of the city. His late keeper said, Farewel good George, with weeping eyes, which caused the officers to carry him to a prison at the north gate, where he was very strictly kept until he went to his death, during which time he had small comfort or relief of any worldly creature.
FOR being in the dungeon or dark prison, none that would do him good could speak with him, or at least durst enterprise so to do, for fear of accusation: and some of the citizens who loved him, for the gospel's sake, (whereof there were but few) although they were never acquainted with him, would sometimes in the evening at a hole upon the wall of the city (that went into the said dark prison) call to him and ask him how he did. He would answer them most chearfully, that he did well, and thanked God most highly that he would vouchsafe of his mercy to appoint him to be a witness of his truth, and to suffer for the same, wherein he did most rejoice; beseeching him that he would give him grace not to faint under the cross, but patiently bear the same to his glory, and comfort of his church: with many other such like sayings at sundry times, as one that most desired to be with Christ. Once or twice he had money cast him in at the same hole, about ten pence at one time, and about two shillings at another time; for which he gave God thanks.
WHEN the day and time appointed came that he should suffer, the sheriffs of the city, whose names were Amry and Couper, with their officers, and a great number of poor simple barbers with rusty bills and poll-axes, went to the north-gate, [Page 545] and there took out Mr. George Marsh, who came with them most humbly and meekly, with a lock upon his feet. And as he came upon the way towards the place of execution, some folks proffered him money, and looked that he should have gone with a little purse in his hand (as felons were accustomed in that city in times past, at their going to execution) to the end to gather money to give unto a priest to say masses for them after their death, whereby they might, as they thought, be saved; but Mr. Marsh said, he would not then be troubled to receive [...], but desired some good man to take the money, if the people were disposed to give any, and to give it to the prisoners or poor people. So he went all the way with his book in his hand, looking upon the same, and many people said, This man goeth not unto his death as a thief, or as one that deserveth to die.
NOW when he came to the place of execution without the city, near unto Spittal-Boughton, one Cawdry, being then a deputy chamberlain of Chester, shewed Mr. Marsh a writing under a great seal, saying, That it was a pardon for him if he would recant. Whereat he answered, That he would gladly accept the same, (and said further, that he loved the queen) but forasmuch as it tended to pluck him from God, he would not receive it upon that condition.
AFTER that he began to speak to the people, shewing the cause of his death, and would have exhorted them to stick unto Christ. Whereupon one of the sheriffs said, George Marsh, we must have no sermoning now. To whom he said, Master, I cry your mercy; and so kneeling down said his prayers, put off his clothes unto his shirt, and then was chained to the post, having a number of faggots under him, and a thing made like a firkin, with pitch and tar in it, over his head; and by reason the fire was unskilfully made, and that the wind did drive the same to and fro, he suffered great extremity in his death, which notwithstanding he bore very patiently.
WE must here observe, that when he had been a long time tormented in the fire without moving, having his flesh so broiled and puffed up, that they who stood before him, could see the chain wherewith he was fastened, and therefore supposed no less but that he had been dead; notwithstanding, suddenly he spread abroad his arms, saying, Father of heaven have mercy upon me, and so yielded his spirit into the hands of the Lord.
UPON this, many of the people said he was a martyr, and died marvellous [...] patient. Which caused the bishop shortly after to make a sermon in the cathedral church, and therein affirmed, that the said Marsh was an heretic, burnt as such, and was a fire-brand in hell.
THE Rev. Mr. Marsh wrote, besides his examinations while in prison, several letters to divers persons, of which the following are true copies.
LETTER I. From the Rev. Mr. GEORGE MARSH to his FRIENDS.
HERE you have, dearly beloved friends in Christ, the chief and principal articles of christian doctrine briefly touched, which heretofore I have both believed, professed, and taught, and as yet do believe, profess, and teach, and am surely purposed, by God's grace, to continue in the same until the last day. I do want both time and opportunity to write out at large the probations, causes, parts, effects, and contraries or errors of these articles, which whoso desireth to know, let them read over the common places of the pious and learned men, Philip Melancthon, and Erasmus Sarcerius, whose judgment in these matters of religion I do chiefly follow and lean unto. The Lord give us understanding in all things and deliver us from this evil world, according to his will and pleasure, and bring us again out of this hell of affliction, into which it hath pleased the merciful Lord to throw us down; and deliver us out of the mouth of the lion, and from all evil doing, and keep us unto his everlasting and heavenly kingdom. Amen.
THOUGH Satan be suffered as wheat to sift us for a time, yet our faith faileth not through Christ's aid, but that we are at all times able and ready to confirm the faith of our weak brethren, "and always ready to give an answer to every man that asketh us a reason of the hope that is in us, and that with m [...]ekness and reverence, having a good conscience; and wh [...]reas they backbite us as evil-doers, they may be ashamed, forasmuch as they have falsely accused our good conversation in Christ." I thought myself, now of late years, for the cares of this life, well settled with my loving and faithful wife and children, and also well quieted [Page 546] in the peaceable possession of that pleasant Euphrates, I do confess it: but the Lord, who worketh all things for the best to them that love him, would not there leave me, but did take my dear and beloved wife from me; whose death was a painful cross to my flesh.
ALSO I thought myself now of late well placed under my most loving and most gentle Mr. Laurence Saunders, in the cure of Langhton. But the Lord of his great mercy would not suffer me long there to continue (although for the small time I was in his vineyard, I was not an idle workman). But he hath provided me, I perceive it, to taste of a far other cup; for by violence hath he yet once [...]gain driven me out of that pleasing Babylon, that I should not taste too much of her wanton pleasures, but with his most dearly beloved disciples to have my inward rejoicing in the cross of his Son Jesus Christ: the glory of whose church, I see it well, standeth not in the harmonious sound of bells and organs, nor yet in the glittering of mitres and copes, neither in the shining of gilt images and lights (as the blind papists do judge it) but in continual labours and daily afflictions for his name's sake.
GOD at this present here in England, hath his fan in his hand, and after his great harvest, whereinto these years past he hath sent his labourers, is now sifting the corn from the chast, and purging his floor, and ready to gather the wheat into his garner, and burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire.
TAKE heed and beware of the leaven of the scribes and of the sadducees; I mean the erroneous doctrine of the papists, which with their glosses deprave the scriptures. For as the apostle St. Peter doth teach us, There shall be false teachers amongst us, which privily shall bring in damnable sects: and he saith, that many shall follow their damnable ways, by whom the way of truth shall be evil spoken of, and that through covetousness they shall with feigned words make merchandize of us: and Christ earnestly warneth us, to beware of [...] prophets, which come to us in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ravenous wolves. By their fruits you shall know them. The fruits of the prophets are their doctrine. In this place are we christians taught, that we should try the preachers, and others that come under colour to set forth true religion unto us, according to the saying of St. Paul, Try all things, hold fast that which is good. Also the evangelist St. John saith, Believe not every spirit, but prove the spirits whether they be of God or not; for many false prophets, saith he, are gone out into the world. Therefore if thou wilt know the true prophets from the false, try the doctrine by the true touchstone, which is the word of God: and as the godly Beteans did, search the scriptures, whether those things which he preached unto you be even so or not: or else by the outward conversation of them ye may easily be deceived.
LETTER II. From the Rev. Mr. GEORGE MARSH, to the Faithful Professors of LANGHTON.
GRACE be unto you, and peace be multiplied in the knowledge of Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen.
I thought it my duty to write unto you, my beloved in the Lord at Langhton, to stir up your minds, and to call to your remembrance the words which have been told you before, and to exhort you (as that good man, and full of the Holy Ghost, Barnabas did the Antiochians) that with purpose of heart ye continually cleave unto the Lord, and that ye stand fast; and be not moved away from the hope of the gospel, whereof, God be thanked, you have had plenteous preaching unto you by your late pastor Mr. Saunders, and other faithful ministers of Jesus Christ, who now, when persecution ariseth because of the word, do not fall away like shrinking children, and forsake the truth, being ashamed of the gospel whereof they have been preachers, but are willing and ready for your sakes (which are Christ's mystical body) to forsake not only the principal delights of this life, (I mean) their native countries, friends, livings, &c. but also to fulfil their ministry to the utmost, that is to wit, with their painful imprisonments and blood-sheddings, if need shall require, to confirm and seal Christ's gospel, whereof they have been ministers; and (as St. Paul saith) they are ready not only to be cast into prison, but also to be killed for the name of the Lord Jesus.
WHETHER these being that good salt of the earth, that is, true ministers of God's word, by whose doctrine, being received through faith, men are made savoury unto God, and which themselves lose not their saltness, now when they be proved by the boisterous storms of adversity and persecution; or others being that unsavoury salt, which hath lost its saltness, that is to wit, those ungodly ministers, which do fall from the word of God, into the dreams [...]nd traditions of Antichrist: whether of these, I say, be more to be credited and believed, let all men judge.
WHEREFORE, my dearly beloved, receive the word of God with meekness, that is grafted in you▪ which is able to save your souls: and see that ye be not forgetful hearers, deceiving yourself with s [...]phistry, but doers of the word, whom Christ doth liken to a wise man, which built his house on a rock, that when the great rain descended, and the floods came and beat upon the house, it fell not, because it was grounded upon a [...]: this is to wit, that when Satan, with all his legion of devils, with all their subtle suggestions, and the world with all the mighty princes thereof, with their crafty counsels, do furiously rage against us, we faint not, but abide constant in the truth, being grounded upon a most sure rock, which is Christ, and the doctrine of the gospel, against which th [...] gates of hell, (that is, the power of Satan) cannot preva [...]l.
[Page 547]AND be ye followers of Christ and his apostles, and receive the word in affliction, (as the godly Tessalonians did,) for the true followers of Christ and the apostles, are they who receive the word of God. They only receive the word of God, who believe it, and also frame their lives after it, and are ready to suffer all manner of adversity for the name of the Lord, as Christ and all the apostles did, and as all that will live godly in Christ Jesus must do▪ for there is no other way in [...]o the kingdom of heaven, but through much tribulation. And if we suffer any thing for the kingdom of heaven's sake, and for righteousness' sake, we have the prophets, Christ, the apostles, and martyrs, for example to comfort us: for they did enter the kingdom of heaven at the strait gate and narrow way that leadeth unto life, which few do find. And unless we will be content, to deny our own selves, and take up the cross of Christ, and his saints, it is an evident argument, that we shall never reign with him.
AND again, If we can find in our hearts patiently to suffer persecutions and tribulations, it is a sure token of the righteous judgment of God, that we are counted worthy of the kingdom of God, for which we also suffer. It is verily (saith the apostle) a righteous thing with God, to recompense tribulation to them that trouble us, and rest to us that be troubled: for after this life, the godly being delivered from their tribulation and pains, shall have a most quiet and joyful rest: whereas the wicked and ungodly contrariwise shall be tormented for evermore with intolerable and unspeakable pains, as Christ, by the parable of the rich glutton and wretched Lazarus, doth plainly declare and teach. These we ought to have before our eyes always, that in the time of adversity and persecution we may stand stedfast in the Lord, and endure even unto the end, that we may be saved. For unless we, like good warriors of Jesus Christ, will endeavour ourselves to please him, who hath chosen us to be soldiers, and fight the good sight of faith even unto the end, we shall not obtain that crown of righteousness, which the Lord, that is a righteous judge, shall give to all them that love his coming.
LET us therefore with meekness receive the word that is gra [...]ted in us, which is able to save our souls, and ground ourselves on the sure rock Christ. For (as the apostle saith) other foundation can no man lay, besides that which is laid already, which is Jesus Christ. If any man build on this foundation, gold, silver, precious stones, timber, hay, stubble, e [...]ery man's work shall appear, for the day shall declare it, and it shall be sh [...]wed in the fire. And the fire sh [...]l try every man's work what it is. If any man's work that he hath builded upon abide, he shall receive a reward: if any man's work burn, he shall suffer loss; but he shall be saved himself, nevertheless yet as it were through [...].
[...] the apostle understand persecution and [...], for they which do truly preach and profess the word of God, which is called the word of the cross, shall be railed at and abhorred, hated, thrust out of company, persecuted and tried in the furnace of adversity, as gold and silver are tried in the fire.
BY gold, silver, and precious stones, he understandeth them that in the midst of persecutions abide stedfast in the word. By timber, hay, and stubble, are meant such, as in time of persecution do fall away from the truth. And when Christ doth purge his floor with the wind of his adversity, these scatter away from the face of the earth like light chaff which shall be burned with unquenchable fire. If then they who believe, stand stedfastly in the truth, the builder (I mean the preacher of the word) shall receive a reward, and the work shall be preserved and saved: but if so be that they go back and swerve, when persecution ariseth, the builder shall suffer loss, that is to say, shall lose his labour and cost, but yet he shall be saved, if he, being tried in the fire of persecution, do abide fast in the faith.
WHEREFORE, my beloved, give diligent heed, that ye as living stones be builded upon this rock, and be made a spiritual house and holy priesthood to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable unto God by Jesus Christ. For we are the true temple of God, and the Spirit of God dwelleth in us, if so be that we continue in the doctrine of the gospel. We are also an holy and royal priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices and oblations; for the sacrifices of the New Testament are spiritual and of three kinds.
THE first is the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving, which St. Paul doth call the fruits of those lips which confess the name of God.
THE second is mercy [...] our neighbours, as the prophet Hosea saith, "I will [...] mercy and not sacrifice." Read the 25th of [...].
THE third is when we make our body a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable unto God, that is, when we mortify and kill our fleshly concupiscences and carnal lusts, and so bring our flesh, through the help of the [...]pirit, under the obedience of God's holy law. This is [...] sacrifice to God most acceptable, which the apostle calleth, "Our reasonable serving of God." And let us be sure, that unless we do now at this present take better heed to ourselves, and use thankfully the grace of God offered to us by the gospel prea [...]ed these years past, whereby we are induced and brough [...] [...] the knowledge of the truth; unless, I say, we keep Chr [...]st and his holy word dwelling by faith in the house and temple of our hearts, the same thing that Christ threateneth unto the Jews, shall happen unto us; that [...] to wit, the unclean spirit of ignorance, superstition, idolatry, infidelity, and unbelief, the mother and head of [...] vices, which by the grace of God was cast out of us, bringing with him seven other spirits worse than himself, shall to our utter destruction return again unto us: and so [Page 548] shall we be in worse case than ever we were before. For if we, after we have escaped from the filthiness of the world, through the knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ, be yet entangled therein and overcome, then is the latter end worse than the beginning: and it had been better for us not to have known the way of righteousness, than after we have known it, to turn from the holy commandment given unto us.
FOR it then happens unto us according to the true proverb, "The dog is turned to his vomit again, and the sow that was washed to wallowing in the mire." And thus to continue and persevere in infidelity, and to kick against the manifest and known truth, and so to die without repentance, and with a despair of the mercy of God in Jesus Christ, is to sin against the Holy Ghost, which shall not be forgiven, neither in this world, nor in the world to come. "For it is not possible (saith St. Paul) that they which were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and have tasted of the good word of God, and of the power of the world to come; if they fall away, should be renewed again by repentance: forasmuch as they have, as concerning themselves, crucified the Son of God again, making a mocking of him." St. Paul's meaning in this place is, that they that believe truly and unfeignedly God's word, do continue and abide stedfast in the known truth.
IF any therefore fall away from Christ and his word, it is a plain token that they were but dissembling hypocrites for all their fair faces outwardly, and never believed truly; as Judas, Simon Magus, Demas, Hymencus, Philetus, and others were, which all fell away from the known verity, and made a mock of Christ: which St. Paul doth call here, to crucify Christ anew, because that they turning to their old vomit again, did most blasphemously tread the benefit of Christ's death and passion under their feet. They that are such can in no wise be renewed by repentance: for their repentance is fleshly, as the repentance of Cain, Saul, and Judas was, which being without Godly comfort, breedeth desperation unto death. These are not of the number of the [...]lect: and as St. John doth say, "They went out from [...], but they were not of us: for if they had been of us, they would have remained with us unto the end." Also the apostle saith in another place, "If we sin willingly after we have received the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrific [...] for [...] but a fearful looking for of judgment and violent fire, which shall devour the adversaries."
THEY sin willingly, which of a set malice and purpose do hold the truth in righteousness and lying, kicking against the manifest and open truth, which although they do perfectly know that in all the world there is none other sacrifice for sin, but only that all-sufficient sacrifice of Christ's death; yet notwithstanding they will not commit themselves wholly unto it, but rather despise it, allowing other sacrifices for sin, invented by the imagination of man, (as we see by daily experience) unto whom, if they abide still in their wickedness and sin, remaineth a most horrible and dreadful judgment. This is that sin unto death, for which St. John would not that a man should pray.
WHEREFORE, my beloved in Christ, let us, (on whom the ends of the world are come) take diligent heed unto ourselves, that now in these last and perilous times (in which the devil is come down, and hath great wrath, because he knoweth the time is short, and whereof the prophets, Christ, and the apostles, have so much spoken, and given us an earnest forewarning) we hold not the truth in unrighteousness, believing, doing, or speaking any thing against our knowledge and conscience, or without faith. For if we so do, for whatsoever cause it be, it is a wilful and obstinate infidelity, and a sin unto death: and as our Saviour Christ saith, "If ye believe not, ye shall die in your sins." For unless we hold fast the word of life, both believing it, and also bringing forth fruit worthy of repentance, we shall with the unprofitable fig-tree, which did but cumber the ground, be cut down, and our talent taken from us, and given unto another that shall put it to a better use; and we, through our own unthankfulness put from the mercy of God, shall never be able to pay our debts, that is to say, we shall altogether be lost and undone. For the earth that drinketh in rain that cometh oft upon it, and bringeth forth herbs meet for them that dress it, receiveth blessing of God: but that ground that beareth thorns and briars, is reproved and is nigh unto cursing, whose end is to be burned.
NEVERTHELESS, dear friends, we trust to see better of you, and things which accompany salvation, and that ye being the good ground, watered with the moistness of God's word, plenteously preached among you, will with a good heart hear the word of God and keep it, bringing forth fruit with patience; and be none of those forgetful and hypocritical hearers, which although they hear the word, yet the devil cometh, and catcheth away that which was sown in their heart; either having no [...]oot in themselves, endure but a season, and as soon as tribulation or persecution ariseth because of the word, by and by they are offended; or with the cares of this world and deceitfulness of riches choke the word, and so are unfruitful. Read the parable of the sower, and among other things note and mark, that the most part of the hearers of God's word are but hypocrites, and hear the word without any fruit or profit, yea, only to their greater cond [...]mnation; for onl [...] the [...] part of the seed doth bring forth fruit. Therefore let not us that be ministers, or [...], and followers of God's word, be disco [...]raged, though very few do give credit, and follow the doctrine of the gospel, and be saved.
WHOSOEVER, therefore, hath ears to hear, let him hear: for whosoever hath [...] be given, and he shall have abundance: but whosoever hath not, [...] [Page 549] shall be taken away, even what he hath: that is to say, they that have a desire of righteousness, and of the truth, shall be more and more illuminated of God: on the contrary part, they that do not covet after righteousness and truth, are more hardened and blind, though they seem unto themselves most wise. For God doth here follow an example of a loving Father, who, when he seeth that fatherly love and correction do not benefit his children, useth another way. He ceaseth to be beneficial unto them, and to minister unto them fatherly correction: he giveth them over unto themselves, suffering them to live as they lift.
BUT we trust to see better of you, my dearly beloved, and that ye like very Gaderenites, for fear of losing your worldly substance or other delights of this life, will not banish away Christ and his gospel from among you: but that ye with all diligence of mind will receive the word of God, taught you by such ministers, as, now when persecution ariseth because of the word, are not ashamed of the testimony of our Lord Jesus, but are content to suffer adversity with the gospel, and therein to suffer trouble as evil doers, even unto bonds. And if ye refuse thus to do, your own blood will be upon your own heads. And as ye have had plenteous preaching of the gospel, more than others have had; so ye shall be sure, if ye repent not, and bring forth fruits worthy of repentance, to be sorer plagued, and to receive greater vengeance at God's hand, than others; and the kingdom of God shall be taken from you, and be given to another nation, which will bring forth the fruits thereof.
WHEREFORE, my dearly beloved in Christ, take heed to yourselves, and ponder well in your minds, how fearful and horrible a thing it is to fall into the hands of the living God. And see that ye receive not the word of God in vain, but continually labour in faith, and declare your faith by your good works, which are infallible witnesses of the true justifying faith, which is never idle, but worketh by charity. And see that ye continually give yourselves unto all manner of good works: amongst which, the chiefest are to be obedient to the magistrates, (since they are the ordinance of God, whether they be good or evil) unless they command idolatry and ungodliness, that is, things contrary unto true religion. For, then ought we to say with Peter, "We ought more to obey God than man." But in any wise we must beware of tumult, insurrection, rebellion, or resi [...]t [...]nce.
THE weapon of a christian, in this matter, ought to be t [...]e sword of the Spirit, which is God's word and prayer, coupled with humility and due submission, and with [...]adiness of heart, rather to die than to do any ungodliness. Christ also doth teach us, that all power is of God, yea even the power of the wicked, which God causeth ofentimes to reign for our sins and disobedience towa [...]ds him and his word. Whosoever then doth resist any power, doth resist the ordinance of God, and so purchases to himself utter destruction and undoing.
WE must also by all means be promoters of unity, peace, and concord. We must honour and reverence princes, and all that be in authority, and pray for them, and be diligent to set forth their profit and commodity.
SECONDLY, We must obey our parents, or them that be in their rooms, and be careful for our housholds, that they be provided for and fed, not only with bodily, but much rather with spiritual food, which is the word of God.
THIRDLY, We must serve our neighbours by all means we can, remembering well the saying of Christ, "Whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you, do ye likewise unto them, for this is the law and the prophets."
FOURTHLY, We must diligently exercise the necessary work of prayer for all estates: knowing that God therefore hath so much commended it, and hath made so great promises unto it, and doth so well accept. After these works, we must learn to know the cross, and what affection and mind we must bear towards our adversaries and enemies, whatsoever they be, to suffer all adversities and evils patiently, to pray for them that hurt, persecute, and trouble us; and by thus using ourselves, we shall obtain an hope and certainty of our vocation, that we be the elect children of God.
AND thus I commend you, brethren, unto God and to the word of his grace, which is able to build further, and to give you an inheritance among all them which are sanctified; beseeching you to help Mr. Saunders and me your late pastors, and all them that be in bonds for the gospel's sake, with your prayers to God for us, that we may be delivered from all them that believe not, and from unreasonable and froward men, and that our imprisonment and affliction may be to the glory and profit of our christian brethren in the world, and that Christ may be magnified in our bodies, whether it be by death or life. Amen.
Salute from me all the faithful brethren: and because I write not several letters unto them, let them either read or hear these my letters. The grace of our [...] be with you all, Amen. The 28th of June, by the unprofitable servant of Jesus Christ, and now also his prisoner,
SAVE yourselves from this untoward generation. Pray, pray, pray: never more need.
LTTTER III. From the Rev. Mr. GEORGE MARSH, to some of his Friends at Manchester, in Lancashire.
GRACE be with you, and peace from God the Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ, Amen.
[Page 550]AFTER salutations in Christ to you, with thanks for your friendly remembrance of me, desiring and wishing unto you, not only in my letters, but also in my daily prayers, such consolation in spirit, and taste of heavenly treasures, that ye may thereby continually work in faith, labour in love, persevere in hope, and be patient in all your tribulations and persecutions, even unto the end and coming of Christ: these shall be earnestly to exhort and beseech you in Christ, as ye have received the Lord Jesus, even so to walk, rooted in him, and not be afraid of any terror of your adversaries, be they ever so many and mighty, and you on the other side ever so few end weak: for the battle is the Lord's. And as in times past, God was with Abraham, Moses, Isaac, David, the Maccabees, and others, and fought for them, and delivered all their enemies into their hands, even so hath he promised to be with us also unto the world's end, and so to assist, strengthen, and help us, that no man shall be able to withstand us. "For as I was with Moses, so will I be with thee, saith God, and will never leave thee, nor forsake thee. Be strong and bold; neither fear nor dread: for the Lord thy God is with thee, whithersoever thou goest. Now if God be on our side, who can be against us?"
IN this our spiritual warfare is no man overcome, unless he traitorously leave and forsake his captain, either cowardly cast away his weapons, or willingly yield himself to his enemies, or fearfully turn his back and fly. Be strong therefore in the lord, dear brethren, and in the power of his might, and put on all the armour of God, that ye may be able to stand stedfast against the crafty assaults of the devil.
NOW what weapons ye must fight withal, learn of St. Paul, a champion both much exercised, and also most valiant and invincible. For we must think none other, but that the life of man is a perpetual warfare upon earth, as the examples of all godly men throughout all ages do declare. The valiant warrior St. Paul being delivered into the hands of the ungodly, and that so many times, and also from so many extreme perils and dangers of death, as he himself doth witness, [...] fain to commit himself in the end to the rough water [...] [...] the sea, where he was in great peril and jeopardy of his own life: yet was God always (to the great comfort of all that hear of it) most ready to comfort and succour him, and gloriously delivered him out of all his troubles; so that no man that invaded him, [...] do him any harm: and in the end he was compelled to say, I have finished my course, the time of my departing is at hand, I long to be loosed, and to be with Christ, which is the best of all, most heartily desiring death.
THESE things are written for our learning and comfort, and are to us a sure obligation, that if we submit ourselves to God and his holy word, no man shall be able to hur [...] us, and that he will deliver us from all troubles, yea▪ from [...] also, until such time as we covet and desire to die. "Let us therefore run with patience unto the battle that is set before us, and look unto Jesus the captain and finisher of our faith, and after his example, for the reward that is set before us, patiently bear the cross, and despise the shame. For all that will live godly in Christ Jesus, shall suffer persecution."
CHRIST was no sooner baptized, and declared to the world to be the Son of God, but Satan was by and by ready to tempt him: which thing we must look for also: yea, the more we increase in faith and virtuous living, the more strongly will Satan assault us: whom we must learn, after the example of Christ to fight against, and overcome with the holy and sacred scriptures, the word of God, (which are our heavenly armour) and sword of the Spirit. And let the fasting of Christ, while he was tempted in the wilderness, be unto us an example of sober living, not for the space of forty days (as the papists do fancy of their own brains), but as long as we are in the wilderness of this wretched life, assaulted of Satan, who like a roaring lion walketh about, and ceaseth not seeking our utter destruction.
NEITHER can the servants of God at any time come and stand before God, that is lead a godly life, and walk innocently before God, but Satan cometh also among them; that is, he daily accuseth, findeth fault, vexeth, persecuteth, and troubleth the godly: for it is the nature and property of the devil always to hurt, and do mischief, unless he be forbidden of God: for unless God doth permit him, he can do nothing at all.
LET us therefore, knowing Satan's deceits and rancour, walk the more warily, and take unto us the shield of faith, wherewith we may be able to quench and to overcome all the deadly and fiery darts of the wicked. Let us take to us the helmet of salvation, and sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God, and learn to use the same according to the example of our great captain Christ. Let us fast and pray continually. For this frantic kind of devils goeth not out otherwise, as Christ doth teach us, but by faithful prayer and fasting, which is true abstinence and soberness of living, if we use the same according to the doctrine of the gospel and word of God. Fasting is acceptable to God, if it be done without hypocrisy, that is to say, if we use it to this intent, that theirby this mortal body may be tamed and brought under the subjection of the spirit: and again, if we fast to this intent, that we may spare wherewith to help and succour our poor needy brethren.
THIS fast do the chris [...]i [...]ns use all the days of their life, although among the common sort of people remaineth yet still that superstitions kind of fasting, which God so earnestly reproveth by his prophet Isaiah. For as for true chastening of the body, and abstaining from vice, with shewing mercy to our needy neighbours, we will neither understand nor hear of it, but still think with the Jews, that we do God a great pleasure when we fast, and that we then fast, when we abstain from one thing and fill our bellies with another. [Page 551] And verily in this point doth our superstition much exceed the superstition of the Jews: for we never read that they ever took it for a fast, to abstain from flesh, and to eat either fish or white-meat, as they call it.
TO fasting and prayer must be joined alms, and mercy towards the poor and needy: and that our alms may be acceptable unto God, three things are chiefly required.
FIRST, That we give with a chearful and joyful heart; for the Lord loveth a chearful giver.
SECONDLY, That we give liberally, putting aside all niggerliness, knowing that he that soweth little, shall reap little, and he that soweth plenteously, shall reap plenteously. Let every man therefore do according as he is able. The poorest wretch in the world may give as great and acceptable an alms in the sight of God, as the richest man in the world can do. The poor widow that did offer but two mites, which make a farthing, did highly please Christ: insomuch that he himself affirmed, That she of her penury had added more to the offerings of God, than all the rich men, which of their superfluity had cast in very much. "For if there be first a willing mind, (as St. Paul saith) it is accepted, according to what a man hath, and not according to what a man hath not."
THIRDLY, We must give without hypocrisy and ostentation, not seeking the praise of men, or our own glory or profit. And although the scriptures in some places make mention of a reward to our alms and other good works, yet ought we not to think that we do merit or deserve any thing: but rather we ought to acknowledge, that God in his mere mercy rewardeth in us his own gifts. For what hath he that giveth alms, that he hath not received? He then that giveth to a poor man any manner of thing, giveth not of his own, but of those goods which he hath received of God. "What hast thou (saith the apostle) that thou hast not received? If thou hast received it, why rejoicest thou, as though thou hadst not received it?"
THIS sentence ought to be had in remembrace of all men. For if we have nothing, but that which we have received, what can we deserve? or what need we to dispute and reason of our own merits? it cometh of the free gift of God, that we live, that we love God, that we walk in his fear. Where is our deserving then? We must also in this our spiritual warfare arm ourselves with continual prayer, a very necessary, strong, and invincible weapon, and after the example of Christ and all other men, cry heartily unto God in faith, in all our distresses and anguishes. Let us go boldly to the seat of grace, where we shall be sure to receive mercy, and find grace to help in time of need. For now is pride and persecution increased: now is the time of destruction and wrathful displeasure.
WHEREFORE, my dear brethren, be ye fervent in the law of God, and venture your lives, if need shall require, for the testament of the fathers, and so shall ye receive great honour, and an everlasting name. Remember Abraham: was not he found faithful in temptation, and it was reckoned unto him for righteousness? Joseph in the time of his trouble kept the commandment, and was made a lord of Egypt. Phineas was so fervent for the honour of God, that he obtained the covenant of an everlasting priesthood. Joshua for the fulfilling of the word of God, was made the captain of Israel. Caleb bare record before the congregation, and received an inheritance. David also in his merciful kindness obtained the throne of an everlasting kingdom. Elias being zealous and servant in the law, was taken up into heaven. Ananias, Azarias, and Misael, remained stedfast in the faith, and were delivered out of the fire. In like manner Daniel being unguilty, was saved from the mouth of the lions.
AND thus ye may consider throughout all ages, since the world began, that whosoever put their trust in God were not overcome. Fear not ye then the words of ungodly men; for their glory is but dung and worms; to-day they are set up, and to-morrow they are gone; for they are turned into earth, and their memorial cometh to nought. Wherefore let us take good hearts unto us, and quit ourselves like men in the Lord: for, if we do the things that are commanded us in the law of the Lord our God, we shall obtain great honour therein.
BELOVED in Christ, let us not faint because of affliction, wherewith God trieth all them that are sealed unto life everlasting: for the only way into the kingdom of God is through much tribulation. For the kingdom of heaven (as God teacheth by his prophet Esdras) is like a city built and set upon a broad field, and full of all good things, but the entrance thereof is narrow, (full of sorrow and travail, perils and labours) like as if there were a fire at the right hand, and a deep water at the left; and as it were one strait path between them both, so small, that there could but one man go there. If this city were now given to an heir, and he never went through the perilous way, ho [...] [...]ould he receive his inheritance? Wherefore seeing we [...] this narrow and strait way, which leadeth unto the most joyful and pleasent city of everlasting life; let us not stagger, neither turn back, being afraid of the dangerous and perilous way, but follow our captain Jesus Christ in the narrow and strait way, and be afraid of nothing, no not [...]ven of death itself: for it is he that must lead us to our journey's end, and open us the door unto everlasting life. Consider also the course of this world, how many there be which for their master's sake, or for a little promotion's sake, would adventure their lives in worldly affairs, as commonly in wars, and yet is their reward but light and transitory▪ and our's unspeakably great, and everlasting. They suffer pains to be made lords on earth for a short season: how much more ought we to [Page 552] endure like pains, yea, peradventure much less, to be made kings in heaven for evermore? Consider also the wicked of this world, which for a little pleasure's sake, or to be avenged on their enemies, will fight with sword and weapons, and put themselves in danger of imprisonment and hanging. So much as virtue is better than vice, and God mightier than the devil, so much ought we to excel them in this our spiritual battle.
AND seeing, brethren, it hath pleased God to send me, and that most worthy minister of Christ, John Bradford, your countryman, in the fore-front of this battle, where (for the time) is most danger, I beseech you all, in the bowels of Christ, to help us, and all our fellow-soldiers standing in like perilous places, with your prayers to God for us, that we may quit ourselves like men in the Lord, and give some example of boldness and constancy mingled with patience in the fear of God, that you and others our brethren, through our example, may be so encouraged and strengthened to follow us, that you also may leave example to your weak brethren in the world to follow you, Amen.
CONSIDER what I say; the Lord give us understanding in all things. Brethren, the time is short; it remaineth that you use this world as though ye used it not: for the fashion of this world vanisheth away. See that ye love not the world, neither the things that are in the world: but set your affections on heavenly things, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God. Be meek and long-suffering, serve and edify one another, with the gift that God hath given you. Beware of strange doctrine; lay aside the old conversation of greedy lusts, and walk in a new life. Beware of uncleanness, covetousness, foolish talking, false doctrine, and drunkenness: rejoice and be thankful towards God, and submit yourselves one to another. Cease from sin, spend no more time in vice, be sober and apt to pray, be patient in trouble, love each other, and let the glory of God and profit of your neighbour be the only mark you shoot at in all your doings. Repent ye of the life that is past, and take better heed to your doings hereafter. And above all things cleave ye fast to him, who was delivered to death for ou [...] sins, and rose again for our justification. To whom wit [...] [...]he Father, and the Holy Ghost, be all honour and power for evermore. Amen.
SALUTE from me in Christ [...]ll others which love us in the faith, and at your discretion make them partakers of these letters: and pray ye all for me and others in bonds for the gospel, that the same God (which by grace hath called us from wicked popery unto true christianity, and now of love proveth our patience by persecution) will of his mercy and favour in the end gloriously deliver us, either by death, or by life, to his glory, Amen. At Lancaster, August 30, 1555.
LETTER IV. From the Rev. Mr. GEORGE MARSH, to JENETH CRAMPTON, JAMES LEIVER, ELICE FOGGE, RALPH BRADSHAW, and others.
THE grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Ghost, be with you all, Amen.
AFTER salutations in Christ, and hearty thanks for your friendly tokens and other remembrances towards me, beseeching God that ye may increase in faith, fear, and love, and all good gifts, and grow up into a perfect man in Christ: These are earnestly to exhort you, yea and to beseech you in the tender mercy of Christ, that with purpose of heart ye continually cleave unto the Lord, and that ye worship and serve him in spirit, in the gospel of his Son. For God will not be worshipped after the commandments and traditions of men, neither yet by any other means appointed, prescribed, and taught us, but by his holy word. And though all men for the most part defile themselves with the wicked traditions of men, and ordinances after the world, and not after Christ; yet do ye after the example of Tobit, Daniel and his three companions, Mattathias and his three sons, be at a point with yourselves, that ye will not be defiled with the unclean meats of the heathen; I do mean the filthiness of idolatry, and the very heathenish ceremonies of the papists: but as the true worshippers, serve ye God in spirit and truth, according to the sacred scriptures, which I would wish and desire you above all things continually and reverently (as Christ and St. Paul command you) to search and read, with the wholesome monitions of the same: to teach, exhort, comfort, and edify one another, and your brethren and neighbours, now in the time of this our miserable captivity, and great famishing of souls, for want of the food of God's word. And doubt not but the merciful Lord, who hath promised to be with us even unto the world's end, and that whensoever two or three be gathered together in his name, he will be in the midst of them, will assist you, and teach you the right meaning of the sacred scriptures, will keep you from all errors, and lead you into all truth, as he hath faithfully promised.
And though you think yourselves unable to teach, yet at the commandment of Christ, now in the time of famine, the hungry people being in a wilderness far from any towns, which if they be sent away fasting, are sure to faint and perish by the way, employ and bestow these five loaves and two fishes that ye h [...]ve, upon that hungry multitude, although you think it nothing among so many. And he that increased the five loaves and two fishes to feed five thousand men, b [...]sides women and children, shall augment his gifts in you, not only to the edifying and winning of others in Christ, but also to an exceeding [Page 553] great increase of your knowledge in God and his holy word. And fear not your adversaries; for either according to his accustomed manner God shall blind their eyes that they shall not spy you, or get you favour in their sight, or else graciously deliver you out of their hands by one means or other.
OBEY with reverence all your superiours, unless they command idolatry or ungodliness. Make provision for your housholds, chiefly that they be instructed and taught in the law of God. Love your wives even as yourselves, and as Christ loved the congregation. Love your children, but abuse them not, lest they be of a desperate mind: and bring them up in the nurture and information of the Lord, and teach them even as the godly parents of Tobit the younger, and Susanna did teach their children, even from their infancy to reverence God according to his law, and to abstain from sin, providing that in no wise they be brought up in idleness and wantonness, seeing that ye reckon yourselves to be children of God, and look for the life which God shall give to them which never turn their belief from him. See that ye even fear God, and keep his commandments; and though the plague of God chance upon you, yet remain ye stedfast in the faith and fear of God, and thank him, and serve him in such holiness and righteousness as are acceptable before him all the days of your life. Comfort yourselves in all your adversities, and stay yourselves in him, who hath promised not to leave you as fatherless and motherless children without any comfort, but that he will come to you like a most gentle and merciful Lord. He will continually stand by you in all your troubles, assisting, helping, and succouring you at all times. "I will be with you (saith he) unto the end of the world." And cleave you fast unto him, which was incarnate, lived, wrought, taught, an died for your sins, yea, rose again from death, and ascended into heaven for your justification. Repent ye of the life that is past, and cease from sin, and from henceforward live as much time as remaineth in the flesh, not after the lusts of men, but after the will of God. To do good and distribute, forget not. Fast and pray [...], and as every man hath received the gift, minister the same one to another as good ministers of the manifold graces of God, that God in all things may be glorified through Jesus Ch [...]ist, to whom be praise and dominion for ever, and while the world standeth, Amen.
LETTER V. From the Rev. Mr. GEORGE MARSH to the same.
THE same grace and peace (dearly beloved in Christ) do I intirely desire and wish unto you, which the apostle St. Paul wisheth to all them, unto whom he did write and send his epistles, than which two things no better can be wished and desired of God. Grace is, throughout all the epistles of Paul, taken for the free mercy and favour of God, whereby he saveth us freely without any deservings or works of the law. In like manner peace is taken for the quietness and tranquillity of the conscience, being fully persuaded that through the only merits of Christ's death and blood-shedding, there is an atonement and peace made between God and us, so tha [...] God will no more impute our sins unto us, nor yet condemn us.
DEARLY beloved, I will not be negligent to put you always in remembrance of things, though you know them yourselves, and be also established in the prese [...]t truth; notwithstanding, I think it meet, as long as I am in t [...]is tabernacle, to stir you up by putting you in remembranc [...]. Wherefore I beseech you, brethren, and exhort you in th [...] Lord Jesus, that ye increase mor [...] [...] more, even as ye have received, how ye ought to walk, and to please God. And as Barnabas, that good man, and full of the Holy Ghost, exhorted the Antiochi [...]s, with purpose of heart cleave ye continually unto the Lord. And stand fast, and be not moved from the hope of the gospel, whereof, God be thanked, ye have had plenteous preaching unto you these years past, by the faithful ministers of Jesus Christ, Leiver, Pilkinton, Bradford, Saunders, and others, who now, when persecution ariseth, because of the word, do not fall away like shrinking children, and forsake the truth, but are glad and ready for your sakes, which are his mystical body, to forsake the chief and principal delights of this life, and some of them in giving place to the outrageous tyranny of the world, to forsake their livings, friends, native land, and other chief pleasures of this life, and to commit themselves to painful exile, that, if it please God, Christ may come again out of Egypt. And others are ready to fulfil their ministry unto the uttermost; that is to say, with their painful imprisonments and blood-shedding, if need shall require, to confirm and seal Christ's gospel whereof they have been ministers; and as St. Paul saith, not only to be cast into prison, but also to die for the name of the Lord Jesus.
BE ye not therefore ashamed of the testimony of our Lord Jesus, neither be ye ashamed of us which are his prisoners, but suffer ye adversity with the gospel, for which word we suffer as evil doers, even unto bonds; but the word of God is not bound with us. Therefore we suffer all things for the elect's sake, they also that pray obtain the salvation that is in Ch [...]ist Jesus with eternal glory: wherefore stand ye fast in the faith, and be not moved from the hope of the gospel, and so shall ye make us even with joy to suffer for your sakes, and as the apostle saith, to fulfil that which is behind of the passions of Christ in our flesh, for his body's sake, which is the congregation. St. Paul doth not here mean, that there wanteth any thing in the passion of Christ, as touching his own person, is that most perfect and all-sufficient sacrifice, whereby we are all made perfect, [Page 554] as many as are sanctified in his blood: but these his words ought to be understood of the elect and chosen, in whom Christ is, and shall be persecuted unto the world's end. The passion of Christ then, as touching his mystical body, which is the church, shall not be perfected till they have all suffered; whom God hath appointed to suffer for his Son's sake. Wherefore establish yourselves, and be of good comfort, and be not moved in these afflictions, knowing that we are appointed thereunto. For on our parts nothing can be greater consolation and inward joy unto us in our adversity, than to hear of your faith and love, and that ye have a good remembrance of us always, praying for us as we do for you, as the apostle writeth of the Thessalonians, saying, Now are we alive, if ye stand stedfast in the Lord: for good shepherds do always count the welfare and prosperous state of Christ's flock to be their own: for while it goeth well with the congregation, it goeth well with them also in whatsoever affliction or adversity they be: but when they see the church in any peril or weakness, then are they weary of their own lives, then can they have no rest nor joy. "Who is weak, (saith St. Paul) and am I not weak? who is offended, and I do not burn." But this affection is not in them that seek their own lucre and glory.
AND forasmuch as the life of man is a perpetual warfare upon earth, let us run with joy unto the battle that is set before us, and like good warriors of Jesus Christ please him, who hath chosen us to be soldiers, and not like shrinking children faint and fall away from the truth now in time of adversity and tribulation, wherewith all that will live godly in Christ Jesus must be tried, even as gold and silver is proved in the fire, and whereof all the scriptures have given us so much forewarning. For God is wont for the most part to warn his elect and chosen, what affliction and trouble shall happen unto them for his sake, not to affright them thereby, but rather to prepare their minds against the boisterous storms of persecution. As we have a notable example in the apostle Paul, unto whom God sent Agabus, who prophesied unto him of the imprisonment and bonds that he should suffer at Jerusalem; in whom we have also a good example of constancy and stedfastness, who regarding not the tears of his familiar friends, nor yet the peril of his own life, did through fire and water go on still to set forth the glory of God; and he being delivered from the hands of his wicked and blood-thirsty enemies, and that so many times, is in conclusion fain to commit himself to the rough waters of the sea, where he was a long season in great peril and jeopardy of his own life. But God was always (to the great comfort of all that shall hear it) most ready to help and succour him. First, he did send him a most friendly and sweet company, I mean Aristarchus and Lucus, so ruling the heart of the under captain Julius that he courteously treated him, and gave him liberty to go to his friends and to refresh himself; and he was beneficial unto him a [...] all times. In like manner was God with Joseph, and delivered him from all his adversities, and gave him favour and wisdom in the sight of Pharaoh king of Egypt, insomuch that he made him governor over all Egypt, and over all his houshold. In like manner was he with Jeremy and Daniel, in their great troubles, and appointed men for them in their trials, to relieve, succour and help them, to their singular comfort.
ALSO when Peter was in Herod's prison, sleeping between two soldiers, bound with two chains, and the keepers before the door keeping the prison, the same night that Herod had intended to have brought him out to the people the day following, and to have put him to death to please the Jews withal, as a little before he had killed James the brother of John with the sword; God sent his angel, and the chains fell off from Peter's bands, and the iron gate opened unto him by its own accord, and so was Peter wonderfully delivered by God. For it is the true living God that looseth hands, and delivereth out of prison, and not that feigned god St. Leonard. On that true God did St. Peter call, unto him did he ascribe the glory of his deliverance, saying, Now I know of a truth, that God hath sent his angel, &c.
THESE things are written for our learning, that we through patience and comfort of the scriptures might have hope. The God of patience and comfort grant that we be lik [...] minded one towards another, after the example of Christ Jesus, that we all agreeing together, may with one mouth glorify God the father of our Lord Jesus Christ.
LETTER VI. From the Rev. Mr. GEORGE MARSH, to ROBERT LANGLEY and other Friends.
THE grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Ghost, be with you [...] good brother in Christ, Robert Langley, and with all them that love the Lord Jesus unfeignedly, Amen.
AFTER hearty commendations to you, with thanks for that ye did [...] a prisoner in Christ, although unacquainted, to your costs, this shall be to let you know, that ye shall receive from me mine own examination and handling at Lathum, and the cause of mine imprisonment, according as I did promise you: and this ye shall receive of my brother, or some one of the Bradshaws of Bolton within this seven night, willing you to sh [...]w the same to such faithful men about Manchester or elsewhere, as you do take to be favourers of true religion, and Christ's holy word, and then to deliver it again. And whereas you did put me in comfort, that if I did want any thing necessary unto this life, you with some others would be bearers with [Page 555] me in this costly and painful affliction; I give you most hearty thanks, and rejoice greatly in the Lord, who stirs up the hearts of others to be careful for me in this my great necessity. I thank God, as yet I do want nothing, and intend to be as little chargeable to others (saving my mother) as I can. If I do want, I will be bold with you and others, to send for your relief and help in my necessity; desiring you in the mean while to pray for me, and all others in the bonds of Christ, that God would perform the thing which he hath begun in us, that we may with boldness confess Jesus Christ, and fight the good fight of faith.
LETTER VII. From the Rev. Mr. GEORGE MARSH, to one of his Benefactors, an [...] pious Friend.
GRACE be with you, and peace be multiplied in the knowledge of God, and Jesus the Lord.
AFTER hearty commendations and thanks to you, not only for your larg [...] token, but much more for your loving letters, full of consolation to me as touching my person to you unknown; these shall be to certify you, that I rejoice greatly in the Lord, when I do perceive how my sweet Saviour Christ doth stir up the minds, not only of my familiar friends in times past, but also of sundry and divers heretofore unto me unknown and unacquainted, to bear part with me in this my painful and costly imprisonment, sending me things not only necessary for this present life, but also comfortable letters, encouraging and exhorting me to continue grounded and established in the faith, and not to be moved away from the hope of the gospel, whereof, according to my small talent, I have been a minister; and daily I call and cry unto the Lord in whom is all my trust, and without whom I can do nothing, that he which hath begun a good work in me, would vouchsafe to go forth with it until the day of Jesus Christ, being surely certified in my conscience of this, that he will so do, forasmuch as he hath given me, that not only I should believe on him, but also suffer for his sake. The Lord strengthen me with his Holy Spirit, that I may be one of the number of those blessed, which enduring to the end shall be saved.
AND whereas you say, that my suffering of persecution with Christ is a thing to you most comfortable, I make answer, that in all mine adversity and necessity nothing on your behalf is greater consolation unto me, than to hear of the faith and love of others, and how they have good remembrance of us always, even as the apostle reporteth by the Thessalonians, saying, Now are we alive, if ye stand stedfast in the Lord. For my trust in the Lord is, that this my business shall happen to the furtherance of the gospel, and that you will be none of those forgetful and hypocritish hearers, whereof some being but way-side hearers, the devil cometh and taketh away the word out of their hearts, lest they should believe and be saved: (but let prayer be made without ceasing by the congregation unto God for them) and, no doubt, God will to your consolation gloriously deliver by one means or other his oppressed. Only tarry ye the Lord's leisure; be strong, let your heart be of good comfort, and wait ye still for the Lord. He tarrieth not that will come; look for him therefore and faint not, and he will never fail you.
A LETTER, From JAMES BRADSHAW, a godly Brother, to the Rev. Mr. GEORGE MARSH, when in Prison.
GRACE and peace from God the Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ be with you always, Amen.
WE had a letter from you which is a great comfort unto us, to see you take the cross so tha [...]kfully. Trouble and affliction doth prove, try, instruct, [...]onfirm and strengthen the faith, provoke and stir up to prayer, drive and force us to amendment of life, to the fear of God, to meekness, to patience, to constancy, to gentleness, to soberness, temperance, and to all manner of virtues, and are the occasion of exceeding much good, as well transitory as eternal, in this world as in the world to come. There is neither good nor bad, godly nor ungodly, but he hath one cross or other. And although some there be that can shift for a while, and make provision for themselves for a time, by craft, soberly, and dissimulation, or by some falshood in fellowship, (as they call it) yet they bring themselves at length into the highest danger, confusion, and shame, both in this world, and in the world to come. And seeing that all the trou [...] and adversity in this world, are a thousand times more lig [...] and easy, yea nothing in comparison of the eternal fire, which is prepared and already kindled for the unfai [...] wicked enemies of God; all faithful and godly [...] ought to bear and suffer their transitory affliction an [...] [...]versity the more patiently, willingly, and thankfully, c [...]dering and remembering all the dearly beloved frien [...] of God, which were wonderfully vexed and plagued of their enemies, Abraham of the Chaldees, Lot of the Sodomites, Isaac of Ishmael, Jacob of Esau, Moses of his people, David of Saul, and of his own son. As for Job, he had not a drop of blood in his body. John the Baptist, the holiest [...] ever was born of a woman, was without any law, right [...] reason beheaded in prison, as though God had known [...] at all of him.
[Page 556]WE have many thousand fellow martyrs and companions of our misery and adversity, in respect of whose imprisonment, racking, chains, fire, wild beasts, and other means wherewith they were tormented, all that we suffer is but a blast of wind. Therefore now, whosoever is ashamed of the cross of Christ, and aggrieved therewith, the same is ashamed to have Christ for his fellow and companion, and therefore shall the Lord Jesus Christ be ashamed of him at the last day.
THUS I leave for this time, beseeching you to let me have your advice, because I do not outwardly speak that with my tongue that I do not think in my heart. Pray for me, as I do for you. I beseech the Holy Ghost have you in his keeping always, Amen.
A PRAYER Of the Rev. Mr. GEORGE MARSH, which he used to say daily.
O Lord Jesus Christ, which art the only physician of wounded consciences, we miserable sinners trusting in thy gracious goodness, do briefly open unto thee the evil tree of our heart, with all the roots, bought, leaves, and fruits, and with all the crooks, knots, and withered ends, all which thou knowest: for thou thoroughly perceivest as well the inward lusts, doubtings, and denying thy providence, as those gross outward sins which we commit openly and daily. Wherefore we beseech thee according to the little measure of our infirmity, although we be very unable and unapt to pray, that thou wouldst mercifully circumcise our stony hearts, and for these old hearts create new within us, and replenish us with a new spirit, and water and moisten us with the juice of heavenly grace, and wells of spiritual waters, whereby the inward venom and noisome juice of the flesh may be dried up, and custom of the old man changed, and our hearts, always bringing forth thorns and briars to be burned with fire, from henceforth may bear spiritual fruits in righteousness and holiness, unto life everlasting, Amen.
BELOVED, among other exercises, I do daily on my knees, use this confession of sins, willing and exhorting you to do the same, and daily to acknowledge unfeignedly to God your unbelief, unthankfulness, and disobedience against him.
CHAP. VIII. The History of the Lives, Cruel Treatment, Sufferings, and Martyrdom of Mr. WILLIAM FLOWER, the Rev. Mr. JOHN CARDMAKER, Mr. JOHN WARNE, Mr. JOHN SIMSON, and Mr. JOHN ARDELEY, under the Persecution of the inhuman BONNER, in the bloody Reign of MARY I.
I. The History of the Life, Sufferings, and Martyrdom, of Mr. WILLIAM FLOWER, a Monk and Priest, who, for striking a Popish Priest, was apprehended, and, first having his Hand cut off, was martyred for his constant Adherence to the Truth.
WILLIAM FLOWER, otherwise named Branch, was born at Snow-hill, in the county of Cambridge, where he went to school some years, and then came to the abbey of Ely; where, after he had remained a while, he was a professed monk, using and bearing the habit of a monk, and observing the rules and orders of the same house, until he came to twenty-one years of age, or thereabouts; and before he came to that age, being a professed monk, he was made a priest also in the same house, and there did celebrate and sing mass. After that, by reason of a visitation, and certain injunctions by the authority of Henry the eighth, he forsook the same house, and casting from him the monk's habit and religion, took upon him and used the habit of a secular priest, and returned to Snow-hill, where he was born; and there he did celebrate and sing mass, and taught children about half a year.
HE then went to Ludgate, in Suffolk, and there served as a secular priest about a quarter of a year; [Page 557] from thence to Stoniland, where he tarried, and served as a secular priest also, until the coming out of the six articles: and then he departed from thence, and went into Gloucestershire, where after he had made his abode in that country a while, at length in Tewksbury, according to God's holy ordinance, he married a wife, with whom he ever after faithfully and honestly continued: and after his marriage, he tarried in Tewksbury about two years together, and from thence he went to Brosley, where he tarried three quarters of a year, and practised physic and chirurgery. From thence he removed into Northamptonshire, where under a gentleman he taught children to write and read. But departing from those parts he came to London, and there remained for a certain space. After that, being desirous to see his country, he returned to Snow-hill, where he was born; from thence to Brankstrey in Essex, then to Coxall, where he taught children, and coming to Lambeth near London, he hired a house, where he and his wife did dwell together: however for the most part he was always abroad, except once or twice in a month, to visit and see his wife; where he being at home upon Easter-Sunday, about ten or eleven o'clock in the forenoon of the same day, came over the water from Lambeth into St. Margaret's church at Westminster; when seeing a priest, named John Cheltam, administering and giving the sacrament of the altar to the people, and therewith being greatly offended in his conscience with the priest for the same, did strike and wound him upon the head, and also upon the arm and hand with his wood knife, the priest having the same time in his hand a chalice, with certain consecrated hosts therein, which were sprinkled with the blood of the said priest.
IN which action as indeed he did not well or evangelically, so afterwards, being examined before bishop Bonner, did he no less confess his not well doing in the same, submitting therefore himself willingly to punishment, when it should come. Howbeit touching his belief in the sacrament, and the popish ministration, he neither would nor did submit himself.
W [...]REUPON Mr. William Flower, being first apprehended and laid in the Gatehouse at Westminster (where he had given two groats the same day a little before to the prisoners, saying, he would shortly after come to them) with as many irons as he could bear; afterwards was summoned before bishop Bonner his ordinary, April 19, 1555, where the bishop, after he had sworn him upon a book, (according to his ordinary manner) ministered articles and interrogatories to him. But before we speak of these, we will here relate a conversation that passed between Mr. Flower and Mr. Robert Smith, a fellow-prisoner, the substance of which is as follows.
A Conversation between Mr. ROBERT SMITH and Mr. WILLIAM FLOWER, concerning the Crime with which the latter stood charged, of having struck and wounded a Popish Priest, while officiating before the Altar, at Westminster.
FRIEND, forasmuch as I understand that you do profess the gospel, and also have done so a long season, I am bold to come unto you, and in the way of communication to demand and learn a truth at your own mouth, of certain things by you committed, to the astonishment not only of me, but of divers others that also profess the truth.
I praise God for his great goodness in shewing me the light of his holy word: and I give you my hearty thanks for your visitation, intending by God's grace to declare all the truth that you shall demand lawfully of me, in all things.
Then I desire you to shew me the truth of your deed, committed on John Cheltam, priest, in the church, as near as you can, that I may hear from your own mouth how it was.
I came from my house at Lambeth over the water, and entering into St. Margaret's church, and there seeing the people falling down before a most detestable idol, being moved with extreme zeal for my God, whom I saw before my face dishonoured, I drew forth my hanger, and struck the priest which ministered the same unto them; whereupon I was immediately apprehended; and this is most true, as the act is manifest.
Did you not know the person that you struck, or was you not zealous upon him for any evil will or hatred between you at any time?
No, verily, I never to my knowledge saw the person before that time, neither had evil will or malice; for if he had not had it, another should, if I had at any time came where the like occasion had been ministered, if God had permitted me to do it.
Do you think that thing to be well done, and after the rule of the gospel?
I do confess all flesh to be subject to the power of Almighty God, whom he maketh his ministers to do his will and pleasure; as in example, Moses, Aaron, Phineas, Joshua, Zimri, Jehu, Judith, Mattathias, with many others, not only changing degrees, but also planting zeals to his honour, [...]gainst all order and respect of flesh and blood. For, as St. Paul saith, "His works are past finding out:" by whose Spirit I have also given my flesh at this present unto such order, as it shall please the good will of God to appoint, in death, which before the act committed I looked for.
Think you it convenient for me, or any other, to do the like by your example?
No, verily, neither do I know if it were to do again, whether I could do it again, or no: for I was up very early at St. Paul's church upon Christ's day in the morning, to have done it in my jealousy: but when I came there, I was no more able to do it, than now to undo that which is done; and yet now being compelled by the Spirit, not only to come over the water, and to enter the church, but being in mind fully content to die for the Lord, gave over my flesh willingly without all fear, I praise God. Wherefore I cannot teach you to do the like. First, Because I know not what is in you. Secondly, Because the rules of the gospel command us to suffer with patience all wrongs and injury: yet nevertheless, if he makes you worthy, that hath made me zealous, you shall not be hindered, judged, nor condemned: for he doth in his people his unspeakable works in all ages, which no man can comprehend. I humbly beseech you to judge the best of the Spirit, and condemn not God's doings: for I cannot express with my mouth the great mercies that God hath shewed on me in this thing, which I repent not.
Are you not assured to have death ministered unto you for the same act committed, and even with extremity?
I did, before the deed committed, adjudge my body to die for the same: whereupon I carried about me, in writing, my opinion of God and the holy scriptures; that if it had pleased God to have given them leave to have killed my body in the church, they might in the said writing have seen my hope, which (I praise God) is laid up safe within my breast, notwithstanding any death that may be ministered upon my body in this world; being ascertained of everlasting life through Jesus Christ our Lord, and being most heartily sorry for all my offences committed in this flesh, and trusting shortly, through his mercy, to cease from the same.
I need not examine or commune with you of the hope that you have any further: for I perceive (God be praised) you are in good state, and therefore I beseech God, for his mercies, spread his wings over you, that, as for his love you have been zealous, even to the loss of this life, so he may give you his Holy Spirit to conduct you out of this world into a better life, which I think will be shortly.
I hunger for the same, dear friend, being fully ascertained that they can kill but the body, which I am assured shall receive life again everlasting, and see no more death; intirely desiring you and all that fear the Lord, to pray with me to Almighty God, to perform the same in me shortly. And thus Robert Smith departed, leaving him in the dungeon, and went again to his ward. And this is the truth, as near as the said Smith could report it.
Now to return again to the matter of his examination. We shewed before, how this William Flower, after his striking the priest, first was laid in the Gatehouse; then, being examined before bishop Bonner, had articles ministered against him, the copy whereof here followeth.
ARTICLES exhibited by Bishop BONNER, against Mr. WILLIAM FLOWER, late of Lambeth, in the County of Surry.
1. THAT thou being of lawful age and discretion, at the least seventeen years old, wast [Page 559] a professed monk in the late abbey of Ely, wherein after thy profession thou remainedst until the age of twenty-one years, using all the mean time the habit and religion of the same house, and was reputed and taken notoriously for such a person.
2. THAT thou wast ordained and made priest, according to the laudable custom of the catholic church, and afterwards thou didst execute and minister as a priest, and wast commonly reputed, named, and taken for a priest.
3. THAT after the premises thou, forgetting God, thy conscience, honesty, and the laudable order of the catholic church, didst, contrary to thy profession and vow, take, as unto thy wife, one woman, commonly called Alice Pulton, in the parish church of Tewksbury, in the diocese of Gloucester, with whom thou hadst mutual cohabitation, as man and wife, and had by her two children.
4. THAT thou being a religious man and a priest, didst, contrary to the order of the ecclesiastical laws, take upon thee to practise in divers places within the diocese of London, physic and chirurgery, when thou wast not admitted expert or learned.
5. THAT upon Easter day last past, that is to wit, the 14th of April, within the parish church of St. Margaret's, at Westminster, within the county of Middlesex, and diocese of London, thou didst maliciously, outragiously, and violently pull out thy wood-knife or hanger. And whereas the priest and minister there, called John Cheltam, was executing his cure and charge, especially in doing his service, and administering the sacrament of the altar to communicants, then didst thou wickedly and abominably smite with the said weapon, the said priest, first upon the head, and afterwards upon his hands or other parts of his body, drawing blood abundantly from him; the said priest then holding the said sacrament in his hand, and giving no occasion why thou shouldst so hurt him: the people being grievously off [...]nded therewith, and the said church polluted thereby, so that the inhabitants were compelled to repair to another church to communicate, and receive the said sacrament.
6. THAT by reason of the promise [...] thou wast and art by the ecclesiastical laws of the church, amongst other penalties, excommunicated and accursed, in very deed, and not to be accompanied withal, neither in the church nor elsewhere, but in special cases.
7. THAT thou, concerning the truth of Christ's natural body and blood in the sacrament of the altar, hast been by the space of one or more years, and yet art at this present, of this opinion, That in the sacrament of the altar, after the words of consecration, there is not really, truly, and in very deed, contained (under the forms of bread) the very true and natural body of our Saviour Jesus Christ.
8. THAT thou for the hatred and disdain that thou hadst and didst bear against the said sacrament, and the virtue thereof, and against the said priest administering the same, (as before) didst smite, wound, and hurt him in manner and form as before is declared.
9. THAT thou, over and besides the pains due unto thee for the doing of the cruel fact, art also by the order of the ecclesiastical laws of the church, and the laudable custom and ordinance of the same, to be reputed, taken, and adjudged (as thou art indeed) a very heretic, and to be punished by and with the pains due for heresy, [...] of the said heresy and damnable opinion.
10. THAT all the prem [...] be [...], manifest, notorious and famous, and that upon the same, and every part thereof, there was and in within the said parish of St. Margaret's, and thereabouts, a public voice and fame.
The Answer of WILLIAM FLOWER to the aforesaid ARTICLES.
TO the first article he answereth and confesseth the same to be true in every part thereof, except that he saith and confesseth that he never consented and agreed in his heart to be a monk.
TO the second article he answereth and confesseth the same to be true in every part thereof. Howbeit he saith, that he never did, nor yet doth esteem the said order of priesthood, according to the order of [Page 560] the said catholic church, because he was offended therewith in his conscience.
TO the third article he answereth and confesseth, That he intending to live in holy matrimony, and not forgetting God, did marry with the said Alice Pulton named in this article, wherein he believed that he did well, and according to God's laws. Further, confessing and believing, that all the time when he was a professed monk, and made priest, he did thereby utterly forget God: but when he did marry the said Alice Pulton, and in continuing with her did beget three children, he did rem [...]mber God, as he saith, and believeth that he did then lawfully.
TO the fourth article he answereth and believeth the same to be true in every part thereof.
TO the fifth article he answereth and confesseth, Than his conscience being greatly offended with the said John Cheltam, priest, for administering the sacrament of the altar to the people at the place and time specified in this article, he did so smite and strike the same priest with his hanger or wood-knife, as well upon his head, as upon other parts and places of his body, which he remembereth not, whereby blood ran out, and was shed in the said church, as he believeth, having, as he saith, none other cause or matter so to do, but only that his conscience was offended and grieved, in that the same priest did so give and administer the said sacrament to the people: which people he believeth was greatly abashed and offended with the said fact and doing, and were compelled to go out of the church, and to repair to another to receive the said sacrament. And further, being then demanded and examined, whether he intended to have killed the said priest, or not; he said he would not answer thereunto. And being further examined, whether he did well or evil in striking the said priest, he would make no answer thereunto.
TO the sixth he answereth and saith, That whether he be so excommunicated or accursed, as is contained in this article, he referred himself herein to the ecclesiastical laws.
TO the seventh he answereth and saith, That by the space of six and twenty years now past, he hath always been, and yet is of this opinion touching the said sacrament of the altar, as followeth; namely, that in the sacrament of the altar, after the words of consecration, there is not really, truly, and in very deed, contained, under the form of bread, the very true and natural body of our Saviour Jesus Christ.
TO the eighth he answereth and believeth the same to be true in every part thereof.
TO the ninth he answereth, and herein he referreth himself to the said laws, custom, and ordinance specified in this article, that is to say, the canonical laws.
TO the last he answereth and believeth, That those things before by him confessed be true, and those which he hath denied, be untrue; and that the said common voice and fame hath and doth only labour and go upon those things by him before confessed.
AFTER this examination, the bishop began to instruct him, and to exhort him to return again to the unity of his mother the catholic church, with such reasons as he is commonly wont to use to others, promsing many fair things if he would do so, besides the forgiving what was past.
TO this William Flower answering again, thanked him for his offer: and where it was in his power to kill or not to kill his body, he stood therewith contented, let him do therein what he thought; yet over his soul he had no such power, which being once separated from the body, is in the hands of no man, but only of God, either to save or destroy. As concerning his opinion of the sacrament, he said he would never go from what he had spoken, do he with him what he would.
THEN the bishop assigned him again to appear in the same place in the afternoon, betwixt three and four; in the mean time to consider well of his former answers, whether he would stand to the same his opinions or not; which if he so did, he would further proceed against him, &c.
[Page 561]IN the afternoon the said William Flower appeared again before the said bishop, at the hour and place appointed. To whom the bishop sitting in his consistory, spake these words: Flower, you was this forenoon here before me, and made answer to certain articles; and thereupon I respited you till now, to the intent you should consider and weigh with yourself your state, and to remember while you have time, both your abominable act, and also that evil opinion which you have conceived touching the verity of Christ's true natural body in the sacrament of the altar.
TO whom the said Flower answered as followeth: That which I have said, I will stand to; and therefore I require that the law may be put in force against me. Whereupon the bishop commanded his notary (Harward by name) to read to him again his articles, as before. Which being read, the said William Flower persisting in his sentence, answered to all parts of the articles, as in the forenoon before, save only that he requested the bishop concerning the fifth article, he might alter something his answer therein, after this tenor and manner of words, to wit, "And moreover confesseth and saith, that whereas he struck the priest on Easter-day last past, in St. Margaret's church in Westminster, he hath since that time, and yet doth mislike himself in that doing, and doth now judge and believe that the same act was evil and wrong. Howbeit he saith and believeth, that for the matter and cause whereof he so struck the said priest, (which was for ministering the sacrament of the altar, which he taketh and judgeth abominable) he neither did nor doth mislike himself at all therein."
MOREOVER, he desireth of the said bishop licence to be granted him, to alter and take out some of the ninth article, and place thereof, these words to be inser [...]ed; to wit, "Herein he referreth himself to the laws, custom, and ordinances specified in this article, &c." At which request, Bonner granted to the altering of both the articles according as he desired, and so put in the acts.
AFTER this, the bishop turning again to his old manner of exhorting, endeavoured with fair words to persuade him to submit himself to the catholic church, and to the faith thereof. Notwithstanding all his persuasions, he still remained constant and firm, saying, that he would not be removed from what he had spoken, though he should suffer death for it. Whereupon the bishop assigned him the next day (being the twentieth of April) to appear in the same place, between eight and nine o'clock in the morning, then and there to hear the sentence pronounced in case he would not relent, &c.
THE next morning the said William Flower was brought by the keeper belonging to the warden of the Fleet, before bishop Bonner, who, according to his usual manner, endeavoured to reduce him to his catholic church and the unity thereof, that is, from Christ to Antichrist; sometimes alluring him with fair promises, and sometimes with menaces, terrors, and threatenings. To which he answered, Do what you will, I am at a point: for the heavens shall as soon fall, as I will forsake my opinion, &c. Whereupon the bishop, after he had commanded these words to be registered, called for the depositions of certain witnesses, produced for the better information of this matter, the names of which witnesses were these; William Jennings, John Bray, Robert Graunt, Richard Dod, William Pampion, Robert Smalwood, the parish priest of St. Margaret's at Westminster. The sum and effect of whose depositions here ensueth.
ROBERT GRAUNT of Westminster, examined upon the said answers of William Flower, saith and deposeth, That he did hear and see the said Flower acknowledge and recognize the said answers, and subscribe to the same with his own hand, and also was present in the church of St. Margaret's in Westminster, when the said William Flower did smite and wound the priest, when he was administering the sacrament; [...]nd how this examinant among others pressed towards him to take him, and was hurt thereby upon his chin, and after he was taken, this examinant did help to conduct him to the Gatehouse.
RICHARD DOD of Westminster, examined upo [...] the said answers, saith and deposeth, That he did hear and see the said Flower ackno [...]ledge and [Page 562] recognize the said answers, and subscribe to the same with his own hand; and also did see and was present, when the said Flower upon Easter-day last past drew his wood-knife, and struck the priest upon the head, hand, and arm: who being wounded therewith, and having a chalice with consecrated hosts there in his hand, sprinkled with the said priest's blood, was rescued by this examinant, and the said Flower carried to the Gatehouse, and the wood-knife taken away by this examinant.
WILLIAM PAMPION, one of the church-warden, of the said parish church of St. Margaret's [...]n Westminster, examined upon the said answer of the said Flower, saith and deposeth, That the same answers be true, and in his sight were sub [...]cribed with the hand of the said Flower. And that, upon Easter-day last past, about eleven o'clock in the forenoon, in the parish church of St. Margaret's in Westminster, among a great number of the people ready to receive the sacrament, the priest's back being turned towards the said Flower, he the said Flower suddenly drew forth his wood-knife, and struck John Cheltam the priest both upon his head, hand, and arm, whereby he was wounded, and bled abundantly, and the chalice with consecrated hosts being in his hand, were sprinkled with his blood, and the people in great fear cried out lamentably, as though they should presently have been killed.
ROBERT SMALWOOD of Westminster, examined upon the said answers, saith and deposeth. That he did hear and see the said Flower acknowledge and recognize the said answers, and subscribe the same with his own hand; and touching the striking and wounding the priest in St. Margaret's church in Westminster, upon Easter-day last, this examinant saith, he was not there when the fact was done, but immediately after he came to church, and found the priest hurt, and wounded in the head, hand, and arm, by the said Flower, and the people in great heaviness by reason thereof. Also the people did report, as this examinant saith, that Flower did the deed, as the priest had the [...]halice in his hand, administering the sacrament to the people.
WILLIAM JENNINGS of Westminster, being examined upon the answers of the said William Flower, saith and deposeth by virtue of his oath, That he did hear and see the said Flower acknowledge and recognize the said answers, and subscribe the same with his own hand in the consistory place: and further deposeth, That he upon Easter-day last past was present in the church of St. Margaret's in Westminster, where Flower struck the said John Cheltam, priest, first upon the head, and afterwards upon his arm, whereby the said priest is like to lose his hand. Also this jurate deposeth, that the said John Cheltam had a chalice with certain consecrated hosts therein in his hand, which were sprinkled with the blood of the said priest, and after Flower was apprehended by this examinant and others, they carried him immediately to the Gatehouse in Westminster.
JOHN BRAY, one of the church-wardens of the parish church of St. Margaret's in Westminster, sworn and examined upon the said answers, saith and deposeth, That he did hear and see the said Flower acknowledge and recognize the said answers, and also subscribe unto the same: and further deposeth of Flower's striking the priest, in effect, as the rest of the examinants do, and that this said jurate was present there at the doing thereof.
AFTER the depositions of these witnesses were taken, published, and denounced, the said bishop spake to William Flower, and asked him, if he knew any matter or cause why sentence should not be read, and he to be pronounced as an heretic. Whereunto he answered as followeth: I have nothing at all to say, for I have already said unto you all that I have to say; and what I have said, I will not go from: and therefore do what you will, &c.
WHICH when he had spoken, the bishop proceeded to the sentence, condemning and excommunicating him for an heretic, and after pronounced him to be degraded, and so committed him to the secular power. Upon the 24th day of the aforesaid month of April, which was St. Mark's eve, he was brought to the place of martyrdom, which was in St. Margaret's church-yard at Westminster, where the fact was committed: and there coming [Page 563] to the stake where he should be burned, first he maketh his prayer to Almighty God, with a confession of his faith, in manner as followeth.
O Eternal God, most mighty and merciful Father, who hast sent down thy Son upon the earth, to save me and all mankind, who ascended up into heaven again, and left his blood upon the earth behind him, for the redemption of our sins, have mercy upon me, have mercy upon me, for thy dear Son our Saviour Jesus Christ's sake, in whom I confess only to be all salvation and justification, and that there is no other means, nor way, nor holiness, in which or by which any man can be saved in this world. This is my faith, which I beseech all men here to bear witness of.
THEN he said the Lord's prayer, and so made an end.
THEN Mr. Cholmely came to him, desiring him to recant his heresy, whereby he might do good to the people, or else he would be damned.
FLOWER answered as followeth: Sir, I beseech you for God's sake to be contented: for what I have said, I have said, and I have been of this faith from the beginning; and I trust to the living God he will give me his holy Spirit to continue to the end. Then he desired all the world to forgive him whom he had offended, as he forgave all the world.
THIS done, first his hand being held up against the stake, was struck off, his left hand being fastened behind him. At which striking off of his hand, some that were present, and purposely observing the same, credibly informed us, that he in no part of his body did once shrink at the striking thereof, but once a little stirred his shoulders.
AND thus fire was set unto him, who, burning therein, cried with a loud voice, O thou Son of God have mercy upon me, O thou Son of God receive my soul, three times, and so his speech being taken from him, he spake no [...] lifting up notwithstanding his stump with his o [...]er arm as long as he could.
AND thus he endured the extremity of the fire, being therein cruelly handled, by reason that the few faggots that were brought being not sufficient to burn him, they were fain to strike him down into the fire. Where he lying along (which was doleful to behold) upon the ground, his lower part was consumed in the fire, whilst his upper part was without the fire, his tongue in all men's fight still moving in his mouth.
MAY 3, 1555, a letter was sent to George Colt and Thomas Daniel, to make search for and apprehend John Bernard and John Walsh, who used to repair to Sudbury, and carrying about with them the bones of Pygot that was burned, shewed them to the people, persuading them to be constant in his religion; and upon examination to commit them to further ordering, according to the laws.
THIS day Stephen Appes was committed to Little Ease in the Tower, there to remain two or three days till further examination.
THE 12th day, Mr. Thomas Ross, preacher, was by the council's letters delivered from the Tower to the sheriff of Norfolk, to be conveyed and delivered to the bishop of Norfolk, and he either to reduce him to recant, or else proceed against him according to the law.
THE 16th, a letter was sent to the lord treasurer, signifying what the lord lieutenant had done for Ross; and that order should be given, according to his lordship's request, for letters to the bishops: and as for Appes, whom the lieutenant of the Tower reporteth to be mad, his lordship perceiving the same to be true, should commit him to Bedlam, there to remain till their further order.
THE 26th, a letter was [...]nt to the lord treasurer, to confer with the bishop of London, and the justices of the peace of that county, wherein they were to be executed that were already condemned for religion, and upon agreement of places, to give order for their execution accordingly.
THE 28th, a letter was sent to the Lord treasurer, to cause speedy preparation to be made of such money as was appointed for such persons as should carry [Page 564] the joyful tidings of queen Mary's good delivery of [...]hild, to divers princes, that they be not compelled to stay when the time shall come. The ambassadors were, the lord admiral to the emperor, the lord Fitzwalter to the French king, sir Henry Sidney to the king of the Romans, Richard Shelley to the king of Portugal, whose free passage through France Dr. Wotton was ordered to procure.
THE 29th, a letter was directed to sir Francis Inglefield to make search for one John D. at London, and to apprehend him, and send him to the council, and to make search for such papers and books as he thinketh may touch the same D. or one Benger.
The Martyrdom of Mr. JOHN CARDMAKER, and Mr. JOHN WARNE, who suffered both together in Smithfield, May 30, 1555.
UPON the 30th day of May, John Cardmaker, otherwise called Taylor, prebendary of the church of Wells; and John Warne, upholsterer, of the parish of St. John in Walbrook, suffered together in Smithfield. Of whom it remaineth now particularly to treat, beginning with Mr. Cardmaker, who first was an observant frier before the dissolution of the abbeys: afterwards was a married minister, and in king Edward's time appointed to be a reader in St. Paul's, where the papists were so enraged against him for his doctrine's sake, that in his reading they cut and mangled his gown with their knives. Mr. Cardmaker being apprehended in the beginning of queen Mary's reign, with Mr. Barlow, bishop of Bath, was brought to London, and put in the Fleet prison, king Edward's laws being yet in force. But after the parliament was ended, in which the pope was again admitted as supreme head of the church, and the bishops had also gotten p [...]wer and authority, officially, to exercise their tyranny, these two were brought before the bishop of Winchester, lord chancellor, and others appointed by commission, (as before is mentioned) to examine the faith of such as were then prisoners; and as unto others before, so now unto them the chancellor offered the queen's mercy, if they would agree, and be conformable, &c.
TO this they both made such an answer, as the chancellor with his fellow commissioners allowed them for catholics. Whether they of weakness so answered, or he of subtlety would so understand their answer, that he might have some forged example of a shrinking brother to lay in the dish of the rest, which were to be examined; it may easily be perceived by this, that to all them which followed in examination, he objected the example of Barlow and Cardmaker, commending their soberness, discretion, and learning. But whatsoever their answer was, yet notwithstanding Barlow was led again to the Fleet, from whence he afterwards being delivered, did by exile constantly bear witness to the truth of the gospel. Cardmaker was conveyed to the Compter in Bread-street, the bishop of London procuring it to be published, that he should shortly be delivered, after he had subscribed to transubstantiation and certain other articles. To the same prison where Cardmaker was, Mr. Laurence Saunders was brought, (after the sentence of excommunication and condemation was pronounced against him) where these two prisoners had such christian conference, that whatsoever the breath of the bishop blustered, and the sickle ears of the people too lightly believed, in the end they both shewed themselves constant confessors and worthy martyrs of Christ▪ as of Laurence Saunders is alr [...]y written. After whose departure Cardmaker remained there prisoner, to be baited by the papists, who would needs seem to have a certain hope that Cardmaker was become their's. Continual and great conferences divers of them had with him, with reasonings, persuadings, and threatenings, but all to no effect. To the end that their doings might appear, he required them to put their reasons in writing, and promised by writing to answer them.
DR. MARTIN, who bare also a part in those pageants, took upon him to be the chief doer by writing, whose long unsavoury letters and simple reasons for transubstantiation, and such papistical trash, Mr. Cardmaker answered largely, learnedly, and substantially, confuting the same, opening the falshood of his arguments, and delivering the sentences of the fathers (which Martin abused for his purpose) to their true understandings; which answers I would had come to our hands. Thus constantly abode this good man all their doings, as he did also the death which he suffered in Smithfield in London: whereof an account shall be [...]. But first we [Page 565] will survey the matter and manner of the articles objected against him by bishop Bonner, with his answers annexed to the same, as followeth.
ARTICLES objected by Bishop BONNER against JOHN TAYLOR, alias CARDMAKER.
1. I Edmund, bishop of London, object against thee, John Taylor, alias Cardmaker, that thou wast and art of the city and diocese of London, and so of the jurisdiction of me Edmund, bishop of London.
2. ITEM, That thou in times past didst profess the rule of St. Francis, and didst by vow promise to keep poverty, chastity, and obedience, according to the rule of St. Francis.
3. ITEM, That thou in times past didst receive all the orders of the church then used; to wit, both greater and lesser.
4. ITEM, That thou after thy said entry into religion, and profession and orders aforesaid, didst take to wife a widow, and with her hadst carnal copulation, and didst get with her a woman child, breaking thereby thy vow and order, and also the ordinance of the church.
5. ITEM, That thou hast believed and taught, and so dost believe, that in the sacrament of the altar, under the visible signs there, that is to say, under the forms of bread and wine, there is really and truly the true and very natural body and blood of our Saviour Jesus Christ.
6. ITEM, That the belief of the catholic church is, that in having the body and blood of Christ really and truly contained in the sacrament of the altar, is to have (by the omnipotent power of Almighty God) the body and blood of Christ invisibly and really present under the said sacrament, and not to make thereby a new God, or a new Christ, or a new body of Christ.
7. ITEM, That it may stand well together, and so is the faith of the catholic church, that the body of Christ is visibly and truly ascended into heaven, and there is in the visible form of his humanity; and yet the same body in substance is invisibly and truly contained in the said sacrament of the altar.
8. ITEM, That Christ at his last supper taking bread into his hands, blessing it, breaking it, giving it to his apostles, and saying, Take, eat, this is my body; did institute a sacrament there, willing that his body really and truly should be contained in the said sacrament, no substance of bread and wine there remaining, but only the accidents thereof.
Mr. CARDMAKER'S ANSWERS to the aforesaid ARTICLES.
TO the first article he answereth, and confesseth the same to be true in every part thereof.
TO the second article he answereth and confesseth, That he being under age, did profess the said order and religion, and afterwards by the authority of king Henry VIII. he was dispensed with for the same religion.
TO the third he answereth, and confesseth the same to be true in every part thereof.
TO the fourth he answereth, and confesseth the first part thereof to be true; and to the second part of the same article he answereth and saith, that in marriage he brake no vow, because he was set at liberty to marry, both by the laws of this realm, and also by the laws and ordinances of the church of the same.
TO the fifth he answereth and confesseth, That he hath believed and taught as it is contained in this article, but he doth not now so believe or teach.
TO the sixth he answereth, That he doth not believe the same to be true in any part the [...]of.
TO the seventh he answereth, That he doth not believe the same to be true in any part thereof.
TO the eighth he answereth and doth believe▪ that it is true; that is to say, that Christ taking bread at [Page 566] his last supper into his hands, blessing it, breaking it, giving it to his disciples, and saying, Take, eat, this is my body, did institute a sacrament there. And to the other part of this article, namely, Willing that his body really and truly should be contained in the said sacrament, no substance of bread and wine there remaining, but only the accidents thereof, he answereth, that he doth not [...]elieve the same to be true.
By me, JOHN CARDMAKER.
MR. Cardmaker calling to mind afterwards the ready cavillings of the papists, and thinking himself not to have fully, and according to his true meaning answered the latter part of the last article, did the next day, after the aforesaid answers, exhibit unto the bishop in a schedule this here following.
"WHERE in my answer to your articles I deny the presence of Christ in the sacrament, I mean not his sacramental presence, for that I confess; but my denial is of his carnal presence in the same. But yet further, because this word is oftentimes taken by the holy fathers, not only for the bread and wine, but also for the whole administration and receiving of the same according to Christ's institution: so I say, that Christ is present spiritually too, and in all them which worthily receive the sacrament; so that my denial is still of the real, carnal, and corporal presence in the sacrament, and not of the sacramental nor spiritual presence.
THIS I have thought good to add to my former answer, because no man should misunderstand it.
ARTICLES objected against JOHN WARNE, Upholsterer, of the parish of St. John, in Walbrook; with his Answers to the same.
FIRST, That you John Warne, being of the age of 29 years, and of the parish of St. John of Walbrook, in London, hast believed, and dost believe firmly and stedfastly, that in the sacrament of the altar there is not the very true and natural body of our Saviour Christ in substance, under the forms of bread and wine.
ITEM, That thou hast believed, and dost believe, that after the words of consecration spoken by the priest, there is not (as the church of England doth believe and teach) the body of Christ; but that there doth only remain the substance of material bread, as it is before the consecration, or speaking the words of consecration; and that the said bread is in no wise altered or changed.
ITEM, That thou hast said and dost believe, that if the catholic church do believe and teach, that there is in the mass now used in England, and in other places of Christendom, a sacrifice containing the body and blood of Christ really and truly; then that belief and faith of the church is naught, and against God's truth and the scripture.
ITEM, That thou hast said, that about a twelve-month ago and more, a rough spaniel of thine was shorn on the head, and had a crown like a priest made on the same, thou didst laugh at it and like it, though thou didst it not thyself, nor knewest who did it.
ITEM, That thou neither this Lent last past, nor at any time since the queen's majesty's reign, hast come into the church, or heard mass, or been confessed, or received the sacrament of the altar; and hast said that thou art not sorry that thou hast so done, but that thou art glad, because thou hast not therewith defiled thy conscience, which otherwise thou shouldst have done.
UPON all which articles John Warne being examined by the said bishop Bonner, in the presence of divers witnesses, May 23, 1555, did confess and believe the same, and subscribe hereunto his name with his own hand.
IT was also objected against the said John Warne, by the aforesaid bishop, as followeth.
ITEM, That thou John Warne wast in time past here in the city of London, accused in Guildhall of heresy against the sacrament of the altar, according to the order of the laws of this realm of England in the time of king Henry VIII. and when alderman Barnes was then sheriff, and the Thursday after that [Page 567] Anne Askew was burnt in Smithfield; and thereupon thou wast sent a prisoner to Newgate, to whom Edmund, bishop of London, did repair with his chaplains, to instruct thee in the true faith of Christ, touching the said sacrament of the altar, and to bring thee from thy error, which was, that in the sacrament of the altar there is not the body of Christ, nor any corporal presence of Christ's body and blood, under the forms of bread and wine: but [...]hat in the said sacrament there is only material bread and wine, without any substance of Christ's body and blood at all: and because thou wouldst not leave and forsake thy said heresy therein, but persist and abide obstinately and wilfully therein, thou wert, according to the said laws condemned to death and to be burnt; and thereupon suit being made for thee to the king and others in the court, thou hast a pardon of king Henry VIII. and thereby didst save thy life.
NEVERTHELESS, in thy heart, conscience, and mind, thou didst both then, and also before believe no otherwise than at this present thou dost believe; that is to say, that in the sacrament of the altar there is neither the very true body or blood of Christ, nor any other substance but the substance of material bread and wine; and to receive the said material bread and wine, and to break it, and to distribute it among the people, only is the true receiving of Christ's body, and no otherwise: so that thy faith and belief is, that in the said sacrament there is no substance of Christ's material body and blood; but all the thing that is there is material bread, and the receiving of it as before; and that the substance of the natural and [...]rue body of Christ, born of the virgin Mary, is only in heaven and not in the sacrament of the altar. In which thine opinion thou hast ever hitherto since continued, and so dost continue at this present, thou confessing all this to be true, and in witness thereof subscribing thy name thereunto, as followeth.
JOHN WARNE being examined upon the aforesaid articles by the bishop before certain witnesses, whose names were John Roswell, John Heywood, and Robert Ravens, the 23d of May, did answer for the same, confessing and granting the articles and contents thereof to be true, according as they were objected in every part, subscribing also the same with his hand. Such strength and fortitude God's Holy Spirit wrought in him, to stand stoutly and confidently to the defence of the sincere doctrine of his Son.
WHEREUPON the bishop exhorting him with many words to leave his heresies, (as he called them) and to return to the bosom of his mother the holy church, commanded him to appear again the next day, being the 24th of May.
WHO so doing (and answering as he did before) was ordered to come thither again in the afternoon, and so he did: at which time he was earnestly exhorted by the said bishop to recant his opinions. To whom he answered, that he would not depart from his received profession, unless he were thereunto thoroughly persuaded by the holy scriptures.
UPON which answer he was ordered to come again the next day, being the 25th of May, at one of the clock in the afternoon. At which day and hour the bishop examined him again upon all his former articles objected, to which he most constantly adhered, with this further answer added thereunto: I am persuaded (said he) that I am in the right opinion, and I see no cause to recant; for all the filthiness and idolatry is in the church of Rome.
THE bishop then seeing that notwithstanding all his fair promises and terrible threatnings, (whereof he used many) he could not prevail; finished this examination with the definitive sentence of condemnation pronounced against the said John Warne, and charged the sheriffs of London with him, under whose custody he remained in the prison of Newgate, until the 30th day of May.
WHICH day being appointed for their execution, John Cardmaker, with the said John Warne, were brought by the sheriffs to the place where they should suffer; who being come to the stake, first the sheriffs called Mr. Cardmaker aside, and talked with him secretly, during which time Mr. Warne had said his prayers, was chained to the stake, and had wood and reeds set about him, while Mr. Cardmaker was talking with the sheriffs.
THE people who before had heard that Mr. Cardmaker [Page 568] would recant, and beholding this, were greatly afflicted, thinking indeed that Mr. Cardmaker would now recant at the bu [...]ing of Mr. Warne. At length Mr. Cardmaker departed from the sheriffs, and came towards the stake, and in his garments as he [...] kneeled down and made a long prayer in silence to himself. His prayers being ended, [...] rose up, put off his clothes unto his shirt, and went with a bold courage unto the stake, and kissed it: and taking Mr. Warne by the hand, he heartily comforted him, and so gave himself to be bound to the stake most gladly. The people seeing this so suddenly done, contrary to their fearful expectation, as men delivered out of a great doubt, cried out for joy, saying, God be praised, the Lord strengthen thee▪ Cardmaker, the Lord Jesus receive thy [...] ▪ And this continued while the executioner put [...] to them, and both passed through the fire to the blessed rest and peace among God's holy saints and martyrs, to enjoy the crown of triumph and victory prepared for the elect soldiers and warriors of Christ Jesus in his blessed kingdom. To whom be glory and majesty for ever. Amen.
The CONFESSION and FAITH of Mr. JOHN WARNE, [...] wrote the Day before he suffered, May 30, 1 [...]55
"I Believe in God the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth."
A Father, because he is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who is the everlasting word, whom before all worlds he hath begotten of himself, which word was made flesh, and therein also manifested to be his Son, in whom he hath adopted us to be his children, the inheritors of his kingdom, and therefore he is our Father: an Almighty God, because he hath of nothing created all things visible and invisible, both in heaven and in earth, even all creatures contained therein, and governeth them.
"And in Jesus Christ his only Son our Lord."
THE eternal word, perfect God with his Father, of equal power in all things, of the same substance, of like glory, by whom all things were made and have life, and without whom nothing liveth: he was made also perfect man, and so being very God, and very man in one person, is the only Saviour, Redeemer, and Ransomer of them which were lo [...] in Adam our forefather. He is the only means of our deliverance, the hope of our health, the surety of our salvation.
"WHICH was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the virgin Mary."
ACCORDING to the Father's most merciful promise, this eternal Son of God, forsaking the heavenly glory, humbled himself to take flesh of a virgin, according to the scriptures, uniting the substance of the Godhead to the substance of the manhood which he took of the substance of that blessed virgin Mary in one person, to become therein the very Messiah, the anointed king and priest, for ever appointed [...] pacify the Father's wrath, which was justly gone out against us all for sin.
"SUFFERED under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead, and buried, and descended into hell."
HE was arraigned before Pontius Pilate the ruler of Jewry, and so unjustly accused of many crimes, that the ruler judged him innocent, and sought means to deliver him; but contrary [...] known justice, he did let go Barabbas who had deserved death, and delivered Christ to be crucified, who deserved no death: which doth manifestly declare that he suffered for our sins, and was buffetted for our offences, as the prophets do witness, thereby to have it manifested to all men, that he is that Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world. Therefore suffering for our sins, he received and did bear our deserved condemnation, the pains of death, the taste of abjection, the very terror of hell, yielding his Spirit to his Father, his body to be buried in the earth.
"THE third day he rose again from death to life."
TO make full and perfect the work of our redemption and justification, the same crucified body which was laid in the grave, was raised up the third day from death, by the power of his Father, and glory of his Godhead: he became the first fruits of the resurrection, and got the victory [Page 569] over death, that all by him might be raised up from death. Through whom all true penitent sinners may now boldly come unto the Father, and have remission of their sins.
"HE ascended into heaven and fitteth at the right hand of God the Father Almighty."
AFTER that in his death and resurrection he had conquered sin, death, and the devil, and had been conversant forty days in the earth, being seen of the apostles, and more than five hundred brethren at once, in the same body in which he wrought the work of our salvation, he ascended into heaven with eternal triumph, for the victory over death, sin, and hell, leaving the passage open, by which all true believers may and shall enter into his kingdom, where he now sitteth at his Father's right hand, that is to say, in power and glory equal, in majesty co [...]ternal.
"FROM thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead."
HE shall appear again in great glory to receive his elect unto himself, and to put his enemies under his feet, changing all living men in a moment, and raising up all that be dead, that all may be brought to his judgment. In this shall he give to each man according to his deeds. They which have followed him in regeneration, which have their sins washed away in his blood, and are clothed with righteousness, shall receive the everlasting kingdom, and reign with him for ever; and they which after the race of the corrupt generation of Adam have followed flesh and blood, shall receive everlasting damnation with the devil and his angels.
"I believe in the Holy Ghost."
I do believe that the Holy Ghost is God the third person in the Trinity, in unity of the Godhead equal with the Father and the Son, given through Christ to inhabit our spirits, by which we are made to feel and understand the great power, virtue, and loving kindness of Christ our Lord. For he illuminateth, quickeneth, and certifieth our spirit, that by him we are sealed up unto the day of redemption, by whom we are regenerate and made new creatures, so that by him and through him we do receive all the abundant goodness promised us in Jesus Christ.
"THE holy catholic church."
THIS is an holy number of Adam's posterity, elected, gathered, washed, and purified by the blood of the Lamb from the beginning of the world, and is dispersed through the same by the tyranny of Gog and Magog; that is to say, the Turk and his tyranny, and Antichrist, otherwise named th [...] bishop of Rome, and his angels, as this day also doth teach.
"THE communion of saints."
WHICH most holy congregation, (being, as St. Paul teacheth, built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ being the head corner stone) tho' it be by tyranny of Satan and his ministers persecuted, some by imprisonment, some by death, and some by other afflictions and painful torments; yet doth it remain in one perfect unity, both in faith and fellowship: which unity is knit in an unspeakable knot, as well of them which are departed from this mortal life, as of them which now be living, and hereafter shall be in the same, and so shall continue until they all do meet in the kingdom, where the head Jesus Christ, with all his holy members, (of which number thro' Christ I assuredly believe I am one) shall be fully complete, knit, and united together for evermore.
"THE forgiveness of sins."
I do believe that my sins, and all their sins which do rightly believe the holy scripture, are forgiven through Jesus Christ, of whom I do profess that I have my whole and full salvation and redemption, which St. Paul saith, cometh not thro' our works and deservings, but freely by grace, lest any should boast himself. Thro' the blood of the cross all things in heaven and earth are reconciled, and set at peace with the Father; without him no heavenly life given, nor sin forgiven.
[Page 570]"THE resurrection of the body."
I do believe, that by the same my Saviour Christ; I and all men shall rise again from death; for he, as St. Paul saith, is risen again from the dead, and is become the first fruits of them which sleep. For by a man came death, and by a man cometh the resurrection from death. This man is Christ, through the power of whose resurrection I believe that we shall all rise again in these our bodies; the godly clothed with immortality to live with Christ forever; the wicked also shall rise immortal to live with the devil and his angels in death everlasting.
"AND the life everlasting."
THRO' the same Jesus, and by none other, I am sure to have life everlasting. He only is the way and entrance into the kingdom of heaven. "For God so loved the world, that he did give his only Son Jesus Christ, to the end that so many as do believe in him might have everlasting life." Which I am sure to possess so soon as I am dissolved, and departed out of this tabernacle, and in the last day both body and soul shall possess the same for ever, to which God grant all men to come.
I believe, that the sacraments, that is to say, of baptism and of the lord's supper, are seals of God's most merciful promises towards mankind. In baptism, as by the outward creature of water I am washed from the filthiness which hangeth on my flesh, so do I assuredly believe, that I am by Christ's blood washed clean from my sins, thro' which I have sure confidence of my certain salvation. In the partaking of the Lord's supper, as I receive the substance of bread and wine (the nature of which is to strengthen the body) so do I by faith receive the redemption wrought in Christ's body broken on the cross, life by his death, resurrection by his resurrection, and in sum, all that ever Christ in his body suffered for my salvation, to the strengthening of my faith in the same. And I believe, that God hath appointed the eating and drinking of the creatures of bread and wine in his holy supper according to his word, to move and sti [...] up my mind to believe these articles above written.
THIS is my faith; this do I believe; and I am content by God's grace to confirm and seal the truth of the same with my blood.
Mr. CARDMAKER'S LETTER to his FRIEND.
THE peace of God be with you. You shall right well perceive that I am not gone back, as some men do report of me, but as ready to give my life, as any of my brethren, that are gone before me, altho' by a policy I have a little prolonged it, and that for the best, as already it appeareth unto me, and shall shortly appear unto all. That day that I recant any point of doctrine, I shall suffer twenty kinds of death, the Lord being mine assistance, as I doubt not but he will. Commend me to my friend, and tell him no less. May the Lord strengthen you, me, and all his elect: my riches and poverty are as they were wont to be, and I have learned to rejoice in poverty as well as riches, for that I account now to be very riches. Thus fare you well in Christ. Salute all my brethren in my name. I have conf [...]ed with some of my adversaries, learned men, and I find that they be but sophists and shadows.
MR. CARDMAKER being condemned, and in Newgate, one Mr. Beard came to him two or three days before he suffered death, and said unto him, Sir, I am sent unto you by the council, to know whether you will recant or no?
From which council are you come? I think you are not come, nor yet sent from the queen's council, but rather from the commissioners, unto whom (as I suppose) you belong. And where [...] you would know, whether I will reca [...]t or [...], thus I pray you report of me to those whom you said sent you. I know you are a taylor by your occupation, and have endeavoured yourself to be [...] cunning workman [...] and thereby to get your living▪ so I have been a preacher these twenty years, and ever since that God by his great mercy hath opened mine eyes to see his eternal truth, I have by his grace en [...]eavoured myself to call upon him, to give me the true understanding of his holy word and I thank him for his great mercy: I hope I have discharged my conscience in the setting forth of the same, to that little talent that I have received.
Yea, sir; but what say you to the blessed sacrament of the altar?
I say, and mark it well, that Christ, the night before his bitter passion, ordained the holy and blessed communion, and hath given commandment, that his death should be preached before the receiving thereof, in remembrance of his body broken, and his precious blood shed for the forgiveness of our sins, to as many as faithfully believe and trust in him.
AND furthermore, to conclude the matter briefly with him, he asked him, Whether the sacrament he spoke of, had a beginning or no? Whereunto when he had granted and affirmed the same to be, then Mr. Cardmaker again thus inferred therefrom: If the sacrament (said he) as you confess, have a beginning and an ending, then it cannot be of God: for God had no beginning nor ending: and so desiring him well to note the same, he departed from him.
THE fifth day, Mr. Secretary Bourne, the master of the rolls, sir F [...]ncis Englefield, sir Richard Read, and Dr. Hughes, authorizing them, or two or three of them at least, to proceed to further examination of Benger, Cary, D. and Field, upon such points as they shall gather out of their former confessions, concerning their lewd and vain practice of calculating or conjuring, presently sent unto them with the said letters.
THE seventh day, another letter was sent to sir John Tre [...]onwel, willing him to join in commission with said lord North, and others above-named, about the examination of the said parties and others, for conjuring and witchcraft.
AND the [...] of August, Cary and D. were set at liberty upon [...] for their good appearance until Christmas after.
THE twelfth day a letter was sent to the lord treasurer, to cause writs to be made to the sheriff of Sussex, for the burning and executing of Di [...]ike▪ a b [...]ewer a [...] [...]ewes, and two others the one at Stainings, the other at Chichester.
THE 23d of June a letter was sent to Bonner, to examine a report given to the council of four parishes in the county of Essex, that still used the English service, and to punish the offenders, if any such be.
The HISTORY of JOHN SIMSON and JOHN ARDELEY, of the Parish of WIGBOROW-THE-GREAT, in ESSEX.
JOHN SIMSON and JOHN ARDELEY were condemned for the same cause and on the same day with Mr. Cardmaker and John Warne, which was the 25th day of May. But before we come to the story of them, first here is to be noted the copy of the king and queen's letter directed from the court the same day, and sent by a post early in the morning to bishop Bonner, in tenor and form as followeth.
RIGHT reverend father in God, right trusty and well beloved, we greet you well. And where of late we addressed our letters to the justices of peace within every of the counties of this our realm, whereby amongst other instructions given them for the good order and quiet government of the country round about them, they are willed to have a special regard unto such disordered persons as (forgetting their duties towards God and us) do lean to any erroneous and heretical opinions, refusing to shew themselves conformable to the catholic religion of Christ's church; wherein if they cannot by good admonitions and and fair means reform them, they are willed to deliver them to the ordinary, to be by him charitably travelled withal, and removed (if it may be) from their naughty opinions, or else, if they continue obstinate, to be ordered according to the laws provided in that behalf: understanding now, to our no little marvel, that divers of the said disordered persons, being by the justices of peace, for their contempt and obstinacy, brought to the ordinaries to be used as aforesaid, are either refused to be received at their hands, or if they be received, are neither so travelled with, as christian charity requireth, nor yet proceeded withal accordi [...] to the order of justice, but are suffered to continue in their errors, to the dishonour of Almighty God, and dangerous example of others; like as we find this matter very strange, so we have thought convenient both to signify our knowledge and therewith also to admonish you to have in this behalf such regard henceforth to the office of a good pastor and bishop, as when any such offenders shall be by the said office [...] or justices of the peace brought unto you, you to [...] your good wisdom and discretion in procuring to remove them from their errors, if it may be, or else in proceeding against them (if they shall con [...]ine obstinate) according to the order of the laws; so as thro' your good furtherance, both God's glory may be better advanced, and the common-wealth more quietly governed. Given under our signet, at our manor of Hampton-court, the 24th of May, the first and second years of our reign.
[Page 572]THIS letter coming from the court to the bishop, made him the more earnest and hasty to the condemnation, as well of others, as of these men, of whom we are now treating, namely, Mr. John Simson and Mr. John Ardeley; who being both of one county, of one town, and of one trade, that is, being both husbandmen in the town of Wigborow in Essex, and also almost both of one age, Simson being of the age of 34, the other of 30, were brought up both together by the under-sheriff of Essex, before Bonner, bishop of London, upon the accusation of heresy, as in that time it was called.
AS concerning the order and manner of their examinations before the bishop, as the articles objected against them were much alike, so their answers again to the same were not much different in manner and form, as here followeth, taken out of the bishop's own registers.
ARTICLES objected by Bishop BONNER, against JOHN SIMSON and JOHN ARDELEY, Husbandmen, at FULHAM.
1. THAT thou John Simson (or John Ardeley) husbandman, of the age of 34 years or thereabouts, wast and art of the parish of Great-Wigborow, within the diocese of London, and thou hast not believed, nor dost believe, that there is here on earth one catholic and universal whole church, which doth hold and believe all the faith and religion of Christ, and all the necessary articles and sacraments of the same.
2. ITEM, That thou hast not believed, nor dost [...], that thou art necessarily bounden, under the pain of damnation of thy soul, to give full faith and credence unto the said catholic and universal church, and to the religion of the same, in all necessary points of the said faith and religion, without wavering or doubting in the said faith or religion, or in any part thereof.
3. ITEM, That thou hast not believed, nor dost believe, that that faith and religion, which both the church of Rome, Italy, Spain, England, France, Ireland, Scotland, and all other churches in Europe, being the members and parts of the said catholic and universal church, do believe and teach, is both agreeing with the said catholic and universal church, and the faith and religion of Christ, and also is the very true faith and religion which all christian people ought to believe, observe, follow, and keep: but to the contrary, thou hast believed, and dost believe, that that fatih and religion, which the said church of Rome, and all the other churches aforesaid have heretofore believed, and do now believe, is false, erroneous, and naught, and in no wise ought to be believed, observed, kept, and followed by any christian man.
4. ITEM, That albeit it be true, that in the sacrament of the altar there is in substance the very body and blood of Christ under the forms of bread and wine, and albeit that it be so believed, taught, and preached undoubtedly in the said church, of Rome, and all other the churches aforesaid, yet thou hast not so believed, nor dost so believe; but contrariwise, thou hast and dost believe firmly and stedfastly, that there is not in the said sacrament of the altar, under the said forms of bread and wine [...] the very substance of Christ's body and blood, but that there is only the substance of material and common bread and wine, with the forms thereof; and that the said material and common bread and wine, are only the signs and tokens of Christ's body and blood, and by faith to be received, only for a remembrance of Christ's passion and death, without any such substance of Christ's body and blood at all.
5. ITEM, That thou hast believed and taught, and thou hast openly spoken, and to thy power maintained and defend [...], and so dost believe, think, maintain, and defend, that the very true receiving and eating of Christ's body and blood, is only to take material and common bread, and to break it, and to distribute it amongst the people, remembering thereby the passion and death of Christ only.
6. ITEM, That thou hast likewise believed, taught, and spoken, that the mass now used in this realm of England, and other the churches aforesaid, is abominable and naught, and full of idolatry, and is of the ordinance of the pope, and not of the institution of Christ, and hath no goodness in it, saving the glory in the highest, and the epistle and the gospel; and that therefore thou hast not, and wilt not come [Page 573] to be present at the mass, nor receive the sacrament of the altar, or any other sacrament of the church, as they are now used in this realm of England, and other the churches aforesaid.
7. ITEM, That thou hast in times past believed precisely, and obstinately affirmed and said, and so dost now believe and think, that auricular confession is not needful to be made unto the priest, but it is a thing superfluous and vain, and ought only to be made to God, and to none other person: and likewise thou hast condemned as superfluous, vain, and unprofitable, all the ceremonies of the church and the service of the same, and hast said, that no service in the church ought to be said but in the English tongue, and if it be otherwise said, it is unlawful and naught.
JOHN SIMSON and JOHN ARDELEY's Answers to the foresaid Articles.
TO the first, they believe, that here on earth there is one catholic and universal holy church, which doth hold and believe as is contained in the first article, and that this church is dispersed and scattered abroad throughout the whole world.
TO the second, they believe, that they be bound to give faith and credence unto it, as is contained in the second article.
TO the third, as concerning the faith and religion of the church of Rome, of Italy, Spain, France, Ireland, Scotland, and other churches in Europe, they say, they have nothing to do with that faith and religion: but as concerning the faith and religion of England, that if the said church of England be ruled and governed by the word of life, then the church of England hath the faith and religion of the catholic church, and not otherwise; and do say also, that if the church of England were ruled by the word of life, it would not go about to condemn them and others of this heresy.
TO the fourth they answer, that in the sacrament, commonly called the sacrament of the altar, there is very bread and very wine, not altered nor changed in substance in any wise, and that he that receiveth the said bread and wine, doth spiritually and by faith only receive the body and blood of Christ, but not the very natural body and blood of Christ in substance under the forms of bread and wine.
TO the fifth they say, they have answered, in answering to the said fourth article, and yet nevertheless they say, that they have believed, and do believe, that in the sacrament of the altar there is not the very substance of Christ's body and blood, but only the substance of the natural bread and wine.
TO the sixth they say, that they believe, that the mass is of the pope, and not of Christ; and therefore it is not good, nor having in it any goodness, saving the Glory in the highest, the epistle and gospel, the creed, and the Lord's-prayer; and for this cause they say they have not, nor will they come and hear mass.
TO the seventh John Ardeley answereth and saith, That he believeth the contents of the same to be true; but John Simson doth answer, that he is not as yet fully resolved with himself, what answer to make thereunto; and further, that as touchin [...] the common and daily service said and used in the church, he saith, that he never said that service in the church ought to be said but in the English tongue; neither did he ever say, that if it be otherwise said and used than in English, it is unlawful and naught.
THESE articles being thus objected to them, and their answers made unto the same, as before, [...] bishop, according to his usual manner, [...]espi [...]d them to the afternoon, between the hours of two and three. At which time the bishop repeating again the said articles unto them, and beginning with John Ardeley, did urge and solicit him to recant.
TO whom John Ardeley answered in the following words: My lord, said he, neither you, nor any other of your religion, i [...] of the catholic church; for you be of a false faith: and I doubt not but you shall be deceived at length, bear as good a face as you can. You will shed the innocent blood, and you have killed many, and yet go about to kill more, &c.
[Page 574]HE added further, saying, If every hair of my head were a man, I would suffer death in the opinion and faith I now profess. These with many other words he spake. Then the bishop yet demanded if he would relinquish his erroneous opinions (as he called them) and be reduced again to the unity of the church. He answered, No, God forbid that I should so do, for then I should lose my soul.
AFTER this the said bishop read the sentence of condemnation against him, as he also did against John Simson, standing likewise in the same cause and constancy with John Ardeley, after asking them in his formal manner, if they knew any cause why sentence should not be pronounced against them: which was done the 25th of May, and so were both committed to the secular power, that is, to the hands of the sheriffs, to be conveyed to the place where they should be executed. But before I come to their execution, I must not omit what happened in the closing up the examination of these good men, which is this.
AT the time of the examination of John Simson and John Ardeley aforesaid, there were assembled such a great multitude of people, that because the consistory was not able to hold them, they were fain to stand in the church, near about the said consistory, waiting to see the prisoner [...] when they should depart. It happened in the mean time, that the bishop being set in a heat with the stout and bold answers of the said two prisoners, especially of John Simson, burst out in his loud and angry voice, and said, Have him away, have him away.
THE people in the church hearing these words, and thinking (because the day was far spent) that the prisoners had their judgment, they being desirous to see the prisoners had to Newgate, severed themselves, some running one way, others another way, which caused such a noise in the church, that they in the consistory were all amazed, and marvelled what it should mean: wherefore the bishop also being somewhat afraid of this sudden stir, asked what there was to do. The standers-by answering, said, That there was like to be some insurrection or tumult, for they were all together by the ears.
WHEN the bishop heard this, by and by his heart was in his heels, and leaving his seat, he with the rest of the court betook them to their legs, hastening with all speed possible to recover the door that went into the bishop's house: but the rest being somewhat lighter of foot than my lord, did sooner recover the door, and thronging hastily to get in, kept the bishop still out, and cried, Save my lord, save my lord; but meaning yet first to save themselves if any danger should come, whereby they gave the standers-by good matter to laugh at. But of this enough is said.
NOW John Simson and John Ardeley being delivered (as is aforesaid) to the sheriffs, were shortly after sent down from London to Essex, where they were both put to death in one day, but not in the same place, for John Simson suffered at Rochford, and John Ardeley at Railey.
FOR the better consideration of the rigorous cruelty of these catholic days, this is furthermore worthy of all men to be noted, and known to all posterity, concerning the examinations of John Ardeley and his company, how that they being brought before the commissioners, were by them greatly charged of stubborness and vain-glory. Unto whom they answered in defence of their own simplicity, that they were content willingly to yield to the queen all their goods and lands, that they might be suffered to live under her, in keeping their conscience free from all idolatry and popery. Yet this could not be granted, although they had offered all to their heart's blood; so greedy and so thirsty are the persecutors of christian blood. The Lord give all such repentance if it be his will, and keep from them the just reward of such cruel dealing. Amen.
CHAP. IX. Further Proceedings of Bishop BONNER against the PROTESTANTS, together with the Lives, Examinations, and Martyrdoms of THOMAS HAUKES, THOMAS WATS, THOMAS OSMOND, WILLIAM BAMFORD, and NICHOLAS CHAMBERLAIN, who were all inhumanly burnt in the bloody Reign of Queen MARY I.
The ridiculous proceeding of Bishop BONNER, against JOHN TOOLY, whose Body being taken out of his Grave, was given to the secular Power, and so burned for an Heretic.
ABOUT the same time of the burning of John Simson and John Ardeley, in the beginning of the month of June, fell out a solemn process, and much ado was made about the pope's spirituality, against John Tooly in a case of heresy. The story is this: There was about the time that the Spaniards began first to make a stir in England, one John Tooly, a citizen and poulterer in London, who conspired with others of this society, to rob a Spaniard at St. James's: and although the deed was heinous and wicked of itself, yet was it aggravated and made greater than it was by others, being commited against such a person, and against such a country, which both the queen and her whole court did highly favour. The robbery being known, and brought into judgment, Tooly was found guilty, and adjudg [...]d to be hanged, whereas notwithstanding in this realm there are many more thefts committed than thieves executed.
THE aforesaid Tooly being led to the gallows, (which stood near Charing-Cross [...] a little before he died, standing upon the cart, read a certain prayer in a printed book, and two other prayers written in two several papers: who then having the halter about his meek, desired the pe [...]ple there present to pray for him, and to b [...]ar him [...] that he died a true christian man, [...] that he trusted to be saved only by the merits of [...] passion, and shedding of his precious [...]lood, and not by any masses, or [...]rent [...]ls, [...], which were, as he said, m [...]re idolatry and [...] by the bishop of Rome; and as the same Tooly, and two others his fellows which were there hanged with him, did steal and rob for covetousness, so the bishop of Rome did sell his masses and trentals, with such paltry, for covetousness, and there being in a [...]reat anger (as appeared) against the bishop of Rome, spake with a loud voice the following words: "From the tyranny of the bishop of Rome, and all his detestable enormities; from false doctrine and heresy, and from the contempt of thy word and commandment, good Lord deliver us."
AND then adding further to the same, he spake unto the people; All you that be true christian men, say with me, Amen. And immediately thereupon three hundred persons and more, to the judgment and estimation of those that were there present, answered and said, Amen, three times together at least.
AFTER this it happened, that when John Tooly had read the bill the first time, it sell from him, and a certain young man (who was thought to be an apprentice) stooped down and took up the bill, and climbed up by the side of the cart, and delivered it to Tooly again, which he again did read to the people. That done, he delivered unto one of the marshal's officers, the book aforesaid, and desired him to deliver it to one Mr. Haukes, saying, that it was his book. Furthermore, he delivered one of the prayers, written in a paper, to one Robert Bromely, serjeant▪ who desired to have it of him; on the top of which was written a line, containing these words, Beware of Antichrist; and subscribed underneath. By me Thomas Harold, prisoner in the Marshalsea, enemy to Antichrist. For the bill aforesaid. Robert Bromely was afterwards brought, and was fain to ask pardon of the bishop, and to detest all the words of Tooly, and glad so to escape.
[Page 576]THUS while Tooly had made his prayers, as is abovesaid, to be delivered from the pope's tyranny, by the same prayer he fell into great tyranny. For so soon as the report of this fact came to the ears of the priest [...] [...] mitred prelates, they were not a little mad therea [...], thinking it not tolerable that so great a reproach should be done against the holy father. Calling therefore for a council together, as though it had been a matter of great importance, Tooly's talk at his death was debated among them.
AT last (after much pro and contra) they all consented to those men's judgment, who thought it meet that the violating of the pope's holiness should be revenged with fire and faggot. And it is very probable that cardinal Poole was no small doer in this sentence: for as Winchester and Bonner did always thirst after the blood of the living, so Poole's lightning was for the most part kindled against the d [...]d; and he reserved this charge only to himself, I know not for what purpose, except peradventure being loth to be so cruel as the other, he thought nevertheless by this means to discharge his duty towards the pope. By the same cardinal's orders, the bones of Martin Bucer and Paulus Phagius, which had been almost two years in their graves, were taken up and burned at Cambridge, as Tooly's carcass was at London. And besides this, because he would shew some token of his diligence in both universities, he caused Peter Martyr's wife, a woman of worthy memory, to be digged out of the church-yard, and to be buried on the dung-hill. Of these two prodigious acts you shall hear more hereafter. But now to our purpose of Tooly, who having ended his prayer, was hanged and put into his grave, out of which he was digged again, by the [...]mand of the bishops, and because he was so bold as to deny the [...]uthority of the bishop of Rome, at the time of his death, it pleased them to judge and condemn him as an heretic, upon the commandment of the council's letter, as here appeareth.
The COUNCIL's LETTER to Bishop BONNER.
AFTER our very hearty commendations to your lordship, understanding that of late amongst others that have suffered about London for their offences, one lewd person that was condemned for felony, died very obstinately, professing at the time of his death sundry heretical and erroneous opinions; like as we think it not convenient that such a matter should be overpassed without some example to the world, so we thought good to pray your lordship to cause further inquiry to be made thereof, and thereupon to proceed to the making out of such process as by the ecclesiastical laws is provided in that behalf. And so we bid your lordship heartily well to fare. From Hampton-Court, April 28, 1555.
- STEPH. WINTON, chanc.
- F. SHREWSBURY
- JOHN GAGE
- THOMAS CHENEY
- R. ROCHESTER
- WILLIAM PETER
- R. SOUTHWELL.
SOON after a citation was set up upon St. Paul's church door, under the bishop of London's great seal; the tenor whereof here ensueth.
The Writ or Mandate of Bishop BONNER, set up at Charing-Cross, St. Paul's Church Door, and at St. Martin's in the Field's, for the citing and further inquiring into the Case of JOHN TOOLY.
EDMUND, by the sufferance of God, bishop of London, to all and singular p [...]rsons, vicars, curates, and others, clerks and learned men, being within our diocese of London, and especially unto Richard Clony, our sworn sumner, greeting, salutation, and benediction. Forasmuch as it is come to our hearing by common same, and the declaration of several credible persons, that one John Tooly, late citizen and poulterer of London, the son of perdition and iniquity, coming to the profundity of malice at the self same time which he should go to hanging, according to the laws of the realm, for the great theft lately by him committed, at which time chiefly he should have cared for the wealth of his soul, and to have died in the unity of the catholic church, did utter divers and sundry damnable, blasphemous, and heretical opinions and errors, utterly contrary and repugnant to the verity of the catholic faith, and unity of the fame, and did exhort, stir up, and encourage the people, there standing in great multitude, to hold and defend the same errors and opinions: and moreover, certain of the people there standing, as it did appear, affected with errors and heresies, as favourers and defenders of the said Tooly, did confirm and give express consent to the aforesaid words, propositions, and affirmations: which thing we do utter with sorrow and bitterness of heart.
[Page 577]WE therefore the aforesaid Edmund, and bishop abovesaid, not being able, nor daring to pass over in silence, nor wink at the aforesaid heinous act, lest by our negligence and slackness the blood of them might be required at our hands at the most terrible day of judgment, desiring to be certified and informed whether the premises declared unto us be of the truth, and lest that any scabbed sheep, lurking amongst the simple flock of our Lord, do infect them with deadly heresy: to you therefore we straitly charge and command, that you cite, or cause to be cited all and singular, having and knowing the truth of the premises, by setting up this citation upon the church door of St. Martin's in the fields, being within our diocese of London, and also upon the cathedral church door of St. Paul's in London, leaving there the copy hereof, or by any other means or ways, the best you can, that this citation and monition may come to their knowledge.
ALL which and singular by the tenor of these presents we cite and admonish that they appear, and every one of them do appear before us, our vicar general, or commissary, whatsoever he be in that behalf, in our cathedral church of St. Paul's in London, in the consistory place, upon Thursday the second day of May, now next ensuing, betwixt the hours of nine and ten or the clock in the forenoon the same day, to bear witness of the truth in this behalf, and to depose and declare faithfully the truth that they know or have heard of the premises, and moreover to do and receive what law and reason doth require.
FURTHER we commit unto you as before, and straitly enjoining you do command, that ye will generally cite the wife of the said Tooly that is dead, and his children, and his kindred by father and mother, his friends and familiars especially, and all other and every of them, if there be any perhaps that desire to defend and purge the remembrance of the person in the premises, that ye admonish them after the manner and form aforesaid, whom we likewise, by the tenor of these presents, do in such sort cite and admonish that they appear all, and [...]hat every one of them do appear (under pain to be compelled to keep silence for ever hereafter in this behalf) before us, or our vicar general in spiritual matters, or such our commissary, at the day, hour, and place aforesaid, to defend the good name and remembrance of him that is dead, and to say, alledge, and propose in due form of law a cause reasonable, if they have or can tell of any, why the said John Tooly, that is dead, ought not to be determined, and declared for such an heretic and excommunicate person, and his remembrance condemned, in the detesting and condemning of so heinous a deed and crime, and his body or [...]arca [...]e to lack church burial, as a rotten member cut off from the church, and the same to be committed to the arm and power secular, and they compelled hereafter for ever to hold their peace.
AND furthermore, to do, receive, and to suffer as law and reason will, and as the quality of such matter, and the nature themselves do constrain and require; and moreover, that you cite and admonish, after the manner aforesaid, all and every of the receivers, favourers, and creditors of the said John Tooly that is dead, especially if any of them do incline and give consent to those wicked and detestable affirmations, propositions, and rehearsals aforesaid, that on this side the said Thursday they return and submit themselves unto us, and to the lap of the mother holy church: which thing if they do, we trusting upon the mercy of Almighty God, do promise that we will receive them being penitent for such their errors and faults, with thanks, benignity, mercy, and favour, to the comfort and health of their own souls, and in that behalf save their honesties to the uttermost of our power; otherwise, if they will not provide th [...] to come of their own accord, but to abide the ordinary process of the law, let those men know that we will punish more severely this offence, according to the uttermost of the law, and as far as the law will bear it; and what ye shall do in the premises, let him among you, which shall execute this our present mandate, certify us, or our [...] general in spiritual matters, either by his own person▪ or by his letters patent, together with these authentically sealed.
Dated at London under our seal, the last day of April, 1555, and of our translation the 11th.
WHEN the time of this citation was expired, and this Tooly being cited did not appear; next in order of law came the suspension, (whereas one suspension had been enough for him) and after that cometh the excommunication, that is, that no man should eat or drink with him: or if any met him by the way, he should not bid him good morrow, and besides that, he should be excluded from the communion of the church. These things being prepared in such a manner, as in such cases full wisely they use to do, at length one stood up that made answer to certain articles, rehearsed in judgment openly, and that in behalf of the dead man. But when the poor dead man could neither speak for himself, nor did (as they said) sufficiently answer them by the other, to avoid the name of an heretic; first witnesses were provided against him, whose names were Henry Clark, Esq Thomas Way, keeper of the Marshalsea; Philip Andrew, under-marshal; William Walter, chandler; Richard Longman, merchant-taylor; Philip Britten, John Burton, brewers; Thomas Smith, serjeant. Then he was condemned for an heretic, and so committed to the secular power, namely to the sheriffs of London, who with the like diligence went about to execute their charge. Therefore receiving the man, being suspended, excommunicated, condemned as an heretic, and besides [Page 578] that, dead, they laid him on the fire to be burned, namely, for a continual remembrance thereof: this was done the fourth day of June.
The LIFE and MARTYRDOM of THOMAS HAUKES, Gentleman.
IMMEDIATELY after the story of Dr. Taylor, mention was made of six men brought before bishop Bonner upon the 8th day of February, whose names were Stephen Knight, W. Pygot, Thomas Tomkins, J. Lawrence, William Hunter. In which number was also Thomas Haukes, and condemned likewise with them the 9th day of February. But because his execution did not so shortly follow their's, but was prolonged to the 10th day of June, it followeth therefore now consequently to give an account thereof; first beginning briefly with his pious conversation and institution of life, then shewing of his troubles, also of his examinations and conflicts with the bishop and other adversaries, according as the order of the story doth require.
AS touching therefore his education and order of life, first he was of the county of Essex, born of an honest stock, in calling and profession a courtier, brought up daintily from his childhood, and like a gentleman. Besides that, he was of such comeliness of stature, so well endued with excellent qualities, that he might seem on every side a man (as it were) made for the purpose. But his gentle behaviour towards others, and especially his fervent study and singular love unto true religion and piety did surmount all the rest. Wherein as God did singularly adorn him; even so he, being such a valiant martyr of God, may seem to make famous the whole company of other holy martyrs, and as a bright star to make the church of God and his truth, of themselves bright and clear, more gloriously to shine by his example.
FOR if the conquests of martyrs are triumphs of Christ, (as St. Ambrose doth notably and truly write) undoubtedly Christ in few men hath either conquered more notably, or triumphed more gloriously, than in this young man: he stood so wisely in his cause, so pious in his life, and so constantly in his death.
BUT to the declaration of the matter: first Mr. Haukes following the fashion of the court, as he grew in years, entered service with the lord of Oxford, where he remained a good space, being there right well esteemed and loved by all the houshold, so long as Edward the sixth lived. But he dying, all things began to go backward, religion to decay, true piety not only to wax cold, but also to be in danger every-where, and chiefly in the houses of great men. Haukes misliking the state of things, and especially in such men's houses, rather than he would change the profession of true godliness, which he had tasted, thought to change the place; and so, forsaking the nobleman's house, departed thence to his own home, where more freely he might give himself to God, and use his own conscience.
BUT what place in this world shall a man find so secret for himself, whither the old wicked serpent cannot creep, whereby he may have some matter to overthrow the quietness of the godly? Now in the mean time, Haukes keeping his house at home, had born unto him a young son, whose baptism was deferred to the third week, for that he would not suffer him to be baptized after the papistical manner, which thing the adversaries not able to suffer, laying hands upon him, did bring him to the earl of Oxford, there to be reasoned with, as not sound in religion, in that he seemed to contemn the sacraments of the church.
THE earl either intending not to trouble himself in such matters, or else seeing himself not able to weigh with him in such cases of religion, sent him up to London with a messenger, and letters, and so, willing to clear his own hands, put him in the hands of Bonner, bishop of London; the contents of which his letter sent to Bonner, are as follow.
MOST reverend father in God, be it known unto you, that I have sent you one Thomas Haukes, dwelling in the county of Essex, who hath a child that hath remained unchristened more than three weeks; who, being upon the same examined, hath denied to have it baptized, as it is now used in the church, whereupon I have sent him to your good lordship, to use as you think best, by your good discretion.
WHEN the bishop had perused this letter, and afterwards read it to Mr. Haukes, he hearing the [Page 579] same, thought with himself that he should not be very well used, seeing he was put to his discretion. Then wrote the bishop a letter again to him that sent the prisoner, with many great thanks for his diligence in setting forth the queen's proceedings. Then the bishop began to enter communication with Mr. Haukes, first asking, what should move him to leave his child unchristened so long? To whom Mr. Haukes answered thus again as followeth.
Because we are bound to do nothing contrary to the word of God.
Why? baptism is commanded by the word of God.
His institution therein I do not deny.
What deny you then?
I deny all things invented and devised by man.
What things are those that be devised by man, that you are so offended withal?
Your oil, cream, salt, spittle, candle, and conjuring of water, &c.
Will you deny that which all the whole world and your fathers have been contented withal?
What my father and all the whole world have done, I have nothing to do with: but what God hath commanded me to do, to that stand I.
The catholic church hath taught it.
What is the catholic church?
It is the faithful congregation, wheresoever it be dispersed throughout the whole world.
Who is the head thereof?
Christ is the head thereof.
Are we taught in Christ, or in the church now?
Have you not read in the eighth of St. John where he said, He would send his Comforter which should teach you all things?
I grant you it is so, that he would send his Comforter, but to what end? Forsooth to this end, that he should lead you into all truth and verity, and that is not to teach a new doctrine.
Ah sir, you are a right scripture man. For you will have nothing but the scripture. There is a great number of your countrymen of your opinion. Do you know one Knight and Pygot?
Knight I know, but Pygot I do not know.
I thought you were acquainted with him: it seemeth so by your judgment. What preachers do you know in Essex?
I know none.
Do you know one Baget?
Yes, forsooth, I know him.
What manner of man is he?
An honest man so far as I know.
Do you know him if you see him?
Yes, that I do.
What should move your lordship so to say?
Because I see in a man that came with you, much humility and lowliness.
It seemeth that your lordship speaketh that to me, because I make no courtesy to you: and with that came Baget. Then the bishop said to Baget, How say you, sir, know you this man?
Yes, forsooth, my lord; with that Baget [Page 580] and I shook hands. Then said the bishop to Baget, Sir, this man hath a child which hath lain three weeks unchristened, (as I have letters to shew) who refuseth to have it baptized, as it is now used in the church: how say you thereto?
Forsooth, my lord, I say nothing thereto
Say you nothing thereto? I will make you tell me whether it be laudable, and to be frequented or used in the church or not.
I beseech your lordship to pardon me, he is old enough, let him answer for himself.
Ah knave, are you at that point with me? Go call me the porter, said he, to one of his men, thou shalt sit in the stocks, and have nothing but bread and water I perceive I have kept you too well. Have I made thus much of you, and are you at this point? Then came the bishop's man, and said, The porter is gone to London: then said the bishop to Baget, Come with me, and he went away with him, and commanded me away, and bade one of his gentlemen to talk with me, (who was one of his own teaching) who desired amongst other things to know of me, with whom I was acquainted in Essex, and what men they were that were my teachers.
When I see your commission I will make you answer. And then immediately came the bishop again: but before he came, his man and I had much talk. Then the bishop sat down under a vine in his orchard, and called Baget to him, whom he carried away, and brought again, and called me also, and said to Baget, How say you now unto baptism? Say whether it be to be frequented and used in the church, as it is now, or no?
Forsooth, my lord, I say it is good.
I befool your heart, could you not have said so before? You have wounded this man's conscience. Then the bishop turned to me, and said; How say you now, sir? this man is turned and converted.
I build not my faith upon this man, neither upon you, but only upon Christ Jesus, who (as St. Paul saith) is the founder and author of all men's faith.
I perceive you are a stubborn fellow. I must therefore go to work another way with you, to win you.
Whatsoever you do, I am ready to suffer it; for I am in your hands to abide it.
Well, you are so, come on your ways, you shall go in, and I will use you christian-like: you shall have meat and drink, such as I have in my house: but in any wise talk not.
I purpose to talk nothing but the word of God and truth.
I will have no heresy talked on in my house
Why, is the truth become heresy? God hath commanded that we should have none other talk in our houses, in our beds, at our meat, and by the way▪ but all truth.
If you will have my favour, be ruled by my counsel.
Then I trust you will grant me my request.
What is that?
That your doctors and servants give me no occasion: for if they do, I will surely utter my conscience. Then he commanded his men to take in Baget, that Haukes and he might not have an opportunity to talk together. And so thus we departed, and went to dinner, and I dined at the steward's table.
AFTER dinner, his chaplains and his men began to talk with me. But, amongst others, there was one named Darbishire, principal of Broadgates in Oxford, and the bishop's kinsman, who said to me, that I was too curious: for you will have (said he) nothing but your little pretty God's book.
And is it not sufficient for my salvation?
Yes, it is sufficient for our salvation, but not for our instruction.
God send me the salvation, and you the instruction. And as we thus reasoned came the bishop, who said unto me; I gave you a commandment that you should not talk.
And I desired of you that your doctors and servants should give no occasion. Then we went into his orchard again, he and I and his doctors.
Would not you be contented, provided your child should be christened after the book that was set out by king Edward?
Yes, with a good will; it is the thing that I desire.
I thought so: you would have the same thing. The principle is in the name of the Father, the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, and in necessity it may serve.
Christ did use it without any such necessity: and yet we lack the chiefest point.
What is that?
"Go teach all nations, baptizing them, &c."
Thou speakest that because I am no preacher.
I speak the text: I do not mean you. Then said all the doctors, and his men that were with him. He spake it of you, my lord
.
Will you be content to tarry here, and your child shall be baptized, and you shall not know of it, so that you will agree to it?
If I would so have done, I needed not to have come to you: for I had the same counsel given before.
You seem to be a lusty young man; you will not give your head for the washing; you will stand in defence of it for the honour of your country. Do you think that the queen and I cannot command it to be done in spite of your teeth.
What the queen and you can do, I will not stand in it: but you get my consent never the sooner.
Well, you are a stubborn young man: I perceive I must work another way with you.
You are in the hands of God, and so am I.
Whatsoever you think, I will not have you speak such words unto me. And so we departed until even-song time: and before even-song was begun, my lord called for me to come to him in the chapel, and said; Haukes, thou art a proper young man, and God hath done his part unto thee; I would be glad to do thee good. Thou knowest that I am thy pastor, and one that should answer for thee. If I would not teach thee well, I should answer for thy soul.
What I have said, I will stand to, God willing: there is no way to remove it.
Nay, nay, Haukes, thou shalt not be so wilful. Remember Christ bade two go into his vineyard; the one said he would, and went not; the other said he would not, and went.
The last went.
Do thou likewise, and I will talk friendly with thee; how sayest thou? It is in the sixth of St. John; "I am the bread of life, and the bread that I will give is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world. And whosoever eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood, hath everlasting life. My flesh is very meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed. And he that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood, dwelleth in me, and I in him." Do you believe this?
Yes, I must needs believe the scriptures.
Why, then, I trust that you be sound in the blessed sacrament.
I beseech your lordship to feel my conscience no farther then in that which I was accused in unto you.
Well, well, let us go unto even-song.
With that I turned my back to go out of the chapel.
Why will you not tarry even-song.
No, forsooth.
And why?
For I will not.
And why will you not?
Because I have no edifying thereby, for I understand no Latin.
Why, you may pray by yourself. What books have you?
I have the New Testament, the books of Solomon, and the Psalter.
Then I pray you tarry here, and pray you on your Psalter.
I will not pray in this place, nor in any such. Then said one of his chaplains, Let him go, my lord, and he shall be no partaker with us in our prayers.
I think myself best at ease when I am farthest from you, and so the bishop went to even-song, and I came down and walked between the hall and the chapel in the court, and tarried there till even-song was done; and within an hour after even-song was done, the bishop sent for me into his chamber where he lay himself, and when I came, there was he and three of his chaplains.
You know of the talk that was between you and me, as concerning the sacrament. You would not have your conscience sought any farther, than in that you were accused of.
I thought you would not be both mine accuser and judge.
Well, you shall answer me to the sacrament of the altar, the sacrament of baptism, the sacrament of penance, and the sacrament of matrimony.
There is none of these, but I dare speak my conscience in them.
In the sacrament of the altar you seem to be found in.
In the sacrament of the altar? why, sir, I do not know it.
Well, we will make you to know it, and believe in it too, before we have done with you.
No that shall ye never do.
Yes, a faggot will make you do it.
No, no, a fig for your faggot. What God thinketh meet to be done, that shall ye do, and more ye shall not do.
Do you not believe that there remaineth in the blessed sacrament of the altar, after the words of consecration be spoken, no more bread, but the very body and blood of Christ? And at that word he put off his cap.
I do believe as Christ hath taught me.
Why? did not Christ say, "Take, eat, this is my body?"
Christ said so: but therefore it followeth not, that the sacrament of the altar is so as you teach, neither did Christ ever teach it so to be.
Why? the catholic church taught it so, and they were of Christ's church.
How prove you it? The apostles never [Page 583] taught it so. Read the Acts, the second and the twentieth. Neither St. Peter nor St. Paul ever taught it, nor instituted it so.
Ah sir, you will have no more than the scripture teacheth, but even as Christ hath left it bare.
He that teacheth me any otherwise, I will not believe him.
Why? then you must eat a lamb, if you will have but Christ's institution only.
Nay, that is not so, for before Christ did institute the sacrament, that ceremony ceased, and then began the sacrament.
Alas, you know not how it began, neither of the institution.
Then I would be glad to learn.
Marry, we will teach you; but you are so stubborn you will not learn.
Except you teach me by the word of God, I will never credit you, nor believe you: and thus we concluded. Then the bishop and his chaplains laughed and said; Jesu, Jesu, what a stubbornness and arrogantness is this? and this was in his chamber where he lay. Then said the bishop to me, Go you down and drink, for it is fasting day; it is midsummer eve, but I think you love neither fasting nor praying,
I will never deny either fasting or praying, so that it be done as it ought to be done, and without hypocrisy or vain glory.
I like you the better for that: and so we left for that night.
THE next day the bishop went to London: for Mr. Fecknam was made dean that day, and I tarried still at Fulham.
THEN did the bishop's men desire me to come to mass, but I utterly refused it, answering them as I did their master.
THE same night the bishop came home to Fulham again.
A CONVERSATION between Mr. HARPSFIELD and Mr. THOMAS HAUKES.
UPON Monday morning very early, the bishop called for me. There was with him Mr. Harpsfield, archdeacon of London, to whom the bishop said, This is the man which I told you of, who would not have his child christened, nor will have any ceremonies.
Christ used ceremonies. Did he not take clay from the ground, and took spittle, and made the blind man to see?
That I well know, but Christ did never use it in baptism. If ye will needs have it, put it to the use that Christ put it unto.
Admit your child die unchristened: what a heavy case you stand in!
I admit if it do, what then?
Marry, then are you damned, and your child both.
Judge you no farther than you may by the scriptures.
Do you not know that your child is born in original sin?
Yes, that I do.
How is original sin washed away?
By true faith and belief in Christ Jesus.
How can your child being an infant believe?
The deliverance of it from sin standeth in the faith of his parents.
How prove you that?
By St. Paul, 1 Cor. vii.14. "The [Page 584] unbelieving man is sanctified by the believing woman, and the unbelieving woman is sanctified by the believing man, or else were your children unclean."
I will prove that they whom thou puttest thy trust in, will be against thee in this opinion.
Who are those?
Your great learned men in Oxford.
If they do it by scriptures, I will believe them,
Recant, recant: do you not know that Christ said, Except ye be baptized, ye cannot be saved?
Doth christianity consist in outward ceremonies, or no?
Partly it doth: what say you to that?
I say as St. Peter saith, "Not the washing of water purging the filthiness of the flesh, but a good conscience consenting unto God."
Beware of pride, brother, beware of pride.
It is written, "Pride serveth not for men, nor yet the sons of men."
Let us make an end here. How say you to the mass, sirrah?
I say it is detestable, abominable, and unprofitable.
What nothing profitable in it? what say you to the epistle and gospel?
It is good if it be used as Christ left it to be used.
Well, I am glad that you somewhat recant: recant all, recant all.
I have recanted nothing, nor will do.
How say you to the Confiteor?
I say it is abominable and detestable, yea, and a blasphemy against God, and his Son Jesus Christ, to call upon any, to trust to any, or to pray to any, save only Christ Jesus.
To trust to any, we hid you not: but to call upon them, and to pray to them, we bid you. Do you not know, when you come into court, you cannot speak with the king and queen, unless you call to some of the privy chamber that are next to the king and queen.
They that list receive your doctrine. You teach me that I should not believe nor trust in any, but to call on them; and St. Paul saith, "How should I call upon him on whom I believe not?
Will you have no-body to pray for you when you be dead.
No surely, except you can prove it by the scriptures. Then the bishop pointed unto Harpsfield, and said unto me; Is it not well done to desire this man to pray for me?
Yes, surely, so long as we live, the prayers of the righteous man are available: but this man's prayers, you being dead, profit nothing at all.
Will you grant the prayer of the righteous man to prevail?
I grant it doth for the living, but not for the dead.
Not for the dead?
No forsooth, for David saith, "No man can deliver his brother from death, nor make agreement with God for him: for it cost more to redeem their souls, so that ye must let that alone for ever."
[Page 585]ALSO Ezekiel saith, "Though Noah, Daniel, or Job dwelt among them, yet can they in their righteousness exceed no farther than themselves." Then the bishop said to Harpsfield, Sir, you see this man hath no need of our lady, neither of any of the blessed s [...]ints. Well, I will trouble you no longer; I did call you, hoping that you should do some good on him, but it will not be. And he said to me, Sir, it is time to begin with you; we will rid you away, and then we shall have one heretic less.
What books have you?
The New Testament, Solomon's books, and the Psalter.
Will you read any other books?
Yes; Latimer's books, my lord of Canterbury's book, Bradford's sermons, and Ridley's books.
Away, away, he will have no books but such as maintain his heresies: so they departed, for Harpsfield was booted to ride unto Oxford, and I went to the porter's lodge again.
THE next day came thither an old bishop, who had a pearl in his eye, and he brought with him unto my lord a dish of apples, and a bottle of wine. For he had lost his living because he had a wife. Then the bishop called me again into the orchard, and said to the old bishop. This young man hath a child, and w [...]ll not have it christened.
I deny not baptism.
Thou art a fool, thou can'st not tell what thou wouldst have. This he spake with much anger.
A bishop must be blameless or faultless, sober, discreet, no chider, nor given to anger.
Thou judgest me to be angry: no by my faith I am not, and struck himself upon the breast.
THEN said the old bishop, Alas good young man, you must be taught by the church, and by your elders, and do as your forefathers have done before you.
No, no, he will have nothing but the scriptures, and God knows he doth not understand them. He will have no ceremonies in the church, no not one: what say you to holy water?
I say to it as to the rest, and to all that be of his making that made them.
Why, the scriptures do allow [...]t?
Where prove you that?
In the book of kings where Elisha threw salt into the water.
You say truth, that it is written in 2 Kings, chap. ii. the children of the prophets came to Elisha, saying▪ "The dwelling of the city is pleasant, but the waters be corrupted." This was the cause that Elisha threw salt into the water, and it became sweet and good: and so when our waters be corrupted, if you can by putting in of salt make them sweet, clear, and wholesome, we will the better believe your ceremonies.
How say you to holy bread?
Even as I said to the other. What scripture have you to defend it?
Have you not read where Christ fed five thousand men with five loaves and three fishes.
Will ye make that holy bread? There Christ dealt fish with his holy bread.
Look, I pray you, how captious this man is.
Christ did not this miracle, or other, because we should do the like miracle, but because we should believe and credit his doctrine thereby.
We believe no doctrine, but that which is wrought by miracles.
No forsooth, for Christ saith, "These tokens shall follow them that believe in me: they shall speak with new tongues, they shall cast out devils, and if they drink any deadly poison, it shall not hurt them."
With what new tongues do ye speak?
Forsooth, where before that I came to the knowledge of God's word, I was a fo [...]l blasphemer and filthy talker▪ since I came to the knowledge thereof, I have lauded God, praised God, given thanks to God, even with the same tongue, and is not this a n [...]w tongue.
How do you cast out devils?
Christ did cast them out by his word, and he hath left the same word, that whosoever doth credit and believe it, shall cast out devils.
Did you ever drink any deadly poison?
Yea forsooth, that I have; for I have drank of the pestilential traditions and ceremonies of the bishop of Rome.
Now you shew yourself to be a right heretic?
I pray you, what is heresy?
All things that are contrary to God's word.
If I stand in any thing contrary thereto, then I am worthy to be so called.
Thou art one, and thou shalt be burned, if thou stand and continue in this opinion. You think we are afraid to put one of you to death; yes, yes▪ there is a brotherhood of you, but I will break it, I warrant you.
Where prove you that Christ or his apostles did kill any man for his faith?
Did not Paul excommunicate?
Yes, my lord; but there is a great difference between excommunicating and burning.
Have you not read of the man and the woman in the acts of the apostles, whom Peter [...].
Yes forsooth, I have read of one Ana [...]i [...], and Sapphira his wi [...]e, who were destroyed for lying against the Holy Ghost, which serveth nothing to your purpose.
Well, you will grant one yet.
Well, if you will have us to grant you be of God, then shew mercy unto us: for that God requi [...]eth.
We will shew such mercy unto you [...] ye shewed unto us: for my benefice or bishopri [...] was taken away from me, so that I had not one penny to live upon.
I pray you, my lord, what do you give him now that was in the bishoprie or benefice before you came again to it? Whereunto he answered me never a word; for he turned his back upon me, and talked with other men, saying that he was very sorry for me, but he trusted that I would turn with St. Paul, because I was so earnest; and so he departed and went to dinner, and I to the porter's lodge again.
AFTER dinner I was called into the hall again, and the bishop desired the old bishop to take me into his chamber; for I would be glad said he▪ if you could convert him. So he took me into his chamber, and sat himself down in a chair, and said to me, I would to God I could do you some good you are a young man, and I would not wish you to go too far, but learn of your [...]lders to bear somewhat.
I will bea [...] nothing that is contrary to the word of God. And I looked that the old bishop should have made me an answer, but he was fast asleep.
THEN I departed out of the chamber alone, and [Page 587] went to the porter's lodge again, and there I saw the old bishop last: I suppose he is not yet awake.
THE next day Dr. Fecknam came to me and said, Are you he that will have no ceremonies?
What mean you by that?
You will not have your child christened, but in English, and you no ceremonies.
Whatsoever the scripture commandeth to be done, I refuse not.
Ceremonies are to be used by the scriptures.
Which be those?
How say you by Paul's breeches?
I have read no such thing.
Have you not read in the Acts of the apostles, how things went from Paul's body, and they received health thereby?
I have read in the 19th ch. of the Acts, how there went handkerchiefs and napkins from Paul's body▪ is it that you mean?
Yes, the same it is: what say you to those ceremonies?
I say nothing to the ceremonies: for the text saith, that God did so wo [...]k by the hands of Paul, that there went handkerchiefs and napkins from him, &c. So that it seemed by the text, that it was God that wrought, and not the ceremonies.
How say you to the woman that came behind Christ, and touched the hem of his vestur [...]? Did not her disease depart from her by that ceremony?
No forsooth▪ for Christ turned back and said to Peter, "Who is it that touched me?" And Peter said, "Thou seest the people thrust thee; and askest thou, who touched me [...]" "Some body hath touched me, said Christ, for virtue hath gone gone out of me:" I pray you, whether was it the virtue that healed this woman, or his vesture?
Both.
Then is not Christ true: for he said, "Go thy way, thy faith ha [...]h made thee whole."
Away, away to the sacrament, for these are but mere trifles to that.
How say you, sirrah? Christ took bread, and brake it, and said, "Take, eat, this is my body."
I grant Christ said so.
And is it not so?
No forsooth, I do not underdand it so.
Why, then, is Christ a liar?
I think you will so prove him.
Will I? why, I have spoken the words that Christ spake.
Is every word to be understood as Christ spake it? Christ said, I am a door, a vine, I am a king, a way, &c.
Christ spake these words in parable [...].
And why speaketh he this in parables when he said, I am a door, a vine, a king, a way, &c. more than when he said. This is my body? For after the same phrase of speech, as he saith, This is my body; so saith he, I am a door, a vine, a king, a way; he saith not, I am like a door, like a vine, &c.
THEN Fecknam stood up, and said, I had such a one before me the other day. Alas! those places serve nothing for your purposes. But I perceive you hang and build on them that be at Oxford.
What mean you by that?
I mean Latimer, Cranmer, and Ridley.
I know nothing else by them, but that they be both godly and learned.
Wilt thou trust to such dolts? One of them hath written a book wherein he affirmeth a real presence in the sacrament.
What he hath done I know not, but what he doth I know.
Ridley hath preached at Paul's Cross openly, that the devil believeth better than you: for he believeth that Christ is able of stones to make bread, and you will not believe Christ's body in the sacrament, and yet thou buildest thy faith upon them.
I build my faith upon no man, and that ye well know; for if those men, and as many more as they be, should recant and deny what they have said or done, yet will I stand to it, and by this ye shall know that I build my faith upon no man.
If any of those recant, what will you say to it?
When they recant, I will make you an answer.
Then thou wilt say as thou dost now for all that?
Yes indeed, will I, and that trust to it by God's grace.
I dare say, Cranmer would recant, so that he might have his living. And so the bishop and Fecknam departed from me with great laughing, and I went again to the porter's lodge.
THE next day Dr. Chedsey came to the bishop and him. They declared unto him that I had stood stubbornly in the defence against the christening of my child, and against the ceremonies of the church, and that I would not have it christened but in English.
THEN said Dr. Chedsey, he denies the order of the catholic church.
Yes, he thinketh there is no church, but in England and Germany.
And you think that there is no church, but the church of Rome.
What say you to the church of Rome?
I say it is a church of a sort of vicious cardinals, priests, monks, and friars, which I will never credi [...], nor believe.
What say you to the bishop of Rome?
From him and all his detestable enormities, good Lord deliver us.
Marry, so may we say, From king Henry VIII. and all his detestable enormities, good Lord deliver us.
Where were you while he lived, that you would not say so?
I was not far.
Where were you in his son's days?
In prison.
It was not for your well doing.
He will by no means come within my chapel, nor hear mass: for neither the mass, nor the sacrament of the altar can he abide, neither will he have any service but in English.
Christ never spake in English.
Neither did he ever speak any Latin, but always in such tongue as the people might be edified thereby. And St. Paul saith, "That tongues profit us nothing." He maketh a similitude between the pipe and the harp, and except it be understood what the trumpet meaneth, who can prepare himself to the battle? So if I hear a tongue that I do not understand, what profit have I thereby? no more than he hath by the trumpet, that knoweth not what it meaneth.
If you understand St. Paul's saying, he [Page 589] speaketh of it under a prophecy, "If one prophesy to you in tongues," &c.
Forsooth St. Paul speaketh plainly of tongues: for tongues serve not for them that believe.
I tell you St. Paul speaketh altogether upon prophecy.
St. Paul maketh a distinction between prophesying and tongues, saying, "That if any man speak with tongues, let it be by two or three at the most, and let another interpret it. But if there be no interpreter, let them keep silence in the congregation, and let himself pray unto God: and then let the prophet speak two or three, and that by course, and let the other judge: and if any revelation be made to him that sitteth by, let the first hold his peace:" so that it seemeth that St. Paul maketh a distiction between tongues and prophesying.
The order was taken in the catholic church that the Latin tongue should serve through the whole world, because that they should pray all generally together in one tongue, and that to avoid all contention and strife, and to have one universal order through the whole world.
This did your councils of Rome conclude.
Understand ye what the general councils of Rome mean?
Indeed all your general councils of Rome be in Latin, and I am an Englishman; therefore I have nothing to do with them.
You are to blame, being an unlearned man, to reprove all the councils throughout all the world.
I reprove them not, but St. Paul rebuketh them, saying, "If any man preach any other doctrine than that which I have taught, do you hold him accursed."
Hath any man preached any other doctrine unto you.
Yes, I have been taught another gospel since I came into this house.
What gospel have you been taught?
Praying to saints, and to our lady, and trusting in the mass, holy bread, holy water, and in idols.
He that teaches you so, teaches you not amiss.
Cursed be he that teacheth me so: for I will not trust him, nor believe him.
You speak of idols, and you know not what they mean.
God hath taught us what they be: for whatsoever is made graven, or devised by man's hand, contrary to God's word, the same is an idol. What say you to that?
What be those that you are so offended withal?
The cross of wood, silver, copper, or gold, &c.
What say you to that?
I say it is an idol. What say you to it?
I say, every idol is an image, but every image is not an idol.
I say, what difference is there between an idol and an image?
If it be a false god, and an image made of him, that is an idol: but if an image be made of God himself, it is no idol but an image, because he is a true God.
Lay your image of a true God and of your false god together, and you shall see no difference. Have not your images feet, and go not; eyes and see not; ears and hear not; hands and feel not; mouths and speak not? and even so have your idols.
"God forbid, saith St. Paul, that I should [Page 590] rejoice in any thing else, but in the cross of Christ Jesus."
Do you understand St. Paul so? Do you understand St. Paul? Unto which he answered nothing.
Where can we have a godlier remembrance when we ride by the way, than to see the cross?
If the cross was such a profit unto us, why did not Christ's disciples take it up, and set it on a pole, and carry it in procession?
It was taken up.
Who took it up? Helene, as you say; for she sent a piece of it to a place of religion, where I was with the visitors when that house was suppressed, and the piece of the holy cross (which the religious had in such estimation, and had robbed many a soul, committing idolatry to it) was called for, and when it was proved, and all came to all, it was but a piece of a lath covered over with copper, double gilded, as it had been clean gold.
Fie, fie, I dare say thou slanderest it.
I know it to be true, and do not believe the contrary. And thus did the bishop and the doctor depart in a great fume; and Chedsey said unto me, as he was about to depart, It is a pity thou should live, or any such as thou art. I answered, In this case I desire not to live, but rather to die.
You die boldly, because you would glory in your death, as Joan Butcher did.
What Joan Butcher did, I have nothing to do withal▪ but I would my part might be to morrow. God make you in a better mind▪ said they both, and so they depart [...]d, and I went to the porter's lodge [...]ith my keeper.
THE next day Dr. Chedsey preached in the [...] chapel, and [...] not [...] was done: and then came the p [...]rter for me, and said, My lord would have you come to the sermon, and so I went to the chapel door, and stood without the door.
Is not this fellow come?
Yes, I am here.
Come in, man.
No, that I will not. He called again, and I answered, I will come no nearer, and so I stood at the door. Then said the bishop, Go to your sermon.
THEN Dr. Chedsey put the stole about his neck, and carried the holy water-sprinkle unto the bishop, who blessed him and gave him holy water, and so he went to his sermon.
THE text that he treated on was the 16th of St. Matthew, "Whom do men say that I the Son of Man am? Peter said, Some say that thou art Elias, some say that thou art John the Baptist, some say thou art one of the prophets. But whom say ye that I am? Then said Peter, Thou art Christ the Son of the living God." Then he left the text there, and said, Whose sins soever ye bind, are bound: which authority said he is l [...]ft to the heads of the church, as my lord here is one, and so unto all the rest that be underneath him. But the church hath been much kicked at since the beginning: yet kick the heretics, spurn the [...] much, the church doth [...] went straitway to [...] mind on it, [...] of them do [...] and so returned to [...] saying. Whose sins ye do [...] and forgiven: and so he applied it to the [...]ishops and priests to forgive sins, [...] said, All that he [...] the church will come and rec [...]ive the same. And this he proved by St. John. chap. xi. saying th [...] Christ came to raise La [...]a [...]us, who when he was [...] in [...]ands [...] said Christ to them that were in authority▪ (who were his discip [...]s) Go ye and loose him, let him go. And this was the [...]ffect of his sermon▪ app [...]ying all to them, that they have the same a [...] [...] city that Christ spake of to his apostles [...] and [...]o [...] his sermon and they went to dinner.
Another CONVERSATION between THOMAS HAUKES, Bishop BONNER, and others.
AFTER dinner I was called into the chapel, where were several of the queen's servants, and other strangers whom I did not know.
Haukes, How like you the sermon?
As I like all the rest of his doctrine.
What, are you not edified thereby?
No, surely,
It was made only because of you.
Why? then am I sorry that you had no more heretics here, as you call them: I am sorry that you have bestowed so much labour on one, and so little regarded.
Well, I will leave you here, for I have business, I pray you talk with him: for if you could do him good, said he, I would be glad.
THIS the bishop spake to the queen's men, who said unto me, Alas! what mean you to trouble yourself about such matters against the queen's proceedings?
Those matters have I answered before them that be in authority: and unless I see you have a further commission, I will answer you nothing at all. Then said the bishop's men, (which were many) My lord hath commanded you to talk with us.
If my lord will talk with me himself, I will answer him. They cried, Faggots, burn him, hang him, to prison with him, it is a pity that he liveth, lay irons upon him; and with a great noise they spake these words. Then in the midst of all their rage I departed from them, and went to the porter's lodge again.
THE next day the bishop called me into his chamber, and said, You have been with me a great while, and you are never the better, but worse and worse: and therefore I will delay the time no longer, but send you to New gate.
My lord, you can do me no better pleasure.
Why would you so fain go to prison?
Truly I did look for none other when I came to your hands.
Come on your ways, you shall see what I have written. Then did he shew me certain articles, and these are the contents of them:
WHETHER the catholic church do teach and believe, that Christ's real presence doth remain in the sacrament or no, after the words of consecration, according to the words of St. Paul, which are these; "Is not the bread which we break the partaking of the body of Christ, and the cup which we bless, the partaking of the blood of Christ?" which if it were not so, St. Paul would never have said it.
What your church doth, I cannot tell: but I am sure that the holy catholic church doth never so take it, nor believe it.
Whether doth the catholic church teach and believe the baptism that now is used in the church, or no?
I answered to it as I did to the other question before. Then did the bishop with much s [...]attery counsel me to be persuaded, and to keep me out of prison, which I utterly refused, and so we departed. And I supposed that the next day I should have gone to prison, and so I had, except for the archdeacon of Canterbury, whose name is Harpsfield, whom the bishop had desired to talk with me, and began to persuade me concerning the sacrament and the ceremonies: and after much talk he said, that the sacrament of the altar was the same body that was born of the virgin Mary, which did hang upon the cross.
He was upon the cross both alive and dead: which of them was the sacrament?
The archdeacon answered, alive.
How do you prove that?
You must believe. Doth not St. John say, "He is condemned already that believeth not?"
St. John saith, "He that believeth not in the Son of God, is already condemned," but he saith not, He that believeth not in the sacrament, is already condemned.
There is no talking with you: for you are both without faith and learning, and therefore I will talk no more with you from scripture.
Then two that stood by bade me enter further into talk with him; and I said unto him, Why is the rood-loft set betwixt the body of the church and the chancel?
I cannot tell: for you have asked a question which you cannot answer yourself.
Yes, that I can: for this saith one of your own doctors, That the body of the church doth represent the church militant, and the chancel the church triumphant: and so because we cannot go from the church militant to the church triumphant, but that we must bear the cross of Christ; this is the cause of the rood-loft being between the body of the church and the chancel.
This is well and learnedly concluded.
As all the rest of your doctrine is; and so with many persuasions on his part we ended, and so departed: and I to the porter's lodge again.
THE next day in the morning, which was the 1st of July, the bishop called me himself from the porter's lodge, commanding me to make myself ready to go to prison, and to take such things with me as I had of my own. And I said, I do neither intend to bribe, neither to steal, God willing. Then he did write my warrant to the keeper of the Gatehouse at Westminster, and delivered it to Harpsfield, who with his own man and one of the bishop's men brought me to prison, and delivered the warrant and me to the keeper: and this was contained in the warrant:
"I will and command you, that you receive him who cometh named in this warrant, and that he be kept as a safe prisoner, and that no man speak with him, and t [...]at you deliver him to no man, except it be the council, or to a justice: for he is a sacramentary, and one that speaketh against baptism, a seditious man, a perilous man to be abroad in these perilous days." And thus was I received, and they departed. And there I remained thirteen days, and then the bishop sent two of his men unto me, saying, My lord would be glad to know how you do. I answered them, I do like a poor prisoner. They said, My lord would know, whether you be the same man that you were when you departed. I said, I am no changeling. They said, My lord would be glad that you should do well. I said, if my lord will do me any good, I pray you desire him to suffer my friends to come to me. So they said they would speak for me, but I heard no more of them.
THIS is the first examination of me Thomas Haukes, being examined by Edmund Bonner, then bishop of London, and by his chaplains and doctors at Fulham, four miles from London, where I lay, till I came to prison at Westminster: and after his two men had been with me, I heard no more of him till the 3d of September.
HERE followeth the second examination, which was on the third of Sepember, for the bishop sent his men for me to come to his palace of London; and so my keeper and his men brought me to his palace the same day.
Second Examination of Mr. THOMAS HAUKES.
THE bishop of Winchester, then being chancellor, preached that day at Paul's-Cross, and the bishop of London said to my keeper, I think your man will not go to the sermon to-day.
Yes, my lord, I pray you let me go: and that which is good I will receive, and the rest I will leave behind me; and so I went. And when the sermon was done, I and my keeper came to the bishop's house, and there we remained till dinner was done: and after dinner the bishop called for me, and asked me if I was the same man that I was before.
I am no changeling, nor none will be.
You shall find me no changeling neither. And so he returned into his chamber, and there he did write the side of a sheet of paper, and all that while I stood in the great chamber, and as many with me as might well stand in the chamber. And as I stood there, Dr. Smith came unto me, (who once recanted as it appeared in print) saying, he would be glad to talk brotherly with me. I asked him what he was? Then said they that stood by, he is Dr. Smith. Then said I, Are you he that did recant? And he said, It was no recantation, but a declaration.
You were best to term it well for your own honesty.
Shall I term it as it pleaseth you?
To be short with you, I will know whether you will recant any more or no, before that I talk with you, credit you, or believe you: and so I departed from him to the other side of the chamber. Then said the bishop's men and his chaplains, that my lord commanded me to talk with him. Then they that stood by, cried with a great noise, Hang him, burn him; it is a pity that he lives, that disobeys my lord's commandment.
THEN said one Miles Huggard, Where prove you that infants were baptized?
"Go teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." Sir here is none excepted.
What shall we go to teach children?
That word doth trouble you; it might [...]e left out full well: it is too much for you to teach. Is not your name Miles Huggard?
So I am called.
Be you not a hosier, and dwell in Pudding-lane?
Yes that I am, and there I do dwell.
It should seem so, for you have more skill in eating pudding, and selling stockings, than in disputing from the scriptures. With that he was in a great rage, and chafed up and down. Then I desired that some person would take pains to appease the gentleman, he did so fret for anger. Then one that stood by me (who was parson of Horn-church and Rumford in Essex) said, Alas, what do you mean? a young man to be so stubborn? there seemeth too much pride in you.
Are you not the parson of Horn-church?
Yes, that I am.
Did you not set such a priest in your benefice?
Yes, for a shift.
Like master, like man. For I know the priest to be as vile a man as can be. I asked the parson, what kin he was to the weather-cock of St. Paul's? and he fell into a great laughter with the rest of his companions. He said I did rail.
THEN said another that stood by unto me, What books have you here? I answered, the New Testament. May I look in it, said he? Yes, that you may, said I; and so he looked into my book, and said it was corrupt. I answered him, if the things contained in it be true, then ye are false prophets. He said that he would oppose me in the first word of the Testament, saying, Here is the generation of Christ; and Isaiah saith, no man can tell his generation.
What meaneth Isaiah by that?
I would learn of you, said he,
You would be angry if the scholar should teach the master: but if you will have me to teach you, I will tell you Isaiah's meaning.
[Page 594]THEN said he, No man can tell the generation between the Father and the Son: but you (I dare say) did know it before.
Isaiah denieth not the generation.
THEN said he, why is Christ called Christ?
Because he is the Messiah.
THEN said he, Why is he called the Messiah?
Because he was so prophesied by the prophets.
THEN said he, Why is your book called a book?
These words do breed more strife than godly edifying.
BEWARE, said he, that you do not decline from the church, for if you do, you will prove yourself an heretic.
Even as you do call us heretics, that do incline to Christ's church from your church; so are ye all false prophets that do decline from Christ's church to your own church. And by this shall all men know you to be false prophets, if ye say, This saith the church: and will not say, This saith our Lord. And so he went away as though he had a flea in his ear.
THEN came another, and said unto me, he would talk with me; for he perceived (as he said) that I was angry, and out of patience.
I will see your commission, before I talk with you, or with any more. For I knew not how to be rid of them, they came so thick about me. And I said, I came to talk with my lord, and not with any of them.
WITH that came the bishop, bringing a letter in his hand, which he had written in my name, and read it unto me, after this manner: I Thomas Haukes, do here confess and declare before my said ordinary Edmund, bishop of London, that the mass is abominable and detestable, and full of all superstition▪ and also as concerning the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ (commonly called the sacrament of the altar) that Christ is in no part thereof, but only in heaven: this I have believed, and this I do believe, &c.
Stop there, my lord: what I have believed, what have you to do withal? But what I do believe, to that stand I, and will. Then he took his pen, and said that he would scrape it out for my pleasure, and so he did to my thinking.
THEN he went further with his writing, and said, I Thomas Haukes have talked with my said ordinary, and with certain good, godly, and learned men. Notwithstanding I stand still in mine opinion.
Shall I grant you to be good, godly, and learned men, and yet grant myself to stand in a contrary opinion? No, I will not grant you to be good, godly, and learned men.
You will grant that you have talked with us: the other I will put out for your pleasure. Then said all his doctors, If your lordship be ruled by him, he will cause you to put all together: and then read more to me. Here unto this bill have I set my hand; and then he offered me the bill and his pen, and bade me set my hand to it.
You shall not have my hand to any thing of your making or devising.
Wilt thou not set to thy hand? It shall be to thy shame for the denying it.
AND then he called all his doctors, and said, he would have every man's hand to it that was in the chamber; and so he had all their hands to it, and said, He that will not set his hand to it, I would [...]e were hanged; and so said all his chaplains with a great noise.
THEN the bishop thrust me on the breast with great anger; and said he would be even with me, and with all such proud knaves in Essex.
You shall do no more than God shall give you leave.
This jeer shall not be unpunished, trust to it.
As for your cursing, railings, and blasphemings, I care not for them: for I know the moths and worms shall eat you, as they eat cloth or wool.
I will be even with you at a future time.
You may in your malice destroy a man: but when you have done, you cannot do so much as make a singer; and you be meetly even with some of us alre [...]dy
If I do thee any wrong, take the law of me.
Solomon saith, "Go not to law with a judge; for he will judge according to his honour."
Solomon saith, "Give not a fool an answer."
What, do you count me a fool?
Yea, by my troth do I, and so dost thou me too: but God forgive thee, and so do I.
Thought is free, my lord. Then the bishop took the bill and read it again; and when he saw that he could not have my hand to it, then he would have had me to take it into my hand, and to give it him again.
What needeth that ceremony? neither shall it come into my hand, heart, or mind. Then he wrapt it up, and put it in his bosom, and went away in great anger, and called for his horse, for the s [...]me day he rode on his visitation into Essex: and so I went to prison again with my keeper. This was the second time of my examination.
WRITTEN by me Thomas Haukes, who desi [...]eth all faithful men and brethren to pray unto God, to stre [...]then me in his truth unto the end. Pray, pray, pray gentle brethren, pray,
[...] all these private conferences, persuasions, and long debates with Mr. Haukes in the bishop's house, as hitherto hath been declared, the bishop seeing no hope to win him to his wicked ways, was determined to proceed openly against him after the ordinary course of his popish law. Whereupon Mr. Haukes was shortly after cited with the rest of his other companions above-mentioned, namely, T. Tomkins, S. Knight, W. Pygot, J. Lawrence, and W. Hunter, to appear in the bishop's consistory, the eighth day of February, 1555. Upon which appearance was laid against him, in like order as to the others, first the bill of his confession, written with Bonner's own hand, to which bill you heard before how this worthy man refused to subscribe.
THIS bill of confession being read, and he standing stedfastly to the same, the bishop then assigned him with the other five the next day following, which was the 9th of February; to appear before him again, to give a resolute answer what they would stick to. Which day being come, and the aforesaid six prisoners being severally called before the bishop, at the coming of Thomas Haukes, the bishop desired him to remember what was said to him yesterday; and now while he had time and space, to advise with himself what he would answer, for he stood upon life and death. Well, said Mr. Haukes again, I will willingly receive whatsoever shall be put upon me. Then certain interrogatories or articles were commenced against him by the said bishop, (in like manner as to the others) to the number of four, with another bill also which bishop Bonner brought out of his bosom, containing private matters against the said Thomas Haukes, which the bishop called heresies and errors, but we may better call them christian verities. The which matter being read, the said Haukes answered openly again, saying that it was true, and that he was glad it was so true as it was, with more words to the like effect. And this was in the forenoon, the 11th day of February. In the afternoon again, the said Haukes appearing and hearing the aforesaid bill of his confession, with the articles and interrogatories read unto him, with like constancy in answering again to the bishop; My lord (saith he) as you being my friend have caused these my sayings to be written; so do you cause them to be read: and yet I will [Page 596] never go from them. And then being exhorted by the bishop, with many fair words, to return again to the bosom of the mother church: No, my lord, (said he) that will I not: for if I had an hundred bodies, I would suffer them all to be torn in pieces rather than I will abjure or recant. And so continuing still in the same song; notwithstanding that the doctors and lawyers were ever calling upon him to come again to the unity of the church, he ever kept them off with this answer, that he would never go from the belief he was in, so long as he lived. Whereupon bishop Bonner at last read the sentence of death upon him, and so was he condemned the same day with the residue of his fellows, which was the 9th of February. Nevertheless his execution was prolonged, and he remained in prison till the 10th day of June. Then was he committed to the hands and charge of the lord Rich, who being sufficiently assisted with power by the wo [...]ipful of the shire, had the aforesaid Thomas Haukes down into Essex, with six other fellow prisoners whose stories hereafter follow, there to suffer martyrdom, Haukes at Coxchall, the others in several other places.
THOMAS HAUKES by the way used much exhortation to his friends, and whensoever opportunity served to talk with them, he would familiarly admonish them.
A little before his death, there were several of his familiar acquaintance and friends, who frequented his company more familiarly, and seemed to be greatly confirmed both by the example of his constancy, and by his talk; yet notwithstanding, being terrified by the sharpness of the punishment which he was going to suffer, privately desired that in the midst of the flame he would shew them some token, if he could, whereby they might be more certain, whether the pain of such burning were so great, that a man might not therein keep his mind quiet and patient. Which thing he promised them to do; and so secretly between them it was agreed, that if the rage of the pain were tolerable and might be suffered, then he should lift up his hands above his head towards heaven, before he gave up the ghost.
NOT long after, when the hour was come, Mr. Haukes was led away to the place appointed for the slaughter, by the lord Rich and his assistants, who being now come to the stake, there mildly and patiently prepared himself for the fire, having a strait chain cast about his middle, with a multitude of people on every side compassing him about. Unto whom after he had spoken many things, especially unto the lord Rich, reasoning with him of the innocent blood of saints, at length, after his fervent prayers first made and poured unto God, the fire was kindled.
IN which when he continued long, and when his speech was taken away by violence of the flame, his skin also drawn together, and his fingers consumed with the fire, so that now all men thought certainly he had been gone, suddenly and contrary to all expectation this good man being mindful of his promise before made, reached up his hands burning on a light fire, which was marvellous to behold, over his head to the living God, and with great rejoicing, as it seemed, struck or clapped them three times together. At the sight whereof there followed such applause and out-cry of the people, and especially of them which understood the matter, that the like hath not commonly been heard: and so the blessed martyr of Christ, straitway sinking down into the fire, gave up his spirit, June 10, 1555. And thus have we plainly and expressly described unto you the whole story, as well of the life, as of the death of Mr. Haukes, a most constant and faithful witness of Christ's holy gospel.
LETTER I. From Mr. THOMAS HAUKES to the CONGREGATION.
GRACE, mercy, and peace, from God the Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ, be always with you all (my dear brethren and sisters in the Lord Jesus Christ) for ever; and his Holy Spirit conduct and lead you all in all your doings, that you may always direct your deeds according to his holy word; that when he shall appear to reward every man according to their works, you may, as obedient children, be found watching, ready to enter into his everlasting kingdom, with your lamps burning; and when the bridegroom shall shew himself, you need not be ashamed of this life which God hath lent you, which is but transitory, vain, and like unto a vap [...]r, that for a season appeareth and vanisheth away: so soon p [...]ss [...]th away all our [...]errestrial honour, glory, and feli [...]ity "For all flesh (saith [Page 597] the prophet) is grass, and all his glory as the flower of the field, which for a season sheweth her beauty, and as soon as the Lord bloweth upon it, it withereth away, and departeth." For in this transitory and dangerous wilderness; we are as pilgrims and strangers following the footsteps of Moses, among many unspeakable dangers, beholding nothing with our outward man, but idle vanities and vexation of mind, subject to hunger, cold, nakedness, bonds, sickness, loss, labours, banishment, in danger of that dreadful dragon, and his sinful seed, to be devoured, tempted, and tormented, who ceaseth not behind every bush to lay a bait when we walk awry, to have his pleasure upon us; casting abroad his apples in all places, times, and seasons, to see 'Adam will be allured and enticed to leave the living God and his most holy commandments, whereby he is assured of everlasting life, promising the world at will, to all that will fall down in all ages, and for a mess of pottage sell and set at naught the everlasting kingdom of heaven. So frail is flesh and blood; "And in especial Israel is most ready to walk awry, when he is filled with all manner of riches," as saith the prophet.
THEREFORE I am bold in bonds (as intirely desiring your everlasting health and felicity) to warn you, and most heartily desire you to watch and pray: for our state is dangerous, and requireth continual prayer. For on the high mountains doth not grow most plenty of grass, neither are the highest trees farthest from danger, but seldom sure, and always shaken by every wind that bloweth. Such a deceitful thing (saith our Saviour) is honour and riches, that without grace it choketh up the good seed sown on his creatures, and so blindeth their eyes, that they go groping at noon-day in darkness: it maketh a man think himself somewhat that is nothing at all. For though for our honour we esteem oursel [...]es and stand in our own light, yet when we shall stand before the living God, there shall be no respect of person [...]. For riches help not in the day of vengeance: ne [...]ther can we make the Lord partial for money. But as ye have ministered un [...]o the saints, so shall you recei [...]e the reward, which I am fully persuaded and assured shall be plenteously poured upon you all, f [...]r the great goodness shewed unto the s [...]rvants of the living God. And I most heartily b [...]seech Almighty God to pour [...]orth a plenteous reward upon you for the same, and that he will assist you with his Holy Spirit in all your doings, that you may grow as you have begun, unto such a perf [...]ction as may be to God's honour, your own salvation, and the strengthening the weak members of Christ. For though the world rage, and [...] the [...] of God, you know that it did so unto [...] ▪ his apostles, and to all that were in the primitive ch [...]h, and shall be unto the world's end.
THEREFORE b [...]li [...]ve in the light while you have it, l [...]st it be taken away from you; if you shall seem to neglect the great m [...]rcy of God th [...] hath been opened unto you, and your h [...]arts consented unto it, that it is the very and and only truth pronounced by God's only Son Jesus Christ, by the good will of our heavenly Father. Therefore I say in the bowels of my Lord Jesus Christ, stick fast unto it; let it never depart out of our hearts and conversation, that you with us and we with you at the great day, being one flock, as we have one shepherd, may rise to life immortal, through Jesus Christ our only Saviour. Amen.
LETTER II. From Mr. HAUKES to his WIFE.
GRACE be with you, and peace from God the Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ, which gave himself for our sins, to deliver us from this present evil world, thro' the good will of God our Father, to whom be praise for ever and ever, Amen.
MY dear yoke-fellow in the Lord, forasmuch as the Lord hath not only called me to work in his vineyard, but hath also fulfilled his good work in me, (I trust to his glory, and to the comfort of all those that look for his coming) I thought it my duty, dear yoke-fellow, to write unto you some lessons out of God's book: and if you will direct yourself thereafter, doubt not of it but God, who refuseth none that will come to him with their whole heart, will assist you with his Holy Spirit, and direct you in all his ways, to his honour and glory, who grant it for his mercy's sake. Amen.
FIRST, I exhort you to fear God, to serve and honour his holy name, to love him with all your heart, soul, and mind, to believe faithfully all his promises to lay sure hold upon them, that in all your troubles, whatsoever they are, you may run strait to the great mercy of God, and he will bring you out of them. Keep you within his wings; then shall you be sure that neither the devil, flesh, nor hell shall be able to hurt you.
BUT take heed; if you will not keep his holy precepts and laws, and to the uttermost of your power call for the help of God to walk in the same, but will leave them, and ran to all abominations with the wicked world, and do as they do; then be sure to have your part with the wicked world in the burning lake that shall never be quenched. Therefore beware of idolatry, which doth most of all stink before the face of Almighty God, and was by all good men most detested from the beginning of the world. For which, what kingdoms, nations, and realms God hath punished with most terrible plauges, with fire, brimstone, hunger, sword and pestilence, &c. to the utter subversion of them, is manifestly to be seen through the whole Bible. Y [...], his own peculiar people, whom he had done so much for, when [Page 598] they fell from him, and went and served other gods, contrary to his commandment, he utterly destroyed and rooted them out from off the earth: and as many as died in that damnable state, not repenting their abominable evil, he threw them into the pit of hell. Again, how he hath preserved those that abhor superstition and idolatry, and that have only taken hold upon them with their whole heart, to serve him, to love him, and to fear him, &c. is most manifestly to be seen even [...]om the beginning, out of what great dangers he hath always delivered them: yea when all hope of deliverance was past, as touching their expectation, even then in the sight of all his enemies would he work his godly will and purpose, to the utter destruction of all those that were his manifest enemies.
FURTHER, I exhort you in the bowels of Christ that you will exercise and be stedfast in prayer; for prayer is the only means to pierce the heavens, to obtain at the hand of God whatsoever we desire, so that it be asked in faith. Oh what notable things do we read in the scriptures that have been obtained through fervent prayer? We are commanded to call upon him for help, aid, and succour in necessities and troubles; and he hath promised to help us. Again, they that will not call upon him with their whole heart, but upon other dead creatures, in whom there is no help, (for there was none found worthy to open the book, but only the Lamb Christ which was killed for our sins) I say, they that will refuse his help, must even by the terrible judgments of God come utterly to confusion: as it hath, and is daily manifest to be seen. And whatsoever you desire of God in your prayer, ask it for Jesus Christ's sake, for whom and in whom, God hath promised to give us all things necessary. And though that which we ask come not at the first and second calling, yet continue still knocking, and he will at length open his treasures of mercy, so that you will be sure to obtain: for he hath so promised, if you continue in faith, hoping surely in him. These former lessons, with all such instructions as I have told you by mouth, I do wish that you would most earnestly learn; and then I doubt not, but God, who is the giver of all grace, will assist you in all your doings, that you may be found worthy of his kingdom, which is prepared through Christ.
FURTHER, whereas it pleased God to send [...]s children, my desire is that they may be brought up in the fear of God, and in his laws. And this is to certify you, that you deliver in any wise my eldest son unto Mr. Throgmorton, who upon his good will hath promised me to bring him up according to my desire; and I trust as God hath put into his heart. See therefore that you deliver him in any wise without delay: and as for the other, if you shall seem to be burdened with him, (which I think nature will not suffer) my desire is, that it be brought up in the fear of God to the uttermost of your endeavour, with some honest man that hath the fear of God before his eyes; and let us give thanks unto God which hath given them unto us, beseeching him that they may be of that flock that shall stand on the right hand of the majesty of God, when he shall judge the world. Amen.
YET once again I warn you, that you continue in fervent prayer, as I said before; then shall you be sure, that God even of his own mercy, according as he hath promised, will be an husband unto you, and provide better for you than ever I was able to do: yea, he will cause all men that fear him to pity you, to help you, to succour you in all your necessities, so that if any do you wrong, he will be avenged on him. Moreover, I wish you to keep company with those of whom you may learn to come to a more perfect knowledge of God, and I doubt not but God will provide that such will be glad to receive you, if you shall profess and go forward in his truth.
FINALLY, and to make an end, I desire you that you take heed with whom you couple yourself. See that he be a man that feareth God, loveth his laws, and will walk in the same to the uttermost of his power: such a one as can be content to love you, and to care for you. Take heed he be no brawler, no drunkard, no wicked person, not given to filthiness, no worldling, no dicer, nor carder: in fine, no filthy person; but chuse such a one as God may be glorified in both your lives. And again on your part, love him, serve him, and obey him in all godliness, as long as God shall give you life in this world. Then shall you both be sure to obtain that kingdom which God the Father hath prepared, and Jesus Christ obtained for you, that never shall have an end, where I trust to abide your coming. Amen.
LETTER III. From Mr. THOMAS HAUKES, to Mr. CLEMENT THROGMORTON.
GRACE, mercy, and peace from God the Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ, be with you, and assist you in all your thoughts, words, and works, that he in all things, as most worthy, may be glorified, and that the blessing of Abraham may be poured plenteously on you and all your posterity.
WHEREAS the love of God hath moved you to require my son to be brought up before your eyes, and the self same love hath also moved me in like case to leave him in your hands, as unto a father in my absence, I shall require you in God's behalf according to your promises, that you will see him brought up in the fear of the Lord, and instructed in the knowledge of his holy word, that he may thereby learn to leave the evil, and to know the good, and always to be [Page 599] pricked forward with fatherly instructions to follow my footsteps, that as Almighty God hath made me worthy, through his special grace to work his will in obedience, he may learn to follow me his father in the like, to God's honour and praise: and this I require you in God's behalf to fulfil, or cause to be fulfilled, as you before the living God must make answer for the same. I have left for the child certain books which shall be delivered unto you, wherein his instruction and salvation lieth, if he learn and practise the same. And thus most humbly beseeching you once again, to be as good unto him, as your promise was unto me, that is, to be a father, and a wall of defence unto him in all troubles, I leave him in your hand through the Lord Jesus, and desire him to bless both him and you according to his good promise: and all that good which you shall do unto him, I shall most heartily desire the everlasting God to recompense unto you in his kingdom, where I hope to meet both him and you among all God's elect. To which God be all praise, honour, and glory, Amen.
The HISTORY of Mr. THOMAS WATS.
THOMAS WATS, of Billerica within the county of Essex, of the diocese of London, was by his occupation a linen draper; who, before he was apprehended, had sold and made away his cloth in his shop, his things being set in order for his wife and children, and gave away much of his cloth unto the poor. For he daily expected to be taken by God's adversaries and his, as shortly after came to pass; so that upon the 26th day of April, he was apprehended and brought before the lord Rich, and other commissioners at Chelmsford, and there being accused for not coming to the church, was upon the same examined before the lord Rich, Henry Tyrel, sir Anthony Brown, Edmund Tyrel, Thomas Mildman, John Wiseman, Roger Appleton, Richard Weston, justice Gaudy, &c. The sum and principal effect of which examination hereunder followeth, briefly expressed.
WHEN Thomas Wats came before the lord Rich and the justices, whose names are specified in the following letter, (which they sent unto the bishop of London against him) at the sessions at Chelmsford, the lord Rich spoke to him as follows;
WATS, you be brought hither, as I understand, because of disobedience to the king and queen's laws. You will not come to the church, you will not hear mass, &c. but have your conventicles a sort of you in corners, contrary to the king's and queen's proceedings. To which Mr. Wats answered and said:
MY lord, if I have offended a law, I am subject here to the law. Then Anthony Brown, justice, said unto him; Wats, I pray thee, tell me who hath been thy schoolmaster to teach thee this religion, or where didst thou first learn it? Forsooth, said Wats, even of you, sir, you taught it me, and none more than you. For in king Edward's days in open sessions you spake against this religion now used, no preacher more. You then said the mass was abominable, and all their trumpery besides, wishing and earnestly exhorting that none should believe therein, and that our belief should be only in Christ: and you said then, whosoever should bring in any strange nation to rule here, it were treason, and not to be suffered. Then Mr. Brown said to my lord Rich, He belies me, my lord— What a knave is this? He will soon bely me behind my back, when he doth it before my face. And my lord Rich said again, I dare say he doth so.
AFTER these words, Mr. Wats took occasion to speak somewhat of king Philip and of his coming in, but what it was I could not justly learn. But thus much was heard, that after those words spoken, the bench among themselves stood up, and said one to another, Treason; except one good man called justice Gaudy, who a little before was about to speak; but when he heard them cry Treason, he held down his head, as one grieved and troubled at their doings.
IN conclusion, the commissioners being weary of him, or else not willing to meddle further in such matters, sent him up to the bishop of London, together with a letter, declaring the cause of his being sent up, as by the contents thereof may be seen.
A LETTER, Sent by certain Justices in Essex, to BONNER, Bishop of London.
AFTER our most hearty commendations to your good lordship, these shall be to advertise you, that at our sessions of oyer and terminer held at Chelmsford, the [Page 600] 26th day of April last past, there came before us in open court, one Thomas Wats of Billerica within your diocese, by ordinary process, and then and there being examined why he refused to come to his parish church, and there to receive the sacrament of the altar, and hear divine service, according to the institution of the holy church, he openly there answered generally: That like as the service of the church set out in the days of the late king Edward VI. was said by us now to be abominable, heretical, schismatical, and naught; so he said, that all that is now used and done in the church, is abominable, heretical, schismatical, and wicked; with divers other erroneous and arrogant words: and therefore we have thought proper to send him to your lordship, to be further examined by you of his particular opinions, as to your pastoral office shall seem convenient, certifying you further, that in our opinion he is one of the most arrogant heretics, that hath been heard speak, or ever came before you, and not meet to be kept here in any jail, as well for fear of corrupting others, as for divers and sundry other special causes hereafter to be more declared. Thus leaving to molest your good lordship, we commit you to the Holy Ghost.
- R. Rich
- Henry Tyrel
- Anthony Brown
- Edmund Tyrel
- Thomas Mildman.
- John Wiseman
- Roger Appleton
- Richard Weston.
NOW when the bishop had received him, how he used him it is easy (by his common practice with others) to judge. What his private conferences were, I know not; but what was publicly done in the consistory at St Paul's, (the common stage for these tragedies) you shall here see.
The First Appearance of Mr. THOMAS WATS, in the Bishop's Consistory.
FIRST upon Thursday, the 2d of May, Mr. Thomas Wats was brought before the bishop of London, and there being examined upon his words said before lord Rich, and others, as contained in their letter, he did earnestly affirm the same to be true. Whereupon the bishop objected, and examined him upon these articles following, to which he answered as hereafter will appear.
Articles objected against Mr. THOMAS WATS, of Billerica, in the County of Essex, within the Diocese of London, by Bishop BONNER.
1. THAT the said Thomas Wats is of Billerica, and so of the jurisdiction of the bishop of London.
2. ITEM, That he believeth not in the sacraments of the holy and catholic church, as the catholic church of Rome, and all other churches, members of the same, ever hitherto have believed, and is taught by all good and faithful people; nor hath allowed the sacraments, rites, usages, or ceremonies of the said church, but hath despised the same.
3. ITEM, That he believeth, and also hath taught others, that the substance of material bread and wine do remain in the sacrament of the altar after the consecration, and that the said material bread and wine are the signs and tokens of Christ's body hanged upon the cross, and of his blood there shed; and that in the said sacrament there is only a memory or remembrance of Christ's body and blood, and nothing else.
4. ITEM, That he believeth, and doth precisely affirm, that the very true presence of Christ's body and blood in substance, is not in the sacrament of the altar, but only in heaven, and no where else.
5. ITEM, That he believeth, affirmeth, and saith, the mass now used in the church of Rome, here in England, and other places, is full of idolatry, abomination, and wickedness, and that Christ did never institute it, nor ordain it, nor yet allow it as a good and laudable thing to be used in his church.
6. ITEM, That he believeth, and affirmeth, that auricular confession to be made unto the priest is not necessary, but superfiuous: and that it is enough for a man to believe only, and to confess himself unto God, without any priest or minister at any time, though he may have the priest to confess him unto.
7. ITEM, That he b [...]lieveth that Luther, Wickliffe, Dr. Barnes, and all others that have held against the sacrament of the altar, and suffered death by fire or otherwise for the maintenance of the said opinion, were good men, and faithful servants and martyrs of Christ in so living and dying.
8. ITEM, That he hath and doth believe, that to fast, pray, or to do alms-deeds, is a thing utterly unprofitable; for if a man shall be saved, he shall be saved without doing of them; and if he shall be [Page 601] damned, they shall not help him, or do him any good at all.
9. ITEM, That the said Wats of late coming into open court at the sessions before the lord Rich, sir Henry Tyrel, knight, Anthony Brown, esquire, and others, and being then and there examined, did openly confess, that he had refused to come to the church, and to hear there the divine service, and to receive the sacrament of the altar, according to the order of the church: because that like as the service of the church set out in the days of the late king Edward VI. was said and alledged to be abominable, heretical, schismatical, and altogether naught; so he the said Thomas Wats, then and there said openly before the said commissioners, that all that is now used and done in the church, is abominable, heretical, schismatical, and altogether naught: and that he did also then utter, before the said commissioners, other erroneous and arrogant words, to the hurt of his soul, and to the evil example of the people there present.
10. ITEM, That the said Thomas, by reason of the premises, was, and is to be taken, had, reputed, and judged as an heretic, and for the same, by order of the ecclesiastical laws, is to be declared accursed; and being obstinate and incorrigible, is to be delivered to the secular power, to be punished as an heretic▪
11. ITEM, That he, over and above all these offences and trespasses aforesaid, had also added this trespass, namely, That he had believed and deliberately said, that the church of Rome, in her rites, ceremonies, sacraments, institutions, and traditions, is the synagogue of Satan; and therefore that he had assented and agreed in opinion with one John Tooly, of late hanged at Cha [...]ing cross, who at the time of his execution desired the people to pray to be delivered from the tyranny of the bishop of Rome, with all his enormities; as much as to say, that his authority and doings were tyranny, and had all enormities and iniquities in them.
12. ITEM, That the premises and every part thereof be true, notorious, manifest, and openly spoken and talked of amongst the honest and credible persons in great multitude; and that of all and singular the same within Billerica aforesaid, and other places thereabout, being of the diocese of London, there is a common voice and fame thereof.
The Answer of Mr. THOMAS WATS to the aforesaid Articles.
TO the first he said and confessed the same to be true in every part thereof.
TO the second article he answered, that he believeth in all the sacraments according to Christ's institution, and the catholic church; but not according to the bishop of Rome's church: and further said, that he doth not believe now as he had done in times past; for in times past he believed as the church then believed, but now he doth not so believe; for the church of Rome hath deceived us, and therefore he said he did not believe as the church of Rome believeth, but as Christ hath taught him; and further said, that he was so taught to believe by the preaching of Mr. Alvey, and others whose names he remembereth not, who did preach the word of God truly and sincerely.
TO the third he answered, that he hath and doth believe, that Christ's body is in heaven, and no where else: and further, that he will never believe that Christ's body is in the sacrament.
TO the fourth he answered, confessing and firmly believing the same to be true.
TO the fifth. That he did believe that the mass is abominable, and that he will not go one jot from that his belief.
TO the sixth, That he neither did, nor yet doth believe, that the priest can absolve him from his sins: howbeit, he denieth not that it is good to ask counsel at the priest's mouth.
TO the seventh he said, That he knew not what the opinions of the said persons named in the said article were; and in case the said persons did believe, that the body and blood of Christ were really and in very deed in the sacrament of the altar, thou that they were not good men. But in case they did believe that the body and blood of Christ was not in [Page 602] the sacrament of the altar really and truly, then he believed that they were good men.
TO the eighth he said, That he had not spoken as is contained in this article; but he hath and doth believe, that fasting, prayers, and alms-deeds be works of a lively faith.
TO the ninth he confessed, That he did utter and speak, as in this article is contained, and further he desired God that he might die in that faith and belief wherein he now is.
TO the tenth he answered and said, That he will submit himself herein to the order of the law: and further said, that he trusteth that with God he shall be blessed, although with men he be accursed.
TO the eleventh he said, he believed that the bishop of Rome is a mortal enemy to Christ and his church. And as for Tooly he said, he did never see or know him: but in case the said Tooly did wish and pray as is contained in the article, then he did likewise wish and consent with him therein.
TO the twelfth he answered, That all which before he confessed to be true, is also true; and all that he hath denied to be true, he denieth again to be true, and believeth the same to be according to such things as he hath confessed.
THESE articles thus propounded and answered, the bishop commanded him to appear again in the same place at three o'clock in the afternoon, upon the same day. At which hour being brought hither by his keeper, the bishop began with him in this wise:
WATS, you know what I said unto you to day, and what I appointed unto you at this time. The time is now come; weigh and consider with yourself, that you are but a man, and albeit that you will wilfully cast away your body, yet cast not away your soul, but while you have time return and confess the truth.
WHEREUNTO Thomas Wats answered and said, I am weary to live in such idolatry as you would have me to live in. Upon which answer the bishop caused his articles again to be read. He thereto answered as before, and farther, subscribed the same with his own hand.
THE bishop, after many persuasions to cause him to recant, ordered him to depart, and to come again on Saturday at eight o'clock in the morning. Where the bishop being absent, Dr. Nicholas Harpsfield, as then being his deputy, did sit, and earnestly exhorted him to deny his opinions. To whom in the end he answered thus:
WELL, you have a law to condemn me, and I submit myself to the laws of the church (as you call it): and farther I do affirm, and still stand to the answers I have made.
WHEREUPON Dr. Harpsfield ordered him to appear there again upon Friday, being the 10th day of the same month of May. Upon which day the bishop privately sent for the said Thomas Wats into his chamber, and there with many fair promises tempted and tried him, whether he would revoke his errors, as he then termed them. But Wats answered him in this sort; I will not believe your church, neither the Romish church, and therefore you do but labour in vain thus to travail with me. He was hereupon again dismissed for that time until Friday the 17th of May, and then commanded to appear in the consistory; which command he obeyed, and having the accustomed former articles ministered unto him, made them such answers as before.
BEING thus tost to and fro from day to day, and hour to hour, he was at last, the 18th of May, brought into the consistory, where first was made a brief recital of all the former process: and there the said Wats being (by the bishop and others) desired to deny his profession, made this final answer; God keep me from the doctrine that you would have me come unto, which you have now declared. And I beseech God that I may persevere in that, that I have done; for I will stand to mine answers.
THE bishop perceiving his fair flattering promises prevailed not, (and having no great store of other [Page 603] reasons to persuade with) put forth his last and strongest argument of condemnation. Which being ended, he was delivered to the sheriffs of London, and by them was sent to Newgate, where he remained until the 9th of June, or (as some assert) to the 22d of May: at which time he was carried to Chelmsford, and there was brought to Mr. Scot's house, keeping then an inn in Chelmsford, where, as they were eating with Mr. Haukes and the rest that came down to their burning, they prayed together both before and after their meat.
THEN Mr. Wats went and prayed privately by himself, and afterwards came to his wife and his six children being there, and said these words in effect: Wife, and my good children, I must now depart from you. Therefore henceforth know I you no more, but as the Lord hath given you unto me, so I give you again unto the Lord, whom I charge you ever to obey, and fear: and beware you turn not to this abominable popery, against which I shall anon, by God's grace, give my blood. Let not the murdering of God's people cause you to relent, but take occasion thereby to be the stronger in the Lord's quarrel, and I doubt not but he will be a merciful Father unto you. All these and such like words spake he unto them, and they unto him: of whom two, as it is said, offered to be burnt with him. In the end he bade them farewel, and kissed them all, and was carried to the fire.
AT the stake, after he had kissed it, he spake to my lord Rich these or the like words; My lord, said he, beware, beware, for you do against your own conscience herein, and without you repent, the Lord will avenge it: for you are the cause of this my death. Thus did this good martyr offer his body to the fire, in defence of the true gospel of Jesus Christ.
WE will now return to the proceedings of the court in the case of queen Mary's supposed child, whereof we have already treated, in a former part of this work.
LONG persuasion had been in England with great expectation, for the space of half a year or more, that the queen was conceived with child. This report was made by the queen's physicians, and others about the court: so that several were punished for saying the contrary. And a command was given, that in all churches supplications and prayer should be made for the queen's good delivery: the certificate whereof you may read before in the letter of the council sent to bishop Bonner. And also the same moreover may appear by provision made before by act of parliament for the child.
AND now forasmuch as in the beginning of this month of June, about Whitsuntide, the time was thought to be nigh that this young master should come into the world, and [...]hat midwives, rockers, nurses, with the cradle and all, were prepared and in readiness; suddenly, upon what cau [...] or occasion is unknown, a certain vain rumour was spread about in London of the safe delivery of the queen and the birth of the child. Insomuch that the [...]ells were rung, bonfi [...]es and processions mad [...] [...] only in the city of London, and in most other parts of the realm, but also in the town of Antwerp, guns were shot off upon the river by the English ships, and the mariners thereof rewarded with an hundred pistolets or Italian crowns by the lady regent, who was the queen of Hungary. Such great rejoicing and triumph was made for the queen's delivery, and that there was a prince born. Yea, divers preachers, particularly the parson of St. Ann within Aldersgate, after procession and Te Deum sung, took upon him to describe the proportion of the child, how fair, how beautiful, and great a prince he was, as the like had not been seen.
IN the midst of this great ado, there was a simple man, dwelling within four miles of Berwick, that never had been half way to London, who said concerning the bonfires made for queen Mary's child, "Here is a joyful triumph, but at length all will not prove worth a mess of pottage," as indeed it came to pass: for in the end all proved clean contrary, and the joy and expectations of men were much deceived. For the people were certified, that the queen neither was then delivered, nor after was in hope to have any child.
AT this time many talked diversly. Some said this rumour of the queen's conception was spread for a policy; others affirmed, that she was deceived by a tympany or some other like disease, to think [Page 604] herself with child, and was not; some thought she was with child, and that it did by some chance miscarry, or else that she was bewitched; but what was the truth thereof the Lord knoweth, to whom nothing is secret. One thing of mine own hearing and seeing, I cannot pass over unwitnessed.
THERE came to me, (says Mr. Fox) whom I did both hear and see, one Isabel Malt, a woman dwelling in Horn-alley, Aldersgate-street, who before witness made this declaration unto us, That she being delivered of a man-child upon Whitsunday in the morning, which was the 11th day of June, 1555, there came to her the lord North, and another lord to her unknown, dwelling then about Old Fish-street, demanding of her if she would part with her child, and would swear that she never knew nor had any such child. Which, if she would, her son, they said, should be well provided for, she should take no care of it, with many fair offers if she would part with the child.
AFTER that came some women also, of whom one they said should be the rocker; but she in no wise would let go her son, who at the writing here of being alive, and called Timothy malt, was of the age of 13 years, and upwards.
THUS much, I say, I heard of the woman herself. What credit is to be given to her relation, I deal not withal, but leave it to the liberty of the reader, to believe it they that list; to them that list not, I have no further warrant to assure them.
AMONG many other great preparations made for the queen's deliverance of child, there was a cradle very sumptuously and gorgeously trimmed, upon which cradle for the child appointed, these verses were written, both in Lating and English.
ABOUT this time there came over into England a certain English book, giving warning to Englishmen of the Spaniards, and disclosing some secret practices for the recovery of abbey-lands, which book was called "a Warning for England." In consequence of which, on the 13th day of this month, the following proclamation was issued.
A Proclamation issued by the King and Queen for the restraining of all Books and Writings, tending against the Doctrine of the Pope and his Church.
WHEREAS by the statute made in the second year of king Henry IV. concerning the repressing of he [...]esy, there is ordained and provided a great punishment, not only for the authors, makers, and writers of books containing wicked doctrine, and erroneous and heretical opinions, contrary to the catholic faith and determination of holy church, and likewise for their favourers and supporters; but also for such as shall have or keep any such books of writings, and not make delivery of them to the ordinary of the diocese or his ministers, within a certain time limited in the said statute, which act or statute being by authority of parliament of late revived, was also openly proclaimed, to the intent the subjects of the realm upon such proclamation should the rather eschew the danger and penalty of the said statute; and as yet nevertheless in most parts of the realm the same is neglected, and little regarded: the king and queen our sovereign lord and lady, therefore, &c. straitly charge and command, that no person or persons, of what estate, degree, or condition soever he or they be, from henceforth presume to bring or convey, or cause to be brought or conveyed into this realm, any books, writings or works hereafter mentioned▪ that is to say, any book or books, writings or works made or set forth, by, or in the name of Martin Luther, or any book or books, writings or wo [...]ks made and set forth, by, or in the name of Oecolampadius, Zuinglius, John Calvin, Pomeran [...], John Alasco, Bullinger, Bucer, Melancthon, Bernardinus, Ochinus, Erasmus, Sarcerius, Peter Mart [...]r, Hugh Latimer, Robert Barnes, otherwise called Friar Barnes, John Bale, otherwise called Friar Bale, Justus Jonas, John Hooper, Miles Coverdale, William Tindal, Thomas Cranmer, late archbishop of Canterbury, William Turner, Theodore Basil, otherwise called Thomas Beacon, John Frith, Roy, and the book commonly called Hall's Chronicle, or any of them in the Latin tongue, Dutch tongue, English tongue, Italian tongue, or French tongue, or any other like book, paper, writing, or work, made, printed, or set forth, by any other person or persons, containing false doctrine contrary and against the catholic faith, and the doctrine of the catholic church. And also that no person or persons presume to write, print, [...]tter, sell, read, or keep any, or cause to be written, printed, uttered, or kept any of the said books, papers, works, or writings, or any other book or books written or printed in the Latin or English tongue, concerning the common service and administration set forth in English to be used in [Page 605] the churches of this realm, in the time of king Edward VI. commonly called the communion book, or book of common service and ordering of ministers, otherwise called, The book set forth by the authority of parliament, for common prayer and administration of the sacraments, or to be [...] in the mother tongue within the church of England, but shall within the space of fifteen days next after the publication of this proclamation, bring or deliver, or cause the said books, writings, and works, and every of them remaining in their custody and keeping, to be brought and delivered to the ordinary of the diocese, where such books, works, or writings be or remain, or to his chancellor or commissaries, without fraud, colour or deceit, at the said ordinaries will and disposition to be burnt, or otherwise to be used or ordered by the said ordinaries, as by the canons or spiritual laws it is in that case limited and appointed, upon pain that every offender contrary to this proclamation, shall incur the danger and penalties contained in the said statute, and as they will avoid their majesties high indignation and displeasure, and further answer to their uttermost perils.
And their majesties by this proclamation give full power and authority to all the bishops and ordinaries, and all justices of the peace, mayors, sheriffs, bailiffs of cities and towns corporate, and other head officers within this realm and the dominions thereof, and expressly commandeth and willeth the same and every of [...], that they and every of them, within their several limits and jurisdictions, shall in default and negligence of the said subjects, after the said fifteen days expired, [...]quire and search out the said books, writings, and works▪ and for this purpose enter into the house or houses, closet and secret places of every person, of whatsoever degree, being negligent in this behalf, and suspected to keep any such books, writings, or works, contrary to this proclamation: and that the said justices, mayors, sheriffs, bailiffs, and other head officers above specified, and every of them within their said limits and jurisdictions finding any of the said subjects negligent and faulty in this behalf, shall commit every such offender to ward, there to remain without bail or main-prize, till the same offender or offenders have received such punishment as the said statute doth limit and appoint in this behalf. Given under our signs manual, [...] our manor of Hampton-court, the 13th day of June, the [...] and second years of our reign.
ARTICLES to be inquired upon by the Wardens of every Company touching seditious Books, especially [...]oncerning the Book called, A WARNING for ENGLAND.
1. WHETHER they have seen any of the aforesaid books.
2. WHETHER they have heard any of the said books.
3. WHERE they were, and in what place they have seen them.
4. WHOM they know to have lately come from beyond the sea, especially from Zurich, Strasburgh, Frankfort, Wesel, Embden, and Doesburg
5. WHOM they know or vehemently suspect to be common carriers of letters, or money thither from hence.
6. THAT they bring to my lord mayor all such seditious books as they have, or shall have found hereafter.
IN this proclamation the reader will easily discover the profound and learned censure of the Roman catholic church, what books they dislike and reject as heretical, schismatical, and pernicious. On which catholic censure of the learned fathers, we have not leisure at present to enlarge; neither is it necessary in this place to enter into a particular defence of the authors here condemned. Suffice it therefore to take a general view of the ridiculous (not to say blasphemous) matter contained in some of the popish books; which by being contrasted with the doctrines of the opposite side, may give an opportunity of judging the better, which is most agreeable to God's holy word and truth, and of discerning between the true catholic church and the mother of abominations.
AND first to begin with the primmer in English, for children, printed with a privilege according to the king and queen's majesty's letters patent, in the reign of queen Mary. Let us repeat and survey some part of the said primmer, (for to express all, would be too tedious) beginning with the first lesson of our lady, in these words:
COMPARE this with the scriptures, good reader, and judge uprightly whether this doctrine be tolerable in the church or not.
IT followeth, in the second Lesson.
IN the third Lesson.
The Versicle.
"Pray for the people, intreat for the clergy, make intercession for the devout woman-kind; let all feel thy help, that worthily solemnize thy memorial," &c.
Another Versicle.
"Holy mother of God, make thy petition; that we may deserve Christ's promission," &c.
AND in the anthem after Benedictus, thus it followeth:
"We beseech thee of thy pity to have us in remembrance, and to make means for us unto Christ, that we being supported by thy help, may deserve to attain the kingdom of heaven."
FURTHERMORE in the Collect after it followeth:
"And grant, that through the gracious intercession of the virgin thy mother, we may be delivered from this present heaviness, and have the fruition of eternal gladness."
IT followeth moreover in the said Primmer thus, concerning the material cross.
"O God, which hast ascended thy most holy cross, and hast given light to the darkness of the world, vouchsafe by the virtue of thy cross to illuminate, visit, and comfort both our hearts and bodies," &c.
MOREOVER, in the name of John the Baptist, thus it prayeth:
"O Lord, defend us always through the continual succours of St. John the Baptist. For the more frail we be, the more need we have to be relieved with necessary prayers," &c.
IN which words note (good reader) not only the absurdity of doctrine, but also the foolishness of the reason. For where their doctrine pretendeth that St. John the Baptist should pray for us, here we pray to God for St. John the Baptist, that he will hear his prayer praying for us. It followeth furthermore in the names of Peter and Paul:
"Hear us mercifully, and grant that through the merits of them both, we may obtain the glory everlasting," &c.
OF St. Andrew.
"So let him, O Lord, be a continual petitioner for us," &c.
OF St. Laurence, thus:
"St. Laurence the deacon did work a great work. For by the virtue of the holy cross, he gave sight to the blind," &c.
BUT how can this be true, when the holy cross was not yet found in the time of St. Laurence? For Helen which first found the cross, as they say, came after St. Laurence more than forty years.
TO Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury.
"By the blood of Thomas, which he for thee did spend, Makes us, Christ, to climb, where Thomas did ascend."
OF St. Nicholas.
"O God, which hast glorified blessed St. Nicholas, thy holy bishop, with innumerable miracles, grant, we beseech thee, that by his merits and prayers we may be delivered from the fire of hell.
OF Mary Magdalen.
"Grant, we beseech thee, thy mercy, to let her purchase for us the bliss everlasting," &c.
ANOTHER prayer to our Lady.
Another prayer in the said Primmer to our Lady.
Item.
"Holy m [...]ther, succour the miserable, comfort the weak-spirited, give courage to the desperate, pray for the people, make intercession for the clergy, and be a mean for the de [...]out of woman-kind," &c.
Another blasphemous Prayer.
Another blasphemy in the said Primmer.
"Hail queen, mother of mercy, our life, our sweetness, our hope. Unto thee do we cry and sigh, weeping and wailing. Come off therefore our patroness; cast upon us thy pitiful eyes, and after this our banishment shew to us the blessed fruit of thy womb. O gate of glory, be for us a reconciliation unto the Father and the Son. From the wretched their faults expel: wipe the spots of sins unclean," &c.
Item, to our Lady.
Item.
"Grant, we beseech thee, that by her merits and prayers we may attain to that unspeakable joy; where she being ascended doth now rejoice with thee in heaven for ever."
AND thus much hitherto of this catholic Primmer, called our Lady's Mattins. Whereunto, if it were not tedious for the reader, we would also adjoin our Lady's Psalter, to the intent that all indifferent readers, as they have seen what books these catholic fathers have condemned and do condemn for heretical; so they may also see and judge, what books on the other side they approve as lawful and catholic. And forasmuch as it is known to all men what our Lady's Psalter is, or what it meaneth; yea, and some peradventure will deny any such book as our Lady's Psalter to be written or approved, here first we will produce the name of the author, who was Bonaventure, a seraphical doctor, bishop also and cardinal, canonized moreover by pope Sixtus IV. in the year 1482, for a saint in the kalendar. In the second part of his whole works, (which were printed at Argentine, anno 1495) to shew himself a devout servant of his lady, he hath taken every psalm of David's Psalter, (which are peculiarly made and referred to Almighty God) and hath in several of the said psalms, put out the name of the Lord, and hath substituted the name of our Lady. This being done through the whole Psalms and every one of them, it is now called our Lady's Psalter, used to be sung and said in the praise and service of our Lady. A brief specimen whereof, for example's sake, we thought proper here to exhibit unto the reader, as followeth.
The Title of the Psalter in English.
"Here beginneth the Psalter of the blessed virgin, made by the seraphical doctor St. Bonaventure, bishop of Alban, and cardinal of the holy church of Rome.
1. "BLESSED is the man which understandeth thy name, O virgin Mary, thy grace shall comfort his soul. Thou shalt bring forth in him the most plentiful fruit of justice, being watered as it were with fountains of water. All women thou surpassest in beauty of thy body; all angels and archangels, in the excellency of thy holiness. Thy mercy and thy grace is magnified every-where. Glory be to the Father," &c.
2. "Why do our enemies fret and imagine vain things against us? Let thy right hand defend us, O mother of God, terribly confounding and destroying them as a sword. Come unto her all ye that labour and are troubled, and she will give rest unto your souls. Come unto her in your temptations, and her loving countenance shall establish and comfort you. Bless her with all your heart, for the earth is full of her mercy. Glory be to the Father," &c.
3. "Why are they so many, O lady, that trouble me? In thy fury thou shalt persecute and destroy them. Loose the bonds of our impiety, and take away the burden of our sins. Have mercy upon me, O lady, and heal my infirmity. Take away my sorrow, and the anguish of my heart. Deliver me not into the hands of mine enemi [...]s, and in the day of my death comfort my soul. Bring me unto the haven of salvation, and restore my spirits unto my maker and creator. Glory be to the Father," &c.
4. "When I called to thee, thou heardst, O my lady, and out of thy high throne thou didst vouchsafe to think upon me. From the roaring of them that prepare themselves to devour me, and out of the hands of such as seek after my life, thy grace shall deliver me: because thy mercy and thy pity are great towards all them that call upon thy holy name. Blessed be thou, O lady, for ever, and thy maj [...]y for ever and ever. Glorify her all nations of the earth," &c.
5. "HEAR my words, O lady, &c. turn our [...] into gladness, and our trouble into rejoicing. Let our [...] mies fall before our feet, and with thy power dash their heads in pieces."
[Page 608]6. "O lady, suffer me not to be rebuked in God's anger, nor to be chastened in his heavy displeasure, &c. From the gate and deep pit of hell, with thy holy prayers deliver us. [...]et the everlasting gates be opened, that we may shew forth thy marvellous works for ever. Because the dead, nor they that be in hell, shall not praise thee, O lady, but they which obtain by thy grace life everlasting."
7. "O my lady, in thee will I put my trust; deliver me from mine enemies, O my lady. Stop the mouth of the [...], and bind the lips of the persecutors. Make no tarrying for thy name's sake, to shew mercy upon me. Let the brightness of thy countenance shine upon us, that our conscience may be saved before the most highest. If the enemy do persecute my soul, O lady, help me that he destroy me not."
9. "I will give thanks to thee, O lady, with my whole heart, and will shew forth among the nations thy praise and glory, &c. They shall find grace through thee, the finder out of grace and salvation: the humble and penitent groan for pardon and forgiveness; heal thou the sores of their heart," &c.
11. "IN thee, O lady, do I put my trust, &c. Seek her even from your youth, and she shall glorify you, &c. In mercy take from us the multitude of our sins, and give unto us plenteousness of merits," &c.
12. "SAVE me, O mother of love, and fountain of mercy, &c. Thou thyself alone hast gone about the compass of the earth, to help them that call upon thee."
13. "HOW long dost thou forget me, O lady, and dost not deliver m [...] in the day of my trouble? How long shall mine enemy triumph over me? With thy mighty power destroy him, &c. We magnify thee the finder and the author of grace, by whom the world is repaired," &c.
16. "PRES [...]R [...]E me, O lady, for in thee have I put my trust, &c. [...] thy breast [...], which with thy de [...]fying milk did nourish the Saviour," &c.
18. "I will love thee, O lady of heaven and earth; I will call upon thy [...] nations. Confess yourselves unto her, ye [...] in heart, and she shall strengthen [...] your enemies, &c. All ye [...]ster [...]rs honour her, for she is your helper and special advocate. Be thou our ref [...]eshing and rest, for thou art the marvellous foundation of all religion."
20. "HEAR us, O lady, in the day of trouble, &c. Cast us not away in the time of our death, but succour our soul when it forsaketh the body. Send an angel to meet it, that it may be d [...]sended from the enemies, &c. In torments and [...]ain let it feel thy comfort, and grant to it a place among the elect of God."
25. "TO thee, O lady, do I lift up my soul, &c. Let not the snares of death prevail against me, &c. Be thou my guide to the heavenly rest, and to the company of angels associate me."
26. "Judge thou me, O lady, for I am fallen from my innocency: but because I put my trust in thee, therefore I shall not fall," &c.
27. "O lady, let the brightness of thy face be my sight, and let the clearness of thy grace shine into my mind," &c.
28. "TO thee, O lady, &c. Have mercy upon me in the day of my trouble, and in the light of thy truth deliver me," &c.
31. "In thee, O lady, do I put my trust, let me not be confounded for ever; in thy glory receive me. Thou art my strength and my refuge, my consolation and protection, &c. Deliver me from the snare that they have said for me, because thou art my helper. Into thy hands I commend my spirit," &c.
34. "I will always praise our lady, &c. In perils, in adversity call upon her, and in time of need ye shall find succour. Let her conversation be an example unto you, and follow the virtue of her humility. Because therefore, O lady, thou wast humble and lowly, thou didst compel the word increate to take flesh of thee."
36. "The wicked man said, &c. Let him depart from his evil purpose; O mother of God, turn the countenance of God towards us: compel him to be merciful unto sinners. Blessed be thy power and dominion in heaven, and blessed be thy magnificence upon the earth."
45. "My heart is inditing a good mat [...], O lady, &c. By thy holiness let my sins be purged, by [...] integrity let me ob [...]ain incorruption," &c.
47. "Clap your hands all ye people &c. For she is the gate of life, the door of salvation, [...] of our [...], the hope of the penitent, the comfort of the sorrowful, the blessed peace of hearts and salvation. Have mercy upon me, O lady, have mercy upon me▪ for thou art the li [...]ht and hope of all that put their trust in thee."
51. "Have mercy upon me, O lady, which ar [...] call [...]d the mother of mercy, and in the bowels of thy great compassion cleanse me from mine iniquities."
54. "O lady, in thy name save me, and from mine unrighteousness deliver me," &c.
70. "Make haste, O lady, to help me, &c. Have mercy on thy servants, by whom thy name is [...]," &c.
[Page 609]71. "In thee lady, have I put my trust: let me not be con [...]ounded for ever, in thy mercy deliver me," &c.
79. "O lady, the Gentiles are come into the inheritance of God, whom thou didst join unto Christ by thy merits," &c.
89. "THOU that rul [...]st Israel, &c. The favour of life cometh from her, and all health floweth out of her heart," &c.
91. "WHOSO dwelleth in the help of the mother of God, shall dwell in the shadow of her protection, &c. Cry unto her in your dangers, and the scourge shall not come near your tabernacle. The fruit of grace shall be to him whoso tru [...]te [...]h in her, and the gate of paradise shall be open unto him."
95. "COME let us rejoice to our lady, &c. Receive our souls at our last end, and bring them into everlasting rest," &c.
105. "PRAI [...]E our lad [...], and call upon her name, &c. Everlasting salvation is in thy hand, O lady," &c.
110. "THE Lord said unto our lady, Sit here, my mother, on my right hand," &c.
114. "IN the passing of my soul out of this world, come and meet [...], O lady, and receive it, &c. Be to it a ladder to the kingdom of heaven, and a right way to the paradise of God," &c.
119. "THE whole earth is full of thy mercies, and therefore I will s [...]r [...]h out the way of the justifications, &c. I will [...] for ever to praise thee, O lady, when thou shalt teach [...] the justifications," &c.
125. "THEY that put their trust in thee, O mother of God, shall not be [...] o [...] the face of th [...] enemy," &c.
12 [...]. "Except [...] shall build the house of our heart, the [...] thereof shall not [...]."
1 [...]8. "BL [...]ED is every one that feareth our lady, and blessed [...] they that know to do her will," &c.
130. " [...] the deep I have called unto thee, O lady; O lady, hear my voice," &c.
132. "O lady, remember David, and all them that call upon thy name▪" &c.
134. " [...] and bless now our lady, all ye that put your trust in her holy name," &c."
136. "AT the floods of Bab [...]lon, &c. There is no prop [...]t [...]ion to be found without her," &c.
140. "DELIVER me, O lady, from all evil, and from the infernal enemy defend me," &c.
145. "OUR eyes look up and trust in thee. Do thou send us meat and food convenient, &c. My tongue shall speak thy praise, and shall bless thee for ever."
148. "PRAISE thou our lady, O Jerusalem, and glorify her also, O thou Sion: for she buildeth up thy walls, and blesseth thy children. Her grace maketh thee fat, and giveth peace unto thy coasts," &c.
I could recite other things of like blasphemy, following immediately after this psalter of our lady, in the seraphical doctor aforesaid, as these:
"BEHOLD my lady my Saviour, I will be bold in thee, and will not fear, &c. Because thou art my strength, &c. And art become my salvation," &c.
"REJOICE, O all mankind, because the Lord thy God hath given unto thee such a mediatrix," &c.
"I will confess to thee, O lady, because thou hast hid these things from the wise, and hast revealed them to the little ones."
"O thou wicked and peevish generation, acknowledge our lady thy Saviour. Is not she the mother that hath possessed thee, and in faith hath begotten thee?"
"O thou blessed, in thy hands is laid up our salvation," &c.
"TO thy name let every knee bend, in heaven and earth, and in hell."
"LIKE as an infant cannot live without the nurse, so ne [...]ther canst thou have salvation without our lady."
"Whoso will be saved, before all things he must needs hold this belief of our lady: which belief, unless every one shall hold perfect and sound, he shall perish without doubt for ever."
MOREOVER, after these so horrible things and intolerable to be heard, in the next place followeth the r [...]sary or garland of our lady, compiled by the said Bonaventure; wherein these words are to be read, as followeth:
"O mediatrix between God and man, the Lord hath worthily magnified thee, that thou only shouldst conceive his Son. Wherefore, O good Mary our mediatrix, mother of grace, and mother of mercy," &c.
[Page 610]AND moreover, within few lines we find these following words:
"THEREFORE, O our empress and lady most bountiful, by the authority of a mother command, command (I say) thy well beloved Son, that he will stir up our minds from the love of worldly things, to heavenly desires, &c.
ITEM, "O thou advocate of the miserable, the eyes of thy servant be directed to thee," &c.
TO these premises, I might also adjoin the following blasphemous words of the said Bonaventure in the said book.
"WHAT greater goodness can be, than that Christ is content to be captive upon the altar?"
WHEREUPON he speaketh in the person of Jeremy, saying,
"BEHOLD I am in your hands, do with me as you see good, &c. Where note, saith he, that when any duke or prince is taken prisoner for his subjects, he is not let go, before he pay some great sum of money for his ransom. Even so neither we ought to let Christ go out of our hands being our prisoner and captive, except he grant to us remission of our sins and his heavenly kingdom. The priest therefore lifteth up the body of Christ upon the altar, as though he said thus, Behold him whom the whole world is not able to comprehend, he is holden here our captive, wherefore let us hold him fast, and not let him go before we obtain of him our requests," &c.
IS not here good catholic stuff, (christian reader) think you? Compare, I beseech you, this doctrine with the doctrine of the apostles, which teach us that we are fully complete in Christ, and I will refer me to no better judge than to your own conscience. And now therefore if any man has been in doubt in times past of the doctrine and proceeding of the church of Rome, whether it be rightly charged with blind errors, with blasphemy intolerable, and idolatry abominable or not, here now he may be fully certified and resolved. For where was ever idolatry or blasphemy to be sound, if it be not here in this matrixs and psalter of our lady▪ If idolatry be to make an [...] to be worshipped as God, which is no god, what do we here but make an idol of our lady▪ [...] they call her) to be worshiped with no less dignity, glory▪ authority, revere [...] ▪ and service, thu [...] is the [...] God himself? [...] called our Lord, so she is called our Lady And if he be king, yet she is the queen of heaven. And though he have the name of God, yet she beareth so the title of the mother of God, that as mothers have the authority of their children, so she is willed to shew herself to be his mother, to cause him to grant our petitions. Finally, if he be our patron, yet she is our patroness. The commandment saith, "Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and him only shalt thou serve." And what worship or service can we give to God, more than we do ascribe unto her? and what benefit is to be asked at the hands of Christ our Saviour, which is not equally asked of her? to save our soule, to give us peace▪ to grant grace, to comfort the hopeless, to loose our captivity, to release oUr sins, to deliver from the fiend, to bring to heaven, &c. To her we pray, we cry, we weep, we sigh, we groan, we knock and kneel, to her we trust, and if we believe not also in our lady, we are no less than heretics.
FURTHERMORE, as Christ our only Lord and Saviour hath his church and congregation which profess his name, of whom we are called christians; so neither is she likewise without her chapels, her cloisters, her chapte [...] [...]. fraternities, and brotherhoods, which professing her name in like sort, are called our lady's brethren, or white friars, besides an innumerable sort of other patrons of churches, of whom every one hath his peculiar church and religion by himself; yet all these together be included under the general devotion of our lady their supreme patroness and governess.
NOW to proceed further to the other part of the commandment, which saith▪ " [...] only shalt thou serve." What service hath the Lord in all the church, but our lady also [...] him hath the like? her mass, her [...], her even-s [...]ng, her hours and compline, her [...], her anthems, her collects, her pri [...]er, her psalter, her holy days likewise, yea [...] to one. Finally, as the Lord hath his prayer called the Lord's prayer, so hath she her Ave Marys, yea ten A [...]es to one [...]: yea, and read further in the said Bonaventure, and you shall see her also to have her [...] Benedictus, her Magnificat, and [...] her Qui [...]nque volt.
I [...] the Lord our God had no [...] expressed unto us his [...], limiting unto us by [Page 611] express injunction what to believe, what to follow, and how to worship and serve him, and how to receive from him our salvation; but had left us to the imagination of our own inventions, every man to shift for himself after his own policy, then peradventure this way taken by the pope's church, to make friends and mediators between God and us, for reconciliation, remission, and salvation, might have some shadow of reason; but now God's word doth bind us, doth prescribe and limit us precisely in every point touching salvation, what to believe, and what to do, shewing us plainly that we cannot be saved but by the blood of his Son only, neither can be justified but by faith only in the same Christ his Son. Wherefore not to believe that which he hath promised, is infidelity, and to follow any other belief than he hath set us, is plain idolatry. Which two special errors most commonly do follow the doctrine of the Romish church, as not only in this primmer and psalter of our Lady aforesaid, but also in all their proceedings, teachings, and preachings, besides may well appear. For where the scripture doth perfectly promise and pronounce us to be justified through our faith in Christ, and willeth us to seek our salvation no where else, but only in the merits of Jesus; the institution of the church of Rome neither will receive what God hath freely given, (wherein standeth infidelity) neither yet will seek the same there where they should, but in the prayers of our Lady, St. John Baptist, St. Peter and St. Paul, St. Andrew, St. Nicholas, St. Thomas of Canterbury, and by the worthiness of the material cross▪ [...] such other unlawful means▪ which is no less [...]. And yet such books [...] among the catholics to be [...] and lawful books, [...] the others, wh [...]h [...] us the true way [...] christianity▪ in [...]. But of this to complain is [...]. Wherefore to p [...]ss from this [...] ▪ let us proceed [...] willing▪ in the course of [...] ▪
The [...] of THOMAS [...], WILLIAM [...] THOMAS O [...]BORNE, &c.
[...] was made before in the sto [...] of Thomas [...] six pris [...]ners besides, which were sent down with him to Essex the same time as he went to execution. Of these six prisoners, three were sent to be burnt, the other three to recant, and to do penance: of whom it followeth next to treat. The names of the six were these, Thomas Osmond, fuller, William Bamford, alias Butler, weaver, Thomas Osborne, fuller, Nicholas Chamberlain, weaver, Thomas Brodehill, weaver, Richard Web, weaver, being all of the town of Coxhall. All which men, next after the examinations of Thomas Haukes and Thomas Wats, were sent up to bishop Bonner to be examined, by the earl of Oxford and sir Philip Paris, knight, a letter also being sent with them, the copy whereof here followeth.
The Earl of OXFORD'S Letter to Bishop BONNER.
AFTER our hearty commendations unto your good lordship, this will be to advertise the same, that the constables of Co [...]ll within your diocese, have brought before us this day six persons dwelling in the town of Coxhall aforesaid, whose names do follow, to wit, Nicholas Chamberlain, weaver, John Wallet, fuller, Thomas Brodehill, weaver, Richard Web, weaver, William Bamford, alias Butler, weaver, and Thomas Osborne, fuller, for that they at the feast of Easter now last, have not obeyed the order of the holy catholic church in receiving of the sacraments, but obstinately refuse the same; besides of holding divers other opinions contrary to the faith of the said church. Wherefore we have thought it good to send the same persons unto your good lordship further to be ordered, as in such case shall appertain. Thus we commit your good lordship to the keeping of Almighty God. From [...]dingham, the first of May, 1555.
THE said prisoners being sent up the first of May, were brought before the said bishop the 17th of the said month, to be examined upon divers and sundry articles ministered and objected against them; whereunto they were compelled to answer▪ and to put their hands to the same: the copy of which their articles and answers, being all in one form and effect, here followeth.
The Copy of the ARTICLES objected against THOMAS O [...]MOND, WILLIAM BAMFORD, and NICHOLAS CHAMBERLAIN.
FIRST, That thou Thomas Osmond, fuller, wast and art of the parish of Coxhall, within [Page 612] the diocese of London, and thou hast not believed nor dost believe, that there is here in the earth one catholic and universal whole church, which doth hold and believe all the faith and religion of Christ, and all necessary articles and sacraments of the same.
2. ITEM, That thou hast not believed nor dost believe, that thou art necessarily bounden under the pain of the damnation of thy soul, to give full faith and credence unto the said catholic and universal church, and to the faith and religion of the same in all necessary points of the said faith and religion, without doubting or wavering in the said faith and religion, or in any part thereof.
3. ITEM, That thou hast not believed that the faith and religion, which both the church of Rome, Italy, Spain, England, France, Ireland, Scotland, and all other churches in Europe, being true members and parts of the said catholic and universal church, do believe and teach, is both agreeing with the faith and religion of Christ, and also is the very true faith and religion which all christian people ought to believe, observe, follow, and keep; but contrariwise, thou hast believed and dost believe, that that faith and religion, which the said church of Rome, and all the other churches aforesaid, have heretofore believed, and do believe, is false, erroneous, and naught, and in no wise ought to be believed, observed, kept, and followed of any christian person.
4. ITEM, That albeit it be true, that in sacrament of the altar there is in substance the very body and blood of our Saviour Christ under the forms of bread and wine; and albeit that it be so believed, taught and preached undoubtedly in the said church of Rome, and all other churches aforesaid, yet thou hast not so believed, nor dost so believe, but contrariwise, thou hast believed, and dost believe firmly and stedfastly, that there is not in the said sacrament of the altar, under the said forms of bread and wine, the very substance of Christ's body and blood, but that there is only the substance of material and common bread and wine, with the forms, thereof, and that the said material and common bread and wine are only the signs and tokens of Christ's body and blood, and are by faith received only for a remembrance of Christ's body and blood, and are by faith to be received only for a remembrance of Christ's passion and death, without any such substance of Christ's body and blood at all.
5. ITEM, That thou hast believed and taught, and hast openly spoke and defended, and so dost believe, think, maintain, and defend, that the very true receiving and eating of Christ's body and blood, is only to take material and common bread, and to break it and distribute it among the people, remembering thereby the passion and death of Christ only.
6. ITEM, That thou hast likewise believed, thought, and spoken, that the mass, now used in the realm of England, and other the churches aforesaid, is abominable and naught, and full of idolatry, and is of the ordinance of the pope, and not of the institution of Christ, and hath no goodness in it, saving the Gloria in Excelsis, the epistle and gospel, and therefore thou hast not, nor wilt come to be present at mass, nor receive the sacrament of the altar, nor any other sacrament of the church, as they are now used in the realm of England, &c.
7. ITEM, That thou hast in times past believed, and yet dost now believe, that auricular confession is not necessary to be made unto the priest, but is a thing superfluous, void, and naught, only to be made to God and to none other person. And likewise thou hast condemned as superfluous, vain, and unprofitable, all the ceremonies of the church, and the service of the same, and hast said that no service in the church ought to be said but in the English tongue, and if it be otherwise, it is unlawful and naught.
8. ITEM, That thou being notoriously and openly suspected for an heretic, and a person culpable in the prem [...]ses, wast of late called and brought before the earl of Oxford, and Mr. Philip Paris, and there wast charged with the said heresies, and wouldst not come to the church to be conf [...]ss [...]d, and receive the said sacrament as other christian people did, but utterly didst refuse to do the same, thou w [...]st by the said earl of Oxford, and Mr. Philip Paris, sent up by a constable unto m [...] bishop of [Page 613] London, and was by them denounced, detected, and put up to me as an heretic and misbelieving person.
9. ITEM, That thou hast known and believed, thou dost know and believe, or at least thou hast credibly heard reported, spoken, and said, that all and all manner of persons, which do teach, preach, or hold any thing concerning the sacraments of the church, or any of the articles of faith, otherwise than is found already discussed and determined by our mother the holy church, or doth call into doubt or question that thing which is already decided or determined by the church, or that willingly and wittingly do utter, openly or privily, any slanderous or blasphemous words concerning the said sacraments or any of them, or that do preach, teach, or keep any sect or kind of heresy against the wholsome doctrine of the church, and do wittingly, or obstinately defend the sect or kind of heresy, are by the canons of the whole and universal catholic church, and also by the ecclesiastical laws of this church of England, by their so doing, accursed with that curse, which doth separate them from the entry into the church, from the receiving of the sacraments, and from the company of faithful people, and are (in continuing in this said sect and heresy) to be pronounced, declared, and taken for heretics, and to be delivered to the secular power, and by the laws temporal of this realm of England, and the custom of the same, to be by the said secular power put to death, and burnt for this said sect and heresy.
10. ITEM, That thou by reason of the premises wast and art to be pronounced, taken, had, reputed, and judged for a manifest and open, wilful and obstinate heretic, for a wicked and cursed person, and to be punished accordingly for the same, according to the said canon laws, usages, and customs.
The ANSWERS of THOMAS O [...]MOND, WILLIAM BAMFORD, and NICHOLAS CHAMBERLAIN, to the aforesaid ARTICLES.
TO the first they answered and confessed the same to be true, except that they do believe that there is here in earth one catholic and whole church, and that the same church doth hold and believe, as is contained in this article.
TO the second they answer and believe the said article not to be true; for they say, that they have and do believe that they are necessarily bounden, under pain of damnation of their soul, to give full faith and credence unto the said catholic church, and to the faith and religion of the same, in all necessary points of the same faith and religion, without wavering or doubting in any part thereof.
TO the third they answer, That the church of Rome, and other churches mentioned in this article, be not true members and parts (as they be used in faith and religion) of the catholic church of Christ, and that the faith and religion used in the said churches, is not agreeable with the church of Christ, but is false and erroneous.
TO the fourth they answer and say, That howsoever the said churches of Rome and others of Christendom have and do believe touching the sacrament of the altar, yet they do believe that in the sacrament, under the forms of bread and wine, there is not the very substance of Christ's body and blood, but there is only the substance of material bread and wine, and that the same material bread and wine be only the signs and tokens of Christ's body and blood, and are to be received only for a remembrance of Christ's passion and death, without any substance of Christ's body and blood at all.
TO the fifth article they answer, That the true receiving and eating of Christ's body, according to Christ's institution, is to take, distribute, and eat material bread, and thereby to remember the passion and death of Christ, and so receive by faith (as they believe) Christ's body and blood, and not otherwise.
TO the sixth they answer, The same to be true in every part thereof, except that over and besides the Gloria in Excelsis, the epistle and gospel, which they believe to be good, they believe the pater-noster and creed used in the mass, to be also good.
TO the seventh they answer and confess, That auricular confession is not necessary to be made to [Page 614] the priest; nevertheless they think it is necessary to go to such a priest as is liable to give good counsel; and that for counsel only, and not otherwise. And as concerning the ceremonies of the church, they answer the same [...]o be vain and unprofitable. No service in the church ought to be said, but only in the English tongue.
TO the eighth they answer, and believe the same to be true in every part thereof, except that they do not believe that they be heretics, or suspected of heresy.
TO the ninth Osmond and Bamford answered, That they referred themselves to the said laws mentioned in that article; but Chamberlain made no answer at all to this article.
TO the tenth, the said Osmond and Bamford answered and said, That by reason of their belief before by them confessed, they are not to be reputed, taken, or adjudged for wilful and obstinate heretics, nor to be punished therefore, as is declared in that article. The other answered nothing
REMARKS upon the aforesaid ARTICLES.
THESE articles, in the same form and manner of words, are commonly objected to all others that follow after, with the same answers thereunto annexed. In which articles thou mayest note, reader, the crafty and subtle handling of these lawyers and registers, who so deceitfully frame their articles and positions, that unless a man do advisedly consider them, it is hard for a simple man to answer to them, but he shall be ensnared and entangled. So they paint their church with such a vis [...]ge of universal, holy, catholic, as it should seem, he that denieth Rome, denieth the holy church of Christ here on earth. Likewise in examining them, and especially the simple sort in the matter of the sacrament, to the material bread in the sacrament they put the word [only] very captiously and fraudulently, to take them at the worst advantage, making the people believe that they take the holy sacrament to be no better than only common bread: when they do not so, but make a difference between the same, both in the use, honour, and name thereof.
AGAIN, when the examinates hold only against the erroneous points of Romish religion, these bishops in their interrogatories give out the matter so generally, as though the said examinates in general spake against all the articles taught in Rome, Spain, England, France, Scotland, &c.
MOREOVER, concerning Latin [...]ervice, in such crafty form of words they propound their article, that it might appear to the people these men do deny any service to be lawful in any place, country, or language, but only in English.
AND as these articles are craftily, captiously, and deceitfully in form of words devised by the bishops and their notaries; so the answers again to the same be no less subtilly framed, and after the most odious manner put down in the name of the examinates, which being thus read unto them, without further advice they were constrained upon a sudden to subscribe the same with their hands. Whereby if any word escaped their hand, peradventure not considerately subscribed, there the papists took advantage against them, to defame them, and to bring them into hatred with the people.
THESE articles thus propounded and answered, they were dismissed till the afternoon. At which time they did again appear, and there were examined and persuaded by fair and flattering speeches, as well by the bishop as others his assistance, to recant and revoke their opinions, who notwithstanding remained constant and firm; and therefore, after the common usage of their ecclesiastical laws, were sent away again until the next day, being Saturday the 18th of May. Then in the forenoon, the bishop using his accustomed manner of proceeding, which he had used before, as well with them as with others, did likewise dismiss them, and at last in the afternoon did condemn them as heretics, and so delivered them to the sheriffs, in whose custody they remained till they were delivered to the sheriff of Essex, and by him were executed, Chamberlain at Colchester, the 14th of June; Thomas Osmond at Maningtree, and William Bamford, al [...]as But [...]er, at Harwich, the 15th of June.
CHAP. X. The Life, Acts, and Martyrdom of the Rev. Mr. JOHN BRADFORD, who, together with Mr. JOHN LEAP, was burned in Smithfield, in the bloody Reign of Queen MARY I.
The Life and Acts of the Rev. Mr. JOHN BRADFORD.
MR. John Bradford was born at Manchester in Lancashire; his parents brought him up in learning from his infancy, until he attained such knowledge in the Latin tongue, and skill in writing that he was able to gain his own living in some honest condition. Then he became servant to sir John Harrington, knight, who in the great affair of king Henry VIII▪ and Edward VI. which he had in hand when he was treasurer of the king's camps and buildings, at divers times in Boulognois, had such experience of Mr. Bradford's activity in writing, his expertness in the art of auditors, as also his faithful trustiness, that not only in those affairs, but in many others of his private business, he trusted Mr. Bradford before others.
MR. Bradford continued several years in an honest and thriving way, after the course of this world, if his mind could have so liked, or had been given to the world as many others are. But the Lord which had elected him unto a better function, and pre-ordained him to preach the gospel of Christ, called this chosen servant to the understanding and partaking of the same gospel. In which call he was so truly taug [...]t▪ that forthwith his effectual call was perceived by the fruits. For then he forsook his worldly affairs and forwardness in worldly wealth, and after a just account given to his master of all his doings, he departed from him, and with marvellous favour to further the kingdom of God by the ministry of his holy word, he gave himself wholly to the study of the holy scriptures. And the better to accomplish his design, he departed from the Temple at London, and went to the university of Cambridge, to learn by God's law how to further the building of the Lord's temple. In Cambridge his diligence in stu [...]y, his prosi [...]ing in knowledge, and pious conversation, so pleased all men, that within a few years after he had been there, the university gave him the degree of master of arts.
IMMEDIATELY after, the master and fellows of Pembroke Hall, gave him a fellowship in their college with them: and that good man, Martin Bucer, so liked him, that he held him not only most dear unto him▪ but also oftentimes exhorted him to bestow his talent in preaching. To which Mr. Bradford always answered, that he was unable to serve in that office through want of learning. To which Bucer was wont to reply, saying, If thou hast not fine wheat bread, yet give the poor people barley bread, or whatsoever else the Lord hath committed unto thee. And while Mr. Bradford was thus persuaded to enter into the ministry, Dr. Ridley, that worthy bishop of London, and glorious martyr of Christ, according to the order that then was in the church of England, called him to take the degree of a deacon. Which order, because it was not without some abuse, as to which Mr. Bradford would not consent, and the bishop perceiving that he was willing to enter into the ministry, was content to ordain him a deacon without any abuse, even as he desired. This being done, he obtained for him a licence to preach, and gave him a prebend in his cathedral church of St. Paul's.
IN this preaching office Mr. Bradford diligently laboured for the space of three years. Sharply he reproved sin, sweetly he preached Christ crucified, ably he disproved heresies and errors, earnestly he persuaded to godly life. After the death of blessed king Edward VI. when queen Mary had gotten the crown, Mr. Bradford still continued diligent in preaching, till he was unjustly dep [...]ed of both his office and liberty by the queen and her council. To the doing whereof, because they had no just cause, they took occasion to add this injury for such an act, as among Turks and Infide [...] would have been rewarded [Page 616] with thankfulness, and with great favour accepted, as indeed it did no less deserve.
THE fact was this: The 13th of August, in the first year of the reign of queen Mary, Mr. Bourne, then bishop of Bath, made a seditious sermon at Paul's Cross in London, as partly is declared before, to set popery abroad in such sort, that it moved the people to great indignation, being almost ready to pull him out of the pulpit. Neither could the reverence of the place, nor the presence of Bishop Bonner, who was then his master, nor yet the command of the mayor of London, whom the people ought to have obeyed, stay their rage▪ but the more they spake, the more the people were incensed. At length, Mr. Bourne seeing the people in such a mood, and himself in such peril, (whereof he was sufficiently warned by the hurling of a drawn dagger at him as he stood in the pulpit) and that he was hindred from ending his sermon, fearing lest (against his will) he should there end his wretched life, desired Mr. Bradford, who stood in the pulpit behind him, to come forth, and to stand in his place and speak to the people. Good Mr. Bradford at his request was content, and there spake to the people of godly and quiet obedience. Whom as soon as the people heard begin to speak unto them, they were so glad, that they gave a great shout, and cried, Bradford, Bradford, God save thy life, Bradford: well declaring not only what affection they bare unto him, but also what regard they gave unto his words. For after he had begun to preach a little to them, and to exhort them unto quietness and patience, the tumult soon ceased, and in the end each man departed quietly to his own house. Yet in the mean season, (for it was a long time before so great a multitude could all depart) Mr. Bourne thought▪ and truly, himself not full sure of his life till he were safely housed, notwithstanding that the mayor and sheriffs of London were there at hand to help him: wherefore he desired Mr. Bradford not to depart from him till he were in safety; which Mr. Bradford according to his promise performed. For while the mayor and sheriffs did lead Mr. Bourne to the school-master's house, which is next to the pulpit▪ Mr. Bradford went at his back, shadowing him from the people with his gown, and so set him safe.
LET the reader now consider the peril of Mr. Bourne, the charity of Mr. Bradford, and the headiness of the multitude, and also the grudging minds of some, who yet still there remained behind, greatly grieved in their minds, to see that so good a man should save the life of such a popish priest, so impudently and openly railing▪ against king Edward. Among whom one gentleman said these words: "Ah, Bradford, Bradford, thou sa [...]est him that will burn thee. I give thee his life: if it were not for thee, I would, I [...] thee, run him through with my sword." Thus Bourne for that time, through Bradford's means, escaped bodily death: but God hath his judgment to be shewed in the time appointed.
THE same Sunday in the afternoon, Mr. Bradford preached at Bow church in Cheapside, and [...] proved the people sharply for their seditious misdemeanor. After this, he abode still in London with an innocent conscience, to try what would come of his just doing.
WITHIN three days after, he was sent for to the Tower of London, where the queen then was, to appear before the council. There was he charged with this act of saving of Bourne, which act they there called seditious, and also objected against him for preaching, and so by them he was committed first to the Tower, then unto other prisons, out of which neither his innocency, piety, nor charitable dealing could purchase to him liberty of body, till by death (which he suffered for Christ's cause) he obtained the heavenly liberty, of which neither pope nor papist shall ever deprive him. From the Tower he came to the King's-Bench in Southwark; and after his condemnation, he was sent to the Compter in the Poultry in London: in which two places, for the time he did remain prisoner, he preached twice a-day continually, unless sickness hindred him; where also the sacrament was often administered; and through his means (the keepers so well did bear with him) such resort of good folks were daily at his lecture, and the administration of the sacrament, that commonly his chamber was well nigh filled therewith. Preaching, reading, and praying, was all his whole life. He did not eat above one meal a day, which was but very little when he took it; and his continual study was upon [Page 617] his knees. In the midst of dinner he used [...] to muse with himself, having his h [...]t over his eyes, from whence came commonly plenty of [...] ▪ Very gentle he was to man and child, and in so good credit with his keeper, that at his desire in an evening (being prisoner in the King's-Bench, Southwark) he had licen [...], upon his promise to return again that night, to go into London without any keeper, to visit one that was sick, lying by the Stillyard. Neither did he fail his promise, but returned to his prison again, [...] preventing his hour, than breaking his fidelity: so constant was he in word and in deed.
HE was somewhat tall and slender of body, of a faint sanguine colour, with a dark brown beard. He slept not commonly above four hours in the night; and in his bed, till sleep came, his book went not out of his hand. His chief recreation was in no gaming or other pastime, but only in honest company, and comely talk, wherein he would spend a little time after dinner, at the table, and so to prayer and his book again. He counted that hour not well spent, wherein he did not some good, either with his pen, study, or in exhorting of others, &c. He was not sparing of his purse, but would liberally give of what he had to his fellow-prisoners. And commonly once a week he visited the thieves, pick-pockets, and such others that were with him in prison where he lay on the other side, unto whom he would give pious exhortation, to learn the amendment of their lives by their trouble, and after that so done, distribute among them some portion of money to their comfort.
WHILE he was in the King's-bench, and Mr. Saunder's in the Marshalsea, both prisoners, on the backside of these two prisons they met many times, and conferred together when they would: so mercifully did the Lord work for them, even in the midst of their trouble; and the said Bradford was so trusted by his keeper, and had such liberty in the backside, that there was no day, but that he might have easily have escaped away, if he would; but the Lord had another work to do for him. In the summer time, while he was in the King's-bench, he had liberty of his keeper to ride into Oxfordshire, to a merchant's house of his acquaintance, and horse and all things prepared for him for that journey, and the party in readiness that should ride with him: but God prevented him by sickness that he went not at all.
ONE of his old friends and acquaintance came unto him whilst he was a prisoner, and asked him, if he sued to get him out, what then he would do, or whither he would go? Unto whom he made answer, at not caring whether he went out or no: but if he did, he said he would marry, and abide still in England secretly, teaching the people as the time would suffer him, and occupy himself that way. He was had in so great reverence and admiration with all good men, that a multitude, which never knew him but by fame, greatly lamented his death: yea, and a number also of the papists themselves wished heartily his life. There were few days in which he was thought not to spend some tears before he went to bed, neither was there ever any prisoner with him, but greatly profited by his company.
ONE circumstance, which ought not to be omitted, is the following. Bishop Farrar being prisoner in the King's-bench, as before you have heard, was persuaded by the papists in the end of Lent, to receive the sacrament at Easter in one kind, who after much persuasion yielded to them, and promised so to do. Then, (so it happened by God's providence) the Easter-eve, the day before he should have done it, Mr. Bradford was brought prisoner to the King's-Bench, where the Lord making him his instrument, Mr. Bradford only was the means that the said bishop Farrar revoked his promise and word, and would never after yield to be spotted with that p [...]pistical pitch; so effectually the Lord wrought by this worthy servant of his.
THE night before he was had to Newgate, which was the Saturday night, he was sore troubled divers times in his sleep by dreams, how the chain for his burning was brought to the Compter-gate, and how the next day being Sunday he should be had to Newgate, and on the Monday after burned in Smithfield, as indeed came to pass accordingly, as shall hereafter be shewed. Now he being vexed oftentimes in this sort with these dreams, about three o'clock in the morning he awaked him that lay with him, and told him his unquiet [...]eep, and [Page 618] what he was troubled withal. Then after a little talk, Mr. Bradford rose out of the bed, and gave himself to his old exercise of reading and praying, as always he had used before: and at dinner according to his accustomed manner he did eat his meat, and was very merry, no body being with him from morning till night but he that lay with him, with whom he had many times on that day godly discourse of death, of the kingdom of heaven, and of the ripeness of sin in that time.
IN the afternoon as they two walked together in the keeper's chamber, suddenly the keeper's wife came up as one half amazed, and seeming much troubled, being almost out of breath, said, Oh Mr. Bradford, I come to bring you heavy news. What is that? said he. To-morrow, said she, you must be burned; and your chain is now a-buying, and you must soon go to Newgate. With that Mr. Bradford put off his cap, and lifting up his eyes to heaven, said, I thank God for it; I have looked for the same a long time, and therefore it cometh not now to me suddenly, but as a thing waited for every day and hour; the Lord make me worthy thereof! And so thanking her for her kindness, departed up into his chamber, where he continued in private prayer for some time; which done, he called to his friend in the same chamber, and took divers writings and papers, and shewed him his mind in those things what he would have done; and after they had thus spent the afternoon, at night half a dozen of his friends came to him, with whom he spent all the evening in prayer and other good exercises.
A little before he went out of the Compter, he made a notable prayer of his farewel, with such plenty of tears, and abundant spirit of prayer, that it ravished the minds of the hearers. Also when he shifted himself with a clean shirt that was made for his burning (by Mr Walter Marlar's wife, who was a good nurse to him) he made such a prayer of the wedding garment, that some of those that were present were struck with admiration, so that their eyes were as thoroughly occupied in looking on him, as their ears gave place to hear his prayer. At his departing out of his chamber, he made likewise a prayer, and give money to every servant and officer in the house, with exhortation to them to fear and serve God, continually labouring to eschew all manner of evil. Then being beneath in the court, all [...] prisoners cried out to him and bade him farewel, a [...] the rest of the house had done before with weeping eyes.
THE time they carried him to Newgate was about 11 or 12 o'clock at night, when it was thought none would be stirring abroad; and yet, contrary to their expectation, there was in Cheapside and other places (between the Compter and Newgate) a great multitude of people that came to see him, who most gently bade him farewel, praying for him with most lamentable and pitiful tears; and he again as gently bade them farewel, praying most heartily for them and their welfare. Now whether it were a command from the queen and her council, or from Bonner and his adherents, or whether it were merrily devised by the lord mayor, aldermen, and sheriffs of London, I cannot tell; but a great [...] there was over night about the city by several, that Mr. Bradford should be burnt the next day in Smithfield, by four o'clock in the morning, before it should be greatly known to any. In which rumour many heads had divers minds; some thinking the fear of the people to be the cause thereof: others thought, that it was because the papists judged his death would convert many to the truth, and give a great overthrow to their kingdom. So some thought one thing, and some another, that no just conjecture of the cause could be known that ever I heard yet. But this was certain, the people prevented the device suspected: for the next day, at the said hour of four o'clock in the morning, there was such a multitude of men and women, that many being in admiration thereat, thought it was not possible that they could have notice of his death, being so great a number in such short time, unless it were by the singular providence of Almighty God.
WELL, this took no effect as the people thought, for it was nine o'clock in the morning before Mr. Bradford was brought into Smithfield; who, in going from Newgate thitherward, espied a friend of his whom he loved, standing on one side of the way, unto whom he reached his hand over the people, and plucked him to him, and delivered to him from his head his velvet night cap, and also his handkerchief, with other things. And after a little private [Page 619] talk with him, they parted, when immediately came to him a brother in law of his, called Roger Beswick, who as soon as he had taken the said Mr. Bradford by the hand, one of the sheriffs of London, Mr. Woodrofe, came with his staff and brake the said Roger Beswick's head, that the blood ran about his shoulders. Which sight Mr. Bradford beholding with grief, bade his brother farewel, desiring him to commend him to his mother, and the rest of his friends, and speedily to go to some surgeon; so they parting, had little or no talk together. Then was he led forth to Smithfield, with a great company of armed men to guard him thither, as the like was not seen at any man's burning: for in every corner of Smithfield there were some, besides those that stood about the stake. Mr. Bradford being come to the place, fell flat to the ground, secretly making his prayers to Almighty God. Then rising again, and putting off his clothes unto his shirt, he went to the st [...]ke, and there suffered with a young man of twenty years of age, joyfully and constantly, whose name was John Leaf. Concerning the manner and order of whose burning, more shall be said (God willing) hereafter. In the mean time we will shew forth the sundry examinations, conflicts, and conferences between Mr. Bradford and his adversaries during his imprisonment, which was in all two years l [...]cking one month and a half. Which examinations here follow.
IT was a little above declared, that John Bradford, within three days after the sermon of Mr. Bourne, was by order of the council committed to the Tower, where he remained from the month of August, 1553, to the 22d of January, 1555, upon which day he was called out to examination before Stephen, bishop of Winchester, and other commissioners. The effect of which examination and com [...]munication which passed between him and them, proceeded in manner as followeth.
The First Examination of Mr. JOHN BRADFORD before the LORD CHANCELLOR, and others of the Council.
AFTER the lord chancellor, and the rest of the queen's council in commission with him, had ended their talk with Farrar, late bishop of St. David's, the under-marshal of the King's-Bench was commanded to bring in John Bradford; who being come into the presence of the council sitting at a table, kneeled down on his knee; but the lord chancellor immediately commanded him to stand up, and so he did.
WHEN he was risen, the lord chancellor spake thus to him in effect: That he had been a long time justly imprisoned for his seditious behaviour at Paul's-cross, the 13th of August, in the year 1553, for his false preaching and arrogancy, taking upon him to preach without authority. But now, said he, the time of mercy is come, and therefore the queen's highness, minding to offer unto you mercy, hath by us sent for you, to declare and give the same, if so be you will with us return: and if you will do as we have done, you shall find as we have found, I warrant you. This was the sum of his words, and in manner the same words which he spake.
TO these words Mr. John Bradford spake (after reverent obeisance made) in this manner: My lord and lords all, I confess that I have been long imprisoned, and (with humble reverence be it spoken) unjustly, for that I did nothing seditiously, falsely, or arrogantly, in word or fact, by preaching or otherwise, but rather sought truth, peace, and all godly quietness, as an obedient and faithful subject, both in going about to save the bishop of Bath now, then Mr. Bourne, the preacher at the cross, and in preaching for quietness accordingly.
AT these words, or rather before he had fully finished, the said lord chancellor something snuffed, and declared it to be a lye: for, said he, the fact was seditious, as you my lord of London can bear witness.
You say true, my lord, I saw him with my own eyes, when he took upon him to rule and lead the people impudently, thereby declaring that he was the author of the sedition.
My lords, notwithstanding my lord bishop's seeing and saying, yet the truth I have told, as one day the Lord God Almighty shall reveal to all the world, when we shall all come to appear before him: in the mean season, because I cannot be believed by you, I must and am ready to suffer, as now [Page 620] your sayings be; wh [...]oever God shall license you to do unto me.
I know thou hast a glorious tongue, and goodly shews thou makest; but all is lies thou speakest: And again, I have not forgot how stubborn thou wast when thou wast before us in the Tower, whereupon thou wast committed to prison concerning religion▪ I have not forgotten thy behaviour and talk, for which cause thou hast been kept in prison, as one that would have done more hurt than I will speak of.
My lord, as I said, I say again, that I stand as before you, so before God, and one day we shall all stand before him: the truth then will be the truth, though now ye will not so take it. Yea, my lord, I dare say, that my lord of Bath, Mr. Bourne, will witness with me, that I sought his safeguard with the peril of mine own life, I thank God therefore.
That is not true: for I myself did see thee take upon thee too much.
No, I took nothing upon me undesired, and that of Mr. Bourne himself, as, if he were present, I dare say he would affirm. For he desired me both to help him, to pacify the people, and also not to leave him till he was in safety. And as for my behaviour in the Tower, and talk before your honours, if I did or said any thing that did not beseem me, if your lordships would tell me wherein it was, I should and would presently make you answer.
Well, to leave this matter: how say'st thou now? wilt thou return again, and do as we have, and thou shalt receive the queen's mercy and pardon.
My lord, I desire mercy with God's mercy, but mercy with God's wrath, God keep me from: although (I thank God therefore) my conscience doth not accuse, that I did speak any thing why I should need to receive the queen's mercy or pardon. For all that ever I did or spake, was both agreeable to God's laws, and the laws of the realm at that present, and did tend much to quietness.
Well, if thou make this babbling rolling in thy eloquent tongue, and yet being altogether ignorant and vain-glorious, and wilt not receive mercy offered to thee, know for truth that the queen is minded to make a riddance of all such as thou art.
The Lord before whom I stand, as well as before you, knoweth what vain-glory I have sought, and seek in this behalf: his mercy I desire, and also would be glad of the queen's favour, to live as a subject without a clog of conscience. But otherwise the Lord's mercy is better to me than life. And I know to whom I have committed my life, even into his hands which will keep it, so that no man may take it away before it be his pleasure. There are twelve hours in the day, and as long as they last, so long shall no man have power thereon. Therefore his good will be done; life in his displeasure is worse than death, and death with his true favour, is true life.
I know well enough, that we shall have glorious talk enough of thee: be sure, that as thou hast deceived the people with false and devilish doctrine, so shalt thou receive.
I have not deceived the people, nor taught any other doctrine, than by God's grace I am, and hope shall be ready to confirm with my blood. And as for the devilishness and falseness in the doctrine, I would be sorry you could so prove it.
Why, tell me, what say you by the ministration of the communion, as now you know it is?
My lord, here I must desire of your lordship and of all your honours a question, before I dare make you an answer to any interrogatory or question, wherewith you now begin. I have been six times sworn that I shall in no case consent to the practising of any jurisdiction, or any authority on the bishop of Rome's behalf within this realm of England. Now, before God▪ I humbly pray your honours to tell me whether you ask me this question by his authority, or no? If you do, I dare not, nor may answer you any thing in his authority, [Page 621] which you shall demand of me, except I would be forsworn▪ which God forbid,
Hast thou been sworn six times? what office hast thou borne?
I was thrice sworn in Cambridge, when I was admitted master of arts▪ when I was admitted fellow of Pembroke-hall, and when I was there, the visitors came thither, and sware tho university Again, I was sworn w [...]en I entered into the ministry, when I had a prebend given me, and when I was sworn to serve the king a little before his death.
Tush, Herod's oaths a man should make no conscience at.
But, my lord, these were no Herod's oaths, no unlawful oaths, but oaths according to God's word, as you yourself have well affirmed in your book, "Of true obedience."
My lords,
I never knew wherefore this man was in prison before now: but I see well that it had not been good that this man had been abroad: what the cause was that he was put in prison, I know not: but I now well know that not without a cause he was, and is to be kept in prison.
Yea, it was reported this parliament time by the earl of Derby, that he hath done more hurt by letters, and exhorting those that have come to him in religion, than ever he did abroad by preaching. In his letters he curseth all that teach any false doctrine, (for so he calleth that which is not according to that he taught) and most heartily exhorteth them to whom he writeth to continue still in that they have received by him, and such like as he is. All which words several of the council affirmed. Whereunto the said Mr. Bourne added, saying, How say you, sir, have you not thus seditiously written and exhorted the people?
I have not written, nor spoken any thing seditiously, neither (I thank God therefore) have I admitted any seditious thought▪ no [...] tru [...]t ever shall do.
Yea, thou hast written letters.
Why speakest thou not? Hast thou not written as he saith?
What I have written, I have written.
Lord God, what an arrogant and stubborn boy is this, that thus stoutly and da [...]yingly behaveth himself before the queen's council! Whereat one looked upon another with disdainful countenances.
My lords and masters, the Lord God which is, and will be judge of us all, knoweth, that as I am certain I stand now before his Majesty, so with reverence in his fight I stand before you▪ and unto you accordingly in words and gesture I desire to behave myself. If you otherwise take it, I doubt not but God in his time will reveal it▪ in the mean season, I shall suffer with all due obedience your sayings and doings too, I hope.
These be gay and glorious words of reverence, but as in all other things, so herein also thou doest nothing but lye.
Well, I would God the author of truth, and abhorrer of lies, would pull my tongue out of my head before you all, and shew a terrible judgement on me here present, if I have purposed, or do purpose to lye before you, whatsoever you shall ask me.
Why then dost thou not answer? Hast thou written such letters as here are objected against thee?
As I said, my lord, what I have written. I have written: I stand now before you, which either can lay my letters to my charge, or no: if you can lay any thing to my charge that I have written, if I deny it, I am then a liar.
We shall never have done with thee, [Page 622] I perceive now: be short, be short, wilt thou have mercy?
I pray God give me his mercy, and if therewith you will extend your's, I will not refuse it, but otherwise I will have none.
HERE now was much ado, one speaking this, and another that of his arrogancy, in refusing the queen's pardon, which she so lovingly did offer unto him; whereto Mr. Bradford answered thus:
MY lords, if I may live as a quiet subject without clog of conscience, I shall heartily thank you for your pardon; if otherwise I behave myself, then I am in danger of the law: in the mean season I ask no more than the benefit of a subject till I be convicted of transgression. If I cannot have this, as hitherto I have not had, God's good will be done.
UPON these words my lord chancellor began a long process of the false doctrine wherewith the people were deceived in the days of king Edward, and so turned the end of his talk to Bradford, saying, How say'st thou?
My lord, the doctrine taught in king Edward's days was God's pure religion: which as I then believed, so do I now more believe it than ever I did, and therein I am more confirmed, and ready to declare it by God's grace even as he will, to the world, than I was when I first came into prison.
What religion mean you in king Edward's days? What year of his reign.
Forsooth, even the same year, my lord, that the king died, and I was a preacher. Here wrote secretary Bourne I know not what.
NOW after a little pausing, my lord chancellor began again to declare, that the doctrine taught in king Edward's days was heresy, using for probation and demonstration thereof, no scripture, nor reason, but this; that it ended with treason and rebellion, so that (said he) the very end were enough to p [...]ove that doctrine to be naught.
Ah my lord, that you could enter into God's sanctuary, and mark the end of this present doctrine that you now so magnify!
What meanest thou by that? I am of opinion we shall have a snatch of rebellion even now.
My lord, I mean no such end you would gather: I mean an end which no man seeth, but such as enter into God's sanctuary. If a man look on present things, he will soon deceive himself.
HERE my lord chancellor again offered mercy, and Bradford answered as before: Mercy with God's mercy should be welcome, but otherwise he would have none. Whereupon the lord chancellor rang a little bell, to call in some body: for there were few present besides those before named, and the bishop of Worcester. Now when one was come in; it is best, said Mr. secretary Bourne, that you give the keeper a charge of this fellow. So the under marshal was called in.
You shall take this man to you, and keep him close without conference with any man, but by your knowledge, and suffer him not to write any letters, &c. for he is of another manner of charge to you now than he was before. And so they departed. Bradford looking as chearfully as any man [...] do, declaring the [...]eby even a desire to give his life for the co [...]firmation of his faith and doctrine.
The SECOND EXAMINATION of the Rev. Mr. JOHN BRADFORD, in St. MARY [...] CHURCH, before the Lord Chancellor, and other Bishop's▪ January 29, 1555.
AFTER the excommunication of Mr. John Rogers, Mr. John Bardford was called in, and standing before the lord chancellor and other bishops, the said lord chancellor spake thus in eff [...]ct.
Whereas before the 2 [...]d of January the said Bradford was called before th [...]
and they offered unto him the queen's [Page 623] pardon, although he had contemned the same; and further said, that he would stiffly and stoutly maintain and defend the erroneous doctrine taught in the days of king Edward VI. yet in consideration that the queen's highness was wonderfully merciful, they thought good to offer the same mercy again, b [...]fore it was too late: therefore advise you well, said he, there is yet space and grace before we so proceed, that you be committed to the secular power, as we must, and will do, if you will not follow the example of Mr. Barlow, and Mr. Cardmaker, whom he there commended, adding many arguments to induce the said Mr. Bradford to yield to the religion then set forth.
AFTER the lord chancellor's long talk, Mr. Bradford began to speak in this manner: My lord, and my lords all, as I now stand in your sight before you, so I humbly beseech your honours to consider, that you sit in the seat of the Lord, who (as David doth witness) is in the congregation of judges, and sitteth in the midst of them judging: and as you would have your place to be by us taken as God's place, so demonstrate yourselves to follow him in your sitting; that is, seek no guiltless blood, neither hunt by questions to bring into a snare them which are out of the same. At this present I stand before you, guilty or guiltless, then proceed and give sentence accordingly: if guiltless, then give me the benefit of a subject, which hitherto I could not [...]ave.
[...] the lord chancellor replied, and said, that the said Bradford began with a true sentence, That the Lord is in the midst of them that judge. But, said he, this and all thy gesture declareth hypocrisy and vain glory. And further he endeavoured to [...] himself, that he sought not guiltless blood, and so began a long process how that Bradford's [...] at St Paul's Cross was persumptuous and arrogant▪ and declared a taking upon him to lead the p [...]ople, which could not but turn to much, [...] that thou
[...] story and stout in religion at that present [...] which as thou wert then committed to priso [...], so [...] thou hast been kept in prison, where [...] letters to the great hurt of the [...] as was credibly declared by t [...]e [...] o [...] D [...]by in the parliament-house. And to this he added, that the said Mr. Bradford, did stubbornly behave himself the last time he was before them: and therefore not for any other thing now I demand of thee, said he, but of and for thy doctrine and religion.
My lord, where you accuse me of hypocrisy and vain-glory, I must and will leave it to the Lord's declaration, who will open your's and my truth and hearty meanings: in the mean season, I will content myself with the testimony of my own conscience, which if it yield to hypocrisy, could not but have God to be my foe also; and so both God and man were against me. And as for my fact at St. Paul's Cross, and behaviour before you at the Tower, I doubt not but God will reveal it to my comfort. For if over I did any thing which God used to public benefit, I think that my deed was one, and yet for it I have been and am kept a long time in prison. And as for letters and religion, I answer as I did the last time I was before you.
There didst thou say stubbornly and saucily, that thou wouldst manly maintain the erroneous doctrine in king Edward's days.
My lord, I said the last time I was before you, that I had six times taken an oath, that I should never consent to the practising of any jurisdiction on the bishop of Rome's behalf, and therefore I durst not answer to any thing that should be so demanded, lest I should be forsworn, which God forbid. Howbeit, saving my oath, I said I was more confirmed in the doctrine set forth publicly in the days of king Edward, than ever I was before I was put in prison: and so I thought I should be, and yet think still I shall be found more ready to give my life as God will, for the confirmation of the same.
I remember well that thou madest much ado about needless matter, as though the oath against the bishop of Rome were so great a matter. So others have done before thee, but yet not in such sort as thou hast done: for thou pretendest a conscience in it, which is nothing else but more [...]ypocrisy.
My conscience is known to the Lord: and whether I deal herein hypocritically or no, he knoweth. As therefore I said then, my lord, so I say again now▪ That for fear lest I should be perjured, I dare not make answer to any thing you shall demand of me, if my answering should consent to the confirming or practising of any jurisdiction for the bishop of Rome here in England.
Why didst thou begin to tell that we are Gods, and sit in God's place, and now wilt thou not make us an answer?
My lord, I said, you would have your place taken of us now, as God's place: and therefore I brought forth that piece of scripture, that you might the more be admonished to follow God and his ways at this present, who seeth us all, and well perceiveth whether of conscience I pretend this matter of the oath or not.
No, all men may well see thy hypocrisy: for if for thine oath's sake, thou didst not answer, then wouldst thou not have spoken as thou didst, and have answered me at the first: but now men well perceive, that this is but a startinghole to hide thyself in, because thou darest not answer, and so wouldst escape, blinding the simple people's eyes, as though of conscience you did all you do.
That which I spake at the first was not a reply or an answer to what you spake to me: and therefore I needed not to lay to me mine oath. For I thought you would have [...] weighed what I did speak, than you did: but when I perceived you did not consider it, but came to ask matter, whereto by answering I should consent to the practising of jurisdiction on the bishop of Rome's behalf here in England, and so be forsworn; then of conscience and simplicity I spake as I do yet again speak, that I dare not for conscience sake answer you. And therefore I seek no startingholes, nor go about to blind the people, as God knoweth. For if you of your honours shall tell me, that you do not ask me any thing, whereby mine answering should consent to the practising of the bishop of Rome's jurisdiction, ask me wherein you will, and you shall hear that I will answer you as flatly as ever any did that came before you. I am not afraid of death, I thank God; for I look, and have looked for nothing else at your hands a long time: but I am afraid when death cometh, I should have matter to trouble my conscience by the guiltiness of perjury, and therefore I do answer as I do.
These are gay glorious words, full of hypocrisy and vain-glory, and yet dost thou not know that I sit here as bishop of Winchester in mine own diocese, and therefore may do this which I do, and more too?
My lord, give me leave to ask you this question, that my conscience may be out of doubt in this matter. Tell me here before God, all this audience being witness, that you demand of me nothing whereby mine answering should consent [...] and confirm the practice of jurisdiction for the bishop of Rome here in England, and then your honour shall hear me give as flat and plain answers briefly, to whatsoever you shall demand of me, as ever any did.
HERE the lord chancellor was greatly offended, and said that truly the bishop of Rome's authority needed no confirmation of Mr. Bradford's answering, nor any such as he was, and turred his discourse to the people, saying, that Mr. Bradford followed crafty covetous merchants, which because the [...] [...]ould lend [...]o money to their neighbours when they were in need, would say that they had often sworn, that [...] would never lend any more money, because their debtors had so often [...]eceived them. Even [...] [...]hou, said he to Mr. Bradford, dost at this present, to cast a mist in the people's eyes, to blear them with an heresy, (which is greater and more hurtful to the common-wealth than the other is) pretend thy oath, whereby the people might make a conscience, whereas they should not. Why speakest thou not?
My lord, as I said, I say aga [...], I dare not answer you for fear of perjury, from which God defend me, or else I could tell you that there is a difference between oaths. Some are according to [Page 625] faith and charity, as the oath against the bishop of Rome; and some against faith and charity; as this, to deny by oath my help to my brother in his need.
HERE my lord chancellor again was much offended, still saying that Bradford durst not answer, and further endeavoured to prove that the oath against the bishop of Rome was against charity.
BUT Bradford answered, that howsoever his honour took him, yet he was assur [...] of his meaning, that no fear but the fear of perjury made him unwilling to answer: for as for death, my lord, said he, as I know there are twelve hours in the day, so with the Lord my time is appointed. And when it shall be his good time, then I shall depart hence: but in the mean season I am safe enough, though all the people had sworn my death. Into his hands have I committed it, and do, his good will be done. And saving mine oath, I will answer you in chis behalf, that the oath against the bishop of Rome was not, nor is against charity.
How prove you that?
Forsooth, I prove it thus:
NOTHING is against charity, which is with God's word, and not against it.
THE oath against the bishop of Rome's authority in England, is with God's word, and is not against it.
ERGO, The oath against the bishop of Rome's authority in England, is not against charity.
Is it against God's word, that a man should take a king to be supreme head of the church in this realm?
No, saving still mine oath, it is not against God's word, but with it, being taken in such sense as it may well be taken: that is, attributing to the king's power, the sovereignty in all his dominion.
I pray you, where [...]nd you that?
I find it in many places, but especially in the 13th chap. of the Romans, where St. [...] exhorteth "every soul to be subj [...]t as the higher powers:" but what power? "The power verily which beareth the sword; which is not the spiri [...]al, but the temporal power." As Chrysos [...]m, well noteth upon the same, which your honour knoweth better than I. He, (Chrysostom I mean) there plainly sheweth that bishops, prophets, and apostles, are obedient to the temporal magis [...]tes.
HERE the lord chancellor was angered yet more, and said, how that Mr. Bradford went about to deny all obedience to the queen for his oath: and so, said he, this man would make God's word a warrant of his disobedience; for he will answer the queen on this sort, that when she says, Now swear to the bishop of Rome, or obey his authority; No, (will he say) for I should be forsworn, and so he makes the queen no queen.
No, I go not about to deny all obedience to the queen's highness, but denying obedience in this part, if she should demand it. For I was sworn to king Edward, not simply, that is, not only concerning his own person, but also concerning his successors, and therefore in denying the queen's request herein, I deny not her authority, nor become disobedient.
Yes, that thou dost; and so he began to tell a long tale, how if a man should make an oath to pay me a hundred pounds by such a day, and the man to whom it was due would forget the debt, the debtor should say, No, you cannot do it: for I am forsworn then.
HERE Mr. Bradford desired my lord c [...]ncellor not to triste it, saving, that he wondered [...] honour would make solemn oaths made to God tristes in that sort; and make so great a matter concerning vows (as they call it) made to the bishop for marriage of priests.
AT these words the lord chancellor was much offended, and said he did not [...]: but, says he, thou goest about to deny obedience to the queen, who now requires obedience to the bishop of Rome.
NO, my lord, I do not deny obedience to the queen, if you would discern between genus and species. Because I may not obey in this, Ergo, I may not obey in the other, is no good reason. As if a man lett or sell a piece of his inheritance, yet this notwithstanding, all his inheritance is not lett or sold: and so in this cas [...] all obedience I deny not, because I deny obedience in this branch.
I will have none of these similitudes.
I would not use them, if you went not about to persuade the people, that I meant that which I never meant: for I myself not only mean obedience, but will give example of all most humble obedience to the queen's highness, so long as she requires not disobedience against God.
No, no, all men may see your meaning well enough. There is no man, though he be sworn to the king, that doth therefore break his oath, if he afterwards be sworn to the French king and to the emperor.
It is true, my lord, but the cases be not alike; for here is an exception: Thou shalt not swear to the bishop of Rome at any time. If we in like manner were sworn; thou shalt not serve the emperor, &c. you see there were some alteration and more doubt. But I beseech your honour remember what you yourself have written, answering the objections against this in your book, of true obedience: "Let God's word, and the reason thereof, bear the bell away."
HERE the lord chancellor was greatly moved, and said still, how that Mr. Bradford had written seditious letters, and perverted the people thereby, and did stoutly stand, as though he would defend the erroneous doctrine in king Edward's time▪ against all men: and now, says he, he says he dare not answer.
I have written no seditious letters, I have not perverted the [...]: but that which I have written and spoken, that will I never deny, by God's grace. And where your lordship says, that I dare not answer you; that all men may know that I am not afraid, save mine oath, ask me wh [...] you will, and I will plainly make you answer, by God's grace, although I now see my life lieth thereon. But, O Lord, into thy hands I commit it, come what will: only sanctify thy name in me, as in an instrument of thy grace, Amen. Now ask what you will, and you shall see I am not afraid, by God's grace, flatly to answer.
Well then, how say you to the blessed sacrament? Do you not believe there Christ to be present [...]oncerning his natural body?
My lord, I do believe that Christ is corporally present at and in the due administration of the sacrament. By this word (corporally) I mean that Christ is there present corporally unto faith.
Unto faith! we must have many more words to make it plain.
You shall so: but first give me leave to speak two words.
Speak on.
I have now been a year and almost three quarters in prison, and in all this time you have never questioned me hereabout, when I might have spoke my conscience frankly without peril; but now you have a law to hang up and put to death, if a man answer freely and not to your liking, and so now you come to demand this question. A [...], my lord, Christ used not this way to bring men to faith. No more did the prophets or apostles. Remember what Barnard writes to Eugenius the pope▪ "I read, that the apostles stood to be judged, but I read not, that they sat to judge. This shall be, that was," &c.
HERE the lord chancellor was app [...]lled, as it seemed, and said most gently that he used not this means. It was not my doing, said he, although some there be that think this to be the best way: for I, for my part, have been challenged for being too gentle oftentimes; which thing the bishop of London confirmed, and so did almost all the audience▪ that he had been too mild and too gentle.
AT which words Mr. Bradford spake thus; [Page 627] My lord, I pray you stretch out your gentleness that I may feel it, for hitherto I have never felt it.
AS soon as ever he had spoke thus; the lord chancellor, perhaps thinking that Mr. Bradford would have had mercy and pardon, said that with all his heart, not only he▪ but the queen's highness would stretch out mercy, [...] with them he would return.
Return, my lord? God [...] me from that going back: I mean it not so, but I mean, that I was three quarters of a year in the Tower; you forbad me paper, pen, and ink, and never in all that time, nor since, did I feel any gentleness from you. I have rather hitherto found, as I looked for, extremity. And I thank God that I perceive now you have kept me in prison thus long, not for any matter you had, but for matter you would have; God's good will be done.
HERE now were divers telling my lord it was dinner time. And so he rose up, leaving Mr. Bradford speaking, saying, [...] the afternoon th [...]y would speak more with him, and he was had into the vestry, and was there all that day until night, when he was carried to prison again.
IN the mean time, about four o'clock in the afternoon, a gentleman, called Mr. Thomas Hussey, of Lincolnshire, who was once an officer in the duke of Norfolk's house, came into the vestry to inquire for one Stoning; and when it was answered him by the under-marshal's officers of the King's-bench, that there was none such, he entered into the house, and made an acqaintance with Mr. John Bradford, saying, that he would commune and speak with him the next morning for o [...]d acquaintance.
THE next morning about seven o'clock, this gentleman came into the chamber wherein Mr. John Bradford lay, and being with him, he began a long oration, how that of love and acquaintance he came to speak that which he would further utter. You did (said he) so wonderfully behave yourself before the lord chancellor, and other bishops yesterday, that even the greatest enemies you have, did see that they have no matter against you: and therefore I advise you, (speaking as though it came of his own good will, without making any other man privy, or any other procuring him as he said) this day, for anon you shall be called before them again, to desire a time, and men to confer withal, so shall all men think a wonderful wisdom, gravity, and piety in you; and by this means you shall escape present danger, which else is nearer than you are aware of. To this Mr. Bradford answered, I neither can nor will make such request. For then shall I give occasion to the people, and to all others to think that I doubt of the doctrine which I confess, which thing I do not, for thereof I am most assured, and therefore I will give no such offence.
AS they were thus talking, the chamber door was unlocked, and Dr. Seton came in, whom when Mr. Bradford saw, he spake thus in his own mind: What, sir, goeth the matter thus? This man told me, no man knew of his coming: Lord, give me grace to remember thy lesson, "Beware of those men, &c. Cast not your pearls before dogs:" for I see these men he come to hunt for matter, that the one may bear witness to the other.
DR. SETON, after some by-talk of Mr. Bradford's age, of his country, and such like, began a gay and long discourse of my lord of Canterbury, Mr. Latimer, and Mr. Ridley, and how they at Oxford were not able to answer any thing at all: and that therefore my lord of Canterbury desired to confer with the bishop of Durham and others; all which talk tended to this end, that Mr. Bradford should make the like suit, being nothing to be compared in learning to my lord of Canterbury.
TO this Mr. Bradford briefly answered as he did before to Mr. Hussey.
WITH this answer neither the doctor nor the gentleman being contented, after many persuasions, Mr. Doctor said, I have heard much good talk of you, and even last night a gentleman made report of you at the lord chancellor's table, that you were able to persuade as much as any that he knew. And I (though I never he [...]d you preach, and to my knowledge did never see you before yesterday) yet methought your modesty [...] such, your behaviour and talk so without malice and impatience, that [Page 628] I would be sorry you should do worse than myself. And I tell you further, I do perceive my lord chancellor hath a favour towards you: wherefore be not so obstinate, but desire respite and some learned man to confer withal, &c.
BUT Mr. Bradford kept still one answer; I cannot, nor will I so offend the people. I doubt not, but I am most certain of the doctrine I have taught.
HERE Mr. Doctor waxed hot, and called Mr. Bradford arrogant, proud, and vain-glorious.
BUT Mr. Bradford answered, Beware of judging, lest you be condemned yourself. But still Dr. Seton urged him, shewing him how merciful my lord chancellor was, and how charitably they entertained him.
I never saw any justice, much less love,
in my lord chancellor. Long have I been unjustly imprisoned, and handled in the same uncharitably: and now my lord hath no just matter against me.
THIS talk served not the Doctor's purpose: wherefore he went from matter to matter, from this point to that point. Bradford still gave him the hearing, and answered not: for he perceived that they both did come only to fish for some things which might make a shew that my lord chancellor had justly kept him in prison.
WHEN all their discourse took no such effect as they expected, Mr. Hussey asked Mr. Bradford, will you not admit conference, if my lord chancellor should offer it publicly?
Conference, if it had been offered before the law had been made, or if it were offered so that I might have liberty to confer, and as sure as he with whom I should confer, then it were something: but else I see not to what purpose conference should be offered, but to defer that which at length will come, and the lingering may give more offence than do good. Howbeit, if my lord shall make such an offer of his own motion, I will not refuse to confer with any he may appoint.
DR. Seton hearing this, called Bradford arrogant, proud, and whatsoever it pleased him.
THEN Bradford perceiving by them that he sho [...] shortly be called for, besought them both to give him leave to talk with God, and to beg wisdom and grace of him; for, said he, otherwise I am helpless; and so they with much ado departed. Then Mr. Bradford went and made his prayers to God, which the Lord of his goodness did graciously accept in his need, praised therefore be his holy name. Shortly after they were gone, Mr. Bradford was led to the aforesaid church, and there tarried uncalled for till eleven o'clock, that is, till Mr. Saunders was excommunic [...]d.
The last Examination of Mr. JOHN BRADFORD, in the church of St. Mary Overy's.
AFTER the excommunication of Mr. Laurence Saunders, John Bradford was called in, and being brought in before the lord chancellor and other bishops there sitting, the lord chancellor began to speak thus in effect: That if Bradford, being now come before them, would answer with modesty and humility, and conform himself to the catholic church with them, he yet might find mercy, because they would be loth to use extremity. Therefore he concluded with an exhortation, that Bradford would recant his doctrine.
AFTER the lord chancellor had ended his long oration, Mr. Bradford began to speak thus: As yesterday I besought your honours to set in your fight the majesty and presence of God to follow him, who seeketh not to subvert the simple by subtle questions; so I humbly beseech every one of you to do this day: for you know well enough, that guiltless blood will cry for vengeance. And this I pray not your lordships to do, as or [...] that taketh upon me to condemn you utterly herein, but that ye might be more admonished to do that, which none doth so much as he should do: for our nature is so much corrupt, that we are very forgetful of God. Again, as yesterday I pleaded mine oath and oaths against the bishop of Rome, that I should never consent to the practising of any jurisdiction for him, or on his behalf in the realm of England; so do I again at this day, lest I should be perjured. And last of all, as yesterday the answers I made, were by protestation and saving mine oath, so I would your honours should know that mine answers [Page 629] shall be this day: and this I do, that when death (which I look for at your hands) shall come, I may not be troubled with the guilt of perjury.
AT which words the lord chancellor was wroth, and said, that they had given him respite to deliberate till this day, whether he would recant his errors of the blessed sacrament, which yesterday, said he, before us you uttered.
My lord, you gave me no time for any such deliberation, neither did I speak any thing of the sacrament which you do disallow. For when I had declared a presence of Christ to be there to faith, you went from that matter, to clear yourself that you were not cruel, and so went to dinner.
What? I perceive we must begin all again with thee. Did I not yesterday tell thee plainly, that thou madest a conscience where none should be? Did I not make it plain, that the oath against the bishop of Rome was an unlawful oath?
No, indeed my lord: you said so, but you have not proved it yet, nor ever can do.
O Lord God, what a fellow art thou! Thou wouldst go about to bring into the people's heads, that we, all the lords of the parliament house, the knights and burgesses, and all the whole realm be perjured. O what an heretic is this! here good people, you may see what a senseless heretic this fellow is. If I should make an oath I would never help my brother, nor lend him money in his need; were this a good answer to tell my neighbour desiring my help, that I had made an oath to the contrary? or that I could not do it?
O my lord, discern betwixt oaths that be against charity and faith, and oaths that be according to faith and charity, as this is against the bishop of Rome.
HERE the lord chancellor made much ado, and a long time was spent about oaths, which were good, and which were evil, he captiously asking often of Bradford a direct answer concerning oaths: which Bradford would not give simply, but with a distinction. Whereat the chancellor was much offended: but Bradford still kept him at bay, that the oath against the bishop of Rome [...] lawful oath, using thereto the lord chancellor's own book, of true obedience, for confirmation.
AT length they came to this issue, who should be judge of the lawfulness of the oath; and Mr. Bradford said, the word of God, according to Christ's word, John xii. My word shall judge; and according to the testimony of Isaiah and Micah, That God's word, coming out of Jerusalem, shall give sentence among the Gentiles. By this, word, (said Bradford) my lord, I will prove the oath against the bishop of Rome's authority, to be a good, a godly, and a lawful oath. So that the lord chancellor left his hold, and as the other day he pretended a denial of the queen's authority and obedience to her highness, so did he now.
BUT Bradford, as the day before, proved, that obedience in this point to the queen's highness, if she should demand an oath to the bishop of Rome, being denied, was not a general denial of her authority, and of obedience to her; no more, said he, than the sale, gift, or lease of the whole inheritance.
AND thus much ado was made about this matter: the lord chancellor talking much, and using many examples of debt, of going out of town tomorrow by oath, and yet tarrying till Friday, and such like. Which trifling talk Bradford did touch, saying, That it was a wonder his honour weighed conscience no more in this, and would be so earnest in vows of priests marriages made to bishops, and be careless for solemn oaths made to God and to princes. In short, this was the end. The lord chancellor said, the queen might dispense with it, and did so to all the whole realm. But Bradford said, that the queen's highness could do no more but remit her right; as for the oath made to God, she could never remit, forasmuch as it was made unto God.
AT which words the lord chancellor chafed wonderfully, and said, that in plain sense I slandered the realm with perjury; and therefore said [...]e to the [Page 630] people, you may see how this fellow taketh upon him to have more knowledge and conscience than all the wise men of England, and yet he hath no conscience at all.
Well, my lord, let all the standers-by see who hath conscience: I have been a year and a half in prison: now before all these people, declare wherefore I was imprisoned, or what cause you had to punish me. You said the other day in your own house, my lord of London witnessing with you, that I took upon me to speak to the people undesired. There he sitteth by you, I mean my lord of Bath, who desired me himself, for the passion of Christ, I would speak to the people. Upon whose words I coming into the pulpit, had like to have been slair▪ with a dagger
for it touched my sleeve. He then prayed me I would not leave him, and I promised him, as long as I lived, I would take hurt before him that day, and so went out of the pulpit and intreated with the people, and at length brought him myself into an house.
BESIDES this, in the afternoon I preached at Bow church, and there going up into the pulpit, one desired me not to reprove the people; for, said he, you will never come down alive, if you do it. And yet notwithstanding I did in that sermon reprove their fact, and called it sedition at least twenty times. For all which my doing, I have received this recompence, imprisonment for a year and a half and more, and death now, which you are plotting. Let all men be judges where conscience is.
THEY endeavoured to interrupt him while he was speaking these words, but Mr. Bradford still speak on, and gave no place till he had made an end. And then the lord chancellor said, that for all that fair tale, his fact at the cross was culpable.
No, my fact was good, as you yourself did bear me witness. For when I was at first before you in the Tower, you yourself did say, that my fact was good, but my mind evil. Well, said I, then my lord, in that case you allow the fact, and condemn my mind; but how can I otherwise declare my mind to man but by saying and doing? God one day, I trust, will open it to my comfort, what my mind was, and your's is.
HERE the lord chancellor was offended, and said, that he never said so. I had not so little wit, said he, as not to discern betwixt meaning and doing: and so brought forth many examples little to the purpose, to prove that men construe things by the meaning of men, and not by their doings. But when this would not serve, then came he to another matter, and said, that Bradford was put in prison at first because he would not yield, nor be conformable to the queen's religion.
Why, my lord, your honour knoweth that you would not reason with me on religion, but said a time should afterwards be found out, when I should be talked withal. But if it were as your lordship saith, that I was put in prison for religion, in that my religion was then authorized by public laws of the realm, could conscience punish, [...] me in prison therefore? Wherefore let all men be judges, in whom conscience is wanting.
HERE came forth Mr. Chamberlain of Woodstock, and told my lord chancellor, that Bradford had been a serving-man, and was with Mr. Harrington.
True, and did deceive his master of seven-score pounds, and because of this, he went to be a gospeller and a preacher, good people, and yet you see how he pretendeth conscience.
My lord, I am ready to face him, whosoever he be, that can come forth and justly vouch, that ever I deceived my master. And as you are chief justice by office in England, I desire justice upon them that so slander me, because they cannot prove it.
HERE my lord chancellor and Mr. Chamberlain were smitten blank, and said they heard it. But, said my lord chancellor, we have another manner of matter than this against you: for you are an heretic.
YEA, added the bishop of London, he wrote letters to Mr. Pendleton, who knoweth his hand as well as his own; your honour did see the letters.
This is not true, I never did write to [Page 631] Pendleton since I came to prison, and therefore I am not justly spoken of.
But you indited it.
I did not, nor know not what you mean, and this I offer to prove.
THEN came in another, (I believe they call him Mr. Allen, one of the clerks of the council) putting the lord chancellor in remembrance of letters written into Lancashire.
You say true: for we have his hand to shew.
I deny that you have my hand to shew of letters [...] into Lancashire, otherwise than before you all I will stand to, and prove them to be good and lawful.
HERE was all answered, and then the lord chancellor began a new matter. Sir, said he, in my house the other day you did most contemptuously despise the queen's mercy, and you would maintain the erroneous doctrine in king Edward's days against all men, and this you do most stoutly.
Well, I am glad that all men see now you have had no matter to imprison me before that day justly. Now say I, that I did not contemptuously despise the queen's mercy, but would have had it, (though if justice might take place, I need it not) so that I might have had it with God's mercy, that is, without doing or saying any thing against God and his truth. And as for maintenance of doctrine, because I cannot tell how you will stretch this word maintenance, I will repeat again that which I spake. I said I was more confirmed in the religion set forth in king Edward's days, than ever I was: and if God so would, I trust I should declare it by giving my lif [...] for the confirmation and testification thereof. So I said then, and so I say now. As for otherwise to maintain it, than pertaining to a private person by confession, I thought not, nor think not.
Well, yesterday thou didst maintain false heresy concerning the blessed sacrament, and therefore we gave thee respite till this day to deliberate.
My lord, as I said at the first, I spake nothing of the sacrament, but that which you allowed, and therefore reproved it not, nor gave me any time to deliberate.
Why? didst thou not deny Christ's presence in the sacrament?
No, I never denied nor taught; but that to faith, whole Christ, body and blood, was as present as the bread and wine to the due receiver.
Yea, but dost thou not believe that Christ's body naturally and really is there, under the forms of bread and wine.
My lord, I believe Christ is present there to the faith of the due receiver: as for transubstantiation, I plainly and flatly tell you, I believe it not.
HERE was Bradford called Diabolus, a slanderer: for we ask no question, said my lord chancellor, of transubstantiation, but of Christ's presence.
I deny not his presence to the faith of the receiver, but deny that he is included in the bread, or that the bread was transubstantiate.
If he be not included, how is he then present.
Indeed, though my faith can tell how, yet my tongue cannot express it, nor you otherwise than by faith hear it, or understand it.
HERE was much ado, now one doctor standing up and speaking this, and others speaking that, and the lord chancellor talking much of Luther, Zuinglius, Oecolampadius: but still Bradford kept him at that point, that Christ is present to faith; and that there is no transubstantiation nor including of Christ in the bread: but all this would not serve them.
THEREFORE another bishop asked this question, Whether the wicked man received Christ's very body, or no? And Bradford answered plainly, No. Whereat the lord chancellor made a long oration, how that it could not be that Christ was present, [Page 632] except that the evil man received it. But Bradford put away all his oration in few words, that grace was at that time offered to his lordship, although he received it not: so that, said he, the receiving maketh not the presence, as your lordship would infer; but God's grace, truth, and power, is the cause of the presence, which grace, the wicked that lack faith cannot receive. And here Bradford prayed my lord, not to divorce that which God hath coupled together. He hath coupled all these together; "Take, eat, this is my body." He saith not, See, peep, this is my body; but, Take, eat. So that it appeareth, this is a promise depending upon condition, if we take and eat.
HERE the lord chancellor and other bishops made a great ado, that Bradford had found out a toy that no man else ever did, of the condition; and the lord chancellor made many words to the people thereabout.
BUT Bradford said thus, My lord, are not these words, Take, eat, a commandment? and are not these words, This is my body, a promise? If you will challenge the promise, and do not the commandment, may you not deceive yourself?
HERE the lord chancellor denied Christ to have commanded the sacrament, and the use of it.
Why, my lord, I pray you tell the people what mood accipite, manducate, is; is it not plain to children, that Christ, in so saying, commandeth?
AT these words the lord chancellor made a great toying and triflting at the Imperative mood, and fell to parsing and examining, as he should teach a child, and so concluded it was no commandment, but such a phrase as this, I pray you give me drink, which, said he, is no commandment, I think.
BUT Bradford prayed him to leave toying and trifling, and said thus: My lord, if it be not a commandment of Christ to take and eat the sacrament, why dare any take upon them to command and make that of necessity, which God leaveth free? as you do in making it a necessary commandment, once a year for all that be of discretion, to receive the sacrament.
HERE the lord chancellor called him again Diabolus or Calumniator, and began, from these words, "Let a man prove himself, and so eat of the bread, (yea bread, said Bradford) and drink of the cup," to prove that it was no commandment to receive the sacrament: for then (said he) if it were a commandment, it should bind all men, in all places, and at all times.
O my lord, discern between commandments: some be general, as the ten commandments, that they bind always, in all places, and all persons: some be not so general, as this of the supper, the sacrament of baptism, of the thrice appearing before the Lord at Jerusalem, of Abraham offering of Isaac, &c.
HERE the lord chancellor denied the cup to be commanded by Christ: for then, said he, we should have eleven commandments.
Indeed I believe you think as you speak: for else you would not take the cup from the people, in that Christ saith, "Drink ye all of it." But how say you, my lords? Christ saith to you especially, "Go and preach the gospel: feed Christ's flock," &c. Is this a commandment, or no?
HERE was my lord chancellor in a heat, and said as pleased him.
THEN the bishop of Durham asked Bradford, when Christ began to be present in the sacrament? whether before the receiver received it, or no?
MR. Bradford answered, that the question was curious, and not necessary; and further said, that as the cup was the New Testament, so the bread was Christ's body to him that received it duly, but yet so that the bread is bread. For, said he, in all the scripture ye shall not find this proposition, There is no bread. And so he quoted Chrysostom, to prove his assertions. Much ado was here, they calling Bradford heretic, and he desiring them to [Page 633] proceed in God's name, he looked for that which God appointed for them to do.
This fellow is now in another heresy of fatal necessity, as though all things were so tied together, that of mere necessity all things must come to pass.
BUT Mr. Bradford desired him to take things as they be spoken, and not wrest them to a contrary sense. Your lordship, said he, doth discern betwixt God and man. Things are not by fortune to God at any time, though to man they seem so sometimes. I speak but as the apostles did, "Lord (said they) see how Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the prelates, are gathered together against thy Christ, to do that which thy hand and counsel hath before ordained for them to do."
HERE the lord chancellor began to read the excommunication. And in the excommunication, when he came to the name of John Bradford, layman: Why, (said he) art thou no priest?
No, nor ever was either priest, or beneficed, or married, or any preacher, before public authority had established religion, or preacher af [...]ter public authority had altered religion, and yet I am thus handled at your hands: but God, I doubt not, will give his blessing where you curse. And so he fell down on his knees, and heartily thanked God that he had counted him worthy to suffer for his name's sake; and prayed to God to give him repentance and a good mind. After the excommunication was read, he was delivered to the sheriff of London, and so had to the Clink, and afterwards to the Compter in the Poultry, in the city of London▪ this being proposed by his murderers, that he should be delivered from thence to the earl of Der [...]by, to he conveyed into Lancashire, and there to be [...] in the town of Manchester, where he was [...] their purpose concerning the place was afterwards altered, for he suffered in London.
AFTER the condemnation of Mr. Bradford, which was the last day of January. Mr. Bradford being sent to prison, remained there till the first of July, during which time he sustained divers other conferences and conflicts with sundry adversaries, who repaired to him in the prison. Of whom first bishop Bonner, coming to the Compter to degrade Dr. Taylor, the 4th day of February, began to discourse with the said Mr. Bradford; the effect whereof here ensueth.
A CONVERSATION between bishop BONNER and Mr. BRADFORD.
ON the 4th of February, the same day Mr. Rogers was burned, Bonner, bishop of London, came to the Poultry Compter to degrade Dr. Taylor, about one o'clock in the afternoon. But before he spake to Dr. Taylor, he called for John Bradford who was prisoner there, whom when he saw, he put off his cap, and gave him his hand, saying, Because I perceive that you are desirous to converse with some learned men, therefore I have brought Mr. Archdeacon Harpsfield to you. And I tell you, you do like a wise man. But I pray go roundly to work, for the time is but short.
My lord, as roundly as I can I will go to work with you: I never desired to confer with any man, nor yet do. Howbeit, if you will have any one to talk with me, I am ready.
What!
did you not tell me that this man desired conference.
No, my lord, I told you that he would not refuse to confer with any; but I did not say that it was his desire.
Well, Mr. Bradford, you are well beloved, I pray you consider yourself, and refuse not charity when it is offered.
Indeed, my lord, this is small charity, to condemn a man as you have condemned me, who never brake your laws. In Turkey a man may have charity but in England I could not yet find it. I was condemned for my faith as soon a [...] I uttered it at your requests, before I had committe [...] any thing against the laws. And as for conference, I am not afraid to talk with whom you will. But to say that I desire to confer, that do I not.
Well, well. And so he called for Dr. Taylor, and Bradford went his way.
UPON another day in February, Mr. Willerton, chaplain to the bishop of London, came to confer with Mr. Bradford; but when he perceived that Mr. Bradford desired not his company, and therefore rather wished for his departing than his stay: Well, Mr. Bradford, said he, I pray you let us confer a little, perchance you may do me good, if I can do you none. Upon which words Mr. Bradford was content, and so they began to talk. Willerton spake much of the doctors, of the fathers, of the bread in the sixth of St. John, &c. labouring to prove transubstantiation, and that wicked men do receive Christ.
BUT Bradford on the contrary disproved his authorities, so that they came to this issue, that Willerton should draw his reasons out of the scriptures and doctors, and Bradford would peruse them; and if he could not answer them, then he would give place. Likewise also Mr. Bradford should draw his reasons out of the scriptures and doctors, to which Willerton should answer if he could: and so they departed for that day.
THE next morning Mr. Willerton sent half a sheet of paper written on both sides, containing no reasons how he gathered his doctrine, but only bare sentences; "The bread which I will give is my flesh:" and the places in the xxvi. of Matthew, the xiv. of Mark, thr xxii. of Luke, and the x. and xi. of the Corinthians, with some sentences of the doctors, all which made as much against him as for him.
IN the afternoon he came himself, and there they had a long talk to little effect. At length Willerton began to talk of the church, saying, that Bradford swerved from the church.
No, that I do not, but you do. For the church is Christ's spouse, and Christ's obedient spouse, which your church is not, whi [...] r [...]bbeth the people of the Lord's cup, and of service in the English tongue.
Why? It is not profitable to have the service in English, for it is written, "The lips of the priest should keep the law, and out of his mouth man must look for knowledge."
Should not the people then have the scriptures? Wherefore ser [...]eth this saying of Christ, "Search the scriptures?"
This was not spoke to the people, but to the scribes and learned men.
Then the people must not have the scriptures?
No, for it is written, "They shall be all taught of God."
And must we learn all from the priests?
Yea.
Then I see you would bring the people to hang up Christ, and let Barabbas go, as the priests did then persuade the people. At which words Mr. Willerton was so offended, that he had no desire to talk any more. In the end Mr. Bradford gave him the reasons which he had gathered against transubstantiation, and desired him to frame his into the form of reasons, and then, said Bradford, I will answer them.
Well, I will do so: [...] first I will answer your's. Which he never performed.
ON the 12th of February, one of the earl of Derby's servants came to Mr. Bradford, saying, My lord hath sent me to you, he desired you to tender yourself, and he will be a go [...]d lord to you.
I thank his lordship for his good will towards me: but in this case I cannot tender myself more than God's honour will allow.
Ah▪ Mr. Bradford, consider your mother, sisters, fr [...]ends, kinsfolk, and country, what a great discomfort will it be unto them to see you die as an heretic!
I have learned to forsake father, mother, bro [...]h [...]r, sister, [...], [...]nd all that ev [...]. I have▪ [Page 635] yea, even mine ownself, for else I cannot be Christ's disciple.
If my lord should obtain for you that you might depart the realm, would you not be content to be at the queen's appointment, where she would appoint you beyond the sea.
No: I had rather be burned in England, than be burned beyond the seas. For I know if she should send me to Paris, Louvain, or some such place, immediately they would burn me.
UPON the 14th of February, Percival Creswell, an old acquaintance of Mr. Bradford's, came to him, bringing with him a kinsman of Mr. Fecknam's, who after many words said:
I pray you let me intercede for you.
You may do what you will.
But tell me what suit I should make for you.
Forsooth, what you please; do it not at my request, for I desire nothing at your hands. If the queen will give me life, I will thank her. If she will ba [...]sh me, I will thank her. If she will burn me, I w [...]ll thank her. If she will condemn me to perpetual imprisonment, I will thank her.
HEREUPON Creswell wen [...] away, and about 1 [...] o'clock he and the other came again▪ and brought a book written by one More, desiring Mr. Bradford to read it over.
BRADFORD, taking the book, said, Good Percival▪ I am immoveably settled in this article.
Oh, if ever you loved me, do one thing for me.
What is that?
Desire and name what learned man or men you will have to come [...] you. My lord of York, my lord of Lincoln, my lord of Bath, and others will gladly come unto you.
No, never will I desire them, or any other, to come to confer with me; for I am as certain of my doctrine as I am of any thing. But for your pleasure, and also that all men may know that I am not ashamed to have my faith sifted and tried, bring whom you will, and I will talk with them. So they went their way.
ABOUT three o'clock in the afternoon. Dr. Harding, who was then the bishop of Lincoln's chaplain, came to Mr. Bradford, and after a great and solemn protestation, declaring that he had prayed to God before he came, to turn his talk to Bradford's good, he began to tell the good opinion he had of Bradford, and spent the time in such tattling, so that thei [...] talk was to little purpose; have that Mr. Bradford prayed him to consider from whence he was fallen, and not follow the world, nor to love it: for the love of God is not where the world is.
BUT Harding counted Mr. Bradford in a damnable state, as one being out of the church, and therefore desired him to take care of his soul, and not die in such an opinion.
WHAT▪ Mr. Harding, said Mr. Bradford, I have heard you with these ears maintain what I now stand in.
I grant that I have taught the doctrine of transubstantiation was subtle doctrine, but otherwise I never taught it. And so he inveighing against marriages of priests, and namely against Peter Martyr, Martin Bucer, Luther, and such, who for breaking their vows were justly green up into heresies [...]as he said: Mr. Bradford seeing him altogether given up to popery, after admonishing him thereof, bade him farewel.
UPON the 25th of February, Percival Creswell came with Mr. Harpsfield, archdeacon of London, and a servant waiting upon him. After formal salutations, he made a long oration, of which this is a short sum; That all men, even the Infidels, Turks, Jews, Anabaptists, and Libertines, desire happiness as well as the Christians, and that every one thinketh they shall attain to it by their religion. To which Mr. Bradford answered briefly, that he spake not far amiss.
[Page 636]THEN said Harpsfield, But the way thither is not all alike: for the Infidels by Jupiter, Juno, &c. the Turk by his Alcoran, the Jew by his Talmud, do believe to come to heaven. For so may I speak of such as believe the immortality of the soul.
You speak truly.
Well, then, here is the matter, to know the way to this heaven.
We are not to invent ways. There is but one way, and that is Jesus Christ, as he himself doth witness; "I am the way."
What you say is true, and also false. I suppose what you mean by Christ, is believing in Christ.
I have learned to discern betwixt faith and Christ. Albeit I confess, that whoso believeth in Christ, the same shall be saved.
No, not all that believe in Christ; for some shall say, "Lord, Lord, have we not cast out devils?" &c. but Christ will answer in the day of judgment to these, "Depart from me, I know you not."
You must make a difference betwixt believing, and saying I believe: as for example, If one should say and swear he loveth you, for all his saying and swearing you will not believe him, when you see he goeth about to utter and do all the evil against you that he can.
Well, this not very material. There is but one way, Christ. How came we to know him? Where shall we seek to find him?
Forsooth, we must seek him by his word, and in his word, and after his word.
Very good: but tell me how first we came into the company of them that could tell us this, but by baptism.
Baptism is the sacrament, by which out [...]wardly we are ingrafted into Christ: I say outwardly, because I dare not exclude from Christ all that die without baptism. I will not tie God, where he is not bound. Some infants die, whose parents desire baptism for them, and cannot have it.
To these we may think perchance that God will shew mercy.
Yes, the children whose parents do contemn baptism will not I condemn, because the child shall not bear the father's offence.
Well, we agree, that by baptism then we are brought, and (as man would say) begotten to Christ. For Christ is our father, and the church his spouse is our mother. As all men naturally have Adam for their father, and Eve for their mother; and as Eve was taken out of Adam's side, so was the church taken out of Christ's side, whereout flowed blood for the satisfaction and purgation of our sins.
All this is truly spoken.
Now then tell me whether this church of Christ hath not been always?
Yes, since the creation of man, and shall be for ever.
Very good. But tell me whether this church is a visible church, or no?
It is no otherwise visible, than Christ was here on earth: that is, by no exterior pomp or shew that setteth her forth commonly, and therefore to see her we must put on such eyes, as good men put on to see and know Christ when he walked here on earth: for as Eve was of the same substance that Adam was of, "Flesh of his flesh, and bone of his bone;" as St. Paul saith, Ephes. v. Look therefore how Christ was visibly known to be Christ when he was on earth, that is, by considering him after the word of God: so is the church known.
I do not come to reason at present, and therefore I will go on forward. Is not this church a multitude?
Yes, that it is. Howbeit, the snake lies hid in the grass, as the proverb is. For i [...] your question is a subtlety. What visible multitude was [Page 637] there in Elijah's time, or when Moses was on the mount, Aaron and all Israel worshipping the calf?
You wander from the matter.
No, nothing at all. For I do prevent you, knowing well whereabout you go. And therefore fewer words might very well serve.
Well, I perceive you have knowledge, and by a little see I the more. Tell me yet further whether this multitude have not the ministry or preaching of God's word.
Sir, you go about the bush. If you understand preaching for the confessing of the gospel, I will go with you: for else if you will, you may know that persecution often hindereth preaching.
Well, I mean it so. Tell me yet more, hath it not the sacraments administered?
It hath the sacraments, howbeit the administration of them is often hindered. But I will put you from your purpose, because I see whereabout you go. If heretics have baptism, and do baptize, as they did in St. Cyprian's time, you know this baptism is baptism, and not to be reiterated. This Mr. Bradford spake that the standers by might observe, that though the popish church hath baptism, which we have received of them, yet notwithstanding it is not the true church, neither need we be baptized again.
You go far from the matter, and I perceive you have more errors than one.
So you say, but that is not enough till you prove it.
Well, this church is a multitude. Hath it not the preaching of the gospel, and the administration of the sacraments? And yet more, hath it not the power of jurisdiction?
What jurisdiction is exercised in persecution and affliction?
I mean by jurisdiction, admonishing one another, and so forth·
Well, go on, what then?
It hath also succession of bishops. And here he made much ado to prove that this was [...] essential point.
You say as you would have it; for if this part fail you, all the church you go about to set up will fall down. You shall not find in all the scripture, this your essential part of succession of bishops. In Christ's church Antichrist will sit. And Peter tells us, as it went in the old church before Christ's coming, so it will be in the new church since Christ's coming: that is, as there were false prophets, and such as bear rule were adversaries to the true prophets; so shall there be (said he) false teachers, even of such as are bishops, and bear rule amongst the people.
You go always out of the matter: but I will prove a further succession of bishops.
Do so.
Tell me, were not the apostles bishops?
No, unless you will make a new definition of a bishop; that is, give him no certain place.
Indeed, the apostles office was not the bishop's office; for it was universal, but yet Christ instituted bishops in his church, as St. Paul saith, he hath given pastors, prophets, &c. So that I think it may be proved from scripture, that the succession of bishops is an essential point.
The ministry of God's word, and ministers, are an essential point. But translate this to the bishops and their succession, is a plain subtlety: and therefore that it may be plain, I will ask a question, Tell me, whether the scripture knew any difference between bishops and ministers, which ye call priests?
No.
Well then, go on forwards, and let us see what you shall get now by the succession of bishops: that is, of ministers which can be understood [Page 638] of such bishops as minister not, but lord it.
I perceive that you are far out of the way. By your doctrine you can never shew in your church, a multitude which ministereth God's word and his sacraments, which hath jurisdiction and succession of bishops, which hath from time to time believed as you believe, beginning now, and so going upwards, as I will do of our doctrine; and therefore are you out of the church, and so cannot be saved. Perhaps you will bring me downwards a shew to blind people's eyes; but to go upwards, that you can never do, and this is the true trial.
You must and will, I am assured, give me leave to follow the scriptures and examples or good men.
Yes.
Well then, Stephen was accused and condemned as I am, that he had taught new and false doctrine, before the fathers of the church then as they were taken. Stephen for his defence disproveth their accusation. But how? doth he it by going upwards? no, but by coming downwards, beginning at Abraham, and continuing still till Esaiahs's time, and the people's captivity. From whence he maketh a great leap until the time he was in, which was about 400 years, and called them by their right names, hell-hounds, rather than heaven-hounds. In this manner will I prove my faith, and that you can never do your's.
Yes sir, if we knew that you had the Holy Ghost, then could we believe you. Here Bradford would have answered, that Stephen's enemies would not believe he had the Holy Ghost, and therefore they did as they did; but as he was speaking Mr. Harpsfield rose up, and the keeper and others that stood by, began to talk gently, pra [...]ing Mr. Bra [...]ford to take heed to what Mr. [...] deacon spak [...], who still said that Mr. Bradford was out of the church.
S [...]r, I am most certain that I am in Christ's church, and I can shew a demonstration of my religion from time to time continually. So saying, Mr. Bradford uttered this short prayer.
"GOD our Father, for the name and blood of his Son Christ, be merciful unto us, and unto all his people, and deliver them from all false teachers, and blind guides, through whom, alas! I fear, much hurt will come to this realm of England. God our Father bless us, and keep us in his truth and poor church for ever." Amen.
THEN the archdeacon departed, saying, that he would come again the next morning.
UPON the 16th of February, in the morning, the archdeacon, and the other two with him, came again, and after a few introductory words they sat down.
MR. ARCHDEACON began a very long oration, first repeating what they had said, and how far they had gone over night, and therewith began to prove upwards, a succession of bishops here in England for 800 years; in France, at Lyons, for 1200 years; in Spain, a [...] Hispalen, for 800 years; in Italy, at Mil [...], for 1200 years, labouring by this to prove his [...]hurch He used all his succession of bishops in the [...]ast church for the better confirmation of his words, and so concluded with an exhortation and an interrogation: the exhortation was, that Mr. Bradford would obey the church; the interrogation, whether Mr. Bradford could shew any such succession, for the demonstration of his church (for so he called it)?
UNTO this long oration Mr. Bradford made this short answer; My memory is bad, so that I cannot particularly answer your oration.
THEREFORE I will do it generally, because your oration is rather to persuade than to prove, and therefore a small answer will serve. If Christ or his apostles, being here on earth, had been required by the prelates of the church then, to have made a demonstration of that church by succession of such high priests as had approved the doctrine which he taught, I think that Christ would have done as I do: that is, have alledged that which upholdeth the church, [...] the word [Page 639] of God, taught and believed, not by the high priests, which of long time had persecuted it, but by the prophets and other good simple men which perchance were counted heretics of the church: which church was not tied to succession, but to the word of God. And thus to think St. Peter giveth me occasion, when he saith that as it went in the church before Christ's coming, so shall it go in the church after his coming: but then the pillars of the church were persecutors of the church: therefore the like we must look for now.
I can gather and prove succession in Jerusalem of the high-priests from Aaron's time.
I grant it, but not such successions as allowed the truth.
Why, did they not allow Mose's law?
Yes, and keep it, as touching the books thereof, as you do the bible and holy scriptures. But the true interpretation and meaning of it they did corrupt, as you have done and do, and therefore the persecution which they stirred up against the prophets and Christ, was not for the law, but the interpretation of it. For they taught as you do now, that we must fetch the interpretation of the scriptures at your hands. But to make an end, death I look for daily, yea hourly, and I think my time is but very short; therefore I had need to spend as much time with God as I can whilst I have it, for his help and comfort; and therefore I pray you bear with me, that I do not now particularly and in more words answer your long talk. If I saw death not so near me as it is, I would then weigh every piece of your oration, if you would give me the sum of it, and I would answer accordingly: but because I dare not, and will not leave off looking and preparing for that which is at hand, I shall desire you to hold me excused, though I do as I do, and I heartily thank you for your gentle good-will: I shall heartily pray God our Father to give you the same light and life which I wish to myself. And so Bradford began to rise up.
BUT then Mr. Archdeacon began to tell him he was in a very perilous case, and that he was s [...]rry to see him so settled. As for death, whether it be nigh or far off, I know not, neither matters it, so that you die well.
I doubt not in this case, but that I shall die well: for as I hope and am certain my death shall please the Lord, so I trust I shall die chearfully to the comfort of his children.
But what if you be deceived?
What if you should say the sun doth not now shine?
Well, I am sorry to see you so secure and careless.
I am more carnally secure, and careless, than I should be: God make me more vigilant. But in this case, I cannot be so secure, for I am most assured I am in the truth.
That you are not; for you are out of the catholic church.
No, though you have excommunicated me out of your church, yet I am in the catholic church of Christ, and am, and by God's grace shall be a child, and an obedient child of it for ever. I hope Christ will have no less care for me, than he had for the blind man excommunicated out of the synagogue: and further, I am sure that the necessary articles of the faith, I mean the twelve articles of the creed, I confess and believe with that which you call the holy church, so that even your church hath taken too much upon her to excommunicate me for that, which by the testimony of my lord of Durham, in the book of the sacrament lately put forth, was free many hundred years after Christ, to believe or not believe.
What is that?
Transubstantiation.
Why, you are not condemned only for that.
For that, and because I deny that wicked men do receive Christ's body.
You agree not with us in the presence, nor in any thing else.
How you believe you know: for my part, I confess a presence of whole Christ, God and man, to the faith of the receiver.
Nay, you must believe a real presence in the sacrament.
In the sacrament? Nay, I will not shut him in, nor tie him to it otherwise than faith seeth and perceiveth. If I should include Christ really present in the sacrament, or tie him to it otherwise than to the faith of the receiver, then the wicked man would receive him, which I do not believe, and by God's grace never will.
More is the pity: but a man may easily perceive you make no presence at all, and therefore you agree not therein with us.
I confess a presence, and a true presence, but to the faith of the receiver.
WHAT, (said one that stood by) of Christ's very body which died for us?
Yes, even of whole Christ, God and man, to feed the faith of the receiver.
Why, this is nothing else but to exclude the omnipotency of God, and all kind of miracle in the sacrament.
I do not exclude his omnipotency, but you do it rather: for I believe that Christ can accomplish his promise, the substance of bread and wine being there, as well as the accidents, which you believe not. When we come to the sacrament, we come not to feed our bodies, and therefore we have but a little piece of bread; but we come to feed our souls with Christ by faith, which the wicked do want, and therefore they receive nothing but the bread of the Lord, as Judas did, and not bread the Lord, as the other apostles did.
The wicked do receive the very body of Christ, but not the grace of his body.
They receive not the body. For Christ's body is no dead carcase: he that receiveth it, receiveth the spirit, which is not without grace.
Well, you have many errors. You count the mass an abomination, and yet St. Ambrose said mass, and so he read out of a written book, a sentence of St. Ambrose to prove it.
Why, sir, the mass us it is now, was nothing so in St. Ambrose's time. Was not the most part of the canon made since by Gregory and Scholasticus?
Indeed a great part of it was made (as you say) by Gregory; but Scholasticus was before St. Ambrose's time.
I think not: however I will not contend. St. Gregory says, that the apostles said mass without the canon, only with the Lord's prayer.
You say true: for the canon is not the greatest part of the mass, the greatest part is the sacrifice, elevation, transubstantiation, and adoration.
I can away with none of them.
No, I think the same: but yet "This do," tells plainly the sacrifice of the church.
You confound sacrifices, not discerning betwixt the sacrifice of the church, and for the church. The sacrifice of the church, is no propitiatory sacrifice, but a gratulatory sacrifice. And as for "This do," it is not referred to any sacrificing, but to the whole action of taking, eating, &c.
You speak not learnedly now: for Christ made his supper only to the twelve apostles, not admitting his mother or any of the seventy disciples to it. Now the apostles do signify the priests.
I think you speak as you would men should understand it: for else you would not keep the cup away from the laity. We have great cause to thank you, that you will give us of your bread. For I perceive you order the matter so, [Page 641] as though Christ had not commanded it to his whole church.
THEN Harpsfield would have proved elevation by a place of Basilius.
I have read the place, which seems to make nothing for elevation: but be it as it is, this is no time for me to scan the doubtful places of the doctors with you. I have been in prison long without books and all necessaries for study, and now death draweth nigh, and by your leave I must now leave off, to prepare for it.
If I could do you good, I would be right glad, either in soul or body. For you are in a perilous case both ways.
Sir, I thank you for your good will. My case is as it is. I thank God it was never so well with me; for death shall be life.
It were best for you to desire Mr. Archdeacon that he would make suit for you, that you might have a time to confer.
I will do the best I can; for I pity his case.
Sir, I will not desire any body to sue for time for me. I am not wavering, neither would I that any body should think I were so. But if you have the charity and love you pretend towards me, and do think I am in an error. I think the same should move you to do as you would be done to. As you think of me, so do I of you, and that you are far out of the way, and I do not only think it, but am also thereof most assured. And with this and such like talk, they departed.
ON the 23d of the month, the archbishop of York, and the bishop of Chichester came to the Compter to speak with Mr. Bradford. When he was come before them, they both▪ and especially the bishop of York, used him very gently: they desired him to sit down, and because [...]e would not, they also would not sit. So they all stood, and whether he would or not, they would needs have him put on, not only his night cap, but his uppercap also, saying unto him, That obedience was better than sacrifice.
WHILE they were thus standing together, my lord of York began to tell Mr. Bradford that they came to him out of pure love and charity, without being sent; and himself, also for the acquaintance he had with Mr. Bradford, more than the bishop of Chichester had: and after commending Mr. Bradford's godly life, he concluded with this question, How he was certain of salvation and of his religion.
AFTER thanks for their good will, Mr. Bradford answered, By the word of God, even by the scriptures, I am certain of salvation and religion.
Very well said: but how do you know the word of God and the scriptures, but by the church?
Indeed my lord, the church was and is a means to bring a man to know the scriptures and the word of God, as the woman of Samaria was the means by which the Samaritans knew Christ: but when they had heard him speak, they said, Now we know that he is Christ, not because of thy words, but because we ourselves have heard; so after we come to the hearing and reading of the scriptures shewed unto us, and discerned by the church, we do believe them, and know them as Christ's sheep, not because the church saith they are the scriptures, but because they be so, being assured thereof by the same spirit which wrote and spake them.
You know in the apostles time at first the word was not written.
True, if you mean it for some books of the New Testament; but else for the Old Testament St. Peter tells us, "We have a more sure word of prophecy;" not that it is simply so, but in respect of the apostles, which being alive and subject to infirmity, attributed to the written word more weight, as wherewith no fault could be found, whereas for the infirmity of their persons men perchance might have found some fault at [Page 642] their preaching; although in very deed no less obedience and faith ought to have been given to the one, than to the other; for all proceedeth from one spirit of tru [...] ▪
That place of St. Peter is not so to be understood of the word written.
Yes, sir, that it is, and of none other.
Yes, indeed, Mr. Bradford doth tell you truly in that point.
Well, you know that Irenaeus and others do magnify much, and alledge the church against the heretics, and not the scripture.
True, for they had to do with such heretics as did deny the scriptures, and yet did magnify the apostles, so they were enforced to use the authority of those churches wherein the apostles had taught, and had still retained the same doctrine.
You speak the very truth: for the heretics did refuse all scriptures, except it were a piece of St. Luke's gospel.
Then the alledging of the church cannot be principally used against me, which am so far from denying of the scriptures, that I appeal to them utterly, as to the only judge.
A pretty matter, that you will take upon you to judge the church! I pray you, where hath your church been hitherto? For the church of Christ is catholic and visible hitherto.
My lord, I do not judge the church when I discern it from the congregation, and those which be not the church; and I never denied the church to be catholic and visible, although at some times it is more visible than at others.
I pray you tell me where the church which allowed your doctrine, was these 400 years?
I will tell you my lord, or rather you shall tell yourself, if you will tell this one thing, Where the church was in Elijah's time, when Elijah said he was left alone?
That is no answer.
I am sorry that you say so: but this I will tell your lordship, that if you had the same eyes wherewith a man might have espied the church then, you would not say it were no answer. The fault why the church is not seen by you, is not because the church is not visible, but because your eyes are not clear enough to see it.
You are much deceived in making this comparison betwixt the church then and now.
Very well spoken, my lord; for Christ said, "I will build my church;" and not I do, or have built it: but I will build it.
My lords, St. Peter teacheth me to make this comparison, saying, "As in the people there were false prophets, which were most in estimation before Christ's coming, so shall there be false teachers amongst the people after Christ's coming, and very many shall follow them." And as for your future tense, I hope your grace will not thereby conclude Christ's church not to have been before, but rather that there is no building in the church but Christ's work only: for Paul and Appollos be but waterers.
In good faith I am sorry to see you so light in judging the church.
He hath taken upon him as they do all to judge the church. A man shall never come to certainty that doth as they do.
My lords, I speak simply what I think, and desire reason to answer my objections. Your affections and sorrows cannot be my rules. If you consider the order and case of my condemnation, I cannot think but that it should something move your honours. You know it well enough, (for you have heard it) no matter was laid against me, but was gathered upon mine own confession. Because I denied transubstantiation, and the wicked to receive Christ's body in the sacrament, therefore I was condemned [Page 643] and excommunicated, but not by the church, although the pillars of the church (as they be accounted) did it.
No; I heard say the cause of your imprisonment was, for that you exhorted the people to take the sword in one hand, and the mattock in the other.
My lord, I never meant any such thing, nor spake any thing in that manner.
Yea, and you behaved yourself before the council so stoutly at first, that you would defend the religion then; and therefore worthily were you imprisoned.
Your grace heard me answer my lord chancellor to that point. But suppose I had been so stout as they and your grace make it, were not the laws of the realm then on my side? Wherefore unjustly then was I imprisoned: only that which my lord chancellor propounded, was my confession of Christ's truth against transubstantiation, and of that which the wicked do receive, as I said
You deny the presence.
I do not, to the faith of the worthy receivers.
Why? what is that to say other, than that Christ lieth not on the altar?
My lord, I believe no such presence.
It seemeth that you have not read Chrysostom: for he proveth it.
Hitherto I have been kept well enough without books: howbeit this I do remember of Chrysostom, that he saith that Christ lieth upon the altar, as the seraphims with their tongs touch our lips with the coals of the altar in heaven, which is an hyperbolical speech, of which you know Chrysostom is full.
It is evident that you are too far gone; but let us come then to the church, out of which you are excommunicated.
I am not excommunicate out of Christ's church, my lord, although they which seem to be in the church, and of the church, have excommunicated me, as the poor blind man was, John ix. I am sure Christ receiveth me.
HERE, after much talk of excommunication, at length Mr. Bradford said,
ASSUREDLY, as I think you did well to depart from the Romish church, so I think you have done wickedly to couple yourselves to it again, for you can never prove that, which you call the mother church, to be Christ's church.
Ah, Mr. Bradford, you were but a child when this matter began. I was a young man, and then coming from the university, I went with the world; but I tell you it was always against my conscience.
I was but a child then, howbeit as I told you, I think you have done evil For you are come, and have brought others to that wicked man which sitteth in the temple of God, that is, in the church: for it cannot be understood of Mahomet, or any out of the church, but of such as bear rule in the church.
See how you build your faith upon such places of scripture as are most obscure, to deceive yourself, as though you were in the church, where you are not.
Well, my lord, though I might by fruits judge of you and others, yet will I not utterly exclude you out of the church. And if I were in your case, I would not condemn him utterly that is of my faith in the sacrament, knowing as you know, that at least 800 years after Christ, as my lord of Durham writeth, it was free to believe or not to believe transubstantiation.
This is a toy that you have found out of your own brain; as though a man not believing [Page 644] as the church doth, that is, transubstantiation, were of the church.
He is an heretic, and so none of the church, that doth hold any doctrine against the definition of the church, as a man to hold against transubstantiation. Cyprian was no heretic, though he believed re-baptizing of them who were baptized by heretics, because he held it before the church had defined it, whereas if he had held it after, then had he been a heretic.
Oh, my lord, will you condemn to the devil any man that believeth truly the twelve articles of the faith, (wherein I take the unity of Christ's church to consist) although in some points he believe not the definition of that which you call the church? I doubt not but that he which holdeth firmly the articles of our belief, though in other things he dissent from your definitions, yet he shall be saved.
YEA, said both the bishops, this is your divinity.
No, it is St. Paul's, who saith, that if they hold the foundation, Christ, though they build upon him straw and stubble, yet they shall be saved.
Lord God, how you delight to lean to so hard and dark places of the scriptures.
I will shew you that Luther did excommunicate Zuinglius for this matter, and so he read a place of Luther making for his purpose.
My lord, what Luther writeth, as you mind it not, no more do I in this case. My faith is not built on Luther, Zuinglius, or Oecolampadius, in this point: and indeed to tell you truly, I never read any of their works in this matter. As for them, I do think assuredly, that they were God's children, and are saints with him.
Well, you are out of the communion of the church.
I am not, for it consisteth and is in faith.
Lo, how you make your church invisible; for you would have the communion of it consist in faith.
For to have communion with the church needeth no visibleness of it; for communion consisteth, as I said, in faith, and not in exterior ceremonies, as appeareth both by St. Paul, who would have one faith, and by Irenaeus to Victor, for the observation of Easter, saying, that disagreeing about fasting should not break the agreement of faith.
The same place hath often even wounded my conscience, because we separated ourselves from the see of Rome.
Well, God forgive you, for you have done evil in bringing England thither again.
HERE my lord of York took a paper-book of common places, and read a piece of St. Augustine, how that there were many things that held St. Augustine in the bosom of the church; consent of people and nations, authority confirmed with miracles, nourished with hope, increased with charity, established with antiquity: besides this, there holdeth me in the church, said St. Augustine, the succession of priests from Peter's seat until this present bishop. Last of all, the very name of catholic did hold me, &c. Lo! (said he) how say you to this of St. Augustine? Paint me out your church thus.
My lord, these words of St. Augustine make as much for me as for you: although I might answer, that all this, if they had been so firm as you make them, might have been alledged against Christ and his apostles. For there was the law and the ceremonies consented to by the whole people, confirmed with miracles, antiquity, and continual succession of bishops from Aaron's time until that present.
In good faith, Mr. Bradford, you make too much of the state of the church before Christ's coming.
Therein I do but as St. Peter teacheth, 2 Pet. ii. and St. Paul very often. You would [Page 645] gladly have your church here very glorious, like a most pleasant lady. But Christ saith, and so may his church say, "Blessed are they that are not offended at me."
Yea, you think that none is of the church, but such as suffer persecution.
What I think, God knoweth: I pray your grace to judge me by my words, and mark what St. Paul saith; "All that will live godly in Christ Jesus, must suffer persecution." Sometimes Christ's church hath rest here; but commonly it is not so, and especially towards the end her form will be more unseemly.
But what say you to St. Augustine? Where is your church that hath the consent of the people and nations?
Even all people and nations that be God's people have consented with me, and I with them in the doctrine of faith.
Lo, you go about to shift off all things.
No, my lord; I mean simply, and God knoweth I so speak.
St. Augustine doth here talk of succession, even from St. Peter's seat.
Yea, that seat then was not so much corrupt as it is now.
Well, you always judge the church.
No, my lord, Christ's sheep discern Christ's voice, but they judge it not; so they discern the church, but judge her not.
Yes, that they do.
Not so, please your grace: and yet full well may one not only doubt, but judge also of the Romish church; for she obeyeth not Christ's voice, as Christ's true church doth.
Wherein?
In Latin service, and robbing the laity of Christ's cup in the sacrament, and in many other things, in which it committeth most horrible sacrilege.
Why? Latin service was in England when the pope was gone.
True; the time was in England when the pope was away, but not all popery; as in king Henry's days.
Latin service was appointed to be sung and had in the choir, where only were the clergy, that is, such as understood Latin, the people fitting in the body of the church praying their own private prayers; and this may well be yet seen by making of the chancel and choir, so as the people could not come in, or hear them.
Yea, but in St. Chrysostom's time, and also in the Latin church in St. Jerome's time, all the church, said he, answereth again mightily, Amen. Whereby we may see that the prayers were made so, that both the people heard and understood them.
You are to blame, to say that the church robbeth the people of the cup.
Well, my lord, term it as you please: all men know that the laity hath none of it.
Indeed I wish that the church would define again, that they might have it, for my part.
If God make it free. who can define to make it bound?
Well, Mr. Bradford, we lose our labour: for you seek to put away all things which are told you for your good: your church no man can know.
Yes, that you well may.
I pray you whereby?
Forsooth Chrysostom saith, only by the scriptures; and this you well know he speaketh very often.
Indeed that of Chrysostom is an imperfect work, which may be doubted of. The church is best known by succession of bishops.
No, my lord, Lyra upon Matthew writeth full well, that "The church consisteth not in men by reason either of secular or temporal power, but in men endued with true knowledge, and confession of faith, and of verity.
AND in Hilary's time, you know he writeth to Auxentius, that the church was hidden rather in caves and holes, than did glister and shine in thrones of pre-eminence.
THEN came one of the servants, and told them, that my lord of Durham tarried for them at the archbishop of York's house; and this was after they had been three hours with Mr. Bradford. And after the man was come, they put up ther written books of common places, and said that they lamented his case: they desired him to read over a book which did Mr. Crome good; and so wishing him good in words, they went their way, and poor Bradford to his prison.
AFTER this communication with the bishops was ended, within two days following came into the Compter two Spanish friars to talk with Mr. Bradford, sent (as they said) by the earl of Derby; of whom one was the king's confessor, the other was Alphonsus, who had before written a popish book against heresies, the effect of which their reasoning here likewise followeth.
UPON the 25th day of February, about eight o'clock in the morning, when these two friars came to the Compter where Mr. Bradford was prisoner, they desired he might be called. Then one friar, who was the king's confessor, asked in Latin (for all their discourse was in Latin) of Bradford, whether he had not seen or heard of one Alphonsus that had written against heresies
I do not know him.
Well, this man
is he. We are come to you of love and charity, by the means of the earl of Derby, because you desire to confer with us.
I never desired your coming, nor to confer with you, or any other But seeing you are come of charity, as you say, I cannot but thank you: and as concerning conference, though I desire it not, yet I will not refuse to talk with you if you will.
It were requisite that you did pray to God, that you might follow the direction of God's Spirit, that he would inspire you, so that you be not addicted to your own self-will or wit.
WHEREUPON Mr. Bradford made a prayer, and besought God to direct all their wills, words and works, as the will, words, and works of his children for ever.
Yea, you must pray with your heart. For if you speak with the tongue only, God will not give you his grace.
Sir, do not judge, lest you be judged. You have heard my words; now charity would have you leave the judgment of the heart to God.
You must be as it were a neuter, and no wedded to yourself, but as one standing in doubt: pray and be ready to receive what God shall inspire; for in vain laboureth our tongue to speak else.
Sir, my sentence, if you mean it for religion, must not be in doubting or uncertainty, as I thank God I am certain in that for which I am condemned: I have no cause to doubt of it, but rather to be more certain of it; and therefore I pray God to confirm me more in it. For it is his truth; and because it is so certain and true that it may abide the light, I dare be bold to have it lo [...]ked on, and confer it with you, or any man; in respect whereof I am both glad of your coming, and thank you for it.
What is the matter whereof you were condemned? we know not.
Sir, I have been in prison almost two years: I never transgressed any of their laws for which I might justly be imprisoned▪ and now am I condemned, only because I frankly conf [...]ss [...]d▪ where [...]of I repent not, my faith concerning the sacrament▪ [Page 647] when I was demanded in these two points; one, that there is no transubstantiation; the other, that the wicked do not receive Christ's body.
Let in look a little on the first. Do you not believe that Christ is present really, and corporally in the form of bread?
No, I do believe that Christ is present to the faith of the worthy receiver, as there is present bread and wine to the senses and outward man: as for any such presence of including and placing Christ, I believe not, nor dare I believe.
I am sure you believe Christ's natural body is circumscriptible.
AND here he made much ado of the two natures of Christ, how that the one is every where, and the other is in his proper place, demanding such questions as no wise man would have spent any time about. At length, because the friar had forgot to conclude, Mr. Bradford put him in mind of it, and thus then at last he concluded, How that because Christ's body was circum [...]riptible, concerning the human nature in heaven, therefore it was so in the bread.
How hangeth this together? Even as if you should say; Because you are here, Ergo, it must needs follow that you are at Rome. For thus you reason; Because Christ's body is in heaven: Ergo, it is in the sacrament under the form of bread: which no wise man will grant.
Why? will you believe nothing but that which is expressly spoken in the scriptures?
Yes, sir, I will believe whatsoever you shall by demonstration out of the scriptures declare unto me.
HE is obstinate, quoth Alphonsus to his fellow: and then turning to Bradford, said, Is not God able to do it?
Yes, but here the question is of God's will, and not of his power.
Why? doth he not say plainly, This is my body?
Yes, and I deny not but that it is so, to the faith of the worthy receiver.
To the faith! how is that?
Forsooth sir, as I have no tongue to express it: so I know you have no ears to hear and understand it. For faith is more than man can utter.
But I can tell all that I believe.
You believe not much then. For if you believe the joys of heaven, and believe no more thereof than you can tell, you will not yet desire to come thither. For as the mind is more capable and receivable than the mouth, so it conceiveth more than the tongue can express.
Christ saith it is his body.
And so say I, after a certain manner.
After a certain manner! that is, after another manner than it is in heaven.
St. Augustine telleth it more plainly, that it is Christ's body after the same manner as circumcision was the covenant of God, and the sacrament of faith is faith; or to make it more plain, as baptism and water of baptism is regeneration.
Very well said: baptism and the water thereof, is a sacrament of God's grace and Spirit in the water cleansing the baptized.
No, sir, away with your inclosing: but this I grant, that after the same sort Christ's body is in the bread, in which sort the grace and Spirit of God is in the water.
God's grace is in the water by signification.
So is the body in the bread in the sacrament.
You are much deceived, in that you make no difference between the sacraments that [Page 648] be by-standers, and the sacraments that are transitory and passers by. As for example, the sacrament of orders, which you deny, though St. Augustine affirmeth it, is a stander, although the ceremony be past. But in baptism so soon as the body is washed, the water ceaseth to be a sacrament.
Very good, and so it is in the supper of the Lord; no longer than it is in use, is it Christ's sacrament.
HERE the friar was in a wonderful rage, and spake so loud (a [...] he had often done before) that the whole house rang again. This friar had the character of being a very learned man, but surely by his behaviour here he had very little patience, for if Bradford had been any thing hot, one house could not have held them. At length they came to this point, That Bradford could not find in scripture that baptism and the Lord's supper bare any similitude together. And here he triumphed before the conquest, saying, that these men would have nothing but scripture, and yet are able to prove nothing by the scripture.
Be patient, and you shall see that by the scripture I will find baptism and the Lord's supper coupled together.
No, that thou canst never do. Let me see a text of it.
St. Paul saith, "That as we are baptized into one body, so were we Potati in uno spiritu, i. e. we have drank of one spirit," meaning the cup in the Lord's supper.
St. Paul hath no such words.
Yes, that he hath.
I think he hath not.
Give me a Testament, and I will shew you.
SO a priest that sat by them gave him his Testament, and he shewed them the plain text. Then they looked one upon another. In fine, the friar made this simple shift, that St. Paul spake not of the sacrament.
Well, the text is plain enough, and there are many of the fathers which do so understand the place▪ for Chrysostom doth expound it so.
ALPHONSUS which had the testament in his hand, desirous to suppress this foil, turned the leaves of the book from leaf to leaf, till he came to the place, 1 Cor. xi. and there he read how that he was guilty, which made no difference of the Lord's body.
Yea, but therewith he saith, "He that eateth of the bread:" calling it bread still: and that after consecration (as you call it), as in the tenth of the Corinthians he saith; "The bread which we break," &c.
Oh how ignorant are you, who know not that things after their conversion do retain the same names which they had before, as Moses's rod: and calling for a bible, after he had found the place, he began to triumph: but Bradford cooled him quickly, saying,
SIR, there is mention made of the conversion, as well as that the same appeared to the sense. But here you cannot find it so. Find me one word how the bread is converted, and I will then say, you bring some matter that maketh for you.
AT these words Alphonsus was troubled, and at length he said, That Bradford hanged on his own sense.
No, that do I not: for I will bring you the fathers of the church 800 years after Christ, to confirm what I speak.
No, you have the church against you.
I have not Christ's church against me.
Yes, that you have. What is the church?
Christ's wife, the chair and seat of truth.
Is she visible?
Yes, she is so to them that will put on the spectacles of God's word to look on her.
This church hath defined the contrary, and that I will prove by all the good fathers from Christ's ascension, even for 800 years at least continually.
What will you so prove? Transubstantiation?
Yea, that the bread is turned into Christ's body.
You speak more than you can do.
That do I not.
Then will I give place.
Will you believe?
Belief is God's gift; therefore I cannot promise: but I t [...]ll you I will give place; and I hope I shall believe his truth always, so good is he to me in Christ my Saviour.
HERE the friar found great fault with Mr. Bradford's answer. But this he let pass, and repeated his question, if he could prove it as he said, whether he would give place?
Yes, that I will. Then called he for paper, pen, and ink, to write; and then said I, Suppose that I prove by the testimony of the fathers, that continually for 800 years after Christ at least, they did believe that the substance of bread doth remain in the sacrament, what will you do?
I will give place.
Then write you here that you will give place if I so prove, and I will write that I will give place if you so prove: because you are the elder, you shall have the pre-eminency.
HERE the friar fumed marvelously, and said; I came not to learn from thee: are not here witnesses? (meaning the priests) are not they sufficient? But the man was so angry, that if Mr. Bradford had not passed over this matter of writing, the friar would have gone to plain scolding.
AT length the king's confessor asked Mr. Bradford what the second question was?
That wicked men receive not Christ's body in the sacrament, as St. Augustine speaketh of Judas, that he received the bread of the Lord, but not bread the Lord.
St. Augustine saith not so.
Yes, that he does. So they arose and talked no more of the matter. Thus went they away, without bidding Bradford farewel.
AFTER they were gone, one of the priests came, and desired Bradford not to be so obstinate.
Sir, be not you so wavering; in all the scriptures you cannot find these words, There is not bread.
Yes, that I can, in five places.
Then I will eat your book. So the book was opened, but no place found; and he went his way smiling. God help us!
IT followed after this, upon the 21st day of March, that by means of one of the earl of Derby's men, there came to the Compter to dinner one Mr. Collier, once warden of Manchester, and the said servant of the earl of Derby, of whom Mr. Bradford learned, that Dr. Weston, dean of Westminster, would be with him in the afternoon about two o'clock. At dinner time, when the said warden discommended king Edward, and went about to set forth the authority of the pope, which Bradford withstood, defending the king's faith, that it was catholic, and that the authority of the bishop of Rome's supremacy was usurped, bringing forth the testimony of Gregory, which affirmeth the name of supreme head, to be a title of the forerunner to Antichrist. A woman prisoner was brought in, whereupon the said Bradford took occasion to rise from the table, and so went to his [Page 650] prison chamber to pray to God for his grace and assistance therein, continuing there till he was called down to speak with Dr. Weston, who was then come in.
MR. BRADFORD then being called down, as soon as he entered into the hall, Dr. Weston very gently took him by the hand, and asked how he did, with such other talk. At length he desired them to go out of the chamber: so they all went out, save Dr. Weston himself, Mr. Collier, the earl of Derbey's servant, the sub-dean of Westminster, the keeper, Mr. Claydon, and the parson of the church near the Compter.
NOW when he began with Mr. Bradford, to tell how that he had often intended to have come unto him, being desired by the earl of Derby: and (said he) after I perceived by this man, that you could be contented rather to speak with me, than any other; I could not but come to do you all the good I can; for you may be sure I will never hurt you.
SIR, replied Mr. Bradford, when I perceived by the report of my lord's servant, that you did bear me good will, more (as he said) than any other of your sort, I told him then, that I could be better content and more willing to talk with you, if you should come unto me. This did I say; otherwise I desired not your coming.
Well, Mr. Bradford, now I am come to talk with you: but before we enter into any talk, certain principles we must agree upon, which sh [...]ll be this day's work.
FIRST, said he, I shall desire you to put away all vain glory, and not hold any thing for the praise of the world.
Sir, St. Augustine maketh that indeed a piece of the definition of an heretic; which if I cannot put away clean, (for I think there will be a spice of it remain in us, as long as this flesh liveth) yet I promise you by the grace of God, that I purpose not to yield to i [...]. God I hope will never suffer it to bear rule in them that strive against it, and desire all the dregs of it utterly to be driven out of us.
I am glad to hear you say so, although indeed I think you do not so much esteem it as others do.
SECONDLY, I would desire you that you will put away singularity in your judgment and opinions.
Sir, God forbid that I should stick to my singularity or private judgment in God's religion. Hitherto I have not desired it, neither do, nor mind at any time to hold any other doctrine than i [...] public and catholic, (understood catholic as good men do) according to God's word.
Very well, this is a good day's work, I hope to do you good: and therefore now, thirdly, I shall pray you to write me the heads of those things whereupon you stand in the sacrament, and to send them to me betwixt this and Wednesday next: until which time, yea, until I come to you again, be assured that you are without all peril of death. Of my fidelity, I warrant you, therefore away with all doubts, &c.
Sir, I will write to you the grounds I lean to in this matter. As for death, if it come, welcome be it; this which you require of me, shall be no great hindrance to me therein.
You know that St. Augustine was a Manichean, yet was he converted at length▪ so have I good hope of you▪
Sir, because I will nor flatter you, I would you should flatly know, that I am even settled in that religion for which I am condemned.
Yea, but if it be not the truth, and you see evident matter to the contrary, will you not then give place?
God forbid, but that I should always give place to the truth.
I would have you so to pray.
So I do, and that he will more and more confirm me in it, as I thank God he hath done and doth.
Yea, but pray with a condition, if you be in it.
No, sir, I cannot pray so, because I am settled and assured of his truth.
WELL, said Weston, as the learned bishop answered St. Augustine's mother, that though he was obstinate, yet the tears of such a mother could not but win her son: so also I hope your prayers (for then Bradford's eyes did shew that he had wept in prayer) cannot but be heard by God, though not as you would, yet as best shall please him. Do you not remember the history thereof?
Yea, sir, I think it is of St. Ambrose.
No, that i [...] is not. And here Weston would have laid a wager, and began to triumph, saying to Bradford, As you are overseen herein, so are you in other things.
Well, sir, I will not contend with you for the name. This (I remember) St. Augustine writeth in his confessions.
AFTER this talk Dr. Weston began to tell Mr. Bradford, that the people were persuaded by him to withstand the queen.
WHEREUNTO Bradford answering again, bade him hang him up as a traitor and a thief, if ever he encouraged any to rebellion: his keeper and the priests that were there, affirmed the same. At that time there was much talk to little purpose. Dr. Weston declared moreover, that he had saved men going in the cart to be hanged and such like.
THE end was this, that Bradford should send unto him the heads of the doctrine of the supper, and after Wednesday he would come unto him again; and thus he departed, after he had drunk to him in beer and wine.
WE omit here to talk of Oxford, of books of German writers, the fear of death, and such other talk which are to no purpose.
IN the mean time, when Mr. Bradford had written his reasons and arguments, and had sent them to Dr. Weston, soon after, about the 28th of March, there came to the Compter Dr. Pendleton, and with him the aforesaid Mr. Collier, sometime warden of Manchester, and Stephen Bech. After salutations, Dr Pendleton began to speak to Mr. Bradford, that he was sorry for his trouble. And further, said he, after that I knew you could be content to talk with me, I made the more speed, being as ready to do you good, and serve you what I can, as you would wish.
Sir, the manner how I was content to speak with you was on this sort: Mr. Bech often asked me whom he should bring unto me, and named you amongst others; and I said I would rather speak with you than with any other. Now the cause why I so would, I will briefly tell you. I remember that once you were, (as far as a man might judge) of the religion that I am of at this present, and I remember that you have earnestly set forth the same. Gladly therefore would I learn of you what thing it was that moved your conscience to alter, and gladly would I see what thing it is that you have seen since which you saw not before.
I do not know for what you are condemned.
Transubstantiation is the cause for which I am condemned, and because I deny that wicked men do receive Christ's body: wherein I would desire you to shew me what reasons which before you knew not, did move your conscience now to alter. For once, (as I said) you were as I am in religion.
HERE Mr. Pendleton, half amazed, began to excuse himself, as though he had not fully denied transubstantiation indeed, although I said, says he, that the word was not in scripture; and so he made an endless tale of the thing that moved him to [...]lter: but (said he) I will gather you the places which moved me, and send you them. And here [Page 652] he desired Mr. Bradford that he might have a copy of that which he had sent to Dr. Weston; which Mr. Bradford promised him.
SOME reasoning also they had, whether evil men did receive Christ's body, Bradford denying, and Pendleton affirming. Mr. Bradford said, that they received not the spirit: Ergo, not the body; for it is no dead carcase. Hereto Mr. Bradford brought also St. Augustine, how Judas received "the bread of the Lord," and not "bread the Lord," and that he must be in Christ's body, which must receive the body of Christ. Pendleton went about to put it away with Idem, and not Ad idem, and how that In Corpore Christi was to be understood of all that are in the visible church of God's elect. Mr. Bradford denied this to be St. Augustine's meaning, and said also that the allegation of Idem, and not Ad idem, could not make for that purpose. They talked more of transubstantiation, Pendleton quoting Cyprian, The nature of bread is changed, &c. And Mr. Bradford said, that in that place, nature did not signify substance. As the nature of an herb is not the substance of it; so the bread changed in nature is not to be taken for changed in substance: for now it is ordained not for food of the body simply, but rather for the soul. Here also Bradford alledged the opinion of Gelasius. Pendleton said, he was a pope. Yes, said Bradford, but his faith was my faith in the sacrament, if you would receive it.
THEY reasoned also whether accidents were things or no. If they are things, said Mr. Bradford, then they are substances; and if they be substances, they are earthly, and then there are earthly substances in the sacrament, as Irenaeus says, which must needs be bread. But Pendleton said, that the colour w [...]s the earthly thing, and called it an accidental substance.
WE omit what passed about my lord of Canterbury, of Peter Martyr's book, of Pendleton's letter laid to Bradford's charge when he was condemned, with other talk about the church; whether Dic Ecclesiae was spoken of the universal church, or of a particular church, at length Mr. Pendleton granted that it was spoken of a particular church) also of vain-glory, which he desired Mr. Bradford to beware of, and such like talk. A little before his departing, Mr. Bradford said thus: Master Doctor, as I said to Dr. Weston before, so say I to you now, that I am the same man in religion against transubstantiation still, as I was when I came into prison; for hitherto I have seen nothing in any one point to convince me of me of the contrary. At which words Mr. Pendleton was something moved, and said it was no catholic doctrine. Yes, says Mr. Bradford, and that I will prove even by the testimony of the catholic fathers till the council of Lateran, or thereabouts. Then Pendleton went his way, saying that he would often come to Mr. Bradford.
THE same day in the afternoon, about five o'clock, Dr. Weston came to Mr. Bradford, and after gentle salutat [...]ons, he desired every man present to depart, and th [...]y two sat down. And after he thanked Mr. Bradford for his writing to him, he pulled out of his bosom the writing which Mr. Bradford had sent him. The writing is as follows:
Certain Reasons against TRANSUBSTANTIATION, collected by Mr. JOHN BRADFORD, and given to Dr. WESTON, and others.
THAT which is former (saith Tertullian) is true; that which is latter is false. But the doctrine of transubstantiation is a late doctrine, for it was not defined generally before the council of Lateran, about 1215 years after Christ's coming, under pope Innocent, the third of that name. For before that time it was free for all men to believe, or not believe it, as the bishop of Durham doth witness in his book of the presence of Christ in his supper, lately published. Therefore, the doctrine of transubstantiation is false.
2. THAT the words of Christ's supper be figurative, the circumstances of the scriptures, the analogy or proportion of the sacraments, and the opinions of all the holy fathers, which were, and wrote for the space of 1000 years after Christ's ascension, do teach: whereupon it follows, that there was no transubstantiation.
3. THAT the Lord gave to his disciples bread, and called it his body, the scriptures do witness. For he gave that, and called it his body, which he [Page 653] took in his hand, whereon he gave thanks, which also he brake, and gave to his disciples, that is to say, bread, as the fathers Irenaeus, Tertullian, Origen, Cyprian, Epiphanius, Augustine, and all the residue which are of antiquity, do affirm: but inasmuch as the substance of bread and wine is another thing than the substance of the body and blood of Christ, it plainly appeareth that there is no transubstantiation.
4. THE bread is no more transubstantiate than the wine: but that the wine is not transubstantiate, St. Matthew and St. Mark teach us: for they witness that Christ said, he would drink no more of the fruit of the vine, which was not blood but wine: and therefore it follows, that there is no trans [...]bstantiation. Chrysostom upon St. Matthew, and Cyprian do affirm this reason.
5. AS the bread in the Lord's suppe [...] is Christ's natural body, so it is his mystical body: for the same Spirit that spake of it, This is my body, said also, For we many are one bread, [...]ne body, &c. but now it is not the mystical body by transubstantiation, and therefore it is not his natural body by transubstantiation.
6. THE words spoken over the cup in St. Luke and St. Paul, are not so mighty and effectual, as to transubstantiate it: for then the cup, or that which is in it, should be transubstantiated into the New Testament: therefore the words spoken over the bread, are not so mighty as to make transubstantiation.
7. ALL that doctrine which agreeth with those churches which be apostolical mother churches, is to be counted for truth, because it holdeth that which these churches received of the apostles, the apostles of Christ, and Christ of God. But it is manifest that the doctrine taught at this present by the church of Rome, concerning transubstantiation, doth not agree with the apostolical and mother churches of Greece, of Corinth, of Philippos, Colossia, Thessalonica, and Ephesus, which never taught transubstantiation; yea, it agreeth not with the doctrine of the church of Rome, as it was taught in times past. For pope Gelasius, setting forth the doctrine which that see then held, doth manifestly confute the error of transubstantiation, and [...]proveth them for sacrilege who divided the mystery, and kept the cup from the laity: therefore the doctrine of transubstantiation agreeth not with the truth.
THIS was the writing which Weston pulled out of his bosom; and yet before he began to read it, he told Mr. Bradford that he had inquired of his conversation at Cambridge since his last being with him; and, said he, because you are a man not given to the glory of the world, I will speak it before your face; your life I have lea [...]ned was [...]ays such there, as all men, even the greatest e [...]emies you have, cannot but praise, and th [...]fore [...] love you much better than ever I did; [...]ut now I will read over your arguments, and so we will confer them. They are such that a man may well perceive you stand on [...]onscience, and therefore I am the more ready and glad to pity you. So he began to read the first▪ to which he said, that though the word [...] on began but lately, yet the thing always was, and hath been since Christ's institution.
I do not contend, or insist upon the word only, but upon the thing which is as new as the word.
THEN Dr. Weston went to the second, and there brought out St. Augustine, how that if an evil man going to the devil, did make his will, his son and heir would not say his father did lie in it, or speak tropically: much more Christ, going to God, did never lie, or use any figurative speech in his last will and testament. Do you not remember this place of St. Augustine, said he?
Yes, sir, but I do not remember St. Augustine hath those words tropically, or figuratively, as you rehearse them: for any man may speak a thing figuratively and not lie: and so Christ did in his last supper.
AFTER this Dr. Weston went to the third, and brought forth Cyprian, how that the nature of bread is turned into flesh. Here, says he, my lord of Canterbury expoundeth nature for quality, by Gelasius. Which interpretation serves for the answer of your argument, that Christ called bread his [Page 654] body: that is, the quality, form, and appearance of bread. And further, the scripture is wont to call things by the same names which they had before, as Simon the leper; he was not so at that time, but because he had been so.
Cyprian wrote before Gelasius; therefore Cyprian must not expound Gelasius, but Gelasius Cyprian; and so they both teach, that bread remaineth still. As for things having still the names they had, it is no answer, except you could shew that this now were not bread, as easily as a man might have known and seen then Simon to have been healed and clear from his leprosy.
AFTER this Dr. Weston went to the fourth, of the cup, which he did not fully read, but digressed into a long talk of Cyprian's epistle De Aquatiis; also of St. Augustine, expounding the breaking of bread by Christ to his two disciples going to Emmaus, to be the sacrament; with such other talk to little purpose: and therefore Mr. Bradford prayed him, that inasmuch as he had written the reasons that established his faith against transubstantiation, so he would likewise do to him, that is, answer him by writing, and shew him more reasons in writing to confirm transubstantiation. This Dr. Weston promised to do, and said that he would send or bring it to Mr. Bradford again within three days.
THUS when he had read over the arguments, and here and there spoke little to the purpose for the avoiding of them, and Mr. Bradford had prayed him to give him his answers in writing: then he began to tell Mr. Bradford how and what he had done for Mr. Grimoald, and that Mr. Bradford needed not to fear any reproach or slander he should suffer, meaning probably to have Mr. Bradford secretly to come to them as Grimoald did; for he subscribed.
Mr. Dean, I would not have you conceive that I mind the shame of men in this matter; I would rather have you think as the very truth is, that hitherto I have not heard or seen any thing to weaken my faith against transubstantiation, so I am no less settled in it than I was at my first coming hither. I love to be plain with you, and to tell you at first as you shall find at the last.
Indeed, Mr. Bradford, I love you better for your plainness: and do not think otherwise of me, but that you shall find me plain in all my talk with you.
HERE Weston began to ask Mr. Bradford of his imprisonment and condemnation; and Mr. Bradford told him altogether how he had been handled. Whereat Weston seemed to wonder: yea, in plain words he said, that Mr. Bradford had been handled otherwise than he had given cause; and so shewed him, that my lord of Bath reported that he had deserved a benefit at the queen's hand, and at all the council's.
IN this kind of talk they spent almost an hour, and Mr. Bradford, being weary, rose up, and Weston called the keeper, and before him he bade Bradford be of good comfort, and told him he was in no danger of death.
SIR, says the k [...]per, but it is in every man's mouth that he shall die to-morrow.
WHEREAT Weston seemed half amazed and [...], he would go say even-song before the queen, [...]nd speak to her in his behalf. But it is to be thought the queen had almost supped at that time; [...]or it was past six o'clock.
BEFORE the keeper, Mr. Bradford told Weston, again, that still he was one man, and even as he was at the first; and till he should see matter to teach his conscience the contrary, he said he must needs so continue.
THE keeper desired Mr. Bradford to hearken to Mr. Doctor's counsel, and prayed Mr. Doctor to be good unto him: and so after they had drank together, Dr. Weston with most gentle words to [...] his leave for three days.
NOW when he was gone, the keeper told Mr. Bradford, that Mr. Doctor spake openly, that he saw no cause why they should burn him. Which sentence, for the ambiguity of the meaning, made him somewhat sorry, lest he had gathered any conformity to them in their doctrine, which God knoweth, said Bradford, I never yet did. God our Father [Page 655] bless us, as his children, and keep us from all evil for ever. Amen.
UPON the 5th of April, Dr. Weston came to the Compter about two o'clock in the afternoon, who excused himself for being so long absent; partly by sickness; partly for that Dr. Pendleton told him that he would come unto him; and partly for that, said he, I withstood certain monks which would have come again into Westminster: telling him moreover that the pope was dead, and also declared unto him, that he had spoken unto the queen in his behalf, and that death was not near to him.
LAST of all he excused himself for not answering his arguments against transubstantiation; because my coming to-day, said he, was more by fortune than of purpose.
I would gladly, Mr, Doctor, if it please you see your answers to my arguments.
Why, you have remembered something that I spake to you, when I was last with you.
No, sir, I never called them in manner to mind, since that time, as well because I hoped you would have written them, as also for that they seemed not to be so material.
In good faith I cannot see any other or better way for you, than to submit yourself to the judgment of the church.
Indeed, so I will, sir, if so be by the church you understand Christ's church.
Lo, you take upon you to judge the church.
No, sir, that I do not; in taking upon me to discern, I do not judge the church.
Yes, that you do; and make it invisible.
I do neither.
Why, who can see your church?
Those, sir, that have spiritual eyes, wherewith they might have discerned Christ's visible conversation here upon earth.
Nay, Christ's church hath three tokens, that all men may well look upon: namely, unity, antiquity, and consent.
These three may be as well in evil as in good, as well in sin, as in virtue, as well in the devil's church, as in God's church. As for example, idolatry amongst the Israelites had all these three. Chrysostom says plainly, as you well know, that the church is well known only by the scriptures.
You make your church invisible, when you will have it known only by the scriptures.
No, sir, the scriptures do plainly set forth to us the church, that all men may well enough know her thereby, if they please to look.
The church is like a tower or town, that all men may see.
True, sir, all men that are not blind. Visible enough is the church, but men's blindness is great. Impute not therefore to the church, that which is to be imputed to men's blindness.
Where was your church forty years ago? Or where is it now, except in a corner of Germany?
Forsooth, sir, the church of God is dispersed, and not tied to this or that place, but to the word of God; so that where it is, there is God's church, if it be truly taught.
Lo, is not this to make the church invisible? Point me out a realm a hundred years past which maintained your doctrine.
Sir, if you would weigh or well mark the state of the church before Christ's coming, with it now, (as St. Peter and Paul willeth us) I think you would not look for such shews of the church to be made, as to point it out by realm [...]. You know [Page 656] that in Elijah's time, both in Israel and elsewhere, God's church was not pointable; and therefore he cried out that he was left alone.
No, truly, did not God say that there were 7000 which but not bowed their knees to Baal? Here was a church of 7000; shew 7000 a hundred years ago of your rligion.
Sir, these 7000 were not known to men: for then Elijah would not have said, that he had been left alone. And that is plain enough by the text, namely, that God saith, "I have reserved to me seven thousand." Mark that it saith, God hath reserved to himself, to his own knowledge; as I doubt not but a hundred years ago God had his seven thousand in his proper places, though men knew not thereof.
[...] Mr. Bradford, I will not make your case worst than for transubstantiation: although I know that we agree not in other matters. And I pray you make it no worse yourself. If I can do you good, I will: hurt you I will not. I am no prince, and therefore I cannot promise you life, except you submit yourself to the definition of the church.
Sir, If you will define your church, and bring no false church into that definition, you shall soon see that I will be at a point with you.
In good faith, Mr. Bradford, I see no good will be done, and therefore I wish you as much good as I can; and perhaps I may come or send to you again: and so he departed and went for Mr. Weal.
AFTER his departure, the keeper, Mr. Claydon, and Stephen Bech came to Mr. Bradford, and spake to him in such a manner as if they had been his utter enemies, notwithstanding the friendship they hitherto pretended. If God be with us, it matters not who is against us.
DIVERS came to Mr. Bradford in prison, some to dispute, some to confer, some to give counsel, some to take comfort, and be confirmed in their faith, and others came to visit him. There was a certain gentlewoman's servant, which gentlewoman had been cruelly afflicted, and miserably handled by her father and mother, and all her kindred in her father's house, for not coming to mass; and she would have been put to death, had not the providence of God delivered her from her father's house, although at the loss of all she had.
THIS gentlewoman's servant therefore coming to Mr. Bradford, and taking him by the hand, said, God be thanked for you. How do you do?
MR. Bradford answered, Well, I thank God▪ For as men in sailing, which be near to the shore or haven where they would be, would be nearer; even so the nearer I am to God, the nearer I would be.
Sir, I have never seen you so strong and healthful in body, as methinks you be now, God be thanked for it.
WHY, said Bradford, I have given over all care and study, and I only covet to be talking with him, whom I have always studied to serve.
Well, God hath done much for you since the time I first knew you, and hath wrought wonderfully in you to his glory.
Truth it is, for he hath dealt favourably with me, in that he hath punished me according to my sins, but hath suffered me to live, that I might seek repentance.
Truly, we hear say, there is a rod made so grievous, out of which I think no man shall pluck his head.
Well, let all that be of Christ's flock, arm themselves to suffer: for I think verily, God will not have one of his to escape untouched, if he love him, let them seek what means or ways they can.
Well, sir, there is a discourse of a friar that preached before the king, who told him, that he should be guilty of the innocent blood that hath been shed of late.
INDEED, said Bradford, I had a book within [Page 657] these two days of his writing, and therein he saith, that it is not meet nor convenient that heretics should live: and therefore I do marvel how that talk should rise: for I have heard of it also, and I have also talked with this friar (he is named Alphonsus) and with divers others, and I praise God they have confirmed me: for they have nothing to say but that which is most vain.
Sir, Mr. Cardmaker commendeth himself unto you.
How doth he, how doth he?
Well, God be thanked.
I am very glad thereof: for indeed my lord chancellor did cast him in my teeth: but as David saith, God hath disappointed him.
Forsooth, God's name be praised, he is very strong.
And I trust so are we. What else? our quarrel is most just: therefore let us not be afraid.
My mistress commendeth herself unto you.
How doth she?
Well, God be praised, but she hath been sorer afflicted by her own father and mother, than ever you were with your imprisonment; and yet God hath preserved her, I trust to his glory.
I pray you, tell her, I read this day a godly history, written by Basilius Magnus, of a virtuous woman who was a widow, and was named Juleddo. She had great lands and many children, and nigh her dwelt a cormorant, who for her virtuous and pious living, had great indignation against her, and of very malice he took away her lands, so that she was constrained to go to law with him: and in conclusion, the matter came to the trial before the judge, who demanded of this tyrant why he wrongfully with held these lands from this woman? He made answer and said, he might so do, for (said he) this woman is disobedient to the king's proceedings: for she will in no wise worship his gods, nor offer sacrifice unto them. Then the judge hearing that, said unto her, Woman, if this be true, thou art not only like to lose thy land, but also thy life, unless that thou worship our gods, and do sacrifice unto them. This good woman hearing that, steps forth to the judge, and said, Is there no remedy but either to worship your false gods, or else to lose my lands and life? Then farewel suit, farewel lands, farewel children, farewel friends, yea, and farewel life too: and in respect of the true honour of the everliving God, farewel all. And with that saying the judge committed her to prison, and afterwards the suffered most cruel death: and being brought to the place of execution, she exhorted all women to be strong and constant. For, said she, you were redeemed with as dear a price as men. For although you were made of the rib of the man, yet are you all of his flesh: so that also in the case and trial of your faith towards God, you ought to be as strong. And thus died she constantly, not fearing death. I pray you, tell your mistress of this story.
That I shall, sir, by God's grace: for she told me that she was with you and Mr. Saunders, and received your kind counsel.
We never gave her other counsel but the truth, and in witness thereof, we have and will seal it with our blood. For I thought this night I had been sent for, because at eleven o'clock there was such a rapping at the door.
THEN answered a maid, and said, Why then, I perceive you were afraid.
You shall hear how fearful I was. For I considered that I had not slept, and I thought to take a nap before I went: and after I was asleep, these men came into the next chamber, and sang, as it was told me, and yet for all my fearfulness, I heard them not: therefore I could not be much afraid, if I slept so fast.
Do you lack any thing towards your nenessity?
Nothing but your prayers, and I trust I have them, and you mine.
I saw a priest come to you to-day in the morning.
Yea, he brought me a letter from a friar, and I am writing an answer.
Then we hinder you, therefore the living God be with you.
And with you also, and bless you.
Amen, amen; and gave him thanks and departed.
MR. BRADFORD continued still in prison, until the month of July, in such labours and sufferings as he always before had sustained in prison. But when the time of his determined death was come, he was suddenly conveyed out of the Compter where he was prisoner, in the night season to Newgate, as is declared before, and from thence he was carried the next morning to Smithfield, where he constantly abiding in the same truth of God, which before he had confessed, earnestly exhorting the people to repent, and to return to Christ, and sweetly comforting the pious young man of nineteen or twenty years of age, who suffered with him, chearfully ended his painful life to live with Christ.
The EXAMINATION of Mr. JOHN LEAF.
WITH Mr. Bradford was burnt John Leaf, apprentice to Humphry Gaudy, tallow chandler, of the parish of Christ-church, in London, born at Kirkly Moreside, in the county of York; who upon the Friday before Palm-Sunday was committed to the Compter in Bread-street, by an alderman of the ward where the said John Leaf dwelt. Afterwards he coming to examination before bishop Bonner, gave a firm and christian testimony of his doctrine and profession, answering to such articles as were objected to him by the said bishop.
FIRST, As touching his belief and faith in the said sacrament of the altar, he answered, that after the words of consecration spoke by the priest over the bread and wine, there was not the very true and natural body and blood of Christ in substance; and further did hold and believe, that the said sacrament of the altar, as it is now called, used, an believed in this realm of England, is idolatrous and abominable; and also said further, that he believed, that after the words of consecration spoke by the priest over the material bread and wine, there is not the self-same substance of Christ's body and blood there contained; but bread and wine, as it was before. And further said, that he believed, that when the priest delivereth the [...]aid material bread and wine to the communicants, he delivereth only material bread and wine; and the communicants do receive the same in remembrance of Christ's death and passion, and spiritually in faith they receive Christ's body and blood, but not under the forms of bread and wine: and also affirmed, that he believed confession not necessary to be made unto a priest; neither that the priest hath any authority given him by the scripture to absolve and remit any sin.
UPON these his answers, and testimony of his faith, he was at that time dismissed, with orders to appear again on the next Monday, June 10, in the said place, there and then to hear the sentence of his condemnation. At which time the aforesaid bishop propounded the said articles to him as before, endeavouring by all manner of ways to bring him to renounce his religion; but notwithstanding all his persuasions, threats, and promises, found him the same man still, so planted upon the sure rock of truth, that no words or deeds of men could remove him:
THEN the bishop, after many words passing between them, at last asked him, if he had been Mr. Rogers's scholar? To whom the aforesaid John Leaf answered again, granting it so to be; and that he believed in the doctrine of the said Rogers, and in the doctrine of bishop Hooper, Cardmaker, and others of their opinion, who were lately burned for the testimony of Christ, and that he would die in that doctrine that they died for. The bishop still continued persuading him to return to the unity of the church, but he answered again in these words: My lord, (said he) you call mine opinion heresy; but it is the true light of the word of God. And again repeating the same, he professed that he would never forsake his stayed and well grounded opinion, while the breath should be in his body. Whereupon [Page 659] the bishop being too weak, either to refute his sentence, or to remove his constancy, proceeded consequently to read the sentence of condemnation; whereby this pious and constant young man being committed to the secular power of the sheriffs there present, was then adjudged, and not long after suffered, the same day with Mr. Bradford, confirming with his death that which he had spoken and professed in his life.
IT is reported of the said John Leaf, by one that was in the Compter at the same time, and saw the thing, that after his examinations before the bishop, when two bills were sent unto him in the Compter in Bread-street, the one containing a recantation, the other his confessions, to know to which of them he would put his hand; first hearing the bill of recantation read unto him, (because he could not read nor write himself) that he refused. And when the bill of his confessions was read unto him, instead of a pen he took a pin, and so pricking his hand, sprinkled the blood upon the said bill, desiring the reader thereof to shew the bishop, that he had sealed the same bill with his blood already.
The Behaviour of Mr. BRADFORD and JOHN LEAF at their MARTYRDOM.
FIRST, when they came to the stake in Smithfield to be burned, Mr. Bradford lying prostrate on one side the stake, and the young man John Leaf on the other side, they lay flat on their faces, praying to themselves the space of a minute. Then one of the sheriffs said to Mr. Bradford, Arise, and make an end; for the press of the people is great.
AT that word they stood up, and Mr. Bradford took a faggot in his hand and kissed it, and likewise the stake. And when he had so done, he desired of the sheriffs, that his servant might have his raiment. For (said he) I have nothing else to give him: and besides that, he is a poor man. And the sheriff said he should have it. Then Mr. Bradford immediately took off his raiment, and went to the stake: and holding up his hands, and casting his eyes towards heaven, he said thus, "O England, England, repent of thy sins; beware of idolatry: beware of Antichrist; take heed they do not deceive you." And as he was speaking these words, the sheriff ordered his hands to be tied if he would not be quiet. O matter Sheriff, said he, I am quiet; God forgive you this, Master Sheriff. And one of the officers who was to make the fire, hearing Mr. Bradford so speaking to the sheriff, said, If you have no better learning than this, you are but a fool, and you had best hold your peace. To which Mr. Bradford gave no answer; but asked all the world forgiveness, and forgave all the world, and desired the people to pray for him: then he turned his head to the young man that suffered with him, and said, Be of good comfort, brother; for we shall have a merry supper with the Lord this night: and then embracing the reeds, he said thus, "Strait is the gate and narrow is the way that leadeth to eternal salvation, and few there be that find it."
AND thus they both ended this mortal life, like two lambs, without any alteration of their countenances, being void of all fear, hoping to obtain the prize that they had long run for; to which I beseech Almighty God happily to conduct us, through the merits of Jesus Christ our Lord and Saviour, Amen.
MENTION was made a little above how churlishly Mr. Woodrofe the sheriff answered Mr. Bradford at the stake, not suffering him to speak, but commanding his hands to be tied, &c. The like extremity, or worse, he used also before to Mr. Rogers.
THE said Woodrofe was sheriff together with Sir William Chester, in the year 1555, who was a much better man, both in temper and religion; he behaved with great mildness towards those pious martyrs, who suffered for their conscience, and was very sorry to see them at any time misused. But Woodrofe was so churlish and ill-natured that he was wont to abuse the friends of those who were going to die; he would not so much as let them shake hands with their departing friends; a privilege never denied to malefactors, and the vilest criminals under protestant government.
BUT now, by the way, let us take notice of the severe punishment which God inflicted on this cruel persecutor Mr. Woodrofe: it is said, that within half a year after the burning of this blessed martyr, [Page 660] the said sheriff was so struck on the right side with a palsy, that for the space of eight years after (till his dying day) he was not able to turn himself in his bed, but needed two men to move him; and withal such an insatiable devouring came upon him, that was monstrous to behold. And thus he continued for eight years together.
On the DEATH of Mr. JOHN BRADFORD.
MR. BRADFORD, during the time of his imprisonment, wrote several comfortable treatises, and many pious letters, of which some were directed to the city of London, Cambridge, Walden, to Lancashire and Cheshire, and divers to his other private friends. Which letters, to the intent it may appear how well this good man occupied his time in prison, what special zeal he bare to the state of Christ's church, what care he had to perform his office, how earnestly he admonished all men, how tenderly he comforted the heavy-hearted, how faithfully he confirmed them whom he had taught, we thought good here to introduce: all the letters that he wrote c [...]nnot be hear exhibited, being so many in number that they alone would make a large volume; however, for the satisfaction of the pious reader, we will insert those that are judged the best and most excellent among them.
IT has been mentioned before how the earl of Derby complained in the parliament house, of certain letters written by John Bradford out of prison, to Lancashire; and he was likewise charged by the bishop of Winchester, and Mr. Allen, with some other letters. Now to the intent that the reader may more perfectly understand what sort of letters these were, which he wrote to his mother, brethren, and sisters, out of the Tower, before his condemnation, we will here produce the copy and contents as followeth
LETTER I. From Mr. BRADFORD to his Mother, a pious Matron, dwelling in Manchester, and to his Brethren and Sisters, and other Friends there.
OUR dear and sweet Saviour Jesus Christ, whose prisoner at this present (praised be his name) I am, preserve and keep you, my good mother, with my brothers and sisters, my fathers John Traves, Thomas Sorrocold, Laurence and James Bradshaw, with their wives and families, &c. now and forever, Amen.
I am now in prison, secure enough from starting, to confirm what I have preached unto you, as I am ready (I thank God) to seal the same with my life and blood, if God shall vouchsafe to make me worthy of that honour. For good mother and brethren, it is a most special benefit from God, to suffer for his name's sake and gospel, as now I do: I heartily thank God for it, and am sure that with him I shall be partaker of his glory, as St. Paul saith, "If we suffer with him, we shall reign with him." Therefore be not faint-hearted, but rather rejoice, at least for my sake, who am now in the right and highway to heaven: for by many afflictions we must enter into the kingdom of heaven. Now will God make known his children. When the wind doth not blow, a man cannot know the wheat from the chaff: but when the blast cometh, then the chaff [...]lieth away, but the wheat remaineth, and is so far from being hurt, that by the wind it is more cleansed from the chaff, and known to be wheat. Gold, when it is cast in the fire, is the more precious: so are God's children by the cross of affliction. God always beginneth his judgment at his house. Christ and the apostles were in the most misery i [...] the land of Jewry, but yet the whole land smarted for [...] after: so now the children of God are first chastised in [...] world, that they should not be damned with the world; for surely the great plagues of God hang over this realm.
YE all know that there never was more knowledge of God, and less godly living, and true serving of God. It was counted a foolish thing to serve God truly; and earnest prayer was not minded. Preaching was but a pa [...]ion. The communion was counted too common Fasting to subdue the flesh was quite out of use. Alms was almost nothing. Malice, covetousness, and uncleanness, was common every-where, with swearing, drunkenness, and idleness. God therefore now is come, and you have heard [...] preach, and because he will not damn us with the world, he beginneth to punish us: as me for carnal living. For as for my doctrine, I am very certain that it is and was God's truth, and by his grace I resolve to give my life for it▪ but beca [...]se I loved not the gospel as sincerely as I ought, therefore doth he thus punish me; nay, in punishing, [...]e rather blesseth me. Indeed I thank him more for this prison, than for any parlour, yea, than for any pleasure [Page 661] that ever I had; for in it I always find God my sweetest and greatest good. The flesh is now punished to admonish us heartily to live as we profess; and to certify the wicked of their just damnation, if they repent not.
PERHAPS you are weakened in that which I have preached, because God doth not defend it, as you think▪ but suffereth the popish doctrine to come again and prevail: but you must know, good mother, that God by this doth prove and try his children, whether they will unfeignedly and simply stand stedfast to him and his word. He did so with the Israelites, bringing them into a desart, after their coming out of Egypt, where (I mean in the wilderness) was want of all things, in comparison of that which they had in Egypt. Christ, when he came into this world, brought no worldly wealth, nor quietness with him, but rather war: "The world (saith he) shall rejoice, but ye shall mourn, and weep, but your weeping shall be turned into joy: and therefore happy are they that mourn and weep; for they shall be comforted." They are marked then with God's mark in their foreheads, and not with the beast's mark, I mean pope's shaven crown, who now with his shavelings rejoice: but woe unto them, for they shall be cast down, they shall weep and mourn. The rich glutton had here his joy, and Lazarus sorrow, but afterwards the case was changed. The end of carnal joy is sorrow. Now let the whoremonger joy with the drunkard, swearer, covetous, malicious, and blind buzzard sir John: for the mass will not bite them, nor make them blush as preaching doth. Now they may do what they will, come devils to church, and go devils home again, for no man must speak against it. They are glad of all this; now they have their hearts desire, as the Sodomites had when Lot was gone; but what followed? forsooth, when they cried peace, all shall be well, then came God's vengeance, fire and brimstone from heaven, and burnt up every mother's child; even so (dear mother) will it be to our papists.
WHEREFORE fear God; stick to his word, though all the world [...] from it. Die you must once, and when and how, you cannot tell. Die therefore with Christ, suffer for serving him truly, according to his word: for we may be sure, that of all deaths it ought to be our greatest desire to die for the cause of God. This is the safest way of dying; we need not doubt but that we shall go to heaven, if we die for his name's take. And that you shall so die, the word of God will warrant you, if you stick to that which God by me hath taught you. You shall see that I speak as I think; for by God's grace I will drink before you of this cup, if it be put to me.
I doubt not but God will give me grace and strength to undergo what I purpose▪ pray for me, that I may be immoveable in the fiery [...]. I am [...]ady whenever God shall be pleased to call me. Death nor life, prison nor pleasure, I trust in God, shall be able to separate me from my Lord God and his gospel. In peace, when no persecution was, then were you content and glad to hear me, then you believed me, and will you not do so now, seeing I speak nothing but that which by God's grace I will verify with my blood? Good mother, I write to you before God, as before him I have preached.
I have taught the pure word of God: it is the same infallible truth whereof he said, "Heaven and earth shall pass, but my word shall not pass. The mass, and such baggage as the false worshippers of God, and the enemies of Christ's cross (the papists) have brought in again, to poison the church of God, highly displeaseth him, and is abominable in his sight. Happy may he be who for conscience sake will suffer the loss of life or goods, in contending against it. Come not near it. If God be God, follow him: if the mass be God, let who will see it, hear, or be present at it, go to the devil with it. What is there which God ordained? His supper was ordained to be received by us as a memorial of his, for the confirmation of our faith, that his body was broken for us, and his blood shed for the pardon of our sins; but in the mass there is no receiving, but the priest alone keepeth all to himself. Christ saith, Take, eat: No, saith the priest, Gape, peep. Here (in the mass) is a sacrificing, yea, crucifying Christ again as much as they can. Here is idolatry in worshipping the outward sign of bread and wine: here is all in Latin, you cannot tell what is said. In short, here is nothing as God ordained. Wherefore (my good mother) come not near it.
I presume some will say, that it will be worse for you, if y [...]u refuse to go to mass, and do as others do. But be assured, that God will assist and protect you, as you shall one day find: he hath promised to them his great blessing in this world, and in the world to come life everlasting.
YOU shall be counted an heretic: but they are the heretics that so call you, whose praise is a scandal.
YOU are not able to reason against the priests, but God will, that they shall not be able to withstand you. I doubt not but father Traves, and others of my brothers and sisters will comfort and assist you by their counsel and pious examples; but if they do not, I your son in God, by his grace, will so do, and go before you: pray that I may be constant: rejoice in my sufferings, for it is for your sakes, that thereby I may confirm the truth I have taught. Beware that this letter come not abroad, but only into father Traves's hands: for if it should be known that I have pen and ink in prison, it would be much worse for me. Therefore keep it to yourselves, and commend me to God's mercy through Jesus Christ, and pray that he would make me worthy to give my life for the sake of his church and gospel. From the Tower of London, October 26, 1553.
[Page 662]MY name I write not, you know the reason well enough: like the letter never the worse. Commend me to all our good brethren and sisters in the Lord. Howsoever you do, be obedient to the higher powers, that is, in no point either in hand or tongue rebel, but rather if they command that which with good conscience you cannot obey, lay your head on the block, and suffer whatsoever they shall do or say. By patience possess your souls.
AFTER the time that Mr. Bradford was condemned, and sent to the Compter, his adversaries purposed (as ye heard before) to send him to Manchester to be burned. Whereupon he writeth to the city of London, thinking to take his last farewel of them in this letter.
LETTER II. From Mr. BRADFORD, to the CITY of LONDON.
TO all that profess the gospel and true doctrine of our our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ in the city of London, John Bradford, a most unworthy servant of the Lord, now not only in prison, but also excommunicated and condemned to be burned for the same true doctrine, wishes mercy, grace, and peace, with increase of all godly knowledge and piety from God the Father of mercy, through the merits of our alone and all sufficient Redeemer Jesus Christ, by the operation of the Holy Spirit, for ever. Amen.
MY dearly beloved brethren in our Saviour Christ, although the time I have to live is very little, (for I hourly look when I shall be had hence to be conveyed into Lancashire there to be burned, and to render my life by the providence of God, where I received it) and although there is great charge given to keep me from all things whereby I might signify any thing to the world of my estate: yet having, as I now have, pen and ink, through God's working, in spite of Satan and his soldiers, I thought good to write a short confession of my faith, and join thereto a little exhortation to you all to live according to your profession.
FIRST, For my saith, I do confess and pray all the whole congregation of Christ to bear witness with me of the same, that I believe constantly, through the gift and goodness of God, (for faith is God's only gift) all the twelve articles of the symbol and creed, commonly attributed to the collection of the apostles. This my faith I would particularly declare and expound to the confirmation and comfort of the simple! but alas! by starts and stealth I write in manner what I write, and therefore I shall desi [...]e you all to take this brevity in good part. And this faith I hold, not because of the creed itself, but because of [...] word of God, which teacheth and confirmeth every artic [...]e accordingly. This word of God, written by the prophets and apostles, left and contained in the canonical books of the whole Bible, I do believe to contain plentifully all things necessary to salvation, so that nothing (as necessary to salvation) ought to be added thereto, and therefore the church of Christ, nor none of his congregation, ought to be burthened with any other doctrine, than that which hath its foundation and ground from thence. In testimony of this faith, I render and give my life, being condemned as well for not acknowledging the Antichrist of Rome to be Christ's vicar general, and supreme head of his catholic and universal church here or elsewhere upon earth; as for denying the horrible and idolatrous doctrine of transubstantiation, and Christ's real, corporal, and carnal presence in his supper, under the forms and accidents of bread and wine.
TO believe Christ our Saviour to be the head of his church, and kings in their realms to be the supreme powers, to whom every soul oweth obedience, and to believe that in the supper of Christ (which the sacrament of the altar, as the papists call it and use it, doth utterly overthrow) is a true and very presence of whole Christ, God and Man, to the faith of the receiver, but not to the stander by, and looker upon, as it is true and very presence of bread and wine to the very senses of man: to believe this, I say, will not serve, and therefore as an heretic I am condemned, and shall be burned; whereof I heartily ask God mercy that I do no more rejoice than I do, having so great cause, as to be an instrument wherein it may please my dear Lord God and Saviour to suffer.
FOR albeit my manifold sins, even since I came into prison, have deserved at the hands of God, not only this temporal, but also eternal fire in hell, much more than my former sinful life, which the Lord pardon for Christ's sake, as I know he of his mercy hath done, and will never lay mine iniquities to my charge to condemnation, so great is his goodness, (praised therefore be his holy name) although, I say, my late manifold and grievous sins have most justly deserved all the tyranny that man or devil can do unto me; and therefore I confess that the Lord is just, his judgments be true, and I have deserved them: yet the bishops and prelates, instead of persecuting them in me, do persecute Christ himself, his word, his truth, and his religion. And therefore I have great cause to rejoice that ever I was born, and hitherto preserved by the Lord; that by my death, which I deserve for my sins, it pleased him to glorify his name, to testify and confirm his truth, and to overcome his adversaries. O good God and merciful Father, forgive my unthankfulness, especially herein.
AND you, my dearly beloved, for the Lord Jesus Christ's sake, I humbly and heartily in his bowels do now, for my last farewel in this present life, beseech you, and every one of you, that you will consider this work of the Lord accordingly. By me be admonished to beware of hypocrisy and carnal security; profess not the gospel with [Page 663] tongue and lips only; but in heart and in truth frame your lives accordingly: beware God's name be not evil spoken of, and the gospel less regarded by your conversation. God forgive me that I have not so heartily professed it as I should have done, but have sought myself, and too much consulted my own ease therein. The gospel is a new doctrine to the old man; it is new wine, and therefore cannot be put into old bottles, without greater harm than good to those bottles. If we will talk with the Lord, we must put off our shoes and carnal affections; if we will hear the voice of the Lord, we must wash our garments and be holy; if we will be Christ's disciples, we must deny ourselves, take up our cross and follow him; we cannot serve two masters. If we seek Christ's kingdom, we must seek the righteousness thereof. To this petition, Thy kingdom come, we must join, Thy will be done, done as it is in heaven. If we will not be doers of the word, but hearers only, we miserably deceive ourselves. If we hear the gospel, and love it not, we declare ourselves to be but fools, and builders upon the sand. Deceitfulness the Lord abhorreth; if we come to him, we must beware that we come not with a double heart; for then God will answer us according to our own folly; and we shall deceive ourselves and others.
TO faith see that we join a good conscience, lest we make a shipwreck. To the Lord we must come with fear and reverence. If we will be gospellers, we must be Christ's; if we be Christ's, we must crucify our flesh with the lusts and concupiscences thereof; if we will be under grace, sin must not bear rule in us. We may not come to the Lord, and draw nigh to him with our lips, and leave our hearts elsewhere, lest the Lord's wrath wax hot, and he take from us the good remaining. In no case can the kingdom of Christ approach to them that repent not. Therefore, my dearly beloved, let us repent and be heartily sorry that we have so carnally, so hypocritically, so covetously, so vain-gloriously professed the gospel. For all these I confess myself to the glory of God, that he may cover mine offences in the day of judgment. Let the anger of God, most justly fallen upon us, be applied to every one of our deserts, that from the bottom of our hearts we may say, It is I, Lord, that have sinned against thee: It is my hypocrisy, my vain-glory, my covetousness, uncleanness, carnality, security, idleness, unthankfulness, self-love, and such like, which have deserved the taking away our good king, of thy word and true religion, of thy good ministers by exile, imprisonment, and death; it is my wickedness that causeth success and increase of authority and peace to thine enemies. Oh be merciful, be merciful unto us. Turn to us again, O Lord of Hosts, and turn us unto thee; correct us, but not in thy fury, lest we be consumed in thine anger; chastise us not in thy wrathful displeasure; reprove us not, but in the midst of thine anger remember thy mercy. For if thou mark what is done amiss, who shall be able to abide it? But with thee is mercifulness, that thou mightest be worshipped. Oh then be merciful unto us, that we might truly worship thee. Help us for the glory of thy name: be merciful unto our sins; for they are great: O heal us, and help us for thine honour. Let not the wicked people say, Where is their God, &c.
ON this sort, my right dearly beloved, let us heartily bewail our sins, repent us of our former evil life, heartily and earnestly purpose to amend our lives in all things, continually watch in prayer, diligently and reverently attend, hear, and read the holy scriptures, labour after our vocation to amend our brethren. Let us reprove the works of darkness. Let us fly from all idolatry. Let us abhor the antichristian and Romish rotten service, detest the popish mass, renounce the Romish god, prepare ourselves to the cross, be obedient to all that are in authority, in all things that be not against God and his word; for then answer with the apostles, "It is more meet to obey God than man." Howbeit never for any thing resist, or rise against the magistrates. Avenge not yourselves, but commit your cause to the Lord, to whom your vengeance belongeth, and he in his time will reward it. If you feel in yourselves an hope and trust in God, that he will never tempt you above that he will make you able to bear, be assured the Lord will be true to you, and you shall be able to bear all brunts. But if you want this hope, fly and get you hence, rather than by your tarrying, God's name should be dishonoured.
IN sum, cast your care on the Lord, knowing for most certain, that he is careful for you; with whom all the hairs of your head are numbered, so that not one of them shall perish without his good pleasure: much more then nothing shall happen to our bodies, which shall not be profitable, howsoever for a time it seem otherwise to our senses. Depend on the providence of God, not only when you have means to help you, but also when you have no means, yea, when all means be against you. Give him this honour, which of all other things he chiefly requireth at your hands: namely, believe that you are his children through Christ, that he is your father and God through him, that he loveth you, pardoneth you all your offences, that he is with you in trouble, and will be with you for ever. When you fail, he will put under his hand, you shall not lie still: before you call upon him he heareth you, out of the evil he will finally deliver you, and bring you to his eternal joy. Doubt not herein, my dearly beloved, doubt not (I say) this God your Father will do for you, not in respect of yourselves, but in respect of Christ your captain, your pastor, your keeper, out of whose hands none shall be able to pluck you; in him be quiet, and often consider your dignity, namely, how that ye be God's children, the saints of God, citizens of heaven, temples of the Holy Ghost, the thrones of God, members of Christ, and lords over all.
THEREFORE be ashamed to think, speak, or do any thing that should be unseemly for God's children, God's saints, Christ's members, &c. Marvel not though the [Page 664] devil and the world hate you, though ye be persecuted here, for the servant is not above his master. Covet not earthly riches, fear not the power of man, love not this world, nor the things of this world; but long for the Lord Jesus's coming, at which time your bodies sha [...]l be made like unto his glorious body; when he appeareth, you shall be like unto him; when your life shall be thus revealed, then shall ye appear with him in glory.
IN the mean time live in hope thereof. Let the life you lead be in the faith of the Son of God. "For the just do live by faith:" which faith flieth from all evil, and followeth the word of God as a lanthorn to her feet, and a light to her steps; her eyes are above where Christ is, she beholdeth not the things present, but rather things to come; she glorieth in affliction; she knoweth that the afflictions of this life are not worthy to be compared to the glory which God will reveal to us and in us. Of this glory God grant us here a lively taste, then shall we run after the scent it sendeth forth. It will make us valiant men to take to us the kingdom of God; whither the Lord of mercy bring us in his good time through Christ our Lord, to whom with the Father and the Holy Ghost, three Persons and one God, be all honour and glory, world without end. Amen.
MY dearly beloved, I would gladly have given here my body to have been burned for the confirmation of the true doctrine I have taught here unto you. But that my country must have. Therefore I pray you take in good part this signification of my good will towards all of you. Impute the want herein to time and trouble. Pardon me mine offensive and negligent behaviour when I was amongst you. With me repent, and labour to amend. Continue in the truth which I have truly taught unto you, by preaching in all places where I have come; God's name therefore be praised. Confess Christ when you be called, whatsoever cometh thereof, and the God of peace be with us all, Amen. February 11, 1555.
LETTER III. From Mr. BRADFORD, to the University of CAMBRIDGE.
TO all that love the Lord Jesus and his true doctrine, being in the university and town of Cambridge, John Bradford, a most unworthy servant of the Lord, now not only imprisoned, but also condemned for the same true doctrine, wisheth grace, peace, and mercy, with increase of all g [...]dliness from God the Father of all mercy, through the bloody passion of our Saviour Jesus Christ, by the lively working of the Holy Spirit for ever, Amen.
ALTHOUGH I look hourly when I should be had to the stake, (my right dearly beloved in the Lord) and although the charge over me is great and strict, yet having by the providence of God secretly pen and ink, I could not but signify unto you my solicitude which I have for all of you in the Lord, though not as I would, yet as I may. You have often and openly heard the truth (especially in this matter wherein I am condemned) disputed and preached, that it is needless to do any more but only to put you in remembrance of the same: but hitherto you have not heard it confirmed, and as it were sealed up, as now you do and shall hear by me, that is, by my death and burning. For albeit I have deserved (though my uncleanness, hypocrisy, avarice, vain-glory, idleness, unthankfulness, and carnal [...] ty, whereof I accuse myself, to my confusion before the world, that before God through Christ I might, as my assured hope is I shall, find mercy) eternal death and hell-fire, much more than this affliction and fire prepared for me: yet my dearly beloved, it is not these, or any of these things, for which the prelates do persecute me, but God's verity and truth; yea, even Christ himself is the only cause for which I am now condemned, and shall be burned as an heretic, because I will not grant the Antichrist [...] Rome to be Christ's vicar general and supreme head of his church here, and every-where upon earth, by God's ordinance, and because I will not grant such corporal, real, and carnal presence of Christ's body and blood in the sacrament, as doth transubstantiate the substance of bread and wine, and is received by the wicked, yea by dogs and mice. Also I am excommunicated and accounted as a dead member of Christ's church, as a rotten branch, and therefore shall be cast into the fire.
THEREFORE you ought heartily to rejoice with me, and to give thanks for me, that God the eternal Father hath vouchsafed our mother to bring up any child in whom it would please him to magnify his holy name as he doth, and I hope for his mercy and truth's sake, will do in me and by me. Oh, what such benefit upon earth can it be, as that I who deserved death by reason of my sins, should be delivered to a demonstration, a testification, and confirmation of God's verity and truth? Thou my mother the university hast not only had the truth of God's word plainly manifested unto thee by reading, disputing, and preaching publicly and privately; but now to make thee altogether excuseless, and as it were, almost to sin against the Holy Ghost, if thou put to thy helping hand with the Romish rout to suppress the verity, thou hast my life and blood as a seal to confirm thee, and bear witness against thee, if thou wilt be confirmed, or else to command thee, and bear witness against thee, if thou wilt take part with the prelates and clergy, which now [...]ll [...] the measure of their fathers which slew the prophets and the apostles, that [Page 665] all the righteous blood from Abel to Bradford, shed upon earth, may be required at their hands.
OF this therefore I thought good before my death, as time and liberty would suffer me, (for the love and duty I bear unto thee) to admonish thee good mother, and my sister the town, that you would call to mind from whence you are fallen, and study to do the first works. You know (if you will) these matters of the Romish supremacy, and the antichristian transubstantiation, whereby Christ's supper is overthrown, his priesthood evacuated, his sacrifice frustrated, the ministry of his word unplaced, repentance repelled, faith fainted, piety extinguished, the mass maintained, idolatry supported, and all impiety cherished: you know I say (if you will) that these opinions are not only besides God's word, but even directly against it, and therefore to take part with them, is to take part against God, against whom you cannot prevail.
THEREFORE for the tender mercy of Christ, in his bowels and blood I beseech you, to take Christ's eye-salve to anoint your eyes, that you may see what you do, and have done, in admitting (as I hear you have admitted, yea, alas! authorized, and by consent confirmed) the Romish rotten rags, which once you utterly expelled. O be not "The dog returned to his own vomit; the sow that was washed returned to her wallowing in the mire," 2 Pet. ii. Beware lest satan enter in with seven other spirits, and then the last shall be worse than the first. It had been better ye had never known the truth, than after knowledge to run from it. Ah, woe to this world and the things therein, which hath now so wrought with you. Oh that ever the dirt of the devil should daub up the eye of the realm. For thou, O mother, art the eye of the realm. If thou be light and shine, all the body shall fare the better; but if thou the light be darkness, alas how great will the darkness be? What is man whose breath is in his nostrils, that thou should thus be afraid of him?
OH what is honour and life here? Bubbles. What is glory in this world, but shame? Why art thou afraid to carry Christ's cross? Wilt thou come into this [...]ingdom, and not drink of his cup? Dost thou not know Rome to be Babylon? Dost thou not know, that as the old Babylon had the children of Judah in captivity, so hath this Rome the true Judah, that is▪ the confessors of Christ? Dost thou not know, that as destruction happened unto it, so shall it do unto this? And thinkest thou that God will not deliver his people now when the time is come, as he did then? H [...]th not God commanded his people to come out from her? And wilt thou give example to the whole realm to run unto her? Hast thou forgotten the woe that Christ threateneth to offence-givers? Wilt thou not remember, that it were better that a mill-stone were hanged about thy neck and thou thrown into the sea, than that thou shouldst offend the little ones▪
AND alas, how hast thou offended? Yea, and how dost thou still offend? Wilt thou consider things according to the outward shew? Was not the synagogue more seemly and like to be the true church, than the simple flock of Christ's disciples? Hath not the whore of Babylon more costly array, and rich apparel, externally to set forth herself, than the homely house-wife of Christ? Where is the beauty of the king's daughter, the church of Christ? Without or within? Doth not David say, within? O remember that as they are happy which are not offended at Christ, so are they happy which are not offended at his poor church. Can the pope and his prelates mean honestly, which make so much of the wife, and so little of the husband? The church they magnify, but Christ they contemn. If this church were an honest woman, (that is, Christ's wife) except they would make much of her husband, Christ and his word, she would not be made much of by them.
WHEN Christ and his apostles were upon earth, who was most like to be the true church, they or the prelates, bishops, and synagogue? If we ought to have followed custom, unity, antiquity, or the greater part, should not Christ and his company have been cast out of doors? Therefore Christ saith, Search the scriptures. Good mother, shall the servant be above his master? Shall we look for better entertainment at the hands of the world, than Christ and his dear disciples found? In Noah's time who was taken for the church, poor Noah and his family, or all the others that were destroyed by the flood? Who was taken for God's church in Sodom, righteous Lot, or the others? And doth not Christ say, "As it was then, so shall it go now towards the coming of the Son of Man?" What meaneth Christ when he saith, Iniquity shall have the upper hand? Doth not he likewise say, that charity shall wax cold? And we plainly see the greatest scarcity of it in those, who would now be taken for Christ's true catholic church. All that fear God in this realm can tell more of this than I can write
THEREFORE, dear mother, receive some admonition of one of thy poor children, now going to be burnt to ashes for the testimony of Jesus. Come again to God's truth; come out of Babylon; confess Christ and his true doctrine; repent of what is past; make amends by declaring thy repentance by the fruits. Remember the reading and preaching of God's prophet the true preacher, Martin Bucer. Call to mind the threatenings of God against impenitent sinners. Let the exile of Leaver, Pilkington, Grindal, Haddon, Horn, Scory, Ponet, &c. awake and strengthen thee. Let the imprisonment of thy dear sons, Cranme [...], Ridley, and Latimer, move thee. Consider the martyrdom of thy intimate friends, Rogers, Saunders, and Taylor. And now cast not away the poor admonition of me, that am now going to be burnt, and to receive the like crown of glory with my fellows. Take to heart God's calling by us. [Page 666] Be not as Pharaoh was, that it may not happen unto thee as it did unto him. What is that? Hardness of heart. And what then? Destruction eternally both of body and soul. Ah therefore, good mother, awake, awake, repent, repent, and make haste to turn to the Lord. For otherwise it shall be more easy for Sodom ane Gomorrah in the day of judgment, than for thee. O harden not your hearts; O stop not your ears to-day in hearing God's voice, though it be by a most unworthy messenger. O fear the Lord, for his anger is begun to kindle. Even now the ax is laid to the root of the tree.
YOU know I prophesied truly before the sweating sickness came what would come, if you repented not your carnal preaching. And now I tell you before I depart hence, that the ears of men will tingle to hear the vengeance of God that will fall upon you all, both town and university, if you repent not, if you leave not your idolatry, if you turn not speedily to the Lord, if you will be ashamed of Christ's truth which you know.
O Perne repent, O Thomson repent, O doctors, bachelors and masters repent; O mayor, aldermen, and town-dwellers repent, repent, repent, that you may escape the approaching vengeance of the Lord. Rent your hearts and make haste to come unto the Lord. Let us all say, We have sinned, we have done wickedly, we have not hearkened to thy voice, O Lord. Deal not with us after our deserts, but be merciful unto our iniquities, for they are great. O pardon our offences. In thine anger remember thy mercy. Turn us unto thee, O Lord God of hosts, for the glory of thy name's sake. Spare us and be merciful unto us. Let not the wicked people say, Where is now their God? O for thine own sake, for thy name's sake, deal mercifully with us. Turn thyself unto us, and us unto thee, and we shall praise thy name for ever.
IF in this sort, my dearly beloved, in heart and mouth we come unto our Father, and prostrate ourselves before the throne of his grace, then surely we shall find mercy. Then shall the Lord look merrily upon us, for his mercy's sake in Christ: then shall we hear him speak peace unto his people. For he is gracious and merciful, of great pity and compassion: he cannnot be chiding for ever: his anger cannot last long to the penitent. Though we weep in the morning, yet at night we shall have our sorrow to cease. For he is merciful, and hath no pleasure in the death of a sinner: he would rather have him turn from his wickedness and live.
OH turn ye now and repent, yet once again I humbly beseech you, and then the kingdom of heaven shall draw nigh. The eye hath not seen, the ear hath not heard, nor is the heart of man able to conceive the joys prepared for us, if we repent, amend our lives, and heartily turn to the Lord. But if ye repent not, but be as ye were, and go forwards with the wicked, following the fashion of the world, the Lord will lead you on with wicked doers, you shall perish in your wickedness, your blood will be upon your own heads, your parts shall be with hypocrites, where shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth; you shall be cast from the face of the Lord for ever and ever: eternal shame, sorrow, woe, and misery, shall be both in body and soul to you world without end. Oh therefore, right dear to me in the Lord, turn you, turn you, repent you, repent you, amend, amend your lives, depart from evil, do good, follow peace, and pursue it. Come out from Babylon, cast off the works of darkness, put on Christ, confess his truth, be not ashamed of his gospel, prepare yourselves for the cross, drink of God's cup before it come to the dregs, and then shall I with you and for you, rejoice in the day of judgment, which is at hand, and therefore prepare yourselves thereto, I heartily beseech you. And thus I take my farewel for ever, with you in this present life, [...] own dear hearts in the Lord. The Lord of mercy be with us all, and give us a joyful and sure meeting in his kingdom, Amen, Amen.
LETTER IV. From Mr. BRADFORD, to LANCASHIRE, and CHESHIRE.
TO all those who profess the name and true religion of our Saviour Christ in Lancashire and Cheshire, and especially abiding in Manchester and thereabouts, John Bradford, a most unworthy servant of the Lord▪ now not only in bonds, but also condemned for the same true religion, wisheth mercy and grace, peace and increase of all godliness from God the Father of all pity, through the deserts of our Lord Jesus Christ, by the working of the most mighty and lively Spirit the Comforter for ever, Amen.
I heard it credibly reported, my dearly beloved in the Lord, that my heavenly Father hath thought it good to provide, that as I have preached his true doctrine and gospel amongst you by word, so I shall testify and conf [...] the same by deed, that is, I shall leave my life with you, which by his providence I first received there, (for in Manchester I was born) for a seal to the doctrine I have taught with you and amongst you: so that if from henceforth you waver in the same, you have no excuse at all. I know the enemies of Christ which exercise this cruelty upon me, (I speak in respect of mine offence, which is none to themwards) think by kil [...]ing of me amongst you, to hinder you and others, lest they should attempt to teach Christ truly, or believe his doctrine hereafter. But I doubt [Page 667] not but my heavenly Father will by my death more confirm you in his truth. And therefore I greatly rejoice to see Satan and his soldiers supplanted in their own wisdom, which is plain foolishness amongst the wise indeed, that is, amongst such as have heard God's word, and do follow it: for they only are counted wise of the wisdom of God our Saviour.
INDEED if I should simply consider my life with that which it ought to have been, and as God in his law requireth, then could I not but cry as I do, Righteous art thou, O Lord, and all thy judgments are true. For I have much grieved thee, and transgressed thy holy precepts, not only before my professing the gospel, but since also: yea, since my coming into prison I do not excuse, but accuse myself before God and all his church, that I have grievously offended my Lord God, I have not loved his gospel as I should have done, I have been too unthankful, secure, carnel, hypocritical, vain-glorious, &c. All which my evils, the Lord of mercy pardon for his Christ's sake, as I hope and certainly believe he hath done for his great mercy in Christ our Redeemer.
BUT when I consider the cause of my condemnation, I cannot but lament, that I do no more rejoice than I do: for it is God's verity and truth. So that the condemnation is not a condemnation of Bradford simply, but rather a condemnation of Christ and of his truth. Bradford is nothing else but an instrument in whom Christ and his doctrine is condemned. And therefore, my dearly beloved, rejoice and give thanks with me and for me, that ever God did vouchsa [...]e so great a benefit to our country, as to chuse the most unworthy (I mean myself) to be one, in whom it would please him to suffer any kind of affliction: much more this violent kind of death, which I perceive is prepared for me with you for his sake. All glory and praise be given unto God our Father, for his great and exceeding mercy towards me through Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen.
BUT perchance you will say unto me, what is the cause for which you are condemned? We hear say, that you deny all presence of Christ in his holy supper, and so make it a bare sign and common bread, and nothing else. My dearly beloved, what is said, and what will be said of me, I cannot tell. It is told me that Dr. [...]endleton is go [...]e down to preach with you, not as he once recanted, (for you all know he hath preached contrary to that he was wont to preach before I came amongst you) but to recant that which he hath recanted. How he will speak of me, and report before I come, when I am come, and when I am burned, I mind not: for he that is so uncertain, and will speak so often against himself, I cannot think he will speak well of me, except it make for his purpose and profit: but of this enough.
INDEED the chief thing which I am condemned for, as an heretic, is because I deny in the sacrament of the altar, (which is not Christ's supper, but a plain perverting of it, being used as the papists now use it) to be a real, natural, and corporal presence of Christ's body and blood, under the form and accidents of bread and wine, that is, because I deny transubstantiation, which is the darling of the devil, and daughter and heir to Antichrist's religion, whereby the mass is maintained, Christ's supper perverted, his sacrifice and cross imperfected, his priesthood destroyed, the ministry taken away, repentance repelled, and all true godliness abandoned. In the supper of our Lord, or sacrament of Christ's body and blood, I confess and believe that there is a true, and very presence of the whole Christ, God and man, to the faith of the receiver, (but not to the stander by or looker on) as there is a very true presence of bread and wine to the senses of him that is partaker thereof. This faith, this doctrine, which consenteth with the word of God, and with the true testimony of Christ's church, (which the popish church doth persecute) will I not forsake, and therefore I am condemned as an heretic, and as such I shall be burned. But, my dearly beloved, (for which I lay down my life) I hope in God shall never be burnt, bound, nor overcome; but shall gloriously triumph, have victory, and be at liberty, in spite of the teeth of God's adversaries. For there is no counsel against the Lord, nor can any device of man be able to defeat the truth in any other than such as be children of unbelief, who have no love to the truth, and therefore are given up to believe lies. From which plague the Lord of mercy deliver you, my dear hearts in the Lord, and all the realm, I humbly beseech his mercy, Amen.
AND that you may be delivered from this plague, I shall for my farewel with you for ever in this present life, heartily desire you all, in the bowels and blood of our most merciful Saviour Jesus Christ, to attend unto these things which I am now going to write unto you out of the holy scriptures.
YOU know the heavy plague [...] of God are fallen upon us, in taking away our king, and true religion, God's true prophets and ministers &c. and setting over us such as seek not the Lord after knowledge: whose endeavours God prospereth wonderfully to the trial of many, that his people may both better know themselves, and be known. Now the cause hereof is our iniquities and grievous sins. We knew not the tim [...] of our visitation; we were unthankful to God, we contemned, and carnally abused the gospel, to serve our hypocrisy, vain-glory, viciousness, avarice, idleness, security, &c. Long did the Lord linger, and tarry to have shewed mercy unto us, but we were ever the less deserving. Therefore God dealeth with us most justly, and even now he tempereth his justice with great mercy, by which we are preserved from utter destruction. If the Lord should deal with us according to our deserts, alas, who could bear it! Seeing in his anger he remembereth mercy, undeserved, (nay, even undesired by us) let us take occasion [Page 668] the more readily to meet him, (not with force of arms, for we are not able to withstand him, much less to prevail against him) and beseech him to be merciful unto us, according to his wonted mercy to deal with us.
LET us arise with David, and say, "Enter not into judgment with thy servant, O Lord, for in thy sight no man living shall be justified." Let us send ambassadors with the centurion and say, "Lord, we are not worthy to come ourselves unto thee; speak the word, and we shall have peace." Let us patiently with the publican look down on the earth, knock our hard hearts to burst them, and cry out, "O God be merciful unto us, wretched sinners." Let us with the lost son return and say, "O Father, we have sinned against heaven and earth, and before thee, we are unworthy to be called thy children." Let us, I say, heartily repent of our former evil life, and turn to God with our whole hearts, hoping in his great mercy through Christ, and heartily calling upon his holy name, and then undoubtedly we shall find and feel otherwise than yet we have felt, both inwardly and outwardly. Inwardly we shall feel peace of conscience between God and us, which peace passeth all understanding, and we shall find that the outward troubles and miseries of this life will be much mitigated, if not quite taken away.
THEREFORE, my dearly beloved in the Lord, I your poorest brother now departing to the Lord, for my eternal farewel in this life, pray you, beseech you, and even from the very bottom of my heart, by all the mercies of God shewed to you in Christ, most earnestly beg and intreat you out of prison, (as I have often done out of your pulpits) that you will repent, and henceforth leave your wicked lives, be sorry for your offences, and turn to the Lord, whose arms are wide open to receive and embrace you. For he is the Lord of mercy, and God of all comfort, he desireth not the death of a sinner, but rather that he should repent, and amend. He hath no pleasure in the destruction of men; his long suffering should draw you to repentance, before the time of vengeance, and the day of wrath, which is at hand, doth come.
NOW is the ax laid to the root of the tree utterly to destroy the impenitent. Now is the fire gone out before the face of the Lord, and who is able to quench it? O therefore repent, repent. It is enough to have played the wanton gospellers, the proud protestants, hypocritical and false christians, as alas! we have done. Now the Lord speaketh to us in mercy and grace; O turn before he speak in wrath. Yet is there mercy with the Lord, and plenteous redemption: yet he hath not forgotten to shew mercy to those that call upon him. O then call upon him while he may be found. For he is rich in mercy, and plentiful to all them that call upon him. So that he that calleth upon the name of the Lord shall be saved. If your sins be as red as scarlet, the Lord saith, he will make them as white as snow. He hath sworn, and never will repent him thereof, that he will never remember our iniquities: but as he is good, faithful, and true, so will he be our God, and we shall be his people: he will write his law in our hearts, and graft it in our minds, and never will he regard our unrighteousness.
THEREFORE, my dear hearts in the Lord, turn you, [...] you to the Lord your Father, to the Lord your Saviour, to the Lord your Comforter. Oh why do you stop your ears, and harden your hearts to-day, when you hear his voice by me your poorest brother? O forget not how that the Lord hath shewed himself true, and me his true preacher, by bringing to pass these plagues which at my mouth you often heard before they came to pass, especially when I treated of Noah's flood, and when I preached on the xxii▪ chap. of St. Matthew's gospel, on St. Stephen's day, the last time that I was with you. And now by me the Lord sendeth you word, dear countrymen, that if you will go forward in your impenitence, carnality, hypocrisy, idolatry, covetousness, swearing, gluttony, drunkenness, whoredom, &c. (wherewith alas, alas, our country floweth!) if, I say, you will not turn and leave off, seeing me now burned amongst you, to assure you on all sides how God seeketh you, and is sorry to do you hurt, to plague you, to destroy you, to take vengeance upon you. O your blood will be upon your own heads: you have been warned, and warned again, by me in preaching, by me in burning.
AS I said therefore, I say again, my dear hearts in the Lord, turn you, turn you, repent you, cease from doing evil▪ study to do well, away with idolatry, fly the Romish go [...] and service, leave off from swearing, cut off carnality, abandon avarice, drive away drunkenness, fly from fornication and flattery, murder and malice, destroy deceitfulness, and cast away all the works of darkness. Put on mercy and piety, serve God after his word, and not after custom, use your tongues to glorify God by prayer, thanksgiving, and confession of his truth, &c. be spiritual, and by the spirit mortify carnal affections; be sober, holy, true, loving, gentle, merciful, and then the Lord's wrath will cease, not for this our doings sake, but for his mercy's sake. Go to therefore, good countrymen, take this counsel of the Lord, by me now sent unto you, as the Lord's counsel, and not as mine, that in the day of judgment I may rejoice with you and for you: which thing I heartily desire, and not to be a witness against you. My blood will cry for vengeance, against the papists as God's enemies, (whom I beseech God, if it be his will, heartily to forgive, yea, even them which put me to death and are the causers thereof, for they know not what they do) so will my blood cry for vengeance against you, my dearly beloved in the Lord, if ye repe [...]t not, amend not, and turn unto the Lord.
TURN unto the Lord, yet once more I heartily beseech thee, thou Manchester, thou Ashton-under-line, thou Bo [...] ton, B [...]ry, Wigan, Liverpool, Winsley, Eccles, Middleton, and thou city of Westchester, &c. where I have truly taught and preached the word of God. Turn, I say unto [Page 669] you all, and to all the inhabitants thereabouts, unto the Lord our God, and he will turn unto you; he will say unto his angel, It is enough, put up the sword. Which that he may do, I humbly beseech his goodness, for the precious blood's sake of his dear Son our Saviour Jesus Christ. Ah good brethren, take in good part these my last words unto every one of you. Pardon me mine offences and negligences in behaviour amongst you. The Lord of mercy pardon us all our offences for our Saviour Jesus Christ's sake. Out of prison ready to come to you, the 11th of February, 1555.
LETTER V. From Mr. BRADFORD to the Town of WALDEN.
TO the faithful, and such as profess the true doctrine of our Saviour Jesus Christ, dwelling at Walden and thereabouts, John Bradford, a most unworthy servant of the Lord, now in bonds and condemned for the same true doctrine, wisheth grace, mercy, and peace, with the increase of all godliness in knowledge and living, from God the Father of all comfort, through the merits of our only Redeemer Jesus Christ, by the mighty working of the most Holy Spirit, the Comforter, for ever. Amen.
WHEN I remember, how that by the providence and grace of God I have been a man by whom it hath pleased him, through my ministry, to call you to repentance and amendment of life, something effectually, as it seemed, and to sow amongst you his true doctrine and religion, lest that by my affliction, and storms now arisen to try the faithful, and to conform them to the image of the Son of God, into whose company we are called, you might be faint-hearted; I could not but out of prison secretly (for my keepers must not know that I have pen and ink) write unto you a signification of the desire I have, that you should be more confirmed in the doctrine I have taught you, which I am assured is the plain and infallible truth of God, and also that you be warned to govern your lives and conversation agreeable thereto. Dearly beloved in the Lord, had I taught you fables, tales, or lies, instead of this truth, I should not so willingly seal it with my blood.
INDEED, to confess the truth to you and all the church of Christ, I do think of myself that I have [...] only most justly deserved this kind of death, but also all kinds of deaths, and that eternally, for mine hypocrisy, vain-glory, uncleanness, self-love, covetousness, idleness, unthankfulness, and carnal professing of God's holy gospel, living therein not so purely and industriously as I should have done: may the God of all mercy pardon me through the merits of Christ's blood, as I hope, yea, I certainly believe he hath done. My dearly beloved, you and all the world well know, and may plainly perceive, that the prelates persecute Christ in me; they do not trouble me for the evil I have done, but for the good I have endeavoured to do, in standing up for the honour of God and his gospel; and because I cannot, dare not, and will not confess transubstantiation, and that wicked men, yea mice and dogs eating the sacrament of the altar, as they term it, (whereby they utterly overthrow Christ's holy supper) do eat the natural and real body of Christ which was born of the virgin Mary: I say, because I will not come into these absurd notions, I am deemed an heretic unworthy to live.
TO believe and confess as God's word teacheth, the primitive church believed, and all the catholic and good holy fathers taught, 500 years at least after Christ, that in the supper of the Lord, (which the mass overthroweth, as it doth Christ's priesthood, sacrifice, death, and passion, the ministry of his word, true faith, repentance, and all godliness) whole Christ, God and man, is present by grace to the faith of the receivers, but not to the standers by or lookers on, as bread and wine is to their senses, will not serve: and therefore I am condemned, and shall be burned out of hand as an heretic. Wherefore I heartily thank my Lord God, that will and doth vouchsafe me worthy to be an instrument, in whom he himself doth suffer. For you see my affliction is not simply, because I have deserved no less, but much more at his hands and justice: but rather because I confess his truth, and by his grace, I am not afraid so to do, that you also might be confirmed in his truth. Therefore, my dearly beloved, I do heartily desire you, and all that sincerely love me in God, to give hearty thanks with me and for me to our heavenly Father, through our sweet Saviour Jesus Christ: for this is his exceeding great, mercy towards me and you also, that your faith waver not from the doctrine I have taught, and you have received. For what can you desire more, to assure your consciences of the verity taught by your preachers, than their own lives?
THEREFORE, my dear friends, waver not in Christ's religion truly taught you, and set forth in the days of king Edward. Never shall the enemies be able to burn, imprison, or keep it in bonds. They may bind and burn us as they please, so long as God shall give them leave; but our cause, religion, and doctrine which we profess, they shall never be able to put away. Their idolatry and popish religion, shall never be built in the consciences of men that love God's truth. As for those that love not his gospel, that have no pleasure in his ways, over those the devil shall prevail: for God will give them up to strong delusions that they may believe lies. Therefore, dear brethren, I humbly beseech you in the blood of our Lord Jesus Christ, as I am now going to death for the testimony of Jesus, and as I have often pressed you from the pulpit, that you love the Lord's truth; so love it, that you frame your lives according to it. Alas, you know the cause of all these plagues now falling upon us, which God's enemies daily triumph in, that it is for our not loving God's word as we ought to do.
YOU know that we were gospellers in lips and not in life. We were glutted with, and tired of the word of God: [Page 670] yea, we loathed it, as the children of Israel did the manna in the wilderness; and therefore as the Lord's wrath waxed hot with them, so it doth with us. So that there is no other remedy, but that (for it is better late to turn, than never to turn) we confess our faults even from the bottom of our hearts, and with hearty repentance, (which God grant to us all) we run unto the Lord our God, who is exorable, merciful, and sorry for the evil poured out upon us; and cry unto him with Daniel, saying, We have sinned, we have grievously sinned, O Lord God, against thy majesty; we have heaped iniquity upon iniquity: the measure of our transgressions floweth over, so that thy vengeance and wrath is justly fallen upon us. For we are very miserable, for we have contemned thy long suffering, we have not hearkened to thy voice. When thou hast called us by preachers, we hardened our hearts, and therefore now we justly deserve to have our hearts hardened like Pharaoh, to have eyes and see not, ears and hear not, hearts and understand not, lest we should turn and be saved. O be merciful unto us; spare us, good Lord, and all thy people whom thou hast dearly bought. Let not thine enemies triumph altogether, and always against thee, for then they will be puffed up. Look down and behold the pitiful complaint of the poor; let the sorrowful sighing of the simple come into thy sight, and be not angry with us for ever. Turn us, O Lord God of hosts, unto thee, and turn thou unto us, that thou mayest be justified in thy sweet sentences, and overcome when thou art judged, as now thou art by our adversaries. For they say, Where is their God? Can God deliver them now? Can their gospel serve them? O Lord, how long? for thy honour's sake, in the bowels and blood of Jesus Christ, we humbly beseech thee, come and help us, for we are very miserable.
IN this manner let us publicly and privately bewail our sins; and at the same time endeavour to avoid them as much as possible, especially all wilful and habitual sins; for if we nourish them in our hearts, the Lord will not hear us, for the prayer of the wicked is abominable in the sight of God, saith the prophet. And in St. John it is written, The impenitent sinners God heareth not; and they are impenitent who purpose not to amend their lives. Those who, for fear or favour of men, worship God in a false manner, and contrary to their own consciences consent to the Romish rags, and resort to the rotten religion, communicating in service and ceremonies with the papists, thereby declaring, in effect, that they love the world more than God, and fear men more than Christ, and dread the loss of temporal things more than spiritual; I say, such men do sin as presumptuously as those who are wilfully guilty of the greatest immorality; for it is evident that the love of God abideth not in them. He that loveth the world, hath not God's word abiding in him, saith St. John: therefore my dear brethren in the Lord, remember what you have professed, Christ's name and religion, and the renouncing the devil, sin, and the world.
REMEMBER, that before you learned ABC, your [...] was Christ's cross. Forget not that Christ will have [...] disciples, but such as will promise to deny themselves, and take up their cross, (mark, take it up) and follow him, and not the multitude, custom, &c. Consider for God's [...], that if we gather not with Christ, we scatter abroad. Wh [...] should it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose [...] own soul? We must not forget that this life is a wild [...] ness, and not a paradise: here is not our home; we are now in warfare: we must needs fight, or else be taken prison [...]. Of all the things we have in this life, we shall carry nothing with us. If Christ be our captain, we must follow him. I we keep company with him in affliction, we shall be [...] of his society in glory everlasting. If we forsake not hi [...], he will never forsake us; but if we deny him, he will deny us. If we be ashamed of him, he will be ashamed of us. Wherefore, as he forsook his Father and [...] ven, and all the glory thereof, to come to us, to suffer poverty, torments, and death for our sakes, surely the [...] that we can do, is to forsake all the trifles here below, and go to him, especially when by so doing we make [...] eternal interest. Whatsoever you lose for the Lord's [...] shall be restored three-fold to your children: and you [...] find peace of conscience and friendship with God, which is infinitely more worth than all the kingdoms of this [...] and the glory thereof.
MY dearly beloved, therefore for the Lord's sake consider these things which I now write unto you of [...] my farewel, and last farewel for ever in this [...] Turn to the Lord, repent of your evil and unthankful [...] declare repentance by the fruits, take time while you [...] it, come to the Lord while he calleth you, run into his [...] while his arms be open to embrace you, seek him while [...] may be found, call upon him while time is convenient, [...] sake and [...]ly from all evil, both in religion and in the rest of your life and conversation. Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and praise God in the day of his visitation. Oh come again, come again, you strange children, and I will receive you, saith the Lord Repent and turn to me, and I will turn to you. Why will ye needs perish? As sure as I live, (saith the Lord) I desire not your death, turn therefore unto me. Can a woman forget [...] child of [...] womb? If she should, yet will I not forget you, saith the Lord your God. I am he, I am he which put away your sins for mine own sake.
O then dear friends, turn, I say, unto your dearest Father. Cast not these sweet and loving words to the ground, for the Lord watcheth on his word to perform it: which is in two sorts; to them that lay it up in their hearts, and believe it, will he pay all, and eternal joy and comfort. But to them that cast it at their backs, and will forget it, to them, I say, will he pour out indignation and eternal shame. Wherefore I heartily yet once more beseech and pray you, and every of you, not to contemn this poor and simple exhortation, which now out of prison I make [...] [Page 671] you, or rather the Lord by me. I am unwilling to be a witness against you in the last day; as of truth I must if you repent not, if you love not God's gospel, yea, if you love it not.
THEREFORE, to conclude, repent, love God's gospel, let it be all your coversation; so shall God's name be praised, his plagues be mitigated, his people comforted, and his enemies ashamed. Grant all this thou gracious Lord God, to every one of us for thy dear Son's sake, our Saviour Jesus Christ; to whom with thee and the Holy Ghost be eternal glory for ever and ever. Amen. February 12, 1555.
LETTER VI. From Mr. BRADFORD, to his loving BRETHREN, B. C. &c. their WIVES and whole FAMILIES.
I Beseech the everlasting God to grant you all▪ my good brethren and sisters, the comfort of the Holy Spirit, and the continual sense of his mercy in Christ our Lord, now and for ever, Amen.
THE world, my brethren, seemeth to have the upper hand, iniquity overfloweth, the truth and verity seemeth to be oppressed, and they which take the part therewith are unjustly treated; as they which love the truth, lament to see and hear as they do. The cause of all this is God's anger and mercy: his anger, because we have most grievously sinned against him; his mercy, because he here punisheth us, and as a Father nurtureth us. We have been unthankful for his word; we have contemned his kindness; we have been negligent in prayer; we have been so carnal, covetous, licentious, &c. we have not hastened to heaven-ward, but rather hell-ward, We were fallen almost into an open contempt of God, and all his good ordinances; so that of his justice he could no longer forbear, but make us feel his anger as how he hath done, in taking his word and true service from us, and permitting Satan to serve us with antichristian religion; and that in such sort, that if we will not yield to it, and seem to allow it in deed and outward fact, our bodies are like to be laid in prison, and our goods given we cannot tell to whom.
WE should look upon this as a sign of God's anger procured by our sins; which, my good brethren, every one of us should often call to our memories, as particularly as we can, that we might heartily lament them, repent them, hate them, earnestly ask mercy for them, and submit ourselves to bear in this life any kind of punishment which God will lay upon us for them. This should we do in consideration of God's anger in this time. Now his mercy in this time of his wrath is seen, and should be seen in us, my dearly beloved, in this, that God doth vouchsafe to punish us in this present life. If he should not have punished us, do not you think that we would have continued in the evils we were in? Yes verily, we should have been worse, and have gone forwards in hardening our hearts by impenitence, and negligence of true godliness. And then if death had come, should not we have perished both soul and body in eternal fire in perdition? Alas, what misery should we have fallen into, if God should have suffered us to have gone forward in our evils? There is no greater sign of damnation, than to lie in evil and sin unpunished by God, as now the papists (my dearly beloved) are cast in Jezebel's bed of security, which of all plagues is the most grievous that can be. They are bastards and not son [...] ▪ [...] are not under God's rod of correction.
A great mercy it [...] [...]erefore that God doth punish us: for if he loved us not, he would not punish us. Now doth he chastise [...], that we should not be damned with the world. Now doth he nurture us, because he favoureth us. Now may we think ourselves God's house and children, because he beginneth his chastizing with us. Now he calleth us to remember our sins past. Wherefore? That we might repent and ask mercy. And why? That he might forgive us, pardon us, justify us, and make us his children, and so begin to make us like unto Christ here, that we might be like unto him elsewhere, even in heaven, where already we are set by faith with Christ; and at his coming in very deed we shall then most joyfully enjoy, when our sinful and vile bodies shall be made like to Christ's glorious body according to the power whereby he is able to make all things subject to himself.
THEREFORE my brethren, let us in respect hereof not lament, but praise God; not be sorry, but be merry; not weep▪ but rejoice and be glad, that God doth vouchsafe to offer us his cross, thereby to come to him to endless joys and comforts. For if we suffer, we shall reign; if we confess him before men, he will confess us before his Father in heaven; if we be not ashamed of his gospel now, he will not be ashamed of us in the last day, but will be glorif [...]ed in us, crowning us with crowns of glory and endless felicity: for, "Blessed are they that s [...]ffer persecution for righteousness' sake, for their's is the kingdom of heaven." Be glad, (saith Peter) for the Spirit of God resteth upon you. And after that you are a little afflicted, God will comfort, strengthen, and confirm you. And therefore, my good brethren, be not discouraged for cross, for prison, or loss of goods, for confession of Christ's gospel and truth which you have believed, and was lively taught amongst you in the days of our late good king and most holy prince, king Edward. This is most certain, if you lose any thing for Christ's sake, and for contemning the antichristian service, [Page 672] set up again amongst us; as you for your parts even in prison shall find God's great and rich mercy, far passing all worldly wealth; so shall your wives and children in this present life find and feel God's providence, more plentifully than tongue can tell. For he will shew merciful kindness on them that love him. The good man's seed shall not go a begging his bread. You are good men, so many as suffer for Christ's sake.
I trust you all, my dearly beloved, will consider this with yourselves, and in the cross see God's mercy, which is more sweet than life itself, much more than any pelf of this world. T [...]is mercy of God should make you merry and chearful; for the afflictions of this life are not to be compared with the joys of the life prepared for you. You know that the way to heaven is not the wide way of the world, which leadeth to the devil; but the way to heaven is strait, which few people walk in. For few live godly in Christ Jesus; few regard the life to come; few remember the day of judgment; few remember how Christ will deny them before his Father, that do deny him here; few consider that Christ will be ashamed of them in the last day, who are ashamed of his truth and true service; few imagine how their accounts will stand at the day of vengeance; few regard the condemnation of their own consciences, in doing that which inwardly they disallow; and few love God better than their goods.
I trust you are of this few, my dearly beloved, I hope you be of that little flock, who shall inherit the kingdom of heaven; I hope you are those mourners and lamenters, who shall be comforted with such comfort as shall never be taken from you. Repent of your former evils: strive against those evil inclinations that are in you: continue to call upon God: defile not your bodies with the idolatrous service of the antichristian church of Rome: molest not the good Spirit of God, which is given you as a pledge of your eternal redemption, a counsellor and guide to lead you to his eternal truth; which good Spirit I beseech the Father of mercy to give to us all, for the sake of his dear Son Jesus Christ our Lord; to whom I commend you all, and to the word of his grace, which is able to help you all, and save all that believe it, and lead their lives according to it.
OF this you may be very certain, that all the hairs of your heads are numbered, so that not one of them shall perish, neither shall any man or devil be able to hurt, or even attempt to hurt any of you, without the permission of our heavenly Father, who tenderly loveth you; and when he hath given them leave, they shall go no farther than he will, nor keep you in trouble any longer than he pleases. Therefore cast your care on him, for he careth for you. Only study to please him, and to keep your consciences clean, and your bodies pure from the idolatrous service, which now every-where is used, and God will marvellously and mercifully defend and comfort you, for the sake of his holy name in Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen.
LETTER VII. From Mr. BRADFORD to ERKINALDE RAWLINS, [...] his WIFE.
GOD our dear and most merciful Father through Jesus Christ, be with you, my good brother and [...] as with his children for ever, and in all things [...]o guide you with his Holy Spirit, the leader of his people, as may be to his glory, and your own everlasting joy and comfort in him. Amen.
AS you have often relieved my necessities, (for which I beseech God to make me thankful, and to recompense you both here and hereafter) I cannot but endeavour, as I a [...] in gratitude bound, to write something for your spiritual comfort.
MY dearly beloved, look not upon these days, and [...] afflictions which they bring, as dismal days, and days [...] of God's vengeance, but rather of good days, or days [...] God's fatherly kindness towards you, and such as you [...] that is, towards such as repent of their past sins, and earnestly purpose to amend their lives, walking not after the way of the world, and the greatest part of men, for the preservation of their pelf, which they shall leave sooner or [...] ▪ and to whom, and how it shall be used, they know [...] ▪ Indeed to such as walk in their wickedness, and wind [...] with the world, this time is a time of wrath and vengea [...], and their beginning of sorrow is but now, because they contemn the physic of their Father, which by this purging time and cleansing days would work for their health, [...] they did but consider it: and because they will not have God's blessing, which hath been offered to them both by prosperity and adversity, therefore it shall be kept for enough from them. As when the sick man will receive [...] kind of physic from the hands of the physician, he is [...] alone, and so the malady increaseth, and at length destroyeth him. To such men, indeed, these days are, and should be doleful days, and days of woe and weeping, because their damnation draweth nigh.
BUT unto such as be penitent, and are desirous to live after the Lord's will, (among whom I do not only count you, but as far as a man may judge, I [...]now you are) unto such, I say, this time is, and should be comfortable. For now our Father chastiseth us for our sins, if he had had a mind to destroy us, he would have left us to ourselves, to seek our own ways, and work our own ruin: let us patiently embrace his fatherly visitation, for he chastiseth us in this world, lest with the world we should perish. Therefore, dear friends, call to mind and lament your sins; pray for mercy and forgiveness, and undoubtingly believe that God [Page 673] will hear you: for he doth not punish twice for one thing.
SO that, I say, we have cause to rejoice for these days, because our Father suffereth us not to lie in Jezebel's bed, sleeping in our own sins and security, but as mindful of us, doth correct us as his own children; whereby we may be certain that we are no bastards, but sons; for he correcteth every son whom he receiveth. So that they who are not partakers of his chastisements, or that contemn it, declare themselves to be bastards and not sons, as I know you are, who being chastised, improve it accordingly. And therefore, my dear friends, be glad, knowing certainly even by these visitations of the Lord, that ye are his dear and chosen children, whose faults your Father doth visit with the rod of correction, but his mercy will he never take away from us. Amen.
YOU have cause to rejoice for these days, because they are days of trial, wherein you yourselves, and all the world shall know that you belong not to it, but are God's darlings. Before these days came, Lord God I how many thought themselves in God's bosom, and so were taken, and would be taken by the world? But now we see whose they are. For, whom we obey, his servants we be. If we obey the world, (which God forbid, and hitherto you have not done it) then are we the world's; but if we obey God, then are we God's. Which thing (I mean, that you are God's) these days have declared both to you, to me, and to all others that know you, better than ever we know it. Therefore you have no cause to be sorry, but rather to rejoice at this assurance of being the Lord's children, and as you are so accounted by all good people.
WHAT though the world repine thereat? what though it kick? what though it seek to trouble and molest you? it doth but according to its nature: he cannot love the Lord who liveth not in the Lord: he cannot brook the child that hateth the Father: he that careth not for the master will not mind the servant. If ye were of the world, the world would love you, you should live quietly, there would be no grief, no molestation. If the devil dwelt in you, (which God forbid) he would not stir up his knights to besiege your house, or suffer his fiends to enter into your swine: but because Christ dwelleth in you, (as he doth by faith) therefore the devil stirreth up his first begotten son, the world, to seek how to disquiet you, to rob you, to spoil you, and to destroy you: and perchance your dear Father, to try, and to make known to you and to the world, that you are intended for a better habitation than can be found here upon earth, even an house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens; hath given, or will give power to Satan, and to the world, to take from you the things which he hath lent you, and by taking them away, to try your fidelity, obedience, and love towards him, (for you must not love them above him) as by giving that you have, and keeping it, he hath declared his love towards you.
SATAN, it may be, telleth God, (as he did of Job) that you love God for the sake of your goods. What then, If the Lord, to try you with Job, should give him power over your goods and body, would you be dismayed? would you despair? would you be faint-hearted? or would you not rather rejoice, as the apostles did, that they were worthy to suffer any thing for the Lord's sake? O forget not the end that happened to Job, for as it happened to him, so shall it happen unto you. For God is the same God, and cannot long forget to shew mercy to them that look and long for it, as you do, and I pray you still so to do: for the Lord loveth you, and never can nor will forget to shew and pour out his mercy upon you. After he hath afflicted and tried you a little while, (saith St. Peter) he will visit, comfort, and confirm you; as he did to Jacob wrestling with the angel, when at length morning came, and the sun arose; so, doubtless, it will happen unto you. However, do ye as Job and Jacob did, that is, order and dispose the things that God hath lent you, as well as you can while you have time: who knoweth but God hath given you power thus long, for that end?
GO therefore, dispose of your goods, prepare yourselves to trial, that ye may either stand to it like God's champions, or else if you feel such infirmity in yourselves that ye be not able, give place to violence, and go where you may serve the Lord with a free and safe conscience. Think not this counsel to come by chance and fortune, but from the Lord. Other oracles we may not look for now. And God told Joseph in a dream by an angel, that he should [...]ly, so if you feel such infirmity in yourselves, as should turn to God's dishonour, and your own destruction withal, know that at this present I am as God's angel, to admonish you to take time while ye have it, and to see that God's name might not be dishonoured by you. Joseph might have objected the omission of his vocation, as perchance ye will do. But (dear hearts) let vocations and all things else give place to God's name, and the sanctifying thereof.
THIS I speak, not as though I would not have you rather to tarry, and to stand to it: but I speak it in respect of your infirmity, which if you feel to be so great in you, that you are not certain of this hope, that God will never tempt you above your ability; [...]ly and get you hence, and know that thereby God will have you tried to yourselves and to others. For by it you shall know how to take this world, and that your home here is no home, but that ye look for another, and so give occasion to [...]hers [...] to love this world, and perchance to some to doubt of their religion. Wherein though they be earnest, yet would they not lose so much as ye do for your religion, which ye do confirm to me and others, by your giving place to violence.
[Page 674]LAST of all, ye have cause to rejoice over these our days, because they be the days of confirmation, in which and by which, God our heavenly Father maketh us like to Christ's image here, that we may be like unto him elsewhere. For if we suffer with him, then shall we rise with him again; if we accompany with him in all troubles and afflictions, then shall we rejoice with him in glory; if we now sow with him in tears, we shall reap with him in gladness: if we confess him before men, he will confess us before his Father in heaven; if we take his part, he will take our's; if we lose aught for his name's sake, he will give us all things for his truth's sake. So that we ought to rejoice and be glad, for it is not given to every one to suffer loss of country, life, goods, house, &c. for the Lord's sake. What can God the Father do more unto us, than to call us into the camp with his Son? What may Christ our Saviour do more for us, then to make us his warriors? What can the Holy Ghost do to us above this, to mark us with the cognizance of the Lord of Hosts?
THIS cognizance of the Lord standeth not in forked caps, tippets, shaven crowns, or such other baggage and antichristian pelf, but in suffering for the Lord's sake. "The world shall hate you," saith Christ. Lo, there is the cognizance and badge of God's children; the world shall hate you. Rejoice therefore, (my dearly beloved) rejoice, that God doth vouchsafe to begin to conform you, and to make you like to Christ. By the trial of these days ye are occasioned more to repent, more to pray, more to desire life everlasting, more to be holy, (for holy is the and for which God doth afflict us) and so to come to God's company. Which thing because we cannot do as long as it is, therefore by the door of death we must enter with Christ into eternal life, and immortality of soul and body; which God of his mercy send shortly for our Saviour Jesus Christ's sake. Amen.
LETTER VIII. From Mr. BRADFORD, to Mrs. A. WARCUP.
THE everlasting peace of Christ be more and more lively felt in our hearts, by the operation of the Holy Ghost, now and for ever, Amen.
ALTHOUGH I know it to be more than needless to write any thing unto you, good sister, being, as I doubt not but you be, diligently exercised [...]n reading of the scriptures, in meditating of the same, and in hearty prayer to God for the help of his Holy Spirit, to have the sense and feeling, especially of the comforts you read in God's word: yet having such opportunity, and not knowing whether hereafter I shall ever have the like, (as this messenger can declare) I thought good in few words to take my farewel in writing, because otherwise I cannot. And now methinks I have done it. For what else can I, or should I say unto you, my dearly beloved in the Lord, but farewel? Farewel, dear sister, farewel; howbeit in the Lord, our Lord, (I say) farewel. In him shall you fare well, and so much the better, by how much in yourself you fare evil, and shall fare evil.
WHEN I speak of yourself, I mean also this world, this life, and all things properly pertaining to this life. In them as you look not for your welfare, so be not [...] when accordingly you shall not see it. To the Lord [...] God, to the Lamb our Christ, which hath borne our [...] on his back, and is our Mediator for ever, do I send [...] ▪ In him look for welfare, and that without wavering, because of his own goodness and truth, which our wickedness cannot take away: not that I would have you [...] yourself in any evil or unbelief, but that I may comfort you, that they should not dismay you. Your's is our Christ wholly; your's, I say, he is, with all that ever he hath: is not this welfare, think you? Mountains shall move, and the earth shall fall, before you find it otherwise, say that liar Satan what he list.
THEREFORE, good sister, farewel, and be merry in [...] Lord, be merry, I say, for you have good cause. If yo [...] welfare, joy, and salvation, hanged upon any other [...] than God's mercy and truth, then ye might well be [...] heavy, and stand in doubt: but in as much as it [...] only upon these two, (I mean God's mercy and truth) [...] Satan that he lieth when he would persuade you to [...] hesitating, by causing you to cast your eyes (which only in this case should be set on Christ our sweet Saviour) [...] yourself. In some part, indeed, look on yourself, on your faith, on your love, obedience, &c. to awaken you from security, to stir you up to diligence, in doing the things appertaining to your vocation: but when you would be at peace with God, and have true consolation in your conscience, altogether look upon the goodness of God in Christ. Think on this commandment which precedeth all other, That you must have no other gods but the Lord Jeho [...]h, which is your Lord God: which he could not be, if he did not pardon your sins in very deed. Remember that Christ commandeth you to call him Father for the same [...]. And here call to mind all the benefits of God hitherto shewed upon you: and so shall you feel in very deed, that which I wish unto you now, and pray you to wish unto [...]. Farewel, dear sister, in the Lord Jesus, with whom he grant us shortly to meet as his children, for his name and mercy [...] sake, to our eternal welfare. Amen.
LETTER IX. To Mr. LAURENCE SAUNDERS, Prisoner in the Marshelsea.
MY good brother, I beseech our good and gracious Father always to continue his gracious favour and love towards us, and by us, as by instruments of his grace, to [Page 675] work his glory and the confusion of his adversaries. "Out of the mouth of infants and babes he will shew forth his praise to destroy the enemy," &c.
I have perused your letters to myself, and have read them to others. For answer whereof, if I should write what Dr. Taylor and Mr. Philpot do think, then must I say, that they think the salt sent unto us by your friend, is unseasonable. And I think they will both declare it heartily, if they should come before men. As for me, if you would know what I think, (my good and most dear brother) because I am so sinful and so defiled (the Lord knoweth that I lie not) with many grievous sins, which I hope are washed away with the blood of Christ, I neither can nor would be consulted withal, but stood as a cypher. Howbeit, to tell you how and what I mind▪ take this for a sum: I pray God in no case I may seek myself, and indeed I thank God for it, I purpose it not.
THAT which remaineth I commit to my Lord God, and I trust in him, that he will do according to this: Cast thy care on the Lord, &c. Cast all your care upon him, &c. Reveal unto the Lord thy way, and trust, &c. Whosoever trusteth in the Lord, mercy shall compass him about. Fo [...] the Lord is faithful: he will in temptation make a way that you may be able to bear it. The Lord knoweth how to rid out of temptation the godly, &c. O would to God, I were godly, &c. The Lord knoweth how to deliver out of temptation such as trust in him, &c. I cannot think that they will offer any kind of indifferent or mean conditions: for if we will not adore the beast, we never shall be delivered, but against their will, think I. God our Father and gracious Lord make perfect the good he hath begun in us.
HE will do it, my brother, my dear brother, whom I have in my inward bowels to live and die with. O that I were with you. Pray for me, my own heart root in the Lord.
LETTER X. From the Same to the Same.
GOD's sweet peace in Christ be with you, my good brother in the Lord Jesus, and with all your fellow captives, Amen.
I was hindered this morning from musing on that which I purposed to have thought on by reason of you, against whom I saw myself guilty of negligence, even in this point that I would not write, I should say, that I had not written unto you as yet: therefore I prepared myself out of hand to clear myself hereof, not that I will go about to excuse my fault, (for that were more to load me) but by asking God and you pardon, to get it no more laid to my charge. Now when I was thus purposing, and p [...]tly doing, there came one with a letter from you: for which as I have cause to thank God and you, so I see myself more blame-worthy for thus long holding my peace. Howbeit, good brother, in this I have given a demonstration to you, to behold my negligence in all other things, and especially in praying for you, and for the church of God, which for my sins and hypocrisy, (hypocrisy indeed even in this writing, God deliver me from it) have deserved all kinds of plagues at his hands: but yet merciful is he that will on this wise chastize us in this world, that we should not be condemned with the world. He might otherwise have punished us, I mean, he might have cast us in prison for other causes, me especially, than for his gospel and word's sake. Praised therefore be his name, who vouchsafeth us worthy of this honour. Ah good God, forgive us our sins, and work by this thy fatherly correction on us, on me especially, effectually to love thee and thy Christ; and with joyfulness carry thy cross to the end.
AH good brother, If I could always have God, his majesty, mercy, heaven, hell, &c. before mine eyes, then should I endure, as St. Paul writeth of Moses, Heb. xi. "He endured as he that saw him which is invisible." Pray for me as I do know you do, and give thanks also: for, "In the Lord I trust, I shall not waver. If I walk by the valley of the shadow of death, I will not fear, for thou art with me, O Lord." I think we shall be shortly called forth; for now they have a law, and according to it they proceed, &c. otherwise they will not reason with us; and I think their sheet anchor will be, to have us to subscribe. Which thing if we do, though with this condition, (so far as the thing subscribed to is not against God's word) yet this will be offensive. Therefore let us all confess that we are no changelings, but the same as we were in religion, and therefore cannot subscribe except we will dissemble both with God, ourselves, and the world. These things I write to you, dear brother in the Lord. Now I will read your epistle. Ah brother, that I had the practical understanding with you in that vine which you describe: pray the Lord that I may think so indeed. God make me thankful for you. All our fellow-prisoners salute you, and give thanks to God for you. The same do you for us, and pray that, &c.
LETTER XI. From Mr. BRADFORD to the Rev. Fathers, Dr. CRANMER, Dr. RIDLEY, and Dr. LATIMER.
JESUS Immanuel. My dear fathers in the Lord, I beseech God our sweet Father through Christ, to make perfect the good he hath begun in us all. Amen.
I had thought that every one of your staves had stood next the door, but now it is otherwise perceived. Our [Page 676] dear brother Rogers hath broken the ice valiantly, as this day, I think, or to-morrow at the uttermost, hearty Hooper, sincere Saunders, and trusty Taylor, end their course, and receive their crown. The next am I, which hourly look for the porter to open me the gates after them, to enter into the desired rest. God forgive me mine unthankfulness for this exceeding great mercy, that amongst so many thousands it pleaseth his mercy to chuse me to be one▪ in whom he will suffer, (for I have been a great hypocrite and a grievous sinner, the Lord pardon me, yea, he hath done it, he hath done it indeed) ye what evil hath he done? Christ whom the prelates persecute, his verity which they hate in me, hath done no evil, nor deserved death. Therefore ought I most he [...]ly to rejoice of this tender kindness of the Lord toward me, which useth a remedy for my sin as a testimonial of his testament, to his glory, to my everlasting comfort, to the edifying of his church, and to the overthrowing of Antichrist, and his kingdom. Oh what am I, Lord, that thou shouldst thus magnify me so vile a man and miser, as always I have been? Is this thy custom, to send for such a wretch and hypocrite as I have been, in a fiery chariot as thou didst for Elijah? O dear fathers be thankful for me, that I still might be found worthy in whom the Lord would sanctify his holy name. And for your part, make you ready; for we are but your gentlemen ushers. The marriage of the Lamb is prepared, come unto the marriage. I now go to leave my flesh there where I received it. I shall be conveyed thither, as Ignatius was [...]o Rome, to be devoured by leopards; by whose evil I hope to be made better. God grant, if it be his will, they may be made better by me. Amen.
FOR my farewel therefore, I write and send this unto you, trusting shortly to see you where we shall never be separated. In the mean season I will not cease, as I have done, to commend you to the Father of heaven, and that you would do so by me, I most heartily pray every one of you: you know now that I have most need. "Faithful is God, who will not suffer us to be tempted above our strength." He never did it hitherto, and I am assured he never will, Amen. "He is on my right hand, therefore I shall not fall. Wherefore my heart shall rejoice, for he shall not leave my soul in hell, neither shall he suffer me his holy one, by his grace in Christ, to see corruption."
LETTER XII. To the Right Honourable the Lord RUSSEL, Earl of BEDFORD, being then in Trouble for the Cause of RELIGION.
THE everlasting and most gracious God and Father of our Saviour Jesus Christ, bless your good lordship with all manner of heavenly blessings in the same Christ our only comfort and hope, Amen.
PRAISED be God our Father, who hath thought you worthy of faith in his Christ, and of his cross for the [...] Magnified be his holy name, who, as he hath delivered you from one cross, so hath made you willing (I hope) and ready to bear another when he shall see his time to [...] it upon you: for these are the most singular gifts of God, given as to few, so to none else but to those few who are most dear in his sight. Faith is reckoned, and worthily, among the greatest gifts of God, yea, it is the greatest that we can enjoy. For by it, as we be justified and [...] God's children, so are we temples and possessors of the Holy Spirit, yea, of Christ also, Ephes. iv. and of the Father himself, John xiv. By faith we drive the devil away▪ 1 Pet. v. We overcome the world, 1 John v. and are already citizens of heaven, and fellows with God's [...] saints. But who is able to reckon the riches that the faith bringeth with her unto the soul she sitteth upon▪ No man nor angel. And therefore (as I said) of all God's gifts, she may be placed at the head, and have the highest seat. Which if men would rightly consider, (in that it cometh only from God's mercy-seat, not of hearing masses, mattins, dirges, or such dross, but by hearing the word [...] God in such a tongue as we may understand it) as they would be diligent and take great heed for doing or [...] any thing which might cast her down, (for then they [...] also) so would they with no less care read and hear Go [...] holy word, joining thereto most earnest and hearty [...], as well for the better understanding, as for the [...] living, and confessing the same, in spite of the devil, the world, the flesh, reason, goods, possessions, carnal friends, wife, children, and very life here, if they pull us back [...] hearken to their voice and counsel, for more quiet, [...] and longer use of them.
NOW notwithstanding this excellency of faith, in that we read the apostle to match therewith, yea, (as it were) to prefer suffering persecution for Christ's sake, I suppose no man will be so weak as to think otherwise, but that I and all God's children have cause to glorify and praise him, who hath made you worthy of so great a blessing. For though the reason or the wisdom of the world, think of the cross according to their reach, and according to their present sense, and therefore they sly from it, as from the greatest ignominy and shame; yet those who have been brought up in the school of Christ have learned to think otherwise of his cross, that it is the frame house in which God frameth his children like to his Son Christ; the [...] that fineth God's gold; the highway to heaven; the livery wherewith God's servants are served; the earnest and beginning of all consolation and glory. For they (I mean God's scholars, as your lordship, I hope, is) do enter into God's sanctuary, lest their feet slip. They look not as beasts do, on things present only, but on things to come, whereby they have the day of judgment, and the glorious coming of Christ, as present to their faith, as the wicked have now their worldly wealth before their eyes, wherein they wallow, and will wallow till they tumble into hell, into miseries inexpressible, into torments everlasting. [Page 677] Now they follow the fiend as the bear doth the train of honey, and the sow the swillings, till they be brought into the slaughter house, and then they shall know (but too late) that their prosperity hath brought them to eternal perdition. Then shall they cry, Wo, wo, wo, we went the wrong way: we counted these men (I mean such as you be, that suffer for God's sake, loss of goods, friends, and life, whom they shall see clothed with rich robes of righteousness, crowns of most pure and precious gold, and palms of conquest) in the glorious palace of the Lamb, where is eternal joy and felicity. We counted (they will then say) these men but fools and madmen, we took their conditions to be but curiosity. But then the time will be turned, laughing shall be turned into weeping, and weeping into rejoicing. Read Wisdom ii.iii.iv. and v.
THEREFORE (as before I have said) great cause have I to thank God, who hath vouchsafed to make you worthy of this most bountiful blessing: much more then have you, my good lord, to be thankful. For look upon your vocation, I pray you, tell me how many noblemen, earls sons, lords, knights, and men of esteem, hath God thus dealt with in this realm of England? I dare say, you think not you have deserved this. Only God's mercy in Christ hath wrought this on you, as he did in Jeremiah's time on Abimelech, in Achab's time on Abdias, in Christ's time on Joseph of Arimathea, in the Apostles time on Sergius Paulus, and the queen of Candace's chamberlain. Only now be thankful, and continue, continue, my good lord, continue to confess Christ. Be not ashamed of him before men, and then he will not be ashamed of you. Now will he try you; stick fast unto him, and he will stick fast by you; he will be with you in trouble, and deliver you. But then you must cry unto him; for so it proceedeth, [...] cried unto me, and I heard him, I will be with him [...], I will deliver him, and honour him."
REMEMBER Lot's wife, who looked back. Remember Francis Spi [...]a. Remember none is crowned but he that striveth lawfully. Remember that all you have is at Christ's command. Remember he lost more for you, than you can lose for him. Remember you lose not that which is lost for his sake; for you shall find much more here and hereafter. Remember you shall die, and when, where, and how, you cannot tell. Remember that the death of sinners is most terrible. Remember the death of God [...]s saints is most precious in his sight. Remember the multitude goeth the wide way that leadeth to destruction. Remember that the strait gate, which leadeth to glory, hath but few travellers. Remember, Christ biddeth you to strive to enter in thereat. Remember, he that trusteth in the Lord, shall receive strength to stand against all the assaults of his enemies. Be certain that all the hairs of your head be numbered. Be certain that your good Father hath appointed bounds, over which the devil dare not look. Commit yourself to him; he is, hath been, and will be your keeper. Cast your care on him, and he will care for you. Let Christ be your scope and mark to aim at: let him be your pattern to work by: let him be your ensample to follow: give unto him your heart and hand, mind and tongue, faith and feet, and let his word be your candle, to go before you in all matters of religion. Blessed is he that walketh not to these popish prayers, nor fitteth nor standeth at them; glorify God both in soul and body. He that gathereth not with Christ, scattereth abroad. Use prayer; look for God's help, which is at hand assuredly to them that unfeignedly ask and desire it. In which prayers I heartily desire your lordship to remember us, who are (God be praised) gladly going with you; but if we go before you, we hope that you (if it be God's pleasure) will follow after, according to your daily prayer, "Thy will be done on earth, as it is in heaven." The good Spirit of God always guide your lordship unto the end, Amen.
LETTER XIII. To Mr. WARCUP and his WIFE, Mrs. WILKINSON, and other FRIENDS.
THE same peace our Saviour Christ left with his people, which is not without war with the world, Almighty God work plentifully in your hearts now and for ever. Amen.
I perceive the time is come wherein the Lord's ground will be known; I mean, it will now shortly appear who have received God's gospel into their hearts indeed, to the [...]aking of good root therein: for such will not wither for a little heat or sun burning, but stiffly will stand and grow on, in spite of the malice of all burning showers and tempests. And forasmuch as (my beloved in the Lord) I am persuaded of you, that ye be indeed the children of God, God's good ground, which groweth and will grow on, by God's grace, bringing forth fruit to God's glory after your vocations, as occasions shall be offered, therefore I cannot but so signify unto you, and heartily pray you and every one of you, accordingly to go forwards after your master Christ, not sticking at the foul way and stormy weather which you are to come into, and are like so to do: being most certain of this, that the end of your journey shall be pleasant and joyful in such a perpetual rest and blissfulness, as cannot but swallow up the showers that ye now feel and are immerged in, if ye often set it before your eyes, after St. Paul's counsel in the latter end of the fourth, and beginning of the fifth chapter of the second epistle to the Corinthians. Read it, I pray you, and remember it often as a restorative to refresh you, lest you faint in the way.
AND besides this, set before you also, that though the [Page 678] weather be foul, and storms grow apace, yet ye go not alone, but others your brothers and sisters tread the same path, as St. Peter telleth us: and therefore company should cause you to be the more courageous and chearful. But if you had no company at all to go presently with you, I pray you tell me, if even from the beginning, the best of God's friends have found any fairer weather and way to the place whither ye are going, (I mean heaven) than ye now find, and are like to; except ye will with the worldlings, which have their portion in this life, tarry still by the way till the storms are overpast, and then either night will so approach that ye cannot travel, or the doors will be locked before you come, and so you lodge without in evil lodgings. Read Revelations xxii. Begin at Abel, and come from him to Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, the Patriarchs, Moses, David, Daniel, and all the saints of the Old Testament, and tell me whether any of them ever found any fairer way than ye now find.
IF the Old Testament will not serve, I pray you come to the New, and begin with Mary and Joseph, and come from them to Zachary and Elizabeth, John Baptist, and every one of the apostles and evangelists, and search whether they all found any other way into the city we travel towards, than by many tribulations.
BESIDES these, if ye should call to remembrance the primitive church, Lord God, ye should see so many to have given chearfully their bodies to most grievous torments, rather than they would be stopped in their journey, that there is no day in the year, but (I dare say) a thousand was the fewest that with great joy lost their homes here, but in the city they went unto, have found other manner of home than man's mind is able to conceive. But if none of these were, if ye had no company now to go with you, as you have me your poor brother and bondman of the Lord, with many others, I trust in God, if you had none of the fathers, patriarchs, kings, prophets, apostles, evangelists, martyrs, and other holy saints and children of God, that in their journey to heaven-ward found as ye now find, and are like to find if ye go forward, as I trust ye will, yet ye have your master and captain Jesus Christ, the only begotten and beloved Son of God, in whom was all the Father's pleasure, joy, and delight; ye have him to go before you, no fairer way, but much fouler, into this our city of Jerusalem. I need not (I trust) rehearse what manner of way he found. Begin at his birth, and till ye come to his burial, ye will find that every foot of his journey was no better, but much worse than your's is now.
WHEREFORE (my dearly beloved in the Lord) be not so dainty, as to look for that at God's hands, your dear Father, which the patriarchs, prophets, apostles, evangelists, martyrs, saints, and his own Son Jesus Christ did not find. Hitherto we have had a fair way (I think) and fair weather also: now because we have loitered by the way, and not made the speed we should have done, our loving Lord and sweet Father hath overcast the weather, and stirred up the storms and tempests, that we might with more haste run out our race before night come, and the doors be locked▪ The devil standeth now at every inn-door in his city and country of this world, crying unto us to tarry and lodge in this place or that place till the storms be overpast; not that he would not have us wet to the skin, but that the time might overpass us to our utter destruction. Therefore beware of his enticements. Cast not your eyes on things that be present, how this man doth, and how that man doth: but cast your eyes on the mark ye run at, or else ye will lose the game. Ye know that he which runneth at the mark, doth not look on others that stand by, and go this way or that way, but altogether he looketh on the mark, and on them that run with him, that those which be behind overtake him not, and that he may overtake them that [...] before: even so should we do, leave off looking at [...] which will not run the race to heaven's bliss by the path of persecution with us, and cast our eyes on the end of our race, and on them that go before us, that we may overtake them, and on them which come after us, that we may encourage them the faster to follow.
HE that shooteth at a mark, will not cast his eyes on these that stand by, but will rather take care of his aim, otherwise, he might shoot the wrong way: even so, my dear [...] beloved, let your eye and your heart be fixed on the mark you aim at, even Christ Jesus, who for the joy set before him, did joyfully carry his cross, contemning the shame, and therefore he now fitteth at the right hand of the throne of God. Let us follow him; for this he did that we should not be faint-hearted: for we may be assured, that if we suffer with him, we shall undoubtedly reign with him: but if we deny him, he will surely deny us: for "He that is ashamed of me, (saith Christ) and of my gospel, in this faithless generation, I will be ashamed of him before the angels of God in heaven." O how heavy a sentence is this to all such as know the mass to be an abominable idol, full of idolatry, blasphemy, and sacrilege against God and his Christ, (as undoubtedly it is) and yet for fear of men, for loss of life and goods, yea, some for advantage and gain, will honour it with their presence, dissembling both with God and man, as their own heart and conscience doth accuse them. Better it were that such had never known the truth, than thus wittingly, and for fear and favour of man, whose breath is in his nostrils, to dissemble it, or rather (as indeed he doth) deny it. The end of such is like to be worse than their beginning. Such had need to take heed of the two terrible places to the Hebrews in the 6th and 10th chapters, left by so doing they fall therein. Let them beware they do not craftily beguile themselves, as some do I fear, who go to mass, and because they worship not, kneel not, or knock not as others do, but sit still in their pews, therefore they think they rather do good to others than hurt.
But, alas, if these men would look into their own consciences, there should they see that they are very dissemblers, [Page 679] and in seeking to deceive others (for by this means the magistrates think them of their sort) they deceive themselves. They think at the time of elevation, that the eyes of all men are fixed upon them, to observe how they do. They think others, hearing of such men going to mass, do see, or inquire of their behaviour there. O if there were in those men that are so present at the mass either love to God, or to their brethren, they would for the one, or both, openly take God's part, and admonish the people of their idolatry. They fear men more than Him who hath power to cast both soul and body into hell-fire: they hasten on both knees: they serve two masters. God have mercy upon such, and open their eyes with his eye-salve, that they may see that they who take no part with God are against him; and that they who gather not with Christ, do scatter abroad. O that they would read what St. John saith will be done to the fearful. The advice given to the church of Laodicea, is good counsel for such.
BUT to return to you again, (dearly beloved) be not ashamed of God's gospel: it is the power of God unto salvation to all those that do believe it. Be therefore partakers of the afflictions, as God shall make you able, knowing for certain that he will never tempt you farther than he will make you able to bear: and think it no small favour from God to suffer for his truth: for the Spirit of God resteth upon you, and ye are happy; as one day ye shall see. Read 2 Thessal. i. Heb. xii. As the fire hurteth not gold, but maketh it finer, so shall ye be more pure by suffering with Christ, 1 Pet. i. The flail and the wind hurteth not wheat, but cleanseth it from the chaff. And ye (my beloved) are God's wheat; fear not therefore the flail: fear not the fanning wind; fear not the mill-stone; fear not the oven: for all these make you more meet for the Lord's own tooth. Soap, tho' it blacken, yet it soileth not the cloth, but rather at length maketh it more clean: so doth the black cross help us to more whiteness, if God strike with his battledore. Because ye are God's sheep, prepare yourselves to the slaughter, always knowing that in the sight of the Lord our death shall be precious. The souls under the altar look for us to fill up their number: happy are we, if God hath so appointed us. Howsoever it be, dearly beloved, cast your eyes wholly upon the Lord, with whom all the hairs of your heads are numbered, so that not one of them shall perish. Will we, nill we, we must drink God's cup, if he hath appointed it for us. Drink it willingly, and at the first when it is full, lest peradventure, if we linger, we shall, with the wicked, drink the dregs thereof, if at the beginning we refuse to drink with his children: for with them his judgment beginneth, and when he hath wrought his will on mount Sion, then will he visit the nations round about.
SUBMIT yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of the Lord. No man shall touch you without his knowledge; and whenever they molest you, know that it is for your good. God will thereby work to make you like unto Christ here, that ye may be like unto him hereafter. Acknowledge your unthankfulness and your sin, and bless God that correcteth you in the world, because you shall not be damned with the world. Call upon his name through Christ, for his help, as he commandeth us. Believe that he is merciful to you, heareth you, and helpeth you: I am with him in trouble, and will deliver him, saith he. Know that God hath appointed bounds, over which the devil and all the world shall not pass. If all things seem to be against us, let us say with holy Job, "If he kill me, I will trust in him." Read the ninety-first psalm, and pray for me your poor brother and fellow-sufferer for God's gospel's sake; his name therefore be praised; and may he through his infinite mercy and goodness make me and you worthy to suffer with good conscience for the same. Die once we must, and when we know not: happy are they to whom God giveth to pay nature's debt, I mean, to die for his sake.
HERE is not our home; therefore let us accordingly consider things, always having before our eyes the heavenly Jerusalem, Heb. xii. Rev. xxi.xxii. the way thither to be by persecution; the dear friends of God, how they have gone it after the example of our Saviour Jesus Christ, whose footsteps let us follow, even to the gallows, if it please God, not doubting but that as he within three days rose again immortal, even so we shall do in our time, that is, when the trump shall blow, and the angel shall shout, and the Son of man shall appear in the clouds with innumerable saints and angels, in majesty and great glory: then shall the dead arise, and we shall be caught up into the clouds to meet the Lord, and so be always with him. Comfort yourselves with these words, and pray for me for God's sake. Out of prison, Nov. 19, 1553.
LETTER XIV. From Mr. BRADFORD to Sir JAMES HALES, Knight, then Prisoner in the Compter.
THE God of mercy, and Father of all comfort, plentifully pour out upon you and in you his mercy, and with his consolations comfort and strengthen you to the end, for his and our Christ's sake.
ALTHOUGH, right worshipful sir, many causes might move me to be content with crying for you to your God and my God, that he would give you grace to persevere well, as he hath right notably begun, to the great glory of his name, and comfort of all such as fear him; as lack of learning, familiarity, yea, acquaintance, (for I think I am unknown to you both by face and name) and other such like things; yet I cannot content myself, but presume to [Page 680] scribble something unto you; not that I think my scribbling can do you any good, but that I might declare my sympathy and compassion, love and affection I bear towards you, who are contented, yea, desirous with us poor sinners, to confess Christ's gospel in these perillous times and days of trial. O Lord God, how good art thou, which dost thus glean our grapes, I mean children for thyself, and brethren for Christ? Look, good master Hales, on your vocation; not many judges, not many knights, not many landed men, not many rich men, and wealthy to live as you are, hath God chosen to suffer for his sake, as he hath now done you. Certainly I dare say, you think not so of yourself, as though God were bound to prefer you, or had need of you, but rather attribute this [...] all good things unto his free mercy in Christ. Again, I dare say that you being a wise man do judge of things wisely, that is, concerning this your cross, you judge of it not after the world and people, which is the great master of error, nor after the judgment of reason and worldly wisdom, which is foolishness to faith, nor after the present sense, to which it seemeth not to be joyous but grievous, as St. Paul writeth: but after the word of God, which teacheth your cross to be, in respect of yourself between God and you, God's chastising, and your Father's correction, nurture, school, trial, pathway to heaven, glory, and felicity, and the furnace to consume the dross, and mortify the relics of old Adam which yet remain, yea even the frame-house to fashion you like to the dearest saints of God here, yea to Christ the Son of God, that elsewhere you might be like unto him.
NOW concerning your cross in respect of the world, between the world and you, God's word teacheth it to be a testimonial of God's truth, of his providence, of his power, of his justice, of his wisdom, of his anger against sin, of his goodness, of his judgment, of your [...] and religion, so that by it you are to the world a witness of God, that he is true, he ruleth all things, he is just, wise, and at length will judge the world, and cast the wicked into perdition, but the godly he will take and receive into his eternal habitation. I know you judge of things after faith's fetch, and the effects or ends of things, and so you see an eternal weight of glory which this cross shall bring unto you, while you look not on things which are seen, but on the things which are not not seen. Let the worldlings weigh things, and look upon the affairs of men with their worldly and corporal eyes, as many did in the subscription of the king's last will; and therefore they did that, for which they afterwards repented. But let us look on things after another manner, as God be praised you did, in not doing that which you were desired; you then beheld things not as a man, but as a man of God, and so you do now in religion, at least hitherto you have done, and that you might do still, I humbly beseech and pray you say with David, "Mine eyes fail for thy word, saying, when wilt thou comfort me? Though you be like a bottle in the smoke, (for I hear you want health) yet do not forget the statutes of the Lord: but cry out, How many are the days of thy servant? When [...] thou execute judgment on them that persecute me?" And be certain, "The Lord will surely come, and not [...] ▪ though he tarry, wait for him: for he is but a while in his anger, but in his favour is life: weeping may abide at evening, but joy cometh in the morning." Follow ther [...] fore Isaiah's counsel, Hide thyself for a very little while [...] til his indignation pass over, which is not indignation indeed, but to our sense: and therefore in the six and twentieth chapter of Isaiah, God saith of his church and people, that as he keepeth night and day; so there is no anger in [...] saith he.
THE mother sometimes beateth the child, but y [...] [...] heart melteth upon it, even in the very beating: and therefore she casteth the rod into the fire, and calleth the chi [...] ▪ giveth it an apple, and dandleth it most motherly. And to say the truth, the love of mothers to their children, is [...] a trace to train us to behold the love of God towards [...]: and therefore, saith he, Can a mother forget the child of her womb? As much as to say, No: but if she should [...] do, yet will I not forget thee, saith the Lord of [...] Ah comfortable saying! I will not forget thee, saith the Lord. Indeed the children of God think oftentimes that God hath forgotten them, and therefore they cry, [...] not thy face from me, &c. Forsake me not, O Lord. Whereas in very truth it is not so, but only in their p [...] sent sense: and therefore, saith David, I said in [...] agony, I was clean cast away from thy face. But was it so? No verily. Read his psalms, and you shall see. [...] he writeth also in other places very often, especially in the person of Christ: as when he saith, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? He saith not, why dost th [...] forsake me? or why wilt thou forsake me? but, why [...] thou forsaken me? whereas, indeed, God had not left him, but that it was so to his sense, and that this psalm telleth as full well, which I pray you sometimes to read; it is the twenty second psalm, and thereto join the thirtieth, and the hundred and s [...]c [...]nth, with divers others. Much the same we read in the fortieth chapter of the prophet I [...], where he reproveth Israel for saying, God hath forgot [...] them, in these words, "Hast thou not known? hast thou not heard? &c. They that trust in the Lord shall renew their strength." In his fifty fourth chapter read the following comfortable words; "Fear not, for a little while I have forsaken thee, but with great compassion will I gather [...] For a moment in mine anger I hid my face from thee, for a little season but in everlasting mercy have I had compassion on thee, saith the Lord thy Redeemer. For this is unto me as the waters of Noah: for as I have sworn that the waters of Noah should no more go over the earth, so have I sworn that I would not be angry with thee nor rebuke the [...]. For the mountains shall move, and the hills shall fall down, but my mercy shall not depart from thee, n [...]it [...] shall the covenant of my peace fall away, saith the Lord that hath compassion on thee."
[Page 681]BUT the scriptures are full of such sweet places to them that will bear the wrath of the Lord, and wait for his health and help. As of all temptations, this is the greatest, that God hath forgotten, or will not help us through the pikes, as they say; so of all the service of God, nothing is more pleasing to him, than assuredly to hope and trust in him whose help is always ready; for he is an helper in tribulations, and doth more gloriously shew his power by such as be weak, and feel themselves so. The weaker we are, the more strong we are in him. Thus the eyes of the Lord are on them that fear and tremble. He will accomplish their desire; he is with them in their trouble; he will deliver them. Before they cry, he heareth them, as all the scriptures teach us. To the reading whereof, and hearty prayer, I heartily commend you, beseeching almighty God, that of his eternal mercy he would make perfect the good he hath begun in you, and strengthen you to the end, that you might have no less hope, but much more of his help to your comfort now against your enemies, than already he hath given you against N. for not subscribing to the king's will.
BE certain, be certain, good master Hales, that all the hairs of your head, your dear Father hath numbered, so that not one of them shall perish: your name is written in the book of life. Therefore cast all your care upon God, who will comfort you with his eternal consolations, and make you able to go through the fire, (if need be) which is nothing to be compared to the fire wherein our enemies shall fall and lie for ever; from which the Lord deliver us, though it be through temporal fire, which must be construed according to the end and profit that cometh after it; it shall not then much terrify us to suffer for Christ our master's cause, which the Lord grant us for his mercy's sake, Amen.
LETTER XV. From Mr. BRADFORD, to Dr. HILL, Physician.
THE God of mercy and Father of all comfort at this present and for ever ingraft in your heart the sense of his mercy in Christ, and the continuance of his consolation, which cannot but enable you to carry with joy whatsoever cross he shall lay upon you, Amen.
HITHERTO I could not have the liberty to write to you, as I suppose you know: but now through God's providence I have no such restraint, and therefore I shall write something to clear myself of the suspicion of unthankfulness towards you in these dangerous days, [...] you should wax cold in God's cause, (which God forbid) or suffer the light of the Lord, once kindled in your heart, to be quenched, and so become as you were before, after the example of the world, and of many others who would have been counted otherwise in our days, and still would be so accounted, although by their outward life they declare the contrary, as if they could keep the heart pure, while the outward man doth curry favour.
IN which doings, as they deny God to be jealous, and therefore requireth the whole man as well body as soul, being both created for immortality and society with him, and redeemed by the blood of Jesus Christ, and now sanctified by the Holy Spirit to be the temple of God, and member of his Son, (I say) by their parting stakes to give God the heart and the world the body, they deny God to be jealous, (for else they would give him both, as the wife would do her husband, whether he be jealous or no if she be honest) so they play the dissemblers with the church of God by their fact, offending the godly, whom either they provoke to fall with them, or make them more careless and conscienceless if they be fallen, and occasioning the wicked and obstinate to triumph against God, and the more vehemently to prosecute their malice against such as will not defile themselves in body or soul with the Romish rags now received amongst us. Because of this, I mean, left you, my dear master and brother in the Lord, should do as too many of our gospellers have done for fear of man, whose breath is in his nostrils, and hath power but of the body, not fearing the Lord, who hath power both of soul and body, not only temporally, but also eternally: I could not but write something unto you, as well because gratitude requireth it, (for the many favours I have received of God by your hands, for which may he reward you, for I cannot) as also because charity and love compelleth; not that I think you have need, (for as I may rather learn of you, so I doubt not but you have hitherto kept yourself upright from halting) but that I might both quiet my conscience, calling upon me hereabout, and signify unto you by something, my carefulness for your soul, as painfully and often you have done for my body.
THEREFORE I pray you call to mind, that there are but two masters, two kinds of people, two ways, and two mansion places. The masters are Christ and Satan, the people are servitors to either of these, the ways are strait and wide, the mansions are heaven and hell. Again, consider that this world is the place of trial of God's people, and the devil's servants: for as the one will [...] his master whatsoever cometh of it, so will the [...] For a time it is hard to discern who pertaineth to [...] and who to the devil: as in the calm and peace who is the good sailor and warrior, and who is not. But as when the storm ariseth, the expert mariner is known, and as in war the g [...]d soldier is seen, so in affliction and the cross, God's children are easily known from Satan's servants; for then as the good servant will follow his master, so will the godly follow their captain, come what will; whereas the wicked and hypocrites will bid adieu, and desire the less of Christ's acquaintance. For which cause the cross [Page 682] is called a prob [...]tion and trial, because it tries who will go with God, and who will forsake him. And now in England we see how small a company Christ hath, in comparison of Satan's soldiers. Let no man deceive himself: for he that gathereth not with Christ, scattereth abroad. No man can serve two masters; the Lord abhorreth double hearts, the lukewarm, that is, such as are both hot and cold, he speweth out of his mouth. None that halt on both knees doth God take for his servants. The way of Christ is the strait way, and so strait, that as few find it, and few walk in it, so no man can halt in it but must needs go upright: for as the straitness will suffer no reeling to this side or that side, so that if any halt, he is like to fall off the bridge into the pit of eternal perdition.
STRIVE therefore, good Mr. Doctor, now you have found it, to enter into it: and if you shall be called or pulled back, look not on this side, or behind you, as Lot's wife did; but strait forwards is the end which is set before you, (though it be to come) as even now present: like as you order your patients to do in purgations, and other your ministrations, to consider the effect that will ensue; whereby the bitterness and loathsomeness of the purgation is so overcome, and the painfulness in abiding the working of what is ministered, is so eased, that it maketh the patient willingly and joyfully to receive whatsoever is to be received, be it ever so unpleasant: so I say, set before you the end of this strait way, and then doubtless, as St. Paul saith, It shall bring with it an eternal weight of glory, whilst we look not on the thing which is not seen, for that is temporal, but on the thing which is not seen, which is eternal. So doth the husbandman in plowing and tilling set before him the harvest-time; so doth the fisher consider the draught of his net, rather than the casting in; so doth the merchant the return of his merchandize; and so should we in these stormy days set before us not the loss of our goods, liberty, and very life; but the reaping time, the coming of our Saviour Christ to judgment, the fire that shall burn the wicked and disobedient to God's gospel, the blast of the trump, the exceeding glory prepared for us in heaven eternally, such as the eye hath not seen, the ear hath not heard, nor the heart of man can conceive. The more we lose here, the greater joy we shall have there. The more we suffer, the greater triumph. For corruptible dross we shall find incorruptible treasures; for gold, glory; for silver, joy without end; for riches royal robes; for earthly houses, eternal palaces: mirth without measure, pleasure without pain, and endless felicity. In fine, we shall have God the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost.
O happy place! O that this day would come? Then shall the end of the wicked be lamentable; then shall they receive the just reward of God's vengeance; then shall they cry, Wo, wo, that ever they did as they have done. Read Wisd. i.ii.iii.iv.v. Read Matt. xxxv. Read 1 Cor. xv. 2 Cor. v. And by faith, (which God increase in us) consider the things there set forth. And for your further comfort, read Hebrews xi. to see what faith hath done, always considering the way to heaven to be through many tribulations, and that all they who live godly in Christ Jesus, must suffer persecution. You know this is your alphabet; He that will be my disciple, (saith Christ) must deny himself, and take up his cross and follow me: not this bishop, nor that doctor, not this emperor, nor that king but me, saith Christ: for he that loveth father, mother, wife children, or even life, better than me, is not worthy of me. Remember that the same Lord saith; He that will save his life shall lose it. Comfort yourself with this, that as the devils had no power over the swine, or over Job's goods without God's leave, so shall they have none over you. Remember also, that all the hairs of your head are numbered with God. The devil may make a man believe that he will drown him, as the sea in its surges threateneth the land: but as the Lord hath appointed bounds for the one, over which it cannot pass, so he doth for the other.
ON God therefore cast your care, love him, serve hi [...] after his word, fear him, trust in him, hope at his hand for all help, and always pray, looking for the cross; and whensoever it cometh, be assured, that the Lord, as he is faithf [...]l, so he will never tempt you further than he will make you able to bear, but in the midst of the temptation will make such a deliverance as will be most for his glory and your eternal comfort. God for his mercy in Christ, with his Holy Spirit endue and comfort you, under the wings of his mercy shadow you, and as his dear child guide you for evermore. To whose merciful tuition, as I do with my hearty prayers commit you; so I doubt not but you pray for me, and so I beseech you still to do. My brother P. telleth me, you would have the last part of St. Jerome's works, to have the use thereof for a fortnight. I cannot well spare th [...] these three days, but on Thursday next I will send them to you, if God preventeth me not. Use me and all that I have as your own. The Lord of his mercy in Christ direct our ways to his glory.
LETTER XVI. To Mrs. M. H. a pious GENTLEWOMAN.
I Humbly and heartily pray the everlasting God and Father of mercy to bless and keep your heart and mind in the knowledge and love of his truth, and of his Christ, through the inspiration and working of his Holy Spirit. Amen.
ALTHOUGH I have no doubt but that you prosper and go forward daily in the way of godliness, more and more drawing towards perfection, and have no need of any thing that [Page 683] I can write; yet because my desire is, that you might be more fervent and persevere to the end, I could not but write something unto you, beseeching you both often and diligently to call unto your mind, as a means to stir you hereunto, yea, as a thing which God most straitly requireth you to believe, that you are beloved of God, and that he is your dear Father, in, through, and for Christ and his death's sake. This love and tender kindness of God towards us in Christ is abundantly herein declared, in that he hath to the godly work of creation of this world made us after his image, redeemed us being lost, called us into his church, sealed us with his mark sign manuel of baptism, kept and preserved us all the days of our life, fed, nourished, and most fatherly chastised us, and now hath kindled in our hearts the sparkles of his fear, faith, love, and knowledge of his Christ and truth, and therefore we lament, because we bewail no more our unthankfulness, our frailty, our diffidence and wavering in things, wherein we should be most certain.
ALL these things we should use as means to confirm our faith of this, that God is our God and Father, and to assure us, that he loveth us as our Father in Christ; to this end, (I say) we should use the things before touched, especially in that, of all things, God requireth this faith and fatherly persuasion of his fatherly goodness, as his chief service. For before he asketh any thing of us, he saith, I am the Lord thy God, giving himself and all that he hath to us, to be our own. And this he doth in respect of himself, of his own mercy and truth, and not in respect of us, for then were grace no grace. In consideration whereof, when he saith; Thou shalt have no other gods but me; Thou shalt love me with all thy heart, &c. though of duty we ought to accomplish all that he requireth, and are culpable and guilty if we do it not, yet he requireth not these things further of us than to make us more in love, and more certain of this his covenant, that he is our Lord and God. In certainty whereof, as he hath given us this whole world to answer our necessities and conveniencies, so hath he given us his Son Christ Jesus, and in Christ, himself to be a pledge, whereof the Holy Ghost doth now and then give us some comfortable taste and sweet smell to our eternal joy.
THEREFORE, as I said, because God is our Father in Christ, and requireth of you stedfastly to believe it, give yourself to obedience, although you do it not with such feeling and readiness as you desire. Faith must first go before, and then, by the operation of love, zeal [...]us affections will follow. If our imperfections, frailty, and many evils should be the occasions whereby Satan would have us to doubt; let us abhor that suggestion as much as possible, as of all others the most pernicious; and indeed so it is. For when we stand in doubt whether God be our Father, we cannot be thankful to him, we cannot heartily pray, or think any thing we do acceptable to him: we cannot even love our neighbours as we ought to do; and therefore Satan is very subtle, for he well knoweth that if we doubt of God's eternal mercy towards us, through Christ, we can neither please God, nor rightly do our duty to man. He continually casteth into our thoughts our imperfection, frailty, falls, and miscarriages, to make us despair of God's mercy and favour.
THEREFORE, my good sister, we must not be sluggish herein, but as Satan laboureth to weaken our faith, so must we endeavour to strengthen it by meditating upon the promises and covenant of God in Christ's blood; namely, that God is our God with all that ever he hath: which covenant entirely dependeth on God's own goodness, mercy, and truth, and not on our obedience or worthiness in any point; for then we should never be certain. Indeed God requireth of us obedience and worthiness, but not that thereby we may be his children, and he our Father: but because he is our father, and we his children through his goodness in Christ, therefore he requireth faith and obedience. Now if we want this obedience and worthiness which he requireth, shall we doubt whether he be our Father? Nay, that were to make our obedience and worthiness the cause, and so to put Christ out of place, for whose sake God is our Father. But rather because he is our Father, we ought to be moved with shame and remorse for not being as we ought to be: and thereupon we should take occasion to go to our Father in prayer on this manner:
"DEAR Father, thou of thine own mercy in Jesus Christ hast chosen me to be thy child, and therefore thou wouldst that I should be brought into thy church, and faithful company of thy children, wherein thou hast hitherto kept me, thy name therefore be praised. Now I see myself to want faith, hope, love, &c. which thy children have, and thou requirest of me, for the want of which the devil would have me to doubt, yea, utterly to despair of thy fatherly goodness, favour, and mercy. Therefore I come to thee as to my merciful Father, through thy dear Son Jesus Christ, and pray thee to help me, good Lord: help me, and give me faith, hope, love, &c. and grant that thy Holy Spirit may be with me for ever, and more and more assure me that thou art my Father; that this merciful covenant that thou madest with me in respect of thy grace in Christ and for Christ, and not in respect of any of my worthiness, is always to me," &c.
ON this manner you ought to pray when Satan persuadeth you to doubt of salvation. He doth all he can to prevail against you. Though you are not so feelingly affected as you desire to be, yet doubt not, but hope beyond all hope, as Abraham did: for, as I said before, faith always goeth before love. As certain as God is almighty, as certain as God is merciful, as certain as God is true, as certain as Jesus Christ was crucified, is risen, and sitteth on the right hand of the Father, as certain as this is God's commandment: "I am the Lord thy God," &c. so certain ought you to believe that God is your Father. As [Page 684] you are bound to have no other gods but him, so are you no less bound to believe that God is your God. What profit would it be to you to believe this sentence, "I am the Lord thy God," to be true to others, if you will not believe it to be true to yourself? The devil believeth in this manner. And whatsoever it be that would move you no doubt whether God be your God through Christ, the same undoubtedly cometh of the devil. Wherefore did God make you, but because he loved you? Might be not have made you blind, deaf, lame, lunatic, &c. Might be not have made you a Jew, a Turk, a Papist, &c.? And why hath be not done so▪ Verily because he loved you? And why did he love you? what was there in you to move him to love you? Surely nothing moved him to love you, neither to create you, nor hitherto to preserve you, but his own goodness in Christ. Now then in that his goodness in Christ still remaineth as much as it was, that is, even as great as himself, for it cannot be lessened; how should it be but that he is your God and Father? Believe this, believe this, my good sister, for God is unchangeable; them whom he loveth, he loveth to the end.
THEREFORE c [...]st yourself wholly upon him, and think without all wavering that you are God's child, that you are a citizen of heaven, that you are a child of God and the temple of the Holy Ghost. If you be assured hereof, as you ought to be, then shall your conscience be quitted, then shall you lament more and more for the want of many things which God loveth; then shall you labour to be holy in soul and body; then shall you desire and endeavour to make God's glory shine in all your words and works: then shall you not be afraid what man can do unto you; then shall you have the wisdom to answer your adversaries, as shall serve to their shame and your comfort: then shall you be certain that no man can t [...]uch one hair of your head, further than it shall please your good Father, to your everlasting joy; then shall you be most certain that God as your good Father will be more careful for your children, and make better provision for them, if all you have were gone, than you can with the peaceable enjoyment of it. Being assured, I say, of God's favour towards you, give yourself over to help and care for others that be in need; then shall you contemn this life, and desire to be at home with your good and sweet Father; then shall you labour to mortify all things that would spot either soul or body. All these things spring out of this certain persuasion and faith, that God is our Father, and we are his children by Christ Jesus. All things should help our faith herein, but Satan goeth about to hinder it.
THEREFORE let us use earnest and hearty prayer; let us often remember this covenant, "I am the Lord thy God;" let us look upon Christ and his precious blood shed for the confirmation of his covenant; let us set before us God's benefits generally in making this world, and in governing [...] calling and keeping his church, &c. let us set before us God's benefits particularly, how he hath made his creatures after his image, our bodies in perfect form and beauty, and endowed our souls with understanding, memory, and will: how he hath made us christians, and hath given us these faculties to enable us to make a right judgment of his religion; how he hath blessed, kept, nourished, and defended us ever since we were born; how he hath often chastised, and fatherly corrected us; how he hath spared us, and now doth spare us, giving us time, place, and grace. If you do this, and use earnest prayer, and flee [...] ▪ all things which may wound your conscience, giving yourself to diligence in your vocation, you shall at [...] (which God grant to us both) a sure certainty of salvation, without all such doubt as may trouble the peace of conscience, to your eternal joy and comfort, Amen.
HERE followeth another letter of Mr. Bradford's to the good lady Vane, wherein he resolveth certain questions which she demanded. This lady Vane was a great supporter of the pious martyrs who were imprisoned in queen Mary's time. Unto whom divers letters were wrote by Messrs. Philp [...]t, Careless, Trahern, Thomas Rose, and others, wherein they render unto her most grateful thanks for her exceeding goodness towards them, their singular commendation and testimony also of her christian zeal towards God afflicted prisoners, and to the truth of his gospel. She died anno 1568.
LETTER XVII. From Mr. BRADFORD to Lady VANE.
THE true sense and sweet [...]ling of God's eternal mercies in Christ Jesus be ever more and more lively wrought in your heart by the Holy Ghost. Amen.
I most heartily thank you, good madam, for your comfortable letter; and whereas you would be advertised what were best to be done on your three questions: the truth is, that the questions are never well seen, no [...] answered, [...] the thing whereof they arise be well considered: I mean until it be seen how great an evil the thing is. If it be once indeed perceived in your heart, upon probable and pithy places gathered out of the word of God, that there was never any thing upon earth so great and so much [...] adversary to God's true service, to Christ's death, passion, sacrifice, and kingdom, to the ministry of God's word and sacraments, to repentance, faith, and all true godliness of life, as that is whereof the questions arise, (as most assuredly it is indeed) then cannot a christian heart but so much the [Page 685] more abhor it, and all things that in any point might seem to allow it, or any thing pertaining to the same, by how much it hath the name of God's service.
AGAIN, your ladyship doth know, that as all is to be discommended and avoided, which is followed or fled from in respect of ourselves, in respect of avoiding Christ's cross; so the end of all our doings should be to God-wards, to his glory, to our neighbours, to edification, and good example, whereof none can be given in allowing any of the three questions by you propounded. But because this which I write now is brief, and needed the more consideration or explication, as I doubt not of the one in you, so from me by God's grace you shall shortly receive the other: for I have already written a little book of it, which I will send unto you, in which you shall have your questions fully answered and satisfied, and therefore I now omit writing any thing about it; beseeching God our good Father, to guide you as his dear child with his Spirit of wisdom, power, and comfort, unto eternal life, that you may be strong, and rejoice in him, and with his church; to carry the cross of Christ, if it be his will, 1 Pet. i. which is a thing to be desired and embraced, if we look on things after the judgement of God's word, and try them by that touch-stone.
IF you be accustomed to think on the brevity, vanity, and misery of this life, and on the eternity, truth, and felicity of life everlasting; if you look on the end of things, and not on their present appearance only; if you accustom yourself to set God's, presence, power, mercy, always before your eyes, to see them, as God by every creature would we should; I doubt not but you shall find such strength and comfort in the Lord, as shall not be shaken with all the power of Satan. God's mercy in Christ be with you, and his good Spirit guide you for ever. Amen.
LETTER XVIII. From the Same to the Same.
AS to mine own soul, I wish to your ladyship grace and mercy from God our dear Father in Christ our Lord and Saviour.
I thank God that he hath something eased you, and mitigated his fatherly correction in us both; I would to God he had done so much in behalf of the grief of the body to you, as he hath done to me. For as for the soul, I trust you feel that which I pray God increase in you, I mean his fatherly love, and grant that I may with you feel the same in such degree as may please him; I will not say as you feel, lest I should seem to ask too much at one time. God doth often much more plentifully visit with the sense of his mercy them that humble themselves under his mighty hand, than others which to the face of the world have a greater shew and appearance.
THEREFORE I wish as I do, and that not only for mine own convenience, but also that I might occasion you [...] consider the goodness of God, which I by your letters do well perceive: which is indeed the highway, whereby God increaseth his gifts, and sheweth his salvation more lively, Psal. l. cvii. I have received God's blessing from you▪ which I have partly distributed to my three fellow-prisoners, Mr. Farrar, Mr. Taylor, and Mr. Philpot, and the residue I will bestow upon four poor souls who are imprisoned in the common gaol for religion also. As for mine own part, if I had need, I would have served mine own turn also. But because I had not, nor (I thank God) have not, I have been, and will be, your almoner, in such a manner as I have already advertised you. God reward you in this world, and in the world to come. Because otherwise I cannot talk with you, therefore on this sort, as occasion and opportunity will serve, I am ready to shew my good will and desire of your help and furtherance in the Lord to everlasting life, whereunto God bring us shortly for his mercy's sake. Amen.
GOOD madam, be thankful to God, as I hope you be; be earnest in prayer, continue in reading and hearing God's word, and if God's further cross come, as therein God doth serve his providence, (for else it shall not come unto you) so be certain the same shall turn to your eternal joy and comfort. Amen.
LETTER XIX. From Mr. BRADFORD to the Right Worshipful the Lady VANE.
THE good Spirit of God our Father be more and more plentifully perceived by your good ladyship, through the merits and mediation of our dear Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
ALTHOUGH your benefits towards me have deserved all the service I can do for you, yet (right worshipful, and dearly beloved in the Lord) the true fear of God, and the love of his truth, which I perceive to be in you, doth, in a more extraordinary manner, oblige me to respect you. This bearer hath told me that your desire is to have something sent to you concerning the usurped authority of the supremacy of the bishop of Rome (who is undoubtedly that great Antichrist, of whom the apostles do so much admonish us.) Now, to strengthen your faith, as well as to furnish you with answers, (that you may at any time be capable to render a reason of the hope that is in you) I shall write something to the purpose, which I desire you would read and mark well.
THE papists do place the pope in pre-eminence over the whole church, thereby unplacing Christ, who is the only [Page 686] head of the church, that giveth life to the whole body, and by his Spirit doth enliven every member of the same. This they do against all scriptures. For where they bring in this spoken to Peter, Feed my sheep; I would gladly know whether this was not commanded unto others also. As for that, which perchance they will urge, that he spake to Peter by name: I answer, that if they had any learning, they might easily perceive it was not for any such cause as they pretend, but rather by a threefold commandment to restore him to the honour of an apostle, which he had lost by his threefold denial. And how dare they interpret this word, My sheep, My lambs, to be the universal church of Christ? I think a man might easily by the like reason prove that Peter himself had resigned that which Christ had given to him, in exhorting his fellow-pastors to feed the flock of Christ. Is not this pretty stuff? Because Christ saith to Peter, Feed my sheep, therefore he ought to rule the universal and whole church of Christ? If Peter do truly write unto others that they should do the like, that is, feed Christ's flock, either he conferreth his right and authority committed to him upon them, or else he doth participate or communicate with them; so that foolishly they go about to establish that which hath no ground. Peter indeed was a shepherd of the sheep, but such a one as bestowed his labour on them so far, as he could stretch himself by his ministry. But the papists prate that he hath full power over all churches: wherein they may see St. Paul to disprove them, for else he hath done unjustly in denying him the superior place. Howbeit, who ever yet read that St. Peter ever took any thing upon him over churches committed to other men? Was not he sent by the church, and sent by one not having rule over the rest? I grant that he was an excellent instrument of God, and for the excellency of his gifts, whensoever they met together, place therefore was commonly given unto him. But what is this to the purpose, to make him head and ruler over all the whole church, because he was so over a small congregation.
BUT be it so, that Peter had as much given unto him as they do affirm: who yet will grant that Peter had a patrimony given for his heirs? He hath left (say the papists) to his successors the self-same right which he received. O Lord God! then his successor must be a Satan: for Peter received that title from Christ himself. I would gladly have the papists to shew me one place of succession mentioned in the scriptures. I am sure that when Paul painteth out the whole administration of the church, he neither maketh one head, nor any inheritable primacy, and yet he is altogether in commendation of unity. After he hath made mention of one God the Father, of one Christ, of one Spirit, of one body of the church, of one faith, and of one baptism, then he describeth the means and the manner how unity is to be kept; namely, because unto every pastor grace is given after the measure wherewith Christ hath endued them. Where, I pray you, is now any title [ plenitudinis p [...]testatis] of fulness of power? When he calleth home every one unto a certain measure why did he not forthwith say, One pope? which he could not have forgotten, if the thing had been as the papists make it.
BUT let us grant that perpetuity of the primacy in the church was established in Peter; I would gladly le [...], why the seat of the primacy should be rather at Rome th [...] elsewhere. Marry, say they, because Peter's chair was at Rome. This is even like to this, that because Moses the greatest prophet, and Aaron the first priest, exercised their offices unto their death in the desart, therefore the principal place of the Jewish church should be in the wilderness. But grant them their reason that it is good; what should Antioch claim? For Peter's chair was there also, wherein Paul gave him a check, which was unsee [...] ▪ and unmannerly done of Paul, that would not give place to his president and better.
NO, say the papists, Rome must have the authority because he died there. But what if a man should by probable conjectures shew, that it is but a fable which is feigned of Peter's bishopric at Rome? Read how [...] doth salute very many private persons, when he writeth to the Romans. Three years after he was brought prisoner to Rome. Luke telleth, that he was received of the brethren, and yet in all these is no mention at all of [...], who then, by their stories, was at Rome. Belike he was proud, as the pope and his prelates be, or else he would have visited Paul. Paul while prisoner at Rome [...] divers epistles, in which he expresseth the names of [...] who were but mean persons in comparison of Peter, but [...]f Peter he speaketh never a word. Surely if Peter had been there, this silence of him had been suspicious. In the second epistle to Timothy, Paul complaineth that no man was with him in his defence, but all had left him. If Peter had been then at Rome, as they write, then either Paul had belied him, or Peter played his Peter's part, Luke xx [...]. In another place, how doth he blame all that were wi [...]h him, Timothy excepted? Therefore we may well doubt whether Peter was bishop at Rome as they prate: for all this time, and long before, they say that Peter was bishop there.
But I will not stir up coals in this matter. If Rome be the chief seat because Peter died there, why should not Antioch be the second? Why should not James and John who were taken with Peter be as pillars? Why, I say, should not their seats have honour next to Peter's seat? Is it not preposterous, that Alexandria, where Mark (who was but one of the disciples) was bishop, should be preferred before Ephesus, where John the Evangelist taught and was bishop; and before Jerusalem, where not only James taught and died bishop, but also Christ Jesus our Lord and high priest for ever, by whom, being master, I hope honour should be given to his chair, more than to the chair of his chaplains.
I need to speak nothing how that Paul declareth Peter's [Page 687] apostleship to concern rather the circumcision of the Jews, and therefore properly pertaineth not to us. Neither need I bring in Gregory the first bishop of Rome, which was about the year of our Lord 600, who in his works doth plainly write, that this title of Primacy, and to be head over all churches under Christ, [...]s a title meet and agreeing only to Antichrist, and therefore he calleth it a profane, mischievous, and a horrible title. Whom should we believe now, if we will neither believe apostle nor pope?
IF I should go about to tell how this name was first gotten by Phocas, I should be too long. I purpose, God willing, to set it forth at large in a work which I have begun of Antichrist, if God for his mercy's sake give me life to finish it. For this present therefore I shall desire your ladyship to take this in good part. If they will needs have the bishop of Rome to be acknowledged for head of the church, then will I urge them to give us a bishop. But they obtrude unto us a butcher, or a bite-sheep, rather than a bishop. They brag of Peter's succession, of Christ's vicar; this is always in their mou [...]h. But alas, how can we call him Christ's vicar, that resisteth Christ, rejecteth his truth, persecuteth his people, and preferreth himself above God and man? How or wherein doth the pope and Christ agree? How supplieth he Peter's ministry, that boasteth of his succession? Therefore, if the papists will have the bishop of Rome supreme head of the church of Christ on earth, they must, before they attain this, give us a bishop in deed, and not in name. For whosoever he be that will make this the bond of unity, whatsoever the bishop of Rome be, surely this must needs follow, that they do nothing else but teach a most wicked defection, and departing from Christ.
BUT of this, if God lend me life, I purpose to speak more at large hereafter. Now wi [...]l I leave your ladyship to the tuition of God our Father, and Christ our only head, pastor, and keeper, to whom see you cleave by true faith, which dependeth only on the word of God, which if you do follow as a lantern to your feet, and a light to your steps, you shall then avoid darkness, and the dangerous deeps wherein the papists are fallen by the judgment of God, and seek to bring us into the same dungeon with them, that blind following the blind, they both may fall into the ditch: out of which God deliver them according to his good will, and preserve us for his name's sake, that we being in his light, may continue therein, and walk in it whilst it is day; so shall the night over-press us, we going from light to light, from virtue to virtue, from faith to faith, from glory to glory, by the governance of God's good Spirit, which God our Father give unto us all for ever, Amen.
HERE followeth another letter from Mr. Bradford to Mr. Richard Hopkins, sometime sheriff of Coventry; who during the time of his shrivalty, was accused by certain malignant adversaries of matters pertaining to religion. What matter it was I am not yet certainly informed, unless it were for sending to a thief, being then in prison ready to be hanged, a certain English book of scripture for his spiritual comfort.
WHEREUPON, or some such like matter, he being maliciously accused, was sent for and committed to the Fleet prison, where he remained a long time in great peril of his life. Notwithstanding the said Hopkins being at length delivered out of prison, following Mr. Bradford's counsel, and minding to keep his conscience pure from idolatry, was driven with his wife, and eight young children to quit the realm, and went into High-Germany, where he continued in the city of Basil till the death of queen Mary, being like a good Tobias, to his power a friendly helper and a comfortable reliever of other English exiles there about him, God's providence so working with him, that in those far countries he fell not into any decay, neither any of his houshold miscarried during his stay there, but as many as he brought out, so many he carried home again, yea, and that with advantage, and God's plenty withal upon him.
LETTER XX. From Mr. BRADFORD, to Mr. RICHARD HOPKINS, then Sheriff of COVENTRY, and Prisoner in the Fleet.
DEARLY beloved in the Lord, I wish unto you as unto mine own brother, yea, as to mine own heart, God's mercy, and to the feeling of the same plentifully in Christ our sweet Saviour, who gave himself a ransom for our sins, and price for redemption, praised be his holy name for ever and ever, Amen.
I will not go about to excuse myself for not sending unto you hitherto, but rather accuse myself before God and you, desiring of you forgiveness, and with me to pray to God for pardon of this my unkind forgetting you, and all other my sins, which I beseech the Lord in his mercy to do away for Christ's sake, Amen.
NOW I would be glad to make some amends, if I [Page 688] could; but because I cannot, I heartily desire you to accept the will for the deed. At present my dear heart, you are in a blessed state, although it seem otherwise to you, or rather unto your old Adam, which I dare now to be so bold as to discern from you, because you would have him not only discerned, but also utterly destroyed. For if God be true, then is his word true.
NOW his word pronounceth of your state that it is happy, therefore it must needs be so. To prove this I think there is no need: for you know the Holy Ghost saith, "That they are happy who suffer for righteousness' sake, and that God's glory and Spirit resteth on them who suffer for conscience to God." You know that you suffer for the sake of God and religion; or else you might soon be out of trouble. You account yourself a great sinner, and so you think you deserve this punishment: but the papists do neither persecute your sins, but in you they persecute Christ, and punish you for professing his religion. Happy are you who have found such favour with God, as to be accounted worthy to suffer for his sake in the sight of man; you shall surely rejoice with a joy unspeakable in the sight of men and of angels.
YOU may think yourself born in a blessed time, that have found this grace with God, as a vessel of honour to suffer with his saints, yea, with his Son. The apostle faith, "Not many noble, not many rich, not many wise in the world, hath the Lord God chosen." Who then hath greater cause to rejoice than you, that amongst the Not many, he hath chosen you to be one? For that cause hath God placed you in your office, that thereby you might the more see his special favour and love towards you. It had not been so great a thing for Mr. Hopkins to have suffered as Mr. Hopkins, as it is for Mr. Hopkins also to suffer as Master Sheriff. O happy day, that you were put into this high office, by which, as God in this world would promote you to greater honour, so by suffering in his room he hath exalted you in heaven, and in the sight of his church and children, to a much more excellent glory. When was it read that the sheriff of a city hath suffered for the Lord's sake, or cast into prison for a good conscience? To the end of the world shall it be written for a memorial to your praise, "That RICHARD HOPKINS, sheriff of Coventry, for the conscientious discharge of his office before God, was cast into the Fleet, and there a long time kept prisoner." Happy, thrice happy are you, if for the sake of religion you may give your life. Never could you have attained to this promotion in this manner, had you not been in that office. Who would ever have thought that you would have been the first magistrate that for Christ's sake should have lost any thing? As I said before, therefore I say again, that your state is happy.
BE thankful therefore, rejoice in your trouble, pray for patience, persevere to the end, let patience have her perfect work. If you want this wisdom and power, ask it of God, who will give it to you in his good time. Hope still in him, yea, if he should stay you, with Job trust in him, and you shall find him merciful and full of compassion; for [...] never did, nor ever will break his promise. He is [...] you in trouble, he heareth you calling upon him, yea, before you call, through Christ he granteth your desire. [...] he now and then hide his face from you, it is to provoke you the more to long for him. This is most true, he i [...] coming, and will come, he will not be long. But if for a time he seem to tarry, yet stand you still, and you shall see the wonderful works of the Lord. O my beloved, why should you be heavy? Is not Christ Emmanuel, God with us? Shall you not find that he is true in saying, "In the world you shall have trouble?" So is he in saying, "In me you shall have comfort." He doth not only foretel that trouble will come, but also promiseth that comfort shall ensue. And such comfort that the eye hath not seen, the ear hath not heard, neither can the heart of man conceive. O great comfort! who shall have this? Verily they that [...] for the Lord, as I hope you do. Then, as I said, happy as you, my dearly beloved in the Lord. You now suffer wi [...] the Lord, surely you shall be glorified with him. Now we are both in the ready road to heaven: for by many afflictions we must enter in thither, whither God bring us for his mercy's sake. Amen.
IN the story of Mr Bradford there was mention made of a gentlewoman, who being troubled by her father and mother, for not coming to mass, sent her servant to visit Mr. Bradford in prison; who tendering the woful case of the gentlewoman, to the intent partly to confirm her with counsel, and partly to relieve her oppressed mind with some comfort, directed unto her the following letter.
LETTER XXI. To a certain Gentlewoman, troubled and afflicted by h [...] Parents for not coming to Mass.
I Wish you, right worshipful, and dearly beloved sister in the Lord, as to myself, the continual grace and comfort of Christ, and of his holy word, through the operation of the Holy Spirit, that you may continue to the end in the faithful obedience of God's gospel, whereunto you are called. Amen.
I understand you are on your trial in the school-house of the Lord, which to me is a great comfort to see the number of God's elect by you increased, who are in that state whereof God hath not called many, as St. Paul [Page 689] faith. May God of his infinite goodness finish and perfect the good he hath begun in you.
IF then your cross be to me a comfort, a token of election, and a confirmation of God's continual favour, how much more ought it to be so unto you? unto whom he hath not only given to believe, but also to come into the rank of those who suffer for his name's sake, and that not by common enemies, but even by your own parents and kindred, as you told me. By which I see Christ's words to be true, That he came to give his children such a peace with him, as the devil cannot abide, and therefore he stirreth up father and mother, sister and brother, rather than it should continue. But my dear sister, if you cry with David to the Lord, and complain to him, that for conscience to him, your father and mother hath forsaken you, you shall hear him speak in your heart, that he hath received you, and by this he would have you see, that he maketh you like unto Christ here, that in heaven you may perfectly enjoy him. You ought to be most assured, that in time, when he shall appear, you shall be like unto him; for he shall make your vile body like unto his glorious and immortal body, according to the power whereby he is able to do all things. He will confess you before his Father; he will make you to reign with him, who now suffer for him, and with him; he will not leave you comfortless, who seek no comfort but at his hand; though for a little time you be afflicted, yet therein will he comfort and strengthen you, and at length make you to be merry with him in such joy as is infinite and endless. He will wipe all the tears from your eyes; he will embrace you as your dear husband, he will, after he hath proved you, crown you with a crown of glory and immortality, such as the heart of man shall never be able to conceive in such sort as the thing is. He now beholdeth your stedfastness, and striving to do his good will; and shortly he will shew you how stedfast he is, and will be ready to do your will, after you have fully resigned it to his.
PLEDGE him in his cup of the cross, and you shall pledge him in the cup of his glory. Desire to drink it before it be come to the dregs, whereof the wicked shall drink, and all those that for fear of the cross and pledging the Lord, do walk with the wicked, in betraying in fact and deed that which their heart embraceth for truth. Which thing if you should do, (which God forbid) then you will not only lose forever all that I have before spoken, and much more infinitely of eternal joy and glory, but also be a cast-away, and partaker of God's most heavy displeasure for ever; and so for a little ease, which you cannot tell how long it will last, lose for ever all ease and comfort. For, "He that gathereth not with me, saith Christ, scattereth abroad." According to that we do in this body, we shall receive, be it good or bad. If of our words we shall be judged to condemnation or salvation, much more then of our acts and deeds. You cannot be a member of Christ's church, and a member of the pope's church. You must glorify God not only in soul and heart, but also in body and deed. God esteemeth his children not only of their hearts, but of [...] pure hands and works, and therefore in Elias's time he accounted none to be his servants and people, but such as had not bowed their knees to Baal; as now he doth not in England account any other to be his servants, which know the truth in heart, and deny it in their deeds, as do our mass-gospellers.
WE ought to desire above all things the sanctifying of God's holy name, and the coming of his kingdom; and shall we then see his name blasphemed so horribly as it is at mass, by making it a sacrifice propitiatory, and setting forth a false Christ made by priests and bakers to be worshipped as God, and say nothing? The Jews rent their clothes asunder in seeing or hearing any thing blasphemously done or spoke against God, and shall we yet come to church where mass is, and be mute? Paul and Barnabas rent their clothes to see the people of Lycaonia come to offer sacrifice unto them, and shall we see sacrifice and God's service done unto an inanimate creature, and be silent? What thing helpeth more, or so much Antichrist's kingdom as the mass doth? And what destroyeth preaching and the kingdom of Christ upon earth more than it doth? And how can we then say, "Let thy kingdom come," and go to mass? How can we pray before God, "Thy will be done on earth," when we will do our own will, and the will of our father or friends? How pray we, "Deliver us from evil," which knowing the mass to be evil, do come to it?
BUT what need I go about to light a candle in the noonday, that is, to tell you that we may not go to mass, or to the congregation where it is, except it be to reprove it, in that all men in so doing do but dissemble both with God and man? And is dissembling now to be allowed? "How long will men yet halt on both knees?" saith God. "Halting, saith Paul, bringeth out of the way," that is to say, out of Christ, who is the way, so that he which is not in him, shall wither away, and be cast into hell-fire. For Christ will be ashamed of them before his Father, who are now ashamed of his truth before this wicked generation.
THEREFORE, my good mistress, take good heed, for it had been for you not to have known the truth, and thereby to have escaped from papistical uncleanness, than now to return to it, making your members, being members of righteousness, members of unrighteousness, as you do if you do but go to the church where mass is. Be pure therefore, and keep yourself from all filth of the spirit, and of the flesh. Abstain not only from all evil, but from all appearance of evil.
AND so the God of peace shall be with you, and the glory of God shall govern you, the Spirit of God shall sanctify you, and be with you forever, to keep you from [Page 690] all evil, and to comfort you in all distress and trouble; which is but short if you consider eternity you shall enjoy in glory and felicity in the Lord, which undoubtedly you will not fail to inherit for ever, if you put your trust in God's mercy, call upon his name unfeignedly, and consent not with the wicked world, but remain stedfast unto the end. God for his holy name's sake, who is properly the God of the widows, be your good and dear Father forever, and help you always, Amen, Amen.
TO these letters of Mr. Bradford, here is also adjoined another, written to some of his faithful friends, worthy to be read by all christians; wherein is described a lively comparison between the old man and the new; also between the law and the gospel.
LETTER XXII. From Mr. BRADFORD, describing a Comparison between the OLD MAN and the NEW, &c.
A Man that is regenerate and born of God, (which that every one of us be, our baptism, the sacrament of regeneration, doth require under pain of damnation, and therefore let every one of us say with the virgin Mary, "Be it unto me, O Lord, according to thy word," according to the sacrament of baptism, wherein thou hast declared our adoption; and let us lament the doubting hereof in us, striving against it as we shall be made able by the Lord (a man, I say, that is regenerate, consisteth of two men, (as one may say) namely of the old man and of the new man. The old man is like to a mighty giant, such a one as was Goliah, for his birth is now perfect. But the new man is like to a little child, such a one as was David, for his birth is not perfect until the day of the general resurrection.
THE old man therefore is more strong, lusty, and stirring than the new man, because the birth of the new man is now begun, and the old man is perfectly born. And as the old man is more active, lusty, and strong, than the new man; so is the nature of him clean contrary to the nature of the new man, as being earthly and corrupted with the seed of Satan; the nature of the new man being heavenly, and blessed with the celestial seed of God. So that inasmuch as the old man is corrupt with the seed of the serpent, so is the new man blessed with the seed of God from above. And as the old man is a sinner, and an enemy to God, so, inasmuch as he is regenerate, he is righteous and holy, and a friend to God, the seed of God preserving him from sin, so that he cannot sin, as the seed of the serpent, wherewith he is corrupt even from his conception, inclineth him, yea enforceth him to sin, and nothing else but to sin: so that the best part in man before regeneration, in God's sight, is not only [...] enemy, but even enmity itself.
A man therefore that is regenerate may well be called always just, and always sinful; just, in respect of God's [...] ▪ and his regeneration; sinful, in respect of Satan's seed and his first birth. Betwixt these two men there is a continu [...] conflict, and a deadly war. The flesh and old man, by reason of his birth being perfect, doth often for a time [...]vail against the new man, (being but a child in comparison) and that in such a manner, that even the children of God themselves think that they be nothing else but old, and that the Spirit and seed of God is lost and gone away; [...] yet notwithstanding the truth is otherwise, the Spirit and seed of God at length appearing again, and dispelling the clouds which cover the sun; so that sometimes a man cannot tell by any sense, that there is any sun, the clouds and winds do so hide it from our sight: even so our blindness and corrupt affections do often shadow the sight of God's seed in his children, as though they were downright r [...] bates. Whereof it cometh that they praying according to their sense, but not according to truth, desire of God [...] give them again his Spirit, as though they had lost it, and he had taken it away. Which thing God never doth indeed, although he maketh us to think so for a time; for he always holdeth his hand under his children in their falls, that they lie not still as others do which are not regene [...]. And this is the difference bewixt God's children which [...] regenerate and elect before all times in Christ, and the wicked always; that the elect lie not still continually in their sin, as the wicked do, but do at length return again by reason of God's seed, which is hid in them as a spark of [...] in the ashes, as we may see in Peter, David, Paul, Mary Magdalen, and others. For these (I mean God's children) God hath made all things in Christ Jesus, to whom he [...] given his dignity, that they should be his inheritance [...] spouses.
THIS our inheritor Christ Jesus, God with God, Light of Light, co-eternal and co-substantial with the Father, and with the Holy Ghost, to the end that he might become our husband, (because the husband and the wife must be [...] body and flesh) hath taken our nature upon him, communicating with it and by it in his own person, to us all his children, his divine majesty, (as St. Peter saith) and so is become flesh of our flesh, and bone of our bones substantially; as we are become flesh of his flesh, and bone of his bones spiritually, all that ever we have pertaining to him, yea even our sins; as all that ever he hath pertaineth unto us, even his whole glory. So that if Satan should summ [...] us to answer for our debts or sins, in that the wife is no suable person, but the husband, we may well bid him [...] his action against our husband Christ, and he will make him a sufficient answer.
FOR this end, (I mean that we might be coupled and married thus to Christ, and so be certain of salvation, and [Page 691] at peace with God in consciences) God hath given his holy word, which hath two parts, (as now the children of God to consist of two men) one part of God's word being proper to the old man, and the other part to the new man. The part properly pertaining to the old man is the law; the part properly pertaining to the new man, is the gospel.
THE law is a doctrine which commandeth and forbiddeth, requiring doing and avoiding. Under it therefore are contained all precepts, threatenings, and promises, upon condition of our doing and avoiding, &c. The gospel is a doctrine which always offereth and giveth, requiring faith on our behalf, not as of worthiness, or as a cause, but as a certificate unto us, and therefore under it are contained all the free and sweet promises of God; as, "I am the Lord thy God," &c.
IN those that be of years of discretion, it requireth faith, not as a cause, but as an instrument, whereby we ourselves may be certain of our good husband Christ, and of his glory, and therefore when conscience feeleth itself disquieted for fear of God's judgment against sin, she may in no wise look upon the doctrine pertaining to the old man, but on the doctrine only pertaining to the new man, in not looking for that which it requireth, that is, faith, because we never believe as we should; but only on it which it offereth, and which it giveth, that is, on God's grace and eternal mercy and peace in Christ. So shall she be in quiet, when she looked for it, altogether out of herself, in God's mercy in Christ Jesus: in whose lap if she lay with St. John, then is she happy, and shall find quietness indeed. When she [...]eeleth herself quiet, let her look on the law, and upon such things as it requireth, thereby to bridle and keep down the old Adam, to slay that Goliah; from whom she must needs keep the sweet promises, being the bed wherein her spouse and she meet and lie together. For as the wife will keep her bed only for her husband, although in other things she is contented to have fellowship with others, as to speak, sit, eat, drink, go, &c. so our consciences which are Christ's wives, must needs keep the bed, that is, God's sweet promises only for ourselves and our husband, there to meet together, to embrace, and to be joyful together. If sin, the law, the devil, or any thing would creep into the bed, and lie there, then complain to thy husband Christ, and forthwith thou shalt see him play Phineas's part. Thus, my dearly beloved, I have given you in a few words a sum of all the divinity which a christian conscience cannot want.
LETTER XXIII. Mr. BRADFORD'S Farewel to his MOTHER, when he thought he should have suffered shortly after.
THE Lord of life, and Saviour of the world, Jesus Christ, bless you and comfort you, my good and dear mother, with his heavenly comfort, consolation, grace, and spirit, now and for ever. Amen.
IF I thought that daily, yea almost hourly you did not cry upon God the Father through Jesus Christ, that he would give me his blessing, even the blessing of his children, then would I write more about it. But forasmuch as I am certain you are diligent herein, so I beseech you, good mother, to continue; I think it good to write something, whereby this your crying might be furthered. Furthered it will be, if those things which hinder it be taken away. Among which, in that I think my imprisonment is the greatest and chiefest, I will spend this letter about it, and that briefly, l [...]st it might increase the hindrance, as my good brother, this messenger, can tell you. You shall know therefore, good mother, that for my body, though it be in an house, out of which I cannot come when I will, yet in that I have conformed my will to God's, I find herein liberty enough I thank God. And for my lodging, bedding, meat, drink, pious and learned company, books, and all other necessaries for mine ease, comfort, and convenience, I am in much better case than I could wish, and God's merciful providence here is far above my worthiness. Worthiness, said I? Alas, I am worthy of nothing but damnation.
BUT besides all this, for my soul I find much more advantage. For God is my Father, I now perceive, thro' Christ; therefore in imprisoning me for his gospel, he maketh me like to the image of his Son Jesus Christ here, that when he cometh to judgment, I might then be like unto him, as my trust and hope is I shall be. Now he maketh me like to his friends the prophets, apostles, the holy martyrs, and confessors. Which of them did not suffer at the least imprisonment or banishment for his gospel and word?
NOW, mother, how far am I unworthy to be compared to them? I (I say) which always have been, and am so vile an hypocrite and grievous sinner. God might have caused me long before this time to have been cast into prison as a thief, a blasphemer, an unclean liver, and an heinous offender of the laws of the realm; but dear mother, his mercy is so great upon you and all that love me, that I should be cast into prison for none of these or for any such vices, but only for Christ's sake, for his gospel's sake, for his churche's sake, that thereby as I might learn to lament and bewail my ingratitude and sins, so I might rejoice in his mercy, be thankful, look for eternal joy with Christ, for whole sake, praised be his name for it, I now suffer, and therefore should be merry and glad. And indeed, good mother, so I am, as ever I was, yea never so merry and glad was I, as now I should be, if I could get you to be merry with me, to thank God for me, and to pray on this sort: "Ah good Father, who dost vouchsafe that my son, being a grievous sinner in thy sight, should find that favour with thee, to be one of thy Son's captain's and men of war to fight and suffer for his gospel's sake, I thank thee, and pray [Page 692] thee, in Christ's name, that thou wouldst forgive him his sins and unthankfulness, and make perfect in him that good which thou hast begun; yea, Lord, I pray thee make him worthy to suffer not only imprisonment, but even death itself, for thy truth, religion, and gospel's sake. As Anna did apply and give her first child Samuel unto thee, so I, dear Father, beseech thee, for Christ's sake, to accept this my gift, and give my son John Bradford, grace always truly to serve thee and thy people, as Samuel did, Amen, Amen."
GOOD mother, mark what I have written, and learn this prayer by heart, use it sincerely every day, and then I shall be merry, and you shall rejoice if you continue, as I trust you do, in God's true religion, even the same I have taught you, and my father Traves I hope will put you in remembrance of: my brother Roger, I doubt not, daily doth so. Go on therefore, and learn apace. Although the devil casteth divers snares in the way, God, in whom you trust, will cast them away for his Christ's sake, if you will call upon him; and never will he suffer you to be tempted farther than he will enable you to bear. But how you should do herein, the other [...]etter which I have written herewith, shall teach you, which I would have nobody read until my father Traves hath read it, and he will give you, by God's grace, some instructions.
NOW therefore will I make an end, desiring you to expect no more letters: for if it were known that I had pen and ink, then should I want all other conveniences I have mentioned concerning my body, and be cast into some dungeon in fetters of iron: which thing I know would grieve you, and therefore for God's sake, see that these be burned, when this little prayer in it is copied by my brother Roger: it may be your house may be searched for such things, when you little think of it: and look for no more, sweet mother, till either God shall deliver me, and send me out, or till you and I meet together in heaven, where we shall never part asunder, Amen.
I require you Elizabeth and Margaret my sisters, that you will fear God, use prayer, love your husbands, be obedient unto them, as God requireth you: bring up your children in God's fear: and be good housewives. God bless you both, with both your husbands, my good brethren, to whom to do good, because I cannot, I will pray for them and you. Commend me to my sister Anne, mother Pike, Thomas Sorocold, and his wife, R. Shalcross and his wife, R. Bolton, J. Wild, Mr. Vicar, the parson Mottrom, Sir Laurence Hall, with all that love, and I hope live in the gospel; and God turn Sir Thomas's heart, Amen. I will daily pray for him. I need not set my name, you know it well enough.
BECAUSE you should give my letters to my father Traves to be burned, I have written here a prayer for you to learn to pray for me, and another for all your house in your evening prayer, to pray with my brother. These prayers are written with mine own hand: keep them still, but the letters give to father Traves to burn, and give him a copy of the latter prayer.
LETTER XXIV. From Mr. BRADFORD to his MOTHER, being his last Farewel, a little before he was burned.
GOD's mercy and peace in Christ, be more and more perceived of us, Amen.
MY most dear mother, in the bowel of Christ I hea [...] ly pray and beseech you to be thankful for me unto God who now taketh me unto himself: I die not as a criminal▪ but as a witness of Christ, the truth of whose gospel I have hitherto confessed, I thank God, both by preaching and imprisonment, and now I am willing to confirm the same by fire. I acknowledge that God might justly [...] taken me hence for my sins, (which are many, great, [...] grievous: but the Lord for his mercy in Christ, I [...] hath pardoned them all) but now, my dear mother [...] taketh me hence by this death, as a confessor and [...] that the religion taught by Christ Jesus, the prophets [...] the apostles, is God's truth. The prelates in me do persecute Christ, whom they hate, and his truth which they will not abide, because their works are evil. They [...] not care for the light, lest men thereby should discover their darkness. Therefore, my dear mother, give [...] to God for me, that he hath made the fruit of thy [...] to be a witness of his glory, and attend to the truth, [...] I have truly taught out of the pulpit of Manchester. [...] often and continual prayer to God the Father, through Jesus Christ. Hearken to the scriptures, and serve God according to them, and not according to the custom: [...] the Romish religion in England; defile not yourself with it: carry the cross of Christ as he shall lay it upon [...] back: forgive them that kill me: pray for them, for they know not what they do: commit my cause to God [...] Father: be mindful of both your daughters, and help [...] as well as you can.
I send all my writings to you and my brother Roger, [...] with them as you will, because I cannot as I would, he can tell you more of my mind. I have nothing to give you, or to leave behind me for you; only I pray God my Father, for Christ's sake, to bless you, and keep you from evil. May he make you patient, and thankful that he will take the fruit of your womb to witness his truth; wherein I confess to the whole world, I die, and depart this life, in hope of a much better: which I look for at the hands of God my Father, through the merits of his dear Son Jesus Christ.
THUS, my dear mother, I take my last farewel of you in this life, beseeching the Almighty and eternal Father by [Page 693] Christ, to grant us to meet in the life to come, where we shall give him continual thanks and praise for ever and ever, Amen.
LETTER XXV. Containing a SUPPLICATION sent by Mr. BRADFORD, to Queen MARY, her Council, and the whole Parliament.
IN most humble wise complaineth unto your majesty and honours, a poor subject, persecuted for the confession of Christ's verity; which deserveth your protection and encouragement, as the thing by which you reign and have your honour and authority. Although we that be professors, through the grace of God, the constant professors of the same, are, as it were, the out-sweepings of the world; yet, I say, the truth itself is not a thing unworthy for your ears to hear, for your eyes to see, and for your hands to handle, help, and succour, as the Lord hath made you able, and placed you where you are for the same purpose. Your highness and honours ought to know, that there is no innocency in words or deeds, where it is enough and sufficient only to accuse. It behoveth kings, queens, and all [...] be in authority, to know, that in the administration of their kingdoms they the God's ministers. It [...] them to know, that they are not kings, but [...], who reign not to this end, that they may [...] God's glory after true knowledge: and [...] of them that they would be wise, [...] was to be taught, to submit themselves to the [...] discipline, and to kiss their Sovereign lest they perish; as all those potentates, with their principalities, and dominions, cannot long prosper, but perish indeed, if they and their kingdoms be not ruled with the sceptre of God, that is, with his word; which whoso honoureth not, honoureth not God, and they that honour not the Lord, the Lord will not honour them, but bring them into contempt, and at length take his own cause, which he hath chiefly committed to them to care for, into his own hands, and so overthrow them, and set up his own truth gloriously; the people also perishing with the princes, where the word of prophecy is wanting, much more is suppressed, as it is now in this realm of England, over which the eyes of the Lord are set to destroy it, your highness, and all your honours, if in time you look not better to your office and duties herein, and not suffer yourselves to be slaves and hangmen to Antichrist and his prelates, who have already brought your highness and honours in mind to let Barabbas loose, and to hang up Christ; as by the grace and help of God I shall make apparent, if first it would please your excellent majesty, and all your honours, to take to heart God's doctrine, which rather through the malice of the pharisees, I mean the bishops and prelates, than your consciences, is oppressed: and not for our contemptible and execrable state in the world, to pass the less of it. For this doctrine is higher, and of more honour and majesty than all the world. It standeth invincible above all power, being not our doctrine, but the doctrine of the ever living God, and of his Christ, whom the Father hath ordained King, to have dominion from sea to sea, and from the river unto the end of the world. And truly so he doth and will reign, that he all will shake the earth with his iron and brazen power, with his golden and silver brightness, only by the rod of his mouth, to shivers, in such a manner as though they were pots of clay, according to what the prophets write of the magnificence of his kingdom. And thus much for the doctrine, and your duties to hearken, to propagate and defend the same.
BUT now will our adversaries mainly cry [...] us, because no man may be admitted once to speak against them, that we pretend falsely the doctrine and word of God, calling us the most wicked [...] of it, and heretics, schismatics, traitors, &c. All which their sayings, how malicious and false they are, though I might refer to that which is written by those men whose works they have condemned, and all that retain any of them, publicly by proclamation; yet here will I occasion your majesty and honours by this my writing, to see that it is far otherwise than they report of us. God our Father, for his holy name's [...] direct [...] to be his instrument to put into your eyes, ears and hearts, that which most may make to his glory, in the false-guard of your souls and bodies, and preservation of the whole realm, Amen.
BESIDES these letters of Mr. John Bradford above specified, there were other letters which he wrote to father Traves, minister of Blackley, long before he came into trouble, the substance of which being fully contained in his foregoing letters, and also because we would make room for matter more entertaining, we think proper to omit, as observed before. And now we proceed to the history of the martyrs.
CHAP. XI. An Account of the Lives, Examinations, Sufferings, and Deaths of various pious PROTESTANTS, most of whom were burned, and some died in Prison, during the bloody Persecution i [...] the Reign of Queen MARY I. A. D. 1555.
A short Account of WILLIAM MINGE, who died in Prison.
THE next day after Mr. Bradford and John Leaf suffered in Smithfield, William Minge, priest, died in prison at Maidstone, being there in bonds for religion, and would, had he lived a little longer, also have suffered the fury of his adversaries, whose nature was to spare and favour none that favoured Christ's pure gospel. This William Minge, with as great constancy and boldness yielded up his life in prison, as if it had pleased God to have called him to suffer by fire, as other good and godly men had done before at the stake, as himself was ready to do, had it pleased God to have called him thereunto.
An Account of JAMES TREVISAM, who was buried in Moorfields.
UPON Sunday the 3d of July, 1555, died one James Trevisam, in the parish of St. Margaret, in Lothbury, who being impotent and lame, kept his bed a long time. This Trevisam had a servant named John Small, who was reading in the bible, when one Berd the promot [...] came to the house, and would needs go up stairs, where he found four persons besides him and his wife; to wit, the young man that read, and two men and a woman. All whom the said Berd apprehended and carried to the Compter, where they remained about a fortnight, notwithstanding all the friends they could make. Not only so, but the said Berd intended to carry the poor lame bedridden man to Newgate in a cart, (and brought a cart to the door for that purpose) had not the neighbour, who had a little more humanity, prevented that barbarous design. Nevertheless, the poor man was obliged to have two sureties for his forth coming, notwithstanding [...] could not get out of his bed, being not only [...] but very sick at the same time. In a few days [...] he grew so ill that his life was despaired of [...] the parson of the parish, one Mr. Farthing, [...] visit him, and had communication with him, [...] they both agreed very well in matters of religion▪ [...] so the parson departed. No sooner was he [...] down into the street, but he was met by one [...] a founder, who threatened to accuse him, [...] with Trevisam; for, said the founder, [...] the sacrament of the altar. Upon [...] parson went to him again, and then they [...] agree. And so the parson went to the [...] London, and told him. The bishop answered, [...] he should be burnt; and if he were already [...] he should be buried in a ditch. And when he [...] dead, the parson shewed as much spite and ill [...] to his poor sorrowful widow as possibly [...] not suffering her to put him in a co [...]n, or [...] else, but insisted on carrying him on a [...] Moorfields, and there he was buried. [...] night the body was taken up again, and [...] taken from him, and he left naked above [...] The owner of the field seeing this, buried [...] again; a fortnight after, the sumner came [...] grave and summoned him to appear at St [...] before his ordinary, to answer to such [...] should be laid against him. But what [...] this affair afterwards, I cannot certainly say.
The HISTORY of Mr. JOHN BLAND, Preacher [...] Martyr.
THE 12th day of July, John Bland, [...] Frankesh, Nicholas Shetterde [...], and H [...] phry Middleton were all four burnt at Canterbury together for one cause. Of which number, Frankesh [Page 695] and Bland were ministers and preachers of the word of God, the one being parson of Adesham, and the other vicar of Rolvindon. Mr. Bland was a man so little born for his own advantage, that no part of his life was separated from the common and public utility of all men. For his first doings were there employed to the bringing up of children in learning and virtue. Under whom were trained up several hopeful young men, which afterwards did hands [...]ely flourish. In which number was Dr. Sands, a man of singular learning and worthiness, as may well become a scholar for such a school-master, whom I gladly here name for his singular [...] of virtue and crudition.
AFTER this, he coming to the ministry in the church of God, or rather being called thereto, was inflamed with incredible desire to profit the congregation, which may appear by this, that whereas he was cast into Canterbury prison for preaching of the gospel, and delivered once or twice from thence at the intercession [...] is friends, yet he would preach the gospel again, as soon as he was delivered. Whereupon he being the third time apprehended, when his friends yet once again would have found means to have delivered him if he would promise to abstain from preaching; he stood in it earnestly, that he would admit no such condition, notably well [...] as the manner and example which we read in the apostle St. Paul; "Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Tribulation, or anguish, or hunger, or nakedness, or persecution, or the sword?" &c. But to express the whole life and actions of this pious martyr, seeing we have his testimony concerning the same, it is best to refer the reader to his own report, writing to his father the whole discourse of his troubles, from the beginning almost to the [...]atter [...] in order and manner as you shall hear.
An Account of the [...] Mr. BLAND, written [...] Father.
DEARLY beloved father in Christ Jesus, I thank you for your gentle lette [...]s. And to satisfy your mind as concerning the troubles whereof you have heard, these shall b [...]n declare unto you all my vexations that have happened unto me since you were with me, and also since I received your last letters. God keep you ever.
FIRST, The 3d of September, being Sunday, after service ended, ere I had put off my surplice, John Austen came to the table, (commonly called the Lord's table) and laid both his hands upon it, saying, Who set this here again? Now they say they took the table down the Sunday before, which I knew not, neither do I know who set it up again. The clerk answered that he knew not. Then said Austen, he is a knave that set it here. I was then going down the church, wondering what he meant, and said, Goodman Austen, the queen's highness hath set forth a proclamation that you move no sedition: and before I could speak any more, he said, Thou art a knave: and I said, Well, Goodman Austen, what I have said, I have said. By God's soul, said he, thou art a very knave. Then my clerk spoke to him, but what I am not sure. But he said, You are both heretic knaves, and have deceived us too long already, and if you say any service here again, I will turn your table upside down; and in that rage he, with others, took the table and laid it on a chest in the chancel, and set the tressels by it. Soon after I rode to Mr. Isaac, and declared unto him how seditiously Austen had behaved himself. Mr. Isaac directed a warrant to the constable, which was immediately served, so that he was brought before him the same night, and was bound by recognizance, with sureties, to appear if he were called. But then we agreed so we [...], that it was never called for: the table was brought down, and was permitted as before.
THE 26th of November, being Sunday, Richard Austen and his brother Thomas came to the aforesaid table after the communion was done, and as I was going by them, Richard said unto me, Mr. Parson, we want to speak with you. And I said, What is your will? And he said, You know that you took down the tabernacle wherein the rood did hang, and such other things: we would know what recompence you would make us: for the queen's proceedings are (as you know) that such things must be put up again.
[Page 696]"SAID I," I know no such proceedings as yet; and as for what I did, I did it by commandment.
NO, said Thomas Austen, you will not know the queen's proceedings.
YES, said I, I refuse not to know them.
THEN said Richard, You are against the queen's proceedings; for you say there are abominable uses and devilishness in the mass.
GOODMAN Austen, said I, if I so said, I will say it again, and God willing, stand to the proof of it.
MASTERS all, said Richard Austen, bear record of these words, and went his way.
[...] Thomas Austen, Thou wilt as soon eat this book as stand to them.
NO, said I, not so soon.
TELL us, said he, what devilishness is in the mass?
I have often preached it unto you, said I, and you have not believed it, nor borne it away, neither will you [...]w, though I should tell you.
THOU (said he) hast told us always like an heretic [...] thou art. Now you lie, goodman Austen, said I, by your leave. Mary, said he, thou liest. And I said, And you lie, for I have taught you Christ and his truth.
SAID he, Thou art an heretic, and [...]st taught us nothing but heresy: for thou canst say nothing that is true.
YES, goodman Austen, I can say that God is in heaven, and you will say (I hope) that it is true, and so have I taught you truly.
SAID he, thou hast taught us like an heretic, and hast said, that there is no devil in hell.
WELL, said I, lie on; methinks you can say little truth. Many other taunts he gave, too long to write. And at last he said, You pulled down [...] altar, will you [...] it again▪ No, said I, [...] I be commanded; for I was commanded to [...] I did.
WELL, if you will not, said he, thou will I. [...] I am churchwarden.
I charge you, said I, that you do not, except [...] have authority. I will not, said he, be [...] your charge. For we will have a mass [...] Sunday, and a preacher that shall prove [...] heretic, if thou dare abide his coming.
YES, said I, God willing, I will abide [...] him; for sure I am, that he cannot disprove [...] doctrine that I have preached.
YES, said he, and that thou shalt hear, if [...] not away ere then.
NO, Mr. Austen, I will not run away.
MARRY, said he, I cannot tell; thou art [...] as not; with many more words we came out [...] church, and so departed.
WHEN Sunday came I looked for our [...] and at the time of morning prayer I said to [...] why do you not ring? You forget that we [...] have a sermon to-day. No, said he, Mr. [...] servant hath been here this morning, and [...] master hath letters from my lord chancellor, [...] must go to London, and cannot come. That [...] I preached a sermon in his stead. Now have [...] slandered me, that I prepared a company [...] places to have troubled him; but they [...] not in their lie. For some said, I had [...] Adesham, and that Richard Austen had knowledge, and sent for the constable to see the peace [...], which is found a lie. Others said, I had them [...] Canterbury and Adesham. Others said, I had [...] in both places, that if the one missed, the [...] should not. God forgive them all. Now [...] these two matters they boast that they sent two [...] of complaint to the council. Wherefore by [...] advice of friends, I made this testimony, and [...] up by Mr. Wiseman.
The Behaviour of Mr. JOHN BLAND, Parson of Adesham, in the County of Kent, on Sunday the 3d Day of December last, containing the Words which be there spake unto the people.
WHEREAS upon certain communication had between the said parson and Richard Austen, and Thomas Austen, in the presence of all the parish of Adesham, the Sunday before St. Andrew's day last, the said Austen then declared, That the said parson had taught there in times past great heresies, which to confound, they would prepare a preacher against the next Sunday following, if so be the said parson would abide, and not run away: upon which rumour, divers persons resorted out of the country, unto the said parish church, at the day appointed, there to hear the preacher; and at the time in which the sermon ought to be made, no man appeared there to preach; but it was reported to the parson that the preacher appointed, had urgent business and could not come. So that the multitude being now come together, the same parson perceiving that the people's expectation was defrauded, said, Forasmuch as you are willingly come to hear some good advertisement of the preacher, who cannot be now present, I think it not convenient to let you depart without some exhortation for your edification. And further declaring that he had no licence to preach, said, That he would not meddle with any matter in controversy. And then he began the epistle for the day, desiring the audience to mark three or four places in the said epistle, which touched of quietness and love to one another: and there briefly reading the epistle, he noted the same places, and so making an end thereof, desired all men to depart quietly and in peace, as they did, without any manner of disturbance, or token of evil.
- Edmund Mores,
- Richard Randal,
- John Hills,
- William Forstall,
- Thomas Gooding.
Another Matter of trouble wrought against Mr. JOHN BLAND, as appeareth by his own Narration.
UPON Innocents day, being the 28th of December, they had procured the priest of Stodmash to say mass: he had nigh made an end of mattins ere I came; and when he had ended them, he said to me, Mr. Parson, your neighbours have desired me to say mattins and mass; I hope you will not be against the queen's proceedings. No, (said I) I will offend none of her majesty's laws, God willing. What say you? quoth he, and made as though he had not heard. Then I spake the same words to him again with an higher voice; but he would not hear, though all the rest in the chancel heard: I spake so loud the third time, that all the church might hear, That I would not offend the queen's laws, and then he went to mass; and when he was reading the epistle, I called the clerk unto me, with the beckoning of my finger, and said unto him, I pray you desire the priest when the gospel is done to tarry a little, I have something to say to the people; and the clerk did so.
AND the priest came down into the stall where he sat; and I stood up in the chancel door, and spake unto the people of the great goodness of God always shewed unto his people, unto the time of Christ's coming: and in him and his coming, what benefit they past, we present, and our successors have; and among other benefits I spoke of the great and comfortable sacrament of his body and blood. And after I had briefly declared the institution, the promise of life to the good, and damnation to the wicked, I spake of the bread and wine, affirming them to be bread and wine after the consecration, as yonder mass-book, saying, Holy bread of eternal life, and the cup of perpetual salvation. So that like as our bodily mouths eat the sacramental bread and wine, so doth the mouth of our souls (which is our faith) eat Christ's flesh and blood. And when I had made an end of that, I spake of the misuse of the sacrament in the mass; so that I judged it in that use no sacrament, and shewed how Christ bade us all eat and drink; and in the mass one only eateth and drinketh, and the rest kneel, knock, and worship: and after these things ended, as briefly as I could, I spake of the benefactors of the mass, and began to declare who made the mass, and recited every man's name, and the patch that he put on the mass; but before I had rehearsed them all, the church-warden and the constable his son-in-law, violently came upon me, and took my book from me, and pulled me down, and thrust me into the chancel, with an exceeding roar and cry. Some cried, Thou [Page 698] heretie; some, Thou traitor; some, Thou rebel; and when every man had said his pleasure, and the rage was something past, Be quiet, good neighbours, said I, and let me speak to you quietly. If I have offended any law, I will make answer before [...]hem that are in authority to correct me. But they would not hear me, and pulled me, one on this side, and another on that, and began again. Then Richard Austen said, Peace, masters, no more till mass be done, and they ceased. Then I said to the church-warden and constable, each holding me by the arm; Masters, let me go into the church-yard till your mass be done. No, said the church-warden, thou shalt tarry here till mass be done. I will not, said I, but against my will. And they said, Thou shalt tarry, for if thou go out thou wilt run away. Then I said to the constable, lay me in the stocks, and then you will be sure of me, and turned my back to the altar. By that time Richard Austen had devised what to do with me, and called the constable and the church-warden, and bade them put me into a side chapel, and shut the door on me, and there they made me tarry till mass was ended. When the mass was ended, they came into the chapel to me, and searched what I had about me; and found a dagger, and took it from me. Then said Thomas Austen, church-warden, after many babblings that they made with me, Thou keepest a wife here amongst us, against God's law and the queen's. You lye, goodman Austen, said I, it is not against God's law, nor as I suppose, against the queen's. Thus they brought me out of the church, and without the door they railed on me without pity or mercy: but anon the priest came out of the church, and Ramsey, that of late was clerk, said unto him, Sir, where dwell you? And therefore Thomas Austen took him by the arm, and said, Come on, sirrah, you are of his opinion, and took his dagger from him, and said, he should go with him. I am content, said he, and a little mocked them in their envious talk. By this time John Gray of Wingham, servant to John Smith, came in at the church style, and seeing them hold Ramsey by the arms, said to him, How now, Ramsey, have you offended the queen's laws? No, said he. Then there is no transgression. Therewith Thomas Austen took him, and said, You are one of their opinion, you shall go with them for company, and took his dagger from him, and then demanded what he did there? But after (I think) for very shame they let him go again. But they carried me and Ramsey to Canterbury, guarded by eighteen persons. A sheet of paper would not contain the talk we had that night with Mr. Hardes, justice, Mr. Oxenden. Mr. Spilman, and Mr. Tutsam.
THE next day they made a bill against me, but it served not their purpose, which was, that they would have had me to prison. But James Chapman, and Bartholomew Joyes, were bound in twenty pounds each of them for my appearance at the next general sessions, or in the mean time to appear, if I were sent for, before the queen's majesty's council, or any other commissioners sent by the queen's authority. And Ramsey was bound to the peace, and to be of good behaviour till the next sessions. His [...] were Thomas Hogeking, and Simon Barrat.
NOW on the 23d or 24th of February Sir Thomas Finch, knight, and Mr. Hardes, sent for me and my sureties to Mr. Finch's place, and took me from my sureties, and sent me to the castle of Canterbury, by Sir Thomas Moyles's order, as they said, where I lay ten weeks, and then was bai [...]ed and bound to appear at the next sessions holden at Canterbury; but after, they changed it to be at Ashford on Thursday in Whitsun-week, being the nineteenth of May: but in the mean time the matter was exhibited to the spiritual court.
The first Examination of Mr. JOHN BLAND in the Spiritual Court, before Dr. HARPSFIELD, Archdeacon of Canterbury, and Mr. COLLINS, Commissary.
THE 18th day of May, Mr. Harpsfield, archdeacon of Canterbury, obliged the mayor's serjeant to bring me before him and Mr. Collins, commissary, into Christ's-church, and they took me into a chamber in the suffragan of Dover's house.
THEN the archdeacon said, Art thou a priest? And I said, I was one. And he said, Art thou a graduate of any university? and I said, Yea. What degree, said he, hast thou taken? The degree, said I, of Master of Arts. The more pity, replied he, that thou shouldst behave thyself as thou hast done. Thou hast been a common licensed preacher, hast [Page 699] thou not? and I said, I have been so. Marry, said he, so I understand.
What hast thou preached?
God's word, to the edifying of his people.
No, no, to the destruction both of thy soul and their's too, if the mercy of God be not speedily extended towards you. I pray thee tell me what thou hast preached?
I told you already what I have preached.
Nay, but tell me what one matter hast thou preached to the edifying of the people, as thou sayest?
I will tell you no particular matter: for I perceive you would have some matter against me.
No, by my faith, I only desire to win thee from the heresies thou art bewrapt in, and hast infected others withal. For thou hast preached, as I am informed, that the blessed sacrament of the altar is not the real body and blood of Christ after the consecration. Tell me, hast thou not thus preached? and is this thy opinion?
Sir I perceive, as I said before, that you seek some matter against me. But seeing that I am bound in the sessions to my good behaviour for preaching, which may be broken with words, and well I know not with what words; and also both mine authority to preach, and my living taken from me, I think I am not bound to make you an answer.
Mr. Bland, do you not remember, that St. Peter biddeth you make answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the faith that is in you?
I know that, and am content so to answer as that text biddeth: but I know that Mr. Archdeacon doth not ask me after that manner, but rather to bring me into trouble. Then they said, No, you shall not be troubled for any thing you may say here.
I am content for knowledge sake to commune with you in any matter, but not otherwise. And so they [...]ell to reasoning for the space of an hour, of the sacrament, both against me. At la [...] Mr. Collins said, Mr. Bland, will you come and take in hand to answer such matters on Monday next as shall be laid to you?
Sir, you said I should not be troubled for any thing that should be said here for learning's sake. And they said, You shall not, but it is for other matters.
Sir, I am bound to appear, as some t [...]ll me, on Thursday next at Ashford, I am in doubt whether I can or no: yet have I purposed to be there, and so to go to London to Mr. Wiseman, for an obligation that he hath, whereby I should receive some money to pay my debts withal. Thou said Mr. Archdeacon, I will write to Mr. Wiseman, that you shall sustain no loss.
That shall not need: for I can sustain no great loss if I go not. But I pray you let me have a longer day. No, said [...]e.
Sir, I cannot well come on Monday.
Wilt thou not come when he so gently speaketh to thee, where he may command thee?
I do not deny to come, but I desire a longer day.
Thou shalt have no other day: I charge thee to come on Monday.
Sir, I perceive it shall be for this or like matters: will it please you, or Mr. Collins, for God's sake, to confer scriptures privately with me in this matter, seeing you say you would so gladly win me.
With all my heart will I take the pains, and I will borrow my lord of Dover's library, to have what books thou wilt: and thus they departed. Now the 17th of May at Ashford I could not be released, although I was called to the Spiritual Court for that purpose, but was bound to appear at the sessions held at Crambroke the third of July.
Another APPEARANCE of Mr. BLAND, before the Archdeacon and his Fellows.
ON the 21st of May I appeared in the chapter-house, where was a great multitude of people, unlooked for by me▪ and Mr. Archdeacon said thus to me; You are come here according as you were appointed; and the cause is, that it hath pleased the queen's highness here to place me, to see God's holy word set forth, and to reform those that are here fallen into great and heinous errors, to the great displeasure of God, and the decay of Christ's sacraments, and contrary to the faith of [...] catholic church, whereof thou art notably known to be one that is sore poisoned with the same, and hast infected and deceived many with thy evil preaching; which if thou wilt renounce, and come home again to the catholic church, both La [...]d many others would be very glad: and I for my part shall be right glad to shew you the favour that lieth in me, as I said unto you when you were appointed hither, because you then refused to [...] again the people that you had deceived. And whereas it is feigned by you, that I should openly dispute the matter with you this day; although I did neither so intend nor appoint, yet I am content to dispute the matter with thee, if thou wilt not without disputation help to heal the souls that are brought hell-ward by thee. What sayest thou?
I do protest before God and you all, that neither is my conscience guilty of any error or heresy, neither that I ever taught any error or heresy willingly. And where your mastership saith, That I have feigned an open disputation with you, it is not true▪ as I can thus prove: Upon Saturday I was at Uxden's, and there Mr. Bingham laid it to my charge, that such an open disputation, as you have here offered, should be this day between you and me. Whereat I much marvelled, and said to him, that before that present I never heard any such word; neither would I answer nor dispute: And Mr. Vaughan, Mr. Oxenden, Mr. Seth, of Overland, and Mr. Uxden can witness to this; and further I said to them, that I never spake to you of any disputation, nor you to me. Now if your mastership have any thing to say to me by the law, I will make answer to it.
Hear ye what he saith? His conscience is clear. I pray thee, whereon groundest thou thy conscience? Let me hear what thy faith is.
I know not why you should ask me a reason of my faith, more than any man in this open audience.
Why, thou heretic, art thou ashamed of thy faith? If it were a christian belief, thou needest not be ashamed of it.
I am not ashamed of my faith. For I belieVe in God the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, and in Jesus Christ his only Son our Lord, &c. with all the other articles of the creed; and I do believe all the holy scriptures of God to be most certain and true.
Wilt thou declare no more than this?
No.
Well, I will tell thee whereon I ground my faith: I do believe and ground my faith and conscience upon all the articles of the creed, and upon all the holy scriptures, sacraments, and holy doctors of the church, and upon all the general councils that ever were since the apostles time. Lo, hereupon ground I my faith; with many more words which I do not well remember.
AND when he could get no other answer from me, than what I had said before, he called for a scribe to make an act against me. And [...] much communication, I said, By what law and authority will you proceed against me? Mr. Colli [...] said, By the canon law.
I doubt whether it be in strength or no. Yet I pray you let me have a counsellor in the law, and I will make answer according to the law.
Why, thou heretic, thou wilt not confess thy faith to me, that have authority to demand it of thee; and yet I have confessed my faith to thee before all this audience. As concerning the [Page 701] blessed sacrament of the altar, thou hast taught, that after the consecration it is bread and wine, and not the body and blood of our Saviour Jesus Christ. How sayest thou, hast thou not thus taught?
Sir, as concerning this matter of the sacrament, when I was with you and Mr. Collins, you said then it was for other matters that I should come hither: and further, that you would be content at my desire, to confer scriptures with me, to see if you could win me; and you said, you would borrow my lord of Dover's library, that I should have what book I would▪ and now you require me thus to answer, contrary to your promise before any conference be had, and seek rather to bring me into trouble, than to win me.
I will, as God shall help me, do the best to thee that I can, if thou wilt be any thing conformable; and I hope to dissolve all thy doubts, if thou be willing to hear. And I also will desire these two worshipful men, my lord of Dover, and Mr. Collins, to hear us.
No, you shall pardon me of that: there shall be no such witness. But when we agree, set to our hands. Here the people made a great noise against me, for refusing the witness: and here we had many more words than I can rehearse. But at last I said, Sir, will you give me leave to ask you one question? And he said, Yea, with all my heart. For in that thou askest any thing, there is some hope that thou mayest be won.
Sir, when it pleased Almighty God to send his angel unto the virgin Mary to salute her, and said, "Hail, full of grace," &c. came any substance from God our Father into the virgin's womb to become man? Whereat Mr. Archdeacon, my lord of Dover, and Mr. Collins were silent But my lord spake first, and said, The Holy Ghost came to her; and ere he had brought out his sentence, Mr. Syriac Peters said, "The power of the Most High overshadowed her." Truth, said Mr. Archdeacon, it was the power of God sent by the Holy Ghost. They had forgot, that He was begotten of the substance of his Father; or else they perceived whereunto this question tended: and so both I and they left it, by what words I cannot tell. But I said, Sir, I shall ask one other? [...] he said, Yea. Is there in the sacrament, after the consecration, Christ's natural body, with all the qualities of a natural body, or no?
Hark, said Mr. Archdeacon, hear you this heretic? He thinks it an absurdity to grant all the qualities of Christ's natural body to be in the sacrament. But it is no absurdity: for even that natural body that was born of the virgin Mary is glorfied, and that same body is in the sacrament after the consecration. But perceive you not the arrogancy of this heretic, that will put me to answer him, and he will not answer me? He thought to put me to a pinch with his question; for I tell you it is a learned question.
If you be so much discontented with me, I will say no more; yet I would all men heard, that you say the glorified body of Christ is in the sacrament after the consecration.
I may call thee gross ignorant. Thou gross ignorant, is not the same body glorified, that was born of the virgin Mary? Is it then any absurdity to grant that to be in the sacrament? And while he spake many other words, I said to Mr. Petit, That the sacrament was instituted, delivered, and received of his apostles, before Christ's body was crucified; and it was crucified before it was glorified; which saying Mr. Petit partly recited to Mr. Archdeacon.
Thou hast no learning. Was not Christ's body given to his apostles, as a glorified act? And yet no inconvenience, although his natural body was not crucified; for when he was born of the virgin Mary without pain, was not that the act of a glorified body? and when he walked on the water, and when he came into the house to his apostles, the doors being shut fast, were not these the acts of a glorified body?
THEN my lord of Dover helped him to a better place, and said, When Christ was in Mount Tab [...]r, he was there glorified in the sight of his apostles.
You say truth, my lord, he was glorified in the sight of three of his apostles.
This methinks is new doctrine.
Well, seeing he will by no other way be reformed, let the people come in and prove these matters against him. And thereupon the archdeacon brought forth a copy of the bill of complaint that was put up against me at Christmas, and about that we had a little talk. And then Mr. Archdeacon rose up, and said, See ye, good people that know this matter, that ye come in, and prove it against him. Whereunto answered Thomas Austen, I pray you let us be no more troubled with him, and then spake John Austen, and Heath a one-ey'd man, and began to accuse me; but I gave them no other answer, but do to me what ye can by law, and I will answer it. Then said Thomas Austen, Bland, you were once abjured. You say not truly, goodman Austen, said I, I was never abjured. Either, said he, you were abjured, or else you had the king's pardon. Neither of both, said I; you speak this of mere malice, with many other babbling words. Then Mr. Archdeacon departed, and left Mr. Collins to command me to appear the next day. However, for certain other urgent business that I had, I did not appear, but wrote a letter to Mr. Commissary, desiring him to respite the matter till my coming home again; and if he would not, I would contentedly submit myself to the law when I came home.
NOW about the 28th day of June I came to Mr. Commissary to let him know of my return, and offered myself to satisfy the law, if it were proceeded against me, before Mr. Cocks of Surry, and Marks the apparitor; but Mr. Commissary gently said, that he had done nothing against me; and so appointed me to appear before him the Friday seven night after. In the mean time a sessions was held at Crambroke, where I was bound to appear; and carrying surety with me to be bound again, for I expected no other, did appear the third day of July.
THEN said Sir John Baker, Bland, we hear that you are a Scot; where was you born and brought up? I said, I was born in England. And he said, Where? I replied, in Sedber, and brought up by one Dr. Lupton, proyost of Eaton college. Well, said he, I know him well. Remain to your bond till afternoon.
THEN said sir Thomas Moyle, Ah Bland, thou art a stiff-necked fellow. Thou wilt not obey the law, nor answer when thou art called. Then said sir John Baker, Mr. Sheriff take him to your ward: and the bailiff set me in the stocks, with others, and would not hear me speak one word; and so we remained in the gaol or Maidstone, till a fortnight before Michaelmas, or thereabouts: and then we were carried to Rochester, to the assize held there, where we were two days among the prisoners: and when we were called, and the judges asked our causes, when my cause was rehearsed, Mr. Barrow, clerk of the peace, said, that I was an excommunicate person.
THEN the judges of assize remanded us to Maidstone again, ordering us to be brought to the next sessions that should be held at the town of Malden: however the sheriff never sent for us; so we tarried at Maidstone till the sessions held at Greenwich, the 18th and 19th of February. I and others being within the bar amongst the felons, and irons upon our arms, were called out the latter day by the jailor and bailiffs, and eased of our irons, and carried by them into the town to sir John Baker, Mr. Petit, Mr. Webb, and two others whom I knew not.
Another EXAMINATION of Mr. BLAND.
Bland, wherefore were you cast into prison?
I cannot well tell. Your master-ship cast me in.
Yea, but for what were you in before that time.
For an unjust complaint against me.
What was the complaint;
I told him as truly and as briefly as I could.
Let me see thy book?—And I gave him a Latin Testament.
Will you go to the church, and obey and follow the queen's proceedings, and do as an honest man should do?
I trust in God to do no otherwise but as an honest man ought to do.
Will you do as I said?
Will it please your mastership to give me leave to ask you a question?
Yes.
Sir, may a man do any thing that his conscience is not satisfied in to be good.
Away, away; and threw down the book, and said, it is no testament. And I said, Yes. And Mr. Webb took it up, and said unto me very gently, Mr. Bland I knew you when you were not of this opinion; I would to God you would reform yourself; with better words than I can write. And I said; if you have known me of another opinion than I am now of, it was for lack of knowledge.
Yea, sayest thou so? by St. Mary, and hold thee there, I will give six faggots to burn thee, ere thou should be unburned: hence knave, hence. And so were we returned into our place again within the bar. And at night, when judgment of felons and all was done, we were called, and the judge ordered the jailor to deliver us to the ordinary. And if, said the judge, they will not be reformed, let them be delivered to us again, and they shall have judgment and execution. And one of our company said, My lord, if we be killed at your hands for Christ's sake, we shall live with him for ever.
Another Appearance of Mr. BLAND in the Spiritual Court.
THEN we came to the castle of Canterbury, and there we remained till the s [...]cond day of March, on which day we were brought int [...] the chapter-house of Cree-church, where were sitting the suffragan of Canterbury, Mr. Collins, Mr. Milles, with others, and then went to them Mr. Oxenden, Mr. Petit, Mr. Webb, and Mr. [...], justices. And when I was called, Mr. Webb said, Here we present this man unto you, as one vehemently suspected of heresy.
Mr. Webb, you have no cause to suspect me of heresy. I have been a prisoner this whole year, and no matter proved against me. I pray you, what is the reason I have been kept so long in prison?
Leave your arrogant asking of questions, and answer to that that is laid to your charge.
I do so; for I say you have no cause to suspect me of heresy.
Yes; you denied to sir John Baker, to be conformable to the queen's proceedings.
Is it a just cause to suspect m [...] of heresy, for asking a question with leave? So we had more words than I well remember.
THEN stood up Mr. Petit, and said▪ Y [...]u were cast into prison, because you fled away [...] your ordinary.
Then have I had wrong: for I never fled nor disobeyed mine ordinary, nor did any thing contrary to the law. If I did, let them now speak; but they said nothing. And when I saw they held their peace, I said, Mr. Commissary, have you been the cause of this my imprisonment? No, says he; you know that when you went from me, you were appointed to appear the Friday after the sessions. Here I was suffered to speak no more, but shut up in a corner till my companions were presented, and then we were sent to Westgate into prison, and were put into several close holds, so that we could not speak to one another, neither was any man permitted to come to us. We appeared four times in this manner: but one they dispatched, by what means I cannot tell, whose name was Cornwall, a tanner.
AND thus hitherto passed the talk between Bland [Page 704] and the justices, and certain gentlemen of the [...]. Now followeth the order of the reasoning, between him and the clergymen, before whom he was examined. But forasmuch as the chief doer and judge against him was the bishop of Dover, or suffragan of Canterbury, called Dr. Richard Thornton, to the intent it may appear what little truth or constancy is in these catholic persecutors, I thought here to exhibit, by the way, a certain popish letter, written to him by a papist. Wherein is declared what gospeller the said Richard Thornton was in king Edward's time, who now turning with the tide, sheweth himself a most bitter persecutor against God's servant's in queen Mary's time. The copy of this letter here followeth.
The Copy of a Popish Letter written to the Bishop of DOVER, by one THOMAS GOLDWELL, a Priest, declaring what a Professor he was in King EDWARD'S Time.
RIGHT reverend, and my good lord, after my hearty thanks for your good cheer at my last being with your lordship, this shall be to certify you, that as soon as cardinal Poole arrived, I gave him your letters, but I had much work to obtian any thing of him for you. For there hath been very evil informations given of you, and it hath been said, that you have concurred with all manner of evil proceedings, which have for some years been in England, as well against the holy sacrament of the altar, and against the supreme authority of Christ's vicar upon earth, as with the use of the late abominable communion, and with the marriage of priests, as well religious as secular; and that you have given orders to (I cannot tell how many) base, unlearned, and evil-disposed people, by reason of which they have taken upon them to preach, and thereby have done much hurt in Kent. So that men think, that yet if any new mutation (which God forbid) should happen, you would be as ready to change as any other. And indeed it maketh me to fear the same, by reason that notwithstanding it hath pleased Almighty God to provide, that our absolution was sent unto you, (when you little thought of it) absolving you from all past offences, yet your lordship (more regarding the vanity [...]f the world than the offence of God, which he only knoweth how much it grieves me for the due love I bear unto you) presumed to sing mass in pontificials, the holidays immediately following, and also to ministrate to children the sacrament of confirmation, because that one (being a member of the devil) did somewhat comfort you so to do.
OH my lord, what honour should it have been both to God and to yourself, and also edification to all good people, (though all worldly men and heretics would have laughed you to scorn) if you considering your great offences towards God, and his goodness towards you, would, as you have offended in the face of the world, to the damnation of many, likewise have shewed yourself penitent in the face of the world, to the edification of many, and not so soon to have celebrated for vanity pontificially; but for a time to have abstained for reverence altogether from the altar, according to the ancient custom of the church. Which I have also seen observed by some honest men, not being enjoined thereto by any man, but as their own consciences obliged them. But what is past cannot be recalled. And I thought it not my part to [...] your lordship, mine own friend and master, in the mire. Wherefore I ceased not so solicit your [...] with my lord's grace, till at last I obtained [...] his grace for your lordship all the faculties of [...] send you a copy here enclosed, partly for your own consolation, and partly for the comfort of others, desiring your lordship to use them to the honour of God that there come to me thereof no rebuke: not publishing them to any person, but to such as you know will gladly receive them. For hitherto there is never a bishop in England, who hath granted him so great authority concerning those which be under his cure. Only Mr. Archdeacon hath the like, and in one thing, more great than be these your lordship's. Wherefore your lordship shall do well to remit unto him all such priests as have cure of souls, whether they be beneficial men or parish priests. For he hath not only authority to absolve them, as you have, but also to give them authority to absolve such as be underneath their cures. And thus I commit your lordship to the protection of Almighty God.
[Page 705]AND thus much by way of digression, concerning the bishop of Dover. Now to return again to the examination of Mr. Bland: let us hear his own report of his answers, as followeth.
Here followeth mine answer, as nigh as I can call to remembrance, every word and sentence; yet if any that was present can help to perfect it, I would be glad. But yet this I dare say, that there is never one sentence, but it was openly spoken the 9th of March in the Chapter-house of Cree-church, in the presence of as many as they had chosen, the mayor of the city being called to be an assistant, and all others shut out.
The ANSWER of Mr. BLAND, at his Appearance before the Commissary, and others in the Spiritual Court.
MR. COLLINS said: Mr. Bland, you know that you are presented unto us as one suspected of heresy. How say you, be you contented to reform yourself to the laws of this realm, and of the holy church?
I deny that I am justly suspected of heresy, and [...] heard when I was presented, that I denied the [...] to be just, but to defend the unjust pun [...]ment that I have suffered: neither can you prove that any occasion hath been given by me, whereby any man should suspect me therein. But if you have any [...]w or authority to proceed against me for any thing done for a whole year ago and more▪ I will answer to it.
You were convented before Mr. Archdeacon and me, and matter of heresy laid to your charge.
That matter was done and said a whole year ago, for I have been in prison this year and more. If you have any thing against me by law, I desire that you let me know the law and matter, and I will answer according to the law.
THEN said my lord suffragan: But that I am one of the judges I would rise, and stand by thee, and accuse thee to be a sacramentary, and bring witness to prove it; yea, and further, that thou hast called▪ the mass an abominable idol.
You, my lord, never heard me say so: but I heard you once say, That in your conscience you had abhorred the mass three years. Thou liest, says he, I never said so.
My lord, if they might be heard, I can bring witness to prove it, with the day, time, and place; and I once did hear Mr. Collins at a visitation in Wingham say, That Christ was a full satisfaction for all sin, present and to come, contrary to that he saith now.
AND here we had more words of this matter, which I let pass for lack of good remembrance.
MR. Collins said, This is but a drift. You had better answer now, else you shall go to prison again, and be called on Monday, and have articles laid to you, and if you then answer not directly, you shall be condemned as an heretic, and that will be worse for you.
Sir, I do not now, nor will then deny to answer any thing that you can lay to my charge by law: wherefore I trust you will let me have the benefit of the law.
This is the law, that if you be required of the ordinary to render a reason of your faith, then may you not deny it. And that we do now.
To that then will I answer. For I believe in God the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, and Jesus Christ his only Son our Lord, with all the other articles of the creed: and I believe all the articles contained both in the creed called the mass creed, and in the creed of Athanasius: and I do believe, that all the holy scriptures, and all things therein contained, are most true.
This will not serve you: you must answer to all such articles in all these as shall be laid to you, or asked of you.
Sir, I have answered you. Have him [Page 706] away, said my lord of Dover, he had better have answered.
My lord, I am ready to answer, if you have any thing against me by law.
You have preached many heresies in Adesham, where I am parson now; and therefore you must make answer to them.
Lay them to my charge by the law, and I will answer them, if you can prove that I am bound to answer to that which was done a year ago or more: for if you may do that, you may also lay to my charge, and compel me to answer to all things done in all my life.
It is not a year ago since you were before Mr. Archdeacon and me.
It is a year and ten weeks since the words were spoken, and I have been a prisoner ever since, and have been at five sessions, and never could have my cause tried. Methinks your charities should think it punishment enough, if I had been guilty.
All this will not serve you; you must needs answer, and it will be better for you to answer now than another time. Will you reform yourself, and go to the church, worship Christ in the blessed sacrament of the altar, and be obedient unto all the queen's laws?
I pray you, wherefore am I brought hither?
To answer to such things as are demanded of you.
Sir, I thought you had some matters against me by the law.
Well, on Monday at nine of the clock you shall see the law, and have articles laid unto you.
THEN they espied Mr. Cox the lawyer, and called him in, and said, Here is a lawyer can tell you are bound by law to answer: And he said as they had said.
Do you not believe, that after the consecration of the blessed sacrament of the altar, there remaineth no substance of bread, but the subst [...]ce of Jesus Christ, both God and man?
Mr. Commissary, I know not by any law why you should ask me that question more than any other man here. And after a little talk, my lord of Dover asked me this question: Dost thou not believe, after the consecration, that it is the body of Christ? And I said, No, I do not so believe: for the scriptures do not teach me, that there should remain the flesh of Christ, to eat as a man should eat man's flesh.
THEN Mr. Glasier said, That was the opinion of the Capernaites, there is no man here of that opinion: and spake long of cutting of Christ's body, as men cut flesh in the shambles.
THEN Dr. Faucet said, Mr. Bland, forasmuch as you and I were brought up both in one house, and born both in one parish, I would be as glad as any man alive to do you good; but you may not thus stand against the church. For Christ saith, You must humble yourself, and take up his cross, and follow him: and to humble yourself in this place, is to be content, and no [...] stick to your own judgment, but to humble yourself to the holy church, which hath determined, that after the consecration there remaineth no bread, but the natural body and blood of Christ.
Mr. Doctor, if you take humbling of ourselves in that place, to admit the determination of the church, then must we know by the scriptures, that the same church determined nothing but according to the scriptures, as this is not: and therefore I do not believe any such transubstantiation, nor ever will, God willing. Then, says he, I have done with you; I will no more pray for you than for a dog.
THEN said Mr. Glasier, How think you? Did St. Paul, when he said, Is not the bread that we [Page 707] break a partaking of the body of Christ? did he mean baker's bread?
Though he did not mean baker's bread, that doth not prove that he brake natural and real flesh.
No, by St. Mary, we say not so, but we say it is the natural body glorified, under the form of bread and wine.
Then the apostles had it not as we have; or else his glorified body was crucified for us.
Tush, you do not understand the scriptures. For Christ's body was ever glorified, in that it was so marvellously united to the Godhead: yea, and he shewed his body divers times glorified, as in the mount Tabor; and when he walked on the water, we see he was light, and had no weight in him. Was not that then a glorified body?
Then belike Peter's body was glorified, if walking on the water was the deed of a glorified body: and the iron that Elisha made made to swim upon the water.
TUSH, said my lord of Dover, that was done by prayer. But there was such a laughing, that I heard no more what my lord said.
Masters, I know that it availeth nothing to reason with you, no more than it availed you in the time of the gospel. For then neither the reason of Eckius, Cochlaeus, nor yet of detection of the devil's sophistry of my lord chancellor's doing, could take any place. And it is known to some that be here, that something I can say in them.
No, you know Oecolampadius, Zuinglius, and such others.
Indeed, my lord, I have seen part of their doing.
That is seen by thee to-day.
I was glad when I heard you say, you believed the catholic church, and now go you from it.
No, that I do not.
You know that Christ saith, "If thy brother have offended thee, go and reconcile him between thee and him. If he hear thee not, take two or three with thee, that in the mouth of two o [...] three witnesses all things may be established. If he hear not them, tell it unto the church; if he hear not the church, take him as an heathen." I pray you where could you have found this church of your's fifty years ago?
You know that the true church did not at all times flourish, but was wonderfully persecuted.
THEN my lord of Dover cried, No more, I command you to hold your peace. Have him away, and bring in another.
You shall come again on Monday at nine o'clock, and in the mean time you shall have whom you will to confer withal; your friend Dr. Faucet, or Mr. Glasier, if you desire them.
I will refuse to talk with no man: as for any conference on your part, it is but weak laws, established as they are. But when there was no law, I did desire conference. And so for that time I departed.
THE Monday after we were brought to the same place again; and then Mr. Collins began to speak to me, but after what manner, it is clean out of my mind; but the end was, that I would reform myself. But as I did before, I demanded what they had to lay to my charge, and to see the law, which they said before I should see.
What needs? We have enough against you: for you denied unto me transubstantiation in the sacrament.
I did refuse to answer till you promised I should see the law, whereby you might compel me to answer.
My lord took the scribe's book, and [Page 708] [...] the answer that I made to Dr. Faucet's reason, which I knew not that they had written.
My lord I made you no such answer when you asked me; I take Mr. Collins and Mr. Glasier to witness. Then they brought forth a decretal, a book of the bishop of Rome's law, to bind me to answer, which my heart abhorred to look upon. The effect was, that the ordinary had authority to examine, and that those whom they so examined must needs answer. But I said that it meaned such as were justly suspected, as I was not. And here we had much communication; for I charged them with unjust imprisonment, which they could not avoid.
MR. Oxenden would have helped them, and said, the justices put me in prison for preaching a seditious sermon, and for troubling a priest at mass.
That is not true; for after I had been ten weeks in prison I was bailed out, till I was cast in again, (as the justice said) for the disobeying mine ordinary, which I never did.
Are you willing to confer with some? It will be better for you; now we offer it, because you would not desire it.
As I did not refuse before, no more will I now. But I did not perceive before, but that one thing might have come, without any leave-asking, to confer the scriptures: and therefore I expected Dr. Faucet would have come to me without desiring, if any profit to me had been in conference; for though I was never able to do him good, yet once I was his tutor.
Will you come to his chamber in the afternoon?
Sir, I am a prisoner, it is meet that I obey, and come whither you will, and so departed. At this time we were three. But they took another to appear before them the Tuesday seven-night after. And when he came, I knew not what was done, but I hear they excommunicated him, and let him go.
Here followeth a certain Confutation of Mr. BLAND, against false and manifest Absurdities granted by Mr. MILLES, Priest of Christ-church in Canterbury.
We say that Christ is in or under the sacrament really and corporally, which are the forms of bread and wine, and that there is his body contained invisibly, and the qualities which we do see, as whiteness and roundness, be there without substance by God's power, as quantity and weight be there also by invisible measure.
This is your own divinity, to make accidents the sacrament, and Christ's real body invisibly contained in them, and so to destroy the sacrament. And yet the doctors say, the matter of the sacrament is bread and wine. And God by his power worketh no miracles with "This is my body," so as to change the substance of bread and wine into his body and blood, in that he maketh accidents to be without their substance by invisible measure. I am ashamed to see you so destroy Christ's sacrament, contrary to your own doctors, and [...] with God's work.
To Christ is given all power in heaven and in earth; so that by the omnipotent power of his Godhead he may be, and is where he listeth; and i [...] really and corporally, without occupying of place; for a glorified body occupyeth no place.
Mark your own reason. All power is given to Christ both in heaven and earth; by the omnipotent power of his Godhead he may be where he list: Ergo, He is in the sacrament really and corporally without occupying of place.
I deny your argument; for it followeth neither of your major nor minor. And first I would learn of you, how you know that Christ lifteth to be present at the will of every priest. For if the priest list not to say your mass, then Christ listeth not to be there.
AGAIN, ye say, all power is given unto Christ both in heaven and in earth; so that is the cause by your reason, that by the omnipotent power of his Godhead he may be where he list: and by that reason he had no power of his Godhead, till he had his [Page 709] human body, and then he was not equal with the Father in divinity: for all power was not given to Christ, before the humanity and the Godhead were knit together, neither was he the Son. Here is more danger than you are aware of, if you would stand to it with just judges.
We eat Christ's flesh and blood spiritually, when we receive it with faith and charity. And we also do eat it corporally in the sacrament; and the body that we so receive hath life. For the Godhead is annexed thereto; which although it be received with the body of Christ, yet it is not visible after a gross sort, and the flesh of Christ that we receive is lively; for it hath the Spirit of God joined to it. And if a man be drunken, it is not by receiving of the blood of Christ: for it is contrary to the nature of Christ's blood. If he be drunken, it is by the qualities and quantities, without substance of blood.
I am glad that you are so much against all men, to say that Christ's body is alive in the sacrament; it may chance to bring you to the [...]ruth in time to come. Methinks it is evil to keep Christ's body alive in the pix; or else must you grant, that he is alive in receiving, and dead in the pix. And you say truth, that it is not the natural receiving of Christ's blood that maketh a man drunken; for it is the nature of wine that doth that, which you deny not.
AND a greater truth you confess than you did think, when you said, If a man be drunken, it is by the qualities and quantities, without the substance of blood; for indeed blood hath no such qualities with it: by which it is evident that there is no natural blood.
IF a man be drunken with wine consecrated, it must be a miracle, as I think you will have it, that the said accidents should be without their natural substance, and work all the operations of both substance and accidents: and so it followeth that a man may be drunken by miracle. The body that you receive, you say, is alive, because it is annexed to the Godhead; and the flesh that you receive is lively, because it hath the Spirit of God joined to it.
THIS division is of your new inventions, to divide the body and the flesh, the one alive by the Godhead, the other lively by God's Spirit, and both one sacrament: you make of it a thing so fantastical, that you imagine a body without flesh, and flesh without a body; as you do qualities and quantities without substance, and a living body without qualities and quantities.
If case so require, and there be a godly intent in the minister to consecrate, after the consecration thereof, there is present the body and blood of Christ, and no other substance, but accidents without substance to a true believer.
You grant three absurdities, that in a tun of wine consecrated is nothing but accidents: and to increase it withal, you have brought in two inconveniencies; first, that it is not the word of God that doth consecrate, but the intent of the priest must help it; and if that fail, you seem to grant no consecration, though the priest speak the word; and yet your doctors say, that the wickedness of the priest diminisheth not the sacrament.
AND to an unbeliever you seem to say, that it is not the same, as it is to the true believer; and then must the believer have something to do in the consecration. By endeavouring to avoid Charybdis you fall upon Scylla.
The substance of Christ's body doth not fill the mouse's belly. For although he doth receive the outward forms of bread and wine, yet he doth not receive the substance inwardly, but without violation And a mouse doth not eat the body of Christ▪ to speak properly; for it doth not feed him spiritually or corporally, as it doth man, because he doth not receive it to any inducement of immortality to the flesh.
You make not your doctrine plain to be understood: we must know how a mouse can receive the substance inwardly and outwardly. You say he doth not receive the substance inwardly, but without violation: Ergo, with violation he receiveth the substance inwardly. You say that the mouse cannot violate Christ's body; but he violateth the substance that he eateth. And this your proper [Page 710] speech doth import as much, as that the mouse should eat the sacrament to as great effect, and the same thing, as doth the unworthy receiver. For if that be the cause that she properly eateth not the body of Christ, because she doth not feed upon it spiritually nor corporally, nor receiveth it to be any inducement of immortality, as you say; then it followeth, that the unbeliever and the mouse receive both one thing. And yet it cannot be denied, but the mouse will live with consecrated bread, and then you must grant this absurdity, that a substance is nourished and fed only without accidents.
Men's bodies be fed with Christ's body, as with immortal meat, by reason of the Godhead annexed, to eternal life; but men's bodies be corporally nourished with qualities and forms of bread and wine: and we deny that by the sacramental eating any gross humour turned into blood is made miraculously in the body.
Where it cannot be denied that a man may live, and naturally be nourished in his natural body with the sacramental bread and wine consecrated; you cannot avoid that: but then you turn to the spiritual nourishing of a man's body, by Christ's body and Godhead annexed, which is nothing to put away the absurdity, that either a man's natural body should be fed naturally with accidents, or else to have them changed into gross humours. But you say, men's bodies be corporally nourished with qualities and forms of bread and wine: and then must you needs grant, that qualities and quantities must be made substance in man. For by them our bodies are nourished, or else is all that is the nutriment in man, accidents and no substance.
If the forms of bread and wine be burned, or worms ingendered, it is no derogation to the body of Christ, because the presence of his body ceaseth to be there, and no substance cometh again.
Ye grant here, that a substance may be made of accidents, as ashes or worms: but I think you will have it by your miracles, and this I count a greater absurdity than the other, that Christ's body should cease to be there, and no substance to come again; for no word in all the whole bible seems to serve you for the ceas [...]ng of his presence, though we granted you, which we do not, that it were ther [...]. God Almighty open your heart, if it be his will and pleasure, to see the truth. And if I thought not my death to be at hand, I would answer you to all the rest, in these and all other my doings.
I submit myself to our Saviour Jesus Christ, and his holy word, desiring you in the bowels of Christ to do the same.
The last Appearance and Examination of Mr. BLAND.
HITHERTO you have heard the troublesome handling of this faithful servant of God, John Bland, tost to and fro, from prison to prison, from session to session. At last he was brought before the bishop of Dover, the commissary, and the archdeacon, at Canterbury, the 13th day of June. The name of this bishop was Richard Thornto [...] ▪ The commissary was Robert Collins, whom the cardinal by his letters patent had substituted his agent, before his coming over to England. The archdeacon was Nicholas Harpsfield. Under th [...]s [...] a great many innocent lambs of Christ was cruelly treated and barbarously slain at Canterbury, amongst whom the aforesaid Mr. Bland was one of the first▪ who, as it is said, being brought before the first bishop, and colleagues, which were John Franke [...], Nicholas Sheterden, Thomas Thacker, Humphrey Middleton, and William Cocker, were examined of articles. To whom it was objected by the commissary, Whether he believed that Christ is really in the sacrament, or not, &c. To this he answered and said, that he believed, that Christ is in the sacrament, as he is in all other good bodies; so that he judged not Christ to be really in the sacrament.
WHEREUPON the day being on Monday, he was bid to appear again upon Wednesday next, and from thence he was deferred again to Monday following, being the 20th of June, in the same chapter-house, then to hear further what should be done, in case he would not relent to their mind. Which day and place he appearing as before, was required to speak his mind plainly and fully to the aforesaid articles, being again repeated unto him. These articles, commonly and in course they usually objected to [Page 711] their examinates which were brought before them, which articles, as here now followeth, need not hereafter be repeated, especially for the county of Kent.
Articles ministered by RICHARD, Bishop of Dover, to Mr. BLAND, and likewise to the rest following after him.
FIRST, That thou art of the diocese of Canterbury, and so subject to the jurisdiction of the archbishop there.
2. Item, That thou art a christian man, and dost profess the laws of God, and faith of Christ's catholic church, and the determination of the same.
3. Item, That all persons who teach, preach, believe, affirm, hold, maintain, or say within the diocese of Canterbury, otherwise than our holy mother the church doth, are excommunicate persons, and heretics, and as excommunicate and heretics ought to be named, reputed, and taken.
4. Item, That thou, contrary to the catholic faith and determination of our holy mother church, within the diocese of Canterbury, hast openly spoken, maintained, holden, affirmed, and believed, and yet dost hold, affirm, and believe, that in the blessed sacrament of the altar, under the forms of bread and wine, there is not the very body and blood of our Saviour Jesus Christ in substance, but only a token, sign, and remembrance thereof, and that the very body and blood of Christ is only in heaven, and no where else.
5. Item, That thou contrary to the catholic faith, and determination of our holy mo [...]her church, hast within this diocese of Canterbury openly spoken, said, maintained, holden, affirmed, and believed, and yet dost hold, maintain, affirm, and believe, that it is against God's word, that the sacrament of Christ's church should be ministered in an unknown tongue; and that no man with a safe conscience, or without peril of sin, receiveth any sacrament administered in any tongue that he understandeth not.
6. Item, That thou, contrary to the catholic faith of our holy mother church, hast, and yet dost hold opinion, and say, that it is against God's word, that the sacrament of the altar should be administered in one kind; and that no man may with a safe conscience so receive it.
7. Item, That the premises be true, and that there is a common fame upon them within the diocese of Canterbury.
The Answers of Mr. BLAND to the aforesaid Articles.
TO these articles Mr. Bland, answering again in order as they were objected to him, saith to the first, granting the same, that he was a priest, and of the diocese of Canterbury.
TO the second also he answereth affirmatively.
TO the third he answereth, that the article is true, meaning the catholic church to be Christ's church.
TO the fourth article he answered as touching the first part thereof, he doth confess, that he hath preached and taught it, as it is contained in the same. And as touching the second part of the article, he doth confess, that he doth now also hold and say, as he preached and taught before.
THE fifth article he granteth.
TO the sixth, he preached, held, and doth hold, as is contained in the article.
TO the last article he granteth the same, &c.
THIS done, and his answers and confession taken, respite was given him yet a few days to deliberate with himself. And on the 25th day of the said month of June he appeared again in the chapter-house, and there boldly and firmly withstood the authority of the pope; whereupon he was condemned and committed to the secular power.
Mr. BLAND'S Prayer before his Death.
THE Lord Jesus, for whose love I do willingly leave this life, and desire rather the bitter death of his cross, with the loss of all earthly things, than to abide the blasphemy of thy holy name, or else to obey man in breaking thy commandments; thou seest, O Lord, that whereas I [Page 712] might live in worldly wealth to worship false gods, and honour thy enemy, I chose rather the torments of this body, and loss of this my life, and have counted all things but vile dust and dung that I might win thee: which death is more dear to me than thousands of gold and silver. Such love, O Lord, hast thou laid up in my breast, that I hunger for thee, as the deer that is wounded desireth the soil. Send thy holy comforter, O Lord, to aid, comfort, and strengthen this weak piece of earth which is void of all strength of itself. Thou rememberest, O Lord, that I am but dust, and not able to do any thing that is good. Therefore, O Lord, as thou of thy accustomed goodness hast bidden me to this banquet, and counted me worthy to drink of thine own cup amongst thine elect; give me strength against this element, that as it is to my sight most irksome and terrible, so to my mind it may be at thy commandment, as an obedient servant, sweet and pleasant; and through the strength of thy Holy Spirit I may pass through the strength of this fire into thy bosom, according to thy promise, and for this mortality to receive immortality, and for this corruptible to put on incorruption. Accept this burnt offering and sacrifice, O Lord, not for the sacrifice itself, but for thy dear Son's sake my Saviour; for whose testimony I offer this free-will offering with all my soul. O heavenly Father, forgive me my sins as I forgive the whole world. O sweet Saviour, spread thy wings over me. O God, grant me thy Holy Ghost, through whose merciful inspiration I am come hither. Conduct me unto everlasting life. Lord, into thy hands I commend my spirit; Lord Jesus receive my soul. So be it.
The History of JOHN FRANKESH, HUMPHREY MIDDLETON, and NICHOLAS SHETERDEN.
HAVING now passed over the examination of Mr. Bland, let us further proceed to the rest of his fellow prisoners, being joined the same time with him in the like cause and like affliction. The names of whom were, John Frankesh, Nicholas Sheterden, Humphrey Middleton, Thacker, and Cocker, of whom Thacker only gave back. The rest constantly standing to the truth, were altogether condemned by the suffragan of Cant [...]rbury, the 25th day of June the year above expressed. Whose examinations I need not long dwell upon, forasmuch as the articles ministered against them were all one, so in their answers they little or nothing disagreed, as you shall hear hereafter. In the mean time, because Nicholas Sheterden in his examinations had a little more talk with the archdeacon and the commissary, I will first begin with him.
The first Examination or Reasoning of NICHOLAS SHETERDEN with Mr. Archdeacon HARPSFIELD and Mr. COLLINS, the Commissary, for which they sent him to Prison.
FIRST the archdeacon and commissary affirmed, that the very words of Christ, when he said, This is my body, did change the substance, without any other interpretation or spiritual meaning of the words.
Then belike when Christ said, "This cup is my blood," the substance of the cup [...] changed into his blood, without any other meaning, and so the cup was changed, and not the wine.
Not so: for when Christ said, "This cup is my blood," he meant not the cup, but the wine in the cup.
If Christ spake one thing, and meant another, then the bare words did not change the substance; but there must be a meaning sought as well of the bread, as of the cup.
There must be a meaning sought of the cup otherwise than the words stand. But of the bread it must be understood only as it standeth, without any other meaning.
Then do you make one half of Christ's institution a figure, or borrowed speech, and the other half a plain speech, and so you divide Christ's supper.
Christ meant the wine, and not the cup, though he said, This cup is my blood.
Then shew me whether the words which the priest speaks over the cup, do change the substance, or whether the mind of the priest doth it?
The mind of the priest doth it, and not the words.
If the mind of the priest doth it, and not the words, if the priest then do mind his harlot, or any other vain thing, that thing so minded was there made, and so the people do worship the priest's harlot instead of Christ's blood: and again, none of the people can tell when it is Christ's blood, or when it is not, seeing the matter standeth in the mind of the priest. For no man can tell what the priest meaneth but himself; and so are they ever in danger of committing idolatry.
THEN was the archdeacon somewhat moved, and sat him down, and said to the commissary, I pray you, Mr. Commissary, to speak to him a while; for they are as unreasonable and perverse answers as ever I heard. Then the commissary stood up and said:
YOUR argument is much against yourself, for you grant that the bread is a figure of Christ's body; but the cup can be no figure of his blood, nor yet his very blood; and therefore Christ did not mean the cup, but the wine in the cup.
My argument is not against me at all; for I do not speak it to prove that the cup is his blood, nor the figure of his blood, but to prove that the bare words being spoken by the priest do not change the substance any more of the bread, than they do change the cup into blood.
It could not be spoken of the cup, when he said, This cup is my blood; but he meant the wine in the cup.
Then it remaineth for you to answer my question to the archdeacon, that is, whether the mind of the priest, when he speaketh over the cup, doth change it into blood or the bare words?
Both together do it, the words and the mind of the priest together; yea, the intent and the words together do it.
If the words and intents together do change the substance, yet must the cup be his blood, and not the wine, forasmuch as the words are, "This cup is my blood," and the intent, you say, was the wine; or else the words take none effect, but the intent only.
AFTER, the commissary in his chamber said, it was the intent of the priest before he went to mass, without the words; for the priest did intend to do as holy church had ordained, then the intent made the sacrament to take effect.
If the sacraments take effect of the intent of the priest, and not of God's word, then many parishes having a priest that intendeth not well, are utterly deceived, both in baptizing, and also worshipping that thing to be God, which is but bread, because for lack of the priest's intent, the words do take none effect in it; so that by this it is ever doubtful, whether they worship Christ or bread, because it is doubtful what the priests do intend.
THEN the commissary would prove to me, that Christ's manhood was in two places at one time, by these words of Christ in the third chapter of John, where he saith, "No man ascendeth up into heaven, but he that came down from heaven, even the Son of man which is in heaven." By this he would prove, that Christ was then in heaven, and on earth also, naturally and bodily.
This and other places must needs be understood for the unity of the person, in that Christ was God and man, and yet the matter must be referred to the Godhead, or else you must fall into great error.
That is not so: for it was spoken of the manhood of Christ, forasmuch as he saith, "The Son of man which is in heaven."
If you will needs understand it to be spoken of Christ's manhood, then must you fall into the error of the Anabaptists, who deny that Christ took flesh of the virgin Mary; for if there be no body ascended up, but that which came down▪ [Page 714] where is then his incarnation? for then he brought his body down with him.
Lo, how you seek an error in me, and yet [...]ee not how you err yourself. For it cannot be spoken of the Godhead, except you grant that God is passable, for God cannot come down, because he is not passable.
If that were a good argument, that God could not come down, because he is not passable; then it might be said by the like argument, that God could not sit, and then heaven is not his seat, and then say as some do, that God hath no right hand for Christ to sit at.
THEN the commissary affirmed plainly, that it was true God hath no right hand indeed.
Oh what an injury to Christ's religion will this be, that because we cannot tell how God came down, therefore we shall say, that he came not down at all, and because we cannot tell what manner of hand he hath, to say that he hath no hand at all; and then he cannot reach the utmost parts of the sea. O misery! at length it will come to pass, that God cannot sit, and then how can heaven be his seat? and if heaven be not his seat, then there is no heaven; and then at length I doubt you will say there is no God, or else no other God but such as the heathen gods are, which cannot go nor feel.
Why, doth not the scripture say, that God is a Spirit? and what hand can a Spirit have?
Truth it is, God is a Spirit, and therefore is worshipped in spirit and truth; and as he is a Spirit, so he hath a spiritual power, so he hath a spiritual seat, a spiritual hand, and a spiritual sword, which we shall feel, if we go on at this rate. Because we know not what God hath, therefore if we say he hath none, then it may as well be said, there is no Christ.
THEN the commissary said, he would talk no more with me, and so departed; and also the commissary was compelled to grant, that Christ's testament was broken, and his institution was changed from that he left it: but he said, they had power so to do.
My first Answering after their LAW was established.
BECAUSE I know you will desire to hear from me some certainty of my estate, I was called before the suffragan, and seven or eight of the chief priests, and examined of certain articles, and then I required to see their commission.
THEY shewed it to me, and said, there it is, and the king and queen's letters also. Then I desired to have it read: and so in reading I perceived, that on some notable suspicion he might examine upon two articles; Whether Christ's real presence were in the sacrament, and whether the church of England be Christ's catholic church.
TO that I answered, that I had been a prisoner three quarters of a year, and as I thought, wrongfully: reason would therefore that I should answer to those things for which I was imprisoned.
THE suffragan said, his commission was, that I must answer directly, yes or no.
THIS commission, said I, was not general to examine whom he will, but on just suspicion.
HE said, I was suspected, and presented to him.
THEN I required him to shew the accusation.
HE said he was not bound to shew it; but he commanded me in the king and queen's name to answer directly.
I, as a subject, do require justice of you: for what I have done I ask no favour.
You were suspected.
Prove your suspicion, or shew what cause you have to suspect.
Thou wert cast into prison for that cause.
That was a pretty suspicion, because I [Page 715] had suffered imprisonment contrary to God's law and realm, that therefore I must now for amends be examined of suspicion without cause, to hide all the wrong done to me before. For when I was cast into prison, there was no law that hindered me from speaking as I did: therefore in that point I could be no more suspected than you, who preached the same yourself not long before.
That was no matter to thee what I preached.
Well, yet in the king and queen's name I must answer directly: and therefore I require as a subject, that you do not extend beyond your commission, but prove me suspected, more than you yourself.
THEN Mr. Mills told them that I had written to my mother, and that he had seen the letter, wherein I persuaded my mother to my opinions.
In that I did but my duty to certify her, that I was not in prison for any evil. And likewise that was before the law, and therefore no more suspicion was in me, than was in them that taught the like.
Well, you are required here to answer directly.
First then I require of you to prove this suspicion; and thus we tossed it to and fro. At last the bishop said, he himself did suspect me. I asked whereby?
Well, I myself did suspect thee, and it is no matter whereby.
But your commission doth not serve you so to do without cause of suspicion.
Well, yet I did suspect you.
It is not meet for you to be my accuser and my judge also, for that is too much for one man. And thus many words were multiplied, and they were much grieved.
If you were a christian man, you would not be ashamed of your faith being required.
I am not ashamed indeed, I thank God, and if any man did come to me, either to teach or learn, I would declare it: but forasmuch as I perceive you come neither to teach nor to learn, I hold it best not to answer you.
If you will not, then will we certify the king's council.
I am therewith content that you should certify that I had suffered three quarters of a year wrongfully in prison, and therefore I desire to be justified or condemned, first for that I suffered such imprisonment; and then I will not refuse to answer your articles, though they were a bushel of them. But to say that I would answer, whereby you should heal all your wrong done to me against the law of God and the realm, I will not.
HERE much ado there was to prove that he had no wrong, and again, that it was not they that did it. But said he, the commissary was one of them. He answered No, and said it was the archdeacon. He said, you sat with him, and he asked your counsel in it, and yet if it were he, it was your church, except the archdeacon and you be divided one from another. Well, said they, Will you now deny what you said then, and promise here to submit yourself, and you shall be delivered?
I am not so much beholden to you as to grant you any such promise: and you shall plainly see that I will not promise to go across the street for you: but if at any time I have offended your law, let me have the punishment: I ask no favour.
THEN they said, it was obstinacy in him that he would not answer, and a token that his faith was naught, seeing he was ashamed to utter it.
NAY, said Sheterden, you well know I am not ashamed of my faith: but because you so greedily seek blood, I will answer only to that you have against me.
Nay, you shall answer to the articles, or else be condemned upon suspicion.
I am content with that, yet all men shall [Page 716] know, that as you suspect and can prove no cause, so shall you condemn me without a matter, and then shall all men know you seek my blood, and no justice.
No, we seek not thy blood, but thy conversion.
That we shall see. For then shall you prove my perversion first, before you condemn me on your suspicion without proof of the same: and by that I shall know whether you seek blood or no. Many other words were between them.
AT last stept up one Lovels, a lawyer, who would prove his imprisonment not to be wrong, but right, by old statutes of Edward the fourth, and Henry, &c. but at last he was compelled to forsake those statutes from Michaelmas to Christmas, and then he said it was no wrong.
TO this Mr. Sheterden said, if he could prove that men might wrongfully imprison before a law, and in the mean while make laws, and then under that hide the first wrong, then he said true, or else not.
THUS he kept the band-dogs at staff's end, not as thinking to escape them, but that I would see, said he, the foxes leap above the ground for my blood if they can reach it, (so it be the will of God) yet we shall see them gape and leap for it.
His EXAMINATION before the Bishop of Winchester, then LORD CHANCELLOR.
I Was called into a chamber before the lord chancellor, the suffragan, and others, priests I think for the most part. He stood by the table, called me to him, and because I saw the cardinal was not there, I bowed myself and drew near.
THEN said he, I have sent for you because I hear you are indicted of heresy; and being called before the commissioners, you will not answer nor submit yourself.
I said, if it please you, I did not refuse to answer; but I did plainly answer that I had been in prison a long time, and reason it was that I should be charged or discharged of that, and not to be examined of articles to hide my wrong imprisonment, neither did I know any indictment against me. If there were any, it could not be just, for I have not been abroad since the law was made.
THEN said the bishop of Winchester, Well, yet if such a suspicion be of you, if you be a christian, you will declare that it is not true, and so clear yourself.
I thought it sufficient to answer to mine offences, &c. trusting that they would lay no such burden upon me, whereby the wrong done to me might be covered, but I would be proved to have wrong or right.
If thou wilt declare thyself to the church to be a christian, thou shalt go, and then have a writ of wrong imprisonment, &c.
I have no mind to sue now, but require right justice: but to make a promise, I will not; and if I offend the law, then punish me accordingly. For it might be that my conscience was not persuaded, nor would be, in prison; seeing these things which I have learned, were by God's law openly taught and received by the authority of the realm. And he said, it was never received, that I might speak against the sacrament; I said that against some opinion of the sacrament it was openly taught.
By no law, and that was not able to consider, that all that while God preserved that, so that no law could pass against it.
I said their law did not only persuade me, but this most; when they preached unto us, they took pains to set out the word of God in our tongue, so that we may read and judge whether they say true or no, but now they take the light from us, and would have us believe it, because they say so, which is to me a great persuasion.
It was not a few that could be your [Page 717] guides in understanding, but the doctors and the whole church, now whom dost thou believe? either the few or many?
I did not believe for the few or for the many, but only for him that bringeth the word, and shewed it to me to be so, according to the process thereof.
Well, then, if an Arian come to thee with scripture, thou wilt believe him, if he shew this text, "My Father is greater than I."
No, my lord, he must bring me also the contrary place, and prove them both true, where he saith, "My Father and I are one."
Yea, that is by charity, as we are one with him.
That gloss will not stand with the rest of the scripture, where he said, "I am the very same that I say to you;" he said the truth, and the truth was God, with more such like. And here he made many words, but very gently, of the sacrament. Likewise Christ said, said he, it was his body; yea, that is to say, a figure of his body; and how men did not consider that the Word was God, and God the Word, and so provoked me with such temptation; but I let him alone, and said nothing. So after many words, he came to the church's faith, and comely order of ceremonies and images. And then I joined to him again with the commandments.
That was done that no false things should be made, as the heathen would worship a cat because she killed mice.
It is plain that the law forbids not only such, but even to make an image of God in any manner or likeness.
Where find you that?
Forsooth, in the law where God gave them the commandments: for he said, "Ye saw no shape, but heard a voice only:" and added a reason why, "lest they should after make images and marr themselves;" so that God would not shew his shape, because they should have no image of him who was the true God, &c.
You have made a goodly interpretation.
No, it is the text.
THEN the bible was called for, and when it came he bid me find it, and I should presently be confounded with my own words; so that if there were any grace in me, I should no longer trust to my own judgment; and when I looked, it was Latin.
Why, can you read no Latin?
No. Then was the English bible brought. He bade me find it; and so I read it aloud: and then he said, Lo here thou mayst see; this is no more to forbid the image of God, than of any other beast, fowl, or fish,
I said it did plainly forbid to make any of these as an image of God, because no man might know what shape he was of. Therefore might no man say of any image, this is an image of God.
Well, yet by your leave, so much as was seen we may, that is, of Christ, of the Holy Ghost, and the Father appeared to Daniel like an old man.
That is no proof that we may make images contrary to the commandment; for though the Holy Ghost appeared like a dove, yet was he not like in shape, but in certain qualities; and therefore when I saw the dove, which is God's creature, indeed I might remember the Spirit to be simple and loving, &c. and with that he was somewhat moved, and said, I had learned my lesson, and asked who taught me, with many words; and he said he would prove how good and profitable images were to teach the unlearned, &c.
At last I said, My lord, although I were able to make ever so good a gloss upon the commandments, yet obedience is better than all our good intents, and much ado we had. At last he said, he saw what it was, and that he had sent for me for charity sake to talk with me, but now he would not meddle; and said, my wrong imprisonment could not excuse me, but I must clear myself.
I said that was easy for me to do, for I had not offended.
He said I could not escape so, there I was deceived.
Well, then, I am under the law, &c.
THE archdeacon was then called in, and he said, that I behaved myself before him with such arrogancy and stoutness, as never was heard; whereas he was minded with such mercy towards me, &c. and many other lies he laid to me, that I was sent home till another time, and I would not be contented, but went out of the church with such an out-cry as was notable.
I declare that herein he falsely reported me, and brought in the laws then in the realm, and the queen's proclamation, that none of her subjects should be compelled till the law were to compel; and that I rehearsed the same in the court for me, and I did use him then, said I, as I use your grace now, and no otherwise.
He said that I did not use myself very well now.
I said I had so offered myself to be bailed, and to confer with them when and where they would.
He said I should not confer, but be obedient. I said, let me go, and I will not desire to confer neither: and when I offend, let them punish me, and so departed.
The last Examination, with the Condemnation of Mr. JOHN BLAND, J. FRANKESH, N. SHETERDEN, and H. MIDDLETON.
AND thus much touching the particular and several examinations of Mr. Sheterden and Bland. Now to touch something also of the other martyrs, who were examined the same time, and suffered together with them, to wit, Humphry Middleton, of Ashford, and John Frankesh, vicar of Rolvynden, in the diocese of Kent, above mentioned; here first should be declared the articles, which publicly in their last examinations were jointly and severally ministered unto them by the aforesaid Thornton, bishop of Dover; but forasmuch as these articles being ordinary and of course, are already expressed in the story of Mr. Bland, it is not therefore needful to make any new rehearsals thereof.
THE seven articles being propounded to the persons above-named, to wit, John Frankesh, John Bland, Nicholas Sheterden, Humphry Middleton, and one Thacker; John Frankesh first answered somewhat doubtfully, desiring further respite to be given him of fourteen days to deliberate with himself, which was granted. Mr. Bland answered flatly and roundly, as you heard before. Nicholas Sheterden and Humphry Middleton, answered to the first and second articles affirmatively. To the third concerning the catholic church after a sort they granted. To the fourth, fifth, and sixth, concerning the real presence, and the sacrament to be administered in the Latin tongue, and in one kind, they utterly refused to answer. Sheterden said, he would not answer thereto before the cause were determined why he was imprisoned, and so still remained prisoner, before the laws of parliament received, &c. Middleton added moreover and confessed, that he believed in his own God, saying, My living God, and no dead god, &c. Thacker only relented, and was content to take penance. Thus the aforesaid four upon these answers were condemned by the bishop of Dover the 25th day of June, 1555.
AND being delivered to the secular power, they were all four burnt together at Canterbury the 12th of July, at two several stakes, but in one fire, where they in sight of God and of his angels, and before men, like true soldiers of Jesus Christ, gave a constant testimony to the truth of the gospel.
Mr. NICHOLAS SHETERDEN'S Prayer before his Death.
O Lord my God and Saviour, who art Lord in heaven and earth, maker of all things visible and invisible, I am the creature and work of thy hands; Lord God, look upon me and other thy [Page 719] people, who at this time are oppressed by the worldly-minded for thy law's sake; yea, Lord, thy law itself is now trodden under foot, and men's inventions exalted above it, and for that cause do I, and many thy creatures, refuse the glory, praise, and conveniences of this life, and do chuse to suffer adversity, and to be banished, yea, to be burnt with the books of thy word, for the hope's sake that is in store. For, Lord, thou knowest, if we would but seem to please men in things contrary to thy word, we might by their permission enjoy these advantages that others do, as wife, children, goods, and friends, all which I acknowledge to be thy gifts, given to the end that I may serve thee. And now, Lord, that the world will not suffer me to enjoy them, except I offend thy laws, behold I give unto thee my whole spirit, soul, and body; and lo, I leave here all the pleasures of this life, and do now leave the use of them for the hope's sake of eternal life purchased in Christ's blood, and promised to all them that fight on his side, and are content to suffer with him for his truth, whensoever the world and the devil shall persecute the same.
O Father, I do not presume to come unto thee trusting in mine own righteousness; no, but only in the merits of thy dear Son my Saviour. For which excellent gift of salvation I cannot worthily praise thee, neither is my sacrifice worthy, or to be accepted with thee, in comparison of our bodies mortified, and obedient unto thy will: and now, Lord, whatsoever rebellion hath been, or is found in my members against thy will, yet do I here give my body to death, rather [...]han I will use any strange worshipping, which I beseech thee accept at my hand for a pure sacrifice: let this torment be to me the last enemy destroyed, even death, the end of misery, and the beginning of [...] ▪ peace, and solace: and when the time of resurrection cometh, then let me enjoy again these members glorified, which now be spoiled and consumed by the fire. O Lord Jesus receive my spirit into thy hands. Amen.
LTTER I. From Mr. SHETERDEN to his MOTHER.
AFTER my humble and bounden duty remembered, well-beloved mother, this shall be to with you increase of grace and godly wisdom, that you may see and perceive the crafty bewitching of Satan our mortal enemy, who as I have divers times declared unto you, doth not openly shew himself in his own likeness, but under a colour of devotion deceiveth them that keep not a diligent eye upon him; but having confidence in men's traditions and customs of the world, leaving the commandments of God and testament of his Son Christ Jesus our Lord, do grow more into superstition and hypocrisy, than into wisdom and true holiness. For this is most true, that Satan, the enemy of Souls, doth by his ministers make many believe, that those things which they compel us unto for their bellies' sake, have many godly significations, although they be most contrary to God's will, as doubtless they be, even as the serpent did in paradise to our first mother Eve. What, said he, hath God commanded you shall not eat of the trees in the garden? The woman said, of the fruits of the trees in the garden we may eat: but of the tree in the midst of the garden, said God, see ye eat not, left ye die." Even so our ministers now-a-days, say, Hath God commanded you shall not make you any image or likeness of any thing? Yea, forsooth. Tush, say they, what harm can they do? May we not remember God the better, when we see his image or picture? For they are good books for the lay-men; but indeed they be better for the priests, because they receive the offerings.
AND look how truly the promise of the serpent was kept with Eve, so is the persuasion of our priests found true with us. For as Adam and Eve did become like God in knowing good and evil, so are we in remembering God by his image. For Adam's eyes were so open, that he lost both innocency and righteousness, and was become the most miserable of all creatures: and even we remember Christ so well by images that we forget his commandments, and count his testament, confirmed in his blood, for stark madness or heresy; so miserably have we remembered him, that of all people we are most blind: and this doth follow upon our presumption, when we remember God by breaking his law; and therefore surely except we repent, shortly God will remember us with his plagues, as sure as there is a God it will come to pass.
BUT (I thank God) I know their craftiness herein, who will say, Where went he to school? Is he wiser than our great doctors that studied all their lives? And lo, they say that it is good hay; although we smell it musty ourselves, yet we must believe it sweet, and then pay them well for their so saying, and all is safe. But I might say again, What, sir, be you wiser than Christ, and God his Father, and the Holy Ghost? What, wiser than the prophets, and the holy apostles, and all the holy martyrs? I pray you, sir, where had you your high learning? Is it higher than God (being in heaven) is able to teach, or have you set it lower in hell, than ever Christ durst to venture? For methinks it is some strange learning, that Christ and his apostles could never attain to the knowledge of it. But vain men are [Page 720] never without some shift: for peradventure they will not be ashamed to say, that Christ coming on his Father's message, did forget half his errand by the way: for I dare say, that the greater half of their ceremonies were never commanded by Christ▪ yea, I doubt it would be hard to find one in the church, perfectly as he left: so Romishly hath Antichrist turned the church upside down for lucre's sake.
BELOVED mother, as I have oftentimes said unto you, even so now I beseech you from my very heart in Christ, to consider your own soul's health is offered to you, do not cast it off: we have not long time here. Why should we deceive ourselves either for ease of our flesh, or for gaining the treasures of this world: I know that some will say to you, Why should we condemn our fathers who lived thus? God forbid that we should condemn any that did according to their knowledge. But let us take heed that they condemn not us, for if they heard the word as we have, and had been warned as we have been, it is to be thought that they would more thankfully have received it than we do: yea, they were more faithful in what they knew, than many now are. Therefore they shall be our condemnation, if we do not embrace this grace that is now offered to us. And surely look how many of them God will accept and save, those shall we never see, nor have any part among them; for our disobedience is greater than was their ignorance. Wherefore if we will meet our fathers in bliss and joy, let us not refuse his mercy offered to us more largely than to them, even according to Christ's promise, which said, after such great ignorance as to seek him from country to country, and find him not; yet shall the gospel, saith he, be preached in all the world, and then shall the end come.
AND now let us know the time of our visitation, and not turn back again, seeing we are once delivered: for surely God will not bear it at our hands to turn backward. O remember Lot's wife. God must needs punish our backsliding, either with induration and hardness of heart, so that they shall persecute his church and his true servants, or else reward it with open vengeance and plagues. And therefore, good mother, accept this my simple letter as a fruit of my love and obedience to you. Would God we might be so knit in faith and trust in God's word and promises here in this life, as we might together enjoy the bliss and consolation of eternal life; which I desire and seek above all worldly treasure, as you partly know. If I would seek the good will of men contrary to my conscience, I could make some my friends which now peradventure are jealous over me amiss. But thank God, let them weigh the matter between God and their consciences, and they have no just cause so to do. Nevertheless I wish they would yet refrain, and put their matter and mine into the ballance of God's most holy word, there to be weighed by the mind of the Holy Ghost, expressed unto us by the holy patriarchs and prophets, and Jesus Christ our only Saviour and mediator, and by his holy apostles, and then I doubt not but our matter shall be ended with peace and joyfulness of heart; which God grant us for his mercy sake. Amen.
LETTER II. To his Brother WALTER SHETERDEN.
I Wish you health in Christ, true knowledge of his word, and a faithful heart unto the same. It is shewed me▪ my brother, that you desired me by a letter made to a friend of your's to persuade me to be ruled by my uncle, who saith, he will bestow his goods very largely upon me, if I would not stand too high in mine own conceit. But, my good brother, I hope you do not judge so evil of me, that I should have a faith to sell for money. For though he or you were able to give me the treasure of the whole country, yet I thank my Lord God, I do judge it but an heap of dung, in respect of the treasure hid within; yet I do esteem a buckle of your shoe, if it come in good will. And for [...] be counselled and ruled by him or you, or any other of my friends, I do not, neither have refused it, if they require [...] more of me than what is in my power, and that which belongeth to a mortal man. But if they require of me any thing which appertaineth to God d [...]ly, there is neither high or low, friend or foe, that shall g [...]t it from me, nor yet [...] angels in heaven.
FOR though I be not learned, (as the vain men of the world call learning) yet thanks be to God, I have learned out of God's book to know him from his creatures, and Christ from his sacraments, and to make a difference between the merits of Christ's passion and his supper, and a difference between the water of baptism and the Holy Ghost, and not mix and mingle all things confusedly together: so that if one ask me a question or a reason of my faith, I must say thus, I believe as the holy church believe [...] ▪ if he ask me what is the order of that faith, I should be so ignorant that I could not discern God from his creatures, nor Christ from his sacraments. If I should so monstro [...]sly utter my faith, that I were not able to judge between Christ's birth and his burial [...] nor, which were first, of his mortification, and his glorification, who would believe that my [...]aith were sound?
FOR some do affirm that Christ did not give to his apostles a mortal and a passable body, but an immortal and g [...] [...]rified body, so that he should have a glorified body before his death, and so his glorification was before his resurrection; and that he was risen before he was crucified, and crucified before his baptism; and then they may as well say he was baptized before his birth, and born before he was conceived, and conceived before he was promised, and that were even right Antichrist to turn all things backward, and [Page 721] then say, O you must believe, for God is mighty, he can do all things, &c. Truth it is, that God is almighty indeed, and yet I may not believe thing [...] contrary to his word, that Christ's body was glorified before he died: for God's omnipotency doth not stand in things contrary to his will, but in performing his will at his pleasure in time. N [...]ither doth he require of us to judge or believe of his almighty power, that he hath made the end of the world to come before the beginning, or yet the fruit to come before the blossom, and yet he is nevertheless almighty.
BUT if peradventure you shall think with yourself, Why, they are learned; it were marvel but they should know what is the truth, as well as others which never kept any such study, &c. To that I answer, that if they had studied God's word, the author of truth, as they have done logic, and Du [...], with the legend of lies, they should have been as expert in the truth, as they now be in b [...]ld reasons. But thus hath God fulfilled his promise, that such should be deluded with lies, who would not believe nor walk in his truth.
AND again, this is a good cause to make us think surely, that it was the cause that God gave them over at the [...] [...]rror, after the apostles time by little, as they grew in sin. For seeing we had his truth now among us a few y [...]rs, because we did not obey it, we see what a sudden change God hath brought upon us, for the sake of our sins. And why should we not think that this and such like disobedience was the cause that God took his word from all Christendom at the first, and cast a darkness upon all them that would not walk in his light? For it is evident enough to see how unlike their doings be to Christ and his apostles: and that seen, either we must judge Christ' [...] doings very [...]ender, and their's good, or else that they be indeed the very Antichrists, who should come and turn all things out of frame. Thus I have been bold to trouble you, which I hope will not be altogether in vain. Pray for me, as I do for you.
LETTER III. From Mr. SHETERDEN to his WIFE.
I Wrote unto you as one that longed more to hear of your health, than of all worldly treasure, willing you to intreat Esau the elder brother by nature gently, gi [...]ng to him his own, yea, and offer him one of the droves, and say they be Jacob's, and are a present for my lord Esau, but he will not take it, &c. Now my beloved, you know the blessing of our Father is, that the elder shall serve the younger, and wisdom, our mother, hath taught us the same, and I know you do complain of your servant the flesh, that he is rebellious, disobedient, and untoward; unruly and crookedly you think he doth his service: but yet behold, how shall you plead your cause before an indifferent judge? For if it be true that his service be not according to his duty, as it is many times found in servants; yet, I say, can you shew your cause to no indifferent judge, but he shall object against you that he is not kept like a servant, but he lacketh both meat and and drink, and other necessaries meet and due for a servant: so shall you take more shame of your own complaint than remedy or advantage against your servant, and it shall be a cloak for him to hide all his rebellion and u [...]oward service because you have misused him.
AND therefore my sentence is, that you patiently bear with him in small faults, and amend your own great faults, as oppression, cruelty, and covetousness, requiring more than a servant can do, especially being tired with labour, starved with [...]unger, and l [...]ed with stripes. And these things amended, if he do his service negligently, (as no doubt sometimes he will) yet then you may boldly correct him with discretion, and sometimes if he do not his task, you make him go to bed supperless: but yet beat him not with durable strokes, neither with-hold his meat in due time, and pinch him not by the belly continually, but let him have something to joy in: only watch him, and keep him from doing of harm. Though he be but a stranger in the life that is in God; yet be good to strangers, for we are all strangers in darkness, and captives in sin, as well soul and spirit, being in Egypt, as now the [...]esh is yet unbaptized with the terrible red sea of death, and remember that one law abideth for the stranger, I mean one reward abideth for body and soul in the land of everlasting rest. And therefore intreat him gently, and deal with him justly now; for the time will come that the yoke of bondage shall be taken from his neck, and he shall be a fellow-heir with your younger brother.
CIRCUMCISE him therefore, but do not misuse him, nor keep him from his own, but deal mercifully with the stranger, that he may say, Oh of what understanding heart i [...] this people: who hath God? or where is God so nigh as to these? God make you wise and politic in heart, victorious in the field of this world, to rule the nations with a rod: but kill not the Gibeonites, with whom peace is taken; but let them draw water, and hew wood, but give them their meat and drink due for labourers, and be glad because your disease is so remedied; for it is better and easier for a labouring man to drink, than for a drunken man to tell a sober tale. Yea, it is a token that you have earnestly followed your labour, and not kept company with drunkards and belly-gods; and therefore be glad, I say, yea, and be glad again, for great is your reward in heaven; yea, blessed shall they be, that in this your [...] shall meet you, and withdraw your [...]and from revenging [Page 722] yourself upon that churlish Nabal: which thing I hope to do now with these sweet raisins, and frails of figs, I being of one house with your servant Nabal, I dare say to you that churlishness is his name: but revenge not, for the lord shall do it in his due time. Farewel mine own heart.
THE next day after the condemnation of these aforesaid, which was the 26th day of July, W. Coker, W. Hopper, of Crambrooke, Henry Laurence, Richard Wright, of Ashford, and W. Stere, of Ashford, were lik [...]se condemned for the same articles. But because the execution of these martyrs pertaineth not to this month, more shall be said of them when we come to the following month of August.
A brief Account of NICHOLAS HALL and CHRISTOPHER WAID.
THE same month of July, Nicholas Hall, bricklayer, and Christopher Waid, of Dartford, suffered death, who were condemned by Maurice bishop of Rochester about the last day of June. The six articles administered to them were of the same ordinary course and effect with the other articles above specified, the brief sum whereof were these.
1. FIRST, That they were christian men and professed the catholic determinations of our holy mother church.
2. THAT they which maintain or hold otherwise than our holy mother the catholic church doth, are heretics.
3. THAT they hold and maintain, that in the sacrament of the altar, under the forms of bread and wine, is not the very body and blood of Christ. And that the said very body of Christ is verily in heaven only, and not in the sacrament.
4. THAT they have and do hold and maintain, that the mass, as it is now used in the catholic church, is naught and abominable.
5. THAT they have been, and be amongst the people of that jurisdiction vehemently suspected upon the premises, and thereupon indicted, &c.
TO these articles they answered as follows: [...] Granting themselves christian men, and ackn [...] ledging the determination of the holy church, [...] is, of the congregation or body of Christ; save that Hall denied to call the catholic and apostolic church his mother, because he found not this word Mother in the scriptures.
TO the second they granted. To the third a [...] cle as touching the very body and blood of [...] to be under the forms of bread and wine in s [...] stance they would not grant, only affirming the very body of him to be in heaven, and the sacrament [...] be a token or remembrance of Christ's death; [...] cholas Hall adding moreover, and saying, Th [...] whereas before he held the sacrament to be only [...] token or remembrance of Christ's death, now [...] said, that there is neither token nor remembr [...] ▪ because it is now misused and clean turned from Christ's institution, &c. And concerning the [...] in the fourth article, to be abominable, Christop [...] Wa [...]d, with the other, answered, that as they [...] confussed before, so they would not now go [...] what they had said. To the fifth article, for the people's suspicion they made no great account [...] sticking to grant the same.
AND thus much concerning the articles and [...] swers of these good men. Which being recei [...] immedia [...]ely sentence of condemnation was [...] by the sai [...] [...] the bishop against them the copy of which sentence as it runneth much af [...] the common course in condemning all the other servants of Christ▪ so the same being exempli [...] before, needeth not here to be repeated. Nichol [...] Hall was burnt at Rochester about the 19th [...] of July.
FURTHERMORE, with the aforesaid Hall and [...] in the same month of July, three others were condemned by Maurice bishop of Rochester, wh [...]e names were Jo [...]n Beach, widow, John Harpol, of Rochester, and Margery Polley. Of which Margery Polley, touching her examination and [...] demnation here followeth an account.
Condemnation of MARGERY POLLEY, Widow and Martyr.
MARGERY POLLEY, widow, sometime wife of Richard Polley of Pepingbery, was accused and brought before the said Maurice bishop of Rochester, about the beginning of the month of June. Which bishop, according to the pontifical solemnity of that church, rising up out of the chair of his majesty, in the high swelling stile after his ordinary manner to dash the silly poor woman, began in these words▪
"WE Maurice, by the sufferance of God▪ bishop of Rochester, proceeding of our mere office in a cause of heresy, against thee Margery Polley, of the parish of Pepingbery, of our diocese and jurisdiction of Rochester, do lay and object against thee all and singula [...] these articles ensuing To which, and to every parcel of them, we require of thee a true, full, and plain answer, by virtue of thine oath thereupon to be given," &c.
THUS the oath being first administered, and the articles commenced against her, which articles were the same that were ministered to Nicholas Hall and Waid before, she so framed her answers again, especially answering to the third and fourth article, that she neither allowed the deity of their sacrament, nor the absurdity of their mass. For which sentence was read against her about the beginning of June, and she condemned for the same. But because her death followed no [...] upon the same, we will therefore defer the transaction thereof to the due place and time, first setting down in order of history the execution of Christopher Waid before mentioned.
The Martyrdom of CHRISTOPHER WAID.
CHRISTOPHER WAID, of Dartford in the county of Kent, linen-weaver, was condemned, by Maurice bishop of Rochester, and appointed to be burnt at Dartford aforesaid. At the day appointed for his execution, which was in the month of July, there was carried out of town betimes in the morning in a cart, a stake, and therewith many bundles of reeds, to a place a quarter of a mile out of town, ca [...]ed the Brimth, into a gravel-pit thereby, the common place for the execution of felons. Thither also was brought a load of broom faggots, with other faggots and tall wood. Unto which place the people of the country resorted in great numbers, and there waited his coming; insomuch that divers fruiterers came thither with horse loads of cherries, and sold them. About ten o'clock the sheriff came riding with a great many other gentlemen and retinue, appointed to assist him therein, and with them Christopher Waid, Margery Polley, of Tunbridge, riding pinioned by him, both singing of a psalm; which Margery, as soon as she espied afar off the multitude gathered about the place where they should suffer, waiting their coming [...] she said unto Waid very loud and chearfully. You may rejoice, to see such a company gathered to celebrate your marriage this day.
AND so passing by the place, which joined to the high-way, they were straightway carried down to the town, where she was kept till the sheriff returned from Waid's execution. Mr. Waid being made ready, and stripped of his cloaths in an inn, a fair long white shirt was brought unto him from his wife, which being put on, and he pinioned, was led on foot again to the aforesaid place. When he was come to the stake, he took it in his arms, and ki [...]ed it, setting his back unto it, and standing in a pitch barrel which was ta [...]en from the beacon, being hard by; then a smith brought a hoop of iron, and with two staples made him fast to the [...]take under his arms.
AS soon as he was thus settled, with his eyes and hands lifted up to heaven, he spake with a chearful and loud voice the last verse of the 86th Psalm: "Shew some good token upon me, O Lord, that they which hate me may see it, and be ashamed: because thou, Lord, hast helped me, and comforted me." Near to the stake was a little hill, upon the top whereof were set up four stays, quadrangle-wise, with a covering round about like a pulpit: into which place as Waid was thus praying at the stake, entered a friar with a book in his hand; whom when Waid espied, he cried earnestly unto the people, to take heed of the doctrine of the whore of Babylon, exhorting them to embrace the doctrine of the gospel preached in king Edward's days. While he was thus speaking to the people, the sheriff interrupted him, saying, Be quiet, Waid, and die patiently. I am quiet, said he, I thank God, [Page 724] Mr. Sheriff, and so trust to die. All this while the friar stood still looking over the coverlet, as though he would have uttered somewhat: but Waid mightily admonished the people to beware of that doctrine; which when the friar perceived, whether he was amazed, or could have no audience of the people, he withdrew out of the place immediately, without speaking any word, and went away down to the town. Then the reeds being set about him, he pulled them, and embraced them in his arms, always with his hands making a hole against his face, that his voice might be heard, which his tormentors perceiving, they [...]ast faggots at the same hole; but notwithstanding he still, as he could, put them off, his face being hurt with the end of a faggot cast thereat. Then fire being put unto him, he cried unto God often, Lord Jesus receive my soul; without any token or sign of impatience in the fire, till at length after the fire was thoroughly kindled, he was heard by no man to speak, still holding up his hands together over his head towards heaven, even when he was dead and altogether roasted, as though they had been stayed up with [...] prop standing under them.
THIS sign did God shew upon him, whereby his very enemies might perceive, that God had, according to his prayer, shewed such a token upon him, even to their shame and confusion. And thus was the order of this godly martyr's execution, this was his end. Whereby God seemed to confound and strike with the spirit of dumbness the friar, that locust which was risen up to have spoken against him: and also no less wonderfully sustained those hands which he lifted up to him for comfort in his torment.
The Apprehension, Examination, Condemnation, and Burning of DIRICK CARVER, and JOHN LAUNDER, who suffered Martyrdom for the Testimony of the Gospel.
THE 22d day of July, Dirick Carver, late of the parish of Brighthel [...]stone in the county of Sussex, was burnt at Lewes in the said county. And the day following John Launder, late of Godstone in the county of Surry, was burnt at Stening. These two men were, with others, about the l [...]tter end of the month of October, in the year 1554, apprehended by Edward Gage, gentleman, as they were at prayers in the dwelling-house of the [...] Dirick, and by him were sent-up to the quee [...]'s council, who, after examination, sent them as prisoners to Newgate, there to attend the leisure of Bonner bishop of London. From whence (upon the bishop's receipt of a letter from the Lord [...] quis of Winchester, now lord treasurer) they [...] brought by the keeper of the prison on the 8th of June next after into the bishop's chamber at [...] house in London; and there, being examined upon divers points of religion, they made their [...] confessions, subscribing and signing them with their own hands: which being read, the bishop obj [...] to them certain other articles, causing them to [...] truly and directly their answers thereunto; [...] articles they confessed to be true, referring [...] selves chiefly to their former confessions.
THIS done, after long persuas [...]ons and fair [...] hortations, they were demanded whether they [...] stand to their answer [...] ▪ To wh [...]m Launder [...] will never go from these answers as long as I [...] The other also confirmed the same, and [...] they were commanded to appear again b [...]fo [...]e [...] bishop in the consistory at St. Paul's the tenth [...] of the same month. Which articles and confess [...] with the forementioned letter, do here ensue.
A LETTER From the Marquis of WINCHESTER, Lord Tre [...] ▪ to BONNER, Bishop of London, touching the [...] nation of the said Prisoners.
AFTER my right hearty commendation [...] your good lordship, I shall not forget [...] livery of black against this time; no more I [...] Mr. Dean, to whom I wrote to make the ser [...] who must now assuredly do it: for my lord of C [...]chester cannot attend it. To whom I have [...] like knowledge by my letter now sent: and you [...] lordship must command the sextons of your [...] to be in readiness for ringing in the time of ser [...] And if you be not furnished with black appa [...]el [...] the altar, and for the priest, deacon, and sub- [...] [Page 725] I must have knowledge thereof, that it may be taken of the queen's stuff, whereof I pray you let me be advertised.
AND you have sent Bradford to Newgate, as a man convicted of heresy before you; but I perceive you have not sent me a significavit, and therefore you must send one, that I may proceed with him, and that shall I do, as soon as I am answered by you.
THERE be divers like prisoners that came from Sussex, that be not yet examined before you, lying now in Newgate, who must be ex [...]ined by you, since they be come to London, and so I pray they may be, and I certified of your proceedings, that I may follow, which I shall do, thanking your lordship heartily for my conies, trusting to recompense your lordship again shortly with twice as many. From my house this 7th of June, 1555.
The Confession of DIRICK CARVER, before BONNER, Bishop of London.
DIRICK CARVER, beer-brewer, of Brighthelmstone, in the county of Sussex, where he hath dwelt about eight or nine years, born in the village of Dilson by Stockom, in the land of Luke, about forty years of age, and now prisoner in Newgate, wher [...] he hath remained and continued at the council's commandment, since Alhallows day last past, being examined concerning his faith and belief in the sacrament of the altar, saith, that he hath and doth believe [...] that the very substance of the body and blood of Christ is not in the said sacrament, and that there is no other substance remaining in the said sacrament after the words spoken by the priest, but only the substance of bread and wine.
ITEM, Being examined concerning the mass in Latin now used in the church of England, he believeth, that there is no sacrifice in the [...]ass, and that there is in it no salvation for a christian man, except it should be said in the mother tongue, that he might understand it; and concerning the ceremonies of the church, he saith and believeth, tha [...] they be not profitable to a christian man.
ITEM, Being examined concerning auricular confession, he answereth, That he hath believed, and doth believe, that it is necessary to go to a good priest for good counsel; but the absolution of the priest, laying his hand upon any man's head, as is now used, is nothing profitable to a christian man's salvation. And further he saith, that he hath not been confessed, nor received the sacrament of the altar, since the coronation of the queen that now is.
ITEM, Concerning the faith and religion now taug [...], set forth, and believed in the church of England, he answereth and believeth, that the faith and doctrine now taught, set forth, and used in the said church of England, is not agreeable to God's word. And furthermore he saith, that bishop Hooper, Cardmaker, Rogers, and others of their opinion, who were lately burnt, were good christian men, and preached the true doctrine of Christ, as he believeth; and saith, that they shed their blood in the same doctrine, which was by the power of God, as he saith and believeth.
AND further being examined, he saith, That since the queen's coronation, he hath had the bible and psalter read in his house at Brighthelmstone divers times, and likewise since his coming to Newgate: but the keeper hearing thereof, took them away; and also said, about a twelvemonth ago, he had the English pr [...]cession said in his house, with other English prayers. And further said, That Thomas Iveson, John Launder, and William Vesi [...], being prisoners with him in Newgate, were taken with this examinate in his house at Brighthelmstone, as they were hearing the gospel then read in English, a little before Alhallows-day last, and brought into the court: and being examined thereupon by the council, were committed by them to prison in Newgate.
The Confession of JOHN LAUNDER, before BONNER, Bishop of London.
JOHN LAUNDER, of the parish of Godstone, in the county of Surry, husbandman, aged 25 [...], born at Godstone aforesaid, being examined, doth confess and say, That about two days before last Alhallow-tide, this examinate and one Dirick Carve [...], Thomas Iveson, William Vesi [...], with divers [Page 726] other persons, to the number of twelve, (being all together at their prayers, saying the service in English, set forth in the time of king Edward the Sixth, in the house of the said Dirick Carver, situated [...] Brighthelmstone in Sussex) were apprehended by one Mr▪ Gage, and by him sent up to London to the king and queen's council▪ and by then (upon his examination) committed to Newgate, where he and his said fellows have ever since remained.
AND further being examined, he doth confess and say, that the occasion of his coming to the said Brighthelmstone, was upon some business there to be done for his father: and so being there, and hearing that the said Dirick was a man that did much favour the gospel, this examinate did resort to his house and company, whom before that time he did never see or know, and by reason of that his resort he was apprehended as before. And further doth confess and believe, that there is here on earth one whole and universal catholic church, whereof the members be dispersed through the world; and doth believe also, that the same church doth set forth and teach only two sacraments, namely, the sacrament of baptism, and the sacrament of the supper of our Lord. And whosoever doth teach or use any more sacraments, or yet any ceremonies, he doth not believe that they be of the catholic church, but doth abhor them from the bottom of his heart. And doth further say and believe, that all the service, sacrifices and ceremonies, now used in this realm of England (yea, and in all other parts of the world, which have been used after the same manner) be erroneous and naught, and contrary to Christ's institution, and the determination of Christ's catholic church, whereof he believeth that he himself is a member.
ALSO he do [...]h confess and believe, that in the sacrament, now called the sacrament of the altar, there is not really and truly contained▪ under the forms of bread and wine, the very natural body and blood of Christ in substance: but his belief and faith therein is as followeth, to wit, That when he doth receive the material bread and wine, he doth receive the same in a remembrance of Christ's death and passion; and so receiving it, he doth eat and drink Christ's body and blood by faith, and none oth [...] ways as he believeth.
AND moreover he doth confess, say, and believe, that the mass now used in the realm of England, or elsewhere in all Christendom, is naught and abominable, and directly against God's word, and his catholic church; and that there is nothing said or used in it good and profitable. For he saith that albeit the Gloria in excel [...]is, the creed, Sanc [...] Parer-noster, Agnus, and other parts of the mass, be of themselves good and profitable, yet the [...] being used amongst other things that be naught and superfluous in the mass, the same good things [...] become naught also, as he believeth.
ALSO he doth believe and confess, that auri [...] lar confession is not necessary to be made to any priest, or to any other creature, but every [...] ought to confess his sins only to God; and [...] that no man hath any authority to absolve any [...] from his sins; and also believeth, that the right and true way (according to the scripture) after a [...] hath fallen from grace to sin, to arise to Christ [...] gain, is to be sorry for his offences, and to do the same or the like no more; and not to make any auricular confession of them to the priest, or [...] take absolution of them at the priest's hands. A [...] which his said opinions he hath believed these seven or eight years past, and in that time hath div [...] times openly argued and defended the same, a [...] he saith, &c.
UPON Monday, being the 10th day of [...] these two persons with others, were brought by the keeper unto the bishop's consistory▪ (as it [...] before commanded) at one o'clock in the afterno [...] ▪ where the bishop first beginning with the said Dirick Carver, caused his confession to be op [...]l [...] read unto him, asking him whether he would [...] to the same. To whom the said Dirick answered▪ that he would: for your doctrine, said he, is p [...] son and sorcery. If Christ were here, you would put him to a worse death than he was put to before.
YOU say that you can make a god; you can make a pudding as well. Your ceremonies in the church be beggary and poison. And further I say, [Page 727] that auricular confession is contrary to God's word, and very poison; with divers other such like words.
THE bishop seeing his constancy, and that neither his accustomed flatteries, nor yet his cruel threatenings could once move this good man to incline to their idolatry, pronounced his usual and general blessing▪ as well towards Dirick Carver, as also on the said John Launder, although severally; who remained as constant as the other: and therefore were both delivered to the sheriffs, who were there present, but afterwards were conveyed to the places above-named, and there most joyfully gave their bodies to be burned in the fire, and their souls into the hands of Almighty God, by Jesus Christ, who hath assured them to a better hope of life.
DIRICK CARVER was a man whom the Lord had blessed as well with temporal riches, as with his spiritual treasures; which were yet no clog or hindrance unto his professing of Christ, (God by his grace so working in him) of which there was such havock made by the greedy raveners of that time, that his poor wife and children had little thereof. During his imprisonment, although he was well stricken in years, (and, as it were, past the time of learning) yet he so diligently spent his time, being at his first apprehension utterly ignorant of any letter of a book, he could before his death perfectly read any printed English. His zeal and industry i [...] worthy of no small commendation, and therefore I thought good not to pass over it in silence▪ but is recommended for the good example and encouragement of others.
MOREOVER, at his coming into the town of Lewes to be burnt, the people called to him, bes [...]ching God to strengthen him in the faith of Jesus Christ. He thanked them, and prayed to God that of his mercy he would strengthen them in the like faith. And when he come to the sign of the Star, the people f [...]ocked about him, where the sheriff said, that he had found him a faithful man in all his answers. And as he came to the stake, he kneeled down and said his prayers, and the sherif [...] made haste.
THEN his book was thrown into the barrel, and when he had stripped himself, (as a joyful servant of God) he went into the barrel himself. And as soon as ever he came in, he took the book and threw it among the people, and then the sheriff commanded in the name of the king and queen, on pain of death, to throw in the book again. And immediately the holy martyr began to speak with a joyful voice, saying:
DEAR brethren and sisters, I call on you all to witness, that I come to seal Christ's gospel with my blood, because I know that it is true: it is well known to you all, that it hath been truly preached here in Lewes, and in all places of England, and now it is not. And because I will not deny God's gospel, and be obedient to man's laws, I am condemned to die. Dear brethren and sisters, as many of you as do believe in the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, unto everlasting life, see you do the works appertaining to the same. And as many of you as do believe in the pope of Rome and his laws, which he sets forth in these days, you do believe to your utter condemnation, and, except the infinite mercy of God prevent it, you shall burn in the eternal flames of hell.
IMMEDIATELY the sheriff spake unto him, and said, If thou dost not believe on the pope, thou art damned body and soul. And further the sheriff said unto him, Speak to thy God, that he may deliver thee now, or else to strike me down, to the example of this people; but this pious man said, The Lord forgive you your sayings.
AND then he spake again to all the people there present with a loud voice, saying, Dear brethren, and all you whom I have offended in words or in deed, I ask you for the Lord's sake to forgive me, and I heartily forgive all you who have offended me in thought, word, or deed. And he said further in his prayer, O Lord my God, thou hast written, "He that will not forsake wife, children, house, and every thing that he hath, and take up thy cross and follow thee, is not worthy of thee." But thou, Lord, knowest that I have forsaken all to come unto thee: Lord have mercy upon me, for unto thee I commend my spirit; and my soul [Page 728] doth rejoice in thee. These were the last words of that faithful servant of Christ, before the fire was put to him. And when the fire came to him, he cried, O Lord, have mercy upon me, and sprung up in the fire▪ calling upon the name of Jesus, and so he ended his life.
An Account of THOMAS IVESON, Martyr.
THOMAS IVESON, of Godstone in the county of S [...]rry, carp [...]nter, wa [...] burnt about the same mouth at Chichester: wh [...] apprehension, examination, and condemnation, (forasmuch as it was at the same time, and in the same form with Dirick Carver's and John Launder's) I here omit, referring the reader to their history and process before-mentioned, except only this his separate confession and private answers made before bishop Bonner at his last examination in the cons [...]story, I thought not to omit, who being examined upon the aforesaid articles, answereth.
The Answers of THOMAS IVESON, to the Objections of BONNER, Bishop of London, in a Chamber as his House, in the Month of July.
FIRST, That I believed, that there is but one catholic, universal, and whole church of Christ both through the whole world, which hath held, and hold the true faith, and all the necessary articles of christian belief, and all the sacraments of Christ, with the true use and administration o [...] the same.
2. ITEM, That he is necessarily bounden to believe and give credit, in all the said faith, articles of the belief, religion, and the sacraments of Christ, and the administration of the same.
3. ITEM, That the faith, religion, and administration of sacraments, which now is believed, used, taught, and set sorth in this our church of England, is not agreeing with the true faith of Christ, nor with the faith of the said catholic and universal church of Christ.
4. ITEM, Concerning the sacrament of the altar, he believeth that it is a very idol, and detes [...] before God, as it is now administered.
5. ITEM, That the mass is naught, and not of the invention of Christ, but that it is of man's invention: and being demanded, whether any [...] used in the mass be good, he said that he [...] answer no further.
6. ITEM, That he had not received the sacrament of the altar since it had been administered [...] now it is in England, neither was confessed a [...] [...] time within these seven years; nor heard mas [...] [...] the same space.
7. ITEM, That auricular confession is not [...] sary to be made to a priest; for he cannot forgi [...] ▪ nor absolve him from sins.
8. ITEM, Concerning the sacrament of [...] that it is a sign and token of Christ, as [...] was, and no otherwise; and he believeth [...] sins are not washed away thereby, but his [...] only washed; for his sins be washed away only by Christ's blood.
9. ITEM, That there be in the catholic [...] of Christ only two sacraments, that is to say, [...] sacrament of baptism, and the sacrament of [...] supper of the Lord, and no more, which [...] rightly used at this present time in England, [...] therefore be unprofitable.
10. ITEM, he believeth that all the cerem [...] now used in the church of England, are vain, [...] perfluous, superstitious, and naught.
FURTHERMORE, the s [...]d Iveson being [...] persuaded to recant, said in this wise, I would [...] recant and forsake my opinion and belief for [...] goods in London: I do appeal to God's [...] and will be none of your church, nor submit my self to the same: and that I have said, I will [...] again, And if there came an angel from [...] to teach me any other doctrine than that which I am now in, I would not believe him. Which answer thus made, he was condemned as an [...] and with the same persons was committed to the secular power, as they term it, and at the place [Page 729] above mentioned was burned, persevering still in his constant faith unto the end.
An Account of JOHN ALEWORTH, who died in Prison.
IN the latter end of the month of July, John Aleworth died in prison at the town of Reading, being there in bonds for the testimony of the gospel. Whom although the catholic prelates (according to their usual solemnity) excluded out of their catholic burial, yet we see no cause to exclude him out of the number of Christ's holy martyrs, and heirs of his holy kingdom.
An Account of JAMES ABBES, Martyr.
AMONG many that endeavoured in these troublesome days to keep a good conscience, there was one James Abbes, a young man, who was inforced to have his part with his brethren in wandering, and going from place to place, to avoid the peril of apprehension. But at length he was caught by the hands of wicked men, and brought before Dr. Hopkins, bishop of Norwich: who examining him of his religion, and charging him therewith both with threats and fair speeches, at last the said Jame Abbes did yield to their naughty persuasions, although his conscience consented not thereto.
NOW when he was dismissed, and should go from the bishop, the bishop calling him again, gave him a piece of money, either lx d. or xx d. whether I know not: which when the said James had received, and was gone from the bishop, his conscience began to throb, and inwardly to accuse his fact: in which combat with himself (being piteously vexed) he went immediately to the bishop again, and there threw him his said money which he had received at his hand, and said, he repented that he ever gave his consent to their wicked persuasions, and in taking of his money.
NOW this being done, the bishop with his chaplains laboured afresh to win him again, but in vain; for he would not yield to their persuasions, (altho' he had played Peter before through infirmity) but stood manfully in his master's quarrel to the end, and abode the force of the fire in the consuming of his body to ashes, which tyranny of burning was done in Bury, the second of August, 1555.
An Account of the Apprehension, Examination, and Condemnation of JOHN DENLEY, Gentleman, JOHN NEWMAN, and PATRICK PACKINGHAM.
IN the midst of this tempestuous rage of malignant adversaries, persecuting and destroying the poor flock of Christ, many there were, which tho' they were not spiritual men, yet thought to help forward for their parts, and as one would say, to heap up more coals to this furious flame of persecution, whether of a blind zeal, or a parasitical flattery, I know not. Amongst which was one Edmund Tyrel, Esq. and at that time a justice of the peace within the county of Essex, an assistant to the cruel murderers of God's saints: who as he came from the burning of som [...] pious martyrs, met with John Denley, gentleman, and John Newman, (both of Maidstone in Kent) travelling upon the way, and going to visit some of their friends in the said county of Essex. And upon the sight of them, as he bragged, apprehended them upon suspicion, and searched them; and finding the confessions of their faith about them in writing, sent them up unto the queen's commissioners, directing also unto one of the same commissioners these his favourable letters in their behalf: the copy whereof here followeth.
A LETTER From EDWARD TYREL, Esq. to one of the Queen's Commissioners.
SIR, with the most hearty commendation [...] unto you, these shall be to advertise you, that I have received a letter from Sir Nicholas Hare and you, and others of their majesties Commissioners, by a servant of the king and queen's, named John Failes, for certain business about S. Osythes, which I could not immediately go about, for that I had received a letter from the council, to assist the sheriff for the execution of the heretics, the one at Raleigh, [Page 730] and the other at Rochford, which was done on Tuesday last.
AND as I came homeward, I met with two men: even as I saw them, I suspected them, and then I did examine and search them, and found about them certain letters which I have sent you, and also a certain writing in paper, what their faith was. And they confessed to me, that they had forsaken and fled out of their country for religion's sake; and since they have been in many countries, by their own confession, which I have sent you: for which I thought it good, (as they came from London, and that there may be more found of them than at present I can inform you) to send them to you, whereby you and others of the king and queen's commissioners there might try them so that their lewdness might thoroughly be known; for I think these have caused many to trouble their consciences. So this hath been some hinderance to me, wherefore I could not go about those matters expressed in your letters: but to-morrow at noon I intend by God's grace to accomplish your letters, with as much diligence as I can. May the Holy Trinity ever have you in his keeping. I beseech you (master) to be so good as to discharge these poor men that bring these prisoners up, as soon as may be. And thus most heartily farewel. From Raimesdon-park the 12th day of June, 1555.
FORASMUCH as in this letter mention is made of a certain writing found about them, containing an account of their faith, the contents thereof here ensueth.
Certain NOTES collected and gathered out of the Scriptures by JOHN DENLEY, Gentleman, with a Confession of his Faith, touching the Sacrament of Christ's Body, and Blood, found in his Pocket at the Time of his Apprehension.
"Christ is in the sacrament, as he is where two or three are gathered together in his name."
THE difference of the doctrine between the faithful and the papists concerning the sacrament is, that the papists say, that Christ is corporally under, or in the forms of bread and wine; but the faithful say, that Christ is not there, neither corporally nor spiritually; but in them that worthily eat and drink the bread and wine, he is spiritually, but not corporally.
FOR figuratively he is in the bread and wine, and spiritually he is in them that worthily eat and drink the bread and wine; but really, carnally, and corporally he is only in heaven, from whence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead.
"My belief in the sacrament of the blessed body and blood of our Saviour Jesus Christ."
AS concerning the sacrament of the body and blood of our Saviour Jesus Christ, my belief is this, that the bread and wine is appointed unto a sacrament; and that after thanks be give [...] to God the Father, then it doth represent unto [...] the very body and blood of our Saviour Jesus Christ; not that the bread is the body, or the wi [...] the blood, but that I in faith do see that blessed body of our Saviour broken on the cross, and his precious blood plenteously shed for the redemption of my sins. Also in faith I hear him call us unto him, saying, "Come unto me all ye that lab [...] and are laden, and I will refresh you," Isa. lv. [...] Matth. xi. &c. In faith I come unto him, and I am refreshed, so that I believe that all that do come to the table of the Lord in this faith, fear and love, being sorry for their offences, intending earnestly [...] lead a godly conversation in this vale of misery, do receive the fruit of the death of Christ, which fruit is our salvation.
I do understand (spiritually) that as the outward man doth eat the material bread which comforteth the body, so doth the inward man (through faith) eat the body of Christ, believing that as the bread is broken, so was Christ's body broken on the cross for our sins: which comforteth our souls unto life everlasting; and signifying thereby, that even a [...] that bread was divided among them, so should his body and fruit of his passion be distributed unto as many as believed in his words. But the bread broken and eaten in the supper admonisheth, and putteth us in remembrance of his death, and so exciteth [Page 731] us to thanksgiving, to laud and praise God for the benefits of our redemption.
AND thus we there have Christ present, in the inward eye and sight of our faith we eat hi [...] body and drink his blood; that is, we believe surely that his body was crucified for our sins, and his blood shed for our salvation.
CHRIST'S body and blood are not contained in the sacramental bread and wine, as the papists have said, and as some yet do say, as ye read in these scriptures following: namely in Matth. ix.xxiv. and xxvi. Luke v.xxiii. and xxiv. Mark xvi. John xiii.xiv.xv.xvi. and xvii. Acts i.iii.vii. and ix. Rom. viii. Psal. viii. 1 Cor. x. and xi. Exod. xii. Coloss. i. Ephes. i. and iv. Phil. i. and ii. 1 Thess. i. and ix. Heb. i.v.viii.ix x. and xii. 1 Pet. iii. Psal. vi.xlvii.ciii. and x.
"Christ's material body is not in all places, as these scriptures do testify hereafter."
FIRST read St. Matthew the last, Luke the last, John xi.xx. and xxi. These places of the scripture do plainly declare, that his body that was born of the virgin Mary, cannot be in more places than one, and that is in heaven, on the right hand of God, and not in the sacrament, nor in all places, as the papists have affirmed, and yet do affirm.
THEREFORE whosoever they be that do worship the creatures of bread and wine, do commit idolatry, and make abominable idols of them, and take the glory from God, and give it to his creatures, which is contrary to the mind of God, as these scriptures do hereafter testify▪ namely Exod. xx.xxii.xxiii. and xxiv. Lev. xix. Deut. iv.vi. and xxxii. Psal. lxxx. Isai. xlv Mal. ii. Matth. iv. Luke iv. Acts xiv. Rev. xiv. Psal. xcviii. 1 Cor. i. Ephes. iv. 1 Tim. ii. 1 John v. Rev. xix. and xxii.
NOW to return to the commissioners again: they receiving these prisoners before-mentioned, after they saw they could little prevail with their own persuasions, sent them to bishop Bonner, to be handled after his fatherly and charitable discretion. Which how discreet and favourable i [...] was, the history of others, as well as the sequel of this doth manifestly declare. For the 28th of June then next following, he caused the said Denley and Newman, with one Patrick Packingham, to be brought into his chamber within his house or palace, there examining them upon their confessions (which Tyrel had found about them), objecting also unto them certain other articles of his own. To which they all answered in effect one thing, although Denley answered more largely than the others, and therefore I thought his answers sufficient to lay down, as containing the substance of all the rest, except that Packingham had one article of no great force objected to him, which the others had not.
THIS done, the bishop began with his accustomed persuasions; to whom Mr. D [...]ley replied, God save me from your counsel, and keep me in the mind I am now in, for what you count heresy I take to be the truth: and thereupon they were commanded to appear in the bishop's consistory the fifth day of July then next coming, in the afternoon, where these articles were objected against them.
ARTICLES objected by EDMUND BONNER, Bishop of London, against JOHN DENLEY, JOHN NEWMAN, and PATRICK PACKINGHAM, jointly and severally, the 28th of June, 1555.
FIRST, That the said Denley now is of the diocese of London, and the jurisdiction of the bishop of London.
Secondly, That the said Denley hath not believed, nor doth believe, that there is any catholic church of Christ here in earth.
Thirdly, That the said Denley hath not believed, nor doth believe, that this church of England is any part or member of the said catholic church.
Fourthly, That the said Denley hath believed and doth believe, that the mass now used in this realm of England is naught, and full of idolatry and evil, and plain against God's word, and therefore [...], the said Denley, hath not heard it, nor will hear it.
[Page 732] Fifthly, That the said Denley hath believed, and doth so believe, that auricular confession now used in this realm of England, is not good, but contrary to God's word.
Sixthly, That the said Denley hath believed, and doth so believe, that absolution given by the priest hearing confession, is not good, nor allowable by God's word, but contrary to the same.
Seventhly, That the said Denley hath believed, and doth so believe, that christening of children, as it is now used in the church of England, is not good, nor allowable by God's word, but against it: likewise confirming of children, giving of orders, saying of mattins and even-song, anointing of sick persons, making of holy bread and holy water, with the rest of the church.
Eighthly, That the said Denley hath believed, and doth so believe, that there are but two sacraments in Christ's catholic church, that is to say, the sacrament of baptism, and the sacrament of the altar.
Ninthly, That the said Denley hath believed, and doth so believe. that forasmuch as Christ is ascended up into heaven, therefore the very body of Christ is not in the sacrament of the altar.
Tenthly, That thou Patrick Packingham, now being of the age of twenty-one at least, being within the house of the bishop of London at St. Paul's, and by him brought to the great chapel to hear mass there, the said 23d day of June, in the year of our Lord, 1555, didst unreverently stand in the said chapel, having thy cap on thy head all the time of mass; and didst also refuse to receive holy water and holy bread at the hands of the priest, there contemning and despising both the mass, and the said holy water and holy bread.
ANSWERS to the foregoing ARTICLES.
TO the first article I answer, It is very true. To the second article I answer, That it is not true: for I believe the holy catholic church, which is built upon the foundation of the prophets and apostles, Christ being the head; which holy church is the congregation of faithful people d [...] persed through the whole world, which church doth truly preach God's holy word; and doth also administer the two sacraments, that is to say, baptism and the supper of the Lord, according to his blessed word.
TO the third article I answer, That I do believe that this church of England, using the faith and religion which is now used, is no part or member of the aforesaid catholic church, but is the church of Antichrist, the bishop of Rome being the [...] thereof: for it is plain, that they have altered the testament of God, and set up a testament of their own devising, full of blasphemy and lies: for Christ's testament is, that he would have all things done to the edifying of the people, as it appea [...] when he taught them to pray, Matth. vi. and [...] it appeareth by St. Paul, 1 Cor. xiv. for he [...] that "He that prophesieth, speaketh unto me [...] for their edifying, for their exhortation, and for their comfort; he that speaketh with the tongue, pro [...] eth himself; he that prophesieth, edifieth the c [...] gregation."
ALSO he saith, "Even so likewise when you [...] with tongues, except you speak words that have signification, how shall it be understood what is spoken▪ for you shall but speak in the air, that is as much as to say, in vain. Also he saith, Thou verily given thanks well, but the other is not edified. I thank my God, I speak with tongues more than you all▪ yet I had rather in the congregation to speak [...] words with understanding, to the information of others, than ten thousand words with the tongue. Also he saith, let all things be done to edification."
ALSO it is written in the xlvi. Psalm "For God is king of all the earth: O sing praises unto him with understanding," &c. So it doth appear that this church of England, now used. is not built up [...] Christ, if St. Paul's words be true, and also the Psalms; therefore this church is not built upon the prophets, apostles, nor Christ, as I have before declared.
TO the fourth article I answer, and I do believe (as I said before), That the mass now used in this [Page 733] realm of England, is naught, and abominable idolatry and blasphemy against God's holy word; for Christ in his holy supper instituted the sacrament of bread and wine to be eaten together in remembrance of his death till he come, and not to have them worshipped, and make an idol of them: for God will not be worshipped in his creatures, but we ought to give him praise for his creatures, which he hath created for us. For he saith in the second commandment, "Thou shalt not make to thyself any graven image, nor the likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or in the earth beneath, thou shalt not bow down to them, nor worship them." So it appeareth by this commandment, that we ought not to worship the sacrament of bread and wine, for it is plain idolatry; for he saith, No similitude; therefore, Thou shalt not bow down to them, nor worship them. I pray you what do you call kneeling down, holding up the hands, knocking of the breast, putting off the cap, and making courtesy, with other like superstition▪ You would make men to be so blind as to think that this is no worshipping.
PERADVENTURE you will object and say, You do not worship the bread and wine, but Christ's body, which was born of the virgin Mary, contained under the forms of bread and wine. But that is a very lie, for Christ's body which was born of the virgin Mary is in heaven, if St. Paul's words be true, as undoubtedly they are: for he saith in Heb. x. "But this man, after he had offered one sacrifice for sins, is set down for ever on the right hand of God, and from henceforth tarrieth till his foes be made his footstool."
ALSO in chap. ix. he saith, "For Christ is not entered into holy places made with hands, which are similitudes of true things, but he is entered into very heaven, to appear now in the sight of God for us," &c. Also Phil. iii. "But our conversation is in heaven, from whence we look for the Saviour, even the Lord Jesus Christ," &c. 1 Thess i. "For they themselves shew of you, what manner of entering in we had unto you, and how ye turned to God from images to serve the living God, and to look for his Son from heaven, whom he raised from the dead, even Jesus which delivered us from the wrath to come," &c. Also, John xvi. "I went out from the Father, and came into the world." Again, "I leave the world, and go to the Father," &c. John xvii. "Now I am not in the world, and they are in the world, and I come to thee." All these places of scripture, with many more, plainly prove to them that have ears to hear, that Christ's body which was born of the virgin Mary is in heaven, and not in the sacramental bread and wine; and therefore it is idolatry to worship them, &c.
TO the fifth article I answer, That I do believe (as I said before) that auricular confession is not good as it is now used. Touching my sins wherein I have offended God, I must seek to him for remission thereof, for our Saviour saith, in the xi. of St. Matt. "Come unto me all ye that labour and are laden, I will ease you," &c. The prodigal son, Luke xv. saith, "I will arise and go to my Father, and I will say unto him, Father, I have sinned against heaven, and before thee, and am no more worthy to be called thy son," &c. Psal. xxxi. "I said I will acknowledge mine offences, and accuse myself unto the Lord, and so thou forgivest the iniquity of my sin," &c. Job xiii. "But I will reprove mine own ways in his sight: he shall make me whole, and there may no hypocrite come before him." Syrach xxxiv. "Who can be cleansed of the▪ unclean?" And there were but one of the ten lepers that were cleansed, that came to Christ to give him thanks. He asked for the other nine. But if I have offended my neighbour, I must reconcile myself to him; and if I be a notorious sinner, after the first and second admonition, it ought to be declared to the congregation, and the minister of the congregation hath power by the word to excommunicate me, and I am to be taken as an heathen person, not for a day, or for forty days, but until such time as I do openly in the congregation acknowledge my fault, and then the minister hath power by the word to preach to me, or them, the remission of our sins in the blood of Jesus Christ, as it is written in the xiiith of the Acts of the Apostles, and Matthew xviii. I know no more of any other confession.
TO the sixth article, I the said John Denley have answered in the fifth.
TO the seventh article I answer, that as touching the sacrament of baptism, which is the christening of [Page 734] children, it is altered and changed, for St. John used nothing but the preaching of the word and the water, as it doth appear when Christ required to be baptized of him, and others also who came to John to be baptized, as it appeareth, Matth. iii. Mark i. Luke iii. and Acts viii. the chamberlain said, See here is the water, what hindereth me to be baptized? It appeareth here that Philip had preached unto him; for he said, Here is water. We do not read, that he asked for any cream, oil, or spittle, or conjured water, or conjured wax, or croysom, or salt, for it seemeth that Philip had preached no such things to him: for he would as well have asked for them as for water: and the water was not conjured, but even as it was before. Also Acts x. "Then answered Peter, Can any man forbid water, that these should no [...] be baptized?" &c. Acts xvi. "And Paul and Silas preached unto him the word of the Lord, and to all that were in his house: and he took them the same hour of the night, and washed their wounds, and so was he baptized, and all they of his houshold straightway," where you see nothing but preaching the word, and the water. The like is to be said of the rest of the ceremonies of your church.
TO the eighth article I answer shortly, that there be no more sacraments than two; baptism, and the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ, except you will make the rainbow a sacrament: for there is no sacrament but what hath a promise annexed to it.
TO the ninth article I answer you, That you have my mind written already: for it was found about me when I was taken: and you also know my mind in the fourth article, plainly expressed, concerning the bodily presence: for Christ's body is in heaven, and will not be contained in so small a piece of bread. And as the words which Christ spake are true indeed, so must they also be understood by other places of scripture which Christ spake himself, and also the apostles after him. And thus I make an end.
THE first day of the month of July, the said three prisoners were brought into the consistory in St. Paul's, where Bonner proceeded against them after the usual form and manner of law, reading [...]st their confessions, articles, and answers, and then temp [...] ing them sometimes with fair promi [...], at other times with threatenings, which indeed were generally his chief arguments and reasons. In the end, seeing their unmoveable constancy, upon the 5th of July he condemned them as heretics, and delivered them to the sheriffs of London, as to his common executioners, who kept them till they were commanded by writ to send them to their several places of suffering; and accordingly Mr. Denley was sent to Uxbridge, where he was burned on the 8th day of August; and being set in the fire, with the burning flames about him, he sung a psalm.
THEN cruel Dr. Story being there present, commanded one of the tormentors to throw a faggot at him, wherewith being so hurt that his face bled, he left singing, and clapt both his hands upon his face. Truly, said Dr. Story to him tha [...] hurled the faggot, thou hast marred a good old song.
YET notwithstanding all this, he put his hands abroad in the flames, and sung again, resigning his spirit into the hands of God, through his Son Jesus Christ.
AFTER the martyrdom of Mr. Denley at U [...] bridge, which was the 8th of August, Mr. Patrick Packing [...] ▪ also suffered at the same town, about the 28th of the said month. This Packingham was charged by Bonner, (as you heard before in the tenth article) for his behaviour in the bishop's chapel, who at the mass time there standing, would not pull off his cap, which was taken for a heinous offence. Packingham being much persuaded by Bonner to recant, protested in these words to the bishop▪ That the church he believed was no catholic church, but was the church of Satan, and therefore he would never turn to it, &c.
FURTHERMORE as concerning the other, which was John Newman, pewterer, at Maidstone in Kent, he was burnt the last day of August, at Saffronwalden, in the county of Essex, whose examination and confession of his faith and belief, for which he was cruelly persecuted and burnt▪ here followeth.
The Examination of Mr. JOHN NEWMAN.
JOHN NEWMAN, when apprehended, was first examined by Dr. Thornton, suffragan of Dover, at Tenterden. From thence he was carried to Bonner, and there condemned with Denley and Packingham. But because his examinations and answers came not then to my hands, I thought here in this place to bestow them, rather than they should be utterly suppressed. And first, what his answer was by writing to the said suffragan, after his apprehension, you shall hear by the tenor of his own words as follow:
IT may please you to understand, that for the space of all the time of the late king Edward's reign, we were diligently instructed with continual sermons, made by such men whose faith, wisdom, learning, and virtuous living, was commended unto all men under the king's hand and seal, and under the hands of all the council. These men taught diligently a long time, persuading us by the allegations of God's word, that there was no transubstantiation, or corporal presence in the sacrament. Their doctrine was not believed by us suddenly, but by their continual preaching, and also by our continual prayer unto God that we might never be deceived; but if it were true, that God would incline our hearts unto it; and if it were not true, that we might never believe. We weighed that they laboured with God's word, and we asked the advice of our friends, neither could we find that they preached false doctrine. We considered also, as we did learn, that the king's grace and his council, and the most part of the whole realm, believed as they taught, because no man preached the contrary. Also we know that the preachers were commanded by the king and laws of the realm, to preach unto us such doctrine [...]s was agreeable to the authority of God's word, and no other; and by their diligent setting of it forth by the king's commandment, and the consent of the whole council, and by the authority of the whole parliament, we embraced it, and received it as a very infallible truth, taught unto us for the space of seven years. Wherefore, until such time as our consciences are otherwise taught and instructed by God's word, we cannot with safeguard of our consciences take it, as many suppose at this time. And we trust in God that the queen's merciful highness, neither yet her most honourable council, will in a matter of faith use compulsion, or violence, because faith is the gift of God, and cometh not of man, neither of man's laws, nor at such time as men require it, but at such time as God giveth it.
The Examination and Answers of JOHN NEWMAN, before Dr. THORNTON and others.
FIRST one of the doctors began, whose name John Newman doth not express, asking in this wise.
How say you to this: "This is my body which i [...] given for you?"
It is a figurative speech, one thing spoken, and another meant; as Christ saith, "I am a vine, I am a door, I am a stone," &c. Is he therefore a material stone, a vine, or a door?
This is no figurative speech. For he saith, "This is my body which is given for you," and he saith not so of the stone, vine, or door; but that is a figurative speech.
Christ saith, "This cup is the New Testament in my blood." If you will have it so meant, then let them take and ea [...] the cup.
Nay, that is not so meant; for it is a common phrase of speech among ourselves: we say to our friend, drink a cup of drink, and yet we mean he should drink the drink in the cup.
Why, if you will have the one so understood, you must so understand the other.
Nay, it is a common use of speech, to say, drink a cup of ale or beer, and therefore it is no figurative speech.
The often using of a thing doth not make that thing otherwise than it is; but wheresoever any thing is spoke, and another meant, it is a figurative speech.
Well, we will not stand hereabout. How say you of the real presence? Is not Christ's natural body there that was born of the virgin Mary?
No, I do not so believe; neither can I so believe; for the soul of man doth not feed upon natural things as the body doth.
Why, how then doth it feed?
I think the soul of man doth feed as the angels in heaven, whose feeding is only the pleasure, joy, felicity, and delectation that they have of God: and so the soul of man doth feed and eat, through faith, the body of Christ.
Yea, but if the body do not feed upon natural things, the soul cannot continue with the body: therefore the body must needs feed upon natural things, that both may live together.
I grant it to be true: but yet the soul doth live otherwise than the body which doth perish: therefore natural things do but feed the body only. I pray you, what did Judas receive at the supper?
Marry, Judas did receive the very body of Christ, but it was to his damnation.
Why, was the devil entered into him before? Then he had the devil and Christ in him at one time.
Nay, the devil did not enter into him afterwards.
Yea, and before too: what, do you think he had but one devil? Nay, I think he had rather a legion of devils at the [...]atter end.
Well, suppose it to be so▪ what say you to that?
Marry, if Christ and the devil were both in Judas at once, I pray you how did they two agree together?
We grant that they were both in Judas at that time: for Christ may be where the devil is, if he will; but the devil cannot be where Christ is, except it please Christ.
Christ will not be in an unclean person that hath the devil.
Why, will you not believe that Christ was in hell? and you will grant that the devil is there; and so might he be in Judas, if it pleased him.
Christ would not suffer Mary Magdalen to touch him, who sought him at his grave, and did love him intirely; much less will he suffer an ungodly man to receive him into his unclean body.
Yes, seeing God may do all things, he may do what he list, and still be where he [...]. And doth not the Psalm say, He is in hell, and in all places? Why should we then doubt of his [...] ing there?
Though his Godhead be in all place [...], yet that is not sufficient to prove that his humanity is in all places.
No, do you not believe that God is omnipotent, and may do all things?
I do believe that God is almighty, and may do all that he will do.
Nay, but if he be omnipotent, he [...] do all things, and there is nothing impossible for him to do.
I know God is almighty, and can do all that he will: but he cannot make his Son a [...] ▪ he cannot deny himself, nor can he restore virginity once violated and defiled.
What is that to your purpose? God doth not defile virginity; we speak but of things that God doth.
Why, will you have the humanity [...] Christ in all places as the Deity is?
Yea, he is in all places as the Deity is, if it please him.
I promise you that seemeth to me a very great heresy, for heaven and earth are not able to contain the divine power of God, for it is in all places, as here and in every place; and yet you say, that wheresoever the Deity is, there is also the [Page 737] humanity; and so you will make him no body, but a fantastical body, and not a body indeed.
Nay, we do not say he is in all places as the Deity is, but if it please him he may be in all places with the Deity.
I promise you, that seemeth to me as great an heresy as ever I heard in my life, and I dare not grant it, lest I should deny Christ to be a very man, and that were against all the scriptures.
Tush, what shall we stand reasoning with him? I dare say he doth not believe that Christ came out of his mother, not opening the matrice. Do you believe that Christ rose from death, and came from death, and came through the stone?
I do believe that Christ rose from death; but I do not believe he came through the stone, neither doth the scripture so say.
Lo, how say you? he doth no [...] believe that Christ came through the stone; and if he doth not believe this, how shall he believe the other? If he could believe this, it were easy for him to believe the other.
The scripture doth not say he went through the stone, but it saith, the angel of God came down, and rolled away the stone, and for fear of him the keepers became even as dead men.
Ah fool, fool, that was because the woman should not see that he was risen again from death.
Well, the scripture maketh as much for me, as it doth for you, and more too.
Well, let us stand not any longer about this. Back again to the real presence. How say you, is the body of Christ really in the sacrament, or no?
I have answered you already.
Well, do you not believe that it is there really?
No, I believe it not.
Well, will you stand to it?
I must needs stand to it, till I be persuaded by a further truth.
Nay, you will not be persuaded, but stand to your own opinion.
Nay, I stand not to mine own opinion, God I take to witness, but only to the scriptures of God, and that can all those that stand here witness with me, and nothing but the scriptures: and I take God to witness that I do nothing of presumption, but that that I do is only my conscience; and if there be a further truth than I see▪ except it appear a truth to me, I cannot receive it as a truth. And seeing faith is the gift of God, and cometh not of man; for it is not you that can give me faith, nor any man else: therefore I hope you will bear the more with me, seeing it must be wrought by God, and when it shall please him to open a further truth to me, I shall receive it with all my heart, and embrace it.
THORNTON had many other questions which I did not bear away; but as I do understand, these are the chief: as for taunts, foolish and unlearned, he lacked none. Praise God for his gifts, and God increase in us strength.
The Arguments of JOHN NEWMAN.
IF the body of Christ were really and bodily in the sacrament, then whosoever received the sacrament, received also the body.
THE wicked receiving the sacrament, receive not the body of Christ.
ERGO, The body of Christ is not really in the sacrament.
ARGUMENT.
THEY which eat the flesh, and drink the blood of Christ, dwell in him, and he in them.
[Page 738]The wicked dwell not in Christ, nor he in them.
ERGO, The wicked eat not the flesh, nor drink the blood of Christ.
ARGUMENT.
THEY that have Christ dwelling in them, bring forth much fruit, John xv. "He that dwelleth in me, and I in him, bringeth forth much fruit."
The wicked bring forth no fruit of goodness.
ERGO, They have not Christ's body dwelling in them.
ARGUMENT.
WHERE remembrance is of a thing, there is imported the absence thereof.
REMEMBRANCE of Christ's body is in the sacrament, "Do this in remembrance of me."
ERGO, Christ's body there is imported to be absent.
INDEED they will say, we see him not with our outward eyes, but he is commended under the forms of bread and wine, and that we see is nothing but a quality of an accident without a substance: but let them first prove this, and I will believe them. And thus much concerning Newman's examinations and arguments.
The Faith of JOHN NEWMAN, dwelling at Maidstone in Kent, who was by Occupation a Pewterer.
"THE Lord is the protector of my life. The just shall live by faith, and if he withdraw himself, my soul shall have no pleasure in him.
MY faith is, that there is one God, which is without beginning, and without ending. This God created all things visible and invisible. And after that he had made both heaven and earth, with all other creatures, he made man, and set him in the place which he had prepared for him▪ which place he called Eden: he gave to Adam his commandments and precepts, and said, Whensoever thou dost the thing which I forbid, thou shalt surely die the death; yet did man for all this disobey God his creator, and after his sin he fled from God, and himself, and was in a miserable desper [...] case. But God, seeing man in his miserable estate▪ because he and all his posterity should not conti [...] in death, promised Adam that the woman's [...] should break the serpent's head; whereby is meant, that the Son of God should become man, and destroy the devil, who by his subtle persuasions [...] deceived Adam. Then did Adam, by faith, take hold of God's promise, and became the servant of righteousness, through the faith which he had i [...] the promise of the woman's seed. So did Abel, Seth, Enoch, and Noah, with faithful Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and the rest of the faithful until Christ's time: as St. Paul saith, "They did all eat one spiritual meat, and did all drink of one spiritual drink; they did drink of that spiritual rock that followed them, which rock was Christ that saveth us." And when the time was fully come, God sent his Son, made of a woman, that is, he took flesh of the virgin Mary, and became ma [...]; not the shadow of a man, nor a fantastical man, but a very natural man in all points, sin only excepted; which God and man is Christ the promised woman's seed. This Christ was here conversant among men for the space of thirty years and more, and when the time was come that he should go to his Father, he gave unto us the mystery of our redemption, that we through faith should [...]t his body, and drink his blood, that we might feed on him through faith to the end of the world. After this Christ offered up his body on the cross to pacify his Father, and to de [...] ver us from the thraldom of the devil, in which we were through sin original and actual. And with that one sacrifice of his body once offered on the cross, he hath made perfect for ever all them that are sanctified. He descended into hell, the third day he rose again from death, and was conversant at certain times with his disciples for the space of forty days after he rose from death. Then in the sight of all his disciples he ascended into heaven: and as his disciples stood looking upward, and beholding him how he went into heaven, two men stood by them in white apparel, which also said; "Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into [Page 739] heaven? This Jesus which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come even as ye have seen him go into heaven."
ST. PETER also saith, that the heavens must receive him, until the time that all things which God hath spoken by the mouth of the prophets, since the world began, be restored again, which is the latter day, when he shall come to judge the quick and the dead. I do believe in the Holy Ghost, which is the Spirit of God proceeding from the Father and the Son, which Holy Spirit is one God with them. I believe that there is an holy church, which is the company of the faithful and elect people of God, dispersed abroad throughout the whole world; which holy church or congregation doth not look for Christ here, nor Christ there, neither in the desert, nor in the secret places whereof Christ warneth us, but as St. Paul saith, in heaven, where he fitteth on the right hand of the Father; they set their affections on things that are above, and not on things that are on earth. And their life is hid with Christ in God: and when Christ who is their life, shall shew himself, then shall they also appear with him in glory. I believe that there is a communion of saints, even the fellowship of the faithful people which are dispersed abroad throughout the whole world, and are of one mind: they follow Christ their head, they love one anorher, as Christ loved them, and are knit together in one, even in Christ; which church or congregation hath the forgiveness of sins through Christ, and shall enter without spot before the face of God into his glory. For as Christ being their head hath entered pure and clean, so they entering by him, shall be like him in glory. And I am certain and sure, that all they which do die, shall rise again and receive their bodies. In them shall they see Christ come in his glory to judge the quick and the dead. At whose coming all men shall appear and give a reckoning of their doings: he shall separate the good from the bad; he shall say to them which are his elect, "Come ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the beginning:" but to the others that have always resisted his will, he shall say, "Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire, which is prepared for the devil and his angels."
THUS have I briefly declared my faith, which were no faith at all if I doubted of it. This faith therefore I desiere God to increase in me. Praise God for his gifts.
AND thus have you the martyrdom, with the confession of the blessed man, and witness of the Lord's truth, who for that gave his life, as is before declared.
LIKEWISE Richard Hook, about the same time, and for the same matter, gave his life at Chichester.
The Examinations, Answers, and condemnation of WILLIAM COKER, WILLIAM HOPPER, HENRY LAURENCE, RICHARD COLLIAR, RICHARD WRIGHT, and WILLIAM STERE, before the Bishop of DOVER, and Dr. HARPSFIELD, Archdeacon of CANTERBURY.
MENTION was made a little before the story of Mr. Bland, and Nicholas Sheterden, of certain other Kentish-men, who being the same time with them called forth and examined by Thornton, bishop of Dover, Dr. Harpsfield, Richard Faucet, and Robert Collins: yet notwithstanding because the condemnation and execution of them was deferred a little longer, till the latter end of the month of August; coming therefore now to the time of suffering, we will briefly touch some part of their examinations and answers as we find them in the registers. The names of these were W. Coker, W. Hopper, H. Laurence, R. Colliar, Richard Wright, and William Stere. What the articles objected to Mr. Bland and them were, you heard before. To which articles they severally answered for themselves in effect as followeth.
FIRST William Coker said, he would answer no otherwise than he had already answered; and being offered to have a longer respite of six days more, he refused to take it; and so upon the same, sentence of condemnation was read against him, the 11th of Iuly.
WILLIAM HOPPER first seemed to grant to the faith and determination of the Roman church, but calling himself better to mind, constantly stuck to [Page 740] the truth, and was condemned the next week after, the 16th of July.
HENRY LAURENCE, examined the said 16th of July, and partly deferred to the 2d of August, answered to the articles objected against him; first denying auricular confession, and that he neither had, nor would receive the sacrament, because, saith he, the order of the holy scriptures is changed in the order of the sacrament.
MOREOVER, the said Laurence was charged for not putting off his cap, when the suffragan made mention of the sacrament, and did no reverence to the same: the said Laurence answered in these words, What? you shall not need to put off your cap: for it is not so holy that you need to put off your cap thereunto.
FURTHER, being opposed concerning the verity of the sacrament given to Christ's disciples, he affirmed that even as Christ gave his very body to his disciples, and confessed it to be the same; so likewise Christ himself said, he was a door, &c. adding moreover, that as he had said before, so he saith still, that the sacrament of the altar is an idol, and no remembrance of Christ's passion, and contrary he knoweth not. At last being required to subscribe his answers, he wrote these words under the bill of their examinations, "You are all of Antichrist and him you fol—and here his hand was hindered from writing any further: belike he would have written out [follow], &c. And so upon the same, sentence was given against him the 2d of August.
RICHARD COLLIAR, of Ashford above-mentioned, having the 16th of August to appear, examined of the sacrament of the popish altar, answered and said, that he did not believe, that after the consecration there is the real and substantial body of Christ, but only bread and wine, and that it is most abominable, most detestable, and most wicked to believe otherwise, &c. Upon this, sentence was read against him, and he condemned the 16th of August. After his condemnation he sung a psalm. Wherefore the priests and their officers railed at him, saying he was out of his wits.
RICHARD WRIGHT, the same place and day above-mentioned, appearing, and being required by the judge what he believed of the real presence in the sacrament, answered again, that as touching the sacrament of the altar and the mass, he was ashamed to speak of it, or to name it, and that he allowed it not, as it was used in the church. Against whom the sentence was also read the day and place aforesaid.
WILLIAM STERE, of the aforesaid parish of Ashford, likewise detected and accused, was brought to appear the said 16th day of August, where he in the chapter-house of Canterbury, being required to answer to the positions laid unto him by the judge, made answer again, That he should command his dog, and not him: and further declared, that Dick of Dover had no authority to sit against him in judgment; and asked, where was his authority? who then shewed him certain bulls and writings from Rome, as he said. William Stere denying that to be of sufficient force, the said Dic [...] also said, he had authority from the queen. Th [...] the martyr alledging that the archbishop of C [...] terbury, (who was then in prison) was his dioces [...], urged him to shew his authority from the archbishop, or else he denied his authority to be sufficient. And as touching the sacrament of the altar, he found i [...] not, he said, in the scripture, and therefore he would not answer thereunto.
AND moreover, the judge speaking of the sacrament of the altar with reverence, and putting off his cap, William Stere told him that he needed not to reverence that matter so highly. And thus (saying to the judge, that he was a bloody man, &c.) th [...] sentence was pronounced against him; and after the sentence was read, he said, that the sacrament of the altar was the most blasphemous idol that ev [...]r was, &c.
AND thus these six heavenly martyrs and witnesses, to the truth, being condemned by the bloody suffragan and archdeacon of Canterbury. Mr. Collins, and Mr. Faucet, were burnt all together in the same town of Canterbury, at three stakes in one fire, about the latter end of August.
THE copy of their sentence condemnatory, you may find before in the story of Mr. John Rogers; [Page 741] for the papists in their condemnations follow one manner of sentence against all they have condemned through their unmerciful tyranny.
The Persecution of TEN MARTYRS together, sent by certain of the Council to BONNER to be examined.
AFTER the burning of these six before-named, next followeth the persecution of ten other true servants of God, the names of whom are as follow:
- Elizabeth Warne,
- George Tankerfield,
- Robert Smith,
- Stephen Harwood,
- Thomas Fust,
- William Hale,
- Thomas Leyes,
- George King,
- John Wade,
- Joan Lashford.
THE prisons of London beginning now to be replenished with God's saints, and still more and more coming in, the council and commissioners, thinking to make ready dispatch with the poor prisoners, caused these ten to be sent with their letter directed to Bonner, bishop of London, by him to be examined and rid out of the way. The copy of which letter, with their names subscribed, here followeth to be read and noted.
A LETTER Sent by the Commissioners to Dr. BONNER, Bishop of London.
AFTER our hearty commendations to your good lordship, we send you here John Wade, William Hale, George King Thomas Leyes, of Thorp in Essex, Thomas Fust, hosier. Robert Smith, painter, Stephen Harwood, brewer, George Tankerfield, cook, Elizabeth Warn [...], and Joan L [...]shford, of London, sacramentaries; all which we desire your lordship to examine, and to order according to the ecclesiastical laws: praying your lordship to appoint some of your officers to receive them at this bearer's hands. And thus most heartily fare your lordship well. From London this 2d of July.
- Nicholas Hare,
- William Roper,
- Richard R [...]d [...],
- William Cooke.
The History of ELIZABETH WARNE, Widow, burn [...] at Stratford-B [...]w.
NOW severally to prosecute the stories of these ten martyrs aforenamed: first we will begin with the history of Elizabeth Warne, widow, who in the month of August was burnt at Stratford-Bow, [...]ear London; she was late wife of John Warne, upholsterer, and martyr, who was also burnt the latter end of the May before, as in his story is recorded.
THIS Elizabeth Warne had been apprehended among others, the first day of January, in a house in Bow-church-yard in London, as they were gathered together in prayer, and at that present was carried to the Compter, where she remained till the 11th day of June: at which time she was brought to Newgate, and was confined there till the 2d day of July. Then was she sent by the king and queen's commissioners unto Bonner, bishop of London, who on the 6th day of the said month caused her with divers others (as Robert Smith, George Tankerfield, &c.) to be brought before him into his palace, and there examined her upon sundry articles, such as were commonly administered unto poor saints and martyrs of God, as you may more plainly perceive by other more large and ample processes before-mentioned.
THE chief objection that he used towards her, or the most of those, was touching the real and corporal presence of the body and blood of Christ in the sacrament of the altar, as the chief ground and most profitable foundation of their catholic dignity. Many other matters he objected against them, as for not coming to the church, for speaking against the mass, for despising their ceremonies and new found sacraments, with divers other fond and trifling toys, not worthy to be mentioned.
IN the end, when she had been divers times brought before him and other his adherents, and there earnestly exhorted to recant, she said, Do what you will; for if Christ were in an error, then am I in an error. Upon which answer, she was condemned as an heretic, the 12th day of the same month of July, and so delivered to the secular power, as they term it, to be by them put to death, which was done in the same month.
[Page 742]THE chief procure [...] of her death was Dr. Story, being, as it was thought, somewhat related to her, or else to her late husband. Who, at the first apprehension of his said kinswoman, endeavoured by all means to get her pardon, and accordingly applied to Dr. Martin, then one of the king and queen's commissioners in matters of religion, (himself being as yet not made commissioner) and by this his suit obtained her deliverance for that present, as Dr. Martin himself (the author hereof) hath reported; yet afterwards, upon what occasion God only knoweth, except upon some burning charity, the said Dr. Story obtaining to be one of the commissioners, caused not only the said John Warne, but also his wife, and afterwards his daughter, to be again apprehended, never leaving them till he had brought them all to ashes. Such was the rage of that devout catholic and white child of the mother church, that neither kindred or any other consideration could prevail with him, although it did (at his request) with others, who in respect of him were but strangers unto them. The Lord, if it be his will, turn his heart, or else rid his poor church from such an hydra, as, thanked be God, now he hath.
An Account of GEORGE TANKERFIELD, Martyr.
GEORGE TANKERFIELD, of London, cook, born in York, about the age of 27 or 28 years, was in the days of king Edward a papist, till the time queen Mary came in, and then perceiving the great cruelty which the papists used, was brought into a misdoubt of their doings, and began (as he said) in his heart to abhor them. And as concerning the mass, whereof he had but a doubtful opinion before, and much striving with himself in that case, at length he fell to prayer, desiring God in mercy to open to him the truth, that he might be thoroughly persuaded therein, whether it were of God, or no: if not, that he might utterly hate it in his heart, and abhor it: which the Lord mercifully heard, and according to his prayer, daily working more and more in him to detest and abhor the same: and so he was moved to read the Testament, whereby (as is said) the Lord enlightened his mind with the knowledge of the truth, working a lively faith in him to believe the same, and utterly to detest all popery, and so he came no more to their doings; and not only that, but also this lively faith (as he said) kindled such a flame in him, [...] would not be kept in, but utter itself by the co [...] sion thereof, reproving his own former doings to his friends, exhorting them likewise to repent [...] turn to the truth with him; thus they began to smell him out, and at length he was sent for [...] followeth:
IT pleased God to strike him with sickness, whereby he lay long sick; and on a certain day to [...] the air abroad, he rose up, and went and walked into the Temple fields to see the shooters. In the mean time Mr. Beard came to his house and inquired for him, pretending to his wife, that he came only to have him dress a banquet at the lord Paget's. His wife, because of his apparel, which was very rich, took him to be some honest gentleman, and with all speed prepared herself to fetch her husband, having a good hope he should now earn some money: and lest this gentleman should be tired with tarrying, she fetched him a cushion to set him soft, and laid [...] fair napkin before him, and set bread thereon, and came to her husband; who, when he heard it, said▪ A banquet, woman; indeed it is such a banquet [...] will not be very pleasant to the flesh, but God's will be done. And when he came home he saw who [...] was, and called him by his name, which when his wife perceived, and wherefore he came, like a tall woman would play Peter's part, and instead of▪ sword took a spit, and would have run him through, had not the constable which Mr. Beard had sent for by his man, came in and rescued him: yet she sent a brickbat after him, and hit him on the back. And so Tankerfield was delivered to the constable, and brought to Newgate about the last day of Feb. 1555, by the said Beard, yeoman of the guards, and Simon Ponder, p [...]wterer, constable of St Duns [...]'s in the West, sent in by Roger Chomley, knight, and Dr. Martin.
TANKERFIELD being thus brought to prison by his adversaries, at length with the others before-named was bro [...]ght to his examination before bishop Bonner, who, after his accustomed manner, ordered his articles and positions unto him, the copy and tenor of which his ordinary articles ye may read above expressed.
TO these articles he answered again, constantly declaring his mind concerning au [...]icular confession, [Page 743] and also the sacrament of the popish altar, and likewise the mass, &c. First, that he has not confessed to any priest five years past, nor to any other, but only to God: and further denying that he would hereafter be confessed to any priest, for that he found it not in Christ's book, and took it only to be a counsel.
AND concerning the sacrament, commonly called the sacrament of the altar, he confessed, that he neither had nor did believe, that in the sacrament there is the real body and blood of Christ, because the body is ascended into heaven, and there doth sit at the right hand of God the Father.
AND moreover he said, that the mass now used in the church of England was naught, and full of idolatry and abomination, and against the word of God; affirming also, that there are but two sacraments in the church of Christ, baptism and the supper of the Lord, &c. And to these assertions he said he would stand; and so he did to the end.
AND when at last the bishop began to read the sentence, first exhorting him with many words to revoke his professed opinion, (which they called damnable and heretical) he notwithstanding resisted all their persuasions, answering the bishop again in this manner: I will not, said he, forsake mine opinions, except you, my lord, can refute them by scriptures; and I care not for your divinity; for you condemn all men, and prove nothing against them. And after many fair words of exhortation, which Bonner then used, to convert, or rather pervert him, he answered boldly again, saying moreover, That the church whereof the pope is supreme head, is no part of Christ's catholic church; and adding thereunto, and pointing to the bishop, spake to the people, saying, Good people beware of him, and such as he is, for these be the people that deceive you, &c.
THESE and many other words he spake▪ whereupon the bishop, reading the sentence of condemnation, gave him to the secular power.
AND so this good man being carried to St. Alban's, there ended his life with much patience and constancy, the 26th day of August, for the defence of the truth, which at length will have the victory.
NOTES concerning GEORGE TANKERFIELD, after he was carried to St. Alban's to suffer Martyrdom.
IMPRIMIS, He was brought to St. Alban's by the high sheriff of Hertford, Edward Brocket, esquire, and Mr. Pulter, of Hitchen, who was under sheriff.
ITEM, Their inn was the cross-keys, where there was a great concourse of people to see and hear the prisoner, among which multitude some were sorry to see so pious a man brought to be burned, others praised God for his constancy and perseverance in the truth. Contrariwise, some there were which said, it was pity he did stand in such opinions: and others, both old men and women, cried against him; one called him heretic, and said it was pity that he lived. But George Tankerfield spake unto them so effectually out of the word of God, lamenting their ignorance, and protesting unto them his unspotted conscience, that God did mollify their hardened hearts, insomuch that some of them departed out of the chamber with weeping eyes.
ITEM, There came a certain school-master, to have communication with George Tankerfield the day before he was coming to St. Alban's▪ concerning the sacrament of the altar, and other points of the popish religion: but as he urged Tankerfield with the authority of the doctors, wresting them after his own will; so on the other side, Tankerfield answered him mightily by the scriptures, not wrested after the mind of any man, but being interpreted after the will of the Lord Jesus, &c. So that as he would not allow such allegations as Tankerfield brought out of the scriptures without the opinions of the doctors; so again Tankerfield would not credit his doctrine to be true, except he would confirm it by the scriptures. In the end, Tankerfield prayed him that he would not trouble him in such matters, for his conscience was established, &c. and so he departed from him, wishing him well, and protesting that he meant him no more hurt than his own soul.
ITEM, When the hour drew on apace that he should suffer, he desired the wine-drawer, that he might have a pint of malmsey and a loaf, that he might eat and drink that in remembrance of Christ [...] death and passion, because he could not have it administered [Page 744] to him by others in such a manner as Christ commanded; and then he kneeled down, making his confession unto the Lord with all which were in the chamber with him: and after he had prayed earnestly unto the Lord, and had read the institution of the holy supper by the Lord Jesus out of the evangelists, and out of St. Paul, he said, O Lord, thou knowest it, I do not this to derogate authority from any man, or in contempt of those which are thy ministers, but only because I cannot have it administered according to thy word, &c. and when he had spoke these and such like words, he received it with giving of thanks.
ITEM, When some of his friends desired him to eat some meat, he said he would not eat that which should do others good that had more need, and that had longer time to live than he.
ITEM, He prayed his host to let him have a good fire in the chamber; he had so; and then he sitting on a form before the fire, put off his shoes and hose, and stretched out his leg to the flame; and when it had touched his floot, he quickly withdrew his leg, shewing the flesh did persuade him one way, and the spirit another way. The flesh said, O thou fool, wilt thou burn, and needest not? The spirit said, Be not afraid, for this is nothing in respect of fire eternal. The flesh said, Do not leave the company of thy friends and acquaintance which love thee, and will let thee lack nothing. The spirit said, The company of Jesus Christ and his glorious presence doth exceed all fleshly friends. The flesh said, Do not shorten thy time, for thou mayest live if thou wilt much longer. The spirit said, This life is nothing unto the life in heaven which lasteth for ever, &c. And all this time the sheriffs were at a gentleman's house at dinner, not far from the town, whither also resorted many knights and gentlemen out of the country, because his son was married that day; and until they returned from dinner, the prisoner was left with his host, to be kept and looked unto. And George Tankerfield all that time was kindly and lovingly intreated by his host; and considering that his time was short, his saying was, That although the day was ever so long, yet at the last it ringeth to evening song.
ITEM, About two o'clock, when the sheriffs were returned from dinner, they brought George T [...] kerfield out of the inn unto the place where he should suffer, which is called Romeland, being a green place near the west end of the abbey church: unto which when he was come, he kneeled down by the stake that was set up for him; and after he had ended his prayers he arose, and with a joyful faith he said, that although he had a sharp dinner, yet he hoped to have a joyful supper in heaven.
ITEM, While the faggots were set about [...], there came a priest unto him, and persuaded him [...] believe on the sacrament of the altar, and he should be saved. But George Tankerfield cried out vehemently, and said, I defy the whore of Babylon, I defy the whore of Babylon: fie on that abominable idol: good people, do not believe him, good people, do not believe him. And then the mayor of the town commanded to set fire to the heretic, and said, If he had but one load of faggots in the whole world, he would give them to burn him. [...] was a certain knight by, who went unto Tanke [...] field, and took him by the hand and said, Good brother, be strong in Christ; this he spake softly; [...] Tankerfield said, O sir, I thank you, I am so, I [...] God. Then fire was set unto him, and he [...] the sheriff and all the people to pray for him; [...] most part did so. And so embracing the [...] bathed himself in it, and calling on the Lord Jesus, he was quickly out of pain.
The History and Examinations of ROBERT SMIT [...], Martyr.
ROBERT SMITH was brought to [...] the 5th of November, by John Matthew, [...] man of the guard of the queen's side, by the co [...] mand of the council. Robert Smith first gave himself to service in the house of sir Thomas [...] knight, being then provost of Eaton: from the [...]e he was preferred to Windsor, having there in the college a clerkship of ten pounds a year. Of [...] he was tall and slender, active about many things▪ but chiefly delighting in the art of painting, [...] many times rather for his mind's sake, than for [...] gain, he did practice and exercise. In religion he was fervent, after he had once tasted the truth; [Page 745] wherein he was much confirmed by the preaching of Mr. Turner, of Windsor, and others. Whereupon at the coming in of queen Mary he was deprived of his clerkship by her visitors; and not long after he was apprehended, and brought to examination before Bonner, as here followeth, written and testified with his own hand.
The first Examination of ROBERT SMITH before Bishop BONNER.
ABOUT nine o'clock in the morning I was among the rest of my brethren brought to the bishop's house and first of all I was brought before him into his chamber, to whom the bishop said as followeth, after he had asked my name.
How long is it since you were confessed to any priest?
Never since I had years of discretion. For I never saw it needful, neither commanded by God to come to shew my fault; to any of that sinful number whom you call priests.
Thou shewest thyself even at thy first speech to be a rank heretic, who being weary of painting, art entered into divinity, and so fallen, through thy departing from thy vocation, into heresy.
Although I have understanding in the said occupation, yet▪ I praise God. I have little need hitherto to live by the same; but have lived without the same in mine own house as honestly in my vocation as you have lived in y [...]ur's, and ye [...] used the same better than ever you used the pulpit.
How long is it since you received the sacrament of the altar, and what is your opinion in the same?
I never received the same since I had years of discretion, nor ever will, by God's grace; neither do esteem the same in any point, because it hath no [...] God's [...], neither in name, nor in other usage, but rather is set up and erected to mock God withal.
Do you not believe that it is the very body of Christ that was born of the virgin Mary, naturally, sustantially, and really, after the words of consecration?
I shewed you before it was none of God's ordinances, as you use it; then much less to be God, or any part of his substance, but only bread and wine erected to the use aforesaid; yet nevertheless, if you can prove it to be the body that you spake of by the word, I will believe it; if not, I will do as I do, account it a detestable idol, not God; but contrary to God and his truth.
THEN after many raging words and vain objections, Bonner said, there was no remedy, but I must be burned.
You shall do no more unto me, than you have done to better men than either of us. But think not thereby to quench the Spirit of God, neither thereby to make your matter good. For your sore is too well seen to be healed so privily with blood. For even the very children have all your deeds in derision; so that although you patch up one place with authority, yet shall it break out in forty to your shame.
Then after much ado, and many railing sentences, he said, throwing away the paper of mine examination; Well, even now, by my troth, even in good earnest, if thou wilt go to confession, I will tear this paper in pieces.
To which I answered; It would be too much to his shame to shew it to men of discretion.
AFTER which answer. I was carried down to the garden with my jailor, and there remained till my brother Harwood was examined; and then being again brought up before the said Bonner, he demanded if I agreed with Harwood in his confession upon these articles following.
What say you to the catholic church? Do you not confess there is one i [...] earth?
Yes verily, I believe that there is one
Yes verily, I believe that there is one catholic church, or faithful congregation, which as the apostle saith, is built upon the prophets and apostles, Christ Jesus being the head corner-stone▪ which church in all her words and works maintaineth the word, and bringeth the same for her authority, and without it doth nothing, nor ought to do, of which I am assured I am by grace made a member.
You shall understand, that I am bound when my brother offendeth, and will not be reconciled, to bring him before the congregation: now if your church be the same, where may a man find it, to bring his brother before the same?
It is written in the Acts of the apostles, that when the tyranny of the bishops was so great against the church in Jewry, they were fain to assemble in houses and secret places, as they now do; and yet were they nevertheless the church of God: and seeing they had their matters redressed being shut up in a corner, may not we do the like now-a-days?
Yea, their church was known full well. For St. Paul wrote to the Corinthians, to have the man excommunicated, that had committed evil with his father's wife. Whereby we may well perceive it was a known church; but your's is not known.
Then could you not persecute it as you do: but as you say the church of God at Corinth was manifest both to God and St. Paul; even so is this church of God in England, which you persecute, both known to God, and also even to the very wicked, although they know not, nor will know their truth nor conversation; yea, and your sinful number have professed their verity, and maintained the same a long season.
Well, thou sayest that the church of God was only at Corinth, when St. Paul writ unto them, and so will I put in writing, shall I?
I do greatly marvel, my lord, that you are not ashamed to lay snares for your brethren on this manner. This is now the third snare you have laid for me. First, to make me confess that the church of England is not the church of Christ. Secondly, to say it is not known. Thirdly, to say the church of God is not universal, but particular. And this is not the office of a bishop. For if an innocent had come in your way, you would have done your best, I see to entangle him.
WELL, friend, said Dr. Harpsfield, you are no innocent, as it appeareth.
By the grace of God I am that I am; and this grace in me, I hope is not in vain.
WELL, said Bonner, laughing, tell me, how sayest thou of the church?
I told you whereon the true church is built, and I affirm in England to be the true congregation of God, and also in omne [...] terra [...], "Their sound is gone forth into all lands," and this is the afflicted and persecuted church, which ye cease not to imprison, slay, and kill. And in Corinth was not all the congregation of God, but a number of those holy and elect people of God. For neither Paul nor Peter were present at Corinth when they wrote, and yet were they of the church of God, as many thousands more which also communicate in that Holy Spirit.
What call you catholic, and what call you church?
Catholic is uni [...]ersal, and church [...]s a congregation knit together in unity.
THEN after much like talk, it was laid to my charge, that my fellow and I spake one thing. For which I praised God, and was sent again to the garden. Where, after a while, as I and brother Harwood had been together, came one of my lord's chaplains, that much desired to commune with [...] demanding first if I were a prisoner.
I am in this flesh a prisoner, and subject to my master and your's▪ but I hope yet the Lord's free man through Christ Jesus.
I do much desire to talk to you lovingly, because you are a man that I much lament, with many other sweet words.
To which I answered, Sub melle latet venenum. And after much ado about his god, I compelled him to say, that it must needs enter into the belly, and so fall into the draught.
What derogation was it to Christ, when the Jews spit in his face?
If the Jews, being his enemies, did spit in his face, and we being his friends throw him into the draught, which of us have deserved the greatest damnation? Then by your argument, he that doth injury to Christ, shall have a most plenteous salvation.
THEN the doctor started away, and would have his humanity incomprehensible, making a comparison between the soul of man and the body of Christ, bringing in to serve his turn, which way Christ came in among his disciples, the doors being shut?
Although it be said, that when he came the doors were shut, yet have I as much to prove, that the doors opened at his coming, as you have to prove he came through the door. For that Almighty God who brought the disciples out of prison, which yet when search was made was found shut, was able to [...]et Christ [...]n at the door, although it were shut: and yet it maketh not for your purpose; for they saw him, [...] him, and felt him, and that you cannot say you do, neither is he in more places than one at the same time.
AT which answer when he had made many scoffings, he went from me, and we were carried into my lord's hall, where we were b [...]ited by my lord's ba [...]d of servants almost all the day, until our keepe [...] seeing their rudeness, shut us all up in a handsome chamber, while my lord wen [...] into his synagogue to condemn Mr. D [...]nley and John Newman.
THEN they brought my lord mayor up into the chamber [...] my [...] intended to sup [...] to hear the matter, and I was the first that was ca [...]ed, where my lord mayor being set with the bishop and one of the sheriffs, wine was flowing on every side, whilst I stood before them like a mute; which made me remember how Pilate and Herod were made friends, but no man was sorry for Joseph's hurt. But after my lord had well drank, my articles were sent for and read, and he demanded whether I did say as was written?
That I have said, I have said, and what I have said I do mean.
Well, my lord mayor, your lordship hath heard in some measure, what a stout heretic this is, and nevertheless forasmuch as they report me to seek blood, and call me bloody Bonner, whereas, God knoweth, I never sought any man's blood in all my life, I have kept him from the consistory this day, whither I could have brought him justly; I desire him to turn, and I will with all speed dispatch him out of his trouble; and this I profess before your lordship and all this audience.
Why, my lord, do you put on this fair vizor before my lord mayor, to make him believe that you seek not my blood, to cloak your murders, through my stoutness, as you call it? Have you not had my brother Tomkins before you, whose hand when you burned most cruelly, you burned also his body, and not only him, but a great many of the members of Christ, men that feared God, and lived virtuously, and also the queen's majesty's most true subjects, as their goods and bodies have made manifest? And seeing in these saints you have shewed so little mercy, shall it seem to my lord and [...]his audience that you shew me more favour? No, no, my lord. But if you mean as you say, why then do you examine me of what I am not bound to answer you?
Well, what sayest thou by the sacrament of the altar? Is it not the very body of Christ, flesh, blood, and bone, as it was born of the virgin?
I have answered that it is none of God's order nor a sacrament, but of man's own vain invention, and shewed him the Lord's institution. [Page 748] But when he was so earnest before the audience, declaring that we knew nothing, bringing out his Hoc est corpus meum to lay in my dish; I proved before the audience that it was a dead god, declaring the distinction appointed between two creatures of bread and wine, and that a body without blood hath no life. At which Harpsfield found himself much offended, and took the tale out of my lord's mouth, saying,
I will prove by the s [...]riptures, that you blaspheme God in so saying: for it is given in two parts, because there are two things shewed. [...]hat is to say, his body and his passion, as saith St. Paul: and therefore the bread is his body, and the wine the representation of his death and blood-shedding.
You falsify the word, and rack it to serve your purpose. For the wine was not only the shewing his passion, but the bread also. For our Saviour saith, "So often as ye do th [...]s, do it in remembrance of me." And St. Paul saith, "So oft as you eat of this bread, and drink of this cup, you shall sh [...]w forth the Lord's death till he come." And her [...] is as much reverence given to the one as to the other. Wherefore if the bread be his body, the cup must be his blood, and as well you make his body in the cup, as his blood in the bread.
THEN my lord rose up, and went to the table, where the lord mayor desired me to save my soul. To whom I answered, I hoped it was saved through Christ Jesus; desiring him to have pity on his own soul, and remember whose sword he carried.
ON which I was carried into the garden, and there abode till the rest of my friends were examined, and then were we sent away to Newgate with many foul farewels, my lord bishop giving the keeper charge to lay me in limbo.
Second Examination of ROBERT SMITH, before Bishop BONNER.
UPON Saturday, at eight o'clock, I was brought to his chamber again, and there examined by him as followeth.
Thou Robert Smith, &c. sayest that there is no catholic church here on earth.
You have heard me both speak the contrary, and you have writing as a witness of the same.
Yes, but I must ask this question: how sayest thou?
Must you of necessity begin with a lie? It maketh manifest that you determine to the end with the same. But there shall no liars enter [...] the kingdom of God. Nevertheless, if you will [...] answered, ask mine articles that were written yesterday, and they shall tell you that I have confessed a church of God, as well in earth as in heaven, and yet all one church, and one man's members, eve [...] Christ Jesus.
Well, what savest thou to auricular confession? Is it not necessary to be used in Christ's church? and wilt thou not be confessed by the priest?
It is not needful to be used in Christ's church, as I answered yesterday. But if it be needful for your church, it is to pick men's pockets; and such pick pocket matters is all the whole rabble of your ceremonies: for all that you maintain is [...] money- [...]tters.
Why, how art thou able to prove th [...] confession is a pick pocket matter? Art thou [...] ashamed to say so?
I speak by experience: for I have bo [...] heard and seen the fruits of the same. For first [...] hath been, we see, a betrayer of king's secrets, and the secrets of other men's consciences; who bein [...] delivered, and glad to be discharged from their sins▪ have given great sums of money to priests to absolve them, and sing masses for their soul's health.
AND for example, I began to bring in a pageant▪ that by report was played at St. Thomas of Acres▪ and where I was when a child, waiting [...] a gentleman of Norfolk, which being bound in [...]nscience▪ through the persuasion of the priest, gave away a great quantity of his goods, and forgave unto one Mr. Gresham a large sum of money, and to another as much. The priest for his part had a good share and the house had an annuity to keep him: which [Page 749] thing when his brother heard, he came to London, and after a declaration made to the council, how by the subtilty of the priest he had robbed his wife and children, recovered a great part again, to the value of two or three hundred pounds of Mr. Gresham and his other friend; but what he gave to the house could not be recovered. This story I began to tell; but when my lord saw it favoured not to his purpose, he began to revile me, and said, By the mass, if the queen's majesty were of my mind, thou shouldst not come to talk before any man, but shouldst be put in a sack, with a dog in the same, and be thrown into a river.
I know you speak by practice, as much as by speculation, for both you and your predecessors have sought all possible means to kill Christ secretly; witness Mr. Hunne, whom your predecessor caused to be thrust in at the nose with hot burning needles, and then to be hanged, and gave it out that the said Hunne hanged himself: and also a good brother of your's, a bishop of your profession, having in his prison an innocent man, whom, because he could not overcome by scripture, he caused to be privately strangled, and his flesh to be [...]rn and plucked away with a pair of pincers; and bringing him before the people, said, the rats had eaten him. Thus according to your oath is all your dealing, and hath been: and as you, taking upon you the office, do not without oaths open your mouth▪ no more do you without murder maintain your traditions.
Ah, you are a generation of liars; there is not one true word that cometh out of your mouths.
Yes, my lord, I have said that Jesus Christ is dead for my sins, and risen for my justification, and this is no lie.
THEN Bonner made his man to put in my tale of the gentleman in Norfolk, and would have m [...] recite it again: which when I would not do, he made his man put in such sums as he [...]. At the end of this sir John Mordaunt came in, and sat down to hear my examination. Then said my lord, How sayest thou, Smith, to the seven sacraments▪ Believest thou not that they be of God's order, that is to say, the sacrament of, &c.
I believe that in God's church are but two sacraments, that is to say, the sacrament of regeneration, and the sacrament of the Lord's supper: and as for the sacrament of the altar, and all your sacraments, they may well serve your church, but God's church hath nothing to do with them, neither have I any thing to do to answer them, nor you to examine me of them.
Why, is God's order changed in baptism? In what point do we dissent from the word of God?
First, in hallowing your water; in conjuring of the same; in baptizing children with anointing and spitting in their mouths, mingled with salt, and with many other lewd ceremonies, of which not one point is able to be proved in God's order.
By the mass, this is the most unshame-faced heretic that ever I heard speak.
Well sworn, my lord, you keep a good watch.
Well, Mr. Controller, you catch me at my words: but I will watch thee as well, I warrant thee.
BY my troth, my lord, said sir John Mordaunt, I never heard the like in all my life. But I pray you, my lord, mark well his answer for baptism. He disalloweth therein holy ointment, salt, and such other laudable ceremonies, which no christian man will deny.
That is a shameful blasphemy against Christ, so to use any mingle mangle in baptizing young infants.
I believe, I tell thee, that if they die before they be baptized, they be damned.
You shall never be saved by that belief. But I pray you, my lord, shew me, are we saved by water, or by Christ.
By both.
Then the water died for our sins: and so must you say, that the water hath life, and it being [Page 750] our servant, and created for us, is our Saviour. This, my lord, is a good doctrine, is it not?
Why, how understandest thou the scriptures? "Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God."
AND again, "Suffer (saith our Saviour) these children to come unto me:" and if thou wilt not suffer them to be baptized after the laudable order, thou hinderest them to come unto Christ.
Where you alledge St. John, "Except a man be born," &c. and will thereby prove the water to save, and so the deed or work to save and put away sins, I will send you to St. Paul, who asketh of the Galatians, "Whether they received the Spirit by the deeds of the law, or by the preaching of faith?" and there concludeth, that the Holy Ghost accompanieth the preaching of faith, and with the word of faith entereth into the heart. So now if baptism preach to me the washing in Christ's blood so doth the Holy Ghost accompany it, and it is unto me as a preacher and not a Saviour. And where you say, I hinder the children to come unto Christ, it is manifest by our Saviour's words that you hinder them to come, that will not suffer them to come unto him without the necessity of water. For he saith, Suffer them to come unto me, and not unto the water; and therefore if you condemn them, you condemn both the merits and words of Christ. For our Saviour saith, "Except ye turn and become as children, ye cannot enter into the kingdom of God." And so I brought out many other examples, to make manifest that Christ hath cleansed original sin, bringing in examples out of the scriptures for the same.
Then thou makest the water of none effect, then put away water.
"It is not (saith St. Peter) the washing away of the filth of the flesh, but in that a good conscience consenteth unto God." And to prove that water only bringeth not the Holy Ghost, it is written in Acts viii. that Simon received water, but would have received the Holy Ghost for money. Also, that the Holy Ghost hath come before baptism. Yea, and although your generation have set at nou [...]ht the word of God, and like swine turned his wo [...]s upside down, yet must his church keep the sa [...] in that order which he left them, which his church [...]re not break; and to judge children damned [...] be not baptized, it is wicked.
By our lady, sir, but I believe that if my child die without water, he is damned.
Yea, and so do I, and all catholic men, good Mr. Mordaunt.
Well, my lord, such catholic, such salvation!
Well, sir, what say you to the sacrament of orders?
You may call it the sacrament of misorders: for all orders are appointed of God. But as for your shaving, anointing, greasing, poling, and rounding, there are no such things appointed in God's book, and therefore I have nothing to do to believe your orders. And as for you, if you had grace and intelligence, you would not so disfigure yourself as you do.
Sayest thou so? Now, by my troth, I will go shave myself to anger thee withal; and so he sent for his barber, who immediately came: and before my face at the door of the next chamber, he shaved himself, desiring me before he went, to answer to these articles.
What say you to holy bread and holy water, to the sacrament of anointing▪ and to all the rest of such ceremonies of the church?
I say they be baubles for fools to play withal, and not for the children of God to exercise themselves in, and therefore they may go among the refuse. Then Mr. Mordaunt went away, and my lord went to be shaved, leaving there certain doctors, as he called them, to try what they could do, by whom I was baited for half an hour: of whom I also asked this question, where were you all the days of king Edward, that you spake not that which you speak now?
We were in England.
Yea, but then you had the faces of men, but now you put on lion's faces again, as saith St. John, "Ye shew yourselves as full of malice, as ye may be." For you have for every time a vizor; yea, and if another king Edward should arise, you would then say, Down with the pope, for he is Antichrist, and so are all his angels.
THEN was I reviled and sent away, and brought in again before th [...]se men; and one of them that baited me before, asked me if I disallowed confession?
Look into mine articles, and they shall shew you what I allow.
Your articles confess that you allow not auricular confession.
I allow it not, because the word alloweth it not, nor commandeth it.
Why, it is written, thou shalt not hide thy sins and offences.
No more do I when I confess them to Almighty God.
Why you cannot say that you can hide them from God, and therefore you must understand the words are spoken to be uttered to them that do not know them.
You have made a good answer, then the priest must confess himself to me, as well as I to him; for I know his faults and secre [...]s no more than he knoweth mine. But if you confess to the priest and not unto God, you shall have the reward that Judas had: for he confessed himself to the priest, and presently went and hanged himself; and so many as do not acknowledge their faults to God, are said to hide them.
What did they that came to John to be baptized?
They came and confessed their sins to Almighty God.
And not unto John?
If it were unto John, as you are not able to prove, yet it was to God, before John and the whole congregation.
Why, John was alone in the wilderness.
Why, and yet the scriptures say he had many disciples, and that many pharisees and sadducees came to his baptism. Here the scriptures and you agree not. And if they confessed themselves to John, as you say, it was to all the congregation, as St. Paul doth to Timothy, and to all that read his epistle, in opening to all the hearers, that he was not worthy to be called an apostle, because he had been a tyrant. But as for ear-confession, you never heard it allowed by the word. For the prophet David made his confession unto God, and saith, "I will confess my sins unto the Lord." Daniel maketh his confession unto the Lord; Judith, Toby, Jeremy, Manasseh, with all the forefathers, did even so. For the Lord hath said, "Call upon me in the time of trouble, and I will deliver thee." Knock, ask, seek, with such like; and this is the word of God; now bring somewhat of the word to help yourself withal. Then they raged, and called me dog, and said I was damned.
Nay, you are dogs, that because holy things are offered, will slay your friends. For I may say with St. Paul, "I have fought with beasts in the likeness of men." For here I have been baited these two days, of my lord, and his great bulls of Basan, and in his hall beneath have I been baited of the rest of his band. With this came my lord from shaving, and asked me how I liked him.
Forsooth, you are even so wise as you were before you were shaven.
How standeth it, Mr. Doctors, have you done any good?
No, by my troth, my lord, we can do no good.
Then is fulfilled that which is written, "How can an evil tree bring forth good fruit?"
Nay, naughty fellow, I set those gentlemen to bring thee home to Christ.
Such gentlemen, such Christs! and as truly as they have that name from Christ, so truly do they teach Christ.
Well, wilt thou neither hear them nor me?
Yes, I am compelled to hear you; but you cannot compel me to follow you.
Well, thou shalt be burnt at a stake in Smithfield, if thou wilt not turn.
And you shall burn in hell, if you repent not: but to put you out of doubt, because I am weary, I will strain courtesy with you: I perceive you will not with your doctors come unto me, and I am determined not to come unto you, by God's grace. For I have hardened my face against you as hard as brass. Then after many railing sentences I was sent away.
AND thus have I left the truth of mine answers in writing, gentle reader, being compelled by my friends to do it: that you may see how the Lord hath according to his promise given me a mouth and wisdom to answer in his cause, for which I am condemned, and my cause not heard.
The last Examination of Mr. SMITH.
THE 12th of July I was with my brethren brought into the consistory, and mine articles read before my lord mayor and sheriffs, with all the assistants; to which I answered, as followeth.
By my faith, my lord mayor, I have shewed him as much favour as any man living might do: but I perceive all is lost, both in him and all his company.
AT this word, which he coupled with an oath, Mr. Smith came in, and said to the bishop, My lord, it is written, "You must not swear."
Ah, Mr. Controller, are you come? Lo, my lord mayor, this is Mr. Speaker, pointing to my brother Tankerfield; and this i [...] Mr. Controller, pointing to me. And then beginning to read my articles, he persevered till he came at my tale of the gentleman of Norfolk, and then demanded of my lord mayor, if he heard of the same before. To which he answered, No. To whom I said:
My lord mayor, will it please you to hear me recite it as [...] he [...]rd it, and [...]old it, and then you shall hear the truth? For this tale that my lord hath told is untrue.
How say you, good Mr. Mordaunt, spake he not this here as it is written? Were you not by?
Yes, my lord, that it is: I heard him say it.
How heard you me say it, and were not present when I spake it? It is manifestly proved what the prophet saith: "Even as the king saith, so saith the judge, that he may do him a pleas [...] again." And then my jailor was brought out for proof thereof, who there openly professed that neither Mr. Mordaunt, nor the doctors before-mentioned, were present when I spake it.
AT which Mr. Mordaunt, with blushing cheeks, said, he heard them read, and heard me affirm the same; which also was not true. Then my lord proceeded with the rest of my articles, demanding of me if I said not as was written. To which I answered, [...] And turning to my lord mayor, I said, I require you, my lord mayor, in God's behalf, unto whom pertaineth your sword and justice, that I may here before your presence answer to these objections that are laid against me, and have probation of the same▪ and if any thing that I have said, or will say, be proved (as my lord saith) heresy, I shall not only with all my heart forsake the same, and cleave to the truth, but also recant wheresoever you shall assign me, and all this audience shall be witness to the same.
Why, Smith, thou canst not de [...] but this thou sa [...]t.
Yes, my lord, I deny that which he hath written, because he hath both added to, and diminished from the same: but what I have spoken I will never deny.
Why, thou speakest against the blessed sacrament of the altar.
I denied it to be any sacrament, and I do stand here to make probation of the same; and if my lord o [...] any of his doctors be able to prove either the name or usage of the same, I will recant mine error. Then spake my brother Tankerfield, and defended the probation of things which they called heresy. To which the bishop answered,
By my troth, Mr. Speaker, you shall preach at a stake.
Well sworn, my lord, you keep a good watch.
Well, Mr. Controller, I am no saint.
No, my lord, nor yet a good bishop. For a bishop, saith St. Paul, should be fau [...]tless, and a vessel dedicated unto God; and are you not ashamed to sit in judgment and be a blasphemer, condemning innocents?
Well, Mr. Controller, you are faultles [...] ▪
My lord mayor, I require you in God's name, that I may have justice. We be here today a great many innocents wrongfully accused of heresy. And I require you, if you will not seem to be parti [...]l, let me have no more favour at your hands, than the apostle had at the hand [...] of Festus and Agrip [...], who being heathens and infidels, gave him leave not only to speak for himself, but also heard the probation of his cause. This require I at your hands, who being a christian judge, I hope will not deny me that right, which the heathen have suffered: if you do: then shall all this audience, yea, and the heathen, speak shame of your fact. For all that do well come to the light, and they that do evil hate the light.
THEN the lord mayor hanging down his head, said nothing, but the bishop told me, I should preach at the stake, and so the sheriff cried with the bishop▪ away with me.
THUS came I in before them four times, desiring justice, but could have none: and at length my friends required the same with one voice, and could not have it; so we had sentence; and then being carried out, were brought in again, and received it separately. But before the bishop gave me sentence, he told me in derision of my brother Tankerfield, a tale between a gentleman and his cook. To which I answered, My lord, you fill the people's ears with fantasies and foolish tales, and make a laughing matter at blood; but if you were a true bishop, you should leave these railing sentences, and speak the words of God.
Well, I have offe [...]ed to that naughty fellow, Mr. Speaker, your companion the c [...]ok, that my chancellor should here instruct him, but he hath with great disdain refused it. H [...]w s [...]yest thou, wilt thou have him instruct thee, and le [...]d thee into the right way?
My lord, [...]f your chancellor will do me any good, and take any pains, as you say, let him take mine articles in his hands, that you have objected against me, and either prove one of them heresy, or any thing that you do to be good: and if he be able so to do, I stand here with all my heart to hear him; if not, I have no need, I praise God, of his sermon: for I come to answer for my life, and not to hear a sermon.
THUS began the sentence, "In the name of God," &c. To which I answered, that he began in a wrong name, requiring of him, where he learned in scripture to give sentence of death against any man for his conscience sake. To which he m [...]de no answer, but went forward to the end, and immediately cried, Away with him. Then I turned to the mayor, and said, Is it not enough for you, my lord mayor, and you that are the sheriffs, that you have left the straightway of the Lord, but you must condemn Christ causeless?
Well, Mr. Controller, now you cannot say, but I have offered you fair, to have instruction. And now, I pray thee, call me Bloody Bishop, and say, I seek thy blood.
Well, my lord, if neither I nor any of this congregation do report the truth of your fact, [Page 754] yet shall these stones cry it out, rather than it shall be hidden.
Away with him, away with him
Away with him, take him away.
Well, good friends, you have seen and heard the great wrong that we have received this day, and you are all witnesses that we have desired the probation of our cause by God's book, and it hath not been granted: but we are condemned, and our cause not heard. Nevertheless, my lord mayor, forasmuch as you have here exercised God's sword causeless, and will not hear the right of the poor, I commit my cause to Almighty God, who will judge all men according to right, before whom we shall both stand without authority; and there will I stand in the right, and have judgment, to your great confusion, except you repent, which the Lord grant you to do, if it be his will. And then was I with the rest of my brethren carried away to Newgate.
THUS, gentle reader, as near as I can, I have set forth the truth of my examination, and the verity of mine unjust condemnation for the truth, praying to God that it may not be laid to the charge of thee, O England, requiring your hearty prayers to God for his grace and spirit of boldness, with hope even shortly to set to my seal at Uxbridge the 8th day of August, by God's grace: pray that it may be to his honour, my salvation, and your consolation, I pray you.
THUS art thou (good reader) not only to note, but also to follow in this man a singular example of christian fortitude, who so valiantly stood in defence of his master's cause: and as thou seest him here boldly stand in examination before the bishop and doctors; so was he no less comfortable also in the prison among his companions: which also is to be observed no less in his other fellow-prisoners, who being together in an outward room in Newgate, had godly conference with themselves, with daily praying and public reading, which they to their great comfort used in that room together; amongst whom Smith was the chief; whose industry was always solicitous, not only for them of his own company, but also his diligence was c [...] ful for other prisoners, whom he ceased not to dissuade from their old accustomed iniquity; and many he converted to his religion.
THE said Robert Smith, the valiant and constant martyr of Christ▪ being thus replenished, as ye [...] heard, with the fortitude of God's Spirit, was condemned at London by Bonner their bishop, on the 12th day of July; and suffered at Uxbridge the 8th day of August; who as he had been before [...] comfortable instrument of God to all them [...] were in prison with him; so now also being at the stake, he did no less comfort the people, [...] standing about him, willing them to think [...] of his cause, and not to doubt but that [...] in that quarrel, should rise again [...] life. [...] said he, I doubt not but God will shew you [...] token thereof. At length he being well [...] burnt, and all black with fire, clustered together [...] in a lump like a black coal, all men thinking him dead, suddenly rose upright before the people, [...] up the stumps of his arms, and clapping the same together, declaring a rejoicing heart [...] them; and so bending down again, and hanging over the fire, slept in the Lord, and ended [...] mortal life.
WHILE he was in prison he wrote several [...] to his friends, some in verse, and others in [...] And the first are in verse as follow.
LETTER I. "O ye that love the Lord, see that ye [...] thing that is evil."
LETTER II. The Exhortation of ROBERT SMITH to his Children, commonly set forth in the Name of Mr. ROGERS.
LETTER III. To his BROTHER.
Written at the Request of a Lady in her Book.
Legem Pone.
LETTER IV. From Mr. ROBERT SMITH to his Wife.
THE God and Father eternal, who brought again from death our Lord Jesus Christ, keep thee, dear wife, now and ever, Amen; thy parents and all thy friends. I praise God for his mercy, I am in the same state that you left me in, rather better than worse, looking daily for the living God, before whom I hunger full sore to appear, and receive the glory, of which I trust thou art willing to be partaker. I give God most hearty thanks therefore, desiring thee of all things to stand in that faith which thou hast received; and let no man take away the seed that Almighty God hath sown in thee, but lay hands on everlasting life which shall ever abide, when both the earth and all earthly friends shall perish, desiring them also to receive thankfully our trouble, which is momentary and light, and as St Paul saith, not worthy to be compared with those things which God hath prepared for us; that we patiently carrying our cross, may attain to the place where our Saviour Christ is gone before, to which I beseech God of his mercy bring us speedily. I have been much troubled about your deliverance, fearing much the persuasion of worldlings, and have found a friend, who will (I trust) find a means for you, if you be not already provided, desiring you in any case to abide such order, as those my friends shall appoint in God. And bear well in mind the words which I spake at our parting, that as God hath found us, and also elected us as worthy to suffer for him, we may endeavour ourselves to follow uprightly in this our vocation, desiring you to present my hearty commendations to all our friends, and especially to your parents, keeping your sentiments close in any wife. Give most hearty thanks to my friend, who is come to Windsor only for our cause. Continue in prayer. Do well. Be faultless in all things. Beware of abominations. Keep yourself clean from sin. Pray for me, as I do for you. I have sent you a piece of gold for a token, and most intirely desire you to send me word if you lack any thing. The Lord Jesus preserve you and your's, Amen. From Newgate, April 15.
LETTER V. From Mr. SMITH to his Wife.
SEEK first to love God, dear wife, with your whole heart, and then shall it be easy to love your neighbour.
BE friendly to all creatures, and especially to your own soul.
BE always an enemy to the devil and the world, but especially to your own flesh.
IN hearing of good things, join the ears of your head and heart together.
SEEK unity and quietness with all men, but especially with your conscience; for it will not easily be intreated.
LOVE all people, but especially your enemies.
HATE the sins that are past, but especially those to come.
BE as ready to further your enemy, as he is to hinder you, that you may be a child of God.
DEFILE not that which Christ hath cleansed, lest his blood be laid to your charge.
REMEMBER that God hath hedged in your tongue, with the teeth and lips, that it might speak under correction.
[Page 762]BE ready at all times to look to your brother's eye, but especially in your own eye: for he that warneth others of what he himself is guilty, doth give his neighbour the clear wine, and keepeth the dregs to himself.
BEWARE of riches and worldly honour; for without understanding, prayer, and fasting, it is a snare; and also poverty, all which are like to a consuming fire, of which if a man take a little, it will warm him, but if he take too much, it will consume him. For it is hard for a man to carry fire in his bosom, and not be burnt.
SHEW mercy to the saints for Christ's sake, and Christ shall reward you for the saints' sake. Among all other prisoners visit your own soul, for it is inclosed in a perilous prison.
IF you will love God, hate evil, and you shall obtain the reward of well-doing.
THUS fare you well, good Anne. Have me heartily commended to all that love the Lord unfeignedly. I beseech you, have me in your prayer whilst I am living, and I am assured the Lord will accept it. Bring up my children and your's in the fear of God, and then I shall not fail to receive you together, in the everlasting kingdom of God, which I go unto.
LETTER VI. From the Same to the Same.
GRACE, mercy, and peace from God the Father, and from the Lord Jesus Christ, be with you, dear wife, now and ever, Amen, and prevent your ways through his holy Spirit, that you may eschew evil, to his honour, and your salvation; that they which see your conversation may in all things learn to do the like, even to the u [...]er shame and confusion of the wicked and ungodly. Amen▪
I sent you by Mr. Alexander a purse with money. I have certain token▪ for you, sent by my fellow-prisoners to you, that is from Mr. Haukes, 12d. from Mr. Simpson, 12d. from his wife, 4d. from Mr. Watts, five new groats; from Mr. Ardeley, 12d. from Mr. Bradford, 12d. which men are all gone to death, except Mr. Bradford, who still remaineth. There is also gone to death Nicholas Chamberlain, Thomas Osmond, and William Bamford. [...] is also condemned this Monday, Dirick Carver, Thomas I [...]e [...]on, John Launder, and William Vassay is reprieved Pray God to have mercy on his people; and bid my [...]eather, if he can conveniently, come down on Monday [...]; if he cannot well do [...], let him bide at home. Commend [...] heartily to your parents. I have sent each of them a token, a bowed great, and desire them for God's sake to help [...] with their prayers. Have little Katharine in mind. Commend me unto all good friends. Continue in prayer. Beware of vanity. Let not God be dishonoured in your conversation, but like a good matron keep your vessel i [...] holiness. The peace of God remain with you for eve [...] Amen.
MY brother Iveson sendeth to you a token, to your mother a token, and to Katharine a token, three pence. John Launder s [...]ndeth you a piece of Spanish money. Father [...] rault a six penny piece. William Andrews sendeth a [...] of ginger▪ and I send your mother one, and a nutmeg. I send Katharine co [...]fits, for a token to eat. I have sent you a key-clog for a token.
LETTER VII. From Mr. SMITH to his FRIEND.
THE eternal God keep you in his fear. I have hearty commendations to you and your husband, [...] Almighty God to preserve you in well doing, and i [...] perfect knowledge of his Christ, that you may be found faultless in the day of the Lord. I have heard say, that my friend is given over to vanity; it breaketh my heart not only to hear that he so doeth, but also teacheth others that it is no crime to go to all abomination, which now stand in the idols temples: nevertheless, dear friend, be you not moved to follow sinners, for they have no inheritance with God and Christ But look that by going into the idol temple, you [...] the temple of God; for light hath no fellowship with [...]. But look, what the Lord hath commanded, that do For if not going to church were without persecution, [...] would not learn you that lesson. But all things that [...] sweet to the flesh, are allowed of the fleshly. The [...] shall reward every man according to his works, and he [...] leadeth into captivity, shall go into captivity; and he [...] by the fleshly man is led into the flesh, shall of the [...] reap corruption. The Lord Jesus give thee his holy Spirit, Amen.
I have sent thee an epistle in metre, which is not to be laid up in thy coff [...]r, but in thy heart.
[Page 763]SEEK peace and insure it. Fear God, love God with all thy heart, with all thy soul, and with all thy strength.
Scribbled in much haste from Newgate, May 12.
ROBERT SMITH to all the faithful Servants of CHRIST, exhorting them to be strong under Persecution.
The Martyrdom of STEPHEN HARWOOD and THOMAS FUST.
ABOUT this time also died these two martyrs of God, Stephen Harwood at Stratford, and Thomas Fust at Ware. Who, as they were burn [...] much about the same time (though not at the same place) with the aforesaid Robert Smith and Georg [...] Tankerfield, so were they likewise examined and openly condemned together with them; and as the proceedings against them all were alike. I thought it needless to repeat the same; only there is one thing more to be added concerning Thomas Fust, who at his last appear [...]nce on the 12th of July, being moved by the bishop to revoke his opinion, answered thus: No, my lord, for no truth cometh out of our mouth, but all lies: you condemn men, and will not hear the truth. Where can you find any anointing or greasing in God's book? I speak nothing but the truth, and I am certain that it is the truth that I speak. This answer of Thomas Fust only, I find noted by the register: and how unfaithful these registers have been, (I mean in omitting those things that were most worthy of note, in order to render the martyrs ridiculous to the people) is very evident in many places of thi [...] history. But to be short, when they had made their answers, both he and Stephen Harwood were, for their faithful perseverance, condemned together by the bishop in his accustomed pity, to be burnt as heretics, and so (as you have heard before) they finished their martyrdom, the one at Stratford, and the other at Ware, in the month of August, and year abovesaid.
The Martyrdom of WILLIAM HALE, at Barnet.
OF the same company with those ten before recorded, who were sent to bishop Bonner by sir Nicholas Hare and other commissioners, in the company of George Tankerfield and Robert Smith, was also William Hale, of Thorp, in the county of Essex, who likewise being examined with the rest, the 12th of July, received with them also the sentence of condemnation; giving this exhortation withal to the lookers on: Ah, good people, said he, beware of this idolater, and this Antichrist (pointing to the bishop of London); and so he was delivered to the sheriffs to be burnt as an heretic, who sent him to Barnet, where about the latter end of August he most constantly sealed up his faith with the consuming of his body by cruel fire, yielding his soul to the Lord Jesus, his only and most sure Redeemer.
An Account of GEORGE KING and THOMAS LEYES, who died, and were buried in the Fields.
MENTION was made before of ten persons sent out of Newgate by Mr. Hare and other commissioners, to be examined by Bonner, bishop of London: of whom six already have been executed in several places, as hath been shewed; whose names were Elizabeth Warn, George Tankerfield, Robert Smith, Stephen Harwood, Thomas Fust, and William Hale. The other three, namely, George King, Thomas Leves, and John Wa [...]e, f [...]lling sick in Lollard's Tower, were so weak th [...]t they were removed into sundry houses within the city of London, and there died, and were thrown out into the fi [...]lds, and there buried [...] the night by some of the faithful brethren, when [...] the [...] time durst do it, Propter metum J [...]orum. The l [...]st that remained of this company a [...]oresaid was [Page 764] Joan Laysh, or Layshford, the daughter-in-law of John Warn, and Elizabeth Warn, martyrs: but because she was reprieved to another time, her story and martyrdom we will defer till the month of January the next year following.
An Account of WILLIAM ANDREW.
THE like catholic charity was also shewed upon William Andrew, of Horsley, in the county of Essex, carpenter, who was brought to Newgate the first day of April, 1555, by John Motham, constable of Malden in Essex. The first and principal promoter of him was the lord Rich, who sent him first to prison. Also sir Richard Southwell, knight, was another great enemy to him, as appeareth by a letter written by him to Bonner, which here followeth.
A LETTER From Sir RICHARD SOUTHWELL to BONNER, Bishop of London.
MAY it please your lordship to understand, that the lord Rich did about seven or eight weeks past, send up unto the council one William Andrew, of Thorp, within the county of Essex, an arrogant heretic. Their pleasure was to command me to commit him to Newgate, where he remaineth; and as I am informed, hath infected a number in that prison with his heresy. Your lordship shall do very well if it please you to convent him before you, and to take order with him as his case doth require. I know the council meant to have writ herein unto your lordship, but by occasion of other business, the thing hath been omitted. Wherefore knowing their good pleasure, I did advise the keeper of Newgate to wait on you with these few lines. And so referring the rest to your virtuous consideration, I remain your lordship's to command.
THIS William Andrew being twice examined before bishop Bonner, there [...] in defence of his religion. At length, by the severe usage he met with in Newgate prison, [...]e there lost his life which otherwise would have been taken away by fire: and so after the popish manner he was cast out into a field, and by night was privately buried by the hands of good men and faithful brethren.
The Martyrdom of Mr. ROBERT SAMUEL, Minister of Barfold, in Suffolk.
MR. Foster, a justice, dwelling at Cobdock, near Ipswich, in the county of Suffolk, being in continual hatred against the truth and the professors of the same, his constant study night and day was how to bring those into thraldom and captivity, that were honest and piously inclined to religion; but also whatsover they were that once came into his claws, could not easily escape without [...] of conscience or loss of life, so greedy was he of blood. Among many whom he had troubled▪ there was one Samuel, in king Edward's days, a very godly and faithful preacher of God's word, who for his valiant and constant behaviour in his sermons, seemeth worthy of high admiration. He was minister at Barfold, in Suffolk, where he industriously and successfully taught the flock which the Lord had committed to his charge, so long as the time would suffer him to do his duty.
AT last being removed from the ministry, and put from his benefice, (as many other good pastors were when he could not avoid the raging violence of the time, yet would he not give over his care that he had for his flock, but would teach the [...] privily and by stealth, when he could not openly [...] so. At which time order was given by the queen, to be published by the commissioners, that all priests which had been married in king Edward's days, should put away their wives from them, and be compelled to return again to their chastity and single life. This decree Mr. Samuel would not stand to, because he knew it to be manifestly wicked and abominable; but determining with himself, that God's laws were not to be broke for man's traditions, still kept his wife at Ipswick, and gave his diligence in the mean time to the instructing of others which were about him, as occasion served. At last Mr. [...]oster having int [...]igence hereof, being a great doer in those parts, spared no time not diligence, but quickly sent his [...] abroad, [Page 765] laying close wait for Mr. Samuel, that if he came home to his wife at any time, they might apprehend him, and carry him to prison.
IN conclusion, when such as should betray him espied him at home with his wife, they brought word to the officer, who came to the house, and beset it with a great company, and so took him in the night-season, because they durst not do it in the day time for fear of trouble and tumult, although good Mr. Samuel did not withstand them at all, but meekly yielded himself into their hands of his own accord. When they had thus caught him, they put him into Ipswich jail, where he patiently spent his time among his pious brethren, so long as he was permitted to continue there. However, not long after, being taken from thence, he was carried (through the malice of the wicked sort) to Norwich, where Dr. Hopton, bishop of that diocese, and Dr. Dunnings, his chancellor, exercised great cruelty against him, as indeed they were men, in that time of persecution, as had not their matches for cruel tormenting the bodies of the martyrs among all the rest; and especially through the procuring of D [...]nnings. For although the others were sharp enough in their generation, yet would they be satisfied with imprisonment and death, and could go no farther. Neither did I ever yet hear of any besides these, who so far exceeded all bounds of pity and compassion in tormenting their poor brethren, as this bishop did; in such sort, that many of them he perverted, brought quite from the truth, and some from their wits also.
THE bishop therefore, or else his chancellor, thinking that he might as easily prevail with Mr. Samuel, as he had lone with the others before, kept him in a very close prison at his first coming, where he was chained bolt-up [...]right to a post, in such sort, that standing only on tip-toe, he was fain to stay up the whole poise or weight of his body thereby. And to make amends for the cruelty or pain that he suffered, they added a far mo [...] grievous torment, keeping him without meat and drink, whereby he was unmercifully ve [...]ed through hunger and thirst▪ saving that he had every day allowed him two or three mouthfuls of bread, and three spoonfuls of water, to the end rather that he might be reserved to farther torment, than that they would preserve his life. 'O worthy constancy of the martyr! O pitiless hearts of papists, worthy to be complained of, and to be accused before God and nature! O the wonderful strength of Christ in his members! Whose heart, though it had been made of adamant stone, would not have relented at the intolerable vexations, and extreme pains above nature! How often would he have drunk his own water; but his body was so dried up with his long emptiness, that he was not able to make one drop.
AT last, when he was brought forth to be burned, which was but a trifle in comparison of those pains that he had passed, there were several that heard him declare what strange things had happened unto him during the time of his imprisonment: to wit, that after he had been famished or pined with hunger two or three days together, he then fell into a sleep, as it were one half in a slumber, at which time one clad all in white seemed to stand before him, which administered comfort unto him by these words: "Samuel, Samuel, be of good cheer, and take a good heart unto thee. For after this day shalt thou never be either hungry or thirsty." Which came to pass accordingly, for soon after he was burned; and from that time till he suffered, he felt neither hunger nor thirst. And this he declared, to the end as he said, that all men might behold the wonderful works of God. Many other matters concerning the great comfort he had of Christ in his afflictions he could utter, he said, besides this, but that shamefacedness and modesty would not suffer him to utter it. And yet if it had pleased God, I wish he had been less modest in that behalf, that the love and care that Christ hath of his servants, might have the more appeared thereby unto us by such present arguments, for the more plentiful comfort of the godly, though there be sufficient testimonies of the same in the holy scriptures already.
NO less memorable it is, and worthy also to be noted, concerning the three ladders which he told to divers, he saw in his sleep set up towards heaven; of which there was one somewhat longer than the rest, but yet at length they became one, joining (as it were) all three together. I his was a forewarning revealed unto him, declaring undoubtedly▪ the martyrdom first of himself, [...] the death of [Page 766] two honest women, who were brought forth and suffered in the same town not long after.
AS this pious martyr was going to the stake, a certain maid came to him, and took him about the neck and kissed him, which being marked by them that were present, was sought for the next day after to be had to prison and burned, as the very party herself informed me: however, as God of his goodness would have it, she escaped their fiery hands, keeping herself secret in the town a good while after But as this maid, called Rose Nottingham, was marvellously preserved by the providence of God; so there were two other honest women that fell into the rage and fury of that time. The one was a brewer's wife, the other was a shoemaker's wife, but both together now espoused to a new husband, Christ.
WITH these two this maid aforesaid was very familiar and well acquainted, who on a time giving counsel to one of them, that she should convey herself away while she had time and space, seeing she could not away with the queen's proceedings; had this answer at her hands again: I know well, saith she, that it is well enough to fly away, which remedy you may use if you please. But my case standeth otherwise. I am tied to an husband, and have besides young children at home▪ and then I know not how my husband, being a carnal man, will take my departure from him; therefore I am minded, for the love of Christ and his truth, to stand to the extremity of the matter.
AND so the next day after Mr. Sam [...]el suffered, these two pious wives, the one named A [...]e Potten, the other Joan Trunchfield, wife of Michael Trunchfield, shoemaker of Ipswich, wer [...] apprehended, and both had to prison together. Who, as they were both by sex and nature somewhat [...]nder, so were they at first less able to endure the stra [...]ness of the prison, and especially the brewer's wife [...]as cast into marvellous great agonies and troubles [...]f mind thereby. But Christ beholding the weak in firmi [...]y of his servant, did not sail to help her when she was in this necessity. So at length they both suffered after Samuel, Feb. 19, 1550, as shall be by God's grace declared hereafter. And these, no doubt, were those two ladders, which being joined with the third, Samuel saw stretched up into [...]ven. This blessed Samuel, the servant of Christ, suffered the 3 [...] of August, 1555.
THE report goeth among some that were [...] present, and saw him burn, that his body in burning did shine as bright and white as new tried silver [...] the eyes of them that were there, and did behold the [...]ight.
An Account of WILLIAM ALLEN, Martyr.
NOW after the suffering of Robert Samuel, about the beginning of September, William Allen was burnt in Wa [...]singham, a labouring [...], sometime servant to John Houghton, of [...] He being brought to the bishop, and asked the [...] why he was imprisoned, answered, That he was put in prison because he would not follow the [...] saying, that he would never go in procession.
THEN being willed by the bishop to return again to the catholic church; he answered, That he would turn to the catholic church, but not to the Romish church: and said, That if he saw the king and queen, and all others follow the cross, or [...] down to the cross, he would not. For which, sentence of condemnation was given against him the 12th of August, to be burnt at Walsingham about the beginning of Sept. who declared such constancy at his martyrdom, and had such credit with the justices, by reason of his well tried conversation among them, that he was suffered to go untied [...] his suffering, and there being fastened with a [...], stood quietly without shrinking until he died.
The Martyrdom of ROGER COO, first examined by the Bishop of NORWICH, and by him condemned, August 1 [...], 1555.
ROGER COO, being brought before the bishop, was first asked by him, why he was [...]mprisoned?
At the justice's commandment.
There was some cause why.
Here is my accuser, let him declare.
AND his accuser said, that he would not receive the sacrament.
THEN the bishop said, that he thought he had transgressed a law.
BUT Coo answered, that there was no law to transgress.
THE bishop then asked, What he said to the law that then was?
COO answered, that he had been in prison a long time, and knew it not.
NO, said his accuser, nor will not. My lord, ask him when he received the sacrament.
WHEN Coo heard him say so, he said, I pray you, my lord, let him sit down and examine me himself.
BUT the bishop would not hear that, but said, Coo, why will you not receive?
HE answered him, That the bishop of Rome had changed God's ordinances, and given the people bread and wine instead of the gospel, and the belief of the same.
How prove you that?
Our Saviour said, "My flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed. He that eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood abideth in me, and I in him;" and the bread and wine doth not so.
Well, Coo, thou dost slander our holy fathers. Did not Christ take bread, give thanks, and break it, and said, "This is my body?"
YES, said he▪ and so he went further with the text, saying, "Which shall be given for you: do [...] in remembrance of me."
You have said the truth.
THEN Coo replied further, and said, Christ commanded to do this in remembrance of him, and not to say this in remembrance of him; neither did the Holy Ghost so lead the apostles, but taught them to give thanks, and to break bread from house to house, and not to say as the bishop said.
How prove you that?
It is written in Acts ii.
THEN the bishop's chaplain said it was true.
THE bishop asked him if he could say his creed.
HE answered yea, and so said part of the creed; and then after, he said he believed more; for be believed the Ten Commandments, that it was meet for all such as look to be saved, to be obedient unto them.
Is not the holy church to be believed also?
Yes, if it be built upon the word of God.
THE bishop said to Coo, that he had the charge of his soul.
Have you so, my lord? Then if you go to the devil for your sins, what shall become of me?
Do you not believe as your father did? Was he not an honest man?
It is written, that after Christ hath suffered, "There [...] come a people with the prince that shall destroy both city and sanctuary." I pray you shew me whether this destruction was in my father's time, or now?
THE bishop not answering his question, asked him, whether he would not obey the king's laws?
As far as they agree with the word of God I will obey them.
Whether they agree with the word of [Page 768] God or not, we are bound to obey them, if the king were an infidel.
If Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed [...] go▪ had so done, Nebuchadnezzar had not confessed the living God.
These two and twenty years we have [...] [...]overned by such kings.
My lord, why were you then dumb, and [...] [...]ot speak or bark?
I durst not for fear of death. And thus they ended.
BUT after this done, it was reported that I railed; wherefore I recollected, and wrote down my railing (as they called it) that light should not be taken for darkness, nor sin for holiness, and the devil for God, who ought to be feared and honoured both now and for ever, Amen.
THIS Roger Coo, an aged father, after his sundry troubles and conflicts with his adversaries, at length was committed to the fire at Yexford, in the county of Suffolk, where he most blessedly ended his aged years, in the month of September, 1555.
An Account of THOMAS COB, of HAVERHILL, Butcher, and Martyr.
THOMAS COB, of Haverhill, butcher, was condemned on the 12th day of August, and executed in the month of September. Being brought and examined by Michael Dunnings, the bloody chancellor of Norwich; first, whether he believed that Christ is really and substantially in the sacrament of the altar; answered, That the body of Christ, born of the virgin, was in heaven, and otherwise (he said) he would not answer, because he had read it in the scripture, that Christ did ascend, and never did descend since; and therefore said, that he had no [...] [...]ea [...]ed in the scripture, that Christ should be i [...] the sacrament.
FURTHERMORE, being demanded whether he would obey the laws of the realm of England made for the unity of faith, or no: he answer [...] That his body should be at the king and [...] commandment so far as the law of God [...] suffer, &c. In fine, he being condemned, [...] burnt in the town of Thetford, in Septe [...] 1555.
An Account of the Martyrdom of GEORGE C [...]MER, ROBERT STREATER, ANTHONY BURWA [...] GEORGE BRODBRIDGE, and JAMES TUTT [...].
NOW to return to Norfolk and Suffo [...] ▪ the diocese of Canterbury, where w [...] [...] treat of five worthy martyrs, whose blood i [...] [...] same year and month of September, was [...] for the true testimony of Christ and his gospel▪ [...] names of whom are as follow.
GEORGE CATMER, of Hith; Robert [...] of Hi [...]h; Anthony Burward, of Calete; [...] Brodbridge, of Bromfield; James Tutty, of [...].
THESE upon the third day of August [...] brought before Dr. Thornton the aforesaid [...] of Dover, and his accomplices, and there [...] both jointly and severally examined upon [...] articles, touching the sacrament of the altar, [...]cular confession, and other such like.
To which the said Catmer (being first examined made answer in this wise; Christ, said he, [...] in heaven on the right hand of God the [...], and therefore I do not believe him to be in the sacrament of the altar; but he is in the worthy receiver spiritually; and the sacrament, as you [...], is an abominable idol.
NEXT unto him Robert Streater was called forth, who being asked, Whether he did [...] the real presence of Christ in the sacrament of the altar, said, that he did not so believe; for you do maintain he [...]sy and idolatry (says he) in that ye [...] teach to worship a false god in the sacrament, enclosed in a box. It is you that are the malignant of the church▪ for in your church there are twenty things used against the law of God.
[Page 769]THE like objection was likewise made against Anthony Burward, who also said that their sacrament was made an idol.
AFTER him it was demanded of George Brodbridge what he said to those articles. Who answered, that he would not be confessed of a priest, because he could not forgive his own sins. And further said, that in the sacrament of the altar there is no real body of our Saviour Christ, but bread given in remembrance of him. Moreover, as for your holy bread, your holy water, and your mass, I do (says he) utterly deny them.
AND last of all, James Tutty made and confirmed the foregoing answers.
AND therefore they were all five condemned as heretics, and were all five burned at Canterbury in one fire, about the 6th day of September then next following.
ALTHOUGH the rage and vehemency of this terrible persecution in queen Mary's days did chiefly light in London, Essex, Norfolk, Suffolk, and Kent, as hath already been partly declared; yet notwithstanding, few parts of the realm were free from this fatal storm, but in almost all places some were put to death for the same righteous cause. And now to begin with the diocese of Litchfield and Coventry, where we shall just mention two persons, namely, Thomas Hayward, and John Goreway, who were both condemned as heretics, and were burnt at Litchfield about the middle of September.
The History of ROBERT GLOVER, Gentleman, and Mr. JOHN GLOVER, in the diocese of LITCHFIELD.
ROBERT GLOVER, gentleman, was likewise apprehended, and put to death in the month of September, in the diocese of Litchfield and Coventry. Of whose apprehension and troubles I cannot well treat, without mentioning some things relating to John Glover, his brother, because the commission was chiefly sent down for John, and not for Robert, (although it pleased God that John escaped, and Robert was apprehended) therefore I thought it necessary to comprehend them both in one story. In describing some part of their virtuous institution and order of life, I shall first begin with John the eldest brother▪ who being a gentleman, and heir to his father in the town of Mancetor, was endowed with fair possessions and worldly goods, but much more plentifully enriched with God's heavenly grace, and inward virtues: which grace so wrought in him, that he with his other brethren, Robert and William, not only received and embraced the happy light of Christ's holy gospel, but also most zealously professed, and no less diligently in their lives and conversation followed the same.
JOHN GLOVER was a man of a very tender conscience, and seemed to have a deeper taste and contemplation of heavenly things, and more mortified from worldly cares than the others were. His spiritual conflicts were very extraordinary, and because the consideration of them both is worthy of memory, and the example may work experience to the comfort of the godly, it may not be amiss to rehearse some part of them. It pleased God so to lay his heavy hand of inward afflictions and grievous passions upon him, that though he suffered not the pains of the outward fire, as his brother and other martyrs did; yet if we consider what he suffered inwardly, and that for a long time, he may well be counted a martyr with his brother Robert, being no less desirous with him of the same martyrdom; yea, and in comparison may seem to be chronicled for a double martyr.
FOR as the said Robert was speedily dispatched with the sharp and extreme torments of the fire in a short time; so this no less blessed saint of God, what, and how much more grievous pangs, what sorrowful torments, what boiling heats of the fire of hell he inwardly felt, no tongue is able to express. Being young, I remember I was once or twice with him, who partly by his talk I perceived, and partly by mine own eyes saw to be so worn and consumed in the space of five years, that he could hardly digest any meat, enjoy the quietness of sleep, or pleasure of life; yea, and almost no kind of senses were left in him. And truly I have often greatly wondered at the miraculous operation of [Page 770] Christ shewed upon him, who unless he had relieved in time his poor wretched servant so far worn, with some seasonable consolation now and then, it could not be possible for him to subsist under such intolerable agonies. And yet the occasion thereof was of no great moment neither. But nothing is more common amongst the holiest and best of men, by how much the more devout and watchful they are, (having the fear of God before their eyes) so much the more they mistrust and suspect themselves; whereby it cometh to pass, that they are often terrified and perplexed with small matters (in comparison) as though they were huge mountains; whereas, on the contrary, others there be whom the blackest and most heinous crimes will nothing touch or move.
THE occasion of this was, that he being first called by the light of the Holy Spirit to the knowledge of the gospel, and having received a wonderful, sweet, and feeling sense of Christ's heavenly kingdom, his mind, after that, falling to some cogitation of his former affairs belonging to his vocation, began by and by to misdoubt himself upon the occasion of these words written in the 6th chapter to the Hebrews; "For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted the good word of God, and the powers of the world to come, if they shall fall away, to renew them again unto repentance. seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame." Upon the consideration of which words, he fully persuaded himself that he had sinned against the Holy Ghost; even so much, that had he been in hell, he could hardly despair much more of his salvation. Every good man may readily judge, by himself, what terrors, boilings, and convulsions, turmoiled in the mean time in his woful breast; although it be hard for any man to judge of the misery thereof, but he who hath by experience felt the like,
NOW in comparing the torments of all martyrs with his pains, I pray you, what pains, punishment, and flames would he not willingly have suffered, to have had some small ease and refreshment? Being under such intolerable agonies of mind, that he could have no enjoyment of his food, yet was he compelled to eat against his appetit [...], on purpose to defer the time of his damnation as long as he could, thinking with himself, that he must needs be thrown into hell, as soon as the breath went out of his body. However, he thought Christ pitied his case, and was sorry for him; yet he could not (as he imagined) help, because of the verity of his word, which said, "It i [...] impossible for those who were once enlightened," &c.
AND this I mention not to open his wound and expose his misfortunes, but to encourage all good men by his example to glorify the Son of God, who suffereth none to be tempted above his strength, but so tempereth and seasoneth the asperity of evils, that what seemeth to us intolerable, he doth not alleviate that we may bear it, but also turneth i [...] more to our advantage than we can imagine▪ which manifestly appeared in this good servant of God, and in no man more. And although (as we have said) he suffered many years these sharp temptations and strong buffetings of Satan; yet the Lord, who graciously preserved him all the while, did not only rid him out of all discomfort, but also framed him thereby to such mortification of life, as the like probably hath not been seen, in such sort as he being like one placed in heaven already, and dead to this world, both in word and meditation led a life altogether celestial, abhorring in his mind all profane doings. Neither was his talk any thing different from the fruits of his life, never throwing out an idle, vile, or vain word. The most part of his lands he distributed to the use of his brethren, and committed the rest to the guiding of his servants and officers whereby he might the more quietly give up himself his godly study, as to a continual Sabbath rest. This was about the latter end of king Henry's reign, and continued in the time of king Edward VI.
AFTER this, in the persecuting days of queen Mary, as soon as the bishop of Coventry heard of his fame, and of his being so ardent and zealous in the gospel of Christ, he immediately wrote a letter to the mayor and officers of Coventry, [Page 771] to apprehend him as soon as possible. But by the good providence of God, it happened otherwise: for God disposeth all things after his own secret pleasure, who seeing his old trusty servant so many years with so extreme and many torments broken and dried up, would in no wise heap too many sorrows upon one poor silly wretch: neither would he commit him to the flames of fire, who had been already baked and scorched with the sharp fires of inward affliction, and had sustained so many burning darts and conflicts of Satan so many years▪ God therefore, of his divine providence, thinking it too much that one man should be so overcharged with so many plagues and torments, did graciously provide, that Robert his brother being both stronger in body, and also better furnished with helps of learning to answer the adversaries, (being a Master of Arts in Cambridge) should sustain that conflict, and even so it came to pass.
FOR as soon as the mayor of Coventry had received the bishop's letters for the apprehending of Mr. John Glover, he forthwith sent private notice to the said John to convey himself away: who with his brother William was not so soon departed out of his house, but that yet, in the sight of the sheriff and others, the searchers came and rushed in to take him, according to the bishop's order.
BUT when the person they sought for could not be found, one of the officers going into an upper chamber, found there Robert the other brother lying on his bed, who had been long sick; and was by him immediately brought before the sheriff. Which sheriff, notwithstanding, favouring Robert, and his cause, would indeed fain have dismissed him, and wrought what means he could, saying, that he was not the man for whom they were sent: yet, nevertheless, being terrified with the threats of the officer, contending with him to have him detained till the bishop's coming, he was constrain-to carry him against his will, and so laid him fast till the bishop came. And thus much by way of preamble, concerning the worthy remembrance of Mr. John Glover.
NOW to enter upon the matter which principally we have in [...]and, that is, to consider the s [...]ory and martyrdom of Mr. Robert Glover; as the whole narration was sent in a letter of his own writing to his wife, concerning the manner of his being handled; therefore it seemeth best, for the more credit of the matter, to exhibit his own letter, the contents of which are as follow.
LETTER From Mr. ROBERT GLOVER to his WIFE, containing the whole Description of his Troubles.
THE peace of conscience which passeth all understanding, the sweet consolation, comfort, strength, and boldness of the Holy Ghost, be continually increased in your heart, through a fervent, earnest, and stedfast faith in our most dear and only Saviour Jesus Christ, Amen.
I thank you heartily, most loving wife, for your letters sent to me in my imprisonment. I read them with tears more than once or twice; with tears, I say, for joy and gladness, that God had wrought in you so merciful a work; first, an unfeigned repentance; secondly, an humble and hearty reconciliation; thirdly, a voluntary submission and obedience to the will of God in all things. Which when I read in your letters, and judged them to proceed from the bottom of your heart, I could not but be thankful to God, rejoicing with tears for you, and these his great mercies poured upon you.
THESE your letters, and the hearing of your most godly proceedings and constant doings from time to time, much relieved and comforted me at all times, and shall be a goodly testimony with you at the great day, against many worldly and dainty dames, who set more by their own pleasure and pelf in this world, than by God's glory, little regarding. as it appeareth, the everlasting health of their own souls or others. My prayer shall be whilst I am in this world, that God, which of his great mercy hath begun his good work in you, will finish it to the glory of his name; and by the mighty power and inspiration of his Holy Spirit, so strengthen, establish, and confirm you in all his ways to the end, that we may together shew forth his praises in the world to come, to our unspeakable consolation everlastingly, Amen.
[Page 772]So long as God shall lend you continuance in this miserable world, above all things give yourself continually to prayer, lifting up, as St. Paul saith, clean or pure hands without anger, wrath, or doubting, forgiving (as he saith also) if you have any thing against any man▪ as Christ forgiveth us. And that we may be the better willing to forgive, it is good often to call to remembrance the multitude and greatness of our sins, which Christ daily and hourly pardoneth and forgiveth us; and then we shall, as St. Peter affirmeth, be ready to cover and hide the offences of our brethren, be they ever so many. And because God's word teacheth us, not only the true manner of praying, but also what we ought to do, or not to do in the whole discourse and practice of this life, what pleaseth or displeaseth God, and that, as Christ saith, "The word of God that he hath spoken, shall judge in the last day:" let your prayer be to this end especially, That God of his great mercy would open and reveal more and more daily to your heart, the true sense, knowledge, and understanding of his most holy word, and give you grace in your living, to express the fruits thereof.
AND forasmuch as it is, as the Holy Ghost calleth it, the word of affliction, that is, it is seldom without hatred, persecution, peril, danger of loss of life and goods, and whatsoever seemeth pleasant in this world, as experience teacheth you in this time: call upon God continually for his assistance always, as Christ teacheth, casting your accounts what it is like to cost you, endeavouring yourself, through the help of the Holy Ghost, by continuance in prayer, to lay foundation so sure, that no storm or tempest shall be able to overthrow or cast it down; remembering always (as Christ saith) Lot's wife; that is, to beware of looking back to that thing that displeaeth God. And because nothing displeaseth God so much as idolatry, that is, false worshipping of God, otherwise than his word commandeth; look not back (I say) nor turn your face to their idolatrous and blasphemous mass, manifestly against the word, practice, and example of Christ; as it is most manifest to all that have any taste of the true understanding of God's word, that there remaineth nothing in the church of England at this present, profitable or edifying to the church and congregation of the Lord, all things being done in an unknown tongue, contrary to the express commandment of the Ho [...] Ghost.
THEY object that they be the church, and ther [...]fore they must be believed. My answer was, The church of God knoweth and acknowledgeth no other head but Jesus Christ the Son of God, whom ye have refused, and chosen the man of sin, the son of perdition, enemy to Christ, the devil's deputy and lieutenant, the pope.
Christ's church heareth, teacheth, and is ruled by his word, he saith, "my sheep hear my voice. If you abide in me, and my word in you, you may be my disciples." Their church repelleth God's words, and forceth all men to follow their traditions.
CHRIST'S church dare not add or diminish, [...] or change his blessed testament▪ but they be [...] afraid to take away all that Christ instituted, and go a whoring (as the scripture saith) with their own inventions: to glory and rejoice in the works of their own hands.
THE church of Christ is, hath been, and shall be in all ages under the cross, persecuted, molest [...] and afflicted, the world ever hating them, beca [...] they be not of the world. But these persecute, murder, slay, and kill such as profess the true doctrine of Christ, be they in learning, living, conversation, and other virtues ever so excellent.
CHRIST and his church reserved the trial of their doctrine to the word of God, and gave the people leave to judge thereof by the same word, "Search the scriptures." But this church taketh away from the people, and suffereth neither learned nor unlearned to examine or prove their doctrine by the word of God.
THE true church of God laboureth by all means to resist and withstand the lusts, desires, and motions of the world, the flesh, and the devil: thes [...] for the most part give themselves to all voluptuousness, and secretly commit such things, which (as St. Paul saith) it is shame to speak of.
[Page 773]BY these and such like manifest probations, they declare themselves to be none of the church of Christ, but rather of the synagogue of Satan. It shall be good for you oftentimes to confer and compare their proceedings and doings with the practice of those whom the word of God doth teach to have been true members of the church of God, and it shall work in you both knowledge, erudition, and boldness, to withstand with suffering their doings. I likened them therefore to Nimrod, whom the scripture calleth a mighty hunter, or a stout champion, telling them, that what they could not have by the word, they would have by the sword, and be the church whether men will or no; and called them with good conscience, as Christ called their forefathers, the children of the devil; and as their father the devil is a liar and a murderer, so their kingdom and church (as they call it) standeth by lying and murdering.
HAVE no fellowship with them therefore, my dear wife, nor with their doctrine and traditions, le [...]t you be partaker of their sins, for whom is reserved a heavy damnation, without speedy repentance. Beware of such as shall advertise you to bear with the world for a season as they do. There is no dallying with God's matters: "It is a fearful thing (as St. Paul saith) to fall into the hands of the living God." Remember the prophet Elias. "Why halt ye on both sides?" Remember what Christ saith, "He that putteth his hands to the plough, and looketh back, is not worthy of me." And seeing God hath hitherto allowed you as a good soldier in the fore front, play not the coward, neither draw back to the rearward. St. John numbereth among them that shall dwell in the fiery lake, such as be fearful in God's cause. Set always before your eyes the examples of such as have behaved themselves boldly in God's cause, as Stephen, Peter, Paul, Daniel, the three children, the widow's sons, and in your days Anne Askew, Laurence Saunders, John Bradford, with many other faithful witnesses of Christ. "Be afraid in nothing (saith St. Paul) of the adversaries of Christ's doctrine, which is to them the sign of perdition, but to you of eternal salvation." Christ commandeth the same, saying, "Fear them not." Let us not follow the example of him which asketh time first to take leave of his friends. If we so do, we shall find few of them that will encourage us to go forward in our business, please it God ever so much. We do not read that James and John, Andrew and Simon, when they were called, put off the time till they had known their fathers or friends pleasure. But the scripture saith, "They forsook all, and by and by followed Christ." Christ likened the kingdom of God to a precious pearl, which whosoever findeth, selleth all that he hath to buy it. Yea, whosoever hath but a little taste or glimmering how precious a treasure the kingdom of heaven is, will gladly forego both life and goods for the obtaining of it. But the most part now-a-days are like Esop's cock, which when he had found a precious stone, wished rather to have found a barley corn. So ignorant are they how precious a jewel the word of God is, that they chuse rather the things of this world, which being compared to it, are less in value than a barley-corn.
IF I would have given place to worldly reasons, these might have moved me: first, the leaving of you and my children; the consideration of the state of my children, being yet tender of age, and young, apt and inclinable to virtue and learning, and so having the more need of my assistance, being not altogether destitute of gifts to help them withal; possessions above the common sort of men; because I was never called to be a preacher or minister; and (because of my sickness) fear of death in imprisonment before I should come to answer, and so my death to be unprofitable.
BUT these and such like, I thank my heavenly Father, (who of his infinite mercy inspired me with his Holy Spirit, for his Son's sake, my only Saviour and Redeemer) prevailed not in me: but when I had by the wonderful permission of God fallen into their hands, at the first sight of the sheriff, nature a little abashed; yet before I came to the prison, by the working of God, and through his goodness, fear departed. I said to the sheriff at his coming to me, What matter have you, Mr. Sheriff, to charge me withal? He answered, You shall know when you come before the masters; and so taking me with him, I expected to be carried before the masters, and to have heard what they could have burdened me withal; but, contrary to my expectation, I was committed forthwith to the gaol, not [Page 774] being called to my answer, little justice being shewed therein. But the less justice a man findeth at their hands, the more consolation in conscience shall he find from God; for whosoever is of the world, the world will love him.
AFTER I [...] into prison, and had reposed myself there a [...] ▪ I wept for joy and gladness, my belly-full, musi [...] much of the great mercies of God, and (as it were) saying to myself after this sort: O Lord, who am I, on whom thou shouldst bestow this thy great mercy, to be numbered among the saints that suffer for the gospel's sake? And so beholding and considering on the one side my imperfection, unableness, sinful misery, and unworthiness, and on the other side the greatness of God's mercy, to be called to so high promotion, I was, as it were amazed and overcome for a whil [...] with joy and gladness, concluding thus with myself in my heart; O Lord, thou shewest power in weakness, wisdom in foolishness, mercy in sinfulness; who shall hinder thee to chuse where and whom thou wilt? As I have zealously loved the confession of thy word, so I ever thought myself to be most unworthy to be partaker of the affliction for the fame.
NOT long after Mr. W. Brasbridge, Mr. C. Phineas, and Mr. Hopkins, came unto me, persuading with me to be dismissed upon bonds. To whom my answer was (to my remembrance) after this sort: forasmuch as the masters have imprisoned me, having nothing to burden me withal; if I should enter into bonds, I should in so doing accuse myself; and seeing they have no matter to lay to my charge, they may as well let me pass without bonds as with them.
SECONDLY, If I shall enter bonds, covenant and promise to appear, I shall do nothing but excuse, colour, and cloak their wickedness, and endanger myself nevertheless, being bound by my promise to appear. They used many worldly persuasions to me to avoid the present peril, and also how to avoid the forfeiture if I brake my promise. I said unto them, I had cast up my penny-worth by God's help. They undertook also to make the bond easy.
AND when they were somewhat importunate, I said to Mr. Hopkins, That liberty of conscience was a precious thing; and took, as it were a [...] ▪ lifting up my heart to God earnestly for his aid and help, that I might do the thing that might [...] him. And so when they had let their suit fall, my heart (methought) was wonderfully comforted Mr. Dudley communed with me in like manner▪ whom I answered in effect as I did before.
AFTERWARDS debating the matter with myself▪ these considerations came into my head; I have from time to time with good conscience (God! take to record) moved all such as I had conference withal to be no dalliers in God's matters, but to shew themselves, after so great a light and knowledge, hearty, earnest, constant, and stable in so manifest a truth, and not to give place one jot contrary to the same. Now thought I, if I shall withdraw myself, and make any shifts to pull my own neck out of the collar, I shall give great offence [...] my weak brethren in Christ, and advantage to the enemies to slander God's word. It will be said▪ He hath encouraged others to be earnest and fervent, to fear no worldly perils or dangers, but he himself will give no such example.
WHERE [...]ORE I thought it my bounden duty, both to God and man, being (as it were) by the great goodness of God marvellously called and appointed hereunto, to set aside all fear, perils and dangers, all worldly respects and considerations, and like as I had heretofore, according to the measure of my small gift within the compass of my vocation and calling, from the bottom of my heart unfeignedly moved, exhorted, and persuaded all that profess God's word, manfully to persist in the defence of the same, not with sword and violence, but with suffering and loss of life, rather than to defile themselves again with the whorish abomination of the Romish Antichrist; so the hour being come, with my fact and example to ratify, confirm, and protest the same to the hearts of all true believers: and to this end, by the mighty assistance of God's Holy Spirit, I resolved mys [...]lf with much peace of conscience, willingly to sustain whatsoever the Romish Antichrist should do against me, and the rather, because I understood the bishop' [...] coming to be at hand, and considered that poor men's consciences would be then [Page 775] sharply assaulted. So I remained prisoner in Coventry for the space of ten or eleven days, being never called to answer my masters, contrary to the laws of the realm, they having neither statute, law, proclamation, letter, warrant, nor commandment for my apprehension. They would have laid all the matter upon the sumner; who being examined, denied it before their faces, as one of my friends told me, saying, that he had no commandment concerning me, but for my elder brother. God lay not their extreme doings against me to their charge at the great day.
THE second day after the bishop's coming to Coventry, Mr. Warren came to the Guildhall, and ordered the chief jailor to carry me to the bishop. I laid to Mr. Warren's charge the cruel seeking of my death; and when he would have excused himself, I told him he could not wipe his hands so; he was as guilty of my blood before God, as though he had murdered me with his own hands.
AND so he departed from me, saying, I needed not to fear if I would be of his belief. God open his eyes if it be his will, and give him grace to believe this, which he and all of his inclination shall find (I fear) too true for their parts; that is, that all they which cruelly, maliciously and spitefully persecute, molest, and afflict the members of Christ for their conscience sake, and for the true testimony of Christ's word, and cause them most unjustly to be slain and murdered, without speedy repentance shall dwell with the devil and his angels in the fierce lake everlastingly, where they shall wish and desire, cry and call, but in vain (as their right companion did) to be refreshed by them whom in this world they contemned, despised, disdained, as slaves, misers, and wretches.
WHEN I came before the bishop in Mr. Denton's house, he began with this protestation, That he was my bishop for lack of a better, and willed me to submit myself.
I said to him, I am not come to accuse myself, what have you to lay to my charge?
HE asked me, whether I was learned? I answered, smally learned.
MR. CHANCELLOR standing by, said, I was a master of arts.
THEN my lord laid to my charge my not coming to the church.
HERE I might have dallied with him, and put him to his proofs, forasmuch as I had not been in his diocese for a long season, neither was any of the citizens able to prove any such matter against me. Notwithstanding, I answered him through God's merciful help, that I neither had, nor would come to their church, as long as their mass was used there, to save (if I had them) five hundred lives. I desired him to shew me one jot or title in the scriptures for the proof and defence of the mass.
HE answered, he came to teach, and not to be taught.
I was content (I told him) to learn of him, so far as he was able to teach me by the word of God.
Who shall judge the word?
Christ was willing that the people should judge his doctrine by searching the scriptures, and so was Paul; methinks you should claim no further privilege nor pre-eminence than they had.
THUS spake Robert Glover, offering him further, that he was content that the primitive church next to the apostle's time, should judge between the bishop and him. But the bishop refused that. Then he said, he was his bishop, and therefore he must believe him.
If you will be believed because you are a bishop, why find you fault with the people that believed bishop Latimer, bishop Ridley, and bishop Hooper, and the residue of them that were bishops?
Because they were heretics.
And may not you err as well as they▪ I expected my lord to use some learned argume [...] [Page 776] to persuade me, but instead of that, he oppressed me only with his authority. He said, I dissented from the church, and asked me where my church was before king Edward's time?
I desired him to shew me where their church was in Elias's time, and what outward shew it had in Christ's time.
Elias's complaint was only of the ten tribes that fell from David's house, whom he called heretics.
You be not able to shew any prophets that the other two tribes had at that same time.
MY lord making no answer to that, Mr. Rogers, one of the masters of the city, cometh in the mean season, taking upon him as though he would answer to the text. But my lord forthwith commanded me to be committed to some tower, if they had any besides the common jail, saying, He would at the end of the visitation of his diocese, weed out such wolves. Mr. Rogers willed him to content himself for that night, till they had taken further order for me. Even where it pleaseth you, said I to my lord, I am content; and so I was returned at that time to the common jail again from whence I came.
ON the Friday morning, being the next day, I had warning by one of the prisoners to prepare myself to ride with my fellow-prisoners the same day to Litchfield, there to be bestowed at the bishop's pleasure. Which tidings at first somewhat discouraged me, fearing lest I should by means of my great sickness, through hard usage, (which I expected) have died in prison before I should come to answer: but immediately with God's words, I rebuked this infidelity in myself, and by the same corrected mine own distrust in the following manner. What make I of God? Is not his power as great in Litchfield as in Coventry? Was he not with Habakkuk, Daniel, Neshach, and Jeremy, in their most dangerous imprisonments? He knoweth what things we have need of. He hath numbered all the hairs of our head. The sparrow falleth not to the ground, without our heavenly Father's will; much more will he care for us if we be not faithless, whom he hath made worthy to be witnesses of his truth. So long as we put our trust in him, we shall never be destitute of his he [...], neither in prison, in sickness, nor in health, [...] in life, nor in death, neither before kings, bishops, or the devil himself, much less one of his ministers, shall be able to prevail against us. With such meditations, I grew chearful, of good consolation and comfort: so that hearing one say that they could not provide horses enough for us, I said, Let th [...], car [...]y us in a dung cart for lack of horses, if they please, I am willing for my part.
NOTWITHSTANDING, at the request of my friends, I wrote to Mr. Mayor, and his brethren, [...] requiring them that I might make answer here [...] such things as should be laid to my charge: [...] contents of which were to this purpose:
"I beseech you to understand, that it is not [...] known, as well to the keeper of the jail, as to the inhabitants about me where I dwell, that I [...] man subject to very great sickness, and have been for the space of seven years and more, so that [...] not like that I shall be removed without great [...] and danger of life. And because I was [...]ere committed to ward by your appointment, I would gladly here answer to such things as should be laid to my charge. If I may obtain this of you, I [...] cause thankfully to acknowledge your clemency▪ if otherwise, I pray God it be not laid to your charge at the great day, where every man shall have just judgment without respect of persons."
BUT receiving no answers to my letters, I conjectured, that when the bishop and the chancellor had seen them, they moved them rather to have [...]e away, being more desirous (as I suppose) to have had me dispatched privily in prison, than to bring me openly to my answer; as did in some measure appear by the treatment I met with at my first coming to prison.
CERTAIN serjeants and constables of Coventry being appointed to have the conveying of us to Litchfield, to be delivered there to one Jephcot, the chancellor's man, sent from Coventry with us for the same purpose, we were commanded to be on horseback about eleven or twelve o'clock on [Page 777] Friday, being a market-day, that we might be the more gazed at: and to set the people's hearts more against us, they did proclaim a letter concerning a proclamation made for calling in, and disannulling of all such books as truly expound and interpret the scriptures. We came to Litchfield about four o'clock▪ and had leave to repose ourselves for supper-time. We put up at the sign of the Swan, where we were entertained friendly and gently.
AFTER supper Jephcot repaired to us, whom we intreated that upon former su [...]eties we might rest ourselves that night, being unprovided of any thing to help ourselves withal in the prison at that present. He seemed willing at first, but afterwards (whether by persuasion, but I rather suppose out of policy, till he could gather a multitude to stare and gaze upon us, and also that we should provide nothing to ease ourselves withal) he revoked his promise, and so by consent we were carried to prison, in the sight of a great multitude of people. I desired Jephcot before to execute his office with mercy, telling him, that they should have judgment without mercy, that shewed no mercy. And this mercy I found at his hand.
HE put me into prison that same night, where I continued till I was condemned, in a place next the dungeon, where was small room, strong building, and very cold, with little light; and there he allowed me a bundle of straw instead of my bed, without chairs, form, or any thing else to ease myself withal. God of his mercy gave me great patience through prayer that night, so that if it had been his pleasure, I could have been con [...]ented to have ended my life: but Jephcot, and one Persey, the bishop's man, who afterwards was my continual keeper for the most part, came to me in the morning, to whom I said, This is a great extremity, God send us patience, and no more.
THEN they were content that I should have a bed of my own procuring. But I was allowed no help, neither night nor day, nor company of any man, notwithstanding my great sickness; nor yet p [...]per, pen, ink, or books, except my New Testament in Latin, and a prayer-book which I privily stole in.
WITHIN two days after, Mr. Chancellor and Mr. Temsey, a pre [...]endary there, came to me into my prison. Mr. Chancellor exhorted me to conform myself to my lord and to the church. He wished no more hurt to my soul than he did to his own; belike because I had laid to his charge at Coventry the seeking of my blood unjustly and wrongfully.
Now thus the second time I answered Mr. Chancellor to his exhortation. [...]That I refused not to be ruled by that church, that was content to be ordered and governed by the word of God.
How know you the word of God, but by the church?
The church sheweth which is the word of God, therefore the church is above the word of God: this is no good reason in learning, said I to Mr. Chancellor. For it is like unto this; John shewed the people who was Christ: Ergo, John was above Christ. Or else I have a man that knoweth not the king, and I tell him who was the king, am I therefore above the king?
MR. CHANCELLOR said, he came not to reason with me, and so departed. And I remained for the space of eight day; without any further conference with any man, until the bishop's coming: in which time I gave myself continually to prayer, and meditation of the merciful promises of God made unto all, without exception of person, that call upon the name of his dear Son Jesus Christ. I found in myself daily amendment of health of body, increase of peace in conscience, and many consolations from God, by the help of his Holy Spirit, and sometimes as it were a taste and glimmering of the life to come; all for his only Son Jesus Christ's sake: to him be all praise for ever and ever.
THE enemy ceased not many times sundry ways to assault me, often objecting to my conscience mine own unworthiness, through the greatness of the benefit to be counted among the number of them that should suffer for Christ, for his gospel's sake Against him I replied with the word of God on this sort, What were all those whom God had chosen from the beginning to be his witnesses, and to [Page 778] carry his name before the world? Were they not m [...]n, as Paul and Barnabas said, as well subject to wickedness, sin, and imperfections, as other men be? Even such were Noah, Abraham, David, and the rest, "who gave first unto him," as Paul saith. And also speaking to every man, "What hast thou that thou receivedst not?" Likewise John, "All have received of his fulness:" they were no bringers [...]f any goodness to God, but altogether receivers. They chose not God first, but he chose them. They loved not God first, but he loved them first. Yea, he both loved and chose them when they were his enemies, full of sin and corruption, and void of all goodness. He is, and will be still, the same God, as rich in mercy, as mighty, as able, as ready, as willing to forgive sins without respect of persons, to the world's end, of all them that call upon him. "The Lord is nigh unto all them that call upon him: to all that call upon him in truth." God i [...] near, he is at hand, he is with all, with all I say, and refuseth none, excepteth none that faithfully in true repentance call upon him, in what hour, what place, or what time soever it be. It is no arrogancy nor presumption in any man, to burthen God (as it were) with his promise, and of duty to claim and challenge his aid, help, and assistance in all our perils, dangers, and distress, calling upon him, not in the confidence of our own godliness, but in the trust of his promis [...] made in Christ, in whom, and by whom, and for whose sake, whosoever boldly approacheth to the mercy-seat of the Father, is sure to receive whatsoever is expedient or necessary, either for body or soul, in a more bountiful manner, than he can well wish, or dare desire. His word cannot lie, "Call upon me in the day of trouble, and I will hear thee, and thou shalt praise me."
I answered the enemy also on this manner; I am a sinner, and therefore unworthy to be a witness of this truth. What then? must I deny his word, because I am not worthy to profess it? What bring I to pass in so doing, but add sin to sin? What is greater sin than to deny the truth of Christ's gospel? As Christ himself beareth witness, "He that is ashamed of me or of my words, of him also will I be ashamed before my Father and all his angels." I might also for the like reason neglect obedience to any of God's commandments.
WHEN I am provoked to pray, the enemy [...] say to me, I am not worthy to pray, therefore I shall not pray: and so in like manner of all the commandments, I shall not forbear swearing, stealing, or murdering, because I am not worthy to keep any commandment of God These be the delusio [...] of the devil, and Satan's suggestions, which must be overcome by continual prayer, and with the word of God applied according to the measure of every man's gift against all assaults of the devil.
AT the bishop's first coming to Litchfield, after mine imprisonment, I was called into a bye chamber next to my prison, to my lord. Before whom when I came, and saw none but his officers, chaplains, and servants, except it were an old priest, I was partly amazed, and lifted up my heart to God for his merciful help and assistance.
MY lord asked me how I liked my imprisonment; I gave him no answer touching that question. He proceeded to persuade me to be a member of his church, which had continued so many years. As for your church (said he to me), it was not known but lately in Edward's time.
I profess myself to be a member of that church (said I) that is built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ being the head corner-stone; and so alledged the place of St. Paul to the Ephesians. And this church hath been from the beginning (said I), tho' it bear no glorious shew before the world, being ever, for the most part, under the cross and affliction, contemned, despised, and persecuted; my lord contended on the other side, that they were the church.
So cried all the clergy (said I) against the prophets of Jerusalem, saying, "The church of the Lord, the church of the Lord." And always when I was about to speak any thing, my lord cried, Hold thy peace, I command thee by the virtue of thy obedience to hold thy peace, calling me a proud arrogant hereti [...].
[Page 779]I desired my lord to lay something to my charge in particular, and then to convince me with some scriptures and good learning.
THEN my lord began to move certain questions. I refused to answer him in corners, requiring that I might make my answer openly. He said I should answer him there. I stood with him upon that point till he said I should go to prison again, and there have neither meat nor drink till I had answered him.
THEN I lifted up my heart to God, that I might stand and agree with the doctrine of his most holy word.
THE first question was this, How many sacraments hath Christ instituted to be used in the church?
THE sacrament of baptism, said I, and the sacrament that he instituted at his last supper.
No more, said he?
THEN said I, To all those that declare a true and unfeigned repentance, a sure hope, trust and confidence in the death of Christ, to such, ministers (I grant) have authority to pronounce, by the authority of God's word, the remission of sins.
HERE interrupting me, he would needs bear me in hand that I called this a sacrament. I would not greatly contend with him in that point, because the matter was of no great weight or importance; although he in so doing did me wrong, for I called it not a sacrament.
HE asked me further, Whether I allowed their confession?
I answered, No.
THEN the bishop would know my mind what I thought of the presence of Christ's body in the sacrament.
I answered, That their mass was neither sacrifice nor sacrament, because (said I) you have taken away the true institution, which when you restore again, I will tell you my judgment concerning Christ's body in the sacrament.
AND thus much did this worthy martyr of God leave behind him in his own hand-writing, concerning the manner of his usage in prison, and also of his disputes with the bishop and his chancellor. More Examinations he had (no doubt) with the bishop in the public consistory, when he was brought forth to be condemned, which he would also have left unto us, if either length of life, or leisure of time, or haste of execution, had permitted him to finish what he intended; but by reason of the writ of his burning being come down from London, want of time did neither serve him so to do, neither yet could I get the records of his last examination, wheresoever they are.
ONLY this which I could learn by the relation of one Augustine Bernher, a minister, and a familiar friend of his concerning the going to his death, I can report; that the said Robert Glover, after he was condemned by the bishop, and was now at a point to be delivered out of this world, it so happened, that two or three days before, his heart being heavy, and desolate of all spiritual consolation, felt in himself no aptness or willingness, but rather a heaviness and dullness of spirit, full of much discomfort to bear the bitter cross of martyrdom ready to be laid upon him.
WHEREUPON fearing in himself left the Lord had utterly withdrawn his wonted favour from him, made his moan to this Augustine, his friend abovementioned, signifying unto him how earnestly he had prayed day and night unto the Lord, and yet could receive no motion nor sense of any comfort from him.
UNTO whom the said Augustine answering again, desired him patiently to wait the Lord's pleasure, and howsoever his present feeling was, yet seeing his cause was just and true, he exhorted him constantly to stick to the same, and to play the man, nothing misdoubting but the Lord in his good time would visit him, and satisfy his desire with plenty of consolation; whereof (he said) he was right certain and sure; and therefore desired him, whensoever any such feeling of God's heavenly [Page 780] mercies should begin to touch his heart, that then he should shew some signification thereof, whereby he might witness with him the same, and so departed from him.
THE next day, when the time came of his martyrdom, as he was going to the place, and was come within sight of the stake, (although all the night before praying for strength and courage he could feel none) suddenly he was so mightily replenished with God's holy comfort and heavenly joys, that he cried out, clapping his hands to Austin, and saying these words, "Austin, he is come, he is come," &c. and that with such joy and alacrity, as one seeming rather to be risen from some deadly danger to liberty and life, than as one passing out of the world by any pains of death. Such was the change of the marvellous working of the Lord's hand upon that good man.
An Account of CORNELIUS BUNGEY, Fellow-Martyr with Mr. ROBERT GLOVER.
IN the same fire with Mr. Glover, Cornelius Bungey, of Coventry, was likewise burnt, who was condemned by the said bishop of Coventry and Litchfield. As concerning the articles which were objected to him, the effect thereof was this.
FIRST, It was objected against him, that these three years last, in the city of Coventry and Litchfield, and places thereabout, he did hold, maintain, argue, and teach, that the priest hath no power here to absolve any sinner from his sins.
SECONDLY, That by baptism sins are not washed away, because he said that the washing of the flesh purgeth the flesh outwardly, and not the soul.
THIRDLY, That there be in the church only two sacraments, that is, baptism and the Lord's supper.
FOURTHLY, That in the sacrament of the popish altar, was not the real body and blood of Christ, but the substance of bread and wine there remaining still, because St. Paul calleth it bread and wine, &c.
FIFTHLY, That he, within the compass of the said years and time, did hold, maintain, and [...] that the pope is not the head of the visible chu [...] here on earth, &c.
SIXTHLY, That he was of the diocese and jurisdiction of the bishop of Coventry and Litchfield, &c.
SEVENTHLY, That the premises are true, manifest, and notorious, and that upon the same there hath been and is a public voice and fame, as well i [...] the places above rehearsed, as in other quarters also about, &c.
TO which articles he answered again:
TO the first he granted, and to every part thereof, meaning after the popish manner of absolution.
TO the second he granted first, after revoked [...] same.
TO the third also he granted, adding withal, that in scripture there is no more contained.
TO the fourth touching the sacrament, he granted, and to every part thereof.
TO the fifth, concerning the pope likewise.
ALSO to the sixth he granted; and likewise to the seventh.
UPON these articles and his answers to the same, the said Radulph, the bishop, read the sentence, and so committed him also, after condemnation of Mr. Robert Glover to the secular power.
THUS this aforesaid Cornelius, falsely condemned by the bishop before mentioned, suffered at the same stake with the christian martyr, Mr. Robert Glover, at Coventry, about the 20th of September.
The History of JOHN GLOVER, and WILLIAM GLOVER, who were excommunicated after their Death, a [...]d buried in the Fields.
JOHN and William Glover, the two brothers of Robert Glover, the martyr, ought not to be omitted in this history, although they were not called [Page 781] to finish their course in fire, as their brother, and other martyrs were; yet they were cast out of the church, and excommunicated even after they were dead, and denied christian burial.
AND first concerning Mr. John Glover, the elder brother, what inward storms and agonies he sustained by the ghostly enemy, you have partly heard before described: now what his bodily enemies wrought against him, remaineth to be declared. Whose rage and malice, although God restrained, that they could little prevail against him so long as his life endured, yet after his decease, having power upon him, what they did you shall now understand.
WHEREUPON the sheriffs, with their under officers and servants, being sent to seek him, came into his house, where he and his wife were. It chanced a [...] he was in the chamber by himself, the officers bursting into the house, and searching other rooms, came to the chamber where John Glover was, who being within, and holding the latch softly in his hand, perceived and heard the officers bustling about the door, amongst whom one of the said officers having the string in his hand, was ready to draw and pluck at the same.
IN the mean time another coming by, (whose voice he heard and knew) bade them come away, saying, they had been there before. Whereupon they departing thence, went to search other corners of the house, where they found Agnes Glover his wife, who being carried to Litchfield, and there examined before the bishop, at length after much ado, was constrained to give place to their tyranny. John Glover, in the mean time, partly for care of his wife▪ partly through cold taken in the woods where he did lie, took an ague, whereupon not long after, he left this life, which the cruel papists so long had sought for.
THUS by the mighty protection of the Almighty Lord, how John Glover was delivered and defended from the hands of the persecuting enemies during all the time of his life, you have heard. Now what befel after the time of his death, both to him and his brother William, is worthy to be remembered. After he was dead, and buried in the church-yard, without priest, or clerk, Dr. Dracot, then chancellor, six weeks after, sent for the parson of the town, and demanded how it happened that he was there buried. The parson answered, that he was then sick, and knew not of it. Then the chancellor commanded the parson to go home, and to cause the body of the said John Glover to be taken up, and to be cast over the wall into the highway: the parson again answered, that he had been six weeks in the earth, and so smelled, that none were able to endure it. Well, quoth Dr. Dracot, then take this bill, and pronounce him in the pulpit a damned soul, and a twelvemonth after take up his bones, (for then the flesh will be consumed) and cast them over the wall, that the carts and horses may tread upon them, and then I will come and hallow that place in the church-yard where he was buried. Recorded by the parson of the town, who told the same to Hugh Burrows, dwelling at Fynden, in Derbyshire, and to Mr. Robert Glover's wife, by whose credible information we received the same.
NOT much unlike usage was practised also by these catholic children of the mother church, upon the body of William, the third brother, whom, after it had pleased Almighty God about the same season to call out of this vale of misery, the well-disposed people of the town of Weme, in Shropshire, where he died, brought the body into the parish church, intending there to have it buried. But one Bernard, being then curate of the said church, in order to stop the burial thereof, rode to the bishop named Ralph Baine, to certify him of the matter, and to have his advice therein. In the mean time, the body lying there a whole day, in the night-time one Richard Morice, a taylor, would have interred him. But then came John Thorlyne, of Weme, with some others, of Weme, and would not suffer the body to be buried; expressing to us the contrary examples of good Tobit; for as he was religious in burying the dead, so this man's religion consists in not burying the dead; so that after he had lain there two days and one night, the aforesaid Bernard, the curate, came with the bishop's letter, the contents of which letter being copied out word for word, here follow.
A Copy of the Bishop's Letter written to the Parish of Weme.
UNDERSTANDING that one Glover an heretic is dead in the parish of Weme, which Glover hath, all the time of my being in this country, been known for a rebel against our holy faith and religion, a contemner of the holy sacraments and ceremonies used in the holy church, and hath separated himself from the holy communion of all good christian men, and never required to be reconciled to our mother holy church, nor in his last days did call for his spiritual father, but died without a rite belonging to a christian man; I thought it good not only to command the curate of Weme, that he should not be honoured with christian burial, but also will and command all the parish of Weme, that no man procure, help, nor speak to have him buried in holy ground: but I do charge and command the church-wardens of Weme in special, and all the parish of the same, that they assist the said curate in defending and hindering, and procuring that he be not buried in the church, or within the walls of the church-yard: and likewise I charge those that brought the body to the place to carry it away again, and that at their charge, as they will answer at their peril. At Ecclesch, this sixth of September 1555.
BY virtue of this aforesaid letter, so it fell out, that they who brought the corps thither, were obliged to carry it back again at their own charges. But as the body was corrupted, and smelt so strong that no man could well come near it, they were forced to draw it with horses into a broom-field, and there he was buried.
THE like example of charitable affection in these catholic churchmen, is also to be seen and noted in the burying of one Edward Burton, Esq. who in the same diocese of Chester, departing out of this world the very day before queen Elizabeth was crowned, required of his friends, as they would answer for it, that his body should be buried in his parish church, (which was St. Chad's, in Shrewsbury) so that no mass-monger should be present thereat. Which thing being declared to the curate of that parish, named John Marshall, and the bo [...] being withal brought to the burial, upon the [...] day when the queen was crowned, the curate [...] therewith offended, said plainly, that he should [...] be buried in the church there. Whereunto on [...] [...] the friends of the deceased, named George Tor [...] ley, answering again, said, That God would jud [...] him in the last day, &c. Then said the prie [...] ▪ Judge God or devil, the body shall not come the [...] And so they buried him in his own garden, wh [...] he is no doubt as near the kingdom of heaven [...] if he had been buried in the midst of the church.
MOREOVER, in the said county of Salop, I [...] that one Oliver Richardine, of the parish of [...] church, was burnt in Hartford-west, sir John Yo [...] being sheriff the same time, which seemeth to be about the last year of king Henry the eighth [...] Whose name, as it was not mentioned before [...] thought here to give some little touch of him, [...] now in hand to speak of the persecution [...] the diocese of Coventry and Litchfield.
The Martyrdom of WILLIAM WOLSEY, and [...] PYGOT, Painter.
WILLIAM Wolsey and Robert Pygot, [...] inhabitants of the town of Wisbich, [...] the next condemned after the suffering of [...] Glover and Cornelius Bungey. These two blessed martyrs were judged and condemned at Ely, [...] John Fuller, the bishop's chancellor of Ely, [...] Shaxtone, his suffragan, Robert Stewart, [...] Ely, John Christopherson, dean of Norwich, [...]. 9, l555. The said William Wolsey, who was [...] a constable, through the means of one [...] Everard, gentleman, a justice appointed for those days, who cruelly treated the said William Wolsey, causing him to put in sureties for his good behaviour and appearance at the next general sessions held within the Isle of Ely. Being called again at the next sessions, he was still constrained to put in ne [...] sureties, which at length he refused to do, and so was committed to jail, at the assize held at Ely in Lent.
IN the Easter week following, Dr. Fuller, the chancellor, with Christopherson, and one Dr. Yonge, [Page 783] came to confer with him, who laid earnestly to his charge that he was out of the catholic faith, desiring him to meddle no further with the scriptures, than it did become such a lay-man as he was to do. The said William Wolsey standing still a great while, suffering them to say their pleasure, at last he answered in this wise: Good Mr. Doctor, What did our Saviour mean, when he spake these words written in the 23d chapter of St. Matthew's gospel, "Woe be unto you scribes and pharisees, hypocrites; for ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against men: for ye neither go in yourselves, neither suffer ye them that are entering to go in."
YEA, saith Dr. Fuller, you must understand, that Christ spake to the scribes and pharisees.
NAY, Mr. Doctor, Christ spake even to you, and your fellows here present, and to all others such as you be.
AWAY, Mr. Doctor, said Christopherson, for you can do no good with this man. Yet, saith Dr. Fuller, I will leave thee a book to read, I promise thee of a learned man's doing, that is to say, of Dr. Watson's doing (who was then bishop of Lincoln).
WOLSEY receiving the same book, did diligently read it over, which in many places did manifestly appear contrary to the truth of God's word. At length, a fortnight or three weeks following, the said Dr. Fuller resorting again to the prison to confer with the said Wolsey, asked him how he liked the said book, (thinking that he had won him by the reading of the same) who answered him and said, Sir, I like the book no otherwise than I thought before I should find it. Whereupon the chancellor taking his book, departed home.
AT night when Dr. Fuller came to his chamber to look on it, he found in many places, contrary to his mind, the book rased with a pen by the said Wolsey. Which he seeing, and being vexed therewith, said, O this is an obstinate heretic, and hath quite marred my book.
THEN the assizes to be held at Wisbich drawing [...]igh, Dr. Fuller cometh again to the said Wolsey, and spake unto him on this manner: thou dost much trouble my conscience, wherefore I pray thee depart, and rule thy tongue, so that I hear no more complaint of thee, and come to the church when thou wilt, and if thou be complained upon, so far as I may, I promise thee I will not hear of it.
MR. Doctor, said Wolsey, I was brought hither by a law, and by a law I will be delivered.
THEN being brought to the sessions before named, Wolsey was laid in the castle at Wisbich. he and all his friends thinking, that he should have suffered there at that present time, but it proved otherwise.
THEN Robert Pygot, the painter, being at liberty, was there presented by some evil disposed persons (sworn men as they called them) for not coming [...] the church.
THE said Pygot being called in the sessions, would not absent himself, but there did plainly appear before sir Clement Hygham, being judge, who said unto him: Ah, are you the holy father the painter? How chance you came not to the church? Sir, quoth the painter, I am not out of the church, I trust in God.
NO, sir, said the judge, this is no church, this is a hall. Yea, sir, said Pygot, I know very well it is a hall: but he that is in the true faith of Jesus Christ, is never absent, but present in the church of God.
AH, sirrah, said the judge, you are too high learned for me to talk with, wherefore I will send you to them that are better learned than I, straightway commanding him to the jail where Wolsey lay. So the sessions being broke up and ended, the said Wolsey and Pygot were carried again to Ely to prison, where they both remained till the day of their death.
IN the mean time some of their neighbours of Wisbich being at Ely, came to see how they did. There came hither also a chaplain of bishop Goodrick's, a Frenchman born, one Peter Valentius, who said to Wolsey and Pygot: My brethren, according to my office I am come to talk with you, [Page 784] for I have been amner here these twenty years and above. Wherefore I must desire you, my brethren, to take it in good part that I am come to talk with you, I promise you not to pull you f [...]om your faith. But I both require and desire, in the name of Jesus Christ, that you stand to the truth of the gospel and word, and I beseech the Almighty God, for his Son Jesus Christ's sake, to preserve both you and me in the same unto the end. For I know not myself, my brethren, how soon I shall be at the same point that you are. Thus with many other like words he made an end, causing all that were there present to water their cheeks, contrary to the expectation they all had of him. God be praised therefore.
THEN within a short time after, Pygot and Wolsey were called to judgment about the 9th of Oct. before Dr. Fuller, then chancellor, with old Dr. Shaxton, Christopherson, and others in commission, who laid earnestly to their charge for their belief in divers articles, but especially of the sacrament of the altar. Whereunto their answer was, That the sacrament of the altar was an idol, and that the natural body and blood of Christ was not present really in the sacrament; and to this opinion they said they would stick, perfectly believing the same to be no heresy that they had affirmed, but the very truth, whereunto they would stand. Then the doctors said, that they were out of the catholic faith.
THEN Dr. Shaxton said unto them, Good brethren, remember yourselves, and become new men, for I myself was in this fond opinion that you are now in, but I am now become a new man.
AH, said Wolsey, are you become a new man? Woe be to thee, thou wicked new man, for God shall justly judge thee.
DR. Fuller then spake, saying, This Wolsey is an obstinate fellow, and one that I could never do good upon. But as for the painter, he is a man quiet and indifferent, (as far as I perceive) and is soon [...] reformed, and may very well be delivered for any ill opinion I find in him.
THEN Christopherson called for pen and ink, and wrote these words following: I Robert Pygot, [...] believe, that after the words of consecration spok [...] by the priest, there remaineth mo more bread [...] wine, but the very body and blood of Christ [...] and substantially, the self same that was born of [...] virgin Mary: and reading it to the painter, he [...] thus, Dost thou believe all this according as it [...] written?
NO, sir, said the painter, that is your faith, and not mine.
CHRISTOPHER. Lo, Dr. Fuller, you would have let this fellow go, he is as much an heretic as the other. And so immediately judgment was given upon them to die. Which done, after the sente [...] read, they were sent again to prison, where they [...] till the day of their death. On which day, [...] Peacock, a batchelor of divinity, being appoi [...] to preach, took his text out of the first epistle of [...] Paul to the Corinthians, chap. v. of one that [...] lived inordinately by abusing his father's [...] likening the said Pygot and Wolsey to the [...] man, oftentimes saying, that such members [...] be cut off from the congregation; most mali [...] ously reporting the said Wolsey to be clean out of the faith, and in many places quite denying the scriptures.
SO his sermon being ended, the aforesaid Pygot and Wolsey were brought to the place of execution, and so bound to the stake with a chain; thither came one Richard Collinson, a priest, at that time destitute of any abiding place or settled benef [...], who said unto Wolsey, Brother Wolsey, the preac [...] hath openly reported in his sermon this day, that you are quite out of the catholic faith, and [...] baptism, and that you do err in the holy scripture; wherefore I beseech you, for the certifying of my conscience, with others here present, that you declare in what place of the scripture you do err and find fault.
Wolsey. I take the eternal and everlasting God to witness, that I do err in no part or point of God's book, the holy bible, but hold and believe in the same to be most firm and sound doctrine in all points most worthy for my salvation, and for all other christians to the end of the word. Whatsoever mine [Page 785] adversaries report of me, God forgive them therefore. With that came one to the fire with a great sheet full of books to burn, like as they had been New Testaments. O, said Wolsey, give me one of them, Pygot desired another, both of them clapping them close to their breasts, saying the [...]th Psalm, desiring all the people to say, Amen, and so received the fire most thankfully.
CONCERNING the story of William Wolsey, I received moreover from the university of Cambridge, by a credible person, and my faithful friend William Fulke, this relation, which I thought in this place not improper to be notified to the reader, i [...] order and form as followeth.
THERE were two godly martyrs burnt at Ely, the one named Wolsey, the other Pygot. In these two appeared a different disposition of spirit. Py [...]t was mild, humble, and modest, promising that he would be conformable to his persecutors, if they could persuade him by the scripture, Wolsey was stout, strong, and vehement, as one having the fulness of the Spirit, and detested all their doing, as of whom he was sure to receive nothing but cruelty and tyranny. He was wonderfully jealous over his companion, fearing lest his gentle nature would have been overcome by the flattering enticements of the world, and therefore the same day that they were burnt, when they would have talked with him alone, he pulled him away from them almost by force. He was so desirous to glorify God with his suffering, that being wonderfully sore tormented in the prison with the tooth-ach, he feared nothing more than that he should depart before the day of execution (which he called his glad day) were come.
THIS Wolsey being in prison at Ely, was visited by Thomas Hodilo, brewer, in Ely. To him he delivered certain money to be distributed (as he appointed) part to his wife, and part to his kinsfolks and friends, and especially six shillings and eight-pence to be delivered to one Richard Denton, a smith, dwelling at Wells, in Cambridgeshire, within the jurisdiction of the isle of Ely, with his commendation, that he marvelled that he tarried so long behind him, seeing that he was the first that delivered him the book of scripture into his hand, and told him that it was the truth, desiring him to make haste after as fast as he could.
THIS Thomas Hodilo, both to avoid the danger of the time, and to have a witness of his doings herein, delivered the said sum of money to one Mr. Lawrence, a preacher, in Essex, (who then resorted often to his house) to be distributed as Wolsey had appointed; which thing he performed, riding from place to place. And when this six shillings and eight-pence was delivered to Richard Denton, with the commendation aforesaid, his answer was this, I confess it is true, but, alas! I cannot burn. This was almost one whole year after Wolsey was burnt. But he that could not burn for the cause of Christ, was afterwards burnt against his will, even after Christ had given peace to his church. For on Tuesday, the 18th of April, 1564, his house was set on fire, and he, endeavouring to save his goods, perished in the flames, with two others that were in the same house.
NOT much unlike this, was the example of Mr. West, chaplain to bishop Ridley, who refusing to die in the cause of Christ, with his master, said mass against his conscience, and died soon after.
CHAP. XII. HISTORY of the LIFE, SUFFERINGS, and MARTYRDOM of Bishop RIDLEY, and Bishop LATIMER, with their LETTERS, &c. CHARACTER of STEPHEN GARD [...] NER, Bishop of Winchester.—Further Account of the EXAMINATIONS and MARTYRDOM of many pious and godly MEN and WOMEN, during the bloody Reign of Queen MARY I.
The HISTORY of Dr. NICHOLAS RIDLEY and Mr. HUGH LATIMER, both Bishops, Preachers, and Martyrs of Christ; with their Conferences and Sufferings described.
ON the 17th of October, 1555, (the day on which William Wolsey and Thomas Pygot suffered at Ely) those two famous and singular captains, the principal pillars of Christ's church, Dr. Nicholas Ridley, bishop of London, and Mr. Hugh Latimer, sometime bishop of Worcester, were cruelly burnt in one fire at Oxford. Men, ever memorable for their piety, learning, and incomparable ornaments and gifts of grace, joined with no less commendable sincerity of life, as the whole realm can testify; so it needeth not greatly that we should stand exactly at this time in setting forth a full description of the same, but only to comprehend briefly in a few words, touching the order of lives, so much as necessarily serveth to the due instruction of the reader, and maketh to the use of this present history, in declaring first their beginning and bringing up, then their studies and acts in the university, their preferments also by their studies to higher dignity, at last their care and trouble in setting forth religion, and in maintaining the same to the shedding of their blood. And first to begin with the life of Dr. Ridley, whose story here ensueth.
AMONG many other worthy histories and notable acts of such as of late days have been troubled, murdered, and martyred, for the true gospel of Christ, in queen Mary's reign, the tragical story and life of Dr. Ridley, I thought good to commit to writing, and leave to perpetual memory; beseeching thee (gentle reader) with care and study well to peruse, diligently to consider, and deep [...] to print the same in thy breast, seeing him to be a man beautified with such excellent qualities, so spiritually inspired, and godly learned, and now written doubtless in the book of life, with the blessed saints of the Almighty, crowned and enthro [...] amongst the glorious company of martyrs. [...], descending of a stock right worshipful, he was [...] in the county of Northumberland, who being a child, learned his grammar with great dexterity in Newcastle, and was removed from thence to the university of Cambridge, where he in a short time became so famous, that for his singular aptness▪ he was called to higher functions and offices of the university, by degrees pertaining thereunto, and was called to be head of Pembroke Hall, and there made doctor of divinity. After this, departing from thence, he travelled to Paris, and at his return was made chaplain to king Henry the eighth, and promoted afterwards by him to the bishopric of Rochester, and from thence translated to the see and bishopric of London, in king Edward's days.
IN which calling and offices he so diligently applied himself by preaching and teaching the true and wholsome doctrine of Christ, that no good child was more singularly loved by his dear parents, than he by his flock and diocese. Every holiday and Sunday he preached in one place or other, except he were otherwise hindered by weighty affairs and business; to whose sermons the people resorted, swarming about him like bees, and coveting the sweet flowers and wholesome juice of the fruitful doctrine, which he did not only preach, [Page 787] but shewed the same by his life, as a glittering lanthorn to the eyes and senses of the blind, in such pure order and chastity of life (declining from evil desires and concupiscence) that even his very enemies could not reprove him in any one jot thereof.
BESIDES this, he was very well learned, his memory was great, and he of such reading withal, that of right he deserved to be compared to the best men of this our age, as his notable works, pithy sermons, and his sundry disputations in both the universities can well testify, and also his very adversaries will say the same themselves.
BESIDES all this, he was wise of counsel, deep of wit, and very politic in all his doings. How merciful and careful he was to reduce the obstinate papists from their erroneous opinions, and by gentleness to win them to the truth, his gentle ordering and courteous handling of Dr. Heath, late archbishop of York, being prisoner with him in king Edward's time, in his house, one year, sufficiently declareth. In fine, he was such a prelate, and in all points so good, pious and spiritual a man, that England may jus [...]ly lament the loss of so worthy a treasure. And thus much concerning these public matters.
NOW I will proceed something further, particularly of his person and conditions. He was a man right comely and well proportioned in all points, both in complexion and lineaments of the body. He took all things in good part, bearing no malice nor rancour from his heart, but straightway forgetting all injuries and offences done against him. He was very kind and natural to his kinsfolk, and yet not bearing with them any otherwise than right would require, giving them always for a general rule, yea, to his own brother and sister, that they doing evil should seek or look for nothing at his hand, but should be [...]s strangers and aliens to him, and they to be his brother and sister, who used honestly and a godly trade of life.
HE used all kinds of ways to mortif [...] himself, and was much given to prayer and contemplation: for duly every morning, as soon as his apparel was put upon him, he went forthwith to his bed-chamber, and there upon his knees prayed the space of half an hour; which being done, immediately he went to his study (if no other business came to interrupt him) where he continued till ten o'clock, and then came to the common prayer, daily used in his house. The prayers being done, he went to dinner; where he used little talk, except otherwise occasion had been ministered, and then it was sober, discreet and wise, and sometimes merry, as cause required.
THE dinner done, which was not very long, he used to sit an hour or thereabouts talking, or playing at the chess: that done, he returned to his study, and there would continue, except visitors, or business abroad were occasion of the contrary, until five o'clock at night, and would come to common prayer, as in the forenoon; which being finished, he went to supper, behaving himself there as at dinner before. After supper, recreating himself in playing at chess the space of an hour, he would then return again to his study; continuing there till eleven o'clock at night, which was his common hour of going to bed, then saying his prayers upon his knees as in the morning when he rose. Being at his manor of Fulham, as sometimes he used to be, he read daily a lecture to his family at the common prayer, beginning at the Acts of the apostles, and so going through all the epistles of St. Paul, giving to every man that could read, a New Testament, hiring them, besides, with money to learn by heart certain principal chapters, but especially the 13th chapter of the Acts of the apostles, reading also unto his houshold oftentimes the 101st Psalm, being marvellously careful over his family, that they might be a pattern of all virtue and honesty to others. To be short, as he was godly and virtuous himself, so nothing but virtue and godliness reigned in his house, feeding them with the food of our Saviour Jesus Christ.
NOW remaineth a word or two to be declared of his gentle nature and kind behaviour to old Mrs. Bonner, mother to Dr. Bonner, sometime bishop of London, which I thought good to mention, as well for the rare clemency of Dr. Ridley, as the [Page 788] unworthy inhumanity and ungrateful disposition again of Dr. Bonner. Bishop Ridley being at his manor of Fulham, always sent for the said Mrs. Bonner, dwelling in a house adjoining to his house, to dinner and supper, with one Mrs. Mungey, Bonner's sister, saying, Go for my mother Bonner; who coming, was always placed in the chair at the head of the table, being so gently treated, welcomed and taken, as though she had been his own mother, being never displaced from her seat, although the king's council had been present; saying, when any of them were there, (as several times they were) By your lordship's favour, this place of right and custom is for my mother Bonner. But how well he was recompensed for this singular kindness, and gentle pity afterwards at the hands of the said Bonner▪ almost the least child that goeth on the ground can declare. For who afterwards was a greater enemy to Dr. Ridley than Dr. Bonner? Who went more about to seek his destruction than he? Recompensing this his gentleness with extreme cruelty; as well appeared by the strict handling of Dr. Ridley's own sister, and her husband, George Shipside, from time to time: whereas the gentleness of the other permitted Bonner's mother, sister, and others of his kindred, not only quietly to enjoy all that which they had from bishop Bonner, but also entertained them in his house, shewing much courtesy and friendship daily unto them: whereas on the other side, bishop Bonner being restored again, would not suffer the brother and sister of bishop Ridley, and other of his friends, not only not to enjoy that which they had by their said brother, bishop Ridley, but also churlishly, without all order of law or honesty, wrested from them all the livings they had.
AND yet being not therewith satisfied, he sought all the means he could to work the death of the aforesaid Shipside, saying, that he would make twelve godfathers to go upon him; which indeed had been brought to pass, at the time he was prisoner at Oxford, had not God otherwise wrought his deliverance by the means of Dr. Heath, then bishop of Worcester. Witnessed by George Shipside.
WHEREBY all impartial good readers may [...] understand what great diversity there was in the disposition of these two natures. Insomuch, that as the one excelled in mercy and piety, so the other again, as much, or more, excelled in churlish ingratitude, and despiteful disdain. But of [...] matter enough.
NOW concerning God's vocation, how Dr. [...] was first called to the savouring and favouring of Christ and his gospel, partly by his disputation before, and by his other treatises it may [...], that the first occasion of his conversion was by the reading of Bertram's book of the sacrament, wh [...] also the conference with archbishop Cranmer, and with Peter Martyr, did not a little confirm in that behalf. Who now by the grace of God, being thoroughly won and brought to the true way, as he was before blind and zealous in his old ignorance, so was he constant and faithful in the ri [...]t knowledge which the lord had opened unto [...], (as well appeared by his life and doctrine during all the time of king Edward) and so long did he much good, when power and authority defended the gospel, and supported the peace and happiness of the church. But after it pleased God (in his wi [...]e providence) to bereave us of our stay, in taking from us that precious king Edward, the whole state of the church of England was left desolate and open to the enemy's hand: so that bishop Ridley, after the coming in of queen Mary, was one of the first that hands were laid on, and committed to prison, as before hath been sufficiently declared [...] first in the Tower, and from thence translated with the archbishop of Canterbury, and [...] them inclosed i [...] the common prison of Boccardo: but at length b [...]ing separated from them, he was commited to cus [...]ody in the house of one Irish, where he remained [...]ill the day of his martyrdom, which was from the year of our Lord 1554, till October 16, 1555.
AS for his [...]isputations at O [...]ford, his determination at Cambridge, his reasons and conference at at the lieuten [...]nt's table, enough hath been said already. Besi [...]es, he had other conferences in prison, hoth with Dr. Cranmer and Mr. Latimer, as here followeth to be read.
Conference between Dr. RIDLEY, and Mr. LATIMER, in Prison, upon the Objection of ANTONIAN, meaning by that Name some Popish Persecutor, as Winchester, alluding thereby to the Story of VICTOR. lib. 3. De persecut. Aphri.
IN writing again you have done me an unspeakable pleasure, and I pray that the Lord may requite it you in that day. For I have received great comfort at your words: but yet I am not so [...]lled withal, but that I thirst much more now than before, to drink more of the cup of your's wherein you mingle unto me profitable with pleasant. I pray you, good father, let me have one draught more to comfort my stomach. For surely, except the Lord assist me with his gracious aid, in the time of his service, I know I shall play but the part of a white-livered knight. But truly my trust is in him, that in mine infirmity he should try himself strong, and that he can make the coward in his cause to fight like a man.
SIR, now I daily look when Diotrephes with his warriors shall assault me: wherefore I pray you, good father, for that you are an old soldier, and an expert warrior, and God knoweth I am but a young soldier, and as yet of small experience in these seats, help me, I pray you, to buckle my harness. And now I would have you to think, that these darts are cast at my head by some of Diotrephes, or Antonius's soldiers.
Except the Lord help me, you say. Truth it is. For without me, saith he, you can do nothing, much less suffer death by our adversaries, through the bloody law now prepared against us. But it followeth, If you abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask what you will, and it shall be done for you. What can be more comfortable? Sir, you make answer yourself so well, that I cannot better it. Sir, I begin to smell what you mean by travelling thus with me; you use me as Bilney once did, when he converted me, pretending as though he would be taught by me, he sought ways and means to teach me, and so do you. I thank you therefore most heartily. For indeed you minister armour unto me, whereas I was unarmed before and unprovided, saving that I give myself to prayer for my refuge.
Objection 1. All men marvel greatly, why you, after the liberty you have granted unto you, more than the rest, do not go to mass, which is a thing much esteemed of all men, yea, of the queen herself.
Because no man that layeth hand on the plough and looketh back is fit for the kingdom of God, and also for the self-same cause why St. Paul would not suffer Titus to be circumcised, which is, that the truth of the gospel might remain with us uncorrupt, Gal. ii. And also, If I build again the things which I have destroyed, I make myself a trespasser. This is likewise another cause: lest I should seem by outward fact to allow the thing, which I am persuaded is contrary to sound doctrine, and so should be a stumbling-block unto the weak. But woe be unto him by whom offence cometh: it were better for him that a mill-stone were hanged about his neck, and he cast into the midst of the sea.
Object. 2. What is it then that offendeth you so greatly in the mass, that you will not vouchsafe once either to hear or see it? And from whence cometh this new religion upon you? Have you not used in times past to say mass yourself?
I confess unto you my fault and ignorance; but know you that for these matters I have done penance long ago, both at St. Paul's Cross, and also openly in the pulpit at Cambridge, and I trust God hath forgiven me this mine offence: for I did it ignorantly. But if you be desirous to know, and will vouchsafe to hear what things do offend me in the mass, I will rehearse those things which be most clear, and seem most manifestly to repugn against God's word, and they be these: The strange tongue, the want of shewing of the Lord's death, the breaking of the Lord's commandment of having a communion; the sacrament is not communicated to all under both kinds, according to the word of the Lord; the sign is se [...]vilely worshipped for the thing signified; Christ's passion is injured, forasmuch as this mass-sacrifice is affirmed [Page 790] to remain for the purging of sins; to be short, the manifold superstitions, and trifling fooleries which are in the mass, and about the same.
Better a few things well pondered, than to trouble the memory with too much; you shall prevail more with praying, than with studying, though mixture be best, for so one shall alleviate the tediousness of the other. I intend not to contend much with them in words, after a reasonable account of my faith given: for it will be but in vain. They will say as their fathers said, when they have no more to say: We have a law, and by our law he ought to die. Be you stedfast and immoveable, saith St. Paul: and again, Stand fast: and how oft is this repeated, If you abide, &c. But we shall be called obstinate, sturdy, ignorant, heady, and what not; so that a man hath need of much patience, having to do with such men.
Object. 3. But you know how great a crime it is to separate yourself from the communion or fellowship of the church, and to make a schism, or division. You have been reported to have hated the sect of the Anabaptists, and always to have impunged the same. Moreover, this was the pernicious error of Novatus, and of the heretics called [Cathari], that they would not communicate with the church.
I know that the unity of the church is to be retained by all means, and the same is necessary to salvation. But I do not take the mass, as it is at this day, for the communion of the church, but a popish device, whereby both the commandment and the institution of our Saviour Christ, for the oft frequenting of the remembrance of his death, is eluded, and the people of God are miserably deluded. The sect of the Anabaptists, and the heresy of the Novitians, ought of right to be condemned, forasmuch as without any just or necessary cause, they wickedly separated themselves from the communion of the congregation, for they did not alledge that the sacraments were unduly administered, but turning their eyes from themselves, wherewith according to St. Paul's rule, they ought to examine themselves, and casting their eyes ever upon others, either ministers, or communicants with them, they always reproved something for which they abstained from the communion, as from an unholy thing.
I remember that Calvin beginneth to confute the Interim after this sort, with this saying of Hilary, The name of peace is beautiful, and the opinion of unity is fair: but who doubteth that to be the true and only peace of the church, which i [...] Christ? I would you had that little book, ther [...] would you see how much is to be given to unity▪ St. Paul, when he requireth unity, joineth with it, according to Jesus Christ, no further. Diotreph [...] now of late, did always harp upon unity, unity. Yea, sir, said I, but in verity, not popery. I ha [...] nothing again but scornful taunts, with commandment to the Tower.
Object. 4. But admit there be in the mass, that peradventure might be amended, or at least mad [...] better; yea, seeing you will have it so, admit ther [...] be a fault; if you do not consent thereto, why do you trouble yourself in vain? Do you not know both by Cyprian and Augustine, that communion of sacraments doth not defile a man, but consent of deeds.
If it were any one trifling ceremony, or if it were some one thing of itself indifferent, (although I would wish nothing should be done in the church which doth not edify the same) yet for the continuance of the common quietness I could be content to bear it. But forasmuch as things done in the mass tend openly to the overthrow of Christ's institution, I judge that by no means either in word or deed I ought to consent unto it. As for that which is objected out of the fathers, I acknowledge it to be well spoken, if it be well understood. But it is meant of them which suppose they are defiled, if any secret vice be either in the ministers, or in them that communicate with them; and is not meant of them which do abhor superstition, and wicked traditions of men, and will not suffer the same to trust upon themselves, or upon the church, instead of God's word and the truth of the gospel.
The very marrow-bones of the mass are altogether detestable, and therefore by no means to be borne withal; so that of necessity the mending [Page 791] of it is to abolish it for ever. For if you take away [...]bl [...]tion and adoration, which do hang upon consecration and transubstantiation, most of the papists will not set a button by the mass, as a thing which they esteem not, but for the gain that followeth thereon. For if the English communion, which of lat [...] was used, were as gainful to them as the mass hath been heretofore, they would strive no more for th [...]ir mass: from thence groweth the grief.
Object. 5. Consider into what dangers you cast yourself, if you forsake the church; and you cannot but forsake it, if you refuse to go to mass. For the mass is the sacrament of unity; without the ark there is no salvation. The church is the ark and Peter's ship. You know this saying well enough. He shall not have God to be his Father, which acknowledgeth not the church to be his mother. Moreover, without the church, (saith St. Augustine) be the life ever so well spent, none shall not inherit the kingdom of heaven.
The holy catholic or universal church, which is the communion of saints, the house of God, the city of God, the spouse of Christ, the body of Christ, the pillar and stay of truth; this church I believe according to the creed. This church I [...]o reverence and honour in the Lord. But the rule of this church is the word of God, according to which rule we go forward unto life. And as many as walk according to this rule, I say with St. Paul, Peace be upon them, and upon Israel, which pertaineth unto God. The guide of this church is the Holy Ghost. The marks whereby this church is known unto me in this dark world, and in the midst of this crooked and froward generation, are these: The sincere preaching of God's holy word, the due administration of the sacraments, charity, and faithful observing of ecclesiastical discipline, according to the word of God. And that church or congregation which is garnished with these marks, is in very deed that heavenly Jerusalem, which consisteth of those that be born from above. This is the mother of us all, and by God's grace I will liv [...] and die the child of this church Out of this (I grant) there is no salvation; and I suppose the rest of [...]he places objected are rightly to be understood of this church only. In times past, (saith Chry [...]sostom) there were many ways to know the church of Christ, that is to say, by good life, by miracles, by chastity, by doctrine, by administering the sacraments. But from that time that heresies did take hold of the church, it is only known by the scriptures, which is the true church. They have all things in outward show, which the true church hath in truth. They have temples like unto our's. Wherefore only by the scriptures do we know which is the true church. To that which they say, That the mass is the sacrament of unity, I answer; The bread which we break, according to the institution of the Lord, is the sacrament of the unity of Christ's mystical body. For we being many, are one bread and one body, forasmuch as we are all partakers of one bread. But in the mass, the Lord's institution is not observed; for we are not all partakers of one bread, but one devoureth all, &c. So that (as it is used) it may seem a sacrament of singularity, and of a certain special privilege for one sect of people, whereby they may be discerned from the rest, rather than a sacrament of unity, wherein our knitting together in one is represented.
Yea, what fellowship hath Christ with Antichrist? Therefore it is not lawful to bear the yoke with papists. Come forth from among them, and separate yourselves from them, saith the Lord. It is one thing to be the church indeed, another thing to counterfeit the church. Would to God it were well known what is the forsaking of the church. In the king's days that is dead, who was the church of England? The king and his favourers, or massmong [...]rs in corners? If the king and the favourers of his proceedings, why be we not now the church, abiding in the same proceeding? If private massmongers might be of the church, and yet contrary to the king's proceedings, why may not we be of the church contrary to the queen's proceedings? Not all that are covered with the title of the church are the church indeed. Separate thyself from them that are such, saith St. Paul: From whom? The text hath before, If any man follow other doctrine, &c. he is puffed up, and knoweth nothing, &c. Weigh the whole text, that you may perceive what is the fruit of con [...]entious disputations. But wherefore are such men said to know nothing, when they know so many things? You know the old verses,
THAT is, "This is to be ignorant, to know many things without Christ. If thou knowest Christ well, thou knowest enough, though thou know no more." Therefore would St. Paul know nothing but Jesus Christ crucified, &c. As many as are papists and mass-mongers, they may well be said to know nothing. For they know not Christ, forasmuch as in their massing, they take much away from the benefit and merit of Christ.
Object. 6. The church which you have described to me is invisible, but Christ's church is visible and known. For else why should Christ have said, Tell it unto the church? For he had commanded in vain, if a man cannot tell which it is.
The church which I have described is visible, it hath members which may be seen; and also I have before declared, by what marks and tokens it may be known, but if either our eyes be so dazzled, that we cannot see, or that Satan hath brought such darkness into the world, that it is hard to discern the church; that is not the fault of the church, but either of our blindness, or of Satan's darkness. But yet in this most deep darkness, there is one most clear candle, which of itself alone is able to put away all darkness. Thy word is a candle unto my feet, and a light unto my steps.
Object. 7. The church of Christ is a catholic or universal church, dispersed throughout the whole world; this church is the great house of God, in this are good men and evil mingled together, goats and sheep, corn and chaff; it is the net which gathereth all kinds of fishes; this church cannot err, because Christ hath promised it hi [...] Spirit, which shall lead it into all truth, and that the gates of hell shall not prevail against it, that he will be with it unto the end of the world; whatsoever it shall loose or bind upon earth shall be ratified in heaven, &c. This church is the pillar and stay of truth; this is it for which St. Augustine saith, he believeth the gospel. But this universal church alloweth the mass, because the greater part of the same alloweth it. Therefore, &c.
I grant that the name of the church [...] taken after three divers manners in the scriptu [...] ▪ Sometimes for the whole multitude of them who profess the name of Christ▪ of which they are [...] named Christians. But as St. Paul saith of the Jews, not every one is a Jew, that is a Jew o [...] wardly, &c. Neither yet all that be of Israel [...] counted the seed; even so, not every one that is a christian outwardly is a christian indeed. For if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, [...] same is none of his. Therefore that church which is his body, and of which Christ is the head, [...] only on living stones, and true christian [...], [...] only outwardly in name and title, but inwardly [...] heart and in truth. But forasmuch as this [...] (which is the second taking of the church) as [...] the outward fellowship, is contained within [...] great house, and hath with the same, outward society of the sacraments and ministry of the [...] many things are spoken of that universal churc [...] (which St. Augustine calleth the mingled chur [...]) which cannot truly be understood, but only of that pure part of the church. So that the rule of Tic [...] nius concerning the mingled church, may here we [...] take place; where there is attributed unto the whol [...] church that which cannot agree to the same, but by reason of the one part thereof; that is, either for the multitude of good men, which is the very true church indeed; or for the multitude of evil men, which is the malignant church and synagogue of Satan. And there is also a third taking of the church; of which although there be seldom mention in the scriptures, in that signification, yet in the world, even in the most famous assemblies of Christendom, this church hath borne the greatest sway. This distinction presupposed of the three sorts o [...] churches, it is an easy matter, by a figure called Synecdoche, to give to the mingled and universal church that which cannot truly be understood, but only of the one part thereof. But if any man will stiffly affirm, that Universal doth so pertain unto the church, that whatsoever Christ hath promised to the church, it must needs be understood of that, l would gladly know of the same man, where that universal church was in the times of the patriarch [...] and prophets, of Noah, Abraham, and Moses, (at such time as the people would have stoned him) of Elias, of Jeremiah, in the times of Christ, and the [Page 793] dispersion of the apostles, in the time of Arius, when Constantius was emperor, and Felix, bishop of Rome, succeeded Liberius. It is worthy to be noted, what Lyra writeth upon Matthew; The church (saith he) doth not stand in men by reason of their power or dignity, whether it be ecclesiastical or secular. For princes and popes, and other inferiors, have been found to have fallen away from God. Therefore the church consisteth in those persons, in whom is true knowledge and confession of the faith, and of the truth. Evil men (as it is in a gloss of the decrees) are in the church in name, and not in deed. And St. Augustine ( Contra Cresc [...]nium grammaticum) saith, Whoever is afraid to be deceived by the darkness of this question, let him ask counsel at the same church of it: which church the scripture doth point out without any doubtfulness. All my notes which I have written and gathered out of such authors as I have read in this matter, and such like, are come into the hands of such as will not let me have the least of all my written books; wherein I am enforced to complain of them unto God: for they spoil me of all my labours, which I have taken in my study these many year. My memory was never good, for help whereof I have used for the most part, to gather out notes of my reading, and so to place them, that thereby I might have had the use of them when the time required. But who knoweth whether this be God's will, that I should be thus ordered, and spoiled of the poor learning I had (as I thought) in store, to the intent that I, now destitute of that, should from henceforth, with St. Paul, learn only to know Christ, and him crucified? The Lord grant me herein to be a good young scholar, and to learn this lesson so well, that neither death nor life, wealth nor woe. &c. make me ever to forget that, Amen, Amen.
I have no more to say in this matter; for you yourself have said all that is to be said. That same vehement saying of St. Augustine, I would not believe the gospel, &c. was wont to trouble many men; as I remember, I have read it well qualified of Philip Melancthon: but my memory is altogether slippery. This it is in effect; the church is not a judge, but a witness. There were some in his time that lightly esteemed the testimony of the church, and the outward ministry of preaching, and rejected the outward word itself, sticking only to their inward revelations. Such rash contempt of the word provoked and drove St. Augustine into that excessive vehemency. In which, after the bare sound of the words, he might seem to such as do not attain unto his meaning, that he preferred the church far before the gospel, and that the church hath a free authority over the same; but that pious man never thought so. It were a saying worthy to be brought forth against the Anabaptists, who think the open ministry to be a thing not necessary, if they any thing esteemed such testimonies. I would not stick to affirm, that the most part of the great house, that is to say, of the whole universal church, may easily err. And again, I would not stick to affirm, that it is one thing to be gathered together in the name of Christ, and another thing to come together with a mass of the Holy Ghost going before. For in the first, Christ ruleth; in the latter, the devil beareth the sway; and how then can any thing be good they go about? From this latter shall our six articles come forth again into the light, they themselves being very darkness. But it is demanded, whether the founder or better part of the catholic church may be seen of men, or no? St. Paul saith, The Lord knoweth them that are his. What manner of speaking is this in commendation of the Lord, if we knew as well as he who are his? Well, thus is the text: the sure foundation of God standeth still, and hath this seal, The Lord knoweth them that are his; and let every man that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity. Now how many are there of the whole catholic church of England who depart from iniquity? How many of the noblemen, how many of the bishops or clergy, how many of the rich men, or merchants, how many of the queen's counsellors, yea, how many of the whole realm? In how small room then, I pray you, is the true church within the realm of England? And where is it? And in what state? I had a conceit of my own well grounded (as they say) when I began, but now it is fallen by the way.
Object. 8. General councils represent the universal church, and have this promise of Christ; Where two or three be gathered together in my [Page 794] name, there am I in the midst of them. If Christ be present with two or three, then much more where there is so great a multitude, &c. But in general c [...]ncils mass hath be [...] approved and used.
Of the universal church, which is mingled of good and bad, thus I think; Whensoever they which be chief in it, which rule and govern the same, and to whom the whole mystical body of Christ doth obey, are the lively members of Christ, and walk after the guiding and rule of his word, and go before the flock to everlasting life, then undoubtedly councils gathered together of such guides and pastors of the christian flock, do indeed represent the christian church, and being so gathered in the name of Christ, they have a promise of the gift and guiding of his Spirit into all truth. But that any such council hath at any time allowed the mas [...], such an one as our's was of late, in a strange tongue, and stuffed with so many absurdities, errors, and superstitions; that I utterly deny, and affirm it to be impossible. For like as there is no agreement betwixt light and darkness, betwixt Christ and Belial; so surely superstition and the sincere religion of Christ, will-worship, and the pure worshipping of God, such as God requireth of his, that is, in spirit and truth, can never agree together. But you will say, where so great a company is gathered together, it is not credible but there are two or three gathered together in the name of Christ. I answer, if there be one hundred good, and two hundred bad, (forasmuch as the decrees and ordinances are pronounced according to the greater number of the multitude of voices) what can the less number of voices avail? It is a known thing, and a common proverb; oftentimes the greater part overcometh the better.
As touching general councils, at this present I have no more to say than you have said. Only I refer you to your own experience, to think [...]f our country parliaments and convocations, how a [...] what you have seen and heard. The greater part in my time did bring forth six articles: for then the king would have it so, being seduced of certain. Afterward the greater part did repel the same, our good Josias willing to have it so. The same articles now again, alas! another great but worse part hath restored. O what an uncertainty is this! But after this manner most commonly are man's proceedings. God be merciful unto [...]. Who shall deliver us from such torments of mind? Therefore is death the best physician unto the faithful, whom he together and at once delivereth from all griefs. You must think this was written upon this occasion, because you would needs have your paper blotted.
Object. 9. If the matter should go thus, that in general councils men should not stand to the gr [...]ter number of the multitude (I mean of them which ought to give voices) then should no certain rule be left unto the church, by which controversies in weighty matters might be determined; but it is not to be believed, that Christ would leave his church destitute of so necessary a help and safe-guard.
Christ, who is the most loving spouse of his church, who also gave himself for it, that he might sanctify it unto himself, did give unto it abundantly all things which are necessary to salvation; but yet so, that the church should declare itself obedient unto him in all things, and keep itself within the bounds of his commandments, and further not to seek any thing which he teacheth not, as necessary unto salvation. Now further, for determination of all controversies in Christ's religion, Christ himself hath left unto the church not only Moses and the prophets, whom he willeth in all doubts to go unto, and ask counsel at, but also the gospels, and the rest of the body of the New Testament; in which whatsoever is heard of Moses and the prophets, and whatsoever is necessary to be known unto salvation, is revealed and opened.
SO that now we have no need to say, Who shall climb up into heaven, or who shall go down into the depth, to tell us what is needful to be done? Christ hath done both, and hath commended to us the word of faith, which also is abundantly declared unto us in his word written; so that hereafter, if we walk earnestly in the way to the searching out of the truth, it is not to be doubted, but through the certain benefit of Christ's Spirit, which he hath promised unto us, we may find it, and obtain everlasting life. Should men ask couns [...]l of the dead for the living, faith Isaiah? Let them go rather to the law and to the testimony, &c. Christ sendeth [Page 795] them that be desirous to know the truth, unto the scriptures, saying, Search the scriptures. I remember a like thing well spoken of St. Jerome; Ignorance of the scriptures is the mother and cause of all errors. And in another place, as I remember in the same author; The knowledge of the scriptures is the food of everlasting life. But now methinks I enter into a very broad sea, in that I begin to shew, either out of the scriptures themselves, or out of the ancient writers, how much the holy scripture is of force to teach the truth of our religion. But this i [...] it that I am now about, that Christ would have the church, his spouse, in all doubts to ask counsel at the word of his Father written, and faithfully left, and commended unto it in both Testaments, the old and the new. Neither do we read, that Christ in any place hath laid so great a burden upon the members of his spouse, that he hath commanded them to go to the universal church. Whatsoever things are written, saith St. Paul, are written for our learning. And it is true, that Christ gave unto his church, some apostles, some prophets, some evangelists, some shepherds and teachers, to the edifying of the saints, till we come all to the unity of faith, &c. But that all men should meet together out of all parts of the world, to define the articles of our faith, I neither find it commanded by Christ, nor written in the word ot God.
There is a difference between things pertaining to God or faith, and politic and civil matters. For in the first we must stand only to the scriptures, which are able to make us all perfect and instructed unto salvation, if they be well understood. And they offer thems [...]s to be well understood only to them, which have good-wills, and give themselves to study and prayer. Neither are there any men less apt to understand them, than the prudent and wise men of the world. But in the other, that is, in civil and politic matters, oftentimes the magistrates do tolerate a less evil, for avoiding of a greater, as they which have this saying often in their mouths; better an inconveniency than a mischief. And it is the property of a wise man, saith one, to dissemble many things, and he that cannot dissemble, cannot rule. In which sayings they betray themselves, that they do not earnestly weigh what is just, and what is not. Wherefore forsormuch as man's laws, if they be but in this respect only, that they be devised by men, are not able to bring any thing to perfection, but are enforced of necessity to suffer many things out of square, and are compelled sometimes to wink at the worst things: seeing they know not how to maintain the common peace and quiet otherwise, they do ordain that the greater part shall take place. You know what these kind of speeches mean, I speak after the manner of men; you walk after the manner of men, all men are liars. And that of St. Augustine, If ye live after man's reason, ye do not live after the will of God.
Object. 10. If you say that councils have sometimes erred, or may err, how then should we believe the catholic church? since councils are gathered by the authority of the catholic church.
From may be, to be indeed, is no good argument: but from being, to may be, no man doubteth but it is a most sure argument. But now that councils have sometimes erred, it is manifest. How many councils were there in the eastern parts of the world, which condemned the Nicene council? and all those who would not forsake the same, they called by a slanderous name (as they thought) Homousians. Was not Athanasius, Chrysostom, Cyril, Eustachius, men very well learned, and of godly life, banished and condemned as famous h [...]retics, and that by wicked councils? How many things are there in the canons and institutions of the councils, which the papists themselves do much dislike? But here peradventure one man will say unto me, We will grant you this in provincial councils, councils of some one nation, that they may sometimes err, forsomuch as they do not represent the universal church; but it is not to be believed, that the general and full councils have erred at any time. Here if I had my books of the councils, or rather such notes as I have gathered out of those books, I could bring something which should serve for this purpose. But now seeing I have them not, I will recite one place only out of St. Austin, which, in my judgment, may suffice in this matter instead of many. Who knoweth not (saith he) that the holy scripture is so set before us, that it is not lawful to doubt of i [...], and that the letters of bishops may be reproved by other men's words, and by councils, and that the councils themselves which are gathered by provinces and [Page 796] countries, do give place to the authority of the general and full councils; and that the former and general councils are amended by the latter, when as by some experience of things, either what was shut up, is opened, or that which was hid, is known. Thus much out of St. Austin. But I will plead upon our Antonian, upon matter confessed. Here with us as when popery reigned, I pray you how doth that book, which was called, The bishop's book, made in the time of king Henry the eighth, wherof the bishop of Winchester is thought to be either the first father, or chief gatherer; how doth it (I say) sharply reprove the Florentine council, in which was decreed the supremacy of the bishop of Rome, and that with the consent of the emperor of Constantinople, and of the Grecians? So that in those days our learned ancient fathers and bishops of England did not stick to affirm, that a general council might err. But methinks I hear another man despising all that I have brought forth, and saying, These which you have called councils, are not worthy to be called councils, but rather assemblies and conventicles of heretics. I pray you, sir, why do you judge them worthy of so scandalous a name? Because (saith he) they decreed things heretical, contrary to sound doctrine and true godliness, and against the faith of true religion. The cause is weighty, for which they ought of right so to be called. But if it be so that all councils ought to be despised which decree any thing contrary to sound doctrine, and the true word, which is according to godliness, forsomuch as the mass, such as we had here of late, is openly against the word of God; forsooth, it must of necessity follow, that all such councils, as have approved such masses, ought to be shunned and despised, as conventicles and assemblies that stray from the truth.
ANOTHER man alledgeth unto me the authority of the bishop of Rome, without which, neither can the councils (saith he) be lawfully gathered, neither being gathered, determine any thing concerning religion. But this objection is only grounded upon the ambitious and shameless maintenance of the Romish tyranny and usurped dominion over the clergy; which tyranny we Englishmen long ago, by the consent of the whole realm, have expelled and abjured. And how rightly we have done it, a little book set forth of both the power [...], doth clearly shew. I grant that the Romish a [...] bition hath gone about to challenge to itself▪ and to usurp such a privilege of old time. [...] the council of Carthage, in the year of our Lord 457, did openly withstand it, and also the council at Milevite, in which St. Austin was present, did prohibit any appellations to be made [...] bishops beyond the sea.
Object. 11. St. Austin saith, the good [...] are not to be forsaken for the evil, but the evi [...], are to be borne withal for the good. You will not say (I suppose) that in our congregations all be evil.
I speak nothing of the goodness or badness of your congregations; but I fight in Christ's quarrel against the mass, which doth utterly take away and overthrow the ordinance of Christ. Let that be taken quite away, and then the partition wall that made the strife shall be broken down. Now to the place of St. Austin, for bearing with the evil for the good's sake, there ought to be added other words, which the same writer hath expressed in other places; that is, if those evil men do cast abroad no seeds of false doctrine, nor lead others to destruction by their example.
Object. 12. It is perilous to attempt any new thing in the church, which lacketh example of good men. How much more perilous is it to commit any act, unto which the examples of the prophets, of Chri [...]t, and of the apostles, are contrary? But unto this your fact, in abstaining from the church by reason of the mass, the examples of the prophets, of Christ, and of the apostles, are clean contrary: therefore, &c. The first part of the argument is evident, and the second part I prove thus. In the times of the prophets, of Christ, and his apostles, all things were most corrupt. The people were miserably given to superstition, the priests despised the law of God; and yet notwithstanding we read not that the prophets made any schisms or divisions; and Christ himself frequented the temple, and taught in the temple of the Jews. Peter and John went up into the temple at the ninth hour of prayer; Paul after the reading of the law, being desired to say something to the people, [Page 797] did not refuse to do it. Yea further, no man can shew, that either the prophets, or Christ, or his apostles, did refuse to pray together with others, to sacrifice, or to be partakers of the sacrament of Moses' law.
I grant the former part of your argument; and to the second part I say, that although it contain many true thing [...], as of the corrupt state in the times of the prophets, of Christ, and the apostles, and of the temple being frequented by Christ and his apostles; yet notwithstanding the second part of your argument is not sufficiently proved. For you ought to have proved, that either the prophets, either Christ or his apostles, did in the temple communicate with the people in any kind of worshipping which is forbidden by the law of God, or repugnant to the word of God. But that can no where be shewed. And as for the church, I am not angry with it, and I never refused to go to it, and to pray with the people, to hear the word of God, and to do all other things whatsoever may agree with the word of God. St. Austin, speaking of the ceremonies of the Jews, (I suppose in the epistle ad Januarium) although he grants they grievously oppressed that people, both for the number and bondage of the same, yet he calleth them burdens of the law, which were delivered unto them in the word of God, not presumptions of men, which notwithstanding, if they were not contrary to God's word, might in some measure be borne withal. But now, seeing they are contrary to such things as are written in the word of God, whether they ought to be borne by any christian or no, let him judge who is spiritual, who feareth God more than man, and loveth everlasting life more than this short and transitory life. To that which was said, that my fact lacketh example of the godly fathers that have gone before, the contra [...]y is most evident in the history of Toby: of whom it is said, that when all others went to the golden calves, which Jeroboam the king of Israel had made, he himself alone fled from their company, and got him to Jerusalem unto the Lord God of Israel. Did not the man of God threaten grievous plagues both unto the priests of Bethel, and to the altar which Jeroboam had there made after his own fantasy? Which plagues king Josias, the true minister of God, did execute at the time appointed. And where do we read, that the prophets or the apostles did agree with the people in their idolatry, when the people went a whoring with their hill-altars? For what cause, I pray you, did the prophets rebuke the people so much, as for their false worshipping of God after their own minds, and not after God's word? For what was so much as that was? Wherefore the false prophets ceased not to accuse the true prophets of God; therefore they beat them, they banished them, &c. How else, I pray you, can you understand what St. Paul alledgeth, when he saith, What concord hath Christ with Belial? or what part hath the believer with the infidel? Or how agreeth the temple of God with images? For ye are the temple of the living God, as God himself hath said; I will dwell among them, and will be their God, and they shall be my people. Wherefore, come out from among them, and separate yourselves from them (saith the Lord), and touch no unclean thing; so will I receive you, and be a Father unto you, and you shall be my sons and daughters, saith the Lord God Almighty.
JUDITH, that holy woman, would not suffer herself to be with the meats of the wicked. All the saints of God, which truly feared God, when they have been provoked to do any thing which they knew to be contrary to God's law's, have chose to die rather than forsake the laws of their God. Wherefore the Maccabees put themselves in danger of death for the defence of the law, and at length died manfully in the defence of the same. If we do praise (saith St. Augustine) the Maccabees, and that with great admiration, because they did stoutly stand even unto death, for the law of their country; how much more ought we to suffer all things for our baptism, for the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ, &c.? But the supper of the Lord, such a one (I mean) as Christ commanded us to celebrate, the mass utterly abolisheth, and corrupteth most shamefully.
Who am I, that should add any thing to this which you have spoken? Nay, I rather thank you, that have vouchsafed to minister so plentiful armour to me, being otherwise altogether unarmed, saving, that he cannot be left destitute of help, who rightly trusteth in the help of God. I only learn to die in reading the New Testament, and am [Page 798] every now and then praying unto my God, that he will be an helper unto me in time of need.
Object. 13. Seeing you are so obstinately set against the mass, that you affirm, because it is done in a tongue not understood of the people, and for other causes, I cannot tell what; therefore is it not the true sacrament ordained of Christ? I begin to suspect you, that you think not catholicly of baptism also. Is our baptism, which we do use in a tongue unknown to the people, the true baptism, or no? If it be, then the strange tongue doth not hurt the mass. If it be not the baptism of Christ, tell me how you were baptized. Or whether will you, (as the anabaptists do) that all which were baptized in Latin, should be baptized again in the English tongue?
Although I would wish baptism to be given in the vulgar tongue, for the people's sake, which are present, that they may the better understand their own profession, also may be more able to teach their children the same, yet notwithstanding there is not like necessity of the vulgar tongue in baptism, as in the Lord's supper. Baptism is given to children, who by reason of their age are not able to understand what is spoken unto them, whatsoever it be. The Lord's supper is, and ought to be given to them that are at years of maturity. Moreover, in baptism, which is accustomed to be given to children in the Latin tongue, all the substantial points (as a man would say) which Christ commanded to be done, are observed. And therefore I judge that baptism to be a perfect and true baptism; and that it is not only not needful, but also not lawful for any man so baptized, to be christened again. But yet notwithstanding, they ought to be taught the catechism of the christian faith, when they come to years of discretion; which catechism whosoever despiseth, or will not desirously embrace and willingly learn, in my judgment he playeth not the part of a christian man. But in the popish mass are wanting certain substantials, that is to say, things commanded by the word of God to be observed in the ministration of the Lord's supper; of which there is sufficient declaration made before.
Where you say [I would wish], surely I would wish that you had spoken more vehemently, and to have said, It is of necessity, that all things in the congregation should be done in the vulgar tongue, for the edifying and comfort of them that are present, notwithstanding that the child itself is sufficiently baptized in the Latin tongue.
Object. 14. Forasmuch as I perceive you are so stiffly, I will not say obstinately bent, and so wedd [...]d to your opinion, that no gentle exhortations, no wholesome counsels, no other kind of means can ca [...]l you home to a better mind, there remaineth that which in like c [...]ses was wont to be the only remedy against stiff-necked and stubborn persons, that is, you must be hampered by the laws, and be compelled to obey whether you will or no, or else to suffer that which a rebel to the laws ought to suffer. Do you not know, that whosoever refuseth to obey the laws of the realm, he bewrayeth himself to be an enemy to his country? Do you not know this is the readiest way to stir up sedition and civil war? It is better that you should bear your own sin, than through the example of your breach of the common laws, the common quiet should be disturbed. How can you say, you will be the queen's true subject, when as you do openly profess that you will not keep her laws.
O heavenly Father, the Father of all wisdom, understanding, and true strength, I beseech thee for thy only Son our Saviour Christ's sake, look mercifully upon [...] wretched creature, and send thy Holy Spirit into my breast, that not only I may understand according to thy wisdom, how this pestilent and deadly dart is to be borne off, and with what answer it is to be beaten back, but also when I must join to fight in the field for the glory of thy holy name, that then I being strengthened with the defence of thy right hand, may manfully stand in the confession of thy faith, and of thy truth, and continue in the same unto the end of my life, through our Lord Jesus Christ, Amen.
NOW to the objection. I grant it to be reasonable, that he who by words and gentleness cannot be made to yield to that which is right and good, should be bridled by the strait correction of the laws: that is to say, He that will not be subject to God's word, must be punished by the laws. It is tru [...] [...]hat is commonly said, He that will not obey the [...], [Page 799] must be tamed and taught by the rigour of the law. But these things ought to take place against him, who refuseth to do that which is right and just according to true godliness, not against him who cannot quietly bear superstitions, but doth hate and detest from his heart such kind of proceedings, and that for the glory of the name of God. To that which you say, a transgressor of the common laws bewrayeth himself to be an enemy of his country, surely a man ought to look unto the nature of the laws, what manner of laws they be which are broken. For a faithful christian ought not to think alike of all manner of laws. But that saying ought only truly to be understood of such laws as are not contrary in truth, (that is to say, in God) they will always judge, if at any time the laws of God and man be the one contrary to the other, that a man ought rather to obey God than man. And they that think otherwise, and pretend a love to that country, forasmuch as they make their country to fight as it were against God, in whom consisteth the only stay of their country, surely I do think such are to be judged most deadly enemies, and traitors to their country. For they that fight against God, who is the safety of their country, what do they else but go about to bring upon their country a present ruin and destruction? But they that do so are worthy to be judged enemies to their country, and betrayers of the realm. Therefore, &c.
BUT this is the readiest way, you say, to stir up sedition to trouble the quiet of the commonwealth; therefore are these things to be repressed in time by force of law. Behold, Satan doth not cease to practise his old guile, and accustomed subtleties. He hath ever this dart in readiness to hurl against his adversaries, to accuse them of sedition, that he may bring them, if he can, in danger of the higher powers. For so hath he by his minister always charged the prophets of God. Ahab said unto Elias, "Art thou he that troubleth Israel?" The false prophets also complained to their princes of Jeremy, that his words were seditious, and not to to suffered: did not the scribes and pharisees falsely accuse Christ as a seditious person, and one that spake against Caesar's friend? Did they not, at last, cry, "If thou let this man go, thou art not Ca [...]sar's friend?" The orator Tertullus, how doth he accuse Paul before Felix the high deputy? "We have found this man (saith he) a pestilent fellow, and a stirrer of sedition, unto all the Jews in the whole world, &c. But, I pray you, were these men, as they were called, sedi [...]ious persons? Christ, Paul, and the prophets? God forbid. But they were by false men falsely accused. And for what, I pray you? But because they reproved before the people their guiles, superstition, and deceit. And when the others could not bear it, and would gladly have had them taken out of the way, they accused them as seditious persons, and troublers of the commonwealth, that being by this made hateful to the people and princes, they might the more easily be snatched up to be tormented, and put to death. But how far they were from all sedition, their whole doctrine, life, and conversation doth well declare. For that which was objected last of all, that he cannot be a faithful subject to his prince, who professeth openly that he will not observe the laws which the prince hath made; here I would wish that I might have an impartial judge, and one that feareth God, to whose judgment in this cause, I promise I will stand. I answer therefore, a man ought to obey his prince, but in the Lord, and never against the Lord. For he that knowingly obeyeth his prince against God, doth not a duty to the prince, but is a deceiver of the prince, and an helpher unto him to work his own destruction. He is also unjust, who giveth not to the prince that which is the prince's, and to God that which is God's. Here cometh to my remembrance that notable saying of Valentinian the emperor for chusing the bishop of Milan. Set him (saith he) in the bishop's seat, to whom if we, as man, do offend at any time, we may submit ourselves. Polycarp the most constant martyr, when he stood before the chief rulers, and was commanded to blaspheme Christ, and to swear by the fortune of Caesar, &c. he answered with a mild spirit: We are taught (saith he) to give honour as is not contrary to God's religion.
HITHERTO you see (good father) how I have in word only made as it were a flourish before the fight, which I shortly look for, and how I have begun to prepare certain kinds of weapons to fight against the adversary of Christ, and to muse myself how the darts of the old enemy may be borne off, and after what manner I may smite him again with the sword of the Spirit. I learn also hereby to [Page 800] accustom myself to armour, and to try how I can go armed. In Tindal, where I was born, not far from the borders of Scotland, I have known my countrymen to watch night and day in their harness, such as they had, and their spears in their hands, especially when they had any private warning of the coming of the Scots. And so doing, although at every such bickering some of them spent their lives, yet by such means, like valiant men, they defended their country. And those that so died, I think that before God they died in a good quarrel, and their offspring and progeny were loved by all the country the better for their father's sake. And in the quarrel of Christ our Saviour, in the defence of his own divine ordinances, by which he giveth unto us life and immortality; yea, in the quarrel of faith and the christian religion, wherein resteth our everlasting salvation, shall we not watch? Shall we not go always armed? Always looking when our adversary (which like a roaring lion seeketh whom he may devour) shall come upon us by reason of our slothfulness? Yea, and woe be unto us, if he can oppress us unawares, which undoubtedly he will do, if he find us sleeping. Let us awake therefore. For if the good man of the house knew at what hour the thief would come, he would surely watch, and not suffer his house to be broken up. Let us awake therefore, I say: Let us not suffer our house to be broken up. Resist the devil, saith St. James, and he will fly from you. Let us therefore resist him manfully, and taking the cross upon our shoulders, let us follow our captain Christ, who by his own blood hath dedicated and hallowed the way which leadeth unto the Father, that is, to the light which no man can attain, the fountain of the everlasting joys. Let us follow, I say, whither he calleth and inviteth us, that after these afflictions, which last but for a moment, whereby he trieth our faith, as gold by the fire, we may everlastingly reign and triumph with him in the glory of the Father, and through the merit of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ; to whom, with the Father and the Holy Ghost, be all honour and glory, now and for ever, Amen.
GOOD father, forasmuch as I have determined with myself, to pour forth these my cogitations into thy bosom, here, methinks, I see you suddenly lifting up your head towards heaven, after your manner, and then looking upon me with your prophetical countenance, and speaking to me, with these or like words, Trust not, my son (I beseech you vouchsafe me the honour of this name; for in so doing I shall think myself both honoured and beloved of you); trust not, I say, my son, to these word-weapons; for the kingdom of God is not in words, but in power. And remember always the words of the Lord. "Do not imagine beforehand, what and how you will speak; for it shall be given you in that same hour what ye shall speak. For it is not you that speak, but the Spirit of your Father which speaketh in you." I pray you therefore, father, pray for me, that I may cast my whole care upon him, and trust upon him in all perils. For I know, and am surely persuaded, that whatsoever I can imagine or think beforehand, is nothing, except he assist me with his Spirit when the time is. I beseech you therefore, father, pray for me, that such a complete harness of the Spirit, such a boldness of mind may be given unto me, that I may out of a true faith say with David, "I will not trust in my bow, and it is not my sword that shall save me. For he hath no pleasure in the strength of an horse, &c. but the Lord's delight is in them that fear him, and put their trust in his mercy." I beseech you, pray, pray that I may enter this fight only in the name of God, and that when all is past, I being not overcome, through his gracious aid, may remain and stand fast in him, till that day of the Lord, in which to them that obtain the victory shall be given the lively manna to eat, and a triumphant crown for evermore.
NOW, father, I pray you help me to buckle on this harness a little better. For you know the deepness of Satan, being an old soldier, and you have collered with him ere now: blessed be God that hath ever aided you so well. I suppose he may well hold you at the bay. But truly he will not be so willing (I think) to join with you a [...] with us youngsters. Sir, I beseech you, let your servant read this my [...]abbling unto you, and now and then, as it shall seem unto you best, let your pen run on my book; spare not to blot my paper▪ I give you good leave.
Sir, I have caused my man not only to [...] your armour unto me, but also to write it out, for it is not only solid armour, but also well buckled armour. I see not how it could be better. I thank you even from the bottom of my heart for it, and my prayers you shall not lack, trusting that you do the like for me; for indeed there is the help, &c. many things make confusion in memory. And if I were learned as well as St. Paul, I would not bestow much amongst them, further than to [...]ll them, and spur-gall too, when and where occasion were given, and matter came to mind, for the law shall be their sheet-anchor stay, and refuge. Therefore there is no remedy (namely, now when they have them after-bowl in their hand, and rule the [...]st) but patience. Better is it to suffer what cruelly they will put upon us, than to incur God's high indignation. Wherefore (my good lord) be of good cheer in the Lord, with due consideration what he requireth of you, and what he doth promise you. Our common enemy shall do no more than God will permit him. God is faithful, who will not suffer us to be tempted above our strength, &c. Be at a point what you will stand unto; stick unto that, and let them both say and do what they list. They can but kill the body, which otherwise is of itself mortal. Neither yet shall they do that when they list, but as God will suffer them, when the hour appointed is come. It will be but in vain to use many words with them, now they have a bloody and deadly law prepared for you. But it is very requisite that you give a reasonable account of your faith, if they will quietly hear you; else, you know, in a wicked place of judgment a man may keep silence, after the example of Christ. Let them not deceive you with their sophistical sophisms and fallacies: you know that false things may have more appearance of truth, than things that be most true: therefore St. Paul giveth us a watch-word, Let no man deceive you with likeliness of speech. Neither is it requisite that with the contentious you should follow strife of words, which tend to no edification, but to the subversion of the hearers, and the vain bragging and ostentation of the adversaries. Fear of death doth mostly persuade a great number. Be well aware of that argument; for that persuaded Shaxton (as many men thought) after that he had once made a good profession openly before the judgment-seat. The flesh is weak, but the willingness of the spirit shall refresh the weakness of the flesh.
THE number of the criers under the altar must needs be fulfilled; if we be separated there unto, happy be we. That is the greatest promotion that God giveth in this world, to be such Philippians, to whom it is given not only to believe, but also to suffer, &c. But who is able to do these things? Surely all our ability, all our sufficiency is of God. He requireth and promiseth. Let us declare our obedience to his will when it shall be requisite in the time of trouble, yea, in the midst of the fire.
WHEN that number is fulfilled, which I suppose will be shortly, then have at the papists, when they shall say, Peace, all things are safe, when Christ shall come to keep his great parliament to redress all things that are amiss. But he shall not come as the papists feign him, to hide himself, and to play bo peep as it were under a piece of bread; but he shall come gloriously, to the terror and fear of all papists, and to the great consolation and comfort of all that will here suffer for him. Comfort yourselves and one another with these words.
LO, sir, here have I blotted your paper vainly, and played the fool egregiously; but so I thought better than not to fulfil your request at this time. Pardon me, and pray for me. For I am sometimes so fearful, that I would creep into a mouse-hole; sometimes God doth visit me again with his comfort. So he cometh and goeth, to teach me to feel and to know mine infirmity, to the intent to give thanks to him that is worthy, lest I should rob him of his due, as many do, and almost all the world. Fare you well.
WHAT belief is to be given to papists may appear by their racking, writing, wrinching, and monstrously injuring of God's holy scripture, as appeareth in the pope's law. But I dwell here now in a school of forgetfulness. Fare you well once again, and be you stedfast and unmoveable in the Lord. Paul loved Timothy marvellously well, notwithstanding he saith unto him, "Be thou partaker of the afflictions of the gospel;" and again, "Harden thyself to suffer afflictions. Be faithful [Page 802] unto death and I will give thee a crown of life," saith the Lord.
LETTER I. From Bishop RIDLEY and his Fellow-Prisoners, to Mr. BRADFORD and his Fellow-Prisoners, in the King's-Bench, in Southwark, Anno 1554.
WELL beloved in Christ our Saviour, we all with one heart wish to you, with all those that love God in deed and truth, grace and health, and especially to our dearly beloved companions which are in Christ's cause, and the cause both of their brethren and of their own salvation, to put their neck willingly under the yoke of Christ's cross. How joyful it was to hear the report of Dr. Taylor, and of his godly confession, &c, I assure you it is hard for me to express.
BLESSED be God, which was and is the giver of that, and of all godly strength and support in the time of adversity. As for the rumours that have or do go abroad, either of our relenting or massing, we trust, that they which know God and their duty towards their brethren in Christ, will not be too light of belief. For it is not the slanderer's evil tongue, but a man's evil deed that can with God defile a man; and therefore with God's grace, you shall never have cause to do otherwise than you say you do, that is, not to doubt but that we will by God's grace, continue, &c. Like rumours as you have heard of our coming to London, have been here spread of the coming of certain learned men prisoners, hither from London; but as yet we know no certainty which of these rumours is, or shall be more true. Know you that we have you in our daily remembrance, and wish you and all the rest of our foresaid companions well in Christ.
IT would much comfort us, if we might have knowledge of the state of the rest of our most dearly beloved, which in this troublesome time do stand in Christ's cause, and in the defence of the truth thereof. We have heard somewhat of Mr. Hooper's matter, but nothing of the rest. We long to hear of father Crome, Dr. Sands, Mr. Saunders, Veron, Peacon, Rogers, &c. We are in good health, thanks be to God, and yet the manner of using us doth change as sour ale in summer. It is reported to us by our keepers, that the university beareth us heavily. A coal happened to fall in the night out of the chimney, and burnt a hole in the floor, and no more harm was done, the bailiff's servant sitting by the fire. Another night there chanced (as the bailiffs told us) a drunken fellow to multiply words, and for the same he was set in Bocardo. Upon these things as is reported, there is a rumour risen in the town and country about, that we would have broke the prison with such' violence, as that if the bailiffs had not played the pretty men, we should have made an escape. We had out of our prison a wall that we might have walked upon, and our servants had liberty to go abroad in the town or fields, but now both they and we are restrained of both.
MY lord of Worcester passed through Oxford, but he did not visit us. The same day our restraint began to be more close, and the book of the communion was taken from us by the bailiffs at the mayor's command, as the bailiffs did report to us. No man is licensed to come unto us; before they might, that would see us upon the wall, but that is so grudged at, and so evil reported, that we are now restrained, &c. Sir, blessed be God with all our evil reports, grudges and restraints, we are merry in God, all our care is and shall be (by God's grace) to please and serve him, of whom we look and hope, after these temporal and momentary miseries, to have eternal joy and perpetual felicity with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, Peter and Paul, and all the heavenly company of angels in heaven, through Jesus Christ our Lord. As yet there has no learned man, nor any scholar, been to visit us since we came into Bocardo, which now may be called a college of Quondams. For as you know we are no fewer than three, and I dare say every one well contented with his portion, which I do reckon to be our heavenly Father's fatherly, good, and gracious gift. Thus fare you well. We shall by God's grace one day meet together, and be merry. The day assuredly approacheth apace; the Lord grant that it may shortly come. For before that day come, I fear the world will wax worse and worse. But then all our enemies shall be overthrown [Page 803] and trodden under foot; righteousness and truth then shall have the victory, and bear the bell away, whereof the Lord grant us to be partakers, and all that love truly the truth.
We all pray you, as we can, to cause all our commendations to be made unto all such as you know did visit us and you when we were in the Tower, with their friendly remembrances and benefits. Mrs. Wilkson and Mrs. Warcup have not forgotten us, but ever since we came to Bocardo, with their charitable and friendly benevolence have comforted us: not that else we did lack, (for God be blessed, he hath always sufficiently provided for us) but that is a great comfort, and an occasion for us to bless God, when we see that he maketh them so tender unto us, whom some of us were never familiarly acquainted withal.
LETTER II. From Bishop RIDLEY to his COUSIN.
GOD's Holy Spirit be with you now and ever, Amen.
WHEN I call to remembrance, beloved cousin, the state of those that for fear of trouble, or for loss of goods, will do in the sight of the world those things that they know and are assured are contrary to the will of God, I can do no less than lament their cas [...] ▪ being assured the end thereof will be so pitiful (without speedy repentance) that I tremble and fear to have it in remembrance. I would to God it lay upon some earthly burden, so that freedom of conscience might be gi [...]en unto them. I wrote (as God knoweth) but o [...] lamenting the state of those who I thought now in this dangerous time should have given both you and me comfortable instruction. But alas! instead thereof we have instructions to follow (I lament to rehearse it) superstitious idolatry. Yea, and what is worst of all, they will seek to prove it by the scriptures. The Lord, for his mercy, turn their hearts, Amen. Commend me, &c. Your's.
LETTER III. From Bishop RIDLEY to Mr. BRADFORD.
BROTHER Bradford, I wish you and your company in Christ, yea, and all the holy brotherhood, that now with you in divers prisons suffer and bear patiently the cross of Christ for the maintenance of his gospel, grace, mercy, and peace, from God the Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ.
SIR, considering the state of this chivalry and warfare, wherein I doubt not but we be set to fight under Christ's banner, and his cross, against our spiritual enemy the devil, and the old serpent Satan, methinks I perceive two things to be his most perilous and most dangerous engines, which he hath to impugn the verity of Christ, his gospel, and his faith; and the same two also be the most massy posts, and most mighty pillars, whereby he maintaineth and upholdeth this satanical synagogue. These two, sir, are they, in my judgment: the one, his false doctrine and idolatrous use of the Lord's supper, and the other, the wicked and abominable usurpation of the primacy of the see of Rome. By these two Satan seemeth to me principally to maintain and uphold his kingdom; by these two he driveth down mightily (alas! I fear me) the third part of the stars in heaven. These two poisonous rotten posts he had so painted over with such a pretence and colour of religion, of unity in Christ's church, of the catholic faith, and such like, that the wily serpent is able to deceive (if it were possible) even the elect of God. Wherefore St. John saith, not without great cause, "If any man know not Satan's subtleties and the profundities thereof, I will wish him no other burden to be laden with."
SIR, because these be his principal and main posts whereupon standeth all his falsehood, craft, and treachery, therefore according to the poor power that God hath given me, I have bended mine artillery to shoot at the same. I know it to be but little (God knoweth) that I can do, and of my shot I know that they care not. Yet I will not, God willing, cease to do the best I can, [Page 804] to shake those cankered and rotten posts. The Lord grant me good success, to the glory of his name, and the furtherance of Christ's gospel. I have now already (I thank God) for this present time spent a good part of my powder in these scribblings, whereof this bearer shall give you knowledge. Good brother Bradford, let the wicked surmise and say what they list; know you for a certainty, by God's grace, without all doubt, that in the cause of Christ's gospel, against and upon the aforesaid enemies of God, I am fully determined to live and die. Farewel, dear brother, and I beseec [...] you, and all the rest of our brethren to have good remembrance of the condemned heretics, as they call them, of Oxford, in your prayers. The bea [...] shall certify you of our state. Farewel in the Lord. From Bocardo.
LETTER IV. From Bishop RIDLEY to Mr. BRADFORD, and his Fellow Prisoners.
DEARLY beloved, I wish you grace, mercy, and peace.
ACCORDING to your mind, I have run over all your papers, and what I have done (which is but small) therein may appear. In two places I have put in two loose leaves. I had much ado to read what was written in your great leaves, and I think somewhere I have altered some words, because I could not perfectly read that which was written. Sir, what shall be best done with these things, now you must consider; for if they come in sight at this time, undoubtedly they must go to the fire with their author: and as for any safe-guard that your custody can be unto them, I am sure you look for no other, but to have and receive like wages, and to drink of the same cup. Blessed be God, that hath given you liberty in the mean season, that you may use your pen to his glory, and the comfort (as I hear say) of many. I bless God daily in you, and all your whole company, to whom I beseech you commend me heartily. Now I love my countryman in deed and in truth, I mean Dr. Taylor, not for my earthly country's sake, but for our heavenly Father's sake, and for Christ's sake, whom, I heard say, he did stoutly in the time of danger confess, and yet also for our country's sake, and for all our mother's sake; but I mean of the kingdom of heaven, and of the heavenly Jerusalem, and because of the Spirit which bringeth forth in him, in you, and in our company such blessed fruits of boldness in the Lord's cause, of patience and constancy. The Lord, who hath begun this work in you all, perform and perfect this his own deed, [...]ntil his own day come, Amen.
AND yet I perceive you have not been baited, and the cause thereof God knoweth, which will let them do no more than his good will and pleasure to suffer them to do for his own glory, and to the profit of them which be truly his For the Father, who guideth them that be Christ's to Christ, is more mighty than all they, and no man is able to pull them out of the Father's hands; except, I say, it please our Father, it please our master Christ to suffer them, they shall not stir one hair of your head.
MY brother P. the bearer hereof, and Mr. Hooper's letters, would that we should say what we think good concerning your mind: that is, not to answer, except you might have impartial judges; we are (as you know separated, and cannot consult with one another, and we be so narrowly watched by the bailiffs about us, that we have no opportunity of private conference. And yet, as we hear, the scholars bear us more heavily than the townsmen. A wonderful thing, among so many, never yet a scholar offered any of us (so far as I know) any manner of favour, either for or in Christ's cause.
NOW as concerning your demand of your counsel, for my part I do not dislike that which I perceive you ar [...] minded to do. For I look for none other, but if you answer before the commissioners that we did, you shall be served and handled as we were, though you were as well learned as ever was either Peter or Paul. And yet further I think, that occasion afterwards may be given you, and the consideration of the profit of your auditory may perchance move you to do otherwise.
FINALLY, determinately to say what shall be best, [Page 805] I am not able; but I trust he, whose cause you have in hand, shall put you in mind to do that which shall be most for his glory, the profit of his flock, and your own salvation. This letter must be common to you and Mr. Hooper, in whom and in his fellow-prisoner good father C—, I bless God, even from the bottom of my heart; for I doubt not but they both do to our master Christ, true, acceptable, and honourable service, and profitable to his flock; the one with his pen, and the other with his fatherly example of patience and constancy, and all manner of true godliness. But what shall I need to say to you? Let this be common among your brethren, among whom, I dare say, it is with you as it is with us, to whom all things here are common, meat, money, and whatsoever any of us hath, that can or may do another good. Although I said the bailiffs and our hostess do strictly watch us, that we have no conference or intelligence of any thing abroad▪ yet God hath provided for every one of us instead of our servants, faithful fellows, who are content to hear and see, and to do for us whatever they can. It is God's work surely, blessed be God for his unspeakable goodness. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the communication of the Holy Ghost, be with you all, Amen.
AS far as London is from Oxford, yet thence we have received of late, both meat, money, and shirts, not only from such as are our acquaintance, but of some (whom this bearer can tell) with whom to my knowledge I never had any acquaintance. I know for whose sake they do; to him therefore be all honour, glory, and due thanks.
AND yet I pray you do so much as to shew them, that we have received their benevolence, and (God be blessed) have plenty of all such things. This I desire you to do: for I know they be of Mr. Hooper's and your familiar acquaintance. Mr Latimer was out of order; but now (thanks be to God) he amendeth again.
LETTER V. From the Same to the Same.
O Dear brother, seeing the time is now come, wherein it pleaseth the heavenly Father, for Christ our Saviour's sake, to call upon you, and to bid you to come, happy are you that ever you were born, thus to be found awake at the Lord's calling. "Well done, good and faithful servant, because thou hast been faithful in small matters, he shall set thee over great things, and thou shalt enter into the joy of thy Lord."
O dear brother, what meaneth this, that you are sent into your own native country? The wisdom and policy of the world may mean what they will, but I trust God will so order the matter finally by his fatherly providence, that some great occasion of God's gracious goodness shall be plentifully poured abroad amongst our dear brethren in that country by this your martyrdom, where the martyrs for Christ's sake shed their blood, and lost their lives, O what wondrous things hath Christ afterwards wrought to his glory, and confirmation of their doctrine? If it be not the place that sanctifieth the man, but the holy man doth by Christ sanctify the place, brother Bradford, then happy and holy shall be that place wherein thou shalt suffer, and shall be with thy ashes in Christ's cause sprinkled over withal. All thy country may rejoice of thee, that it ever brought forth such a one, which would render his life again in his cause of whom he had received it. Brother Bradford, so long as I shall understand thou art in thy journey, by God's grace I shall call upon our heavenly Father, for Christ's sake to set thee safely home; and then, good brother, speak you, and pray for the remnant which are to suffer for Christ's sake, according to that thou then shalt know more clearly.
WE do look now every day when we shall be called on, blessed be God. I think I am the weakest many ways of our company; and yet I thank our Lord God and heavenly Father by Christ, that since I heard of our dear brother Rogers's departing, and stout confession of Christ and his truth, even unto death, my heart (blessed be God) rejoiced for it, that since that time (I say) I never felt any great heaviness in my heart, as I grant I have felt sometime before. O good brother, blessed be God in thee, and blessed be the time that ever I knew thee. Farewel, farewel.
LETTER VI. To the BRETHREN remaining in Captivity, and dispersed abroad in sundry prisons, but knit together in Unity of the Spirit and Holy Religion, in the Bowels of the LORD JESUS.
GRACE, peace, and mercy, be multiplied among you. What worthy thanks can we render unto the Lord for you my brethren, namely, for the great consolation which through you we have received in the Lord, who notwithstanding the rage of Satan, that goeth about by all manner of subtle means to beguile the world, and also busily laboureth to restore and set up his kingdom again, that of late began to decay and fall to ruin; you remain yet still immoveable, as men surely grounded upon a strong rock. And now, albeit, that Satan by his soldiers and wicked ministers, daily (as we hear) draweth numbers unto him, so that it is said of him, that he plucketh the very stars out of heaven, while he driveth into some men the fear of death, and loss of all their goods, and sheweth to others the pleasant baits of the world; namely, riches, wealth, and all kinds of delights and pleasures, fair houses, great revenues, fat benefices, and what not; and all to the intent that they should fall down and worship, not the Lord, but the dragon, the old serpent, which is the devil, that great beast and his image, and should be enticed to commit fornication with the strumpet of Babylon, together with the kings of the earth, with the lesser beast, and with the false prophets, and so to rejoice and be pleasant with her, and to get drunken with the wine of her fornication: yet blessed be God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, which hath given unto you a manly courage, and hath so strengthened you in the inward man, by the power of his Spirit, that you can contemn as well all the allurements of the world, esteeming them as vanities, mere trifles, and things of nought; who hath also wrought, planted, and surely established in your hearts, so stedfast a faith and love of the Lord Jesus Christ, joined with such constancy, that by no engines of Antichrist, be they ever so terrible or plausible, you will suffer any other Jesus, or any other Christ to be forc [...]d upon you, besides him whom the prophets have spoken of before, the apostles have preached, the holy martyrs of God have confessed and testified with the effusion of their blood.
IN this faith stand you fast, my brethren, and suffer not yourselves to be brought under the yoke of bondage and superstition any more. For you know, brethren, how our Saviour warned us beforehand, that such should come as would set him out with so many false miracles, and with such deceivable and subtle practices, that even the very elect, (if it were possible) should thereby be deceived: such strong delusion to come did our Saviour give warning of before. But continue you faithful and constant, and be of good comfort, and remember that our great captain hath overcome the world, for he that is in us, is stronger than he that is in the world, and the Lord promiseth us, that for the elect's sake, the days of wickedness shall be shortened. In the mean season abide you and endure with patience as you have begun: endure I say, and reserve yourselves unto better times, as one of the heathen poets said; cease not to shew yourselves valiant soldiers of the Lord, and help to maintain the travelling faith of the gospel.
YOU have need of patience, that after you have done the will of God you may receive the promises, "For yet a very little, and he that shall come, will come, and will not tarry; and the just shall live by faith: but if any withdraw himself, my soul shall have no pleasure in him (saith the Lord). But we are not they which do withdraw ourselves unto damnation, but believe unto the salvation of the soul." Let us not suffer these words of Christ to fall out of our hearts by any manner of terror, or threatenings of the world. Fear not them which kill the body, the rest you know. For I write not unto you, as men which are ignorant of the truth, but who know the truth, and to this end only, that we agreeing together in one faith, may comfort one another, and be more confirmed and strengthened thereby. We never had a better, or more just cause either to contemn our life, or shed our blood; we cannot take in hand the defence of a more certain, clear, and manifest truth. For it is not any ceremony for which we contend; but it toucheth the very substance of our whole religion, yea, even Christ himself. Shall we, or can we receive [Page 807] any other Christ instead of him, who is alone the everlasting Son of the everlasting Father, and is the brightness of the glory, and a lively image of the substance of the Father, in whom only dweleth corporally the fulness of the Godhead, who is the only way, the truth, and the life? Let such wickedness, my brethren, let such horrible wickedness be far from us. For although there be that are called gods, whether in heaven or in earth, as there be many gods, and many lords, yet unto us there is but one God, who is the Father, of whom are all things, and we by him; but every man hath not knowledge. "This is life eternal, (saith St. John) that they know thee to be the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent." If any therefore would force upon us any other God, besides him whom Paul and the apostles have taught, let us not hear him, but let us fly from, and hold him accursed.
BRETHREN, you are not ignorant of the deep and profound subtleties of Satan; for he will not cease to range about you, seeking by all means possible whom he may devour: but play you the men, and be of good comfort in the Lord. And although your enemies and the adversaries of the truth, armed with all worldly force and power that may be, do set upon you; yet be you not faint-hearted, and shrink not therefore, but trust unto your captain Christ, trust unto the Spirit of truth, and trust to the truth of your cause; which as it may by the malice of Satan be darkened, so can it never be [...]lean put out. For we have (high praise be given to God therefore) most plainly, evidently, and clearly on our side, all the prophets, all the apostles, and undoubtedly all the ancient ecclesiastical writers which have written, until of late years past.
LET us be hearty and of good courage therefore, and thoroughly comfort ourselves in the Lord. Be in no wise afraid of your adversaries; for that which is to them an occasion of perdition, is to you a sure token of salvation, and that of God. For unto you it is given, that not only you should believe on him, but also suffer for his sake. And when you are railed upon for the name of Christ, remember that by the voice of Peter, yea, and of Christ our Saviour also, ye are counted with the prophets, with the apostles, and with the holy martyrs of Christ, happy and blessed for ever: for the glory and Spirit of God resteth upon you.
ON their part our Saviour Christ is evil spoken of, but on your part he is glorified. For what can they else do unto you by persecuting you, and working all cruelty and villainly against you, but make your crowns more glorious, yea, beautify and multiply the same, and heap upon themselves the horrible plagues and heavy wrath of God: and therefore, good brethren, though they rage ever so fiercely against us, yet let us not wish evil unto them again, knowing that while for Christ's cause they vex and persecute us, they are like madmen, most outrageous and cruel against themselves, heapi [...]g hot burning coals upon their own heads: but rather wish well unto them, knowing that we are thereunto called in Christ Jesus, that we should be heirs of the blessing. Let us pray therefore unto God, that he would drive out of their hearts this darkness of errors, and make the light of his truth to shine unto them, that they acknowledging their blindness, may with all humble repentance be converted unto the Lord, and with us confess him to be the only true God, which is the Father of light, and his only Son Jesus Christ, worshipping him in spirit and truth, Amen. The Spirit of our Lord Jesus Christ comfort your hearts in the love of God, and patience of Christ, Amen.
LETTER VII. From Bishop RIDLEY to the BRETHREN which constantly cleave unto Christ, in suffering Affliction with him and for his Sake.
GRACE and peace from God the Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ, be multiplied unto you, Amen.
ALTHOUGH, brethren, we have of late heard nothing from you, neither have at this present any news to send to you: yet we thought good to write something unto you, whereby you might understand that we have good remembrance of you [Page 808] continually, as we doubt not b [...] you have of us also. When this messenger, coming unto us from you of late, had brought unto us good tidings of your great constancy, fortitude, and patience in the Lord, we were filled with much joy and gladness, giving thanks to God the Father through our Lord Jesus Christ, which hath caused his [...]a [...]e so to shine upon you, and with the light of sp [...]itual understanding hath so enlightened your hearts, that now being in captivity and bonds for Christ's cause, you have not ceased as much as in you lieth, by words, but much more by deeds and by your example, to establish and confirm that thing, which when you were at liberty in the world, you laboured to publish and set abroad by the word and doctrine: that is to say, holding fast the word of life, you shine as lights in the world, in the midst of a wicked and crooked nation, and that with so much the greater glory of our Lord Jesus Christ, and profit of your brethren, by how much Satan more cruelly now rageth, and busily laboureth to darken the light of the gospel.
AND as for the darkness that Sa [...]an now bringeth upon the church of England, who needeth to doubt thereof? Of late time our Saviour Christ, his apostles, prophets, and teachers, spake in the temple to the people of England in the English tongue, so that they might be plainly understood by the godly, and such as sougnt for heavenly knowledge in matters, which of necessity pertained to the obtaining of eternal life; b [...]t now those things which once were written by them for the edifying of the congregation, are read in a strange tongue without interpretation, manifestly against St. Paul's commandment, so that there is no man able to understand them, who hath not learned that strange and unknown tongue.
OF late days those heavenly mysteries, whereby Christ hath ingrafted us into his body, and hath united us one to another, whereby also being regenerate, and born a-new to God, he hath nourished increased, and strengthened us, whereby moreover either he hath taught and set forth an order amongst them which are whole, or else to the sick in soul or body, hath given, as it were, wholesome medicines and remedies; these (I say) were all plainly set forth to the people in their own language; so that what great and exceeding good things every one owed to another by God's ordinance, what every one had professed in his vocation, and was bound to observe, where remedy was to be had for the wicked and feeble, he to whom God hath given a desire and willing heart to understand these things, might soon perceive and understand. But now all these things are taught and set forth in such sort, that the p [...] ple redeemed with Christ's blood, and for whose sakes they were by Christ himself ordained, can have no manner of understanding thereof at all.
OF late (forasmuch as we know not how to pray as we ought) our Lord Jesus Christ in his prayer▪ whereof he would have no man ignoran [...], and also the Holy Ghost in the Psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs, which are set forth in the Bible, did teach and instruct all the people of England in the English tongue, that they might ask such things as are according to the will of the Father, and might join their hearts and lips in prayer together; but now all these things are commanded to be hid and shut up from them in a strange tongue, whereby it must needs follow, that the people can neither tell how to pray, nor what to pray for; and how can they join their hearts and voice together, when they understand no more what the voice signifieth that a brute beast?
FINALLY, I hear say, that the catechism, which was lately set forth in the English tongue, is now in every pulpit condemned. O devilish malice, and most spitefully injurious to the salvation of mankind purchased by Jesus Christ! Indeed Satan could not long suffer that so great a light should be spread abroad in the world; he saw well enough that nothing was able to overthrow his kingdom so much, as if children being instructed in religion, should learn to know Christ whilst they are yet young: whereby not only children, but the elder sort also, and aged people that were not taught before how to know Christ in their childhood, should now even with children and babes, be forced to learn to know him. Now therefore he roareth, now he rageth. But what else do they, brethren, who serve Satan, and become his ministers and slaves maintaining his impiety, but even the same which they did, to whom Christ our Saviour threatened this curse in the gospel; "Woe unto you [Page 809] who shut up the kingdom of heaven before men, and take away the key of knowledge from them: you yourselves have not entered in, neither have ye suffered them that would enter, to come in."
AND from whence shall we say (brethren) that this horrible and mischievous darkness proceedeth, which is now brought upon the world? From whence, I pray you, but even from the smoke of the great furnace of the bottomless pit, so that the sun and the air are now darkened by the smoke of the pit? Now, even now, (out of doubt, brethren) the pit is opened against us, and the locusts begin to swarm, and Abaddon now reigneth.
YE therefore, brethren, which pertain unto Christ, and have the seal of God marked in your foreheads; that is, are sealed with an earnest of the Spirit to be a peculiar people of God, quit yourselves like men, and be strong; for he that is in us, is stronger than he that is in the world; and you know that all who are born of God overcome the world, and this is our victory that overcometh the world, even our faith. Let the world fret, let it rage ever so much, be it ever so cruel and bloody, yet be you sure that no man can take us out of the Father's hands: for he is greater than all, who hath not spared his own Son, but hath given him to death for us all; and therefore how shall he not with him give us all things also? Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's elect? It is God that justifieth, who then shall condemn? It is Christ that is dead, yea rather which is risen again, who is also at the right hand of God, and maketh request also for us. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or anguish, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or the sword? The rest you know brethren. We are certainly persuaded with St. Paul, by the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that no kind of thing shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. Which thing, that it may come to pass by the grace and mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ, to the comfort both of you and of us all, as we for our parts will continually (God willing) pray for you; so, dear brethren in the Lord, with all earnest and hearty request we beseech you, even in the bowels of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you will not cease to pray for us. Fare you well, dear brethren. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all evermore, Amen.
LETTER VIII. From Bishop RIDLEY, in Answer to a certain Letter of one Mr. WEST, sometime his Chaplain.
I Wish you grace in God, and love of the truth, without which truly established in men's hearts by the mighty hand of Almighty God, it is no more possible to stand by the truth in Christ in time of trouble, than it is for the wax to abide the heat of the fire. Sir, you know this, that I am, blessed be God, persuaded that this world is but transitory, and (as St. John saith) "The world passeth away and the lust thereof." I am persuaded that Christ's words be true; "Whosoever shall confess me before men, him will I confess also before my Father which is in heaven." And I believe that no earthly creature shall be saved, whom the Redeemer and Saviour of the world shall before his Father deny. This the Lord grant, that it may be so grafted, fixed, and established in my heart, that neither things present nor to come, high nor low, life nor death, be able to remove me thence. It is a goodly wish, that you wish me deeply to consider the things pertaining unto God's glory; but if you had wished also, that neither fear of death, nor hope of worldly prosperity should hinder me to maintain God's word and his truth, which is his glory and true honour, it would have pleased me well. You desire me, for God's sake, to remember myself. Indeed, sir, now it is time so to do; for, so far as I can perceive, it standeth me upon no less danger, than the loss both of body and soul; and I think it is time for a man to awake, if any thing will awake him. He that will not fear him that threateneth to cast both body and soul into everlasting fire, whom will he fear? With this fear, O Lord, fasten thou together our frail flesh, that we never swerve from thy laws. You say you have made much suit for me. Sir, God grant that you have not, in suing for my worldly deliverance, impaired and hindered the furtherance of God's word and his truth.
YOU have known me long indeed; in which time I happened, as you say, to mislike some things. I [Page 810] grant it is true; for sudden changes without substantial and necessary cause, and the hasty setting forth of extrem [...]ti [...]s, I did never love. Confession unto the minister who is able to instruct, correct, comfort, and inform the weak, wounded, and ignorant conscience, indeed I ever thought might do much good in Christ's congregation, and so I assure you, I think even at this day. My doctrine and my preaching, you say, you have heard often, and after your judgment have thought it godly, saving only for the sacrament, which thing, although it was by me reverently handled, and a great deal better than of the rest (as you say), yet in the margin you write warily, and in this world wisely; and yet methought all sounding not well. Sir, but that I see so many changes in this world, and so much alteration, else at this your saying I would not a little marvel. I have taken you for my friend, and a man whom I fancied for plainness and faithfulness, as much, I assure you, as for your learning; and have you kept this so close in your heart from me unto this day? Sir, I consider more things than one, and will not say all that I think. But what need you to ca [...]e what I think, for any thing I shall be able to do to you, either good or harm? You give me good lessons to stand in nothing against my learning, and to beware of vain-glory. Truly, I herein like your counsel very well, and by God's grace I intend to follow it unto my life's end.
TO write unto those whom you name, I cannot see what it will avail me. For this I would have you know, that I esteem nothing available for me, which will not also further the glory of God. And now, because I perceive you have an entire zeal and desire of my deliverance out of this captivity and worldly misery, if I should not bear you a good heart in God again, m [...]thinks I were to blame. Sir, how nigh the day of my dissolution and departure out of this world is at hand, I cannot tell: the Lord's will be fulfilled how soon soever it shall come. I know the Lord's words must be verified on me that I shall appear before the incorrupt Judge, and be accountable to him for all my former life. And though the hope of his mercies it my sheet-anchor of eternal salvation, yet am I persuaded, that whosoever wittingly neglecteth and regardeth not to [...]lear his conscience, he cannot have peace with God, nor a lively fai [...]h in his mercy▪ Conscience therefore moveth me, considering you were one of my family, and one of my houshold, of whom then I think I had a special care, and of all them which were within my house, which indeed ought to have been an example of godliness to all the rest of my care not only of good life, but also in promoting of God's word to the uttermost of their power, (but, alas! now when the trial doth separate the chas [...] from the corn, how small a quantity it is, God knoweth, which the wind doth not blow away) this conscience, I say, doth move me to fear, lest th [...] lightness of my family shall be laid to my charge for lack of more earnest and diligent instruction▪ which should have been done. But blessed be God who hath given me grace to see this my fault, an [...] to lament it from the bottom of my heart, [...] my departing hence.
THIS conscience doth also move me now to require both you and my friend Dr. Harvey, to remember your promises made to me in times past, of the pure setting forth and preaching of God's word and his truth. These promises although you need not fear being charged with them by me before the world, yet look for none other (I exhort you as my friend) but to be charged with them at God's hand. This conscience and the love that I bear unto you, biddeth me now say unto you both in God's name, fear God, and love not the world: for God is able to cast both body and soul into hellfire. When this wrath sh [...]ll be suddenly kindled, blessed are all they that put their trust in him. And the saying of St. John is true, "All that is in the world, as the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye [...], and the pride of life, is not of the Father but of the world; and the world passeth away, and the lusts thereof, but he that doth, the will of God abideth for ever." If this gift of grace (which undoubtedly is necessarily required unto eternal salvation) were truly and unfeignedly grafted and firmly established in men's hearts, they would not be so light, so suddenly to shrink from the maintenance and conffession of the truth as is now, alas! manif [...]s [...]ly seen of so many in these days. But here, peradventure, you would know of me, what is the truth. Sir, God's word is the truth, as St. John saith, and that even the same that was heretofore. For although men do vary and change, as the moon, yet God's word is stable, and abideth one evermore: [Page 811] and of Christ it is truly said, "Christ yesterday and to-day, the same is also for ever."
WHEN I was in office, all that were esteemed learned in God's word, agreed this to be a truth in God's word written, that the Common Prayer of the church should be had in the common tongue. You know I have conferred with many, and as assure you, I never found man, (so far as I do remember) neither old nor young, gospeller nor papist, of what judgment soever he was, in this thing to be of a contrary opinion. If then it were a truth of God's word, think you that the alteration of the world can make it an untruth? If it cannot, why then do so many shrink from the confession and maintenance of this truth received once of us all? For what is it, I pray you, else to confess or deny Christ in this world, but to maintain the truth taught in God's word, nor for any worldly respect to shrink from the same? This one thing have I brought for an ensample; other things be in like case, which now particularly I need not rehearse. For he that will forsake knowingly, either for fear or gain of the world, any open truth of God's word, if he be con [...]ained. he will assuredly forsake God and all his truth, rather than he will endanger himself to lose or to leave what he love [...]h better indeed than he doth God and the truth of his word.
I like very well your plain speaking, wherein you say I must either agree or die, and I think that you mean the bodily death, which is common both to good and bad. Sir, I know I must die, whether I agree or no. But what folly were it then to make such an agreement, by which I could never escape this death which is common to all, and also incur the guilt of death and eternal damnation? Lord grant that I may utterly detest this damnable agreement so long as I live. And because I dare say, you wrote this short earnest advertisement to me out of love, and I think verily, wishing me to live and not to die, therefore bearing you in my heart no less love in God, then you do me in the world, I say unto you in the word of the Lord, (and what I say to you, I say to all my friends and lovers of us in God) that if you do not confess and maintain to your power and knowledge that which is grounded upon God's word, but will either for f [...]ar or gain of the world shrink and play the apostate, indeed you shall die the death; you knew what I mean. And I beseech you all true friends and lovers in God, remember what I say, for this may be the last time peradventure that ever I shall write unto you.
MR. GRINDAL (afterwards archbishop of Canterbury) being in the time of exile in the city of Francfort, wrote to Dr. Ridley, then prisoner, a certain epistle, wherein first he lamenteth his captivity, exhorting him withal to be constant. Secondly, He certifieth him of the English exiles being dispersed in Germany, and of the singular providence of God in stirring up the magistrates and rulers there towards them. Thirdly, He writeth to know his mind and will concerning the printing of his book against transubstantiation, and of other treatises and his disputations. Whereunto bishop Ridley answered him as follows.
LETTER IX. From Dr. RIDLEY, in Answer to Mr GRINDAL.
BLESSED be God our heavenly Father, which inclined your heart to have such a desire to write unto me, and blessed be he again which hath heard your request, and brought your letters safe unto my hands; and over all this I bless him thro' our Lord Jesus Christ, for the great comfort I have received by the same, of the knowledge of your state, and of other our dearly beloved brethren and countrymen in those parts beyond the sea.
DEARLY beloved brother Grindal, I say to you and all the rest of our brethren in Christ with you, rejoice in the Lord, and as you love me, and the others my reverend fathers and fellow-prisoners, (which undoubtedly are Gloria Christi) lament not our state, but I beseech you and them all to give to our heavenly Father, for his boundless mercies and unspeakable benefits, even in the midst of all our troubles given unto us, most hearty thanks. For know you, that as the weight of his cross hath increased upon us, so he hath not, nor doth he cease to multiply his mercies to strengthen [Page 812] us; and I trust, yet by his grace I doubt nothing, but he will do so for Christ our master's sake even to the end. To hear that you and our other brethren do find favour and grace in your exile, with the magistrates, ministers, and citizens at Tigury, Francfort, and other places, it doth greatly comfort (I dare say) all here that do love Christ and his true word. I do assure you it warmed my heart, to hear you by chance name some, as Scory, Cox, &c. O that it had come in your mind to have said somewhat also of Cheek, Turner, Leaver, Sampson, and Chambers, but I trust in God they be all well. And, sir, seeing you say, that there be in those parts with you of students and ministers so good a number, now therefore care not for us, otherwise than to wish that God's glory may be set forth by us. For whensoever God shall call us home (as we look daily for no other, but when it shall please God to say, Come) you, blessed be God, are enough through his aid, to light and set up again the lanthorn of his word in England. As concerning the copies you say you have with you, I wonder how they ever did or could find the way to come to you. My disputation, except you have that which I gathered myself after the disputation was done, I cannot thi [...]k you have i [...] truly. If you have that, then you have therewithal the whole manner after which I was used in the disputation.
AS for the treatise in English against transubstantiation, I cannot think it worth translating into Latin, nor would I have you translate any other of my writing, till you are certain how the Lord will dispose of me. And thus much concerning your letters. Now although I suppose you know a good part of our condition here, (for we are forth coming, even as when you departed, &c.) you shall understand that I was in the Tower about the space of two months a close prisoner, and after that had granted to me, without my labour, the liberty of the Tower, and so continued about half a year; and then, because I refused to allow the mass with my preference, I was shut up in prison again.
THE last Lent save one, it chanced by reason of the tumult stirred up in Kent, there were so many prisoners in the Tower, that my lord of Canterbury, Mr. Latim [...]r, Mr. Bradford, and I, w [...]re put altogether in one prison, where we remained until almost Easter, and then we three, Canterbury, Latimer, and I, were suddenly sent a littl [...] before Easter to Oxford, and were suffered to have nothing with us, but what we carried upon us. About the Whitsuntide following were our disputations at Oxford, after which all was taken from us, as pen, ink, &c. Our own servants were taken from us before, and every one had a strange man put to him, and each of us were appointed to be kept in separate places, as we are unto this day.
BLESSED be God, we three at the writing hereof were in good health, and (in God) of good cheer. We expected long ago to have been dispatched, for we were all three on one day condemned as heretics by Dr. Weston, (he being the head commissioner) within a day or two of our disputations, and ever since we remain here as we were by him left. The Lord's will be fulfilled in us, as I doubt not bu [...] by his grace it shall be to his glory, and our eternal salvation, through Jesus Christ our Lord.
LIKEWISE the Lord hath hitherto preserved, above all our expectation, our dear brother, and in Christ's cause a strong champion, John Bradford. He is also condemned, and is already delivered to the secular power, and writs (as we have heard say) given out for his execution, and called in again.
THUS the Lord, so long as his blessed pleasure is, preserveth whom he listeth, notwithstanding the wonderful raging of the world. Many (as we hear say) have valiantly suffered, confessing Christ's truth, and nothing yielding to the adversary, no, not for the fear or pains of death.
THE names of them which I knew, and have now suffered, are these; Farrar, bishop of St. David's; Hooper, bishop of Worcester; Rogers, your fellow prebend; Dr. Taylor, of Hadley; Mr. Sanders, and one Tomkins, a weaver; and now this last day, Mr. Cardmaker, with another, were burnt at Smithfield, in London, and many others in Essex and Kent, whose names are written in the book of life, whom yet I know not.
WEST, your old companion, and sometime my [Page 813] officer, (alas!) hath relented, (as I have heard) but the Lord hath shortened his days, for soon after he died, and is gone. Grimbold was caught by the heel, and cast into the Marshalsea, but now is at liberty again; but I fear he escaped not without bowing his knee to Baal.
MY dear friend Thomas Ridley, of the Bullhead, in Cheap, which was to me the most faithful friend that I had in my trouble, is departed also unto God. My brother Shipside, that married my sister, hath been almost half a year in prison, for delivering (as he was accused) of certain things from me; but now, thanks be to God, he is at liberty again, but so that the bishop hath taken from him his park.
OF all us three prisoners in Oxford, I am kept [...]ost strict, and with least liberty; either because [...] man in whose house I am a prisoner is governed by his wife, who is a morose, superstitious old woman, and thinks she shall merit by having me very closely confined; for the man himself, whose name is Irish, is civil enough to all, but too much ruled by his wife. Though I never had a wife, yet from this daily usage I begin to understand how great and intolerable a burthen it is to have a bad one. The wise man says rightly▪ A good wise is the gift of God: and again, Blessed is the man who has a good wife. Or else I say the reason is, (for I know not from which) that he is so commanded from the higher powers, which is what he pleads, when I complain of my hard usage.
AT Cambridge, (as I hear say) all the reformations of students and statutes which were lately made, are now undone; and all things are reduced to their ancient confusion and old popish superstition. All the heads of colleges who preached the sincere word of God, or favoured it, are turned out, and others of the popish faction put in their places; insomuch that I he [...] no one can be admitted a fellow of a college, that will not bow the knee to Baal. Nor do I wonder, since it is so throughout the whole realm of England, among archbishops, bishops, priests, and deacons, and the whole body of the clergy. And to tell you much naughty matter in few words, Popery every where reigns among us in its full and ancient force.
THE Lord be merciful, and for Christ's sake pardon us our old unkindness and unthankfulness: for when he poured upon us the gifts of his manifold graces and favours, alas! we did dot serve him, nor render thanks unto him according to the same. We pastors, many of us were too cold, and bore too much with the wicked world; our magistrates did abuse, to their own worldly gain, both God's gospel and the ministers of the same. The people in many places were unruly and unkind. Thus of every side and of every sort we have provoked God's anger and wrath to fall upon us: but blessed may he be that hath not suffered his to continue in those ways which so wholly have displeased his sacred majesty, but hath awaked them by the fatherly correction of his own Son's cross, unto his glory and our endless salvation, through Jesus Christ our Lord.
MY daily prayer is (as God doth know) and by God's grace shall be so long as I live in this world, for you my dear brethren, that are fled out of your own country, because you will rather forsake all worldly things, than the truth of God word. It is even the same that I use to make to God for all those churches abroad through the world, which have forsaken the kingdom of Antichrist, and professed openly the purity of the gospel of Jesus Christ; that is, that God our eternal Father, for our Saviour Christ's sake, will daily increase in you the gracious gift of his heavenly Spirit, to the true setting forth of his glory and of his gospel, and make you agree brotherly in the truth of the same, that there arise no root of bitterness among you, that may affect that good seed which God hath sown in your hearts already, and finally that your life may be so pure and so honest, according to the rule of God's word, and according to that vocation whereunto we are called by the gospel of Christ our Saviour, that the honesty and purity of the same may provoke all that shall see or know it, to the love of your doctrine, and to love you for honesty and virtue's sake, and so both in brotherly unity of your true doctrine, and also in the godly virtue of your honest life, to glorify our Father which is in heaven.
SEVERAL of our magistrates, viz. The chancellor of Winchester, earl of Arundel, and lord Paget, are ambassadors with cardinal Poole, beyond [Page 814] the seas, to make peace (as it is said) between the emperor, our realm, and the king of France. After whose return, and the delivery of the queen, which we daily expect, and have long expected, and which God, for the glory of his name, grant to be a safe and happy one, then shall we expect from the old enemy of our profession, soon to receive triumphant crowns in the Lord.
I humbly with my whole heart commend me to all your prayers, and first to your's, O most dear brother in Christ, and my most beloved Grindal, to your's most dear, and together with my beloved in the Lord, Cheek, Cox, Turner, Lever, Sampson, Chambers, and all our fellow-countrymen who live amongst you, and love our Lord Jesus Christ in truth. I commend also to you the reverend fathers in God, and my fellow-captives in the Lord, Thomas Cranmer, now most worthy of the name of a true great pastor and archbishop; and that old soldier of Christ, and true apostle of our English nation, Hugh Latimer. I here give myself the greater length in this letter, most dear brother, because after this I am persuaded they will be too short to trouble you.
LETTER X. From Dr. RIDLEY to AUGUSTINE BERNHER.
BROTHER AUGUSTINE, I bless God with all my heart in his manifold merciful gifts, given unto our dear brethren in Christ, especially to our brother Rogers, whom it pleased him to set forth first, no doubt out of his gracious goodness and fatherly favour towards him. And likewise blessed be God in the rest, as Hooper, Sanders, and Taylor, whom it hath pleased the Lord to set in the forefront of the battle against his adversaries, and hath endued them all (so far as I can hear) to stand in the confession of his truth, and to be content in his cause, and for his gospel's sake to lose their lives. And evermore without end, blessed be even the same our heavenly Father, for our dear and intirely beloved brother Bradford, whom now the Lord (I perceive) calleth for; for I believe he will no longer vouchsafe him to abide among the adulterous and wicked generation of this world. I do not doubt but that he (for those gifts of grace which the Lord hath bestowed on him plen [...]eously) hath helped those which have gone before in their journey, that is, hath animated them to keep the highway, and so to run, that at length they may receive the reward. The Lord be his comfort, whereof I do not doubt, and I thank God hea [...]tily that ever I was acquainted with him, and that I ever had such a one in my house. And yet again I bless God in our dear brother, and of this tim [...] proto-martyr Rogers, that he was also one of my calling to be a prebendary preacher of Londo [...]. And now because Grindal is gone (the Lord I doubt not hath and knoweth wherein he will bestow him) I trust to God, it shall please him of his goodnes [...] to strengthen me to make up the trinity out of Paul's church, to suffer for Christ whom God the Father hath anointed, the Holy Spirit doth bear witness unto, Paul and all the apostles preached. Thus fare you well, I had no paper, I was constrained thus to write.
The LIFE of Bishop LATIMER, a famous Preacher, and worthy Martyr of Christ.
NOW consequently after the life of bishop Ridley, followeth the life of that valiant champion, and old disciplined soldier of Christ, bishop Hugh Latimer, who was the son of one Hugh Latimer, of Thirkesson, in the county of Leicester, a husbandman in good repute, with whom he was brought up till he was about four years old: at which time his parents, (having him as then lest for their only son, with six daughters) seeing him to be of a ready, prompt, and sharp wit, purposed to train him up in erudition and knowledge of good literature; wherein he so profited in the common schools of his own country, that at fourteen years of age he was sent to the university of C [...]mbridge: where, after some continuance in the exercise of other things, he gave himself [Page 815] up to the study of such school divinity as the ignorance of that age would suffer.
ZEALOUS he was then in the popish religion, and therewith so scrupulous, as himself confessed, that being a priest, and using to say mass, he was so servile an observer of the Romish decrees, that he thought he had never sufficiently mingled his massing wine with water▪ and moreover, that he should never be damned, if he were once a professed friar, with divers of such superstitious fantasies. And in this blind zeal he was a very enemy to the professors of Christ's gospel; as both his oration made, when he commenced bachelor of divinity, against Melancthon, and also his other works did plainly declare. But especially in those days his popish zeal could in no case abide good Mr. Stafford, reader of the divinity lectures in Cambridge, most spitefully railing against him, and persuading the youth of Cambridge in no wise to believe him.
NOTWITHSTANDING, such was the goodness and merciful purpose of God, that when he saw his good time, by which he thought utterly to have defaced the professors of the gospel, and true church of Christ, he was at length himself by a member of the same prettily caught in the blessed net of God's word. For Mr. Thomas Bilney being at that time a trier of Satan's subtilties, and a secret overwhelmer of Antichrist's kingdom, seeing Mr. Latimer to have a zeal in his way, (although not according to knowledge) was stricken with a brotherly pity towards him, and began to consider by what means he might win this zealous ignorant brother to the true knowledge of Christ. Wherefore, after a short time, he came to Mr. Latimer's study, and desired him to hear him make his confession, which he willingly did; and by hearing thereof, he was, by the good Spirit of God, so touched, that thereupon he forsook the study of the school-doctors, and other such fopperies, and became an earnest student in true divinity, as he himself, as well in his conference with bishop Ridley, as also in his first sermon made upon the Pater Noster, doth confess. So that whereas before he was an enemy, and almost a persecutor of Christ, he was now a zealous seeker after him, changing his old manner of cavilling and railing, into a diligent kind of conferring, both with Mr. Bilney and others, and came also to Mr. Stafford before he died, and desired him to forgive him.
AFTER his own conversion, he was not satisfied without endeavouring that of others, and like a true disciple of the blessed Samaritan, pitied the misery of others, and therefore became both a public preacher, and also a private instructor to the rest of his brethren within the university, by the space of three years, spending his time partly in the Latin tongue among the learned, and partly amongst the simple people in his natural and vulgar language. Howbeit, as Satan never sleepeth when he seeth his kingdom begin to decay, so likewise now, seeing that this worthy member of Christ would be a terrible shaker thereof, he raised up his impious [...] to molest and trouble him.
AMONGST these there was an Augustine friar, who took occasion upon certain sermons that Mr. Latimer made about Christmas, 1529, as well in the church of St. Edward, as also in St. Augustine's, within the university of Cambridge, to inveigh against him, for that Mr. Latimer in the said sermons (alluding to the common usage of the season) gave the people certain cards out of the 5th, 6th, and 7th chapters of St. Matthew, whereupon they might, not only then, but always else occupy their time. For the chief triumph in the cards he limited the heart, as the principal thing they should serve God withal, whereby he quite overthrew all hypocrital and external ceremonies, not tending to the necessary furtherance of God's holy word and sacraments. For the better attaining hereof, he wished the scriptures to be in English, whereby the common people might the better learn their duty, as well to God as their neighbours.
THE handling of this matter was so apt for the time, and so pleasantly applied by him, that it not only declared the wit and dexterity of the preacher, but also wrought in the hearers much fruit, to the overthrow of popish superstition. and setting up of perfect religion.
THIS was upon the Sunday before Christmasday; on which day coming to the church, and causing the bell to be tolled to a sermon, he entered [Page 816] into the pulpit, taking for his text the words of the gospel aforesaid, read in the church that day, "Who art thou?" &c. In delivering which cards (as is aforesaid) he made the heart to be Triumph, exhorting and inviting all men thereby to serve the Lord with inward heart and true affection, and not with outward ceremonies: adding moreover, to the praise of that Triumph, that though it were ever so small, yet it would take up the best court card beside in the bunch, yea, though it were the king of clubs, &c. meaning thereby how the Lord would be worshipped and served in simplicity of heart and verity, wherein consisteth true christian religion, and not in the outward deeds of the letter only, or in the glittering shew of man's traditions, or pardons, pilgrimages, ceremonies, vows, devotions, voluntary works, and works of supererogation, foundations, oblations, the pope's supremacy, &c. so that all these either were needless, where the other is present; or else were of small estimation, in comparison of the other. The tenor and effect of these his sermons, so far as they could come to our hands, here followeth.
The Tenor and Effect of certain Sermons, made by Mr. LATIMER in Cambridge, about the Year of our Lord, 1529.
TU quis es? Which words are as much as to say in English, "Who art thou?" These be the words of the Pharisees, which were sent by the Jews unto St. John Baptist in the wilderness, to have knowledge of him who he was; which words they spake unto him of an evil intent, thinking that he would have taken on him to be Christ, and so they would have had him done by their good wills, because they knew that he was more carnal and given to their laws, than Christ indeed should be, as they perceived by their old prophesies: and also, because they marvelled much at his great doctrine, preaching, and baptizing, they were in doubt whe [...]ther he was Christ or not: wherefore they said unto him, "Who art thou?" Then answered St. John, and confessed that he was not Christ. Now here is to be noted the great and prudent answer of St. John Baptist unto the Pharisees, that when they required of him who he was, he would not directly answer of himself, what he was himself; but he said he was not Christ, by which saying he thought to put the Jews and Pharisees out of their false opinion, and belief towards him, in that they would have had him to exercise the office of Christ, and so declared further unto them of Christ, saying, "He is in the midst of you, and amongst you, whom ye know not, the latchet of whose shoe I am not worthy to unloose." By this you may perceive that St. John spake much in the praise of his master Christ, professing himself to be in no wise like unto him. So likewise it shall be necessary unto all men and women of this world, not to ascribe unto themselves any goodness of themselves, but all unto our Lord God, as shall appear hereafter, when this question aforesaid [Who art thou?] shall be moved unto them: not as the Pharisees did unto St. John, of an evil purpose, but of a good and simple mind, as may appear hereafter.
NOW then, according to the preacher's mind, let every man and woman, of a good and simple mind, contrary to the Pharisees' intent, ask this question, Who art thou? This question must be moved to themselves, what they be of themselves, on this fashion, What art thou of thy only and natural generation between father and mother, when thou camest into the world? What substance, what virtue, what goodness art thou of thyself? Which question if thou rehearse oftentimes to thyself, thou shalt well perceive and understand how thou shalt make answer to it: which must be made in this wise; I am of myself, and by myself, coming from my natural father and mother, the child of the anger and indignation of God, the true inheritor of hell, a lump of sin, and working nothing of myself, but all towards hell, except I have better help of another, than I have of myself. Now we may see in what state we enter into this world, that we be of ourselves the true and just inheritors of hell, the children of the ire and indignation of Christ, working all towards hell, whereby we deserve of ourselves perpetual damnation, by the right judgment of God, and the true claim of ourselves: which unthrifty state that we were born unto is come unto us for our own deserts, as proveth well this example following.
LET it be admitted for the probation of this, [Page 817] that it might please the king's grace now being, to accept into his favour a mean man, of simple degree and birth, not born to any possession; whom the king's grace favoureth, not because this person, hath of hi [...]self deserved any such favour, but that the king casteth his favour unto him of his own mere motion and fancy: and because the king's grace will more declare his favour unto him, he giveth unto this said man a thousand pounds in lands, to him and his heirs, on this condition, that he shall take upon him to be the chief captain and defender of his town of Calais, and to be true and faithful to him in the custody of the same, against the Frenchmen especially above all other enemies.
THIS man taketh on him this charge, promising this fidelity thereunto; it chanceth in process of time, that by the singular acquaintance and frequent familiarity of this captain with the Frenchmen, these Frenchmen give unto the said captain of Calais a great sum of money, so that he will be content [...] and agreeable, that they may enter into the said town of Calais by force of arms, and so thereby possess the same unto the crown of France. Upon this agreement the Frenchmen do invade the said town of Calais, only by the negligence of this captain.
NOW the king's grace hearing of this invasion, cometh with a great puissance to defend this his said town, and so by good policy of war overcometh the said Frenchmen, and entereth again into his said town of Calais. Then he being desirous to know how these enemies of his came thither, he maketh strict search and inquiry by whom this treason was conspired; by this sear [...]h it was known and found his own captain to be the very author and the beginner of the betraying of it. The king, seeing the great infidelity of this person, dischargeth this man of his office, and taketh from him and his heirs this thousand pounds possessions. Think you not that the king doth use justice unto him, and all his posterity and heirs? Yes truly; the said captain cannot deny himself but that he had true justice, considering how unfaithfully he bahaved himself to his prince, contrary to his fidelity and promise: so likewise it was of our first father Adam. He had given unto him the spirit and science of knowledge to work all goodness therewith; this said spirit was not given only to him, but unto all his heirs and posterity. He had also delivered him the town of Calais, that is to say, paradise on earth, the most strong and fairest town in the world, to be in his custody: he nevertheless, by the instigation of these Frenchmen, that is, the temptation of the fiend, did obey unto their desire, and so he broke his promise and fidelity, the commandment of the everlasting King his master, in eating the apple by him prohibited.
NOW then, the king seeing this great treason in his captain, dispossessed him of the thousand pounds of lands, that is to say, from everlasting life in glory, and all his heirs and posterity: for likewise, as he had the spirit of science and knowledge for him and his heirs; so in like manner when he lost the same, his heirs also lost it by him, and in him. So now this example proveth, that by our father Adam we had once in him the very inheritance of everlasting joy; and by him, and in him again we lost the same.
THE heirs of the captain of Calais could not by any manner of claim ask of the king the right and title of their father in the thousand pounds possessions, by reason the king might answer and say unto them, that although their father deserved not of himself to enjoy so great possessions, yet he deserved by himself to lose them, and greater, committing so high treason as he did, against his prince's commandments; whereby he had no wrong to lose his title, but was unworthy to have the same, and had therein true justce; let not you think which be his heirs, that if he had justice to lose his possessions, you have wrong to lose the same. In the same manner it may be answered unto all men and women now in being, that if our father Adam had true justice to be excluded from his possessions of ev [...]rlasting glory in paradise, let us not think the contrary that be his heirs, but that we have no wrong in losing also the same; yea, we have true justice and right. Then in what miserable estate we be, that of the right and just title of our own deserts have lost the everlasting joy, and claim of ourselves, to be true inheritors of hell? For he that committeth deadly sin willingly, bindeth himself [Page 818] to be an inheritor of everlasting pain: and so did our fore-father Adam willingly eat of the apple forbidden. Wherefore he was cast out of the everlasting joy in paradise, into this corrupt world amongst all vileness, whereby of himself he was not worthy to do any thing laudable or pleasant to God, evermore bound to corrupt affections and beastly appetites, transformed into the uncleanest and most variable nature that was made under heaven, of whose seed and disposition all the world is lineally descended; insomuch that this evil nature is so much diffused and shed from one into another, that at this day there is no man nor woman living, that can of themselves wash away this abominable vileness: and so we must needs grant of ourselves to be in like displeasure unto God, as our father Adam was; by reason hereof, as I said, we be of ourselves the very children of the indignation and vengeance of God, the true inheritors of hell, and working all towards hell, which is the answer to this question, made to every man and woman by themselves, Who art thou?
AND now the world standing in this damnable state, cometh in the occasion of the incarnation of Christ; the Father in heaven perceiving the frail nature of man, that he by himself and of himself could do nothing for himself, by his prudent wisdom sent down the second Person in the Trinity, his Son Jesus Christ, to declare unto man his pleasure and commandment: and so at the Father's will Christ took on him human nature, being willing to deliver man out of this miserable [...], and was content to suffer cruel passion in she [...]ding his blood for all mankind, and so left be [...]ind for our safeguard, laws and ordinances, to keep us always in the right path unto everlasting lif [...], as the gospels, the sacraments, the commandments, &c. which if we do keep and observe according to our profession, we shall answer better unto this question, [Who art thou?] than we did before: for before thou didst enter into the sacrament of baptism, thou wert bu [...] a natural man or a natural woman; as I might say, a man, a woman; but after thou takest on thee Christ's religion, thou hast a longer name; for then thou art a christian man, a christian woman. Now [...] seeing thou art a christian man, what shall be the answer of this question, Who art thou▪
THE answer of this question is, when I ask it unto myself, I must say that I am a christian man, a christian woman, the child of everlasting joy, thro [...] the merits of the bitter passion of Christ. This is a joyful answer. Here we may see how much we be bound, and indebted unto God, that hath revived us from death to life, and saved us that were damned: which great benefit we cannot well consider, unless we do remember what we were of ourselves before we meddled with him or his laws: and the more we know our feeble nature, and set less by it, the more we shall conceive and know in our hearts what God hath done for us, and the more we know what God hath done for us, the less we shall set by ourselves, and the more we shall love and please God; so that in no condition we shall either know ourselves or God, except we do utterly confess ourselves to be mere vileness and corruption. Well, now it is come unto this point, that we be christian men, christian women, I pray you, what doth Christ require of a christian man, or of a christian woman? Christ requireth nothing else of a christian man or woman, but that they will observe his rule. For likewise as he is a good Augustine friar that keepeth well St. Augustine's rule, so is he a good christian man that keepeth well Christ's rule.
NOW then what is Christ's rule? Christ's rule consisteth in many things, as in the commandments, and the works of mercy, and so forth. And because I cannot declare Christ's rule unto you at one time, as it ought to be done, I will apply myself according to your custom at this time of Christmas; I will, as I said, declare unto you Christ's rule, but that shall be in Christ's cards. And where you are wont to celebrate Christmas in playing cards, I intend by God's grace to deal unto you Christ's cards, wherein you shall perceive Christ's rule. The game that we will play at, shall be called the Triumph, which if it be well played at, he that dealeth shall win; the players shall likewise win, and the standers by and lookers on shall do the same; insomuch that there is no man that is willing to play at this Triumph with these cards, but they shall be all winners, and no losers.
LET therefore every christian man and woman play at these cards, that they may have and obtain the Triumph; you must mark also that the Triumph [Page 819] must apply to fetch home unto him all the other cards, whatsoever suit they be of. Now then take you this first card, which must appear and be shewed unto you as followeth. You have heard what was spoken to men of the old law, Thou shalt not kill; whosoever shall kill shall be in danger of judgment. But I say unto you of the new law, saith Christ, that whosoever is angry with his neighbour, shall be in danger of judgment; and whosoever shall say unto his neighbour Racha, that is to say, Brainless, or any other like word of rebuking, shall be in danger of a council; and whosoever shall say unto his neighbour, Fool, shall be in danger of hell-fire. This card was made and spoken by Christ, as appeareth in the fifth chapter of St. Matthew.
NOW it must be noted, that whosoever shall play with this card, must first before they play with it, know the strength and virtue of the same; wherefore you must well note and mark the terms how they be spoken, and to what purpose: let us therefore read it once or twice, that we may be the better acquainted with it.
NOW behold and see, this card is divided into four parts: The first part is one of the commandments that was given unto Moses in the old law, before the coming of Christ, which commandment we of the new law are bound to obse [...]ve and keep, and is one of our commandments. The other three parts spoken by Christ, be nothing else but expositions to the first part of this commandment: for in very effect of all these four parts be but one commandment, that is to say, "Thou shalt not kill." Yet nevertheless, the three last parts do shew unto thee how many ways thou may'st kill thy neighbour, contrary to this commandment: yet for all Christ's exposition, in the three last parts of this card, the terms be not open enough to thee that dost read and hear them spoken. No doubt the Jews understood Christ well enough when he spoke to them in their own natural terms and tongue: wherefore seeing that these terms were natural terms of the Jews, it shall be necessary to expound them, and compare them unto some like terms of our natural speech, that we in like manner may understand Christ as well as the Jews did. We will begin with the first part of this card, and then after with the other three parts: you must therefore understand that the Jews and the Pharisees of the old law, to whom this first part, this commandment, "Thou shalt not kill," was spoken, thought it sufficient and enough for their discharge not to kill with any material weapon, as sword, dagger, or with any such weapon, and they thought it no great fault whatsoever they said or did by their neighbour, so that they did not harm or meddle with their corporal bodies, which was a false opinion in them, as prov [...] well the three last other sentences following the first part of this card.
NOW as concerning the three other sentences, you must note and take heed what difference is between these three manner of offences: 1. To be angry with your neighbour. 2. To call your neighbour brainless, or any such word of disdain. 3. Or to call your neighbour fool: whether these three manner of offences be of themselves more grievous one than the other, it is to be opened unto you. Truly, as they be of themselves divers offences, so they kill diversly one more than the other, as you shall perceive by the first of these three, and so forth: A man which conceiveth against his neighbour or brother, anger or wrath in his mind, by some manner of occasion given unto him, and although he be angry in his mind against his said neighbour, he will peradventure express his anger by no manner of sign, either in word or deed; yet nevertheless he offe [...]th against God, and breaketh this commandment in killing his own soul; and is therefore in danger of judgment.
NOW to the second part of these three; That man that is moved with anger against his neighbour, and in his anger calleth his neighbour brainless, or some other like word of displeasure; as a man might say in a fury, I shall handle thee well enough, which words and countenances do more represent and declare anger to be in this man, than in him that was but angry, and spake no manner of word, nor shewed any countenance to declare his anger: wherefore as he that so declareth his anger either by word or countenance, offendeth more against God, so he both killeth his own soul, and doth what in him is to kill his neighbour's soul in moving him to anger, wherein he is faulty himself, and so this man is in danger of a council.
[Page 820]NOW to the third offence, and last of the three; That ma [...] that calleth his neighbour fool, doth more de [...]la [...] his angry mind towards him, than he that calleth his neighbour brainless, or any such word moving anger: but to call a man a fool, that word representeth more envy in a man than brainless doth. Wherefore he doth most offend, because he doth most earnestly with such words express his anger, and so he is in danger of hell-fire: wherefore you must understand now these three parts of this card be three offences, and that one is more grievous to God than the other, and that one killeth more the soul of man than the other.
NOW peradventure there will be some that will marvel that Christ did not declare this commandment by some greater faults of anger, than by these which seem but small faults, as to be angry and speak nothing of it, to declare it and to call a man brainless, and to call his neighbour fool; truly these be the smallest, and the least faults that belong to anger, or to killing in anger. Therefore beware how you offend in any kind of anger: seeing that the smallest be damnable to offend in, see that you offend not in the greatest. For Christ thought, if he might bring you from the smallest manner of faults, and give you warning to avoid the least, he reckoned you would not offend in the greatest and worst, as to call your neighbour thief, whoreson, whore, drab, &c. into more blasphemous names, which offences must needs have punishment in hell, considering how that Christ hath appointed these three small faults, to have three degrees of punishment in hell, as appeareth by these three terms, judgment, council, and hell-fire; these three terms do signify nothing else but three divers punishments in hell, according to the offences. Judgment is less in degree than council, therefore it signifieth a lesser pain in hell, and it is ordained for him that is angry in his mind with his neighbour, and doth express his malice neither by word nor countenance. Council is a less degree in hell than hell-fire, and is a greater degree in hell than judgment, and it is ordained for him that calleth his neighbour brainless, or any such word that declareth his anger and malice: wherefore it is more pain than judgment. Hell-fire is more pain in hell, than council or judgment, and it is ordained for him that calleth his neighbour fool, by reason that in calling his neighbour fool, he declareth more his malice, in that it is an earnest word of anger. Wherefore hell-fire is appointed for it, that is, the most pain of the three punishments.
NOW you have heard, that to these divers offences of ire and killing, punishments are appointed according to their degrees; for observe, as the offence is, so shall the pain be: if the offence be great, the pain shall be accordingly: if it be less, there shall be less pain for it. I would not now that you should think because that here are but three degrees of punishment spoke of, that there be no more in hell: no doubt Christ spake of no more here but of these three degrees of punishment, thinking they were sufficient enough for example, whereby we might understand, that there are as many pains as there are offences: and so by these three offences, and these three punishments, all other offences and punishments may be compared with each other: yet I would satisfy your minds farther in these three terms, judgment, council, and hell-fire. Where you might say, what was the cause that Christ declared more the pains of hell by these terms than by any other terms? I told you before that he knew well to whom he spake them; these' terms were natural, and well known among the Jews and the Pharisees. Wherefore Christ taught them with their own terms, to the intent they might understand the better his doctrine: and these terms may be likened unto three terms which we have common and usual amongst us, that is to say, the sessions of inquirance, the sessions of delirance, and the execution day: sessions of inquirance is like unto judgment; for when sessions of inquiry is, then the judges cause twelve men to give verdict of the felon's crime, whereby he shall be judged to be indicted: sessions of deliverance is much like council; for at sessions of deliverance the judges go among themselves to council, to determine sentence against the felon. Execution day is to be compared to hell-fire: for the Jews had a place of execution amongst themselves named Hell-fire: and surely when a man goeth to his death, it is the greatest pain in this world: wherefore you may see that there are degrees in these our terms, as there be in those terms. These evil disposed affections and sensualities in us are always contrary to the rule [Page 821] of our salvation. What shall we do now or imagine to thrust down these Turks, and to subdue them? It is a great ignominy and shame for a christian man to be bond and subject unto a Turk: [...]ay, it shall not be so, we will first cast a trump in their way, and play with them at cards who shall have the better; let us play therefore on this card. Whensoever it shall happen these foul passions and Turks to rise in our stomachs against our brother or neighbour, either for unkind words, injuries, or wrongs, which they have done unto us, contrary to our mind, straightway let us call unto our remembrance, and speak this question unto ourselves, Who art thou? The answer is, I am a christian man. Then further we must say to ourselves▪ What requireth Christ of a christian man? Now turn up your trump, your heart, (hear is trump, as I said before) and cast your trump, your heart, on this card, and upon this card you shall learn what Christ requireth of a christian man, not to be angry, nor moved to ire against his neighbour, in mind, countenance, nor otherwise by word or deed. Then take up this card with your heart, and lay them together; that done, you have won the game of the Turk, whereby you have defaced and overcome by true and lawful play: but, alas, for pity, the Rhodes are won and overcome by these false Turks, the strong castle faith is decayed, so that I fear it is almost impossible to win it again.
THE great occasion of the loss of this Rhodes is, by reason that christian men do so daily kill their own nation, that the very true number of Christians is decayed: which murder and killing one of ano [...]ther is increased, especially two ways, to the utter undoing of Christendom, that is to say, by example and silence. By example thus: When the father, the mother, the lord, the lady, the master, the dame, be themselves overcome with these Turks, they be continual swearers, adulterers, disposers to malice, never in patience, and so forth in all other vices: think you not when the father, the mother, the master, the dame, be disposed unto vice or impatience, but that their children and servants shall incline and be disposed to the same? No doubt as the child shall take disposition natural of his father and mother, so shall the servants apply unto the vices of their masters and dames; if the head [...] false in their faculties and crafts, it is no marvel if the children, servants, and apprentices do join therein. This is a great and shameful manner of killing christian men, that the fathers, the mothers, the masters, and the dames, shall not only kill themselves, but all their's, and all that belongeth unto them, and so this way is a great number of christian lineage murdered and spoiled. The second manner of killing is silence. By silence also is a great number of christian men slain; which is on this fashion: although the father and mother, master and dame, of themselves be well disposed to live after the law of God, yet they may kill their children and servants in suffering them to do evil before their own faces, and do not use correction according to their offences; the master seeth his servant or apprentice take more of his neighbour, than the king's laws, or the order of his faculty doth admit him, or he suffered him to take more of his neighbour than he himself would be content to pay if he were in like condition: thus doing, I say, such men kill willingly their children and servants, and shall go to hell for so doing; but also their fathers and mothers, masters and dames, shall bear them company for so suffering. Wherefore I exhort all true christian men and women to give good example unto your children and servants, and suffer not them by silence to offend: every man must be in his own house, according to St. Augustine's mind, a bishop, not only giving good example, but teaching according to it, rebuke and punish vice, not suffering your children and servants to forget the laws of God: you ought to see them have their belief, to know the commandments of God, to keep their holy days, and not lose their time in idleness; if they do so, you shall all suffer pain for it, if God be true of his saying, as there is no doubt thereof: and so you may perceive that there be many that break this card, "Thou shalt not kill," and playeth therewith oftentimes, at the blind trump, whereby they be no winners, but great losers; but who be those now-a-days that can clear themselves of these manifest murders used to their children and servants? I think not the contrary, but that many have the [...] two ways slain their own children unto their damnation, were not the great mercy of God ready to help them when they repent therefore.
WHEREFORE considering that we be so prone and ready to continue in sin, le [...] us cast ourselves down [Page 822] with Mary Magdalen, and the more we bow down with her towar [...]s Christ's feet, the more we shall be afraid to rise again in sin; and the more we know and submit ourselves, the more we shall be forgiven, and the less we know and submit ourselves, the less we shall be forgiven, as appeareth by the following example.
WHEN Christ was in the world amongst the Jews and Pharisees, there was a great Pharisee whose name was Simon; this Pharisee desired Christ on a time to dine with him, thinking with himself that he was able and worthy to give Christ a dinner: Christ refused not his dinner but came unto him. In time of their dinner, there happened to come into the house a great sinner named Mary Magdalen. As soon as she perceived Christ, she cast herself down, and called unto her remembrance what she was of herself, and how greatly she had offended God, whereby she conceived in Christ great love, and so came near unto him, and washed his feet with bitter tears, and shed upon his head precious ointment, thinking that by him she should be delivered from her sins; this great and proud Pharisee seeing that Christ did accept her oblation in the best part, had great indignation against this woman, and said to himself, If this man Christ were a holy prophet, as he is taken for, he would not suffer this sinner to come so nigh him. Christ understanding the naughty mind of this Pharisee, said to him, Simon, I have somewhat to say unto thee: say what you please (quoth the Pharisee). Then, said Christ, I pray thee tell me this: if there be a man to whom there is owing twenty pounds by one, and forty by another, this man to whom this money is owing, perceiving these two men be not able to pay him, he forgiveth them both. Which of these two debtors ought to love this man most? The Pharisee said, That man ought to love him best that had most forgiven him: Likewise, said Christ, it is by this woman. She hath loved me most, therefore most is forgiven her; she hath known her sins most, whereby she hath most loved me; and thou hast least loved me, because thou hast least known thy sins; therefore because thou hast least known thine offences, thou art least forgiven. So this proud Pharisee had an answer to allay his pride: and think you not but there is amongst us a great number of these proud Pharisees, which think themselves worthy to bid Christ to dinner, who will perk and presume to fit by Christ in the church, and have disdain of this poor woman Magdalen, their poor neighbour with an high disdainful and solemn countenance; and being always desirous to climb highest in the church, reckoning themselves more worthy to sit there than another, I fear me poor Magdal [...]n under the board and in the belfry, hath more forgiven of Christ than they have: for it is like that these Pharisees do less know themselves and their offences, whereby they less love God, and so they be less forgiven.
I would to God we would follow this example, and be like unto Magdalen. I doubt not but we be all Magdalens in falling into sin, and in offending: but we be not again Magdalens in knowing ourselves, and in rising from sin. If we be true Magdalens, we should be as willing to forsake our sin, and rise from sin, as we were willing to commit sin, and to continue in it; and we then should know ourselves best, and make more perfect answer than ever we did, unto this question, Who art thou? To which we might answer, that we be true christian men and women: and then, I say, you should understand and know how you ought to play at this card, "Thou shalt not kill," without any interruption of your deadly enemies the Turks, and so Triumph at the last by winning everlasting life in glory, Amen.
IT would require a long discourse to declare what a stir there was in Cambridge upon this preaching of Mr. Latimer. Belike Satan began to feel himself and his kingdom to be touched too near, and therefore thought it time to look about him, and to make out his men of arms.
FIRST came out the prior of the Black-Friars, called Buckneham, who thinking to make a great hand against Mr. Latimer, about the same time of Christmas, when Mr. Latimer brought forth his cards to deface belike the doings of the other, brought out his Christmas dice, casting there to his audience Cinque and Quarter, meaning by the Cinque five places in the New Testament, and the four doctors by the Quarter; by which his Cinque and Quarter, he would prove that it was not expedient for the scriptures to be in English, lest the [Page 823] ignorant and vulgar sort, through the occasion thereof, might aptly be brought in danger to leave their vocation, or else to run into some inconvenience; as for example:
THE ploughman, when he heareth this in the gospel, "No man that layeth his hand on the plough and looketh back, is meet for the kingdom of God;" might, peradventure hearing this, cease from his plough. Likewise the baker, when he hears that a little leaven corrupteth a whole lump of dough, may perchance leave our bread unleavened, and so our bodies shall be unseasoned. Also the simple man, when he heareth in the gospel, "If thine eye offend thee, pluck it out, and cast it from thee," may make himself blind, and so fill the world with beggars. These, with some others, this clerkly friar brought out, to the number of [...], to prove his purpose.
MR. Latimer hearing this sermon of Dr. Buck [...]ham, came again in the afternoon, or shortly after, to the church to answer the friar, where resorted to him a great multitude, as well of the university as of the town, both doctors and other graduates, with great expectation to hear what he could say: among whom also, directly in the face of Latimer, underneath the pulpit, sat Buckneham the aforesaid friar, prior of the Black-Friars, with his black friar's cowl about his shoulders.
THEN Mr. Latimer first repeating the friarly reasons of Dr. Buckneham, whereby he would prove it a dangerous thing for the vulgar people to have the scriptures in the vulgar tongue, so refuted the friar, so answered to his objections, so dallied with his bald reason of the ploughman looking back, and of the baker leaving his bread unleavened, that the vanity of the friar might to all men appear, well proving and declaring to the people, that there was no such fear [...]nor danger for the scriptures to be in English, as the friar pretended; at least requiring this, that the scriptures might be so long in the English tongue, till Englishmen were so mad, that either the ploughman durst not look back, or the baker should leave his bread unleavened. And proceeding moreover in his sermon, he began to discourse of the mystical speeches and figurative phrases of the scriptures; which phrases he said were not so diffuse and difficult, as they were common in the scriptures, and in the Hebrew tongue are commonly used and known: and not only in the Hebrew tongue, but also every speech (saith he) hath its like metaphors and figurative significations, so common and vulgar to all men, that the very painters do paint them on walls and on houses.
AS for example (saith he, looking towards the friar that sat over against him) when they paint a fox preaching out of a friar's cowl, none is so mad to take this to be a fox that preacheth, but know well enough the meaning of the matter; which is to paint out unto us, what hypocrisy, crafts, and subtle dissimulation lieth hid many times in these friars cowl's, willing us thereby to beware of them. ln fine friar Buckneham was so dashed with this sermon, that he durst never after peep out of the pulpit against Mr. Latimer.
BESIDES this Buckneham, there was also another railing friar, not of the same coat, but of the same note and faction, a gray friar and a doctor, an outlandish man, named Dr. Venetus, who likewise in his brawling sermons railed and raged against Mr. Latimer, calling him a mad and brainless man, &c. To whom Mr. Latimer answering again, taketh for his ground the words of our Saviour Christ, Matt. v. Thou shalt not kill, &c. But I say unto you, Whosoever is angry with his neighbour shall be in danger of judgment; and whosoever shall say unto his neighbour Racha, (or any other like words of rebuking, as brainless) shall be in danger of council: and whosoever shall say to his neighbour, Fool, shall be in danger of hell-fire.
IN discussing of which place, first he divideth the offence of killing into three branches. One to be with hand, the other with heart, the third with word. With hand, when we use any weapon drawn, to spill the life of our neighbour. With heart, when we be angry with him. With word, when in word or countenance we disdainfully rebuke our neighbour, or despitefully revile him. Words of rebuking are, when we speak any opprobrious or unseemly thing, whereby the patience of our neighbour is moved, as when we call him [Page 824] ma [...] (said he) or brainless, or such like, which are guil [...] [...]o council: words of spite, or reviling are, when we call him fool; which Christ saith is guilty of hell-fire.
THUS Mr. Latimer in handling and trimming this matter, after that with the weight of Christ's words, and the explaining of the same, he had sufficiently borne the friar clean down, then he turned to the fifth chapter of the book of Wisdom. Out of which chapter he declared to the audience, how the true servants and preachers of God in this world, commonly are scorned and reviled by the proud enemies of God's word, which account them here as mad-men, fools, brainless, and drunken: so did they (said he) in the scripture call them which most purely preached, and set forth the glory of God's word. But (said he) what will be the end of these jolly fellows, or what will they say in the end? We madmen, we mad fools, we, we ourselves, &c. And that he will be their end except they repent. And thus ending his sermon, he so confounded the poor friar, that he drove him not only out of countenance, but also clean out of the university.
BUT what should I here stand deciphering the names of his adversaries, when whole swarms of friars and doctors flocked against him on every side, almost through the whole university, preaching and likewise barking against him? Amongst whom was Dr. Watson, master of Christ's college, whose scholar Latimer had been before, Dr. Notaries, master of Clare-hall, Dr. Philo, master of Michael-house, Dr. Metcalfe, master St. John's, Dr. Blithe, of the King's-hall, Dr. Bullock, master of the Queen's college, Dr. Cliffe, of Clement-house, Dr. Donnes, of Jesus college, Dr. Psalms, master of St. Nicholas Hostel, Bain, Rud, and Greenwood, bachelors of divinity, all three of St. John's college; also Brickenden, bachelor of divinity, of the same house, and scholar sometime to the said Latimer. In short, almost as many as were heads there of houses, so many enemies did this worthy standard-bearer of Christ's gospel sustain.
THEN came at last Dr. West, bishop of Ely, who preached against Mr. Latimer at Barwell-abbey, forbad him within the churches of that university to preach any more. Notwithstanding, so the Lord provided, that Dr. Barnes, prior of the Augustine friars, did license Mr. Latimer to preach in his church of the Augustines, and he himself preached at the next church, called St. Edward's church, which was the first sermon of the gospel that Dr. Barnes preached, being Sunday and Christmas Eve. Whereupon certain articles were gathered out of his sermon, and were commenced against him by Mr. Tyrell, fellow of King's-hall, and so by the vice-chancellor presented to the cardinal.
THUS Mr. Latimer (as you have heard) being baited by the friars, doctors, and masters of that university, about the year aforesaid, 1529, notwithstanding the malice of these malignant adversaries, continued yet in Cambridge preaching for the space of three years together, with favour and applause of the godly, also with such admiration of his enemies that heard him, that the bishop himself coming in, and hearing his gift, wished himself to have the like, and was compelled to commend him upon the same.
SO Mr. Latimer and Mr. Bilney, after this, continued in Cambridge for some time, where they so frequently conferred together, that the field wherein they usually walked, was for a long time after called, The heretics' hill.
THE society of these two, as it was much noted by many in that university, so it was full of many good examples, to all such as would follow them, both in visiting the prisoners, relieving the needy, and in feeding the hungry. Mr. Latimer maketh mention of a certain history which happened about this time in Cambridge, between them both and a certain woman then prisoner in the castle or tower of Cambridge, which I thought here worthy to be mentioned. The story is this: It so happened, that after Mr. Latimer had been so acquainted with the aforesaid Mr. Bilney, he went with him to visit the prisoners in the tower of Cambridge, and being there, among other prisoners, there was a woman who was accused that she had killed her own child, which act she plainly and stedfastly denied. Whereby it gave them an occasion to search [Page 825] for the matter, and at length they found that her husband loved her not, and therefore sought all means he could to make her away. The matter was thus:
A child of her's had been sick a whole year, and at length died in harvest time, as it were in a consumption: which when it was gone, she went to have her neighbours to help her at the burial, but all were abroad in the harvest, whereby she was enforced with heaviness of heart, alone to prepare the child for the burial. Her husband coming home, and not loving her, accused her of murdering the child. This was the cause of her trouble; and Mr. Latimer, by earnest inquisition, of conscience thought the woman not guilty. Then immediately after he was called to preach before king Henry the eighth at Windsor, where after his sermon the king's majesty sent for him, and talked familiarly with him. At which time Mr. Latimer, finding an opportunity, kneeled down, opened the whole matter to the king, and desired her pardon, which the king most graciously granted, and gave it to him at his return homeward. In the mean time the woman was delivered of a child in the prison, whose godfather was Mr. Latimer, and Mrs. Cheek godmother. But all the while he would not tell her of the pardon, but laboured to have her confess the truth of the matter. At length the time came when she expected to suffer, and Mr. Latimer came, as he was wont, to instruct her; unto whom she made great lamentation and moan, to be purified before her suffering, for she thought she must be damned if she died without purification.
THEN Mr. Bilney being with Mr. Latimer, both told her, that that law was made for the Jews, and not for us, and that women be as well in the favour of God before they be purified as after; and rather it was appointed for a civil and political law, for natural honesty's sake, than that they should any thing the more be purified from sin thereby, &c. So thus they argued with this woman till they had better instructed her, and at length shewed her the king's pardon, and let her go.
THIS good act, among many others about that time, happened in Cambridge by Mr. Latimer and Mr. Bilney. But this was not all, for many more like matters were wrought by them. But as it is commonly seen in the natural course of things, that as the fire beginneth to kindle, so the more smoke ariseth withal, in much like sort it happened with Mr. Latimer, whose zeal the more it began to work, his virtues to be seen, and his doings to be known, the more his adversaries began to kick and spurn against him. Concerning these adversaries, and such as did molest him, partly their names are above expressed. Among the rest of this number was Dr. Redman, a man favouring more of superstition than of true religion, after the zeal of the Pharisees, yet not so malignant or hurtful, but of a civil and quiet disposition, and also liberal in well-doing, that few poor scholars were in that university who fared not better by his purse. This Dr. Redman was a man of great authority in the university of Cambridge, and perceiving the bold enterprize of Mr. Latimer, in setting abroad the word and doctrine of the gospel, at this time, or much about the same, writeth to him, seeking by persuasion to revoke the said Latimer from that kind and manner of teaching; to whom Mr. Latimer maketh answer again in a few words: the sum and effect of both their letters, translated out of the Latin, here followeth.
LETTER From Dr. REDMAN to Mr. LATIMER.
GRACE be with you, and true peace in Christ Jesus. I beseech you heartily, and require most earnestly even for charity's sake, that you will not stand in your own conceit with a mind so indurate, nor prefer your own singular judgment in matters of religion and controversy before so many learned men, and which is more, before the whole catholic church, especially considering that you neither have any thing in the word of God to make for you, nor yet the testimony of any authentic writer. Nay, nay, I beseech you rather consider that you are a man, and that lying and vanity may quickly blear your eyes, which doth sometime [...] transform itself into an angel of light.
JUDGE not so rashly of us, as that wicked spirit hath tickled you in the ear, I assure you we are careful for you, and that we wish you to be saved, and that we also are careful for your own [Page 826] salvation. Lay down your stomach I pray you▪ and humble your spirit, and suffer not the church to take offence with the hardness of your heart, nor that her unity and Christ's coat without seam (as much as lieth in you) should be torn asunder. Consider what the saying of the wise man is, and be obedient thereunto. Trust not your own wisdom. The Lord Jesus Christ, &c.
LETTER From Mr. LATIMER, in Answer to Dr. REDMAN.
REVEREND Mr. Redman, it is even enough for me, that Christ's sheep hear no man's voice but Christ's: and as for you, you have no voice of Christ against me, whereas for my part I have a heart that is ready to hearken to any voice of Christ that you can bring me. Thus fare you well, and trouble me no more from the talking with the Lord my God.
AFTER Mr. Latimer had thus laboured in preaching and teaching in the university of Cambridge about the space of three years, at length he was called up to the cardinal for heresy, by the procurement of some of the said university, where he was content to subscribe and grant to such articles as then they propounded to him, &c.
AFTER that he returned to the university again, where shortly after, by the means of Dr. Buts, the king's physician, a singular good man, and a special favourer of good proceedings, he was in the number of them which laboured in the cause of the king's supremacy. Then went he to the court, where he remained a certain time in the said Dr. But's chamber, preaching then in London very often. At last being weary of the court, having a benefice offered b [...] the king, at the suit of the lord Cromwel and Dr. Buts, was glad thereof, seeking by that means to be rid of the court, wherewith in no case he could agree; and so having a grant of the benefice, contrary to the mind of Dr. Buts, he would needs depart, and be resident at the same.
THIS benefice was in Wiltshire, under the diocese of Sarum, the name of which town was called West Kingston, where this good preacher did exercise himself with much diligence of teaching to instruct his flock, and not only to them his diligence extended, but also to all the country about. In fine, his diligence was so great, his preaching so powerful, the manner of his teaching so zealous, that there in like sort he could not escape without enemies. So true it is what St. Paul foretelleth us, Whosoever will live godly in Christ, shall suffer persecution. It so happened, that whereas he preaching upon the blessed virgin Christ's mother, (whom we call our lady) had thereupon declared his mind, referring and reducing all honour only to Christ our only Saviour, certain popish priests being therewith offended, sought and wrought much trouble against him, drawing out articles and impositions which they untruly, unjustly, falsely, and uncharitably imputed unto him: First, that he should preach against our lady, for that he reproved in a sermon the superstitious rudeness of certain blind priests, which so held together upon the blessed virgin, as though she never had any sin, nor were saved by Christ the only Saviour of the whole world.
ITEM, That he should say, that saint [...] were not to be worshipped.
ITEM, That Ave Maria was a salutation only, and no prayer.
ITEM, That there was no material [...].
ITEM, That there was no purgatory, in saving, that he had rather be in purgatory than in Lollard's Tower.
TOUCHING the whole discourse of which articles, with his reply and answer to the same, hereafter shall follow when we come to his letters.
THE chief enemies and molesters of him, besides these country priests, were Dr. Powel, of Salisbury, Dr. Wilson, sometime of Cambridge, Mr. Hubberdin, and Dr. Sherwood [...] Of whom some preached and some wrote against him; insomuch that by their procurement [...] was cited up, and called to appear before W. [...], archbishop of Canterbury, [Page 827] and John Stokesly, bishop of London, Jan. 29, 1531. The copy of which citation (as now translated from the Latin) here followeth.
The Copy of a Citation sent to Mr. LATIMER by the Chancellor of Sarum, at the Intercession of the bishop of London.
RICHARD HILLEY, doctor of the decrees of the most reverend father in God, Laurence, by divine providence, bishop of Sarum, and vicar general in spiritual affairs throughout England, to all and singular rectors, vicars, chaplains, curates, and the rest of the clergy and learned persons throughout the whole diocese of Sarum, health in our Lord Jesus Christ. Together and apart we commit and firmly command, that ye immediately cite, or cause to be cited, Mr. Hugh Latimer, vicar of West Kingston, in the county of Wilts, and dioc [...]se of Sarum, that he may appear before the rev. father in God, John, by divine providence, bishop of London, or his vicar general in spirituals, or before the chapter held in the church of St. Paul, London, on Monday the 29th of this instant January, between the hours of nine and eleven in the forenoon of the same day, there personally to answer to certain articles or questions concerning grievous crimes and misdemeanors by him committed, and under the cognizance of the bishop of London, and furthermore to receive condign punishment for the same: and that ye certify us at Sarum of what is done on the premisses before the 22d of this same month of January, that we may be able to certify the same to the abovesaid rev. father, the lord bishop of London, on or before the said 22d of January, according as the same rev. father having prayed and required it of us, in aid of the law, and out of mutual kindness.
Given at Sarum. under the seal of the aforesaid father in God, the 10th of January, 1531.
AGAINST this citation, although Mr. Latimer did appeal to his own ordinary, requiring him to be ordered, yet notwithstanding all that, he was had up to London befo [...] War [...]am the archbishop of Canterbury, and the bishop of London, where he was greatly molested, and detained a long time from his [...] home. There he being called thrice every week before the said bishops, to make answer for his preaching, had certain articles or propositions drawn out and laid to him, whereunto they required him to subscribe. At length he not only perceiving their practical proceedings, but also much grieved with their troublesome unquietness, who neither would preach themselves, nor yet suffer him to preach and do his duty, writeth to the aforesaid archbishop, partly excusing his infirmity, whereby he could not appear at their commandment, partly expostulating with them for so troubling and detaining him from doing his duty, and that for no just cause, but only for preaching the truth against certain vain abuses crept into religion, much needful to be spoken against. All which may appear by his epistle sent to a certain bishop or archbishop, whose name is not expressed; the copy of which epistle is now translated from the Latin, and is as followeth.
A Copy of the Epistle by Mr. LATIMER to the Archbishop of Canterbury.
HAD not sickness prevented me, I had myself waited on you at your palace; but these fresh troubles have brought on me a sharp return of an old distemper, so that I can't be able to wait on you to-day; I can't, I say, without great pain, but that your lordship might no longer in vain expect my coming, I have sent these lines scribbled with mine own hand to your grace, as to a most upright judge, of my excuse, in which I wish I had more time or more judgment to frame a just expostulation with your grace for detaining me so long against my will from my cure, and that so unseasonably, at a time when it most behoves every pastor to be with his flock. But what shall I say, if it is lawful for so mean a prisoner to plead with so great a father? If we esteem a priest good for doing his duty, who, while he remains in this earthly tabernacle, never ceaseth to teach and admonish his congregation, and so much the more as he draws nearer his last home, what must we think of those who neither preach themselves now, (at which I should not wonder had they not been used to it before) nor permit those who are desirous to do it, unless they are bound to do and say nothing [Page 828] but what they please. At first I thought it safe to submit myself intirely to your clemency, but now it seems as safe to justify myself a little, since one thing was pretended in the beginning, but now another, and what will be the end I have great room to doubt, but I hope truth only will be used. St. Jerome on these words (which I hope I shall never forget) "The Lord who preserveth truth, for ever shall deliver thee," writes thus, Whatsoever I suffer for truth's sake shall never trouble me, for the Lord liveth and careth for me. First I was sent to London, where I was before the court of Canterbury, then all was stopped that had been done, and the matter had bounds and limits set to it by him who sent me; but so the business was handled and brought into doubt, that at length there seemed no end to it, but that it must be infinitely prolonged. For while, without either method or design, I was questioned of one thing after another, whether pertinent or impertinent, now by one, and then by another, if I gave them no answer, or if I answered them to the purpose (which I thought was not imprudent sometimes to put an end to the dispute) I was equally uncivil; while one answers to many and of many things, he may inadvertently say something that may prejudice the most righteous cause. None ought to judge me wicked for what at most they can call but an error of conscience; and to remember all things, it behoves a man to remember the foundation of the other world. When a man acts against conscience he doth it to gain, to maintain, or defend his own, but what they charge me with is far different, and I believe without example, wickedly requesting to know the cause of my confinement. If any person is disposed to attack my sermons, that they are obscure, or not cautiously enough worded, I am prepared either to explain or vindicate them, for (to the best of [...]y knowledge) I never preached any thing against the truth, against the councils of the fathers, or against the catholic faith. All that my adversaries or detractors truly charge me with, is what I have long desired, and do desire, namely, the improving the common people's judgment, I heartily desire that all men might know and comprehend the disagreement of things, the worth, place, time, degrees, and order proper for each, and how much they are concerned in those things which God has prepared for them to walk in: every man ought to be very diligent in doing the works of his calling; after which, things indifferent may be done with equal diligence, amongst which are all things which no law has forbid, unless we forbid them to ourselves: it is lawful to use images, to go on pilgrimages, to invocate saints, to remember the souls in purgatory, but these which are voluntary acts are to be so restrained, that they diminish not the just esteem of the precepts of God (which bestow eternal life on those who follow them) should necessarily have; they who use them otherwise, are so far from gaining the love of God, that they rather incur his hatred. The true love of God is to keep his commandments, as our Saviour says, He who heareth my words and doth them, he it is who loveth me. Let no man then have so mean an opinion of the laws of God, as to make them equal to the fancies of men, since by those at the last day before the tribunal of Christ we shall all be judged, and not by these; as Christ says, The word that I speak, that shall judge you at the last day; and what [...] able to make amends for the breach of one of those commands, by any or all of these specious additions? O that we would be but as ready, as diligent as devoted to do his will as we are to follow our own empty notions! Many things done with an upright heart God accepts of, making allowance for our infirmities, though he has not commanded or required them; but these things ought to be taken away when they begin to have the force of commands, lest while we do these omit those that are absolutely necessary; and what can be more absurd than to revere as ordinances of God the idle fancies of men, whilst his true ordinances are neglected; whence I in behalf of the commandments of God stand hitherto immovable, not seeking my own but Christ's gain, not my own but God's glory, and whilst I live I will stand stedfast: so all the German divines have hitherto complained of the intolerable abuse of these things, that no man desirous of the glory of Christ can accept of the ministry without doing things against his conscience, and if some have (for I will not say none) submitted to this hardship purely to do good, yet what [...]oth the christian religion suffer [Page 829] by it? unless we are so miserably blinded as to think that these things are to be dispensed with for our own filthy gain, though they are not for the honour of God. Now who can justify the constant practice of such things which in themselves are highly criminal? Some things are constantly performed which ought never, while others are omitted which ought always to be done: now who cannot see this manifest abuse? And who sees, and does not grieve? And who grieves, that would not labour to remove it? And when shall it be removed, while it is constantly preached and commended? Why, it is hardly possible for it not to be [...]. It is one thing barely to permit, a [...]d another to enforce as law. Go (says Christ) and teach all things; but what are those all things? Why, all that you have heard of me, not all that seems fit to yourselves. Let us therefore by the help of God, go and do likewise: let us employ our whole strength to preach the sincere word of God, not to flatter or cook up our sermons to men's [...] then shall we be true preachers of God's word. As careless as men are in what relates to God, they are diligent enough in what relates to themselves, to this they want no spurs; but they are miserably deceived by an unjust esteem of things, and an early superstition received in their tender years from their fore-fathers, which we are hardly able to remedy by any preaching, how frequent, how earnest, how sincere and pure soever, which God doth not now permit; for in these evil days they who ought to preach themselves (for to us, says St. Peter, has he given to preach the gospel) forbid them to preach who are willing and able, and on the contrary, co [...] ple time-servers, who damnably detain the miserable people in superstition and false confidence; but Lord have mercy upon us, and grant we may know thy way upon earth, not to be found amongst those to whom the Lord says, My ways are not your ways, neither are my thoughts your thoughts? Hence I dare not subscribe to these propositions, most honoured father, because I would no ways be accessary to the longer continuance of these popular superstitions, lest I should be the author of my own damnation. Was I worthy, I would even give you some advice, but that little impertinent thing the heart, can do little else than guess, none knowing the things of a man but the spirit of a man which is in him. It is not any pride that hinder [...] me from subscribing to these propositions; on the contrary, I am very sorry I cannot wholly perform your request. I know how great a crime it is to disobey the fathers and governors of the church, but then regard is to be had to what they command, in which case we ought always to obey God rather than man.
MY head aches so much, and my body is so weak, that I can neither come, nor write over again and correct these lines; but your lordship, I [...]ope, will approve, if not the judgment, yet the endeavours of
IN this aforesaid epistle (as you hear) he maketh mention of certain articles or propositions, where [...]nto he was required by the bishops to subscribe. The copy and effect of those articles or rude propositions (as he calleth them) are these:
ARTICLES devised by the Bishops for Mr. LATIMER to subscribe unto.
I Believe that there is a purgatory to purge the souls of the dead after this life.
THAT the souls in purgatory are holpen with the masses, prayers, and alms of the living.
THAT the saints do pray as mediators now for us in heaven.
THAT they are to be honoured of us in heaven.
THAT it is profitable for christians to call upon the saints, that they may pray as mediators for us unto God.
THAT pilgrimages and oblations done to the sepulchres and relics of saints are meritorious.
THAT they which have vowed perpetual chastity may not marry, nor break their vow, without the dispensation of the pope.
[Page 830]THAT the keys of binding and loosing, delivered to Peter, do still remain with the bishops of Rome his successors, although they live wickedly, and are by no means, nor at any time, committed to laymen.
THAT men may merit and deserve at God's hand by fasting, prayer, and other good works of piety.
THAT they which are forbidden by the bishop to preach, as suspected persons, ought to cease until they have purged themselves before the said bishop, or their superiours, and be restored again.
THAT the fast which is used in Lent, and other fasts prescriped by the canons, and by custom received of the christians (except necessity otherwise require) are to be observed and kept.
THAT God in every one of the [...]even sacraments giv [...]th grace to [...], rightly receiving the same.
THAT consecrations, sanctifyings and blessings, by use and custom received in the church, are laudable and profitable.
THAT it is laudable and profitable, that the venerable images of the crucifix and other saints, should be had in the churches as a remembrance, and to the honour and worship of Jesus Christ and his saints.
THAT it is laudable and profitable to deck and to clothe those images, and set up burning lights before them to the honour of the said saints.
TO these articles whether he did subscribe or no, it is uncertain. It appeareth by this epistle above-written to the bishop, that he durst not consent unto them, where he writeth in these words; I dare not subscribe to these propositions, because I would no ways be accessary to the longer continuance of these popular superstitions, lest I be the author, &c. But yet, whether he was compelled afterwards to agree, through the cruel dealing of the bishops, is in doubt. By the words and the title in Tonstal's register prefixed before the articles it may seem that he did subscribe. The words of the register are these▪ [...]ugh Latimer, bachelor of divinity, of the university of Cambridge in a convocation held at Westminster before the lord archbishop of Canterbury, John, lord bishop of London, and the rest of the clergy, has acknowledged and made the following confession of his faith, as in these articles, March 21, 1531. If these words be true, it may be thought that he subscribed. And whether he so did, no great m [...]ter nor marvel, the iniquity of the time being such; that either he must needs so do, o [...] else abide the bishop's blessing; that is, cruel sentence of death, which he at that time (as he himself confessed, preaching at Stamford) was loth to sustain for such matters as these were, unless it were for articles necessary of his belief; for by his words I conjecture rather that he did subscribe at length, although it was long before he could be brought so to do. Yet this by the way is to be noted, concerning the crafty and deceitful handling of these bishops in his examinations, what subtle devices they used [...] same time to entrap him in their snares. The truth of the story has shewed forth himself in a ce [...]tain sermon preached at Stamford, October 9, [...]550; his words be these:
I was once (saith he) in examination before five or six bishops, where I had much trouble; thrice every week I came to examinations, and many snares and traps were laid to get something. Now God knoweth I was ignorant of the law, but that God gave me wisdom what I should speak▪ it was God indeed, for else I had never escaped them. At last I was brought forth to be examined into a chamber hung with arras, where I was wont to be examined: but now at this time the chamber was somewhat altered. For whereas before there was wont always to be a fire in the chimney, now the fire was taken away, and an arras hanged over the chimney, and the table stood near the chimney's end.
THERE was amongst the bishops who examined me, one with whom I have been very familiar, and took him for my great friend, an aged ma [...], and he sat next the table's end.
THEN amongst all other questions he put fort [...] one, a very subtle and crafty one, and such an one indeed as I could no [...] think so great danger in. [Page 831] And when I should make answer, I pray you, Mr. Latimer, said one, speak out, I am very thick of hearing, and here be many that sit far off. I marvelled at this that I was bid to speak out, and begun to suspect, and give an ear to the chimney; and, sir, there I heard a pen writing in the chimney behind the cloth. They had appointed one there to write all mine answers, for they made sure that I should not start from them: there was no starting from them. God was my good Lord, and gave me answer, I could never else have escaped it. The question then and there objected to him was, Whether he thought in his conscience, that he hath been suspected of heresy. This was a captious question. There was no holding of peace; for that was to grant himself faulty. To answer, it was every way full of danger. But God, which always giveth in need what to answer, helped him, or else (as he confessed himself) he had never escaped their bloody hands. Albeit what was his answer, he doth not here express. And thus hitherto you have heard declared the manifold troubles of this godly preacher, in the time not only of his being in the university, but especially at his benefice, as partly his own words above-mentioned, and partly by his own letters hereafter following may better appear.
IN these so hard and dangerous straits, and such snares of the bishops, hard it had been for him, and impossible to have escaped and continued so long, had not the almighty helping hand of the highest, as he stirred him up, so preserved him through the favour and power of his prince; who with much favour embraced him, and with his mere power sometime rescued and delivered him out of the crooked claws of his enemies. Moreover, at length, also through the procurement partly of Dr. [...]uets, partly of the good lord Cromwel, he advanced him to the degree and dignity of a bishop, making him the bishop of Worcester, which so continued a few years, instructing his diocese, according to the [...] of a diligent and vigilant pastor, with wholsome doctrine and example of perfect conversation duly agreeing to the same. It were a long matter to stand particularly upon such things as might here be brought to the commendation of his pains; as study, readiness, and continual preaching, exhorting, visiting, correcting, and reforming, either as his ability could serve, or else the time would bear. But the days then were so dangerous and variable, that he could not in all things do what he would. Yet what he might do, that he performed to the uttermost of his strength, so that although he could not utterly extinguish all the sparkling relics of old superstition, yet he so wrought, that though they could not be taken away, yet they should be used with as little hurt, and with as much profit as might be. As for example, in this thing, and divers others it did appear, that when it could not be avoided, but holy water and holy bread must needs be received, yet so he prepared and instructed them of his diocese, with such informations and lessons that in receiving thereof superstition should be excluded, and some remembrance taken thereby, teaching and charging the ministers of his diocese, in delivering the holy water and the holy bread, to say the words following·
BY this it may be considered what the diligent care of this bishop was in doing the duty of a faithful pastor among his flock. And moreover it is to be thought that he would have brought more things else to pass, if the time then had answered to his desire; for he was not ignorant how the institution of holy water and holy bread, not only had no ground in scripture, but also how full of profane exorcisms and conjurations they were, contrary to the rule and learning of the gospel. Thus this good man behaved himself in his diocese. But (as before) both in the university and at his benefice, he was tost and troubled by wicked and evil disposed [Page 832] persons; so in his bishopric also, he was not free from some that sought his trouble. As among many other evil willers, one especially there was, and that was no small person, who accused him then to the king for his sermons. The story, because he himself sheweth in a sermon of his before king Edward, I thought therefore to use his own words, which are these:
IN the king's days that is dead, a great many of us were called together before him, to speak our minds in certain matters. In the end one kneeleth down and accuseth me of sedition; and that I had preached seditious doctrine. A heavy salutation, and a hard point of such a man's doing, as if I should name you would not think.
THE king turned to me, and said, What say you to that, sir? Then I kneeled down, and turned first to my accuser, and required him; Sir, what form of preaching would you appoint me in preaching before a king? Would you have me preach nothing as concerning a king in a king's sermon? Have you any commission to appoint me what I shall preach? Besides this, I asked him divers other questions, and he would make no answer to any of them all; he had nothing to say.
THEN I turned to the king, and submitted myself to his grace, and said, I never thought myself worthy, nor did I ever sue to be a preacher before your grace, but I was called to it, and would be willing (if you mislike me) to give place to my betters; for I grant that there be a great many more worthy of the room than I am. And if it be your grace's pleasure so to allow them for preachers, I could be content to carry their books after them. But if your grace allow me for a preacher, I would desire your grace to give me leave to discharge my conscience, and thus to frame my doctrine according to my audience. I had been a very blockhead to have preached so at the borders of your realm, as I preach before your grace.
AND I thank Almighty God (who hath always been my remedy) that my sayings were well accepted of the king; for like a gracious lord he turned into another communication. It is even as the scripture saith, The Lord directeth the king's heart. Some of my friends came to me with [...] in their eyes, and told me, they expected I should have been in the Tower the same night.
BESIDES this, divers other conflicts and combats this godly bishop sustained in his own country and diocese, in taking the cause of right and equity against oppression and wrong. As for another example, There was at that time not far from the diocese of Worcester, a certain justice of the peace, whom here I will not name, being a good man afterwards, and now deceased. This justice in purchasing of certain lands, for his brother, or for himself, went about to wrong or damnify a poor man, who made a complaint to Mr. Latimer. He first hearing, then tendering his rightful cause▪ wrote his letter to the gentleman, exhorting him to remember himself, to consider the cause, and to abstain from in [...]ury. The justice of peace not content withal (as the fashion of men is when they are told of their faults) sendeth word again in great displeasurer that he would not so take it at his hands, with such threatening words. Mr Latimer hearing this, answered again, by writing to a certain gentleman; the copy whereof among his letters hereafter followeth in the sequel of this story to be seen.
IT were a large and long process to declare all the doings, travels, and writings of this christian bishop, neither yet have we expressed all that came to our hands; but this I thought sufficient for the present. Thus he continued in his laborious function of a bishop some years, till the coming in of the six articles. Then being distressed through the straightness of time, so that either he must lose the quietness of a good conscience, or else forsake his bishopric, the latter of which he freely did, and Dr. Shaxton, the bishop of Salisbury, resigned likewise with him. At which time he threw off his rochet in his chamber among his friends, and suddenly gave a skip on the floor for joy, feeling his shoulder so light, and being discharged (as he said) of such a heavy burden. However, he was not so lightened, but that troubles and labours followed him wheresoever he went. For a little after he had renounced his bishopric, he was much bruised by the fall of a tree; then coming up to London for remedy, he was molested and troubled by the [Page 833] bishops, whereby he was again in no little danger, and at length was sent to the Tower, where he continually remained prisoner, till the time that the blessed king Edward entered his crown, by which the golden mouth of this preacher, long shut up before, was now opened again. And so he beginning afresh to set forth his plough again, continued all the time of the said king, labouring in the Lord's harvest most fruitfully, discharging his talent at Stamford, and before the duchess of Suffolk, and many other places in this realm (whose sermons are now extant) as also at London in the Convocation-house, and especially before the king at the court; in the same place of the inward garden, which was before applied to lascivious and courtly pastimes, there he dispensed the fruitful word of the glorious gospel of Jesus Christ, preaching there before the king and his whole court, to the edification of many.
AND thus he spent his time in king Edward's days, preaching for the most part, twice every Sunday, to the shame of all other loitering and un [...]eaching prelates, who occupy great rooms, and do little good; and so much the more to their shame, because he being a man so bruised by the fall of a tree, and above 67 years of age, took so little ease and care of sparing himself, to do the people good. Now to speak here of his indefatigable diligence in his private studies: notwithstanding his years, and the fatigue of so often preaching, it was his custom every morning, winter and summer, to be diligently at his book by two o'clock. How careful his heart was of the preservation of the church, and the good success of the gospel, his letters can testify, wherein he admonisheth those of their duty that were then in authority, and assisted them with his godly counsel.
AS the diligence of this man of God never ceased all the time of king Edward, to profit the church both publicly and privately, so it is likewise to be observed, that the same good Spirit of God that assisted and comforted him in preaching the gospel, did also enable him to foretel all those kinds of plagues, which afterwards ensued; ever if England had a prophet, he seemed to have been one. And as touching himself, he ever affirmed, that the preaching of the gospel would cost him his life, to which he no less chearfully prepared himself, than certainly was persuaded that Winchester was kept in the Tower for the same purpose, as the event did too truly prove the same. For after the death of the said pious king Edward, not long after queen Mary was proclaimed, a pursuivant was sent down (by the [...], no doubt, of Winchester) into the country, to call him up, of whose coming although Mr. Latimer lacked no forewarning, being premonished about six hours before by one John Careles, (whose story hereafter followeth) yet he was so far from endeavouring to escape, that he prepared himself for his journey before the said officer came to his house.
AT which when the pursuivant marvelled, seeing him so prepared for his journey, Mr. Latimer said unto him, My friend, you are a welcome messenger unto me. And be it known unto you and to all the world, that I go as willingly to London at this present, being called by my prince to render a reckoning of my doctrine, as ever I went to any place in the world. I doubt not but that God, as he hath made me worthy to preach his word before two excellent princes, so will he enable me to witness the same unto the third, either to her comfort, or discomfort eternally, &c. When the pursuivant had delivered his letters, he departed, affirming, that he had commandment not to tarry for him. By whose sudden departure it was manifest that they would not have him appear, but rather to have fled out of the realm. They knew that his constancy should deface them in their popery, and confirm the godly in the truth.
THUS Mr. Latimer being sent for, and coming up to London, (entering Smithfield, he merrily said, That Smithfield had long groaned for him) was brought before the council, where he patiently bearing all the mocks and taunts given him by the scornful papists, was again sent to the Tower, where being assisted with the heavenly grace of Christ, patiently sustained imprisonment a long time; notwithstanding the cruel and unmerciful usage of the lordly papists, who then thought their kingdom would never fall, yet he shewed himself [Page 834] not only patient, but also merry and chearful, in and above all that which they could work against him: yea, such a valiant spirit the Lord gave him, that he was able not only to despise the terribleness of prisons and torments, but also to deride and laugh to scorn even the cruel proceedings of his enemies. It is well known to many what answer he made to the lieutenant when he was in the Tower. For when the lieutenant's man upon a time came to him, the aged father, kept without fire in the frosty winter, and well nigh starved with cold, he bade the man tell his master, That if he did not look better after him, perchance he might deceive him.
THE lieutenant hearing this, and not knowing what to make of so odd a speech, and fearing that he would make in earnest his escape, began to look more strictly to his prisoner, and so coming to him, beginneth to charge him with his words, reciting the same unto him which his man had told him before; that if he were not better looked unto, perchance he might deceive him. Yea, Mr. Lieutenant, so I said, (says he) for I suppose you expect that I should burn; but except you let me have some fire, I am like to deceive your expectation, for I am like to starve here with cold.
MANY such-like answers and reasons, merry, but savoury, coming not from a vain mind, but from a constant and quiet reason, proceeded from that man, declaring a firm and stable heart, little minding all this blustering of their terrible threats, but rather deriding the same.
THUS Mr. Latimer passing a long time in the Tower, with as much patience as a man in his case could do, from thence was transported to Oxford, with Dr. Cranmer, archbishop of Canterbury, and Dr. Ridley, bishop of London, there to dispute upon articles sent down from Gardiner bishop of Winchester, as is before mentioned; the manner and order of which disputations between them and the university doctors, is also before sufficiently expressed. Where also is declared, how, and by whom the said Latimer, with his other fellow-prisoners, were condemned after disputations, and so committed again to the prison, and there they continued from the month of April till the month of October, where they were most godly occupied, either with brotherly conference, or with fervent prayer, or with fruitful writing.
ALBEIT, Mr. Latimer, by reason of the feebleness of his age, wrote least of them all, in this latter time of his imprisonment; yet in prayer he wa [...] fervently occupied, wherein oftentimes so long he continued kneeling, that he was not able to rise without help; and amongst other things, these were three principal matters that he prayed for.
FIRST, That as God had appointed him to be a preacher of his word, so also he would give him grace to stand to his doctrine until his death, that he might give his heart's blood for the same.
SECONDLY. That God of his mercy would restore his gospel to Eng [...]and once again; and these words Once again, Once again, he did so inculcate and beat into the ears of the Lord God, as though he had seen God before him, and spoken to him face to face.
THE third matter was, to pray for the preservation of the lady Elizabeth, whom in his prayer he used to name, and even with tears desired God to make her a comfort to this comfortless realm of England.
THESE were the matters he prayed for so earnestly. Neither were these things of him desired in vain, as the good success thereof after following did declare; for the Lord most graciously did grant all those his requests.
FIRST, Conce [...]ing his constancy, even in the most extremity the Lord graciously assisted him. For when he stood at the stake without Bocardogate at Oxford, and the tormentors about to set the fire to him, and to the learned and pious Dr. Ridley, he lifted up his eyes towards heaven, with an audible and comfortable countenance, saying these words, "God is faithful, which doth not suffer us to be tempted above our strength;" and so afterwards shed his blood in the cause of Christ, which blood ran out of his heart in such abundance, that all [Page 835] those that were present, being godly, did marvel to see the most part of the blood in his body to be gathered to his heart, and with such violence to gush out, his body being opened by the force of the fire; by which things God most graciously granted his request, which was, That he might shed his heart's blood in the defence of the gospel.
HOW mercifully the Lord heard his second request, in restoring his gospel once again unto this realm, these present days can bear record. And what then shall England say now for her defence, which being so mercifully visited and refreshed with the word of God, so slenderly and unthankfully considereth either her own misery past, or the great benefit of God now present? The Lord be merciful unto us, Amen.
AGAIN, concerning his third request, it seemeth likewise most effectually granted, to the great praise of God, the furtherance of his gospel, and to the unspeakable comfort of this realm. For whether at the request of his prayer, or of other God's holy saints, or whether God was moved with the cry of his whole church, the truth is, that when all was deplorable and in a desperate case, and so desperate that the enemies mightily flourished and triumphed, God's word was banished, Spaniards received, no place left for Christ's servants to cover their heads, suddenly the Lord called to remembrance his mercy, and forgetting our former iniquity, made an end of all these miseries, and wrought a marvellous change of things; at the change whereof the said queen Elizabeth was appointed and anointed, for whom this gray-headed father so earnestly prayed in his imprisonment: through whose true, natural, and imperial crown, the brightness of God's word was set up again to confound the dark and false vizored kingdom of Antichrist, the true temple of Christ re-edified, the captivity of sorrowful christians released, which so long was wished for in the prayers of so many good men, especially of this faithful and true servant of the Lord, Mr. Latimer.
THE same God, who at the requests of his holy, faithful saints hath poured upon us such benefits of his mercy, peace, and tranquillity, assist our most virtuous and christian prince, and his subjects, that we may every one in his state and calling serve to his glory, and walk in our vocation, that we lose not that which we have obtained, but may proceed in all faithfulness, to build and keep up the house and temple of the Lord, to the advancing of his glory, and our everlasting comfort in him. And thus much concerning the laborious travels of Mr. Latimer. Now after these things thus finished and discoursed, pertaining to the story of his life, let us come to his letters, which he wrote at divers and sundry times from the beginning of his preaching, all which here to comprehend, which he wrote both in English and Latin, want of room at present will not permit: nevertheless some we shall insert, and first concerning the articles above-mentioned, for which he was troubled by the priests of the country about his benefice at West-Kingston; which he writeth thereof to Mr. Morrice, the copies whereof follow.
ARTICLES untruly, unjustly, falsely, and uncharitably imputed to me by Dr. POWEL, of Salisbury.
FIRST, that our Lady was a sinner.
OCCASIONED of some, not only lay-men, but also priests and beneficed men, who gave so much to our lady of devotion without judgme [...] ▪ as though she had not needed Christ to save her. To prove Christ her Saviour, to make Christ a whole Saviour of all that be, or shall be saved, I reasoned after this manner: That either she was a sinner, or no sinner; there is no mean. If she was a sinner, then she was redeemed or delivered from sin by Christ, as other sinners be: if she was no sinner, then she was preserved from sin by Christ; so that Christ saved her, and was her necessary Saviour, whether she sinned or no. Now certain authors, said I, as Chrysostom, Theophylact, and others, write, as though she had been something faulty in her time. Also I said, that certain scriptures standeth to the same, unless they be the more warily understood and taken, (as in Rom. iii.10.20.) All have declined, that every mouth be stopped, and all the world be bounden or in danger to God. And after in the same chapter, All have sinned, and need the glory of God. And in the fifth, And [Page 836] so death passed through into all men and women, forasmuch as all have sinned. But to these scriptures I said it might be answered, that the privilege of one, or of a few, doth not derogate or diminish the verity of an universal exposition in scriptures.
AND as to the doctors, I said, that others say otherwise; and forasmuch as now it is universally and constantly received and applied that she was no sinner, it becometh every man to stand and agree to the same; and [...]o will I, said I, nor any man that is wise, will the contrary: but to my purpose it is neither to nor from, to prove neither this nor that; for I will have her saved, and Christ her Saviour, whether ever she was, &c.
AND to that, what need you to speak of this? I answered great need, when man cannot be content that she was a creature saved, but as it were a Saviouress, not needing salvation, it is necessary to set her in degree to the glory of Christ, Creator and Saviour of all that be or shall be saved. Good authors have written that she was not a sinner: but good authors never wrote that she was not saved: for though she never sinned, [...] she was not so impeccable, but she might have sinned, if [...] had not been preserved: it was of the goodness of God that she never sinned: it had come of her own illness if she had sinned: there was difference between her and Christ. And I will give as little to her as I can (doing her no wrong) rather than Christ her Son and Saviour shall lack any thing of his glory; and I am sure that our lady will not be displeased with me for so doing, for our lady sought his glory here upon earth, she would not defraud him now in heaven: but some are so superstitiously religious, or so irreligiously superstitious, so preposterously devout toward our lady, as though there could not too much be given to her: such are zeals without knowledge and judgment to our lady's displeasure.
NO doubt our lady was, through the goodness of God, a good and a gracious creature, a devout handmaid of the Lord, endued with singular gifts and graces from above, which through the help of God she used to God's pleasure, according to her duty, so giving example to do likewise, so that all the goodness that she had, she had it not of herself, but of God the author of all goodness: the Lord was with her favourably, and poured graces unto her plenteously, as it is in the Ave Maria. The son of God, when he would become man, to save both man and woman, did chuse her to be his mother, which love he shewed to her alone, and to no other, of his benign goodness, by which she was the natural mother of Christ: and through faith in Christ she was the spiritual sister of Christ, saved by Christ, blessed by hearing Christ's word, and keeping the same. It would not have availed her to salvation, to have been his natural mother, if she had not done the will of his heavenly Father: by him she was his mother, by him she did the will of his Father: she the hand-maiden, he the Lord. The hand-maiden did magnify the Lord, the hand-maiden would that all should magnify the Lord, to whom be honour and glory for ever, Amen.
TO honour him worthily, is not to dishonour our lady; he is as able to preserve from sin, as to deliver from sin; he was then subject to Joseph his father-in-law, his mother's husband; Joseph is now subject to him. He never dishonoured Joachim and Anna, his grandfather and grandmother, and yet I have not read that he preserved them from all sin.
TO say that Peter and Paul, David and Mary Magdalen, were sinners, is not to dishonour them: for then scripture doth dishonour them. It had not been for our profit to have preserved them all that he could have preserved.
FOR remembrance of that fall and up-rising keepeth us in our fall from despairing: both is of God, to have not sinned, and to have forsaken and left sin. And as sure is this of heaven as that, and this more common than that, and to us that have been sinners more comfortable.
IT hath been said in times past, without sin, that our lady was a sinner: but it was never said without sin, that our lady was not saved, but a Saviour: I do not go about to make my lady a sinner, but to have Christ her Saviour. When mine adversaries cannot reprove the thing that I say, then thy [Page 837] will belie me, to say the thing that they can reprove. They will sin to make our lady no sinner, to prove that, that no man dieth. So that provers, and so cold probations saw you never. It were better unproved, than so weakly proved. But they be devout towards honouring of our lady, but a sin to have our lady no sinner, or to say she was no sinner.
I would be as loath to dishonour our lady as they, I pray God we may honour her as she would be honoured; for verily she is worthy to be honoured.
TO make a pernicious and a damnable lie, to have our lady no sinner, is neither honour, nor yet pleasure to our lady, but great sin, to the dishonour and displeasure both of God and her.
THEY should both please and honour our lady much better, to believe their sinful living, and keep themselves from sinfulness, as our lady did, than so sinfully to lie to make our lady no sinner [...] which if they do not, they shall certainly go to the devil, though they believe ever so surely that our lady was no sinner.
AND for the Ave Maria they lie falsely, I never denied it: I know it was a heavenly salutation or greeting of our lady, spoken by the angel Gabriel, and written in the holy scripture of St. Luke. But yet it is not properly a prayer, as the Pater Noster is. Saluting or greeting, lauding or praising, is not properly praying. The angel was sent to greet our lady, and to communicate and shew the good will of God towards her, and therefore it is called, the Annunciation of our lady, and not to pray to her: shall the Father of heaven pray to our lady? When the angel spake it, it was not properly a prayer. And is it not the same thing now as it was the [...]? nor yet he that denieth the Ave Maria to be properly a prayer, denieth the Ave Maria; so that we may salute our lady with Hail Mary! as the angel did, though we be not sent of God so to do, as the angel was. Yet though we may so do, we have no plain command or so doing, as the angel had; so that the angel had been more to blame peradventure to have left it unsaid, than we be, forasmuch as he was appointed of God to say it, and not we: but as I deny not, but as we may say the Pater Noster, and the Ave Maria together, that to God, this to our lady, so we may say them separately, the Pater Noster by itself, and the Ave by itself; and the Pater Noster is a whole and a perfect prayer, without the Ave Maria; so that it is but a superstition to think that a Pater Noster cannot be well said without an Ave Maria at his heel. For Christ wa [...] no fool, and when he taught the people to say a Pater Noster to God, he taught them not to say, neither Pater Noster, neither Ave Maria to our lady, nor yet Pater Noster to St. Peter, as Mr. Hubberdin doth: therefore to teach to say twenty Ave Marias for one Pater Noster, is not to speak the word of God as the word of God. And one Ave Maria well said, and devoutly with affection, sense, and understanding, is better than twenty-five said superstitiously. And it is not like, but our lady said many times the Pater Noster, forasmuch as her son Christ, whom she loved and honoured over all, did make it, and taught it to be said; whether she made an Ave Maria with all, or ten or twenty Ave Marias for one Pater Noster. I will leave that to learned men, as Hubberdin and Powel, to discuss and determine: she was not saved by often saying of the Ave Maria, but by consenting to the will of him that sent the angel to salute her with Hail Mary: wherefore if the praying of them which decline thei [...] ear from hearing the law of God is execrable in the sight of God, yea, though they say the Pater Noster, I doubt not but the salutation of them hath been unpleasant to our lady in her sight, for whatsoever pleaseth not her Son, pleaseth not her; for she hath delight and pleasure in nothing, but in him, and in that which delighteth and pleaseth him. Now we will be traitors to her Son by customable sinful living, and yet we shall think great perfection and holiness in numbering every day many Ave Marias to our lady, and so we think to make her our friend and patroness, and then we care not for God: for having our lady on our side, we may be bold to take our pleasure: for we fancy as though the very work and labour of repeating the Ave Maria is very acceptable to our lady, and the more, the more acceptable, not minding how they be said, so that they be said: if the Pater Noster which Christ both made and commanded us to use, may be used to Christ's displeasure, much more the Ave Maria, which neither Christ nor our lady bid us say, may be said [...]o her displeasure; and [Page 838] better never once said, than often so said. I would have a difference between well saying and often saying, and between that which Christ bids us say, and that which he bid us not say: and whether Ave Maria be said in heaven or no, who can tell but Dr. Powel? and if it be said always there without a Pater Noster, why may not Pater Noster be said here without Ave Maria; and whether doth our lady say it in heaven or no? Which thing I speak not to withdraw you from saying of it, but to withdraw you from superstitious and unfruitful saying of it. So that by occasion of false faith and trust that you have in the daily saying of it, you se [...] not aside imitation and following of holy living, which will serve at length, when superstitious gree [...]ing will neither serve nor stand in strength: it is meet that every thing be taken, esteemed, and valued as it is.
WE salute also and greet well the holy cross, or the image of the holy cross, saying, All hail, holy cross, which hath deserved to bear the precious talent of the world: and yet who will say that [...]e pray properly to the holy cross? whereby it may appear that greeting is one thing, praying another thing. The cross can neither hear nor speak again, no more than this pulpit: therefore we do salute it, not properly pray to it.
THE angel spake also to Zachary, before he speak to our lady. Be not afraid, Zachary, for thy prayer i [...] heard, and thy wife Elizabeth shall bring thee forth a child which shall be called John, and great joy and gladness shall be at his birth, and he shall be great and full of the Holy Ghost from the womb of his mother, &c.
WHAT if a man should say these words every day, between the Pater Noster, and the Ave Maria, in the worship of St. Zachary, who I think is a saint in heaven, and was ere ever our lady came there to be honoured, I think he might please and honour St. Zachary, as well some other way, and better too, though they were words sent from God, spoken by an angel, and written by St. Luke in holy scripture.
AND yet if it were once begun and accustomed, I warrant some men would make it more than sacrilege to leave it off, though the devil should sow ever so much superstition by process of time unto it.
CHRIST made the Pater Noster for a prayer, and bid his people say it to his heavenly Father, One God in Trinity of Persons, one Father and Comforter, one Worker and Doer of all things here in this world, saying unto us, After this manner shall ye pray, Our Father, &c. God sent his Son, amongst other things, to teach his people to pray: God sent his angel to greet our lady, not to teach his people to pray. For neither Christ nor the angel said to the people, This shall you pray, Ave Maria. When the apostles said to Christ, Teach us to pray; Christ said, When you pray, say, Our Father: he said not when you pray, say, Ave Maria. I suppose Christ could teach to pray, as well as Dr. Powel and Mr. Hubberdin. I say that the Ave Maria was before the Pater Noster [...] D [...]. Powel saith, it shall endure after the Pater No [...]er: I can prove my saying by scripture, which he cannot: yet as it is no good argument, The Ave Maria was before the Pater Noster; Ergo, it is properly a prayer: so it is no good argument, The Ave Maria shall last after the Pater Noster; Ergo, it is properly a prayer, without the antecedent be impossible, which is not credible to come out of such a fantastical brain.
WHO was ever so mad as to think that words of [...]oly scripture could not be well said: and yet we may not be so peevish as to allow the superstitious sa [...]ing of holy scripture. The devil is crafty, and was frail and prone to superstition and idolatry; God give us grace to worship him and his, not after our own curiosity, but according to his ordinance with all humility.
ST. Zachary is to be honoured, and in no wise to be dishonoured; so that we may leave unsaid that which the angel said without dishonouring him.
IT is not necessary to our salvation to make an ordinance of honouring him, with saying as the angel did.
IT is better for a mortal man to do the office of a man, which God biddeth him to do, than to leave [Page 839] that undone, and do the office of an angel which God biddeth us not to do: if the other be presumption, I had rather presume to pray to God, which is God's bidding and man's office, than to presume into the office of an angel without God's bidding.
IT is a godly presumption, to presume to do the bidding of God.
HERE I neither say, that our lady wa [...] a sinner, nor yet deny the Ave Maria.
SAINTS are not to be honoured.
I Said this word [Saints] is diversly taken by the vulgar people; images of saints are called saints, and inhabiters of heaven are called saints. Now by honouring of saints, is meant praying to saints. Take honouring so, and images for saints; so saints are [...] to be honoured: that is to say, dead images are not to be prayed unto; for they have neither ears to hear withal, nor tongue to speak withal, nor heart to think withal, &c.
THEY can neither help me, nor mine ox, neither my head nor my tooth, nor work any miracle for me, one no more than another: and yet I shewed the good use of them to be laymen's books, as they are called, reverently to look upon them, to remember the things that are signified by them, &c.
AND yet I would not have them so costly and curiously gilt and decked, that the quick image of God, (for whom Christ shed his blood, and to whom whatsoever is done Christ reputeth it done to himself) lack necessaries and be unprovided for by that occasion, for then the layman doth abuse his book.
A man may read upon his book, though it be not very curiously gilded; and in the day-time a man may behold it without many candles, if he be not blind.
NOW I say there be two kinds of mediators, one by way of redemption, another by way of intercession; and I said that these saints, that is to say, images called saints, be mediators neither way.
AS touching pilgrimages, I said, that all idolatry, supertition, error, false faith, and hope in the images, must be pared away, before they can be well done, houshold looked upon, poor christian people provided for, restitutions made, all ordinance of God discharged, or ever they can be well done. And when they be at best, before they be vowed, they need not to be done▪ they shall never be required of us, though they be never done, and yet we shall be blamed when they be all done; wives must advise with their husbands, and husbands with their wives, both with curates, ere ever they may be vowed to be done.
AND yet idolatry may be committed in doing of them, as it appeareth by St. Paul, in the first epistle to the Corinthians, chap. x. where he biddeth the Corinthians this; to beware of idolatry, and that after they had received the true faith in Christ; which had been vain, if they could not have done i [...]latry: and expositors add, to beware not only of the act of idolatry, but also of all occasion of that act: which is plain against Mr. Hubberdin, and parson of Christ's church, who went about to prove, that now there could be no idolatry.
AS touching the saints in heaven, I said, They be not our mediators by way of redemption: for so Christ alone is our Mediator and their's both: so that the blood of martyrs hath nothing to do by way of redemption: the blood of Christ is enough for a thousand worlds, &c.
BUT by way of intercession, so saint [...] in heaven may be mediators, and pray for us, as I think they do, when we call not upon them; for they be charitable, and need no spurs, and we are not openly required of God in scripture to call upon them, as we call upon God, nor yet may we call upon them without any diffidence or mistrust in God; for God is more charitable, more merciful, more able, more ready to help than them all, so that though we may desire the saints in heaven to pray to God for us, yet it is not so necessary to be done, but that we may pray to God ourselves, without first making suit to them, and obtain of him whatsoever we need, if we continue in prayer; so that whatsoever we ask the Father in the name of Christ, his Son, the Father [Page 840] will give it us▪ for saints can give nothing without him, but he can without them, as he did give to them: scripture doth set saints that be departed before our eyes for our examples, so that the chiefest and most principal worship and honouring of them is to know their holy living, and to follow them, as they followed Christ, &c.
GOD biddeth us come to him with prayer, and to follow his advice is no presumption, it is rather presuming to leave it undone to do that which he biddeth us not do, &c. We must have saints in reverent memory, and learn, at God's goodness towards them to trust in God, and mark well their faith towards God and his word, their charity towards their neighbour, their patience in all adversity, and pray to God who gave them grace so to do, that we may do likewise, for such like doings we shall have like speedings, they be well honoured when God is well pleased; the saints were not saints by praying to saints, but by believing in him that made them saints: and as they were saints, so we may be saints; yea, there be many saints that never prayed to saints, and yet I deny not, but we may pray to saints, but rather to him who can make us saints, who calleth us to him, biddeth us call upon him, promiseth help, cannot deceive us and break his promise; when we pray faithfully to him we honour him, not after our own fantastical imagination, but even after his own wise ordinances, whom to honour is not to dishonour saints; therefore they lie that say, that I would not have saints to be honoured, &c.
There is no Fire in Hell.
I Never knew a man that said so. I speak of divers opinions that have been written of the nature of that fire; some that it is a spiritual fire, or at least way, a spiritual pain in the corporal fire; for as it is called a fire, so it is called a worm, but a spiritual and metaphorical worm, so they think of the fire. Some that it is a corporal and natural fire; some have thought diversly before the resurrection without the body, and after with the body; some that the soul without the body suffereth in the fire, but not of the fire; some both in and of the fire. The scholastic authors think, that the souls before the resurrection, because they be of spiritual substance, do not receive the heat of the fire into them, which is a sensible and a corporal quality, so that Athanasius, a Greek author, calleth their pain Tristitiam, a heaviness or anguish: and this opinion is probable enough: some think though they be always in pain, yet they be not always in fire; but go from waters of snow to exceeding heat; but it i [...] when their bodies be there; but whether in cold or heat, in water or in fire, in air or in earth, they lack no pain, their torment goeth with them, for they think that the devils that tempt us, though they have pain with them, yet they have not fire with them, for then they should be known by the heat of the fire.
I am certain, saith St. Augustine, that there is a fire in hell, but what manner of fire, or in what pa [...]t of the world, no man can tell but he that is of God [...]s privy council: I would advise every man to be more careful to keep out of hell, than trust he shall find no fire in hell. Chrysostom saith, That to be deprived the fruition of the Godhead, is grea [...] pain than being in hell: there is fire burning, there is heat, there is cold, there is pain without pleasure, torment without ease, anguish, heaviness, sorrow, and pensiveness, which tarrieth and abideth for all liars and hinderers of the truth.
There is no Purgatory after this life.
NOT for such liars as will bear me in hand to say that I said not: I shewed the state and condition of them that be in purgatory: then I denied it, not that they have charity in such surety, that they cannot lose it, so that they cannot murmur against God, cannot dishonour God, can neither displease God, nor be displeased with God, cannot be dissevered from God, cannot die, nor be in peril of death, cannot be damned, nor be in danger of damnation; cannot be but in surety of salvation; they be members of the mystical body of Christ as we be, and in more surety than we be; they love us charitably; charity is not idle, that is, it worketh and sheweth it, self, and therefore I say, they wish us well, and pray for us, they [...] not cry loud to God, they be in Christ, and Christ in them, they be with Christ, and Christ with them, they joy with the Lord Christ always, taking thankfully whatsoever God doth with them, ever giving thanks to their Lord God, ever [Page 841] and praising him in all things that he doth, discontent with nothing that he doth, &c.
AND forasmuch as they be always in charity, and when they pray for us, they pray always in charity, and be always God's friends, God's children, brethren and sisters to our Saviour Christ, even in God's favour, even have Christ with them, to offer their prayer to the Father of heaven, to whom they pray in the name of the Son. And we many times for lack of charity, having malice, envy, rancour, and hatred one towards another, be the children of the devil, inheritors of hell, adversaries to Christ, hated of God, his angels, and all his saints; they in their state may do us more good with their prayers, than we in this state. And they do us always good, unless the lack and impediment be in us; for prayer said in charity is more fruitful to him that it is said for, and more acceptable to God, than said out of charity; for God looketh not to the work of praying, but to the heart of the prayer. We may well pray for them, and they much better for us, which they will do of their charity, though we desire them not.
I had rather be in purgatory than in the bishop of London's prison; for in this I might die bodily for lack of meat; in that I could not. In this I might die spiritually for fear of pain, or lack of good counsel; in that I could not. In this I might be in extreme necessity, in that I could not, if extreme necessity be peril of perishing. And then you know what followeth, if we be not bounden by precept to help, [...] them that be in extreme necessity, we see not [...] needeth in purgatory, but we see who needeth in this world. And John saith, If thou see thy brother, and help him not, how is the charity of God in thee? Here, either we be, or we may be in extreme necessity, both in body and soul; in purgatory neither one nor other. Here we be bound to help one another, as we would be helped ourselves under pain of damnation. Here for lack of help, we may murmur and grudge against God, dishonour God, undo ourselves, which inconveniencies shall not follow, if we do our duty to one another. I am sure the souls in purgatory be so charitable, and of charity so loth to have God dishonoured, that they would have nothing withdrawn from the poor here in this world, to be bestowed upon them which might occasion the dishonour of God, &c.
THEREFORE, howsoever we do for purgatory, [...]et us provide to keep out of hell. And had I a thousand pounds to bestow, as long as I saw necessary occasion offered to me of God to dispense it upon my needy brother here in this world, according to God's commandment, I would not withdraw my duty from him for any provision of purgatory▪ as long as I saw dangerous ways unrepaired, poor men's daughters unmarried, men beg for lack of work, sick and sore for lack of succour. I would have difference between that which may be done and that which ought to be done, and this to go before that, and that to come after this: if God command one way, mine own devotion moveth me another way, which way should I go? I may by no trentals, no masses, no ladders of heaven, make a foundation for myself with other men's goods; goods wrongfully gotten must needs home again, must needs be restored to the owners, if they can be known, if not, they be poor men's goods: debts must needs be paid, creditors satisfied and content, God's ordinance towards my neighbour here in this world discharged, all affections and lusts moving to the contrary purged. Or else, though our soul-priests sing till they be blear-eyed, or say mass till they have worn their tongues to the stumps, neither their singings nor their sayings shall bring us out of hell, whither we shall go for contemning God's prohibitions.
HE that purgeth all errors of false opinions, all unwillingness to do God's ordinance, provideth not for hell or purgatory. Purgatory's iniquity had set aside restitutions, and brought poor christians to extreme beggary, replenished hell, and left heaven almost empty.
In Purgatory there is no pain
That can break their charity.
That can break their patience.
That can dissever them from Christ.
That can dissever Christ from them.
[Page 842] That can cause them to dishonour God.
That can cause them to displease God.
That can cause them to be displeased with God.
That can cause them to be discontent with God.
That can bring them to peril of death.
That can bring them to peril of damnation.
That can bring them to extreme necessity.
That can bring them from surety of salvation.
AND yet it followeth not that there is no pain.
HOWBEIT, if the bishop's two fingers can shake away a good part, if a friar's cowl, or the pope's pardon, or Scala Coeli of a groat, can dispatch for all together, it is not so greatly to be cared for, I have not leisure to write at large, and I wrote before such things which in this haste come now to mind.
THEY that can reclaim at this, that the souls in purgatory do pray for us, if they could get as much money for the prayer, that the souls in purgatory say for us, as they have done for that, that they have said for them, they would not reclaim: You know the wasp that doth sting them, and make them so swell, they that reclaim at that, do not reclaim at this, nor at this following.
Christ's blood is not sufficient without the blood of martyrs.
Magdalen did not know Christ to be God before his resurrection.
There can be no idolatry.
Rome cannot be destroyed.
The pope is lord of all the world.
Whatsoever he doth is well done.
Pater Noster is to be said to St. Peter.
Pater Noster is but a beggarly prayer.
Ave Maria is infinitely better.
Twenty Ave Marias for one Pater Noster.
It was not necessary for scripture to be written.
He that leaveth father and mother maketh for our pilgrimage.
With many more.
Mr. LATIMER'S LETTER to Mr. MORRICE, concerning the Articles written, which were falsely laid against him.
RIGHT worshipful, and mine own good master Morrice, health in Christ Jesus. And I thank you for all hearty kindness, not only heretofore shewed unto me, but also that now of late you would vouchsafe to write unto me so poor a wretch, to my great comfort among all these my troubles. I trust and doubt nothing in it, but God will reward you for me, and abundantly supply mine inability, &c. Mr. Morrice, you would wonder to know how I have been treated at Bristol, I mean by some of the priests, who first desired me, welcomed me, made me cheer, heard what I said, and allowed my saying in all things while I was with them; when I was gone home to my benefice, perceiving that the people favoured me so greatly, and that the mayor had appointed me to preach at Easter, privily they procured an inhibition for all them that had not the bishop's license, which they knew well enough I had not, and so craftily defeated master mayor's appointment, pretending they were sorry for it, procuring certain preachers to rail against me, as Hubberdin and Powel, with others, whom when I had brought before the mayor, and the wise council of the town, to know what they could lay to my charge, wherefore they so declaimed against me, they said they spake as they were informed: however no man could be brought forth that could stand to any thing: so that they had place and time to belie me shamefully, but they had no place or time to lay to my charge when I was present and ready to make them answer. God amend them, and assuage their malice, that they have against the truth and me, &c.
Our Lady was a sinner.
SO they did belie me to have said, when I had said nothing so, but to reprove certain▪ both priests and beneficed men, which do give [...]o much to our lady, as though she had not been saved by Christ, a whole Saviour, both of her, and of all that be, or shall be saved; I did reason after this manner, that either she was a sinner, or no sinner; if a sinner, than she was delivered from sin by Christ; so that he saved her, either by delivering or preserving her from sin, so that without him, neither she, nor none other, either be, or could be saved. And to avoid all offence, I shewed how it might be answered, both to certain scriptures, which maketh all generally sinners, and how it might be answered unto Chrysostom and Th [...]ophilact, which makes her namely and specially a sinner. But all would not serve, [Page 843] their malice was so great; notwithstanding that five hundred honest men can and will bear record. When they cannot reprove that thing that I do say, then will they belie me, to say that thing which they can reprove; for they will needs appear to be against me.
Saints are not to be worshipped.
SO they lied when I had shewn certain divers significations of this word [Saints] among the vulgar people: First, images of saints are called saints, and so they are not to be worshipped: take worshipping of them for praying to them; for they are neither mediators by way of redemption, nor yet by way of intercession. And yet they may be well used when they be applied to the uses for which they were ordained, to be laymens' books for remembrance of heavenly things, &c.
TAKE saints for inhabitants of heaven, and worshipping of them, for praying to them, I never denied, but that they might be worshipped, and be our mediators, though not by way of redemption, (for so Christ alone is a whole Mediator, both for them and for us) yet by the way of intercession.
Pilgrimage.
AND I never denied pilgrimage. And yet I have said that much scurf must be pared away, ere ever it can be well done; superstition, idolatry, false faith, and trust in the image, unjust estimation of the thing▪ setting aside God's ordinances for doing of the thing; debts must be paid, restitution made, wife and children must be provided for, duty to our neighbours discharged. And when it is at the best, before it be vowed, it need not be done, for it is neither under the command of God nor man to be done. And wives must advise with husbands, and husbands and wives with curates before it is done.
Ave Maria.
AS for Ave Maria, who can think that I would deny it? I said it was an heavenly greeting or [...]ting of our blessed lady, wherein the angel Gabriel, sent from the Father of heaven, did annunciate and shew unto her the good will of God towards her, and to what he had chosen her. But I said it was not properly a prayer, as the Pater Noster, which our Saviour Christ himself made for a p [...]per prayer, and bid us to say it for a prayer, n [...] adding that we should say ten or twenty Aves or Marias also, but not so that we shall think that the Pater Noster is not good, a whole and perfect prayer, nor cannot be well said without Ave Maria; so that I did not speak against the well saying of it, but against superstitious saying of it, and of the Pater Noster too; and yet I put a difference betwixt that, and that which Christ made to be said for a prayer.
No Fire in Hell.
WHO ever could say or think so? However, good authors do make a difference betwixt suffering in the fire with bodies, and without bodies. And as it is called a fire, so it is called a worm, and it is thought of some not to be a material worm, that is, a living beast, but it is a metaphor, but that is nothing to the purpose; for a fire it is, a grief, a misery, a sorrow, a heaviness inexplicable, and intolerable, whose nature and condition in every point, who can tell, but he that is of God's privy council, saith St. Austin? God give us grace rather to be diligent to keep us out of it, than to be curious to discuss the property of it; for certain we be, that there is little ease, yea, none at all, but weeping, wailing, and gnashing of teeth▪ which be two effects of the extreme pain, rather certain tokens what pain there is, than what manner of pain there is.
No Purgatory.
HE that sheweth the state and condition of it, doth not deny it. But I had rather be in it than in Lollard's Tower, the bishop's prison, for divers reasons.
First, In this I might die bodily for lack of meat and drink; in that I could not.
Item, In this I might die spiritually for fear of pain, or lack of good council; there I could not.
Item, In this I might be in extreme necessity; in that I could not, if it be peril of perishing.
[Page 844] Item, In this I might lack charity; there I could not.
Item, In this I might lose my patience; in that I could not.
Item, In this I might be in danger of death; in that I could not.
Item, In this I might be without surety of salvation; in that I could not.
Item, In this I might dishonour God; in that I could not.
Item, In this I might murmur and grudge against God; in that I could not.
Item, In this I might displease God; in that I could not.
Item, In this I might be displeased with God; in that I could not.
Item, In this I might be judged to perpetual prison, as they call it; in that I could not.
Item, In this I might be craftily handled; in that I could not.
Item, In this I might be brought to bear a faggot; in that I could not.
Item, In this I might be discontented with God; in that I could not.
Item, In this I might be separated and dissevered from Christ; in that I could not.
Item, In this I might be a member of the devil; in that I could not.
Item, In this I might be an inheritor of hell; in that I could not.
Item, In this I might pray out of charity, and in vain; in that I could not.
Item, In this my lord and his chaplains might manacle me by night; in that they could not.
Item, In this they might strangle me, and say that I hanged myself; in that they could not.
Item, In this they might have me to the consistory, and judge me after their fashion; from thence they could not.
Ergo, I had rather be there than here. For tho' the fire be called ever so hot, yet if the bishop's two fingers can shake away a piece, a friar's cowl another part, and Scala Coeli all together, I will never found abbey, college, nor chauntry, for that purpose.
FOR seeing there is no pain that can break my charity, break my patience, cause me to dishonour God, to displease God, to be displeased with God, cause me not to joy in God, nor that can bring me to danger of death, or to danger of desperation, or from surety of salvation, that can separate me from Christ, or Christ from me, I care the less for it. John Chrysostom saith, the greatest pain that damned souls have, is to be separate and cut off from Christ for ever; which pains the souls in purgatory neither have nor can have.
CONSIDER, Mr. Morrice, whether provision for purgatory hath not brought thousands to hell. Debts have not been paid; restitution of evil-gotten lands and goods hath not been made; christian people (whose necessities we see, to whom whatsoever we do Christ reputeth done to himself, to whom we are bound under pain of damnation to do for, as we would be done for ourselves) are neglected and suffered to perish, last wills unfulfilled and broken; God's ordinance set aside: and also for purgatory, foundations have been taken for sufficient satisfaction; so we have trifled away the ordinances of God and restitutions. Thus we have gone to hell with masses, dirges, and ringing of many a bell. And who can pull pilgrimages from idolatry, and purge purgatory from robbery, but he shall be in peril to come in suspicion of heresy with them? So that they may fleece with pilgrimage, and spoil with purgatory. And verily the abuse of them cannot be taken away, but great lucre and advantage shall fall away from them, who had rather have profit with abuse, than lack the same with use; and that is the wasp that doth sting them, and maketh them to swell. And if purgatory were purged of all that it hath gotten, by setting aside restitution, and robbing of Christ, it would be but a poor purgatory; so poor, that it should not be able to feed so fat, and trick up so many idle and slothful lubbers.
[Page 845]I take God to witness, I would hurt no man, but it grieveth me to see such abuse continue without remedy: I cannot understand what they mean by the pope's pardoning of purgatory, but by way of suffrage, and as for sufferage, unless he do his duty, and seek not his own, but Christ's glory, I had rather have the suffrage of Jack in the skullery, who in his calling doth exercise both faith and charity; but as for his mass, that is as good of another simple priest as of him. As for authority of keys, it is to loose from guiltiness of sin and eternal pain, due to the same, according to Christ's word, and not to his own private will: and as for pilgrimage, you would wonder what juggling there is to get money withal. I dwell within half a mile of the Foss-way, and you would wonder to see how they come by flocks out of the west-country to many images, but chiefly to the blood of the Hailes. And they believe verily that it is the very blood that was in Christ's body, shed upon the mount of Calvary for our salvation, and that the sight of it with their bodily eye doth certify them, and putteth them out of doubt, but they be clean in life, and in a state of salvation without spot of sin, which doth embolden them to do many things. For you would wonder if you should commune with them both coming and going, what faith they have. For as for forgiving their enemies, and reconciling their christian brethren, they cannot away withal; for the sight of that blood doth quit them for a time.
I read in scripture of two certifications; one to the Romans; "We being justified by faith have peace with God."
If I see the blood of Christ with the eye of my soul, that is, true faith, that his blood was shed for me, &c.
ANOTHER in the epistle of St. John: "We know that we are translated from death to life, because we love the brethren." But I read not that I have peace with God, or that I am translated from death to life, because I see with my bodily eye the blood of Hailes. It is very probable, that all the blood that was in the body of Christ, was united and knit to his Divinity, and then no part thereof shall return to his corruption. And I marvel that Christ shall have two resurrections. And if it were that they did violently and injuriously pluck it out of his body when they scourged him and nailed him to the cross, did see it with their bodily eye, yet they were not in clean life. And we see the selfsame blood in form of wine, when we have consecrated, and may both see it, feel it, and receive it to our damnation, as touching bodily receiving. And many do see it at Hailes without confession, as they say. God knoweth all, and the devil in our time is not dead.
CHRIST hath left a doctrine behind him, wherein we be taught how to believe, and what to believe; he doth suffer the devil to use his craftiness, for our trial and probation. It were little thank-worthy to believe well and rightly, if nothing should move us to false faith, and to believe superstitiously. It was not in vain that Christ, when he had taught truly, by and by said, Beware of false prophets, who would bring in error slily. But we be secure and careless, as though false prophets could not meddle with us, and as if the warning of Christ were no more earnest and effectual, than is the warning of mothers when they trifle with their children, and bid them beware the bugg, &c.
LO, sir, now I run at riot beyond measure. When I began, I was minded to have written but half a dozen lines; but thus I forget myself, whenever I write to a trusty friend, who will take in worth my folly, and keep it from mine enemy, &c.
AS for Dr. Wilson, I know not what I should say; but I pray God endue him with charity. Neither he nor any of his countrymen, did ever love me, since I did inveigh against their factions, and partiality in Cambridge. Before that, who was more favoured of him than I? That is the bile that may not be touched, &c.
A certain friend shewed me, that Dr. Wilson is gone now into his country, about Beverly, in Holderness, and from thence he will go a journey thro' York-shire, Lancashire, Cheshire, and so from thence to Bristol. What he intended by this progress, God knoweth, and not I. If he come to Bristol, I shall hear, &c.
AS for Hubberdin (no doubt) he is a man of no [Page 846] great learning, nor yet of stable wit. He is here Servus Hominum; for he will preach whatsoever the bishops will bid him preach. Verily in my mind they are more to be blamed than he. He doth magnify the pope more than enough. As for our Saviour Christ and christian kings, they are little beholding to him. No doubt he did miss the cushion in many things. However, they that did send him, men think, will defend him; I pray God amend him and them both. They would fain make matter against me, intending so either to deliver him by me, or else to rid us both together, and so they would think him well bestowed, &c.
AS touching Dr. Powel, how highly he took upon him in Bristol, and how little he regarded the sword, which representeth the king's person, many can tell you. I think there is never an earl in this realm that knoweth his obedience by Christ's commandment to his prince, and knoweth what the sword doth signify, that would have taken upon him so stoutly. However Mr. Mayor, as he is a profound wise man, did flout prettily; it were too long to write all. Our pilgrimages are not a little beholding to him; in favour of which he alledged this text: Whoever leaveth father, house, wife, &c. By that you may perceive his hot zeal and crooked judgment, &c. Because I am so belied, I could wish that it would please the king's grace to command me to preach before his highness a whole year together every Sunday, that he himself might perceive how they belie me, saying, that I have neither learning nor utterance worthy thereunto, &c. I pray you pardon me, I cannot make an end.
A brief Digression concerning the railing of Mr. HUBBERDIN against Mr. LATIMER.
FORASMUCH as mention hath been made in this letter of Mr. Hubberdin, an old divine of Oxford, a right painted pharisee, and a great strayer abroad in all quarters of the realm, to deface and impeach the purity of God's gospel, something will be added more concerning that man, whose doings and pageants, if they might be described at large, it were as good as an interlude for the reader to behold. Who in all his life, and in all his actions, (in one word to describe him) seemeth nothing else but a right image or a counterfeit, setting out unto us in lively colours the pattern of perfect hypocrisy. But because the man is now gone, to spare therefore the dead. (although he little deserved to be spared, who never spared to work what villainly he could against the true servants of the Lord) this shall be enough for example's sake, for all christian m [...]n necessarily to observe, how the said Hubberdin, after his long railing in all places against Luther, Melacthon, Zuinglius, John Frith, Tindal, Latimer, and all other like professors, after his hypocritical open alms given out of othe [...] men's purses, his long prayers, devout fastings, his mean habit, and other his prodigious demeanor, riding in his long gown down to the horse-heels like a pharisee, or rather like a sloven dirted up to the horse's belly, after [...] forged tales and fables, dialogues, dreams, dancings, hoppings and leaping, with other player-like toys and gestures used in the pulpit, and all against heretics; at last riding by a church side, where the youth of the parish were dancing in the churchyard, he suddenly alighting from his horse, by the occasion of their dancing, came into the church, and there causing the bell to toll in the people, thought instead of a fit of mirth, to give them a sermon of dancing. In which sermon, after he had patched up certain common texts out of the scriptures, and then coming to the doctors, first to Augustine, then to Ambrose, so to Jerome and Gregory, Chrysostom, and other doctors, had made them every one (after his dialogue manner) by name to answer to his call, and to sing after his tune for the probation of the sacrament of the altar against John Frith, Zuinglius, Oecolampadius, Luther, Tindal, Latimer, and other heretics (as he called them): at last to shew a perfect harmony of these doctors together, as he had made them before to sing after his tune, so now to make them dance also after his pipe, first he calleth out Christ and his apostles, then the doctors and ancient seniors of the church, as in a round ring all to dance together; with pipe up Hubberdin. Now dance Christ, now dance Peter, [...], now dance Augustine, Ambrose, Jerome▪ and th [...] old Hubberdin, as he was dan [...]ing with his do [...]tors▪ lustily in the pulpit against the heretics, how he st [...]mped and took on I cannot tell, but crash came the pulpit, down cometh the dancer, and there [...] Hubberdin, not dancing, but sprawling in the midst of his audience; [Page 829] where although he brake not his neck, yet he brake so his leg at the same time, and bruised his old bones, that he never came in the pulpit more, and died not long after the same. Whereupon when the church-wardens were called, and charged for the pulpit not being stronger, they made answer again, excusing themselves that they had made their pulpit for preaching and not for dancing, &c. But to spend no more paper about this idle matter, now to our purpose again.
AMONGST many other accusers and adversaries, whereof there was no small sort which did infest this good man in sermons, some also there were which attempted the pen against him. In the number of whom was one Dr. Sherwood, who upon the same occasion of preaching of the virgin Mary (or as they thought against the virgin) did invade him with his pen, writing against him in Latin, whose long epistle, with Mr. Latimer's answer also in Latin to the same, hereunder followeth now translated into English.
LETTER From Dr. WILLIAM SHERWOOD to Mr. LATIMER. William Sherwood, Priest, to Mr. Latimer, Rector of West-Kingston, Grace and Peace from God the Father, and from the Lord Jesus Christ.
PResuming you will not take it amiss to be christianly admonished by a christian, I have sent these lines, to reason with you about some things delivered by you in a sermon, or rather a satyre, lately preached at Greatfield, not much like a christian: and first, concerning the parable of the thief and the shepherd, where you truly said, that our Saviour reproved the scribes and pharisees for the hardness of their hearts, but not openly, but secretly, and in general he did not say to every one of the scribes and pharisees, Ye are thieves and robbers; but what did he say? Why, verily I say unto you, he who enters not by the door into the sheepfold, but climbeth in some other way, the same is a thief and a robber: on the contrary, you openly declare all popes, bishops, and priests, to be thieves and robbers (yourself, and a few of the refuse of the people excepted); thus you have preached or deceived the people: but perhaps you meant it for an hyperbole, if so, it was a very cruel and unjust one. My brother, we are not so rashly to judge before the time (if we may believe St. Paul) when the Lord shall come, who will bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and manifest the counsels of the heart: also Christ himself, whom the Father has appointed Judge both of the living and the dead, in Matthew, seems to forbid the rash judging of our neighbour, where he says, Judge not that ye be not judged, for with what judgment ye judge ye shall be judged, and with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again, and such like.
I would have vice exposed, but I would not have light put for darkness, nor darkness for light; nor that good should be called evil, and evil good, sweet bitter, and bitter sweet. If this should be, then each in his turn would devour one another. But I need urge this no farther, the thing itself appears so plain, we know your designs, and what notice has been taken of them. Alas! alas! Latimer, what madness urged you to preach, or lie, saying, There are more thieves than shepherds, more goats than sheep? St. Cyprian said otherwise, Let God be true, and every man a liar, the greater number of christians is still best, more are those who keep the faith entire than those the devil has seduced: you also cry out against those things which the church hath in the highest reverence, [...] have been brought in by those who have suffered for the name of Christ. For you say, any man who like Peter did confess Christ to be the Son of the living God, has as much power as Peter, and that the church there mentioned signifies any congregation; so that Peter was no more Christ's supreme vicar on earth than any other christian. St. Origen says, we are like Peter, if we make the same confession as he did, namely, Thou art the Son of the living God, not by flesh and blood revealed unto us, but by the Father who is in heaven illuminating our minds; shall we say that these words are of as great force as those spoke to Peter himself? No, no. For after the name of Christ all his faithful servants are called, as says the prophet, that he might save his Christs, and again, Touch not my Christs. The word [...] here used differ from those which only signify anointed. [Page 848] Erasmus (whom you follow and imitate in many things) in his annotations on the 16th chapter of St. Matthew, upon these words, Thou art Peter, &c. says very justly, that he was the first Roman pontiff and head of the christian faith. But if, like you, we should say this of all christians equally with Peter, we should fall into that error of Luther, that all christians are priests, and that after ordination they have no more power than before, that only licensing them to exercise i [...]. But this has been condemned by the church a great while ago.
ON those words of Christ, where he says, The least of these precepts, you say he alludes to the wickedness of the scribes and pharisees, who to raise their own traditions, called the divine commandments, The least commandments: but here you differ widely from Origen, a diligent interpreter of scripture, who in his homily on the fifth of St. Matthew, says, Some precepts may be called least, since from the observation of them it is said, some shall be great in the kingdom of heaven.
YOU find fault because we say that Christ went up into the mount only with a few disciples, the multitude, the scribes and pharisees not being worthy to hear that divine sermon; you have subjoined (not much like a christian, I think) that a christian man who hath any carnal desires, is no more a christian than a Jew or a Turk, this seems to me not like a christian, but Oecolampadian—
[Some things are here wanting, which perhaps may be supplied from Mr. Latimer's answer.]
THIS was needful to bring back the Germans to the beneficial confession of Peter; what it is you here drive at I do not know; is it his supremacy, truly every catholic is obliged to defend it with all his strength; had not Peter the supremacy, the words of Christ are of no effect, (I give thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven, &c) if there is no need to defend the supremacy of Peter, there is no need to defend the truth, for which every one ought to contend even to death. I cannot think the Germans can be brought to a beneficial confession of Peter without acknowledging his supremacy; is Christ the Son of the living God? The Son of God is truth, but Christ is not truth if Peter ha [...] no supremacy. What a foul fall is here, for no advantage can come from the confession of Christ to that man who will not preserve and defend the apostolic chair with all his might: you say this is one of the most bare-faced lies, that Christ was in the mountain only with a few disciples. Origen, the most accurate interpreter of scripture, in his sermon on the fifth of St. Matthew, says plainly as I say, Jesus went down from the mountain, and there followed many multitudes; the disciples were with him in the mount, for to them it was given to know the secrets of his heavenly doctrine, the knowledge of salvation, which makes the heart of the most brutish to rejoice; they were to spread abroad the light of truth, to enlighten the eyes of those blinded with the thick darkness of worldly delight, whence it was our Lord said to them, Ye are the salt of the earth, ye are the light of the world: but now descending from the mount, the multitudes followed him; into the mountain none were able to ascend to hear those sublime mysteries, but those who had cast away the burden of all worldly delights. Thus you hear how Origen approves of mine and not of your interpretation.
YOU have found out certain false preachers, who I know not, howsoever they are well known to you, who persuade the people it is enough for a christian to believe as the church believe, though at the same time they know neither what nor how the church believes, so the miserable vulgar are deterred from seeking after a larger knowledge of God; that there are such preachers we are beholden to the Lutheran and heretic churches, they cannot possibly be in ours, since the bridegroom hath promised never to desert his spouse the church. What you have said else I pass over as mere jests. It is plain, that, lastly, you say I argue philosophically of the justification of faith, and yet you cannot overthrow my argument, but whether it is arguing philosophically, to say we are not justified by faith only, but rather by works done in faith and charity? If this is to argue like a philosopher, then I am one, and not I only, but St. James also. Faith is, I confess, as St. Augustine rightly saith, the root and foundation of a holy life, which is the performance of all good [Page 849] by which we are justified; let no man think that faith alone is able to justify exclusive of all good and pious works, the rest seeing I have forgot, I pass over; I shall only add, if thou dost well, shalt thou not be rewarded? but if thou dost ill, sin lieth at thy door. When I have more leisure I shall write more fully of those things, till when farewel.
LETTER In answer to the foregoing, by Mr. Latimer.
HEALTH to you in abundance. I do not know, worthy sir, that I am so fierce as not to bear patiently any christian admonition, or so insensible, that when slandered, admonished, confuted, condemned by calumny and lies, I should justify myself; what if I should answer your letter with the same liberty you take? But I forbear, lest instead of convincing I provoke your passion; rather God give us both wisely to know him, and to me patience worthy of a christian amidst so many afflictions, and to you a right judgment, that you be not transported too far by an over hot zeal. I thought this prayer better than any apology for answering you, being withal so busy in writing a sermon which I must preach the day after to-morrow, that I have no more leisure than there is obligation, to answer all your heap of lies; but that I may satisfy you a little, I will say a few things to a great many. And first, the thing is what I have said, and what you say I have said. And here you are so hard put to it, that, as the saying is, you are forced to skin a flint; but so it is, that through all you say there runs a continued strain of rage and malice. Suppose I said, that all popes, bishops, and priests, entering not by the door into the sheepfold, but climbing up some other way, were thieves and robbers; the stress lays on their entering and climbing up, not on their persons or titles; and I say no more than what Christ himself says: hence, you of your own head charge me with saying, that all popes, bishops, and priests, were thieves and robbers. Now (my brother) is this fairly to be collected from what I said? May not I justly apply to you that of St. Paul to the Romans, So they say we said, but they speak evil of us, and their [...] is just; and yet St. Paul's adversaries [...] justly draw their conclusions from what he said, than you can from what I said. If the word of God is the same as it was at first, and the ministers of that word are as acceptable to him now as they were then, doth not the same damnation remain for their calumniators? But there is a great difference, you say, between saying all that enter not by the door are thieves and robbers, and saying simply, that all were thieves and robbers. But whence comes it, I beseech you, that whilst I say all that enter not by the door, should seem to you simply to say all in general; unless more seem to you to ascend some other way, than to enter by the door, though you are too wise to own it? And if it is so, there is no wonder there should be more thieves than shepherds. For whether you will own it or not, it is true that whoever enter not by the door are thieves and robbers, whether they be popes, bishops, or priests. You say our Saviour reproved the scribes and pharisees privately, but the scriptures says that to their face; and before a great multitude he said unto them, Woe unto you, scribe [...] and pharisees, hypocrites, &c.
YOU advise me not to judge lest I be judged, and this ought to teach you how necessary it is for liars to have good memories, lest your throat be cut with your own sword, and you fall into the pit you had dug for others, for I think you pass your judgment upon me when you say, I account all thieves and robbers but myself and a few of the refuse of the people; you cry out that I have invaded the power of St. Peter, and of the keys, when I said not one word of the power of the keys, or made mention of St. Peter's supremacy: I told them not to build on a sandy foundation, but on the rock of Christ, not to be content with a dead faith, lest they endangered their own salvation, but to shew their faith by their works, that at the last they may attain everlasting life. You know well what Luther's sentiments were of the church, and I can readily subscribe to what Lyra, after many others, says on the 16th of St. Matthew, That the church doth not consist of men great either by ecclesiastical or civil power, for [...] have found that many princes and pope [...] hav [...] [...]postatised from the faith, but of such who have a true knowledge both of the [Page 850] faith and truth of the christian religion With him agree St. Jerome and St. Chrysostom, who say, there are some more ready to defend the supremacy of St. Peter, a thing of no necessity, than to make that blessed confession which would be of real use: you dare to say, that Christ, when he called some of the commandments least, did not allude to the impiety of the pharisees, and that because you had read Origen had otherwise interpreted it; but may not one and the same place of scripture be differently expounded by different persons? Because Origen took no notice of this allusion, doth it therefore follow that nobody else should; when Christ himself tells them that they made the commandments of God of no effect by their traditions? Again, except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the scribes and pharisees, ye shall in no case enter the kingdom of heaven; you say, Christ preached his sermon on the mount only to a few of his disciples; this is plainly to contradict the scripture. In the 7th of St. Matthew it is said, that having ended these sayings, they were astonished at his doctrine, for he taught them as one that had authority. Who was it that were astonished? Why St. Luke will tell you it was the multitude that heard him, chapter the 7th, when he had ended all his sayings in the audience of the people; as to that of blaming any person for believing as the church believes, it is either your ill will which made you deaf, or else you were willing to hear what was never spoke. What I said was, that many false preachers tell the people to believe as the church believes, when they are ignorant in what manner the church believes. As to what, lastly, you call so inhuman, see St. Jerome on the 26th of St. Matthew, I say a christian, that is, one admitted into the church by baptism, if he answers not his profession, but give [...] himself up to fleshly desires, is in respect of eternal life which is promised to christians, no more a christian than a Jew or a Turk; yea, I say his condition shall [...]e worse at the last day, if he says true, who says, It was better never to have known the way of truth, than after they have known, to fall away; it is the duty of a preacher to exhort all so to live with Christ here, that they may reign with him hereafter, otherwise (whatever they may think) they are no christians, so the interpreters of the scriptures speaks, but this seems to you heretical, for a covetous man, a fornicator, or a murderer, with you is a good catholic, and a servant of Christ, but these are also servants of sin and the devil, therefore they can serve two masters, which was what Christ did not know. If so, a dead faith may be catholic, and devils may be members of the catholic church, as being those, who according to St. James believe and tremble. You say a fornicator believes in Christ, he who believes in Christ shall not perish, but have everlasting life: also St. Paul writing to the Galatians, which had erred from the faith, calls them a church, and to the Corinthians, in one chapter, calls them both carnal persons and the temple of God, because some were good and some bad, the evangelical n [...]t gathering of all sorts. Now, pray, is it a crime to exhort all to do good and not evil? If your discourse is no gentler than your letter, I desire I may hear none of it, but all bitterness, anger, and evil-speaking, with all malice, being taken from you, neither your discourse nor writing would be burdensome to me. I believe you desire no such auditors as yourself, and unless God gives you a better disposition, I shall never desire you to be one of mine.
LETTER From Mr. LATIMER to Dr. SHERWOOD.
MAY the Spirit of truth be with you. I have read your letter through carefully, but it is more worthy of the flames than of my perusal, it abounds so much with slanders. What you have truly said you shall soon see. It is now a great [...]ile ago since several persons, who heard the sermon preached at Marchfield, told me, you being present suffered the person openly, and with authority, to say that those were unworthy and miserable wretches who saluted the virgin mother of God with the angelic salutation, unless they could raise her up again that she might bear Christ. I said, this was neither christianly nor religiously done▪ had you not been there; for we ought not to offend pious christians, who may not believe just as we do. Now whether this was slandering, or not, rather giving pious and religious advice, &c.
[The remaining part of this letter is vin [...]dicating [Page 851] himself from the same things as the former, and almost in the same words, which for brevity's sake we omit.]
LETTER From Mr. LATIMER to Sir EDWARD BAYNTON. Knt.
RIGHT worshipful sir, I recommend myself unto you, with hearty thanks for your friendly, charitable, and mindful remembrance of so poor a wretch. Whereas of late I received your letters by Mr. Bonnam, and perceiving therein who are grieved with me, and what behoveth me to do in case I must needs come up, for which your goodness towards me, whereas I myself am not able to recompense, I shall not cease to pray to my Lord God, who is both able, and also doth indeed regard all them that favou [...] the favourers of his truth for his sake; for the truth is a common thing, pertaining to every man, for which every man shall answer another day. And I desire favour neither of your mastership, nor of any man else, but in the truth and for the truth, I take God to witness, which knoweth all.
IN very deed Mr. Chancellor did shew me, that my lord bishop of London had sent letters to him for me; and I made answer that he was mine ordinary, and that he might and should reform me as far as I needed reformation, as well and as soon as my lord of London. And I would be very loth (now this deep winter) being so weak and so feeble, (not only exercised with my old disease in my head and side, but also with new, both the cholic and stone) to take such a journey▪ and though he might so do, yet he needed not, for he was not bound so to do. Notwithstanding I said, if he, to do my lord of London pleasure, to my great displeasure, would needs command me to go, I would obey his command, yea, though it should be ever so great a grievance and painful to me. With which answer he was content, saying, he would certify my lord of London thereof, trusting his lordship would be content with the same.
M [...]. CHANCELLOR also said, that my lord of London seemed greatly displeased with me, because I contemned his authority at my last being in London. Forsooth, I preached in [...]-church, not certain then (as I remember) whether in his dioces [...] or no, intending nothing less than to contemn his authority; and this I did at the request of honest merchantmem, as they seemed to me, whose names I do not know, for they were not of my acquaintance before; and I am glad thereof for their sakes, lest if I knew them, I should be compelled to utter them so, and their good desire to hear godly preaching should turn to their trouble; for they required me very earnestly, and to say the truth, very importunately. Whether they were of that parish or no, I was not certain: but they shewed not only themselves, but also many others, to be very desirous to hear me, pretending great hunger and thirst of the word of God, and spiritual doctrine And upon consideration, and to avoid all inconveniences, I put them off, and refused them twice or thrice, till at last they brought me word, that the p [...]rson and curate were not only content, but also desired me; notwithstanding that they certified him both of my name plainly, and also that I had not the bishop's seal to shew for me, but only a license of the university: which curate did receive me, welcomed me, and when I should go into the pulpit, gave me the common benediction; so that I had been not only uncharitable, but also churlishly uncharitable, if I should have said nay. Now all this supposed to be truth, (as it is) I marvel greatly how my lord of London can alledge any contempt of him in me.
FIRST, He did never inhibit me in my life; and if he did inhibit his curate to receive me, what pertaineth that to me, who did neither know thereof, nor yet made any suit to the curate deceitfully; nor did it appear to me very likely, that the curate would so little have regarded my lord's inhibition, which he maintaineth so vigilantly, not knowing my lord's mind before. Therefore I conjectured with myself, that either the curate was of such acquaintance with my lord, that he might admit whom he would; or else (and rather) that it was a train and a trap laid before me, to the intent that [Page 852] my lord himself, or some pertaining to him, appointed to have been there, and to have taken me if they could in my sermon; which conjecture both occasioned me somewhat to suspect those men which desired me, though they spake ever so fair and friendly, and also rather to go. For I preach nothing, but if it might be so, I would my lord himself might hear me every sermon I preach. So certain I am, that it is truth which I take in hand to preach. If I had with power of my friends (the curate gainsaying and withstanding me) presumed to have gone into the pulpit, there had been something wherefore to pretend a contempt. I preached in Kent also, at the earnest request of a curate; yet I do not hear that this ordinary layeth any contempt to my charge, or yet doth trouble the curate.
I marvel not a little how my lord bishop of London, having so large and populous a diocese committed to his charge, can have leisure for preaching and teaching the word of God, opportunely and pressingly, in season and out of season, publicly and privately, to his own flock, in persuading, confuting, exhorting, and admonishing with all mildness and doctrine, have leisure (I say) either to trouble me, or to trouble himself with me, so poor a wretch, a stranger to him, an [...] nothing pertaining to his cure, but as every man pertaineth to every man's cure, so intermixing and intermeddling himself with another man's cure, as though he had nothing to do in his own. If I would do as some men say my lord doth, gather up riches, warily and covetously, and yet neither preach for it in mine own cure, nor elsewhere, peradventure he would deny me nothing. In the very deed I did admonish both judges, and ordinaries, to use charitable equity in their judgments towards such as be accused, namely, of such accusers, who be as like to hear and betray, as others be to say amiss, and to take men's words in the meaning thereof, and not to wrest them in another sense than they were spoken in: for all such accusers and witnesses do evil before God, as St. Jerome saith, upon the 26th chapter of St. Matthew. Nor yet do I account those judges well advised, who wittingly will give sentence after such witnesses, much less those who procure such witnesses against any man: nor do I think judges now-a-days so deeply confirmed in grace, or so impeccable, but that it may become preachers to admonish them to do well, as well as other men both great and small. And this I did, occasioned of the [...]pi [...]e which I declared, Rom. vi. wherein is this sentence: Ye are not under the law but under grace: ye christian men that believe in Christ, are not under the law. What a saying is this, (says I) if it be not rightly understood, that is, as St. Paul did understand it? for the words sound as though he would go about to occasion christian men to break the law, seeing they be not under the law: and what if pseudo-apostles, adversaries to St. Paul, would have so taken them, and accused St. Paul to my lord of London? If my said lord would have heard St. Paul declare his own mind of his own words, then he should have escaped, and the false apostles put to rebuke; if he would have rigorously followed whatsoever was alledged and proved, and have given sentence after relation of the accusers, then good St. Paul must have borne a faggot at Paul's Cross, my lord of London being his judge. O, it had been a godly sight to have seen St. Paul with a faggot on his back, even at Pauls Cross, my lord of London, bishop of the same, sitting under the cross. Nay, verily I dare say, my lord would sooner have burned him, for St. Paul did not mean that christian men might break the law, and do whatsoever they would, because they were not under the law: but he did mean, that christian men might keep the law, and fulfil the law, if they would, because they were not under the law, but under Christ, by whom they were divided from the tyranny of the law, and above the law, that is to say, able to fulfil the law, to the pleasure of him that made the law, which they could never do of their own strength, and without Christ: so that to be under the law after [...], is to be weak to satisfy the law, and w [...]t could St. Paul do with all, though his adversaries would so take it? But peradventure my [...] would say, that men will not take the [...] otherwise than they mean therein. W [...]ll said; as though St. Paul's [...] ▪ [Page 853] as it appeareth in the third chapter of the Romans, where he saith, Our unrighteousness commendeth and maketh more excellent the righteousness of God, which soundeth to many as though they should be evil, that good should come of it, and by unrighteousness to make the righteousness of God more excellent. So St. Paul was reported to mean; yet he did mean nothing so, but shewed the inestimable wisdom of God, who can use our haughtiness to the manifestation of his unspeakable goodness; not that we should do naughtily to that end and purpose. Now my lord will not think (I dare say) that St. Paul was to blame that he spake no more circumspectly, more warily, or more plainly, to avoid evil offence of the people; but rather he will blame the people, for not taking better heed, and not giving more attendance to St. Paul's speaking, for the better understanding thereof: yea, he will rather pity the people, who have been so long misled by the doctrine of the pharisees, and wallowed so long in the darkness of man's traditions, superstitions, and trade of living, that they were unapt to receive the bright light of the truth and wholesome doctrine of God, uttered by St. Paul. Nor do I think my lord will require more circumspection, or more convenience to avoid offence of errors in me, than was St. Paul, when he did not escape malevolous corrections, and slanderous reports of them that were of perverse judgments, who reported him to say whatsoever appeared to them to follow of his saying; but what followeth? So they report us to say, saith St. Paul, so they speak evil of us; but such whose damnation is just, saith he; and I think the damnation of all such as report evil of preachers now-a-days, likewise just, for it is untruth now, as it was then. Yea, Christ himself was misreported, and falsely accused, both as touching his words, and also concerning the meaning of his words. First, he said, Destruite, that is to say, Destroy you: they made it Possum destruere; that is to say, I can destroy: he said Templum hoc, This Temple; they added, Manu factum, that is to say, Made with hand, to bring it to a contrary [...]. So they both inverted his words, and also added unto his words, to alter his sentence: for he did mean the temple of his body, and they wrested it to Solomon's temple. Now I report me, whether it be a just [...]ame raised up and dispersed after this manner. Nay, verily, for there be three manner of persons which can make no credible information: first, adversaries and enemies; secondly, ignorant, and without judgment; thirdly, susurrones, that is to say, whisperers, and blowers in men's ears, who will spue out in secret discourse, more than they dare avow openly. The first will not, the second cannot, the third dare not: therefore the relation of such is not credible, and therefore they can make no fame lawful, nor occasion any impartial judge to make process against any man; and it maketh no little matter what they be themselves that report of any man, whether well or evil; for it is a great commendation to be evil spoken of by them that be nought themselves, and to be commended by them, is many times no small reproach. God send us once grace to wish well one to another, and to speak well one of another.
METHINKS it were more comely for my lord (if it were comely for me to say so) to be a preacher himself, having so great a cure as he hath, than to be a disturber and troubler of preachers, and to preach nothing at all himself. If it would please his Lordship to take so great a labour and pain at any time, as to come and preach in my little bishopric, at West-Kingston, whether I was present or absent myself, I would thank his lordship heartily, and think myself greatly bounden to him, that he of his charitable goodness would go so far to help me in my cure, or else I were more unnatural than a beast unreasonable: nor yet would I dispute, contend, or demand by what authority, or where he had authority so to do, as long as his preaching were fruitful, and to the edification of my parishioners. As for my lord, he may do as it pleaseth his lordship. I pray God he do always as well as I would wish him ever to do. But I am sure St. Paul saith in the first chapter to the Philippians, that in his time some preached Christ for envy of him, thinking thereby so to grieve him withal, and as it were to obscure him, and to bring his authority into contempt; some of good will and love, thereby to comfort him: notwithstanding, (saith he) by all manner of ways, and after all fashions, whether it be of occasion or of truth, as you would say for truth's sake, so that Christ be preached and shewed, I joyed and will joy. So much he regarded more the glory of Christ, and the promotion of Christ's doctrine, to the edification [Page 854] of christian souls, than the maintenance of his own authority, reputation, and dignity, considering right well, (as he said) that what authority soever he had, it was to edification, and not to destruction. Now I think it were no reproach to my lord, but very commendable, rather to joy with St. Paul, and be glad that Christ is preached [...] whatsoever manner, yea, though it were for envy, that is to say, in disdain, despight, and contempt of his lordship, (which thing no man well advised will attempt) than when the preaching cannot be proved justly, to demand of the preacher austerely, as the pharisees did of Christ, By what authority do you these things, and who gave you this authority? As my authority is good enough, and as good as any my lord can give me, yet I would be glad to have his also, if it would please his lordship to be so good unto me. For the university of Cambridge hath authority apostolic to admit twelve yearly, of which I am one: and the king's highness, God save his grace, hath decreed, that all admitted of universities, should preach throughout all his realm, as long as they preached well, without interruption; my lord of Canterbury, my lord of Durham, with many such others stood by, heard the decree▪ and also gave their consent to the same. Now to contemn my lord of London's authority, were no little fault in me; so no less fault might appear in my lord of London, to contemn the king's authority and decree, yea, so godly, so fruitful, so commendable a decree, pertaining both to the edification of christian souls, and also to the regard and defence of the popish grace and authority apostolic. To have a book of the king not inhibited, is to obey the king, and to inhibit a preacher of the king's admitted, is it not to disobey the king? Is it not one king that doth inhibit and admit, and hath he not as great authority to admit as to inhibit? He that resisteth the power, whether a [...]itting or inhibiting, doth he not resist the ordinance of God? We low subjects are bound to obey powers, and their ordinances: and are not the highest subjects also, who ought to give us example of such obedience? As for my preaching itself, I trust in God, my lord of London cannot justly blame, nor reprove it; if it be taken with the circumstance thereof, and as I spake it, or else it is not my preaching, but his that falsely reporteth it, as the poet Martial said, to one that depraved his book,
BUT now I hear say that my lord of London is informed, and upon the said information hath informed the king, that I go about to defend Bilney, and his cause, against his ordinaries and his judges, which I assure you is not so: for I had nothing to do with Bilney, nor yet with his judges, except his judges did him wrong; for I did nothing else but admonish all judges indifferently to do right; n [...] am I altogether so foolish as to defend the thing which I knew not. It might have become a preach [...] to say as I said, though Bilney had never been born▪ I have known Bilney a great while, I think much better than ever I did my lord of London: for [...] have been his spiritual father many times; and to tell you the truth, what I have thought always [...] him, I have known hitherto few such so prompt and ready to do every man good according to his power, both friend and foe, and willingly offending no man; in short, he was a very good and pious soul▪ in nothing fit for this wretched world, for the blindness of which he would lament and bewail as much as any man that I ever knew: as for his singular learning, as well in holy scripture as in all good letters, I will not speak of it. Notwithstanding, if either now of late, or at any time, he attempted any thing contrary to the obedience which a christian man doth owe either to his prince or to his bishop, I neither do nor will allow and approve that, neither in him, or any other man; we are all men, and liable to fall; wherefore he that standeth, let him beware he fall not. How he ordered or misordered himself in judgment, I cannot tell, nor will I meddle with it; God knoweth, whose judgments I will not judge. But I cannot but wonder, if a man living so mercifully, so charitably, so patiently, so continently▪ so studiously and virtuously, and killing his old Adam, that is to say, mortifying his evil affections, and blind motions of his heart so diligently, should die an evil death, there is no more, but let him that standeth beware that he fall not: for if such as he shall die evil, what shall become of me, such a wretch as I am? But let this go, as little to the purpose, and come to the point we must rest upon. Either my lord of London will judge my outward man only, as it is said, Man seeth those [Page 855] things that are without, or else he will be my God, did judge my inward man, as it is said, But God seeth the heart. If he will have to do only with mine outward man, and meddle with mine outward conversation, how that I have ordered myself towards my christian brethren, the king's liege people, I trust I shall please and content both my Lord God, and also my lord of London; for I have preached and teached but according to holy scripture, holy fathers, and ancient interpreters of the same, with which I think my lord of London will be pacified: for I have done nothing else in my preaching, but with all diligence moved my auditors to faith and charity, to do their duty, and that which is necessary to be done. As for things of private devotion, mean things, and voluntary things, I have reproved the abuse, the superstition of them, without condemnation of the things themselves, as it becometh preachers to do: which thing, if my lord of London, will do himself (as I wish to God he would), he should be reported, no doubt, to condemn the use of such things, of covetous men that have damage, and find less in their boxes by condemnation of the abuse, which abuse they said rather should continue still, than their profit should not continue (so thorny are their hearts). If my lord will needs coast and invade my inward man, and break violently into my heart, I fear I shall displease my lord of London (which I would not willingly do) or else my Lord God, which I shall be more loath to do: not for any infidelity, but for ignorance, for I believe as a christian man ought to believe: but peradventure my lord knoweth, and will know many things certainly, which, perchance, I am ignorant in, with which ignorance, though my lord of London may if he will be discontent, yet I trust my Lord God will pardon it, as long as I hurt no man withal, and say to him with diligent study, and daily prayer, My heart is ready, O God, my heart is ready, so studying, and preaching, and tarrying the pleasure and leisure of God: and in the mean season, Acts viii. as Apollos did, when he knew nothing of Christ, but the baptism of John, teach and preach mine, even christian like, and no farther than I know to be true. There are three creeds, one in my mass, another in my mattins, the third common to them that neither say mass nor mattins, nor yet know what they say when they say the creed: and I believe all three, with all that God hath left in holy writ, for me and all others to believe; yet I am ignorant in things which I trust hereafter to know, as I do know things in which I have been ignorant heretofore: ever learn, and ever to be learned, to profit with learning, with ignorance not to offend. I have thought in times past, that the pope, Christ's vicar, hath been lord of all the world as Christ is, so that if he should have deprived the king of his crown, or you of the lordship of Bromeham, it had been enough; for he could no wrong. Now I might be hired to do otherwise; notwithstanding I have both seen and heard scripture drawn to that purpose. I have thought in times past, that the pope's dispensations of the pluralities of benefices, and absence from the same, had discharged consciences before God: forasmuch as I have heard, Lo! I am with you, and he who heareth you, bended to corroborate the same. Now I might be intreated to think otherwise, &c.
I have thought in times past, that the pope could have spoiled purgatory at his pleasure with a word of his mouth; now learning might persu [...] me otherwise, or else I would marvel why he should suffer so much money to be bestowed that way, which is so needful to be bestowed otherwise, and to deprive us of so many patrons in heaven as he might deliver out of purgatory, &c. I have thought in times past, that if I had been a friar, and in a cowl, I could not have been damned, nor afraid of death, and by occasion of the same I have been minded many times to have been a friar, namely, when I was sore, sick, and diseased; now I abhor my superstitious foolishness, &c. I have thought in times past, that divers images of saints could have helped me, and done me much good, and delivered me of my diseases: now I know that one can help as well as another. And it grieves my heart that my lord, and such as my lord is, can suffer the people to b [...] so craftily deceived. It were too long to tell you what blindness I have been in, and how long it was ere I could forsake such folly, it was so incorporated in me: but by continual prayer, continual study of scripture, and oft communing with men of more right judgment, God hath delivered me, &c. Yea, men think my lord himself hath thought in times past, that by God's law a man might marry his brother's wife, which now both dare think and say the contrary: and yet this his boldness might have [Page 856] chanced, in pope Julius's days, to stand him either in a fire, or else in a faggot. Which thing deeply considered and pondered by my lord, might something stir him to charitable equity, and to be something remiss towards men, which labour to do good as their power serveth with knowledge, and to do hurt to no man with their ignorance: for there is no greater distance than between God's law, and not God's law.
AND finally as you say, the matter is weighty, and ought substantially to be looked upon, even as weighty as my life is worth; but how to look substantially upon it otherwise I know not, than to pray my Lord God day and night, that as he hath emboldened me to preach his truth, so he will strengthen me to suffer for it, to the edification of them which have taken by the working of him fruit thereby; and even so I desire you, and all others that favour me for his sake, likewise to pray: for it is not I (without his mighty helping hand) that can abide that brunt; but I have trust that God will help me in the time of need, which if I had not, the ocean, I think, would have divided my lord of London and me by this day. For it is a rare thing for a preacher to have favour at his hand who is no preacher himself, and yet ought to be. I pray God that he and I may both discharge ourselves, he in his great cure, and I in my little one, to God's pleasure, and safety of our souls, Amen. I pray you pardon me, that I write no more distinctly, nor more truly, for my head is out of frame, that it would be too painful for me to write it again; and if I be not prevented, I intend to make merry with my parishioners this Christmas, for all the sorrow, lest perchance I never return to them again: and I have heard say, that a doe is as good in winter as a buck in summer.
LETTER From Sir EDWARD BAYNTON, Knight, in Answer to Bishop LATIMER.
MASTER LATIMER, after hearty recommendations, I have communicated the effect of your letters to divers of my friends, such as for christian charity (as they say) rather desire in you a reformation, either in your opinion, if it swerve from the truth, or at least in your manner and behaviour, inasmuch as it giveth occasion of slander and trouble, to the hindrance of your good purposes, than any other inconvenience to your person or good name. And forasmuch as your said letter misliketh them in some part, and that I have such confidence [...] your christian breast, as in my judgment you will conformably and gladly both hear what may be reformed in you, and also (as it is worthy) so acknowledge and confess the same: I have therefore desired them to take the pains to note their mind in this letter which I send you, as the sum of their sayings, and sent from me your assured friend and favourer, in that which is the very truth of God's word: wherein nevertheless, as I trust you will temper your own judgment, and in soberness affirm no truth of yourself, which should divide the unity of the congregation in Christ, and the received truth agreed upon by holy fathers of the church, consonant to the scripture of God, even so whatsoever you will do therein, (as I think you will not do otherwise than you should do) I being unlearned, and not of the knowledge to give sentence in this altercation and contention, must rather of good congruence shew myself in that you disagree with them, readier to follow their doctrine in truth than your's, unless it may please Almighty God to inspire and confirm the hearts of such people to testify the same in some honest number, as ought to induce me to give credence unto them.
ONLY God knoweth the certain truth, which is communicated to us, as our capacity may understand it by faith, but that is through a glass darkly. And there have been those who have had a zeal of God, but not according to knowledge. Among whom I repute not you, but to this purpose I write it, that to call this or that truth, it requireth a deep and profound knowledge, considering that to me unlearned, what I take for truth may be otherwise, not having a sense exercised enough, as St. Paul sayeth, to discern good and evil: and it is shewed me, that an opinion or manner of teaching, which causeth dissention in a christian congregation, is not of God, by the doctrine of St. John in his epistle, where he saith, All who confess that Christ is come in the flesh, &c are of God. And like as the word of God hath always caused dissention among men unchristened, whereupon hath ensued and followed martyrdom [Page 857] to the preacher; so in Christ's congregation, among them that profess Christ's name, in one Lord, one baptism, and one faith, they that preach and stir rather contention than charity, though they can defend their saying, yet their teaching is not to be taken as of God, in that it breaketh the chain of christian charity, and maketh division in the people, congregate and called by God into an unity of faith and baptism. But for this point I would pray to God, that not only in the truth may be agreement, but also such soberness and uniform behaviour used in teaching and preaching, as men may wholly express (as they may) the charity of God, tending only to the union and love of us all, to the profit and salvation of our souls.
LETTER From Bishop LATIMER, in Answer to Sir EDWARD BAYNTON.
RIGHT worshipful sir, and my singular good master, &c. Whereas you have communicated my last letters to some of your friends, which rather this or that in me, &c. what I think therein I will not now say, not that there could be my peril or danger in the said letters (well taken) as far as I can judge, but for that they were rashly and unadvisedly scribbled, as you might well know both by my excuse, and by themselves also, though no excuse had been made. And besides that, you know right well, that where the bee gathereth honey, even there the spider gathereth venom, not for any diversity of the flower, but for different natures in them that suck the flower: as in times past, and in the beginning, the very truth, and one thing in itself was to some an offence, to some foolishness, to others otherwise disposed, the wisdom of God. Such difference there was in the hearers thereof.
BUT this notwithstanding, there is no more but either my writing is good or bad. If it be good, the communicating thereof to your friends cannot be hurtful to me; if it be otherwise, why should you not communicate it to them, who both could and would instruct you in the truth, and reform my error? Let this pass, I will not contend: "had I knew," ever cometh out of season. Truly I were not well advised if I would not either be glad of your instruction, or yet refuse mine own reformation; but yet it is good for a man to look before he leap, and God forbid that you should be so addict and sworn to me so wretched a fool, that you should not rather follow the doctrine of your friends in truth, so great learned men as they appear to be, than the opinions of me, having ever so christian a breast.
WHEREFORE do as you will: for as I would not if I could, so I cannot if I would, be noisome unto you; but yet I say I would my letters had been unwritten, if for no other cause, at leastway inasmuch as they cause me more writing, an occupation not fitting my mad head. And as concerning points which in my aforesaid letters your friends mislike, I have little leisure now to make an answer thereto, for the great business that I have in my little cure: I know not what other men have in their great cures, seeing that I am alone without any priest to serve my cure, without any scholar to read unto me, without any book necessary to be looked upon, without learned men to come and counsel withal. All which things others have at hand abundantly, but something must be done, howsoever it be. I pray you take it in good worth as long as I temper my own judgment, affirming nothing with prejudice of better. First, you mislike that I say I am sure I preach the truth, saying in reproof of the same, that God knoweth certain truth. Indeed God alone knoweth all certain truth, and God alone knoweth it as of himself, and none knoweth certain truth but God, and those who are taught of God, as St. Paul saith, for God hath made it plain to them: and Christ himself says, They shall all be taught of God: and your friends deny not but that certain truth is communicated to us, as our capacity may comprehend it by faith, which if it be truth, as it is, then there ought no more to be required of any man, but according to his capacity; now certain it is, that every man hath not like capacity, &c.
BUT as to my presumption and arrogancy; either I am certain or uncertain that it is truth that I preach. If it be truth, why may I not say so, to [Page 858] encourage my hearers to receive the same mo [...] [...] dently, and pursue it more studiously? If [...] uncertain, why dare I be so bold as to preach it▪ And if your friends, in whom you trust so greatly, be preachers themselves, after their sermon, I pray you ask them whether they be certain and sure that they have taught you the truth or no, and send me word what they say, that I may learn to speak after them. If they say they be sure, you know what followeth: if they say they be unsure, when shall you be sure, that have so doubtful and unsure teachers? And you yourself, whether are you certain or uncertain that Christ is your Saviour, and so forth of other articles that you are bound to believe? Or whether are you sure or unsure, that civil ordinances are the good works of God, and that you do God service in doing of them, if you do them for a good intent? If you are uncertain, take heed he i [...] your sure friend that heareth you say so, and then with what conscience do you doubt, seeing, Whatsoever is not of faith is sin? But contrary say you, God alone knoweth certain truth, and you have it but through a glass darkly; and there are some who have a zeal for God, but not according to knowledge: and to call this or that truth, it requireth a deep knowledge, considering that to you unlearned, what you take for truth may be otherwise, nor having a sense exercised to discern good and evil, as you reason against me, and so you do best to know surely nothing for truth at all, but to wander meekly here and there, with every wind of doctrine, &c. Our knowledge here, you say, is but through a glass darkly: what then? Ergo, it is not certain and sure.
I deny your argument by your leave; yea, if it be by faith, as you say, it is more sure, because the certainty of faith is the surest certainty, as Duns and other school doctors say▪ that there is a great disagreement between certain knowledge and clear knowledge; for that may be of things absent that appear not, this requireth the presence of the object, I mean of the thing known, so that I certainly and surely know the thing which I perfectly believe, though I do not clearly and evidently know [...] know your school [...] as well as you, which disput [...] as though [...] knowledge, that is to say, dark and obscure knowledge, might not be certain and sure knowledge▪ because it is not clear, manifest, and evident knowledge; and yet there have been (say they) which have had a zeal, but not after knowledge. True it is there have been such, and yet are too many to great hindrance of Christ's glory, which nothing doth more obscure, than a hot zeal accompanied with great authority without right judgment. There have been also, which have had knowledge without any zeal of God, who holding the verity of God in unrighteousness, shall be beaten with many stripes, while they knowing the will of God do nothing thereafter. I mean not among Turks and Saracens that be unchristened, but of them that be christened. And there have been also, they that have lost the spiritual knowledge of God's word which they had before, because they have not followed after it, nor promoted the same, but rather with their mother's wits have impugned the wisdom of the Father, and hindered the knowledge thereof, which therefore hath been taken away from them; that Christ may be justified in his sayings, and overcome when he is judged, threatening, Matth. xiii. To him that hath not, that also which he hath, that is, that which he seemeth to have, shall be taken from him: when as to abuse that which a man hath, or not to use it well, is as not to have it. And also seeing it is true, that God's wisdom will not dwell in a body subject to sin, altho' he abound too much in carnal wisdom: yet the same carnal and philosophical understanding of God's scriptures, is not the wisdom of God, which is hid from the wise, and is revealed to little ones. And if to call this or that truth, requireth a deep and profound knowledge, then every man hath either a deep and profound knowledge, or else no man can tell this or that truth: and it behoveth every preacher to have this deep and profound knowledge, that he may call this or that truth, which this or that he taketh in hand to preach for the truth; and yet he may be ignorant and uncertain in many things, both [...] as Apollos was: but which things, whether this or that, he will not attempt to preach for the truth. And as for myself, I trust in God I may hav [...] [...] exercised to discern good [...] things, which without deep and profound knowledge in many things I preach not, yea there are many things in scripture in which I cannot [...]ertainly discern good and evil, I mean true and fals [...], not with all the exercise I have in scripture, no [...] y [...] with the help of [Page 859] all the interpreters that I have, to content myself and others in all scruples that may arise: but in such I am wont to wade no further into the stream, than that I may either go over, or else return back again, ever having respect, not to the ostentation of my little wit, but to the edification of them that hear me, as far forth as I can, neither passing mine own nor yet their capacity.
AND such manner of arguments might well serve the devil against cowards, to occasion them to wander and waver in the faith, and to be uncertain in things in which they ought to be certain: or else it may appear to make and serve against such preachers as will define great subtleties and high matters in the pulpit, which no man can be certain and sure of by God's words to be truth, unless a man had a superlative sense to discern good and evil: as whether, if Adam had not sinned, we should have had stock-fish out of Island; how many larks for a penny if every star in the element were a flickering hobby: how many years a man shall lie in purgatory for one sin, if he buy not plenty of the oil that runneth over our lamps to slake the sin with, and so forget hell which cannot be slaked, to provide for purgatory.
SUCH argumentation, I say, might appear to make well against such preachers, not against me, which simply and plainly utter true faith and the fruits of the same, which be the good works of God, which he hath prepared for us to walk in, every man to do the thing that pertaineth to his office and duty in his degree and calling, as the word appointeth; which thing a man may do with soberness, having a sense but indifferently exercised to discern good and evil. For it is but foolish humility, willingly to continue always an infant in Christ and in infirmity. In reproof of which it was said, Ye have need of milk and not of strong meat. For St. Paul saith not▪ Be ye humble, that ye be not deceived. For though he would not that we should think arrogantly of ourselves, and above what it becometh us to think of ourselves, but so to think of ourselves that we may be sober and [...]; yet he biddeth us so think of ourselves. As God hath distributed to e [...]ry one the [...] For he that may not with meekness think in [...]imself what God hath done to him, and of himself as God hath done for him, how shall he, or when shall he give due thanks to God for his gifts? And if your friends will not allow the same, I pray you inquire of them, whether they may with sobriety and modesty follow St. Paul's advice, where he saith unto us all, Be not children in understanding, but in maliciousness be ye infants. God give us all grace to keep the mean, and to think ourselves neither too high nor too low, but so that we may restore unto him, who hath sent abroad his gifts again, with good use of the same, so that we do our part with the same, to the glory of God, Amen.
FOR my life, I trust in God that I neither (by God's grace) shall, neither in soberness, nor yet in drunkenness, affirm any truth of myself, therewith intending to divide that unity of the congregation of Christ, and the received truth agreed upon by the holy fathers of the church, consonant to the scripture of God, though it be shewed you ever so often, that an opinion or manner of teaching, which causeth dissention in a christian congregation, is not of God, by the doctrine of St. John in his epistle, where he saith, Every one that confesseth Christ hath come in the flesh, is of God. First, Not every thing whereupon followeth dissention, causeth dissention, as I would that they shewed you, that would also shew you, whether this opinion, that a man may not marry his brother's wife, be of God or of men: if it be of men, then as Gamaliel said, dissolve it; if it be of God, as I think it is, and perchance your friends also, who can dissolve it, but shall seem to repugn against God? And yet there may be many, not heathens, but in Christendom, that dissent from the same, which could bear full evil to hear said unto them. You are of the devil's side. So that such an opinion might seem to some to make a dissention in a christian congregation, saying that they may say perchance with more liberty than others, that an occasion is sometimes taken and not given, which with their favour I might abuse for my defence, saying, that it is not granted unto all in these worst of times.
THE Galatians having for preachers and teachers the false apostles, by whose teaching they were degenerate from the sweet liberty of the gospel into the four bond of ceremonies, thought themselves, peradventure, a christian congregation, when St. [Page 860] Paul did write his epistle unto them, and were in a quiet trade under the dominion of masterly curates, so that the false apostles might have objected to St. Paul, that his apostleship was not of God, forasmuch as there was a dissention in a christian congregation by occasion thereof▪ whilst some would renew their opinions by the occasion of the epistle, some would judge, as they were wont to do, and follow their great lords and masters the false apostles, which were not heathen and unchristened, but christened prelates of the professors of Christ. For your friends I know right well what Erasmus hath said in an epistle set before the paraphrases of the first epistle to the Corinthians, which Erasmus hath caused no small dissention with his pen in a christian congregation, inasmuch as many have dissented from him, not only in cloisters (men more than christened men) of high perfection, but also at Paul's cross, and St. Mary Spittle, besides many that with no small zeal have written against him, but not without answer.
AND I would fain learn of your friends, whether St. Jerome's writings were of God, which caused dissention in a christian congregation, as it appeareth by his own words in the prologue before the canonical epistles, which be these: And whilst that you, Eustochium, virgin of Christ, inquire so earnestly of me the truth of the scripture, you seem in some measure to put off my old age, corroded with teeth and bites of the envious, who style me a falsiter and corrupter of scriptures; but I am not affrighted at their envy in such a work, nor will deny the truth of the scriptures to those that require it. I pray you, what were they that called St. Jerome a falsiter and corrupter of scripture, and for envy would have bitten him with their teeth; unchristian or christian? What had the unchristian to do with the christian doctrine? They were worshipful fathers of a christian congregation, men of much hotter stomachs than right judgments, of a greater authority than good charity. But St. Jerome would not cease to do good for the evil speaking of them that were naught, giving in that an example to us of the same; and if this dissention were in St. Jerome's time, what may be in our time? From ill to worse.
AND I pray you what mean your friends by a christian congregation? All those (think you) that have been baptized? But many of those be in a worse condition, and shall have greater damnation than many unbaptized. For it is not enough to a christian congregation that is of God, to have been baptized: but it is to be considered what we promise when we are baptized, to renounce Satan, his works, his pomps. Which things if we busy not ourselves to do, let us not boast that we profess Christ's name in a christian congregation.
AND where they add, in one Lord: I read in Matt. xvii. Not every one that saith, Lord, Lord, &c. And in Luke, the Lord himself complaineth and rebuketh such professors and confessors, saying to them, Why call ye me Lord, and do not that I bid you? But I would your friends would take the pains to read over Chrysostom upon Mat. hom. xlix. cap. xxiv. to learn to know a christian congregation, if it will please them to learn of him. And where they add, in one faith, St. James saith boldly, Shew me thy faith by thy works. And St. Jerome, If we believe, we shew the truth in working. And the scripture saith, He that believeth God, attendeth to his commandments. And the devils do believe to their little comfort. I pray God to save you and your friends, from that believing congregation, and from that faithful company.
THEREFORE all this toucheth not them that be unbaptized, but them that be baptized, and answer not to their baptism. For St. Jerome sheweth how true preachers should order themselves, when evil priests and false preachers, and the people that be by them deceived, should be angr [...] with them for preaching the truth, exhorting them to suffer death for the same, of the evil priests and false preachers, and the people deceived of them, which evil priests and false preachers, with the people deceived, be baptized as well as others. And I fear that St. Jerome might appear to some christian congregation, as they will be called, to write seditiously, to divide the unity of a great honest number confessing Christ, in one baptism, one Lord, one faith, saying, The people which before were brought asleep by their masters, must go up [Page 861] to the mountains, not such mountains which smoke when they are touched, but to the mountains of the Old and New Testament, the prophets, apostles, and evangelists. And when thou art occupied in reading in these mountains, if then thou find no instructors, (for the harvest is great▪ and the workmen few) yet shall the diligent study of the people be fleeing to the mountains, and the slothfulness of the masters shall be rebuked.
I do marvel why our christian congregations be so greatly grieved that lay-people would read the scripture, seeing that St. Jerome alloweth and approveth of the same, which compareth not here the unchristened to the christened, but the lay-people christened to their curates christened, under which they have been rocked and locked asleep in a subtle trade a great while full soundly, though now of late they have been awaked, but to their pain, at least to the pain of those that awakened them with the word of God; and it is properly said of St. Jerome to call themselves masters and not servants, meaning that servants teach not their own doctrine, but the doctrine of their master Christ, to his glory. Masters teach not Christ's doctrine, but their own, to their own glory; which masterly cur [...]tes cannot be quiet, till they have brought the people asleep again: but Christ, the very true master, saith, Watch and pray, lest ye enter into temptation. My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither my ways your ways, saith the Lord: and there be those who have gone about counsels, which they could not establish, I pray God give our people grace so to awake, that their works may be approved, and our masters so to sleep, that their idleness do not rebuke them. For who is so blind as not to see how far our christian congregation doth gainsay St. Jerome, and speaketh after another manner? God amend what is amiss; for I understand we be something wide.
BUT now your friends have learned of St. John, That every one that confesseth Jesus Christ in the f [...]esh, is of God: and I have lea [...]ned of St. Paul, that there have been, not among the heathen, but among the christians, which confess Christ with their mouth, and deny him with their acts: so that St. Paul should appear to expound St. John, saying that I will not affirm any thing as of myself, but leave it to your friends to shew you, Whether they who in deeds deny Christ, are by the bare confession of the mouth, of God: for your friends know well enough by the same St. John, He who is of God sinneth not: and there both have been, and now be, too many, who with the mouth only confess Christ to be come in the flesh; but will not effectually hear the word of God▪ by consenting to the same, notwithstanding that St. John saith, He who is of God, heareth God's word; you hear not, because you are not of God: and many shall hear, I never knew you, which shall not only be christened, but also shall prophesy, and do powerful things in the name of Christ; and St. Paul said, there would come ravening wolves who will not spare the flock; meaning of them who should with their lips confess Christ in the flesh, and usurp by succession the office, which Christ calleth false prophets, and biddeth us beware of them, saying, They shall come in sheep's clothing, and yet they may wear both sattin, silk, and velvet, called afterwards naughty servants, not feeding but smiting their fellow-servants, eating and drinking with the drunken, who shall have their portion with hypocrites. They are called servants, I suppose, because they confess Christ in the flesh; and naughty they are called, because they deny him in their deeds, not giving meat in due season, and exercising mastership over the flock. And yet your friends reason as though there could none bark and bite at true preachers, but they that be unchristened, notwithstanding that St. Augustine, upon the same epistle of St. John, calleth such confessors of Christ, Antichrists, according to the doctrine of St. Paul, Hate that which is evil; and so making division, not between christened and unchristened, but between christians and antichristians, when neither tongue nor pen can divide the antichristian from their blind folly. And I wish you would cause your friends to read over St. Augustine upon the epistle of St. John, and tell you the meaning thereof, if they think it expedient for you to know it, as I remember it is Tractatu iii. but I am not sure nor certain of that, because I did not see it since I was at Cambridge; and here I have not St. Augustine's works to look for it, but well I know [Page 862] that there he teacheth us to know the christians from the antichristians, which both be christened, and both confess Jesus to be Christ, if they are asked the question: and yet the one part denieth it in the very deed. But to know the difference, we must not stand upon our talk, but not attend to our doings and conversation of life, whether we not only do put our endeavour thereto, but also persuade ourselves as though it were not necessary for us to accomplish such things, &c. but that is not enough to bear rule and authority over them, and to bestow ourselves wholly upon secular matters, pleasures, and pomps of this world. And yet we will appear, at the least to be of God alone, but they far otherwise confess Christ, who are approved to be of God by their confession.
AND yet as long as they minister the word of God, or his sacraments, or any thing that God hath ordained to the salvation of mankind, wherewith God hath promised to be present, to work with the ministration of the same to the end of the world, they to be heard, to be obeyed, to be honoured for God's ordinance sake, which is effectual and fruitful, whatsoever the minister be, though he be a devil, and neither church nor member of the same, as Origen saith, and Chrysostom; so that it is not all one to honour them and trust in them, St. Jerome saith: but there is required a judgment to discern when they minister God's word and ordinance of the same, and their own, lest peradventure we take chalk for cheese, which will edge our teeth, and hinder digestion. For as it is commonly said, The blind eateth many a fly, as they did which were persuaded by the high priests to ask Barabbas and to crucify Jesus: and ye know that to follow the blind guides, is to come into the pit with the same. And will you know, saith Augustine, how pertly they resist Christ, when men begin to blame them for misliving, and intolerable secularity and negligence? They dare not for shame blaspheme the name of Christ himself, but they will blaspheme the ministers and preachers by whom they be blamed.
THEREFORE whereas you will pray for agreement both in the truth, and in uttering the truth, when shall that be, as long as we will not hear the truth, but disturb with crafty conveyance the preacher of the truth, because they reprove our wickedness with the truth? And, to say the truth, it were better to have a deformity in preaching, so that some would preach the truth of God, and that which is to be preached without detriment and adulteration of the word, (as Lyranus saith in his time few did, what they do now-a-days I refer to them that can judge) than to have such an uniformity, that the silly people should be thereby occasion [...]d to continue still in ignorance, corrupt judgment, superstition and idolatry, and esteem things as they do all, preposterously, doing what they need not to do, and leaving undone what they ought to do, for lack of knowing what is to be done, and so shew their love to God, not as God commandeth, (who saith, If you love me, keep my commandments; and again, He that knoweth my precepts, and doth them, he loveth me) but they command, which seek their own things, not as Christ's; as though to tythe mint were more than judgment, faith and mercy.
AND what is to liye in state of curates, but that he taught which said, Peter, lovest thou me? feed, feed, feed; which is now set aside, as though to love, were to do nothing else but to wear rings, mitres, and rochets, &c. And when they err in right living, how can the people but err in loving, which is now turned to piping, playing, and curious singing, which will not be reformed (I believe) unless by the strong hand of God. And I have both St. Augustine and St. Thomas, with divers others, that [law] is taken not only for ceremonies, but also for morals, where it is said, ye are not under the law, though your freinds reprove the same. But they make no division in a christian congregation. And whereas both you and they would have a soberness in our preaching, I pray God send it unto us, whatsoever you mean by it. For I see well, whosoever will be happy▪ and busy with woe to you, he shall shortly after come before you.
AND where your friends think that I made a lie, when I said, that I have thought in times past that the pope had been lord of the world, though your friends are much better learned than I, yet I am sure that they know no [...] what either I think, o [...] have thought better than I, according to that, No man [Page 863] knoweth the things of a man, &c. as though better men than I have not thought so, as Bonifacius Octavus (as I remember) the great learned man John of the Burnt Tower, Presbyter Cardinalis in his book where he proveth the pope to be above the council general and special; and where he saith that the pope is king of kings, and lord of lords, and that he is the true lord of the whole world by good right, although in fact he is not so; and that Constantine did but restore his own unto him when he gave unto him Rome; so that, as St. John saith Christ did, He came unto his own, and his own received him not; and yet I hear not that any of our christian congregation have reclaimed against him, until now of late dissention began. Who be your friends I cannot tell; but I wish you would desire them to be my good masters, and if they will do me no good, at least do me no harm; and though they can do you more good than I, yet I am sure I would be as loth to hurt you as they, either with mine own opinions, manner of preaching, or writing.
AND as for the pope's high dominion over all, there is one Raphael Maruphus in London, an Italian, and in times past a merchant of dispensations, which I suppose would die in the quarrel, as God's true knight and and true martyr. As touching purgatory, and worshipping of saints, I shewed to you my mind before my ordinary: and yet I marvelled something, that after private communication had with him, you would (as it were) adjure me to open my mind before him, not giving me warning before, saving I cannot interpretet your evil doings towards me; and yet neither my ordinary nor you disallowed the thing that I said, and I looked not to escape better than Dr. Crome: but when I opened my mind ever so much, yet I shall be reported to deny my [...], by them that have belied it, as he was: I shall have need of great pa [...]ience to bear the [...] report of the malignant church.
SIR, I have had more business in my little cure, since I spake with you, what with sick [...]olks, and what with matrimonies, than I have had since I came to it, or than I would have [...]ought a ma [...] should have in a great cure. I wonder how men can go quietly to bed, who have great and many cures, and yet peradventure are in none of them all. But I pray you to tell none of your friends that I spake so foolishly, lest I make a dissention in a christian congregation, and divide a sweet and peaceable union, or as many as may rest with this in such an age. Sir, I had just made an end of this scribbling, and was beginning to transcribe it more correctly, but there came a man of my lord Farley's, with a citation to appear before my lord of London in haste, to be punished for such excesses as I committed at my last being there, so that I could not perform my purpose; I doubt whether you can read it as it is. If you can, well be it; if not, I pray you send it me again, and that you so do, whether you can read it or not. Jesus, mercy, what a world is this, that I shall be put to so great labour and pains, besides great charges, above my power, for preaching a poor simple sermon! But I think our Saviour Christ said true, I must needs suffer, and so enter: so dangerous a thing it is to live virtuously with Christ, yea, in a christian congregation. God make us all christians, after the right fashion, Amen.
A public and authentic Instrument of the BISHOPS for abolishing, and inhibiting of the Scripture, and divers other Books to be read in English, in the Time of King HENRY VIII 1531.
IN the name of God, Amen, Be it known to all and singular true and faithful people, to whom these present letters testimonial, or this present public and authentic instrument shall come, or shall see, read, hear, or understand the same▪ and whom this underwritten shall or may teach, or appertain in any manner of wise to come, William, by the sufferance of Almighty God, archbishop of Canterbury, primate of all the realm of England, sendeth greeting in our lord God everlasting. We signify unto you all, and let you well know by these presents, that where the king our sovereign lord, hearing of books in the English tongue, containing many detestable errors, and damnable opinions, printed in many parts beyond the seas, to be brought into divers towns, and sundry parts of this his realm of England, and sown abroad in the same, to the great decay of our catholic faith, and perilous corruption of his people, unless speedy remedy were briefly provided, his highness willing [...]ermore to employ all his study and mind [Page 864] in the high degree which Almighty God hath called him unto, to the wealth of his subjects, that they might not only live in tranquillity and peace, but also to be kept pure and clean from all contagion and wrong opinions in Christ's religion: considering also that he being defender of the faith, would be very loth to suffer such evil seed to be sown amongst his people, and so take root that it might overthrow the corn of the catholic doctrine, before sprung in the souls of his subjects; for the repelling of such books, calling unto him of his great goodness, and gracious disposition, not only certain of the chief prelates and clerks of his realm, but also of each university a certain number of the chief learned men of them, proposed such of the books, as his grace had ready, therefore unto them to be read; requiring them to hear in that behalf their advice and judgment of them: who both by great diligence and mature deliberation, perusing over the said books, found in them many errors and heresies, both detestable and damnable, being of such a sort, that they were soon like to corrupt a great part of his people (if they might be suffered to remain in their hands any time), gathering also out of them many great errors, and pestilent heresies, and noting them in writing, to the intent to shew for what cause they reputed the said books damnable, of which hereafter out of each book gathered, many do ensue. However many more there be in the said books, which books totally do swarm full of heresies, and detestable opinions.
Heresies and Errors contained in the Book called, The Parable of the WICKED MAMMON.
SAINTS in heaven cannot help us thither.
TO build a church in honour of our lady, or any other saint, is to build in vain, they cannot help thee, they be not thy friends.
TO bid the poor man pray for me, is only to remember him to do his duty, not that I have any trust in his prayer.
CHURCHES are for preaching only, and not as they be used now.
TO worship God otherwise, than to believe that he is just and true in his promise, is to make God an idol.
Heresies and Errors contained in the Book called, The Obedience of a CHRISTIAN MAN.
THAT we are able to make satisfaction to our neighbour, but not to God.
THAT children neither ought nor can contract matrimony without the consent of their parents.
PAUL was of higher authority than Peter.
SAINTS be saved, not by their merits, but only by the merits of Christ.
Errors, Blasphemies, and Heresies, noted in the Book of the Revelation of Antichrist, and the Epistle going before.
TO bind a man perpetually to any vow of religion, is without doubt an error.
TO feign the constitutions of religion are good because holy men did ordain them, as Augustine, Benedict, Francis, Domimick, and such others, that is to leave the faith; and to follow such examples of fathers in some things, that is, in these things, is erring.
IF they would make all the observation [...] of the ceremonies, as Lent, fasting, holy-days, confession, matrimony, mass, mattins, relics, &c. free and indifferent, he should not be Antichrist; but now because he commandeth it in the name of Christ, he doth utterly corrupt the church, suppress the faith, and advance sin.
The Errors and Heresies contained in the Book called, The SUM of the SCRIPTURES.
WE deserve nothing of God.
WE deserve not everlasting life by our good works: for God hath promised it unto [...] before that we began to do good.
WE must love death, and more desire to die than to fear death.
[Page 865]THOU shalt not count at night how much money thou hast gained.
THOU shalt not vex or grieve by justice, or otherwise, the poor that oweth unto thee: for thou may [...]st not do it without sin.
HE that is rich and liveth of his rents, may not use to over-spend his goods as he will, but thy goods belong as well unto the poor as to thee.
GOD hath not given riches to rich men for to boast and brag therewith; nor to make great cheer, neither to make themselves lords, but to the in [...] that they should be servants unto all the world.
Out of the Book of BEGGARS.
THERE be many men of great literature and judgment, that for the love they have unto the church, and unto the commonwealth, have not feared to put themselves into the greatest infamy that may be in the objection of all the world, yea in the peril of death, to declare their opinion in this matter, which is, that there is no purgatory; but that it is a thing invented by the covetousness of the spirituality, only to translate all kingdoms from other princes unto them; and that there is not one word spoken of it in all holy scripture. God took Enoch away, that is to say, he departed out of this word spoken of it in all holy scripture. God took Enoch away, that is to say, he departed out of this world like other men; the first is wrong translated, for the scripture says, he was translated, not taken away; and the last is false, for in Heb. xi. it is said, by faith Enoch was translated that he should not see death, and was not found, because God had translated him▪ and in Eccles. Enoch pleased God and was translated into para [...]ise, that he might declare the wisdom of his people.
Out of the PRIMMER.
HE putteth in the book of seven psalms, but he leaveth out the whole Litany, by which it appeareth his erroneous opinion against praying to saints.
HE hath left out all the hymns and anthems of our lady, by which appeareth his erroneous opinions against praying to our lady.
The ungodly and erroneous Saying contained in an English Work, inscribed, An Exposition upon the 7th Chapter of the first Epistle to the Corinthians.
WHOSOEVER in himself doth not feel this godly thing, this gift of chastity, but doth feel incontinency, to him, I say, a commandment is given that he may be married.
HEREOF doth follow, that no person may make a vow, or promise to live chaste or single, and that none are bound to keep any such vows, but rather to break them: and he that shall observe them, it is damnable, and by the law of God already condemned.
THE touching of women, some persons have compassed too straightly, so that they dare not touch a woman's hand or skin; moreover they imagined many, both statutes and ceremonies, to keep them from company of women, as they thought that built abbies, but how fortunately that hath come to pass, what place thereby hath been given to Satan, it were horrible to be spoken of.
HE that is compelled outwardly to abstain from women, and is inwardly full of lust, is a dissembler, and it is double letchery.
MARK what soul-slayers they be that provoke foolish youth to a vow of chastity, compelling them to nourish inwardly hidden malice.
ALL other evils may be suffered with a mean conscience.
THIS cannot so be endured, this can be helped by no medicine but by marriage.
IT is good for a man not to touch a woman; this word good is not understood of merit and deserving before God, as though an unmarried man were better before him, than the married, like as St. Jerome hath expounded this text; for it concerneth only faith▪ and [...] deed or work, but it is spoken of temporal [...]etness of this life, so that the virgin and maid hath much more joy and tranquillity.
[Page 866]CHANTITY is a good thing, if lust and incontinency make it not so common a thing as we have hitherto used to do, and yet do, but all amiss; but the apostle willeth, that all men universally be conjugal; but all the bishops since his time have destroyed this godly ordinance, when they babble and rail in pulpits, changing this word every into certain.
MEN ought to stint of their statutes-making for a better statute can none be than this, that men without any respect of time use their wife, not to exempt certain days as they have which we call vigils, and women conceived.
FASTING is a measurable usage of meats and drinks; prayer is a crying, sighing, desiring, and mourning.
NO man ought to enforce and compel men to fasting and prayer, as they hitherto by laws have done.
BEFORE God, all things are alike and equal.
ABOMINABLY they do sin who make nuns swell in pride, when they babble, that their religion is more precious than matrimony, and then feign that they shall have a crown or garland of gold, so making them arrogant, wicked, unfaithful; chastity is a gift of God, and therefore can no man neither promise, nor vow, nor keep it.
THE sects of all them that are called religious, and of all manner of shavelings, are falsly called the spiritual orders: for matrimony like as in very deed, so it ought to be called the spiritual state before other orders worldly and secular; matrimony is of all other the highest religion, and most spiritual estate.
BY testimony of scriptures, all the apostles and all the bishops' successors were married.
ST. PAUL saith, That he ought to be chosen to be a bishop that is the husband of one wife.
SEEING you chuse not married men to be bishops, either Christ must be a fool and unrighteous, who did not so chuse, or you Antichrists and deceivers.
YOU put away universal marriage from priests, contrary unto God, to nature, to season, to right, only of presumption, without any manner of cause.
THERE is no sin nor mischief in all the world so great, that can hinder a man from priest-hood, but godly matrimony.
WHAT other thing is it to say, that a priest should not marry, than to say, that a man should not be a man?
THIS I dare be bold to say, that where one is chaste, there ought to be more than an hundred thousand to live married.
TO keep a young man in a clo [...]ster to live chaste, is as much as to offer a child to Moloch there to be burnt.
ALL which great errors and pestilent heresies being contagious and damnable, with all the books containing the same, with the transla [...]ion of scripture corrupted by William Tindal, as well in the Old Testament as in the New, and all other books in English containing such error, the king's highness present in person, by one whole advice and assent of the prelates and clerks, as well of the universities, as of all o [...]her assembled together, determined utterly to be repelled, rejected, and put away out of the hands of his people, and not to be suffered to go abroad among his subjects; and his highness willeth further, that his pleasure and determination should be notified by preachers abroad unto the people, as well for putting away of all such books, as reading, retaining, or having hereafter of any other like, delivering unto certain preachers the form of a writing to be published in effect unto the people in their sermons, whereof the form here followeth, willing them in all his realm to publish the same.
Here followeth the BILL in English, to be published by the PREACHER.
IT is the office and duty of every peacher and teacher of the word of God, not only to shew and declare unto his audience that which might be profitable and wholesome for the wealth of their [Page 867] souls, to be followed and taken, but also to note and signify unto them such things as may be dangerous and contagious, to the intent they might be avoided and eschewed, and also as near as they can judge who be teachers and authors of the same; this example we have of our Saviour Christ, where he saith. Beware of false prophets, &c. St. Paul likewise many times giveth warning to such as he wrote unto, that they should beware of the false apostles▪ that in his absence went about to corrupt the doctrine th [...]t he had taught them being present. Wherefore considering that it hath pleased the king's highness, like a noble and a virtuous prince, tendering not only the present wealth and tranquillity of all his subjects, for his and the worldly benefit and advantage, but most chiefly regarding the wealth of their souls and their due order towards God, thereby to deserve and attain immortal glory, to assemble and call together the chief personages of his prelates, and a great number of learned men of both universities, charging and commanding them for the di [...]charge and exoneration of his conscience, to find, read, examine and discuss, the contents of such books as are now spread abroad within his grace's realm in the English tongue, concerning the points and articles of our faith, and after their learning and conscience to make relation unto his highness, whether the same books be expedient and profitable for his people, to the direction and ordering of their conscience and soul, or else contagious and pestiferous for the same: and whether the opinions contained in them, were agreeable to God's word and doctrine or no, forasmuch as the said congregation and assembly had free liberty and licence granted unto every man to say as his conscience and lea [...]ning served him, without any reproof or blame to be imputed or arrested for any thing to be spoken there, whose person soever it touched, or any necessity to agree to the greater part, but only to say that his own learning and conscience could maintain and justify; after mature deliberation and consultation had, it was there, by a whole consent, no man rep [...]gning or gain sa [...]ing, determined and agreed that the books now being abroad in the English tongue contain false tradition and corrupt doctrine, far diff [...]rent from the true sense of the gospel and catholic unde [...]standing of the scripture, only [...] pernicious heresies to the destruction of the souls of good christian men, and that the certainty hereof, I can report unto you of mine own knowledge, being one of the said assembly, and hearing and seeing the said opinions read, declared and examined, and by the true sense and meaning of God's learning reproved and rejected: I think therefore my duty is, taking upon me the office of preacher, following the example of our master Christ and St. Paul, as is aforesaid, to warn and admonish you by the words of Christ, as I spake before: Beware of false prophets, &c. and take heed yourself that you be not infected by the contagion and infection of such false apostles, as have in our English tongue set forth books to seduce you from the true knowledge of God's laws, and bring you by their false interpretations of scripture into detestable and abominable heresies, to the destruction of our souls: wherefore you that have the books called, The obedience of a christian man; The sum of scripture; The revelation of Antichrist; The supplication of beggars; The mammon of unrighteousness; The matrimony of Tindal; The New Testament in English, of the translation which is now printed, and such other books in English, the authors whereof either dare not, or do not put to their names, be pernicious books; detest them, abhor them, keep them not in your hands, deliver them to the superiors such as call for them: and if by reading them heretofore, any thing remaineth in your breasts of that teaching, either forget it, or by information of the truth expel and purge it, to the intent that you being so purified and cleansed of that contagious doctrine and pestiferous traditions, may be fit and apt to receive and retain the true doctrine and understanding of Christ's laws, to the comfort and edification of your souls; thus I move and exhort you in God to do, this is your duty to do.
THE prelates of the church having the cure and charge of your souls ought to compel you, and your prince to punish and correct your not doing of the same, unto whom, as St. Paul saith, the sword is given by God's ordinance for that purpose; you shall also further understand, that the king's highness, forasmuch as it was reported unto him that there is engendered in divers of his s [...]bjects, an opinion, that it is his grace [...]s duty t [...] [Page 868] cause the scripture of God to be translated into the English tongue to be communicated unto the people, and that the prelates, and also his highness, do wrong in hindering of the same, his highness willed therefore every man there present in the said assembly, freely and frankly to shew and open unto him what might be proved, and conferred by scripture, and holy doctors in that behalf, to the intent that his highness (as he there openly protested) might conform himself thereunto, minding to do his duty towards his people, as he would they should do their duties towards him: in which matter, after the scripture declared, holy doctors and authors alledged and read, and all things said, which might be on both sides, and for both parties spoken, deduced, and brought forth, finally it appeared, that the having of the whole scripture in English, is not necessary to christian men; but that without having any such scripture, endeavouring themselves to do well, and to apply their minds to take and follow such lessons as the preacher that teacheth them, and so learned by his mouth, may as well edify spiritually in their souls, as if they had the same scriptures in English. And like as the having the scriptures in the vulgar tongue, and in the common people's hands, hath been by both holy fathers heretofore in sometimes thought meet and convenient, so at another time it hath been thought to holy fathers not expedient to be communicated among [...] them wherein forasmuch as the king's highness, by the advice and deliberation of his council, and the agreement of the great learned men, thinketh in his conscience, that the divulging of the scripture at this time in the English tongue, to be committed to the people, considering such pestilent books, and such evil opinions, as be now spread amongst them, should rather be to their further confusion and destruction, than the edification of their souls, and that as holy doctors testify, upon such-like considerations, the same hath been done in times past, it was thought there in that assembly to all and singular in that congregation, that the king's highness and the prelates, in s [...] doing and not suffering the scripture to be divulged a [...]d communicated in the English tongue un [...] the people, at this time doth well. And also I [...] and judge the same, exhorting and moving you, that in consideration his highness did there openly say and protest that he would cause the New Testament to be by learned men, faithfully and purely translated into the English tongue, to the intent that he might have it in his hands ready to be given to his people, as he might see their manners and behaviour meet, apt, and convenient to receive the same, that you will so detest those pernicious books, so abhor these heresies and new opinions, so decline from arrogancy of knowledge and understanding of scripture after your fancies, and shew yourself in cunning and reasoning, so sober, quiet, meek, and temperate, as all fear of misusing the gift of scripture taken away, you may appear such in your prince's eye [...], and eyes of your prelates, as they shall have no just cause to fear any such danger; persuading unto yourself in the mean time, without grudging or murmuring the very truth, which is this, that we cannot require or demand scripture to be divulged in the English tongue, otherwise than upon the discretion of our superiors, so as whensoever they think in their conscience it may do you good▪ they may and do well to give it unto you: and whensoever it shall be seen otherwise unto them, they do amiss in suffering you to have it. Of and upon which decree, order, and determination above recited, his gracious highness being in person in the chapel, called the old chapel, which sometime was called St. Edward's chamber, sat on the east side of the parliament chamber, within his grace's palace at Westminster, upon the 24th day of May, in the year of our Lord God 1530, and in the two and twentieth year of his reign, called before his grace the three notaries hereunder written, and then and there in the presence of all the personages there assembled and gathered together, willed and required the said three notaries to make public and authentic instruments, and us to set thereunto our seal accordingly in and for witness, and perpetual memory and monument of this his grace's desire, order, and determination, and of all and singular the personages then and there being present, to testify the same, and bear record and testimony thereupon: in witness of all and singular the premises, We William, archbishop, primate and legate, aforesaid, have commanded and obtained [Page 869] these present letters testimonial, or present public or authentic instrument, containing therein the order, decree, and determination abovesaid, to be made and to be subscribed, and consigned by the hands of the notaries hereafter named, and to be sealed with our own seal. All which premises have been done in manner and form above specified, then and there being present the noble personage of Thomas Moor, knight, great chancellor of England; our reverend brother in Christ, Cuthbert, by the permission of God, bishop of Durham: and worshipful personages, Mr. Stephen Gardiner, secretary; Mr. Richard Samson, dean of the chapel, doctor of law; Mr. Richard Wolman, master of the requests; Mr. John Bell, counsellor, doctors of holy decrees; Mr. Nicholas Wilson, the king's counsellor, Mr. Richard Duck, archdeacon of Wiltshire, doctors of divinity; Mr. John Oliver, Mr. Edmund Steward, doctors of the law, chaplains to our sovereign lord the king's grace; Mr. Richard Mawdley, Mr. William Mortimer, Mr. Edward Crome, Mr. Edward Wiggen, doctors also of divinity; Mr. Robert Carter, Mr. Edward Leighton; Mr. Hugh Latimer, and Roger Tilson, masters of art in both the universities abovesaid, with many more learned men of both universities, in a great number assembled then and there together, witness to the premises required and exhibited. These being premised, now let us see the answer of bishop Latimer again to this aforesaid proposal or instrument of the bishops, in a letter which the said Latimer wrote to king Henry the same time in that behalf.
HERE followeth a letter of bishop Latimer's, written to king Henry the eighth upon this occasion. You heard before of two proclamations set out by the bishops in the name of king Henry, one in the year 1531, and the other in the year 1546; in which proclamations, being authorized by the king's name, were inhibited all English books, either containing or tending to any matter of scripture. Where also we have expressed a catalogue of some of the errors which the said bishops have falsely picked out, and maliciously imputed to godly writers. Now bishop Latimer growing in some favour with the king, and seeing the great decay of Christ's religion by reason of these two proclamations, and touched therefore with the zeal of conscience, directed unto king Henry this letter here ensuing, thereby intending by all means possible, to persuade the king's mind to set open again the freedom of God's holy word amongst his subjects. The copy of which here followeth.
LETTER From Bishop LATIMER to King HENRY the Eighth, for restoring again of the free Liberty of reading the holy Scriptures.
THE holy doctor St. Augustine, in an epistle which he wrote to Casalanus, saith, That he which for fear of any power hideth the truth, provoketh the wrath of God to come upon him, for he feareth men more than God. And according to the same, the holy man St. John Chrysostom, saith, that he is not only a traitor to the truth, which openly for truth teacheth a lie; but he also which doth not freely pronounce and shew the truth that he knoweth. These sentences (most redoubted king) when I read now of late, and marked them earnestly in the inward parts of mine heart, they made me sore afraid, troubled and vexed me grievously in my conscience, and at last drove me to this strait, that either I must shew forth such things as I have read and learned in scripture, or else be of that sort that provoke the wrath of God upon them, and be traitors unto the truth: which thing, rather than it should happen, I had rather suffer extreme punishment.
FOR what other thing is it to be a stranger unto the truth, than to be a traitor and a Judas unto Christ, who is the very truth, and cause of all truth? Who saith, that whosoever denieth him before men, he will deny him before his Father in heaven. Which denying ought more to be feared and dreaded, than the loss of all temporal goods, [Page 870] honour, promotion, fame, prison, slander, hurts, banishments, and all manner of torments and cruelties, yea, and death itself, be it ever so painful and shameful. But alas! how little do men regard those sharp sayings of these two holy men! And how little do they fear the terrible judgment of Almighty God! And especially they who boast themselves to be guides and captains unto others, and challenging unto themselves the knowledge of holy scripture, yet will neither shew the truth themselves (as they be bound) or suffer them that would. So that unto them it may be said, that which our Saviour Christ said to the pharisees, Matth. xiii. Woe be unto you, scribes and pharisees, who shut up the kingdom of heaven before men, and neither will you enter in yourselves, neither suffer them that would to enter in. And they will, as much as in them lieth, debar not only the word of God, which David calleth, a light to direct and shew every man how to order his affections and lusts, according to the commandments of God, but also by their subtle wil [...]ness they instruct, move, and provoke in a manner, all kings in Christendom, to aid, succour, and help them in this their mischief; and especially in this your realm they have so blinded your liege people and subjects with their laws, customs, ceremonies, and Banbury glosses, and punished them with cursings, excommunications, and other corruptions (corrections I would say) and now at the last, when they see they cannot prevail against the open truth (which the more it is persecuted, the more it increaseth by their tyranny) they have made it treason to your noble grace to have the scripture in English.
HERE I beseech your grace to pardon me a while, and patiently to hear me a word or two; yea, though it be so that, as concerning your high majesty and regal power, whereunto Almighty God hath called your grace, there is as great difference between you and me, as between God and man▪ for you be here to me and to all your subjects▪ in God's stead, to defend, aid, and succour us in our right, and so I should tremble and qua [...] to speak to your grace. But again, as concerning that you be a mortal man, in danger of sin, having in you the corrupt nature of Adam, in which we are all both conceived and born: so have you no less need of the merits of Christ's passion for your salvation, than I and other of your subjects have, which [...] all members of the mystical body of Christ. And though you be an higher member, yet you must not disdain the lesser. For as St. Paul saith, Those members that are taken to be most vile, and had in least reputation, be as necessary as the other, for the preservation and keeping of the body. This, most gracious king, when I considered, and also your favourable and gentle nature, I was bold to write this rude, homely, and simple letter to your grace, trusting that you will accept my true and faithful mind, even as it is.
FIRST, I will exhort your grace to mark the life and process of our Saviour Christ, and his apostles, in preaching and setting forth of the gospel; and to note also the words of our master Christ, The tree is known by its fruit. For by the diligent marking of these, your grace shall clearly know and perceive who are the true followers of Christ, and teachers of his gospel, and who are not. And concerning the first, all scripture sheweth plainly that our Saviour Jesus Christ's life was very poor.
BEGIN at his birth, and I beseech you, who ever heard of a poorer, or so poor as he was? It were too tedious to write how poor Joseph and the blessed Virgin Mary took their journey from Nazareth toward Bethlehem, in the cold and frosty winter, having nobody to wait upon them, but he both master and man, and she both mistress and maid. How vilely, thinks your grace, were they treated in the inns and lodgings by the way? and in how vile and abject a place was this poor maid, the mother of our Saviour Jesus Christ, brought to bed, without company, light, or any other thing necessary for a woman in that condition? Was not here a poor beginning, as concerning this world? Yes truly. And according to this beginning was the process and end of his life in this world, and yet he might by his godly power have had all the goods and treasures of this world at his pleasure, when and where he would.
BUT this he did to shew us, that his followers and vicars should not regard and set by the riches and treasures of this world, but after the saving of David we ought to take them, which saith thus; If [Page 871] riches, promotions, and dignity happen to a man, let him not set his affiance, pleasure, trust, and heart upon them. So that it is not against the poverty in spirit, which Christ preacheth in the gospel of St. Matthew▪ chap. v. to be rich, to be in dignity and in honour, so that their hearts be not fixed and set upon them so much, that they neither care for God nor good men. But they be enemies to this poverty in spirit, have they ever so little, that have greedy and desirous minds to the goods of this w [...]ld, only because they would live after their own pleasures and lusts. And they also be private enemies (and so much the worse) which have professed, as they say, wilful poverty, and will not be called worldly men, and they have lord's lands, and king's riches; yea, rather than they would lose one jot of that which they have, they will set debate between king and king, realm and realm, yea, between the king and his subjects, and cause rebellion against the temporal power, to which our Saviour Christ himself was obedient, and paid tribute, as the gospel declareth; unto whom the holy apostle St. Paul [...] teacheth every christian man to obey. Yea, and beside all this, they will curse and censure, as much as in them lieth, even into the deep pit of hell, all that gainsay their appetite, whereby they think their goods, promotions, or dignities should decay.
YOUR grace may see what means and craft the spirituality (as they will be called) imagine, to break and withstand the acts which were made in your grace's last parliament against their superfluities. Wherefore they that thus do, your grace may know them not to be true followers of Christ. And although I named the spirituality to be corrupt with their unthrifty ambition; yet I mean not all to be faulty therein, for there be some good of them. Neither will I that your grace should take away the goods due to the church, but take away all evil persons from their goods, and set better in their stead.
I name nor appoint no person nor persons, but remit your grace to the rule of our Saviour Christ, as in Matthew the 7th chapter, By their fruit you shall know them. As touching the words that our Saviour Christ spake to his disciples when he sent them to preach his gospel, they be read in Matthew, the fifteenth chapter, where he sheweth, That here they shall be hated and dispised of all men worldly, and brought before kings and rulers, and that all evil should be said of them for their preaching sake; but he exhorteth them to take patiently such persecution by his own example, saying, It becometh not the servant to be above the master. And seeing they call me Beelzebub, what marvel is it if they call you devilish persons and heretics. Read the fourteenth chapter of St. Matthew's gospel, and there your grace shall see that he promised to the true preachers no worldly promotions or dignity, but persecutions and all kinds of punishment, and that they should be betrayed even by their own brethren and children. In John also he saith, In the world ye shall have oppression, and the world shall hate you: but in me you shall have peace. And in the tenth chapter of St. Matthew's gospel, saith our Saviour Christ also, Lo I send you forth as sheep among wolves. So that true preachers go like sheep, harmless, and be persecuted, and yet they revenge not their wrongs, but remit all to God; so far is it off that they will persecute any other but with the word of God only, which is their weapon. And so this is the most evident token that our Saviour Jesus Christ would that his gospel and the preachers of it should be known by, that it should be despised among those worldly wise men, and that they should repute it but foolishness and deceivable doctrine, and the true preachers should be persecuted and hated, and driven from town to town, yea, and at the last lose both goods and life.
AND yet they that did this persecution, should think that they did well, and a great pleasure to God. And the apostles remembering this lesson of our Saviour Christ, were content to suffer such persecutions, as you may read in the Acts of the apostles, and the epistles. But we never read that they ever persecuted any man. The holy apostle St. Paul saith, That every man that will live godly in Christ Jesus, should suffer persecution. And also he saith further, in the epistle [...]o the Philippians, [...] the first chapter, That it is not only given to you to believe in the Lord, but also to suffer, p [...]secution for his sake.
WHEREFORE take this for a sure conclusion, that [Page 872] there where the word of God is truly preached, there is persecution, as well of the hearers, as of the teachers: and where is quietness and rest in worldly pleasures, there is not the truth. For the world loveth all that are contrary to it. And, to be short, St. Paul calleth the gospel, the word of the cross, that word of punishment. And the holy scripture doth promise nothing to the favourers and followers of it in this world, but trouble, vexation, and persecution, which these worldly men cannot suffer, nor away withal.
THEREFORE pleaseth it your good grace, to return to this golden rule of our master and only Saviour Jesus Christ, which is this, By their fruits you shall know them. For where you see persecution, there is the gospel, and there is the truth: and they that persecute, be void without all truth; not caring for the clear light, which (as our Saviour Jesus Christ saith, in the third chapter of St. John's gospel) is come into the world, and which shall utter and shew forth every man's works. And they whose works be nought, dare not come to this light, but go about to stop and hinder it, endeavouring to prevent, as much as possible, the reading of the holy scriptures in our mother tongue, saying, that it would cause heresy and insurrection, and so they persuade, at least they would fain persuade your grace to keep it back. But here mark their shameless boldness, who be not ashamed contrary to Christ's doctrine, to gather figs of thorns, and grapes of t [...]istles, and to call light darkness and darkness light, sweet bitter and bitter sweet, good evil and evil good; and to say, that that which teacheth all obedience should cause dissension and strife: but such is their belly-wisdom, where with they judge and measure every thing, to hold and keep still this wicked mammon, the goods of this world, which is their god, and hath so blinded the eyes of their hearts, that they cannot see the clear light of the sacred scripture, though they babble ever so much of it.
BUT, as concerning this matter, other men have shewed your grace their minds, how necessary it is to have the scripture in English. Which thing also your grace hath promised by your last proclamation: which promise I pray God that your gracious highness may shortly perform, even to-day before to-morrow. Nor let the wickedness of these worldly men detain you from your godly purpose and promise. Remember the subtle worldly wise counsellors of Hanun the son of Na [...]s, king of the Ammonites, whom when David sent his servants [...] comfort the young king for the death of his father, by crafty imaginations counselled Hanun, not only to receive them gently, but to treat them mo [...] shamefully and cruelly, saying, "That they cam [...] not to comfort him, but to espy and search hi [...] land, so that afterward, they bringing David wor [...] how every thing stood, David might come and conquer it." And he caused the young king to she [...] their heads, and to cut their coats by the point [...] ▪ and sent them away like fools; whom he ought rather to have made much of, and to have treated them gently, and have given them great thank [...] and rewards: O wretched counsellors! But [...] what followed of this carnal and worldly wisdom▪ truly nothing but destruction of all the whole realm▪ and also of them that took their parts.
THEREFORE, good king, seeing that the right David, that is to say, our Saviour Christ, hath sent his servants, that is to say, his true preachers, and his own word also to comfort our weak and sick souls, let not these worldly men make your grace believe, that they will cause insurrections and heresies, and such mischiefs as they imagine of their own mad brains, lest that he be avenged upon you and your realm, a [...] was David upon the Ammonites, and as he hath ever been avenged upon them which have obstinately withstood and gainsaid his word. But peradventure they will lay this against me, and say that experience doth shew, how that such men as call themselves followers of the gospel, regard not your grace's commandment, neither obey your proclamation; and that was well proved by those persons which of late were punished in London for keeping such books as your grace had prohibited by proclamation: and so like as they regarded not this, so they will not regard or esteem other your grace's laws, statutes, or ordinances. But this is but a crafty persuasion. For your grace knoweth, that there is no man living, especially that loveth worldly promotion, that is so foolish to set forth, promote, or ad [...]ance his enemies, whereby he should be hindered of his worldly pleasures and fleshly desires; but rather he will seek all the ways [Page 873] possible that he can, utterly to confound, destroy, and put him out of the way. And so as concerning your last proclamation, prohibiting such books, the very true cause of it, and chief counsellors (as men say, and of likelihood it should be) were they whose evil living and cloaked hypocrisy these books uttered and disclosed. And howbeit that there were three or four that would have had the scripture to go forth in English, yet it happened there, as it is always seen, that the most part overcometh the better, and so it might be [...] not take this proclamation as your's, but as their's, set forth in your name, as they have done many times more, which hath put this your realm in great hindrance and trouble, and brought it in great pe [...]ry; and more would have done, if God had not mercifully provided to bring your grace to knowledge of the falshood and privy treason, which their head and captain was about; and be you sure not without adherents, if the matter be duly searched. For what marvel is it, that they being so nigh of your counsel, and so familiar with your lords, should provoke both your grace and them to prohibit these books, which before by their own authority have forbidden the New Testament under pain of everlasting damnation▪ [...]or such is their manner▪ to send a thousand men to [...], ere they send one to God, and yet the New Testament (and so I think by the o [...]er) was meekly offered to every man that would and could▪ to amend it, if the [...]e were any fault.
MOREOVER, I will ask them the cause of all in [...]urrections, which have heretofore been in this realm. And whence is it that there be so many extortioners, bribers, murderers, and thieves, which [...]ily do not only break your grace's [...], and statutes▪ but also the laws and commandments of Almighty God? I think they will not say these books, but rather their pardons, which causeth many a man to sin in trust of them. For as for those mal [...]factors which I now rehearsed, you shall not find one among a hundred; but he will cry out, both of these books, and also of them that have them, yea and will be glad to spend the goods which he hath wrongfully gotten; upon faggots, to burn both the books, and them that have them.
AND as touching these men that were lately punished for these books, there is no man, I hear say, that can lay any word or deed against them that should sound to the breaking of any of your grace's laws, this only except, if it be you [...]'s, and not rather [...]. And be it so that [...] b [...] some that have these books, that be evil, unruly, and self-willed persons, not regarding God's law [...], [...] man's, yet th [...]se books be not the cause thereof, no more than was the bodily presence of Christ and his words the cause that [...] sell, but their own frow [...]rd mind and [...], which should be amended by the virtuous example of living of their [...] rates, and by the true exposition of the scripture. If the lay-people had such curates that would [...] do their office, neither these books, nor the devil himself, could hurt or put them out of order, so that the lack of good [...] is the destruction and cause of all mischief. Neither do I write [...] things because that I will either excuse these m [...]n lately punished, or to affirm all to be true [...] in these b [...]ks, which I have not all read, but to shew that there cannot such inconvenience follow of them, and especially of the scripture, as they would make [...] believe should follow.
AND though [...] go forth without persecution, if your grace had commanded that every m [...]n within your [...] throughout all the world, which is the [...] that Christ shewed [...] his disciples should come before the day of judgment; so that if your gra [...]e had once commanded that the scripture should be put forth, the de [...]il would set forth some [...] or other [...] persecute the truth. But my purpose is, for the love that I have [...] God principally, and the glory of his name, which is only known by his word, and for the true allegiance that I ow [...] unto your grace, and not to hide in the [...] of my heart the talent given me by God, but [...] it forth to others, that it may increase [Page 874] to the pleasure of God, to exhort your grace to avoid and beware of these mischievous flatterers, and their abominable ways and counsels.
And take heed whose counsels your grace doth [...] in this matter: for there be some that for fear of losing of their worldly worship and honour, will not leave off their opinion, which rashly, and that to please men withal by whom they had great promotion, they took upon them to defend by writing, so that now they think that all their felicity which they put in this life should be marred, and their wisdom not so greatly regarded, if that which they have so slanderously oppressed should be now put forth and allowed. But alas! let these men remember St. Paul, how fervent he was against the truth (and that of a good zeal) before he was called; he thought no shame to suffer punishment and great persecutions for that which before he despised and called heresy. And I am sure that their living is not more perfect than St. Paul's was, as concerning the outward works of the law, before he was converted.
ALSO the king and prophet David was not ashamed to forsake his good intent in building of the temple, after that the prophet Nathan had shewed him that it was not the pleasure of God that he should build any house for him; and notwithstanding that Nathan had before allowed and praised the purpose of David, yet he was not ashamed to revoke and eat his words again, when he knew that they were not according to God's will and pleasure.
WHEREFORE they be sore drowned in worldly wisdom▪ that think it against their worship to acknowledge their ignorance; whom I pray to God that your grace may espy, and take heed of their worldly wisdom, which is foolishness before God, that you may do what God commandeth, and not what seemeth good in your own sight without the word of God, that your grace may be found acceptable in his sight, and one of the members of his church; and according to the office that he hath called your grace unto, you may be found a faithful minister of his gifts, and not a defender of his faith, for he will not have it defended by man, or man's power, but by his word only, by which he hath evermore defended it, and that by a way far above man's power or reason, as all the stories of the Bible make mention.
WHEREFORE, gracious king, remember yourself, have pity upon your soul, and think the day is even at hand when you shall give an account of your office, and of the blood that hath been shed with your sword. In which day that your grace may stand stedfastly, and not be ashamed, but be clear and ready in your reckoning, and to have, as they say, your discharge sealed with the blood of our Saviour Christ, which only serveth at that day, is my daily prayer to him that suffered death for our sins, who also prayeth to his Father for grace for us continually. To whom be all honour and praise for ever, Amen. The Spirit of God preserve your grace.
December 1, 1530.
IN this letter of Bishop Latimer to the king above prefixed, many things we have to consider; First, his good conscience to God, his good will to the king, the duty of a right pastor unto truth, his tender care to the commonwealth, and especially to the church of Christ. Further, we have to consider the abuse of princes' courts, how kings may be abused with flatterers and wicked counsellors about them; and especially, we may note the subtle practices of prelates, in abusing the name and authority of kings, to set forth their own malignant proceedings. We may see moreover, and rather marvel at in the said letter, the great boldness and divine stoutness in this man, who as yet being no bishop, so freely and plainly without any fear of death, adventuring his life to discharge his conscience, durst so boldly, to so mighty a prince, in such a dangerous case, against the king's law and proclamation set out in such a terrible tim [...] take upon him to write, and to admonish that which no counsellor durst so much as once mention unto him in defence of Christ's gospel. Whose example, if the bishops and prelates of this realm, for their parts likewise, in like cases would follow (as indeed they ought to do) it is very probable that many things would not be so out of frame as they be.
FINALLY, this moreover in the said letter is to be noted, how blessedly Almighty God wrought with [Page 875] his faithful servant's bold adventure, and wholesome counsel, though it did not prevail through the iniquity of the time, yet God so wrought with his servant in doing his duty, that no danger, nor yet displeasure rose to him thereby, but rather thanks and good will of the prince; for not long after the same he was advanced by the king to the bishopric of Worcester, as is above declared.
SEEING bishop Latimer was so bold and plain with the king (as is before specified) no great marvel if he did use the like freedom and plain [...]s towards other meaner persons, in admonishing them of their misorder, especially if any such occasion where given, were truth and equity required his defence against injury and oppression. For example whereof we have another letter of his, written to a certain justice of the peace in Warwickshire, who as he is long since departed, so he shall be here unnamed. The letter, although it may seem somewhat [...] and tedious, yet I thought not to overpass the same for several reasons: First, That the virtue and faithful conscience of this good pastor may appear more at large; also, for that all other bishops and pastors by this examp [...]e may learn with like zeal and resolution to discharge their duty and conscience in reforming things amiss, and in powdering with the salt of God's word the sores of the people. Which thing if every bishop for his part within his diocese had done in king Edward's days, in redressing such corruption of that time with like diligence as this man did, verily I suppose that the persecution of queen Mary had not so plagued the realm as it did. Item, Another respect i [...], because of the justices and all others placed in office, which may take heed here, not to abuse their authority to tread down truth▪ and bear down poor men with open wrong through extortion of partiality. And finally, that all injurious oppressors whatsoever, by the said letter, may take some fruit of wholesome admonition.
Bishop LATIMER'S Letter to a Justice of the Peace.
RIGHT worshipful, health in the Lord. And now, sir, I understand▪ that you be in great admiration at me, and take very grievously my manner of writing to you; adding, thereunto that you will not bear it at my hand, no if I were the best bishop in England, &c.
AH sir, I see well I may say as the common saying is, Well, I have fished and caught a frog▪ brought little to pass with much ado. You will not bear it with me, you say. Why, sir, wha [...] will you do with me? You will not fight with me, I suppose. It may seem unseemly for a justice of peace to be a breaker of the peace: I am glad the doting time of my foolish youth is gone and past▪ What will you then do with me, in that you say you will not bear it at my hand? What hath my hand offended you? Perchance you will summo [...] me before some judge, and call me into some court. God turn it to good. I refuse no jud [...]ment. Le [...] us accuse one another, that one of u [...] may amend another, in the name of the Lord. Let justice proceed in judgment. And then and there do best, have best, for club-halfpenny. Or peradventure you will set pen to paper, and all to rattle me in a letter, wherein confuting me you will defend yourself and your brother against me. Now that would I see, says long Robin, as is commonly said. I cannot chuse but must allow such diligence. For so should both your integrities and innocencies best appear, if you be able to defend both your own proceedings, and your brother' [...] doings in this matter to be upright. And then will I gladly give place, confessing my fault humbly, as conquered with just reasons. But I think it will not be. But now first of all let me know, what it is that you will not bear at my hand? What have I done with my hand? What hath my hand trespassed you? Forsooth, that can I tell, no man better; for I have charitably admonished you in a secret letter, of your supper-dealing and such like misbehaviour. What a sore matter is this? And will you not bear so much with me? Will you not take such a shew of my good will towards you, and towards the saving of your soul at my hand? O Lord God, who would have thought that Mr. N. had been so imprudent, that he would not bear a godly admonition for the wealth of his soul? I have in use to commit such trespass many times in a year with your betters, by two or three degrees, both lords and ladies, and the best of the realm, and yet hitherto I hav [...] not [Page 876] heard that any of them have said in their displeasure, that they will not bear it at my hand. Are you yet to be taught what is the office, liberty, and privilege of a preacher? What is it else, but even to rebuke the world of sin without respect of persons: which thing undoubtedly is the peculiar office of the Holy Ghost in the church of God, so that it be practised by lawful preachers. You could but ill bear (belike) to hear your fault openly reproved in the pulpit, which cannot bear the same in a secret sealed-up letter, written both friendly, charitably, and truly; unless perhaps to rebuke sin sharply, be now to lack all charity, friendship, and truth. But Mr. N. if you will give me leave to be plain with you, I fear you are so plunged in worldly purchasings, and so drowned in the manifold dr [...]s of this deceivable world▪ that I believe you have forgotten your cat [...]chism. Read therefore again the opening of the first commandment, and then tell me, whether you have just cause to complain of me, or I of you, &c.
ALSO, sir, you said further, that I am wonderfully abused by my neighbour, &c. How so, good Mr. N [...]? Wherein? or how will you prove it to be true, and when? So you said, that he had abused you, and given you wrong information; but the contrary is found true by the good testimony of Mr. Chambers, who heard as well as you what my neighbour said, and hath testified the same, both to you, and against you, full like himself. Mr. N. to forge and feign, (which argueth an ill cause) that is one thing; but to prove what a man doth say, that is another thing. A [...] though you were privileged to out-face poor men, and bear them in hand what you lift, a [...] may seem to make some maintenance for your naughty cause. Trust me, Mr. N. I was but very little acquainted with my neighbour when this matter began; but now I have found him so conformable to honesty, upright in his dealings, and so true in his talk, that I esteem him better than I do some others whom I have perceived and found otherwise. For I will flatter no man▪ nor yet claw his back in his folly, but esteem all men as I find them▪ allowing what is good, and disallowing what is bad. Among all men, either friends or enemies, according to St. Paul's precept, not esteemed of the children of this world; Ha [...]e you, saith he, that which is evil, and cleave that which is good. And let us not any time, for the favour of men, call good evil, and evil good, [...] the children of this world are commonly wont to do, as it is every where to be seen. And now what manner of man do you make me, master N. when you note me to be so much abused by so ignorant a man, so simple, so plain, and so far without all wrinkles? Have I lived so long in this to [...] tering world, and have I been so many ways turmoiled and tossed up and down, and so much as it were seasoned with so many experiences to [...] fro, to be now so far bewitched and alienated from my wits, as though I could not discern chees [...] from chalk, truth from falsehood, but that every silly soul, and base-witted man, might easily abuse me to what enterprize he lifted at his pleasure? Well, I say not nay, but I may be abused. But why do you not tell me how your brother abused me, promising before me and many more, that he would stand to your awardship, and now doth deny it? Why do you not tell me, how those two false faithless wretches abused me, promising also to abide your a [...]ard, and do it not? Ye [...], why do you not tell me how you yourself have abused, me promising me to address the injury and wrong that your brother hath done to my neighbour, and have not fulfilled your promise? These notable abuses be nothing with you, but only you must needs burden me with my neighbour's abusing me, which is nothing at all, as far as I could perceive, so God help me at my need. For if he had abused me as you and others have done, I should be soon at a point with him, for any thing further doing for him, &c.
LIKEWISE, sir, you said further, that I shall [...] ver be able to prove that either your brother or the two tenants agree to stand to your award, &c. No, sir, Mr. N. you say be [...]ike as you would have it to be, or as your brother with his adheren [...] have persuaded you to think it to be, so inducing you to do their request to your own shame and rebuke, if you persevere in the same, besides the danger o [...] your soul, for consenting, at least wi [...]e, to the maintenance by falsehood of your brother's iniqu [...] ty. For in that you would your awardship should take no effect, you shew yourself nothing inclinable to the redress of your brother's u [...]right dealing with an honest poor man, which hath been ready at [Page 877] your request to do you pleasure with his things, or he had never come into this wrangle for his own goods with your brother.
AH, master N. what manner of man do you shew yourself to be? or what manner of conscience do you shew yourself to have? For, first, as touching your brother, you know well that sir Thomas Coking, with a letter of his own hand writing, hath witnessed unto your brother's agreement; which letter he sent to me unsealed, and I shewed the same to my neighbour, and others before I sealed it, and perchance have a copy of the same yet to shew. With what conscience then can you say that I shall never be able to prove it? Shall not three men upon their oaths make a sufficient proof, think you? The Lord himself says, is the mouth of two or three, &c. Yea, you think i [...] true, I dare say, in your conscience, if you have any conscience, though I were in my grave, and so unable to prove any thing. As for the two tenants, they be as they be, and I trust to see them handled according as they be three men yet alive, that dare swear upon a book, that they both did agree. But what should we look for at such men's hands, when you yourself play the part you do? But God is yet alive, who seeth all, and judgeth justly.
ALSO, sir, you said yet further, that the justices of the peace in the county think you▪ very unnatural, in taking part with me before your brother, &c. Ah, master N. what a sentence is this to come out of your mouth? For partaking is one thing, and ministring of justice is another thing; and a worthy minister of justice will be no partaker, but one indifferent between party and party. And did I [...]quire you take my part, I pray you? No, I required you to administer justice between your brother and my neighbour, without any partaking with either▪ But what manner of justices be they, I pray you, who would so fain have you to take part naturally with your brother, when you ought and should reform and amend your brother? as you yourself know, no man better. What, justice! No, jugglers you might more worthily call such as they be, than justices. [...] they those justices which call you unnatural, for that you will not take your brother's part against all right and conscience, whom you had picked out and appointed to have the final hearing and determining my neighbour's cause, after your substantial and final award-making? Verily, I think no less. Forsooth, he is very much obliged to you, and I also for his sake. Is that the wholesome counsel that you have to give your poor neighbours in their need? Indeed you shew yourself a worthy juggler: oh, I would have said a justicer, among other of your juggling and partaking justices. O good God! what is in the world? Marry, sir, my neighbour had spun a fair thread, if your partaking-justices through your good counsel had had his matter in ordering and finishing. I pray God save me and all my friends, with all God' [...] flock, from your natural, and so partaking-justices, Amen.
LORD God! who would have thought that there [...]ad been so many partaking-justices in Warwick [...]hire, if master N. himself, one of the same order▪ (but altogether out of order) and therefore knoweth it best, had not told us the tale? But the [...] call you, you say, very unnatural, &c. And [...] not rather, I pray you, too much natural? for we read of a double nature, found and corrupt. That was full of justice: this, unless it be restored, abideth always unjust, bringing forth the fruits of wickedness one after another; so that he that will not help his brother, having a just cause in his [...] may be justly called unnatural, as one following [...] disposition and inclination of corrupt nature against the will of God; and so to be natural may [...] be cater-cousin, or cousin-german with, to be [...] bolical.
I fear we have too many justices that be too much natural, to their own punishment both of body and soul. For worthy justices having ever the fear and dread of God before their eye [...], (of which sort we have fewer amongst us than I wish we had) w [...]ll have no respect at all in their judgments and proceedings, to vicinity of blood, but altogether to the worth and justice of the cause, judging that to be just which is so in the sight of God, though not of men; of which number I pray God to make you one, Amen. He is just that doth justice. But he [...] sinneth (as they [...] do which do unjustly [...] favour and pleasure of men) is of the devil, [...] he, of which sort all our partaking and natural justices be with all their partiality and naturality. Wherefore it would be right and just that as many [Page 878] [...] be such justices, be justly deprived of their offices, and further also to be punished, according to the quantity or quality of their crime, so that [...] that means they may be cut off, as men born and bred to the hurt and detriment of the common wealth, which trouble us when they ought to help us, Amen.
SIR, finally and last of all you added these words following: Well, said you, let bishop Latimer take heed how he meddleth with my brother, for he is like to find as crabbed and froward a piece of him, as ever he found in his life, &c. Ah, sir, and is your brother such an one as you speak of indeed? Merciful God, what a commendation is this for one brother to give another? Is this your glorying, my friend? And were it not possible, think you, to make him better? It is written, Vexation giveth understanding. And again, It is good, O Lord, that thou hast humbled me. At least, I may pray to God for him as David did for such like, after this sort; Bind fast asses with bridle and snaffle, that they approach not near unto thee. In the mean season, I would I had never known either of you both; for so should I have been without this inward sorrow of my heart, to see such unwillingness in you both to godliness; for I cannot but be heavy h [...]a [...]ted, to see such men so wickedly minded. Well, let us ponder a little better your words, where you say, I shall find him as crabbed and as froward a piece as ever I found in my life, &c. Mark well your own words. For by the tenor of the same it plainly appeareth, that you confess your brother's cause, wherein he so stiffly standeth, to be unjust and very naught. For he that standeth so stiffly in a good quarrel and a just cause, as many good men have done, is called a fast man, a constant, a trusty man. But he that is obstinate and untractable in wickedness and wrong doing, is commonly called a crabbed and froward piece, as you name your brother to be.
WHEREFORE knowing your brother's cause to be so wicked, why have you not endeavoured yourself, as a worthy justice, to reform him accordingly, as I required you, and you promised me to do, now almost twelve months ago. In short Mr. N. if you will not come off shortly, and apply yourself thereunto more effectually hereafter than you have here [...]ofore, [...]e you well assured thereof, I shall [...] you to all the friends that I have in England, both high and low, as well hi [...] crabbedness and frowardness, as your colourable support of the same; that I trust I shall be able thereby either to bring you both to some goodness, or at least I shall so warn my friends and all honest hearts to beware of your wickedness, that they shall either take no hurt at all, or at least less harm by you through my advertisement; in that knowing you perectly, they may the better avoid and shun your company. You shall not hinder me, Mr. N. no, though you would give me all the lands and goods you have, as rich as you are noted to be. I will not forsake such a just cause, neither will I communicate with other men's sins. For whether it be by detestable pride; whether by abominable avarice; or by both linked together, it is no small iniquity to keep any poor man so long from his right and duty so stiffneckedly and obstinately, or, whether ye will, crabbedly and frowardly. And what is it then any manner of ways to consent to the same? You know, I suppose, Mr. N. what theft is, that is, to take or detain by any manner of way another man's goods against his will that is the owner, as some define it. If he be a thief that doth so openly, what shall he be that approveth him which is the doer, defendeth, maintaineth, and supporteth him by any manner of colour? Consider with yourself, good Mr. N. what it is to oppress and to defraud your brother in his business, and what folleweth thereof. It is truly said, the sin is not forgiven, except the thing be restored again that is taken away. No restitution, no salvation; which is as well to be understood of things gotten by fraud, guile, and deceit, as of things got by open theft and robbery. Wherefore let not your brother, Mr. N. by cav [...] lation continue in the devil's possession. I will do the best I can, and wrestle with the devil with all my strength, to deliver you both from him. I will leave no one s [...]ne unmoved to have both you and your brother [...]. There is neither archbishop nor bishop, [...] yet any learned man neither in universi [...] [...] or elsewhere, that I am acquainted with, that shall not write u [...]to you, and in their writing by their learning confute you. There is no godly man of law in this realm that I am acquainted with, but they s [...]ll write unto you, and confute you by law. There is neither lord nor [Page 879] lady, nor yet any noble personage in this realm, that I am acquainted with, but they shall write unto you, and godly threaten you with their authority.
I will do all this; yea, and kneel upon both my knees before the king's majesty, and all his honourable council, with most humble petition for your reformation, rather than the devil shall possess you still, to your final damnation. So that I do not despair, but verily trust one away or the other, to pluck both you and also your crabbed brother, as crabbed as you say he is, out of the devil's claws, in spite of the devil's heart.
THESE premises well considered, look upon it good master N. that we have no further ado; God's plague is presently upon us; therefore let us now diligently look about us, and in no wise defend, but willingly acknowledge and amend whatsoever hath been amiss. These were the capital points of your talk, as I was informed, after you had perused my nipping and unpleasant letter? And I thought good to make you some answer to them, if perchance I might so move you, rather to call yourself to some better r [...]membrance, and so more earnestly apply yourself to accomplish and perform what you have begun and promised to do, namely, the thing itself being of such sort, as apparently tendeth both to your worship, and also to God's high pleasure.
THUS, lo, with a mad head, but yet a good will, after long scribbling I know not well what (but I know you can read it, and comprehend it well enough), I bid you most heartily well to fare in the Lord, with good health, and long life to God's pleasure.
DURING the time that the said bishop Latimer was prisoner at Oxford, we read not much of what he did write, besides his conference with Dr Ridley, and his protestation at the time of his disputation. Otherwise, of letters we find very few or none that he wrote to his friends abroad, save only these few lines, which he sent to one Mrs. Wilkinson of London, a pious woman, and afterwards an exile for the gospel's sake. Who, so long as she remained in England, was a singular patroness to the good saints of God, and learned bishops, as to bishop Hooper, to the bishop of Hereford, to Mr. Coverdale, bishop Latimer, Dr. Cranmer, with many others. The copy and effect of which his letter to Mrs. Wilkinson here followeth.
LETTER From Mr. HUGH LATIMER to Mrs. Wilkinson, Widow, in London.
IF the gift of a pot of water shall not be in oblivion with God, how can God forget your manifold and bountiful gifts, when he shall say to you, I was in prison and you visited me? God grant us all to do and suffer while we are here, as may be to his will and pleasure, Amen.
TOUCHING the memorable actions of this worthy man, among many others this is not to be neglected, what a bold enterprize he attempted, in sending to king Henry a present, the manner whereof is this. There was then, and remaineth still an old custom received from the old Romans, that upon New-year's day, being the first day of January, every bishop with some handsome new-year's gift should gratify the king; and so they did, some with gold, some with silver, some with a purse full of money, and some one thing, some another: but bishop Latimer being then bishop of Worcester, among the rest, presented a New Testament for his new-year's gift, with a napkin having this posey abo [...] it, Fornicators and adulterers God will judge.
AND thus hast thou (gentle reader) the whole life, both of Dr. Ridley and bishop Latimer, two worthy fathers in the church of Christ, their writings, disputations, sufferings, their painful travels, and faithful preachings, studious service in Christ's church their patient imprisonment, and constant fortitude in that which they had taught, with all their proceedings from time to time, since their first springing years to this present month of queen Mary, being the month of October, Anno 1555. In which month they were brought forth together, to their final examination and execution. Wherefore [Page 880] as we have hitherto declared both their lives severally and distinctly one from another; so now jointly: to couple them both together, as they were both together joined in one society or cause of martyrdom, we will, by the grace of Christ, prosecute the rest that remaineth concerning their last examination, degrading and constant suffering, with the order and manner also of the commissioners, and what were their words, their objection, their orations there used, and what again were the answers of those men to the same, as in the process here followeth may be seen.
The Order and Manner of the Examination of Dr. RIDLEY, and Bishop LATIMER, in Sept. 1555.
FIRST, after the appearing of Thomas Cranmer, archbishop of Canterbury, before the the pope's delegate, and the queen's commissioners in St. Mary's church at Oxford, about the 12th of September, whereof more shall be said (by God's grace) when we come to the death of the said archbishop; shortly after, on the 28th of the said month, another commission was sent down to Oxford from cardinal Poole, to John White, bishop of Lincoln, Dr. Brooks, bishop of Gloucester, and Dr. Holyman, bishop of Bristol. The contents and virtue of which commission was, that the said bishops of Lincoln, Gloucester, and Bristol, or two of them, should have full power and authority to cite, examine and judge, Mr. Hugh Latimer and Dr. Ridley, for divers and sundry erroneous opinions, which the said Hugh Latimer and Nicholas Ridley did hold and maintain in open disputations had in Oxford, in the months of May, June, and July, in the year 1554, as long before in the time of perdition, and since. Which opinions, if the named persons would now recant, giving and yielding themselves to the determination of the universal and catholic church planted by Peter in the blessed [...] of Rome, that then the deputed judges, by the said authority of their commission, should have power to receive the said penitent persons, and forthwith administer unto thm the reconciliation of the holy father the pope; but if the said Hugh Latimer, and Nicholas Ridley, would stoutly and stubbornly maintain these their erroneous opinions and assertions, that then the said lords by their commission should proceed in form of judgment, according to the law of heretics; that is degradi [...] them from their promotions and dignity of bi [...]ops, priests, and all other ecclesiastical order [...] should pronounce them heretics, and therefore clean cut them off from the church, and so yield them to receive punishments due to all such heresy and schism.
WHEREFORE the last of September the said two persons, Nicholas Ridley and Hugh Latimer were cited to appear before the said lords in the divinity school at Oxford at eight of the clock▪ At which time the lords repaired thither, placing themselves in the high seat made for public l [...]tures and disputations, according to the usage of that school, being then fair set and trimmed with cloth of tissue, and cushions of velvet: and after the said lords were placed and set, the said Latimer and Ridley were sent for. And first Dr. Ridley appeared, and by and by bishop Latimer. But because it seemed good severally to examine them, bishop Latimer was kept back until Dr. Ridley was thoroughly examined. Therefore soon af [...]ter the coming of Dr. Ridley into the sch [...] ▪ the commission was published by an appointed notary, and openly read. But Dr. Ridley standing bareheaded, humbly expecting the cause of that his appearance, as soon as he had heard the cardinal named, and the pope's holiness, put [...] his cap. Wherefore after the commission was published, the bishop of Lincoln spake as followeth.
Mr. Ridley, although neither [...] nor yet my lords here, in respect of our own persons do look for cap or knee, yet because we bear and represent such persons as we do, that is, my lord cardinal's grace, legate a latere to the pope's holiness, as well in that he is of a noble parentage
descending from the royal blood, as in that he is a man worthy to be reverenced with all humility, for his great knowledge and learning, noble virtuous and godly life, and especially in that he is here in England deputy to the pope's holiness, it should have becomed you at this name to have uncovered your head. Wherefore except you will of your ownself take the pains to put your hand to your head, and at the nomination, as well [Page 881] of the said cardinal, as of the pope's holiness, uncover the same, lest that this your contumacy, exhibited now before us, should be prejudicial to the said most reverend persons, (which thing we may in no case suffer) you shall cause us to take the pairs to oblige some man to pluck off your cap from you. To whom Dr. Ridley (desiring lic [...]e) answered:
As touching what you said, my lord, that you of your own persons desire no cap or knee, but only require the same in consideration that you represent the cardinal's grace's person, I would have you know, and thereupon make my protestation, that I did put on my cap at the naming of the cardinal's grace, neither for any contumacy that I bear towards your own persons, neither for any derogation of honour toward [...] the lord cardinal's grace. For I know him to be a man worthy of all humility, reverence, and honour, in that he came of the most regal blood, and in that he is a [...]an indued with manifold graces of learning and virtue; and as touching these virtues and points, I, with all humility
and obeisance that I may, will reverence and honour his grace; but in that he is legate to the bishop of Rome
whose usurped supremacy and abused authority I utterly refuse and renounce, I may in no wise give my obeisance or honour unto him, lest that my so doing might be prejudicial to mine oath, and a derogation to the verity of God's word: and therefore that I might not only by confession profess the verity, in not reverencing the renounced authority, contrary to God's word, but also in gesture, in behaviour, and all my doings, express the same, I have put on my cap, and for this consideration only, and not for any contumacy to your lordships, neither contempt of this worshipful audience, neither derogation of any honour due to the cardinal's grace, both for his noble parentage, and also his excellent qualities, I have kept on my cap.
Mr. Ridley, you excuse yourself of that with which we pressed you not, in that you protest you keep on your cap, neither for any contumacy towards us (who look for no such homage from you) neither for any contempt of this audience: which although justly they may, yet (as I suppose) in this case do not require any such obeisance of you, neither in derogation of any honour due to my lord cardinal's grace, for his regal descent
and excellent qualities; for although in all the premises honour be due yet in these respects we require none of you, but only in that my lord cardinal's grace is here in England, deputy of the pope's holiness
and therefore we say unto you the second time, that except you take the pains yourself, to put your hand to your head, and put off your cap, you shall put us to the pains to cause some man to take it from you, except you alledge some infirmity and sickness, or other more reasonable cause, upon the consideration whereof we may do as we think good.
The premises I said only for this end, that it might as well appear to your lordships, as to this worshipful audience, why and for what consideration I used such kind of behaviour, in not humbling myself to your lordships with cap and knee: and as for my sickness I thank my Lord God, that I am as well at ease as I have been this long time; and therefore I do not pretend that which is not, but only this, that it might appear by this my behaviour, that I acknowledge in no point that usurped supremacy of Rome, and therefore contemn and utterly despised all authority coming from him. In taken off my cap, do as it shall please your lordships, and I shall be content.
THEN the bishop of Lincoln, after the third admonition, commanded one of the beadles (that is, an officer of the universiy) to pluck his cap from his head▪ Dr. Ridley bowing his head to the officer, gently permitted him to take it away.
AFTER this, the bishop of Lincoln, in a long oration, exhorted Dr. Ridley to recant, and submit himself to the universal faith of Christ, in this manner.
Mr. Ridley, I am sure you have sufficiently pondered with yourself the effect of this o [...] commission with good advice, considering both points thereof, how that authority is given to us, if you shall receive the true doctrine of the church, which first was founded by Peter at Rome immediately after the death of Christ, and from him by lineal succession hath been brought to this our time, if you will be content to renounce your former errors, recant your heretical and seditious opinions, content to yield yourself to the undoubted faith and truth of the gospel, received and always taught by the catholic and apostolic church, which the king and queen, all the nobles of this realm, and commons of the same, all christian people have and do confess you only standing alone by yourself: you understand and perceive, I am sure, that authority is given to us to receive you, to reconcile you, and upon due penance to join and associate you again into the number of the catholics and Christ's church, from which you have so long strayed, without which no man can be saved: which thing I and my lords here, yea, and all, as well nobles and commons of this realm, most heartily desire, and I, for my part,
most earnestly exhort you to do.
REMEMBER, Mr. Ridley, it is no strange country whither I exhort you to return. You were once one of us, you have taken degrees in the school. You were made a priest, and became a preacher, setting forth the same doctrine which we do now. You were made bishop according to our laws; and, to be short, it is not so long ago since you separated yourself from us, and in the time of heresy became a setter-forth of that devilish and seditious doctrine which, in these latter days, was preached amongst us. For at what time the new doctrine of only faith began to spring, the council, willing to win my lord chancellor, sent you to him (I then being in my lord's house, unknown, as I suppose, to you); and after you had talked with my lord secretly, and were departed, immediately my lord declared certain points of your talk, and means of your persuasion, and amongst others this was one, that you should say, Tush, my lord, this matter of justification is but a trifle, let us not stick to condescend herein to them; but for God's love, my lord, stand stoutly in the verity of the sacrament; for I see they will assault thee also▪ If this be true, (as my lord is a man credible enough in such a matter) hereby is is declared of what mind you were then, as touching the blessed sacrament.
ALSO in a sermon of your's at Paul's Cross, you as effectually and as catholicly spake of that blessed sacrament as any man might have done, whereby it appeareth that is no strange thing, nor unknown place whereunto I exhort you. I wish you to return thi [...]her from whence you came, that is, with us to acknowledge the church of God, wherein no man may err, to acknowledge the supremacy of our most reverend father in God the pope's holiness, which (as I said) lineally taketh his descent from Peter, upon whom Christ promised, before his death, to build his church; which supremacy or prerogative the most ancient fathers in all ages, in all times did acknowledge: and here he brought a place or two out of the doctors, but especi [...]lly fixed upon a place of St. Augustine, who writeth after this manner; All the christian countries beyond the sea are subject to the church of Rome. Here you see, Mr. Ridley, that all Christendom is subject to the church of Rome. What should hinder you therefore to confess the same as St. Augustine and other fathers?
THEN Dr. Ridley desired his patience to suffer him to speak somewhat of the premises, lest the multitude of things might confound his memory; and having leave granted him, he said in this manner.
My lord, I most heartily thank your lordship, as well for your gentleness, as also for your sobriety in talk, and for your good and favourable zeal in this learned exhortation, in which I have marked especially three points, which you used to persuade me to leave my doctrine and religion, which I perfectly know and am thoroughly persuaded to be grounded, not upon man's imagination and decrees, but upon the infallible truth of Christ's gospel, and not to look back and to return to the Romish see, contrary to mine [...]ath contrary to the prerogative and crown of this realm, and especially (which moveth me most) contrary to the express word of God.
[Page 883]THE first point is this, that the see of Rome taking its beginning from Peter, upon whom you say Christ hath built his church, hath in all ages, lineally from bishop to bishop, been brought to this time.
SECONDLY, That even the holy fathers from time to time have confessed the same.
THIRDLY, That in that I was once of the same opinion, and together with you I did acknowledge the same.
FIRST, As touching the saying of Christ, from whence your lordship gathereth the foundation of the church upon Peter, truly the place is not to be understood as you take it, as the circumstance of the place will declare. For after that Christ had asked his disciples whom men judged him to be, and they answered, that some had said he was a prophet, some Elias, some one thing, some another; then he said, Whom say ye that I am? Then Peter said, I say that thou art Christ the Son of God. To whom Christ answered, I say, Thou art Peter, and upon this stone I will build my church; that is to say▪ Upon this stone not meaning Peter himself, as though he would have constituted a mortal man, so frail and brittle a foundation of his stable and infallible church: but upon this rock stone, that is this confession of thine, that I am the Son of God, I will build my church. For this is, the foundation and beginning of all christianity with word, heart, and mind, to confess that Christ is the Son of God. Whosoever believeth not this, Christ is not in him; and he cannot have the mark of Christ printed in his forehead, which confesseth not that Christ is the Son of God.
THEREFORE Christ said unto Peter, that upon this rock, that is, upon this confession, that he was Christ the Son of God, he would build his church [...] to declare, that without this faith no man can come to Christ: so that this belief, that Christ is the Son of God, is the foundation of our christianity, and the support of our church. Here you see upon what foundation Christ's church is built, not upon the frailty of man, but upon the stable and infallible word of God.
NOW as touching the lineal descent of the bishops in the see of Rome, true it is, that the patriarchs of Rome in the apostles [...]me, and long after, were great maintainers and [...]ters-forth of Christ's glory, in which, above all other countries and regions, there especially was preached the true gospel, the sacraments were most duly administered; and as▪ before Christ's coming, it was a city so valiant in power, and martial affairs, that all the world was in a manner subject to it, and after Christ's passion divers of the apostles there suffered persecution for the gospel's sake: so after that the emperors, their hearts being illuminated, received the gospel, and became christians, the gospel there, as well for the fame of the place, flourished most, whereby the bishops of that place were had in more reverence and honour, most esteemed in all councils and assemblies, not because they acknowledged them to be their head, but because the place was most reverenced and spoken of, for the great power and strength of the same. As now here in England▪ the bishop of Lincoln, in sessions and sittings, hath the pre-eminence of other bishops, not that he is the head and ruler of them; but for the dignity of the bishopric
Wherefore the doctors in their writings have spoken most reverently of this see of Rome.
IN like manner, I cannot, nor dare but commend, reverence and honour the see of Rome, as long as it continued in the promotion and setting forth of God's glory, and in due preaching of the gospel, as it did many years after Christ. But after that the bishops of that see, seeking their own pride, and not God's honour, began to set themselves above kings and emperors, challenging to them the title of God's vicars, the dominion and supremacy over all the world, I cannot but with St. Gregory, a bishop of Rome also, confess that place is the very true Antichrist, whereof St. John speaketh by name of the whore of Babylon; and say, with the said St. Gregory, He that maketh himself a bishop over all the world, is worse than Antichrist.
NOW whereas you say St. Augustine should seem not only to give such a prerogative, but also supremacy to the see of Rome, in that he saith all the christian world is subject to the church of Rome, [Page 884] and therefore should▪ give to that see a certain kind of subjection; I am sure that your lordship knoweth, that in St. Austin's time there were four p [...]triarchs, of Alexandria, Constantinople, Antioch, and Rome, which patriarchs h [...]d under them cert [...]in countries; as in England the archbishop of Canterbury hath under him certain bishoprics in England and Wales, to whom he may be said to be their patriarch. Also your lordship knoweth right well▪ that at the time St. Austin wrote that book he was then bishop in Africa. Farther, you are not ignorant, that between Europe and Africa lieth the sea called the Mediterranean sea, so that all the countries in Europe to him which is in Africa, may be called countries beyond the sea, Hereof St. Austin saith, All the christian countries beyond the seas and remote regions, are subject to the see of Rome. If I should say all countries beyond the sea, I do except England, which to me now being in England, is not beyond the sea. In this sense, St. Austin saith, All countries beyond the sea are subject to the see of Rome; declaring thereby, that Rome was one of the sees of the four patriarchs, and under it Europe, by what subjection I pray you? Only for a pre-eminence; as we here in England say, that all the bishoprics in England are subject to the archbishop of Canterbury.
FOR this pre-eminence also the other doctors (as you recited) say, that Rome is the mother of church [...]s, as the bishopric of Lincoln is mother to the bishopric of Oxford, because the bishopric of Oxford came from the bishopric of Lincoln, and they were once both one; and so is the archbishopric of Canterbury, mother to the other bishoprics which are in her province. In like manner the archbishopric of York, is mother to the North bishoprics; and yet no man will say, that Lincoln, Canterbury, or York, in supreme head to the other bishoprics; neither then ought we to confess the see of Rome to be supreme head, because the do [...]tors in their writings confess the see of Rome to be mother of churches.
NOW where you say. I was once of the same religion which you are of, the truth is I cannot but confess the same. Yet so w [...]s St. Paul a persecutor of Christ. But in th [...]t you say, I was one of you not long ago, in that I in doing my message to my [...]ord of Winchester, should desire him to stand stout in that gross opinion of the supper of the Lord: in very deed I was sent (as your lordship said) from the council to my lord of Winchester, to exhort him also to receive the true confession of justification; and because he was very refractory, I said to him, What make you so great a m [...]tter herein? You see many an [...]baptists rise against the sacrament of the altar; I pray you, my lord, be diligent in confounding of them: for at that time my lord of Winchester and I had to do with two anabaptists in Kent. In this sense I willed my lord to be stiff in the defence of the sacrament against the detestable errors of anabaptists, and not in the confirmation of that gross and carnal opinion now maintained.
IN like sort, as touching the sermon which I made at St. Paul's Cross, you shall understand, that there were at St. Paul's, and divers other places, fixed raili [...]g bills against the sacrament, terming it Jack of the Box, The Sacrament of the Halter, Round Robin, with such unseemly terms; for which causes, I, to rebuke irreverent behaviour of certain evil-disposed persons, preached as reverently of that matter as I might, declaring what estimation and reverence ought to be given to it, what danger ensued the mishandling thereof, affirming in that sacrament to be truly and verily the body and blood of Christ, effectually by grace and spirit; which words the unlearned understanding not, supposed that I had meant of the gross and carnal being which the Romish decrees set forth, that a body having life and motion, should be indeed under the shapes of bread and wine.
WITH that the bishop of Lincoln interrupting him said:
Well, Mr. Ridley, thus you wrest places to your own pleasure; for whereas St. Augustine saith, That the whole christian world is subject to the see of Rome without any limitation, and useth these words, Beyond the se [...]s, and remote regions, only to express the latitude of the dominion of the see of Rome, willing thereby to declare that all the world, yea countries far distant from Rome, yet nevertheless are subject to that see, yet you would wrest it, and leave it only to Europe. I am sure you will not deny, but all the countries is more than Europe.
Indeed, my lord, if St. Augustine [...]ad said simply, All the countries, and not added, Beyond the seas, it had been without limitation; but in that he said, All the countries beyond the seas, he himself doth limit the universal proposition, declaring how far he meant by All the countries.
THE bishop not staying for his answer, proceeded, saying:
Well, if I should stay upon this place, I could bring many more places of the fathers for a confirmation thereof; but we have certain instructions, according to which we must proceed, and came not hither to dispute the matter with you, but only to take your answers to certain articles, and used this in the way of disputation, in which you interrupted me; wherefore I will return thither again.
YOU must consider that the church of Christ lieth not hid, but is a city on the mountain, and a candle in the candlestick. Ponder with yourself, that the church of Christ is catholic, and universally spread throughout the world, not contained in the alligation of places, not comprehended in the circuit of England, not contained in the compass of Germany and Saxony, as your church is.
WHEREFORE, Mr. Ridley, for God's love be you not singular; acknowledge with all the realm the truth, it shall no [...] be (as you alledge) prejudicial to the crown; for their majesties the king and queen have renounced that usurped power taken of their predecessors, and justly have renounced it. For I am sure you know there are two powers, the one declared by the sword, the other by the keys. The sword is given to kings and rulers of countries; the keys were delivered by Christ to Peter, and of him left to all the successors. As touching our goods, possessions, and lives, we with you acknowledge us subjects to the king and queen, who hath the temporal sword; but as concerning matters of religion, as touching God's quarrel and his word, we acknowledge another head; as the king and the queen's highness do in all worldly affairs justly challenge the prerogative and p [...]imacy, so in spiritual [...]nd [...]cclesia [...]ical matters they acknowledge thems [...]lves not to be heads and rulers, but members of Christ's body. Why, therefore, should you stick at that matter, which their majesties have forsaken and yielded?
WHEREFORE, Mr. Ridley, you shall not only no [...] do injury to the crown, and be prejudicial to their majesties honour, in acknowledging with all Christendom the pope's holiness to be supreme head of Christ's church militant here upon earth, but do a thing most agreeable to them, and most desired of his holiness. Thus if you will do, revoking together all your errors, acknowledging with the residue of the realm the common and public fault, you will do what all men most heartily desire; you will bring quietness to your conscience, and health to your soul; then shall we with great joy, by the authority committed to us from the cardinal's grace, receive you into the church again, acknowledging you to be no longer a rotten, but a lively member of the same; but if you shall still be singular, if you shall still obstinately persevere in your errors, stubbornly maintaining your former heresies▪ then we must against our will, according to our commission, separate you from us, and cut you off from the church, lest the rottenness of one part, in process of time, putrify and corrupt the whole body, then must we confess and publish you to be none of our's; then must we yield you up to the temporal judges, of whom, except it otherwise please the king and queen's highness, you must receive punishment by the laws of this realm, due for heretics.
WHEREFORE, Mr. Ridley, consider your state, remember your former degrees, spare your body, especially consider your soul, which Christ so dearly bought with hi [...] pre [...]ious blood, do not rashly cast away that which was precious in God's sight; enforce us not to do all that we may do, which is not only to publish you to be none of us, but to cut you off from the church: we do not, nor can we condemn you to die, (as most untruly hath been [...]eported of us) but that is the office of the temporal judges; we only declare you to be not of the church, and then you must, according to the tenor of them, and pleasure of the rulers, abide their determination, so that we, after we have given you up to the temporal rulers, have no further to do with you.
[Page 886]BUT I trust, Mr. Ridley, we shall not have occasion to do what we may. I trust you will suffer us to rest in that point of our commission, which w [...] most heartily desire, that is, upon recant [...]tion and repentance to [...]eceive to reconcile you, and again to join you to [...]he unity of the church.
THEN Dr. Ridley, with often interruption, at length spake.
My lord, I acknowledge an unspotted church of Christ, in which no man can err, without which no man can be saved, which is spread throughout all the world, that is, the congregation of the faithful; neither do I alligate or bind the same to any one place, as you said, but confess the same to spread throughout all the world; and where Christ's sacraments are duly administered, his gospel truly preached and followed, there doth Christ's church shine as a city upon a hill, and as a candle in a candlestick: but rather it is such as you that would have the church of Christ bound a place, who appoint the same to Rome, that there and no where else is the foundation of Christ's church. But I am fully persuaded that Christ's church is every where founded, in every place where his gospel is truly received, and effectually followed. And in that the church of God is in doubt, I us [...] herein the counsel of Vincentius Lyrinen [...]is, whom I am sure you will allow, who giving precepts how the catholic church may be in all schisms and heresies known, writeth in this manner: When (saith he) one part is corrupted with heresies, then prefer the whole world before that one part; but if the greatest part be infected, then prefer antiquity.
IN like manner now when I perceive the greatest part of christianity to be infected with the poison of the see of Rome, I repair to the usage of the primitive church, which I find quite contrary to the pope's decrees; as in that the priest receiveth alone, that it is made unlawful to the laity to receive in both kinds, and such like, wherefore it requireth, that I prefer the antiquity of the primitive church, before the novelty of the Romish church.
Mr. Ridley, these faults which you charge the see of Rome withal, are indeed no faults. For first, it was never forbid the laity, but that they might, if they demanded, receive under both kinds. You know also, that Christ after his resurrection, at the time he went with his apostles to Galilee, op [...]ned himself by breaking of bread. You know that St. Paul after his long failing towards Rome, brake bread, and that the apo [...]les came together in breaking of bread, which declareth that it is not unlaw [...]ul to administer the sacrament under the form of bread only. And yet the church had just occasion to decree, that the laity should receive in one kind only, thereby to t [...]ke away an opinion of the unlearned, that Christ was wholly both flesh and blood, under the form of bread. Therefore to take away their op [...]nion▪ and to establish better the people's faith, the Holy Ghost in the church thought fit to decree, that the laity should receive only in one kind; and it is no news for the church upon just considera [...]ion to alter rites and ceremonies. For you read in the Acts of the Apostles, that St. Paul writing to certain of the Gentiles, who had received the gospel biddeth them to abstain from things stifl [...]d, and from blood, so that this seemeth to be an expr [...]ss commandment; y [...]t who will say but tha [...] it is lawful to eat bloodings? How is it lawful but by the permission of the church?
My lord, such things as St. Paul enjoined to the Gentiles for a sufferance, by a little to win the Jews to Christ, were only commandments of time, and respected not the successors. But Christ's commandment. Do this, (that is, that which he did in remembrance, which was not to administer in one kind only) was not a commandment for a time, but to persevere to the world's end.
BUT the bishop of Lincoln not attending to this answer, without any stay proceeded in this oration.
SO that the church seemeth to have authority by the Holy Ghost, whom Christ said he would send after his ascension, which should teach the apostles all truth, to have power and jurisdict [...]on to alter such points of the scripture, ever reserving the founda [...]ion: but we came not, as I said before, in this sort to reason the matter with you, but [Page 887] have certain instructions ministered unto us, according to the tenor of which we must proceed, proposing certain articles, unto which we require your answer directly, either affirmatively, or negatively, to every of them, either denying them or granting them, without farther disputations or reasoning; for we have already stretched our instructions, in that we suffered you to debate and reason the matter, in such sort as we have done; which articles you shall hear now, and to-morrow at eight o'clo [...]k, in St. Mary's church, we will require and take your answers; and then according to the same proceed: and if you require a copy of them, you shall have it, pen, ink, and paper, also such books as you shall demand, if they be to be gotten in the university.
The ARTICLES.
IN the name of God, Amen. We John of Lincoln, James of Gloucester, and John of Bristol, bishops, &c.
1. WE do obj [...]ct to thee, Nicholas Ridley, and to thee Hugh Latimer, jointly and severally; first, that in the year 1554, in the month of April, May, June, July, or in some one or more of them, hast affirmed and defended and maintained, and in many other times and places besides, that the true and natu [...]al body of Christ, after the consecration of the priest, is not really present in the sacrament of the altar.
2. THAT in the year and months aforesaid thou hast pu [...]licly affirmed and defended, that in the sacram [...]nt of the altar remaineth still the substance of bread and wine.
3. ITEM. That in the said year and months thou hast openly affirmed, and obstinately maintained, that in the mass is no p [...]opitiatory sacrifice for the quick and the dead.
4. ITEM. That in the year, place, and months aforesaid, th [...]se the aforesaid ass [...]tions solemnly had been condemned, by the s [...]holastical censure of this school as heretical and contrary to the catholic faith, by the worshipful Dr. Weston, prolocuter then of the convocation house, as also by other learned men of both the universities.
5. ITEM. That all and singular the premises be true, notorious, famous, and openly known by public same, as well to them near hand, as also to them in distant places far off.
All these articles I thought good here to place together, that as often as hereafter rehearsal shall be of any of them, the reader may have recourse hither, and peruse the same, and not to trouble the story with several repetitions thereof.
Examination upon the said ARTICLES.
AETER these articles were read, the bishops took counsel together. At last the bishop of Lincoln said, These are the very same articles which you in open disputation here in the university did maintain and defend. What say you unto the first? I pray you answer affirmatively, or negatively.
Why, my lord, I supposed your gentleness had been such, that you would have given me space until to-morrow, that upon good advice I might bring a determinate answer.
Yea, Mr. Ridley, I mean not that your answers now shall be prejudicial to your answers to morrow. I will take your answers at this time, and yet notwithstanding it shall be lawful to you to add, diminish, alter, and change these answers to morrow what you will.
Indeed, in like manner at our last disputations I had many things promised, and few performed. It was said, that after disputations I should have a copy thereof, and license to change mine answers, as I should think good. It was meet also that I should have seen what was written by the notaries at that time. So your lordship pretended great gentleness in giving me a time; but this gentleness is the same that Christ had of the high priest. For you as your lordship saith, have no power to condemn me, neither at any time to put a man to death: so in like sort the high-priests said, that it was not lawful for them to put any man to death, but committed Christ to Pilate, neither would suffer him to absolve Christ, although he fought all the means for it that he might.
[Page 888]THEN spake Dr. Weston, one of the audience, What, do you make the king Pilate?
No, Mr. Doctor, I do but compare your deeds with Caipha [...]'s deeds and high-priests, which would condemn no man to death, as you will [...]ot, and yet would not suffer Pilate to absolve and deliver Christ.
Mr. Ridley, we mind not but that you shall enjoy the benefit of answering to-morrow, and will take your answers now as now, to-morrow you shall change, take out, add, and alter what you will. In the mean season we require you to answer directly to every article, either affirmatively or negatively.
Seeing you appoint me a time to answer to-morrow, and yet will take mine answers out of hand: first, I require the notaries to take and write my protestation [...] that in no point I acknowledge your authority, or admit you to be my judges, in that point you are authorized from the pope. Therefore whatsoever I shall say or do, I protest I neither say it, neither do it willingly, thereby to admit the authority of the pope▪ and if your lordship will give me leave, I will shew the causes which move me thereunto.
No, Mr. Ridley, we have instructions to the contrary. We may not suffer you.
I will be short; I pray your lordship suffer me to speak in a few words.
No, Mr. Ridley, we may not abuse the hearers ears.
Why, my lord, suffer me to speak three words.
Well, Mr. Ridley, to-morrow you shall speak forty. The time is far past; therefore we require your answer determinately. What say you to the first article? and there upon rehearsed the same.
My protestation always saved, that by this mine answer, I do not condescend to your authority, in that your are le [...]ate to the pope, I a [...]swer thus: In a sense the first a [...]icle is true, and in a sense it is false; for if you take really for truly, for spiritually by grace and efficacy, then it is true that the natural body and blood of Christ it in the sacrament really and truly; but if you take these terms so gro [...]ly, that you would conclude t [...]ereby a natural body having motion, to be contained under th [...] for [...] of bread and wine, really and truly, then really is not the body and blood of Christ in the sacrament, no more than the H [...]ly Ghost is in the element of our baptism. Because this answer was not understood, the notaries knew not how to note it; wherefore the bishop of Lincoln [...] him to an [...]wer affirmatively or negatively, either to grant [...]he article, or to deny it.
My lord, you know that where any equivocation (which is a word having two significations) is, except distin [...]ion be given, no direct answer can be made; for it is one of Aristotle's fallacies, containing two questions under one, which cannot be satisfied with one answer. For both you and I agree herein, that in the sacrament is the very true and natural body and blood of Christ, even that which was born of the virgin Mary, which ascended into heaven, which sitteth at the right hand of God the Father, which shall come from thence to judge the quick and the dead, only we differ in the way and manner of being; we confess all one thing to be in the sacrament, and dissent in the manner of being there. I being fully by God' [...] word thereunto persuaded, confess Christ's natural body to be in the sacrament indeed by spirit and grace, because that whosoever worthily receiveth that bread and wine, receiveth effectually Christ's body, and drinketh his blood, that is, he is made effectually partaker of his passion; and you make a grosser kind of being, inclosing a natural, a lively, and a moving body, under the shape or form of bread and wine.
NOW, this difference considered, to the question thus I answer, that in the sacrament of the a [...]er is the natural body and blood of Christ really and truly, or spiritually by grace and efficacy; for so every worthy receiver receiveth the very true body of Christ; but if you mean really and indeed, so that thereby you would include a lively [Page 889] and a moveable body under the forms of bread and wine, then in that sense is not Christ's body in the sacrament really and indeed.
THIS answer taken and penned by the notaries, the bishop of Lincoln proposed the second question or article. To whom he answered:
Always my protestation reserved, I answer thus; that in the sacrament is a certain change, in that bread, which was before common bread, but is now made a lively representation of Christ's body, and not only a figure, but effectually representeth his body; that even as the mortal body is nourished by that visible bread, so is the internal soul fed with the heavenly food of Christ's body, which the eye of faith seeth, as the bodily eye seeth only bread. Such a sacramental mutation I grant to be in the bread and wine, which truly is no small change, but such a change as no mortal man can make, but only that omnipotency of Christ's word.
THEN the bishop of Lincoln desired him to answer directly, either affirmatively or negatively, without further declaration of the matter. Then he answered:
That notwithstanding the sacramental mutation of which he spake, and all the doctors confessed, the true substance and nature of bread and wine remaineth: with which the body is in like sort nourished, as the soul is by grace and spirit with the body of Christ. Even so in baptism the body is washed with the visible water, and the soul is cleansed from all filth by the invisible Holy Ghost, and yet the water ceaseth not to be water, but keepeth the nature of water still: in like manner in the sacrament of the Lord's supper the bread ceaseth not to be bread.
THEN the notaries penned, that he answered affirmatively to the second article. The bishop of Lincoln declared a difference between the sacrament of the altar and baptism, because that Christ did not say by the water, This is the Holy Ghost, as he did by the bread, This is my body.
THEN Dr. Ridley cited St. Augustine, which conferred both the sacraments one with the other: but the bishop of Lincoln notwithstanding, thereupon recited the third article, and required a direct answer. To whom Ridley said:
Christ, as St. Paul writeth, made one perfect sacrifice for the sins of the whole world▪ neither can any man reiterate that sacrifice of his, and yet is the communion an acceptable sacrifice to God of praise and thanksgiving; but to say that thereby sins are taken away (which wholly and perfectly was do [...] by Christ's passion, of which the communion is only a memory) that is a great derogation from the merits of Christ's passion: for the sacrament was instituted, that we receiving it, and thereby recognizing and remembering his passion, should be partakers of the merits of the same. For otherwise doth this sacrament take upon it the office of Christ's passion whereby it might follow, that Christ died in vain.
THE notaries penned this his answer to be affirmative.
Indeed as you alledge out of St. Paul, Christ made one perfect oblation for all the whole world; that in▪ that bloody sacrifice upon the cross: yet nevertheless he hath left this sacrifice, but not bloody, in the remembrance of that by which sins are forgiven; which is no derogation of Christ's passion.
THEN the bishop of Lincoln recited the fourth article. To which Dr. Ridley answered:
That is some part the fourth was true, and in some part false; true, in that his assertions were condemned as heresies, although unjustly; false, in that it was said, they were condemned Scientia Scholastica, in that the disputations were in such sort ordered, that it was far from any school act.
THIS answer being penned by the notaries, the bishop of Lincoln rehearsed the fifth article. To which Dr. Ridley answered:
That the premises were in such sort [Page 890] true, as in these answers he had declared. Whether that all men spake evil of them, he knew not, in that he came not so much abroad to hear what every man reported.
WHEN this answer also was taken by the notaries, the bishop of Lincoln said:
To-morrow, at eight o'clock, you shall appear before us in St. Mary's church, and then because we cannot well agree upon your answer to the first article
if it will please you to write your answer, you shall have pen, ink, paper, and books, such as you shall require; but if you write any thing more than your answers to these articles, we will not receive it: so he charging the mayor with him, declaring also to the mayor, that he should suffer him to have a pen and ink, dismissed Dr. Ridley, and sent for Mr. Latimer, who being brought to the divinity-school, there tarried till they called for him.
Bishop LATIMER appeareth before the Commissioners.
NOW after Dr. Ridley was committed to the mayor, then the bishop of Lincoln commanded the bailiffs to bring the other prisoner, who, as soon as he was placed, said to the lords:
My lords, If I appear again, I pray you not to send for me untill you be ready. For I am an old man, and it is great hurt to mine old age to tarry so long gazing upon the cold walls. Then said the bishop of Lincoln:
Mr. Latimer, I am sorry you are brought so soon, although it is the bailiff's fault, and not mine: but it shall be amended.
THEN Mr. Latimer bowed his knee down to the ground, holding his hat in his hand, having a kerchief on his head, and upon it a night cap or two, and a great cap (such as townsmen use, with two broad fl [...]s to button under the chin), wearing an old thread-bare Bristow frize gown girded to his body with a penny leather girdle, at which hanged by a long string his Testament, and his spectacles without a case, depending about his neck upon his breast. After this the bishop of Lincoln began on thi [...] manner.
Mr. Latimer, you shall understand, that I and my lords here have a commission from my lord cardinal Poole's grace, legate a latere to this realm of England, from our most reverend father in God, the pope's holiness, to examine you upon certain opinions and assertions of your's, which you, as well here openly in disputations in the year of our Lord 1554, as at sundry and at divers other times, did affirm, maintain, and obstinately defend. In which commission be specially two points; the one which we must desire you is, that if you shall now recant, revoke, and disannul these your errors, and together with all this realm, yea, all the world, confess the truth, we, upon due repentance on your part, shall receive you, reconcile you, acknowledge you no longer a strayed sheep, but adjoin you again to the unity of Christ's church, from which you, in the time of schism, fell. So that it is no new place to which I exhort you; I desire you to return thither from whence you went.
CONSIDER, Mr. Latimer, that without unity of the church there is no salvation, and in the church there be no errors. Therefore what should hinder you to confess that which all the realm confesseth, to forsake that which their majesties the king and queen have renounced, and all the realm recanted: it was a common error, and it is now of all confessed; it will be no more shame to you than it was to us all. Consider, Mr Latimer, that within this twenty years this realm also with all the world confessed one church, acknowledged in Christ's church an head, and by what means, and for what occasion it cut off itself from the rest of christianity, and renounced that which in all times and ages was confessed, it is well known, and might be now declared upon what good foundation the see of Rome was forsaken, save that we must spare them that are dead, to whom the rehearsal would be opprobrious; it is no usurped power, as it hath been termed, but founded upon Peter by Christ, a sure foundation, a perfect builder, as by divers places, as well of the ancient fathers, as by the express word of God may he proved.
WITH that Mr. Latimer, who before leaned his [Page 891] head, began to remove his cap and kerchief from his ears. The bishop proceeded, saying,
FOR Christ spake expressly to Peter, saying, Feed my sheep, and rule my sheep, which word doth not only declare a certain ruling of Christ's [...]ock, but includeth also a certain pre-eminence and government; and therefore is the king called a King from ruling: so that in saying, Rule, Christ declared a power which he gave to Peter, which jurisdiction and power Peter by hand delivered to Clement, and so in all ages it hath remained in the see of Rome. This, if you will confess with us, and acknowledge with all the realm your errors and false assertions, then will you do what we most desire, then shall we rest upon the first part of our commission, then shall we receive you, acknowledge you one of the church, and according to the authority given unto us, minister unto you, upon due repentance, the benefit of absolution, to which their majesties the king and queen were not ashamed to submit themselves, although they of themselves were unspotted, and needed no reconciliation: yet lest the putrefaction and rottenness of all the body might be noisome, and do damage to the head also, they (as I said) most humbly submitted themselves to my lord chrdinal's grace, by him, as a legate to the pope's holiness, to be partakers of the reconciliation. But if you shall stubbornly persevere in your blindness, if you will not acknowledge your errors, if you as you stand alone, will be singular in your opinions, if by schism and heresy you will divide yourself from the church, then must we proceed to the second part of the commission, which we would be loth to do, that is, not to condemn you, for that we connot do (that the temporal sword of the realm, and not we will do), but to separate you from us, acknowledge you to be none of us, to renounce you as no member of the church, to declare that you are the son of perdition, a lost child, and as you are a rotten member of the church, so to cut you off from the church, and so to commit you to the temporal judges, permitting them to proceed against you, according to the tenor of their laws.
THEREFORE, Mr. Latimer, for God's love consider your estate, remember you are a learned man, you have taken degrees in the schools, borne the office of a bishop; remember you are an old man, spare your body, accelerate not your death, and especially remember your soul's health, and the peace of your conscience; consider that if you should die in this state, you shall be a stinking sacrifice to God; for it is the cause that maketh the martyr, and not the death: consider that if you die in this state, you die without grace, for without the church can be no salvation. Let not vain-glory have the upper hand, humble yourself, captivate your understanding, subdue your reason, submit yourself to the determination of the church; do not force us to do all that we may do, let us rest in that part which we most heartily desire, and I, for my part,
again with all my heart exhort you.
AFTER the bishop had somewhat paused, then Mr. Latimer lift up his head
and asked whether his lordship had done speaking; and the bishop answered, Yea.
Then will your lordship give me leave to speak a word or two?
Yea, Mr. Latimer, so that you use a modest kind of talk, without railing or taunts.
I beseech your lordship, license me to sit down.
At your pleasure, Mr. Latimer, take as much ease as you will.
Your lordship gently exhorted me in many words to come to the unity of the church. I confess (my lord) a catholic church, spread throughout all the world, in which no man may err, without which unity of the church no man can be saved, but I know perfectly by God's word that this church is in all the world, and hath not its foundation in Rome only, as you say; and methought your lordship brought a place out of the scriptures to confirm the same, that there was a jurisdiction given to Peter, in that Christ bade him govern his people. Indeed, my lord, St. Peter did his office well and truly, in that he was bid to govern: but since the bishops of Rome have taken a new kind of government. Indeed they ought to govern, but how, my lord? not as they will themselves: but this government must be hedged in [Page 892] and ditched in [...]. They must rule, but according to the word of God.
BUT the bishops of Rome have turned the rule according to the word of God, into the rule accoring to their own pleasures, and as it pleaseth them best▪ as there is a book set forth which hath divers points in it, and amongst others, this point is one which your lordship went about to prove by this word, and the argument which he bringeth forth for the proof of that matter is taken out of Deuteronomy, where it is said; If there aris [...]th any controversy among the people, the priests of of the order of Levi shall decide the matter, according to the law of God; so it must be taken. This book perceiving this authority to be given to the priests of the old law, taketh occasion to prove the same to be given to the bishops and other the clergy of the new law: but in proving this matter, whereas it was said there, as the priests of the order of Levi should determine the matter, according to God's law, that (according to God's law) is left out, and only is recited, as the priests of the order of Levi shall decide the matter, so it ought to be taken of the people; a large authority, I ensure you. What gelding of scripture is this? what clipping of God's coin? with which terms the audience smiled. This is much like the ruling which your lordship talked of. Nay, nay, my lords, we may not give such authority to the clergy, to rule all things as they will. Let them trust themselves within their commission. Now, I keep my lord, I do not rail yet.
No, Mr. Latimer, your talk is more like taunts that railing; but in that I have not read the book which you blame so much, nor know of any such, I [...]an say nothing therein.
Yes, my lord, the book is open to be read, and is intitled to one which is bishop of Gloucester, whom I never knew, nei [...]her did at any time see him to my knowledge. With that the people laughed, because the bishop of Gloucester sat there in commission.
THEN the bishop of Gloucester stood up, and said it was his book.
Was it your's my lord? Indeed I knew not your lordship, neither ever did I see you before, neither yet see you now through the brightness of the sun shining betwixt you and me. Then the audience laughed again; and bishop Latimer spa [...]e unto them, saying. Why my masters, this i [...] no laughing matter. I answer upon life and death Wo unto you that laugh now, for ye shall weep.
THE bishop of Lincoln commanded silence, and then said Mr. Latimer, if you had kept yourself within your bounds, if you had not used such [...] and taunts, this had not been done.
AFTER this the bishop of Gloucester said i [...] excusing of his book; Mr. Latimer, hereby every man may see what learning you have.
THEN Mr. Latimer interrupted him, saying [...] Lo, you look for learning at my hands who have gone so long to the school of oblivion, making the bare walls my library, keeping me so long in priso [...] without book, or pen and ink▪ and now you let me lose to come and answer to articles. You deal with me as though two were appointed to fight for life and death, and overnight the one, through friends and favour, is cheri [...]hed, and hath good counsel given him how to encounter with his [...]nemy. The other, for envy or lack of friends, all the whole night is set in the stocks. In the mor [...] ing when they shall meet, the one is in strength and lusty; the other is stist in his limbs, and almost deed for feebleness. Think you, that to run through this man with a spear is not a goodly victory?
BUT the bishop of Gloucester interrupting his answer; proceeded, saying: I went not about to recite any places of scripture in that place of my book, for then if I had not recited it faithfully, you might have had just occasion of reprehension: but I only in that place formed an argument a majore, in this sense; that if in the old law the priests had power to decide matters of controversy, much more then ought the authority to be given to the clergy in the new law: and I pray you, in this point what ava [...]eth there rehearsal, According to the law of God?
Yes, my lord, very much. For I acknowledge authority to be given to the spirituality to decide matters of religion, and as my lord said even now, to rule; but they must do it according to the word and law of God, and not after their own imaginations and fancies.
THE bishop of Gloucester would have spoke more, saving that the bishop of Lincoln said, that they came not to dispute with Mr. Latimer, but to take his determinate answers to their articles, and so began to propose the same articles which were p [...]oposed to Dr. Ridley. But Mr. Latimer interrupted him speaking to the bishop of Gloucester: Well, my lord, I could wish more faithful dealing with God's word, and not [...]o leave out a part, and snatch a part here and another there, but to rehearse the whole faithfully.
BUT the bishop of Lincoln, not attending to this saying of bishop Latimer, proceeded in rehearsing the articles, in form and sense as I declared before in the examination of the articles, proposed to Dr. Ridley, and required bishop Latimer's answer to the first, Then bishop Latimer making his protestation, that notwithstanding these his answers it should not be taken that thereby, he should acknowledge any authority of the bishop of Rome, saying, that he was the king and queen's majesty's subject, and not the pope's, neither could serve two masters at one time, except [...]e should now renounce one of them: required the notaries so to take his protestation, that whatsoever he should say or do, it should not be taken as though he did thereby agree to any authority that came from the bishop of Rome.
THE bishop of Lincoln said, that his protestation should be so taken; he required him to answer briefly, affirmatively or negatively, to the first article, and so recited the same again: and Mr. Latimer answered as followeth:
I do not deny, my lord, that in the sacrament by spirit and grace is the very body and blood of Christ, because that every man by receiving bodily that bread and wine, spiritually receiveth the body and blood of Christ, and is made partaker thereby of the merits of Christ's passion: but I deny that the body and blood of Christ is in such manner in the sacrament as you would have it.
Then, Mr. Latimer, you answer affirmatively.
Yea, if you mean of that gross and carnal thing that you do take.
THE notaries took his answer affirmatively.
What say you, Mr. Latimer, to the second article? and recited the same.
There is, my lord, a change in the bread and wine, and such a change as no power, but the omnipotency of God can make, in that which before was bread, should now have the dignity to exhibit Christ's body, and yet the bread is still bread, and the wine still wine; for the change is not in the nature, but the dignity, because now that which was common bread hath the dignity to exhibit Christ's body: for whereas it was common bread, it is now no more common bread, neither ought it [...]o be so taken, but as holy bread sanctified by God's word.
WITH that the bishop of Lincoln smiled, saying, Lo, Mr. Latimer, see what stedfastness is in your doctrine. That which you abhorred and despised most, you now most establish: for whereas you most railed at holy bread, you now make your communion holy bread.
Tush, a rush for your holy bread. I say the bread in the communion is an holy bread indeed.
BUT the bishop of Lincoln interrupted him, and said, O, you make a difference betwixt holy bread and holy bread (with that the audience laughed). Well, Mr. Latimer, is not this your answer, that the substance of bread and wine remaineth after the words of consecration?
Yes, verily, it must needs be so. For Christ himself calleth it bread, St. Paul calleth it bread, the doctors confess the same, the nature of a sacrament confirmeth the same, and I call it holy bread, not in that I make no difference between your holy bread and this, but for the holy office which it beareth, that is, to be a figure of Christ's [Page 894] body, and not only a bare figure, but effectually to represent the same.
SO the notaries penned his answer in the affirmative.
What say you to the third question? and recited the same.
No, no, my lord, Christ made one perfect sacrifice for all the world, neither can any man offer him again, neither can the priest offer up Christ again for the sins of man, which he took away by offering himself once for all, (as St. Paul saith) upon the cross, neither is there any propitiation for our sins saving his cross only.
SO the notaries penned his answers to this article also affirmatively.
What say you to the fourth, Mr. Latimer, and then recited it. After the recital whereof, when Mr. Latimer answered not, the bishop asked whether he heard him or no?
Yes, but I do not understand what you mean thereby.
Marry, only this, that these your assertions were condemned by Dr. Weston, as heresies; is it not so Mr. Latimer?
Yes, I think they were condemned. But how unjustly, he that is judge of all knoweth.
THE notaries also took this answer affirmatively.
What say you, Mr. Latimer, to the fifth article? and then recited it.
I know not what you mean by these terms. I am no law [...]er, I wish you would propose the matter plainly.
In that we proceed according to the law, we must use their terms also. The meaning only is this, that these your assertions are notorious, evil spoken of, and yet common and frequent in the mouths of the people.
I cannot tell how much, nor what men talk of them. I come not so much among them, in that I have been secluded a long time. What men report of them I know not, and care not.
THIS answer taken, the bishop of Lincoln said, Mr. Latimer, we mean not that these your answers shall be prejudicial to you. To-morrow you shall appear before us again, and then it shall be lawful for you to alter and change what you will. We give you respite till to-morrow, trusting that after you have pondered well all things against that time, you will not be ashamed to confess the truth.
Now, my lord, I pray you give me license in three words to declare the causes why I refused the authority of the pope.
Nay, Mr. Latimer, to-morrow you shall have license to speak forty words.
Nay, my lords, I beseech you to do with me now as it shall please yo [...] lordships; I pray you let me not be troubled to-morrow again.
Yes, Mr. Latimer, you must needs appear again to-morrow.
Truly, my lord, as for my part I require no respite, for I am at a point; you shall give me respite in vain: therefore I pray you let me not trouble you to-morrow.
Yes, for we trust God will work with you against to-morrow. There is no remedy, you must needs appear again to-morrow at eight o'clock in St. Mary's church. And forthwith the bishop charged the mayor with Mr. Latimer, and dismissed him, and then brake up their session for that day, about one o'clock in the afternoon.
The Second SESSION.
THE next day following (which was the first of October) somewhat after eight o'clock, the said lords repaired to St. Mary's church, and after they were set in a high throne, well trimmed with cloth of tissue and silk, then appeared Dr. Ridley, [Page 895] who was set at a framed table a good space from the bishop's feet, which table had a silk cloth cast over it, and the place was encompassed about in a quadrate form, partly for gentlemen who repaired thither, (for this was the sessions day of goal delivery) and the heads of the university to sit, and partly to keep off the press of the audience: for the whole body, as well of the university as of the town, came hither to see the end of these two persons. After Dr. Ridley's appearance, and the silence of the audience, the bishop of Lincoln spake in manner following.
Mr. Ridley, yesterday when we challenged you for not uncovering your head, you excused yourself of that whereof no man accused you, in saying you did not put on your cap for any obstinacy towards us, who as touching our own persons desired no such obedience of you, but only in respect of those whose persons we bear; neither (you said) for any contempt that you bear to this worshipful audience, which, although justly, may yet in this case require no such humility of you; neither for any derogation of honour to my lord cardinal's grace, in that he is descended from royal blood, in that he is a man most noble, both for his excellent qualities and singular learning; for as touching those points, you said, you would with all humility, honour, reverence, and worship his grace; but in that he is legate to the most reverend father in God, the pope's holiness,
you said you neither could, nor would by any means be induced to give him honour: but forasmuch as this is the point as we told you yesterday, why we require honour and reverence of you, we tell you now as we did then, unless you take the pains to move your bonnet, we will take care to cause your bonnent to be taken from you, unless you pretend sickness, as yesterday you did not.
I pretend now no other cause than I did yesterday, that is, only that hereby it may appear, that not only in word and confession, but also by all my jesture and behaviour, in no point I agree or admit any authority from the pope, and not for any pride of mind, (as God is my judge) neither for contempt of your lordships, or of this worshipful audience, neither for derogation of honour due to my lord cardinal's grace, as concerning those points which your lordship spake of, that is, his noble parentage, and singular graces in learning. And as for taking my cap away, your lordship may do as it shall please you, it shall not offend me, but I shall be content with your ordinance in that behalf.
Forasmuch as you do now answer as you did yesterday, we must do also as we did the [...], and forthwith one of his beadles very hastily snatched his cap from his head.
AFTER this the bishop of Lincoln began the examination in the following manner.
Mr. Ridley, yesterday we took your answer to certain articles, which we then proposed unto you: but because we could not be thoroughly satisfied with your answer then to the first article, neither could the notaries take any determinate answer of you, we (you requiring the same) granted you license to bring your answer in writing, and thereupon commanded the mayor that you should have pen, paper, and ink, yea, any books also that you would require, if they were to be gotten; we licensed you then also to alter your former answers this day at your pleasure: therefore we are now come hither, to see whether you are in the same mind now, that you were yesterday (which we would not wish) or contrary, contented to revoke all your former assertions, and in all points consent to submit yourself to the determination of the universal church, and I for my part most earnestly exhort you,
not because my conscience pricketh me, as you said yesterday, but because I see you a rotten member, and in the way of perdition.
YESTERDAY I brought forth amongst others, St. Augustine, to prove that authority hath always been given to the see of Rome, and you wrested the words far contrary to St. Augustine's meaning, in that you would have all the world to be applied only to Europe, which is but a third part of all the world, whereas indeed the process of St. Augustine's words will not admit of your interpretation. For he saith not, All the christian countries beyond the [Page 896] seas, &c. but first, All the christian countries are subject to the see of Rome, afterwards add [...]th, Beyond the sea, but only to augment the dominion of the see of Rome.
BUT Dr. Ridley still persevered in his former answer, saying, I am sure, my lord, you have some skill in Cosmography, in which you shall understand that there is a sea called, The Mediterranean sea, cast between Europe and Africa, in which he meant Europe beyond the sea, even as if I should say the whole world beyond the sea, excepting England in which I stand. And here many words were spent upon the interpretation of the same place of St. Austin.
AFTER long disputation, the bishop of Lincoln said, that the meaning of St. Augustine might be known by the consent of the other doctors, and rehearsed divers.
BUT as Dr. Ridley required the rehearsal of the places, and to read the very words of the doctors, saying, that perhaps those which the bishop rehearsed, being proposed in other terms in the doctors, would admit a contrary meaning and interpretation: but in that book out of which the bishop rehearsed them, was none of the doctors, but only some sentences drawn out of the doctors by some studious man: he could not recite the very words of the doctors.
THEN after the bishop of Lincoln mentioned Cyril, who (as he said) made against Mr. Ridley, in the sacrament, even by Philip Melancthon's own alledging in his [...]mmon places, and forthwith called for Melancthon, but in vain, because all such books were burned a little before, wherefore he passed it over.
CYRIL also in another place proving to the Jews that Christ was come, useth this reason, Altars are erected in Christ's name in Britain, and in far countries: Ergo, Christ is come. But we may use the contrary of that reason; Altars are plucked down in Britain: Ergo, Christ is not come. A good argument a contrariis. I will stand to it in the schools by and with any man. You see what a good argument this your doctrine maketh for the [...]ews, to prove that Christ is not come.
DR. RIDLEY smiling, answered, Your lordship is not ignorant that this word Altar in the scripture signifieth as well the altar whereupon the Jews were wont to make their burnt sacrifices, as the table of the Lord's supper. Cyril meaneth there by this word Altars, not the Jewish altar, but the table of the Lord, and by that saying (Altars are erected in Christ's name, Ergo, Christ is come) he meaneth, that the communion is administered in his remembrance: Ergo, Christ is come: for the strength of his argument is, because the remembrance of a thing cannot be, except itself be part: then could not all countries celebrate the communion in remembrance of Christ's passion, except Christ had been come and suffered. As for the taking down of the altars, it was done upon just considerations, for that they seemed to come too nigh to the Jewish usage. Neither was the supper of the Lord at any time better administered, or more duly received, than in those latter days when all things were brought to the rites and usage of the primitive church.
A goodly receiving, I promise you, to set an oyster-table instead of an altar, and to come from puddings at Westminster to receive; and yet when your [...]able was constituted, you could never be content, in placing the same, now East, now North, now one way, then another, until it pleased God of his goodness to place it clean out of the church.
Your lordship's irreverent terms do not elevate the thing. Perhaps some men came more devoutly from puddings, than other men do now from other things.
As for that, Mr. Ridley, you ought to be judge of no man: but by this your reasoning you cause us to stretch and inlarge our instructions. We came not to reason, but to take your determinate answers to our articles, and then he read the first article in manner above specified.
NOW, Mr. Ridley, what say you to the first [Page 897] article? If you have brought your answer in writing, we will receive it: but if you have any other matter, we will not receive it.
THEN Dr. Ridley took a sheet of paper out of his bosom, and began to read that which he had written, but the bishop of Lincoln commanded the beadle to take it from him. But he desired license to read it, saying, that it was nothing but his answers, but the bishop would in no wise suffer him.
Why, my lord, will you require my answer, and not suffer me to publish it? I beseech you, my lord, let the audience bear witness to your doings.
Well, Mr. Ridley, we will first see what you have written, and then if we shall think it good to be read, you shall have it published; but except you will deliver it first, we we will take none at all of you.
WITH that Dr. Ridley, seeing no remedy, delivered it to an officer, who immediately delivered it to the bishop of Lincoln, who after he had secretly communicated it to the other two bishops, declared the sense, but would not read it as it was written, saying, that it contained words of blasphemy: therefore he would not fill the ears of the audience therewithal, and so abuse their patience: notwithstanding Dr. Ridley desired very instantly to have it published, saying, that except a line or two, there was nothing contained but the ancient fathers saying for the confirmation of his assertions.
AFTER the said bishops had secretly viewed the whole, the then bishop Lincoln said: In the first part, Mr. Ridley, is nothing contained but your protestation, that you would no [...] have these your answers to be taken, as though you seemed thereby to consent to the authority or jurisdiction of the pope's holiness.
No, my lord, I pray you read it out that the audience may hear it: but the bishop of Lincoln would in no wise, because (he said) there were contained words of blasphemy.
THEN the bishop of Lincoln recited the first article, and required Dr. Ridley's answer to it. Then Dr. Ridley said, that his answer was there in writing, and desired that it might be published; but the bishop would not read the whole, but here and there a piece of it. So the notaries took his answer, that he referred them to his answer in writing exhibited now, and also before at the time of disputation, Dr. Weston being prolocutor.
IN like manner the bishop of Lincoln recited the second article, and required an answer, and Dr. Ridley referred him to his answer in writing exhibited now, and also before at the time of disputation: and like answers were taken to all the rest of the articles.
THESE answers in this manner rehearsed, taken and penned by the notaries, the bishop of Gloucester began an exhortation to move Dr. Ridley to turn.
If you would once empty your stomach, captivate your senses, subdue your reason, and togethe [...] with us consider what a feeble ground of your religion you have, I do not doubt but you might easily be brought to acknowledge one church with us, to confess one faith with us, and to believe one religion with us. For what a weak and feeble stay in religion is this, I pray you? Latimer leaneth to Cranmer, Cranmer to Ridley, and Ridley, to the singularity of his own wit: so that if you overthrow the singularity of Ridley's wit, then must needs the religion of Cranmer and Latimer fall also. You remember well, Mr. Ridley, that the prophet speaketh most truly, saying, Woe, woe be to them which are singular and wise in their own conceits.
BUT you will say here, it is true that the prophet saith: but how know you, that I am wise in mine own conceit? Yes, Mr. Ridley, you refuse the determination of the catholic church; you must needs be singular and wise in your own conceit, for you bring scripture for the proof of your assertions, and we also bring scriptures: you understand them in one sense, and we in another. How will you know the truth herein? If you stand to your own interpretation, then you are singular in your own conceit: but if you say you will follow the minds of the doctors and ancient fathers, likely you understand them in one meaning, and we take them [Page 898] in another: how will you know the truth herein? If you stand to your own judgment, then are you singular in your own conceit, then [...]an you not avoid the woe which the prophet speaketh of.
WHEREFORE if you have no stay but the catholic church in matters of controversy, except you will rest upon the singularity and wisdom of your own brain, if the prophet most truly saith, Wee, woe be to them that are wise in their own conceit: then for God's love, Dr. Ridley, stand not singular, be not you wise in your own conceit, please not yourself overmuch. How were the Arians, the Manichees, Eutychians, with divers other hereties which have been in the church, how, I pray you, were they suppressed and convinced? By reasoning in disputations? No truly, the Arians had no more places for the confirmation of their heresy, than the catholics for the defence of the truth. How then were they convinced? Only by the determination of the church. And indeed except we do constitute the church our foundation, stay, and judge, we can have no end of controversies, no end of disputations. For in that we all bring scriptures and doctors for the proof of our assertions, who shall be judge of this our controversy? If we ourselves then be singular and wise in our own conceits then cannot we avoid the woe that the prophet speaketh of.
IT remaineth therefore that we submit, ourselves to the determination and a [...]bitrement of the church, with whom God p [...]omised to remain to the world's end, to whom he promised to send the Holy Ghost which should teach it the truth. Wherefore, Mr. Ridley, if you will avoid the woe that the prophet speaketh of, be not wise in your own judgment: if you will no [...] be wise and singular in your own judgment, captivate your own understanding, subdue your reason, and submit yourself to the determination of the church.
THIS is briefly the sum of the oration of the bishop of Gloucester, by which he ende [...]vored in many more words, amplifying and enlarging the matter eloquently with sundry points of rhetoric to move affections, to persuade Dr. Ridley to turn and forsake his religion.
TO whom Dr. Ridley answered in few words, That he said most truly with the prophet, Woe [...] to him that is wise in his own conceit; but that [...] acknowledgeth no such singularity in him, nor [...] any cause why he should attribute so much to himself. And whereas he said bishop Cranmer leaned to him, that was most untrue, in that he was [...] young scholar in comparison of Dr. Cranmer; for when he was but a young scholar. Mr. Cranmer was then a doctor; so that he confessed Mr. Cranmer might have been his schoolmaster for many years. It seemed that he would have spoke more, but the bishop of Gloucester interrupted him, saying:
WHY, Mr. Ridley, it is your own confession, for Mr. Latimer, at the time of his disputation, confessed his learning to [...]ie in Mr. Cranmer's books, and Mr. Cranmer also said that it was your doing.
THE bishop of Lincoln likewise with many words, and gently holding his c [...]p in his hand, desired him to turn. But Dr. Ridley made an absolute answer, That he was fully persuaded the religion which he defended to be grounded upon God's word, and therefore without great offence towards God, great peril and damage of his soul, he could not forsake his master and Lord God; but desired the bishop to perform his grant, in that his lordship said the day before, that he should have license to shew his cause, why he could not with a safe conscience admit the authority of the pope. But the bishop of Lincoln said, that whereas then he had demanded license to speak three words, he was contented then that he should speak forty, and that grant he would perform.
THEN stepped forth Dr. Weston, who sat by, and said, Why, my lord, he hath spoken four hundred already.
DR. RIDLEY confessed he had, but they were not of his prescribed number, neither of that matter. The bishop of Lincoln [...]ade him take his license: but he should speak but forty, and then he would tell them upon his fingers; and presently Dr. Ridley began to speak: but before he had ended half a sentence, the doctors sitting by, cried out, and said, that his number was out; and with that he was put to silence.
[Page 899]AFTER this the bishop of Lincoln, who sat in the midst, beg [...]n to speak as followeth:
NOW I perceive, Mr. Ridley, you will not permit nor suffer us to stay in that point of our commission which we most desired: for indeed, for my part, I take God to witness, I am sorry for you. Whereupon Dr. Ridley answered:
I believe it well, my lord, forasmuch as one day it will be burdensome to your soul.
Nay, not so, Mr. Ridley, but because I am sorry to see such stubbornness in you, that by no means you may be persuaded to acknowledge your errors, and receive the truth: but seeing it is so, because you will not suffer us to persist in the first, we must of necessity proceed to the other part of our commission. Therefore I pray you hearken to what I shall say, and forthwith he read in the sentence of condemnation, which was written a long process: [...]he tenor of which as it is sufficiently already expressed before, we thought meet in this place to omit, forasmuch as they are rather words of course than things devised upon deliberation. Howbeit indeed the effect was that forasmuch as the said N [...]cholas Ridley did affirm, maintain, and stubbornly defend certain opinions, assertions, and heresies, contrary to the word of God, and the received faith of the church, as in denying the true and natura [...] body of Christ, and his natural blood, to be in the sacrament of the altar: secondly, in affirming the substance of bread and wine to remain after the words of consecration: thirdly, in denying the mass to be a lively sacrifice of the church for the quick and the dead, and by no means would be brought from these his heresies: they therefore, the said John of Lincoln, James of Gloucester, John of Bristol, did judge and condemn the said Nicholas Ridley as an heretic, and so adjudged him presently, both by word and also in deed, to be degraded from the degree of a bishop, from priesthood, and all ecclesiastical order; declaring moreover the said Nicholas Ridley to be no member of the church, and therefore comitted him to the secular powers, of them to receive due punishment according to the tenor of the temporal laws; and further excommunicating him by the great excommunication.
The last Appearance and Examination of Bishop LATIMER before the Commissioners.
THIS sentence being published by the bishop of Lincoln, Dr. Ridley was committed as a personer to the mayor, and immediately Mr. Latimer was sent for: but in the mean time the carp [...] or cloth which lay on the table whereat Dr Ridley stood, was removed, because (as men reported) Mr. Latimer had never the degree of a doctor, as Dr. Ridley had. But as soon as Mr. Latimer appeared, [...] he did the day before, perceiving no cloth upon the table, he laid his [...], which was an [...]d felt, under his elbows, and immediately spake to the commissioner [...], saying:
My lords, I beseech your lordships to set a better order here at your entrance▪ for I am an old man, and have a very sore back, so that the press of the multitude doth me much harm.
I am sorry, Mr. Latimer, for your hurt. At your departure we will see to better order.
WITH that Mr. Latimer thanked his lordship, making a very low courtesy. After this the bishop of Lincoln began in this manner.
MR. LATIMER, although yesterday, after [...] had taken your answers to those articles which we proposed, we might have justly proceeded to judgment against you, especially in that you required the same; yet we having a good hope of your returning, desiring not your destruction, but rather that you would recant, revoke your errors, and turn to the catholic church, deferred farther process till this day; and now according to the appointment, we have called you here before us, to hear whether you are content to revoke your heretical assertions, and submit yourself to the determination of the church, as we most heartily desire, and I for my part, as I did yesterday, most earnestly do exhort you, or to know whether you persevere still the man that you were, for which we would be sorry.
IT seemed that the bishop would have further proceeded, if Mr. Latimer had not interrupted him by saying:
[Page 900]YOUR lordship doth often repeat the catholic church, as though I should deny the same. No, my lord, I confess there is a catholic church, to the determination of which I will stand, but not the church which you call catholic, which ought rather to be termed diabolic. And whereas you join together the Romish and catholic church, stay there, I pray you. For it is one thing to say the Romish church, and another thing to say catholic church: I must use here in this mine answer the counsel of Cyprian, who when cited before certain bishops that gave him leave to take deliberation and counsel, to try and examine his opinion, he answereth them thus: In sticking and persevering in the truth, there must no counsel or deliberation be taken. And again, being demanded of them sitting in judgment, which was most like to be of the church of Christ, whether he who was persecuted, or they who did persecute? Christ, said he, hath foreshewed, that he that doth follow him, must take up his cross. Christ gave knowledge that his disciples should have persecution and trouble. How think you then, my lords, is it like that the see of Rome, which hath been a continual persecutor, is rather the church, or that small flock which hath continually been persecuted by it, even to death? Also the flock of Christ hath been but few in comparison to the residue, and ever in subjection: which he proved, beginning at Noah's time, even to the apostles.
Your cause and Cyprian's is not one, but clean contrary; for he suffered persecution for the sake of Christ and his gospel; but you are in trouble for your errore and false assertions, contrary to the word of God, and the received truth of the church.
MR. LATIMER interrupted him, saying, Yes, verily, my cause is as good as St Cyprian's: for his was for the word of God, and so is mine.
Also at the beginning and foundation of the church, it could not be but that the apostles should suffer great persecution. Further, before Christ's coming, continually there were very few which truly served God: but after his coming began the time of grace, then began the church to increase, and was continually augmented, until it came unto this perfection, and now hath justly that jurisdiction which the unchristian princes before by tyranny did resist▪ there is a diverse consideration of the state of the church now in the time of grace, and before Christ's coming. But, Mr. Latimer, although we had instructions given us determinately to take your answer to such articles as we should propose, without any reasoning or disputations, yet we hoping by talk somewhat to prevail with you, appointed you to appear before us in the divinity-school, a place for disputations. And whereas then notwithstanding you had license to speak your mind, and were answered to every matter, yet you could not be brought from your errors; we thinking that from that time you would with good conversation ponder your state, gave you a respite from that time yesterday, when we dismissed you, until this time, and now have called you again here in this place, by your answers to learn whether you are the same man you were then or no? Therefore we will propose unto you the same articles which we did then, and require of you a determinate answer, without further reasoning, and he immediately recited the first article.
Always my protestation saved, that by these [...] answers it should not be thought that I did condescend and agree to your lordship's authority, in that you are legated by authority of the pope, so that thereby I might seem to consent to his jurisdiction: to the first article I answer now as I did yesterday, that in the sacrament the worthy receiver receiveth the very body of Christ, and drinketh his blood by the spirit and grace. But after a corporal being, which the Romish church prescribeth Christ's body and blood is not in the sacrament under the forms of bread and wine.
THE notaries took his answer affirmatively. For the second article he referred himself to his answers made before.
AFTER this the bishop of Lincoln recited the third article, and required a determinate answer.
Christ made one oblation and sacrifice for the sins of the world, and that a perfect sacrifice; [Page 901] neither needeth there to be any other, neither can there be any other propitiatory sacrifice.
THE notaries took his answer affirmatively.
IN like manner did he answer to the other articles, not varying from his answers made the day before.
AFTER his answers were penned by the notaries, and the bishop of Lincoln had exhorted him in like manner to recant as he did Dr. Ridley, and revoke his errors and false assertions, and Mr. Latimer had answered that he neither would nor could deny his master Christ and his verity, the bishop of Lincoln desired Mr. Latimer to hearken to him: and then Mr. Latimer hearkening for some new matter and other talk, the bishop of Lincoln read his condemnation, after which the said three bishops brake up their sessions, and dismissed the audience.
BUT Mr. Latimer required the bishop to perform his promise, in saying the day before that he should have license briefly to declare the cause why he refused the pope's authority.
BUT the bishop of Lincoln said, that now he could not hear him, neither ought to talk with him.
THEN Mr. Latimer asked him, whether it were not lawful for him to appeal from his judgment. And the bishop asked him again, to whom he would appeal. To the next general council, said Mr. Latimer, which shall be truly called in God's name. With that appellation the bishop was content: but he said it would be a long season before such convocation as he meant would be called.
THEN the bishop committed Mr. Latimer to the mayor, saying, Now he is your prisoner, Mr. Mayor. Because the press of the people was not diminished▪ each man looking for farther process, the bishop of Lincoln commanded avoidance, and desired Mr. Latimer to tarry till the press was diminished, lest he should take hurt at his going out, as he did at his entrance. And so Dr. Ridley and Mr. Latimer continued in custody till the 16th day of the said mouth of October.
A Communication between Dr. Brooks, Bishop of Gloucester, and Dr. Ridley, in the House of Mr. Irish, Mayor of Oxford, October 15, 1555, at which Time he was degraded.
ON the 15th day in the morning, Dr. Brooks, bishop of Gloucester, and the vice-chancellor of Oxford, Dr. Marshall, with divers other of the chief and heads of the same university, and many others accompanying them, came to the house of Mr. Irish, then mayor of Oxford, where Dr. Ridley, late bishop of London, was close prisoner. And when the bishop of Gloucester came into the chamber where the said Dr. Ridley did he, he told him for what purpose their coming was unto him, saying, That yet once again the queen's majesty did offer unto him by them▪ her gracious mercy, if that he would receive the same, and come home again to the faith which he was baptized in an [...] revoke his erroneous doctrine that he of late had tau [...]t abroad, to the destruction of many. And further said, That if he would not recant and become one of the catholic church with them, then they must needs (against their wills) proceed according to the law, which they would be very loth to do, if they might otherwise. But, said he, we have been oftentimes with you, and have requested that you would recant this your fantastical and devilish opinion, which hitherto you have not, although you might in so doing win many, and do much good. Therefore, good Mr. Ridley, consider with yourself the danger that shall ensue both of body and soul, if that you shall so wilfully cast yourself away in refusing mercy offered unto you at this time.
MY lord, said Dr. Ridley, you know my mind fully herein; and as for the doctrine which I have taught, my conscience assureth me that it was sound, and according to God's word (to his glory be it spoken); which doctrine, the Lord God being my helper, I will maintain so long as my tongue shall wag, and breath is within my body, and in confirmation thereof seal the same with my blood.
Well, it were best, Mr. Ridley, not to do so, but to become of the church with us. For you know this well enough, that whosoever is out of the catholic church cannot be saved. Therefore I say once again, that while you have time and mercy [Page 902] offered you, receive it, and confess with us the pope's holiness to be the chief head of the same church.
I marvel that you will trouble me with any such vain and foolish talk. You know my mind concerning the usurped authority of that Romish antichrist. As I confessed openly in the schools, so do I now, that both by my behaviour and talk I do no obedience at all unto the bishop of Rome, nor to his usurped authority, and that for divers good and godly considerations. And here Dr. Ridley would have reasoned with the said Brooks, bishop of Gloucester▪ concerning the bishop of Rome▪ authority, but could not be suffered, and yet he spake so earnestly against the pope therein, that the bishop told him, if he would not hold his peace, he should be compelled against his will. And seeing, saith he, that you will not receive the queen's mercy now offered unto you, but stubbornly refuse the same, we must, against our wills, proceed according to our commission to degrading, taking from you the dignity of priesthood. For we take you for no bishop, and therefore we will the sooner have done with you: so committing you to the secular power, you know what doth follow.
Do with me as it shall please God to suffer you, I am well content to abide the same with all my heart.
Put off your cap, and put on you this surplice.
Not I truly.
But you must.
I will not.
You must, therefore make no more ado but put this surplice upon you.
Truly if it come upon me, it shall be against my will.
Will you not put it upon you?
No, that I will not.
It shall be put upon you by one or other.
Do therein as it shall please you, I am well content with th [...]t, and more than that the servant is not above his master. If they dealt so cruelly with our Saviour Christ, as the scripture maketh mention, and he suffered the same patiently, how much more doth it become us his servants? And in saying these words they put upon the said Dr. Ridley a surplice, with all the trinkets appertaining to the mass. And as they were putting on the same, Dr. Ridley did vehemently inveigh against the Romish bishop, and all that foolish apparel, calling him Antichrist, and apparel foolish and abominable, yea, too foolish for a device in a play, insomuch that Brooks was exceeding angry with him, and bade him hold his peace, for he did but rail. Dr. Ridley answered him again, and said, So long as his tongue and breath would suffer him, he would speak against their abominable doings, whatsoever happened unto him for so doing.
Well, you had best hold your peace, lest your mouth be stopped. At which words one Edrige, the reader then of the Greek lecture, standing by, said to Dr. Brooks, Sir, the law is that he should be gagged, therefore let him be gagged. At which words Dr. Ridley looking earnestly upon him that so said, shook his head at him, and made no answer; but said with a sigh, Oh well, well, well.
SO they proceeded in their doings, yet nevertheless Dr. Ridley was ever speaking things not pleasant to their ears, although one or other bade him hold his peace, lest he should be caused against his will.
BUT when they came to that place where Dr. Ridley should hold the chalice and the wafer cake (called singing-bread) they bade him hold the same in his hands: Dr. Ridley said, They shall not come into my hands; for if they do, they shall fall to the ground for me. Then there was one appointed to hold them in his hand, while bishop Brooks read a certain thing in Latin, touching the degradation of spiritual persons, according to the pope's law.
THEN they put a book in his hand, and read another thing in Latin, the effect whereof was, "We do take from thee the office of preaching the [Page 903] gospel," &c. At which words Dr. Ridley gave a great sigh, looking up towards heaven, saying, O Lord God, forgive them this their wickedness.
HAVING put on him the mass-gear, they began to take it away (beginning with the uppermost garment), again reading a thing in Latin, according to the pope's law. Now when all was taken from him, saving only the surplice left on his back, as they were reading and taking it away, Dr. Ridley said unto them, Lord God, what power be you of, that you can take from a man that which he never had? I was never a singer in all my life, and yet you will take from me that which I never had.
SO when this their abominable and ridiculous degradation was ended very solemnly, Dr. Ridley said unto Dr. Brooks, Have you done? If you have done, then give me leave to talk a little concerning these matters. Brooks answered and said, Mr. Ridley, we ma [...] not t [...]lk with you, you be out of the church▪ and our law is, that we may not talk with any that be out of the church. Then Dr. Ridley said Seeing that you will not suffer me to talk▪ neither will vouchsafe to hear me, what remedy but patience? I refer my cause to my heavenly Father, who will reform things that be amiss, when it shall please him.
AT which words they would have been gone, but Mr. Ridley said, My lord I would wish that your lordship would vouchsafe to read over and peruse a little book of Bertram's writing, concerning the sacrament. I promise you, you shall find much good learning therein, if you will read the same with an indifferent judgment. To which Dr. Brooks made no answer, but was going away. Then said Dr. Ridley, Oh, I perceive you cannot away with this manner of talk. Well, as it is to no purpose, I will say no more; I will speak of worldly affairs. I pray you therefore, my lord, hear me, and be a means to the queen's majesty, in behalf of a great many poor men, especially my poor sister and her husband, who standeth there. They had a poor living granted unto them by me when I was in the see of London, which is taken away from them, by him that occupieth the same room, without all law or conscience.
HERE I have a supplication to the queen's majesty in their behalf. You shall hear the same read, [...]o shall you perceive the matter better. Then he read the same, and when he came to the place in the supplication that touched his sister by name, he wept, so that for a little time he could not speak for weeping. But recovering himself, he said; This is nature that moveth me, but I have now done: and with that read out the rest, and delivered the same unto his brother, commanding him to put it up to the queen's majesty, and to sue not only for himself, but also for such as had any leases or grants by him, and were put from the same by Dr. Bonner, then bishop of London. Whereunto Brooks said, Indeed, M [...]. Ridley, your request in this supplication is very lawful and honest: therefore I must needs in conscience speak to the queen's majesty for them.
I pray for God's sake do so.
I think your request will be granted, except one thing hinder it, and that is (I fear) because you do not allow the queen's proceedings, but obstinately withstand the same, that it will hardly be granted.
What remedy? I can do no [...] but speak and write. I trust I have discharged [...] conscience therein, and God's will be done.
I will do what lieth in me.
A Copy of the Supplication written to the Queen.
Dr. Ridley to the Queen's majesty.
MAY it please your majesty, for Christ our Saviour's sake, in a matter of conscience (and not for myself, but for other poor men) to vouchsafe to hear and understand this humble supplication. It is so (honourable princess) that in the time while I was in the ministry of the see of London, divers poor men, tenants thereof, have taken new leases of their tenantries and holdings: and some have renewed and changed their old, and therefore have payed fines and sums of money, both to me and to the chapter of St. Paul's, for the confirmation of the same.
[Page 904]NOW I say, that the bishop, who at present occupieth the same room, will not allow the aforesaid leases, which must redound to many a poor man's utter ruin and decay. Wherefore is is mine humble supplication unto your honourable grace, that it may please the same, for Christ's sake, to be unto the aforesaid poor men their gracious patroness and defender, either that they may enjoy their aforesaid leases and years renewed, as I suppose when their matter shall be heard with conscience, both justice, conscience, and equity shall require, for that their leases shall be found (I trust) made without fraud or cunning, either on their part, or of mine, and always also the old rents reserved to the see, without any kind of damage thereof: or if this will not be granted, that then it may please your gracious highness, to command that the poor men may be restored to their former leases and years, and to have rendered to them again such sums of money as they paid to me and to the Chapter-house for their leases and years, so now taken from them. Which thing, concerning the fines paid to me, may be easily done, if it shall please your majesty to command some portion of those goods which I left in my house, when I fled in hope of pardon for my trespass towards your grace, which goods (as I have heard) be yet reserved in the same house. I suppose that half the value of my plate that I left in mine offices, and especially in an iron chest in my bed-chamber, will go nigh to restore all such fines received, the true sums and parcels whereof are not set in their leases: and therefore if that way shall please your highness, they must be known by such ways and means as your majesty, by the advice of men of wisdom and conscience, shall appoint: but yet, for Christ's sake, I crave and humbly beseech your majesty, of your gracious pity and mercy, that the former way may take place.
I have also a poor sister that came to me out of the north, with three fatherless children, whom I married after to a servant of mine own house; she is put out of that which I did provide for them. I beseech your honourable grace, that her case may be mercifully considered, and that the rather, in contemplation that I never had of him, which suffered indurance at my entrance into the see of London, not one penny of his moveable goods, for it was almost half a year after his deposition before I entered into that place; yea, and also if any were left, known to be his, he had license to carry it away, or there for his use it did lie safe, as his officers do know. I paid for the lead which I found there, when I occupied any of it to the behoof of the church or of the house. And moreover, I had [...] part of his moveable goods, but also (as his ol [...] receiver, and then mine, called Mr. Stanton, can testify) I paid for them towards his servants' common liveries and wages, after his deposition, fifty-three or fifty-five pounds, I cannot tell which.
IN all these matters I beseech your honourable majesty to h [...]ar the advice of men of c [...]science▪ [...]nd especially the archbishop of York; which for that he was continually in my house a year and more, before mine imprisonm [...]nt, I suppose he is not altogether ignorant of some part of these things; and also his grace doth know my sister, for whose succour, and some relief, now unto your highness I make humble suit.
THE degradation being past, and all things finished, Dr. Brooks called the bailiffs, delivering to them Dr. Ridley, with this charge, to keep him safely from any man speaking with him, and that he should be brought to the place of execution when they were commanded Then Dr. Ridley in praising God, burst out in these words, and said, God, I thank thee, and to thy praise be it spoken, there is none of you all able to lay to my charge any open or notorious crime: for if you could, it would surely be laid in my lap, I see very well. Whereunto Brooks said, he played the part of a proud pharisee, exalting and praising himself.
BUT Dr. Ridley said, No, no, no; as I have said before, to God's glory be it spoken. I confess myself to be a miserable sinner, and have great need of God's help and mercy, and do daily call and cry for the s [...]me: therefore I pray you have no such opinion of me. Then they departed, and in going away, a certain warden of a college, of whose name I am not sure, advised D [...] Ridley to repent and forsake that erroneous opinion. Whereunto Dr. [Page 905] Ridley said, Sir, repent you, for you are out of the truth: and, I pray God, (if it be his blessed will) have mercy upon you, and grant you the understanding of his word. Then the warden, being in a passion thereat, said, I trust that I shall never be of your erroneous and devilish opinion, either yet to be in that place whither you shall go. He is, saith he, the most obstinate and wilful man that I ever heard talk since I was born.
The Behaviour of Dr. RIDLEY at his Supper, the Night before his Suffering.
THE night before he suffered, his beard was washed and his legs; and as he sat at supper, the same night, at the house of Mr. Irish, (who was his keeper) he asked his hostess, and the rest at the table, to his marriage: for, said he, to [...]morrow I must be married, and so shewed himself to be as merry as ever he was at any time before. And wishing his sister at his marriage, he asked his brother, sitting at the table, whether she could find in her heart to be there or no: and he answered, Yea, I dare say, with all her heart. At which word he said, He was glad to hear of her so much therein. At this discourse Mrs. Irish wept.
BUT Dr. Ridley comforted her, and said, O Mrs. Irish, you love me not now, I see well enough; for in that you weep, it doth appear you will not be at my marriage, neither are con [...]ent therewith. Indeed you be not so much my friend, as I thought you had been. But quiet yourself, though my breakfast shall be somewhat sharp and painful, yet I am sure my supper shall be more pleasant and sweet
WHEN they arose from the table, his brother offered to stay all night with him. But he said, No, no, that you shall not. For I intend (God willing) to go to bed, and to sleep as quietly to night, as ever I did in my life. So his brother departed, exhorting him to be of good cheer, and to take the cross quietly, for the reward was great, &c.
The Behaviour of Dr. RIDLEY and Mr. LATIMER, at the Time of their Death, October 1 [...]th, 1555.
UPON the north side of the town, in the ditch over against Baliol-college, the place of execution was appointed: and for fear of any tumult that might arise to hinder the burning of them, the lord Williams was commanded by the queen's letters, and the householders of the city, to be there assistant, sufficiently appointed; and when every thing was in readiness, the prisoners were brought forth by the mayor and bailiffs.
DR. RIDLEY had a fair black gown furred, and faced with foins, such as he was wont to wear being bishop, and a tippet of velvet furred likewise about his neck, a velvet night-cap upon his head, and a corner-cap upon the same, going in a pair of slippers to the stake, and going between the mayor and an alderman, &c.
AFTER him came Mr. Latimer in a poor Bristow freeze frock much worn, with his buttoned cap and kerchief on his head, all ready to the fire, a new long shroud hanging over his hose down to his feet: which at the first fight stirred men's hearts to pity them, beholding on the one side the honour they sometime had, and on the other the calamity whereunto they were fallen.
DR. RIDLEY, as he passed toward Bocardo, looked up where Dr. Cranmer lay, hoping belike to have seen him at the glass-window, and to have spoke unto him. But Dr. Cranmer was then busy with friar Soto and his fellows disputing together, so that he could not see him through that occasion. Then Dr. Ridley looking back, espied Mr. Latimer coming after. Unto whom he said, Oh, be you there? Yea, said Mr. Latimer, have after as fast as I can follow. So he following a pretty way off, at length they came to the stake, the one after the other▪ where first Dr. Ridley entering the place, marvellously and earnestly holding up both his hands, looked towards heaven: then shortly after seeing Mr. Latimer, with a wondrous chearful look he ran to him, embraced and kissed him, and as they that stood near reported, comforted him, saying, Be of good heart, brother, for God will either assuage the fury of the flame, or else strengthen us to abide it.
WITH that he went to the stake, kneeled down by it, and earnestly prayed, and behind him Mr. Latimer kneeled, as earnestly calling upon God as he. After they arose, the one talked with the [Page 906] other a little while, till those who were appointed to see the execution removed themselves out of the fun. What they said I can learn of no man.
THEN Dr. Smith began his sermon to them upon this text of St. Paul, in the 13th chapter of the first epistle to the Corinthians: "If I yield my body to the fire to be burnt, and have not charity, I shall gain nothing thereby." Wherein he alledged, that the goodness of the cause, and not the order of death, maketh the holiness of the person: which he confirmed by the examples of Judas, and of a woman in Oxford that of late hanged herself, for that they and such like as he recited, might then be adjudged righteous, which desperately separated their lives from their bodies, as he feared that those men that stood before him would do. But he cried still to the people to beware of them, for they were heretics, and died out of the church. And on the other side, he declared their diversities in opinions, as Lutherans, Oecolampadians, Zuinglians, of which sect they were he said, and that was the worst: but the old church of Christ, and the catholic faith, believed far otherwise. At which place they lifted up both their hands and eyes to heaven, as it were calling God to witness of the truth. Which countenance they made in many other places of his sermon, where they thought he spake amiss. He ended with a very short exhortation to them to recant and come home again to the church, and save their lives and souls, which else were condemned. His sermon was scarce in all a quarter of an hour.
DR. RIDLEY said to Mr. Latimer, Will you begin to answer the sermon, or shall I? Mr. Latimer said, Begin you first, I pray you. I will, said Dr. Ridley.
THEN the wicked sermon being ended, Dr. Ridley and Mr. Latimer kneeled down on their knees to my lo [...]d Williams, of Tame▪ the vice-chancellor of Oxford, and divers other commissioners appoint [...]ed for that purpose, who sat upon a fo [...]m thereby Unto whom Dr. Ridl [...] said, I beseech you, my lord, even for Christ's sake, that I may speak but two or three wor [...]s: and whilst my lord bent his head to the mayor and vice-chancellor, to know (as it appeared) whether he might have leave to speak, the bailiffs, and Dr. Marshal, the vice-chancellor, ran hastily unto him, and with their hands stopped his mouth, and said, Mr. Ridley, if you will revoke your erroneous opinions, and recant the same, you shall not only have liberty so to do, but also the benefit of a subject, that is, have your life. Not otherwise? said Dr. Ridley. No quoth Dr. Marshal: therefore if you will not do so, then there is no remedy but you must suffer for your deserts. Well, says Dr. Ridley, so long as the breath is in my body▪ I will never deny my Lord Christ, and his known truth: God's will be done in me. And with that he rose up, and said with a loud voice, Well then I commit our cause to Almighty God, who will indifferently judge all.
TO which Mr. Latimer added his old posey, Well, there is nothing hid but it shall be opened: and he said he could answer Smith well enough, if he might be suffered. Incontinently they were commanded to make themselves ready, which they with all meekness obeyed. Dr. Ridley took his gown and his tippet, and gave it to his brother-in-law Mr. Shipside, who all the time of his imprisonment, although he might not be suffered to come to him, lay there at his own charges to provide him necessaries, which from time to time he sent him by the serjeant that kept him. Some other of his apparel that was little worth he gave away, the others the bailiffs took away.
He gave away divers other small things to gentlemen standing by, and divers of them pitifully weeping; to Sir Henry Lea he gave a new gr [...]at, and to divers of my lord Williams [...]s gentlemen, some n [...]pkins, some nutm [...]gs, and race [...] of ginger, his dial, and such other things as he had about him, to every one that stood n [...]xt to [...]im. Some plucked the p [...]int [...] off his hose. Happy was he that might get any r [...]g of him.
MR. LATIMER gave no [...]hing but very quietly suffer [...]d [...] pull off hi [...] [...] and hi [...] other array, [...] look unto was very [...] ▪ and being stripp [...]d in [...]o h [...]s should, he seemed as [...] a p [...]rs [...]n to them that were th [...]re p [...]s [...]nt, as one could well se [...]; and whereas in his [...]loaths he appeared a wi [...]hered and silly old m [...]n h [...] now stood bol [...] upright, as comely a father as one might behold.
[Page 907]THEN Dr. Ridley standing as yet in his truss, said to his brother, It were best for me to go in my truss still. No, says his brother, it will put you to more pain: and the truss will do a poor man good. Whereunto Dr. Ridley said, Be it so in the name of God, and so unlaced himself. Then being in his shirt, he stood upon the aforesaid stone, and held up his hand and said, Oh heavenly Father, I give unto thee most hearty thanks, for that thou hast called me to be a professor of thee, even unto death; I beseech thee, Lord God, have mercy on this realm of England, and deliver the same from all her enemies.
THEN the smith took a chain of iron, and brought the same about both their middles: and as he was knocking in a staple, Dr. Ridley took the chain in his hand and shaked it, for it did gird in his belly; and looking aside to the smith, said, Good fellow, knock it in hard, for the flesh will have its course. Then his brother brought him a bag of gunpowder, and tied it about his neck. Dr. Ridley asked him what it was, his brother said gunpowder. Then, said he, I will take it to be sent of God▪ therefore I will receive it as sent from him. And have you any, said he, for my brother▪ (meaning Mr. Latimer.) Yea, sir, that I have, says his brother. Then give it unto him, said he, betime, lest you come too late. So his brother went and carried some gunpowder to Mr. Latimer.
IN the mean time Dr. Ridley spake unto may lord Williams, and said, My lord, I must be a suitor unto your lordship in the behalf of divers poor men, and especially in the cause of my poor sister: I have made a supplication to the queen's majesty in their behalf. I beseech your lordship for Christ's sake, to be a mean to her grace for them. My brother here hath the supplication, and will resort to your lordship to certify you hereof. There is nothing in all the world that troubleth my conscience, (I praise God this only excepted. Whilst I was in the see of London▪ divers poor men took lease [...] of me, and agreed with me for the same. Now I hear say the bishop that now occupieth the same [...]o [...]m, will not allow my grants to them made, but contrary to all law and conscience, hath taken from them their livings, and will not suffer them to enjoy the same. I beseech you, my lord, be a means for them: you shall do a good deed, and God will reward you.
THEN they brought a lighted faggot, and laid it at Dr. Ridley's feet. Thereupon Mr. Latimer said, Be of good comfort, Mr. Ridley, and play the man, we shall this day light such a candle by God's grace in England, as I trust shall never be put out. When Dr. Ridley saw the fire flaming up towards him, he cried with a wonderful loud voice, Into thy hands, O lord, I commend my spirit: Lord, receive my spirit; and after repeated this often, Lord, Lord, receive my spirit. Mr. Latimer cried as vehemently on the other side, O Father of heaven receive my soul: who received the flame as it were embracing of it. After he had stroked his face with his hands, and as it were bathed them a little in the fire, he soon died, (as it appeareth) with very little or no pain. And thus much concerning this old and faithful servant of God, bishop Latimer, whose laborious travels, fruitful life, and constant death, the whole realm hath cause to give thanks to Almighty God.
BUT Dr. Ridley, by the ill-making of the fire, the faggots being green, and built too high about the goss, so that the fire being kept down by the green wood, burned fiercely beneath, which put him to such exquisite pain, that he desired them for God's sake to let the fire come unto him; which his brother-in-law heard, but not well understood, intending to rid him out of his pain, (for which cause he gave attendance) as one in such sorrow, not well advised what he did, heaped faggot upon him, so that he clean covered him, which made the fire more vehement beneath, so that it burned all his nether parts, before it touched the upper, and that made him leap up and down under the faggots, and often desire them to let the fire come to him, saying, I cannot burn. Which indeed plainly appeared: for after his legs were consumed by reason of his struggling through the pain, (whereof he had no release, but only the comfort he had from God) he shewed that side towards us clean, shirt and all untouched with flame. Yet in all this torment he forgot not to call upon God still, having in his mouth, Lord have mercy upon me, intermingling his cry, Let the fire come unto me, I cannot burn. In which [Page 908] pains he laboured till one of the standers by, with his bill, pulled off the faggots above, and where he saw the fire flame up, he wrested himself to that side. And when the fire touched the gunpowder, he was seen to stir no more, but burned on the other side, falling down at Mr. Latimer's feet: which some said, happened by reason that the chain loosed; other said, that he fell over the chain, by reason of [...] of his body, and the weakness of the ne [...]ther [...]imbs.
SOME said that before he was like to fall from the stake, he desired them to hold him to it with their bills. However, surely it moved hundreds to t [...]ars, [...] beholding the horrible sight. For I think there were none that had not clean banished all humanity and mercy which would not have lamented to behold the fury of the fire so to rage upon their bodies. Signs there were of sorrow on every side. Some took it grievously to see their deaths, whose lives they h [...]ld full dear. Some pitied their persons, that thought their souls had no need thereof. His brother moved many men, seeing his miserable case, seeing him (I say) compelled to such infelicity, that he thought then to do him best service when he hasten [...] his end. Some cried out of the luck, to see his endeavour, who most dearly loved him, and sough [...] his release, turn to his greater vexation, and increase of pain. But whoso considered their preferments in time past, the places of honour that they sometimes occupied in this commonwealth, the favour they were in with their princes, and the opinion of learning they had, could not chuse but [...] with tears, to see so great dignity, honour, and estimation, so necessary members sometime accounted, so many godly virtues, the study of so many years, such excellent learning, to be put into the [...]ire, and consumed in one moment. Well, dead they are, and the reward of this world they have already. What reward remaineth for them in heaven▪ the day of God's glory, when he cometh with h [...]s [...]ints, shall shortly declare.
A LETTER Written by Dr. RIDLEY, being his last Farewel, to all his true and faithful Friends in GOD, with a sharp Admonition withal to the Papists.
AT the name of Jesus let every knee bow, both of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth, and let every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is the lord, unto the glory of God the Father. Amen.
AS a man intending to take a far journey, and to depart from his familiar friends, commonly and naturally hath a desire to bid his friends farewel before his departure; so likewise now I, looking daily when I should be called to depart hence from you, (O all you my dearly beloved brethren and sisters in our Saviour Christ that dwell here in this world) having a like mind towards you all, to bid you all, my dear brethren and sisters (I say in Christ) that dwell upon the earth, after such manner as I can, Farewel.
FAREWEL, my dear brother George Shipside, whom I have ever found faithful, trusty, and loving in all states and conditions, and now in the time of my cross over all others to me most friendly and stedfast, and that which pleased me best over all other things, in God's cause ever hearty.
FAREWEL, my dear sister Alice his wife, I am glad to hear of thee, that thou dost take Christ's cross, which is laid now (blessed be God) both on thy back and mine, in good part. Thank thou God that hath given thee a godly and loving husband: see thou honour him and obey him, according to God's law. Honour thy mother in law, his mother, and love all those that pertain unto him, being ready to do them good a [...] it shall lie in thy power. As for thy children, I doubt not of thy husband, but that he who hath given him an heart to love and fear God, and in God them that pertain unto him, shall also make him friendly and beneficial unto thy children, even as if they had been begotten of his own body▪
FAREWEL▪ my dearly beloved brother, John Ridley, of the Walt [...]u [...] ▪ and you my gentl [...] and loving sister Elizabeth: who be [...]es the natural [...] of amity, your tender love, which you were said [...]ver to bear towards me above the rest of your brethren, doth bind me to love. My mind wa [...] to [...] acknowledged this your loving affection, and to have acquitted with deeds, and not with words alone. Your daughter Elizabeth I bid [...], whom I love for the meek and gentle [...] that God [...] [Page 909] given her, which is a precious thing in the sight of God.
FAREWEL, my beloved sister dwelling at Unthank, with all your children, nephews and nieces, since the departure of my brother Hugh, my mind was to have been unto them instead of their father, but the Lord God must and will be their father if they would love and fear him, and live according to his law.
FAREWEL, my well beloved and worshipful cousins, Mr. Nicholas Ridley, of Willimountswike, and your wife, and I thank you for all your kindness both shewed unto me, and also to all your own kinsfolk and mine. Good cousin, as God hath set you in our stock and kindred (not for any respect of your person, but of his abundant grace and goodness) to be as it were the bell-weather to order and conduct the rest, and hath also endued you with his manifold gifts of grace both heavenly and worldly above others; so I pray you, good cousin, (as my trust and hope is in you) continue and increase in the maintenance of the truth, honesty, righteousness, and all true godliness, and to the uttermost of your power to withstand falshood, untruth, unrighteousness, and all ungodliness which is forbidden and condemned by the word and laws of God.
FAREWEL▪ my young cousin, Ralph Whitfield. Oh! your time was very short with me. My mind was to have done you good, and yet you caught in that little time a loss, but I trust it shall be recompensed as it shall please Almighty God.
FAREWEL, all my whole kindred and countrymen, farewel in Christ altogether. The Lord, who is the searcher of secrets, knoweth that according to my heart's desire, my hope was of late that I should have come among you, and to have brought with me abundance of Christ's blessed gospel, according to the duty of that office and ministry, whereunto among you I was chosen, named and appointed by the mouth of that late peerless prince, king Edward, and so denounced openly in his court, by his p [...]vy council.
I warn you all, my beloved kinsfolk and countrymen, that you be not amazed or astonished at the kind of my departure or dissolution; for I assure you I think it the greatest honour that ever I was called to in all my life: and therefore I heartily thank my Lord God for it, that it hath pleased him to call me of his great mercy unto this high honour, to suffer death willingly for his cause and for his sake; unto which honour he hath called the holy prophets, and dearly beloved apostles, and his blessed chosen martyrs. For know you that I doubt no more, that the causes for which I am put to death are God's causes, and the causes of the truth, than I doubt that the gospel which John wrote is the gospel of Christ, or that Paul's epistles are the very word of God. And to have a heart willing to abide, and stand in God's cause, and in Christ's quarrel even unto death, I assure thee, (O man) it is an inestimable and an honourable gift of God, given only to the true elect, and dearly beloved children of God and inheritors of the kingdom of heaven. For the holy apostle, and also martyr in Christ's cause, St. Peter, saith, If ye suffer rebuke in the name of Christ, that is, in Christ's cause, and for his truth's sake, then are ye happy and blessed, for the glory of the Spirit of God resteth upon you. If for rebuke's sake suffered in Christ's name, a man is pronounced, by the mouth of that apostle, blessed and happy, how much more happy and blessed is he that hath the grace to suffer death also! Wherefore all you that be my true lovers and friends, rejoice, and rejoice with me again, and render with me hearty thanks to God our heavenly Father, that for his Son's sake my Saviour and Redeemer Christ, he hath vouchsafed to call me, being else without his gracious goodness, in myself but a sinful and vile wretch, to call me, I say, unto this high dignity of his true prophe [...]s, of his faithful apostles, and of his holy elect and chosen martyrs, that is, to die, and not to spend this temporal li [...]e in the defence and maintenance of his eternal and everlasting truth.
YOU know that be my countrymen dwelling upon the borders, where (alas) the true man suffereth oftentimes much wrong at the thief's hand, if it chance a man to be slain by a thief (as it often doth [Page 910] there) which went out with his neighbour to help him to recover his goods again, that the more cruelly he be slain, and the more stedfastly he stuck by his neighbour in the fight against the faith of the thief, the more favour and friendship shall all his posterity have for the slain man's sake, of all them that be true, as long as the memory of this fact, and his posterity doth endure: even so you that be my kinsfolk and countrymen, know ye (howsoever the blind, ignorant, wicked world hereafter shall rail upon my death, which thing they cannot do worse than their fathers did, of the death of Christ our Saviour, of his holy prophets, apostles, and martyrs:) know ye, I say, that both before God, and all them that be godly, and that truly know and follow the laws of God, ye have, and shall have by God's grace, ever cause to rejoice, and to thank God highly, and to think good of it, and in God rejoice with me your flesh and blood, whom God of his goodness hath vouchsafed to associate unto the blessed company of his holy martyrs in heaven: and I doubt not in the infinite goodness of my Lord God, nor in the faithful fellowship of his elect and chosen people, but at both their hand in my cause, ye shall rather find the more [...]avour and grace: for the Lord saith, that he will be both to them and their's that love him, the more loving again in a thousand generations: the Lord is so full of mercy to them, I say, and their's who do love him indeed. And Christ saith again, that no man can shew more love than to give his life for his friend.
NOW also know ye, all my true lovers in God, my kinsfolk and countrymen, that the cause for which I am put to death, is even after the same sort and condition, but touching more near God's cause, and more weighty matters, but in the general kind all one: for both is God's cause, both is in the maintenance of right, and both for the common-wealth, and both for the weal also of the christian brother, although yet there is in these two no small difference, both concerning the enemies, the goods stolen, and the manner of the fight. For know ye all, that like as there when the poor man is robbed by the thief of his goods truly gotten (whereupon he and his houshould should live) he is greatly wronged, and the thief in stealing and robbing with violence the poor man's goods, doth offend God, doth transgress his law, and is injurious both to the poor m [...]n, and to the common-wealth; so I say, know ye that even here in the cause of my death, it is with the church of England I mean the congregation of the true chosen children of God in this realm of England, which I acknowledge not only to be my neighbours, but rather the congregation of my spiritual brethren and sisters in Christ, yea, members of one body, wherein by God's grace I am and have been grafted in Christ. This church of England hath of [...], of the infinite goodness and abundant grace of Almighty God, great substance, great riches of heavenly treasure, great plenty of God's true sin [...]ere word, the true and wholesome administration of Christ's holy sacraments, the whole profession of Christ's religion truly and plainly set forth in baptism, the plain declaration and understanding of the same, taught in the holy catechism, to have been learned of all true christians.
THE church had also a true and sincere form and manner of the Lord's supper, wherein according to Jesus Christ's own ordinance and holy institution▪ Christ's commandments were executed and done. For upon the bread and wine set upon the Lord's table, thanks were given, the commemoration of the Lord's death was had; the bread, in the remembrance of Christ's body torn upon the cross▪ was broken, and the cup in the remembrance of Christ's blood shed▪ was distributed▪ and both communicated unto all that were present and would receive them, and also they were exhorted of the minister so to do.
ALL was done openly in the vulgar tongue, so that every thing might be must early heard, and plainly understood by all the people, to God's high glory, and the edification of the whole church. This church had of late the whole divine services, all common and public prayers ordained to be said and heard in the common congregation, not only framed and fashioned to the true vein of holy scripture, but also set forth according to the commandment of the Lord, and St. Paul's doctrine, for the people's edification, in their vulgar tongue.
IT had also holy and wholesome homil [...]s in commendation of the p [...]incipal virtues, which are [Page 911] commended in scripture; and likewise other homilies against the most pernicious and capital vices that used (alas) to reign in this realm of England. This church had in matters of controversy, articles so penned and framed after the holy scriptures, and grounded upon the true understanding of God's word, that in short time if they had been universally received, they should have been able to have set in Christ's true religion, and to have expelled many false errors and heresies, wherewith this church, alas, was almost overgone.
BUT alas, of late into this spiritual possession of the heavenly treasure of these godly riches, are en [...]ered in thieves, that have robbed and spoiled all this treasure away. I may well complain of these things, and cry out upon them with the prophet, saying, "O Lord God, the Gentiles, heathen nations, are come into thy heritage: they have defiled thy holy temple, and made Jerusalem an heap of stones, that is, they have broken and beaten down to the ground thy holy city." This heathenish generation, these thieves of Samaria, these Sabaei and Chaldaei, these robbers have rushed out of their dens, and have robbed the church of England of all the aforesoid holy treasure of God; they have carried it away and overthrown it, and instead of God's holy word, the true and right administration of Christ's holy sacraments, as of baptism and others, they mixt their ministry with man's foolish fancies, and many wicked and ungodly traditions.
INSTEAD of the Lord's holy table, they give the people with much solemn disguising a thing which they call their mass, but in deed and in truth, it is a very masking and mockery of the true supper of the Lord; or rather I may call it a crafty juggling, whereby these false t [...]i [...]ves and jugglers have bewi [...]ched the mi [...]ds of the simple people, that they have brought th [...]m from the true worship of God unto pernicious idolatry, and make them to believe that to b [...] Christ our Lord and Saviour, which indeed [...] man, nor hath any life in it [...]elf but [...] the creature [...]f bread and wine, [...] of the Lord's [...] is the sa [...]rament of Chri [...]t [...] and for this [...] them in hi [...] table, to represent unto us his blessed body torn upon the cross for us, and his blood there shed, it pleased him to call them his body and blood: which understanding Christ declareth to be his true meaning, when he saith, Do this in remembrance of me. And again, St. Paul likewise doth set out the same more plainly, speaking of the same sacrament, after the words of consecration, saying, As often as ye shall eat of this bread and drink of this cup, ye shall set forth the Lord's death until his coming again. And here again these thieves have also robbed the people of the Lord's cup, contrary to the plain words of Christ written in his gospel.
NOW for the common public prayers which were in the vulgar tongue, these thieves have brought in again a strange tongue, whereof the people understand not one word. Wherein what do they else, but rob the people of their divine service, wherein they ought to pray together with the minister? And to pray in a strange tongue, what is it but (as St. Paul calleth it) barbarousness, childishness, unprofitable folly, yea, and plain madness.
FOR the godly articles of unity in religion, and for the wholesome homilies, what do these thieves place in the stead of them, but the pope's laws and decrees, lying legends, feigned fables, and miracles to delude and abuse the simplicity of the rude people? Thus this robbery and theft is not only committed, nay, sacrilege, and wicked spoil of heavenly things, but also in the stead of the same is brought in and placed the abominable desolation of the tyrant Antiochus, of proud Sen [...]cherib, of the shameless faced king, and of the Babylonian beast. Unto this robbery, this theft and sacrilege, for that I cannot consent, nor (God willing) ever shall so long as the breath is in my body, because it is blasphemy against God, high treason against Christ our heavenly King, Lord, Master, and our only Saviour and Redeemer, it is plainly contrary to God's word, and to Christ's gospel; it is the subversion of all true godliness, and against the salvation of mine own soul, and of all my brethren and sisters, whom Christ my Saviour hath so dearly bought, with no l [...]ss price than with the effusion and shedding forth of his most precious blood. Therefore all you my true lovers in God, kinsfolk and countrymen, for this cause, I say, know ye that I am put [Page 912] to death, which by God's grace I shall willingly take, with hearty thanks to God therefore, in certain hope without any doubting, to receive at God's hand again, of his mercy and grace, everlasting life.
ALTHOUGH the cause of the true man slain of the thief, helping his neighbour to recover his goods again, and the cause for which I am put to death, in a generality is both one (as I said before); yet know ye that there is no small difference. These thieves against whom I do stand, are much worse than the robbers and thieves of the borders. The goods which they steal are much more precious, and their kinds of fight are far different. These thieves are worse (I say) for they are cruel, more wicked, more false, more deceitful, and crafty: for those will but kill the body, but these will kill both body and soul. Those, for the general theft and robbery, be called, and are indeed, thieves and robbers; but these for their spiritual kind of robbery, are called Sacralegi, as you would say, Church-robbers. They are more wicked: for those go about to spoil men of worldly things, worldly riches, gold and silver, and worldly substance; these go about in the ways of the devil their spiritual father, to steal from the universal church, and particularly from every man, all heavenly treasure, true faith, true charity, and hope of salvation in the blood of our Saviour Jesus Christ, yea, to spoil us of our Saviour Jesus Christ, of his gospel, of his heavenly Spirit, and of the heavenly heritage of the kingdom of heaven, so dearly purchased unto us, with the death of our Master and Saviour Christ. These are the goods and godly substance whereupon the christian before God must live, and without which he cannot live: these goods, I say, these thieves, these church robbers go about to spoil us of. Which goods, as to the man of God, they excel and surpass all worldly treasure; so to withstand, even unto death, such thieves as go about to spoil both us and the whole church of such goods, is most high and honourable service done to God.
THESE church-robbers be also much more false, crafty, and dec [...]itful, than the thieves upon the borders; for th [...]se have not the craft so to commend their theft, that they dare avouch i [...], and therefore as acknowledging themselves to be evil, they steal commonly in the night, they dare not app [...]ar in judgments and sessions, where justice is executed, and when they are taken and brought thither, they never hang any man, but they be oftentimes hanged for their faults. But these church-robbers can so cloak and colour their spiritual robbery, that they can make people to believe falshood to be truth, and truth falshood; good to be evil, and evil good; light to be darkness, and darkness light; superstition to be true religion, and idolatry to be the true worship of God, and that which is in substance the creature of bread and wine, to be no other substance, but only the substance of Christ the living Lord, both God and man. And with this their falshood and craft, they can so juggle and bewitch the understanding of the simple, that they dare avouch it openly in court and in town, and fear neither hanging nor heading, as the poor thieves of the borders do; but stout and strong like Nembroth, dare condemn to be burned in flaming fire, quick and alive, whosoever will go about to bewray their falshood.
THE kind of fight against these church-robbers is also of another sort and kind▪ than that which is against the thieves of the borders. For there the true men go forth against them with spear and lance, with bow and bill, and all such kind of bodily weapons as the true men have: but here as the enemies be of another nature, so the watchmen of Christ's flock, the warriors that fight in the Lord's war, must be armed, and fight with another kind of weapons and armour. For here the enemies of God, the soldiers of Antichrist, although the battle is set forth against the church by mortal men, being flesh and blood, and nevertheless members of their father the devil, yet for that their grand master is the power of darkness, their members are spi [...]itual wickedness, wicked spirits, spirits of errors, of heresies, of all deceit and ungodliness, spirits of idolatry, superstiti [...]n and hypocrisy, which are called by St. Paul, principalities and powers, lords of the world, rulers of the darkness of this world, and spiritual sub [...]eti [...]s concerning heavenly things; therefore one weapons mu [...] be [...]it and meet to fight against such▪ not [...] bodily weapons, as spear and l [...]nce, but spiritual and heavenly▪ we must [...]ight against such with the [Page 913] armour of God, not intending to kill their bodies, but their errors, their false craft and heresies, their idolatry, superstition, and hypocrisy, and to save (as much as lieth in us) both their bodies and their souls.
AND therefore, as St. Paul teacheth us, "We fight not against flesh and blood," that is, we fight not with bodily weapons to kill the man, but with the weapons of God to put to flight his wicked errors and vice, and to save both body and soul. Our weapons therefore are faith, hope, charity, righteousness, truth, patience, prayer unto God, and our sword wherewith we smite our enemies, beat and batter and bear down all falshood, is the Word of God. With these weapons, under the banner of the cross of Christ, we do fight, ever having our eye upon our grand master and captain, Christ; and then we reckon ourselves to triumph and to win the crown of everlasting b [...]iss, when induring in this battle without any shrinking or yielding to the enemies, after the example of our grand captain Christ, our master, after the example of his holy prophets, apostles, and martyrs, when (I say) we are slain in our mortal bodies by our enemies, and are most cruelly and without all mercy murdered down like a flock of sheep. And the more cruel, the more painful, the more vile and spiteful the kind of death is whereunto we be put, the more glorious in God, the more blessed and happy we reckon (without all doubts) our martyrdom to be.
AND thus much, dear lovers and friends in God, my countrymen and kinsfolk, I have spoke for your comfort, lest at my death ye might be abashed, or think any evil: whereas ye have rather cause to rejoice (if ye love me indeed) that it hath pleased God to call me to a greater honour and dignity, than ever I did enjoy before, either in Rochester, or in the see of London, or ever should have had in me see of Durham, whereunto I was la [...]t of all elected and named: yea, I count it grea [...]er honour before God indeed to die in his cause (whereof I nothing d [...]ub [...]) than is any earthly or temporal promotion or honour that can be gi [...]en to a man in this world. And who is he that knoweth the cause to be God's, to be Christ's quarrel, and of his gospel, to be the common w [...]l of all the [...] and chosen children of God, of all the inheritors of the kingdom of heaven; who is he (I say) that knoweth this assuredly by God's word, and the testimony of his own conscience (as I through the infinite goodness of God, not of myself, but by his grace acknowledge myself to do): who is he, I say, that knoweth this and both loveth and feareth God in deed and in truth▪ loveth and believeth his master Christ, and his blessed gospel; loveth [...]is brotherhood, the chosen children of God, and also lusteth and longeth for everlasting life: who is he, I say again, that would not or cannot find in his heart in this cause to be content to die? The Lord forbid that any such should be that should forsake this grace of God. I trust in my Lord God, the God of mercies, and Father of all comfort through Jesus Christ our Lord, that he which hath put this mind, will, and affection by his Holy Spirit in my heart, to stand against the face of the enemy in his cause, and to chuse rather the loss of all my worldly substance, yea, and of my life too, than to deny his known truth: that he will comfort me, aid me, and strengthen me evermore even unto the end, and to the yielding up of my spirit and soul into his holy hands, whereof I most heartily beseech his most holy sacred Majesty of his infinite goodness and mercy, through Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen.
NOW that I have taken leave of my countrymen and kinsfolk, and the Lord doth lend me life, and giveth me leisure, I will bid my other good friends in God of other places also, farewel. And whom first or before other, than the University of Cambridge, where I have dwelt longer, found more faithful and hearty friends, received more benefits (the benefits of my natural parents only excepted) than ever I did even in mine own country wherein I was born.
FAREWEL therefore (Cambridge) my loving mother and tender nurse. If I should not acknowledge thy manifold benefits, yea, if I should not for thy benefits at least love thee again, truly I were to be accounted too ungrateful and unkind▪— What benefits hadst thou ever, that thou usedst to give and bestow upon thy best beloved children, that thou thoughtest too good for me? Thou didst bestow on me all thy school degrees, the common offices, the chaplainship of the university, the offices, [Page 914] the chaplainship of the university, the office of the proctorship, and of a common reader; and of thy private advantages and emoluments in colleges, what was it that thou madest me not partner of? First to be scholar, then to be a fellow, and after my departure from thee, thou calledst me again to a mastership of a right worshipful college. I thank thee, my loving mother, for all this thy kindness, and I pray God that his laws, and the sincere gospel of Christ may ever be truly taught and faithfully learned in thee.
FAREWEL, Pembroke Hall, of late mine own college, and my charge: what case thou art in now God knoweth, I know not well. Thou wast ever named since I knew thee, which is not thirty years ago, to be studious, well learned, and a great promoter of Christ's gospel, and of God's true word; so I found thee, and, blessed be God, so I left thee indeed. Woe is me for thee mine own dear college, if ever thou suffer thyself by any means to be brought from that trade. In thy orchard (the walls, buts, and trees, if they could speak, would bear me witness) I learned without book almost all St. Paul's epistles, yea, and I think all the canonical epistles, save only the Apocalypse. Of which study, although in time a great part did depart from me, yet the sweet smell thereof I trust I shall carry with me into heaven: for the profit thereof I think I have felt in all my life-time ever after, and I think of late (whether they abide now or no, I cannot tell) there were others that did the like. The lord grant this zeal and love toward that part of God's word, which is a key and true commentary to all the holy scripture, may ever abide in that college so long as the world shall endure.
FROM Cambridge I was called into Kent by the archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Cranmer, that most reverend father, and of him preferred to be vicar of Herne, in East Kent. Wherefore, farewel, Herne thou worshipful and wealthy parish, the first cure whereunto I was called to preach God's word. Thou hast heard of my mouth oftentimes the word of God preached, not after the popish trade, but after Christ's Gospel: O that the fruit had answered to the seed. And yet I must acknowledge me to be thy debtor for the doctrine of the Lord's supper, which at that time I acknowledge God had not revealed unto me: but I bless God, in all that godly virtue and zeal of God's word, which the Lord by preaching of his word did kindle manifestly both in the heart and in the life and works of that godly woman there, lady Phines; the Lord grant that his word took like effect there [...] others.
FAREWEL, thou cathedral church of Canterbury, the metropoli [...] see, whereof I once was a member. To speak things pleasant unto thee I dare not for danger of conscience, and displeasure of my Lord God, and to say what lieth in my heart were now too much, and I fear were able to do thee now but little good. Nevertheless, for the friendship I have found in some there, and for charity sake, I wish thee to be washed clean of all worldliness and ungodliness, that thou mayest be found of God after thy name Christ's-church, in deed and in truth.
FAREWEL, Rochester, sometime my cathedral see, in whom (to say the truth) I did find much gentleness and obedience; and I trust thou wilt not say the contrary, but I did use it to God's glory, and unto thine own profit in God. O that thou hadst and mightest have continued and gone forward in the trade of God's law wherein I did leave thee; then thy charge and burden should not have been so terrible and dangerous, as I suppose verily it is like to be (alas) in the latter day.
TO Westminster other advertisement in God I have not now to say, than I have said before to the cathedral church of Canterbury, and so God give thee of his grace, that thou mayest learn in deed and in truth to please him after his own laws: and thus fare you well.
O London, London, to whom now may I speak in thee, or whom shall I bid farewel? Shall I speak to the prebendaries of St. Paul's? Alas, all that loved God's word, and were the true setters-forth thereof, are now (as I hear say) some burnt and slain, some exiled and banished, and some confined in hard prison, and appointed to be put to the most cruel death for Christ's gospel sake. As for the rest of them, I know they could never brook me well, nor could I ever delight in them.
[Page 915]SHALL I speak to the see thereof, wherein of late I was placed almost, and not fully the space of three years? But what may I say to it, being (as I hear say I am) deposed and expulsed by judgment as an unjust usurper of that room. O judgment, judgement. Can this be just judgment to condemn the chief minister of God's word, the pastor and bishop of the diocese, and never bring him into judgment that he might have heard what crimes were laid to his charge, nor even suffer him to have any place or time to answer for himself? Thinkest thou hereafter, when true justice shall have place, this judgment can ever be allowed either of God or man? Well, as for the cause or whole matter of my deposition, and the spoil of my goods which thou possessest yet, I refer it unto God who is a just judge; and I beseech God, if it be his pleasure, that that which is but my personal wrong, be not laid to thy charge in the latter day, this only I can pray for.
O thou now wicked and bloody see, why dost thou set up again many altars of idolatry, which by the word of God were justly taken away? Why dost thou daily delude thy people, masking in thy masses instead of the Lord's supper, which ought to be common as well (saith Chrysostom, yea, the Lord himself) to the people as to the priest? How darest thou deny to the people of Christ, contrary to his express commandment in the gospel, his holy cup? Why babblest thou to the people the Common-prayer in a strange tongue, wherein St. Paul commandeth in the Lord's name, that no man should speak before the congregation, except it should be presently declared in their common tongue, that all might be edified? Nay, hearken, thou whorish bawd of Babylon, thou wicked limb of Antichrist, thou bloody wolf, why slayest thou down, and makest [...]avoc of the prophets of God? Why murderest thou so cruelly Christ's poor silly sheep, which will not hear thy voice, because thou art a stranger, and will follow no other but their own pastor Christ's voice? Thinkest thou to escape, or that the Lord will not require their blood at thy hands? Thy God, which is the work of thy hands, and whom thou sayest thou hast power to make, that thy deaf and dumb god, I say, will not indeed, nor can, (although thou art not ashamed to call him thy Maker) make thee to escape the revenging hand of the high and Almighty God. But be thou assured, that the living Lord our Saviour and Redeemer, who sitteth on the right hand of the Father in glory, he seeth all thy wicked ways and cruelty done to his dear memb [...] and he will not forget his holy ones, and his ha [...]s, O thou whorish drab, shalt thou never escape. Instead of my farewel to thee, now I say, Fi [...] upon thee, fie upon thee, filthy drab, and all thy false prophets.
YET, O London, I may not leave thee thus. Although thy episcopal see, now being joined in league with the seat of Satan, thus hath now both handled me and the saints of God, yet I do not doubt, but in that great city there be many private mourners, who do daily mourn for that mischief, who never did nor shall consent to that wickedness, but do detest and abhor it as the ways of Satan. But these privy mourners here I will pass by, and bid them farewel with their fellows hereafter, when place and occasion shall more conveniently require. Among the worshipful of the city, and especially which were in office of mayoralty, yea, and in other cities also (whom now to name is not necessary) in the time of my ministry, which was from the latter part of sir Rowland's Hills' year, unto sir George Barnes's year, and a great part thereof, I do acknowledge that I found no small humanity and gentleness as I thought: but to say the truth, that I do esteem above all other for true christian kindness, which is shewed in God's cause, and done for his sake.— Wherefore, O Dobs, Dobs, alderman and knight, thou in thy year didst win my heart for evermore, for that honourable act, that most blessed work of God, of the erection and setting up of Christ's holy hospitals, and truly religious houses, which by thee and through thee were begun. For thou, like a man of God, when the matter was moved for the relief of Christ's poor silly members to be holpen from extreme misery, hunger, and famine, thy heart, I say, was moved with pity, and as Christ's high honourable officer in that cause, yea, and not only in thine own pe [...]son thou didst set forth Christ's cause, but to further the matter, thou broughtest me into the council chamber of the city before the aldermen alone, whom thou hadst assembled there together to hear me speak what I could say, as an advocate by [...]ffice and duty, in the poor men's cause. The Lord wrought with thee, and gave thee the [Page 916] consent of thy brethren: whereby the matter was brought to the common-council, and so to the whole body of the city; by whom, with an uniform consent, it was committed to be drawn, ordered, and devised by a certain number of the most witty citizens and politic, endued also with godliness, and with ready hearts to set forward such a noble act, as could be chose in all the whole city; and like true and faithful ministers, both to their city, and their master Christ, so ordered, devised, and brought forth the matter, that thousands of poor silly members of Christ, which else for extreme hunger and misery should have famished and perished, shall be relieved, holpen, and brought up, and shall have cause to bless the aldermen of that time, the common council, and the whole body of the city, but especially thee, O Dobs, and those chosen men, by whom this honourable work of God was begun and wrought, and that so long throughout all ages, as that godly work shall endure: which I pray Almighty God may be ever unto the world's end. Amen.
AND thou, O sir George Barnes, the truth is to be confessed to God's glory, and to the good example of others, thou wast in thy year not only a furtherer and continuer of that which before thee by thy predecessor was well begun, but also didst labour so to have perfected the work, that it should have been an absolute thing, and perfect spectacle of true charity and g [...]d [...]iness unto all Christendom. Thine endeavour was to set up an house of occupati [...]ns, both that all kind of poverty, being able to [...], sh [...]uld not have lacked, whereupon profitably they might have been occupied to their own relief, and to the profit and commodity of the commonwealth of the city, and also to have retired thither the poor babes brought up in the hospitals, when they had come to a certain age and strength, and also those which in the hospitals aforesaid had been cured of their diseases. And to have brought this to pass, thou didst obtain, not without great diligence and labour, both of thee and thy brethren, and of that godly king Edward, that christian and peerless prince's hand, his princely pal [...]c [...] of Bridewell, and what other things to the performance of the same, and under what condition it is not unknown. That this thine endeavour had not like success, the fault is not in thee, but in the condition and state of the time, which the Lord of his infinite mercy vouchsafe to amend when it shall be his gracious will and pleasure.
FAREWEL now all you citizens that be of God, of what state and condition soever you be. Undoubtedly in London you have heard God's word truly preached. My heart's desire and daily prayer shall be for you, as for whom, for my time, I know to my Lord God I am accountable, that you never swerve, neither for loss of life, nor worldly goods, from God's holy word, and yield unto Antichrist: whereupon must needs follow the extreme displeasure of God, and the loss both of your bodies and souls, into perpetual damnation evermore.
NOW that I have gone through the places where I have dwelt any space in the time of my pilgrimage here upon earth, remembering that for the space of king Edward's reign, which was the time of mine office in the sees of London and Rochester, I was a member of the higher house of parliament; therefore seeing my God hath given me leisure, and the remembrance thereof, I will bid the lords of temporality farewel. They shall have no just cause, by God's grace, to take in ill part what I intend to say. As for the spiritual prelacy that now is, I have nothing to say them, except I should repeat again a great part of what I have said before now already to the see of London. To you therefore, my lords of the temporality, will I speak, and this would I have you first to understand, that when I wrote this, I looked daily when I should be called to the change of this life, and thought this my writing should not come to your knowledge before the time of the dissolution of my body and soul should be expired; and therefore know ye, that I had before mine eyes only the fear of God, and christian charity towards you, which moveth me to write; for of you hereafter I look not in this world, either for pleasure or displeasure. If my talk shall do you ever so much displeasure or profit, you cannot promote me, nor if I displease you, can you hurt me or harm me, for I shall be out of your reach. Now therefore, if you fear God, and can be content to hear the talk of him that seeketh nothing at your hands, but to serve God, and to do you good, hearken to what I say. [Page 917] I say unto you as St. Paul saith to the Galatians, I wonder what hath bewitched you, that you so suddenly are fallen from Christ to Antichrist, from Christ's gospel to man's traditions, from the Lord that bought you, unto the bishop of Rome. I warn you of your peril; be not deceived, except you will be found willing consenters to your own death. For if you think thus, We are laymen, this is a matter of religion, we follow as we are taught and lead; if our teachers and governors teach us and lead us amiss, the fault is in them, they shall bear the blame. My lords, this is true, (I grant you) that both the false teachers and corrupt governor shall be punished for the death of their subject, whom they have falsely taught, and corruptly led, yea, and his blood shall be required at their hands. But nevertheless shall the subject die the death himself also; that is, he shall also be damned for his own sin; for if the blind lead the blind, Christ saith, not the leader only, but he saith, both shall fall into the ditch. Shall the synagogue and senate of the Jews (think you) which forsook Christ, and consented to his death, therefore be excused, because Annas and Caiaphas, with the scribes and pharisees▪ and their clergy, did teach them amiss? Yea, and also Pilate the governor, and emperor's lieutenant, by his tyranny, did without cause put him to death. Forsooth no, my lords, no. For notwithstanding that corrupt doctrine, or Pilate's washing of his hands, neither shall excuse that synagogue, or Pilate; but at the Lord's hand, for the effusion of innocent blood, all shall drink of the deadly cup. You are witty, and understand what I mean, therefore I will pass over this, and return to tell you how you are fallen from Christ to his adversary the bishop of Rome.
AND lest, my lords, you may peradventure think, thus barely to the bishop of Rome Christ's adversary, or (to speak in plain terms) to call him Antichrist that it is done in mine anguish, and that I but rage, and as a desperate man do not care what I say, or upon whom I rail; therefore that your lordships may perceive my mind, and thereby understand that I speak the words of truth and sobriety. (as St. Paul said unto Festus) be it known unto your lordships, (the living Lord beareth me witness, before whom I speak) I do think many a good holy man, many martyrs and saints of God have sat and taught in that place Christ's gospel truly, which therefore justly may be called Apostolici, that is, true disciples of the apostles, and also that church and congregation of christians to be a right apostolic church: yea, and that certain hundred years after the same was first erected and built upon Christ, by the true apostolical doctrine taught by the mouths of the apostles themselves. If you will know how long that was, and how many hundred years, to be curious in pointing the precise number of the years, I will not be too bold, but thus I say, So long and so many hundred years as that see did truly preach and teach that religion, exercised that power, and ordered every thing by those laws and rules which that see received of the apostles, and (as Tertullian saith) the apostles of Christ, and Christ of God: so long, I say, that see might well have been called Peter and Paul's chair, and the bishop thereof Apostolicus, or true disciple and successor of the apostles, and a minister of Christ.
BUT since the time that that see hath degenerated from the trade of truth and true religion, which it received of the apostles at the beginning, and hath preached another gospel, hath set up another religion, hath exercised another power, and hath taken upon it to order and rule the church of Christ by other strange laws, canons, and rules, than ever it received of the apostles of Christ, which things it doth at this day, and hath continued so doing, (alas) too long a time, I say, that that state and condition of that see hath thus been changed, in truth it ought of duty and of right to have the names changed both of the see and of the sitter therein. For understand, my lords, it was neither for the privilege of the place or person thereof, that that see and bishops thereof were called apostolic; but for the true trade of Christ's religion, which was taught and maintained in that see at first, and of those godly men. And therefore as truly and justly as that see then, for that true trade of religion, and consanguinity of doctrine with the religion and doctrine of Christ's apostles, was called apostolic; so as truly and as justly for the contrariety of religion, and diversity of doctrine from Christ and his apostles, that see and bishop thereof, at [...] day both ought to be called, and are indeed antichristian.
[Page 918]THE see is the see of Satan, and the bishop the same, that maintaineth the abominations thereof, is Antichrist himself indeed. And for the same causes this see at this day is the same which St. John calleth in his Revelation Babylon, or the whore of Babylon, and the spiritual Sodom and Egypt, the mother of fornication and of the abominations upon the earth. And with this whore do spiritually meddle, and lie with her, and commit most stinking and abominable adultery before God, all those kings and princes, and all nations of the earth which do consent to her abominations, and use or practise the same; that is (of the innumerable multitude of them to rehearse some for example's sake) her dispensations▪ her pardons and pilgrimages, her invocation of saints, her worshipping of images, her false counterfeit religion in her monkery and f [...]iarage, and her traditions, whereby God's laws are defiled; as her massing and false ministering of God's word and the sacraments of Christ, clean contrary to Christ's word and the apostle's doctrine, whereof in particular I have touched something before in my talk had with the see of London, and in other treatises more at large; wherein (if it please God to bring the same to light) it shall appear, I trust by God's grace, plainly to the man of God, and to him whose rule in judgment of religion is God's word, that that religion, that rule and order, that doctrine and faith which this whore of Babylon, and the beast whereupon she doth sit, maintaineth at this day with all violence of fire and sword, with spoil and banishment (according to Daniel's prophecy), and finally with all falshood, deceit, hypocrisy, and all kind of ungodliness, are as clean contrary to God's word, as darkness is unto light, or light unto darkness, white to black, or black to white, or as Belial to Christ, or Christ to Antichrist himself.
I know, my lords, and foresaw when I wrote this, that so many of you as should see this my writing, not being before endued with the Spirit of grace and the light of God's word, so many (I say) would at these my words lord-like stamp and spurn, and spit thereat. But sober yourselves with patience, and be still, and know ye, that in my writing of [...], my mind was none other, but in God (as the living God doth bear me witness) both to do you profit a [...]d pleasure. And otherwise, as for your displeasure, by that time this shall come to your knowledge, I trust by God's grace to be in the hands and protection of the Almighty, my heavenly Father and the living Lord, which is (as St. John saith) the greatest of all, and then I shall not need, I suppose, to fear what any lord, no nor what any king or prince can do unto me.
MY lords, if in time past you have been contented to hear me sometimes in matters of religion before the prince in the pulpit, and in the parliament-house, and have not seemed to have despised what I have said (when as else if you had perceived just occasion, you might then have suspected me in my talk, though it had been reasonable, either desire of worldly gain, or fear of displeasure) how then have your lordships more cause to hearken to my word, and to hear me patiently, seeing now you cannot justly think of me being in this case appointed to di [...], and looking daily when I shall be called to come before the eternal judge, otherwise but that I only study to serve my Lord God, and to say that thing which I am persuaded assuredly by God's word shall and doth please him, and profit all them to whom God shall give grace to hear and believe what I do say? And I do say even what I have said heretofore both of the see of Rome and of the bishop thereof, I mean after this their present state at this day, wherein if ye will not believe the ministers of God, and true preachers of his word, verily I denounce unto you in the word of the Lord, except you do repent be [...]ime, it shall turn to your confusion, and to your smart on the bitter day. Forget not what I say, my lord's, for God's sake forget not, but remember it upon your bed. For I tell you mo [...]eover, as I know I must be accountable for this my talk, and of my speaking thus, to the eternal judge (who will judge nothing amiss), so shall you be a [...]countable of your duty in hearing, and you shall be charged, if you will not hearken to God's word, for not obeying the truth. Alas, my lords, how chanceth this, that this, that this matter is now anew again to be persuaded unto you? Who would have thought of late, but your lordships had been persuaded indeed sufficiently, or that you could ever have agreed so uniformly with one consent to the abolishment of the usurpation of the bishop of Rome? If that master were then but a matter of policy wherein the prince must [Page 919] be obeyed; how is it now made a matter wherein (as your clergy saith now, and so saith the pope's law indeed) standeth the unity of the catholic church, and a matter of necessity of our salvation? Hath the time, being so short since the death of the two last kings, Henry the eighth, and Edward his son, altered th [...] nature of the matter? If it has not, but was of the same nature and danger before God then as it is now, and be now (as it is said by the pope's laws, and instructions set forth in English to the curates of the diocese of York) indeed a matter of necessity to salvation: how then chanced it that you were all (O my lords) so light, and so little passed upon the catholic faith, and the unity thereof, without which no man can be saved, as for your princes' pleasure, who were but mortal men, to forsake the unity of your catholic faith, that is, to forsake Christ and his gospel? And furthermore, if it were both then, and now is so necessary to salvation, how chanced it also that ye, all the whole body of the parliament agreeing with you, did not only abolish and expel the bishop of Rome, but also abjure him in your own persons, and did decree in your acts great oaths to be taken both of the spirituality and temporality, whosoever should enter into any weighty and chargeable office in the common wealth? But on the other side, if the law and decree which maketh the supremacy of the see and bishop of Rome over the universal church of Christ, to be a thing of necessity required unto salvation by an Antichristian law (as it is indeed) and such instructions as are given to the diocese of York, be indeed a setting forth of the power of the beast of Babylon, by the craft and falshood of his false prophets (as of truth compared to God's word, and truly judged by the same, it shall plainly appear that they be) then my lords never think other, but the day shall come when you shall be charged with this your undoing of that, that once you had well done, and with this your perjury and breach of your oath, which oath was done in judgment, justice, and truth, according to God's law. The whore of Babylon may well for a time dally with you, and make you so drunken with the wine of her filthy stews and whoredom (as with her dispensations and promises of pardon for punishment and crime) that for drunkenness and blindness ye may think yourselves safe. But be you assured, when the living Lord shall try the matter by the fire and judge it according to his word, when all her abominations shall appear what they be, then you, my lords, repent if you will be happy, and love your own soul's health; repent, I say, or else without all doubt you shall never escape the hands of the living Lord, for the guilt of your perjury, and breach of your oath. As you have banquetted and lain by the whore in the fornication of her whorish dispensations, pardons, idolatry, and such like abominations; so shall you drink with her (except ye repent betime) of the cup of the Lord's indignation and everlasting wrath, which is prepared for the beast, his false prophets, and all their partakers. For he that is partner with them in their whoredom and abominations, must also be partner with them in their plagues, and in the latter day shall be thrown with them into the lake burning with brimstone and unquenchable fire. Thus fare you well, my lords all. I pray God give you understanding of his blessed will and pleasure, and make you to believe and embrace the truth. Amen.
Another Farewel to the Prisoners in the Cause of Christ's Gospel, and to all them who for the same Cause are banished from their own Country, chusing rather to leave all worldly Goods than their Master Christ.
FAREWEL, my dearly beloved brethren in Christ, both you my fellow-prisoners, and you also that be exiled and banished out of your countries, because you will rather forsake all worldly advantages, than the gospel of Christ.
FAREWEL all you together in Christ; farewel and be merry, for you know that the trial of your faith bringeth forth patience, and patience shall make us perfect, whole, and sound on every side, and such, after trial (ye know) shall receive the crown of life, according to the promise of the Lord made to his dearly beloved; let us therefore be patient unto the coming of the Lord. As the husbandman abideth patiently the former and latter rain for the increase of his crop, so let us be patient, and pluck up our hearts, for the coming of the Lord approacheth apace. Let us my dear brethren, take example [Page 920] of patience in tribulation of the prophets, who likewise spake God's word truly in his name. Let Job be to us an example of patience and the end which the Lord suffered, which is full of mercy and pity. We know, my brethren, by God's word, that our faith is much more precious than any corruptible gold, and yet that is tried by the fire: even so our faith is therefore tried likewise in tribulations, that it may be found, when the Lord shall appear, [...]u [...]lable, glorious, and honourable. For if we for Christ's cause do suffer, that is grateful before God; for thereunto are we called, that is our state and vocation, wherewith let us be content. Christ, we know, suffered for us afflictions, leaving us an example that we should follow his footsteps, for he committed no sin, nor was there any guile found in his mouth: when he was railed upon, and all to be reviled, he railed not again: when he was evil intreated, he did not threaten, but committed the punishment thereof to him that judgeth aright.
LET us ever have in fresh remembrance those wonderful comfortable sentences spoken by the mouth of our Saviour Christ; Blessed are they which suffer persecution for righteousness' sake, for their's is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are ye when men revile you, persecute you, and speak evil against you for my sake: rejoice and be glad, for great is your reward in heaven; for so did they persecute the prophets that were before you. Christ our master hath told us beforehand, that the brother should put the brother to death, and the father the son, and the children should rise against their parents and kill them, and that Christ's true apostles should be hated of all men for his name's sake; but he that shall abide patiently unto the end, shall be saved.
LET us then endure in all troubles patiently, after the example of our master Christ, and be contented therewith, for he suffered, being our Master and Lord: how doth it then become us to suffer? For the disciple is not above his Master, nor the servant above his Lord. It may suffice the disciple to be as his master, and the servant to be as his lord. If they have called the Father of the family, the Master of the houshold, [...], how much more shall they [...]ll them so of his houshold? Fear them not (saith our Saviour) for all hidden things shall be [...]ade plain; there is now nothing secret, but it sha [...] be shewed in light. Of Christ's word [...] let us neither be ashamed nor afraid to speak them; for so Christ commandeth us, saying, What I tell you privily, speak openly abroad, and what I tell you in your ear, preach openly on the ho [...]se top. And fear not them which k [...]ll the body, for the soul they cannot kill; but fear him which can cast both body and soul into hell-fire.
KNOW ye that our our heavenly Father hath ever a gracious eye and respect toward you, and a fatherly providence for you, so that nothing without his knowledge and permission can do you harm. Let us therefore cast all our care upon him, he shall provide that which shall be best for us. For if of two small sparrows, which both are sold for a mite, one of them lighteth not on the ground without your Father, and all the hairs of our head are numbered, fear not them (saith our master Christ) for you are worth more than many sparrows. And let us not stick to confess our master Christ for fear of danger, whatsoever it shall be, remembering the promise that Christ maketh, saying, Whosoever shall confess me before men, him shall I confess before my Father which is in heaven: but whosoever shall deny me, him shall I likewise deny before my Father which is in heaven. Christ came not to give us here a carnal amity, and a worldly peace, or to knit his unto the world in ease and peace, but rather to separate and divide from the world, and to join them unto himself: in whose cause we must, if we will be his, forsake father and mother, and stick unto him. If we forsake him or shrink from him for trouble or death's sake, which he calleth his cross; he will none of us, we cannot be his. If for his cause we shall lose our temporal lives here, we shall find them again, and enjoy them for evermore: but if, in his cause, we will not be contented to leave nor lose them here, then shall we lose them so, that we shall never find them again, but in everlasting death. What though our trouble [...] here are painful for the time, and the st [...]ng of death bitter and unpleasant; yet we know that they shall not last, in comparison of eternity, [...]o not the twinkling of an eye, and that they, patiently taken in Christ's cause, shall procure and [Page 921] get us unmeasurable heaps of heavenly glory, unto which these temporal pains of death and troubles compared▪ are not to be esteemed, but to be rejoiced upon. Wonder not, saith St. Peter, as though it were any strange matter that ye are tried by the [...], he meaneth of tribulation, which thing, saith he, is done to prove you; nay, rather in that ye are partners of Christ's afflictions, rejoice that in his glorious revelation ye may rejoice with merry hearts. If ye suffer rebukes in Christ's name, happy are ye, for the glory and Spirit of God resteth upon you. Of them God is reviled and dishonoured, but of you he is glorified.
LET no man be ashamed of that which he suffereth as a christian, and in Christ's cause; for now is the time that judgment and correction must begin at the house of God: and if it begin first at us, what shall be the end of those, think ye, which believe not the gospel? And if the righteous shall be hardly saved, the wicked and the sinner, where shall he appear? Wherefore they which are afflicted according to the will of God, let them lay down and commit their souls ro him by well doing, as to a trusty and faithful maker. This, as I said, may not seem strange to us, for we know that all the whole fraternity of Christ's congregation in this world is served with the like, and by the same is made perfect. For the servant love that the apostles had unto their master Christ, and for the great advantages and increase of all godliness which they felt by their faith to insue of afflictions in Christ's cause, and also for the heaps of heavenly joys which the same do get unto the godly, which shall endure in heaven for evermore; for these causes (I say) the apostles did joy of their afflictions, and rejoiced in that they were had and accounted worthy to suffer contumelies and rebukes for Christ's name. And St. Paul, as he glorieth in the grace and favour of God, whereunto he was brought and stood in by faith; so he rejoiced in his afflictions for the heavenly and spiritual profits which he numbered to rise upon them: yea, he was so far in love with what the carnal man loatheth so much, that is, with Christ's cross, that he judged himself to know nothing else but Christ crucified: he will glory, he saith, in nothing else but in Christ's cross, yea, and he blesseth all those as the only true Israelites, and elect people of God, with peace and mercy, which walk after that rule, and after no other.
O Lord, what a wonderful spirit was that, that made Paul, in setting forth of himself against the vanity of Satan's false apostles, and in his claim there, that he, in Christ's cause, did excel and surpass them all? What wonderful spirit was that, I say, that made him to reckon up all his troubles, his labours, his beatings, his whippings and scourgings, his shipwrecks, his dangers and perils by water and by land, his famine, hunger, nakedness, and cold, with many more, and the daily care of all the congregations of Christ, among whom every man's pain did pierce his heart, and every man's grief was grievous unto him? O Lord, is this Paul's prima [...]y, whereof he thought so much good that he did excel others? Is not this Paul's saying unto Timothy his own Scholar? And doth it not pertain to whosoever will be Christ's true soldiers? Bear thou, saith he, affliction like a true soldier of Jesus Christ. This is true; if we die with him (he meaneth Christ) we shall live with him; if we suffer with him, we shall reign with him; if we deny him, he shall deny us; if we be faithless, he remaineth faithful, he cannot deny himself This, Paul would have known to every body; for there is no other way to heaven but Christ and his way: and all that will live godly in Christ, shall (saith St. Paul) suffer persecution. By this way went to heaven the patriarchs, the prophets, Christ our master, his apostles, his martyrs, and all the godly since the beginning. And as it hath been of old, that he which was born after the flesh, persecuted him who was born after the spirit, for so it was in Isaac's time; so said St. Paul, it was in his time also. And whether it be so now or no, let the spiritual man, the self same man I mean, that is endued with the spirit of Almighty God, let him be judge. Of the cross of the patriarchs, as ye may read in their stories, if ye read the book Genesis, ye shall perceive. Of others, St. Paul in a few words comprehendeth much matter, speaking in a generality of the wonderful afflictions, death, and torments which the men of God in God's cause, and for the truth's sake, willingly and gladly did suffer. After much particular rehearsal of many, he saith, Others were racked and despised, and would not be delivered, that they might obtain a better resurrection. [Page 922] Others again were tried wi [...] [...]ockings and s [...]ourgings, and mor [...]ver wi [...]h [...]onds and imprisonment; they were [...], tempted, fell, and were slain upon the e [...]ge of the sword; some wandered to and fro in sheep-skins, in goat-skins, forsaken, oppressed, afflicted, such godly men as the world was unworthy of, wandering in wildernesses, in mountains, in caves, and in dens, and all these were commended for their faith. And yet they abide for us the servants of God, and for those their brethren which are to be slain as they were for the word of God's sake, that none be shut out, but that we may all go together to meet our master Christ in the air at his coming, and so be in bliss with body and soul for evermore.
THEREFORE seeing we have so much occasion to suffer, and to take afflictions for Christ's name's sake patiently, so many advantages thereby, so weighty causes, so many good examples, so great necessity, so pure promises of eternal life and heavenly joys of him that cannot lie: let us throw away whatever might hinder us, all burden of sin, and all kind of carnality, and patiently and constantly let us run for the best game in this race that is set before us, ever having our eyes upon Jesus Christ, the captain and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, not minding the shame and ignominy thereof, and is set now at the right hand of the throne of God. Consider this, that he suffered such strife of sinners against himself, that ye should not give over nor faint in your minds. As yet, brethren, we have not withstood unto death fighting against sin. Let us never forget, dear brethren, for Christ's sake, that fatherly exhortation of the wise man that speaketh unto us as unto his children, the godly wisdom of God, saying thus; my son, despise not the correction of the Lord, nor fall from him when thou art rebuked of him; for whom the Lord loveth him doth he correct, and scourgeth every child whom he receiveth. What child is he whom the father doth not chasten? If ye be free from chastisement, whereof all are partakers, then are ye bastards, and no children. Seeing then, when as we have had carnal parents which chastered us, we reverenced them, shall not we much more be subject unto our spiritual Father that we might live? And they for a little time have taught us after their own mind, but this Father teacheth us to our advantage, to give unto us his holiness. All chastisement for the present time appeareth not pleasant but painful; but afterwards it rendereth the fruit of righteousness on them which are exercised in it. Wherefore let us be of good cheer, good brethren, and let us pluck up our feeble members that were fallen or begun to faint, heart, hands, knees, and all the rest, and let us walk upright and straight, that no limping nor halting bring us out of the way. Let us not look upon the things that be present, but with the eyes of our faith let us stedfastly behold the things that be everlasting in heaven, and so chuse rather in respect of that which is to come, with the chosen members of Christ to bear Christ's cross, than for his shortlife time to enjoy all the riches, honours, and pleasures of the broad world. Why should we Christians fear death? Can death deprive us of Christ, which is all our comfort, our joy, and our life? Nay forsooth. But contrary, death shall deliver us from this mortal body, which loadeth and beareth down the spirit, that it cannot so well perceive heavenly things; on which so long as we dwell, we are absent from God.
WHEREFORE understanding our state in that we be christians, that if our mortal body, which is our earthly house, were destroyed, we have a building, a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens, therefore we are of good cheer, and know that when we are in the body, we are absent from God; for we walk by faith, and not by sight. Nevertheless we are bold, and had rather be absent from the body, and present with God. Wherefore we strive, whether we be present at home, or absent abroad, that we may always please him; and who that hath true faith in our Saviour Christ, whereby he knoweth somewhat truly what Christ our Saviour is, that he is the eternal Son of God, Life, Light, the Wisdom of the Father, all goodness, all righteousness, and whatsoever is good that heart can desire, yea infinite plenty of all these, above what man's heart can either conceive or think (for in him dwelleth the fulness of the Godhead corporally), and also that he is given us of [Page 923] the Father, and made of God to be our wisdom, our righteousness, our holiness, and our redemption: who, I say, is he that believeth this indeed, that would not gladly be with his master Christ? Paul for this knowledge coveted to be loosed from the body, and to have been with Christ, for he counted it much better for himself, and had rather be loosed than to live. Therefore these words of Christ to the thief on the cross, that asked of him mercy, were full of comfort and solace: This day thou shalt be with me in paradise. To die in the defence of Christ's gospel, it is our bounden duty to Christ, and also to our neighbour. To Christ, because he died for us, and rose again that he might be Lord over all. And seeing he died for us, we also, saith St. John, should hazard, yea give our life for our brethren, and this kind of giving and losing, is getting and winning indeed: for he that giveth or loseth his life thus, getteth and winneth it for evermore. Blessed are they therefore that die in the Lord, and if they die in the Lord's cause, they are most happy of all. Let us not then fear death, which can do us no harm, otherwise than for a moment to make the flesh to smart: but that our faith, which is fastened and fixed upon the word of God, telleth us that we shall be anon after death in peace, in the hands of God, in joy, in solace, and that from death we shall go straight unto life. For St. John saith, He that liveth, and believeth in me, shall never die. And in another place, he shall depart from death unto life. And therefore this death of the christian is not to be called death, but rather a gate of entrance into everlasting life. Therefore Paul calleth it but a dissolution and change, and both Peter and Paul, a putting off this tabernacle or dwelling house: meaning thereby the mortal body, as wherein the soul or spirit doth dwell here in this world sort a short time. Yea, this my death may be called, to the christian, an end of all miseries. For so long as we live here, we must pass through many tribulations before we can enter into the kingdom of heaven. And now, after that death hath shot his b [...]lt, all the christian man's enemies have dore what they can, after that they have no more to do. What could hurt or harm poor Lazarus that lay at the rich man's gate? his former penury and poverty? his misery, beggary, and horrible sore [...] and sickness? No: as soon as death had struck him with his dart, so soon came the angels, and carried him straight up into Abraham's bosom. What lost he by death, who from misery and pain is conducted, by the ministry of angels, into a place of joy and felicity?
FAREWEL, dear brethren, farewel; let us comfort our hearts in all troubles, and in death, with God's word, for heaven and earth shall perish, but the word of the Lord endureth for ever.
FAREWEL, Christ's dearly beloved spouse, here wandering in this world in a strange land, encompassed about with deadly enemies, who see thy destruction.
FAREWEL, farewel, O ye the whole universal congregation of the chosen of God here living upon earth, the true church militant of Christ, the true mystical body of Christ, the very houshold and family of God, and the sacred temple of the Holy Ghost, farewel.
FAREWEL, O thou little flock of the high heavenly pastors of Christ, for to you it hath pleased the heavenly Father to give an everlasting and eternal kingdom. Farewel.
FAREWEL, thou spiritual house of God, thou holy and royal priesthood, thou chosen generation, thou holy nation, thou won spouse. Farewel, farewel.
Bishop RIDLEY'S Lamentation for the Change of Religion in England; also a Comparison between the Doctrine of the Gospel, and the Romish Religion, with wholesome Instructions to all Christians, how to behave themselves in Time of Trial.
ALAS, what misery is thy church brought unto, O Lord, at this day! Where of late the word of the Lord was truly preached, was read and heard in every town, in every village, yea, and almost in every honest man's house, alas, now it is exiled and banished out of the whole realm. Of late who was not taken for a lover of God's word, for a reader, for a really hearer, and for a learner of the same! And now, alas, who [Page 924] dare bare any open countenance towards it, but such as are content in Christ's cause, and for his word's sake to stand to the danger and loss of all they have!
OF late there were to be found, of every age, of every degree and kind of people, some that gave their diligence to learn (as they could) out of God's word, the articles of the christian faith, the commandments of God, and the Lord's prayer. The babes and young children were taught these things by their parents, their masters, and weekly by their curates in every church; and the aged folk, which had been brought up in blindness, and in ignorance of those things which every christian is bound to know, when otherwise they could not, yet they learned the same by often hearing their children and servants repeat the same: but now (alas, and alas again) the false prophets of Antichrist, which are past all shame, do openly preach in pulpits unto the people of God, that the catechism is to be accounted heresy: whereby their old blindness is brought home again: for the aged are afraid of the higher powers, and the youth are abashed and ashamed, even of that which they have learned, even though it be God's word, and dare no more meddle.
OF late in every congregation throughout all England, prayer and petition was made unto God to be delivered from the tyranny of the bishop of Rome, and all his detestable enormities, from all false doctrine and heresy; and now, alas, Satan hath persuaded England by his falshood and craft, to revoke her old godly prayer, to recant the same, and draw down the fearful wrath and indignation of God upon her own pate.
OF late by strict laws and ordinances, with the consent of the nobles and commonalty, and full agreement and counsel of the prelates and clergy, the beast of Babylon was banished hence, with laws, I say, and with oaths, and all means that then could be devised for so godly a purpose: but now, (alas) all these laws are trodden under foot: the nobles, the commonalty, the prelates and clergy are quite changed, and all those oaths, though they were made in judgment, justice, and truth, and the [...] than a bond of rushes, or a barley straw, and public perjury no more terrifieth them, than a shadow upon [...] wall.
OF late it was agreed in England of all hands, according to St. Paul's doctrine, and Christ's commandment, that nothing ought to be done in the church, in the public congregation, but in that tongue which the congregation could understand, that all might be edified thereby, whether it were common prayer, administration of the sacraments, or any other thing belonging to [...] public ministry of God's holy and wholesome [...] but, alas, all is turned upside down, Paul's doctrine is put apart, Christ's commandment is not regarded. For nothing is heard commonly in the church but a strange tongue, that the people do not understand.
OF late all men and women were taught after Christ's doctrine, to pray in that tongue which they could understand, that they might pray with heart that which they should speak with their tongue: now, alas, the unlearned people are brought into that blindness again, to think that they pray, when they speak with their tongue they cannot tell what, nor whereof their hearts are nothing mindful at all, for that it cannot understand a whit thereof.
OF late the Lord's supper was duly administered, and taught to be common to all that are true christians, with thanksgiving, and setting forth of the Lord's death and passion until his returning again, to judge both quick and dead: but now, alas, the Lord's table is quite overthrown, and that which ought to be common to all the godly, is made private to a few ungodly, without any kind of thanksgiving, or any setting forth of the Lord's death at all, that the people are able to understand.
OF late all that were endued with the light and grace of understanding God's holy mysteries, did bless God, who had brought them out of that horrible blindness and ignorance▪ whereby in times past being seduced by Satan's subtleties, they believed that the sacrament was not the sacrament, but the thing itself whereof it is a sacrament▪ that the creature was the creator, and that the thing which had neither life nor sense, [...] was the ho [...]r [...]ble blindness▪ was the Lord himself, which made the [...] to see, and hath given all senses and [...] [Page 925] unto man: but now, alas, England is returned again like a dog to her own vomit and spewing, and is in worse case than ever she was: for it had been better never to have known the truth, than to forsake the truth once received and known: and now not only that light is turned into darkness, and God's grace is received in vain, but also laws of death are made by the high court of parliament, masterfully to maintain by sword, fire, and all kind of violence, that heinous idolatry, wherein that adoration is given unto the lifeless and dumb creature, which is only due unto the everliving God: yea, they say they can, and do make of bread both man and God, by their transubstantiation. O wicked men, and Satan's own brood!
OF late was the Lord's cup at his table distributed according to his own commandment, by his express words in the gospel, as well to the laity as to the clergy, which order Christ's church observed so many hundred years after, as all the ancient ecclesiastical writers do testify, without contradiction of any one of them, that can be shewed unto this day: but now, alas, not only the Lord's commandment is broken, his cup denied to his servants, to whom he commandeth it should be distributed, but also with the same is set up a new blasphemous kind of sacrifice to satisfy and pay the price of sins both of the quick and the dead, to the great and intolerable reproach of Christ our Saviour's death and passion, which was and is the one only sufficient and everlasting available sacrifice, satisfactory for all the elect of God, from Adam the first, to the last that shall be born in the world.
OF late the commandment of God, "Thou shalt not make to thyself any graven image, nor any similitude nor likeness of any thing in heaven above, or in earth beneath, or in the water under the earth, thou shalt not bow down to them nor worship them:" this commandment of God, I say, was graven almost every where in churches, was learned by every body both old and young; whereupon images that provoked the simple and ignorant unto idolatry, as the wise man saith, were taken out of the churches, and strictly forbidden that none should any where bow down to them, or worship them: but now, alas, God's holy word is blotted and razed out of churches, and stocks and stones are set up in the place thereof. God commanded his word so to be ordered, that it might be had in continual remembrance at all times, and in every place: and on the other side, he forbid images and idols so to be either made or set in any place, where any should bow or worship them: but now, alas, that which God commanded is not minded, and that which he forbiddeth, is powerfully maintained by falshood and craft, and wickedly upheld.
OF late all ministers that were admitted to the public office and ministry of God's holy word, in their admission made a solemn profession before the congregation, that they should teach the people nothing as doctrine necessary to eternal salvation, but that which is God's own holy word, or may be thereon grounded without any doubt; whereby vanished and melted away of themselves many vain, yea, wicked traditions of man, as wax before the fire: but now at one brunt they are revived, and are in full hope also to return again in as great strength as ever they have been. And how can any man look for any other thing, but when you have received the head, you must also receive the whole body, or else how can the head abide? The head, under Satan, of all mischief, is Antichrist and his brood, the same is he which is the Babylonical beast. The beast is he, whereupon the whore [...]itteth. The whore is that city, saith John in plain words, which hath empire over the kings of the earth. This whore hath a golden cup of abominations in her hand, whereof she maketh to drink the kings of the earth, and of the wine of this harlot have all nations drank, yea and kings of the earth have lain by this whore, and merchants of the earth, by virtue of her pleasant merchandize, have been made rich.
NOW what city is there in all the whole world, that when John wrote, ruled over the kings of the earth; or what city can be read of in any time, that of the city itself challenged the empire over the kings of the earth, but only the city of Rome, and that since the usurpation of that see hath grown to her full strength? And is it not read that the old and ancient writers understand Peter's former epistle to be written at Rome, and it to be called of him in the same epistle in plain terms, Babylon? By the abominations thereof I understand all the whole [Page 926] trade of the Romish religion, under the name and title of Christ, which is contrary to the only rule of true religion, that is, God's word. What word of God hath that devilish drab for the maintenance of her manifold abominations, and to set to sale such merchandize, wherewith (alas! the madness of man) the wicked harlot hath almost bewitched the whole world? Did not Peter, the very true apostle of Christ (of whom this stinking strumpet beareth herself so high, but falsely and without all just cause) did not he, I say, give all the world warning of her pelf and trash, of her false doctors and apostles (for this whore will be called the Lord's apostle, whosoever say nay) after this manner in his latter epistle? "There were among the people in times past false prophets, as there shall be among you in time to come false preachers, which shall privily bring in pestilent sects, even denying the Lord which hath bought them and redeemed them, procuring to themselves swift damnation, and many shall follow their damnable ways, by whom the way of truth shall be railed upon, and through covetousness by counterfeit tales or sermons, they shall make merchandize upon you," &c. And doth not John likewise in his Revelation, after he hath reckoned up a great rabblement of this whore's mystical merchandize, at the last (as though he would knit up all in plain words, without any mist at all, setting out the whore's merchandize) reckon up amongst the rest, and concludeth, saying, And the souls of men too? Whereupon, I pray you, else rose this true proverb in Latin, Omnia Romae venalia, that is, All things for money are set to sale at Rome?
BUT you would know which be these merchandizes which I said this whore setteth forth to sell, for which all her false prophets, with all their jugglings and crafty glosses, cannot bring one jot of God's word. Surely, they be not only all these abominations which are come into the church of England already (wherefore I have spoke somewhat before) but also an innumerable rabblement of abominations and wicked abuses, which now must needs follow; as popish pardons, pilgrimages, Romish purgatory, Romish masses, dispensations, and immunities from all godly discipline, laws and good order, pluralities, unions, with a thousand more. Now shall come in the flattering friars and the false pardoners, and play their old pranks and knavery as they were wont to do. Now shall you have (but of the see of Rome only, and that for money) cononizing of such saints as have stood stout in the pope's cause, shrining of relics, and from any kind of wickedness (if you will pay well for it) clear absolution from punishment and crime, for thousands of years; yea, and at every bishop's hand and suffragan, ye shall have hallowing of churches, chapels, altars, super [...]altars, chalices, and of all the whole houshold stuff and adornment which shall be used in the church after the Roman guise, for all these things must be esteemed of such high price, that they may not be done but by a consecrated bishop only. O Lord, all [...]hese things are such as thy apostles never knew. As for conjuring (they call it hallowing, but it is conjuring indeed) of water and salt, of christening of bells, and such like things, what need I speak? For every priest that can but read, hath power (they say) not only to do that, but also hath such power over Christ's body, as to make both God and man once at the least every day of a wafer cake.
AFTER the rehearsal of the said abominations, and remembrance of a number of many more, which (the Lord knoweth) it grieveth me to think upon, and were too long to describe; when I consider on the other side the eternal word of God that abideth for ever, and the undefiled law of the Lord which turneth the soul from all wickedness, and giveth wisdom unto the innocent babes, I mean that milk that is without all guile, as Peter calleth it, that good word of God, that word of truth that must be engraven within the heart, and then is able to save men's souls; that wholesome seed, not mortal, but immortal, of the eternal and everlasting God, whereby the man is born anew, and made the child of God, that seed of God, whereby the man of God so b [...]ing born, cannot sin, as John sai [...]h, (he meaneth so long as that seed abideth in him) that holy scripture which hath not been devised by the wit of man, but taught from heaven by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost, which is profitable to teach, to reprove, to correct, to instruct, and to give order in all righteousness, that the man of God may be whole and sound, ready to perform every good work: when, I say, I consider this holy and wholesome true word that teacheth us truly [Page 927] our bound [...]n duty towards our Lord God in every p [...]int, what his will and pleasure is, what his infinite great goodness and mercy is, what he hath done for us, how he hath given us his own dearly beloved Son to death for our salvation, and by him hath sent us the revelation of his blessed will and pl [...]asure, what his eternal word willeth us both to believe, and also to do; and hath for the same purpose inspired the holy apostles with the Holy Ghost, and sent them abroad into all the world, and also made them and other disciples of Christ inspired by the same Spi [...]it, to write and leave behind them the same things that they taught (which as they did prooved of the Spirit of truth, so by the confession of all them that ever were endued with the Spirit of God, were sufficient to the obtaining of eternal salvation) and likewise when I consider that all that man doth profess in his regeneration, when he is received into the holy catholic church of Christ, and is now to be accounted for one of the lively members of Christ's own body, all that is grounded upon God's holy word, and standeth in the profession of that faith, and obedience of commandments which are all contained in God's holy word.
AND furthermore, when I consider whom our Savi [...]ur Christ pronounceth in his gospel to be blessed, and to whom Mos [...]s [...] in the law, what ways the law▪ the prophets, the psalms, and all holy scriptures, both new and old, do declare to be the wa [...]s of the Lord, what is good for man to obtain and abide in God's savour, which is that faith that justifieth before God, and what is that charity that doth pass and excel all, which be the properties of heavenly wisdom, and which is [...] undefiled religion which is allowed of God, which things Christ himself calleth the weighty matters of the law, which thing is that which is only available in Christ, and what knowledge is that that St. Paul esteemed so much, that he counted all else vanity, what shall be the manner of the extreme judgment of the latter day, who shall judge, and by what he shall judge, and what shall be required at our hands on that fearful day, how all things must be tried by the fire, and that only shall stand for ever which Christ's words shall allow, which shall be the judge of all flesh, to give sentence upon all flesh▪ and every living soul, either of eternal damnation, o [...] of everlasting salvation, from which sentence there shall be no place to appeal, no wit shall serve to elude, nor any power to withstand or revoke. When (I say) I consider all these things, and confer to the same again and again all those ways wherein standeth the substance of the Romish religion (whereof I spake before) it may be evident and easy to perceive, [...] these two ways, these two religious, the one of Christ, the other of the Romish see, in these latter days be as far distant the one from the other, as light and darkness, good and evil, righteousness and unrighteousness, Christ and Belial. He that is hard of belief, let him note and weigh well with himself those places of holy scripture whereupon this talk is grounded, and by God's grace he may receive some light. And unto the contemner I have nothing now to say, but to rehearse the saying of the prophet Isaiah, which Paul spake to the Jews in the end of the Acts of the Apostles. After he had expounded to them the truth of God's word, and declared to them Christ out of the law of Moses and the prophets, all the day long from morning to night, he said unto them that would not believe, "Well spake the Holy Ghost unto our fathers, saying▪ Go unto this people and tell them, ye shall hear with your ears, and not understand, and seeing you shall behold, and not see the thing: for the heart of this people is waxed gross and dull, and with their ears they are hard of hearing, and they have shut together their eyes, that they should not see, nor hear with their ears, nor understand with their hearts, that they might return, and I should heal them, saith the Lord God."
ALAS, England, alas, that this heavy plague of God should fall upon thee. Alas, my dearly beloved country, what thing is it now that may do thee good? Undoubtedly thy plague is so great, that it is utterly incurable, but by the bottomless mercy and infinite power of Almighty God. Alas, my dear country, what hast thou done that thou hast provoked the wrath of God, and caused him to pour out his vengeance upon thee for thine own deserts? Canst thou be content to hear thy faults told thee? Alas, thou hast heard oft, and would never amend. England, thy faults of all degrees and sorts of men, of magistrates, of the ministers' and of the common people, were never more plainly told since thou bore that name, than thou didst [Page 928] hear them of late, even before the magistrates in king Edward's days; but thou heardst them only, and didst amend never a whit. For even of thy greatest magistrates some (the king's highness then, that innocent, that godly-hearted and peerless young christian prince excepted) evermore unkindly and ungently, against those that went about most wholesomely to cure their sore backs, spurned privily, and would not spare to speak evil of them, even unto the prince himself, and yet would they towards the same preachers outwardly bear a jolly countenance and a fair face.
I have heard that Cranmer, and another whom I will not name, were both in high displeasure, the one for shewing his conscience secretly, but plainly and fully in the duke of Somerset's cause, and both of late, but especially Cranmer, for repugning as they might, against the late spoil of church goods, taken away only by commandment of the higher powers, without any law or order of justice, and without any request or consent of them to which they did belong. As for Latimer, Lever, Bradford, and Knox, their tongues were so sharp, they ripped in so deep in their galled backs, to have purged them (no doubt) of that filthy matter that was festered in their hearts, of insatiable covetousness, of filthy carnality and voluptuousness, of intolerable ambition and pride, of ungodly loathsomeness to hear poor men's causes, and to hear God's word, that these men of all others these magistrates could never abide. Others that were very godly men, and well learned, that went about by the wholesome plaisters of God's word, howbeit after a more soft manner of handling the matter, but, alas, all sped alike. For all that could be done of all hands, their disease did not diminish, but daily did increase, which, no doubt, is no small occasion in that state of the heavy plague of God that is poured upon England at this day. As for the common lawyers, it may be truly said of them, as of the most part of the clergy, of curates, vicars, pa [...]sons, prebendaries, doctors of the law, archdeacons, deans, yea, and I may say, of bishops a [...]so, I fear, for the most part, (although I doubt not but God had, and hath ever, whom he in every state knew and knoweth to be his) but for the most part, I say, they were never persuaded in their hearts, but from the teeth forward, and for the king's sake, in the truth of God's word, and yet all these did dissemble, and bear a copy of a countenance, as if they had been found within.
HYPOCRISY and dissimulation St. Jerome doth well call a double wickedness; for neither it loveth the truth (which is one great evil) and also falsely it pretendeth to deceive the simple for another thing. This hypocrisy and dissimulation with God, in matters of religion, no doubt, hath wholly also provoked the anger of God. And as for the common people, although there were many good, where they were well and diligently taught; yet (God knoweth) a great number received God's true word and high benefits with unthankful hearts. For i [...] was great pity and a lamentable thing to have seen in many places the people so loathsomely and irreligiously to come to the holy communion, and to receive it accordingly, and to the common prayers, and other divine service, which were according to the true vein of God's holy word, and in all points so godly and wholesomely set forth, in comparison of that blind zeal, and undiscreet devotion which they had aforetimes to those things▪ whereof they understood never one whit, nor could be edified by them any thing at all.
AND again, as for our alms-deeds, which are taught in God's word, whereby we are certain that God is pleased with them, and doth and will require such at our hands, which are a put of true religion, as St. James saith, and such as he saith himself he setteth more by than by sacrifice; to provide for the fatherless, infants and orphans, for the same, aged, and impotent poor needy folk, and to make public provision that the poor that might labour, should have wherewith to labour upon, and so he kept from shameful beggary and stealing in these works: I say, how wayward were many, in comparison (I mean) of that great prodigality whereby in times past they spared not to spend upon flattering friars, false pardoners, painting and gilding of stocks and stones, to be set up and honoured in churches, plainly against God's word? And yet because no place is to be defrauded of their just commendation, London, I must confess, for such godly works in sir Richard Dobs, knight, then [Page 929] lord mayor, his year being marvellous well: the Lord grant the same may so likewise persevere, continue, yea and increase, to the comfort and relief of the needy and helpless, that was so godly begun. Amen.
ALL these things do administer more matter of mourning and bewailing the miserable state that now is: for by this it may be perceived, how England hath deserved this just plague of God. And also it is greatly to be feared, that those good things, whatsoever they were that had their beginning in the time when God's word was so freely preached, now with the exile and banishment of the same, will depart again.
BUT to return again to the consideration of this miserable state of Christ's church in England, and to leave farther and more exquisite searching of the causes thereof unto God's secret and unsearchable judgments, let us see what is best now to be done for Christ's little flock. This is one maxim and principle in Christ's law; He that denieth Christ before men, him shall Christ deny, before his Father and all his angels in heaven. And therefore every one that looketh to have by Christ our Saviour everlasting life, let him prepare himself so, that he deny not his master Christ, or else he is but a castaway, and a wretch, howsoever he be counted or taken here in the world.
NOW then seeing the doctrine of Antichrist is returned again into this realm, and the higher powers (alas) are so deceived and bewitched, that they are persuaded it is the truth, and Christ's true doctrine to be error and heresy, and the old laws of Antichrist are allowed to return with the power of their father again: what can be hereafter looked for, by reason, to the man of God, and true christian, abiding in this realm, but extreme violence of death, or else to deny his Master? I grant the hearts of princes are in God's hands, and withersoever he will he can make them bow: and also that christian kings in old time used a more gentle kind of punishment, even to them which were heretics indeed; as degradation, and deposition out of their rooms and offices, exile and banishment out of their dominions and countries: and also (as it is read) the true bishops of Christ's church were sometime intercessors for the heretics unto princes, that they would not kill them, as is read of St. Augustine. But as yet Antichrist's kingdom was not so e [...]ected at that time, nor is now accustomed so to order them th [...] will not fall down and worship the beast and his image (but even as all the world knoweth) after the same manner that both John and Daniel hath prophesied before, that is, by violence of death▪ and Daniel declareth farther, that the kind of death accustomably should be by sword, fire, and imprisonment.
THEREFORE, if thou, O man of God, dost purpose to abide in this realm, prepare and arm thyself to die: for both by Antichrist's accustomable laws, and th [...]se prophesies, there is no appearance or likelihood of any other thing, except thou wilt deny thy master Christ, which is the loss at the last both of body and soul unto everlasting death▪— Therefore my good brother or sister in Christ, whatsoever thou be, to thee that canst and mayest so do, that counsel that I think is the best safeguard for thee, both for thy body, and most surely for thy soul's health, is that which I shall shew thee hereafter▪ But first I warn thee to understand me to speak to him or her, which be not in captivity, or called already to confess Christ, but are at liberty abroad.
MY counsel, I say, therefore is this, to fly from the plague, and get thee hence. I consider not only the subtilities of Satan, and how he is able to deceive by his false persuasions (if it were possible) even the chosen of God, and also the great frailty, which is oftentimes more in a man than he doth know in himself, which in the time of temptation then will utter itself: I do not only consider these things, I say, but that our master Christ, whose life was and is a perfect rule of the christian man's life, that he himself avoided oftentimes the fury and madness of the Jews, by departing from the country or place.
PAUL likewise, when he was sought in Damascus, and the gates of the city were laid in wait for him, he was conveyed by night, being let down in a basket out at a window over the wall: and Elias [Page 930] the prophet fled the persecution of the wicked Jezabel: and Christ our Saviour saith in the gospel, "When they persecute you in one city, flee unto another:" and so did many good, great, learned▪ and virtuous men of God, who were great and stout champions nevertheless, and stout counsellors and maintainers of Christ and his truth, in due time and place. Of such was the great clerk Athanasius. But this is so plain to be lawful by God's word, and examples of holy men, that I need not to stand in it.
HAVING this for my ground, I say to thee, O man of God, this seemeth to me to be the most [...]ure way for thy safeguard, to depart and flee far from the plague, and that swiftly also: for truly before God, I think, that the abomination that Daniel prophesied of so long before, is now set up in the holy place. For all the doctrine of Antichrist, his laws, rites, and religion contrary to Christ, and so to the true serving and worshipping of God, I understand to be that abomination: therefore now is the time in England for those words of Christ, "Then they that be in Judea, let them flee into the mountains." Then (saith he) mark this Christ's (Then) for truly I am persuaded, and I trust, by the Spirit of God, that this (Then) is commanded; "Then (saith Christ) they that be in Jewry, let them fly unto the mountains, and he that is on the house top, let him not come down to take away any thing out of his house, and he that is abroad in the field, let him not return to take his cloaths. Woe be to the great-bellied women, and to them that give suck; but pray (saith Christ) that your flight be not in winter, or on the sabbath-day."
THESE words of Christ are mystical▪ and therefore had need of interpretation. I understand all those to be in Jewry spiritually, which truly confess one true living God, and the whole truth of his word, after the doctrine of the gospel of Christ. Such as they whom Christ here biddeth, in the time or the reign of Antichrist's abomina [...]ons, to fly unto the mountains; which signifieth places of safeguard, and all such things which are able to defend from the plague. That he biddeth him that is on the house top▪ not to come down, and him that is in the field, not to return to take with him his cloaths; he meaneth that they should speed them to get them away betime, lest in their tarrying and trifling about working prevision, they be trapped in the snare ere ever they be aware, and caught by the back, and for gain of small worldly things, endanger and cast themselves into great perils of more weighty matters. And where he saith, Woe be so the great-bellied women, and to them that give suck; women great with child, and nigh to their lying down, and to be brought to bed, and not able to travel; and also those women which are brought to bed, and now give their babes suck: by these therefore Christ spiritually understandeth all such to be in extreme danger, which this word (Woe) signifieth: all such, I say, as are so hindered by any manner of means, that they no ways be able to fly from the plague. And where Christ saith, Pray you that your flight be not in the winter, nor on the sabbath day: in winter, the common course of the year teacheth us, that the ways be foul, and therefore it is a hard thing then to take a far journey, for many incommodities and dangers of the ways in that time of the year; and on the sabbath-day it was not lawful to journey, but a little way. Now Christ therefore meaning that we should have need, both to speed our journey quickly, which cannot be done in winter, for the badness of the ways, and also to go far, which cannot be done on the sabbath-day: he biddeth us therefore pray that our flight be not in the winter, nor on the sabbath-day; that is, to pray that we fly in time, and also far enough from the danger of the plague. Now, the causes why we should fly, follow in the same place of St. Matthew's gospel, which I now pass over; thou mayst read them there.
AND in the eighteenth chapter of the Revelation, the angel is said to have cried mightily with a loud voice, "Flee, my people, out of Babylon, lest you be infected with her faults, and so to be made partners of her plagues: for her offences and sins are grown so great, that they swell, and are come unto the heavens." Certainly the time doth approach, and the Lord's day is at hand. Hear, I beseech you, a [...]so holy [...]aul▪ that blessed apostle, he plainly forbiddeth us, " [...]o join or couple ourselves with the unfaithful: for what fellowship can there be, saith he, of righteousness with unrighteousness, what [...] ▪ any [...] light with [...], [Page 931] or what agreement hath Christ with Belial? or what part can the faithful have with the unfaithful? or how doth the temple of God with images or idols? For you are the temple of the living God: as God hath said, I will walk and dwell in them, I will be their God, and they shall be my people: wherefore depart from amongst them, and get you from them, faith the Lord, and touch no unclean thing: and I will receive you, and be to you in the stead of your father, and you shall be unto me as my sons and daughters, saith the Almighty God.
THIS counsel to depart the realm, I do not marvel it doth seem to divers (even of them, I mean, that bear favour to Godward) diversly. Many (I trust) that be learned shall think the counsel good. Others there be peradventure, that will think it rather a thing to be more tolerable, and that it may be indeed by God's word lawfully done, rather than to be counselled to be done, for they will peradventure say, we should counsel a man always to do that which is best of all, and of most perfection: but boldly in Christ's cause to spend a man's life, is best of all, and of most perfection, and to fly it may seem to smell of cowardice. In many things, that which is best for one at sometimes, is not best for all at all times, and it is not most perfection, nor meet for a child to covet to run before he can go. I will not here make a discourse in this matter, what might be here objected, and what might be answered again; I leave that to the wit [...]y and eloquent men of the world.
THIS is my mind, which I would thou shouldst know, O man of God, as I would wish, and I do pray to Almighty God it may be, that every true christian, either brother or sister (after they be called, and brought into the wrestling place, to strive in Christ's cause for the best game, that is, to confess the truth of the gospel, and of the christian faith, in hope of everlasting life) should not shrink nor [...]elent one inch, nor give back, whatsoever shall bef [...], but to stand to their tackle, and stick by it even unto death, as they [...] Christ shall stick by them at the latter day▪ so likewise I dare not wish nor counsel [...], either brother or sister, of their own acco [...] to [...] up into the stage, or to cast themselves, either before, and farther in danger than time and need shall require: for undoubtedly when God seeth his time, his pleasure is, that his glory shall be set forth, and his church edified by thy death and confession, means shall be found by his fatherly universal providence, that thou, without thine own presumptuous provocation, shalt be lawfully called, to do thy feat, and play thy part. The miserable end that one Quintus came unto, may be a warning, and a fearful example for all men to beware of presumption, and rashness in such things (as Eusebius writeth in his ecclesiastical history, lib. 4, cap. 15.) for ever.
BUT a third sort of men there be, who also will be counted favourers of God's word, and are (I fear) in number far more, and worse to be persuaded to that which is the godly mean. I mean of such as will peradventure say or think, that my former counsel, which was to fly the infection of the antichristian doctrine by departing out of the realm, is more than needeth, and other ways and means may be found, both to abide, and also to be clear out of danger of the aforesaid plague. If that could be found, both to abide, and also to be clear out of danger of the aforesaid plague, truly agreeable to God's word, I would be as glad to hear it, God is my witness, as any other man. Yes, peradventure, will some say, thus it may be: thou mayst keep thyself, thy faith, and thy religion close to thyself, and inwardly and privily worship God in spirit and truth, and outwardly see thou be no open meddler, nor talker, nor transgressor of common order: so mayst thou be suffered in the commonwealth, and yet use thy religion without offence of thy conscience. In other countries somewhere this peradventure might be used, but in England what shall be, God knoweth: but it never was yet, so far as ever I have known or heard. And also how can it be, but either thou must transgress the common order, and the Romish laws and customs, which have been used in England, in times past of popery, and now (it is certain) they return again: I say, thou must either be a breaker of these rites, laws, and customs, and so bewray thyself, or else, if thou be indeed a man of God, thou shalt offend thy conscience; for in observing of them thou shalt be compelled to break God's law, which is the rule of conscience to the [Page 932] man of God. For how canst thou resort every holy day to the church, and bear a face to worship the creature instead of the Creator, as thou must do, and peradventure confess it with thy mouth, and to sprinkle thyself with the conjured water.
THOU must be contributor also to the charges of all their popery, as of books of Antichrist's service, of lights of the rood-loft, of the sepulchre, for setting up and painting images (nay, indeed of idols), and thou must bear a face to worship them also, or else thou must be had by the back. Thou must serve the turn, to give the holy loaves as they call them, which is nothing else but a very mockery of the Lord's holy table. Thou must be contributor to the charges of all the disguised apparel, that the popish sacrificing priest, like unto Aaron, most play his part in. Yea, when the pardoner goeth about, or the flattering friar to beg for the maintenance of superstition, except thou do as thy neighbours do, look not long to live at rest. If any of thy family die, if thou wilt not pay money for ringing and singing, for requiem, masses, dirige, and commendations, and such like trumpery of the antichristian religion, thinkest thou that thou shalt be reckoned for a catholic man, or for Caesar's friend? An hundred things more may be reckoned, and many of more weight, and of more evident superstition and idolatry, than some of these which I have now rehearsed, which, God knoweth, be ill enough: but these are enough to declare, and to set before thine eyes, the thing that I intend, that is, if thou abide and wilt dwell in England, thou must either do these, and many other more contrary to God's word, which forbiddeth not only the thing which is evil, but also saith, Abstain from all things that have any appearance of evil; or else if thou wilt not do them, how thou canst live in England in rest, safe from the stake, truly I cannot tell.
BUT peradventure (as man is ready to find, and invent some colour to cloak his conscience, to do that thing that his heart desireth) thou wilt say, though at any time I shall be forced to do any of these things, and such like, yet will I have no confidence in them, but outwardly with my body; I will keep my heart unto God, and will not do that of my own mind willingly neither, but to avoid another inconvenience: I trust therefore God will hold me excused, for he shall have my heart: what can I do more?
O my friend, beware for God's sake, and know that the subtilties of Sat [...]n are very deep. He that is not able by God's word to perceive them is heavily laden. Pray therefore with David; Lord, let me not have a mind to invent excuses to cloak my sin; examine, my dear friend, th [...]se wily ways with the word of God, and if they do agree, thou mayest use them: if not, know, though they may seem ever so fine and goodly, yet indeed they be of Satan's brood. God's word is certain, that forbiddeth to worship the creature for the Creator, for that is heinous idolatry, and against the commandment of God; and it is also against the second commandment of the first table to bow down, or to worship unto any images of God, or of any other thing; and God's word requireth not only the belief of the heart, but also the confession of the mouth; and to bear part of the charges, to the maint [...]nance of things ungodly; what is that, but in thy so doing, a consent to the thing done? Now consen [...]ers and the doers, God's word accounteth to be guilty of both. And it is not lawful, by St. Paul's doctrine, which was inspired by the Spirit of God, to do ill, that thereof the thing which is good may come.
THY heart, thou sayest, God shall have, and yet will suffer thy body to do the thing that God doth abhor. Beware, O man, take heed what thou sayest; man may be deceived, but no man may deceive God, for he is called, and is truly, the searcher of the heart. Now to give God thy heart, is to give him thy whole heart, to dread him, and to trust in him above all other things. "He that hath my commandments, saith Christ, and observeth and keepeth them, it is he that loveth me:" and to dread God above all others, is rather willingly to incur the danger and peril of all fearful things, than wittingly to do that thing which is contrary to his blessed will and commandment; and to trust in him above all things, is assuredly to trust to his promise of his reward, and of his tuition, and of his goodness and mercy, and to prefer that above all things in the world, seem they ever so [Page 933] strong, so wise, or so good. Now, [...]how c [...]nst thou say truly, that God hath thy heart after this manner of sort, when thy deeds do declare for another thing? Thy body, O man, is God's, and all the parts thereof, even as thy soul is: he made them both, and Christ with his blood redeemed them both, for he hath bought them both dearly: and darest thou suffer any part of them to do service to Satan? Surely in so doing thou committest sacrilege, and dost rob God; thou defilest the living temple of the living God, if thou suffer thy body to do Satan service. "Do you not know, saith St. Paul, that your body is a lively temple of God?" And may a man then take and use any part thereof but in the service of God? No, surely, it is not lawful so to do for the man of God, neither with hand, tongue, nor feet, nor any part of the whole body.
DOTH not Paul command that to the Romans, which pertaineth to every christian soul? "As you have in times past, saith he, given your members to do service unto uncleanness and wickedness, from one wickedness to another; so now give your members to do service unto righteousness, that you may be sanctified." And I pray thee, good brother, what dost thou think it is to bear the mark of the beast in the forehead, and in the hand, that St. John speaketh of? I know we ought warily to speak of God's mysteries, which he shewed by the spirit of prophesying to his servant John, yet to read them with reverence; and to pray for the same so much as God knoweth is necessary for our time to know, I think it necessary and good. Wherefore what I suppose is to bear the beast's mark, I will tell thee and commit the judgment of mine interpretation, as in all other things, to the spi [...]ual man. I suppose he beareth the beast of Babylon's mark in his forehead, which is not ashamed of the beast's ways, but will profess them openly to set forth his master the beast of Abaddon. And likewise he beareth his mark in his hand, that will and doth practise the works of the beast with his power and hand. And likewise I will not forbear to tell thee, what I think to be signed in the forehead for the servant of God is, whereof John also speaketh, reckoning up many thousands so to have been signed of every tribe. I suppose he is signed in the forehead for the servant of God, whom God hath appointed of his infinit [...] goodness, and hath given him grace and strength stoutly to confess him, and his truth before the world. And to have grace and strength to confess Christ, and the doctrine of the cross, and to lament and mourn for the abomination of Antichrist, I suppose is to be signed TAU, whereof Ezekiel the prophet doth speak. Thus, I suppose, these prophecies are spiritually to be understood: and to look for other corporal marks, to be seen in men's foreheads, or in their hands, is nothing else but to look that there should come some brute beast ou [...] of Babylon, or some elephant, leopard, lion, or some such monstrous beast with ten horns, that should do all the wonderful things spoken in John: and yet a beast speaketh John, but I understand him so to be called, not for that he shall be any such brute beast, but for that he is and shall be the child of perdition, which for his cruelty and beastly manners is well called a beast.
THE carnal Jews knew there was a promise made, that Elias should come before Christ the Messiah, the anointed of God, to prepare his ways: they knew also there was a promise of Messiah, that he should come, and be a king, and reign in the house of David for evermore: but they understood all so grossly, and so carnally, that they neither knew Elias, nor Messiah, when they came; for they looked for Elias to come down from heaven in his own person, and for Messiah to come and reign in worldly pomp, power, riches, and glory, whereas the prophecies of both were spiritually to have been understood: of Elias, that he should not come in person, but in spirit; that is, one that should be endowed with the spirit and gifts of grace of Elias, who was indeed John Baptist, as Christ himself did declare to his apostles: and of Messiah's reign, all the prophets were to be understood of the reign of his spiritual kingdom over the house of Jacob, and the true Israelites for evermore. And so by that their gross and carnal understanding, they mistook both Elias and the true Messiah, and when they came, knew neither of them. So likewise, I fear, nay, it is certain, the world that wanteth the light of the Spirit of God (for the world is not able to receive him, saith John) neither doth, nor shall know the beast, nor his marks, though he rage cruelly, and live ever [Page 934] so beastly, and though his marked men be in number like the sand of the sea. The Lord therefore vouchsafe to open the eyes of the blind with the light of grace, that they may see and perceive, and understand the words of God, after the mind of his Spirit. Amen.
HERE remain two objections, which may seem weighty, and which may peradventure move many not to follow the former counsel. The former reason is, A man will say, O sir, it is no small matter you speak of, to depart from a man's own native country into a strange realm. Many men have so great hindrances, as how is it possible that they can, or may do so? Some have lands and possessions, which they cannot carry with them: some have father, mother, wife, children, and kinsfolk, from whom to depart is as hard a thing (and all one almost) as to suffer death, and to go to a strange country that thou knowest not, neither the manner of the people, nor how thou mayst away either with the people, or with the country: or what a hard thing it is to live among a strange people, whose language thou dost not understand, &c.
I grant here thou mayst heap a number of worldly disadvantages, which are surely very likely to ensue the departure out of a man's native country, I mean out of the whole realm, into a strange land: but what of all these, and a thousand more of the like sort? I will set unto them one saying of our Saviour Christ, which unto the faithful child of God, and to the true christian, is able to countervail all these, yea, and to weigh them down. Christ our Saviour saith in Luke, "If any come to me, and do not hate his father and mother, [he meaneth, and will not in his cause forsake his father and mother] his wife, children, and brethren, yea, and his life too, he cannot be my disciple: and whosoever doth not bear my cross, and come after me, he cannot be my disciple." And, in the same place, he declareth by the two parables, one of a builder, and the other of a king that is a warrior, that every man that will not, in Christ's cause, forsake all that ever he hath, he cannot be his disciple. Look the places who will; the matter is so plainly set forth, that no glosses, nor cloaking of conscience to the man of God, can serve to the contrary. Many places there be for the same purpose for the embracing of Christ's cross, when Christ and his cause layeth it upon our back; but this is so plain, that I need here rehearse no more.
THIS latter reason and objection, whereof I spake before, is of more force, and includeth a necessity, which, after the common saying▪ hat [...] no law, and therefore it is more hard to shape for it a good answer. This may be objected of some; Alas, sir, I grant all these things do grieve me, and because I understand they do not agree with God's word, which is the rule of my conscience, I loath either to look on them, or to hear them. But, sir, alas, I am an impotent man, an aged man, a sick man, a lame man; or I have so many small infants, and a lame wife, who all live by my labour, and by my provision: if I leave them, they will starve, and I am not able to carry them with me, such is my slate. Alas, sir, what shall I do? And these causes may chance to some men of God, whereby either it shall be for them utterly impossible to depart the country, or else in departing they shall be enforced to forsake such in extreme necessity, of whom both God and nature have committed unto them the care.
ALAS! what counsel is here to be given? O lamentable state! O sorrowful heart! that neither can depart, and without extreme danger and peril is not able to tarry still. And these are they whom our Saviour Christ saw before should be, and called them in his prophecy of the latter time, great bellied, or travailing women, and women that give, after they are brought to bed, su [...]k to their babes. Of the state of such as are not able to fly the infection of the pestiferous plague of Antichrist's abominations, Christ's lamenting, and not cursing, saith, "Woe be to the great bellied and travailing women, and women that give suck in those days." For these, alas, my heart mourneth the more, the less I [...] able to give any comfortable counsel, but this; that always, as they look for everlasting life, they abide still in the confession of his truth, whatsover shall befal, and for the rest, to put their trust now wholly in God, who in able to save them against all appearance; and commonly in extremities, when all worldly comfort faileth, and the danger is at the [Page 935] highest, then unto his he is wont, after his accustomed mercy, to be most ready to put to his helping hand. God suffered Daniel to be cast into the den of lions, and the three children into the hot burning furnace, and yet he saved them all. Paul was plucked out of the mouth of the lion (as he saith himself), and in Asia he was brought into such trouble, that he looked for nothing less than present death, and yet he that raised the dead to life again, brought him out of all his troubles, and taught him and all others that be in trouble for Christ's cause, not to trust to themselves, but in Almighty God.
OF God's gracious aid in extreme perils towards them that put their trust in him, all scripture is full both of old and new. What dangers were the patriarchs often brought into, as Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, but of all others Joseph, and how mercifully were they delivered again? In what perils was Moses when he was fain to fly for safeguard of his life? And when he was sent again to deliver the Israelites from their servile bondage? Not before they were brought into extreme misery. And when did the Lord mightily deliver his people from the sword of Pharaoh? Not before they were brought into such straits, that they were so encompassed on every side, the main sea on one side, and the main host on the other, that they could look for none other, (yea, what did they indeed else look for?) but either to have been drowned in the sea, or else to have fallen on the edge of Pharaoh's sword. Those judges which wrought most wonderful things in the delivery of the people, were given when the people was brought to most misery before, as Othniel, Ehud, Samgar, Gideon, Jephtha, Samson And so was Saul endued with strength and boldness from above, against the Ammonites, Philistines, and Amalekites, for the defence of the people of Gad. David likewise felt God's help most sensibly ever in his extreme persecutions. What shall I speak of the prophets of God, whom God suffered so oft to be brought into extreme perils, and so mightily delivered them again: as Elias, Jeremiah, Daniel and Jonah, and many others, whom it were too [...] to rehearse and set out at large? And did the [...] use his servants otherwise in the new law after Christ's incarnation? Read the Acts of the Apostles, and you shall see no. Were not the apostles cast into prison, and brought out by the mighty hand of God? Did not the angel deliver Peter out of the strong prison, and bring him out by the iron gates of the city, and set him free? And when, I pray you? Even the same night before Herod appointed to have brought him to judgment to have slain him, as he had a little before killed James the brother of John. Paul and Silas, after they had been sore scourged, and were put into the inner prison, and there laid fast in the stocks, I pray you, what appearance was there that the magistrates should be glad to come the next day themselves to them, to desire them to be content, and to depart in peace? Who provided for Paul, that he should be safely conducted out of all danger, and brought to Felix the emperor's deputy, when as both the high-priest, the pharisees, and rulers of the Jews conspired to require judgment of death against him, he being fast in prison, and also more than forty men had sworn each one to the other, that they would neither eat nor drink till they had killed Paul? A thing wonderful, that no reason could have invented, or man could have looked for: God provided Paul his own sister's son, a young man that disappointed that conspiracy, and all their former conjuration. The manner how the thing came to pass, thou mayst read in the Acts xxiii. I will not be tedious unto thee with the rehearsal thereof.
NOW to descend from the apostles to the martyrs that followed next in Christ's church, and in them likewise to declare how gracious our good God over hath been to work wonderfully with them who in his cause have been in extreme perils, it were matter enough to write a long book. I will here name but one man and one woman, that is, Athanasius the great clerk and godly man, stoutly standing in Christ's cause against the Arians, and that holy woman Blandina, standing so constantly in all extreme pains, in the simple confession of Christ. If thou wilt have examples of more, look and thou s [...]alt have these and an hundred more, in Eusebius's ecclesiastical history, and in Tripartita Historia.
BUT for all these examples, both of holy scripture, and of other histories, I fear me the weak man of God, incumbered with the frailty and infirmity of the flesh, will have now and then such thoughts and [Page 936] qualms (as they call them) to run over his heart, and to think thus: all these things which are rehearsed out of the scripture I believe to be true, and the rest truly I do think well, and can believe them also to be true; but all these we must needs grant were special miracles of God, which now in our days [...]re ceased, we see; and to require them at God's hands, were it not to tempt God?
WELL, beloved brother, I grant such were great wonderful works of God, and we have not seen many such miracles in our time, either for that our sight is not clear, or else because we have not the like faith of them for whose cause God wrought such things, or because, after he had set forth the truth of his doctrine by such miracles then sufficiently, the time of so many miracles to be done was expired. Which of these is the most special cause of all other, or whether there be any other, God knoweth; I leave that to God. But know thou this, my well beloved in God, that God's hand is as strong as ever it was, he may do what his gracious pleasure is, and he is as good and gracious as ever he was. Man changeth as the garment doth; but God our heavenly Father is even the same now that he was, and shall be for evermore.
THE world without doubt (this I believe, and therefore I say) draweth towards an end, and in all ages God hath had his own manner, after his secret and unsearchable wisdom, to use his elect, sometimes to suffer them to drink of Christ's cup, that is, to feel the smart, and to feel of the whip. And though the flesh smarteth at the one, and feeleth ease in the other, is glad of the one, and sore vexed in the other; yet the Lord is all one towards them in both, and loveth them no less when he suffereth them to be beaten, yea, and to be put to bodily death, than when he worketh wonders for their marvellous delivery. Nay, he doth rather more for them, when in an anguish of the torments he standeth by them, and strengtheneth them in their faith, to suffer in the confession of the truth and his faith, the bitter pangs of death, than when he openeth the prison door and letteth them go loose: for here he doth but respite them to another time, and leaveth them in danger to fall in like peril again; and there he maketh them perfect, to be without danger, pain or peril, after that for evermore. But this his love towards them, howsoever the world doth judge of it, i [...] all one, both when he delivereth, and when he suffereth them to be put to death. He loved as well Peter and Paul, when (after they had, according to his blessed will, pleasure and providence, finished their courses, and done their services appointed them by him here in preaching of his gospel) the one was beheaded, and the other was hanged and crucified by the cruel tyrant Nero, as the ecclesiastical history saith, as when he sent the angel to bring Pet [...]r out of prison, and for Paul's delivery he made all the doors of the prison to f [...]y wide open, and the found [...]tion of the same, like an earthquake, to tremble and shake.
THINKEST thou, O thou man of God, that Christ our Saviour had less affection to the first martyr St. Stephen, because he suffered his enemies even at the first conflict to stone him to death? No surely; nor James, John's brother, who was one of the three that Paul called primates or principals amongst the apostles of Christ. He loved him never a whit the worse than he did the other, although he suffered Herod the tyrant's sword to cut off his head. Nay, doth not Daniel say, speaking of the cruelty of Antichrist's time, And the learned (he meaneth truly learned in God's law) shall teach many, and shall fall upon the sword, and in the flame, (that is, shall be burned in the flaming fire) and in captivity (that is, shall be in prison, and be spoiled and robbed of their goods for a long season). And afterwards in the same place of Daniel it followeth, And of the learned there be, which shall fall or be overthrown, that they may be known, tried choser, and made fresh and lusty. If that then was foreseen to be done to the godly learned, and for such gracious causes, let every one to whom any such thing by the will of God doth chance, be merry in God and rejoice, for it is to God's glory, and to his own everlasting wealth. Wherefore will is he that ever he was born, for whom thus graciously God hath provided, having grace of God, and strength of the Holy Ghost to stand stedfast in the height of the storm. Happy is he that ever he was born, whom God his heavenly Father hath vouchsafed to appoint to glorify him, and to edify his church by the effusion of his blood.
TO die in Christ's cause is an high honour, to [Page 937] which no man certainly shall or can aspire, but to whom God vouchsafeth that dignity: for no man is allowed to presume to take upon himself any office of honour, but he who i [...] thereunto called of God. Therefore▪ John saith well, speaking of them who have obtained the victory by the blood of the Lamb, and by the word of his testimony that they loved not their lives, even unto death.
AND our Saviour Christ saith, "He that shall lose his life for my cause shall find it." And this manner of speech pertaineth not to one kind of christians (as the world doth wickedly dream), but to all that do truly pertain unto Christ. For when Christ had called unto him the multitude together with his disciples, he said unto them (mark that he said not this to the disciples and apostles only, but he said it to all), Whosoever will follow me, let him forsake and deny himself, and take up his cross and follow me: for whosoever will save his life shall lose it (he meaneth, whosoever will, to save his life, forsake or leave him and his truth), and whosoever shall lose his life for my cause and the gospel's sake, shall save it. For what shall it profit a man if he shall win the whole world, and lose his own soul, his own life? or what shall a man give to recompense that los [...] of his own life, and of his own soul? Whosoever shall be ashamed of me and my words (that is, to confess me and my gospel) before this sinful and adulterous generation, of him shall the Son of Man be ashamed, when he cometh in the glory of his Father, with the holy angels. Know thou, O man of God, that all things are ordained for thy behoof, and to the furtherance of thee, towards thy salvation. All things, saith Paul, worketh with the good to goodness, even the enemies of God, and such kind of punishments whereby they go about to destroy them, shall be forced by God's power, might, and fatherly providence, to do them service.
IT is not as the wicked thinketh, that poverty, adversity, sickness, tribulation, yea painful death of the godly, be tokens that God doth not love them; but even clean the contrary, as all the whole course of scripture doth evidently declare: for then he would never would have suffered his most dearly beloved, the patriarchs, to have had such troubles, his prophets, his apostles, his martyrs, and chief champions and maintainers of his truth and gospel, so cruelly by the wicked to have been murdered and slain. Of whom some were racked, as the apostle faith, and would not be delivered, that they might receive [...] a better resurrection. Some were tried by mockings and scourgings, yea, moreover by bonds and imprisonment: they were stoned, they were sawn asunder, they were tempted, they were slain with the sword, they wandered up and down in sheep-skins and goat-skins, being forsaken, afflicted, and tormented, such men as the world was not worthy to have, wandering in wildernesses, in mountains, in dens and [...]aves of the earth. All these were approved by the testimony of faith, and received the promise, because God provided better for us, that without us they should not be consummated. They tarry for us now undoubtedly, longing for the day: but they are commanded to have patience yet (saith the Lord) a little while, until the number of their fellow-servants be fulfilled, and of their brethren which are not yet slain, as they were.
NOW (thou, O man of God) for our Lord's sake, let us not for the love of this life, tarry then too long, and be occasion of delay of that glorious consummation, in hope of expectation whereof they departed in the Lord, and which also the living indued with God's Spirit, ought so earnestly to desire and to groan for with all the creatures of God. Let us all, with John the servant of God, cry in our hearts unto our Saviour Christ, Come, Lord Jesus, come. For then when Christ, who is our life, shall be made manifest, and appear in glory, then shall the children of God appear what they be, even like unto Christ: for this our weak body shall be transfigured, and made like unto Christ's glorious body, and that by the power whereby he is able to subdue all things unto himself. Then that which is now corrupible, shall be made incorruptible: that which now is vile, shall be made glorious: that which is now weak, shall rise then mighty and strong: that which is gross and carnal, shall be made fine and spiritual: for then we shall see and have the unspeakable joy and fruition of the glorious Majesty of our Lord, even as he is.
[Page 938]WHO, or what then shall hinder us to jeopard, yea, to spend this life which we have here in Christ's cause? O therefore, thou man of God, thou that art loaden, and so hindered like unto a pregnant woman, that thou canst not fly the plague, yet if thou lust after such things as I have spoken of, stand fast whatsoever shall befal, in thy master's cause; and take this thy hindrance to fly, for a calling of God to fight in thy master Christ's cause. Of this be thou certain, they can do nothing unto thee, which thy Father is not aware of, or hath not foreseen before: they can do no more than it shall please him to suffer them to do for the furtherance of his glory, edifying of his church, and thine own salvation. Let them then do what they shall, seeing to thee, O man of God, all things shall be forced to serve, and to work with thee unto the best before God. O be not afraid, and remember the end.
ALL this which I have spoken for the comfort of the lamentable case of the man whom Christ called great bellied woman, I mean to be spoke likewise to the captive and prisoner in God's cause▪ for such I count to be as it were already summoned and pressed to fight under the banner of the cross of Christ, and as it were soldiers allowed and taken up for the Lord's wars, to do their Lord and master good and honourable service, and [...]o stick to him, as men of trusty service in his cause, even unto death, and to think their life lost in his cause, is to win it in eternal glory for evermore.
THEREFORE, now to conclude and make an end of this treatise, I say unto all that love God our heavenly Father, that love Christ Jesus our Redeemer and Saviour▪ that love to follow the ways of the Holy Ghost, which is comforter and sanctifier; unto all that love Christ's spouse and body, the true catholic church of Christ, yea, that love life and their own souls health; I say unto all these, hearken, my dear brethern and sisters, all you that be of God, of all sorts, ages, dignities, or degrees; hearken to the words of our Saviour Jesus Christ, spoken to his apostles, and meant to all his, in St. Matthew's gospel, Fear not them which kill the body, for they cannot kill the soul; but fear him more which may destroy and east both body and soul into hell fire. Are not two small sparrows sold for a mite, and one of them shall not fall or light upon the ground without your Father? All the hairs of your head are numbered. Fear them not, you are much more worth than are the little sparrows. Every one that confesseth me before men, him shall I likewise confess before my Father which is in heaven. But whosoever shall deny me before men, I shall deny him likewise before my Father which is in heaven.
THE Lord grant us therefore of his heavenly grace and strength, that here we may so confess him in this world amongst this adulterous and sinful generation, that he may confess us again at the latter day before his Father which is in heaven, to our glory and everlasting comfort, joy▪ and salvation.
TO our heavenly Father, to our Saviour and Redeemer Jesus Christ, and to the Holy Ghost, be all honour now and for ever. Amen.
The Martyrdom of JOHN WEBB, Gentleman, GEORGE ROPER, and GREGORY PARKE, at Canterbury.
JOHN WEBB was brought before the bishop of Dover, and Nicholas Harpsfield, or some other deputed in their room, on the 16th of September, and there had propounded unto him such articles as were commonly administered by Bonner to those of his jurisdiction: and being willed for that present to depart, and to deliberate with himself upon the matter, against the next time of his appearance; he made answer, that he [...]uld no otherwise say (by God's grace) than he ha [...] [...]lready said, which was this: As touching the [...]ament of Christ's body, said he, I do believe it to be left unto his church (with thanksgiving) in co [...]emoration of his death and passion, until his [...]ming ag [...]n. So that it is left in remembrance of his [Page 939] body, and not by the words of consecration to be made wholly his body, really, substantially, and the same body that was born of the virgin Mary: I utterly deny that.
AFTER this (besides sundry other times) the third of October, the said John Webb, George Roper, and Gregory Parke, were all brought together before the said judges; who there and then agreeing, and stedfastly allowing the former answer made before by Mr. Webb,, were by the bloody prelates adjudged heretics; and therefore about the end of the same month they were brought out of prison together to the place of martyrdom; saying certain psalms mournfully as they were going to the stake.
AND being thus brought (as I said) to the stake, and there encompassed about with a chain, were burnt all together in one fire at Canterbury, most patiently enduring their torments, and accounting themselves happy nnd blessed of the Lord that they were made worthy to suffer for Christ's gospel sake.
A short Account of WILLIAM WISEMAN.
THE 13th of December, William Wiseman, a cloth-worker of London, died in Lollard's-Tower, where he was in prison and bonds for the gospel of Christ: some thought, that either through famine, or ill handling of some murdering papists, he was made away. By reason whereof the coroner, named John Gibbes, gentleman, with an inquest of twelve men, sat upon him, who although to outward appearance, were said to find nothing in him else but only God's visitation, yet what other privy causes there might be of his death, the Lord knoweth, I have not to say.
AFTER the said William Wiseman was departed (as is said) in the Tower, the papists cast him out into the fields, commanding that no man should bury him, according as their devout manner is to do with all such as die in like sort, whom they account as profane, and worthy of no burial, but to be cast to dogs and birds. And yet notwithstanding this their merciless commandment, some good Tobits there were who buried him in the evening, as commonly they did all the rest thrown out in like manner, whom they were wont privily by night to cover, and many times the archers in the fields standing by, and singing psalms together at their their burial.
IN the same month of December, James Gore also died in prison at Colchester, laid there in bonds for the truth of God's word.
THE NEW AND COMPLETE BOOK of MARTYRS; OR, An Vniversal History of Martyrdom: BEING FOX's BOOK OF MARTYRS, Revised and Corrected, with Additions and great improvements CONTAINING AN AUTHENTIC ACCOUNT OF THE LIVES, PERSECUTIONS and SUFFERINGS of the HOLY MARTYRS; AND THE MANY DREADFUL Persecutions against the Church of CHRIST in all Parts of the World, BY PAGANS, JEWS, TURKS, PAPISTS, AND OTHERS, FROM THE EARLIEST AGES OF THE CHURCH TO THE PRESENT PERIOD. INCLUDING THE Life, Sufferings, and Martyrdom of Our Lord and Saviour JESUS CHRIST; WITH THE Martyrdom of the APOSTLES, EVANGELISTS, and other PRIMITIVE CHRISTIANS.
The Ten Great Persecutions under the Roman Emperors.
The Persecutions in Persia, under Saphores: and the Persecutions under the Arian Vandals. The Martyrdom of the Missionaries in China: The Persecutions in the East-Indies: The Barbarities exercised by the Spaniards in America: And the Cruelties practised on the Christians of Abyssinia and Georgia.
The Persecutions exercised by the Papists in various Parts of Europe.
Together with a COMPLETE HYSTORY of the MARTYRDOMS of The FAITHFUL and VIRTUOUS in the First Ages of the World: The Persecutions of the Maccabees by the Greeks: of the Hebrews by the Egyptians: and of the Children of Israel by the Philistines, and other barbarous Nations.
THE WHOLE FORMING AT ONCE A General Christian Martyrology, and a Complete History of Persecutions.
By the Rev. Mr. JOHN FOX. M. A. late of Magdalen College, Oxford.
NOW Revised, Corrected and Improved, with many Additional Articles, Relating to the Acts and Monuments of the Church.
BY PAUL WRIGHT, D. D.
Embellished with Forty Elegant COPPER PLATE ENGRAVINGS.
IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. II.
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THE NEW AND COMPLETE BOOK of MARTYRS; OR, AN Universal History of Martyrdom: BEING FOX's BOOK OF MARTYRS, Newly Revised and Corrected, with Additions and great Improvements. BOOK II. CONTAINING An HISTORICAL ACCOUNT of the LIVES, ACTS, MONUMENTS, PERSECUTIONS, SUFFERINGS, and TRIUMPHANT DEATHS, of the PROTESTANT REFORMERS; With the particular Processes, and Names of all those Good, Pious, and Faithful Martyrs, both Men and Women, who were Imprisoned, Tortured, and who sealed the Faith of our Most Holy Religion with their Blood in the Cruel Reign of MARY I. commonly called BLOODY QUEEN MARY.
CHAP. I. The HISTORY of STEPHEN GARDINER, Bishop of WINCHESTER.
THE next month after the burning of Dr. Ridley, and Mr. Latimer, which was the month of November, Stephen Gardiner, bishop, and chancellor, a man hated of God and all good men, ended his wretched life. This viper's bird crept out of the town of Bury, in Suffolk, was brought up most part of his youth in Cambridge; his wit, capacity, memory, and other endowments of nature, were not to be complained of, if he had well used, and rightly applied the same; wherein there was no great want of God's part in him, if he had not rather himself wanted to the goodness of his gifts. Through this promptness, activity, and towardness of his, he profited not a little in such studies as he gave his head unto, as first in the civil law, then in languages, and such other like, especially in those arts and faculties which had any prospect to dignity and preferment to be hoped for. Besides other ornaments or help of nature, memory chiefly seemed in him very beneficial, rather than diligence of study.
TO these gifts or qualities were joined again his great or greater vices, which not so much followed him, as overtook him, and made him burdensome to the whole realm. He was of a proud stomach, and high-minded, in his own opinion and conceit flattering himself too much; in wit, crafty and subtle: towards his superiors, flattering and fair spoken; to his inferiors, fierce; against his equals, stout and envious, especially if in judgment and sentence he any thing withstood him, as appeared between the good lord Cromwel and him, in the reign of king Henry the Eighth. Who, although he would give no place to men, yet notwithstanding I wish he would have given place to truth, according as he seemed not altogether ignorant of the truth. What his knowledge was therein [Page 4] is evident, partly by his book De vera Obedientia, as also by his sermon before king Edward; also by his answers to the council the same time, and moreover by his own words it may be gathered in sundry places, as more plainly may appear by that which hereafter followeth.
UPON his estimation and fame he stood too much, more [...]han was proper for a man of his coat and calling, whose profession was to be crucified unto the world, which thing made him so stiff in maintaining that which he once begun to take upon him.
WHAT his learning was in the civil and canon law I have not to say: what it was in other liberal arts and sciences, this I suppose, that neither his continuance in study, nor diligence of reading was such (by reason of his too much intermeddling in prince's matter) as could truly well merit unto him the title of a deep learned man. But what learning or cunning soever it was he had, so it fared in him, as it doth in butchers, which use to blow up their flesh: even so he with boldness and stoutness, and especially with authority, made those gifts that he had, to appear much greater than they really were. Whereunto use peradventure, and experience abroad made no little helps▪ rather than either quickness of wit, or happiness of education.
AND as touching divinity, he was so variable, wavering with time, that no constant censure [...]ar be given what to make of him. If his doings and writings were according to his conscience, no man can rightly say whether he was a right protestant or papist. If he wrote otherwise than he thought, for fear, or to bear with time, then was he a deep dissembler before God and man, to say and unsay, to write and unwrite, to swear and forswear as he did. For first in the beginning of queen Anne Bullen's time, who was so forward or so busy in the matter of the king's divorce as Stephen Gardiner, who was first sent to Rome, and then to the emperor with Edward Fox, as chief agent in the behalf of the lady Anne? By whom also he was preferred to the bishopric of Winchester, and Edward Bonner was preferred to the bishopric of London. Again, at the abolishing of the pope, who so ready to swear, or so vehement to write against the pope as he, not only by his sermons, but also by his book De Obedientia may appear? In which book, lest any should think him drawn thereunto otherwise than by his own consent, he plainly declareth, how not rashly nor on a sudden, but upon a long deliberation and advertisement in himself about the matter, he at length uttered his judgment in writing against the usurped supremacy of the pope, that coming to Lovain afterward, he was there accounted a person excommunicate and a schismatic, insomuch that he was not permitted in their church to say mass; and moreover, in their public sermons they openly cried out against him. Whereof read hereafter.
AND thus long continued he firm and forward, so that who but Winchester during all the reign of queen Anne? After her decease, that time by little and little carried him away, till at length the emulation of the lord Cromwel's estate, and especially (as it seemeth) for his so much favouring of Bonner (whom Winchester at that time in no case could abide) made him an utter enemy both against him, and also his religion: till again in king Edward's days, he began a little to rebate from certain points of popery, and somewhat to s [...]ell of the gospel, as both by his sermon before king Edward, as also by his subscribing to certain art [...]cles, may appear; and this was an half turn of Stephen Gardiner from popery again to the gospel, and (no doubt) he would have farther turned, had not the unlucky decay of the duke of Somerset clean turned him away from true divinity, to plain popery; wherein he continued a cruel persecutor to his dying day.
AND thus much concern [...]ng the trade and profession of Stephen Gardiner's popish divinity. In which his popish trade, whether he followed more true judgment, or else time, or rath [...]r the spirit of ambition and vain glory, it is doubtful to say, and so much the more doubtful, because in his doings and writings a man may see him not only contrary to himself, but also in some points contrary to other papists. And furthermore, where he agreeth with them, he seemeth therein not so much to follow his own sense, as the mind and meaning of Perseus; out of whose book the greatest part of Winchester's divinity seemeth to be borr [...]w [...]d.
[Page 5]AND therefore as in the true knowledge of God's holy word and scripture he appeareth nobody; so in his pen and style of writing no less far is he from commendation, than he is from all plainness and perspicuity. In whose obscure and perplexed kind of writing, although peradventure some sense may be found with some searching, yet shall no reader find any sweetness in his reading.
WHAT moved him to be so sturdy against Mr. Cheek, and sir Thomas Smith, for the Greek pronunciation, others may think what they please; I speak but what I think, that so he did, for that he saw it a thing rather newly begun, than truly impugned. Such was the disposition of that man (as it seemeth) that of purpose he ever affected to seem to be a patron of old customs, though they were ever so rotten with age. Amongst other matters, this one I cannot but marvel at in my mind, when I see how proudly he braggeth, and vainly he vaunteth himself (as well in his letters to the lord protector, and others of king Edward's council, as also in his long matter articulated and exhibited before the archbishop of Canterbury, and other the king's commissioners) of the high favour he had of the noble king of famous memory, king Henry the Eighth, when indeed nothing was less true; neither did the king less favour any of his council, than him, affirming very often, that he greatly suspected the said bishop to be a secret maintainer of the bishop of Rome's usurped authority, and a stout disturber and hinderer of his proceedings in reformation of religion. And therefore he did so much dislike him, that he did not only mind (if it had pleased God to grant his highness long [...]r life) to have used the extremity of the law against him, upon very s [...]re and just matter of old committed by him (and yet not taken away by any pardon), thereupon often commanding the lord Pag [...]t, then his secretary, to ke [...]p safe certain writings which he had against him; but also he commanded that he should be put clean out of his l [...]st will and testament, not suffering him either to be one of his executors, or in any case to be of his son's council, no, although he were earnestly entreated to the contrary by sundry of the lords, and others of his highness's council, saying, he was a wilful, troublesome, and headstrong man, and not meet to be about his son, or to have any thing to do by his will. New, amongst other causes that moved the king t [...]us to suspect his fidelity towards his godly proceedings in religion, I find this to be one. It pleased his majesty, after his abolishing the bishop of Rome's usurped authority (amongst other embassages to foreign princes), to send the said Bishop of Winchester, and sir Henry Knevet, knight, as joint ambassadors to the emperor, being then at a diet or council at Ratisbon, appointing also sir Henry Barkely, sir William Blunt, knights, and Andrew Bainton, esquire, (their highnesses servants) to give their attendance upon the said sir Henry Knevet, for the more honouring of his embassage. It happened also at that time, that sir Henry Knevet entertained in his service (as steward of his houshold) one William Wolfe, who had in the same capacity before served sir Thomas Wyat, knight, the king's former ambassador there, and by that means had good acquaintance in those parts, as well in the emperor's court, as elsewhere. This Wolfe, towards the latter end of the diet or council, happened to walk (as often he did) toward's the emperor's palace to hear some news, where he met with one Ludovico, an Italian merchant, one of his old acquaintance. Who, supposing the said Wolfe to have attended upon the bishop of Winchester, (not knowing of any other joint ambassador) required Wolfe, for old acquaintance, to do him a pleasure; whereunto he willingly granted. Whereupon Ludovico shewed him, that the pope's legate, or ambassador to the emperor (which was cardinal Contarene) departing the day before towards Rome, and having no leisure to end his business himself, had put the said Ludovico in trust for the accomplishing of them: and amongst all other things he had especially charged him, that he should repair to the ambassador of England, and require of him an answer to the pope's letters, which the leg [...]e did of late send unto him, addressed to him from Rome, and that upon the receipt thereof he should send them after with all speed; therefore if his lord ambassador would write by that courier, he prayed Wolfe to tell him that it was time to write, for the courier went away within a day or two. At this tale Wolfe being abashed, and yet partly guessing which ambassador he meant, thought it not meet to tell him whose [Page 6] servant he was, but by other soothing talk found that he meant the bishop of Winchester. And to the end that Ludovico should suspect nothing, he answered him, that he being not the ambassador's secretary, could say little therein; however he would not fail to put his secretary in remembrance of it: which thing Ludovico also desired him to do, for that he had no other acquaintance with the ambassador, and so for that time they departed. This matter seeming to Welfe of some importance, he immediately revealed it to sir Henry Knevet, his master: who weighing also the greatness of the case, and what disadvantage it were upon one man's bare report to attempt aught, in a place and time whereby such a person was to be touched, charged Wolfe well to advise himself, that no h [...]tred, displeasure, or other passion, did move him to disclose this, but truth only. Wolfe replied, That he weighed well the weightiness of the cause, meet, as to his own respect, to be passed over in silence, for avoiding or his private displeasure, if the duty of allegiance bound him not otherwise. But sir, (says he) if you think not my hearing thereof, one to one, to be sufficient, I warrant you to devise means that some other of your [...]vants shall hear the like words from Ludovico's own mouth as well as I. Upon which sir Henry Knevet devised which of his servants he might use to that purpose, and at last rested upon Mr. Thomas Chalenor, his secretary, because he had the Italian tongue. Not making him privy to any matter, but desired Wolfe to take him abroad with him, as of his own private motion, for they were very familiar friends. Whereupon the next morning, being Sunday, Wolfe came to Chalenor's chamber, and prayed him familiarly to take a walk with him abroad to the Piazza, or Market-stead, which he readily did, not knowing of any special cause why. When they came to the Piazza, overgainst the emperor's palace, (near whereunto also the pope's legate had lodged) and had there walked awhile together, there came thither the said Ludovico, aod espying Wolfe, saluted him very friendly, end entered into talk about the Exchange, and sundry other matters, Chalenor being still with them. At last upon an occasion, they entered into a little talk about the former letters that the ambassador of England had received from Rome by the pope's legate, of which Ludovico had in charge to receive an answer, affirming that the post deparrted the next day, and therefore prayed Wolfe to put the ambassador's secretary in remembrance of them. Whereunto Wolfe answered, That he would willingly do it: but he did not well know which ambassador he meant, for there were two; one, the bishop of Winchester▪ and the other, a gentleman of the king's privy chamber. To whom Ludovico replied, That he meant not the gentleman of the privy chamber, but the bishop. By which talk, and much such, like, (as upon the former day) Mr. Chalenor being moved, (and not knowing yet of his master's and Wolfe's purpose) after the departure of Ludovico from [...] said unto Wolfe, that Ludovico had had but [...]mely talk with him, not to be passed over lightly, and therefore he would tell his master of it. To whom Wolfe answered, Do as you will, if you think any matter therein. And therefore at his return home, he told sir Henry Knevet what speech he had heard at Ludovico's mouth.
SIR HENRY KNEVET being thus further ascertained of the matter, opened the whole to sir John Barkley, sir William Blunt, and to Mr. William Bainton, who all agreed yet to make a farther trial thereof. And therefore devised that Wolfe should procure Ludovick to bring certain velvets, and other silks, unto sir Henry Knevet's lodgings, as well for himself as for the other gentlemen, which that afternoon he did accomplish, and brought Ludovick unto sir Henry, where also were the other gentlemen. After they had awhile viewed the silks, and had some talk about the price, Wolfe took occasion to asK Ludovick, if sir Henry was the ambassador of whom he was to demand an answer of the letters sent by the pope's legate? To whom the merchant answered, No, it was not his seigniory, but it was a bishop, terming him Reverendissimo▪ whereby they easily perceived whom he meant. Sir Henry Knevet hereupon somewhat dissembling the matter, entered into further t [...]lk about it, whereby Ludovick open [...]d as much in effect to them, as he had done before to Wolfe; but yet at last perceiving that as well sir Henry, as also the other gentlemen, beheld him somewhat angrily, he broke of his talk. Wherewith sir Henry Knevet, making as though he had noted nothing, did lovingly dismiss him, praying [Page 7] him, that when he had received the bishop's letters, he would also repair to him for a packet to an English gentleman of his acquaintance at Milan; which he promised to do, and so departed again. When sir Henry had thus made sufficient trial of this matter, he forthwith wrote his letters unto the [...] majesty, signifying unto him the whole at large, as he had learned. In the meanwhile Ludovick the next morning repaired to the bishop of Winchester's lodging, to demand an answer of those letters the legate had sent unto him: but how he used himself, or whether he uttered the discourse he had with sir Henry Knevet, and with Wolfe, whom he supposed at first to be the bishop's man, is not certainly known. But the bishop perceiving, that by mistaking one for another, (and in supposing Wolfe to be the bishop's servant) Ludovick had uttered all his message from the legate unto Wolfe, and that thereby his practices would come to light; in great haste and rage he caused Ludovick to be stayed in his own house, while in the mean time himself went to Gravela, one of the emperor's council, and so practised with him, that Ludovick was secretly committed to prison, in the custody of one of the emperor's marshals, and so as he could be no more talked with, all the time of their abode there. And then sending in great haste to sir Henry Knevet to come and speak with him, (which he did) he fell into very hot speech with him, saying, that he had poison in his dish, and that a knave was suborned to be his destruction; with many such like words. Sir Henry told him again how he understood it; and prayed him that Ludovick might be brought face to face, to be examined in both their presences. Which the bishop would in no case agree unto, affirming, that he had also declared the case to Gravela, being indifferent (as he thought) to them both, that he would not meddle with Ludovick, nor speak with him: but that the emperor's council should examine him, and try what he was for him. To whom sir Henry Knevet again very earnestly objected. That he marvelled that the bishop in matters touching the king's majesty, their master, would use the aid or means of Gravela, a foreign prince's minister, to make him privy of their question. But say and do what he could, he would never come to the speech of Ludovick any more ever after. Whereupon there arose great and long controversies between them, (both writing unto the king about that matter) until at last the king's majesty perceiving his affairs otherwise to [...]lack thereby, wrote to them both, that they should lay all those things under foot and join together in his service as before; which they did accordingly. But howsoever this matter was salved here with the king's majesty, as either by the death of sir Henry Knevet, (which I think was not long after) or by other friends the bishop had here at home, I know not; yet Wolfe, who within two months after died of a long cough of the lungs, upon his death-bed did again affirm the premises to be most true; and therefore in the presence of sir Henry Knevet, and divers of his servants, he protested, that he had not invented, sought or procured this at Ludovick's hands, for any malice or displeasure borne to the bishop, but only for the discharge of his faith and duty unto the king's majesty, desiring that the same his protestation might be inserted in the end of his last will and testament, which was then presently done, and thereunto he set his hand.
NOW, whether this was the matter that the king moved so often Mr. Secretary Paget (being after lord keeper) to keep safe as sore matter against the bishop, I know not, but yet it appears by some depositions of the nobility, and others, in the process had against him in king Edward's days, that the king's majesty, Henry VIII. had this matter ever in his mind: for in every general pardon that he granted by parliament after this practice, he did still except all treasons committed beyond the seas; meaning thereby, as it was supposed, that the bishop should not take any benefit by any general pardon, if at any time his majesty would call him to account: and therefore all things well weighed, he had small cause to vaunt of his great favour he had with king Henry, his master. Howbeit, it seemeth he was brought into this fool's paradise by lord Paget; who (as he himself reporteth in his depositions) in his messages from the king to the said bishop, deluded him, telling him much otherwise than the king spoke, and concealing always the king's hard speeches, against him, which thing puffed up this vain-glorious boaster not a little.
[Page 8]BUT whosoever he was, seeing he is now gone, I refer him to his judge, to whom he shall stand or fall. As concerning his death and manner thereof, I would they which were present thereat, would testify to us what they saw. This we have all to think, that his death happened so opportunely, that England hath a mighty cause to give thanks to the Lord for it: not so much for the great hurt he had done in times past in perverting his princes, in bringing in the six articles, in murdering God's saints, in defacing Christ's sincere religion, &c. but also and especially for that he had thought to have brought to pass in murdering also the lady Elizabeth. For whatsoever danger of death that she was in, it did (no doubt) proceed from the bloody bishop, who was the cause thereof. And if it be certain which we have heard, that her highness being in the Tower, a writ came down from certain of the council for her execution, it is not out of controversy that Winchester was the framer of that engine, who (no doubt) in that one day, had brought this whole realm into woeful ruin, had not the Lord's most gracious counsel, through Mr. Bridges then the lieutenant, coming in haste to the queen, certified her of the matter, and prevented his bloody devices. For which thanks be to the same, our Lord and Saviour, in the congregation of all English churches, Amen.
OF things uncertain, I must speak uncertainly, for lack of fuller information, or else peradventure there are some in the realm can say more than I have expressed. For as Bonner, Story, Thornton, Harpsfield, Dunning, with others, were occupied in putting the poor branches of God's saints to death; so this bishop for his part bent all his devices, and had spent all his powder in assailing the root, and in casting such a platform, (as he himself in words at his death is said to confess) to build his popery upon, as he thought should have stood for ever. But (as I said before) of things un [...]ertain, I speak uncertainly. Whereof as touching the manner and order of his death, how rich he died, what words he spoke, what little repentance he shewed, whether he died with his tongue swoln, and out of his mouth, as did Thomas Arund [...]l, archbishop of Canterbury, or whether he stunk before he died, as cardinal Wolsey did, or whether he died in despair, as Latomus and others did, &c. All this I refer to their repor [...]s of whom I heard it, or leave it to the knowledge of them who know it better.
NOTWITHSTANDING, here by the way, touching the death of the aforesaid bishop, I thought not to overpass a certain hear-say, which not long since came to me by information of a certain worthy and creditable gentlewoman, and another gentleman of the same name and kindred, which Mrs. Mundy, the wife of Mr. Mundy, some time secretary to the old lord Thomas, duke of Norfolk, a present witness of this that is testified, thus openly reported in the house of a worshipful citizen, bearing yet office in this city, words and effect as followeth. The same day as bishops Ridley and Latimer suffered at Oxford, being about the 19th day of October, there came into the house of Stephen Gardiner the old duke of Norfolk, with the aforesaid Mr. Mundy, above-named, reporter hereof. The old aged duke, there waiting for his dinner, the bishop being not yet disposed to dine, deferred the time till three or four o'clock in the afternoon. At length about four o'clock cometh his servant posting from Oxford, bringing intelligence to the bishop what he had heard and seen: of whom the said bishop diligently inquiring the truth of the matter, and hearing by his man that fire most certainly was set unto them, cometh out rejoicing to the duke; Now, said he, let us go to dinner. Whereupon they being sat down, meat immediately was brought, and the bishop began merrily to eat. But what followed? The bloody tyrar had not eaten a few bits, but the sudden stroke of God's terrible hand fell upon him in such sor [...], as immediately he was taken from the table, and so brought to his bed, where he continued the space of fifteen days in such intolerable anguish and torments, that all that mean while during the fifteen days, he could not void by urine or otherwise, any thing that he received: whereby his body being miserably inflamed within, (who had inflamed so many good martyrs before) was brought to a wretched end. And th [...]refore, no doubt, as most likely it is, came the thrusting out of his tongue from his mouth, so swoln and black, with the inflammation of his body. A spectacle worthy to be noted and beheld of all such bloody and burning persecutors.
BUT to proceed farther in the sequel of our story: [Page 9] I could name the man (but I abstain from names), who being then present, and a great doer about the said Winchester, reported to us concerning the said bishop, that when Dr. Day, bishop of Chichester, came to him, and began to comfort him with words of God's promise, and with the free justification in the blood of Christ our Saviour, repeating the scriptures to him; Winchester hearing that, What my lord, (quoth he) will you open the gap now? then farewel all together. To me, and such others in my case, you may speak it, but open this window to the people, then farewel altogether.
MOREOVER, what Dr. Bonner then saw in him, or what he heard of him, and what words passed between them about the time of this extremity, betwixt him and him be it. If Bonner did there behold any thing which might turn to his good example, I exhort him to take it, and to beware in time, as I pray God he may. Here I could bring in the frivolous epitaph that was made on his death, devised by a papist for a popish bishop, but I omit it, and instead thereof I have here inserted certain things gathered out of his sermons, words, and writings, wherein may appear what an earnest and vehement enemy he was to the pope, if he would have been constant in himself; and how inconstantly he varied from himself; and also how he, standing upon the singularity of his own wit, varied from other papists in certain points. In gathering whereof, although there be some pains, and tediousness also in reading; yet I thought not to omit the same, upon certain considerations, namely, for that so many yet to this day there be who stick so much to Gardiner's wit, learning, and religion, taking him for such a substantial pillar of the pope's church. To the intent therefore, that such as hitherto have been deceived by him, may no longer be abused therein, if they will either credit his own works, Words, sermons, writings, disputations; or else will be judged by his own witnesses of his own party produced, we have here collected such manifest probations, which may notoriously declare how effectually fir [...]t he withstood the pope's supremacy: and likewise afterward may declare the manifest contrariety and repugnancy of the sa [...] Gardiner, first with other writers, and lastly with himself: first beginning with his sermon preached before king Edward. The sum and effect of which sermon, briefly collected by Mr. Udal, hereunder followeth.
The Sum and Effect of Bishop GARDINER'S Sermon, preached before king Edward, Anno 1550.
MOST honourable audience, I purpose, by the grace of God, to declare some part of the gospel that is accustomably used to be read in the church at this day. And because that without the special grace of God, neither can I speak any thing to your edifying, nor ye receive the same accordingly, I shall desire you all that we may jointly pray all together for the assistance of his grace. In which prayer I commend to Almighty God your most excellent majesty, our sovereign lord king of England, France, and Ireland, and of the church of England and Ireland, next and immediately under God here on earth, the supreme head; queen Catharine dowager, my lady Mary's grace, my lady Elizabeth's grace, your majesty's most dear sister's; my lord protector's grace, with all others of your most honourable council, the spirituality and temporality; and I shall desire you to commend unto God with prayer, the souls departed unto God in Christ's faith, and amongst these, most especially, our late sovereign lord king Henry VIII. your majesty's most noble father. For these and for grace necessary, I shall desire you to say a Pater Noster, and so forth.
The GOSPEL beginneth, Matt. xvi.13, 14, 15, 16.
When Jesus was come into the parts of Cesarca, a cit [...] that Philippus builded, he asked his disciples, and said whom do men say that the Son of Man is? They said, Some that thou art John the Baptist, some that thou art Elias, some that thou art J [...]emiah, or some one of the prophets. He said to them, But whom do ye say that I am? Then answered Sim [...] Peter, and said, Tho [...] art Christ the Son of the living God, &c.
I Cannot have time, I think, to speak of the gospel thoroughly, for other matters that I have here now to say, but I shall note unto you such things as I may; and first of the diversity of opinions concerning Christ, which were among the [Page 10] people variable: but among this, that is, the disciples of Christ's school, there was no variety, they agreed all together in one truth, and among them there was no variety. For when Peter had, for all the rest, made his answer, that Christ was the Son of God, they all confessed with one consent, that he had spoken the truth. Yet these opinions of Christ that the people had of him, though they were sundry, yet they were honourable and not slanderous▪ for to say that Christ was Elias, and John the Baptist, was honourable: for some thought him so to be, because he did frankly, sharply, and openly rebuke vi [...]e. They that called him Jeremiah, had also an honourable opinion of him, and thought him so to be, because of his great learning which they perceived in him, and marvelled where he had it. And they that said he was one of the prophets, had an honourable opinion of him, and favoured him, and thought well of him.
BUT there was another sort of people that spake evil of him, and slandered him, and railed on him, saying that he was a glutton, and a drinker of wine; that he had a devil in him; that he was a deceiver of the people; that he was a carpenter's son, as though he were the worse for his father's craft. But of these he asked no question: for among these none agreed with the other. Wherein ye shall note, that man of his own power and strength can do nothing: no, nothing that is good can he do of his own invention or device, but erreth and faileth; when he is left to his own invention, he erreth in his imagination. So proud is man, and so stout of his own courage, that he dev [...]seth nothing well, whensoever he is left to himself without God; and then never do any such agree in any truth, and wander and err in all that they do. As men of law, if they be asked their opinion in any point touching the law, ye shall not have two of them agree in opinion in any matter if they should answer all one thing, they fear le [...] they should be supposed and thought to have no learning. Therefore be they ever so many of them, they will not agree in their answers, but devise each men a sundry answer in any thing that they are asked.
THE philosophers that were not of Christ's school erred every one in their vain opinions, and no one of them agreeth with the other.
YEA, men of simplicity, though they meant well, yet being out of Christ's school, they varied and agreed not in their opinions of Christ, though they thought well of him. Some said he was John, some Elias, some Jeremiah, but none made the right answer. He that answered here, was Simon the son of Jonas, and he said, Thou art Christ the Son of the living God.
HERE ye may note the properties that were in Peter. He was called Simon, which is obedience, and Jonas is a dove▪ so that in him, that is of Christ's school, must be these two properties, obedience and simplicity. He must be humble and innocent as a dove, that will be of Christ's school. Pride is a hindrance of Christ's school: for as the wise man saith, God resisteth the proud, and giveth grace to the humble and meek. And according to the same doth Christ in the gospel say, Oh Father, I confess unto thee, that is, I laud and magnify thee, for that thou hast hidden these things from the wise, and hast opened them unto the little ones. Whereupon saith St. Augustine, that the gifts of learning and knowledge of sciences are no hindrance to Christ's school, but a furtherance thereunto, if they be well applied and used as they ought to be: but he that is proud, and feedeth himself with his own conceit and opinion of himself, and abuseth the gifts of God, applying his learning and knowledge to the satisfying and following of his own fantasy, is no right disciple of Christ, but falleth into error. When they said and affirmed themselves to be wise, they were made fools.
THE philosophers had every one a sect of his own, and had many gay sentences for the commendation of their opinions, and every man thought his own opinion to be best: but because they applied all to their own pride and glory, and not to the honour of God, nor humbled themselves as they ought to have done, but followed their own fantasy, they erred and fell out of the way, and were not of Christ's school: and all that have gone out of Christ's school, pride hath brought them out of it; and such as have not entered, have kept themselves out of it with pride likewise: therefore all such as [...]ill be scholars of Christ's school and discipli [...], must be humble and me [...]k, otherwise, when the [...] said and affirmed themselves to be wise, they were made fools.
[Page 11]HE that cannot learn this lesson of Peter, and humbly confess with him, that Christ is the Son of the living God, is no scholar of Christ's school, be he otherwise ever so well learned, ever so well read in other sciences. But now concerning the answer of Peter, Matthew here, in this place, saith he answered, "Thou art Christ the Son of the living God." St. Luke saith he answered, "Thou art the Christ of God." And St. Mark saith, he answered, "Thou art the Christ." But in all that is no variety: for to say, Christ the son of the living God, and to say, The Christ of God, and to say, The Christ, is in effect all one, and no diversity in it, for Christ alone is the whole; and he that confesseth thoroughly Christ, is thoroughly a christian man, and doth therein confess him to be the Lord and Saviour of the world. But now we must consider what Christ is; he was sent to be our Messiah, our Saviour: he was sent to be our bishop, and also our sacrifice: he was sent from the Trinity to be our Mediator between God and us, and to reconcile us to the favour of God the Father▪ he was the bishop that offered for our sins, and the sacrifice that was offered: and as he is our bishop, so he is our mean to pacify God for us, for that was the office of a bishop to sacrifice for the sins of the people, and to make intercession for the people; and as he was our sacrifice, so was he our reconciliation to God again.
BUT we must confess and believe him thoroughly I say: for as he was our bishop then, so it is he that still keepeth us in favour with God: and like as his sacrifice then made was sufficient to deliver us from our sins, and to bring us in favour with God; so to continue us in the same favour of God, he ordained a perpetual remembrance of himself, he ordained himself for a memory of himself at his last supper, when he instituted the sacrament of the altar, not for another redemption as though the world needed a new redemption from sin, but that we might thoroughly remember his most holy passion, be instituted the sacrament by his most holy word, saying, "This is my body," which word is sufficient to prove the sacrament, and maketh sufficiently for the substance thereof. And this daily sacrifice he instituted to be continued among christian men, not for need of another redemption o [...] satisfaction for the sins of the world, for that was sufficiently performed by the sacrifice of his body and blood done upon the cross; neither that he is now our bishop for need of any further sacrifice to be made for sin to continue us in the remembrance of his passion suffered for us, to make us strong in believing the fruit of his passion, to make us diligent in thanksgiving for the benefit of his passion, to establish our faith, and to make it strong in acknowledging the efficacy of his death and passion suffered for us. And this is the true understanding of the mass, not for another redemption, but that we may be strong in believing the benefits of Christ's death and blood-shedding for us upon the cross▪ And this it is that we must believe of Christ, and believe it thoroughly: and therefore by your patience, as Peter made his confession, so will I make confession; wherein, by your majesty's leave and sufferance, I will plainly declare what I think of the [...] of the church of England at this day▪ how I lik [...] it, and what I think of it.
WHERE I said of the mass, that it was a sacrifice ordained to make us the more strong in the faith and remembrance of Christ's passion, and for commending unto God the souls of such as [...]e dead in Christ, (for these two things are the special causes why the mass was instituted) the parliament very well ordained mass to be kept; and because we should be the more strong in the faith and devotion towards God, it was very well done of the parliament, for moving the people more and more to devotion, to ordain that the sacrament should be received in both kinds. Therefore I say, that the act of parliament for receiving the sacrament of the altar in both kinds, was well made.
I say also, that the proclamation which was made, That no man should irreverently speak of the sacrament, or otherwise speak of it than the scripture teacheth them, was well made. For this proclamation stoppeth the mouths of all such as will irreverently speak of the sacrament: for in scripture there is nothing to be found that maketh any thing against the sacrament, but all maketh with it. Wherefore if they were the children of obedience, they would not use any irreverent talk [Page 12] against the sacrament, nor blaspheme the holy sacrament. For no word of the scripture maketh any thing against it.
BUT here it may be said unto me, Why, sir, is this your opinion? It is good you speak plainly in this matter, without any colouring or covert speaking. The act for dissolving and suppressing of the chauntries seemeth to make against the mass, how like you that act? What say you of it? or what would you say of it, if you were alone? I will speak what I think of it, I will use no colourable or covert words, I will not use a devised speech for a time, and afterwards go from it again. If chauntries were abused by applying the mass for the satisfaction of sin, or to bring men to heaven, or to take away sin, or to make wicked men just, I like the act well, and they might well be dissolved, for the mass was not instituted for any such purpose: yet nevertheless for them that were in them, (I speak as in the cause of the poor) it were well done that they were provided of livings. The act doth graciously provide for them during their lives, and I doubt not but that your majesty, and the lords of your most honourable council, have taken order that they should be well looked unto, but yet how shall they be used at the hands of other officers, God knoweth, full hardly, I fear. But as for the chauntries themselves, if there were any such abuse in them concerning the mass, it is no matter if they be taken away.
KING Henry VIII. a noble and wise prince, not without great pain maintained the mass, and yet in his doctrine it was confessed that masses of Scala Coeli were not to be used, or allowed, because [...]hey did perver [...] the right use and institution of [...]. For when m [...]n add unto the mass an opinion of satisfaction, or [...] new redemption, then do they put it to another [...] than it was ordained for. I that allow mass so well, and I that allow praying for the dead, (as indeed [...]he dead are of christian charity to be prayed for) [...] can agree with the realm in that matter of putting down chauntries.
BUT yet you would say unto me, There be fewer masses, by putting away the chauntries. So there were when the abbeys we [...]e dissolved; so there be when we unite many churches in one. But this is no injury or prejudice to the mass; it consisteth not in the number, nor in the multitude, but in the thing itself: so that the decay of the mass by taking away the chauntries is answered by the abbeys. But yet I would have it considered for the persons that are in them. I speak of the poor men's livings.
I have now declar [...]d what I think of the act of parliament made for the receiving of the sacrament of the body and blood of our Saviour Christ in both kinds. You have my mind and opinion concerning a proclamation that came forth for the same act, and I have shewed my mind therein, even as plainly as I think, and I have ever been agreeable to this point; I have oftentimes reasoned in it, I have spoken and also written in it, both beyond the seas, and here; my books be abroad, which I cannot now unwrite again. I was ever of this opinion that it might be received in both kinds, and it was a constitutional provincial, scarce two hundred years ago, made by Peckham, then archbishop of Canterbury, that it should be received in both kinds, or at leastwise in the great churches, for in the smaller churches it was not thought to be so expedient. Thus I have ever thought of this matter, I have never been of other mind, nor have I changed my conscience, but I have obeyed and followed the order of the realm, and I pray you to obey orders as I have obeyed, that we may all be children of obedience.
NOW will I return to the text. When Simon had answered, Thou art Christ the [...]on of the living God: then Christ said unto him. Blessed art thou, Simon Barjona, for flesh and blood hath not opened that unto thee, but my Father which is in hea [...]en; and I say unto thee, that thou art Peter, and upon this rock will I build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. Blessed art thou (saith he) for flesh and blood hath not opened that unto thee. For otherwise in John, Andrew told of Christ, and said, I have found the Messiah▪ which is Christ. But that is not enough. He that shall confess Christ must have an inward teaching, and must be spiritually taught by the Father of heaven, for Andrew's confession was no [...] [Page 13] thing but a carnal confession, and such a one as any other might have made by natural reason: but the confession of Peter was above the reason of man: for Christ was there a very man, and Peter's eyes told him that he was a man and nothing else: bu [...] h [...] was inwardly taught by the Father of heaven, and had [...] secret knowledge given him from heaven, not by flesh and blood, that is to say by man's rea [...]son, but inwardly by the Father of heaven: and seeing this was the reason, it is a marvellous thing that reason should be used to deny faith, which is not within the precinct of carnal men, and such as use gross reason.
BUT Peter had another reason inwardly taught him, and because he understood his lesson, Christ gave him a new name: for Petra is a stone, a new name of a christian man, for upon this confession of thy faith, here I will build my church, that is, I will establish all those which I intend to gather unto thee, and the devils shall not prevail against it: for he that with a good heart and sure faith confesseth this, he is sure from all evil: this world nor Sa [...]an can do him no harm.
BUT now for a farther declaration, it is a marvellous thing, that upon these words the bishop of Rome should found his supremacy: for whether it be Super Petram, or Petrum, all is one matter, it maketh nothing at all for the purpose of any such supremacy. For otherwise (when Peter spake carnally to Christ, as in the same chapter a little following) Satan was his name, where Christ said, Get behind me, Satan: so that the name of Peter is no foundation for the supremacy, but as it is said in scripture, Ye are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, that is, by participation (for godly participation giveth names of things), he might be called the head of the church, as the head of the river is called the head, because he was the first that made this confession of Christ, which is not an argument for dignity, but for the quality that was in the man. For the first man is not evermore the best. The head-man of a quest, is not always the best man in the quest, but is chosen to be the head man for some other quality that is in him. Virtue may allure men, so that the inferior person in dignity may be the better in place, as the king sometimes chuseth a mean man to be of his council, of whom he hath a good opinion, yet in the king the king still. And in some case the king of England might send to Rome, and if the bishop of Rome were a man of such wisdom, virtue, and learning, that he were able in matters of controversy concerning religion, to set an unity to the church of England; the king might well enough send to him for his counsel and help, and yet should not in so doing give the bishop of Rome any superiority over the king. For if a king be sick, he will have the best physician; if he has war, he will have the best captain; and yet these are not the superiour [...], but the inferiours.
A schoolmaster is a subject, a physician is a subject, a captain is a subject, counsellors are subjects, yet do these order and direct the king. Wherefore, leaving the bishop of Rome, this I say to declare what opinion I am of. I do not now speak what I could say. I have spoken beyond the seas, I have written, my books be abroad. But this is not the place here, I say that this place maketh nothing for the bishop of Rome, but for Christ only, for other foundation can no man lay, than what is laid, which is Jesus Christ.
BUT now to go forth declaring my mind; in my time had come many alterations. First, a great alteration it was to renounce the bishop of Rome's authority, and I was one that stood in it. A great alteration it was, that abbeys were dissolved. A great alteration it was that images were pulled down: and to all these I condescended, and yet I have been accounted a maintainer of superstition, and have been called a master of the ceremonies, and of outward things; and I have been noted to take that religion which consisteth in outward things, as though he were a right christian that fulfilled the outward ceremonies, whereof I promised to declare my conscience, and so will I, and how I have esteemed ceremonies, and that I have never been of other opinion than I am concerning ceremonies, and my opinion I have gathered of Augustine and Jerome, ancient fathers and doctors of the church.
CEREMONIES serve to move men to serve God, and as long as they be used for that purpose, they may be well used in the church▪ but when man [Page 14] maketh himself servant to them and not to serve him, then be our ceremonies brought to an abuse If by overmuch familiarity of them, men abuse them, they do evil. For we must not serve creatures but God. We had monkery, nunnery, and friery, of a wonderous number, much variety of garments, variety of devices in dwelling, many sundry orders and fashions in moving the body. These things were first ordained to admonish them of their duty to God, to labour for the necessity of the poor, and to spare from their own bellies to the poor; and therefore was their fare ordained and prepared. And because they abused these things, and set them in an higher place than they ought to do, not taking admonition thereby the better to serve God, but esteeming perfection to consist in them, they were dissolved, and their garments were taken away.
BUT one thing king Henry would not take away, that was the vow of chastity. The vow of obedience he converted to himself, the vow of chastity he willeth still to remain with them.
WE had many images whereto pilgrimages were done, and many tombs that men were used to visit, by reason whereof they fell into a fancy of idolatry and superstition, above the things that they might have been taken for; and because that they had not the use they were ordained for, they were left. When men put the images in a higher place than they served for then were they taken clean away: give a child a gay book to learn upon, and then if he gaze upon the gorgeousness of his book, and learn not his lesson, according to the intent that that book was given for, the book is taken away from him. So the images, when men had them in higher place and estimation than they were first set up in the church for, then they might be taken away: and I never was of other mind, nor ever had other opinion of them, Divers things there be in the church which be in the liberty of the ruler to order as he seeth cause; and he that is ruler may either let them stand, or else may cause them to be taken away.
THERE be two manner of reformations. We have had of both sorts. There be things in the [...]hurch, which if they be abused, may not be taken away. As for baptism, if it be abused, there may not another thing be put in the place of it, but the thing must be reformed, and brought to the right use again. Also preaching, if it be abused, may not be taken away, but must be reformed, and brought to the right use: but there be other things used in the church, in which the rulers have liberty either to reform them or to take them away. And because it was an easier way to take them away, than to bring them to the right use that they were ordained for, they were all clean taken away, and so they might be. Yea, sir, will you say, but you have maintained and defended them, and have preached against such persons as despised them. It is truth, I have preached against the despisers of them, and have said, that images might be suffered and used in the church as lay-men's books, yet I never otherwise defended them, but to be used for such purpose as they were first set up in the church for; but now that men be waxed wanton, they are clean taken away, wherein our religion is no more touched, than when books were taken away for abusing them.
THERE was an order taken for books not to be used, wherein some might have said, the books are good, and I know how to use them, I may therefore use them well enough. I will therefore use them though they are forbidden: but if thou hast any charity, thou oughtest to be contented rather to have them clean taken away, than to declare thyself to have another opinion than thou oughtest to have.
AS touching ceremonies, I esteem them all as Paul esteemeth them things indifferent, where he saith, That the kingdom of God is not meat and drink, &c. So of ceremonies. Nevertheless we have time, place, and number, as a certain number of Psalms to be said at times▪ which may be done without superstition; but these things must serve us, and not we serve them. Yet if an order be set in them by such as have power, we must follow it, and we must obey the rulers that appoint such time, place, and number to be kept. You may not say, if the time will serve me, then I will come an hour after. No, sir, you must keep this time, and this hour, because it is so appointed by [Page 15] the rulers, not for the things, but for the order that is set. I have been ever of this opinion.
WE had palms and candles taken away, which things may indifferently have either of the two reformations abovesaid. When they were in place, they should have put men in remembrance of their duty and devotion towards God, but because they were abused, they were and might be taken away. But the religion of Christ is not in these exercises, and therefore in taking away of them the religion of Christ is nothing touched nor hindered. But men must in such things be conformable, not for the ceremony, but for obedience sake. St. Paul saith, that we should rebuke every brother that walketh inordinately. I have told you mine opinion, and my conscience telleth me that I have spoken plainly, that you know what I am, and that you may not be deceived in me, nor be slandered in me, nor make any further search to know my heart.
I like well the communion, because it provoketh men more and more to devotion. I like well the proclamation, because it stoppeth the mouths of all such as irreverently speak or rail against the sacrament. I like well the rest of the king's majesty's proceedings concerning the sacrament. I have now told you what I like. But shall I speak nothing of what I mislike? you will then say I speak not plainly. I will therefore shew you my conscience plainly.
I mislike those preachers who preach by the king's license, and those readers which by the king's permission and sufferance do read open lectures, do openly and blasphemously talk against the mass, and against the sacrament. And to whom may I liken such readers and preachers? I may liken them unto posts, for the proverb saith, That posts do bear truth in their letters, and lies in their mouths; and so do they, and to speak so against the sacrament, it is the most marvellous matter that ever I saw or heard of. I would wish therefore that there were a stay and an order in this behalf, and that there might be but one order and rule. And let no man out of his own head begin matters, nor go before the king, and such make themselves kings. Well, what mislike them else?
IT misliketh me, that priests, and men that vowed chastity, should openly marry, and avow it openly: which is a thing that since the beginning of the church hath not been seen at any time, that men that have been admitted to any ecclesiastical administration should marry. We read of marrie [...] priests, that is to say, of married men chosen to be priests and ministers in the church. And in Epiphanius we read, that some such for necessity were winked at. But that men being priests already should marry, was never yet seen in Christ's church from the beginning of the apostles time. I have written in it, and studied for it; and the very same places that are therein alledged to maintain the marriage of priests, being diligently read, shall plainly confound them that maintain your priests to marry, or at the farthest within two lines after.
THUS have I shewed my opinion in order, proceeding from the inferiours, and in order proceeding from the higher powers. And thus I have (as I trust) plainly declared myself, without any covering or counterfeiting. And I beseech your most excellent majesty to esteem and take me as I am, and not to be slandered in me; for I have told you the plain truth as it is, and I have opened my conscience unto you. I have not played the post with you, to carry truth in my letters, and lies in my mouth: for I would not for all the world make a lie in this place; but I have disclosed the plain truth as it lieth in my mind. And thus I commit your most excellent majesty, and all your most honourable counsellors, with the rest of the devou [...] audience here present, unto God. To whom be all honour, praise, and glory, wo [...]ld without end.
THUS having comprised the sum and chief purpose of his sermon, with other such matters above-mentioned, wherein may appear the double-faced doings of this bishop in matters of religion: now for the more fortification of that which hath been said, if any shall deny this aforesaid sermon, or any part thereof to be true, to confirm therefore the same, we will adjoin certain brief notes, collected as well out of the testimonies and depositions of his [Page 16] own friends and servants, and others which were sworn truly to declare their knowledge in this behalf, as also out of his own writings and works agreeing with the same.
The POPE'S Supremacy denied by Bishop GARDINER.
FIRST, [...] touching the confession and judgment of Stephen Gardiner, against the supremacy of the bishop of Rome, read in his book De vera Obedientia.
ITEM, The said bishop Gardiner in his sermons and preachings as where he expoundeth the place [Thou art Peter] nothing at all to make for the authority of the Romish bishop, marvelled how the pope could usurp so much to take up that place to build upon, when Christ had taken it up before to build his church.
ITEM, The confession of Peter was the confession of all the apostles, like as the blessing given to Peter pertained as well to all the apostles as to Peter.
ITEM, That the plac [...], Feed my sheep, was not special to Peter alone▪ but general to all the apostles. Also that the Greek church did never receive the said bishop of Rome for their universal head.
ITEM, That the church was built upon Christ's faith, and not upon Peter's.
AND though Peter was called the prince of the apostles, that was nothing else but like as it is in an inquest, where the foreman, o [...] headman is not so called, because he is best or chiefest of that company, but because he speaketh first.
The said bishop, in his book De vera Obedientia, did not only write against the pope's supremacy, but also did defend the same at Louvain. And moreover in his sermons did alledge and preach the same.
ITEM▪ For the space of fourteen years together, he preached against the pope's supremacy in divers sermons, and especially in one sermon before king Henry.
Ceremonies, Images, Chauntries, &c. discountenanced by Bishop GARDINER.
ITEM, For ceremonies and images which were abused, to be taken away by public authority, he did well allow it, as a child to have his book taken from him when he abuseth i [...], or delighteth only in the golden cover.
ITEM, The dissolving of monasteries and religious houses, he allowed and granted, that they were justly suppressed.
FRIARS he never liked in all his life.
MONKS he counted but belly-gods.
THE going about of St. Nicholas, St. Catherine, and St. Clement, he affirmeth to be children's toys.
THE taking away or transposing of Chauntry Obits; he referreth to the arbitrement of the politic rulers, granting that if they did dissolve them, it might well be done.
ITEM, He wisheth them to be committed to a better use, and that monasteries were justly taken away.
THE observing of days, hours, number, time, and place, if they be orderly and publicly commanded by the rulers, it is but to set the church in an outward and public order; but if a man inwardly and privately be addicted to the same, thinking his prayer otherwise not available, but by observing thereof, it is an error.
THE communion set out by king Edward he liked well.
THE book of common service he was content both to keep himself, and cause it to be kept by others.
FOR the homilies, he exhorted the people in his preaching to come to the church to hear them.
[Page 17]In sum, to all injunctions, statutes, and proclamations set forth by the king and superior [...], he yielded and granted.
NOW, reader, compare these writings, preachings, and sayings of this bishop in the days of king Henry and king Edward, with his doings in queen Mary's time, and thou shalt see how variable he was, how inconstant and contrary to himself, how perjured and false, and far differing from that which he was reported to be, in a certain English book set out in queen Mary's time, which saith that there were three only in England, whose conscience had never been stained in religion; of whom he falsely saith, the aforesaid bishop of Winchester was one.
ALTHOUGH bishop Gardiner in granting to these points of religion, (as just related) and other some again denying, could not therefore deserve the name and fame of a perfect christian; yet notwithstanding, if he had continued in his judgment still, and been constant in himself, he might have won more commendation both with God and men. But as soon as the time began to alter, he likewise altering with the time, was so far changed from what he seemed, that neither he agreed with other papists, nor yet with himself, as Dr. Ridley in certain treatises hath well noted of him: wherein, as in a glass, may be seen the manifest contrariety and repugnance in him, not only from the truth of God's blessed word, but also how the said bishop standing so much in singularity by himself, neither agreeth with other his fellow-writers of his own faction, nor yet fully accordeth with himself in certain cases of the sacrament, as the aforesaid Dr. Ridley, in examining his words and works, hath well declared.
HERE we see this stout prelate of Winchester, with all his prosperities, doings, and qualifications, as in a certain anatomy proportioned out, whereby we may easily judge what is to be esteemed of him by his fruits, that he neither was a true protestant, nor yet stedfast in the truth; false in king Henry's time, a dissembler in king Edward's time, double perjured, and a murderer in queen Mary's time, mutable and inconstant in all times.
TO describe and point out the instability of this bishop aforesaid, no more need be added; yet notwithstanding, seeing the matter is not long, it may not be amiss to annex a piece of Driander's letter, written to one Crispin, physician, in Oxford, sent from Antwerp, concerning the doings of this bishop of Winchester. The copy of which here follows.
BEFORE my departure from the city of Paris, I wrote to you by our friend the Englishman, &c.
NOW you shall be contented only with the narration of your bishop of Winchester, who (as appertained to the ambassador of so noble a prince) came to Louvain with a great bravery, and was there received at one Jeremy's house, and most honourably entertained, where the faculty of divines, for honour's sake, presented him with wine in the name of the whole university. But our famous doctors, and learned masters, for that they would more deeply search and understand the learning and excellency of the prelate, perused and scanned a certain oration made by him, and now extant, intitled, De vera Obedientia, in which oration he did deny the supremacy of the bishop of Rome, and preferred his lord's and king's authority, before the holy apostolic see, (as they term it) which being read and considered by them, they did not only repent that they had given him such honour, but also recanted that which they had done: and did not so much honour him before, but now they were as earnest and spiteful against him. Richard Lothomus, interpreter of terms, with the favourers of that fraternity, and other champions of the falling church, disputed with him concerning the pope's supremacy. This bishop stoutly defended his said oration. The divines on the contrary side, stiffly maintained their opinions, and divers times openly with exclamations, calling the said bishop an excommunicate person, and a schismatic, to no little reproach and infamy of the English nation. The bishop not long after minding to say mass in St. Peter's church, they did deny unto him, as to an excommunicate person, the ornaments and vestments meet for the same; wherewith he being highly offended, suddenly hasted his journey from thence. The next day after the dean [Page 18] made an elegant oration, wherein he openly disgraced and defamed him. You have heard now a true story, for our doctor was a beholder o [...] the whole tragedy, &c.
AND this now being sufficient for Gardiner's story, to leave him to his judge, and to let him go, we shall return and proceed (by God's leave) as the course of those doleful days shall lead us, to prosecute the residue of Christ's martyrs, as now in order followeth.
The History of Mr. JOHN PHILPOT, who was [...]xamined, condemned, and martyred for the De [...]ence of the Gospel of Christ.
THE troubles of Mr. Philpot have been partly related before, in the beginning of queen Mary's time, in prosecuting the disputation in the convocation-house. He came of a worshipful family, the son of a knight, born in Hampshire, brought up at New College in Oxford, where he studied the civil law about six or seven years, besides other liberal arts, especially languages, and particularly he wonderfully advanced in the Hebrew tongue. In wit he was pregnant and happy, of a singular courage, in spirit fervent, in religion zealous, and also well practised and exercised in the same (which is no small matter in a true divine), of nature plain and ap [...]rt, far from all flattery (as doth evidently appear in all his behaviour), farther from all hypocrisy and deceitful dissimulation. What his learning was, his own examinations, penned with his own hand, can declare.
FROM Oxford, desirous to see other countries, as occasion served thereunto, he went over into Italy and places thereabouts, where he coming upon a time from Venice to Padua, was in danger through a certain Franciscan friar accompanying him in his journey, who, coming to Padua, sought to accuse him of heresy. At length returning into England, as the time ministered more boldness unto him in the days of king Edward, he had divers conflicts with bishop Gardiner in the city of Winch [...]ster.
AFTER that, having an advowson by the said bishop, he was made there archdeacon of Winchester, under Dr. Poinet, who then succeeded Gardiner in that bishopric. Thus he continued during the time of king Edward, to the great profit of those parts thereabouts. When that pious king was taken away, and Mary his sister came in place, whose study was wholly bent to alter the state of religion in the woeful realm of England: first she caused a convocation of the prelates and learned men to be assembled for the accomplishment of her desire.
IN which convocation, Mr. Philpot being present, according to his room and degree, with a few others, sustained the cause of the gospel manfully against the contrary part (as has been already recited), for which cause, notwithstanding the liberty of the house promised before, he was called to account before bishop Gardiner the chancellor, then being his ordinary, by whom he was first examined, although that examination came not to our hands. From thence again he was removed to bishop Bonner, and other commissioners, with whom he had divers conflicts, as may appear by the following examinations.
The first Examination of Mr. JOHN PHILPOT, before the Queen's Commissioners, Mr. CHOLMLEY, Mr. ROPER, and Dr. STORY, and one of the Scribes of the Arches, at Newgate Sessions-Hall, October 2, 1555.
BEFORE I was called into an inner parlour, where the commissioners sat, Dr. Story came out into the hall where I was, to view me among others that were there; and passing by me, he said, Ha, Mr. Philpot; and in returning immediately again, staid against me, beholding me, and saying that I was well fed indeed.
If I be fat, and in good liking, Mr. Doctor, it is no marvel, since I have been stalled up in prison, these twelve months and a half, in a [Page 19] close corner. I am come to know your pleasure wherefore you have sent for me.
We hear thou art a suspected person, and of heretical opinions, therefore we have sent for thee.
I have been in prison thus long, only upon the occasion of disputation made in the convocation-house, and upon suspicion of setting forth the report thereof.
If thou wilt revoke the same, and become an honest man, thou shalt be set at liberty, and do right well, or else thou shalt be committed to the bishop of London. How sayest thou, wilt thou revoke it or no?
I have already answered in this behalf to mine ordinary.
If thou answerest thus when thou comest before us anon, thou shalt hear more of our minds; and with that he went into the parlour, and I within a little while after was called in.
Sir, what is your name?
My name is John Philpot. And so he intituled my name.
This man was archdeacon of Winchester, of Dr. Poin [...]t's presentment.
I was archdeacon indeed, but none of his presentment; but by virtue of a former advowson given by my lord chancellor that now is.
You may be assured that my lord chancellor would not make any such as he is archdeacon.
Come hither to me, Mr. Philpot. We hear say that you are out of the catholic church, and have been a disturber of the same; out of which whoso is, he cannot be the child of salvation. Wherefore if you will come into the same, you shall be received and find favour.
I am come before your worshipful masterships at your appointment, understanding that you are magistrates authorized by the queen's majesty, whom I own and will do my due obedience unto the uttermost. Wherefore I desire to know what cause I have offended in, for which I am now called before you. And if I cannot be charged with any particular matter done contrary to the laws of this realm, I desire your masterships, that I may have the benefit of a subject, and be delivered out of my wrongful imprisonment, where I have lain a year and a half, without any calling to answer before now, and my living taken from me without law.
Though we have no particular matter to charge you withal, yet we may by our commission and by the law, drive you to answer to the suspicion of a slander going on you: and besides this, we have statutes to charge you herein withal.
If I have [...]ended any statute, charge me therewithal, and I have incurred the penalty thereof, punish me accordingly. And because you are magistrates and executors of the queen's majesty's laws, by force whereof you do now sit, I desire that if I be found no notorious transgressor of any of them, I may not be burdened with more than I have done.
If the justice do suspect a felon, he may examine him upon suspicion thereof, and commit him to prison though there be no fault done.
I perceive whereabouts this man goeth: he is plain in Cardmaker's case, for he made the same allegations. But they will not serve thee; for thou art an heretic, and holdest against the blessed mass: how sayest thou to that?
I am no heretic.
I will prove thee an heretic. Whosoever hath held against the blessed mass is an heretic: but thou hast held against the same, therefore thou art an heretic.
That which I spake, and which you are able to charge me withal, was in the convocation, [Page 20] whereby, the queen's majesty's will and her whole council, liberty was given to ev [...]ry man of the house to utter his conscience, and to speak his mind freely of such questions in religion, as there were propounded by the prolocutor; for which now I thought not to be molested and imprisoned as I have been, neither now be compelled by you to answer for the same.
Thou shalt go to Lollards' Tower, and be handled there like an heretic as thou art, and answer to the same that thou there didst speak, and be judged by the bishop of London.
I have already been convented of this matter before the lord chancellor, mine ordinary, who this long time hath kept me in prison: therefore, if his lordship will take my life away, as he hath done my liberty and living, he may; which I think he cannot do of his conscience, and therefore hath let me lie thus long in prison: wherefore I am content to abide the end of him herein, that is mine ordinary, and do refuse the auditory of the bishop of London, because he is an incompetent judge for me, and not mine ordinary.
But, sir, thou spakest words in the convocation house, which is in the bishop of London's diocese, and therefore thou shalt be carried to Lollard's Tower, to be judged by him for the words thou spakest in his diocese against the blessed mass.
Sir, you kn [...]w it is against all equity, that I should be twice vexed for one cause, and that by such as by the law have nothing to do with me.
You cannot deny, but that you spoke against the mass in the convocation-house.
Dost thou deny that which thou spakest there, or no?
I cannot deny that I have spoken there, and if by the law you may put me to de [...]th for it, I am h [...]re ready to suffer whatsoever I shall be judged unto.
This man is s [...]d of vain-glory.
[...]lay the wise gentleman and be conformable, and be not stubborn in your opinions, neither cast yourself away. I would be glad to do you good.
I tell thee, if thou wouldst be a good catholic man, I would be thy friend, and spend my gown to do thee good; but I will be no friend to an heretic, as thou art, but will sp [...]d both my gown and my coat, but I will burn thee. How sayest thou to the sacrament of the altar?
Sir, I am not come now to dispute your mastership, and the time now serveth not thereto, but to answer to that I may be lawfully charged withal.
Well, since thou wilt not revoke that thou hast done, thou shalt be had into Lollard' [...] Tower.
Sir, since you will needs shew me this extremity, and charge me with my conscience, I do desire to see your commission, whether you have this authority so to do, and after view thereof, I shall (according to my duty) make you further answer, if you may by virtue thereof burthen me with my conscience.
Let him see the commission: is it here?
Shall we let every vile person see our commission?
Let him go from whence he c [...]me, and on Thursday he shall see our commission.
Let him lie in the Lollard's Tower; for I will sweep the King's Bench, and all other prisons also of these hereti [...]s; they shall not have that resort as they hav [...] had, to scatter their heresies.
You have power to transfer my body from place to place at your pleasure; but you have no power over my soul. And I mind not whither you c [...]mmit me, for I cannot be worse intreated than I am, kept all day in a close chamb [...]r; wherefore it is no marvel that my flesh is puffed up, wherewithal Mr. Doctor is offended.
Marshal, take him home with you again, and see that you bring him again on Thursday, and then we shall rid our fingers of him, and afterwards of your other heretics.
God hath appointed a day shortly to come, in which he will judge us with righteousness, howsoever you judge of us now.
Be content to be ruled by Mr. Doctor, and shew yourself a catholic man.
Sir, if I should speak otherwise than my conscience is, I should but dissemble with you [...] and why be you so earnest to have me shew m [...]self a dissembler both to God and you, which I cannot do?
We do not require you to dissemble with us to be a catholic man.
If I do stand in any thing against that, wherein any man is able to burthen me with one jot of the scripture, I shall be content to be counted no catholic man, or an heretic, as you please.
Have we scripture, scripture? and with that he rose up, saying, Who will be judge, I pray you? This man is like his fellow Woodman, which the other day would have nothing else but scripture. And this is the beginning of the tragedy.
The second Examination of Mr. PHILPOT, before the Queen's Commissioners, Mr. CHOLMLEY, Mr. ROPER, Dr. STORY, Dr. COOK, and the Scribe, Oct. 24, 1555, at Newgate Sessions-Hall.
AT my coming, a man of Aldgate, of mine acqu [...]i [...]tance, said unto me, God have mercy on you, for you ar [...] already condemned in this world; for Dr. Story said, that my lord chancellor had commanded to do you away. After a little conversation had between them, Mr. Cholmley called me unto him, saying.
Mr. Philpot, shew yourself a wise man, and he not stubborn in your own opinion, but he conformable to the queen's proceedings, and live, and you shall be well assured of great favour and reputation.
I shall do as it becometh a christian man to do.
This man is the rankest heretic that hath been in all my lord chancellor's diocese, and hath done more hurt than any man else there: and therefore his pleasure is, that he should have the law to proceed against him, and I have spoken with my lord herein, and he willeth him to be committed to the bishop of London, and there to recant or else burn. He howled and wep [...] in the convocation-house, and [...] such ad [...] as never man did, [...] hereti [...]s [...] when they know not how to answer. He shall go after his fellows. How sayest thou, wilt thou recant?
I know nothing I have done that I ought to recant.
Well, then I pray you let us commit him to the Lollard's Tower, there to remain until he be further examined before the bishop of London; for he is too fine fed in the King's-Bench, and he hath too much favour there; for his keeper said yesterday, that he was the finest fellow, and one of the best learned in England; and with this he rose and went his way.
This man hath most stoutly maintained heresies since the queen's coming in, above any that I have heard of; therefore it is most meet that he should be adjudged by the bishop of London, for the heresies he hath maintained.
I have maintained no heresies.
No, have you not? Did you not openly speak aghinst the sacrament of the altar in the convocation-house? Call you that no heresy? wilt thou recant that or not?
It was the queen's majesty's pleasure that we should reason thereof, not by my seeking, but by other men's procuring, in the hearing of the council.
Did the queen give you leave to be an heretic? you may be sure her grace will not do so. Well, we will not dispute that matter with you; [Page 22] my lord of London shall proceed by inquisition upon thee, and if thou wilt not recant, thou shalt be burned.
My lord of London is not mine ordinary in this behalf, and I have already answered unto mine ordinary in this matter▪ and therefore, (as I have said before) you shall do me great wrong, to vex me twice for one matter, since I have sustained this long imprisonment, besides the loss of my living.
You are a very unmeet man to be an archdeacon.
I know I was as meet a man as he that hath it now.
A meet man▪ quoth he? He troubled Mr. Roper and the whole country.
There never was poor archdeacon so handled at your hands as I am, and that without any just cause you be able to lay unto me.
Thou art no archdeacon.
I am archdeacon still, although another be in possession of my living; for I was never deprived by any law.
No, sir, that needeth not: for a notorious heretic should have no ordinary proceeding about his deprivation; but the bishop may, upon knowledge thereof, proceed to depri [...]ation.
Mr. Doctor, you know that the common law is otherwise: and besides this, the statutes of this realm be otherwise, which give this benefit to every person, though he be an heretic, to enjoy his living until he be put to death for the same.
No, there thou art deceived.
Upon the living I mind not. But the unjust dealing grieveth me, that I should be thus troubled for my conscience, contrary to all law.
Why, will not you agree that the queen's majesty may cause you to be examined of your faith?
Ask you Mr. Doctor Cook, and he will tell you that the temporal magistrates have [...] to do with faith, for d [...]terma [...]ion thereof. And St. Ambrose saith, that the things of God are not subject to the power and authority of princes.
No. May not the temporal power commit you to be examined of your faith to the bishop?
Yea, sir. I deny not that; but you will grant that the same may examine any of their own authority.
Let him be had away.
Your mastership promised me the last time I was before you, I should see your commission by what authority you do call me, and whether I by the same be bound to answer to so much as you demand.
Let him see the commission.
THE Scribe then exhibited it to Mr. Roper, and was about to open the same.
Lo, what will ye do? he shall not see it.
Then you do me wrong, to call me and vex me, not shewing your authority in this behalf.
If we do you wrong, complain of us; and in the mean time thou shalt lie in the Lollard's Tower.
Sir, I am a poor gentleman; therefore I trust to your gentleness that you will not commit me to so vile and straight a place, being found no heinous trespasser.
Thou art no gentleman.
Yes, that I am.
An heretic is no gentleman: for he is a gentleman that hath gentle conditions.
The offence cannot take away the state of a gentleman as long as he liveth, although he were a trai [...]or: but I mean not to boast of my gentlemanship, but will put it under my foot, since you do no more esteem it.
What, will you suffer this heretic to prate all this day?
He saith he is a gentleman.
A gentleman, said he? he is a vile heretic knave: for an heretic is no gentleman Let the keeper of the Lollard's Tower come in, and have him away.
Here sir.
Take this man with you to the Lollards' Tower, or else to the bishop's coal-house.
Sir, if I were a dog, you could not appoint me a worse nor more vile place: but I must be content with whatsoever injury you do offer me. God give you a more merciful heart; you are very cruel upon one that hath never offended you. I pray you, Mr. Cholmley, shew me some friendship that I may not be carried to so vile a place. And he then called me aside, and said:
I neither understand their doings nor their laws; I cannot tell what they mean, I would I could do you good.
I am content to go whither you will have me. There never was a man more cruelly handled than I am at your hands, that without just cause known should thus be treated.
Shall we suffer this heretic thus to reprove us? Have him hence.
God forgive you, and give you more m [...]rciful hearts, and shew you more mercy in the time of need: "Do quickly that you have in hand."
Do you not hear how he maketh [...] like Judas?
That is after your own understanding
AFTER this, I with four others were b [...]ought to the keeper's house in P [...]ter-noster-row, where we supped, and after supper I was called up to a chamber by the archdeacon of London's servant, and that in his master's name, who offered me a bed for that night. To whom I gave thanks▪ saying, That it would be a grief to me to lie one night well, and the next night worse: wherefore I will begin (said I) as I am like to continue to take such part as my fellows do. And with that we were brought through Pater-noster-row to my lord of London's coal-house; unto which is joined a little blind house, with a great pair of stocks, appointed both for hand and foot: but thanks be to God we have not played on those organs yet, although some before us have tried them; and there we found a minister of Essex, a married priest, a man of godly zeal, with one other poor man. And this minister at my coming desired to speak with me, and did greatly lament his own infirmity, for that through extremity of imprisonment he was constrained by writing to yield to the bishop of London: whereupon he was once set at liberty, and afterwards felt such a hell in his conscience, that he could scarce refrain from destroying himself, and never could be at quiet until he went to the bishop's register, desiring to see his bill again; which as soon as he had received, he tore it in pieces, and after he was as joyful as any man might be▪ Of which when my lord of London understood, he sent for him, and fell upon him like a lion, and like a manly bishop buffeted him well, so that he made his face black and blue, and pluckt away a great piece of his beard: but now, thanks be to God, he is as joyful under the cross as any of us, and very sorry for his former infirmity. I write this, because I would all men to take heed how they do contrary to their conscience; which is, to fall into the pains of hell.
The Manner of my being called first before the Bishop of London, the second Night of mine imprisonment in his Coal-house.
THE bishop sent Mr. Johnson his register to me with a mess of meat▪ and a good pot of drink and bread, saying, That my lord had no knowledge before of my being here, for which he was sorry: therefore he had sent me and my fellows [Page 24] that meat, not knowing whether I could receive the same.
I thanked God for my lord's charity, that it pleased him to remember poor prisoners, desiring Almighty God to increase the same in him, and in all others; and therefore I would not refuse his beneficence, and therewith took the same unto my brethren, praising God for his providence towards his afflicted flock, that he stirred our adversaries up to help the same in their necessity.
My lord would know the cause of your being sent hither (for he knoweth nothing thereof), and wondereth that he should be troubled with prisoners that are not of his own diocese.
I declared unto him the whole cause. After which he said, My lord's will was, that I should have any friendship I would desire, and so departed.
WITHIN a while after, one of my lord's gentlemen came for me; and I was brought into his presence, where he sat at a table with three or four of his chaplains waiting upon him, and his register.
Mr. Philpot, you are welcome; give me your hand.
WITH that, because he so gently put forth his hand▪ I to render courtesy for courtesy, kissed my hand and gave him the same.
I am right sorry for your trouble, and I promise you that till within these two hours, I knew not of your being here. I pray you tell me what was the cause of your being sent hither: for I promise you I know nothing thereof as yet, neither would I you should think that I am the cause thereof: and I marvel that other men will trouble me with their matters; but I must be obedient to my betters, and I fear men speak otherwise of me than I deserve.
I shewed him the sum of the ma [...]ter; that it was for the disputation in the convocation house, for which I was against all right molested.
I marvel that you should be troubled for that, if there was none other cause but this. But peradventure you have maintained the same since, and some of your friends of late have asked, whether you do stand to the same, and you have said, yea; and for this you might be committed to prison.
If it shall please your lordship I am burdened no otherwise than I have told you, by the commissioners who sent me hither, because I would not recant the same.
A man may speak in the parliament [...]house, though it be a place of free speech, so as he may be imprisoned for it, as in case he speak words of high-treason against the king or queen: and so it might be that you spake otherwise than it became you of the church of Christ.
I spake nothing which was out of the articles which were called in question, and agreed upon to be disputed by the whole house, and by permission of the queen and council.
Why, may we dispute of our faith?
That we may.
Nay, I think not, by the law.
Indeed by the civil law I know it is not lawful, but by God's law we may reason thereof. For St. Peter saith, "Be ye ready to render account unto all men of the hope which is in you, that demand of you the same."
Indeed St. Peter saith so. Why, then I ask of you what your judgment is of the sacrament of the altar.
My lord, St. Ambrose saith, that the disputation of faith ought to be in the congregation, in the hearing of the people, and that I am not bound to render account thereof to every man privately, unless it be to edify. But now I cannot shew you my mind but I must run upon the pikes in danger of my life for it. Wherefore as the said doctor said unto Val [...]ntinian the emperor▪ so s [...]y I to your lordship; Take away the law▪ and I shall reason with you. And yet if I come in op [...] judgment, where I am bound by the law to answer. I [Page 25] trust I shall utter my conscience as freely as any that hath come before you.
I perceive you are learned, I would have such as you be about me. But you must come and be of the church, for there is but one church.
God forbid I should be out of the church, I am sure I am within the same: for I know as I am taught by the scripture, that there is but one catholic church, one dove, one spouse, one beloved congregation, out of which there is no salvation.
How chanceth it then, that you go out of the same, and walk not with us.
My lord, I am sure I am within the bounds of the church whereupon she is built, which is the word of God.
What age are you of?
I am four and forty.
You are not now of the same faith your godfather and godmothers promised for you, in which you were baptized.
Yes, I thank God I am: for I was baptized into the faith of Christ which I now hold.
How can that be? there is but one faith.
I am assured of that by St. Paul, saying, "'That there is but one God, one faith, and one baptism," of which I am.
You were twenty years ago of another faith than you are now.
Indeed, my lord, to tell you plain, I was then of no faith, a neuter, a wicked liver, neither hot nor cold.
Why, do you not think that we have now the true faith?
I desire your lordship to hold me excused for answering at this time▪ [...] am sure that God's word was thoroughly with the primitive church, and all the ancient fathers do agree with this faith I am of.
Well, I promise you I mean you no more hurt than to mine own person: I will not therefore burthen you with your conscience now; I marvel that you are so merry in prison as you are, singing and rejoicing, as the prophet saith, Rejoicing in your naughtiness. Methinks you do not well herein; you should rather lament and be sorry.
My lord, the mirth that we make is but in singing certain psalms, according as we are commanded by St. Paul, willing us to be merry in the Lord, singing together in hymns and psalms: and I trust your lordship cannot be displeased with that.
We may say unto you as Christ said in the gospel, "We have piped unto you, and ye have not danced—
HERE my lord stumbled, and could not bring forth the text, and required his chaplains to help, and to put him in remembrance of the text better; but they were mum: and I recited out the text unto him, which made nothing to his purpose unless he would have us to mourn, because they, if they laugh, sing still sorrowful things unto us, threatening faggots and fire.
We are, my lord, in a dark comfortless place, and therefore it behoveth us to be merry, lest, as Solomon saith, sorrowfulness eat up our heart. Therefore I trust your lordship will not be angry for our singing of psalms, since St. Paul saith, "If any man be of an upright mind, let him sing." And we therefore, to testify that we are of an upright mind to God, (though we be in misery) do sing.
I will trouble you no f [...]rther as now. If I can do you any good, I shall be glad to do it for you. God be with you, good Mr. Philpot, and give you a good night. Have him to the cellar, and let him drink a cup of wine.
THUS I departed, and by my lord's register I was brought to his cellar door, where I drank a good cup of wine. And my lord's chaplain, Mr. Cousin, [Page 26] followed me, making acquaintance, saying, that I was welcome, and wished that I would not be singular.
I am well taught the contrary by Solomon, saying, Woe be to him that is alone. After that I was carried to my lord's coal-house again, where I with my six companions do house together in straw as chearfully (we thank God) as others do in their beds of down. Thus for the third fit.
The fourth Examination of Mr. PHILPOT, in the Archdeacon of London's House, in the Month of October, before the Bishops of London, Bath, Worcester, and Gloucester.
Mr. Philpot, it hath pleased my lords to take pains here to-day, to dine with my poor archdeacon, and in the dinner-time it chanced us to have communication of you, and you were pitied here by many that knew you at New-College, in Oxford: And I also do pity your case, because you seem unto me by the talk I had with you the other night, to be learned: and therefore now I have sent for you to come before them, that it might not be said hereafter, that I had so many learned bishops at my house, and yet would not vouchsafe them to talk with you, and at my request (I thank them) they are content so to do. Now therefore utter your mind freely, and you shall with all favour be satisfied. I am sorry to see you lie in so evil a case as you do, and would fain you should do better, as you may if you please.
My lords here have not sent for you to fawn upon you, but for charity sake to exhort you to come into the right catholic way of the church.
Before he beginneth to speak, it is best that he call upon God for grace, and to pray that it might please God to open his heart, that he may conceive the truth.
With that I fell down upon my knees before them, and made my prayer on this manner:
"ALMIGHTY God, which art the giver of all wisdom and understanding, I beseech thee of thine infinite goodness and mercy in Jesus Christ to give me (most vile sinner in thy sight) the spirit of wisdom to speak and make answer in thy cause, that it may be to the satisfaction of the hearers before whom I stand, and also to my better understanding if I be deceived in any thing."
Nay, my lord of Worcester, you did not well to exhort him to make any prayer. For this is the thing they have a singular pride in, that they can often make their vain prayers, in which they glory much. For in this point they are much like to certain arrant heretics, of whom Pl [...]ny maketh mention, that did daily sing praise unto God before dawning of the day.
My lord, God make me and all you here present such heretics as those were that sung those morning hymns: for they were right christians, with whom the tyrants of the world were offended with their well doing.
Proceed to what he hath to say. He hath prayed I cannot tell for what.
Say on, Mr. Philpot; my lords will gladly hear you.
I have, my lords, been these twelve months and a half in prison without any just cause that I know, and my living taken from me without any lawful order, and now I am brought (contrary to right) from my own territory and ordinary, into another man's jurisdiction, I know not why.— Wherefore, if your lordships can burden me with any evil done, I stand here before you to purge me of the same. And if no such thing may be justly laid to my charge, I desire to be released of this wrongful trouble.
There is none here that goeth about to trou [...]le you, but to do you good, if we can. For I promise you, you were sent hither to me without my knowledge. Therefore speak your conscience without any fear.
My lord, I have learned to answer in matters of religion in the congregation▪ being thereto lawfully called: but now I am [...] called, neither is here a just congregation where [...]ought to answer.
Indeed this man told me the last time I [Page 27] spake with him, that he was a lawyer, and would not utter his conscience in matters of saith, unless it were in the hearing of the people, where he might speak to vain-glory.
My lord, I said that I was not a lawyer, neither do I arrogate to myself that name, although I was once a novice in the same, where I learned something for mine own defence, when I am called in judgment to answer to any cause, and whereby I have been taught not to put myself further in danger than I need, and so far am I a lawyer, and no farther.
If you will not answer to my lord's request, you seem to be a wilful man in your opinion.
My lord of London is not mine ordinary before whom I am bound to answer in this behalf, as Mr. D. Cole (who is a lawyer) can well tell you by the law. And I have not offended my lord of London wherefore he should call me.
Yes, I have to lay to your charge, that you have offended in my diocese by speaking against the blessed sacrament of the altar: and therefore I may call you, and proceed against you to punish you by the law.
I have not offended in your diocese. For that which I spake of the sacrament was in Paul's church in the convocation house, which (as I understand) is a peculiar jurisdiction belonging to the dean thereof, and therefore is counted of your lordship's diocese, but not in your diocese.
Is not Paul's church in my diocese? Well, I think it costeth me a good deal of money in the year, the leading thereof.
That may be, and yet be exempted from your lordship's jurisdiction. And if I had so offended in your diocese, yet I ought by the law to be sent to my ordinary, if I require it, and not to be punished by you that are not my ordinary. And already (as I have told you) I have been convented of mine ordinary for this cause, which you go about to inquire of me.
How say you, Mr. D. Cole, may not I proceed against him by the law, for what he hath done in my diocese?
I think Mr. Philpot needeth not to stand so mu [...]h with your lordship in that point as he doth, since you seek not to hinder him, but to further him: therefore I think it best that he go to the matter that is laid against him of the convocation, and make no longer delay.
I would willingly shew my mind of the matter, but I am sure it will be laid against me to my prejudice when I come to judgment.
Why then you may speak by protestation.
But what shall my protestation avail in a cause of heresy (as you call it), if I speak otherwise than you will have me; since that which I speak in the convocation-house, being a place privileged, cannot now help me?
But, Mr. D. Cole, may not I proceed against him for that offence he hath done in my diocese?
You may call him before you, my lord, if he be found in your diocese.
But I have by force been brought out of my own diocese to my lord's, and required to be judged by my own ordinary: and therefore I know Mr. Doctor will not say of his own knowledge, that your lordship ought to proceed against me. And here Mr. Doctor would say nothing.
Do you not think to find before my lord here, as good equity in your cause, as before your own ordinary?
I cannot blame my lord of London's equity, with whom (I thank his lordship) I have sound more gentleness since I came, than of mine own ordinary (I speak it for no flattery) this year and half before, who never would call me to answer, as his lordship hath done now twice. No man is forbid to use his own right due unto him; but I ought not to be forestalled of my right, and therefore I challange the same for divers other considerations.
Now you cannot say hereafter but that you have been gently communed with by my lords here, and yet you will be wilful and obstinate in your er [...]ror, and in your own opinions, and will not shew any cause why you will not come into the unity of the church with us.
My lords, in that I do not declare my mind according to your expectations, is (as I have said) because I cannot speak without present danger of my life. But rather than you should report me by this either obstinate or self-willed without any just ground whereupon I stand; I will open unto you somewhat of my mind, or rather the whole, desiring your lordships, which seem to be pillars of the church of England, to satisfy me in the same: and I will refer all other causes in which I dissent from you, unto one or two articles, or rather to one, which includeth them both; in which if I can by the scriptures be satisfied at your mouths, I shall as willingly agree to you as to any other in all points.
These heretics come always with their ifs, as this man doth now, saying, if he can be satisfied by the scriptures: so that he will always have this exception, I am not satisfied, although the matter be ever so plainly proved against him. But will you promise to be satisfied, if my lords take some pains about you?
I say, my lord, I will be satisfied by the scriptures in that wherein I stand. And I protest here before God and his eternal Son Jesus Christ my Saviour, and the Holy Ghost, and his angels, and you here present who be judges of what I speak, that I do not stand in any opinion of wilfulness or singularity, but only upon my conscience, certainly informed by God's word, from which I dare not go for fear of damnation: and this is the cause of mine earnestness in this behalf.
I will trouble my lords no longer, seeing that you will not declare your mind.
I am about so to do, if it please your lordships to hear me speak.
Give me leave, my lord, to hear what he hath to say.
My lords, it is not unknown to you that the chief cause why you do count me, and such as I am, for heretics, is because we be not at unity with your church. You say, that whosoever is out of your church is damned: and we think verily on the other side, that if we depart from the true church, whereon we are grafted in God's word, we should stand in the state of damnation. Wherefore if your lordships▪ can bring any better authority for your ch [...]rch than we can do for ours, and prove by the scriptures that the church of Rome now (of which you are) is the true catholic church, as in all sermons, writings and arguments you do uphold, and that all christian persons ought to be ruled by the same under pain of damnation, (as you say) and that the same church (as you pretend) hath authority to interpret the scriptures as it seemeth her good, and that all men are bound to follow such interpretations only; I shall be as conformable to the same church as you may desire me, which otherwise I dare not: therefore I require you for God's sake to satisfy me in this.
If you stand upon this point only, you may soon be satisfied if you please.
It is the thing that I require, and to this I will stand, and refer all other controversies wherein I now stand against you, and will put my hand thereto, if you mistrust my word.
I pray you, Mr. Philpot, what faith were you of twenty years ago? This man will have every year a new faith.
My lord, to tell you plain, I think I was of no faith; for I was then a wicked liver, and knew not God then as I ought to do, God forgive me.
No faith? that is not so. I am sure you were of some faith.
My lord, I have declared to you on my conscience what I then was, and judge of myself. And what is that to the purpose of the thing I desire to be satisfied of you?
Mr. Doctor Cole, I pray you [...] your mind to him.
What will you say, if I can prove it was decreed by an universal council in Athanasius's time, that all the christian church should follow the determination of the church of Rome? but I do not now remember where.
If you, Mr. Doctor, can shew me the same granted to the see of Rome by the authority of the scripture, I will gladly hearken thereto. But I think you be not able to shew any such thing: for Athanasius was president of the Nicene council, and there was no such thing decreed I am sure.
Though it were not then, it might be at another time.
I desire to see the proof thereof.
AND upon this Mr. Harpsfield, the chancellor to the bishop of London, brought in a book of Ireneus, with certain leaves turned in, and laid it before the bishops to help them in their perplex [...]y, if it might be: which after the bishops of Bath and Gloucester had read together, the bishop of Gloucester gave me the book, and said:
TAKE the book, Mr. Philpot, and look upon that place, and there you may see how the church of Rome is to be followed of all men.
I took the book and read the place, which after I had read, I said it made nothing against me, but against A [...]ians and other heretics, against whom Ireneus wrote, proving that they were not to be credited, because they did teach and follow after strange doctrine in Europe, and that the chief church of the same, was founded by Peter and Paul, and had to this time continued by faithful succession of the faithful bishops in preaching the true gospel, as they had received of the apostles, and nothing like to these late sprung hereties, &c. Whereby he concludeth against them, that they were not to be heard, neither to be credited, which thing, if you, my lords▪ be able to prove of the church of Rome, then had you as good authority against me in my cause now, as Ireneus had against those heretics. But the church of Rome hath swerved from the truth and simplicity of the gospel which it main [...]tained in Ireneus's time, and was uncorrupted from that which it is now, wherefore your lordships cannot justly apply the authority of Iren [...]us to the church of Rome now, which is so manifestly corrupted from the primitive church.
So will you say st [...]ll [...]t maketh nothing to the purpose, whatsoever authority we bring, and will never be satisfied.
My lord, when I do by just reason prove, that the authorities which are brought against me do not make to the purpose, as I have already proved, I trust you will receive mine answer.
It is to be proved most manifestly by all ancient writers, that the see of Rome hath always followed the truth, and never was deceived, until of late certain heretics had defaced the same.
Let that be proved, and I have done.
Nay, you are of such arrogancy, singularity, and vain-glory, that you will never see it, be it ever so well proved.
Ha, my lords, is it now time, think you, for me to follow singularity or vain-glory, since it is now upon danger of my life and death, not only presently, but also before God to come? And I know if I die not in the true faith, I shall die everlastingly: and again I know, if I do not as you would have me, you will kill me, and a great many more: yet I had rather to perish at your hands, than to perish eternally. And at this time I have lost all my commodities of this world, and lay in a coal-house, where a man would not lay a dog, w [...]h which I am well contented.
Where are you able to prove that the church of Rome hath erred at any time? and by what history? Certain it is by Eusebius, that the church was established at Rome by Peter and Paul, and that Peter was bishop twenty five years at Rome.
I know well that Eusebius so writeth: but if we compare that which St. Paul writeth to the Galatians, chap. i. the contrary will manifestly appear, that he was not half so long there. He lived not past thirty-five years after he was called to [Page 30] be an apostle: and St. Paul maketh mention of hi [...] abi [...]ing at Jerusalem after Christ's death more than thirteen years.
What did Peter write to the Galatians?
No, I say Paul maketh me [...]ion of Peter, writing to the Galatians, and of his a [...]iding at Jerusalem. And farther, I am able to prove, both by Eusebius and other historiograp [...]ers, that the church of Rome hath manifestly erred, and at this present doth err, because she agreeth not with that which they wrote. The primitive church did use according to the gospel, and there needeth none other proof, but to compare the one with the other.
I may compare this man to a certain man I read of, who fell into a desperation, and went into a wood to hang himself, and when he came there, he went viewing of every tree, and could find none on which he might vouchsafe to hang himself. But I will not apply this as I might. I pray you (Mr. Doctor) go forth with him.
My lord, there be on every side of me, some who are better able to answer him, and I love not to fall into disputation: for we now-a-days sustain shame and obloquy thereby of the people. I had rather shew my mind in writing.
And I had rather you should do so than otherwise, for then a man may better judge of your words, than by argument, and I beseech you so to do. But if I were a rich man. I durst wager an hundred pounds that you shall not be able to shew that you have said, to be decreed by a general council in Athanasius's time. For this I am sure of, that it was concluded by a general council in Africa, many years after, that none of Africa (under pain of excommunication) should appeal to Rome: which decree I am sure they would not have made, if by the scriptures and by an universal council it had been decreed, that all men should abide and follow the determination of the church of Rome.
But I can shew that they revoked that [...] ▪
So you say, Mr. Doctor, but I pray you shew me where. I have hitherto heard nothing from you to my satisfaction, but bare words without any authority.
What▪ I pray you, ought we to dispute with you of our faith? Justinian in the law hath a title▪ De fide Catholica, to the contrary.
I am certa [...]n the civil law hath such a constitution: but our faith must not depend upon the civil law. For as St. Ambrose saith, Not the law, but the gospel hath gathered the church together.
Mr. Philpot, you have the spirit of prid [...] wherewith you be [...], which will not let you yield to the truth: leave it off for shame.
Sir, I am sure I have the spirit of faith, by which I speak at this present▪ neither am I ashamed to stand to my faith.
What? do you think yourself better learned than so many noble learned men as be here?
Elias alone had the truth, when there were four hundred priests against him.
Oh, you would be counted now for Elias. And yet I tell thee he was deceived: for he thought there had been none good but himself; and yet he was deceived, for there were seven thousand besides him.
Yea, but he was not deceived in doctrine▪ as the other four hundred were.
By my faith you are greatly to blame, that you can [...]ot be content to be of the church which ever hath been of that faithful antiquity.
My lord, I know Rome, and have been there, where I saw your lordship.
Indeed I did fly hence thither, but I remember not that I saw you there. But I am sorry that you have been there; for the wickedness which you have seen there peradventure causeth you to do as you do.
No, my lord, I do not as I do for that cause: for I am taught otherwise by the gospel, not altogether to refuse the minister for his evil living, so that he bring sound doctrine out of God's book.
Do you think the universal church may be deceived?
St. Paul to the Thessa [...]oni [...]ns prophesieth tha [...] there should come an universal dep [...]rting from the faith in the latt [...]r days before the coming of Christ, saying, that "Christ shall not come, till there come a departing first."
Yea, I pray you, how take you the departing there in St. Paul? it is not meant of faith, but of the departing from the empire: for it is in Greek, APOSTASIA.
Marry indeed you, Mr. Doctor, put me in good remembrance of the meaning of St. Paul in that place, for APOSTASIA is properly a departing from the faith, and thereof cometh Apostata, which properly sign fieth one that departeth from his faith: and St. Paul in the same place after speaketh of the decay of the empire.
APOSTASIA doth not only signify a departing from the faith, but also from the empire, as I am able to shew.
I never read it so taken, and when you shall be able to shew it (as you say in words), I will believe it, and not before.
I am sorry that you should be against the christian world.
The world commonly, and such as be called christians, (for the multitude) have hated the truth, and been enemies of the same.
Why, Mr. Philpot, do you think that the universal church hath erred, and you only be in the truth?
The church that you are of was never [...]niversal, for two parts of the world, which are Asia and Africa, never consent [...]d to the supremacy of the bishop of Rome, as at this day they do not, neither do they follow his decrees.
Yes, in the Florentine council they did agree.
It was said so by false report, after they of Asia and Africa were gone home: but it was not so indeed, as the sequel of them all hitherto doth prove the contrary.
I pray you by whom will you be judged in matters of controversy which happen daily?
By the word of God. For Christ saith in St. John▪ "The word that he spake, shall be judge in the latter day."
What if you take the word one way, and I another way: who shall be judge then?
The primitive church.
I know you mean the doctors that wrote thereof.
I mean verily so.
What if you take the doctors in one sense, and I in another: who will be judge then?
Then let that be taken which is most agreeable to God's word.
My lords, why do you trouble yourselves to answer him in this matter? It is not the thing which is laid to his charge, but his error of the sacrament, and he to shift himself of that brought in another matter.
This is the matter, Mr. Cole▪ to which I have referred all other questions, and desire to be satisfied.
It is a wonder to see how he standeth with a few against a great multitude.
We have almost as many as you. For [Page 32] we have Asia, Africa, Germany, Denmark, and a great part of France, and daily the number of the gospel doth increase: so that I am credibly informed, that for this religion in which I stand▪ and for which I am like to die, a great multitude daily come out of France through persecution▪ that the cities of Germany be scarce able to rec [...]ive them: and therefore your lordship may be sure, the word of God will one day take place, do what you can to the contrary.
They were well occupied to bring you such news, and you have been well kept to have such resort unto you. Thou art the arrogant [...]st fellow, and stoutest fond fellow, that ever I knew.
I pray your lordship to bear with my hasty speech: it is part of my corrupt nature to speak somewhat hastily: but for all that▪ I mean with humility to do my duty to your lordship.
Mr. Philpot, my lords will trouble you no farther at this time, but you shall go from whence you came, and have such favour as in the mean while I can shew you: and upon Wednesday next you shall be called upon again to be heard what you can say for the maintenance of your error.
My lord, my desire is to be satisfied of you in that I required; and your lordship shall find me as I have said.
We wish you as well as ourselves.
I think the same (my lords), but fear you are deceived, and have a zeal of yourselves, not according to knowledge.
God send you more grace.
And also God increase the same in you, and open your eyes, that you may see to maintain his truth, and his true church.
THEN the bishops rose up▪ and consulted [...]gether, and caused a writing to be made, in which I think my blood by them was bought and sold, and thereto they put their [...]ands; and after this I was carri [...]d to my coal [...] again.
THUS ended the fourth part of this tragedy. God hasten the end thereof to his glory, Amen.
BECAUSE I have begun to write unto you of mine examinations before the bishops and others, more to satisfy your desire than it is any thing worthy to be written; I thought it good to write unto you also that which had been done of late that the same might come to l [...]ght which they do in darkness, and in privy corners, and that the world now, and posterity hereafter, might know how disorderly, unjustly, and unlearnedly these ravenous wolves do proceed against the silly and faithful flock of Christ, and condemn and persecute the sincere doctrine of Christ in us, which they are not able by honest means to resist, but only by tyranny and violence.
The fifth Examination of Mr. JOHN PHILPOT, before the Bishops of LONDON, ROCHESTER, St. ASAPH, &c. and others, in the Gallery of my Lord of London's Palace.
Mr. Philpot, come you hither, I have desired my lords here, and other learned men, to take some pains once again to do you good, and because I do mind to sit in judgment on you to morrow, as I am commanded, yet I would you should have as much favour as I can sh [...]w you, if you will be any thing conformable; [...]herefore p [...]ay the wise man, and be not singular in your own opinion, but be ruled by these learned men.
My lord, in that you say you will sit on me in judgment to-morrow, I am glad thereof: for I was promised by them which sent me unto you, that I should have been judged the next day after: but promise hath not been kept with me, to my farther grief. I look for none other but de [...]th at your hands, and I am as ready to yi [...]ld my life in Christ's cause, as you are to require it.
Lo, what a wilful man is this? By my faith it is but folly to reason with him, neither with any of these hereti [...]s. I am sorry that you [Page 33] will be no more tractable, and that I am compelled to shew extremity against you.
My lord, you need not to shew extremity against me unless you will: neither by the law (as I have said) have you any thing to do with me, for that you are not my ordinary, however I am (contrary to all right) in your prison.
Why, the queen's commissioners sent you hither unto me, upon your examination held before them. I know not well the cause; but I am sure they would not have sent you hither unto me, unless you had some talk with them, otherwise than it becometh a christian man.
My lord, indeed they sent me hither, without any occasion then ministered by me. Only they laid unto me the disputation I made in the convocation-house, requiring me to answer the same, and to recant it. Which because I would not do, they sent me hither to your lordship.
Why did you not answer them thereto?
For that they were temporal men, and [...]ught not to be judges in spiritual causes whereof they demanded me, without shewing any authority whereby I was bound to answer them, and hereupon they committed me to your prison.
Indeed I remember now, you maintained open heresy in my diocese: wherefore the commissioners sent you unto me that I should proceed against you, for this you have spoke in my diocese.
My lord, I stand still upon my lawful plea in this behalf; that though it were a great heresy, as you suppose it, yet I ought not to be troubled for it, in respect of the parliament-house, whereof the convocation-house is a member, where all men in m [...]tter [...] propounded may frankly speak their minds; and here is present a gentleman of the queen's majesty that was present at the disputation▪ and can testify the questions which were then in controversy were not set forth by me, but by the prolocut [...]r, who required in the queen's majesty's name▪ all m [...]n to dispute their minds freely in the same that were of the house.
Though the parliament-house be a place of privilege for men of the house to speak, yet none may speak treason against the queen, or maintain treason against the crown.
But if there be any matter which otherwise it were treason to speak of, were it treason for any person to speak therein, especially the thing being proposed by the speaker? I think not.
You may make the matter easy enough to you yet, as I perceive, if you will revoke the same which you did there so stubbornly maintain.
This man did not speak under reformation, as many there did, but as earnestly and persuasively as ever I heard any.
My lords, since you will not cease to trouble me for that I have lawfully done, neither will admit my just defence for what was spoke in the convocation-house by me, contrary to the laws and custom of the realm; I appeal to the whole parliament-house, to be judged by the same, whether I ought thus to be molested for what I have there spoken.
But have you spoken and maintained the same since that time, or no?
If any man can charge me justly there [...]ith, here I stand to make answer.
How say you to it now? will you stand to that you have spoken in the convocation-house, and do you think you then said well, or no?
My lord, you are not mine ordinary to proceed Ex Officio against me, and therefore I am not bound to tell you my conscience at your demands.
What say you now? Is there not in the blessed sacrament of the altar
the presence of our Saviour Christ, really and substantially after the words of consecration?
I do believe in the sacrament of Christ's body, duly administered, to be such manner of presence, as the word teacheth me to believe.
I pray you, how is that?
As for that I will declare another time, when I shall be lawfully called to dispute my mind of this matter, but I am not yet driven to that point. And the scripture saith, "All things ought to be done after an order."
This is a froward and vain-glorious man.
It is not lawful for a man by the civil laws to dispute of his faith openly, as it appeareth in the title, De summa Trinitate & fide Catholica.
My lord, I have answered you to this question before.
Why, I never asked thee of this before now.
Yes, that you did at my last examination, and moreover I answered your lordship by St. Ambrose, that the church is congregated by the word, and not by man's law. Wherefore I now add further of this saying, "That he which refuseth the word, and objecteth the law, is an unjust man, because the just shall live by faith." And moreover, my lord, the title which your lordship al [...]ledgeth out of the law, maketh it not unlawful to dispute of all the articles of the faith, but of the Trinity.
Thou liest, it is not so: and I will shew you by the book how ignorant he is.
AND with that he went with all haste to his study, and brought his book, and openly read the text and title of the law, and charged me with such words as seemed to make for his purpose, saying, How sayest thou to this?
My lord, I say as I said before, that the law meaneth of the catholic faith, determined in the council of Chalcedon, where the articles of the creed were only concluded upon.
Thou art the veriest be [...]st that ever I heard, I must needs speak it, thou compellest me thereunto.
Your lordship may speak your pleasure of me. But what is this to your purpose, which your lordship is so earnest in? You know that our faith is not grounded upon the civil law: ther [...]fore it is not material to me whatsoever the law saith.
By what law wilt thou be judged? Wilt thou be judged by the common law?
No, my lord, our faith dependeth not upon the laws of man.
He will be judged by no law, but as he will himself.
The common laws are but abstracts of the scriptures and doctors.
Whatsoever you do make them, they are no ground of my faith, by which I ought to be judged.
I must needs proceed against thee to-morrow.
If your lordship so do, I will have Exceptionem fori: for you are not my competent judge.
By what law canst thou refuse me to be thy judge?
By the civil law, De competente judice.
There is no such title in the law. In what book is it, as cunning a lawyer as you are?
My lord, I take upon me no great cunning in the law: but you drive me to my shifts for my defence, and I am sure if I had the books of the law, I am able to shew what I say.
What De competente judice? I will go bring thee my books. There is a title indeed, De officiis judicis ordinarii.
Verily, that is the same De competente justice ▪ which I have alledged. With that he ran [Page 35] to his study, and brought the whole course of the law between his ha [...]ds, which (as it might appear) he had well occupied, by the dust they were covered with.
There are the books: find it out if thou canst, and I will promise to release thee out of prison.
My lord, I stand not here to reason matters of the civil law, although I am not altogether ignorant of the same; for that I have been a student in the law six or seven years; but to answer to the articles of faith with which you may lawfully burden me. And whereas you go about unlawfully to proceed, I challenge, according to my knowledge, the benefit of the law in my defence.
Why, thou wilt answer directly to nothing thou art charged with: therefore say not hereafter but you might have been satisfied here by learned men, if you would have declared your mind.
My lord, I have declared my mind unto you, and to other of the bishops at my last being with you, desiring you to be satisfied but of one thing, whereunto I have referred all other controversies: which if your lordships now, or other learned men can simply resolve me of, I am as contented to be conformable in all things, as you shall require; which is to prove that the church of Rome (whereof you are) is the catholic church.
Do you not believe your creed, "I believe the catholic church?"
Yes, that I do: but I cannot understand Rome (wherewithal you burden us) to be the same, neither like to it.
It is most evident that St. Peter did build the catholic church at Rome. And Christ said, "Thou art Pe [...]er, and upon this rock will I build my church." Moreover the succession of bishops in [...] of Rome can be proved from time to [...] it can be of none other place so we [...]l, [...] probation of the catholic church, as divers doctors do write.
That you would have to be undoubted, is most uncertain, and that by the authority which you alledge of Christ, saying unto Peter, "Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church," unless you can prove that rock to signify Rome, as you would make me falsely believe. And although you ca [...] prove the succession of bishops from Peter, yet this is not sufficient to prove Rome the catholic church, unless you can prove the profession of Peter's faith, whereupon the catholic church is built▪ to have continued in his successors at Rome, and at this present to remain.
Are there any more churches than one catholic church? And I pray tell me into what faith were you baptized?
I acknowledge one holy catholic and apostolic church, whereof I am a member (I praise God), and am of that catholic faith of Christ whereunto I was baptized.
I pray you, can you tell what this word catholic doth signify? shew if you can.
Yes, that I can, I thank God. The catholic saith, or the catholic church, is not as now-a-days the people are taught, to be that which is most universal, or by most part of men received, whereby you do infer our faith to hang upon the multitude, which is not so: but I esteem the catholic church to be as St. Austin defineth the same: "We judge, saith he, the catholic faith, of that which hath been, is, and shall be." So that if you can be able to prove, that your faith and church hath been from the beginning taught, and is, and shall be; then you may count yourselves catholic, otherwise not. And catholic is a Greek word compounded of KATA, which signifieth, after, or according, and HOLON, a sum, or principle, or whole. So that catholic church, or catholic faith, is as much as to say, the first, whole, sound, or chief faith.
Doth St. Austin say so as he alledgeth it? or doth he mean as he taketh the same? How say you, Mr. Curtop?
Indeed, my lord, St. Austin hath such a [Page 36] saying, speaking against the Donatists, that the catholic faith ought to be esteemed of things in times past, and as they are practised according to the same and ought to be through all ages, and not after a new manner, as the Donatists began to profess.
You have said well, Mr. Curtop, and after the meaning of St. Austin, and to confirm that which I have said for the signification of catholic.
Let the book be seen, my lord.
I pray you, my lord, be content, or in good faith I will break even off, and let all alone. Do you think that the catholic church (until within these few years, in which a few upon singularity have swerved from the same) hath erred?
I do not think that the catholic church can err in doctrine: but I require you to prove this church of Rome to be the catholic church.
I can prove that Ireneus (which was within an hundred years after Christ) came to Victor, then bishop of Rome, to ask his advice about the excommunication of certain heretics, which (by all likelihood) he would not have done, if he had not taken him to be supreme head.
Mark well this argument. How are you able to answer the same? Answer if you can.
It is soon answered, my lord, for that is of no force; neither doth this fact of Ireneus make any more for the supremacy of the bishop of Rome, than mine hath done, who have been at Rome as well as he, and might have spoken with the pope if I had list; and yet I would none in England did favour his supremacy more than I.
You are more to blame (by the faith of my body) for that you favour the same no better, since all the catholic church (until these few years) have taken him to be the supreme head of the church, besides this good man Ireneus.
That is not likely, that Ireneus so took him, or the primitive church: for I am able to shew seven general councils after Ireneus's time, wherein he never took him for supreme head.
This man will never be satisfied, say what we can. It is but folly to reason any more with him.
O, my lords, would you have me satisfied with nothing? Judge, I pray you, who hath better authority, he which bringeth the example of one man going to Rome, or I that by these many general councils am able to prove, that he was never so taken in many hundred years after Christ, as by Nicene, Ephesine, the first and second Chalcedon, Constantinopolitan, Carthaginese, Aquilense.
Why will you not admit the church of Rome to be the catholic church?
Because it followeth not the primitive catholic church, neither agreeth with the same, no more than an apple is like a nut.
Wherein doth it dissent?
It were too long to recite all, but two things I will name, the supremacy and transubstantiation.
As for transubstantiation, albeit it was set forth and decreed for an article of faith not much above three hundred years ago, yet it was always believed in the church.
Yes, that it was. Very well said of you, Mr. Curtop.
You have said right, that transubstantiation is but a late plantation of the bishop of Rome, and you are not able to shew any ancient writer, that believed any such thing; and with this Curtop shrank away. And immediately after the ambassador of Spain came in, to whom my lord of London went, leaving the others with me. To whom I said, My lords, if you can shew me that this church of Rome (whereof you are members) is the catholic church, I shall be con [...]nt to be one thereof, and as conformable to the same [Page 37] as you can require me in all things; for I know there is no salvation but within the church.
Can you disprove that the church of Rome is the catholic church?
Yes, that I am able, but I desire rather to hear of you the proof thereof. And seeing I cannot have my request at your hands, neither be satisfied with any probable authority, I will shew you good proof why it is not. For if the primitive church were catholic, as it was indeed, and ought to be the form and school-mistress unto the world's end; then is not the church of Rome now the catholic church, which dissenteth so far from the same both in doctrine and use of the sacraments.
How prove you that the church of Rome now dissenteth in doctrine and use of the sacraments from the primitive church?
Compare the one with the other, and it shall soon appear; as you may see both in Eusebius and others ecclesiastical and ancient writers.
What have you to say more, why it is not the catholic church?
Because it is not [by your interpretation of Catholic] universal, neither ever was, albeit you falsely persuade the people it is so. For the world being divided into three parts, Asia, Africa, and Europe, two parts thereof, Asia and Africa, professing Christ as well as we, did never consent to the church of Rome, which is of Europe; which is a sufficient testimony that your faith was never universal.
How prove you that?
All the historians which write of the proceedings of the church, do testify the same. Besides that, this present time doth declare that to be true which I say▪ for at present the churches of Asia, and Africa, do not consent to the church of Rome. Yea, and besides all this, most part of Europe doth not agree, neither allow the church of Rome; as Germany, the kingdom of Denmark, the kingdom of Poland, a great part of France, England, and Zealand, which is a manifest probation that your church is not universal.
AFTER this the bishop of London called away the other bishops, and left with me divers gentlem [...]n, with certain of his chaplains, as Dr. Saverson, an Englishman, who began with me in this manner.
Mr. Philpot, I remember you beyond sea, since the time you reasoned with a friar, (a notable learned man) coming from Venice to Padua in a barge.
I cannot forget that; for the friar threatened to accuse me of heresy as soon as he came to Padua, because I talked to him so boldly of the truth. He was not so learned a man as you name him to be, but only in his school points a good purgatory friar.
Well, he was a learned man for all that. And I am sorry that you this day, having communed with so many notable learned men, are no more conformable to them than you be.
I will be conformable to all them that be conformable to Christ in his word. And I pray you, good Mr. Doctor, be not so conformable to please men more than God, contrary to your learning, for worldly estimation sake.
No, that I am not. Upon what occasion should you think thus of me?
Upon no evil that I do know of you, Mr. Doctor, but I speak as one wishing that you should not be led away from the truth, for promotion's sake, as many be now a-days.
I have heard your arguments hitherto, and think that a great many of the old ancient writers be against you, in that you do not allow the church of Rome, neither the supremacy; for St. Cyprian (which is an ancient writer) doth allow the bishop of Rome to be supreme head of the church.
That I am sure he doth not. For he, writing to Cornelius, then bishop of Rome, calleth him but his companion and his fellow bishop, neither attributed to him the name either of pope, [Page 38] or of any other usurped terms, which now be ascribed to the bishop of Rome, to the setting forth of his dignity.
You cannot be able to shew that St. Cyprian calleth Cornelius his fellow-bishop.
I will wager you with what I am able to make, that I can shew it you in St. Cyprian, as I have said.
I will lay no other wager with you but book for book, that it is not so.
I agree thereto, and I pray you one of my lord's chaplains to fetch us Cyprian hither for the trial hereof. And with that one of them went to my lord's study, and he brought forth Cyprian, and by and by he turned to the first book of his epistles, the third epistle, and there he would have seemed to gather a strong argument for the supremacy of the bishop of Rome, because he saith, "It goeth not well with the church when the high-priest is not obeyed, which supplieth the stead of Christ, after God's word, and the consent of his fellow-bishops, and the agreement of the people."
How can you avoid this place which maketh so plainly for the bishop of Rome's supremacy?
It maketh not so plain, Mr. Doctor, on your side, as you gather, as by and by I will give you to understand. But first I challenge the wager which we made, that your book is mine. For here you may see that he calleth Cornelius his fellow-bishop, as he doth also in other places. And for the understanding of that place, you do misconstrue it, to take the high-priest only for the bishop of Rome, and otherwise than it was in his time. For there were by the Nicene council four patriarch of Constantinople, the patriarch of Alexandria, and the patriarch of Rome, of which four, the patriarch of Rome was placed lowest in the council, and so continued many years, for the time of seven or eight general councils, as I can shew.
THEREFORE St. Cyprian writing to Cornelius, patriarch of Rome, (whom he calleth his fellow-bishop) findeth himself offended that certain hereti [...]s, being justly excommunicated by him, (as the Novatians were) did flee from his diocese, which was their chief bishop, (refusing to be obedient to him and to be reformed) to the bishop of Rome, and the patriarch of Constantinople, and there were received in communion of the congregation, in derogation of good order and discipline in the church, and to the maintaining of heresies and schisms: and that heresies did spring up, and schisms daily rise hereof, that obedience was not given to the priest of God, nor was it once considered him to be in the church for the time the priest, and for the time the judge in Christ's stead, (as in the decree of the Nic [...]ne council was appointed) not the bishop of Rome only, but every patriarch in his precinct; who had every one of them a college or cathedral church of learned priests, in hearing of whom by a convocation of his fellow-bishops, with the consent of the people, all heresies were determined by the word of God: and this is the meaning of St. Cyprian.
You take it so, but it seemeth to me otherwise.
Upon what ground it should seem otherwise unto you I know not, but this meaning which I have declared, the general councils, seven or eight, one after another, confirmed it so to be, which did not allow one supreme head only.
There were not so many general councils, but four only allowed.
That is not so, Mr. Pendleton, although there be four specially allowed for the confirmation of the Trinity: but besides these four, there were many other general councils, as you may learn by many writers.
Did not Christ build his church upon Peter? St. Cyprian saith so.
St. Cyprian, De simplicitate P [...]latorum, declareth in what respect he so said: "God gave in person of one man, the keys to all, that he might signify the unity of all men." And also St. Augustine saith in the tenth treatise of St. John, "If in Peter had not been the mystery of the [Page 39] church, the Lord had not said unto him, I will give unto thee the keys. For if that were said [...]o Peter, the church hath them not; if the church have them, when Peter received them, he signified the whole church." And also St. Hierom, a priest of Rome, writing to Nepotian, saith, "That all churches do lean to their own pastors▪ where he speaketh of the ecclesiastical hierarchy or regiment," where he maketh no mention of the bishop of Rome. And to Evagrius, he saith, "That wheresoever a bishop be, whether it be at Rome, or at Evagi, or at Rhegium, he is of one power and one jurisdiction."
St. Hierom De coelesti Hierarchia? It was Dionysius you mean.
I say not that Hierom wrote any book so entitled. But I say, that in the epistle by me alledged, he maketh mention of the ecclesiastical regiment.
I wonder you will stand so stedfast in your error to your own destruction.
I am sure we are in no error, by the promise of Christ made to the faithful once, which is, that he will give to his true church such a spirit of wisdom, that the adversaries thereof should never be able to resist. And by this I know we are of the truth, for that neither by reasoning, neither by writing, your synagogue of Rome is able to answer. Where is there one of you all that ever hath been able to answer any of the godly learned ministers of Germany, who have disclosed your counterfeit religion? Which of you all (at this day) is able to answer Calvin's institutions, who is minister of Geneva.
A godly minister indeed, a receiver of cut-purses and runagate traitors. And of late I can tell you, there is such contention fallen between him and his own sects, that he was obliged to fly the town, about predestination. I tell you truth, for I came by Geneva here.
I am sure you blaspheme that godly man, and that godly church where he is minister; as it is your church's disposition, when you cannot answer men by learning, to answer them with blasphemies and false reports. For in the matter of predestination he is in no other opinion than all the doctors of the church be, agreeing to the scriptures.
Men are able to answer him if they will. And I pray you, which of you has answered bishop Fisher's book?
Yes, Mr. Doctor, that book is answered, and answered again, if you like to seek what hath been written against him.
AND after this Dr. Story came in. To whom I said, Mr. Doctor, you have done me great injury, and without law have straitly imprisoned me, more like a dog than a man. And besides this you have not kept promise with me, for you promised that I should be judged the next day after.
I am come now to keep promise with thee. Was there ever such a fantastical man as this is? nay, he is no man, he is a beast; yea, these heretics be worse than brute beasts: for they will upon a vain singularity take upon them to be wiser than all men, being indeed very fools and ass-heads, not able to maintain that which of an arrogant obstinacy they do stand in.
Mr. Doctor, I am content to abide your railing judgment of me now. Say what you will, I am content, for I am under your feet to be trodden on as you like. God forgive it you; yet I am no heretic. Neither you nor any other shall be able to prove that I hold one jot against the word of God otherwise than a christian man ought.
The word of God? forsooth the word of God? It is but a folly to reason with these heretics, for they are incurable and desperate. But yet I may reason with thee, not that I have any hope to win thee: whom wilt thou appoint to judge of the word whereto thou standest?
Verily the word itself.
Do you not see the ignorance of this [Page 40] beastly heretic? he willeth the word to be judged of the word. Can the word speak?
If I cannot prove that which I have said by good authority, I will be content to be counted an heretic and an ignorant person, and further what you please.
Let us hear what wise authority thou canst bring in.
It is the word of Christ in St. John, "The word which I have spoken, shall judge in the last day." If the word shall judge in the last day▪ how much more [...]ught it to judge of our doings now; and I am sure I have my judge on my side, who will absolve and justify me in another world. Howsoever now it shall please you by authority unrighteously to judge of me and others, sure I am in another world to judge you.
What? you purpose to be a stinking martyr, and to sit in judgment with Christ in the last day to judge the twelve tribes of Israel?
Yea, sir, I doubt not thereof, having the promise of Christ, if I die for righteousness sake, which you have begun to persecute in me.
I told you it was but in vain to argue with this heretic; he is drowned in heresies without all learning.
Sir, I have brought you good authority for what I have said out of God's book, to which you answer nothing, but go on still to give railing judgment against me without any cause.
I will come to you by and by. When the judge in Westminster-Hall giveth sentence, doth the word give sentence? Tell me.
Civil matters are subject to civil men, and they have authority by the word to be judges of them. But the word of God is not subject to mans' judgment, but ought to judge all the wisdom, thoughts, and doings of men, and therefore your comparison disproveth nothing that I have said, neither answereth any whit thereto.
Wilt thou not allow the interpretation of the church upon the scriptures?
Yes, if it be according to the word of the true church: and this I say to you, as I have said heretofore, that if you can prove the church of Rome, (whereof you are) to be the true catholic church which I ought to follow, I will be as ready to yield thereto (as long as it can be so proved) as you may desire me.
What a fellow is this? He will believe nothing but what he knoweth himself. Are we not in possession of the church? Have not our forefathers these many hundred years taken this church for the catholic church whereof we are now? And if we had no other proof but this, it were sufficient; for the prescription of time maketh a good title in the law.
You do well, Mr. Doctor, to alledge prescription of many years, for it is all that you have to shew for yourselves. But you must understand, that prescription hath no place in matters belonging unto God, as I am able to shew by the testimony of many doctors.
Well, sir, you are like to go after your father Latimer the sophister, and Ridley, who had nothing to alledge for himself, but that he had learned his heresy of Cranmer. When I came to him with a poor batchelor of art, he trembled as though he had had the palsy, at these heretics have always some token of fear whereby a man may know them, as you may see this man's eyes do [...]remble in his head. But I dispatch them; and I tell thee that there never yet hath been one burnt, but I have spoke with him, and have been a cause of his dispatch.
You have the more to answer for, Mr. Doctor, as you shall feel in another world, how much soever you do now triumph of your proceedings.
I tell thee I will never be confessed [...]hereof. And because I cannot now t [...]rry to speak with my lord, I pray one of you to tell my lord, that my coming was to signify to his lordship, that he must out of hand put this heretic out of the way. And [Page 41] going away he said to me, I certify thee, that thou mayest thank no other man but me.
I thank you therefore with all my heart, and forgive it you.
What, dost thou thank me? If I had thee in my study half an hour, I think I should make [...]hee sing another song.
No, Mr. Doctor, I stand upon too sure a ground to be overthrown by you now. And thus they departed all away from me one after another, until I was left alone. And afterwards going with my [...]eeper to the coal-house, as I went I met with my lord of London, who spoke unto me very gently, saying,
Philpot, if there be any pleasure I may shew thee in my house, I pray you require it, and you shall have it.
My lord, the pleasure that I will require of your lordship, is, to hasten my Judgment which is committed unto you, and to dispatch me out of this miserable world unto my eternal rest. And for all this fair speech I cannot attain hitherto this fortnight's space, either fire, candle, or good lodging. But it is good for a man to be brought low in this world, and to be counted amongst the vilest, that he may in time of reward receive exaltation and glory. Therefore praised be God that hath humbled me, and given me grace with gladness to be content therewith. Let all who love the truth say Amen.
THUS ended the fifth tragedy.
The Sixth Examination of Mr. PHILPOT, before the Right Honourable Lords, the Lord Chamberlain to the Queen, the Viscount Hereford, commonly called Lord Ferras, the Lord Rich, the Lord St. John, the Lord Windsor, the Lord Shandois, Sir John Bridges, Lieutenant of the Tower, and two others whose Names I know not, with the Bishop of London, and Dr. Chedsey, Nov. 6, 1555.
WHILE the lords were seating themselves, the bishop of London came aside to me and whispered in my ear, desiring me to behave prudently before the lords of the queen's majesty's council, and to take heed what I said; and thus he pretended to give me counsel, because he wished me to do well, as I might now if I would.
AND after the lords and other worshipful gentlemen were sat, my lord of London placed himself at the end of the table, and called me to him, and by the lords I was placed at the upper end against him▪ where I kneeling down, the lords commanded me to stand up, and the bishop spoke to me in the following manner.
Mr. Philpot, I have heretofore both privately myself, and openly before the lords of the clergy, more times than once caused you to be conversed with, to reform you of your errors, but I have not yet found you so tractable a [...] I would wish: wherefore now I have desired those honourable lord [...] of the temporality, and of the queen's majesty's council, who have taken pains with me this day, (I thank them for it), to hear you, and what you can say, that they may be judges whether I have sought all means to do you good or no: and I dare be bold to say in their behalf, that if you shew yourself conformable to the queen's majesty's proceedings, you shall find as much favour for your deliverance as you can wish. I speak not this to fawn upon you, but to bring you home unto the church. Now let them hear what you have to say.
My lord, I thank God that I have this day such an honourable audience to declare my mind before. And I cannot but commend your lordship's equity in this behalf, which agreeth with the order of the primitive church, which was, if any body had been suspected of heresy, as I am now, he should be called first before the archbishop or bishop of the diocese where he was suspected; secondly, in the presence of others his fellow bishops and learned elders; and thirdly, in hearing of the laity; where after the judgment of God's word declared, and with the assent of our bishops and consent of the people, he was condemned for an heretic, or absolved. And the second point of that good order I have found at your lordship's hands already, in being called before you and your fellow bishops; and now have the third sort of men, at whose hands I trust to find more righteousness in my cause, than I have found with my lords of the clergy: God [Page 42] grant that I may have at the last the judgment of God's word concerning the same.
Mr. Philpot, I pray you ere you go any further, tell my lords here plainly, whether you were by me or by my procurement committed to prison or not, and whether I have shewed you any cruelty since you have been committed to my prison.
If it shall please your lordship to give me leave to declare forth my matter, I will touch that afterward.
Answer first of all to my lord's two questions, and then proceed forth of the matter. How say you? Were you imprisoned by my lord or no? Can you find any fault since with his cruel using of you?
I cannot lay to my lord's charge the cause of my imprisonment, neither may I say that he hath used me cruelly; but rather for my part I may say, that I have found more gentleness at his lordship's hands, than I did at my own ordinary's, for the time I have been within his prison, because he hath called me three or four times to mine answer, to which I was not in a year and a half before.
Well, now go to your matter.
The matter is, that I am imprisoned for the disputations held by me in the convocation-house against the sacrament of the altar, which matter was not moved principally by me, but by the prolocutor, with the consent of the queen's majesty and of the whole house, and that house, being a member of the parliament-house, which ought to be a place of free speech for all men of the house, by the ancient and laudable custom of this realm. Wherefore I think myself to have sustained hitherto great injury for speaking my conscience free [...] in such a place as I might lawfully do it: and I desire your honourable lordships judgment who are of the parliament-house, whether of right I ought to be impeached for the same, and sustain the loss of my living (as I have done), and moreover of my life, as it is sought.
You are deceived herein; for the convocation-house is no part of the parliament-house.
My lord, I have always understood the contrary by such as are more expert men in things of this realm than I: and again, the title of every act leadeth me think otherwise, which alledgeth the agreement of the spirituality and temporality assembled together.
Yea, that is meant of the spiritual lords of the upper house.
Indeed the convocation-house is called together by one writ of the summons of the parliament of an old custom; notwithstanding that house is no part of the parliament-house.
My lords, I must be contented to abide your judgments in this behalf.
We have told you the truth. And yet we would not that you should be troubled for any thing that there was spoken, so that you having spoken amiss, do declare now that you are sorry for what you have said.
My lords, he hath spoken there manifest heresy, yea, and there stoutly maintained the same against the blessed sacrament of the altar
and would not allow the real presence of the body and blood of Christ in the same: yet, my lords, God forbid that I should endeavour to shew him extremity for so doing, in case he will repent and revoke his wicked sayings; and if in faith he will so do, with your lordships consent, he shall be released by and by; if he will not, he shall have the extremity of the law, and that shortly.
My lord of London speaketh reasonably unto you: take it while it is offered you.
How say you? will you acknowledge the real presence of the body and blood of Christ, as all learned men of this realm do, in the mass, and as I do, and will believe as long as I live, I do protest it?
My lord, I do acknowledge in the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ such a [Page 43] presence as the word of God doth allow and teach me.
That shall be no otherwise than you like.
A sacrament is the sign of a holy thing; so that there is both the sign, which is the accident (as the whiteness, roundness, and shape of bread), and there is also the thing itself, as very Christ both God and man. But these hereti [...]s will have the sacrament to be but bare signs. How say you? declare unto my lords here whether you do allow the thing itself in the sacrament, or no.
I do confess that in the Lord's supper there are in due respects both the sign and the thing signified, when it is duly administered after the institution of Christ.
You may see how he goeth about the bush (as he hath done before) with my lords of the clergy, and dare not utter his mind plainly.
Shew us what manner of presence you allow in the sacrament.
If it please you, my lord of London, to give me leave to proceed orderly thereunto, and to le [...] me declare my mind without interruption, I will thoroughly open my mind therein.
I pray you, my lord, let him speak his mind.
My lords, that at first I have not plainly declared my judgment unto you, the reason is this, because I cannot speak hereof without the danger of my life.
There is none of us here that seeketh thy life, or means to take any advantage of that thou shalt speak.
Although I mistrust not your honourable lordships that be here of the temporality; yet here is one that sitteth against me
that will lay it to my charge even to death. Notwithstanding, seeing your honours do require me to declare my mind of the presence of Christ in the sacrament, that ye may perceive that I am not ashamed of the presence of Christ, neither do maintain any opinion without probable and sufficient authority of scripture, I will shew you frankly my mind without all colour, whatsoever shall ensue unto me therefor, if my lord of London will not hinder me to utter my mind.
My lord, permit him to say what he can, seeing he is willing to shew his mind.
I am content, my lords, let him say what he can, I will hear him.
That which I do intend to speak unto you (right honourable lords) I do protest here, first before God and his angels, that I speak it not of vain-glory, neither of singularity, neither of wilful stubbornness, but truly upon a good conscience, grounded upon God's word, against which I dare not go for fear of damnation, Which will follow that which is done contrary to knowledge. Neither do I disagree to the proceedings of this realm in the religion, in that I love not the queen (whom I love from the bottom of my heart), but because I ought to love and fear God in his word more than man in his laws, though I stand, as I seem to do, in this consideration, and for no other, as God I call to witness.
THERE are two things principally, by which the clergy at this day deceive the whole realm; that is, the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ, and the name of the catholic church: which they do usurp, having indeed neither of them. And as touching their sacrament, which they term of the altar, I say now as I said in the convocation-house, that it is not the sacrament of Christ, neither in the same is there any manner of Christ's presence. Wherefore they deceive the queen's majesty, and you of the nobility of this realm, in making you to believe that to be a sacrament which is none, and cause you to commit manifest idolatry in worshipping that for God, which is no God. And in testimony of this to be true, besides manifest proof, which I am able to make to the queen's majesty, and to all you of her nobility, I will yield my life; which to do, if it were not upon sure ground, it were to my utter damnation.
[Page 44]AND where they take on them the name of the catholic church (whereby they blind many people's eyes) they are nothing so, calling you from the true religion which was revealed and taught in king Edward's time, unto vain superstition. And this I will say for the trial hereof, that if they can prove themselves to be the catholic church (as they shall never be able to do), I will never be against their doings, but revoke all that I have said. And I shall desire you, my lords, to be a means for me to the queen's majesty, that I may be brought to the just trial hereof. Yea, I will not refuse to stand against ten of the best of them in this realm. And if they be able to prove otherwise than I have said, either by writing or reasoning, with good and lawful authority, I will here promise to recant whatsoever I have said, and to consent to them in all points.
AND in the declaration of these things more at large, which now I write in sum, the bishop of London would have interrupted me, but the lords procured my liberty to make out my argument, to the great grief of the lord bishop of London, as it appeared by the dumps he was in.
It hath been told me before, that you love to make a long tale.
All heretics do boast of the Spirit of God, and every one would have a church by himself; as Joan of Kent, and the Anabaptists. I had myself Joan of Kent a week in my house after the writ was out for her to be burnt, where my lord of Canterbury, and bishop Ridley resorted almost daily unto her: but she was so high in the Spirit, that they could do nothing with her for all their learning. But she went wilfully into the fire, was burnt, and so do you now.
As for Joan of Kent, she was a vain woman (I knew her well) and an heretic indeed, well wor [...]hy to be burnt, because she stood against one of the manifest articles of our faith, contrary to the scriptures: and such vain spirits are soon known from the true Spirit of God and his church, for that the same abi [...]eth within the limits of God's word, and will not go out of the same, neither stubbornly maintain any thing contrary to the word, as I have God's word thoroughly on my side to shew for that I stand in.
I pray you, how will you join me these two scriptures together; Pater major me est; & pater & ego unum su [...]us. I must interpret the same, because my lords here understand not the Latin, that is to say, "The Father is greater than I; and I and the Father are one." But I cry your mercy, my lords, I have mis spoken, in saying you understand no Latin; for the most part of you understand Latin as well as I. But I speak in consideration of my lord Shandois, and Mr. Bridges his brother▪ whom I take to be no great Latin men. Now shew your cunning, and join these two scriptures by the word if you can.
Yes, that I can right well. For we must understand that in Christ there be two natures, the divinity and humanity, and in respect of his humanity, it is spoken of Christ, "The Father is greater than I." But in respect of his Deity he said again, "The Father and I be one."
But what scripture have you?
Yes, I have sufficient scripture for the p [...]oof of that I have said, For the first, it is written of Christ in the Psalms, "Thou hast made him a little lower than the angels." It is the [...]9th Psalm▪ beginning, "The heavens declare." And there I misreckoned, whereupon my lord took m [...].
It is in "O Lord, our Lord [...]" You may see, my lords, how well this man is used to say his m [...]ttins,
Though I say not mattins in s [...]ch order a [...] your lordsh [...]p [...]; yet I remember of old, that "O Lord our Lord," and "The heavens declare," be not far asunder: and although I mis-named the psalm, it is no prejudice to the truth that I have proved.
What s [...]y you then to the second scripture? how couple you that by the word to the other?
The text its [...]lf declareth, that notwithstanding Christ did abase himself in our human nature, yet he is still one in Deity with the Father. And this St. Paul to the Hebrews doth more at large set forth. And [...]s I have by the scriptures joined these two scriptures together, so am I able to do in all other articles of faith which we ought to believe, and by the manifest word of God to expound them.
How can that be, seeing St. Paul saith, "That the letter killeth, but it is the Spirit that giveth life?"
St. Paul meaneth not the word of God written, in itself killeth, which is the word of life, and faithful testimony of the Lord; but that the word is unprofitable, and killeth him that is void of the Spirit of God, although he be the wisest man of the world, and therefore St. Paul said, "That the gospel to some was a savour of life unto life, and to others a savour of death unto death." Also an example hereof we have in the sixth of John of them who hearing the word of God without the Spirit, were offended thereby; wherefore Christ said, "The flesh profiteth nothing, it is the Spirit that quickeneth."
What? do you understand that of St. Paul and of St. John so?
It is not mine own interpretation, it is agreeable to the word in other places; and I have learned the same of ancient fathers interpreting it likewise. And to the Corinthians it is written, "The natural man perceiveth not the things that be of the Spirit of God, but the spiritual m [...]n, who is [...]dued with the Spirit, judgeth all things."
You see, my lords, that this man will have his own mind, and wilfully cast himself away. I am sorry for him.
The words that I have spoken are none of mine but the gospel, whereon I ought to stand. And if you, my lord of London, c [...]n bring better authority for the faith you will draw me unto, than that which I stand upon, I wi [...]l gladly hear the same by you or by any other in this realm.
Wherefore I, kneeling down, besought the lords to be good unto me a poor gentleman, that would fain live in the world if I might, and testify as you have heard me to say this day, that if any man can prove that I ought to be of any other manner of faith than that which I am now, and can prove the same sufficiently, I will be neither wilful nor desperate, as my lord of London would make you believe me to be.
What countryman are you Are you of the Philpots of Hampshire?
Yea, my lord, I am sir P. Philpot's son, of Hampshire.
He is my kinsman; wherefore I am the more sorry for him.
I thank your lordship that it pleaseth you to challenge kindred of a poor prisoner.
In faith I would go an hundred miles on my bare feet to do you good.
He may do well enough if he will.
Mr. Philpot, you are my countryman, and I would be glad you should do well.
You said even now, that you would desire to maintain your belief before ten of the best in the realm. You did not well to compare with the nobility of the realm. But what if you have ten of the best in the realm to hear you, will you be tried by them?
My lord, your lordship mistaketh me to think that I challenge ten of the best of the nobility in this realm. It was no part of my mind, but I meant of the best learned on the contrary side.
Well, I take your meaning: what if means be made to the queen's majesty that you shall have your request, will you be judged by them?
My lord, it is not meet that a man should be judg [...]d by his adversaries.
By whom then would you be judged?
I will make your honours judges, that shall be hearers of us.
I dare be bold to procure for you of the queen's majesty that you shall have ten learned men to reason with you, and twenty or forty of the nobility to hear, so you will promise to abide their judgment. How say you, will you promise here before my lords so to do?
I will be contented to be judged by them.
Yea, but will you promise to agree to their judgment?
There are causes why I may not so do, unless I were sure they would judge according to the word of God.
O, I perceive you will have no man judge but yourself, and think yourself wiser than all the learned men in this realm.
My lord, I seek not to be mine own judge, but am willing to be judged by others, so that the order of judgment in matters of religion be kept that was in the primitive church, which is, first that God's will by his word was sought, and thereunto both the spirituality and temporality were gathered together, and gave their consents and judgment, and such kind of judgment I will stand to.
My lords, he would make you believe [...]at he were profoundly known in ancient writers of the judgments of the primitive church, and there was never any such manner of judgment used as he now talketh of.
In the epistles of St. Cyprian I am able to shew you.
Ah, I tell you there is no such thing; fetch me Cyprian hither.
You shall find it otherwise when the book cometh. And Dr. Chedsey, his chaplain
whispered the bishop in his ear, and brought not the book, in likelihood that he [...]hould have sustained the reproach thereof if the book had been brought. Well, my lord, said I, Mr. Doctor knoweth it is so, or else he would have brought the book er [...] this.
You would have no other judge, I see, but the word.
Yes, my lord, I will be tried by the word, and by such as will judge according to the word. As for an example, if there were a controversy between your lordship and another upon the words of a statute, must not the words of the statute judge and determine the controversy?
No marry, the judges of the law may determine of the meaning thereof.
He hath brought as good an example against himself as can be.
AND here the bishop thought he had a good argument against me, and therefore enlarged it with many words to the judgment of the church.
He hath overthrown himself by his own argument.
My lords, it seemeth to your honours that you have great advantage of me by the example I brought in to express my cause, but if it be pondered thoroughly, it maketh wholly with me, and nothing against me, as my lord of London hath pretended. For I will ask of my lord Rich here, whom I know to have good knowledge in the laws and statutes of this realm, although a judge may discern the meaning of a statute agreeable to the words, whether the same may judge a meaning contrary to the express words or no?
He cannot so do.
Even so say I, that no man ought to judge the word of God to have a meaning contrary to the express words thereof, as this false church of Rome doth in many things: and with this the lords seemed to be satisfied, and made no further reply herein.
I marvel then why you do deny the express words of Christ in the sac [...]ament, saying "This is my body:" and yet you will not stick to say it is not his body. Is not God omnipotent? And is not be able as well by his omnipotency to make it his body, as he was to make man flesh of a piece of clay? Did not he say, "This is my body which shall be betrayed for you?" And was not his very body betrayed for us? Therefore it must needs be his body.
My lord Rich, you have said wonderful well and learnedly. But you might have begun with him before also, in the sixth of John, where Christ promised to give his body in the sacrament of the altar, saying, "The bread which I will give is my flesh." How can you answer to that?
If it please you to give me leave to answer first my lord Rich, I will also answer this objection.
Answer my lord of London first, and after come to me.
My lord of London may be soon answered: that saying of St. John is, that the humanity of Christ, which he took upon him for the redemption of man, is the bread of life whereby our souls and bodies are sustained to eternal life, of which the sacramental bread is a lively representation, and an effectual coaptation to all such as believe on his passion. And as Christ saith in the same sixth of John, "I am the bread that came down from heaven;" but yet he is not material, neither natural bread: likewise the bread is his flesh, not natural or substantial, but by signification, and by grace in the sacrament▪
AND now my lord Rich's argument. I do not deny the express words of Christ in the sacrament, "This is my body:" but I deny that they are naturally and corporally to be taken; they must be taken sacramentally and spiritually, according to the express declaration of Christ, saying, that the words of the sacrament which the Capernaites took carnally, as the Papists now do, ought to be taken spiritually and not carnally, as they falsely imagine, not weighing what interpretation Christ hath made in this behalf, neither following the institution of Christ, neither the use of the apostles and of the primitive church, who never taught, neither declared any such carnal manner of presence as is now exacted of us violently without any ground of scripture or antiquity, who used to put out of the church all such as did not receive the sacrament with the rest, and also to burn that which was left after the receiving, as by the canon of the apostles, and by the decree of the council of Antioch may appear.
No, that is not so; they were only Catechumeni, which went out of the church at the celebration of the communion, and none other.
It was not only of such as were novices in faith, but all others that did not receive.
What say you to the omnipotency of God? Is not he able to perform that which he spake, as my lord Rich hath very well said? I tell thee, that God by his omnipotency may make himself to be this carpet if he will.
As concerning the omnipotency of God, I say that God is able to do (as the prophet David saith) whatsoever he willeth; but he willeth nothing that is not agreeable to his word; that is blasphemy which my lord of London hath spoken, that God may become a carpet. For, as I have learned of ancient writers, God cannot do that which is contrary to his nature, and it is contrary to the nature of God to be a carpet. A carpet is a creature; and God is the creator; and the creator cannot be the creature: wherefore unless you can declare by the word, that Christ is otherwise present with us than spiritually and sacramentally by grace, as he hath taught us, you pretend the omnipotency of God in vain.
Why, wilt thou not say that Christ is really present in the sacrament? Or do you deny it?
I deny not that Christ is really present in the sacrament to the receiver thereof according to Christ's institution.
What mean you by really present?
I mean by really present, present indeed.
Is God really present every where?
He is so.
How prove you that?
The prophet Isaiah saith, "That God filleth all places:" and wheresoever there be two or three gathered together in Christ's name, there is he in the midst of them.
What, his humanity?
No, my lord, I mean the Deity, according to what you demanded.
My lord of London, I pray you let Dr. Chedsey reason with him, and let us see how he can answer him, for I tell thee he is a learned man indeed, and one that I do credit before a great many of you, whose doctrine the queen's majesty and the whole realm doth well allow, therefore hear him.
My lords, I pray you, will it please you to drink? You have talked a great while, and much talk is thirsty. I will leave Mr. Doctor and him reasoning together awhile, with your leave, and will come to you by and by again. He went, as I suppose, to make room for more drink, after the lords had drank.
MY lord Rich said to the lords, I pray you let the poor man drink, for he is thirsty, and with that he called for a cup of drink, and gave it me, and I drank before them all: God requite him, for I was thirsty indeed. Afterwards Dr. Chedsey began in this wise, making a great process, of which this the effect.
Mr. Philpot findeth fault with the convocation-house before your lordships, that he hath lain thus long in prison, and that he had there a dozen arguments, whereof he would not be suffered to prosecute one thoroughly, which is not so; for he had leave to say what he could, and was answered to as much as he was able to bring; and when he had nothing else to say, he sell to weeping. I was there present and can testify thereof; although there is a book abroad of the report of the disputation to the contrary, in which there is never a true word. And whereas you require to be satisfied of the sacrament, I will shew you the truth thereof, both by the scriptures and by the doctors.
It is a shrewd likelihood that you will not conclude with any truth, since you have began with so many untruths, as to say that I was answered while I had any thing to say; and that I wept for lack of matter to say, and that the book of the report of the disputation is not true. God be praised, there were a good many noblemen, gentlemen, and worshipful men that heard and saw the doings thereof, which can testify that you here have made an unjust report before these honourable lords. And that I wept, was not for lack of matter, as you slander me; for I thank God I have more matter than the best of you all shall ever be able to answer, as little learning as I have: but my weeping was, as Christ was upon Jerusalem, seeing the destruction that should fall upon her: and I foreseeing then the destruction which you (through violence and unrighteousness which you there declared) would work against the true church of Christ and her faithful members, as this day beareth witness, was compelled to weep in remembrance of that which I with many more have felt and shall feel.
ALL these words I did then speak out, being interrupted by my lord Rich, saying, that I should suffer him to proceed out in this matter, and afterwards I should have leisure to answer him in every article. But he promised more than he could perform, as the end did well declare; for he had not the consent of the spirituality to his promise, which now rule the roast. God shorten their cruel days, for his elect's sake. And therefore I add this, which I purposed to have spoken, if then I might have been suffered, lest any that perfectly know not the things done in the convocation-house and now laid to my charge, if they should not be answered by me, might reckon Dr. Chedsey's saying to be true. And as concerning the book of the report of the disputations, I wrote the same, and it is true in every argument, as Mr. Dean, of Rochester, and Mr. Cheney; archdeacon of Hereford, (being yet alive, and within the realm) can testify.
You have of scriptures the four evangelists [Page 49] for the probation of Christ's real presence to be in the sacrament after the words of consecration, with St. Paul to the Corinthians; which all say, "This is my body." They say not, as you would have me believe, this is not the body. But especially the 6th of John proveth this most manifestly, where Christ promised to give his body, which he performed in his last supper, as it appeareth by these words, "The bread which I will give is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world."
My lord Rich, with your leave I must needs interrupt him a little, because he speaketh open blasphemy against the death of Christ: for if that promise brought in by St. John, was performed by Christ in his last supper, then he needed not to have died after he had given the sacrament.
Let Mr. Doctor make an end of his arguments, and afterward object to him what you can.
You must note, that there is twice Dabo in this saying of St. John, and the first is referred to the sacrament of the altar; and the second to the sacrifice upon the cross: and besides these manifest scriptures, there are many ancient doctors proving the same, as Ignatius, Ireneus, St. Cyprian (whose authority he recited at large) which I do omit, because I was not permitted to answer the same.
Now answer, and object to him what you can, and you shall be heard.
My lord, the chief ground whereon he with the rest of his side do ground themselves against us, are these words, "This is my body," with a false pretence of the omnipotency of God. And before I will come to the particular answers of all that he hath alledged, for that your lordships may the better understand me, what I mean, and whereupon I stand, I will first require Mr. Doctor to answer me one question. But first of all I do protest to your honours that I think as reverently of the sacrament, as a christian man ought to do, and that I acknowledge the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ, ministered after Christ's institution, [...]o be one of the great [...]st treasures and comforts that he left us on the earth; contrarywise, it is most sinful and abominable, not being ministered as it ought to be, as it is used now a-days.
AND now to my question, which is this: whether these words only, "This is my body," spoken by a priest over the bread and wine, may make the body and blood of Christ, as you suppose, or no?
CHEDSEY studying what he might say, at last answered, That these words alone, pronounced by the priest, are sufficient to make the bread and wine the very body and blood of Christ really.
That is blasphemy to say, and against all the scriptures and doctors, who affirm that the form and substance in consecration must be observed which Christ used and did institute, as St. Cyprian saith, "In the sacrifice which is C [...]st, only Christ is to be followed." And by the law it is forbidden to add or take away from God's word. And St. Peter saith, "If any man speak, let him speak as the word of God." Wherefore whosoever saith that these words only, "This is my body," do make a presence of Christ, without "Bless, Take, and Eat," which be three as substantial points of the sacrament, as, "This is my body," he is highly deceived.
THEREFORE St. Augustine saith, "Let the word be joined to the element, and it becometh a sacrament:" So that if the intire words of Christ's institutions be not observed in the ministration of a sacrament, it is no sacrament; as the sacrifices which the ten tribes did offer at Bethel to God, were not acceptable, because they were not in all points done according to God's word. Wherefore except blessing be made after the word, (which is a due thanksgiving for our redemption in Christ) and also a shewing forth of the Lord's death in such wise as the congregation may be edified; and moreover a taking and eating after Christ's commandment; except, I say, these three parts be first performed, (which is not done in the mass) these words, "This is my body," which are last placed in the institution of the Lord's supper, cannot be verified. For Christ commanded as well, "Take ye, Eat ye," as "This is my body."
Christ said, "Take, Eat, this is my body," and not, Take ye, Eat ye.
Did he not, Mr. Doctor? be not these the words of Christ, Accipite, Manducate? and do not these words in the plural number signify, "Take ye, Eat ye," and not Take thou, Eat thou, as you would suppose?
I grant it is as you say.
Likewise of consequence, you (Mr. Doctor) must n [...]eds deny what you have said, that these words, "This is my body," being only spoken, be sufficient to make the body and blood of Christ in the sacrament, as you have untruly said.
THEN the bishop came in again and said, What is it that you would have Mr. Doctor deny?
My lord, [...]. Doctor hath affirmed that these words, "This is my body," spoken by the priest only, do make the sacrament.
Indeed if Mr. Bridges should speak these words over the bread and wine, they would be of none effect: but if a priest speak them after a due manner, they are effectual, and make a real body.
Mr. Doctor hath said otherwise.
I think you mistake him: for he meaneth [...] the words duly pronounced.
Let him revoke that he hath granted, and then will I begin again with that which before was said; that, "This is my body," hath no place, except Bless, Take, and Eat, duly go before. And therefore because the same words do not go before, "This is my body," but preposterously follow in your sacrament of the mass, it is not the sacrament of Christ, neither hath Christ in it present.
If "This is my body" only do not make the sacrament, no more do, "Bless, take, and eat."
I grant that the one without the other cannot make the sacrament. And it can be no sacrament unless the whole action of Christ doth concur together according to the first institution.
Why, then you would not have it to be the body of Christ, unless it be received?
No verily, it is not the very body of Christ to any other, but such as condignly receive the same after his institution.
Is not a loaf a loaf, being set on the table though no body eat thereof?
It is not alike, my lord: for a loaf is a loaf before it be set on the table: but so is not the sacrament a perfect sacrament before it be duly administered at the table of the Lord.
I pray you what is it in the mean while before it is duly received?
It is, my lord, a sign begun of a holy thing, and yet no perfect sacrament until it be received. For in the sacrament there be two things to be considered, the sign, and the thing itself, which is Christ and his whole passion; and it is that to none but such as worthily receive the holy signs of bread and wine, according to Christ's institution.
There were never any that denied the words of Christ as you do. Did he not say, "This is my body?"
My lord, I pray you be not deceived. We do not deny the words of Christ: but we say, these words be of none effect, being spoken otherwise than Christ did institute them in his last supper. For example; Christ biddeth the church to be baptized in the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. If a priest say these words over the water, and there be no child to be baptized, these words only pronounced do not make baptism. And again, baptism is only baptism to such as be baptized, and to none other standing by.
I pray you, my lord, let me ask him one question. What kind of presence in the sacrament (duly administered according to Christ's ordinance) do you allow?
If any come worthily to receive, tha [...] do I confess the presence of Christ wholly to be with all [Page 51] the fruits of his passion, unto the said worthy receiver, by the Spirit of God, and that Christ is thereby joined to him, and he to Christ.
I am answered.
My lords, take no heed of him, for he goeth about to deceive you. His similitude that he bringeth in of baptism, is nothing like to the sacrament of the altar. For if I should say to sir John Bridges being with me at supper, and having a fat capon, Take, eat, this is of a capon, although he eat not thereof, is it not a capon still? And likewise of a piece of beef, or of a cup of wine? if I say, Drink, this is a cup of wine, is it not so, because he drinketh not thereof?
My lord, your similitudes are too gross for so high mysteries as we have in ha [...]d, as, if I were your equal, I could more plainly declare; and there is much more dissimilitude between common meats and drinks, than there is between baptism and the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ. Like must be compared to like, and spiritual things with spiritu [...]l, and not spiritual things with corporal things. And meats and drinks be of their own natures good or evil, and your words commending or discommending, do but declare what they are. But the sacraments are to be considered according to the word which Christ spake of them, of which, "Take ye, and eat ye," be some of the chief, concurrent to the making of the same, without which there can be no sacraments. And therefore the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ is called Communion: and likewise in the gospel Christ commanded, saying, "Divide it among you."
St. Paul calleth it a Communication.
That doth more expressly shew that there must be a participation of the sacrament together.
My lords, I am sorry I have troubled you so long with this obstinate man, with whom we can do no good; I will trouble you no longer now. And with that the lords rose up, none of them saying any evil word unto me.
THUS ended the sixth examination.
The seventh Examination of Mr. JOHN PHILPOT, on the 19th of November, before the Bishops of LONDON and ROCHESTER, the Chancellor of LITCHFIELD, and Dr. CHEDSEY.
Sirrah, come hither. How chance you came no sooner? Is it well done of you to make Mr. Chancellor and me to tarry for you this hour? By the faith of my body, half an hour before mass, and half an hour even at mass, looking for your coming.
My lord, it is well known to you that I am a prisoner, and that the doors be shut upon me, and I cannot come when I please: but as soon as the doors of my prison were open, I came immediately.
We sent for thee to the intent thou shouldst have come to mass. How say you, would you have come to mass or no, if the doors had been sooner opened?
My lord, that is another manner of question.
Lo, Mr. Chancellor, I told you we should have a froward fellow of him; he will answer directly to nothing. I have had him before the spiritual lords and temporal, thus he fareth still; yet he reckoneth himself better learned than all the realm. Yea, before the temporal lords the other day, he was so foolish as to challenge the best: he would make himself learned, and is a very ignorant fool indeed.
I reckon I answered your lordship before the lords plain enough.
Why answerest thou not directly, whether thou wouldst have gone to mass or no, if thou hast come in time?
Mine answer shall be thus, that if your lordship can prove your mass, whereunto you would have me to be come to the true service of God, whereunto a christian ought to come I will afterwards come with a good will
Look, I pray you; the king and queen, and all the nobility of the realm do come to mass, [Page 52] and yet he will not. By my faith, thou art too well handl [...]d; thou shalt be worse handled hereafter, I warrant thee.
If to lie in a blind coal-house, may be counted good handling, without either fire or candle, then may it be said, I am well handled. Your lordship hath power to treat my body as you please.
Thou art a fool, and a very ignorant fool. Mr. Chancellor, in good faith I have handled him and his fellows with as much gentleness as they can desire. I did let their friends come unto them to relieve them. And wot you what? the other day they had gotten themselves up into the top of the leads, with a number of apprentices gazing abroad as though they had been at liberty: but I cut off your resort: and as for the apprentices they were as good not to come to you, if I take them.
My lord, we have no such resort to us as your lordship imagineth, and there come very few unto us. And of apprentices, I know not one, neither have we any leads to walk on over our coal house, that I know of: wherefore your lordship hath mistaken your mark.
Nay, now you think (because my lord chancellor is gone) that we will burn no more: yes, I warrant thee, I will dispatch you shortly, unless you do recant.
My lord, I had not thought that I should have been alive now, neither so raw as I am, but even well roasted to ashes.
Cast not yourself wilfully away, Mr. Philpot. Be content to be ruled by my lord here, and by other learned men of this realm, and you may do well enough.
My conscience beareth me record that I seek to please God, and that the love and fear of God causeth me to do as I do: and I were of all other creatures most miserable, if for mine own will only I do lose all the conveniencies I might have in this life, and afterwards be cast into damnation. But I am sure it is not my will whereon I stand, but God's will, who will not suffer me to be cast away, I am sure.
You are not so sure, but you may be deceived.
Well, since thou wilt not be conformable by fair means, I will proceed against thee Ex Officio, and therefore hearken here to such articles as I have here written, and I charge thee to make answer to them. And with that he read a libel which he had in his hand of divers articles, and when he had done he bade me answer.
Your libel, my lord, containeth in sum two special points: The first pretendeth, that I should be of your diocese, and therefore your lordship upon divers suspicions and infamies of heresy going upon me, is moved to proceed against me by your ordinary office; which first is not true, for that I am not of your lordship's diocese, as the libel doth pretend. And the second is, that I being baptized in the catholic church, and in the catholic faith, am gone from them, which is not so, for I am of that catholic faith and church which I was baptized into.
What? art thou not of my diocese? where are you now, I pray you?
I cannot deny but I am in your coal-house, which is your diocese: yet I am not o [...] your diocese.
You were sent hither unto me by the queen's majesty's commissioners, and thou art now in my diocese: wherefore I will proceed against thee as thy ordinary.
I was brought hither through violence, and therefore my present being now in your diocese is not eno [...]gh to abridge me of mine own ordinary's jurisdiction, neither make it me willingly subject to your jurisdiction, since it cometh by force, and by such men as had no just authority so to do; no more than a sanctuary man, being by force brought forth of his place of privilege, doth thereby lose his privilege, but always may challenge the same wheresoever he be brought.
Hath not not the queen's majesty authority, by her commissioners, to remove your body whither she will? and ought you not to obey her [...]in?
I grant that the queen's majesty (of her just power) may transpose my body, whither it shall please her gr [...]ce to command the same. But yet by your laws, spiritual causes are not subject to the temporal power. As for example; you, Mr. Doctor, if the queen's majesty would appoint two temporal men to be judges over you in certain spiritu [...]l matters, might not you alledge the privilege of a cl [...]rk, and demand competent spiritual judges in your causes?
Doth not a judge (I pray you) appoint a court at his own discretion?
My lord, your rule is true in temporal matters, but in spiritual causes it is not so: which be otherwise privileged.
What sayest thou then to the second article, and to the other?
My lord, I say that I am not bound to answer the second, neither the rest, unless the first be proved.
Well, suppose the first may be proved, as it will be, what will you say then to the second, that you are not of the same catholic faith, neither of the same church now as you were baptized in?
I am of the same catholic faith, and of the same catholic church, which is of Christ, the pillar and establishment of truth.
Nay that you are not.
Yes, that I am.
Your godfathers and godmothers were of another faith than you are now.
I was not baptized either into my godfathers faith or my godmothers, but into the faith and into the church of Christ.
How know you that?
By the word of God, which is the touchstone of faith, and the limit of the church.
How long hath your church stood, I pray you?
Even from the beginning, from Christ and from his apostles, and from their immediate successors.
He will prove his church to be before Christ.
If I did so, I go not amiss: for there was a church before the coming of Christ, which maketh one catholic church.
It is so indeed.
I will desire no better rule than the same which is oftentimes brought in of your side, to prove both my faith and the catholic church; that is, antiquity, universality, and unity.
Do you not see what a bragging foolish fellow this is? He would seem to be very well versed in the doctors, and he is but a fool. By what doctor art thou able to prove thy church? Name him, and thou shalt have him.
My lord, let me have all your ancient writers, with pen, and ink, and paper, and I will prove both my faith and my church out of every one of them.
No that thou shalt not have. You shall see how he lieth. St. Cyprian saith, "There must be one high-priest, to which the residue must obey;" and they will allow no head, neither vicar-general.
St. Cyprian saith not, that there should be a vicar-general over all. For in his book De simplicitate Praelatorum, I am sure he saith the contrary: "There is but one bishopric, which is wholly possessed of every bishop in part."
Fe [...]ch hither the book, thou shalt see the manifest place against thee.
DR. CH [...]DSEY brought the book, and turned to the place in an epistle written unto Cornelius then bishop of Rome, and recited these words in sum, "That it went not well with the church, where the high-priest was not obeyed;" and so would have concluded for the confirmation of the bishop's saving.
Mr. Doctor, you mis-construe the place of St. Cyprian; for he meaneth not there by the high-priest, the bishop of Rome, but every patriarch in his precinct, of whom there were four appointed in his time. And in writing unto Cornelius, he meaneth by the high-priest, himself, who was then bishop of Africa, whose authority the heretics began to despise. Whereof he complaineth to Corne [...]ius, and saith, the church cannot be well ordered, where the chief minister by order after the judgment of the scriptures, after the agreement of the people, and the consent of his fellow-bishops, is not obeyed.
Hath not the bishop of Rome always been supreme head of the church, and Christ's vicar on earth even from Peter?
No, that he was not. For by the word of God he hath no more authority, than the bishop of London hath.
Was not Peter head of the church, and hath not the bishop of Rome, who is his successor, the same authority?
I grant that the bishop of Rome, as he is the successor of Peter, hath the same authority as Peter had: but Peter had no more authority than every one of the apostles had.
Yes, that St. Peter had; for Christ said specially unto him, "I will give thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven;" which he spake to none other of his disciples singularly, but to him.
St. Augustine answereth otherwise to the objection, and saith, "That if in Peter there had not been the figure of the church, the Lord had not said to him, To thee will I give the keys of the kingdom of heaven. Which if Peter received not, the church hath them not▪ if the church hath them, then Peter hath them not."
What if I can prove and shew you out of the civil law, that all christendom ought to follow the holy catholic church of Rome, as there is a special title thereof, De catholica fide & sancta Romana ecclesia?
That is nothing material, seeing the things of God be not subject to man's laws; and the divine matters must be ordered by the word of God, and not of man.
What will you say, if I can prove that Christ built his church upon Peter, and that out of St. Cyprian? will you then believe that the bishop of Rome ought to be supreme head of the church?
I know what St. Cyprian writeth in that behalf; but he meaneth nothing as you take it.
St. Cyprian hath these words, That upon Peter was built the church, as upon the first beginning of unity.
He declareth that in an example, that unity must be in the church; he grounded on Peter his church alone, and not upon men. Which he doth more manifestly declare in the book De simplicitate Praelatorum, saying, in the person of one man God gave the keys to all, that he in signification thereby might declare the unity of all men.
What, will you understand St. Cyprian so? That were good indeed.
I think you cannot understand St. Cyprian better, than he doth declare himself.
I will desire you (Mr. Chancellor) to take some pains with Dr. Chedsey, about his examination, for I must go to the parliament-house. And I desire you will dine with me.
Then the doctor again took his former [Page 55] authority in hand for want of another, and would have mad a further circumstance, digressing from his purpose. To whom I said he knew not whereabouts he went, and herewith he laughed. And I said his divinity was nothing but scoffing.
Yes, then I have done with you, and so went away.
You are too young in divinity to teach me in the matters of my faith. Though you may be more learned in other things than I, yet in divinity I have been longer practised than you, for any thing I can hear of you; therefore be not too hasty to judge what you do not perfectly know.
Peter and his successors from the beginning have been allowed for the supreme head of the church, and that by the scriptures, for Christ said unto him in St. John thrice, "Feed my sheep."
That is no otherwise to be taken, than, "Go ye and preach," which was spoken to all the apostles as well as unto Peter. And that Christ said thrice, "Feed my sheep," it signifieth nothing else but the earnest study that the ministers of God ought to have in preaching the word. God grant that you of the clergy would weigh your duty in this behalf more than you do. Is this a just interpretation of the scripture, to take "Feed my sheep," for to be lord of the whole world?
IN the mean while a bachelor of divinity came in, which is a reader of Greek in Oxford, belonging to the bishop, and he took upon him to help Mr. Chancellor.
What will you say if I can shew you a Greek author called Theophylact to interpret it so? Will you believe his interpretation?
Theophylact is a late writer, and one that was a favourer of the bishop of Rome, and therefore not to be credited, since his interpretation is contrary to the determination of many general councils.
In what general council was it otherwise, that the bishop of Rome was not supreme head over all?
In the council of Nice I am sure it was otherwise; for Athanasius was there the chief bishop and president of the council, and not the bishop of Rome.
Nay, that is not so.
Then I perceive you are better seen in words than in knowledge of things: and I will lay with you what you will it is so, as you may see in the Epitome of the councils.
I will fetch Eusebius and shew the contrary, and the book of General Councils. He went into my lord's closet, and brought Eusebius, but the General Councils he brought not, saying (for saving of his honesty) that he could not come by them, and there he would have defended that it was otherwise in Eusebius, but he was not able to shew the same, and so shrunk away confounded.
The church of Rome hath been always taken for the catholic church; therefore I would advise you to come into the same with us. You see all the men of this realm do condemn you. And why will you be so singular?
I have said, and still do say, that if you can be able to prove it unto me, that I will be of the same. But I am sure that the church, which you make so much of, is a false church, and a synagogue of Satan. And you with the learned men of the realm do persecute the true church, and condemn such as are more righteous than you.
Do you hear, Mr. Doctor, what he saith, that the church of Rome is the devil.
I wish you did think more reverently of the church of Rome. What will you say if I can shew you out of St. Austin, in his epistle written unto pope Innocent, that the whole general council of Carthage did allow the church of Rome to be the chief over all others?
I am sure you can shew no such thing. And with that he fetched me the book of St. Austin, and turned to the epistle, but he could not prove his allegation manifestly, but by conjectures in this wise.
Here you may see, that the council of Carthage writing to Innocent, the bishop, calleth the see of Rome the apostolic see. And besides this, they write to him, certifying him of things done in the council for the condemnation of the Donatists, requiring his approbation in the same; which they would not have done if they had not taken the church of Rome for the supreme head of others. And moreover you may see how St. Austin doth prove the church of Rome to be the catholic church, by continual succession of the bishops until his time, which succession we can prove until our days: therefore by the same reason of St. Austin we say now, that the church of Rome is the catholic church.
Mr. Doctor, I have considered how you do weigh St. Austin; and contrary to his meaning and words, you would infer your false conclusion.
AS concerning that it was called by him the apostolical see, that is not material to prove the church of Rome now to be the catholic church. I will grant indeed that it is the apostolic see, in respect that Paul and Peter did there once preach the gospel, and abode there for a certain season. I wish you could prove it to be the apostolical see of the true religion and sincerity as the apostle left it, and did teach the same; which if you could do, you might boast of Rome as of the apostolical see; otherwise it is now of no more force, than if the Turks at Antioch and at Jerusalem should boast of the apostolic sees, because the apostles did there once abide, and founded the church of Christ.
AND whereas the whole council of Carthage did write unto pope Innocent, certifying him of what was done in the general council, and willing him to set his helping hand to the suppressing of the Donatists, as they had done; that fact of the council doth not prove the supremacy of the bishop of Rome, no more than if the whole convocation-house now gathered together▪ and agreeing upon certain articles, might send the same to some bishop that upon certain impediments is not present, desiring hi [...] [...] agree thereto, and to set them forth in his d [...]cese. Which fact doth not make any such bishop of greater authority than the rest, because his consent is brotherly required.
AND touching the succession of the bishops of Rome, brought in by St. Augustine, it maketh nothing now thereby to prove the same catholic church, unless you can conclude with the same reason as St Augustine doth. And the rehearsal of the succession of the bishops doth tend to this only, to prove the Donatists to be heretics, because they began as well at Rome as in Africa, to found another church of their own setting up, than was grounded by Peter and Paul, and by their successors, whom he recited until his time, which all taught no such doctrine, neither such church as the Donatists. Rome (whereof you do glory) that such doctrine hath not been taught by any of the successors of Peter's see, as is now taught and believed by us, you have good reason against us: otherwise it is of no force, as I am able to declare.
Well, Mr. Doctor, you see we can do no good in persuading of him: let us administer the articles which my lord hath lest us, unto him. How say you, Mr. Philpot, to these articles? Mr. Johnson, I pray you write his answers.
Mr. Chancellor, you have no authority to inquire of me my belief in such articles as you go about, for I am not of my lord of London's diocese; and to be brief with you, I will make no further answer herein than I have already to the bishop.
Why then let us go our ways, and let his keeper take him away.
THUS ended the seventh part of his tragedy.
A private Conference between Mr. PHILPOT and Bishop BONNER.
EARLY the next morning the bishop sent one of his men to me, to call me up into his chapel to [...]ear mass.
Mr. Philpot, where are you?
Who is that that calleth me?
My lord's will is, you should rise and come to hear mass: will you come or no?
My stomach is not very good this morning: you may tell my lord I am sick. After this, the keeper was sent to bring me to my lord.
Mr. Philpot, you must rise and come to my lord.
I am at your command, Mr. Keeper, as soon as I can: and going out of the prison, he asked me saying:
Will you go to mass?
My stomach is too raw to digest such raw meats of flesh, blood, and bone this morning.
AFTER this, my keeper presented me to the bishop in his hall.
Mr. Philpot, I charge you to answer unto such articles as my chaplain and my register have from me to object against you: go and answer them.
My lord, all judgments ought to be public. Therefore if your lordship has any thing to charge me lawfully with, let me be in judgment lawfully and openly called, and I will answer according to my duty; otherwise in corners I will not.
Thou art a foolish knave I see well enough, thou shalt answer whether thou wilt or no; go thy ways with them, I say.
I will go with them at your lordship's pleasure; but I will make them no further answers than I have said already.
No, wilt thou not, knave? Have him away, and set him in the stocks: what, foolish knave?
Indeed, my lord, you handle me, with others, like fools: and we must be content to be made fools at your hands, stocks and violence are your bishop-like alms. You go about by force in corners to oppress, and are ashamed that your doings should come to light: God shorten your cruel kingdom for his mercy's sake. And presently after I was put into the stocks, in a house alone, separate from my fellows: God be praised that he hath thought me worthy to suffer any thing for his name's sake. Better it is to sit in the stocks of this world, than to fit in the stocks of a damnable conscience.
Another Conference between the Bishop and Mr. PHILPOT, and other Prisoners.
The next day after, an hour before day, the bishop sent for me again by the keeper.
Mr. Philpot, arise, you must come to my lord.
I wonder what my lord meaneth, that he sendeth for me thus early, I fear he will use some violence towards me, wherefore I pray you ma [...] him this answer, Tha [...] if he did send for me by an order of law, I will [...] and answer: otherwise since I am not of his diocese, neither is he [...] ordinary, I will not (without I be violently constrained) come unto him.
I will go and tell my lord, what answer you make: and so he went away to the bishop, and immediately returned with two of the bishop's men, saying, that I must come whether I would or no.
If by violence any of you will enforce me to go, then I must go, otherwise I will not; and therewith one of them took me by force by the arm, and led me up into the bishop's gallery.
What, thou art a foolish knave indeed; thou wilt not come without thou be fetched.
I am brought indeed (my lord) by violence [Page 58] unto you, and your cruelty is such, that I am afraid to come before you; I would your lordship would gently proceed against me by the law.
I am blamed b [...] [...]he lords the bishops, that I have not dispatched thee ere this. And in faith, I made suit to my lord cardinal, and all the convocation-house, that they would hear thee. And my lord of Lincoln stood up, and said thou wert, a frantic fellow, and a man that [...]ill always have the last word. And they all have much blamed me, because I have brought thee so often before the lords openly: and they say, it is meat and drink to you to speak in an open audience, you glory so in yourself. Wherefore I am commanded to take a further order with thee, and in good faith if thou wilt not relent, I will make no further delay. Marry, if thou wilt yet be conformable, I will forgive thee all that is pa [...]t, and thou shalt have no hurt for any thing that is already spoken or done.
My lord, I have answered you already in this behalf, what I will do. And as for the report of Mr. White bishop of Lincoln, I heed it not; he is known to be mine enemy, for that I being archdeacon did excommunicate him for preaching n [...]ughty doctrine. If Christ my master was called a madman, it is no marvel though you co [...]t me frantic.
Hadst thou not a pig brought thee the other day with a knife in it? Wherefore was it (I pray thee) but to kill thyself? or, as it is told me, (marry I am counselled to take heed of thee) to kill me? But I fear th [...]e not, I think I am able to tread thee under my feet, do the best thou canst.
My lord, I cannot deny but that there was a knife in the pig's belly that was brought me. But who put it in, or for what purpose, I I know not, unless it were because he that sent the meat, thought I was without a knife, and so put it in. But other things your lordship needeth not to fear: for I was never without a knife, since I came to prison. And touching your own person, you shall live long if you should live till I go about to kill you; and I confess, by violence your lordship is able to overcome me.
I charge thee to answer to mine articles. Hold him a book. Thou shalt swear to answer truly to all such articles, as I shall demand of thee.
I will first know your lordship to be mine ordinary, before I swear herein.
What, we shall have an Anabaptist of thee, who thinketh it not lawful to swear before a judge.
My lord, I am no Anabaptist, I think it lawful to swear before a competent judge, being lawfully required. But I refuse to swear in these causes before your lordship, because you are not mine ordinary.
I am thine ordinary, and here do pronounce by sentence peremptory, I am thine ordinary, and that thou art of my diocese: and here he ordered others to be called in to bear him witness. And I make thee,
to be my notary. And now hearken to my articles, to which
he admonished me to make answer, and said to the keeper, Fetch me his fellows, and I shall make them be witnesses against him.
IN the mean while came in one of the sheriffs of London, whom the bishop
placed by him, saying, Mr. Sheriff, I would you should understand how I do proceed against this man. Mr. Sheriff, you shall hear what articles this man doth maintain; and so read a rabblement of feigned articles: That I should deny baptism to be necessary to them that were born of christian parents, that I denied fasting and prayer, and all other good deeds, that I maintained only bare faith to be sufficient to salvation, whatsoever a man did besides, and I maintained God to be the author of all sin and wickedness.
Ha, my lord, have you nothing of truth to charge me withal, but you must be fain to imagine these blasphemous lies against me? You might as well have said I had killed your father. The scriptures say, "That God will destroy all men that speak lies." And is not your lordship ashamed to say before this worshipful gentleman, (who is unknown to me) that I maintain these [Page 59] abominable blasphemies which you have rehearsed? which if I did maintain, I were well worthy to be counted an heretic, and to be burnt an hundred times if it were possible.
I do object them unto thee, to hear what thou wilt say in them, and how thou canst clear thyself of them.
Then it was not justly said of your lordship in the beginning, that I did maintain them, since almost I hold none of these articles you have read, in form as they are written.
How sayest thou? wilt thou answer to them or no?
I will first know you to be mine ordinary, and that you may lawfully charge me with such things, and then afterwards being lawfully called in judgment, I will shew my mind fully thereof, and not otherwise.
Well, then I will make thy fellows to be witnesses herein against thee: where are they? are they come?
They are here, my lord.
Come hither, [...]irs;
you shall swear by the contents of that book, that you shall (all manner of affections laid apart) say the truth of all such articles as shall be demanded of you concerning this man present, who is a very naughty man, and take you heed of him that he doth not deceive you, as I am afraid he doth you much hurt, and strengtheneth you in errors.
My lord, we will not swear, except we know whereto; we can accuse him of no evil, we have been but a while acquainted with him.
I wonder your lordship knowing the law, will go about, contrary to the same, to have infamous persons to be witnesses, for your lordship doth take them to be heretics, and by the law an heretic cannot be a witness.
Yes, one heretic against another may be well enough. And, Mr. Sheriff, I will make one of them to be a witness against another.
You have the law in your hand, and will do what you list.
No, my lord.
No, will you not? I will make you swear, whether you will or no. I think th [...] be Anabaptists, Mr. Sheriff, they think it not lawful to swear before a judge.
We think it lawful to swear for a m [...] judicially called, as we are not now, but in a bli [...] corner.
Why, then seeing you will not swear against your fellow, you shall swear for yourselves, and I do here in the presence of Mr. Sheriff object the same articles unto you, as I have do [...] unto him, and require you under pain of excommunication, to answer particularly unto every one of them when you shall be examined, as you shall be by and by examined by my regist [...]r and some of my chaplains.
My lord, we will not accuse ourselves. If any man can lay any thing against us, we are here ready to answer thereto: otherwise we pray your lordship not to burden us; for some of us are here before you, we know no just cause why.
Mr. Sheriff, I will trouble you no longer with these froward men. And so he rose up, and was going away, talking with Mr. Sheriff.
Mr. Sheriff, I pray you record how my lord proceedeth against us in corners, without all order of law, having no just cause to lay against [...]s. And after this, we were all commanded to be put in the stocks, where I sat from morning until night; and the keeper at night upon favour l [...] me out.
Another private Conference between the Bishop and Mr. PHILPOT in the Coal-house.
The Sunday after, the bishop came into the coal-house at night, with the keeper, and viewed the house, saying, that he was [Page 60] never [...]: whereby a man may guess how he kept God's commandment in visiting the prisoners, seeing he was never with them that have been so [...]igh his no [...]: and he came not then for any good zeal, but [...]o view the place, and thought i [...] too good for me, and therefore after supper, between eight and nine, he sent for me, saying:
Sir, I have great displeasure of the queen and council for keeping you so long, and letting you have [...] m [...]ch liberty▪ and besides that, you be yonder, and strengthen the other prisoners in their errors, as I have laid wait for your doings, and am certified of you well enough; I will sequester you therefore from them, and you shall hurt them no more as you have done, and I will out of hand dispatch you as I am commanded, unless you will be a conformable man.
My lord, you have my body in your custody, you may transport it whi [...]her you please, I am content. And I wish you wo [...]d make as quick expedition in my judgment, as [...]ou say; I long for it: and as for conformit [...], I am ready to yield to all truth, if any can bring better than I.
Why, will you believe [...]o man but yourself, whatsoever they say?
My belief must not hang upon men's sayings, without sure authority of God's word, which if they can shew me, I w [...]ll be pliant to the same; otherwise I cannot go from my certain faith to that which is uncertain.
Have you then the tru [...]h only?
My lord, I will speak my mind freely unto you, and upon no malice that I bear to you, before God. You have not the truth, neither are you of the church of God; but you persecute both the truth and the true church of God, for which cause you cannot prosper long. You see God doth not prosper your doings according to your expectations: he ha [...]h of late shewed his just judgment ag [...]inst one of your greatest doers, who by report died mis [...]r [...]bly. I envy not the authority you are in. You that have l [...]ning, should know best how to rule. And seeing God hath restored you [...]o your dignity and living again, use the same to God's glory, and [...]o the setting forth of his true religion; otherwise it will not continue, do what you can. With this saying he paused, and at length said:
That good man was punished for such as thou art. Where is the keeper? Come, let him have him to the place that is provided for him. Go your way before.
And he f [...]llowed me, calling the keeper aside, commanding him to keep all men from me, and narrowly to search me, (as the sequel did declare) and brought me to his privy door that goeth into the church, and commanded two of his men to accompany the keeper, and to see me placed.
AND afterwards I passed through St. Paul's up to Lolla [...]d's Tower, and after that turned along the west-side of St. Paul's through the wall, and passing through six or seven doors, came to my lodging through many straits; where I called to remembrance▪ that strait is the way to heaven. And it is in a tower, right on the other side of Lollard's Tower, as high almost as the battlements of St. Paul's, eight feet in breadth, and thirteen in length, and almost over the p [...]ison where I was before▪ having a window opening towards the east, by which I could look over the tops of a great many houses, but see no man passing into them: and whoso walk in the bishop's outer gallery going to his chapel, might see my window, and me standing in the same.
AND as I came to my place, the keeper plucked off my gown, and searched me very narrowly, and took away a pen case, ink horn, girdle, and knife, but (as God would) I had an inkling a little before I was called, of my removal, and thereupon made an errand to the stool, where (full sore against my will) I cast away many a sweet and friendly letter; but that which I had written of my list examination before, I thrust into my hose, thinking the next day to have made an end thereof, and with walking it was fallen down to my leg, which he by feeling did soon find out, and asked what that was. I said, they were certain letters: and with that he was very busy to have them out. Let me alone, said I, I will plu [...] th [...]m out: with that I put in my h [...]d, having two other letters [Page 61] therein, and brought up the same writing into my breeches, and there left it, giving him the other two letters that were not of any great importance; which to make a shew that they had been weighty, I began to tear as well as I could, till they snatched them from me, and so deluded him (I thank God) of his purpose.
THEN he went away, and as he was going, one of them that came with him, said, that I did not deliver the writing I had in my hose, but two other letters I had in my hand before. Did he not, says he? I will go and search him better: which I hearing, conveyed my examination I had written, into another place near my bed, and took all my letters I had in my purse, and was tearing of them when he came again, and as he came I threw the same out of the window, saying, That I heard what he said; wherefore I did prevent his searching again, and I was right glad. God be praised that gave me that present shift to blind their eyes from the knowledge of my writings, which if they had known, it would have been an occasion of straiter keeping and looking unto, although they looked narrowly enough.
The Eighth Examination of Mr. JOHN PHILPOT, before the Bishops of London and St. David's, Mr. Mordant, and others in the Bishop's Chapel.
THE next day after, my keeper came in the morning before day to call me down, and so I was brought down into his wardrobe, where with a keeper I was left, and there continued all the day. But after dinner I was called down into the chapel, before the bishops of London and St. David's, Mr. Mordant, one of the queen's council, Mr. Archdeacon of London, and before a great many other Baalamites. And the bishop spake unto me in this wise.
Sir, I here object, and lay unto you, in the presence of my lord of St. David's, and of Mr. Mordant, and of these worshipful men, these articles here in this libel contained; and openly he read them.
TO whom when I would particularly have answered to some of his blasphemies, he would not permit me; but said, I should have leisure to say what I would, when he had spoken.
AND unto th [...]se here I add another schedule. Also, I require thee to answer to the catechism set forth in the schismatical time of king Edward. Also I will thee to answer to certain conclusions agreed upon in Oxford and Cambridge. And I here do bring forth these witnesses against thee in thine own presence, namely, my lord of St. David's▪ Mr. Mordant, and Mr. Harpsfield, with as many as were present at the disputation you made in the convocation-house; willing you to testify, of your oaths taken upon a book, his stubborn and irreverent behaviour he did there use against the blessed sacrament of the altar. Give me a book, and receiving one, he opened the same, saying, I will teach him here one trick in our law, which he knoweth not; that is, my lord of St. David's, because you are a bishop, you have this privilege, that you may swear by looking on the gospel book without touching the same. And so he opened the book in his sight, and shut it again, and caused the others to put their hands on the book, and take their oath, and desired them to resort to his register to make their depositions when they might be best at leisure. And afterwards he turned to me and said, Now, sir, you shall answer but two words, whether you will answer to these articles which I have laid unto you, directly, yea, or nay?
My lord, you have told a long tale against me, containing many lying blasphemies, which cannot be answered in two words: besides this, you promised me at the beginning, that I should say what I could for my defence, and now you will not give me leave to speak. What law is this?
Speak yea, or nay, for you shall say no more at this time.
Then my two words you would have me speak, shall be, that I have appealed from you, and take you not for my sufficient judge.
Indeed, Mr. Mordant, he hath appealed to the king, and to the queen; but I will be so bold with her majesty, to stay that appeal in mine own hands.
You will do what you please, my lord, you have the law in your hands,
Wilt thou answer, or no?
I will not answer otherwise than I have said.
Register, note his answer that he maketh.
Knock me on the head with a hatchet, or set up a stake and burn me out of hand, without further law; you may as well do so, as what you do, for all is without order of law: such tyranny was never seen as you use now-a-days; God of his mercy destroy your cruel kingdom. And whilst I spake this, the bishop went away in haste.
Mr. Philpot, I pray you be quiet, and have patience with you.
My lord, I thank God, I have patience to bear and abide all your cruel intents against me: notwithstanding I speak this earnestly, being justly moved thereto, to notify your unjust and cruel dealing with me in corners, without all due order of law.
AFTER this, at night, I was conducted again by three or four into the coal-house.
The Ninth Examination of Mr. JOHN PHILPOT before Bishop Bonner and his Chaplains.
THE next day, betimes in the morning I was called down by my [...]eper, and brought again into the wardrobe, where I remained till the bishop had heard his mass, and afterwards he sent up for me into his inward parlour, and there he called for a chair to sit down, and brought his infamous libel of his forged articles in his hand, and sat down, willing me to draw near unto him, and said:
I am this day appointed to tarry at home from the parliament-house to examine you and your f [...]llows upon [...] articles, and you stand [...]allying with me, and will neither answer to nor fro. I know all your [...]ceptions will not serve you. Will it not be a [...] honesty for you, th [...]nk you, that when thou comest before the lord mayor and the sheriffs, and other worshipful audience, when I shall say before them all, that I have had thee many times before me, and before so many learned men, and then thou couldst say nothing for that thou standest in, for all thy great brags of learning, neither wouldst thou answer directly to any thing?
My lord, I have told you my mind plain enough; but yet I do not intend to lose that privilege the law giveth me, which is free choice to answer where I am not bound, and this privilege will I cleave unto, until I am compelled otherwise.
Well, I perceive thou wilt play the obstinate fool. Lay thine appellation when thou comest to judgment, and answer in the mean while to these articles.
No, my lord, by your leave I will not answer to them, until my lawful appeal be tried.
Well, thou shalt hear them, and with that he began to read them.
I shrunk back into the window, and looked on a book, and after he had read them over he said unto me:
I have read them over, although it hath not pleased you to hear me, I marvel, in good faith, what thou meanest by being so wilful and stubborn, seeing thou mayest do well enough if thou likest. It is but singularity; dost thou not see all the realm against thee?
My lord, I speak unto you in the witness of God, before whom I stand, that I am neither wedded to mine own will, neither stand upon my stubbornness or singularity, but upon my conscience instructed by God's word: and if your lordship can sh [...]w better evidence than I have of a good faith, I will follow the same.
What, thou wilt not, lo, for all that [...] Well, all that is past shall be forgotten, if thou wilt be conformable unto us. I [...] thou mightest find as much favour as thou wouldst des [...]re.
[Page 63]THEN I p [...]rceiving that he fawned so much upon me, thought it good to give him some hope of my relentin [...] to the intent I might give him and his hypocritical generation openly a further foil, perceiving that they dare reason openly w [...]th none but such as are unlearned, [...] lack of knowledge not able to answer, or else with such as they have hope that for fear o [...] love of the world will recant: I said, my lord, it is not unkown to you, that I have openly, in the audience of a great number, stood to the maintenance of these opinions I am in, and by learning did offer to defend them; therefore, my lord, I would it might appear to the world tha [...] I am won by learning, or else what will they say, b [...]t that either for fear, or love of the world, I am without any ground turned from the truth? And if I hear any kind of learning openly shewed, I shall be as conformable as you may require me.
Yea marry, now you speak somewhat like a [...]easonable man. You might have had a great deal more favour in my house, and liberty than you have had; and you shall lack nothing that is within my house; call for it and you shall have it. And what is it that you would openly by learning be somewhat satisfied in? Tell me.
My lord, I have openly said, and do believe it also, that your sacrifice of the mass is no sacrament.
What, do you deny the presence of Christ in the sacrament?
No, my lord, I deny not the presence of Christ in the sacrament, but I have denied the sacrament of the altar as it is used in your mass, to be the true sacrament of Christ's institution: and first it must be proved a sacrament before there can be any presence granted.
Why, do you deny the mass to be a sacrament? I pray you, what is a sacrament? Is it not a sign of a holy thing, as St. Austin doth de [...]e it?
Yes, verily that it is.
Then I make this argument unto you: [...] sacrament i [...] the sign of a holy thing: but the mass is the sign of a holy thing: Ergo, It is a sacrament.
You must add this to your major, or first proposition, as St. Augustine doth mean, that a sacrament is the sign of a holy thing instituted of God, and commanded; for otherwise it can be no sacrament; for all men cannot make a sacrament.
I grant that; and such a sign of a holy thing is the mass of Christ's institution.
I deny that, my lord.
I will prove this by St. Augustine by and by. I will go shew you the book, and you shall have any book I have that you will demand. Ho, who is without there? Call me Mr. Doctor Chedsey, Mr. Archdeacon, Mr. Cosins, and other chaplains hither.
HERE, my lords: Mr. Dr. Chedsey is gone to Westminster, and Mr. Archdeacon Harpsfield was here even now.
Mr. Cosins, I pray you examine him upon these articles, and write the answer he maketh to every one of them. I will go examine his fellows, and send you St. Augustine by and by. I find this man more conformable than he was before.
I trust, my lord, you shall find him at length a good catholic man. Marry, here be a sight of heresies; I dare say you will hold none of them, nor stand in any of them. How say you to the first?
Mr. Cosins, I have told my lord already, that I will answer to none of these articles he hath objected against me; but if you will with learning answer to that which is in question between my lord and me, I will gladly hear and commune with you.
Will you not? Why, what is that then that is in question between my lord and you?
Whether your mass be a sacrament or no.
What, the mass to be sacrament? Who ever doubted thereof?
If it be an undoubted truth, you may the sooner prove it; for I doubt much thereof.
Why, I will prove it. It is the sign of a holy thing: Ergo, it is a sacrament.
I deny your antecedent.
What, will you so? Then there is no reasoning with you.
THUS Mr. Cosins gave over in the plain field for want of further proof. And then the morrow-mass chaplain began to speak for his occupation: and with that Mr. Harpsfield came out from my lord with St. Augustine's epistles, saying:
My lord hath sent you here St. Augustine to look upon, and I pray you look what he saith in a certain epistle which he writeth; I will read over the whole. Here you may hear the celebration of the mass, and how it reproveth them that went a hawking and hunting before the celebration of the same, on the sabbath and holidays.
I perceive the contents of this epistle, and I see nothing herein against me, neither any thing that maketh for the proof of your sacrament of the mass.
No, doth he not make mention of the mass, and the celebration thereof? what can be spoken more plain?
St. Austin meaneth of the celebration of the communion, and of the true use of the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ, and not of your private mass, which you of late years have erected in the stead thereof; for this word Mass hath been an old term, attributed to the communion even from the primitive church And I pray you tell me what Missa doth signify? I think not many that say mass can well tell.
No, can they not? that is a marvel.
Then tell me if you can. But Mr. Cosins and my morrow-mass chaplain were both dumb, looking upon Mr. Harpsfield for help, and at length he spake.
You think it cometh of the Hebrew word Massah, as though none were versed in the Hebrew but yourself.
I have not gone so long to school, to derive the signification of the word Missa, which is a Latin word, out of Hebrew: but I have learned to interpret Greek words by Greek, and Latin by Latin, and Hebrew by Hebrew; I take the communion to be called Missa, a mittendo, of such things as at the celebration of the communion were sent by such as were of ability, to the relief of the poor, where the rich brought according to their devotion and ability, and required the minister in the celebration of the communion to pray unto God for them, and to accept their common alms▪ which they at such times did send for the relief of their poor brethren and sisters; and for this it was called Missa, as learned men do witness. At which celebration of the mass, all that were present did communicate under both kinds, according to Christ's institution, as they did in St. Augustine's time. But unless you can shew that your mass is used as it then was, you shall never by the name of mass (which St. Augustine attributed to the true use of the communion) prove your private mass to be a sacrament, unless you can prove the same now to be in your masses as was then, which is clean contrary.
What, deny you the mass to be a sacrament? For shame speak it not.
I will not be ashamed to deny it, if you cannot prove it.
Why, it is a sacrifice, which is more than a sacrament.
You may make of it as much as you like: but you shall never make it a sacrifice, as you may imagine thereof, but first it must be a sacrament, for of the sacrament you deduce your sacrifice.
Why? doth not Christ say, "This is my body?" and doth not the priest pronounce the same that Christ did?
The pronunciation only is not enough, unless the words be therewithal applied to the use, as Christ spake them to. For though you speak the words of baptism over water ever so many times▪ yet there is no baptism unless there be a christian person to be baptized.
Nay, that is not alike; for, Hoc est corpus meum, manducate, that is, "This is my body," said also, Accipite, manducate, that is, Take ye, eat ye. And except the former part of the institution of Christ's sacrament be accomplished according to the communion; the latter, "This is my body," can have no verification, take it which way you will, and how you will.
Why then you will make the sacrament to stand in the receiving, and that receiving maketh it a sacrament.
I do not say, that the receiving only maketh it a sacrament, but I say, that a common receiving must needs be concurrent with the true sacrament▪ as a necessary member, without which it cannot be a sacrament, because Christ has made this a principal part of the sacrament, "Take ye, eat ye," which you do not in your mass according to Christ's institution; wherefore, it can be no sacrament, for that it wanteth Christ's institution.
We do forbid none to come to it, but as many as like may be partakers with us at the mass if they require it.
Nay, that they shall not, though they require it, you will minister but one kind unto them, which is not after Christ's institution. Besides that, you ought before you go to mass, to exhort all that be present to make a sacrifice of thanksgiving, for Christ's passion with you, and exhort them to be partakers with you, according to Christ's commandment, saying unto all that be present, "Take ye, eat ye:" and likewise by preaching shew forth the Lord's death, which you do [...].
What if all things be done, even as you would have it, and whilst the minister is about to administer the sacrament, before any have received it th [...]re arise a sudden hurly burly, that the communicants he compelled to go away; is it not a sacrament for all that none hath communicated besides the priest?
In this case, where all things are appointed to be done according to God's word, if incident necessity had not hindered, I cannot say but it is a sacrament, and that he who hath received, hath the true sacrament. After this, the morrow-mass priest made this apish reason.
If the sacrament of the mass be no sacrament, unless all do receive it, because Christ said, "Take ye, eat ye," then the sacrament of baptism is no sacrament where there is but one baptized▪ because Christ said to his apostles, "Go preach the gospel to all creatures, baptizing all nations in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost."
In that saying of Christ, "Baptizing all nations," is a commandment to the apostles, to baptize all sorts of men, and to exclude none that believe, be he Gentile or Jew, not meaning all at once, for that were impossible. And there are many examples that baptism may be singularly ministered to one person, as we have example of Christ baptized of John, and in the Eunuch baptized of Philip, with many more such like: but so have you not of the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ, but contrariwise by the express words of St. Paul, you are commanded to use it in a communion and participation of many together: 1 Cor. xi. "As oft as ye come together to eat (meaning the Lord's supper) tarry one for another." And also the minister in the celebration of the sacrament speaketh unto all that be present in Christ's behalf, to communicate with him, saying, "Take ye, eat ye." Wherefore, as many as are present and do not communicate▪ break God's commandment in not receiving the same, and the minister is no just minister that doth not distribute the sacrament as Christ did, to all that are present; and where God's word is transgressed, there is not Christ present, and consequently it is no sacrament.
What, would you have it no sacrament without it be a communion?
I make it not so, but God's express word teacheth me so, yea, also all the ancient writers; as [Page 66] Chrysostom writing upon the epistle to the Ephesians, saith, That the oblation is in vain, where none doth communicate with the priest. If by his judgment the action of the priest alone is in vain, where is no communion, how can that be a sacrament, which he calleth a vain oblation, and a vain standing at the altar?
Such a fellow I have never heard, you will not have the mass to be a sacrament; you are no man for me to reason with. Come, let us go, pointing to the morrow-mass chaplain; we will leave you (Mr. Archdeacon) and him together; and so they went away. Afterwards the archdeacon fell into earnest persuasions with me, saying:
Mr. Philpot, you and I have been acquainted these many years; we were school-fellows both in Winchester and in Oxford. Wherefore I must wish you as well to do as myself, and I pray you so think of me.
I thank you for your good will towards me. But if you be deceived (as I am sure you are), I shall desire you not to wish me deceived with you. For before God I tell you plainly, you are highly deceived, and maintain false religion, and be not those men you take yourselves for: and if you do not repent, and leave off your persecuting Christ's truth, you will go to the devil for it. Therefore consider it in time, I give you warning, for else in the day of judgment I shall be a witness against you, that I told you this here talking together.
Fie, that is but your own singular opinion; I perceive you are now still that man you were in Oxford.
I trust you can report no notorious evil that ever you knew by me there.
I can say no evil of your conversation, but I knew you to be a studious man. Marry, if you remember when we met in disputation in Par [...]is, you would not lightly give over, and for that cause I speak what I said.
Mr. Harpsfield, you know in the schools of Oxford, when we were young men, we did strive much upon vain glory, and upon contention, more than for the truth: but now our years and riper learning teach us to fall to a truth, which must be our portion for ever. And if I was then, in my time of ignorance, earnest in my own cause, I ought now to be earnest in my master Christ's cause, and his truth. I know now that nothing done upon vain glory and singularity can please God, have it ever so godly a shew: wherefore I pray you judge not so of me now.
What, will you think yourself better learned than all the learned men in this realm?
My faith hangeth not upon the learned of the world, but on the learned of God's word.
Well, I will talk with you no more as now, but pray God to open your heart.
I pray God open both our hearts, to do more his will than we have done in times past.
Ho, keeper, take him away with you.
I pray you, Mr. Harpsfield, tell me what this pronoun (Hoc) doth demonstrate and shew, in this indicative proposition as you call it, Hoc est corpus meum, This is my body?
It doth demonstrate the substance of bread, which by the words spoken by the priest, and by the omnipotency of God, is turned into the substance of Christ's very body.
Is the substance of bread, as you say, turned into Christ's body?
Yea, that it is.
Why, then Christ's body receiveth daily a great increase of many thousand pieces of bread into his body, and that is his body become now, which was not before, and by this you would seem to make, that there is an alteration in Christ's glorified body, which is a wicked thing to think.
Then he fetched about again, and remembering [Page 67] himself better, and seeing the inconvenience of his first assertion, of the transubstantiation of bread into Christ's body, he said, That the substance of bread, after the words spoken by the priest, was evacuated or vanished away by the omnipotency of God.
This is another song than you sung first: and here you may see how contrary you are to yourselves. For indeed your schoolmen do hold, That the very substance of bread is really turned into the very substance of Christ's body. And now you perceiving of late the inconvenience which is objected against you in that opinion, are driven so imagine a new shift, and say, The substance of bread is evacuated, contrary to that which your church hath at first believed and taught. O what contrariety is there among you, and all to deface the sincere truth.
Is not God omnipotent? and cannot he do as he hath said?
But his omnipotence will not do as you say, contrary to his word and to his honour. It is not God's honour to include him bodily into a piece of bread, and of necessity to tie him thereto. It is not God's honour for you to make a piece of bread God and man, which you see before your face doth putrify after a certain time. Is not God's omnipotence as able to give his body with the sacramental bread, as to make so many turnings away of the bread, as you do, and that directly against the scripture, which calleth it bread many times after consecration? Are you not ashamed to make so many alterations of the Lord's institution as you do, and take away the substantial parts of the sacrament, as, "Take ye, eat ye, drink ye all of this; do ye this in remembrance of me;" and to place in their stead, Hear ye, gaze ye, knock ye, worship ye, offer ye, sacrifice ye for the quick and the dead! If this be not blasphemy to God and his sacraments, to add and to pluck away in this sort, and that contrary to the mind of all ancient writers, and contrary to the example of Christ and all his apostles, tell me▪
I know you have gathered the sayings of the doctors together which make for your purpose; I will talk no longer with you.
I pray God open both our hearts, to do more his will than we have done in times past.
Ho, keeper, take him away with you.
The tenth Examination of Mr. PHILPOT, before Bishop BONNER, his Register, and others.
THE next day, after dinner, I was brought into my lord's upper hall, and there he called me before him and his register, and before Dr. Chedsey, in the presence of two homely gentlemen, and a priest which I knew not: at which time the bishop said▪
I do here lay to this man in your presence, (requiring you to be a witness against him, as much as you know in any of them) these articles, this book of the catechism, made in king Edward's days, also these conclusions agreed upon both in Oxford and Cambridge; also I lay unto him, that he hath despised the censures of the church, and hath stood accursed above this twelvemonth, and never required absolution thereof. How say you, wert thou not accursed by my lord chancellor?
I was excommunicated by him wrongfully, and without any just cause, and without order of law, being never personally cited.
Didst thou not tell me the other day, when I required thee to come to the mass, that thou wast excommunicated, and therefore by law could not hear mass! How long hast thou thus been excommunicated?
More than a year and a half.
Lo, you may hear what he saith: write it.
But as you would have written what I have said, I have been thus long excommunicated; so also let him write, that I did require of my lord chancellor that did excommunicate me, my absolution, but he would not give it me, saying, That I was Excommunicatus ipso jure, because I was an heretic, as it pleased him to call me, therefore accursed by your law, and so commanded me to prison, where I remain.
Why do you not require absolution at my lord's hands here now?
Because he is not mine ordinary, neither hath by the law any thing to do with me of right.
What an obstinate fool is this? I tell thee I will be thine ordinary whether thou wilt or no.
And because of this your unrighteous force towards me, I have appealed from you▪ and require you, Mr. Register, that my appeal may be entered in writing.
Have you heard such a froward fellow as this? He seemed yesterday to be very tractable, and I had good hope of him. I tell thee, thou art of my diocese.
I am of Winchester diocese, and not of London diocese.
I pray you, may not a man be of two dioceses at once?
No, that he cannot.
Lo, will you see what an ignorant fool this is in the law, in which he would seem to be a proficient? I tell thee, a man may be of three dioceses at once: as if thou wert born in London, by reason thereof thou shouldst be of my diocese; or else if thou wert not born, but hadst a dignity here, also thou art to be counted of my diocese, or else by reason of thy habitation in my diocese.
In none of these respects am I of your lordship's diocese. But for all that, this will not follow, that I dwelling at Winchester, am at that present of London diocese.
What wilt thou lay thereof? Wilt thou recant if I prove it?
But what shall I win if you do not?
I will give thee my bishopric if I prove it not.
Yea, but who will de [...]ver it me if I win?
Thou art an arrogant fool, enter their oaths, and take these witnesses depositions. I must be gone to the parliament-house.
AFTER this, a priest who was standing by, asked me, whether I was a-kin to my lord Rich, or no?
I said, my lord Rich said so himself to me the other day, but how I know not.
I heard him say he was his nigh kinsman.
Why then you and I must be a-kin, for he is my nigh kinsman. How chance it that you and I be of contrary judgments?
It is no marvel, for Christ prophesied, "That the father should be divided against the son, and the son against the father, for my truth's sake."
You do hold, as I understand, against the blessed sacrament of the altar, and against the holy mass.
If you can prove it a sacrament, I will not hold against you.
What, prove it a sacrament, said he? Doth not St. Paul say, "That such things as the eye hath not seen, neither [...]ar heard, hath God prepared for them that love him."
That saying of St. Paul concerneth not your sacrament, but is meant of the heavenly joys that are prepared for all faithful believers.
Why then I perceive you understand not St. Paul. By God, you are deceived.
You ought not to swear, kinsman. if you will that I shall so call you: and without disowning of our kindred, I understand St. Paul as well as you, and know what I say▪ and [...]ith that shewed him a Greek Testament, with Erasmus's translation, and with the old also, demanding of him, which text he was best acquainted withal.
I knew Greek too once, as well as you, I care not which you read.
You know them all alike; you understand [Page 69] the one as well as the other. With this my Balaamite kinsman departed in a fury.
THE next day after I was brought down again, after dinner, to the chapel, and there my Balaamite kinsman (to verify the scriptures, that a man's own kinsfolks shall be his enemies) came in with the bishop as a witness against me: and there the bishop caused another that came, to hint about other matters, to swear also to be a witness against me, who was a priest also, saying,
You shall swear also to depose all the truth of certain articles you shall be inquired of concerning this man; and here I (according to the law) do bring them forth in thy presence.
My lord, I do not agree to the production of them, but do appeal from all these and other your proceedings against me; and require you, Mr. Register, that my appeal may be entered, and I will pay you for your labour.
Your appeal shall be entered at leisure. Whom do you appeal unto? Tell me.
I appeal to a higher judge, as to the lieutenant of the archbishopric of Canterbury, for I know not who is bishop thereof at this present. With that the bishop went away, and my Baalamite kinsman looked big upon me, but said never a word.
THUS have I in haste scribbled out all mine examinations hitherto, that the same which hath been done unto me in the dark might come to light, and that the papists' unjust proceedings and nakedness in their false religion, might be known to their confusion. Jesus is Emanuel, that is, God with us, Amen.
The Eleventh Examination of Mr. JOHN PHILPOT, on St. Andrew's Day, before the Bishops of DURHAM, CHICHESTER, BATH, and LONDON, Mr. CHRISTOPHERSON, Dr. CHEDSEY, Mr. MORGAN of Oxford, Dr. WESTON, Dr. HARPSFIELD, Archdeacon, Mr. COSINS, and Mr. JOHNSON, Register to the Bishop of London, in his Palace.
BEING sent for with my keeper, the bishop of London met me at his hall-door, and full ma [...]erly he played the gentleman usher to bring me before the lords, saying▪
My lords, I shall desire you to take some pains with this man, he is a gentleman, and I would he should do well, but he will wilfully cast away himself.
Come hither, sir, what is your name?
My name is Philpot.
I have heard of that name to be a worshipful stock, and since you are a gentleman, do as you may live worshipfully among other gentlemen. What is the cause of your trouble now?
I told him the cause, as in my former examinations is expressed.
Well, all causes set apart, will you now be a conformable man to the catholic faith, and leave all new-fangled opinions and heresies? I was in Germany with Luther at the beginning of these opinions, and can tell how they began. Leave them and follow the catholic church throughout the whole world, as the whole realm now doth.
My lord, I am in the catholic faith, and desire to live and die in the same: but it is not unknown to your lordship, that I, with others, these twenty years have been taught another manner of faith than you now go about to compel us unto; wherefore it is requisite that we have time to weigh the same, and to hear how it agreeth with God's word. For faith is at a sudden neither won, neither removed, but as St. Paul saith, "Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by [...]"
And if you will give me leave, my lord, I will shew him how he taketh the saying of St. Paul amiss, as many others now [...] do, alledging the same, that they ought [...] compelled to believe, whereas St. Paul mea [...] of infidels, and not of the faithful; and so St. Austin, writing against the Donatists, saith, That the faithful may be compelled to believe.
St. Bernard, (if it please your lordship, doth take that sense of St. Paul as I do, saying) that faith must be persuaded to a man, and not enjoined. And St. Augustine speaketh of such [...]s were first thoroughly persuaded by manifest scriptures, and yet would resist of stubborn wilfulness.
So Bernard meaneth of infidels also.
No, my lord, that he doth not, for he writeth not of the infidels, but he writeth of such as were deceived by errors.
My lord of Durham, I ha [...]e been so bold as to interrup [...] your lordship of your tale, I pray you now proceed on.
Mr. Philpot, will you be of the same catholic faith and church with us you were baptized in, and your godfathers promised for you, and hold as we do? and then may you be rid out of trouble. I perceive you are learned, and it is [...] pity but you should do well.
I [...] of the same catholic faith and catholic church I was baptized into, and in that will I live and di [...].
That is well said; if you hold there, you cannot but do well.
Yea, my lord, but he meaneth otherwise than you do. Are you of the same faith your godfathers and godmothers were, or no?
I cannot tell what faith they were of certainly, but I am of the saith I was baptized into, which is the faith of Christ; for I was not baptized into the faith of my godfathers, but in the faith of Christ.
St. Austin faith▪ That infants are baptized in the faith of their godfathers.
St. Augustine, in so saying, meaneth of the faith of Christ, which the godfathers do, or ought to believe, and not otherwise.
How say you, will you believe as we do, and all the learned of the realm, or no? and be of one church with us.
My lords, it is not unknown to you, that there have been always two churches.
Nay, tha [...] is not so: there is but one catholic church.
I shall desire your lordships to hear out my tale, and to take my meaning. For I know there is but one true church; but always from the beginning there hath been joined to the same true church, a false church, adversary to the true: and that was declared at first in Abel and Cain, who persecuted and slew his brother▪ in whom (St. Augustine witnesseth) is represented the false and true church. And that as soon as God had chosen his peculiar people, and shewed unto them his sanctuary, holy statutes, and will, anon after arose the false church, and ten of the twelve tribes of Israel divided themselves from the true church of Judah and Benjamin, and made one to themselves at Bethel, and set up [...]olden calves▪ and yet pretended therewith to serve God, and so abused his word. Notwithstanding God was displeased with them, and ceased not his wrath until he had utterly destroyed them.
I will grant you before the coming of Christ there were two churches in the old law; but in the new law since Christ's coming, you cannot shew it to be so by the scriptures.
Yes, my lord, that I can, if you would give me leave. After Christ had chosen his apostles, was there not a Judas in the new law, and a Simon Magus, and were they not of the church?
Yea, but I mean after the gospel was written, where can you find me two churches after Christ had ascended, and sent the Holy Ghost?
The gospel was within eight years after the ascension written by St. Matthew; and the writing thereof is not material to the declaration of these two churches to have been always from time to time, as by example it may be shewed: and yet as bad as my memory is, I remember in the New Testament mention is made of two churches, as it appeareth in the Revelations, and also as St. Paul to the Thessalonians [...]aketh mention, that Antichrist, with his false generation, shall sit in the temple of God. To which Chichester replied not.
The church in scripture is likened to a great fisher's net, which contained in it both good [Page 71] fish and bad fish. I trust you will be of the better sort, and lean to th [...] truth.
My lord, it is my whole desire now to follow that which is good, whatsoever I have done in times past, and to cle [...]e to God's truth.
Do you so, and then you shall do well: it is almost night, my lord of London, I must needs be gone.
Nay, my lord of Durham, I must desire your lordship, and my lord of Chichester, to tarry a little while. And before he had so said, the bishop of Bath went his way without saying a word. What, my lord of Bath, will you be gone? I pray you tarry. My lords, I have earnest matters to charge this man withal, whereof I would your lordships to be made privy, and I have them here written in a libel, I pray you sit down again, or else I will. First, I lay to him here, that he hath written in a bible, which I took from him, this erroneous saying, that "The Holy Ghost is Christ's vicar on earth." Wilt thou abide by this saying of thine, that the Spirit is Christ's vicar on earth?
My lord, it is not my saying, it is a more learned man's than mine: for I use not to write mine own sayings, but the notable sayings of other ancient writers, as all others be where you find the same written. And as I remember, it is even the saying of St. Bernard, and a saying that I need not be ashamed of neither you to be offended at, as my lord of Durham, and my lord of Chichester, by their learning can discern, and will not reckon it ill said.
Will they not? Why take away the first syllable, and it soundeth Arius.
That is far fetched indeed; if your lordship will scan men's sayings in such wise, you may find out what you list.
But to help this, I find moreover with his own hand, in another book, "In me, John Philpot, where sin did abound, grace hath super-abounded." I pray you what super-abundant grace have you more than other men? So said Arius, That he had abundance of grace above all others.
My lord, you need not be offended with that saying more than the other, for it is the saying of St. Paul himself, and I did apply it to myself for my comfort, knowing that though my sins be huge and great in the sight of God, yet is his mercy and grace above them all. And concerning Arius and his adherents, I defy them, and it is well known that I have written against him.
Also I lay to thy charge that thou killed thy father, and was accursed of thy mother on her death-bed, as I can bring witness thereof.
O my lord, what blasphemy is this? Hath your lordship nothing of truth to charge me withal, but (as I may speak it with your honour) such blasphemous lies? If any of these can be proved, I will promise to recant at Paul's Cross what you will have me: I am so sure they are as great blasphemies as may be objected to any man. Ha, my lords, I pray you, consider how my lord of London hath hitherto proceeded against me: for indeed he hath none other but such pretended slanderous lies.
They be Parerga; that is, matter beside the purpose.
My lord, I must needs bid you farewel.
Nay, my lord, here is a letter, which I shall desire you to hear ere you go. This man, (being in my keeping) hath taken upon him to write letters out of prison, and to pervert a young gentleman, called Mr. Green, in my house,
and hath made a false report of his examination, as you shall hear, not being content to be evil himself, but to make others as bad as himself. He tore the letter when he saw my man went about to search him, but yet I have pieced it again together, and caused a copy to be written thereof; and he read the torn letter, bidding Mr. Christopherson and Morgan to mark the copy thereof.
THE contents of the letter was the examination of Mr. Green, before the bishop of London, in the presence of Mr. Fecknam, dean of St. Paul's, and of divers others, whose ready answers in the scriptures and in the doctors were wondered at by the dean himself, and many others, as Fecknam did report: and that he was committed to Dr. Chedsey, [Page 72] and to have his meat from the bishop's own table. How say you, my lords, was this well done of him, being my prisoner, to write this? and yet he hath written a shameful lie, that he was in Dr. Chedsey's keeping. How say you, Mr. Dr. Chedsey, is it not a shameful lie?
Yes, my lord, he was never in my keeping.
Art thou not ashamed to write such letters? Come hither, Mr. Green, did I not shew you this letter?
Yea forsooth, my lord, you shewed it me.
How think you, my lords, is not this an honest man to belie m [...]?
Your lordship doth mistake all things. This letter (as your lordship may perceive, and all others that have heard the same) was not written by me, but by a friend of mine, certifying me at my request, how Mr. Green fared at the bishop of London's hands: and there is nothing in the letter that either I, or he that wrote it, need to fear, but that might be written as my report.
Then tell me who wrote it, if you dare.
No, my lord, it is not my duty to accuse my friend: and especially seeing you will take all things at the worst: neither shall you ever know of me who wrote it. Your lordship may see in the end of the letter, that my friend did write unto me upon the occasion of my appeal which I have made to the whole parliament-house, about such matters as I am wrongfully troubled for.
I would see any so hardy to put up thine appeal.
My lord, I cannot tell what God will work, I have written it, speed it as it may.
My lords, I have used him with much gentleness since he came to me. How sayest thou▪ have I not?
If to lie in the vilest prison in this town, (being a gentleman and an archdeacon) and in a coal-house, for the space of five or six weeks already, without fire or candle, may be counted gentl [...]ness at your hands, I must needs say I have found gentleness. But there were never men so cruelly handled as we are at these days.
Lo, what a varlet is this. Besides this, my lords, even yesterday he procured his man to bring a bladder of black powder, I cannot tell for what purpose.
Your lordship needeth not to mistrust the matter; it is nothing but to make ink withal for lack of ink, as I had it before i [...] the King's-Bench when my keeper took away my inkhorn.
And why should [...] thou go about any such thing unknowing to me, b [...]ing thy keeper? for I am thy keeper in this house, I tell thee.
My lord, because you have caused my pen case and inkhorn to be taken from me, I would yet be glad my friends should know what I lack, not that I intend to write any thing that I would be afraid should come to your sight.
More than this, my lords, he caused a pig to be roasted, and made a knife be put between the skin and the flesh, for what purpose judge you. How sayest thou, didst thou not so?
I cannot deny but there was half a pig sent me, and under the same a knife lying in the sauce, but for no ill purpose that I know; your lordship may judge what you will. It was not to kill myself nor any other, as you would have men to believe; for I was never yet without a knife since I came to prison. Therefore all these are but false surmises, and not worth rehearsal.
I have here to lay to his charge (chiefest of all) his book of the report of the disputation in the convocation-house, which is the rankest heresy that can be against the blessed sacrament of the altar. How say you, Dr. Weston, did he maintain the same there stubbornly, or no?
Yea, my lord, that he did, and would never be answered. And it is pity that the same worshipful congregation should be slandered with such untrue reports.
You answered me indeed, Mr. Doctor, (being then prolocutor) goodly, with, Hold thy peace, and, Have him to prison, and, Put him out of the house. I have read the book, and I find the report of every man's argument to be true in all points. And if there be any fault, it is, because he setteth forth your doings too favourably, and nothing like to that you did use me, being an archdeacon, and not of the worst in the house.
Thou art no archdeacon.
Indeed, Mr. Doctor, you have amongst you un-archdeaconed me now, (I thank God for it) and that without all order of law.
I pray you, my lords, hearken to what he writeth of himself, I read it over this morning, and made a note of it. He said that Dr Weston called him frantic and mad-man, and said, he should go to Bedlam.
Indeed, my lord, so it pleased Dr. Weston to taunt me, and say his shameful pleasure, but yet I was not one whit the more so for all his sayings, than Christ was when the scribes and pharisees said likewise he was mad, and that he was possessed of a devil, most blasphemously.
My lord of London, I can tarry no longer, I must needs bid you farewel. Mr. Philpot, methinketh you have said well that you will abide in the catholic faith, and in the catholic church: I pray you so do, and you shall do right well. And so he departed with Dr. Weston and Mr. Hussey.
I have purposed so to do, howsoever I speed, by God's grace.
I pray you, my lord of Chichester, and Mr. Prolocutor, and Mr. Dr. Morgan, to commune with him while I go to my lord of Durham.
Mr. Philpot, I was acquainted with you at Rome, if you remember it, but you have forgotten me, and talked somewhat with you of these matters, and I find you now the same man that you were then▪ I wish it were otherwise. For God's sake be conformable to men that are better learned than you, and stand not in your own conceit.
Whereas you call me in remembrance of acquaintance had at Rome, indeed it was so, though it were but very strange on your part to [...]e-ward, being driven to necessity.
You know the world was dangerous at that time.
Nothing so dangerous as it is now; but let that pass. Whereas you say, you find me to be the same man I was then, I praise God that you see me not like a reed wavering with every wind. And whereas you would have me follow better learned men than myself: indeed I acknowledge that you, with a great many others, are f [...]r better learned than I, whose books, in respect of learning, I am not worthy to carry after you: but faith and the wisdom of God consisteth not in learning only, and therefore St. Paul willeth that our faith be not grounded upon the wisdom of man. If you can shew by learning out of God's book, that I ought to be of another faith than I am, I will hear you, and any other man whatsoever he be.
I marvel why you should dissent from the catholic church, since it hath thus long been universally received, except within these five or six years here in England.
I do not dissent from the true catholic church, I do only dissent from the bishop of Rome, which if you can prove to be the catholic church of Christ, I will be of the same also with you.
Will you believe St. Cyprian, if I can shew out of him, that the church of Rome is such a one unto which misbelief cannot approach?
I am sure you cannot shew any such saying out of St. Cyprian.
What will you lay thereon?
I will lay as much as I am able to make.
Will you promise to recant, if I shew his saying to be true.
My faith shall not hang upon any doctor's saying, further than he shall be able to prove the same by God's word.
I will go fetch the book, and shew it▪ him by and by; and therewithal he went into the bishop's study, and brought Cyprian, and pointed out these words in one of his epistles, Ad Romanos autem, quorum fides Apostolo praedicanto laudata est, non protest accedere perfidia; that is, "But unto the Romans, whose faith by the testimony of the apostle is praised, misbelief can have no access."
These words of Cyprian do not prove your pretended assertion, which is, That to the church of Rome there could come no misbelief.
Good Lord, doth it not not? What can be said more plainly?
He speaketh not of the church of Rome absolutely.
By God, a child that can but say his grammar will not deny what you do, the words are so plain.
Swear not, Mr. Doctor, but weigh Cyprian's words with me, and I shall make you to say as I have said.
I am no doctor, but I perceive it is but labour lost to reason with you.
AND with that the bishop of London came in blowing again, and said, What, is my lord of Chichester gone away also? (for he even a little before departed also without any other word, than that he must needs be gone.)
What
is the matter you now stand upon?
Mr. Christopherson hath shewed Mr. Philpot a notable place of the authority of the church of Rome, and he maketh nothing of it.
Where is the place? Let me see▪ By my faith here is a place alone. Come hither, sir, what say you to this? Nay, tarry a while, I will help this place with St. Paul's own testimony, in the first chapter to the Romans, where he saith, That their saith is preached throughout the world▪ how can you be able to answer to this?
Yes, my lord, it is soon answered if you will consider all the words of Cyprian; for he speaketh of such as in his time were faithful at Rome, and followed the doctrine of St. Paul, as he had taught them, and as it was notified throughout the world, by an epistle which he had written in the commendation of their faith. With such as are praised by St. Paul at Rome, for following the true faith, misbelief can have no place. And if you can shew, that the faith which the church of Rome holdeth now, is that faith which the apostle praised and allowed in the Romans in his time, then will I say what St. Cyprian then said, and with you, That infidelity can have no place there; but otherwise it maketh not absolutely for the authority of the church of Rome, as you do mistake it.
You understand Cyprian well indeed; I think you never read him in your life.
Yes, Mr. Doctor, that I have, I can shew you a book noted with mine own hand: though I have not read so much as you, yet I have read somewhat. It is a shame for you to wrest and wreath the doctors as you do, to maintain a false religion, which be altogether against you, if you take them aright; and indeed your false packing of doctors together hath given me and others occasion to look upon them, whereby we find you shameful liars, and mis reporters of the ancient doctors.
What, will you be in hand to allow doctors now? They of your sect do not so. I marvel therefore that you will allow them.
I do allow them inasmuch as they do agree [Page 75] with the scriptures, and so do all they which are of the truth, howsoever you term us, and I praise God for that good understanding I have received by them.
What? you understand not the doctors, you may be ashamed to say it.
I thank God, I understand them better than you: for you have Exc [...]cationem cordis, The blindness of heart; so that you understand not truly what you read, no more than the wall here, as your taking of Cyprian doth declare. And, before God, you are but deceivers of the people, for all the brag you make of learning; neither have you scripture or ancient doctor on your side, being truly taken.
Why, all the doctors are on our side, and against you altogether.
Yea, so you say when you are in your pulpits alone, and none to answer you. But if you will come to cast accounts with me thereof, I will venture with you a recantation, that I (as little fight as I have in the doctors) will bring more authorities of ancient doctors on my side than you shall be able for your's, and he that can bring most, to him let the other side yield. Are you willing so to do?
It is but folly to reason with you, you will believe no man but yourself.
I will believe you or any other learned man, if you can bring any thing worthy to be believed. You cannot win me with vain words from my faith. Before God there is no truth in you.
What, no truth? No truth? ha, ha, ha!
Except the articles of the Trinity, you are corrupt in all other things, and sound in nothing.
What say you; do we not believe well on the sacrament?
It is the thing which (among all others) you do most abuse.
Wherein I pray you? tell us.
I have told you before, Mr. Doctor, in the convocation [...]house.
Yes marry: indeed you told us there very well. For there you fell down upon your knees, and fell to weeping, ha, ha, ha!
I did weep indeed, and so did Christ upon Jerusalem, and am not to be blamed for it, if you consider the cause of my weeping.
What, make you yourself Christ? ha, ha, ha!
No, sir, I make not myself Christ▪ but I am not ashamed to do as my Master and Saviour did, to bewail and lament your infidelity and idolatry, which I there foresaw through tyranny you would bring again to this r [...]alm, as this day doth declare.
That is your argument.
Wherein do we abuse the sacrament? tell us.
As I may touch but one of the least abuses, you administer it not in both kinds as you ought to do, but keep the one half from the people, contrary to Christ's institution.
Why, is there not as much contained in one kind as in both? And what need is it then to minister in both kinds?
I believe not so: for if it had, Christ would have given but one kind only; for he instituted nothing superfluous: and therefore you cannot say that the whole effect of the sacrament is as well in one kind as in both, since the scripture teacheth otherwise.
What if I can prove it by scripture, th [...] we may administer it in one kind? The apostle [...] did so, as it may appear in the Acts of the Apostles in one or two places, where it is written, that the apostles continued "in prayers and in breaking of bread," which is meant of the sacrament.
Why, Mr. Doctor, do you not know that St. Luke, by making mention of breaking of bread, meaneth [...]he whole use of the sacrament according to Chri [...]s institution, by a figure which you have learned grammar, Synecdoche, where part is mentioned, and the whole understood to be done, as Christ commanded it?
Nay, that is not so: for I can shew you out of Eusebius, in his Ecclesiastical History, that [...] a man of God, whom he named, that sent the [...] in one kind by a boy, to one that was [...].
I have read indeed that they did use to give what was left of the communion-bread to children, to mariners, and to women▪ and so peradventure the boy might carry a piece of what was left to the sick man.
Nay, as a sacrament it was purposely sent unto him.
If it were so, y [...]t you cannot precisely say, that he had not the cup administered unto him also by some sent unto him: but though one man did use it thus, doth it follow that all men may do the lik [...]? St. Cyprian noteth many abuses of the sacrament in his time, which rose upon singular men's examples, as using of water instead of wine: therefore he saith, "We must not look what any man hath done before us, but what Christ first of all did and commanded."
Hath not the church taught us so to use the sacrament? And how do we know that Christ is HOMOUSIOS, that is, of one substance with the Father, but by the determination of the church? How can you prove that otherwise by express words of scripture, and where find you HOMOU [...]IOS in all the scripture?
Yes, that I do in the first of the Hebrews, where it is written that Christ is the express image of God's own substance, Ejusdem substanti [...].
Nay, that is not so. That is, there is no more but Expressa imago substantiae, The express image of God's substance, and image is accident.
It is in the text, Of his substance, Substantiae illius, or his own substance, as it may [...] well interpreted. Besides this, that which Christ spake of himself in St. John manifesteth the same, saying, I and the Father be one thing, Ego & pater unum sumus. And whereas you say, Imago here is an accident, the ancient fathers use this for a strong argument to prove Christ to be God, because he is the very image of God.
Do they? Is this a good argument, because we are the image of God, Ergo. We are God?
We are not called the express image of God, as it is written of Christ, and we are but the image of God by participation; and as it is written in Genesis. We are made to the likeness and similitude of God. But you ought to know, Mr. Christopherson, that there is no accident in God, and therefore Christ cannot be the image of God, but he must be of the same substance with God.
Tush.
How say you to the presence of the sacrament? Will you stand here to the judgment of your book, or no? Or will you recant?
I know you go about to catch me in words. If you can prove that book to be my setting forth, lay it to my charge when I come to judgment.
Speak, are you of the same mind [...] this book i [...] of, or no? Sure I am you were once, unless you are become another manner of man that you were.
What I was, you know: what I am, I will not tell you now▪ but this I will say to you by the way, that if you can prove the sacrament of the mass (as you now use it) to be a sacrament, I will then grant you a presence; but first you must prove the same a sacrament, and afterward treat of the presence.
Ho, do you doubt that it is a sacrament?
I am past doubting, for I believe you can never be able to prove it a sacrament.
Yea, do you? Good Lord, doth not St. Augustine call it the sacrament of the altar? How say you to that?
That maketh nothing for the probation of your sacrament. For so he with other ancient writers do call the holy communion or supper of the Lord, in respect that it is the sacrament of the sacrifice which Christ offered upon the altar of the cross, which sacrifice all the altars and sacrifices done upon the altars in the old law did prefigure and shadow, which pertaineth nothing to your sacrament hanging upon your altars of lime and stone.
Doth it not? I pray you, what signifieth Altar.
Not as you falsely take it, materially, but for the sacrifice of the altar of the cross.
Where find you it ever so taken.
Yes, that I do in St. Paul to the Hebrews, the 13th chap. where he saith, "We have an alter, of which it is not lawful for them to eat which serve the t [...]bernacle." Is not altar in this place taken for the sacrifice of the altar, and not for the altar of lime and stone?
Well, God bless me out of your company. You are such an obstinate heretic, as I have not heard the like.
I pray God keep me from such blind doctors, who when they are not able to prove what they say, then fall to reviling (as you do now) for lack of better proof. In the mean while the bishop of London was talking with some other hard by, and at length came in to supply his part, and said:
I pray you, masters, hearken to what I shall say to this man. Come hither, Mr. Green: and now, sir,
you cannot think it sufficient to be wicked yourself, but must go about to procure this young gentleman to do the like.
My lord, he cannot say that I ever hitherto wrote unto him concerning any such matter, as he here can testify.
No, you never wrote unto me.
Why, is not this your letter which you did write concerning him.
I have shewed your lordship my mind concerning that letter already: it was not written to Mr. Green, neither was he privy to the writing thereof.
How say you then, if a man be in an error, and you know thereof, what are you bound to do in such a case?
I am bound to do the best I can to bring him out of it.
If Mr. Green here be in the like, are you not bound to reform him thereof if you can?
Yes, that I am, and will do the uttermost of my power therein.
BUT the bishop remembering himself, thinking that he would but shrewdly after his expectation be holpen at my mouth, but rather consumed in that which he called an error, ceased to go any further in his demand, and called Mr. Green aside, and before his register read him a letter, I know not the contents thereof: and therewithal he gave Mr. Green the book of my disputation in the convocation-house, and afterwards went aside, communing with Mr. Christopherson, leaving Mr. Morgan▪ Mr. Harpsfield, and Mr. Cosins, to reason with me in the hearing of Mr. Green.
Mr. Philpot, I would ask you how old your religion is?
It is older than your's by a thousand years and more.
I pray you, where was it fifty years ago?
It was in Germany apparent by the testimony of Huss, Jerome of Prague, and Wickliffe, whom your generation an hundred years ago and [Page 78] more, did burn for preaching the truth unto you; and before their time and since hath been, although under persecution it hath been put to silence.
That is a marvellous strange religion, which no man can tell certainly where to find it.
It ought to be [...]o marvel unto you to see God's truth through violence oppressed; for so it hath been from the beginning from time to time, as it appeareth by history, and as Christ's true religion is now to be found here in England, although hypocrisy hath by violence the upper hand. And in the Revelations you may see it prophesied, that the true church should be driven into corners, and into the wilderness, and suffer great persecutions,
Ah, are you versed in the Revelations? there are many strange things therein.
If I tell you the truth which you are not able to refute, believe it, and dally not out so earnest matters: methinks you are more like a scoffer in a play, than a reasonable doctor to instruct a man; you have no sense of shame, but dance naked in a net, and see not your own nakedness.
I pray you, be not so quick with me, let us talk a little more calmly together.
I will talk with you as mildly as you can desire, if you will speak learnedly and charitably. But if you go about with taunts to delude the truth, I will not hide it from you.
Why will not you submit your judgment to the learned men of this realm?
Because I see they can bring no good ground whereupon I may with a good conscience settle my faith, more surely than on that which I am now grounded upon by God's manifest word.
Can they not? It is marvellous that so many learned men should be deceived.
It is not marvellous to St. Paul, for he saith, "That not many wise, neither many learned after the world be called to the knowledge of the gospel."
Have you then alone the Spirit of God, and not we?
I say not that I alone have the Spirit of God, but as many as abide in the true faith of Christ, have the Spirit of God as well as I.
How know you that you have the Spirit of God?
By the faith of Christ which is in me.
Ah, by faith do you so? I think it is the spirit of the buttery, which your fellows have had that have been burned before you, who were drunk the night before they went to their death, and I believe went drunken unto it.
It appeareth by your communication, that you are better acquainted with the spirit of the buttery than with the Spirit of God; wherefore I must now tell thee, thou painted wall and hypocrite, in the name of the living Lord, whose truth I have told thee, that God shall rain fire and brimstone upon such scorners of his word and blasphemers of his people as thou art.
What, you rage now.
Thy foolish blasphemies have compelled the Spirit of God, which is in me, to speak that which I have said to thee, thou enemy of all righteousness.
Why do you judge me so?
By thine own wicked words I judge of thee, thou blind and blasphemous doctor; for as it is written, "By thy words thou shalt be justified, and by thy words thou shalt be condemned." I have spoke on God's behalf, and now I have done with thee.
Why then I tell thee, Philpot, thou art an heretic, and shall be burned for thine her [...]sy, and afterwards go to hell-fire.
I tell thee, thou hypocrite, that I mind [Page 79] not thy threats of fire and faggote, neither I thank God my Lord, stand in fear of the same: my faith in Christ shall overcome them. But the hell-fire with which thou threatenest me, is thy portion, and is prepared for thee, (unless thou speedily repent) and for such hypocrites as thou art.
What, th [...] speakest upon wine, thou hast tippled well to-day by appearance.
So said the cursed generation to the apostles, being replenished with the Holy Ghost, and speaking the wondrous works of God: they were drunk, when they had nothing else to say, as thou dost now.
Why, I am of opinion I am able to answer thee.
So it seemeth, with blasphemies and lies.
Nay, even with learning, say what thou canst.
That appeared well at my disputation in the convocation-house, where thou didst undertake to answer those few arguments I was permitted to make, and yet were not able to answer one; but in thine answers did fumble and stammer, that the whole house was ashamed of thee: and the final conclusions of all thine answers was, that thou could [...]t answer me if I were in the schools at Oxford.
What, did I so? thou beliest me.
I do not belie thee, the book o [...] the report of the disput [...]ion beareth record thereto, and all that were present then can tell thou sa [...]st so, if they list. And I t [...]ll thee plain, thou art not able to answer that Spirit of truth which speaketh in me for the defence of Christ's true religion. I am able by the might thereof to drive thee round about this gallery before me: and if it would please the queen's majesty and her council to hear thee and me, I would make thee for shame shr [...]k behind the door.
Yea, would you so?
Thou hast the spirit of illusion and sophistry, which is not able to countervail the spirit of truth. Thou art but an ass in the true understanding of things appertaining unto God. I call thee ass, not in respect of malice, but in that thou kickest against the truth, and art void of all godly understanding, not able to answer to that thou braggest in.
Why, have I not answered thee in all things thou hast said unto me? I take them to record.
Ask my fellow whether I be a thief.
Hark, he maketh us all thieves.
You know that phrase of the proverb, that like will hold with like. And I am sure you will not judge with me against him, speak I ever so true; and in this sense I speak it. The strongest answer that he hath made against me is, that you will burn me.
Why, we do not burn you, it is the temporal men that burn you, and not we.
Thus you would (as Pilate did) wash your hands of all your wicked doings. But, I pray you, call upon the secular power to be executioners of your unrighteous judgments. And have you not a title in your law, To burn heretics?
I have heard you both a good while reason together, and I never heard so stout a heretic as you are, Mr. Philpot.
Nor I, in all my life.
You are not able to prove me an heretic, by one jot of God's word.
You have the spirit of arrogancy, I will reason with you no more. And so he was departing, and Mr. Cosins also. And with that the bishop and Christopherson came in again, and said:
Mr. Doctor, how doth this man and you agree?
My lord, I do ask him where his church was fifty ye [...]s ago.
Are you not half agreed? as one man said once to two parties, in whom the one was equally disagreeing from the othe [...].
My lord, [...] to reason with him any further, your lordship will but lose time, for he is in [...]urable.
Well, then let his keeper have him away. And with that Dr. Ched [...] led me a way by which we could not pass, and therefore came back again through the bishop's ch [...]mber, where all these doctors were clustered together; and as I was passing by, the bishop took me by the gown, and said, Knew you what Mr. Christopherson telleth me? I pray you. Mr. Christopherson, rehearse the sentence in Latin; and so he did: the contents whereof were, That an heretic would not be won.
St. Paul saith, "Fly an heretic after once or twice warning."
Yea, my lord, it is best you so do, and trouble your lordship no more with him.
You must first prove me justly to be an heretic, before you use the judgment of St. Paul against me: for he speaketh of such as hold opinion against the manifest word, which you cannot prove by me: and because you want in your proof, and be able to prove nothing against me, therefore you go about falsely to suppose me to be an heretic, for the safeguard of your counterfeit honesty; but before God you are the heretics which so stoutly and stubbornly maintain so many things directly against God's word, as God in his time will reveal. As I went out of his chamber, the bishop called me aside, and said:
I pray thee in good sadness, what didst thou mean by writing in the beginning of thy bible, "The Spirit is the vicar of Christ on the earth?" I suppose you have some special meaning therein.
My lord, I have no other meaning than as I have told you already, That Christ, since his ascension, worketh all things in us by his Spirit, and by his Spirit doth dwell in us. I pray you, my lord, let me have my bible, with other lawful books and writings which you have of mine, whereof many of them be none of mine, but lent to me by my friends.
Your bible you shall not have, but I will perhaps let you have another, and after I have perused the rest you shall have such as I think good.
I pray your lordship then that you would let me have candle-light.
To what purpose, pray?
The nights be long, and I would fain occupy myself about somewhat, and not spend my time idly.
Then you may pray.
I cannot well say my prayers without light.
Can you not say your Pater-noster without a candle? I tell you, you shall have some meat and drink of me, but candles you shall have none.
I had rather have candles than your meat and drink; but seeing I shall not have my request▪ the Lord shall be my light.
Have him down.
I will bring him to his keeper, my lord. Mr. Philpot, I wonder all these learned men whom you have talked withal this day can nothing at all persuade you.
Why, Mr. Doctor, would you have me to be persuaded with nothing? or would you have me build my faith upon sand? What do you all bring, whereby I ought by any sufficient authority to be persuaded by you?
I am sorry you will so wilfully cast yourself away, whereas you might li [...]e worshipfully: do you not think that others have souls to be saved as well as you?
Every man shall receive according to his own doings. Sure I am that you are deceived, and maintain a f [...]lse religion; and as for my casting away, I wish my burning day was to morrow, for this [...] every day to die, and yet not to be dead.
You are not like to die yet, I can tell you.
I am the more sorry thereof. But the will of God be done of me to his glory, Amen.
The Twelfth EXAMINATION of Mr. PHILPOT, on Wednesday, December 4, before the Bishops of LONDON, WORCESTER, and BANGOR.
IN the morning I was brought down to the wardrobe adjoining to the chapel, and within a while after came three of the bishop's chaplains unto me, saying:
Mr. Philpot, my lord hath sent us unto you, to desire you to come to mass, certifying you, that there is a doctor of divinity, a chaplain of my lord's, called Dr. Chedsey, going to mass: therefore we also pray you, good Mr. Philpot, be content to come, it is hard-by.
I wonder my lord would trouble you in sending you about this matter, seeing he knoweth I am a man (by your law) that cannot hear mass, because I stand excommunicate.
Your excommunication is but upon a contumacy, and my lord will dispense with you if you will come.
My lord cannot, for he is not mine ordinary, and I will not seek any such thing at his hands. With this answer they went away.
AFTER mass, the bishop called me before him into his chapel, and there in the presence of his register, (after he had said his mind because I would not come to mass) recited the articles, which he had done in that behalf, with the depositions of the witnesses, of whom some were not examined.
Sir, what can you now say why I should not now proceeed to give sentence against thee as an heretic.
Why, my lord, will you proceed to give sentence before your witnesses be examined? that is plain against your own law, as all your doings have been hitherto.
See what a fool thou art in the law. I need not to recite the depositions of the witnesses, but if I list: for I know them well enough already.
It appeareth indeed you may do what you list.
Tell me, I say, whether thou wilt answer, or no: and whether if thou wert absolved of thine excommunication, thou wouldst come to mass, or no?
I have answered as much as I intended to do, until I be called to a lawful judgment; and as concerning my conscience, I will not make you God to sit there as yet; it is God's part only to be searcher of my heart.
Look how foolishly he speaks. Art thou God▪ and yet dost thou not sit in thine own conscience?
I sit not in mine own conscience, but I know it; and God there only ought to sit, and none else.
Thou art a naughty fellow, and hast done much hurt, and hast seduced other poor fellows here in prison with thee, by thy comforting of them in their errors, and hast made them rejoice and sing with thee.
Yea, my lord, we shall sing, when you, and such others as you are, shall cry, Woe, woe, except you repent.
What an arrogant fool is this! I will handle thee like an heretic, and that shortly.
I fear nothing, I thank God, you can do [Page 82] unto me. But God shall destroy such as thou art, and that shortly, as I trust.
Have him away, this is a knave indeed.
AND I was had into the wardrobe again by my keeper, and within an hour after was sent for to come before him and the bishops of Worcester and Bangor.
Sir, I have talked with you many times, and have caused you to be talked with by many learned men, yea and honourable, both temporal and spiritual, and it availeth nothing with you. I am blamed that I have brought thee before so many; for they say thou gloriest to have so many talk withal. Well, now it lieth upon thee to look to thyself, for thy time draweth near to an end, if thou do not become conformable. And at present we are sent from the synod to offer you this grace, that if you will come to the unity of the church of Rome with us, and acknowledge the real presence of Christ in the sacrament of the altar with us, all that is past shall be forgiven, and you received to favour.
Mr. Philpot, we are sent (as you have heard by my lord of London) from the synod to offer you mercy, if you will receive it, and of the good will I bear you I wish you to take it whilst it is offered, and be not a singular man against a whole multitude of learned men, who now in fasting and prayer, are gathered together to devise to do you good. Many very learned men have talked with you, why should you think yourself better learned than them all? Be not of such arrogancy, but have humility, and remember there is no salvation but in the church.
Methinks my lord hath spoke wonderfully well unto you, that you should not think yourself so well learned, but others are as well learned as you; neither of so good wit, but others be as wise as you; neither of so good memory, but others have as good memories as you. Therefore mistrust your own judgment, and come home to us again. I never liked your religion, because it was set forth by violence and tyranny, and that is no true token of true religion. And I was the same manner of m [...]n then that I am now, and a great many more. Marry, for fear we held our peace, and bore with that time. Wherefore, Mr. Philpot, I wish you well, for I love you; and therefore be content to come h [...]me with us again into the catholic church of Rome.
Where, my lord, (as I may begin first to answer you) you say, that religion is to be misliked which is set forth by tyranny, I pray God you give not men occasion to think the same by your's at this day, which had no other argument to stand but by violence. If you can shew me any good sufficient ground whereby to ground my conscience, that the church of Rome is the true catholic church, whereunto you call me, I will gladly be of the same; otherwise I cannot so soon change the religion I have learned these many years.
Where was your religion to be found (I pray you) an hundred years ago, that any man knew of it.
It was in Germany, and in divers other places apparent.
Jesus! will you be still so singular a man? What is Germany to the whole world?
My lords, I pray you give me leave to tell you, that I sent for him to hear mass this morning. And think you what excuse he made unto me, forsooth that he was accursed, alledging his own shame. He playeth as the va [...]let Latimer did at Cambridge, when the vice chancellor sent for him (who intended to have excommunicated him for his heresies), and the chancellor was coming to his chamber, he hearing thereof, made answer that he was sick of the plague, and deluded the ch [...]ncellor; even so this man saith, he was accursed, because he will not come to mass.
My lord (I am sure) here doth behave himself like a father unto you; th [...]refore be admonished by him, and by us, that come now friendly unto you, and follow your fathers before you.
It is forbidden us of God by the prophet Ezekiel, to follow our fathers, or to walk in their commandments.
It is written also in another place, Ask of your fathers.
We ought to ask indeed our fathers that have more experience and knowledge than we of God's will, but no more to allow them, than we perceive they agree with the scripture.
You will be a contentious man, I see well; and St. Paul saith, that neither we, nor the church of God have any such custom.
I am not contentious but for the verity of my faith, in which I ought to contend with all such as do impugn the same without any just objection.
Let us rise, my lord, for I see we shall do no good.
Nay, I pray you, tarry and hear the articles I lay to his charge. And after he had recited them, they arose, and stood to reason with me a while.
Mr. Philpot, I am very sorry that you will be so singular. I never talked with any yet in my diocese, but after once communication had with me, they have been contented to revoke their errors, and to teach the people how they were deceived, and so do much good, as you may like. For as I understand you were archdeacon of Winchester, (which is the eye of the bishop) and you may do much good in that country if you would forsake your errors, and come to the catholic church.
Wherewithal you so soon persuaded them to your will, I see not. Error, that I know, I hold none; and of the catholic church I am sure I am.
The catholic church doth acknowledge a real presence of Christ in the sacrament, and so will not you.
That is not so: for I acknowledge a very essential presence in the duly using of the sacrament.
What, a real presence?
Yea, a real presence by the Spirit of God in the right administration.
That is well said: and do you agree with the catholic church also?
I do agree with the true catholic church.
My lord of London, this man speaketh reasonably now.
You do agree in generals, but when it shall come to particulars, you will far disagree.
Well, keep yourself here, and you shall have other learned bishops to commune further with you, as my lord of Durham, and my lord of Chichester, whom I hear say you do like well.
I do like them as I do all others that speak the truth. I have once already spoken with them, and they found no fault with me.
In the mean season pray to God for grace.
Prayer is the most comfortable exercise I feel in my trouble, and my conscience is quiet, and I have the peace of mind, which cannot be the fruits of heresy.
We bid you farewell for this time.
AFTER dinner they called for me again, and demanded of me whether I meant as I spake before dinner, and would not go from it. To them I answered, that I would not go from what I had said.
You said at my departing from you before dinner, that if we did burn you, we should burn a catholic man: will you be a catholic man, and stand to the catholic church?
I will stand to the true catholic church.
Will you stand to the catholic church of Rome?
If you can prove the same to be the catholic church, I will be one thereof.
Did not Christ say unto Peter, and to all his successors of Rome, "Feed my sheep, feed [Page 84] my lambs?" Which doth signify that he gave him more authority than the rest.
That saying pertaineth nothing to the authority of Peter, above others, but declareth what Christ requireth of his beloved apostles, that they should with all diligence preach to the flock of Christ the way of salvation, and that doth the iteration of feeding, spoken to Peter, only signify. But the bishop of Rome little regardeth the spiritual feeding, and therefore he hath imagined an easier way to make himself lord of the whole world, yea, and of God's word too, and doth not feed Christ's flock as Peter did.
How can you tell that?
Yes, I have been there, and I could not learn of all his countrymen that ever he preacheth.
Though he preacheth not one way, he preacheth another, by procuring good order for the church to be kept in.
I am sure that it will be his damnation before God, that he leaveth what he is commanded by Christ, and setteth forth his own decrees to deface the gospel.
It is the evil living that you have seen at Rome, that causeth you to have this ill judgment of the church of Rome. I cannot now tarry with you to reason further of the matter.
HOW say you to the real presence of the sacrament, will you stand to that?
I do acknowledge (as I have said) a real presence of the sacrament, in the due administration thereof, to the worthy receivers by the Spirit of God.
You add now a great many more words than you did before; and yet you say more of the sacrament than a great many will do.
THUS they departed, and after them came unto me, Dr. Chedsey, and Dr. Wright, a [...]chdeacon of Oxford, with a great many more.
Mr. Philpot, here is Mr. Archdeacon of Oxford come to give you good counsel, I pray hear him.
I will refuse to hea [...] none that will counsel me any good; and if any can bring me better matter than I have, I will stick thereunto.
I would wi [...] you, Mr. Philpot, to agree with the catholic church, and not to stand in your own conceit: you see a great many learned men against you.
I am, Mr. Doctor, of the unfeigned catholic church, and will live and die therein: and if you can prove your church to be the true catholic church, I will be one of the same.
I came not to dispute with you, but to exhort you. Here are better learned than I, who can inform you better.
What proof would you have? I will prove unto you our church to have it's being and foundation by the scriptures, by the apostles, and by the primitive church, confirmed with the blood of martyrs, and with the testimony of all confessors.
Give me your hand, Mr. Doctor, prove that, and have with you.
If I had my books here, I could soon prove it, I will go fetch some; and with that he went and brought his book of annotations, saying, I cannot well bring my books, therefore I have brought my book of annotations, and turned there to a common place of the sacrament, asking me whether the catholic church did allow the presence of Christ's body in the sacrament, or no? I hear say you do confess a real presence: but I'll be hanged if you will abide by it: you will deny it by and by.
What I have said I cannot deny, neither intend, whatsoever you say.
If there be a real presence in the sacrament, [Page 87] then evil men receive Christ, which thing you will not grant, I am sure.
I deny the argument, for I do not grant in the sacrament, by transubstantiation, any real presence, as you falsely imagine, but in the due administration to the worthy receivers.
I will prove that the evil and wicked men eat the body of Christ, as well as the good men, by St. Augustine here.
And in the beginning of his text St. Augustine seemeth to approve his assertion; but I bad him read out to the end, and there St. Augustin declareth most evidently that it was Quodammodo, after a certain manner the evil men received the body of Christ, which is sacramentally, only in the outward sign, and not really, or indeed as the good doth. And thus all the doctors that you seem to bring in for your purpose, be quite against you if you did rightly weigh them.
By God you are a subtle fellow. See how he would writhe St. Augustine's words.
See which of us do writhe St. Augustine most, you or I, who take his meaning by his own express words. And seeing you charge me with subtlety, what subtlety is this of you, to say, that you will prove your matter of the church, even from the beginning, promising to shew your books therein, and when it cometh to the proof, you are able to shew none, and for want thereof slip into a by-matter, and you faint in the proof thereof? Before God you are ridiculous and without shame in your religion.
You shall be constrained to come to us at length, whether you will or no.
Hold that argument fast; for it is the best you have, for you have nothing but violence.
The Thirteenth Examination of Mr. PHILPOT before the Archbishop of YORK, and other Bishops.
THE Thursday after, I was called in the morning before the archbishop of York, the bishop of Chichester, the bishop of Bath, and the bishop of London. The bishop of Chichester being first come, began to talk with me.
I am come of good will to talk with you, to instruct you what I can, to come to the catholic church, and to exhort you to instruct your own judgment, and to learn first to have humility, and by the same to learn of others that be better learned than you, as they did learn of such as were their betters before them.
We must be taught of God, and I will with all humility learn of them that will inform me by God's word, what I have to do. I confess I have but little learning in respect of you, that both of your years and great exercise do excel therein: but faith consisteth not in learning, but in the simplicity which God's word teacheth. Therefore I shall be glad to hear both of your lordship, and of any other, (that God hath revealed unto by his word) the true d [...]trine thereof, and to thank you that it doth please you to take pains herein.
You take the first alledged amiss, as though all men should be taught by inspiration, and not by learning. How do we believe the gospel, but by the authority of the church, and because the same hath allowed it?
St. Paul saith, "He learned not the gospel by men, neither of men, but by the revelation of Jesus Christ." Which is a plain and sufficient proof that the gospel taketh not it's authority of man, but of God only.
St. Paul speaketh but of his own knowledge how he came thereto.
Nay, he speaketh of the gospel generally, "Which cometh not from man but from God;" and that the church must only teach that which cometh from God, and not man's precepts.
Doth not St. Augustine say these words, "I would not believe the gospel, if the authority of the church did not move me thereto."
I grant the authority of the church doth move the unbelievers to believe; but yet the church doth not give the word it's authority; for the [Page 86] word hath it's authority from God, and not of men; men be but disposers thereof. For first, the word had it's being before the church, and the word is the foundation of the church, and first is the foundation sure, before the building thereon can be stedfast.
I perceive you mistake me, I speak of the knowledge of the gospel, and not of the authority; for by the church we have all knowledge of the gospel.
I confess that; for faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God. And I acknowledge that God appointeth an ordinary means for men to come unto the knowledge now, and not miraculously, as he hath done in times past; yet we that be taught by men, must take heed that we learn nothing else but that which was taught in the primitive church by revelation. Here came in the bishops of York and Bath; and after they had saluted one another, and communed a while together, the archbishop of York called me unto them, saying,
Sir, we hearing that you are out of the way, are come of charity to inform you, and to bring you into the true faith, and to the catholic church again; willing you first to have humility, and to be humble and willing to learn of your betters, for else we can do no good with you. And God saith by his prophet, "On whom shall I rest but on the humble and meek, and such as tremble at my word?" Now if you be so, we shall be glad to travel with you.
I know that humility is the door whereby we enter unto Christ; and I thank his goodness I have entered in at the same unto him, and with all humility will hear whatsoever truth you shall speak unto me.
What be the matters you stand on, and require to be satisfied in?
My lord, if it shall please your grace, we were entered into a good matter before you came, of the church, and how we should know the truth but by the church.
Indeed that is the head we ought to begin at, for the church being truly known, we shall sooner agree in particular things.
If your lordships can prove the church of Rome to be the true catholic ch [...]rch, it will do much to persuade me towards what you would have me incline unto.
Why, let us go to the definition of the church. What is it?
It is a congregation of people dispersed throughout the world, agreeing together in the word of God, using the sacraments, and all other things according to the same.
Your definition is of many words to no purpose.
I do not precisely define the church, but declare unto you what I think the church is.
Is the church visible or invisible?
It is both visible and invisible. The invisible church is of the elect of God only; the visible consists both of good and bad, using all things in faith, according to God's word.
The church is an universal congregation of faithful people in Christ throughout the world; which this word catholic doth well express; for what is catholic else? doth it not signify universal?
The church is defined by St. Augustine to be called catholic in this wise, "The church is called therefore ca [...]holic, because it is truly perfect, and halteth in nothing."
Nay, it is called catholic, because it is universally received of all christian nations, for the most part.
The church was catholic in the apostles time, yet was it not universally received of the world; but because their doctrine which they had received of Christ was perfe [...], and appointed to be preached and received of the whole world, therefore it is called the catholic faith, and all persons receiving the same, to be counted th [...] c [...]holic church. And St. Augu [...]tine in another place writeth, [Page 87] that the catholic church is that which believeth aright.
If you will learn, I will shew you St. Augustine, writing against the Donatists, that he proveth the catholic church by two principal points, which is, univers [...]lity and succession of bishops, in one apostolical see, from time to time. Now thus I will make mine argument.
THE church of of Rome is universal, and hath her succession of bishops from time to time.
ERGO, it is the catholic church.
HOW answer you to this argument?
I deny the antecedent, that the catholic church is only known by universality and succession of bishops.
I will prove it, and with that he brought forth a book, which he had noted out of the doctors, and turned to his common places therein of the church, and recited one or two out of St. Augustine, especially out of his epistle written against the Donatists, where St Augustine manifestly proveth, that the Donatists, were not the catholic church because they have no succession of bishops in their opinion, neither universality; and the same force hath St. Augustine's argument against you.
My lord I have weighed the force of that argument before now, and I perceive it maketh nothing against me, neither cometh it to your pur [...]pose; for I will stand to the tri [...]l of St Augus [...]tine for the approbation of the catholic church whereof I am. For St. Augustine speaketh of universality joined with verity, and of faithful successors of Peter before corruption came into the church And so if you can deduce your argument for the see [...]f Rome [...]ow, as St. Augustine might do in his time, I would say it might be of some force, otherwise not.
St. Augustine proveth the catholic church principally by succession of bishops, and therefore you und [...]rstand not St. Augustine. For what, I pray you, was the opinion of the Donatists, ag [...]inst whom he wrote, can you tell▪ what country were they of?
They were a certain sect of men, affirming, among other heresies that the dignity of the sacraments depended upon the worthiness of the minister; so that if the minister was good, the sacraments which he ministered were available, or else not.
That was their error, and they had none other but that. And he read another authority of St. Austin, out of a book which he brought, even to the same purpose that the other was.
I challenge St. Austin to be with me thoroughly in this point, and will stand to judgment, taking one place with another.
If you will not have the church to be certain, I pray you be judged in matters of controversy.
I do not deny the church to be certain; but I deny that it is necessarily tied to any place, longer than it abideth in the word; and for all controversies the word ought to be judge.
But what if I take it one way, and you another, how then?
St. Austin sheweth a remedy for that, and willeth, "That one place of the scripture ought to be understood by the majority."
How answer you to this argument?
ROME hath known succession of bishops, which your church hath not.
ERGO, That is the catholic church, and your's is not, because there is no such succession can be proved in your church.
I deny, my lord, that succession of bishops is an infallible point to know the church by: for there may be a succession of bishops known in a place, and yet there be no church, as at Antioch and Jerusalem, and in other places, where the apostles abode as well as at Rome. But if you put to the succession of bishops, succession of doctrine [Page 88] withal, as St. Austin doth, I will grant it to be a good proof for the catholic church: but a local succession only is nothing available.
You will have no church then, I see well.
Yes, my lord, I acknowledge the catholic church, as I am bound by my creed; but I cannot acknowledge a false church for the true.
Why, are there two catholic churches then?
No, I know there is but one catholic church, but there have been, and be at this present, that take upon them the name of Christ and of his church, which be not so [...], as it is written, "There be they that call themsel [...]es apostles and be not so indeed, but the synagogue [...] and liars." And now it is with us as it was wi [...]h [...] two women in Solomon's time, which la [...] toge [...]er, and the [...] overlaid her child, and afterwa [...]ds went about to challenge the true mother' [...] child.
What a babbling is here with you now? I see you lack humility. You will go [...]out to teach, and not to learn.
My lords, I must desire you to bear with my hasty speech, it is my infirmity of n [...]ture. All that I speak is to learn by, I wish you did understand all my mind, that I might be satisfied by you through better authority.
My lord, if it please your grac [...] tur [...] the argument upon him which you have [...], a [...]d let him shew the succession of the bishops of his church, as we can do. How say you, can you shew the succession of bishops in your church from time to time? I tell you this argument troubled Dr. Ridley so sore, that he could never answer it; yet he was a man well learned, I dare say you will say so.
He was a man so learned, that I was not worthy to carry his books for learning.
I promise you he was never able to answer that. He was a man that I loved well, and he me; for he came unt [...] me divers times being in prison, and conferred with me▪
I wonder, my lord, you should make this argument, which you would turn upon me, for the trial of my church whereof I am, or that you would make bishop Ridley so ignorant that he was not able to answer it, since it is of no force. For behold, first I denied you that a local succession of bishops in one place is a necessary point alone to prove the catholic church by, and that which I have denied you cannot prove: and is it then reason that you should put me to the trial of that, which by you is unproved, and of no force to conclude against me?
I see, my lords, we do but lose our labours to reason with him, he thinketh himself better learned than we.
I take upon me the name of no learning. I boast of [...] knowledge but of faith and of Christ, and that I am bound [...] to know, as I am sure I do.
These heretics ta [...]e upon them to be sure of all things they stand in. You should say rather with humility, I trust I know Christ, than that you be sure thereof
Let him doubt of his fa [...]h that listeth; God giveth me grace always to believe that I am sure of true faith and favour in Christ.
How will you be able to answer heretics, but by determination of the known catholic church.
I am able to answer all heretics by the the word of God, and convince them of the same.
How arrogantly is that spoken! I dare not say so.
My lords, I pray you bear with me; for I am bold on truth's side, and I speak somewhat by experience that I have had with heretics: and I know the Arians be the subtlest that ever were, and yet I have manifest scriptures to beat them down withal.
I perceive now you are the [...] of man I have heard of, that will not be satisfied with learning.
Alas, my lord, why do you say so? I do most humbly desire to be taught, if there be any better way that I should learn, and hitherto you have shewed me no better, therefore I pray your lordship not to mis-judge without a cause.
If you be of the true catholic church, then will you hold with the real presence of Christ in the sacrament, which the true church hath ever maintained.
And I, my lord, with the true church, do hold the same in the due administration of the sacrament; but I desire you, my lord, there may be made a better conclusion in our first matter, before we enter into any other; for if the church be proved, we shall soon agree in the rest. In the mean while my lord of York was turning his book for more places to help his cause.
I have found at length a very notable place, which I have looked for all this while, of St. Austin, De simplicitate credendi.
It is but folly, my lord, for your grace to read any more places to him, for he esteemeth them not.
I esteem them, inasmuch as they be of force, as your lordship doth hear me deny no doctors you bring, but only require the true application of them, according to the writer's meaning, and as by his own words may be proved.
I will read him the place, and so make an end. After he had read the sentence, he said, that by four special points St. Augustine here proveth the catholic church. The first is by the consent of all nations: the second, by the apostolic see; the third, [...] [...]versality; and the fourth by this word catholic.
That is a notable place indeed, if it please your grace.
I pray you, my lord, of what church doth St. Augustine write the same, of Rome, or not?
Yea, he writeth it of the church of Rome.
I will lay your lordship as much as I have, that it is not so; and let the book be seen.
What art thou able to lay? Thou hast nothing.
Doth he not make mention here of the apostolic see, whereby he meaneth Rome?
That is very straightly interpreted, my lord, as though the apostolic see had been no where else but at Rome. But let it be Rome, and yet you shall never verify the same, unless all the other conditions do go therewith, as St. Augustine doth proceed withal, whereof none, except the apostolic see, can now be verified of the church of Rome. For the faith which that see now maintaineth hath not the consent of all nations, neither hath had. Besides that, it cannot have the name of catholic, because it differeth from the catholic churches which the apostles planted, almost in all things.
Nay, he goeth about here to prove the catholic church by universality; and how can you shew your church to be universal fifty or an hundred years ago?
That is not material, neither any thing against St. Augustine: for my church (whereof I am) were to be accounted universal, though it were but in ten persons, because it agreeth with the same that the apostles did universally plant.
I perceive you are an obstinate man in your own opinion, and will not be taught; wherefore it is but lost labour to talk with you and longer, you are a member to be cut off.
I have heard of you before, how you troubled the good bishop of Winchester, and now I see in you what I have heard.
I trust you see no evil in me by this; I [Page 90] desire of you a sure ground to build my faith on, and if you shew me none, I pray you speak not ill of him that meaneth well.
Thou art as impudent a fellow as any I have talked with.
That is spoken uncharitably, my lord, to blaspheme him whom you cannot justly reprove.
Why, thou art not God: blasphemy is counted a rebuke to God-ward, and not to man.
Yes, it may be as well verified of an infamy laid to man, speaking in God's cause, as you now do lay unto me, for speaking freely the truth before God, to maintain your vain religion. You are void of all good ground. I perceive you are blind guides, and leaders of the blind: and therefore (as I am bound to tell you) very hypocrites, tyrannously persecuting the truth, which otherwise by just order you are by no means able to convince. Your own doctors and testimonies which you bring, be evidently against you, and yet you will not see the truth.
Have we these thanks for our good will, in coming to instruct thee?
My lords, [...]ou must bear with me, since I speak in Christ's cause; and because his glory is defaced, and his people cruelly and wrongfully slain by you, because they will not consent to the dishonour of God, and to hypocrisy with you; if I told you not your fault, it would be required at my hands in the day of judgment. Therefore know you, ye hypocrites indeed, that it is the Spirit of God that telleth you your sin, and not I; I thank God, I value not all your cruelty. God forgive you, and give you grace to repent. And so they departed.
Another Conference the same Day.
THE same day at night, before supper, the bishop sent for me into his chapel, in the presence of archdeacon Harpsfield, Dr. Chedsey, and his other chaplains and servants. And then he said:
Mr. Philpot, I have sundry means gone about to do you good, and I marvel you do so little consider it. By my truth, I cannot tell what to say to you: tell me directly whether you will be a conformable man, or no; and whereupon you chiefly stand.
I have told your lordship oftentimes plain enough, whereon I chiefly stand, requiring a sure probation of the church whereunto you call me.
St. Augustine, writing against the Donatists, declareth four special marks to know the church by; the consent of many nations, the faith of [...] sacraments confirmed by antiquity, succession of bishops, and universality.
I pray you, Mr. Archdeacon, fetch the book hither; it is a notable place, let him see it. And the book was brought, and the bishop read it, demanding how I could answer the same.
My lord, I like St. Augustine's four points for the trial of the catholic church, whereof I am: for it can abide every point thereof together, which your's cannot do.
Have not we succession of bishops in the see and church of Rome? Wherefore then do you deny our church to be the catholic church?
St. Augustine doth not put succession of bishops only to be sufficient, but he addeth the use of the sacraments according to antiquity, and doctrine universally taught and received by most nations from the beginning of the primitive church, which your church is far from. But my church can avouch all these better than your's; therefore by St. Augustine's judgment, which you here bring, mine is the catholic church, and not your's.
It is but folly, my lord, for you to reason with him, for he is irrecoverable.
That is a good shift for you to run unto, when you are confounded in your own sayings, and have nothing else to say: you are evidently deceived, and yet will not see it when it is laid open to your face.
[Page 91]THUS have I at large set forth as many of the said John Philpot's examinations and privy conferences as are yet come to light, being faithfully written with his own hand. And although he was examined after this several times, both openly in the consistory at St. Paul's, and also secretly in the bishop's house; yet what was there said is not sufficiently known, either because his writings are by some kept close, and not brought forth, otherwise than as the bishop's register hath noted, whose handling of such matters, because it is (either for fear or favour of his lord and master) very slender, little light of any true meaning can be gathered, especially in behalf of the answer; however, such as it is, such thought I good to put forth; requiring the reader to judge hereof according to his answers in his former examinations.
The Last Examination of Mr. JOHN PHILPOT, in open Judgment, with his final Condemnation by Bishop BONNER, in the Consistory at St. Paul's.
THE bishop having sufficiently taken his pleasure with Mr. Philpot in his private talk, and seeing his zealous, learned, and immutable constancy, thought it now high time to rid his hands of him, and therefore on the thirteenth and fourteenth days of December, sitting judicially in the consistory at St. Paul's, he caused to be brought thither before him and others, as it seemeth, more for order's sake, than for any good affection to justice and right judgment. The effect of which their two sundry proceedings, as well also of another had the eleventh day of the same month in his chapel, appear in a manner to be all one. The bishop therefore first speaking to Mr. Philpot, said:
Mr. Philpot, amongst other things that were laid and objected against you, these three things you were principally charged and burthened with.
THE first is, That you being fallen from the unity of Christ's catholic church, do refuse and will not come to be reconciled thereunto.
THE second is, That you have blasphemously spoken against the sacrifice of the mass, calling it idolatry.
AND the third is, That you have spoken against the sacrament of the altar, denying the real presence of Christ's body and blood to be in the same.
AND according to the will and pleasure of the synod legislative, you have been often by me invited and required to go from you [...] said errors and heresies, and to return to the unity of the catholic church, which if you will now willingly do, you shall be mercifully and gladly received, charitably used, and have all the favour I can shew you. And now to tell you true, it is assigned and appointed me to give sentence against you, if you stand herein, and will not return. Wherefore if you so refuse, I do ask of you, whether you have any cause that you can shew, why I now should not give sentence against you.
Under protestation, not to go from my appeal that I have made, and also not to consent to you as my competent judge, I say, touching your first objection concerning the catholic church, I neither was nor am out of the same. And as touching the sacrifice of the mass, and the sacrament of the altar, I never spoke against the same. And as concerning the pleasure of the synod, I say, that th [...]se twenty years I have been brought up in the faith of the true catholic church, which is contrary to our church, whereunto you would have me to come: and in that time I have been many times sworn both in the reign of king Henry the Eighth, and king Edward his son, against the usurped power of the bishop of Rome, which I think I am bound in my conscience to keep, because I must perform unto the Lord mine oath. But if you, or any of the synod, can by God's word persuade me that my said oath was unlawful, and that I am bound by God's law to come to your church, faith, and religion, whereof you be now, I will gladly yield, agree, and be conformable unto you, otherwise not.
BONNER then not able with all his learned doctors to accomplish this his offered condition, fell to persuading of him, both by his accustomed vain [Page 92] promises and threatenings, to return to their church: to which he answered:
You, and all other of your sort, are hypocrites, and I wish all the world knew your hypocrisy, your tyranny, ignorance, and idolatry.
UPON these words the bishop did for that time dismiss him, commanding that on Monday the 16th day of the same month, between the hours of one and three in the afternoon, he should again be brought thither, there to have the definitive sentence of condemnation pronounced against him, if he remained then in his former constancy.
AT which day and time, Mr. Philpot being there presented before the bishops of London, Bath, Worcester, and Litchfield; Bonner, bishop of London, began to talk in this manner:
My lords, Stokesley, my predecessor, when he went to give sentence against an heretic, used to make this prayer;
Deus qui errantibus, ut in viam possint redire, justitiae veritatisque tuae lumen ostendis, da cunctis qui christiana professione censentur, & illa respuere quae huic inimica sint nomini, & ea quae sint apta sectari per Christum Dominum nostrum, Amen. Which I will follow. And so he read it with a loud voice in Latin. To which Mr. Philpot said:
I wish you would speak in English, that all men might hear and understand you; for St. Paul willeth, that all things spoken in the congregation to edify, should be spoken in a tongue that all men might understand.
Whereupon the bishop did read it in English:
"O God, who sheweth the light of thy truth and righteousness to those that stray, that they may return into thy way, give to all who profess themselves christians, to refuse those things which are foes to thy name, and to follow those things which are fit, by Christ our Lord, Amen." And when he came to these words, "To refuse those things which are foes to thy name," Mr. Philpot said,
THEN they all must turn away from you; for you are enemies to that name (meaning Christ's name), and God save us from such hypocrites as would have things in a tongue that men cannot understand.
Whom do you mean?
You, and all others that be of your generation and sect. And I am sorry to see you sit in the place that you now sit in, pretending to execute justice, and to do nothing less but deceive all men in this realm.
O all you gentlemen, beware of these men (meaning the bishops) and all their doings, which are contrary to the primitive church. And I would know of you, my lord, by what authority you proceed against me.
Because I am bishop of London.
Well, then you are not my bishop, nor have I offended in your diocese: and moreover, I have appealed from you, and therefore by your own law you ought not to proceed against me, especially being brought hither from another place by violence.
Why, who sent you hither to me?
Dr. Story, and Dr. Cook, with other commissioners of the king and queen; and, my lord, is it not enough for you to worry your own sheep, but you must also meddle with other men's sheep?
THEN the bishop delivered two books to Mr. Philpot, one of the civil, and the other of the canon law, out of which he would have proved that he had authority to proceed against him in such manner as he did. Mr. Philp [...]t then perusing the same, and seeing the small and slender proof that was there alledged, said to the bishop:
I perceive your law and divinity is all one; for you have knowledge in neither of them; and I [Page 93] wish you did know your own ignorance: but you dance in a net, and think that no man doth see you. Hereupon they had much talk, but what it was is not yet known. At last Bonner said unto him:
PHILPOT, as concerning your objections against my jurisdiction, you shall understand that both the civil and canon laws make against you; and as for your appeal, it is not allowed in this case: for it is written in the law, There is no appeal from a judge executing the sentence of the law.
My lord, it appeareth by your interpretation of the law, that you have no knowledge therein, and that you do not understand the law; for if you did, you would not bring in that text.
HEREUPON the bishop recited a law of the Romans, That it was not lawful for a Jew to keep a christian man in captivity, and to use him as a slave, laying then to the said Philpot's charge that he did not understand the law, did like a Jew. Wherento Philpot answered,
NO, I am no Jew, but you, my lord, are a Jew. For you profess Christ, and maintain Antichrist; you profess the gospel, and maintain superstition, and you be able to charge me with nothing.
With what can you charge us?
You are enemies to all truth, and all your doings be naught, full of idolatry, saving the article of the Trinity.
WHILST they were thus debating the matter, there came thither sir William Garret, knight, then mayor of London, sir Martin Bowes, knight, and Thomas Leigh, then sheriff of the same city, and sat down with the said bishops, in the said consistory, where bishop Bonner spake these words in effect as follows:
Philpot, before the coming of my lord mayor, because I would not enter with you into the matter, wherewith I have heretofore, and now intend to charge you withal, until his coming, I did rehearse a prayer unto you, both in English and Latin, which bishop Stokesley, my predecessor, used when he intended to proceed to give sentence against an heretic.
AND here did again read the said prayer both in English and Latin: which being ended, he spake again unto him, and said:
Philpot, amongst others I have to charge you especially with three things:
FIRST, Where you have fallen from the unity of Christ's catholic church, you have thereupon been invited and required, nor only by me, but also by many and divers other catholic bishops, and other learned men, to return and come again to the same; and also you have been offered by me, that if you would so return and confess your errors and heresies, you should be mercifully received, and have so much favour as I could shew unto you.
THE second is, That you have blasphemously spoken against the sacrifice of the mass, calling it idolatry and abomination.
AND thirdly, That you have spoken and held against the sacrament of the altar, denying the real presence of Christ's body and blood to be in the same.
THIS being spoken, the bishop recited unto him a certain exhortation in English, the tenor and form whereof is this:
Bishop Bonner's Exhortation.
MR. Philpot, this is to be told you, that if you, not being reconciled to the unity of the catholic church, from whence you did fall in the time of the late schism, here in this realm of England, against the see apostolic of Rome, will now heartily and obediently be reconciled to the unity of the same catholic church, professing and promising to observe and keep, to the best of your power, the faith and christian religion observed and kept by all faithful people of the same: and moreover, if you, which heretofore, in the years of our Lord 1553, [Page 94] 1554, and 1555, or in one of them, have offended and trespassed grievously against the sacrifice of the mass, calling it idolatry and abominable; and like [...]wise have offended and trespassed against the sacrament of the altar, denying the real presence of Christ's body and blood to be there in the sacrament of the altar, affirming also withal, material bread and material wine to be in the sacrament of the altar; and not the substance of the body and blood of Christ; if you, I say, will be reconciled as aforesaid, and will forsake you heresies and errors before touched, being heretical and damnable, and will also allow the sacrament of the mass, you shall be mercifully received, and charitably used with as much favour as may be; if not, you shall be reputed, taken, and judged for an heretic (as you be indeed). Now do you chuse what you will do; you ar counselled herein friendly and favourably.
Ita est quod Edm. Bonner, Episc. Lond.
THE bishop's exhortation thus ended, Mr. Philpot turned himself to the lord mayor, and said,
To you my lord mayor, bearing the sword, I am glad it is my chance now to stand before that authority, that hath defended the gospel and the truth of God's word; but I am sorry to see that that authority, which representeth the king and queen's persons, should now be changed, and be at the command of Antichrist; and you
pretend to be the followers of the apostles of Christ, and yet be the very Antichrists and deceivers of the people; and I am glad that God hath given me power to stand here this day, and to declare and defend my faith, which is founded on Christ.
THEREFORE, as touching your first objection, I say, that I am of the catholic church, whereof I never was out, and that your church (which you pretend to be the catholic church) is the church of Rome, and so the Babylonical, and not the catholic church; of that church I am not.
AS touching your second objection, which is, that I should speak against the sacrifice of the mass; I do say, that I have not spoken against the true sacrifice, but I have spoken against your private masses that you use in corners, which is blasphemy to the true sacrifice; for your daily sacrifice is reiterated blasphemy against Christ's death, and it is a lie of your own invention: and that abominable sacrifice which you set upon the altar, and use in your private masses, instead of the living sacrifice, is idolatry, and you shall never prove it by God's word; therefore you have deceived the people with that your sacrifice of the mass, which you make a masking.
THIRDLY, where you lay to my charge, that I deny the body and blood of Christ to be in the sacrament of the altar, I cannot tell what altar you mean, whether it be the altar of the cross, or the altar of stone: and if you call it the sacrament of the altar in respect of the altar of stone, then I defy your Christ, for it is a rotten Christ.
AND as touching your transubstantiation, I utterly deny it, for it was first brought up by a pope. Now as concerning your offer made from the synod, which is gathered together in Antichrist's name; prove to me that you be of the catholic church (which never can), and I will follow you, and do as you would have me to do. But you are idolaters, and daily do commit idolatry. You be also traitors; for in your pulpits ye rail against good kings, as king Henry, and king Edward his son, who have stood against the usurped power of the bishop of Rome; against whom I have also taken an oath, which if you can shew me by God's law that I have taken unjustly, I will then yield unto you: but I pray God turn the king and queen's heart from your synagogue and church, for you do abuse that good queen.
HERE the bishop of Coventry and Litchfield began to shew where the true church was, saying:
The true catholic church is set upon an high hill.
Yea, at Rome, which is the Babylonical church.
No, in our true catholic church are the apostles, evangelists, and martyrs: but before Martin [Page 95] Luther there was no apostle, evangelist, or martyr of your church.
Will you know the cause why? Christ did prophesy that in the latter days there should come false prophets and hypocrites, as you be.
Your church of Geneva, which you call the catholic church, is that which Christ prophesied of.
I allow the church of Geneva, and the doctrine of the same, for it is catholic and apostolic, and doth follow the doctrine the apostles did preach; and the doctrine taught and preached in king Edward's days, was also according to the same. And are you not ashamed to persecute me for your church's sake, which is Babylonical, and contrary to the true catholic church?
My lord, this man had a roasted pig brought unto him, and this knife was put secretly between the skin and the flesh thereof, and so it was sent to him in the prison. And also this powder was sent unto him, under pretence that it was good and comfortable for him to eat and drink; which powder was only to make ink to write withal. For when his keeper did perceive it, he took it and brought it unto me: which when I did see, I thought it had been gunpowder, and thereupon I put fire to it, but it would not burn. Then I took it for poison, and so gave it to a dog, but it was not so. Then I took a little water, and it made as fair ink as ever I did write withal. Therefore, my lord, you may understand what a naughty fellow this is.
Ah, my lord, have you nothing else to charge me withal, but these trifles, seeing I stand upon life and death? Doth the knife in the pig prove the church of Rome to be the catholic church? &c.
THEN the bishop brought forth a certain instrument, containing articles and questions, agreed upon both in Oxford and Cambridge. Also he exhibited two books in print; the one a catechism made in king Edward's days, in the year 1552, the other concerning the report of the disputation in the convocation-house, mention whereof is above expressed.
MOREOVER he brought forth two letters and laid them to Mr. Philpot's charge; the one touching Bartlet Green, the other containing godly exhortations and comforts; which were both written to him by some of his friends; the tenor whereof is above expressed.
A LETTER, Produced by BONNER, written by some Friend of Mr. PHILPOT'S, and sent to him, concerning the Usage of Mr. GREEN, in Bonner's House at London..
YOU shall understand that Mr. Green came unto the bishop of London on Sunday last, where he was courteously received; for what policy the sequel declareth. His entertainment for one day or two was to dine at my lord's own table, or else to have his meat from thence. During those days he lay in Dr. Chedsey's chamber, and was examined. Albeit in very deed, the bishop earnestly and faithfully promised many right worshipful men (who were suitors for him, but to him unknown) that he in no case should be examined; before which Mr. Fecknam would have had him in his friendly custody, if he would have desired to have conferred with him, which he utterly refused. And in that the bishop objected against him singularity and obstinacy; his answer thereunto was thus, To avoid all suspicion thereof, although I myself am young and utterly unlearned in respect of the learned, (and yet I understand, I thank my Lord) yet let me have such books as I shall require, and if I, by God's Spirit, do not thereby answer all your books and objections contrary thereto, I will assent to you. Whereunto the bishop and the rest assented, permitting him at the first to have such books. They at sundry times have reasoned with him, and have found him so strong and rise in the scriptures and goodly fathers, that since they have not only taken from him the liberty of those books, but all other books, not leaving him so much as the New Testament. Since, they have beat and used him most cruelly. This Mr. Fecknam reported; saying farther, that he never heard the like young man and so perfect. What shall become farther of him, [Page 96] God knoweth; but death I think, for he remaineth more and more willing to die, as I understand. Concerning your bill, I shall confer with others therein, knowing that the same court is able to redress the same: and yet I think it will not be reformed, for that I know few or none that dare or will speak therein, or prefer the same, because it concerneth spiritual things. Notwithstanding, I will ascertain you thereof; committing you to the Holy Ghost, who keep you and us all as his.
A LETTER Written by Lady VANE to Mr. PHILPOT, exhibited likewise by Bishop BONNER.
HEARTY thanks I render unto you, my well beloved in Christ, for the book you sent me, wherein I find great consolations, and according to the doctrine thereof do prepare my cheeks to the strikers. and my womanish back to the burdens of reproof, and so in the strength of my God I trust to leap over the wall; for his sweetness overcometh me daily, and maketh all these apothecary's drugs of the world even medicinal like in my mouth. For the continuance whereof, I beseech thee (my dear-fellow soldier) make thy faithful prayer for me, that I may with a strong and gladsome conscience finish my course, and obtain the reward, tho' it be no whit due to my work. I am not content that you so often gratify me with thanks for that which is none worthy, but duty on my part, and small relief to you. But if you would love me so much, that I might supply your wants, then would I think you believed my offers to be such as agreed with my heart. And for the short charges you speak of, the means are not so pleasant, if God (whom my trust is in) will otherwise prepare; but Solomon saith, "All things here have their time;" you to day, and I to-morrow, and so the end of Adam's line is soon run out. The mighty God give us his grace, that during this time his glory be not defaced through our weakness. Because you desire to shew yourself a worthy soldier, if need so require, I will supply your request for the scarf you wrote of, that you may present it before your captain, that I be not forgotten in the odours of incense, which our beloved Christ offered for his own; to whom I bequeath both our bodies and souls.
BESIDES these letters, the bishops did also bring forth a supplication, made by Mr. Philpot unto the high-court of parliament, whereof mention is made in the first of the two letters last mentioned; the copy whereof here follows.
To the KING and QUEEN'S Majesties Highness, the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and the Commons of this present Parliament assembled.
IN the most humble wise complaineth unto this honourable court of parliament John Philpot, clerk, that where as by the queen's highness a parliament was called in the first year of her gracious reign, and after the old custom a convocation of the clergy, your suppliant then being one of the said convocation-house, and matters there arising upon the using of the sacraments, did dispute in the same, knowing that there all men had and have free speech, and ought not to be after troubled for any thing there spoken: and yet that notwithstanding, not long after the said parliament, your said suppliant (without any act or matter) was commanded to prison in the King's-Bench by the late lord chancellor, where he hath remained ever since, until now of late that my lord the bishop of London hath sent for your said suppliant, to examine him (being none of his diocese) upon certain matters, wherein they would have your suppliant to declare his conscience, which the said bishop saith he hath authority to do, by reason of an act of parliament made in the first and second years of the king and queen's majesties reign, for the reviving of three statutes made against them that hold any opinion against the catholic faith: whereby he affirmeth, that every ordinary may, ex officio, examine every man's conscience: and for that your said suppliant hath and doth refuse, that the said bishop of London hath any authority over your said suppliant, because he is neither his diocesian, nor hath published, preached, nor held any opinion against the catholic faith (notwithstanding the said bishop of London detained him in the stocks in the coal-house, without a bed, or any other thing to lie upon but straw), [Page 97] and for that your said suppliant cannot appeal for his relief from the same bishop to any other judge, but the same bishop may refuse the same by their law, and therefore hath no succour and help but by this high court of parliament, for the explanation of the said act: therefore may it please you, that it may be enacted by the king and queen's majesties, the lords spiritual and temporal, and the commons of this present parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, that no bishop or ordinary shall commit or detain in prison any suspected person or persons for the catholic faith, except he or they have spoken, written, or done some manifest act against the catholic faith; and the same to be lawfully proved against every such person or persons, by the testimony of two lawful witnesses, to be brought before the said person or persons so accused, before he or they shall either be committed to prison, or convicted for any such offence or offences; the said former statute, made in the said first and second year of our said sovereign lord and lady notwithstanding: whereby your said suppliant shall not only be set at liberty, and divers other more remaining in prison; but also the blood of divers of the queen's majesty's true and faithful subjects preserved.
The Condemnation of the worthy Martyr of God, Mr. JOHN PHILPOT.
THESE books, letters, supplications, and other matters being thus read, the bishop demanded of him, if the book intitled, "The true report of the disputation," &c. were of his penning or not? Whereupon Philpot answered, That it was a good and true book, and of his own penning and setting forth.
THE bishops growing weary, and not being able by any sufficient ground, either of God's word, or of the true ancient catholic fathers, to convince and overcome him, fell with fair and flattering speech to persuade with him; promising, that if he would revoke his opinions, and come home again to their Romish and Babylonical church, he would not only be pardoned that which was past, but also they would, with all favour and chearfulness of heart, receive him again as a true member thereof. Which words when Bonner saw would take no place, he demanded of Mr. Philpot (and that with a charitable affection I warrant you), whether he had any just cause to alledge why he should not condemn him as an heretie. Well, quoth Mr. Philpot, your idolatrous sacrament, which you have found out, you would fain defend, but you cannot, nor ever shall.
IN the end the bishop, seeing his unmoveable stedfastness in the truth, did openly pronounce the sentence of condemnation against him. In the reading whereof, when he came to these words, And you an obstinate, pernicious, and impenitent heretic, &c. Mr. Philpot said, I thank God that I am an heretic out of your cursed church; I am no heretic before God. But God bless you, and give you once grace to repent your wicked doings, and let all men beware of your bloody church.
MOREOVER, whilst Bonner was about the midst of the sentence, the bishop of Bath pulled him by the sleeve, and said, My lord, my lord, know of him first whether he will recant, or not. Then Bonner said, (full like himself) O let him alone; and so read forth the sentence.
AND when he had done, he delivered him to the sheriffs; and so two officers brought him through the bishop's house into Pater-noster-row, and there his servant met him, and when he saw him, he said, Ah, dear master.
THEN Mr. Philpot said to his man, Content thyself, I shall do well enough; for thou shalt see me again.
AND so the officers thrust him away, and took him to Newgate; and as he went, he said to the people, Ah, good people, blessed be God for this day; and so the officers delivered him to the keeper. Then his man pushed to go in after his master, and one of the officers said unto him, Hence fellow, what wouldst thou have? And he said, I would go speak with my master. Mr. Philpot then turned him about, and said to him, To-morrow thou shalt speak with me.
THEN the under keeper said to Mr. Philpot, Is this your man? and he said, Yea. So he gave his man leave to go in with him. And Mr. Philpot [Page 98] and his man were turned into a little chamber on the right hand, and there remained a short time, until Alexander, the chief keeper, came unto him; who at his entering, greeted him with these words, All, said he, hast thou not done well to bring thyself hither? Well, said Mr. Philpot, I must be content, for it is God's appointment; and I shall desire you to let me have your gentle favour, for you and I have been of old acquaintance. Well, said Alexander, I will shew thee gentleness and favour, so thou wilt be ruled by me. Then said Mr. Philpot, I pray you shew me what you would have me to do.
HE said, If you will recant, I will shew you any pleasure I can. Nay, said Mr. Philpot. I will never recant that which I have spoken, whilst I have my life, for it is most certain truth, and in witness hereof I will seal it with my blood. Then Alexander said, This is the saying of the whole pack of you heretics. Whereupon he commanded him to be [...] upon [...]he block, and as many irons upon his [...] he or old bear, because he would not follow [...] mind.
THEN the clerk told Alexander in his ear, that Mr. Philpot had gives his man money. And Alexander said to his man, What money hath thy master given thee? He answered, My master hath given me none: No, said Alexander, hath he given thee none? That will I know, for I will search thee.
DO with me as you like, and search me all that you can, quoth his servant; he hath given me a token or two to send to his friends, to his brothers and sisters. Ah, said Alexander unto Mr. Philpot, thou art a maintainer of heretic [...], thy man should have gone to some of thine affinity, but he shall be known well enough. Nay, said Mr. Philpot, I do send it to my friends; there he is, let him make answer to it. But, good Mr. Alexander, be so much my friend that these irons may be taken off. Well, said Alexander, give me my fees, and I will take them off: if not, thou shalt wear them still.
THEN said Mr. Philpot, Sir, what is your fee? He said, Four pound was his fees. Ah, said Mr. Philpot, I have not so much; I am but a poor man, and I have been long in prison. What wilt thou give me then, said Alexander? Sir, said he, I will give thee twenty shillings, and that I will send my man for, or else I will give you my gown in pledge; for the time is not long I am sure, that I shall be [...] you; for the bishop said unto me that I should be soon dispatched.
THEN Alexander said unto him, What is that to me? And with that he departed from him, and commanded him to be had into limbo, and so his command was fulfilled; but before he could be taken from the block, the clerk would have a groat.
THEN one Witterence, steward of the house, took him on his back, and carried him down, his man knew not whither. Wherefore Mr. Philpot said to his man, Go to Mr. Sheriff, and shew him how I am used, and desire Mr. Sheriff to be good unto me; and so his servant went straightway, and took an honest man with him.
AND when they came to Mr. Sheriff, (which was Mr. Macham) and shewed him how Mr. Philpot was handled in Newgate, the sheriff hearing this, took his ring from off his finger, and delivered it to that honest man that came with Mr. Philpot's man, and bade him go unto Alexander the keeper, and commanded him to take off his irons, and to handle him more gently, and to give his man again that which he had taken from him.
AND when they came again to the said Alexander, and delivered their message from the sheriff, Alexander took the ring and said, Ah, I perceive that Mr. Sheriff is a bearer with him, and all such heretics as he is, therefore to-morrow I will shew it to his betters: yet at ten o'clock he went into Mr. Philpot where he lay, and took off his irons, and gave him such things as he had taken before from his servant.
UPON Tuesday at supper, being the 17th of December, there came a messenger from the sheriffs, and bade Mr. Philpot make ready, for the next day he should suffer, and be burned at a stake with fire. Mr. Philpot answered and said, I am ready; God grant me strength, and a joyful resurrection. And so he went into his chamber, and poured out his spirit unto the Lord God, g [...]ving him most [Page]
[Page 99] hearty thanks, that he of his mercy had made him worthy to suffer for his truth.
IN the morning the sheriffs came according to order, about eight o'clock, and calling for [...] he most joyfully came down to them. And there his man met him, and said, Ah, dear master, farewel. His master said unto him, Serve God, and he will help thee. And so he went with the sheriffs to the place of execution; and when he was entering into Smithfield, the way was foul, and two officers took him up to bear him to the stake. Then he said merrily, What, will you make me a pope? I am content to go to my journey's end on foot. But first coming into Smithfield, he kneeled down there, saying these words, "I will pay my vows in thee, O Smithfield."
AND when he was come to the place of suffering, he kissed the stake, and said, Shall I disdain to suffer at [...] stake, seeing my Redeemer did not refuse to suffer the most vile death upon the cros [...] for [...] ▪ And then with an obedient heart, full [...] he said the cvi.cvii. and cviii. Psalms: and when he had made an end of all his prayers, he said to the officers, What have you done for me? And every one of them declared what they had done, and he gave money to them.
THEN they bound him to the stake, and set fire to that constant martyr; who, the 18th day of December, in the midst of the fiery flames, yielded his soul into the hands of Almighty God, and like a lamb gave up his breath, his body being consumed to ashes.
THUS have we presented the reader with the life and actions of this learned and worthy soldier of the Lord, John Philpot, with all his examinations that came to our hands, being marvellously preserved from the sight and hands of his enemies; who by all manner of means, sought not only to stop him from all writing, but also to spoil and deprive him of that which he had written. For which cause he was many times stripped and searched in the prison by his keeper: but yet so happily these his writings were conveyed and hid in places about him, or else his keeper's so blinded, notwithstanding all this malicious purpose of the bishops, they are yet remaining and come to light.
LETTER I. From Mr. PHILPOT to a Christian Congregation, exhorting them to refrain from Idolatry, and to serve GOD after his Word.
IT is a lamentable thing to behold, at this time in England, the faithless departing, both of men and women, from the true knowledge and use of Christ's sincere religion, which so plentifully they have been taught, and do know, their own conscience [...] bearing witness to the verity thereof. If that earth be accursed of God, which soon receiving moisture and pleasant dews from heaven, doth not bring forth fruit accordingly; how much more grievous judgment shall such persons receive, who having received [...] the Father of heaven the perfect knowledge of his word by the ministry thereof, do not shew [...] worship [...] same? If the Lord will [...], in the day of judgment, a [...] usury of all manner of [...] which he le [...]eth [...] more will he [...] the same of his [...] revealed unto us (which is of all other talents the chief, and most pertaining to our exercise in [...]), if we hide the same in a napk [...], and set it not forth to the usury of God's glory, and edifying of his church by true confession? God hath kindled [...]he bright light of his gospel, which in times past was suppressed, and hi [...] under the vile ashes of man's traditions, and hath caused the brightness thereof to shine in our [...]arts, to the end that the same might shine before men to the honour of his name. It is not only given us to believe, but also to confess and declare wh [...] we believe in our outward conversation. For as St. Paul writeth to the Romans. "The belief of the heart justifieth, and to acknowledge with the mouth maketh a man safe." It is all one before God, not to believe at all, and not to shew forth the lively works of our belief. For Christ saith, "Either make the tree good, and its fruits good; or else make the tree evil, and the fruits evil; because a good tree bringeth forth good fruits, and an evil tree bringeth▪ forth evil fruits." So that the person who knoweth his master's will, and doth it not, shall be beaten with many stripes. And not all they who say, Lord. Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of God, but he that doth the will of the Father. And, "Whosoever [Page 100] in the time of trial is ashamed of me, (saith Christ) and of my words, of him the Son of man will be ashamed before his Father." After we have built ourselves into the true church of God, it hath pleased him, by giving us over into the hands of the wicked synagogues, to prove our building, and to have it known as well to the world as to ourselves, that we have been wise builders into the true church of God upon the rock, and not on the sand, and therefore now the tempest is risen, and the storms do mightily blow against us, that we might notwithststanding stand upright and be firm in the Lord, to his honour and glory, and to our eternal felicity. There is no new thing happened unto us, for with such tempests and dangerous weathers the church of God hath been continually exercised. Now once again, as the prophet Haggai tells us, "The Lord shaketh the earth, that those might abide for ever, which be not overcome."
THEREFORE, my dearly beloved, be stable and immoveable in the word of God, and in the faithful observation thereof, and let no man deceive you with vain words, saying, that you may keep your faith to yourselves, and dissemble with Antichrist, and to live at rest and quientness in the world, as most men do, yielding to necessity. This is the wisdom of the flesh, but wisdom of the flesh is death and e [...]mity to God, as our Saviour, for example, did aptly declare in Peter, who exhorteth Christ not to go to Jerusalem to celebrate the passover, and there to be slain, but counselled him to look better to himself.
LIKEWISE the world would not have us to forsake it, neither to associate ourselves to the true church, which is the body of Christ, whereof we are lively members, and to use the sacraments after God's word with the danger of our lives. But we must learn to answer the world as Christ did Peter, and say, "Go behind me, Satan, thou savourest not the things of God. Shall I not drink of the cup which the Father giveth me?" For it is better to be afflicted and slain in the church of God, than to be counted the son of a king, in the synagogue of false religion. Death for righteousness is not to be abhorred, but rather to be desired, which assuredly bringeth with it the crown of everlasting glory. These bloody executioners not only persecute Christ's martyrs, but crown them with everlasting felicity; we were born into this world to be witnesses unto the truth, both learned and unlearned.
NOW since the time is come, that we must shew our faith, and declare whether we will be God's servants in righteousness and holiness, as we have been taught, and are bound to follow, or else with hypocrisy to serve unrighteousness: let us take good heed that we be found faithful in the Lord's covenant, and true members of his church, in which through knowledge we are ingrafted; from which if we fall by transgression with the common sort of people, it will be more straightly required of us▪ than many yet do make account thereof. We [...] not serve two masters: we may not halt on both sides, and think to please God; we must be fervent in God's cause, or else he will cast us out from him. For by the first commandment, we are commanded to love God with all our heart, with all mind, with all our power and strength. But they are manifest transgressors of this commandment, which with their heart, mind, or bodily power, do communicate with a strange religion, contrary to the word of God, in the papistical synagogue, which calleth itself the church, and is not. As greatly do they offend God now which do so, as the Israelites did in times past, by forsaking Jerusalem, the true church of God, and by going to Bethel to serve God in a congregation of their own setting up, and after their own imaginations and traditions; for which doing, God utterly destroyed all Israel, as all the prophets almost do testify▪ This happened unto them for our example, that we might beware to have any fellowship with any like congregation to our destruction.
GOD hath one catholic church dispersed throughout the world, and therefore we are taught in our creed to believe one catholic church, and to have communion therewith: which catholic church is grounded upon the foundation of the prophets and of the apostles, and upon none other, as St. Paul witnesseth to the Ephesians. Therefore wheresoever we perceive any people to worship God truly after his word, there we may be certain the church of Christ to be; unto which we ought to associate ourselves, and to desire with the prophet David, [Page 101] to praise God in the midst of his church. But if we behold through the iniquity of the time, separations to be made with counterfeit religion, otherwise than the word of God doth teach, we ought then, if we be required to be companions thereof, to say again with David, "I have hated the synagogue of the malignant, and will not sit with the wicked" In the Revelations the church of Ephesus is highly commended, because she tried such as said they were apostles, and were not indeed, and therefore would not abide the company of them. Further, God commanded his people, that they should not seek Bethel, neither enter into Gilgal, where idolatry was used, by the mouth of his prophet Amos. Also, we must consider that our bodies be the temple of God, and whosoever (as St. Paul teacheth) doth prophane the temple of God, him the Lord will destroy. May we then take the temple of Christ, and make it the member of an harlot? All strange religion and idolatry is accounted whoredom with the prophets, and more detestable in the sight of God, than the adventurous abuse of the body.
THEREFORE the princes of the earth, in the Revelations of St. John, are said to go a whoring, when they are in love with false religion, and follow the same. How then by any means may a christian man think it tolerable to be present at the popish private mass (which is the very prophanation of the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ) and at other idolatrous worshippings and rites, which are not after the word of God, but rather to the derogation thereof, in setting man's traditions above God's precepts, since God by his word judgeth [...]ll strange religion, which is not according to his institution, for whoredom and adultery?
SOME fondly think that the presence of the body is not material, so that the heart do not consent to their wicked doings. But such persons little consider what St. Paul writeth to the Corinthians, commanding them to glorify God as well in body as in soul.
MOREOVER, we can do no greater injury to the true church of Christ, than to seem to have forsaken her, and disallow her by cleaving her adversary: whereby it appeareth to others which are weak, that we allow the; and so contrary to the word, do give great offence to the church of God, and do outwardly slander, as much as men may, the truth of Christ. But woe be unto him by whom any such offence cometh. Better it were for him to have a mill [...]stone tied about his neck, and to be cast into the sea. Such are traitors to the truth, like unto Judas, who with a kiss betrayed Christ. Our God is a jealous GOD, and cannot be content that we should be of any other than of that unspotted church, whereof he is the head only, and wherein he hath planted us by baptism. This jealousy which God hath towards us, will cry for vengeance in the day of vengeance, against all such as have now such large consciences to do that which is contrary to God's glory, and the sincerity of his word, except they do in time repent, and cleave inseparably to the gospel of Christ, how much soever at this present both men and women otherwise in their own corrupt judgment do flatter themselves. God willeth us to judge uprightly, and to allow and follow that which is holy and acceptable in his sight, and to abstain from all manner of evil, and therefore Christ commandeth us in the gospel to beware of the leaven of the pharisees, which is hypocrisy.
ST. PAUL to the Hebrews saith, "If any man withdraw himself from the faith, his soul shall have no pleasure in him;" therefore he saith also, "That we are not such as do withdraw ourselves unto perdition, but we belong unto faith, for the attainment of life." St. John in the Revelations telleth us plainly, that none of those who are written in the book of life, do receive the mark of the beast, which is of the papistical synagogue, either in their foreheads, or else in their hands, that is, apparently or obediently.
ST. PAUL to the Philippians affirmeth, that we may not have any fellowship with the works of darkness, but in the midst of this wicked and froward generation we ought to shine like lights upholding the word of truth. Further he saith, that we may not touch any unclean thing; which signifieth, that our outward conversation in foreign things ought to be pure and undefiled as well as the inward, that with a clean spirit and rectified body, we might serve God justly in holiness and righteousness all the days of our life.
[Page 102]FINALLY, in the 18th of the Revelations, God biddeth us plainly to depart from the Babylonical synagogue, and not to be partakers of her trespass. St. Paul to the Thessalonians commandeth us in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, to withdraw ourselves from every brother that walketh inordinately, and not according to the institution which he hath received of him.
PONDER ye therefore well, good brethren and sisters, these scriptures which are written for your erudition and reformation, whereof one jot is not written in vain: which be utterly against all counterfeit illusion to be used by us with the papists in their fantastical religion, and be adversaries to all them that have so light consciences in so doing: and if they do not agree with this adversary (I mean the word of God) which is contrary to their attempts, he will (as is signified in the gospel) deliver them to the judge, which is Christ; and the judge will deliver them to the executioner, that is, to the devil: and the devil shall commit them to the horrible prison of hell-fire (where is the portion of all hypocrites) with sulphur and brimstone, with wailing and gnashing of teeth, world without end. But yet many will say for their vain excuse, God is merciful, and his mercy is over all. But the scripture teacheth us, That cursed is he that sinneth upon hope of forgiveness. Truth it is, that the mercy of God is over all his works, and yet upon such as fear him: for it is written in the Psalms, "The mercy of God is on them that fear him, and on such as put their trust in him." Where we may learn, that they only put their trust in God, that serve him; and to fear God, is to turn from evil and do what is good. So that such as do look to be partakers in God's mercy, may not abide in that which is known to be manifest evil, and detestable in the sight of God.
ANOTHER sort of persons do make them a cloak for the rain, under the pretence of obedience to the magistrates, whom we ought to obey although they are wicked. But such must learn of Christ to give to Caesar that that is Caesar's, and to God that which is due to God, and with St. Peter to obey the higher powers in the Lord, altho' they be evil, if they command nothing contrary to God's word, otherwise we ought not to obey their commandments, although we should suffer death for it, as we have the apostles for our example herein to follow, who answered the magistrates as we ought to do in this case, not obeying their wicked precepts, saying, "Judge you whether it be more righteous that we should obey man rather than God."
ALSO Daniel chose rather to be cast into the d [...] of lions to be devoured, than to obey the king's wicked commandments. If the blind lead the blind, both fall into the ditch. There is no excuse for the transgression of God's word, whether a man doth it voluntarily or by commandment, although great damnation is to them, by whom the offer [...] cometh. Some others there are, that for an extreme refuge in their evil-doing, do run to God's predestination and election, saying, that if I be elected of God to salvation, I shall be saved whatsoever I do. But such are great tempters of God, and abominable blasphemers of God's holy election, and cast themselves down from the pinnacle of the temple in presumption, that God may preserve them by his angels through predestination. Such verily may reckon themselves to be none of God's elect children, that will do evil that good may ensue [...] whose damnation is just, as St. Paul saith. God's predestination and election ought to be with simple eye considered, to make us more warily to walk in good and godly conversation according to God's word, and not to sit down in idleness, and put all upon God's back to do wickedly at large: for the elect children of God must walk in righteousness and holiness after they are once called to the true knowledge. For saith St. Paul to the Ephesians, "That God hath chosen us before the foundations of the world were laid, that we should be holy and blameless in his sight."
THEREFORE St. Peter willeth us through good works to make our vocation and election certain to ourselves, which we know not but by the good working of God's Spirit in us, according to the rule of the gospel; and [...]e that conformeth not himself to the same in godly conversation, may justly [Page 103] tremble, and doubt that he is none of the elect children of God, but of the viperous generation, and a child of darkness. For the children of light will walk in the works of light and not of darkness; though they fall, they do not lie still.
LET all vain excuses be set apart; and whilst you have light, as Christ commandeth, believe the light and abide in the same, lest eternal darkness overtake you unawares. The light is come into the world, but (alas) men love darkness more than light, God give us his pure eye-salve to heal our blindness in this behalf. O that both men and women would be healed, and not seek to be wilfully blinded. The Lord open their eyes, that they may see how dangerous a thing it is to decline from the knowledge of truth, contrary to their conscience.
BUT what said I, conscience? Many affirm their conscience wil [...] bear them well enough to do all that they do, and to go to the idolatrous church to service; whose conscience is very large to satisfy man more than God. And although their conscience can bear them so to do, yet I am sure that a good conscience will not permit them so to do; which cannot be good, unless it be directed after the knowledge of God's word; and therefore in Latin this feeling mind is called Conscientia, which soundeth by interpretation, as much as with knowledge.
AND therefore if our conscience be led of herself, and not after true knowledge, yet we are not so to be excused as St. Paul beareth witness, saying, "Although my conscience accuseth me not, yet in this I am not justified." And he joineth a good conscience with these three sisters, charity, a pure heart, and unfeigned faith. Charity keepeth God's commandments, a pure heart loveth and feareth God above all, and unfeigned saith is never ashamed of the profession of the gospel, whatsoever damage he shall suffer in body thereby. The Lord, who hath revealed his holy will unto us by his word, grant us never to be ashamed of it, and give us grace so earnestly to cleave to his holy word, and the true church, that for no manner of worldly respect we become partakers of the works of hypocrisy, which God doth [...]; so that we may be [...]ound faithful in the Lord's testament to the end, both in heart, word, and deed, to the glory of God and our everlasting salvation. Amen.
PRISONER in the King's-Bench for the testimony of the truth. 1556.
LETTER II. From Mr. PHILPOT to Mr. JOHN CARELESS, Prisoner in the King's-Bench.
MY dearly beloved brother Careless, I have received your loving letters full of love and compassion, insomuch that they made my hard heart to weep, to see you so careful for one that hath been so unprofitable a member as I have been, and am in Christ's church. God make me worthy of that I am called unto, and I pray you cease not to pray for me, but cease to weep for him which hath not deserved such gentle tears: and praise God with me, for that I now approach to the company of them, whose want you may worthily lament; God give your pitiful heart his inward consolation. Indeed, my dear Careless, I am in this world in hell, and in the shadow of death; but he that brought me for my deserts down into hell, shall shortly lift me up to heaven, where I shall look continually for your coming, and other my faithful brethren in the King's-Bench. And though I tell you that I am in hell in the judgment of this world, yet assuredly I feel in the same the consolation of heaven, I praise God; and this loathsome and horrible prison is as pleasant to me, as the walk in the garden of the King's-Bench.
YOU know, brother Careless, that the way to heaven out of this life is very narrow, and we must strive to enter in at a narrow gate. If God doth mitigate the ugliness of my imprisonment, what will he do in the rage of the fire whereunto I am appointed? And this hath happened unto me, that I might be hereafter an example of comfort, if the like happen unto you, or to any other of my dear brethren with you in these cruel days, in which the devil so rageth at the faithful flock of Christ, but in vain (I trust) against any of us, who are persuaded that neither life, nor death is able to separate us from the love of Christ's gospel, which is God's [Page 104] high treasure committed to our brittle vessels to glorify us by the same. God of his mercy make us faithful stewards to the end, and give us grace to fear nothing whatsoever in his good pleasure we shall suffer for the same, That I have not written unto you before this, the cause is, our strait keeping and the want of light by night; for the day serveth us but a little while in our dark closet. This is the first letter that I have written since I came to this prison, besides the report of mine examinations; and I am fain to scribble it out in haste.
COMMEND me to all my faithful brethren, and bid them with a good courage look for their redemption, and frame themselves to be hearty soldiers in Christ. They have taken his prest money a great while, and now let them shew themselves ready to serve him faithfully, and not to fly out of the Lord's camp into the world as many do Let them remember, that in the Revelations the fearful be excluded the kingdom. I [...] be of good cheer, for our Lord overcame the world, that we should do the like. Blessed is th [...] servant, whom when the Lord cometh, he findeth watching. O let us watch and pray earnestly one for another, that we are not led into temptation. Be joyful under the cross, and praise the Lord continually, for this is the whole burnt sacrifice which the Lord delighteth in. Commend me to my father Hunt, and desire him to love and continue in the unity of Christ's true church, which he hath begun, and then will he make me more and more to joy under my cross with him. Tell my brother Clements, that he hath comforted me much by his loving token in signification of unfeigned unity with us; let him increase my joy unto the end perfectly. The Lord of peace be with you all. Salute my loving friends, Mr. Mering, Mr. Crooch, with the rest, and especially Mr. Marshal, and his wife, with great thanks for his kindness shewed unto me. Farewel, my dear Careless. I have dallied with the devil a while, but I am over the shoes: God send me well out.
LETTER III. From Mr. PHILPOT to Mr. JOHN CARELESS, profitable to be read by all those who mourn for, and repent of their Sins.
THE God of all comfort, and the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, send unto thee, my dear brother Careless, the inward consolation of his Holy Spirit, in all the malicious assaults and troublesome temptations of our common adversary the devil, Amen.
THAT God giveth you so contrite a heart fo [...] your sins I cannot but rejoice to behold the lively mark of the children of God, whose property is to think more lowly and meanly of themselves than of any other, and oftentimes do set their sins before them, that they might the more be stirred to bring forth the fruits repentance, and learn to mour [...] in this world, that in another they might be glad and rejoice. Such a broken heart is a pleasant sacrifice unto God: O that I had the like contrite heart. God mollify my stony heart, which lamenteth not in such wise my former detestable iniquities. Praised be God that he hath given you this sorrowful heart in respect of righteousness, and I pray you let me be partaker of these godly sorrows [...] sin, which be the testimony of the Holy Ghost. Did not the sword of sorrow pierce the heart of the elect and blessed mother of our Lord? Did not Peter weep bitterly for his sins, which was so beloved of Christ? Did not Mary Magdalen wash the feet of our Saviour with her tears, and received the [...]thal remission of her seven-fold sins?
BE of good comfort therefore, mine own dear heart, in this thy sorrow, for it is the earnest penny of eternal consolation. In thy sorrow laugh, for the Spirit of God is with thee: blessed be they (saith Christ) that mourn, for they shall be comforted. They went forth and wept, saith the prophet, such shall come again having their sorrow turned into gladness. And although a painful heart, in consideration of his sins, be an acceptable sacrifice before God, whereby we are stirred up to more thankfulness unto God, knowing that much is forgiven us that we might love the more, yet the man of God must keep a measure in the same, lest he be swallowed up by much s [...]rrow. St. Paul would not that the Thess [...]lonians should b [...] sor [...]y as other men without hope: such a sorrow is not commen [...]able, but worketh damnation, and is far from the children [Page 105] of God, who are continually sorrowful in God when they look upon their own unworthiness, with hope of forgiveness. For God to this end by his Spirit setteth forth the sins of his elect still before them, that where they perceive sin to abound, there they might be assured that grace shall superabound: and bring them down into hell, that he might lift them up with greater joy into heaven. Wherefore, mine own bowels in Christ, as long as you are not void altogether of hope, be not dismayed through your pensive heart for your sins, how huge soever they have been, for God is able to forgive more than you are able to sin; yea, and he will forgive him who with hope is sorry for his sins.
BUT know, brother, that as oft as we do go about, by the help of God's Spirit to do that which is good, the evil spirit Satan layeth hard wait to turn the good unto evil, and goeth about to dung the detestable weeds of desperation with the godly sorrow of a pure penitent heart. You are not ignorant of his malicious subtlety, and how that continually he assualteth that good which the grace of God planteth. I see the battle between you and him, but the victory is your's, yea, and that daily: for you have laid hold upon the anchor of salvation, which is hope in Christ, which will not suffer you to be made ashamed.
BE not discontented that you have this conflict; but be glad that God hath given you the same to try your faith, and that you might appear daily worthy of the kingdom of God, for which you strive. God beholdeth your striving faith against Satan, and is pleased with your mighty resistance. The Spirit which is in you, is mightier than all the adversary's power. Tempt he may, and lying in wait at your heels, give you a fall unawares; but overcome he shall not; yea, he cannot, for you are sealed up already with a lively faith to be the child of God for ever: and whom God hath once sealed for his own, him he never utterly forsaketh.
THE just falleth seven times, but he riseth again. It is man's frailty to fall, but it is the property of the devil's child to lie still.
THIS strife against sin is a sufficient testimony that you are the child of God: for if you were not, you would feel no such malice as he now troubleth you with. When this strong Goliah hath the hold, all things are in peace which he possesseth: and because he hath you not, he will not suffer you unassaulted. But stand fast, and hold out the buckler of [...]aith, and with the sword of God's promises smite him on the scalp; that he may receive a deadly wound, and never be able to stand against you any more. St. James telleth you that he is but a coward, saying, "Resist the devil, and he will fly from thee. It is the will of God that he should thus long tempt you, and not go away as yet, or else he had done with you long ere this. He knoweth already that he shall receive the foil at your hands, and increase the crown of your glory: for he that overcometh shall be crowned. Therefore glory in your temptations, since they shall turn to your felicity. Be not afraid of your continual assaults, which are occasions of your daily victory. The word of God abideth for ever. In what hour soever a sinner repenteth him of his sins, they be forgiven. Who can lay any thing to the charge of God's elect? Do you not perceive the manifest tokens of your vocation to the gospel, and after your vocation, the manifest gifts of the Spirit of God given unto you above many other of your condition, with godliness which believeth and yieldeth to the authority of the scriptures, and is zealous for the same? Seeing you are God's own dearlings, who can hurt you? Be not of a dejected mind for these temptations, neither make your unfeigned friends to be more sorrowful for you than need doth require.
SINCE God hath willed you at your baptism in Christ to be careless, why do you make yourself careful? Cast all your care on him. Set the Lord before your eyes always, for he is on your right side, that you should not be then moved. Behold the goodness of God towards me. I am careless, being fast inclosed in a pair of stocks, which pinch me for very straitness; and will you be careful? I would not have that unseemly addition to your name. Be as your name pretendeth, for doubtless you have no other cause but so to be. Pray, I beseech you, that I may still be careless in my careful estate, as you have cause to be careless in your easier condition. [Page 106] Be thankful, and put away all care, and then I shall be joyful in my present strait case. Commend me to all our brethren, and desire them to pray for me, that I may overcome my temptations: for the devil rageth against me: I am put in the stocks in a place alone, because I would not answer to such articles as they would charge me with in a corner at the bishop's appointment, and because I did not come to mass when the bishop sent for me. By God's grace, I will lay all the days of my life in the stocks, rather than I will consent to the wicked generation. Praise God, and be joyful, that it hath pleased him to make us worthy to suffer somewhat for his name's sake. The devil must rage for ten days. Commend me to Mr. F—, and thank him for his law-books: but neither law nor equity will take any place among these blood-thirsty. I wish for your sake the unjust dealing were noted unto the parliament-house, if it might avail. God shorten these evil days. I have answered the bishop meetly plain already, and I said to him, if he will call me in open judgment, I will answer him as plainly as he shall require; otherwise I have refused, because I fear they will condemn me in private. The peace of God be with you, my dear brother. I can write no more for want of light, and that which I have written I cannot read myself, and pray God you may pick out some understanding of my mind towards you. Written in a coal-house of darkness, out of a pair of painful stocks, by thine own in Christ,
LETTER IV. From Mr. PHILPOT to certain godly Women, who forsook their own Country for the Gospel, full of fruitful Precepts.
THE Sp [...]it of truth, revealed unto you, my dearly beloved, by the gospel of our Saviour Jesus Christ, be continually abiding with you, and augmented into a perfect building of you into the lively temple of God, through the mighty operation of his holy power.
I read in the Evangelists, of certain godly women that ministered unto Christ; following him in the days of his passion, and never forsook him, but being dead in his grave, brought oil to anoint him, until he had shewed himself unto them after his resurrection, and bidding them shew unto his disciples, which at his passion were dispersed, and tell them that he was risen, and that they should see him in Galilee. To whom I may justly compare you (my loving sisters in Christ) who of late have seen him suffer in his members, and have ministered to their necessity, anointing them with the comfortable oil of your charitable assistance, even to the death: and now since you have seen Christ to live in the ashes of them whom the tyrants have slain, he willed you to go away upon just occasion offered you, and to declare to our dispersed brethren and sisters that he is risen, and liveth in his elect members in England, and by death doth overcome infidelity, and that they shall see him in Galilee, which is by forsaking this world, and by a faithful desire to pass out of this world by these ways, which he with his holy martyrs hath gone on before.
GOD therefore (intire sisters) direct your way, as he did Abraham and Tobias unto a strange land. God give you health of body and soul, that you may go from virtue to virtue, and grow from strength to strength, until you may see face to face the God of Sion in his holy hill, with the innumerable company of his blessed martyrs and saints. Let there be no decrease of any virtue, which i [...] already planted in you. Be as the light of the just, such as Solomon saith increaseth to the perfect day of the Lord. Let the strength of God be commended in your weak vessels, as it is. Be examples of faith and sobriety to all that you shall come in company withal. Let your godly conversation speak where your tongue may not, in the congregation. Be swift to hear, and slow to speak, after the counsel of St. James. Be not curious about other men's doings, but be occupied in prayer and continual meditation, with reverent talking of the word of God, without contentions among the saints. Let your faith shine in a strange country, as it hath done in your own, that your Father which is in heaven may be glorified by you unto the end.
THIS farewel I send you, not as a thing needful [Page 107] (which know already what your duty is, and be desirous to perform the same) but as one that would have you understand that he is mindful of your godly conversation, whereof he hath had good experience, and therefore writeth this to be a perpetual memorial betwixt you and him, until our meeting together before God, where we shall joy that we have here lovingly put one another in memory of our duty to perform it.
FAREWEL again, mine own bowels in Christ, and take me with you wheresoever you go, and leave yourselves with me, that in spirit we may be present one with another. Command me to the whole congregation of Christ, willing them not to leave their country without witness of the gospel, after that we are all slain which already be stalled up and appointed to the slaughter; and in the mean season pray earnestly for our constancy, that Christ may be glorified in us and in them, both by life and death. Farewel in the Lord.
LETTER V. Containing an Exhortation to his own Sister, constantly to stick to the Truth, which she had fruitfully professed.
GOD the eternal Father, who hath justified you by the blood of his Son Jesus Christ, and called you to hallow his name through a good conversation and profession of life, sanctify you with daily increase of virtue and faith by his Holy Spirit, that you may appear a vessel of sanctification, in the midst of this wicked and perverse generation, to the la [...]d and praise of the gospel, Amen.
I have occasion (my own dear sister) to praise God in you for two causes; the one, that to your ability you are ready to shew yourself a natural and loving sister to me your poor afflicted brother, as by your gentle tokens you have often testified being absent, and also present in visiting me; which well declareth that you be a very natural sister indeed, and to be praised in this behalf. But in the other, that you be also a sister to me in faith, after Christ's gospel, I have occasion to thank God so much the more, how much the one excelleth the other, and the spiritual consanguinity is more perdurable than that which is of flesh and blood, and is a worker of that which is by nature, for commonly such as be ungodly, be unnatural, and only lovers of themselves, as daily experience teacheth us. The living Lord, which through the incorruptible seed of his word hath begotten you to be my liege sister, give you grace to grow in that generation, that you may increase to a perfect age in the Lord, to be my sister with Christ for ever.
LOOK therefore that you continue a faithful sister as you are called and are godly entered, not only to me, but to all the church of Christ, yea to Christ himself, who voucheth you, in this your unfeigned faith, worthy to be his sister. Consider this dignity to surmount all the vain dignities of the world, and let it accordingly prevail more with you than all earthly delights: for thereby you are called to an equal proportion of the everlasting inheritance of Christ, if in no wise you do shew yourself an unnatural sister to him in forsaking him in trouble, which I trust you never will do far any kind of worldly respect. You are under dangerous temptations to be turned from that natural love you owe unto Christ, and you shall be tried with God's people through a sieve of great affliction: for so Satan desireth us to be sifted, that through fear of sharp troubles we might fall from the stableness of our faith, and so be deprived of that honour, joy, and reward, which is prepared for such as continue faithful brothers and sisters in the Lord's covenant to the end. Therefore the wise man, in the book of Ecclesiasticus, biddeth them that come to the service of the Lord, "To prepare themselves to suffer temptations."
SINCE then that for the glory of God and our faith, we are called now to abide the brunt of them, and that when our adversary hath done all that he can, yet we may be stable and stand; this Christ, our first-begotten brother, looketh for at our hands, and all our brethren and sisters in heaven desire to see our faith through afflictions to be perfect, that we might fulfil their number: and the universal church here militant rejoiceth, at our constancy, all whom by the contrary we should make sorry, to the danger of the loss both of body [Page 108] and soul. Fear not therefore, whatsoever be threatened of the wicked; prepare your back, and see it be ready to carry Christ's cross. And if you see any unwillingness in you, (as the flesh is continually repugnant to the will of God) ask with faithful prayer, that the good Spirit of God may lead your sinful flesh whither it would not: for if we will dwell in the flesh and follow the counsel thereof, we shall never do the will of God, neither wor [...] that which tendeth to our salvation.
YOU are at this present in the confines and borders of Babylon▪ where you are in danger to drink of the whore's cup, unless you be vigilant in prayer. Take heed the serpent seduce you not from the simplicity of your faith, as he did our first mother Eve. Let not worldy fellowship make you partaker of iniquity. He that toucheth [...]ar, cannot but be defiled thereby. With such as be perverse, a man shall soon be perverted: with the holy you shall be holy. Therefore say continually with the prophet David, Psalm xxxv. "Unto the saints that he on the earth, all my will is on them." You have been sanctified, and made pure through the truth: take heed you be not unholied and defiled, le [...]t the last be worse than the first. I write not this because I stand in any doubt of your sincere continuance, of which I have had so good experience; but because the days be evil, and in the same it is the duty of each of us to exhort and stir up one another; I am bold to put you (my good sister) in remembrance of that which doth not a little comfort me to remember, in my troubles and daily temptations. Wherefore I doubt not but you will take that in good part, which cometh from your brother both in spirit and body, who tendereth your salvation as earnestly as his own, that we might joy together eternally with such joy as the world shall never be able to take from us. Thanks be unto God, you have begun to run a good and a great time well in the ways of the Lord▪ run out the race to the end which you have begun, and then shall you receive the crown of glory. None shall be crowned, but such as lawfully strive, Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good, and the Lord will make you one of th [...]se faithful virgins that shall follow the Lamb wheresoever he goeth; which Christ grant both to you and me, Amen.
COMMEND me to all them that love me in the Lord unfeigne [...]y. God increase our faith, and give us never to be ashamed of his gospel. That same request which I have made to my brother Thomas, I make also to you, desiring you by all means you can to accomplish my request▪ that my sureties might be satisfied with what is mine own, to the content of my mind, which cannot be quiet until they be discharged: therefore I pray you help to purchase my quietness, that I may depar [...] [...]ut of this world in peace. My dissolution I look see da [...]ly, [...] the Lord knoweth how unworthy I am of so high an honour, as to die for the testimony of his truth. Pray that God would make me worthy▪ as he hath done of long imprisonment, for which his name be praised for ever. Pray and look for the coming of the Lord, whose wrath is great over us, and I will pray for you as long as I live. The 9th of July, in the King's-Bench.
LETTER VI. From Mr. PHILPOT to certain godly Brethren.
THE grace of God the Father, and the peace of our Saviour Jesus Christ his eternal Son, and the consolation of the Holy Ghost our comforter, strengthen your hearts, and comfort your minds, that you may rejoice and live in the truth of Christ's gospel to the end, Amen.
I do much rejoice, dearly beloved in the Lord, to hear of your constant faith in the word of God, which you have so purely received; which do not with the worldings decline from the purity thereof, albeit you suffer grief and trouble thereby; for which I praise God most heartily: and the Lord of all strength, who hath begun this good work in you, make it perfect to the end, as I doubt not but he will, for the faithful zeal you have to his truth, and to his afflicted church. Therefore that you may [Page 109] the better stand and bear the brunt of many temptations you are like to be assaulted withal, in these wicked and stormy days; I thought it good, as it is the duty of one christian man to exhort another in the time of trouble, to put you in remembrance thereof, and to will you with the wise man to prepare yourselves to temptations; and to beware that you, which yet do stand by the goodness of God, may not fall from your lively knowledge and hope. It is an easy thing to begin well, but to continue out in well-doing, is the only property of the children of God, and such as assuredly shall be saved. For so saith our Saviour in his gospel, "Blessed are they that persevere to the end."
LET not therefore this certainty of your salvation, which is continuance in the sincerity of faith, slide from you. Esteem it more than all the riches and pleasures of this world, for it is the most acceptable treasure of eternal life. This is that precious stone, for which the wise merchant-man, after the gospel, doth sell all that he hath and buyeth the same. God, in Revelations iii. doth signify to the church, that there shall come a time of temptation upon the whole world, to try the dwellers upon earth. From the danger of which temptation all such shall be delivered as observe his word: which word is there called the word of patience: to give us to understand, that we must be ready to suffer all kind of injuries and slanders for the profession. thereof.
THEREFORE God commandeth us there to hold it fast, that no man might bereave us of our crown of glory: and St. Peter telleth us, now we are afflicted with divers trials, as it is need it should so be, That the trial of our faith being much more precious than gold that perisheth, and yet is tried by fire, might redound to the laud, glory, and honour of Jesus Christ. St. Paul to the Hebrews sheweth us, that Christ our Saviour was in his humanity made perfect by afflictions, that we being called to perfection in him, might more willingly sustain the troubles of the world, by which God giveth all them, that be exercised in the same for his sake, his holiness. And in the 12th chapter of the said epistle is written, My son, refuse not the correction of the Lord, nor shrink when thou art rebuked of him: for the Lord doth chastise every son whom he receiveth, &c. Christ, in the gospel of St. John, biddeth his disciples to look for afflictions, saying, In the world you shall have trouble, but in me ye shall have joy. And therefore in the midst of their trouble, in the 21st of St. Luke, he biddeth them look up and lift up their heads, for your redemption, saith he, is at hand, And in the 22d he saith to all such as be afflicted for him, You are those that have continued with me in my temptations, and therefore I appoint unto you a kingdom, as my Father hath appointed for me, to eat and drink upon my table in my kingdom.
OH, how glorious be the crosses of Christ, which bring the bearers of them unto so blessed an end! Shall we not be glad to be partakers of such shame as may bring us to so high a dignity? God open our eyes to see all things as they be, and to judge uprightly. Then doubtless we would think with Moses, that it is better to be afflicted with the people of God, than to be counted the king of Egypt's son. Then should we joyfully say with David in all our adversities and troubles, It is good, O Lord, thou hast brought me low, to the end I might learn thy righteousness. Therefore St. Paul would not glory in any other thing of the world, but in the cross of Christ, and in other his infirmities: we have the commandment of Christ, daily to take up his cross and follow him. We have the godly examples of all his apostles and holy martyrs, which with great joy and exultation have suffered the loss of all lands, goods, and life, for the hope of a better reward which is laid up for all those in heaven, that unfeignedly cleave to the gospel, and never be ashamed thereof.
GREAT is the felicity of the world to the outward man, and very pleasant are the transitory delights thereof; but the reward of the righteous after the word of God, doth incomparably excel them all, insomuch that St. Paul to the Romans doth plainly affirm, that all the tribulations of this world cannot deserve that glory which shall be shewed unto us.
LET us therefore (good brethren and sisters) be merry and glad in these troublesome days, which be sent of God to declare our faith, and to bring to the end and fruition of that which we hope for. If we would enter into the Lord's sanctuary, and behold [Page 110] what is prepared for us, we could not but desire the Lord to hasten the day of our death, in which we might set forth, by true confession, his glory. Neither should we be afraid to meet our adversaries, who so earnestly seek our spoil and death, as Christ did Judas and the wicked rout, which came to apprehend him, saying, I am he whom ye seek. It is commanded us by the gospel, not to fear them that kill the body, but to fear God, who can cast both body and soul into hell-fire. So much we are bound to observe this commandment as any other God hath given us, The Lord increase our faith, that we fear God more than man. The Lord give us such love towards him and his truth, that we may be content to forsake all and follow him. Now will it appear what we love best; for to what we love best we shall stick. There is none worthy to be counted a christian, except he can find in his heart for Christ's sake, if the confession of his truth doth require it, to renounce all that he hath, and follow him; and in so doing he gaineth an hundred fold more in this life (as our Saviour said to Peter) and hereafter is assured of eternal life. Behold, I pray you, what he loseth who in this life receiveth an hundred for one, with assurance of eternal life. O happy exchange! Perchance your outward man will say, If I were sure of this great recompence here, I could be glad to forsake all; but where is this hundred fold in this life to be found? Yes, truly; for instead of the worldly riches which thou dost forsake, which be but temporal, thou hast found the everlasting riches of heave [...], which be glory, honour, and praise, both before God, angels, and men; and for an earthly habitation, hast an eternal mansion with Christ in heaven; for even now thou art of the city and houshold of the saints with God, as it is verified in the fourth of the Philippians. For worldly peace, which can last but a while, thou dost possess the peace of God, [...]hich passeth all understanding; and for the loss of a few friends, thou art made a fellow of the innumerable company of heaven, and a perpetual friend, of all those that have died in the Lord, from the beginning of the world. Is not this more than an hundred fold? Is not the peace of God which we in this world have through faithful imitation of Christ (which the world cannot take from us) ten thousand fold more, than those things that most highly be esteemed in the world, without the peace of God? All the peace of the world is no peace, but a mere anguish, and a gnawing fury of hell: as of late God hath set example before our eyes, to teach us how horrible an evil it is to forsake the peace of Christ's truth, which breedeth a worm in the conscience that never shall rest.
O that we would weigh this with indifferent ballances. Then should we not be dismayed at this troublesome time, neither sorrow after a worldly manner for the loss we are now like to sustain, as weak faithless persons do, which love their goods more than God, and the things visible above those which be invisible; but rather would heartily rejoice and be thankful, that it pleased God to call [...] to be soldiers in his cause against the works of hypocrisy, and to make us like unto our Saviour? Christ in suffering, whereby we may assure ourselves of his eternal glory: For blessed are they, saith Christ, that suffer persecution for righteousness' sake. And as St. Paul witnesseth to Timothy, If we die with Christ, we shall live with Christ, and if we deny him, he will deny us.
O that we would enter into the vail of God's promises. Then should we with St. Paul to the Philippians, reject all, and count all things but for dross, so that we may gain Christ. God▪ which is the enlightener of all darkness, and putter away of all blindness, anoint our eyes with the true eye-salve, that we may behold his glory, and our eternal felicity, which is hidden with Christ, and prepared for us that do abide in his testament; for blessed is that servant, whom the master when he cometh (as Christ said) doth find faithful. Let us therefore watch and pray one for another, that we yield not in any point of our religion to the antichristian synagogue, and that we be not overthrown by these temptations. Stand therefore, and be no cowards in the cause of your salvation; for his Spirit that is in us, is stronger than he which in the world doth now rage against us. Let us not put out the Spirit of God from us, by whose might we shall overcome our enemies, and then death shall be as great a gain to us as it was to the blessed apostle St. Paul. Why then do ye mourn? Why do ye weep? Why are ye so careful as though God hath forsaken you? He is never more present with us, than when we are in trouble, if we do not forsake him. We are [Page 111] in his hands, and no body can do us any injury or wrong without his good will and pleasure. He hath commanded his angels to keep us, that we stumble not at a stone without his divine providence. The devil cannot hurt any of us, and much less any of his ministers, without the good will of our eternal Father.
THEREFORE let us be of good comfort, and continually give thanks unto God for our estate, whatsoever it be; for if we murmur against the same, we murmur against God, who sendeth the same: which if we do, we kick but against the pricks, and provoke more the wrath of God against us; which by patient suffering otherwise would sooner be turned into our favour through faithful prayer.
I beseech you with St. Paul, to give your bodies pure and holy sacrifices unto God. He hath given us bodies to bestow unto his glory, and not after our own concupiscence. If many years God hath suffered us to use our bodies, which be his temples, after the lust of the flesh, in vain delights, not according to his glory; is it not our duty in the latter end of our life, the more willingly to yield unto God's glory our bodies, with all that we have in demonstration of true repentance of that we have evil spent before? Cannot the example of the blessed man Job, horribly afflicted, cause us to say, "The Lord hath given it, the Lord hath taken it: blessed be the name of the Lord, so is it come to pass? If we cast our whole care likewise upon God, he will turn our misery into felicity, as well as he did to Job. God tempteth us now as he did our father Abraham, commanding him to slay his son Isaac in sacrifice to him; which Isaac, by interpretation, doth signify mirth and joy. Who by his obedience preserved Isaac unto long life, and offered in his stead a ram that was tied by the horns in the brambles. So likewise we are all commanded to sacrifice unto God our Isaac, which is our joy and consolation: which if we be ready to do, as Abraham was, our joy shall not perish, but live and be increased, although our ram be sacrificed for our Isaac: which doth signify, that the pride and concupiscence of our flesh entangled through sin, with the cares of this stinging world, must be mortified for the preservation and perfect augmentation of our mirth and joy, which is sealed up for us in Christ.
AND to withstand these present temptations wherewith we are now encumbered, you cannot have a better remedy than to set before your eyes how our Saviour Christ overcame them in the desart, and to follow his example. That if the devil himself, or any other by him, willeth you to make stones bread, that is, to take such a worldly-wise way, that you may have your fair houses, lands and goods to live on still; you must say, that every man liveth not only by bread, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
AGAIN, if the devil counselleth you to cast yourselves down to the earth, as to revoke your sincere belief and godly conversation, and to be conformable to the learned men of the world, pretending that God will be well enough content therewith; you must answer that it is written, that a man shall not tempt his Lord God.
FURTHER, if the devil offer you large promises of honour, dignity, and possessions, so that you will worship idols in his synagogue, you must say, Get behind me, Satan, for it is otherwise written, that a man must worship his Lord God, and serve him only.
FINALLY, if your mother, brother, sister, wife, child, kinsman, or friend, do require you to do otherwise than the word of God hath taught you, you must say with Christ, that they are your mothers, brothers, sisters, wives, children, kinsmen, which do the will of God the Father. To which will the Lord for his mercy conform us all unfeignedly to the end, Amen.
LETTER VII. From Mr. PHILPOT to Mr. ROBERT HARRINGTON.
GENTLE Mr. Harrington. I cannot tell what condign thanks I may give unto God for you, [Page 112] in respect of the great gentleness and pains which you have taken for the relief of me and of our other afflicted brethren in Christ. God be praised for his mercy, whose loving providence we have seen towards us by such faithful stewards as you have been towards a great many. Blessed be you of God for the loving care which you have taken for his poor flock. God hath reserved your reward of thanks in heaven, and therefore I go not about to render you any, lest I might seem to judge that you looked for that here, which is reserved for a better place. I thank God for that which I have found by your faithful and diligent industry, and God forgive me my unworthiness of so great benefits. God give me grace to serve him faithfully, and to run out my race with joy. Glorious is the course of the martyrs of Christ at this day. Never had the elect of God a better time for their glory than this is. Now may they be assured under the cross, that they are Christ's disciples for ever.
METHINKS I see you desiring to be under the same. The flesh draweth back, but the spirit saith, It must be brought whither it would not. Here is the victory of the world: here is the true faith, and everlasting glory. Who is he which desireth not to be found faithful to his master? And now is the time that every faithful servant of Christ hath just opportunity to shew himself a glorious soldier in the Lord's fight. Now do the Amalekites invade the true Israelites, that the Israelites might with speed be glorified: I need not for want of understanding to admonish you hereof, but as a willing soldier in Christ, to exhort you so to run as you may get the victory, and that speedily with us. A man that is invited to a glorious feast, desireth his friend may go with him, and be partaker thereof. God doth call me, most unworthy, among others, to drink of the bride-cup of his Son, whereby we shall be made worthy (as many of our brethren have been before us) to sit at the right hand and at the l [...]t hand of Christ. O what unspeakable condition i [...] that? May any worldly thing hinder us from the desire thereof? Since we seek the kingdom of God, why do we not apprehend it, being so near offered unto us?
LET us approach near unto God, and God will ward near unto us. God draw us after him, that we may all run after the savour of his sweet ointments. Christ anoint us, that we may be suppl [...] in these evil days to run lightly unto the glory of the Lord. Shame, imprisonment, loss of good [...], and shedding of our blood, be the just price which we must willingly bestow for the same. Wherefore (dearly beloved in the Lord) let not the great charges keep you back from buying this glory: for the reward is ten thousand fold greater than the price.
THAT you have married a wife, whom God bless▪ I cannot excuse you from this mart, but you must bring your wife for an usury to the Lord, whose pleasure is in godly yoke-fellows. I wish you to be as I am, except these horrible bands, but yet most comfortable to the spirit, assuring you, that we are made worthy, through Christ, of the kingdom for which we suffer. Praised be the Lord for the affliction which we suffer, and may he give us strength to continue to the end.
COMMEND me to Mr. Heath, and tell him that I would wish him with me, to prove how apt he is [...] carry the cross of Christ. I pray for his continuance in Christ, as for mine own. Commend me [...] his wife, and to Mrs. Hall; certifying them that I am brought to the gates of hell, that I might never enter into the same, but be raised up from hell to heaven, through the word that sanctifieth us. Commend me to Mr. Elsing and his wife, and thank them that they remembered to provide for me some ease in prison; and tell them, that though my lord's coal-house be but very black, yet it is more to be desired by the faithful than the queen's palace. God make her a joyful mother, and preserve them both to the comfort of God's people. Thus for this time farewel, dear brother. Written in post-haste because of strait keeping.
THIS day I expect to be called before the commissioners again. Pray, dear brother, for the Spirit of wisdom to remain with me. Commend me to your wife, and I thank you both for your tokens. Your token I have sent to your wife; and my token unto you, is my faithful heart with this letter. Commend me to all my friends, and tell them that I am chearful in Christ, wishing them to fear God more than man, and to learn to despise earnestly the [Page 113] vanities of the world; desiring you all to pray for me, that I may end my journ [...] with fidelity, Amen.
LETTER VIII. From Mr. JOHN PHILPOT to the Lady VANE.
THE principal Spirit of God the Father, given unto us by Christ our merciful Saviour, confirm, strengthen, and establish you in true knowledge of the gospel, that your faithful heart (worshipful and dear sister in the Lord) may attain and taste with all the saints what is the heighth, the depth, the length, and the breadth of the sweet cross of Christ, Amen.
Oh, happy are you amongst all other women, that have found this, precious stone which is hidden in the gospel; for which we ought to sell all other things, and to purchase the same. Oh, happy woman, whose heart God hath moved and enlarged to be in the profession thereof. Others seek worldly goods, honours, and delights; but you seek with a good understanding to serve God in spirit and in truth. This is the gate that leadeth to heaven, this is your portion for ever. By this you shall see God face to face (which sight is unspeakable joy), and by this shall you have a full sight of all the beautiful heavenly bower [...], and of all the celestial paradise. By this shall you know them that you never knew, and be glad and joyful with those which you have known here in God, world without end.
Ah, I lament the infidelity of England, that after so great light, is stept into such huge darkness again. The servant who knoweth his master's will and doth it not, shall be beaten with many stripes. Ah, great are the plagues that hang over England, yea, though the gospel should be restored again. Happy shall that person be whom the Lord shall take out of this world, not to see them. Ah, the great perjury which men have [...]un so wilfully against God by receiving Antichrist again, and his wicked laws; which do threaten a great ruin unto England. O that the Lord would turn his just judgments upon the authors of the truce-breakers between God and us, that they might be brought low (as Nebuchadonosor was) that his people might be delivered, and his glory exalted. God grant that that good luck which you hope shortly to come upon the house of God, be a true prophecy, and not a well wishing only. Ah, Lord, take away the heavy hand from us, and stretch it out upon thin [...] enemies, those hypocrites, as thou hast begun, that they may be confounded. O let not the weak perish for want of knowledge through our sin. Although thou kill us, yet we will put our trust in thee.
THUS, dear heart, you teach me to pray with you in writing. God hear our prayers, and give us the spirit of effectual prayer, to pour out our [...] continually together before God, that we [...] mercy both for ourselves, and for our afflicted brethren and sisters. I cannot but praise God in you, for that pitiful heart that taketh other folks' [...] mities to heart as your own. Blessed be them that mourn, for such shall be comforted. God wipe away all tears from your pitiful eyes, and sorrow from your merciful heart, that you may (as doubtless you shall do shortly) rejoice with his elect for ever. You have so armed me to the Lord's battle both inwardly and outwardly, that except I be a very coward, I cannot faint, but overcome by death. You have appointed me to so good and gracious a general of the field, to so victorious a captain, and to so favourable a marshal, that if I should not go on lustily, there were no spark of heavenly manhood in me. I will present your coat-armour before my captain, and in the same I trust by him to overcome. The scarf I desire as an outward sign to shew our enemies, who see not our glorious end, neither what God worketh inwardly in us, through the blindness of their hearts, that they persecute Christ's cross in us, whereby he hath sealed up the truth of his gospel by his death unto us, that we by our death (if need be) might confirm the same, and never be ashamed whatsoever torment we do suffer for his name's sake; and our weak brethren seeing the same, might be more encouraged to take up Christ's cross, and to follow him. God give us grace to do all things to his glory, Amen.
THE world wondereth how we can be merry in [Page 114] such extreme misery, but our God is omnipotent, who turneth misery into felicity. Relieve me (dear sister) there is no such joy in the world as the people of Christ have under the cross. I speak by experience; therefore believe me, and fear nothing that the world can do unto you. For when they imprison our bodies, they set our souls at liberty with God. When they cast us down, they lift us up; yea, when they kill us, then do they bring us to everlasting life. And what greater glory can there be, than to be in conformity to Christ? which afflictions do work in us.
GOD open our eyes to see more and more his glory in the cross of Jesus Christ, and make us worthy partakers of the same. Let us rejoice with St. Paul in the cross of Jesus Christ, by whom the world is crucified unto us, and we to the world. The cross of Christ be our standard to fight under for ever. While I am talking to you of our common consolation, I forget how I trouble you with my rude and inordinate tediousness: but you must impute it to love which cannot quickly depart from them whom he loveth, but desireth to pour himself into their bosoms.
THEREFORE though your flesh would be offended (as it might justly be) at such rudeness, yet your spirit will say nay, which taketh all things in good part that cometh of love. And now I am departing, yet will I take my leave ere I go, and would fain speak somewhat that might declare my sincere love to you for ever. Farewel, O elect vessel of the Lord, to the comfort of his afflicted flock, farewel on earth, whom in heaven I am sure I shall not forget. Farewel under the cross most joyfully, and until we meet, always remember what Christ saith, "Be of good cheer, for I have overcome the world," &c.
GOD pour his Spirit abundantly upon you, mine own dear bowels in Christ, until you may come to see the God of all gods with his elect in the everlasting Sion. I send you the kiss of peace, with which I do most entirely take my leave of you at this present. It is necessary we depart hence, or else we could not be glorified. Your heart is heavy because I say I must depart from you: it is the calling of the merciful Father, wherewithal you are content, and so am I. Be of good comfort, hold but your buckler of faith: for by the strength thereof we shall shortly meet in eternal glory: to which Christ bring us both, Amen. The 10th of December, 1555.
DEATH, why should I fear thee? Since thou canst not hurt me, but rid me from misery unto eternal glory.
DEAD to the world, and living to Christ, your own brother, sealed up in the verity of the gospel for ever.
LETTER IX. From Mr. PHILPOT to the same Lady, being a gre [...] Supporter of him.
I Cannot but most heartily give God thanks for these his gifts in you, whose brightness many beholding that are weak, are much encouraged [...] seek God likewise, and to cleave to him, having the example of so faithful and constant a gentlewoman before their eyes. If the queen of the south shall rise with the men of Christ's generation, and condemn them, for that she came from the end of the world to hear the wisdom of Solomon: then shall your sincere and godly conversation, thus shining in this dangerous time of the trial of God's people, (being a woman of a worshipful estate and wealthy condition) condemn in the latter day a great many of these faint-hearted gospellers, which so soon be gone back and turned from the truth, at the voice of a handmaiden, seeing that neither the fear of imprisonment, neither the possession of the world, (wherewithal you are sufficiently endued above a great many) can separate you from the love of the truth, which God hath revealed unto you; whereby it appeareth that the seed of God's word which was sown in you, fell neither in the highway, nor among the thorns, nor upon the stones, but upon good ground, which is blessed of God, and bringeth forth fruit with great affliction, an hundred fold to the glory of God, and the increase of his church, &c.
IN consideration whereof St. James biddeth us [Page 115] highly to rejoice, whensoever we fall into many temptations, knowing it is but the trial of our faith, that we might bring forth that excellent virtue patience, by which we are made alike to our Redeemer Christ, with whom we here being like in suffering, assuredly shall hereafter be partakers of his eternal glory. Therefore St. Paul saith, "God forbid that I should glory in any thing but in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ." I that am under the cross with you (thanks be given to God therefore) have felt in the same more true joy and consolation, than ever I did by any benefit that God hath given me in my life before. For the more the world doth hate us, the [...]igher God is unto us, and there is no perfect joy but in God. Wherefore Christ said, "In me ye shall have joy, but in the world affliction." Blessed be God which sendeth us this affliction, that we might perfectly joy in him. For this cause in the ripest time of iniquity, and in the most fervent season of persecution of the true church, which Christ in the 21st of Luke prophesied to come, he willeth us to be of good cheer, and to lift up our heads, for our redemption is at hand.
O that the Lord would come and deliver us from this world, which is a vale of misery, unto his own kingdom, where floweth perpetual joy and consolation. And verily that is the true and only joy that is conceived, not of the creature, but of the Creator, which when we do possess, nobody can take it away from us. To which joy all other joys being compared, are but mournings, all delights sorrow, all sweetness sour, all beauty filth, and finally, all other things that be counted pleasant, are tediousness. Your own self is better witness of this than I▪ ask yourself, with whom you are best acquainted. Doth not the Holy Ghost speak the same in your heart? H [...]e you not persuaded yourself this to be true, before I wrote thereof? For how should you, being a woman, and a young gentlewoman, beautiful, and at your own liberty, have overcome this your frail kind and [...]ge, and despised your excellent beauty and estate, unless all those [...] [...]hi [...]h are subject to the senses, had been counted of you vile▪ and little to be esteemed in comparison of those things which inwardly do comfort you to overcome the fl [...]sh, the world, and the devil?
GOD increase your joy in all spiritual things, and establish your hope to the day of eternal rest. You have forsaken darkness, and are entered into light, God grant the same may shine still in you, until the perfect day come of the Lord, in which is all our consolation. Here we must be darkened, that there we may appear as bright as the sun in the face of the whole world, and of all them that now condemn us for our well doing; whose judges then we shall be, to their horrible grief, though now they wrongfully judge us. Pray heartily, and that often, that God once again for his Christ's sake would be merciful to his afflicted church in England. Faithful prayer is the only remedy that we have against the fiery darts of the devil, that are kindled against us. By prayer the Amalekites shall be overcome and the roarings of the lion, which seeketh still to devour us, shall be stopped and put to silence. The Lord stop Leviathan's mouth, that he swallow not up God's silly people, according to his expectation.
PRAISE the Lord for the faithful testimony and sacrifice which two of our brethren of late have through fire rendered to the truth of the gospel, which now triumpheth by the death of godly martyrs. The Lord is at hand, therefore watch and pray. The last day of May, 1555. Captive in the King's-Bench.
LETTER X. From the Same to the Same.
GOD the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ increase in your godly heart the faith of the gospel, which is your eternal inheritance, and the Holy Ghost comfort your spirit with all spiritual consolation to the day of the Lord, Amen.
I cannot but praise God most highly and earnestly (my dear and faithful lady) for the great and unfeigned love which you bear unto me in Christ, declared oftentimes, as well now as of late, by manifest and liberal tokens. Blessed be God that made you so worthy a member in his kingdom. [Page 116] For it cannot be but such shall reap with abundance in time of reward, that here do sow so plenteously in well-doing; although I am most unworthy to receive any such benefits at your hands as in respect of a pillar of Christ's church, which I am scarce a shadow thereof. But the zeal of Christ's church in you wisheth me to be such an one as the time doth require. God fulfil your desire of me, that I may be found constant, and no wandering star. I am not worthy of the name of a prophet, or of a minister of God's word, for that I have (being hindered by the iniquity of the time) little or nothing laboured therein. I am a friend of our common spouse Jesus, and do rejoice in the verity of his word; for which (praised be his name) he hath counted me worthy to suffer: and indeed whosoever giveth a draught of water in the name of a disciple (as Christ promised), shall not lose his reward. Therefore that your gentleness doth in the name of him, which I am not, the Lord recompe [...]se unto you in all his blessings, which he is accustomed to pour on them who love his flock unfeignedly.
GOOD lady, you have to joy that the kingdom of God is thus continually before your eyes, and that you are not ashamed of the bands of Christ, which you with his people in part do suffer. They may be assured of the glory everlasting, who here are not ashamed to take up the cross of Christ, and to follow him. Here we must weep and lament, while the world laugheth and triumpheth over us; but our tears shall be shortly turned to unspeakable joy, and we shall eternally be merry together, when the world shall lament their infidelity without end.
I would I were able to do any thing that might shew condign thanks for that sincere love you bear unto me in Christ: you adjure me (as it were) by your gentle letters to be bold on you in all my needs. I thank God who ceaseth not to provide for his, I [...] nothing at present, but only ability to thank your faithful heart for your goodness towards me. I love you and not your [...]s, as it is mee [...] for christians to love one another in God; and your faith which I behold in you, is more worth unto me than all your possessions. And I think I shall not [...]ed long to be chargeable unto you, for that this week I look for some commissioners to sit on me, and my fellow prisoners in prison, lest the spirit of your breath might blow further abroad. The will of God be done. We are not so good as John the Baptist, who was beheaded in prison. We must not fear the fire, for our Lord is a consuming fire, who will put out the fierceness of raging torments from us. Be not afraid of them that can kill the body, but fear him that can cast both body and soul into hell-fire. God forbid that we should rejoice otherwise than in the cross of Christ, and pray that he would make us worthy to suffer for his sake. God will have our faith tried and known; and therefore let us willingly humble ourselves under the mighty hand of God, that he may gloriously lift us up in his good time. There is none perfectly faithful indeed, till he can say with St. Paul, "I am persuaded that neither death nor life, nor principalities nor powers, nor things present nor things to come, nor heighth nor depth, nor any other creature is able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord." This faith God plant both in you and me unmoveably. In this faith we have to rejoice, and in none other.
ALL the tribulations of the world are not worthy of the eternal weight of glory which is prepared for them, that do with patience abide the cross. Wherefore let us be strong with the strength in him, that is able to make us strong, and lament the weakness, I might say, the infidelity of our f [...]int-hearted gospellers. Christ, whom we would pretend to have put upon us, is the strength of God and how can they be weak where Christ is? We have more cause to be glad, touching ourselves, of this time, than we have had of any time before, in which we have so ready a way to go unto God, and so good an occasion to shew our duty in glorifying his holy name. For if we are imprisoned i [...] his cause, we are blessed. If we lose all that we have, we are blessed an hundred-fold. If we die, we are blessed eternally▪ so that in suffering persecutions, all is full of blessings. Be blessed therefore (O elect lady) of God, with the blessed of God, and flee (as you do) the concu [...]idenc [...] of the world. Embrace that which is perfect, and joyfully look for the coming and cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, &c. Thus desiring God to preserve [Page 117] you to his true peace, and to give you victory of that temptation which now is come to try our faith; Christ be with you, and bless you both in body and soul; and my prayer shall follow you wheresoever you go, as I desire that your's may be with me. The last week I sent your beneficence to Oxford; I could not have a convenient messenger before. As soon as I have word, you shall be satisfied of your request. Love me as you do, and the God of love be with you. The 20th day of August,
LETTER XI. To the same Lady.
THE mercy of God the Father, and the consolation of the Holy Ghost through Jesus Christ, be with you, and strengthen you, my dear mother and sister in the Lord, in these dangerous days, to the crown of eternal glory, which is now offered to all faithful soldiers in the gospel, Amen.
AS your good ladyship doth desire to hear from me, so I am desirous to write, as your gentleness and daily goodness bind me. But Satan of late hath hindered me, who envying all good exercises which I have had and received by mine easy imprisonment in times past, hath brought me out of the King's-Bench into the bishop of London's coal-house, a dark and an ugly prison as any about London, (but my dark body of sin hath well deserved the same, and the Lord hath now brought me into outward darkness, that I might the more be enlightened by him, as he is most present with his children in the midst of darkness) where I cannot be suffered to have any candle-light, neither ink nor paper, but by stealth. Wherefore I cannot write to you as I would, neither as my duty is. As Christ, my master, was sent from Annas to Caiaphas, so I am sent from Winchester to London, I trust to make a speedy end of my course, God give me grace and patience to be a faithful follower of my master. I have been already a week in this coal house, and have of late been four times called to mine answer, but hitherto not called to judgment, which I do daily look for; but I fear they will prolong me, and try me by strait imprisonment a while; in which God's will be done.
PRAY (dear lady) that my faith faint not, which I praise God is now more lively with me than it hath been in times past. I taste and feel the faithfulness of God in his promise, who hath promised to be with his in their trouble, and to deliver them. I thank the Lord I am not alone, but have six other faithful companions; who in our darkness do faithfully sing hymns and praises unto God for his great goodness. We are so joyful, that I wish you part of my joy; but rather be glad and thankful unto God with me, that it hath pleased him to make me, most wretched sinner, worthy to suffer any thing for his sake. Hitherto we have not resisted unto blood. God make us never to count our blood more precious in our eyes than his truth.
AH, my dear sister, I thank you again for the last letter you sent me; it is a singular comfort unto me, as oft as I read the same. I have it in my bosom, and will carry the same even to the stake with me, in witness that Christ hath so constant and faithful a lady in England. God succour and keep that spirit in you; for it is the very spirit of adoption of the child of God. Such cheerful and holy spirits under the cross are acceptable sacrifices in the sight of God; for Christ came to cast fire into the earth, and locketh that it should be kindled. Be you fervent in spirit in our Christ's cause, as you have begun, for that is the principal spirit wherewithal David desired to be confirmed. O, how do I rejoice, your ladyship to go arm in arm with me unto Christ, or rather before me! I cannot but joy of such a worshipful f [...]llow. Methinks I see you mourn, and desire [...]o be loosed out of the earthly and fra [...]l habitation of this body. O how amiable and pleasant it is to dwell in God's tabernacle! Our Christ and his heavenly company look for us; let us h [...]ste and run thereto, for behold the Lord is ready to embrace us. Mine own bowels in the Lord, be merry in the Lord with your afflicted brother, who daily offered your merciful alms, which most unworthily I do receive still of you, unto the Lord. But now (dear mother) you need [Page 118] not burden yourself so much (as my last letters did signify▪ for that my chargeable imprisonment is cut off, and a little now serveth me; wherefore I pray you send no more until I send to you▪ for I have sufficient, and do abound. God's peace be with you for ever. Out of my lord of London's coal-house, the last of October. Your own,
LETTER XII. From Mr. PHILPOT to the said Lady▪ wherein he partly c [...]plain [...] of the Dissimulation and Perjury of Englishmen falling again to the Pope, and partly expresses his Joy in his Afflictions.
I Cannot but joy with you (my heartily beloved in Christ) of the fall of Sennacherib: since it is to the glory of God, and to the consolation of his church, to see the fall of their enemies before their face, according as it is written, "The just shall rejoice, when he seeth the vengeance of the wicked." God make this joy perfect▪ for as concerning myself I c [...]nt not to see those good days whereof you have a glimmering in this life. For although the cockatrice be dead, yet his pestilent chickens, with the whore of Babylon, still live. But a great hope there is of their short confusion, because God doth not prosper their doings according to their expectation. Most happy shall he be, whom the Lord shall soonest take out of this life, that he may not see the plagues which the manifest perjury, and the manifold idolatry and detestable distimulation, and that of such as do [...] the truth, do threaten to come.
THE Lord is just, and all unrighteousness displeaseth him, and either here or else in another world he [...] this gro [...] infidelity of the world: but his [...], and such as he loveth, will he punish here, [...] they should not be condemned hereafter with the world eternally: we have nothing so much to rejoice [...], as in the cross of Jesus Christ, and in that we are partakers of his afflictions, which are the earnest penny of that eternal kingdom which he upon the cross for us hath purchased. For [...] Paul, his faithful witness, saith, "If we suffer with him, we shall reign with him. If we die with him, we shall live with him."
WHEREFORE (mine own dear bowels) praise [...] with me most entirely, that it hath pleased him now mercifully to visit the sins of my youth, and my huge unthankfulness, and by the same doth give me much consolation, that he assureth me of his great goodness and mercy, and turneth his fatherly chastisement into my crown of glory. O good God, what am I on whom he should shew this great mercy? To him that is immortal, invisible, and only wise, be all honour, praise and glory therefore, Amen.
THIS is the day which the Lord hath made, let us rejoice and be glad in the same. This is the way, though it be narrow, which is full of the peace of God, and leadeth to eternal bliss. O how my heart leapeth for joy, that I am so near the apprehension thereof! God forgive me mine unthankfulness and unworthiness of so great glory. The swords which pierced Mary's heart in the passions of our Saviour, which daily also goes through your faithful heart, be more glorious and to be desired than the golden scepters of this world. O blessed be they that mourn in this world to God-ward, for they shall eternally be comforted: God make my stony heart to mourn more than it doth. I have so much joy of the reward that is prepared for me, most wretched sinner, that though I be in a place of darkness and mourning, yet I cannot lament, but both night and day I am so joyful, as though I were under no cross at all: yea, in all the days of my life I was never so merry, the name of the Lord be praised therefore for ever and ever, and may [...] pardon mine unthankfulness. Our enemies do fret, fume, and gnash their teeth, to see and hear that we, under this grievous affliction in the world, [...] be so merry. We are by them counted as desperate persons, for the certain hope and feeling which we have of our everlasting salvation: and it is no marvel, for the worldly men cannot perceive the things of God, they being mere foolishness and abomination to them.
BE thankful unto our God, (mine own dear helper) for his wondrous working in his chosen people. Pray instantly that this joy be never taken from us, for it passeth all the delights of this world. This is the peace of God which summounteth all understanding: this peace, the more his chosen be [Page 119] afflicted, the more they feel, and therefore cannot faint, neither for fire, nor for water. Let us pray for our weak brethren and sister's sake, that it may please God to alleviate the grievous and intolerable burden of these cruel days. But touching ourselves, l [...]t us heartily beseech our Saviour to vouchsafe to give us this glorious gift to suffer for his gospel's sake, and that we may think the shame of the world to be our glory, as it is indeed. God increase our faith, and open our eyes to behold what is prepared for us. I lack nothing, praise be to God. I trust my marriage-garment is r [...]dy. I will send you my examinations as soon as I can get them written, if you be desirous of them.
GOD of his mercy fill your merciful heart with all joy and consolation of the hope to come. Out of the coal-house, the 19th of November.
LETTER XIII. From Mr. PHILPOT to a Friend of his, Prisoner the same time in Newgate, wherein is debated and discussed the Matter or Question of the Baptizing of Infants.
THE God of all light and understanding enlighten your heart with all true knowledge of his word, and make you perfect to the day of our Lord Jesus Christ, whereunto you are now called, through the mighty operation of his Holy Spirit, Amen.
I received yesternight from your (dear brother, saint, and fellow-prisoner for the truth of Christ's gospel) a letter, wherein you gently require my judgment concerning the baptism of infants, which is the effect thereof. And before I do shew you what I have learned out of God's word, and of his true and infallible church touching the same, I think it not out of the matter first to declare what vision I had the same night while musing on your letter. I fell fast asleep▪ knowing that God doth not without cause reveal to his people, who have their minds fixed on him, special and spiritual revelation to their comfort, as a taste of their joy and kingdom to come, which flesh and blood cannot comprehend.
BEING in the midst of my sweet rest, it seemed as if I saw a great beautiful city, of the colour of azure and white, four-square, in a beautiful composition in the midst of the sky, the sight whereof so inwardly comforted me, that I am not able to express the consolation I had thereof, yea the remembrance thereof causeth as yet my heart to leap for joy: and as charity is no churl, but would wish others to be partakers of his delight, so methought I called to others (I cannot tell whom) and while they came and we together beheld the same, by and by, to my great grief, it faded away.
THIS dream I think not to have come of the illusion of the senses, because it brought with it so much spiritual joy, and I take it to be of the working of God's Spirit for the contentation of your request, as he wrought in Peter to satisfy Cornelius. Therefore I interpret this beautiful city to be the glorious church of Christ, and the appearance of it in the sky, signified the heavenly state thereof, whose conversation is in heaven; and that according to the primitive church which is now in heaven, men ought to measure and judge the church of Christ now on earth: for as the prophet David saith, "The foundations thereof [...]e in the holy hills, and glorious things be spoken of the city of God." And the marvellous quadrature of the same, I take to signify the [...]niversal agreement of the same, and that all the church throughout the four parts of the world; as the prophet affirmeth, saying, "God maketh us to dwell after one manner in one house." And that I conceived so wonderful joy at the contemplation thereof, I understand the unspeakable joy which they have that be at unity with Christ's primitive church: for there is joy in the Holy Ghost, and peace, which passeth all understanding; as it is written in the Psalms, as of joyful persons is the dwelling of all them that be in thee. And that I called others to the fruition of this vision, and to behold this wonderful city, I construe it by the will of God this vision to have come upon me musing on your letter, to the end that under this figure I might have occasion to move you with many others, to behold the primitive church in all your opinions concerning faith, and to conform yourself in all points to the same, which is the pillar and establishment of the truth, and teacheth the true use of the sacraments, and having with a greater fulness than [Page 120] we have now, the first fruits of the Holy Ghost, did declare the true interpretation of the scriptures according to all verity, even as our Saviour promised to send them another Comforter, which should teach them all truth.
AND since all truth was taught and revealed to the primitive church, which is our mother, let us all, that be obedient children of God, submit our selves to the judgment of the church, for the better understanding of the articles of our faith, and of the doubtful sentences of the scripture. Let us not go about to shew in us (by following any private man's interpretation upon the word) another spirit than they of the primitive church had, lest we deceive ourselves. For there is but one faith and one Spirit, which is not contrary to himself, neither otherwise now teacheth us than he did them. Therefore let us believe as they have taught us of the scriptures, and be at peace with them, according as the true catholic church is at this day; and the God of peace will assuredly be with us, and deliver us out of all our worldly trouble [...] and miseries, and make us partakers of their joy and bliss▪ through our obedience to faith with them.
THEREFORE God commandeth us in Job, to ask of the elder generation, and to search diligently the memory of the fathers. For we are but yesterday's children, and are ignorant, and our days are like a shadow, and they shall teach thee, saith the Lord, and speak to thee, and shall utter words from their hearts. And by Solomon we are commanded, not to reject the direction of our mother. The Lord grant you to direct your steps in all things after her, and to abhor contention with he [...]. For as St. Paul writeth, "If any man be contentious, neither we, neither the church of God hath any such custom."
HITHERTO I have shewed you (good brother) my judgment generally of that you stand in doubt and dissent from others, to which I wish you as mine own heart to be conformable, and then doubtless you cannot err, but boldly may be glad in your troubles, and triumph at the hour of your death, that you shall die in the church of God, a faithful martyr, and receive the crown of eternal glory. And thus much have I written upon the occasion of a vision before God unfeigned. But that you [...] not think that I go about to satisfy you with [...] visions only, and not after God's word, I [...] take the ground of your letter, and especially [...] swer to the same by scriptures, and by [...] reasons deduced out of the same, will prove [...] baptism of infants to be lawful, commendable, [...] necessary, whereof you seem to stand in doubt.
INDEED if you look upon the papistical syn [...]gogue only, which had corrupted God's word [...] false interpretations, and hath perverted the [...] use of Christ's sacraments, you might seem to [...] good hand fast of your opinion against the [...] of infants. But forasmuch as it is of more antiquity, and hath it's beginning from God's word, [...] from the use of the primitive church, it must [...] in respect of the abuse in the popish church be [...]lected, or thought not expedient to be used in Christ's church. Auxentius, one of the Arian [...] his adherents, was one of the first that denied the baptism of children, and next after him Pelag [...] the heretic, and some others there were in St. [...] time, as it doth appear by his writings [...] in our days the Anabaptists, an inordinate kind, [...] men stirred up by the devil, to the destruction [...] the gospel. But the catholic truth delivered [...] us by the scriptures, plainly determineth▪ that [...] such are to be baptized, whom God acknowledgeth for his people, and voucheth them worthy of sanctification or remission of their sins. Therefore since that infants be in the number or scroll of God's people, and be partakers of the promise by their purification in Christ, it must needs follow thereby▪ that they ought to be baptized as well as those that can profess their faith. For we judge the people of God as well by the free and liberal promise of God, as by the confession of faith. For to wh [...]soever God promiseth himself to be their God, and whom he acknowledgeth for his, those no man without great impiety may exclude from the number of the faithful. But God promiseth that he will not only be the God of such as do profess him but also of infants, promising them his grace and remission of sins, as it appeareth by the words of the covenant made unto Abraham. "I will set my covenant between thee and me, saith the Lord▪ and between thy seed after thee in their generations, [Page 121] with an everlasting covenant, to be thy God, and the God of thy seed after thee." To which covenant circumcision was added, to be a sign of sanctification as well in children as in men; and no man may think that this promise is abrogated with circumcision and other ceremonial laws. For Christ came to fulfil the promises, and not to dissolve them. Therefore in the gospel he saith of infants, that is, of such as yet believed not, "Let the little ones come unto me, and forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of heaven," Again, "It is not the will of your Father which is in heaven, that any of these little ones do perish." Also, "He that receiveth one of these little ones receiveth me. Take heed therefore that ye despise not one of these babes, for I tell you their angels do continually see in heaven my Father's face." And what may be said more plain than this? It is not the will of the heavenly Father that the infants should perish; whereby we may gather, that he receiveth them freely into his grace, although as yet they confess not their faith. Since then that the word of the promises, which is contained in baptism, pertaineth as well to children as to men, why should the sign of the promise, which is baptism in water, be withdrawn from children, when Christ himself commandeth them to be received of us, and promiseth the reward of a prophet to those that receive such a little infant, as he for an example did put before his disciples?
NOW will I prove with manifest arguments that children ought to be baptized, and that the apostles of Christ did baptize children. The Lord commanded his apostles to baptize all nations; therefore also children ought to be baptized, for they are comprehended under this word, All nations.
FURTHER, whom God doth account among the faithful, they are faithful, for it was said to Peter, "That thing which God hath purified, thou shalt not say to be common or unclean." But God doth repute children among the faithful: Ergo, they are faithful, except we had rather to resist God, and seem stronger and wiser than he.
AND without all doubt the apostles baptized those which Christ commanded: but he commanded the faithful to be baptized, among which infants are reckoned: the apostles then baptized infants.
THE gospel is more than baptism, for Paul said, "The Lord sent me to preach the gospel, and not to baptize:" not that he denied absolutely that he was sent to baptize, but that he preferred doctrine before baptism, for the Lord commanded both to the apostles: but children be received by the doctrine of the gospel of God, and not refused: therefore what person being of reason, may deny them baptism, which is a thing less than the gospel? For in the sacraments be two things to be considered, the thing signified, and the sign, and the thing signified is greater than the sign; and from the thing signified in baptism, children are not excluded; who therefore may deny them the sign, which is baptism in water?
ST. Peter could not deny them to be baptized in water, to whom he saw the Holy Ghost given, which is the certain sign of God's people: for he saith in the Acts, "May any body forbid them to be baptized in water who have received the Holy Ghost as well as we? Therefore St. Peter denied not baptism to infants, for he knew certainly both by the doctrine of Christ, and by the covenant which is everlasting, that the kingdom of heaven pertaineth to infants.
NONE are received into the kingdom of heave [...] but such as God loveth, and which are indued with the Spirit: for whoso hath not the Spirit of God, he is none of his. But infants are beloved of God, and therefore want not the Spirit of God: Wherefore if they have the Spirit of God as well as men, if they be numbered among the people of God as well as we that be of age, who (I pray you) may well withstand children to be baptized with water, in the name of the Lord?
THE apostles in times past, being yet not sufficiently instructed, did murmur against those which brought their children unto the Lord, but the Lord rebuked them, and said, "Let the babes come unto me." Why then do not these rebellious Anabaptists [...]ey the commandment of the Lord? For [Page 122] what do they now-a-days else that bring their children to baptism, than they did in times past which brought their children unto the Lord, and our Lord received them, and putting his hands on them, blessed them, and both by words and by gentle behaviour towards them, declared manifestly that children be the people of God, and entirely beloved by him. but some will say, Why then did not Christ baptize them? Because it is written, Jesus himself baptized not, but hi [...] disciples.
MOREOVER, circumcision in the old law was administered to infants: therefore baptism ought to be administered in the new law unto children. For baptism is come in the stead of circumcision, as St. Paul witnesseth, saying to the Colossians, "By Christ ye are circumcised with a circumcision which is without hands, when ye put off the body of sin of the flesh, by the circumcision of Christ, being buried together with him through baptism." Behold, Paul calleth baptism the circumcision of a christian man, which is done without hands, but that with hands no man any longer ought to be circumcised, although the mystery of circumcision do still remain in faithful people.
TO this I may add, that the servants of God were always ready to administer the sacraments to them for whom they were instituted. As for an example, we may behold Joshua, who most diligently procured the people of Israel to be circumcised before they entered into the land of promise; but since the apostles were the preachers of the word, and the very faithful servants of Jesus Christ, who may hereafter doubt that they baptized infants, since baptism is in the place of circumcision.
ITEM, The apostles did attemperate all their doings to the shadows and figures of the Old Testament: therefore it is certain that they did attemperate baptism accordingly to circumcision, and baptized children because they were under the figure of baptism; for the people of Israel passed through the Red Sea, and the bottom of the water of Jordan, with their children. And although the children be not always expressed, neither the women in the holy scriptures, yet they are comprehended and understood in the same.
ALSO the scripture evidently telleth us, that the apostles baptized whole families or housholds: but th [...] children are comprehended in a family or household, as the chiefest and dearest part thereof▪ therefore we may conclude, the apostles did baptize infants or children, and not only men of lawful age. And that the houshold is taken for man, woman, and child, it is manifest in the 17th of Genesis; and also that Joseph doth call Jacob with a [...]l his house, to come out of the land of Canaan into Egypt.
FINALLY, I can declare out of ancient writers, that the baptism of infants hath continued from the apostles time unto our's, neither was it instituted by any councils, neither of other men, but commanded from the scripture by the apostles themselves. Origen, upon the declaration of St. Paul's epistle to the Romans, expounding the 6th chapter faith▪ "That the church of Christ received the baptism of infants from the very apostles." St. Jerome maketh mention of the baptism of infants in the third book against the Pelagians, and in his epistle to Leta. St Augustine reciteth, for this purpose, a place out of John, bishop of Constantinople, in his first book against Julian, chap. 2. and he again writing to St. Jerom, epist. 28. saith, "That St. Cyprian, not making any new decree, but firmly observing the faith of the church, judged with his fellow bishops, that as soon as one was born, he might be lawfully baptized." The place of Cyprian is to be seen in his epistle to Fidus.
ALSO St. A [...]gustine, in writing against the Donatists, in the fourth book, chap. 23 and 24, saith, That the bap [...]ism of infants was not derived from the authority of man, neither of councils, but from the tradition or doctrine of the apostles.
CYRIL, upon Leviticus, chap. 8, approveth the baptism of children, and condemneth the iteration of baptism. These authorities of men I do alledge, not to tie the baptism of children unto the testimonies of men, but to shew how men's testimonies do agree with God's word, and that the verity of antiquity is on our side, and that the Anabaptists have nothing but lies for them, and new imaginations, [Page 123] which feign the baptism of children to be the pope's commandment.
AFTER this will I answer to the sum of your arguments for the contrary. The first, which includeth all the rest, is, "Go ye into all the world, and preach the glad tidings to all creatures. He that believeth and is baptized, shall be saved: but he that believeth not, shall be damned," &c.
TO this I answer, That nothing is added to God's word by baptism of children, as you pretend, but that is done which the same word doth require, for that children are accounted of Christ in the gospel among the number of such as believe, as it appeareth by these words, "He that offendeth one of these little babes which believe in me, it were better for him to have a millstone tied about his neck, and to be cast into the bottom of the sea." Where plainly Christ calleth such as be not able to confess their faith, Believers, because of his mere grace he reputeth them for believers. And this is no wonder so to be taken, since God imputeth faith for righteousness unto men that be of riper age: for both in men and children, righteousness, acceptation, sanctification, is of mere grace, and by imputation, that the glory of God's grace might be praised.
AND that children of faithful parents are sanctified, and that among such as do believe, is apparent in the seventh chapter of the first epistle to the Corinthians. And whereas you do gather by order of the words in the said commandment of Christ, that children ought to be taught before they be baptized, and to this end you alledge many places out of the Acts, proving that such as confessed their faith first, were baptized: I answer, that if the order of words might weigh any thing in this cause, we have the scripture that maketh as well for us. For in St. Mark we read that John did baptize in the desart, preaching the baptism of repentance. In which place we see baptizing go before, and preaching to follow after.
AND also I will declare this place of Matthew, exactly considered, to make for the use of baptism in children; for St. Matthew hath it written in this wise, "All power is given me (saith the Lord) in heaven and in earth," therefore going forth M [...]THETEUSATE, that is, Disciple ye, (as I may expre [...] the signification of the word) or, Make or gathe [...] to me disciples of all nations. And following, [...] declareth the way how they should gather to hi [...] disciples out of all nations, "Baptizing them an [...] teaching;" by baptizing and teaching ye sha [...] procure a church to me. And both these aptly an [...] briefly severally he setteth forth, saying, "Baptizin [...] them in the name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, teaching them to observ [...] all things whatsoever I have commanded you." Now then baptism goeth before doctrine.
BUT hereby I do not gather, that the Gentiles who never heard any thing before of God, and o [...] the Son of God, and of the Holy Ghost, ought to be baptized, neither would they permit themselves to be baptized before they knew to what end. But this I have declared to shew you upon how feeble foundation the Anabaptists be grounded. And plainly it is not true which they imagine of this text, that the Lord did only command such to be baptized whom the apostles had first of all taught. Neither here verily is signified who only are to be baptized, but he speaketh of such as be at perfect age, and of the first foundations of faith, and of the church to be planted among the Gentiles, which were as yet rude and ignorant of religion.
SUCH as be of age may hear, believe, and confess that which is preached and taught, but infants cannot: therefore we may justly collect, that he speaketh nothing here of infants or children. But for all this they ought not to be excluded from baptism.
IT is a general rule, "He that doth not labour must not eat." But who is so barbarous as to think hereby, that children should be famished?
THE Lord sent his apostles, at the beginning of his setting up of his true religion unto all nations, unto such as were both ignorant of God, and were out of the covenant of God; and truly such persons it behoved not first to be baptized, and afterward taught; but first to be taught, and after baptized. If at this day we should go to the Turks to convert them to the faith of Christ, verily first we ought to teach them, and afterwards baptize such as would [Page 124] yield to the servants of Christ. Likewise the Lord himself in time past did, when first he renewed the covenant with Abraham, and ordained circumcision to be a seal of the covenant after that Abraham was circumcised. But he, when he perceived the infants also to pertain to the covenant, and that circumcision was the sealing up of the covenant, did not only circumcise Ishmael his son, that was 13 years of age, but all other infants that were born in his house, among whom we reckon Isaac.
EVEN so, faithful people who were converted from heathen idolatry by the preaching of the gospel, and confessing the faith, were baptized; when they understood their children to be counted among the people of God, and that baptism was the token of the children of God, they procured also their children to be baptized. Therefore, it is written, "Abraham circumcised all the male children in his house." In like manner we read in the Acts and writings of the apostles, that after the master of the house was turned to the faith, all the whole house was baptized. And as concerning those which of old time were compelled to confess their faith before they received baptism, which were called Catechumeni, they were such as with our forefathers came from the Gentiles into the church, who being yet rude of faith, they did instruct in the principles of their belief, and afterward they did baptize them; but the same ancient fathers notwithstanding did baptize the children of faithful men, as I have already partly declared.
AND because you do require a hasty answer of your letter of one that is but a dull writer, I am here enforced to cease particularly to go through your letter in answering thereto, knowing that I have fully answered every part thereof, in that I have already written, although not in such order as it had been meet, and as I purposed. But forasmuch as I understand that you will be no contentious man, neither in this matter, nor in any other contrary to the judgment of Christ's primitive church, which is the body and fulness of Christ, I desire you in the fulness of him, or rather Christ desireth you by me (that your joy may be perfect, whereto you are now called) to submit your judgment to that church, and to be at peac [...] and unity in the same; that the coat of Christ, whi [...]h ought to be without seam but now, alas, most miserably, is torn to pieces by many dangerous sects and damnable opinions, may appear to you in no part to have been rent, neither that any giddy head in these dog-days, might take an example by you to dissent from Christ's true church: I beseech thee, dear brother in the gospel, follow the steps of the faith of the glorious in the primitive church, and of such as at this day follow the same; decline from them neither to the right hand nor to the left. Then shall death, be it ever so bitter, be more sweet than this life; then shall Christ with all the heavenly Jerusalem triumphantly embrace your spirit with unspeakable gladness and exultation, who in this earth was content to join your spirit with their spirits, according as it is commanded by the word, that the spirit of the prophets should be subject to the prophets. One thing ask with David ere you depart, and require the same, that you may dwell with a fu [...]l accord in his house, for there is glory and worship: and so with Simeon in the temple embracing Christ, depart in peace: to which peace Christ bring both you and me, and all our loving brethren that love God in the unity of faith, by such ways as shall please him, to his glory. Let the bitter passion of Christ, which he suffered for your sake, and the horrible torments which the godly martyrs of Christ have endured before us, and also the inestimable reward of your life to come, which is hidden yet a little while from you with Christ, strengthen, comfort, and encourage you to the end of that glorious race which you are in, Amen.
OTHER letters were written by Mr. Philpot to divers persons, but these, as most principal, I have inserted. Amongst which I thought here not much impertinent to the place, to adjoin another certain letter of a godly and zealous gospeller (whose name in her writing doth not appear), who in defending and commending the quarrel of Mr. John Philpot, the famous and worthy martyr of Christ, was therefore troubled and brought before bishop Bonner. And therefore being appointed by the said bishop to appear upon a certain day to answer for herself▪ [Page 125] indeed kept not her day with the bishop, but instead of her appearance, sent him this letter here following.
"WO [...] be unto the idolatrous shepherds of England, that feed themselves. Should not the shepherds feed the flock? but ye have eaten the fat, ye have cloathed you with the wool; the best fed have ye slain, but the flock have ye not nourished, the weak have ye not [...]olden up, the sick have ye not healed, the broken have ye not bound together, the out-casts have ye not brought again, the lost have ye not sought, but churlishly and cruelly have ye ruled them." Ezekiel xxxiv.
FORASMUCH (my lord) as my business is such that I cannot come to your lordship, according to my promise, I have been so bold to write these few words unto you, partly to excuse mine absence, and partly to answer your lordship's demands at my last most happy departure from you. As touching the breach of my promise with you in not coming again at the hour appointed, your lordship shall understand that I take the counsel of the angel, which warned the wise men not to come again to H [...]rod according to their promise, but to return home again another way. Now, my lord, I perceive you [...] lordship to be a more cruel tyrant than ever w [...]s Herod, and more desirous to destroy Christ in his poor members than ever he was, who to destroy Christ killed his own son, I thought good to take the angel's counsel, and come no more to you; for I see that you are set all in a rage like a ravening wolf against the poor lambs of Christ, appointed to the slaughter for the testimony of the truth. Indeed you are called the common cut-throat, and general slaughter-slave to all the bishops in England; and therefore it is wisdom for me and all other simple sheep of the Lord, to keep us out of your butcher's stall as long as we can: especially seeing that you are not able to drink all their blood, lest you should break your belly; and therefore let them lie still and die with hunger. Therefore (my lord) I th [...]u [...]ht it g [...]od to tarry a while until your lordship's stomach were come to you a little better; for I do perceive by your great fat cheeks, that you lack no lamb's flesh yet, and belike you are almost glutted with supping so much blood, and therefore you will let some of the leanest die in prison, which will then be good meat enough for your barking beagles, Harpsfield and his fellows▪ but yet, my lord, i [...] were a great deal more for your lordship's honour, if your chaplains might have the meat roasted in Smithfield at the fire of the stake, yea, and when it is something fat and fair liking; for now they have nothing but skin and bones, and if the dogs come hastily to it, they may chance shortly to be choaked, and then your hunting will be greatly hindered, if it be not altogether marred. I hear say, my lord, that some of the butcherly ours came of late to my house to seek their prey, and that they go round about the city (as David saith) grinning and grudging that they have no [...] meat enough: therefore belike they have killed my poor brethren and sisters that have lain so long upon the butcherly stall, and eaten them up: for I hear say their friends could not be suffered to see them these three days and more; therefore I perceive now that if I had come again according to my promise, your lordship, like a ravening wolfe, or else some of your hell-hounds, would quickly have worried me: but I see well my appointed time is not yet come, therefore I will yet liv [...] and thank God for my deliverance with continual songs of laud and praise. Thus have I been bold to trouble your lordship with telling you the truth, and the very cause that I came not to you again according to my unpurposed promise. I trust your lordship will take this in good part, and accept it as a lawful excuse, and not doubting but your lordship would have done the like if you had been in my case.
NOW concerning the second part that caused me to write unto your lordship, which is to answer unto your subtle or rather cruel demand of my judgment of the death of that blessed martyr of Christ Jesus, good Mr. Philpot, I will answer your lordship simply and plainly, what peril soever shall come thereof. Truly, my lord, I do not only think, but I am also most certain and sure, that he was a very man of God, died a true martyr, and constant confessor of his dear Lord and S [...]viour Jesus Christ, to whom he did most faithfully commit his [Page 126] dear [...]oul, who will surely keep the same with him in joy for evermore. Also, my lord, I do verily believe and know, that your lordship hath committed a most cruel murder in the unjust condemning and killing of him, and that you shall make as heavy an account for his blood, which shortly shall be required at your hand, as ever your great grandfather, cruel Cain, did or shall do for his innocent brother Abel. Moreover, because I am credibly informed, that your lordship doth believe, and have in secret said, that there is no hell, I certify you, that your lordship never did any thing in all your life that did so much redound to your lordship's dishonour, and perpetual shame and infamy, as your killing the body of this blessed prophet doth; especially seeing that he was none of your diocese, nor had offended any of your lordship's devilish and cruel laws. Verily I hear almost every body say in all places where I come, that your lordship is made the common slaughter-slave to all your fellows, bite-sheep bishops I would say; yea, the very papists themselve [...] begin now to abhor your blood-thirstiness, and speak shame of your tyranny and cruelty. Believe me, my lord, every child that can any whit speak, can call upon your name and [...]y, Bloody Bonner is bishop of London, and every man hath it as perfectly upon his finger ends as his Pater-noster, how many you have for your part burned with fire, and famished in prison; they say the whole sum amounteth to forty persons within this three quarters of a year. Therefore, my lord, though your lordship believeth that there is neither heaven nor hell, nor God nor devil; yet if your lordship loves your own honesty, which was lost long ago, you were best to cease from this cruel burning of true christian men, and also from murdering some in prison; for that indeed offendeth men's minds mos [...]; yea, even your old friends, the rankest papists that be. For, say they, Felix the heathen ruler did not forbid Paul's friends to visit him in prison, and to bring him necessary relief; and therefore it is a very great shame and sin, to see a bishop that beareth the name of a christian, to be more cruel upon his poor brethren, than an Heathen, Turk, or Infidel.
THESE are men's sayings in every place, not only of this realm, but also of the most part of the world, and the common talk they have of your lordship; therefore I thought to be so bold with your lordship, as to tell you of it, though perchance you will give me but small thanks for my labour. Well, as for that, I put it to your lordship's choice, for I have as much already as I look for: finally, my lord, I will give you to understand, that the death of this constant martyr and valiant soldier of Jesus Christ, hath given a greater shake towards the overthrowing of your papistical kingdom, than you shall ever be able to recover again these seven years, do the best you can, and set as many crafty daubers to patch it up with untempered clay as you will; yea, though prating Pendleton, that wicked apostate, apply all his wily wits to help them. Verily, my lord, by all men's reports, his blessed life could never have done the like sorrow to Satan's synagogue, whereof some say your lordship is a mighty member, as his happy death hath done. You have broken a pot indeed, but th [...] precious word contained therein is so notably therewith shed abroad, that the sweet savour thereof hath wonderfully well refreshed all the true houshold or congregation of Christ, that they cannot abide any more the stinking savour of your filthy ware that came from the dunghill of Rome, though your lordship's Judases do set them to sale every where to fill your bags. I put your lordship out of doubt, that if you do break any more such pots, you will marr your own market altogether: for I promise you, most men begin to mislike your devilish doings, and wonderfully to loathe your popish pedlary wares.
THUS have I (according to your lordship's command) shewed you simply what I think of that good man's death, whose blood crieth for vengeance against your lordship's butcherly bloody proceedings in the ears of the Lord of Hosts, who will shortly revenge the same upon your pilled pate, and upon the rest of your poll shorn brethren, the very marked cattle of the great Antichrist of Rome. The measure of his iniquity is filled up to the brim, therefore will God shortly pour in double unto your deserved destruction. And then your new made proselytes will be glad to cover their crowns with filth and dirt (saving your lordship's reverence I should have said first). Well, I rather desire their conversion than confusion, the Lord send one of them shortly, as may be most to his glory, Amen.
[Page 127]I signify also unto your lordship, that the railing words which your lying preacher shewed forth of his filthy fountain upon Sunday, against the dear servant of God, good Mr▪ Philpot, do greatly re [...]ound to your lordship's dishonesty, and much deface your spiritual honour. Verily I see that the great wrath of God hath so blinded your eyes, that you see not what is with you, nor what is against you, but still you vomit out your own shame, and make all the world to wonder at you. Was it not [...]ough for you to condemn him most unjustly, yea, contrary to your own laws, and to kill his innocent body most tyrannously, but you must also set a lying limb of the devil to blaspheme, slander, and belie him, now he is dead? O viperous generation, seed of the serpent, and right children of the devil: full well do you counterfei [...] your father's steps, whom Christ calleth a murderer, and a liar from [...]he beginning; which two things are the only weapons of your war, wherewith you maintain all your mischief, that is to say, lying and murder; for those whom you cannot overcome with your lying persuasions, them you kill most cruelly, and then blaspheme and belie them with railing sentences when they are dead. But all this will not blind the people of God, nor yet make them any whit the less believe the truth, nor abate their love from the preachers thereof, yea, it is a true sign and a token that they are the very disciples of Christ; for he hath said, "Blessed are ye when men revile you, and say all manner of evil sayings against you for my name's sake. Rejoice and be glad, for great is your reward in heaven." And doubtless great is that good man's reward in heaven by this time, as your lordship's damnation shall be great in hell, except you repent and cease from shedding innocent blood. But it is to be feared your heart is hardened as Pharaoh's was, seeing that with Judas you have sold and betrayed your master. Take heed, my lord, lest you come to the same end, or a worse than be did: for verily I cannot perceive how you should escape it long; therefore say not but that a woman gave you warning, if you like to take it. And as for the obtaining your popish purpose in suppressing the truth, I put you out of doubt, you shall not obtain it so long as you go the way to work as you do; for verily I believe that you have lost the hearts of twenty thousand that were rank pap [...]ts within these twelve months.
IT is found very true what one holy doctor saith, The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the gospel; when one is put to death, a thousand do rise for him. And that this is true, you may well perceive by the hearty love that the people shewed unto good Mr. Philpot at his going to death. They went not about to make an idol of him, as your adders' brood would have men imagine; but they worshipped God who gave such strength to his dear child, to die so constantly for the testimony of his truth, to the utter destruction of that detestable idolatry which your lordship doth most devilishly maintain with the force of fire, faggots, and sword: yea, and rather than fail, to famish men in prison again, as you have done already. It is reported by your own tormentors, that the six prisoners which you have in your prison, are put in six several places all the day, and every night brought together, and [...] in the stocks. Forsooth, my lord, this doth get you a foul name all about the country, and yet all will not help your lordship's pestilent purpose, but every way hinder the same. For Zorobbabel will be found no liar, who said, The truth shall have victory. You do but strive against the stream, and kick against the pricks; the lord doth laugh your doings to scorn, and will bring all your counsels and devices to nought (as knoweth the Lord God)▪ who of his great mercy shortly convert your lordship, or utterly confound you, and get his name a glory over you, Amen.
The History of Seven Martyrs suffering together at London, for the Testimony of Christ's Gospel.
THE catholic prelates of the pope's band being as yet not satisfied with this their one year's murdering of the reverend, learned, and principal members of Christ's church (whereof now [Page 128] there are very few, who either were not cruelly consumed by fire, or else, to avoid their popish rage, compelled to flee their natural country), continued still this next year also, which was anno 1556, in no less cruelty towards the poor, simple, and inferior sort of people (I mean in degree, tho' God be praised, not in stedfastness), having yet sometimes amongst them such as were both learned and of good estimation, as in the continuance of this story shall appear.
WHEREFORE (as the first fruits thereof) to begin this year with, about the 27th day of January, were burned in Smithfield at London these seven persons hereafter following, to wit:—Thomas Whittle, priest. Bartlet Green, gentleman. John Tudson, artificer. John Went, artificer. Thomas Browne. Isabel Foster, wife. Joan Warne, alias Lashford, maid.
ALL which seven, as they were burned together in one fire, so were they likewise all upon one sort and form of articles condemned in one day. However, forasmuch as the gifts of God in them were diverse (some more abounding in knowledge than others), their dealing withal were also diverse, as shall be more plainly perceived in the discoursing of their several processes hereafter following. And therefore for the better understanding hereof, I will first, (by the leave of the Lord) passing over their private articles and examinations had at sundry times in the bishop's house, set forth their general examinations in the public co [...]sistory, upon the bishop's articles there administered unto them, with their answers also to the same, according as they all agreed after one manner and sort together, as here by the words, both of the articles and their answers underwritten, may appear.
The Form and Words of Bishop BONNER'S Articles administered to the Seven Persons above mentioned, in his Consistory.
AND first to behold the manner of speech in these bishops, sitting in their majesty to terrify the ea [...]s of the simple with, let us hear the pontifical phrase of this bishop, beginning in thi [...] sort.
The within written articles, and every of them, and every part and parcel of them, we Edmund, by the permission of God, bishop of London, do object and administer to thee Thomas Whittle, &c. of our mere office, for thy soul's health, and for the reformation of thine offences and misdemeanors, admonishing thee in the virtue of obedience, and under the pains of both censures of the church, and also of other pains of the law, to answer fully, plainly, and truly to all the same.
FIRST, that thou N. hast firmly, steadfastly, and constantly believed in times past, and so dost now believe at this present, that there is here in earth a catholic church, in which catholic church the faith and religion of Christ is truly professed, allowed, received, kept and retained by all faithful and true christian people.
2. ITEM, That thou the said N. in times past hast also believed, and so dost believe at this present, that there are in the catholic church seven sacraments, instituted and ordained by God, and by the consent of the holy church allowed, approved, received, kept, and retained.
3. ITEM, That thou the said N. wast in times past baptized in the faith of the said catholic church, professing by thy godfathers and godmother, the faith and religion of Christ and the observation thereof, renouncing there the devil and all his pomps and works, and was by the said sacrament of baptism incorporated to the catholic church, and made a faithful member thereof.
4. ITEM, That thou the said N. coming to the age of fourteen years, and so to the age of discretion, didst not depart from the said profession and faith, nor didst dislike any part of the same faith or doings, but did like a faithful christian person abide and continue in all the same for the space of certain years, ratifying and confirming all the same.
5. ITEM, That thou the said N. notwithstanding the premises, hast of late, that is to say, within these two years last past, within the city and diocese of London, swerved at the least way from some part of the said catholic faith and religion; and amongst [Page 129] other things thou hast misliked and earnestly spoken against the sacrifice of the mass, the sacrament of the altar, and the unity of the church, railing and maligning the authority of the see of Rome, and the faith observed in the same.
6. ITEM, That thou the said N. hast heretofore refused, and dost refuse at this present to be reconciled again to the unity of the church, not acknowledging and confessing the authority of the said see of Rome to be lawful.
7. ITEM, That thou the said N. misliking the sacrifice of the mass, and the sacrament of the altar, hast refused to come to thy parish-church to hear mass, and to receive the said sacrament, and hast expressly said, that in the said sacrament of the altar there is not the very body and blood of our Saviour Christ, really, substantially, and truly, but hast affirmed expressly, that the mass is idolatry and abomination, and that in the sacrament of the altar there is none other substance but only material bread and material wine, which are tokens of Christ's body and blood only, and that the substance of Christ's body and blood is no wise in the said sacrament of the altar.
8. ITEM, That thou the said N. being convented before certain judges or commissioners, for thy disorder herein, and being found obstinate, wilful, and heady, was by their commandment sent unto me and my prison, to be examined by me, and process to be made against thee for thy offence herein.
9. ITEM, That all and singular the premises have been, and be true and manifest, and thyself not only suspected and accused thereof, but also culpable therein; and by reason of the same, you was and are of the jurisdiction of me Edmund, bishop of London, and before me, according to the order of the ecclesiastical laws, are to be convented, and also by me to be punished and reformed.
Their Answers to the foregoing Articles.
TO the first article they altogether agreed, affirming the same to be true: John Tudson, and Thomas Brown, further adding, that the church of England, as it was at that present used, was no part of the true catholic church.
TO the second article they answered, that they acknowledged but only two sacraments in Christ's catholic church, that is to say, baptism, and the supper of the Lord: John Went, and Tudson affirmed, that the sacrament of the altar, as it was then used, was an idol, and no sacrament at all.
TO the third article they all agreed, and confessed it to be true, that they were baptized in the faith of Christ, that the church then taught; and afterwards during the time of king Edward the Sixth, they hearing the gospel preached, and the truth opened, followed the order of the religion and doctrine then used and set forth in the reign of the said king Edward.
TO the fourth article they also agreed: but John Went added, that about seven years past, he then being about twenty years of age, began to mislike certain things used in the church of England, as the administration of the sacrament of the altar; likewise all the ceremonies of the said church, and did likewise at that present time mislike the same as they were used, although his godfathers and godmother promised for him the contrary.
JOHN TVDSON also said, that when he came to the years of discretion, that is, about nine years past, being about eighteen years of age, he did mislike the doctrine and religion then taught and set forth in the church of England, except in the time of king Edward, in whose reign the gospel was truly set forth: and he further said, that the doctrine set forth in the queen's reign was not agreeable to God's word, nor yet to the true catholic church that Christ speaketh of, &c.
ISABEL FOSTER, with others granted, adding likewise, and saying to the said four articles, that she continued in the same faith and religion which she was baptized in, after she came to the years of discretion as other common people did; however, blindly and without knowledge, till the reign of king Edward the Sixth: at which time she hearing the gospel truly preached and opened to the people, [Page 130] re [...]eived thereupon the faith and religion then taught and set forth, &c.
TO the fifth article, they answered and agreed the same to be true, according to the contents thereof: Thomas Whittle adding moreover, that he had swerved and gone away, and not in whole but in part, not from the whole catholic church, but from the church of Rome, in speaking against the mass, the sacrifice thereof, and the see of Rome.
JOAN LASHFORD, alias Joan Warne, granted with the others the said article, added moreover, that she never hitherto swerved or went away, nor yet doth, from any part of Christ's catholic faith and religion; but said, that from the time she was eleven years of age, she had misliked the sacrifice of the mass, the sacrament of the altar, and the authority of the see of Rome, with the doctrine thereof, because they are against Christ's catholic church, and the right faith of the same.
BARTLET GREEN, answering to this article, said, that he swerved not from the catholic faith, but only from the church of Rome, &c.
TO the sixth article they answered, and confessed the same to be true, rendering the cause thereof, because (said they) the same church and doctrine therein set forth and taught, disagreeth from the unity of Christ's word, and the true catholic faith, &c.
WHEREUNTO Bartlet Green answered, that he was contented to be reconciled to the unity of Christ's catholic church, but not to the church of Rome.
IN like manner added also John Went.
TO the seventh article they answered, and confessed the contents thereof to be true, giving withal the reason and cause of this their so doing, for that the mass with the sacrament thereof, as it was then used and set forth in the church of England, was dissonant to the word and teaching of the people, &c.
JOHN WENT furthermore said, as concerning the mass, that he believed no less, but the mass which he calleth the supper of the Lord, as it is now used in the realm of England, is naught, full of idolatry, and against God's word so far as he seeth it; however, he saith, that since the queen's coronation by chance he hath been present where the mass hath been said, whereof he is sorry.
ISABEL FOSTER also answer to the said articles, with the other before, confessed moreover, that since queen Mary's reign she had not heard mass, nor received the sacrament, but had refused to be in the place where it was administered: for she knew no such sacrament to be. And being demanded of her belief in the same, she said, that there was but one only material bread, and material wine, and not the real substance of the body of Christ in the same sacrament: for so she had been taught to believe by the preachers in the time of king Edward whom she believed to have preached the truth in that beha [...].
TO the eighth article they grant the same, and the contents thereof to be so.
THOMAS WHITTLE adding and affirming, that the lord chancellor that then was, sent him up to the bishop there present.
BARTLET GREEN added, that he was sent up to the said bishop, but for no offence herein mentioned.
JOHN WENT said, that Dr. Story, queen Mary▪ commissioner, examined him upon the sacrament, and because he denied the real presence, he presented this examinant to the bishop.
JOHN TUDSON, likewise examined by Mr. Chol [...] ley, and Dr. Story upon the same matters, and for not coming to the church, and accused by the same, because he would not agree to them, was sent to the bishop.
THOMAS BROWN also said, that he for not coming to the church of St. Bride's, was brought by the constable to the bishop, &c.
JOAN WARNE confessed, that she was sent by Dr. Story to the bishop of London, about twelve weeks ago, since which time she hath continued with the said bishop.
[Page 131]TO the ninth article they confess and say, that as they believe the premises before by them confessed to be true, so they deny not the same to be manifest, and that they are of the jurisdiction of London.
AND thus having expressed their articles, with their answers jointly made unto the [...]ame, it remaineth further more fully to discourse the stories, and handling of all the seven aforesaid martyrs severally and particularly by themselves, first beginning with Thomas Whittle.
The History of THOMAS WHITTLE, Martyr.
MENTION was made before, in Mr. Philpot's story, of a married priest, whom he found in bishop Bonner's coal-house at his first going thither, in heaviness of mind and great sorrow, for recanting the doctrine which he had taught in king Edward's days whose name was Thomas Whittle, of Essex; and thus lieth his story. This Thomas Whittle, after he had been expulsed from the place in Essex where he served, went abroad where he might, now here and there, as occasion offered, preaching and sowing the gospel of Christ. At length being apprehended by one Edmond A [...]ablaster, in hope of reward and promotion, which he miserably gaped after, he was brought first as prisoner before the bishop of Winchester, who then was lately fallen sick of his disease, whereof not long after he died most strangely. But the apprehender for his proffered service was highly checked by the bishop, asking if there were no man unto whom he might bring such rascals, but to him? Hence (quoth he) out of my sight, thou varlet, why dost thou trouble me with such matters? The greedy cormorant being thus defeated of his desired prey, yet thinking to seek and to hunt further, carried his prisoner to the bishop of London, with whom what ill usage this Whittle had, and how he was by the bishop beaten and buffeted about the face, by this his own narration in a letter sent to his friend, manifestly may appear.
UPON Thursday, which was the tenth of January, the bishop of London sent for me Thomas Whittle, minister, out of the porter's lodge, where I had been all night, lying on the earth on a little low bed, where I had as painful a night of sickness as ever I had. And when I came before him, he talked with me many things of the sacrament so grossly, as is not worthy to be rehearsed. And amongst other things, he asked me, if I would have come to mass that morning if he had sent for me. Whereunto I answered, that I would have come to him at his commandment, but to your mass (said I) I have small affection. At which answer he was sore displeased, and said, I should be fed with bread and water▪ And as I followed him through the great hall, he turned back, and beat me with his fist, first on the one cheek, and then on the other, as the sign of my beating did many days appear. And then he l [...]d me to a little salt-house, where I had neither straw nor bed, but lay two nights on a table, and slept soundly, I thank God.
THEN, upon the Friday next after, I was brought to my lord, and he then gave me many fair words, and said he would be good to me. And so he going to Fulham, committed me to Dr. Harpsfield, that he and I, in that afternoon, should commune together, and draw out certain articles, whereunto if I would subscribe, I should be dismissed. But Dr. Harpsfield sent not for me till night, and then persuaded me very much to forsake my opinions. I answered, I held nothing but the truth, and therefore I could not so lightly turn therefrom. So I thought I should at that time have had no more ado: but he had made a certain bill, which the register pulled out of his bosom, and read it. The bill indeed was very easily made, and therefore more dangerous; for the effect thereof was to detest all errors and heresies agaist the sacrament of the altar, and other sacraments, and believe the faith of the catholic church, and live accordingly.
THE copy of this bill here mentioned, if it please the gentle reader to peruse, so as it came to our hands, we have hereunto adjoined, written in their own words, as followeth.
The BILL of Submission, offered to THOMAS WHITTLE to subscribe.
I Thomas Whittle, priest, of the diocese of London, acknowledge and confess with my mouth, agreeing with my heart before you, reverend father [Page 132] in God, Edmund, bishop of London, my ordinary, that I do detest and abhor all manner of heresies and errors against the sacrament of the altar, or any of the sacraments of the church, which heresies and errors have heretofore been condemned in any wise by the catholic church: and I do protest and declare by these presents, that I do both now hold, and also intend by God's grace always hereafter to hold, observe, and keep, in all points the catholic faith and belief of Christ's church, according as this church of England, being a member of the said catholic church, doth now profess and keep, and in no wise to swerve, decline, or go from the said faith, during my natural life, submitting myself fully and wholly to you, reverend father, my said ordinary, in all things concerning my reformation and amendment at all times. In witness whereof I, the said Thomas Whittle, priest, have hereunto subscribed my name, written, &c.
TO this bill I did also set my hand, being much desired and counselled so to do; and the flesh being always desirous to have liberty, I considered not thoroughly the inconvenience that might come thereupon; and respite I desired to have had, but earnestly they desired me to subscribe. Now when I had so done, I had little joy thereof; for by and by my mind and conscience told me by God's word that I had done evil, by such a slight means to shake off the sweet cross of Christ: and yet it was not my seeking, as God knoweth, but altogether came of them. O the crafty subtilty of Satan in his members! Let every man that God shall deliver into their hands take good heed, and cleave fast to Christ: for they will leave no corner of his consci [...]nce unsought, but will attempt all guileful and subtil means to corrupt him, to fall both from God and his truth. But yet let no man despair of God's help, for Peter did fall and rise again. And David saith, "A righteous man though he fall, he shall not be cast away: for the Lord upholdeth him with his hand." [...]or I for my part have felt my infi [...]mities, and yet I found God's present help and comfort in time of need, I thank him therefore.
THE night after I had subscribed I was sore grieved, and for sorrow of conscience could not sleep. For in the deliverance of my body out of bonds, which I might have had, I could find no joy nor comfort, but still was in my conscience tormented more and more, being assured by God's Spirit and his word, that I through evil counsel and advice had done amiss. And both with disquietude of mind, and with my other cruel handling, I was sickly, lying upon the ground when the keeper came; and so I desired him to pray Dr. Harpsfield to come to me, and so he did.
AND when he came, and the register with him, I told him that I was not well at ease, but especially I told him I was grieved very much in my conscience and mind because I had subscribed. And I said that my conscience had so accused me, through the just judgment of God and his word, that I had felt hell in my conscience, and Satan ready to devour me: and therefore I pray you, Mr. Harpsfield, (said I) let me have the bill again, for I will not stand to it. So he gently commanded it to be fetched, and gave it me, and suffered me to put out my name, whereof I was right glad when I had so done, although death should follow. And hereby I had experience of God's providence and mercy towards me, who trieth his people, and suffereth them to fall, but not to be lost: for in the midst of this temptation and trouble, he gave me warning of my deed, and also delivered me; is name be praised for evermore, Amen.
NEITHER devil nor cruel tyrant can pluck any of Christ's sheep out of his hand. Of which fl [...]ck of Christ's sheep I trust undoubtedly I am one, by means of his death and blood shedding, which shall at the last day stand at his right-hand, and receive with others his blessed benediction. And now, being condemned to die, my conscience and mind, I praise God, is quiet in Christ, and I by his grace am very willing and content to give over this body to the death, for the testimony of his truth and pu [...]e religion, against Antichrist and all his false religion and doctrine. They that report otherwise of me, speak not truly. And as for Fountain, I saw him not all this while.
CONCERNING the troubled mind of this good man, and tearing his name out of the bill, here followeth the report of the same, written in the [Page 133] letters both of the said Mr. Harpsfield, and also of Johnson the register, being then present thereat, and reporters of the same unto the bishop, as in their letters hereto annexed is to be seen.
Mr. HARPSFIELD'S Letter to BONNER, Bishop of London, concerning Mr. WHITTLE.
PLEASE your good lordship to understand, that yesterday I dined with my lord of Exeter, who soon after my first coming to him, asked me▪ what news? I answered, none but good that I had heard. No? said he: why, it is a rumour in the city, that to-morrow the queen's grace will take her journey towards the king. I answered, that I thought it not to be any whit true, but an invention of heretics: yea, and further, said he, there is a report made abroad of my lord your master, that he is in discomfort, and therefore will suffer no man to come unto him. When I heard thus much, I began to laugh, and to declare how untrue this report was: so that my lord (who before was very sad) afterward, knowing the truth, rejoiced very much to hear that all was well with your lordship, and desired me to have his hearty commendations to your lordship.
ONE of my lord of Pembroke's retinue, a very handsome man, and, as far as I can yet learn, is a catholic, is a suiter to your lordship to have license to erect a school: the order which he intendeth to use is contained in this printed paper, which I send here inclosed to your lordship. I would be glad for my lord of Pembroke's sake, that he understood, that upon my motion your lordship were content he should teach as he intendeth. Mr. Johnson and I have travailed with the pri [...]st, and he hath subscribed his name to this draught which is here inclosed, and hath promised he will stand to the same before your lordship.
WHEN I had written thus much, suddenly came tidings to me, that he was turned the other side of Jordan. Cluney coming to the priest, found him lying prostrate, and groaning as though he should have died forthwith. Then Cluney to [...]k him up, and set him upon a stool, and came to me, and told me of the matter. It happened that Mr. Johnson was with me, and we went to this fond heretic, and found him lying all along, holding his hands up, and looking hypocritically towards heaven. I caused Thomas More and Cluney to set him on the stool, and with much ado at length he told me, that Satan had been with him in the night, and told him that he was damned, and, weeping, he prayed Mr. Johnson and me to see the bill whereunto he subscribed, and when he saw it [...] tore his name, to wit, out of the book of the living. Methinks by him he will needs burn a faggot, neither is there any other likelihood of the young woman. I have inquired of the two persons who sue to have a license to eat flesh. And the woman of Christ-church is indeed very much diseased, and hath been long diseased, and she and her husband both catholics. Of the other yet I can learn nothing. Thus Jesus evermore preserve your good lordship, and my mistress, your lordship's sister, with all your's. This present Saturday.
Another Letter of ROBERT JOHNSON, Register, touching THOMAS WHITTLE, written to BONNER, Bishop of London.
MY bounden duty premised, pleaseth your lordship to understand, that this last Friday in the afternoon, Mr. Archdeacon of London did diligently travail with sir Thomas Whittle, priest. I being present, and perceiving his conformity, as outwardly appeared, devised this submission, and he being content therewith, did subscribe the same. But now this Saturday morning Mr. Archdeacon and I, upon Cluney's report, declaring that he feigned himself to be distracted of his senses, went unto him, to whom he declared, that Satan, in the night-time, appeared unto him, and said that he was damned, for what he had done against his conscience in subscribing to the said submission, with other like words. And then Mr. Archdeacon, at his earnest request, delivered unto him the submission. And thereupon the said Whittle did tear out his subscription, made in the foot of the same, as your lordship shall perceive by the submission s [...]nt now unto your lordship by Mr. Archdeacon; wherewith the said Whittle was somewhat quieted.
[Page 134]AND as touching Joan Lashford, Mr. Archdeacon did likewise travail with her, and shewing her sir Thomas Whittle's submission, which I read unto her twice, demanded if she could be content to make the like submission; and she desired respite until this morning. And being now immediately demanded, in like wise saith, that she will not make any thing in writing, nor put any sign thereunto. Mr. Archdeacon and I intend this afternoon to examine the said sir Thomas upon articles; for as yet there appeareth nothing in writing against him, as knoweth Almighty God, who preserve your good lordship in prosperity with honour long to endure.
The Condemnation and Martyrdom of Mr. THOMAS WHITTLE.
AT his last examination before the bishop upon the 14th day of January, 1556, bishop Bonner, with others [...]itting in his consistory in the the afternoon, first called forth Thomas Whittle, with whom he began in effect as followeth: Because you be a priest (said he) as I and other bishops here be, and did receive the order of priesthood after the right and form of the catholic church, you shall not think but I will administer justice as well unto you as unto others. And then the said Bonner, in further communication, did charge him, that where in times past he said mass according to the order then used, the same Whittle now of late had spoken and railed against the same, saying, that it was idolatry and abomination. Whereunto Thomas Whittle answering again, said, That at such a time as he so said mass, he was then ignorant, &c. adding moreover, that the elevation of the sacrament at the mass, giveth occasion of idolatry to them that be ignorant and unlearned.
AFTER this the bishop making haste to the articles (which in all his examinations he ever [...] upon) came to this article, That thou wast in times past baptized in the faith of the [...] church▪
TO this the said Whittle inferred again, I was baptized in the faith of the catholic church, although I did forsake the church of Rome. And you, my lord, do call these heresies which are no heresies, and do charge me therewith as heresies, and you ground yourself upon that religion which is not agreeable to God's word, &c.
THEN the said Thomas Whittle was again admonished, and with persuasions intreated by the bishop; who because he would not agree unto the same, the bishop proceeded first to his degradation. The order and manner of which their popish and most vain degradation, may be seen before in the history of bishop Hooper.
THEN Whittle, in the midst of the ceremonies, when he saw them so busy in degrading him, after their father the pope's pontifical fashion, said unto them, Paul and Titus had not so much to do with their priests and bishops. And farther, speaking to the bishop, he said unto him, My lord, your religion standeth most with the church of Rome, and not with the catholic church of Christ.
THE bishop after this, according to his accustomed formal proceedings, tried him yet again with words, rather than with substantial arguments, to conform him to his religion. Who then refusing so to do, said, As for your religion, I cannot be persuaded that it is according to God's word.
THE bishop then asked, what fault he found in the administration of the sacrament of the altar?
WHITTLE answered and said, It is not used according to Christ's institution, in that it is privately and not openly done. And also because it is administered but in one kind to the lay-people, which is against Christ's ordinance. Farther, Christ commanded it not to be elevated nor adored: for the adoration and elevation cannot be proved by scripture.
WELL, said Bonner, my lords here and other learned men have shewed great learning for thy [Page 135] conversion, wherefore if thou wilt yet return to the faith and religion of the catholic church, I will receive thee thereunto, and not commit thee to the secular power, &c. To make short, Whittle, strengthened with the Lord, stood strong and immoveable in what he had affirmed. Wherefore the sentence being read, the next day following he was committed to the secular power, and so in a few days after brought to the fire with the other six above-named, sealing up the testimony of his doctrine with his blood, which he willingly and chearfully gave for the witness of the truth.
LETTER I. From THOMAS WHITTLE to Mr. JOHN CARELESS, Prisoner in the King's-Bench.
THE peace of God in Christ be with you continually, dearly beloved brother in Christ, with the assistance of God's grace and Holy Spirit, to the working and performing of things which may comfort and edify his church (as you daily do) to the glory of his name, and the increase of your joy and solace of soul in this life, and also your reward in heaven with Christ our captain, whose faithful soldier you are, in the life to come, Amen.
I have greatly rejoiced (my dear heart) with thanks to God for you, since I have heard of your faith and love which you bear towards God and his saints, with a most godly ardent zeal to the virtue of Christ's doctrine and religion, which I have heard by the report of many, but especially by the declaration of that valiant captain in Christ's church, that stout champion in God's cause, that spectacle to the world, I mean our good brother Philpot, who now lieth under the altar, and sweetly enjoyeth the promised reward. And especially I and my condemned fellows give thanks to God for your loving and comfortable letter in the deepness of our trouble (after the flesh) sent unto us to the consolation of us all, but especially to me, most sinful wretch on my own behalf, but happy, I hope through God's loving kindness in Christ shewed unto me; who suffered me to faint and fall through human infirmity, by the working of the arch-enemy in his sworn soldiers the bishops and priests. In whom so lively appeareth the visage and shape of Satan, that a man (if it were not prejudice to God's word) might well affirm them to be devils incarnate, as I by experience do speak. Wherefore, whosoever shall for conscience-matter come into their hands, had need of the wiliness of the serpent to save his head, though it be with the wounding of his body, and to take diligent heed how he consenteth to their wicked writings, or setteth his hand to their conveyances.
SO did they assault me and craftily tempt me to their wicked ways, or at least to a denial of my faith and true opinions, though it were but by colour and dissimulation. And (alas) something they did prevail. Not that I did any thing at all like their opinions and false papistical religion, or else doubted of the truth wherein I stand, but only the infirmity of the flesh beguiled me, desiring liberty by an unlawful means; God lay it not to my charge at that day, and so I heartily desire you to pray. However, uncertain I am whether more profit came thereby: profit to me, in that God suffered Satan to buffet me by his aforesaid minister of mischief, shewing me mine infirmity, that I should not boast nor rejoice in myself, but only in the Lord. Who, when he had led me to hell in my conscience, through the respect of his fearful judgments against me for my fearfulness, mistrust, and crafty cloaking in such spiritual and weighty matters, yet brought me from thence again to the magnifying of his name, suspecting of flesh and blood, and consolation of mine own soul, or else that I might feel disprofit in offending the congregation of God, which peradventure will rather adjudge my fall to come of doubtfulness in my doctrine and religion, than of human imbecility.
WELL, of the heavy burden of a troubled conscience for denying or dissembling the known verity, I by experience could say very much more, which perhaps I may declare by writing, to the warning of others, if God grant time: for now am I and my fellows ready to go hence even for Christ's cause; God's name be praised who hath hitherto called us. Pray, I beg you, that we may end our course with joy, and at your appointed time you shall come after. But as the Lord hath kept you, so will he preserve your life still, to the intent you should [Page 136] labour (as you do) to appease and convince these ungodly contentions and controversies, which now do too much reign, brawling about terms to no edification. God is dishonoured, the church disquieted, and occasion to speak evil of the gospel ministered to our adversaries. But such is the subtlety of Satan, that whom he cannot win with gross idolatry in open religion, them he seeketh to corrupt and deceive in opinions, in a private profession. But here I will abruptly leave, lest with my rude and simple vein I should be tedious unto you, desiring you, (my loving brother) if it shall not seem grievous unto you, to write unto me and my fellows yet once again, if you have leisure, and we time to the same.
PROVIDE me Mr. Philpot's nine examinations for a friend of mine, and I shall pay you therefore, by the leave of Almighty God our heavenly Father, who correcteth all his dear children in this world, and trieth the faith of his saints through many tribulations, that being found constant to the end, he may crown his own gifts in them, and in heaven highly reward them; whither I trust to go before, looking for you to follow (my faithful friend) that we may sing perpetual praise to our loving Lord God for victory over Satan and sin, won for us by Jesus Christ God and man, our only and sufficient Saviour and advocate, Amen.
LETTER II. From Mr. WHITTLE to his dear Friend and Brother JOHN WENT, and other his Fellow-Prisoners in Lollards'-Tower.
HE that preserved Joseph, prisoner in Egypt, fed Daniel in the lion's den, and delivered Paul, Peter, and the apostles out of prison, vouchsafe of his goodness to keep, fe [...]d, and deliver you, my good brother Went, with the other our fellow-soldiers your prison-fellows, as may be most to his glory, to your consolation, and the edification of his church.
I cannot but praise God most earnestly, when I hear of your constancy in the faith, and joy in the cross of Christ, which you now bear and suffer together, with many other good members of Christ, which is a token that by Christ you are counted worthy of the kingdom of God, as St. Paul saith. And though the world counteth the yoke and cross of Christ as a most pernicious and hurtful thing, yet we which have tasted how friendly the Lord is, cannot but rejoice in this persecution as touching ourselves; inasmuch as the cause for which we suffer is the Lord's cause and not our's, at whose hand, if we endure to the end, we shall receive, through his liberal promise in Christ, not only a great reward in heaven, but also in the mean season be sure to be defended and cared for, so that we shall lack no necessary things, neither a hair of [...] heads shall perish without his knowledge. O what is he that would mistrust, or not gladly serve so loving a Father! O how unhappy are they that forsake him, and put their trust in man; but how blessed are they that for his love and for his holy word's sake, in these troublesome days do comm [...] their souls and bodies into his hands with well doing, counting it greater happiness and riches to suffer rebuke with Christ and h [...]s church, than to enjoy the pleasures of this life for a short season? This cross that we now bear hath been common to all the faithful from Abel hitherto, and shall be to the end, because the devil having great wrath against God and his Christ, cannot abide that he should for his manifold mercies be lauded and magnified, and Christ to be taken and believed upon for our only sufficient Redeemer, Saviour, and Advocate: and therefore because we will not deny Christ, nor dissemble with our faith, but openly protest and profess the same before the world, he seeketh by all means to stir up his wicked members to persecute and kill the bodies of the true christians; as St. John saith, "The devil shall cast some of you into prison." And David saith, "I believed, and therefore have I spoken, but I was sore troubled." Notwithstanding this, go forward, dear brethren, as ye have begun, to fight the Lord's [Page 137] battle, considering Christ the captain of your war, who will both fight for you, give you victory, and also highly reward your pains. Consider to your comfort the notable and chief shepherds and soldiers of Christ, which are gone before us in these days, I mean those learned and godly bishops, doctors, and other ministers of God's word; whose faith and examples we that are inferiors ought to follow; as St. Paul saith, "Remember them that have declared unto you the word of God, the end of those conversation see that you look upon, and follow their faith." The grace and blessing of God, with the ministry of his holy angels, be with you for ever, Amen. All my prison-fellows greet you. From the Coal-house, this 4th of December.
LETTER III. From Mr. WHITTLE to all the true Professors and Lovers of God's Holy Gospel within the City of London.
THE same faith for which Abraham was counted righteous, and Mary blessed, the Lord God increase and make stable in your hearts, my dear and faithful brethren and sisters of London, for ever and ever, Amen.
DEARLY beloved, be not troubled in this which is now come amongst you to try you, as though some strange thing had happened unto you, but rejoice inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ's passions, that when his glory appeareth, ye may be merry and glad, &c. Out of these words of St. Peter I gather more especially these four notes. First, that persecution happeneth to Christ's church for their trial, that is, for the probation and proof of their faith. Which faith, like as it is known with God in the depth of our hearts, so will he have it made manifest to the whole world through persecution, that so it may evidently appear that he hath such a church and people on earth, which so trusteth in him and feareth his holy name, that no kind of persecution, pains, nor death, shall be able to separate them from the love of him. And thus was Abraham tried, and [...] tempted, that their faith, which before lay hid almost in their hearts, might be made known to the whole world to be so stedfast and strong, that neither the devil▪ natural love, nor any other enemy could bereave them thereof. Whereby also God was to be magnified, who hath tried his people by many tribulations, and also standeth by them in the midst of their troubles, to deliver them by life or death as he seeth best: like as he assisted Lot and delivered him out of his enemy's hands; Joseph out of the hands of his brethren, and out of prison; Paul from his enemies in Damascus, and the apostles out of the stocks and prison.
THESE with many more he delivered to life; and also he delivered Abel, Eleazar, Stephen, and John Baptist, with many others by death, and hath also by the trial of their faith made them good precedents and examples to us and all that come after, to suffer affliction in the like cause: as [...] saith, Take, my brethren (saith he) the prophets for an example of suffering adversity and of long patience, which spake unto you in the name of the Lord: behold, we count them happy which endur [...]. Ye have heard of the patience of Job, and have known what end the Lord made with him, for the Lord is very pitiful and merciful. Also the Lord trieth us, to let us see our own hearts and thoughts, that no hypocrisy or ambition deceive us, and that the strong in Christ may pray that he fall not, but to endure to the end; and that those that fall through fearful infirmity, might speedily repent and rise again with Peter, and also that the weak ones might bewail their weakness, and cry with David, Psal. vi. "Have mercy upon me, O Lord, for I am weak: O Lord, heal me, for all my bones are vexed."
OF this opening of the heart by persecution spak [...] holy Simeon to Mary, Christ's mother, when he said, The sword, that is, the cross of persecution, shall pierce thy soul, that the thoughts of many hearts may be opened. For like as a king that should go to battle, is compelled to look in his coffers what treasure he hath, and also what number and puissance of men and weapons he hath, so that if he himself be unready and unarmed to fight his enemy, he ceaseth and taketh truce for a time: even [Page 138] so we by persecutions have our hearts opened, that we may look therein to see what faith in Christ we have, and what strength to withstand the enemies, and to bear the cross, that if we be rich in these treasures, we might rejoice, and valiantly go to battle; or if we want these things, we might with all spend call and cry upon him who giveth all good gifts to those that ask them. Item, The cross [...]rieth the good people from the bad, the faithful from the worldlings and hypocrites, and also cleanseth and scoureth the faithful hearts from all corruption and filthiness, both of the flesh and the spirit. And even as iron▪ except it be often scoured, will soon wax rusty; so except our sinful hearts and flesh be often scoured with the whetstone of the cross, they will soon corrupt and evergrow with the rust of filthiness and sin. And therefore it is meet and good for us (as the wise man saith) that as gold and silver is tried in the fire, so should the hearts of acceptable men be tried in the furnace of adversity. Abide the trial (dear friends), that ye may obtain the crown of life. Fight manfully in this the Lord's cause, that ye may obtain a glorious victory here, and receive greater reward in heaven hereafter.
AS ye are called christians, and would be angry to be called Jews or Turks, so declare your christianity by following the steps of Christ, whose name ye bear; suffer with him and for his gospel's sake, rather than deny him or defile your faith and conscience with false worshipping of Romish religion.
TAKE up your cross (my hearts) now when it is offered you, and go up with Christ to Jerusalem amongst the bishops, priests, and rulers, if God call you thereto, and they will anon send you to Calvary: from whence (dying in the cause of the gospel, wherein our good preachers and brethren have given their lives) your souls (I warrant you) through Christ Jesus shall ascend to God that gave them, and that body shall come after at the last day, and so shall ye dwell with the Lord for ever in unspeakable joy and bliss. O blessed are they that suffer persecution for righteousness' sake▪ Christ's people in this Jewish England now doth; for their's [...]s the kingdom of heaven. O my beloved▪ set your mind on this kingdom where Christ our head and king is; considering that as the brute beast looketh downwards with the face towards the earth; so man is made contrariwise with his face looking upwards towards the heavens, because his conversation should be in heaven and heavenly t [...]ings, and not upon the earth and earthly thing [...], as St. Paul saith, Coloss. iii. Set your mind on things [...] are above, where Christ is. And again he saith, Phil. iii. Our conversation is in heaven, fr [...]m whence we look for our Saviour, who will change our vile bodies, and make them like to his glorious body. O the glorious estate that we be called unto▪ The Lord preserve us harmless unto his eternal kingdom through Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen.
THE second thing that I note in the aforesaid words of Peter, is, that he calleth persecu [...]ion no strange thing. And truth it is: for which of the prophets were not persecuted, with Christ and his apostles, and some of them in the end cruelly killed for the truth's sake? Cain killed Abel, Isaac was persecuted of Ishmael, Jacob was hated of Esau, Joseph was imprisoned and set in the stocks, the prophet Isaiah was cut in two with a saw, Jeremiah was stoned, Micah was buffeted and fed with bread and water, Elias was sore persecuted, Eleazar, and the woman with her seven sons, were cruelly killed. What Christ and the apostles suffered i [...] well known. So that by many tribulations (as Paul saith, Acts xiv.) we must enter into the kingdom of heaven. All the holy prophets, Christ and his apostles, suffered such afflictions not for evil doing, but for preaching God's word, for rebuking the world of sin, and for their faith in Jesus Christ.
THIS is the ordinance of God (my friends), this is the high way to heaven, by corporal death to eternal life; as Christ saith, John v. He that heareth my words▪ and believeth in him that sent me, hath eternal life, and shall not come to judgment, but is esc [...]ped from death to life. Let us never fear death, which is ki [...]led by Christ, but believe in him, and live forever, as St. Paul saith, Rom. viii. There i [...] no [...] to th [...]m that are in Christ Jesus, which [...] not [...] the flesh, but after the [...] 1 Cor. xv. [...] [Page 139] thy [...]ctory? Thanks be to God▪ who hath given us the victory through Jesus Christ.
BESIDES this, ye have seen, and do daily see, the blood of your good pr [...]achers and brethren, which hath been shed in the gospel's cause in this sinful Sodom, this bloody Jerusalem, this unhappy city of London. Let not their blood be forgotten▪ nor the blood of your good bishop Ridley, who like a shepherd, to your comfort and [...]xample, hath given his life for his sheep. Good St. Paul saith, Heb. xiii. Remember them that have spoken to you the word of God, and look upon the end of their conversation, and follow their faith.
THE devil ever stirreth up false teachers, as he hath done now over all England, as Peter, Paul, and Jude proph [...]sied it should be, to poison and kill our souls with the false doctrine. And where he faileth of his purpose that way, then moveth he his members to persecute the silly carcasses of the saints, because they will not deny nor dissemble their pure faith in our living Christ, and confess a dead breadly Christ, and honour the same as Christ God and man, contrary to God's commandment, Exod. xx.
THIS is the working of Satan, who knowing his own just damnation, would have all mankind to b [...] partakers with him of the same; such a mortal hatred beareth▪ he against God and his p [...]ople. And therefore when this wicked tempter could not kill Christ, with subtle temptation to fall down and worship him, then he stirred up his servants the bishops and phar [...]sees to kill his body, whereby notwithstanding the devil lost his title and interest which he had to m [...]n's s [...]ul, and man by his precious passion and death was ransomed from the devil, death, and hell, to immortality and li [...]e everlasting: and so when Satan thought to have won all in ki [...]ling [...]f Christ▪ he lost all: and so shal [...] [...] do in us, if we abide const [...]nt and strong in the faith of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ unto the end. God gr [...]nt it for his mercy's sake in Christ. Bl [...]ssed are all they that put their trust in him. Amen.
WH [...]REFORE (my hearty beloved br [...]thren and sisters) be of good comfort through Jesus Christ, for he that is in us is stronger than he that is in the world. Therefore draw ye near to God, and he will draw near to you. Resist the devil, and he will (as St. James saith) flee from you. Beware of the leaven of the pharisees. Touch no [...] pitch lest ye be defiled therewith. Eat no swine's flesh for it is against the law; I mean, defile not yourself either inwardly or outwardly with this false and wicked religion of Antichrist: for it is nothing else but pitch and swine's flesh. Beware of the beast's mark, lest ye drink of the cup of God's wrath. If God hath given you knowledge and faith, dissemble not therewith. Deny not the known verity before men, lest Christ deny you before his Father. Come away from Babylon, as St. John biddeth, Rev. xviii. and touch no unclean thing, but separate yourselves from the company of the ungodly, as St. Paul commandeth you. Whatsoever ye have done amiss here [...]ofore, now repent ye and amend: for with the Lord there is mercy and plenteous redemption.
THE third thing and note which I gather out of the aforesaid words of Peter, is this, that he saith, Rejoice, because ye are partakers of Christ's passion Our sufferings (my well beloved) are Christ's [...]ufferings, and that injury that is done to us for his sake, he reckoneth it to be done to himself, as he said unto St. Paul, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? Therefore we ought to rejoice in our sufferings, as St. Paul writeth, which we suffer with Christ, one with another, as St. Peter said, and to [...]ulfil that which is behind of the passions of Christ in our fl [...]sh; which Christ hath, by his passion, fully redeemed and saved us in his own person: howbeit, his elect must suffer with him and for him unto the world's [...], that he may be glorified in them, and they thereby corrected and cleansed from sin in this world, and be made more meet temples for the Holy Ghost, and also obtain a great reward in heaven for their suffering for righteous [...]es [...] sake, according to [...]is promise. And therefore I say (my b [...]ethren) rejoice in the Lord always, and ag [...]in I say, rejoice Let us rejoice in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ whereby the world is crucifi [...]d to us and we to the world.
AN [...] why should we so greatly rejoice in the cross of Christ, which we now suffer? Because (saith [Page 140] St. Peter) when his glory appeareth, we may be merry and glad. And this is the fourth note that I gather out of his words above written. Wherein is set out the reward of suffering, not to be had in this wo [...]ld; but at his coming to judgment when we shall be raised again: and then shall they that have sown in tears reap in joy, as Christ saith, Blessed are they that weep here, for they shall laugh. Blessed are ye when men hate you, thrust you out of their company, railing on you, and abho [...]ring your name as an evil thing for the Son of man's sake: rejoice ye in that day and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven.
WHEREFORE (my dearly beloved) through the hope of this heavenly joy and reward, which he that cannot lie hath promised (which joy is so great that no ear hath heard, no eye hath seen, no [...] the heart can think, where we shall dwell for ever in the heavenly city, the celestial Jerusalem, in the presence of God the Father, and Jesus Christ our Mediator, as Paul sai [...]h, and in the company of innumerable angels, and with the spirits and souls of all just men), rejoice and be glad: and seeing ye be called to so great a glory, see that you make your election and vocation sure by good works, and especially by suffering adversity for the gospel's sake: for it is given us of God, saith St. Paul, not only to believe in Christ, but also to suffer for his sake. Continue in prayer, and pray for me, that I may end my course with joy. Have brotherly love amongst yourselves, which is a token that ye be Christ [...]s disciples. Edify and comfort one another in the word of the Lord, and the God of p [...]ce and love be with you always, Amen. For your liberality and kindness shewed upon the prisoners and afflicted people of God in this time of persecution, the Lord will reward you when he cometh to reward every man according to his deeds, and will not leave a cup of cold water bestowed upon his faithful people unreward [...]d. God make you rich in all grace, that ye always having sufficient, may be rich unto all manner of good works.
THE grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Ghost, be with you always. Amen.
LETTER IV. From Mr. WHITTLE to his loving and faithful Brother, JOHN CARLLESS, Prisoner in the King's-Bench.
THE same faith for which Abraham was accounted just, and Mary blessed, whereby also just men live, the Lord God our loving Father increase and establish in you and me, to the obtaining of eternal life in our alone and sweet Saviour Jesus Christ, Amen.
I cannot worthily and sufficiently praise God (my heartily beloved brother) for the consolation and joy that I have received by reason of your loving letters, repenting me much that I being so long so near you, did not endeavour to stir up familiarity and communication between us by writing, to mutual consolation in Christ. For what is there upon earth wherein to rejoice (where all things are transitory and vain, yea man himself respecting this life) but as David saith, Psal. xvi. The saints that dwell upon the earth, and such as excel in virtue? But here now I consider, that if the fellowship, love, and joy of faithful men and children of God being as we now be, in double bondage, the body within clay walls, and the soul within these frail earthly bodies, be so great and comfortable; how unspeakable will these joys be, when we shall be delivered from all corruption into the glorious liberty of the sons of God? where we shall be present together continually in our glorified bodies, beholding the face of our heavenly Father (whom now we see but in the glass of faith) with his dear Son Christ our Redeemer and brother, and the blessed company of angels, and all the faithful saved souls.
ON the incomparable good things, and heavenly treasures laid up for us in heaven by Jesus Christ; for the obtaining whereof, we ought to set light by all temporal grief and transitory afflictions, so much the more, in that our God is faithful, and will not suffer us to be tempted above our strength, and that namely in the end of our life, when the tree where it falleth lieth still, as the preacher saith, Eccles. xi. for else before the end he suffereth his sometimes to fall, but not finally to perish: as Peter sinked upon the sea, but yet was not drowned▪ and sinned grievously upon the land through infirmity denying his master, but yet found mercy: for the righteous [Page 141] falleth often times. And Christ's holy apostles are taught to say, Forgive us our trespasses. Yea though the righteous fall, saith David, he shall not be cast away, for the Lord upholdeth him with his hand. On the bottomless mercy of God towards us miserable sinners! May he vouchsafe to plant in my heart true repentance and faith, to the obtaining of the remission of all my sins in the mercies of God, and merits of Christ his Son, and thereto I pray you say, Amen.
O my dearly beloved, it grieveth me to see the spoil and havock that Saul maketh with the congregation of Christ: but what remedy? This is God's will and ordinance, that his people shall here both be punished in the flesh, and tried in their faith: as it is written, "Many are the troubles of the righteous, but the Lord delivereth them out of all;" for by a strait path and narrow door must we enter. Whither? Into the joyfu [...] kingdom of heaven: therefore blessed are you and others that suffer persecution for Christ's sake, for the profession of the same. Pray for me and my fellows, good brother, that we may fight a good fight, that we may keep the faith, and end our course with joyful gladness, for now the time of our deliverance is at hand. The Lord guide, defend, and keep us and you, and all his people in our journey, that we may safely thro' a short death pass to that long lasting life.
FAREWEL, my de [...]r and loving brother and fellow-soldier in Christ; farewel, I say, in him: who receive our souls in peace when they shall depart from these tabernacles, and may he grant us a joyful resurrection, and a merry meeting at the last day, and continual dwelling together in his eternal heavenly kingdom, through Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen.
LETTER V. From Mr. WHITTLE to his dear Brethren, Mess. FILLLS and CUTBERT.
MY dear and well beloved brethren in Christ, [...] and C [...]t [...]ert, I wish you all [...] of soul and body. W [...]here to the soul is repentance of sin, faithful assistance in Christ Jesus, and a godly life. Welfare to the body is the health of the same, with all necessary things for this life. The soul of man is immortal, and ther [...] fore ought to be well kept, lest immortality of joy should turn to immortality of sorrow. As for the body, be it ever so well kept and made much of, yet shortly by nature will it perish and decay: but those that are ingrafted and incorporated into Christ by true faith, feeling the motion of God's holy Spirit as a pledge of their election and inheritance, exciting and stirring them not only to seek heavenly things, but also to hate vice, and embrace virtue, will not only do these things, but also if need require, will gladly take up their cross and follow their captain, their king, and their Saviour Jesus Christ (as his poor afflicted church of England now doth), against that false and antichristian doctrine and religion now used, and especially that blasphemous mass, wherein Christ's supper and holy ordinance is altogether perverted and abused, contrary to his institution, and to Paul's proceedings: so that that which they have in their mass, is neither sacrament of Christ, nor yet sacrifice for sin, as the priests falsely pretend. It is a sacrament, that is, as St. Augustine saith, a visible sign of invisible grace, when it is administered to the communicants according to Christ's example, and as it was of late years in this realm. And as for sacrifice, there is none to be made now for sin: "For Christ with one sacrifice hath perfected for ever those that are sanctified."
BEWARE of false religion, and men's vain traditions, and serve God with reverence and godly fear, according to the doctrine of his gospel, whereto cleave ye that ye may be blessed, though of wicked men ye are hated and accursed. Rather drink of the cup of Christ with his church, than of the cup of that rose coloured whore of Babylon, which is fall of abominations. Rather strive ye to go to heaven by the path which is strait to flesh and blood [...] with the little flock, than to go in the wide way, following the enticements of the world and the flesh, which leadeth to damnation.
LIKE as Christ suffered in the flesh, saith St. Peter, so [...] ye yourselves with the same mind: for Christ suffered for us, leaving us an example to [Page 142] follow his footsteps. Blessed are they that suffer for his sake, great is their reward in heaven. He that overcometh (saith St. John, Rev. ii.3.) shall eat of the tree of life; he shall have a crown of life, and shall not be hurt of the second death: he shall be clothed with white array, and not be put out of the book of life; yea, I will conf [...]ss his name, saith Christ, before my Father and before his angels, and he shall be a pillar in the house of God, and sit with me on my seat. And thus I bid you farewel, mine own brethren and dear fellows in Christ, whose grace and peace be always with you, Amen.
LETTER VI. From Mr. THOMAS WHITTLE to a godly Woman.
O My dear and loving sister in Christ, be not dismayed in this storm of pers [...]cution: for Paul c [...]ll [...]th the gospel the word of the cross, because it is never truly taught, but the cross and cruel persecution immediat [...]ly and necessarily doth follow the same▪ and therefore it is a manifest token of God's truth, and hath been here and is still abroad, and that is the cause of the rage and cruelty of Satan ag [...]inst Ch [...]ist and his members, which must be co [...]rected for their sins in this world: th [...]ir faith must be tried, and after trial and p [...]tient suffering the faithful m [...]y rec [...]iv [...] [...] crown of glory. Fear not therefore my well beloved, but pro [...]eed in the k [...]wl [...]dge and fear of God, and he will keep you from all evil. Call upon his holy name, and he will strengthen you and [...]ssist you in all you [...] ways; and if it pl [...]ase him to l [...]y his [...] upon you for his gos [...]p [...]l's sak [...], refuse it n [...]t, [...] it off by unlawful means, lest you should (as God forb [...]d) find a more grievous cross and torment of conscience, if you should dissemble and deny the know [...] verity, than is any persecution or death of body. O how happy are they that suffer pers [...]cution for righteousness sake? their reward is great in heaven. The momentary afflictions of this life are not worthy of contrast with the glory that shall be shewed upon us. O remember the godly women of the Old and New Testament, who lived in God's service and fear, and therefore are now in bliss and commended for ever: namely, Judith, Esther, Abigail, the mother of the seven sons, Mary, Elizabeth, Susanna, Lydia, Phebe, and others. Set their examples before your eyes, and fear nothing▪ for Satan is conquered by our Saviour Christ; [...] is put to flight, and the gate of immortality and eternal life is set wide open: God grant we [...] enter therein through the door Jesus Christ, Amen.
The HISTORY of Mr. BARTLET GREEN.
AFTER the martyrdom of Mr. Whittle, ne [...]t followeth in order to speak of Bartlet Green, who the next day after the aforesaid Whittle, was likewise condemned. Mr. Green was of a good house, and had such parents, as both favoured le [...]rning, and were also willing to bring up this their child in the same. After some entr [...]nce in other inf [...]rior schools, he was sent to the university of Oxford; where through exercise and diligently study he so profited, that within short time he attained, as well to the knowledge of sundry profane sciences, as [...]lso now in hi [...] last year [...] unto the godly understanding of divinity. Whereunto through ignorance (in which he [...] trained up from his youth) he was at the first [...], until such time [...]s God of his mercy had [...] his eyes, by his oft [...]n [...]pairing unto the c [...]mmon lectures of P [...]ter Ma [...]ter, reader of the divinity lecture [...] in the same university, so that thereby (as by God's instrument) he saw the true light of Christ's gospel.
WHEN he had once t [...]sted of this, it became unto [Page 143] him as the fountain of living water, that our Saviour Christ sp [...]ke of to the woman of Samaria, so as he never thirsted any more, but had a well springing unto everl [...]sting l [...]fe. Insomuch as when he was called by his fri [...]nds from the university, and was placed in the Temple [...] London, there to attain to the knowledge of the common laws of the realm, he [...] sti [...]l in his former study and earnest profession of the gospel; wherein also he greatly profited Howbeit (such is the frailty of o [...]r corrupt nature, without the special assistance of God's Holy [...]pirit) through the continual accompanying, and fe [...]l [...]wship of such worldly (I will not say youthful and wild) young gentlemen, as are commonly in that and the like houses, he became by little and little a co [...]partner of their follies and youthful vanities, as well in his apparel as also in banquetings, and other superfluous excesses: [...] he afterwards (being again called by God's merciful correction) did sore lament and bewail, as appeareth by his own testimony, notified and le [...]t in a book belonging to Mr. Bartram Calthrop, one of his friends, written with his own hand, a little before his death, in manner as followeth:
"TWO things have very much troubled me while I was in the Temple, pride and gluttony; which under the colour of glory and good fellowship, drew me almost from God. Against both there is one remedy, by earnest prayer, and without ceasing. And forasmuch as vain-glory is so subtle an adversary, that almost it woundeth deadly, ere ever a man can perceive himself to be smitten, therefore we ought so much the rather by continual prayer to labour for humbleness of mind. Truly, gluttony beginneth under a charitable pretence of mutual love and society, and hath in it most uncharitableness. When we seek to refresh our bodies, that they may be the more apt to serve God, and perform our duties towards our neighb [...]urs, then it stealeth in as a privy thief, and murdereth both body and soul, that now it is not apt to pray, or serve God, apt to study, or labour for our neighbour. Let us therefore watch and be s [...]ber: for our adversary the devil walketh about like a ro [...]ring lion seeking whom he may devour. And remember what Solomon sai [...]h, A p [...]tient man is better than a strong warrior, and he that conquer [...]th his own stomach is better than he that conquereth towns and cities.
"AGREEMENT of minds joining in unity of faith, and growing up in charity, is true and stedfast amity. Farewel (my Bartram), and remember me, that ever we may be like together. Farewel, at Newgate, Jan. 26, 1 [...]56.
THUS w [...] see the fatherly kindness of our most gracious and merciful God, who never suffereth his elect children so [...]o f [...]ll, that they lie st [...]ll in security of sin, but oftentimes quickeneth them up by some such means, as perhaps they think least of, as he did here this his strayed sheep. And now therefore to return to our history: For the better maintenance of himself in these his studies, and other his affairs, he had a large exhibition of his grandfather, Mr. Doctor Bartle [...], who during the time of Green's imprisonment made unto him large offers of great livings, if he would recant, and (forsaking the truth and the gospel of Christ) come home again to the church and synagogue of Rome. But those his persuasions (the Lord be praised) took small effect in his faithful heart, as the sequel did declare. He was a man beloved of all men (except the papists, who love none that love the truth), and so he well deserved: for he was of a meek, humble, discreet, and most gentle behaviour to all. Injurious he was to none, beneficial to many, especially to those who were of the houshold of faith, as appeareth, amongst others, by his friendly dealing with Mr. Christopher Goodman, at that time a poor exile beyond the seas. With whom this Bartlet Green (as well for his toward learning, as also for his sober and godly b [...]haviour) had often society in Oxford, in the days of good king Edward: who now, notwithstanding his friend's misery and banishment, he did not lightly forget; and that turned, as it happened (not without the providence of Almighty God) to the great grief of both; the one of heart, for the loss of his friend, and the other of body, in suffering the cruel and murdering rage of papists.
THE cause hereof was a letter which Green wrote unto the said Goodman, containing as well the report of certain demands or questi [...]ns, which were cast abroad in London (as appeareth hereafter in a letter of his own penning, whch he intended to [Page 144] have sent to Mr. Philpot, wherein he fully declareth his usage before the bi [...]op of London, and others,) as also an answer to a question made by [...] said Christopher Goodman, in a letter written unto him, in which he required to have the certainty of the report which was spread amongst them on the other side of the seas, that the queen was dead. Whereunto Mr. Green simply answered and as the truth then was, that [...] dead.
THESE letters, with many others, written to div [...] of the godly exiles, by their friends here in England, being delivered to a messenger to [...], came by the apprehension of the [...] the hands of the king and queen's council. Who, at their convenient leisure (which in th [...]se days by some of them was quickly found for such matters) [...]cused the whole number of the said letters, and amongst them espied this letter of [...] Green's, written to his friend Christopher Good [...]man, in the contents whereof (amongst other news and private matters) they found these words, The queen is not yet dead. Which words were only written as an answer, to certify Mr. Goodman of the truth of his former demand. Howbeit (to some of the council) they seemed very heineous words, ye [...] treason they would have made them, if the law would have suffered. Which when they could not do (and being yet very loth to let any depart freely whom they suspected to be favourers of the gospel) they then examined him upon his faith in religion, but upon what points it is not certainly known.
NEVERTHELESS (as it seemeth) his answers were such as little pleased them (especially the anointed sort), and there [...]re after they had detained him in prison, as well in the Tower of London as elsewhere, they sent him at last to Bonner, bishop of London, to be ordered according to his ecclesiastical law; as appeareth by their letters sent to the bishop, with the said prisoner also: wherein it may appear that sir John Bourne (then secretary to the queen) was a chief stirrer in such cases, yea, and an [...]nticer of the council▪ who otherwise (if for fear they durst) would have been content to let such matters alone. The Lord forgive them their weakness, if it be his good pleasure, and give all such men true repentance, Amen.
A LETTER Sent to [...] London, by the [...] Day of November, [...] the 17th Day of the same [...]
AFTER our hearty commendations [...] good lordship, we send to the [...] the body of Bartlet Green, who hath of [...] remained in the Tower for his obstinate [...] against the catholic religion, [...] queen's majesties pleasures [...] lordship's diocese) ye shall [...] according to the laws in such cases [...] we bid your lordship [...]. From St James's, the 1 [...]th of [...] 155 [...].
- Winchester,
- Pembroke,
- Tho. Ely,
- William [...]
- John Bourne,
- Thomas [...]
POSTSCRIPT. I sir John Bourne will [...] your lordship, and signify further the [...] queen's majesties pleasure herein.
THAT ye may the better understand the [...] of the ill usage he met with in Bonner's [...] I have thought it good to put forth his own [...] cont [...]ining at large an account of the same. [...] letter he wrote intending to have sent it [...] Philpot, but, either by Mr. Philpot's [...] (more probably) by the watchfulness of his [...] he was prevented: for it came (by what [...] know not) to the bishop's hands, and [...] to his register, was found in one of his [...] of record. The copy whereof here followeth.
A LETTER Of BARTLET GREEN, written to JOHN PHILPOT, [...]taining, besides other particular Matters [...] and Mr. PHIL [...]T, a brief rehearsal of [...] Conferences with Bishop BONNER and others▪ his first coming before them.
THAT which was wanting in talk ( [...] my default) at your being here, I have s [...] plied by writing in your absence, now at length getting [Page 145] some opportunity and leisure. The 17th day of November, being brought hither by two of the clock in the afternoon, I was presented before my lord of London, and other two bishops, Mr. Deane, Mr. Roper, Mr. Welch, Dr. Harpsfield, archd [...]con of London, and two or three others, all setting at one table. There were present Dr. Dale, Mr. George Mordaunt, Mr. Dee. Then after the bishop of London had read unto himself the letter that came from the council, he spake with [...] words, but (as I remember) to this effect; that the cause of their assembly was, to hear my examination, whereunto he had authority by the council, and had provided Mr. Welch and another, whose name I know not, (but well I remember, though he obtained it not, yet desired he my lord, that I might hear the council's letters) to be there [...] matters of the common law arise, to discuss [...], he intreated my lord to determine all con [...]oversies of scriptures; and for the civil law, he [...] Dr. Dale should take on them.
WHEREFORE he demanded of me the cause of my imprisonment: I said, that the occasion of my apprehension was a letter which I wrote to one Christopher Goodman, wherein (certifying him of such news as happened here) among the rest, I wrote that there were certain printed papers of questions scattered abroad. Whereupon, being suspected to be privy to the devising or publishing of the same, I was committed to the Fleet: but, after the commissioners had received my submission, I heard nothing thereof. The sum whereof was, that as I was sure there neither could be true witnesses, nor probable conjecture against me in that behalf, so refused I no punishment, if they of their consciences would judge me privy to the devising, printing, or publishing of those questions. But my lord affirming that there was another cause of my imprisonment, demanded if I had not after, since I was committed to the Fleet, spoken or written somewhat against the natural presence of Christ in the sacrament of the altar.
THEN I desired his lordship to be good unto me, trusting that he would not put me to answer to new matters, except I were first discharged of the old. And when I stood long in that, Mr. Welch answered, that it was procured that I should so do, right well. For albeit I were imprisoned for treason, if [...]ring the time of my confinement I had maintained heresy that were no sufficient allegation against the ordinary; neither whether I were before him acquitted or condemned, should it take away the former fault. Then my lord affirming that I was not brought before him but for heresy, and the other gentleman saying, that doubtless I was discharged of my former matter; my desire was, that I might be charged according to the order of the law, to hear my accusers.
THEN Dr. Chedsey was sent for, who reported that in the presence of Mr. Mosley and the lieutenant of the Tower, I spake against the real presence and the sacrifice of the mass, and that I affirmed their church was the church of Antichrist.
IS not this true? said my lord. I said, Yea. Will you continue therein? said he. Yea, said I. Wilt thou then maintain it by learning? said he. Therein, quoth I, I should shew myself to have little wit, knowing mine own youth and ignorance, if I would take on me to maintain any controversy against so many grave and learned men. But my conscience was satisfied in the truth, which was sufficient to my salvation.
Conscience! said Mr. Roper, so shall every Jew and Turk be saved.
WE had hereafter much talk to no purpose, and especially on my part, who felt in myself, through cold and open air, much dulnes [...] of wit and memory. At length I was asked what conscience was: and I said the certifying of the truth.
WITH that Mr. Welch rose up, desiring leave to talk with me alone. So he taking me aside into another chamber, said that he was sorry for my trouble, and would gladly see me at liberty: he marvelled that I being a young man, would stand against all the learned men of the realm, yea and contrary to the whole determination of the catholic church from Christ's time, in a matter wherein I could have no great learning; I must not think mine own wit better than all men's, but I should [Page 146] believe them that were learned. I promise you (quoth he) I have read all Peter Martyr's book, and Cranmer's, and all the rest of them, and have conferred them with the contrary, as the bishop of Winchester, &c. and could not perceive but that there was one continual truth, which from the beginning had been maintained; and those which at any time severed from this unity, were answered and answered again. This was the sum of his tale, which lacked both wit and eloquence.
Forasmuch as it pleaseth your mastership to use me so familiarly (for so he behaved himself towards me, as though I had been his equal) I shall open my mind freely unto you, desiring you to take it in good part. I consider my youth, lack of wit and learning, which would to God it were but a little under the opinion that some men have of me. But God is not bound to time, wit, or knowledge, but rather chuseth the weak of the world that they may confound the strong; neither can men appoint bounds to God's mercy: For, I will have compassion, saith he, on whom I will shew mercy. There is no respect of persons with God, whether it be old or young, rich or poor, wise or foolish, fisher or basket-maker. God giveth knowledge of his truth, through his free grace, to whom he list, James i. Neither do I think myself only to have the truth, but stedfastly believe that Christ hath his spouse, the catholic and universal church, dispersed in many realms where it pleaseth him, the Spirit blowing where it listeth: no more is he addicted to any one place, than to the person and quality of one man. Of this church I nothing doubt myself to be a member, trusting to be saved by the faith that is taught in the same. But how this church is known, is in a manner the end of all controversy. And the true marks of Christ's church is the true preaching of his word, and administering of his sacraments. These marks were sealed by the apostles, and confirmed by the ancient fathers, till at length they were, through the wickedness of men and the devil▪ sore worn, and almost utterly taken away. But God be praised that he hath renewed the print, that his truth may be known in many places. For myself, I call God to witness, I have no hope in mine own wit and learning, which is very small; but I was persuaded thereto by him, as by an instrument, that is excellent in all good learning and living. And God is my record, that chiefly I sought it of him by continual prayer with tears.
FURTHERMORE, what I have done herein, it [...] not needful for me to speak: but one thing, I say, I wish of God with all my heart, that all men which are of contrary judgment, would seek the truth in like manner. Now I am brought hither before a great many bishops and learned men, [...] be made a fool and laughing-stock, but I value it not a rush: for God knoweth that my whole study is to please him: besides that, I care not for [...] pleasure or displeasure.
No, Mr. Green, said he, think not so uncharitably of any man, but judge rather that men labour for your soul's health, as for their [...] But, alas, how will you condemn all our [...] fathers? Or how can you think yourself to [...] the catholic church, without any continuance, [...] contrary to the judgment of all learned men?
Sir, I have no authority to judge any man: nevertheless, I doubt not but that I am of the true catholic church, howsoever our lear [...] men here judge of me.
Why, then do you suppose your own wit and learning better than all their's? If you do not give credit only to them, other learned [...] shall resort unto you, that shall persuade you by the scriptures and doctors.
Sir, God knoweth that I refuse not to learn any child, but I would embrace the truth from the mouth of a natural fool, in any thing wherein I am ignorant, and that in all things, saving my saith: but concerning the truth, wherein I am thorougly persuaded, I cannot submit myself to learn, unless it be, as your mastership said, that I peruse books on both sides. For so might I make myself an indifferent judge; otherwise I may be seduced.
AND here we had a long discourse of the church, wherein his learning and wit was far above mine: but in the end I told him I was persuaded, and that he did but lose his labour.
Why then, what shall I report to my lord?
Even as it pleaseth you, or else you may say that I would be glad to learn, if I had books on both sides.
SO he going in, the bishops (being risen and ready to depart) asked how he liked me? He answered, In faith, my lord, he will be glad to learn. Which words when they were spoken, lest they should mistake his meaning and mine, I said, yea, so that I have books on both sides, as Calvin, and my lord of Canterbury's books, and such others. Well, said my lord, I will satisfy thy mind therein also; and they were all in great hopes, that shortly I should become a good catholic as they call it.
THEN was I brought into my lord's inner chamber (where you were) and there was put in a chamber with Mr. Dee, who treated me very friendly. That night I supped at my lord's table, and lay with Mr. Dee in the chamber you did see. On the morrow I was served at dinner from my lord's table, and at night did eat in the hall with his gentleman; where I have been placed ever since, and fared wonderful well. Yea, to say the truth, I had my liberty within the bounds of his lordship's house: for my lodgings and fare, scarce have I been at any time abroad in better case so long together, and have found so much gentleness of my lord and his chaplains, and other servants, that I should easily have forgotten that I was in prison, were it not that this good chear was often powdered with unsavoury sauces of examinations, exhortations, posings, and disputations.
FOR shortly after supper, the first Monday at night, I was had into my lord's bed chamber, and there he would know of me how I came first into these heresies: I said, I was persuaded thereto by the scriptures, and authorities of the doctors, alledged by Peter Martyr in his lectures upon the eleventh chapter of the first epistle to the Corinthians, while he treated there on that place of the Lord's supper for a month together. But then my lord inforced the plainness of Christ's words, and his almighty power, demanding of me, what reason should move me from the literal sense of the words: but I having no lust to those matters, would have alledged that there were books sufficient of that matter, as Peter Martyr, Cranmer, and Oecolampadius: nevertheless, when this shift would not serve, but I was constrained to say somewhat, I said I was moved from the literal sense by the manner of speaking, by the circumstance, and by conference of other places of the scriptures. It is evident that Christ took bread, and that he shewed them (they seeing it) bread, which he affirmed to be his body.
CHRIST affirmed that bread was body.
BUT that affirmation taken literally, can by no means be true.
ERGO, The words, if they be taken according to the letter, cannot be true.
FOR this predication, Panis est corpus Christi, or, Corpus Christi est panis, is neither Identica nor Accidentalis, nor Essentialis praedicatio. Wherefore of necessity I must say it was spoken in the same sense, as Christ was a door, a vine, and a way. Neither can it serve to say, that it was not bread that he affirmed to be his body, and that for two causes.
FOR whatsoever he shewed, that was bread, for nought else was seen.
BUT that which he shewed he affi [...]med to be his body.
THE second reason is, For that it was not changed before, seeing Benedixit, is Gratias egit, or else Christ affirmed no true proposition, and you are without authority.
IN the end of this letter there were noted these sentences following, collected for confirmation of his former assertions, viz.
Eadem locutio populi, that is, The phrase is used and spoken upon the cup.
Dicitur postea panis. It is called bread in the same place afterwards.
Eadem ratione rejecero corpus, qua tu panem, that [Page 148] is, By the same reason as it may be denied to be bread, it may be denied to be the body.
Ascendit in coelum, that is, His body ascended into heaven.
Corpore nobis fectus est similis in omnibus post nativitatem. At nostrum corpus non potest esse in duobus locis. Ergo, &c. In body he was like to us in all things after his nativity (sin excepted). Seeing then our body cannot be in two places at once: Ergo, neither his.
Discipuli non stupebant, &c. His disciples took it as no miracle nor wonder.
The last Examination and Condemnation of Mr. GREEN.
THUS, as it seemeth, for this time they left off. But not long after the bishop perceiving Green's learning and constancy to be such, as neither he, nor any of his doctors and chaplains could by the scriptures refute, began then to object and put in practice his chief and strongest argument against him; which was the rigour of the law, and cruelty of execution: an argument, I assure you, which without the special grace of our God to flesh is insupportable. And therefore using law as a cloak of his tyranny, the 28th day of November, the said bishop examined him upon certain points of christian religion. Whereunto when he had answered, the bishop appointed the register (as their most common manner is) there to draw out an order of confession: which being afterwards read unto Green, was also subscribed by him, as a confirmation of his former assertions: the tenor whereof here ensueth.
The Confession of BARTLET GREEN.
BARTLET GREEN, born in the city of London, in the parish of Basing-hall, of the diocese of London, and of the age of 25 years, being examined in the bishop's palace the 27th day of November, Anno 1555, upon certain articles▪ answered as followeth, viz. That neither in the time of king Edward, after the mass by him was put down, neither in the time of queen Mary after the mass was restored again, he hath heard [...] mass at all; but he saith that in the reign of the said queen's majesty, he the said Bartlet, two times, to wit, at two Easter-tides or days, in the chamber of John Pulline, one of the preachers in king Edward's time, within the parish of St. Michael's, Cornhill, of the diocese of London, did receive the communion with the said Pulline, and Christopher Goodman, sometime reader of the divinity lecture in Oxford, now gone beyond the sea; and the second time with the said Pulline, and with one Rimneger, Master of Arts, of Magdalen college, in Oxford: and this examinate also saith, that at both the said communions, he and the other [...] named, did take and receive bread and wine, [...] bread and wine he c [...]lled sacramental bread, [...] sacramental wine, which he saith were used there by them, Pulline only reading the words of the institution, expressed in the book of communion.
IN which receiving and using, this examinate saith, that the others aforenamed did receive the sacrament of the Lord's-supper, and that they received material bread and material wine, no substance thereof changed, and so no real presence of the body and blood of Christ there being, but only grace added thereto. And further, this examinate saith, that he had heretofore, during the reign of the queen's-majesty aforesaid, refused▪ and so now doth refuse to come and hear mass, and to receive the sacrament of the altar, as they are now used and administered in this church of England, because he saith, that concerning the mass, he cannot be persuaded in his conscience, that the sacrifice pretended to be in the same, is agreeable to God's word, or maintainable by the same: and that without deadly offence he cannot worship the body and blood of Christ that is pretended to be there. And as concerning the sacrament of the altar, this examinate saith, that he heretofore during the said reign, hath refused, and now doth refuse to receive the same▪ as is now used in this church of England, because it is not used according to the institution of Christ▪ but both in a strange tongue, and also ministered [Page 149] in both kinds; and besides that, contrary to God's word it is there taught, that the thing there administered is to be adored, as the real and true body of Christ. And furthermore this examinate saith, that during the said reign he hath not been confessed to the priest, nor received absolution at his hands, because he is not bound by God's word to make auricular confession.
MANY other conferences and examinations they brought him unto. But in the end (seeing his steadiness of faith to be such, against which neither their threatnings, nor yet their flattering promises could prevail) the 13th day of January the bishop caused him with the rest before mentioned, to be brought into the consistory of St. Paul's; where being set in his judgment seat, accompanied by Mr. Fecknam, then d [...]an of the same church, and other his chaplains, after he had condemned the other six, he then calling for Bartlet Green, began with these, or the like words:
HONOURABLE AUDIENCE, I think it best to op [...]n unto you the conversation of this man, called Bartlet Green. And▪ because you shall not charge me, that I go about to seek any man's blood, here you shall hear the council's letters which they sent with him unto me. The effect whereof is; that whereas he had been a long time confined in the tower of London for heresy, they have now sent him unto me to be ordered, according to the laws therefore provided. And now [...]o thee, Bartlet Green, I propose these nine articles. Then he read the articles before mentioned, which were generally objected to all these seven prisoners, to wit, Thomas Whittle, John Tudson, John Went, Thomas Brown, Isabel Foster, Joan Lashford, Bartlet Green.
BUT when Mr. Green would have answered them particularly▪ he was put to silence, with promise that he should have time to answer sufficiently and therefore [...]he bishop proceeding, said, that when Green came first to his house, he desired to have the books of the ancient doctors of the church to read which he said he granted him.
WHEREUNTO Green answered, and said, that if the doctors were with indifferent judgment weighed, they made more a great deal with him, than they did with them.
UPON which words, Dr. Fecknam, dean of St. Paul's, stood up, and marvelling why he said so, asked him if he would be content to stand to the judgment of the doctors.
GREEN then said, that he was content to stand to the doctors' judgment.
I will then propound unto you (said Fecknam) the doctors, and interpret them yourself. So he alledged a place of Chrysostom, Ad popul. Antioch. which was this: Elias ascendens melotam suam post se reliquit: Christus vero ascendens carnem suam assumpsit, & eandem post se reliquit. "Elias going up, left his cloak behind him: but Christ ascending up took his flesh, and also left it behind him." And he demanded of Green how he understood the place.
THEN Green desired him that he would confer the doctors' sayings together, and therefore alledged the same doctor again, writing upon 1 Cor. x. "Is not the bread which we bless the communication of the Lord's body?" Whereby he proved that this doctor called this sacrament but a sign of the Lord's body. Many other words of probation and trial were between them.
AT last Fecknam demanded of him, how long he had been of this opinion. For Mr. Green, said he, you confessed once to me, that when you were at Oxford at school, you were called the rankest papist in that house, and being compelled to go to the the lecture of Peter Martyr, you were converted from your old doctrine.
AND Green confessed the same.
THEN Fecknam said, that Green told him the said Peter Martyr was a papist at his first coming to Oxford. Whereupon he made an exclamation, and prayed the people to consider how vain his doctrine was that he professed, which was grounded upon one man, and that upon so inconstant a man as Peter Martyr, who perceiving the wicked intent of [Page 150] the council, was content to please them, and forsake the true and catholic faith.
GREEN said, that he grounded not his faith upon Peter Martyr nor any other, nor did believe so because Peter Martyr believed the same; but because he had heard the scriptures, and the doctors of the church truly and wholesomely expounded by him; neither had he any regard of the man, but of the word which he spake. And further he said, that he heard the said Peter Martyr say often, that he had not, while he was a papist, read Chrysostom upon the [...]enth to the Corinthians, nor many other places of the doctors: but when he had read them and wel [...] considered them, he was content to yield to the doctors, having first humbled himself in prayer, desiring God to illuminate him, and bring him to the true understanding of the scripture. Which thing (said Green) if you, my lord, would do, I do not doubt but God would open your eyes, and shew you his truth, no more than I doubt his words to be true that saith, "Ask, and it shall be given to you; knock, and it shall be opened unto you," &c.
THEN Fecknam asked him what he thought of this article, The holy catholic church.
AND Green answered, that he did believe one holy and universal church throughout all the world.
THEN Fecknam said, that he would fain have a sure mark and token, whereby he might know this church: and therefore he prayed Green to define unto him this church.
GREEN answered, that this church did agree in verity with the true doctrine of Christ, and was known by the true administration of his sacraments.
WHEREUPON Fecknam said, that he would prove the church whereof he [...]as to be never agreeing in doctrine, but always to have been in controversy in their religion. For, said he, Luther and Zuinglius could never agree in their writing or sayings, nor Oe [...]mpa [...]ius with Carolost [...]dius, nor Craolostadius with either Zuinglius or Luther, &c. for Luther, writing upon the sacrament of the altar, said, that in this bread, or under this bread we receive the body o [...] the Lord. Zuinglius controuling him, said, under the sign of the bread we receive the body of the Lord. And the other controuled him in like case.
THEN Mr. Green proved their opinions of the sacrament to be one in effect, being rightly weighed▪ and though their words did not sound all one, yet they meant one thing; and their explanations were all one, as he proved by divers other examples.
THEN Fecknam desired him that he would not [...] wilfully cast himself away, but to be rather conformable to reason, and that my lord bishop there present would be good unto him, and would grant him respite (if he would demand it) for a fortnight or three weeks, and that he should chuse [...] learned man whom he would, and should [...] him home to his house: and that he who [...] [...] would chuse would willingly take the pains to [...] and confer on the doctors with him, and open the doctors' minds and meanings unto him.
THEN bishop Bonner said, that he was a proud and an obstinate boy; and therefore he desired Fecknam to hold his peace, and to call him no more Mr. Green: for (said he) you ought not to call an heretic master.
AFTER this Dr. Pendleton alledged to him this text out of the 22d of Luke, "I will eat no more of this, until it be fulfilled in my Father's kingdom." Here, said he, you must confess your opinion to be false, else you must say Christ was a liar: for Christ said, "I will eat no more of this, until it be fulfilled in my Father's kingdom." If Christ did eat no more the bread when he spake these words, then must you say that he was a liar: for he did eat bread after with his disciples, before he ascended. But if you say he did eat his body then, and after but bread, it will not agree with the scriptures, nor with good reason.
THEN Green answered, and said, that this was spoken by an anticipation, as one of their own bishops (who is now de [...]d) did say.
THEN Dr. Pendleton said, that that was no sufficient discharge, nor no sufficient answer for him in this case; for, said he, it is well known that that [Page 151] bishop was of a contrary opinion to you, and that he died a good christian man.
TO which words Green said, I do not call him to witness in this case, as though he were a sufficient man to prove my saying to be true in this matter: but I do alledge him against you, as Paul did the scripture, which he found graven in the altar of the Athenians, against themselves, To the unknown God.
THESE, with many other words were between them, which I pass over, because it were too long to stand upon recital of every thing. Last of all the bishop asked him if he would recant. He said nay, he would not. But, my lord, said he, in old time there were no men put to death for their conscience, until such times as bishops found the means to make it death to believe contrary to them; but excommunication, my lord, was the greatest penalty which men had for their conscience; yea, insomuch that St. Augustine wrote, and commanded that no man should be put to death for his opinion.
THEN Bonner said, that when Augustine saw what inconveniencies followed that commandment, he wrote again to the temporal rulers, commanding them to punish their bodies.
BUT, said Green, he ordered not to put them to death.
HE said, punish them, qouth Bonner.
YEA, said Green, but not put them to death.
THAT they should be punished, quoth Bonner, again.
THIS talk ended, he asked Green if he would recant, and return to his Romish mother. Which when he denied, the bishop pronounced the sentence definitive against him, and so committed him to the sheriffs of London, who caused him to be carried to Newgate.
AND as he was going thither, there met with him two gentlemen, being both his special friends, minding alike to comfort this their persecuted brother: but at their meeting, their loving and friendly hearts (not able any longer to hide themselves) were manifested by the abundance of their pitiful tears. To whom, when Green saw them, he said in these or like words. Ah, my dear friends, is this the comfort you are come to give me, in this my occasion of heaviness? Must I, who needed to have comfort ministered to me, become now a comforter of you? And thus declaring his most quiet peaceable mind and conscience, he chearfully spake to them and others, until he came to the prison door, into which he joyfully entered, and there remained always either in prayer (whereunto [...]he much gave himself) or else in some other godly meditations and exercises, until the 28th day of January, when he with his other before-mentioned brethren, went most ch [...]arfully to the place of their torments, often repeating, both by the way and at the stake, these Latin verses.
In English thus,
DURING the time of his imprisonment in Newgate, divers of his friends had access unto him, to whom he gave sundry godly exhortations, wherewith they were not only well contented, but for a better remembrance of his instructions, as well as of his good and pious person, they desired him to write somewhat in their books, which he readily complied with.
AMONGST other divers and singular good virtues of this good man, especially in him was to be noted such a modest nature, so humbly thinking of himself, as in few is to be found, ever dejecting himself under that which was in him, and ever seeming to be less than he was, so that nothing less could he abide, than to hear of his praise or commendation; which his letter written to Mr. Philpot declareth, wherein he doth earnestly expostulate with him, for slandering him with praise of his wit and learning, and other manifold virtues of great excellency; [Page 152] but also by his own speech and answers in his examination, wherein he casteth from him all knowledge of learning and cunning, when notwithstanding he had [...] him, than to any man's eyes did appear.
SO great and admirable was this gift of modesty grafted in the nature of him, so far abhorring all pride and arrogancy, that as he could not abide any thing that was spoken to his advancement or praise; so neither did there appear any shew or boasting in whose things wherein he might justly glory, which were his punishments and sufferings for the cause and quarrel of Christ. For when he was beaten and scourged with rods by bishop Bonner (which scarce any man would believe, nor I neither, but that I heard it of him, who heard it out of his own mouth), and he greatly rejoiced in the same, yet his modesty was such, that he would never mention it, lest he should seem to glory too much in himself, except only to one Mr. Cotton, an intimate friend, a little before his death.
TO this admirable modesty may be added his excellent and universal compassion to mankind; which, however slighted by some, yet there is nothing in nature that doth more truly resemble the image of the most high Majesty of Almighty God. As, in respect of humanity, man only excelleth a beast, so this man by his merciful tenderness did not only seem to be, but really was, superior to most of his own species. It was his custom to visit the poor prisoners (those that were with him in prison) both with bodily relief and spiritual comfort: and finding many of them (I mean such as were there for theft and other wicked crimes) very penitent, and sorry for their wicked lives, in hope of their amendment, did not only by word of mouth, but also by his letters require, yea, as it were of duty in love, charged his friends to do their utmost endeavours to obtain their liberty: such was the pious and charitable disposition of this true member of Christ's church, whose imitation of divine benignity appeareth in the following letter.
A LETTER Of Mr. GREEN in Behalf of poor Prisoners.
TO my very loving Friends and Masters, Mr. [...], M [...]. Fernham, Mr. Fleetwood, Mr. Russ [...]wel, Mr. Hussey, Mr. Calthorp, Mr. Bowyer, and other my Masters of the Temple, Bartlet Green wisheth Health of Body and Soul.
VERY friends are they who are knit together with the knot of charity; charity doth not decay, but increase in them that die faithfully▪ whereof it followeth, that though we be absent [...] body, yet are we present in the spirit, coupled together with the unity of faith in the bond of p [...]ace, which is love. How is he worthy the name of a friend, that measureth his friendship with the distance of a place, or p [...]ting of persons? If thy friend be out of sight, is thy friendship ended? [...] he be gone into the country, wilt thou cease to love him? if he be passed the sea [...], wilt thou so for sake him? if he be carried into heaven, is charity [...]indered thereby?
ON the one side we have the use of the fathers from the primitive church, who gave thanks for their f [...]ends that died in the faith, to prove that charity died not with death. On the other side, saith Horace, They change their country, not their minds, who sail beyond sea.
WHY speak I of Horace? Saith not St. Paul the same thing? For we are members of his body, of his flesh and of his blood, yea we are members one of another. Is the hand or arm, foot or leg, a member, when it is dissevered from the body? How can we be members, except we be joined together? What is the line that coupleth us but love? When all things shall fail, love never faileth. Hope hath it's end, when we have got that which we hoped for. Faith is finished in heaven; love endureth for ever; love, I say, that proce [...]seth of charity; for carnal love, when that which he loveth is lost, doth perish with the flesh. Neither was that ever but fleshly love, which by distance of place or severing of bodies, is parted asunder. If love be the end or sum of the law; if heaven and earth shall perish, yet one jot of God's word shall not decay, why should we think that love lasteth not for ever?
I need not write much to you, my friends, neither have I leisure now the [...]: but this I say, h [...] we keep Christ's comm [...]dment in [Page]
[Page 153] loving each other, as he loved us, then should our love be everlasting. This friendship St. Paul felt when it moved him to say, That neither length nor breadth (meaning no distance of place), neither heighth nor depth, should sever him from the love of Christ. Weigh this place well, and mete it with St. Paul's measures; so shall we find that if our love be untainted, it can never be ended. Now may you say, Why writest thou this? certainly to the end that if our friendship be stable, you may accomplish this the last request of your friend, and perform after my death the friendship we began in our life, that amity may increase until God make it perfect at our next meeting together.
MR. FLEETWOOD, I beseech you remember Wittrance and Cook, two singular men amongst common prisoners. Mr. Fernham and Mr. Bell, with Mr Hussey, as I hope, will dispatch Palmer and Richardson with his companions. I pray you, Mr. Palmer, think on John Grove, an honest poor man, Traiford and Rice Apprice, his accomplices: my cousin Thomas Witton (a scrivener in Lombard-street) hath promised to further their delivery; at least he can instruct you which way to work. I doubt not but that Mr. Bowyer will labour for the good wife Cooper (for she is worthy to be holpen), and Berard, the Frenchman. There be also other well-disposed men, whose deliverance if ye will not labour for, yet I humbly beseech you to seek their relief, as you shall see cause: namely, of He [...]ry Apprice, Lancelot, Hobbes, Lother, Homes, Carre, and Bockingham, a young man of goodly gifts in wit and learning, and (saving that he is somewhat wild) likely to do well hereafter. There be also two women, Conningham and Alice Alexander, prove honest. For these and all other poor prisoners here I make my humble suit and prayer to you all my masters, and especially good friends, beseeching you of all bonds of amity, for [...]he precious blood of Jesus Christ, in the bowels of mercy, to tender the causes of miserable captives; help to clothe Christ, visit the afflicted, comfort the sorrowful, and relieve the needy. The very God of peace guide your hearts to have mercy on the poor, and love faithfully together, Amen. This present Monday, when I look to die, and live for ever.
A LETTER. Of Mr. GREEN to Mrs. ELIZABETH CLARK.
WOULD God, if it were his pleasure, that with this letter I might send you my heart and mind, and whatsoever there is in me else, that pertaineth to God: so should I think it the best message, and happiest letter that ever I could write. But though I obtain not my desire, yet I shall not cease with continual prayer to labour for you, desiring Almighty God to increase that which he hath long since begun in you, of sober and earnest zeal towards his religion. In faith (as saith St. Paul) she that is a true widow and friendless, putteth her trust in God, continuing day and night in supplication and prayer; but she that liveth in pleasure is dead while she liveth. And verily a true widow is she that hath married Christ, forsaking the vanities of the world, and lust of the flesh. For as the married woman careth how to love, please, and serve her husband, so ought the widow to give all her heart and soul, thought and words, studies and labours, faithfully to love God, virtuously to bring up her children and houshold, and diligently to provide for the poor and oppressed.
THEREFORE St. Paul first instructeth a widow how to behave herself, that is, Not to live in pleasure, then to watch unto prayer, as the only means to obtain all our desires, stedfastly laying up all our trust in God, as David right well saith, First eschew evil, then do good. Of Anna, the praise was written, that she never went out of the temple, but served God with fasting and prayer night and day; so well had she espoused Christ. Judith wore a smock of hair, continuing in fasting, and had good report of all men.
The next care that belongeth to a widow, is, that she bring up her children and houshold godly, in the nurture and information of the Lord. Whereof St. Paul saith, If any have children or nephews, let them learn first to rule their own house godly, and to recompence their elders. The incontinency and covetousness of Phineas and [...]ophni, corrected by Eli their father, provoked God's vengeance upon him and all his kindred. The over tender of love of Absalom expelled David from his kingdom. The unrebuked sins of [Page 154] Amnon encouraged Absolom to slay his brother; most manifest examples against the parents, for the offences of their children.
CONTRARIWISE, how greatly might [...] rejoice over Samuel her son, [...] had brought up in the house of the Lord? What [...] might Tobi [...]'s wife give for her son Toby? How happy was Solomon to be taught by the prophet Nathan? But above all widows, thrice blessed was the happy mother of the seven [...], that [...] so instructed them by the [...] of God, that by no torments they would shrink from the love of his truth?
OF the last part, St. Paul sheweth that a widow should be chosen, if she has nourished her children, if she has been liberal to strangers, if she has washed the [...], and if she [...] to them in adversity. Herein it is evident how earnestly St. Paul would have widows [...] towards the poor; for th [...] (as though they only had been therefore [...]) he appointed only widows to minister to the saints, and to gather for the poor. Which use also continued almost throughout the primitive church, that widows had the charge and gathering for the poor men and strangers.
OF your neighbours I need not put you in remembrance, seeing you daily feed them with good hospitality, by which means also many foreigners are by you relieved: but of the poor alms-houses, and miserable prisoners here in London, many lacking their liberty without cause, some under colour of religion, some only kept for [...]es, and some on private men's displeasure. Alas! th [...] Christ so hungereth, and no man will feed him; is sore oppressed with thrist, and no man will give him drink: destitute of all lodging, and not relieved; naked, and not clothed, sick, and not visited; imprisoned, and not seen.
IN times past men could bestow large sums of money on copes, vestments and ornaments of the church. Why rather follow we not the example of St. Ambrose, who sold the same for the relief of the poor; or the commandment of Chrysostom, who willed first to deck and garnish the living temple of God? But, alas! such is the wickedness of these our last days, that nothing moveth us; neither the pure doctrine, the godliness of [...] good examples of ancient fathers. If in [...] they erred, if they have written any [...] [...] for sects and dissention, that will [...] children embrace, publish, and [...] sword, faggot▪ and fire: but all in vain; [...] against the [...] ▪ For though in despite [...], by force of the [...] of crafty persuasion [...] may bring themselves into the haven of [...] they cannot make all men believe that the [...] move whilst the ship saileth, nor ever shall [...] to turn the direct course of the stream of God's [...] Our Lord Jesus Christ strengthen you in [...] doctrine and upright living, and give you [...] to [...] up your children and family, [...] carefully to provide for the poor and [...] men. At Newgate, the 20th of January, [...] 1556.
Another certain Writing of Mr. BARTLET [...]
BETTER is the day of death, saith [...] th [...]n the day of birth. Man that is [...] woman liveth but a short time, and is [...] with many miseries: but happy are the dead [...] in the Lord. Man of woman is born in [...] live in misery; man through Christ doth die in [...] and live in felicity. He is born to die, and [...] to live. Straight as he cometh into the world, [...] cries he uttereth his miserable estate; straight [...] departeth with songs he praiseth God [...] Scarce yet in his cradle, th [...]e deadly enemies [...] him; after death no adversary can annoy [...] Whilst he is here, he displeaseth God; when [...] dead, he fulfilleth his will. In this life here he [...] through sin; in the life to come he liveth [...] righteousness. Through many tribulations in [...] he is still purged; with joy unspeakable in [...] i [...] he made pure for ever. Here he dieth [...] hour; there he liveth continually. Here is [...] there is righteousness. Here is time; there is eternity. Here is hatred; there is love. Here is pain▪ there is pleasure. Here is misery; there is fe [...]icity. Here is corruption; there is immortality. Here we see vanity; there we shall behold the majesty of God with triumphant and unspeakable joy in glory [Page 155] everlasting. Seek therefore the things that are [...], where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God the Father; unto whom, with the Holy [...], be all honour and glory, world without end, Amen.
[...] were divers [...] letters and matters wrote by this servant of God, as namely certain [...] and extracts in Latin, out of the doctors and other authors, for his memory, whereby is declared, [...] studious he was in the searching and knowledge of the law of God, although his profession was the temporal law. Where I would to God he [...] not among the lawyers such a phenix, that he had very few or no fellows to fly with him, or to [...] his steps. But God is to be praised, that although we read of few or none among that sort that died as he did, yet good witnesses do spring up of the same profession, to such forwardness and godly zeal, that some hope appeareth shortly to come to pass, that this godly phenix shall not fly [...]. These aforesaid no [...]es and gatherings of his out of the doctors, were taken from him by bishop Bonner, being found about him, which was [...] him no little grief. He among the rest was first apprehended, but the last of them condemned, which was the fifteenth day of January, and afterwards burned with other martyrs the 27th of the same month.
III. The History of THOMAS BROWN, Martyr.
THOMAS BROWN, born in the parish of Histon, within the diocese of Ely, came afterwards to London, where he dwelt in the parish of St. Bride's, in Fleet street, a married man of the age of thirty-seven years, who, because he came not to his parish-church, was presented by the constable of the parish to bishop Bonner. The articles on which he was examined, with his answers also annexed to the same, have been already mentioned in the general process against him and his fellow-sufferers. This Thomas Brown being had to Fulham with the others there to be examined, was required to come into the chapel to hear mass, which he refusing to do, went into the warren, and there kneeled among the trees. For this he was greatly charged by the bishop as for an heinous matter, because he said it was done in despite and contempt of their mass; which seemed to the bishop and his chaplains no small offence. At length being produced to his last examination before the said bishop, the 15th day of January, there to hear the definitive sentence against him; first he was required, with many fair words and glossing promises, to revoke his doctrine, to whom the aforesaid bishop speaking these words, said, Brown, you have been before me many times and oft, and I have endeavoured to win thee from thine errors; yet thou, and such like, hast and do report that I go about to seek thy blood, &c.
TO whom the said Thomas Brown answered again, Yea, my lord (said he), indeed ye be a bloodsucker, and I wish I had as much blood as there is water in the sea, for you to suck.
BONNER then proceeding to the articles, when he had read them unto him again, as he had done divers times before, asked him whether he was content and willing to relinquish those his heresies and erroneous opinions (as he called them), and return again unto the unity of the catholic faith. Whereunto he made answer again, saying, if they were heresies, he would forsake them. They be heresies, said the bishop. How will you prove it? said Brown, for I will not go from mine answer, except you can prove them to be heresies, which ye shall never do. For that which ye call heresy is no heresy. With that bishop Bonner, not able, or else not disposed to supply the part of a sufficient teacher, in proving that which the other denied, by good authority and doctrine of the scripture, went about with words and promise of pardon to allure him to renounce those his heresie [...], as he called them, and to return unto the unity of his mother catholic church, &c.
TO whom the said Brown inferred again as foleth; Prove it to be heresy, that I do hold and maintain, and I will turn to you. But you will condemn me, because I will not confess and believe the bread in the sacrament of the altar (as you call it) to be the body of Christ, and therefore ye spill mine and such like innocents' blood, being the [Page 156] queen's true subjects, for which you shall answer, and that shortly.
AFTER this being spoken, Bonner (as he had done to others before) read in writing the sentence against him. The copy and form of which sentence wherewith the papists were wont to condemn these innocents, is before expressed. And this being done, he was committed to the sheriffs to be had away, and burned the 27th day of the said month of January, constantly abiding with others the cruel torments, for the true confession of his christian faith.
IV. The History of JOHN TUDSON, Martyr.
ON the same day that the aforesaid Thomas Brown with his fellows were condemned (as is above related), being the 15th day of January, John Tudson was also brought forth with the rest of the said company unto the like condemnation. This John Tudson was born in Ipswich, in the county of Suffolk, after that apprentice in London, dwelling with one George Goodyear, of the parish of St. Mary Botolph, within the diocese of London, who being complained of to sir Richard Cholmley and Dr. Story, and was by them sent unto Bonner, bishop of London, and was divers times before him in examination.
THE articles and interrogatories ministered unto him as unto the rest, are before specified, with his answers also to the same annexed, &c. After this he was brought into the open consistory, where the said John Tudson appearing before the said bishop and his accomplices, was urged with sundry persuasions (as their manner is) to go from his opinion, which they named heresy, and to return to the unity of the church which they were of; but [...]e, constantly persisting in that which he had received by the preachers in king Edward's time, refused so to do, saying, there was no heresy in his answers.
For I (said he) defy all heresy. The bishop yet still used his old accustomed persuasions to remove him, promising moreover all his offences and errors (as he called them) to be forgiven him, if he would return, &c. Then said Tudson, Tell me wherein I have offended, and I will return. Then said the bishop, In your answers. No, said Tudson [...] ▪ I have not therein offended; and you, my lord, pretend charity, but nothing thereof appeareth in your works. Thus after a few words, the bishop did likewise pronounce against him sentence of [...] demnation; which being read, the godly [...] was committed to the secular power, and so [...] much patience finished this life with the other [...]fore named, the 27th day of January.
V. The History of JOHN WENT, [...].
JOHN WENT, born in Langham, in [...] within the diocese of London, of the age of twenty-seven, and a sheerman by occupation, [...] first examined (as in partly mentioned before) [...] Dr. Story upon the sacrament of the altar; and because the poor man did not accord with him thoroughly in the real presence of the body and blood of Christ, the said Dr. Story sent him up to [...], bishop of London. Who likewise, after [...] examinations upon the articles aforesaid in the consistory, attempted the like manner of [...] with him as he did to the others, to recant [...] turn. To whom, in very few words, the said We [...] answered again, he would not; but that by the leave of God, he would stand firm and constant in that he had said. And when the bishop yet notwithstanding did still urge and call upon him with words and fair glosses, to give over himself to their opinion, he could have no other answer of him but this, No, I say as I have said, &c. Whereupon being condemned by the bishop's sentence, he was committed unto the sheriffs, (whom that shameless shaveling at that time abused for his servile butcher) and so brought to his martyrdom, which he with no less constancy suffered to the end, with the rest of that blessed society of martyrs above named.
VI. The History of ISABEL FOSTER, Martyr.
WITH these five persons above recited and condemned, were also two women in the said company condemned the same time, and likewise burned for the same cause▪ the one a wife, [Page 157] called Isabel Foster, the other a maid, named Joan [...], or otherwise Lashford.
THIS aforesaid Isabel was born in Grafestock, in the diocese of Carlisle, and was afterwards married to one John Foster, cutler, of the parish of St. [...]ride's, in Fleet-street, being of the age of fifty-five years. She likewise, for not coming to their church, was sent to bishop Bonner, who put her in prison, and examined her sundry times, but she would never be overcome, nor removed from the constant confession of Christ's gospel.
AT length, coming unto her final examination before the bishop in the consistory the 15th day of the said month of January, she was moved ag [...]in, whether she would yet go from her former answers. Whereunto she gave a resolute answer in a few words▪ I will not, said she, go from them, by God's grace; and thereunto did adhere, neither being cast down by the menacing threats of the bishop, nor yet yielding through his alluring enticements, promising both life and liberty, if she would associate herself in the unity of the catholic church. Whereunto she said again in this wise, That she trusted she was never out of the catholic church, &c. and so persisting in the same, continued constant till the definitive sentence was pronounced, and then she was committed by command of the bishop to the secular power, and so brought a few days after to the stake, the 27th day of the aforesaid month: where she, like a faithful witness of the Lord's truth (with the other five aforesaid), ended her troubles here, to find a better rest in the kingdom of Christ our Saviour.
VII. The History of JOAN LASHFORD, alias JOAN WARNE, Martyr.
IN this volume mention hath been made of one Elizabeth Warne, who with her husband John Warne (as is aforesaid), in the beginning of queen Mary's reign, was apprehended in Bow-churchyard for being there at a communion; and both suffered for the same; first, the man in the month of May, then the wife in July after; and now the daughter in the month of January followed her parents in the same martyrdom. Furthermore, in the same place following mention was made also of Dr. Story, who there (we said) was somewhat near unto the said parties, either in kindred or alliance; however, as I have heard since, there was no kindred between them, but only that she was his servant. Yet notwithstanding, the said Dr. Story (as it is above specified) before he was commissioner, made intercession for the parties to Dr. Martin, then commissioner: but afterwards being placed in commission himself, he so far forgot himself, and his old servant, that he became no small procurer of their deaths. I will not here expostulate with the hard heart of that man, nor with his inconstancy: who yet notwithstanding, after he had brought them to death, was arrested himself for three-score pounds, charged with debt in their behalf; which if it be true, it may thereby appear that he was in some manner allied unto them. But leaving that person to the good pleasure of God, let us return to what we have in hand.
THIS Joan Lashford, born in the parish of Little St. Alhallow [...] ▪ in Thames-street, was the daughter of one Robert Lashford, cutler, and of the aforesaid Elizabeth, who afterwards was married to John Warne, upholsterer, who (as is before said) was persecuted for the gospel of God to the burning fire; and after him his wife; and after her, this Joan Lashford her daugher; who, about the age of twenty years, ministring to her father and mother in prison, suspected and known to be of the same doctrine and religion, was sent to Bonner, bishop of London, by Dr. Story (as is above in the answers to the articles declared) and so committed to the Poultry Compter, where she remained about five weeks, and from thence conveyed to Newgate, where she continued some months.
AFTER that, remaining prisoner in the custody of Bonner, and being examined, her confession was, that for above a twelve-month before, she came not to the popish mass service in the church, neither would, either to receive the sacrament of the altar, or to be confessed, because her conscience would not suffer her so to do; confessing and protesting, that in the sacrament of the altar there is not the [...] presence of Christ's body end blood; nor that [...] confession or absolution after the popish sort, was necessary, nor the mass to be good, according [Page 158] to the scripture, but said, that both the said sacra [...]nts, confession and absolution, and the mass, with [...] their other superfluous sacraments, ceremonies, [...] divine service, as then used in this realm of England, were most vile and contrary to Christ's word and institution; so that they were neither at the beginning, nor shall be at the latter end. This godly damsel, feeble and tender of age, yet strong by grace in this her confession and faith, stood so firm, that neither the flattering promises, nor the violent threats of the bishops could turn her, but being moved and exhorted by the bishop to return to the catholic unity of the church, boldly said to him again, If you will leave off your abomination, I will return, and otherwise I will not.
WHEREUPON the bishop yet again promised her pardon of all her errors (as he called them) if she would be conformed. To this she answered again, saying to the bishop, Do as it pleaseth you, and I pray God that you may do that which may please God.
AND thus she constantly persevering in the Lord's holy truth, was by the sentence definitive condemned and committed to the sheriffs, by whom, the aforesaid 27th day of January, she with the rest being brought unto the stake, there washed her clothes in the blood of the Lamb, dying most constantly for his word and truth, to whom most lovingly she espoused herself.
AND thus much concerning the life, story and condemnation of these seven martyrs.
The History of five Martyrs, who were burnt at Canterbury, at two Stakes in one Fire.
THESE five martyrs suffered for the truth of the gospel at Canterbury on the 31st day of January, being one man, and four women, whose names and examinations here follow:
JOHN LOMAS, a young man; Anne Albright; John Ca [...]mer; Agnes Snoth, widow, Joan Sole, wife.
JOHN LOMAS, Martyr.
JOHN LOMAS, of the parish of Tendering detected and presented of that religion [...] the papists call heresy, and cited upon [...] same [...]o appear at Canterbury, examined [...] the first article, whether he believed the [...] church or no, answered thus; that he believed [...] much as is cont [...]ined in God's book, and [...] more.
THEN being assigned to appear again under the pa [...]n of the law the next Wednesday seven [...] after, which was the 17th day of January, the said Lomas was examined, whether he would be [...] fessed by a priest or no, answered and said, that [...] found it not written that he should be confessed [...] any priest in God's book, neither would he be [...] fessed, unless he [...] accused by some man of [...]. Again, examined whether he believed the body of Christ to be in the sacrament of the altar really [...] der the forms of bread and wine after the conse [...] tion, or no? He answered, that he believed [...]ality of Christ's body to be in the sacrament [...] found he written, that he is there under [...] or trest [...]e, but he believed so much as is written. Being [...] demanded whether he believed that there is a catholic church or no, and whether [...] would b [...] content to be a member of the same, [...] answered thereunto, that he believed so much [...] was written in God's book, and other answer tha [...] this he refused to give, &c. Whereupon the sentence was given and read against him the 18th day of January, and so committed to the secular power, he constantly suffered for the conscience of a true faith, with the four women here following.
2. AGNES SNOTH.
AGNES SNOTH, widow, of the parish of Smarden, likewise cited and accused for the true profession of Christ's religion, was divers times examined before the pharisaical fathers; who was there compelled to answer to such articles and interrogatories as should be administered unto her, first denied to be c [...]nfessed to a priest; notwithstanding she denied not to confess her offences one to another, but not auricularly to any priest. And as touching the sacrament of the altar, she protested [Page 159] that if she or any other did receive the sacrament so as Christ and his apostles after him did deliver it, then she and they did receive it to their comfort: but as it is now used in the church, she said that no man could otherwise receive it than to his damnation, as she thought. Afterwards being examined again concerning penance, whether it were a sacrament or no, she plainly denied the same, and that the popish manner of their absolution was not consonant to the word, nor necessary to be taken; with other such like, agreeing with the answers and confession of John Lomas before-mentioned. Whereupon the sentence being likewise read, she was committed to the sheriffs of Canterbury, and so suffering martyrdom with the rest, declared herself a perfect and constant witness of Christ and his truth, the 31st of January.
3. ANNE ALBRIGHT, alias CHAMPNES.
ANNE ALBRIGHT, likewise appearing before the judge and his colleagues, it was also objected concerning the same matter of confession. Whereunto she answered in these words, saying, That she would not be confessed by a priest; and added moreover, speaking unto the priests, You priests (said she) are the children of perdition, and can do no good by your confession. And likewise speaking unto the judge and his assistants, she told them that they were subverters of Christ's truth.
AND concerning the sacrament of the altar, she said it was a weak and abominable idol, and so utterly denied the same sacrament. Thus persisting and persevering in her former sayings and answers, she was condemned the said 18th day of January, with the others before-mentioned; with whom also she suffered quietly, and with great comfort, for the truth of Christ's religion.
4. JOAN SOLE.
IN like manner Joan Sole, of the parish of Horton, was condemned by the same pharisees and priests for not allowing auricular confession, and for denying the real presence and substance of Christ to be in the sacrament. Who, after their pharisaical sentence being pronounced, was brought by the sheriffs to the stake with the other four, and sustained the like martyrdom with [...] through the assistance of God's unbounded holy grace and Spirit mightily working in her, to the glory of his name, and confirmation of his truth.
5. JOAN CATMER.
THE fifth and last of this heavenly company of martyrs, was Joan Catmer, of the parish of Hith, wife of George Catmer, burned before. Who being asked what she said to confession made to a priest, denied to be confessed to any such priest. And moreover, the judge speaking of the sacrament of the altar, she said and affirmed, That she believed not in that sacrament, as it was then used, for that it was made, said she, a very idol. In this her confession she remaining and persisting, was by the like sentence cruelly by them condemned, and so suffered with the aforesaid John Lomas, and the other three martyrs, ratifying and confessing with their blood the true knowledge and doctrine of the glorious gospel of Jesus Christ our Saviour.
THESE five persons were burnt at two stakes in one fire, together at Canterbury, as is before said; who, when the fire was flaming about their [...]ars, did sing psalms. Whereat the good knight▪ sir John Norton, being there present, wept bitterly at the sight.
THE judges and other assistants which sat upon her and the other four before-mentioned, were Richard Faucet, John Warren, John Mills, Robert Collins, and John Baker, the notary.
The History of the Reverend Pastor and Prelate, THOMAS CRANMER, Archbishop of Canterbury, Martyr, burnt at Oxford, for the Confession of Christ's true Doctrine, under Queen MARY, March 21, 1556.
CONCERNING the life and estate of that most reverend father in God, and worthy prelate of godly memory, Thomas Cranmer, late archbishop of Canterbury, and of the original cause and occasion of his preferment unto his archiepiscopal dignity, who by many hath been thought to have procured the same by friendship only, and by some [Page 160] others esteemed unworthy of so high a vocation; it is first therefore to be noted and considered, that the same Thomas Cranmer, coming of an ancient parentage, from the conquest to be deduced, and continuing since in the name and family of a gentleman, was born in a village called Arselacton, in Northamptonshire, of whose said name and family there remaineth at this day the manor and mansion house in Lincolnshire, called Cranmer-hall, &c. sometime the heritage of the said stock and family. He being from his infancy kept at school, and carefully brought up, from school he was sent unto the university of Cambridge, and there prospering in good knowledge amongst the better sort of students, was chosen fellow of Jesus college in Cambridge. And so being master of arts, and fellow of the same college, he married a gentleman's daughter, by which he lost and gave over his fellowship, and became a reader in Buckingham-college; and because he would with more diligence apply himself to his office of reading, he placed his said wife in an inn, called the Dolphin, in Cambridge, the woman of the house being a relation of her's. By reason whereof, and his often going to see his wife in that inn, he was much noticed by some popish merchants: on this arose the slanderous noise and report against him, after he was preferred to the archbishopric of Canterbury, raised up by the malicious disdain of certain malignant adversaries to Christ and his truth, reporting abroad every where, that he was but an ostler, and therefore deficient in all good learning. Of whose malicious reports, one of their practices in that behalf shall hereafter be declared, as place and time shall serve.
BUT in the mean time to return to the matter present: while Mr. Cranmer continued as a reader in Buckingham-college, his wife died in child-bed. After whose death the masters and fellows of Jesus-college, desirous again of their old companion, namely, for his eminent learning, chose him again fellow of the same college. Where he remaining at his study, became in a few years after the reader of divinity lecture in the same college, and in such universal estimation and reputation with the whole university, that when doctor of divinity, he was commonly appointed one of the heads (which are two or three of the most learned men) to examine such as yearly proceed in commencement, either bachelors or doctors of divinity, by whose approbation the whole university licensed them to proceed unto their degree, and again by whose non-approbation the university also rejected them for a time to proceed, until they were better furnished with knowledge.
NOW, Dr. Cranmer, ever savoring the knowledge of the scripture, would never permit any to proceed in divinity, unless they were substantially versed in the history of the bible: by means whereof certain friars, and other religious persons, who were principally brought up in the study of school-authors, without regard had to the authority of the scriptures, were commonly rejected by him; so that he was greatly, for that his severe examination, by the religious sort much hated, and had in great indignation; and yet it came to pass in the end, that divers of them thus compelled to study the scriptures, became afterwards very well learned and well affected; insomuch that when they became doctors of divinity, they could not too much extol and commend Dr. Cranmer's goodness towards them, who for a time had put them back, to initiate themselves in better knowledge and perfection. Among whom Dr. Barret, a white friar, who afterwards dwelt at Norwich, was handled after that manner, giving him no less commendation for his happy rejecting of him for a better amendment. Thus much I repeat, that our apish and popish sort of ignorant priests may well understand, that this his exercise, kind of life, and vocation, was not altogether ostler-like.
WELL to proceed; as he was neither in same unknown, nor in knowledge obscure, he was very much solicited by Dr. Capon, to be one of the fellows in the foundation of cardinel Wolsey's college in Oxford, which he utterly refused, not without danger of indignation. Notwithstanding, he foresaw that which after happened to the utter confusion of many well-affected learned men there, without consideration (because man's glory was there more sought for than God's), he stood the danger of the said indignation, which turned out more prosperously unto him within a few years after than he expected. While he [...] in Cambridge, [Page 161] [...] and weighty cause of King Henry the [...] divorce with the lady Katherine Dowager of [...], came into question; which being many [...] for the space of two or three years amongst [...] [...]annonists, civilians, and other learned men, [...] disputed and debated, i [...] came to pass that [...] Dr. Cranmer, on account of the plague [...] Cambridge, resorted to Waltham Abbey, to [...] Mr. Cressey's house there, whose wife was a relation of the said Dr. Cranmer. He had two sons of the said Mr. Cressey with him at Cambridge as his pupils; he continued at Waltham-Cross, at the house of the said Mr. Cressey, with the said two children, during the summer-time while the plague reigned.
DURING this summer cardinal Camp [...]us and cardinal Wolsey, being in commission from the pope, to hear and determine that great cause in controversy between the king and the queen, his pretended wife, dallied and delayed all the summertime until the month of August in hearing the said cause in controversy debated. When August was come, the said cardinals little minding to proceed to give sentence, took occasion to finish their commission, and to determine no further therein, pretending that it was not permitted by the laws to keep courts of ecclesiastical matters in harvest-time; which sudden stoppage and giving up of the said commission by both the cardinals, unknown to the king, so much enraged him, that he taking it as a mock at the cardinals hands, commanded the dukes of Norfolk and Suffolk to dispatch immediately home to Rome cardinal Campeius; and in haste removed himself to Waltham for a night or two, while his houshold removed to Greenwich: by this means it happened that the harbingers, Dr. Stephen Gardiner, secretary, and Dr. Foxe, almoner, (who were the chief furthurer, preferrers, and defenders on the king's behalf in the said cause) to lodge in the house of the said Mr. Cressey, where Dr Cranmer also lodged and resided. When supper-time came, the three doctors met together; Dr. Stephen Gardiner, and Dr. Foxe were very much surprised at Dr Cranmer's being there. He declared the cause, namely, because the plague was in Cambridge: as [...]hey were old acquaintance, the secretary and the almoner very well entertained Dr. Cranmer, intending to understand his opinion concerning the great business they had in hand. And as this good occasion served, while they were at supper, they conferred with Dr. Cranmer concerning the king's cause, requesting him to give his judgment and opinion of what he thought therein.
WHERETO Dr. Cranmer answered, That he could say little to the matter, as he had not studied nor looked for it. Notwithstanding he said, that in his opinion they made more ado in prosecuting the ecclesiastical law than needed. It were better, as I think, said Dr. Cranmer, that the question, Whether a man may marry his brother's wife, or no? were discussed by the divines, and by the authority of the word of God, whereby the conscience of the prince might be better satisfied and quieted, than thus from year to year by unnecessary delays to prolong the time, leaving the very truth of the matter unsettled by the word of God. There is but one truth in it, which the scripture will soon declare, make open and manifest, being by learned men well handled, and that may be as well done in Engla [...] in the universities here, as at Rome, or elsewhere [...] any foreign nation, the authority whereof will soon compel any judge to come to definitive sentence: and therefore, as I take it, you might that way have made an end of this matter long since. When Dr. Cranmer had thus ended his tale, the other two liked well his device, and wished they had proceeded so before, and thereupon conceived some matter of counsel to instruct the king with, who was then thinking to send to Rome again for a new commission.
NOW the next day, when the king removed to Greenwich, recollecting in himself how he had been used by the cardinals, in thus deferring his cause, his mind was very uneasy, and desirous to see an end of this long and tedious suit, he called unto him the two principal managers of his cause, namely, Dr. Gardiner, and Dr. Foxe. What now, my masters, said the king, shall we do in this infinite cause of mine? I see there must be a new commission procured from Rome, and when we shall have an end, God knoweth, and not I.
WHEN the king had declared somewhat of his mind herein, Dr. Foxe, the almoner, said to the king, we trust that there shall be better ways devised [Page 162] for your majesty, than to send any more to Rome in your highness's cause, which by chance was put into our heads last night at Waltham. The king being very desirous to understand his meaning, said, Who hath taken in hand to instruct you by a better or more expec [...] method of proceeding in our said cause? Then said Dr. Foxe, We happened to lodge last night at one Mr. Cressey's house in Waltham, your highness being there, where we met with an old acquaintance of our's, named Dr. Cranmer, with whom having conference concerning your highness's cause, he thought that the best way was, first to instruct and quiet your majesty's conscience by trying your majesty's question by the wor [...] of God, and thereupon to proceed to a final sentence. [...] report the sacretary was displeased with [...], because they did not take the glory of this [...]vention to themselves. And when the secretary endeavoured by colourable words to make it appear to the king, that it was a project of their own devising, the king immediately [...] out, Where is this Dr. Cranmer, is he still at [...] altham? They answered, that they left him there. Then, said the king, I will surely speak with him, and therefore let him be sent for immedia [...]ly▪ I perceive (said the king) that that man hath [...] true mode of proceeding. And if I had known this device but two years ago, it had been a great saving of money to me, and extricated me out of much disquietude,
WHEREUPON Dr. Cranmer was sent for, but having removed from Waltham to Cambridge, was going to see his friends in Nottinghamshire, when the post overtook him. But when he came to London, he began to quarrel with his two acquaintances, that he through their means was thus troubled, and brought thither to be encumbered in a matter which he had not studied, but was intirely unacquainted with; and therefore intreated they would instantly go and make his excuse in such a manner that he might be dispatched home again, and not be required to come into the king's presence. They promised and took the matter upon themselves to do, if by any means they could accomplish it. But all was in vain; for the more they excused Dr. Cranmer's absence, the king insisted to have him brought into his presence out of hand, so that no excuse serving, he was obliged immediately [...] wait on the king at court, whom the gentle pri [...] benignly received, demanded his name, and [...] unto him, Were you not at Waltham at such a [...] in the company of my secretary and my [...] Dr. Cranmer confessing the same, the king [...] [...]gain, Had you not conference with them conce [...]ni [...] our matter of divorce now in question after this sort? repeating the manner and order the [...] ▪ That is right true, if it please your highness, qui [...] Dr. Cranmer. Well, (said the king) I well perceive that you have the right sense of this [...] You must understand that I have been long tr [...]bled in conscience, and now I perceive that by [...] means I might have been long ago relieved [...] way or other from the same, if we had this way [...]ceeded. And therefore, Mr. Doctor, I pray [...] and nevertheless because you are a subject, I [...] and command you (all your other business and [...]fairs set apart) to take some pains to see this [...] cause furthered according to your device, as [...] as it may lie in you, so that I may shortly u [...]stand whereunto I [...]ay trust. For this I [...] before God and the world, that I seek not to [...]vorced from the queen, if by [...] means I might justly be persuaded that this our matrimony were inviolable and not against the laws of God: for otherwise there never was any other cause to [...] me to seek any such extremity. Never was [...] prince had a more gentle, a more obedient [...] companion and wife than the queen is, nor [...] ever fancy a woman in all respects better, if the doubt had not risen; assuring you that for the singular virtues wherewith she is indued, besides the consideration of her noble family, I would be right well contented still to remain with her, if so be it would stand with the will and pleasure of Almighty God. And thus highly commending her many and amiable qualities, the king further said, I therefore pray you with an indifferent eye, and with as much dexterity as in you lieth, that you will for your part forward this matter for the discharging of both our consciences.
DR. Cranmer unwilling by himself to meddle in so weighty an affair, besought the king's highness to commit the trial and examining of this matter to the word of God, unto the best learned men of both [Page 163] his universities, Cambridge and Oxford. You speak well, said the king, and I am content therewith. But nevertheless, I will have you particularly to write your mind thereon. And so calling the [...] of Wiltshire to him, said I pray you, my [...] Dr. Cranmer have entertainment in your house at Durham-Place for a time, to the intent he may be there quiet to accomplish my request, and let him want neither books nor any thing requisite for his study. And thus after the king's departure, Dr. Cranmer went with my lord of Wiltshire unto his house, wherein he incontinently wrote his mind concerning the king's question; adding to the same, besides the authorities of the scriptures, of general councils, and of ancient writers, but also his own opinion, which was this, That the bishop of Rome had no such authority, whereby he might dispense with the word of God and the scripture. When Dr. Cranmer had written this book, and commit [...]d it unto the king, the king said unto him, [...] you stand to this that you have here written before the bishop of Rome? That I will do, by God's grace, quoth Dr. Cranmer, if your majesty will send me thither. Indeed, said the king, I will send you unto him in a sure ambassage.
AND thus by the means of Dr. Cranmer's handling of this matter with the king, not only certain learned men were sent abroad to the most part of the universities in Christendom, to dispute the question, but also the same being by commission disputed by the divines in both the universities of Cambridge and Oxford, it was there concluded, That no such matrimony was by the word of God lawful.
WHEREUPON a solemn ambassage was then prepared and sent to the bishop of Rome, then being at Bonony, wherein went the earl of Wiltshire, Dr. Cranmer, Dr. Stokesley, Dr. Carne, Dr. Bennet, and divers other learned men and gentlemen.
AND when the time came that they should come before the bishop of Rome to declare the cause of their ambassage, the bishop fitting on high in his cloth of state, and in his rich apparel, with his sandals on his feet, offering, as it were, his foot to be kissed by the ambassadors; the earl of Wiltshire disdaining thereat, stood still, and shewed no countenance thereunto, so that all the rest kept them selves from this wicked idolatry.
HOWEVER, one thing is not to be omitted here, as a prognosticate of our separation from the see of Rome, which then happened through a spaniel which belonged to the earl of Wiltshire. For he having there a great spaniel, which he brought with him out of England, it stood between the earl and the bishop of Rome. And when the said bishop, that servant of the servants of God (as he in great humility stiled himself), offered his foot to be kissed, and while they stood still and declined it, the said spaniel seeing the foot shining with gold and jewels, caught hold of it, taking it to [...] some [...] of repast, and bit it. The pope [...] the affront, in haste pulled in that glorio [...] [...] and kicked the dog with the other, while the Englishmen smiled in their sleeves at the omen. The pontifical bishop, knitting his brows, demanded the cause of their [...]mbassy. Which being declared, the earl of Wiltshire delivered Cranmer's book to the pope; [...] him withal, That there were learned men co [...] along with him from England, who were ready to defend what was contained in that book, by the holy scriptures, the councils, and the writin [...] of the orthodox fathers, against all who should contradict it.
THE pope often promised the ambassador to appoint a day for the disputation: but it was a promise which he never performed; by affected delays spinning out the time, as his cardinals had before done in England. So giving the ambassadors most honourable and court-like entertainment▪ and having made Cranmer (whom to either knew or supposed to be the author of that book concerning the king's marriage with Katherine) his penitentiary in England, Ireland, and Wales; being mighty timorous, and equally afraid of the emperor, the French king, and our's, he durst not come to any resolution in a matter of such moment, but dismissed the assembly, without determining, or even proposing any thing about it.
FROM hence, while the rest returned home, Cranmer, by the king's private order, made the emperor and princes of Germany in his way. At [Page 164] that time the emperor was engaged in an expedition against the Turks, who were engaged in the siege of Vienna, the capital of Austria. Whom when Cranmer attended, and asked him in the king's name, which of his domestics or others that he knew would contradict him? C [...]rnelius Agrippa was mentioned; a man better versed in the secrets of philosophy than divinity. But he being easily brought over to Cranmer's side of the question, did readily join in persuading other learned men of the emperor's retinue, not to oppose Cranmer; who, he said, had brought the truth along with him. Therefore meeting with no opposition, he took his leave of the emperor. From whence taking a tour throughout Germany, he brought home with him to the king the opinions and judgment of the most learned men there, as well in the universities, as in the courts of princes, all agreeing with his own.
THIS matter thus prospering on Dr. Cranmer's behalf, as well touching the king's question, as concerning the invalidity of the pope's authority, bishop Warham, then archbishop of Canterbury, departed this transitory life, whereby that dignity then being in the king's gift, was immediately given to Dr. Cranmer, as worthy, for his good services, of such a promotion. Thus much concerning the preferment of Dr. Cranmer, and by what means he arrived at this dignity: not by flattery, nor by bribes, nor by any other unlawful means; which thing I more at large discoursed, to stop the railing mouths of such, who being themselves obscure and unlearned, are not ashamed most scurrilously to attack so learned a man with the nick-name of Ostler, whom, for his godly zeal to sincere religion, they ought with humility to have had in regard and reputation.
NOW as concerning his behaviour and method of living towards God and the world, being now entered into his said dignity, and forasmuch as the apostle St. Paul writing to two bishops, Timothy and Titus, setteth out unto us a perfect description of a true bishop, with all the other properties and conditions belonging to the same, unto which pattern it is rare in these strange days to find the image of any bishop correspondent; yet, for example's sake, let us take this archbishop of Canterbury, and try him by the rule th [...]eof, to see either how near he cometh to the description of St. Paul, or else how far he swerveth from the common course of others in his time, of his calling. The rule of St. Paul is found, 1 Tim. iii. also in his epistle to Titus, chap. i. in these words:
"A bishop must be faultless, as becometh the minister of God, not stubborn, nor angry, no drunkard, no fighter, nor given to filthy lucre; but a lover of hospitality, one that loveth goodness, sober-minded, righteous, holy, temperate, and such as cleaveth unto the true word and doctrine, that he may be able to exhort," &c.
UNTO this rule and touch-stone, to lay now the life and conversation of thi [...] archbishop, we will first begin with that which is thus written.
A bishop must be faultless, as becometh the minister of God.
AS no man is without sin, and as every man carrieth about him his peculiar vice or failings; yet nevertheless the apostle meaneth, that the bishop and minister must be faultless in comparison of the common conversation of men in the world, who seem to live more licentiously at their own liberties and pleasures, than a bishop or minister ought to do, having small regard to the giving of good example; which a bishop or minister most carefully ought [...]o consider, lest by his dissolute life the word of God be slandered and evil spoken of; to avoid which, and the better to accomplish this precept of the apostle, this worthy man gave himself to continual study, strictly observing the order that he in the university commonly used, that is, to be by five o'clock in the morning at his book, and so continuing in prayer and study till nine, he then applied himself (if the prince's affairs did not call him away) until dinner-time to hear suiters, and to dispatch such matters as appertained to his special cure and charge, committing his temporal affairs, both of his houshold and other foreign business, to his officers: so that such things were never impediments either to his study, or to his pastoral charge, which principally consisted in reformation of corrupt religion, and in setting forth of true and sincere doctrine. For the most part always being in commission, [Page 165] he associated himself with learned men for sifting or bolting something or other for the advantage and profit of the church of England. By means whereof, and what for his private study, he was never idle; besides that, he accounted it no idle [...] to bestow an hour or two of the day in reading over such works and books as daily came from beyond the seas.
AFTER dinner, if any suiters were attendant, he would very diligently hear them, and dispatch them in such an obliging manner, that every one admired and commended his lenity and gentleness, although the case required that sometimes divers of them were committed by him to prison. And having no suiters after dinner, for an hour, or thereabouts, he would play at chess, or behold such as were at play. That done, then again to his ordinary study, where he commonly stood (seldom sat down) till five of the clock, which hour he bestowed in hearing the Common Prayer, and walking, or using some innocent recreation till supper-time. At supper, if he had no appetite (as many times he would not sup), yet he would sit down at table, having his ordinary provision of his mess furnished with expedient company, he wearing his gloves on his hands, because he would, as it were, thereby wean himself from eating of meat, but yet entertaining the company with such edifying discourse as did much delight the hearers; so that by this means hospitality was well furnished, and the alms-chest well maintained for relief of the poor. After supper he would spend, at least, one hour in walking, or some other harmless pastime, and then again till nine of the clock at his study: so that no hour of the day was spent in vain, but the same was so bestowed, as tended to the glory of God, the service of the prince, or the advantage of the church. By all which he gained a good report amongst men, so that his conversation, in comparison with other men, seemed to be faultless, as the minister of God.
That a bishop ought not to be stubborn.
SECONDLY, It is required, "That a bishop ought not to be stubborn." With which kind of vice, without great wrong, this archbishop in no wise ought to be charged; whose nature was such, as none more gentle, or sooner won to an honest suit or purpose, especially such things, wherein by his word, writing, counsel, or deed, he might gratify either nobleman or gentleman, or do good to any mean person, or else relieve the needy and poor. Only in causes pertaining to God or his prince, no man more stout, more constant, or more hard to be won; as in that part his earnest defence in the parliament-house above three days together, in disputing against the six articles of Gardiner's device, can testify. And though the king would needs have them upon some politic consideration to go forward, yet he so handled himself, as well in the parliament-house, as afterwards by writing, so obediently, and with such humble behaviour towards his prince, protesting the cause not to be his, but Almighty God's, who was the author of all truth, that the king did not only well like his defence (willing him to depart out of the parliament-house into the council whilst the act should pass and be granted, for safeguard of his conscience; which he with humble protestation refused, hoping that his majesty, in process of time, would revoke them again); but also after the parliament was finished, the king perceiving the zealous affection that the archbishop bare towards the defence of his cause, which many ways, by scriptures and manifold authorities and reasons, he had substantially confirmed and defended, sent the lord Cromwel, then vicegerent, with the two dukes of Norfolk and Suffolk, and all the lords of the parliament, to dine with him at Lambeth; where it was declared by the vicegerent, and the two dukes, that it was the king's pleasure, that they all should, in his highness's behalf, cherish, comfort, and animate him, as one that for his trouble in that parliament had shewed himself both greatly learned, and also discreet and wise, and therefore they willed him not to be discouraged for any thing that was passed contrary to his allegations. He most humbly thanked the king's majesty for his great goodness towards him, and them for all their pains, saying, I hope in God, that hereafter my allegations and authorities shall take place to the glory of God and the advantage of the realm; in the mean time I will satisfy myself with the honorable consent of your honours, and the whole parliament.
HERE it is to be noted, that this man's stout and godly defence of the truth herein so bound the [Page 166] prince's conscience, that he would not permit the truth in that men to be clean overthrown with authority, and power: and therefore this way God working in the prince's mind a plain token was declared them hereby, that all things were not so sincerely handled in the confirmation of the said six articles as they ought to have been, for else the prince might have had just cause to have borne his great indignation towards the archbishop. Let us pray that the like stoutness may be perceived in all ecclesiastical and learned men, where the truth ought to be defended, and also the like relenting and flexibility may take place in princes and noblemen, when they shall have occasion offered to maintain the same, so that they utterly overwhelm not the truth by self-will, power, and authority. Now in the end this archbishop's constancy was such towards God's cause, that he confirmed all his doings by bitter death in the fire, without respect of any worldly treasure or pleasure. And as concerning his stoutness in his prince's cause, the contrary resistance of the duke of Northumberland against him proved right well his good mind that way [...]; which chanced by reason that he would not consent unto the dissolving of chantries, until the king came of age, to the intent that they might then better serve to furnish his royal estate, than to have so great treasure consumed in his non-age. Which stoutness, joined with such simplicity, surely was thought to divers of the council a thing incredible, especially in such sort to contend with him, who was so accounted in this realm, as few or none would or durst withstand him.
SO dear to him was the cause of God, and of his prince, that for the one he would not keep the conscience clogged, nor for the other lurk or hide his head. Otherwise (as it is said) his very enemies might easily intreat him in any cause reasonable; so that he was altogether free from the vice of stubbornness, and ra [...]er culpable of over much facility and gentleness.
Not Angry.
THEN [...]ll [...]weth, Not angry. Surely if overmuch patie [...] may be a vice, this man may seem to offend ra [...]er on this sid [...] than on the contrary Albeit for all [...]is doings I cannot say: for the most part such was his mortification that way, that few we shall find in whom the saying of our Saviour Christ so much p [...]vailed as with him, who would not only have a man to forgive his enemies, but also to pray for them; that lesson never went out of his memory. It was known that he had [...] cruel enemies, not for his own deserts, but only for the sake of his religion: and yet whosoever he was that sought his hindrance, either in goods, estimation, and life, or upon conference would seem ever so slenderly to relent and excuse himself, he would both forget the offence, and ever afterwards familiarly entertain the offender: insomuch that it became a common proverb, "Do unto my lord of Canterbury a displeasure, or a shrewd turn, and then you may be sure to have him your friend whilst he liveth." Of which his gentle disposition in abstaining from revenge, amongst many examples thereof, I shall repeat one.
IT happened that an ignorant priest and parson in the north parts (the town is not now in remembrance, but he was kinsman to one Chersey, a grocer in London; being one of those priests that used more to study at the alehouse, than in his chamber) to sit on a time with his honest neighbours at the alehouse in his own parish, where they were talking in the praise of my lord Cranmer, archbishop of Canterbury: and this priest envying his name only for religion's sake, said to his neighbours, "What make you of him, he was but an ostler, and hath no more learning than the goslins that go yonder on the green," with such like slanderous and uncomely words. His honest neighbours not much liking his irreverent speech, articled against him, and sent their complaint to the lord Cromwel, then vicegerent in causes ecclesiastical, who sent for the priest, and committed him to the Fleet, intending to have made him recant those slanderous words publicly at Paul's Cross. However the lord Cromwel, having great affairs of the prince then in hand, forgot his prisoner in the Fleet: so that the said Chersey, the grocer, understanding that his kinsman was in confinement, only for speaking words against my lord of Canterbury, consulted with the priest, and between them devised to apply rather to the archbishop for his deliverance, than to the lord Cromwel, before whom he was accused: well knowing the difference of their tempers, the one [Page 167] gentle and full of clemency, the other somewhat more severe and rigid, especially against a papist: so that Chersey took upon him first to try my lord of Canterbury's benignity, inasmuch as his cousin's offence was only against him, and none other. Whereupon the said Chersey came to one of the archbishop's gentlemen (whose father bought all his spices and fruit of the said Chersey, and so thereby of familiar acquaintance with the gentleman), and acquainted him with the trouble his kinsman was in, desiring him to be a means to my lord his master, to hear his suit in the behalf of his kinsman.
THE matter was moved. The archbishop, like a good-natured man, would never shew himself strange to the meanest petitioner: he immediately sent for the said Chersey, who appearing before him, declared, that there was a kinsman of his in the Fleet, a priest of the north country, and [...] I may tell your grace the truth (quoth Chersey) a man of small civility, and of less learning: and yet he hath a personage there, which now (by reason that my lord Cromwel hath laid him in prison) being in his cure, is unserved, and he hath continued in durance above two months, and is called to no answer, and knows not when he shall come to any end; so that this imprisonment consumeth his substance, and will utterly undo him, unless your grace be his good lord.
I know not the man, said the archbishop, nor what he hath done why he should thus be in trouble.
SAID Chersey again, He only hath offended agaist your grace, and against no man else, as may well be perceived by the articles objected against him; the copy whereof the said Chersey then exhibited to the said archbishop of Canterbury; who well perusing the said articles, said, This is the common talk of all the ignorant popish priests in England against me. Surely, said he, I was never made privy to this accusation, and of his confinement I never heard before this time. Notwithstanding, if there be nothing else to charge him withal against the prince or any of the council, I will, at your request, take order with him, and send him again to his cure to do his duty; and so thereupon sent his ring to the warden of the Fleet, desiring him to send the prisoner unto him, with his keeper, in the afternoon.
WHEN the keeper had broug [...]t the prisoner at the hour appointed, and Chersey bad well instruct [...] his cousin in any wise to submit to the archbishop, confessing his fault, whereby that way he should most easily have an end, and win his favour: the parson was carried into the garden at Lambeth, and there the archbishop sitting under the vine, demanded of the parson what was the cause of his confinement, and who committed him to the Fleet. The parson answered and said, that the Lord Cromwel sent him thither, for that certain malicious parishioners of his parish had wrongfully accused him of words which he never spake or meant. Chersey hearing his foolish cousin so far out of the way from his former instruction, said, Thou dastardly dolt and varlet, is this thy promise thou madest to me? Are there not a great number of thy honest neighbours hands against thee, to prove thee a liar? Surely, my lord, (quoth Chersey) it is a pity to do him good. I am sorry I have troubled your grace thus far with him.
WELL, said the archbishop unto the parson, if you have not offended me, I can do you no good: for I am intreated to help one out of trouble that hath offended against me. If my lord Cromwel hath committed you to prison wrongfully, that lieth in himself to amend, and not in me. If your offence only hath touched me, I will be bold to do somewhat for your friend's sake here. If you have not offended against me, then have I nothing to do with you, but that you may go and remain from when [...]e you came.
HEREUPON his kinsman Chersey made a great ado with him, calling him all kinds of opprobrious names! In the end my lord of Canterbury seeming to rise and go his ways, the priest fell on his knees, and said, I beseech your grace to forgive me this offence, assuring your grace that I spake those words, being drunk and not well advised.
AH, said my lord, this is somewhat, and yet it is no good excuse: for drunkenness always uttereth that which lieth hid in the heart of man when he is sober, alledging a text or two out of the scriptures [Page 168] concerning the vice of drunkenness, which cometh not now to remembrance.
NOW therefore (said the archbishop) that you acknowledge somewhat your fault, I am content to commune with you, hoping that you are at this present of an different sobriety. Tell me then, quoth he, did you ever see me, or were you ever acquainted with me before this day?
THE priest answered and said, that he never saw his grace in his life. Why then, said the archbishop, what occasion had you to call me an ostler, and that I had not so much learning as the goslins which then went upon the green before your face? If I have no learning, you may now try it, and be out of doubt thereof: therefore, I pray you, examine me, either in grammar, or in other liberal sciences, for I have at one time or other tasted partly of them. Or else if you are a divine, say something that way.
THE priest being amazed at my lord's familiar talk, answered and said, I beseech your grace to pardon me. I am altogether unlearned, and understand not the Latin tongue, but very simply. My only study hath been to say my service and mass, fair and deliberate, which I can do as well as any priest in the county where I dwell, I thank God.
W [...]LL, said my lord, if you will not examine me, I will make bold to try you, and yet as easily as I can devise, and that only in the story of the Bible now in English, in which I suppose you are daily exercised. Tell me therefore who was king David's father, said my lord. The priest stood still pausing a while, and said, In good faith, my lord, I have forgotten his name. Then said my lord again to him, If you cannot tell me that, I pray you tell me then, who was Solomon's father? The foolish priest, without all consideration of what was demanded of him before, made answer, Good my lord, bear with me, I am no further seen in the Bible, than is daily read in our service in the church.
THEN the archbishop said, This my question may be found well answered in your service. But I now well perceive, howsoever you have judged heretofore of my learning, sure I am that you have none at all. But this is the common practice of all you that be ignorant and superstitious priests, [...] slander, back-bite, and hate all such as are learned and well affected towards God's word and [...] religion. Common reason might have taught [...] what an unlikely thing it was, and contrary [...] manner of reason, that a prince having two universities within his realm of well learned men, and [...]sirous to be resolved of as doubtful a question [...] these many years the like was not moved [...] Christendom, should be driven to that necessity [...] the defence of his cause to send out of his realm [...] ostler, being a man of no better knowledge [...] goslin, in an embassy to answer all the learned [...], both in the court of Rome, and the emper [...]r' [...] court, in so difficult a question as touching the king [...] matrimony, and the divorce thereof. I say, if [...] were men of any reasonable consideration, [...] might think it both unseemly and uncomely [...] prince so to do. But look, where malice [...] in man, there reason can take no place; and [...] fore I see by it, that you are all at a point, that [...] reason or authority can persuade you to favour my name, who never meant evil to you, but both [...] advantage and profit. Howbeit, God amend you all, forgive you, and send you better minds.
WITH these words the priest seemed to weep, and desired his grace to pardon his fault and frailty, so that by this means he might return to his [...] again, and he would certainly recant those [...] words before his parishioners, as soon as he [...] home, and would become a new man. Well, [...] the archbishop, so had you need: and giving [...] godly admonition to forbear haunting [...] ▪ and bestow his time better in the [...] the scriptures, he dismissed him from the Fleet.
THE lord Cromwel, perceiving within a fortnight after that his prisoner was sent home without any open punishment, came to Lambeth to the archbishop, and, in a great heat, said to him, My lord, I understand that you have dispatched the northern priest home again, that I of late sent to the Fleet for railing against you, and calling you an ostler.
INDEED I have done so, said the archbishop▪ for that in his absence the people of his cure wanted their divine service. It is very devout divine service [Page 169] that he saith, quoth the lord Cromwel; it were more meet for him to be an ostler than a curate, who sticketh not to call you an ostler. But I thought so much what you would do; and therefore I would not tell you of his knavery when I sent him to prison. Howbeit, henceforth, they shall cut your throat before that I say any thing more to them on your behalf. Why, what would you have done with him? quoth the archbishop; there was nothing laid to his charge, other than words spoken against me, and now the man hath repented, and is well reconciled, and hath been at great charges in prison: it is time therefore that he were rid of his trouble. Well, said my lord Cromwel, I meant that he should have preached a recantation at Paul's Cross before he had gone home. That had been well done, quoth the archbishop, for then you would have all the world to wonder at me as well as at him. Well, well, said lord Cromwel, we shall bear so long with these popish knaves, that at length they will bring us indeed [...]o be wondered at of all the world.
THIS example among others serveth to declare, that there remained small desire of revenge in the said archbishop. But what should I say more? His quietness and mortification this way was such, that it is reported by all that knew him, that he never raged so far with any of his houshold servants as once to call the meanest of them varlet or knave in anger, much less to reprove a stranger with any reproachful words. Much unlike, in this part to the property, (as it seemeth) of some other inferior bishops of this realm, which have not spared to fly in the faces, to pluck off the beards, to burn the hands, to beat and scourge with rods the bodies both of gentlemen, married men, and others, having almost nothing else in their mouths, but fools and knaves, &c. and yet after all this, think themselves good perfect bishops, after the rule which followeth, and saith,
No Striker, no fighter.
FROM which kind of vice, the nature of this archbishop was so far off, a [...] was his doctrine which he professed, and the death which he suffered, far from all condition and example of blind popery. After the prohibition of these foresaid vices, succeedeth the mother of all good virtues necessarily required by all christians, but chiefly of a spiritual prelate; which is,
Not given to filthy Lucre.
THE contrary whereof was so odious [...]nto St. Paul, that he esteemed the same no less than a kind of idolatry, in that it maketh men forget their duty to God so far, and instead of him to worship their treasure. How little this prelate we spake of was infected with this vice, and how he was no niggard, all kind of people that knew him, as well learned beyond the seas and on this side, to whom yearly he gave in exhibition great sums of money, as others, both gentlemen, mean men, and poor men, who had in their necessity that which he could conveniently spare, lend, or make, can well testify. And albeit such was his liberality to all sort of men that no man did lack whom he could do for, either in giving or lending; yet nevertheless such was again his circumspection, that when he was apprehended and committed to the Tower by queen Mary, he owed no man living a penny, that could or would demand any of him, but satisfied every man to the uttermost; whereas several sums of money were owing him by divers persons, which by breaking their bills and obligations he freely forgave them, and suppressed before his attainder. Insomuch that when he perceived the fatal end of king Edward would work to him no good success touching his body and goods, he immediately called for his officers, his stewart and others, commanding them in any wise to pay where any money was owing, which was out of hand dispatched. And then he said, now I thank God I am mine own man, and in conscience with God's help able else to answer all the world and worldly adversities, which some men would suppose he might also have avoided, if he would have been counselled by some of his friends. It followeth moreover.
A Lover of Hospitality.
AND as touching his hospitality, so little was this property lacking in him, that some men disliking the same, thought it a house of too much lavishing and unprofitable expence. But as nothing can be [Page 170] so well done, which by others shall not be maligned and detracted; so neither did this man want his accusers, some finding fault with his great prodigality, some on the contrary part repining and complaining of his scanty house-keeping, and strict order, much beneath his revenues and calling. Of which two, the first sort must consider the causes which moved him to that liberal and large kind of expences. Wherein here cometh to be considered, the time wherein he served; which was then reformation of religion first began to be advanced. At that time the whole weight and care of the same chiefly depended upon him. During which season almost for the space of sixteen years together, his house was never lightly unfurnished of a number both of learned men and commissioners, from time to time appointed for deciding ecclesiastical affairs.
AND thus as he seemed to some to be too lavish and open-handed, even more than hospitality required; so on the other side, there wanted not some by whom he was much noticed and accused, yea, and complained of to king Henry the Eighth, for his niggardly and slender house-keeping as not worthy to be accounted the hospitality of a gentleman, as by the following doth appear.
AFTER the ample and great possessions, revenues, jewels, rich ornaments, and other treasures of the abbeys were dissolved and brought into the king's hands, in the dissolving whereof many cormorants were, fed and satisfied, and yet not so fully but that in a few years they began to be hungry again; and because no more could be scraped out of the abbeys, they began to seek some other prey to satiate their appetites, and which was, to tickle the king's ears with the rich revenues of the bishops lands. To bring this device to pass, they procured sir Thomas Seymour, knight of the privy chamber, to be a promoter of the same; who not in all points much liking the archbishop, and embracing a favorable opportunity, declared to the king, that my lord of Canterbury did nothing else but sell his woods, and let his leases by large and many fines, making havock of all the royalties of the archbishopric, and that only to the intent to gather up treasure for his wife and children, keeping no manner of hospitality, in comparison of so great a revenue; advertising the king further, that it was the opinion of many wise men, that it were much better for the bishops to have a sufficient yearly stipend in money out of the exchequer, than to be encumbered with those temporal affairs of their royalties▪ being great impediments to their study and pastoral charge, and his highness to have their lands and royalties converted to his own use, which besides their honest stipends would be no small advantage and profit to his majesty.
WHEN the king had heard his fair tale, he [...] little thereunto, other than this. Well, we will talk more of this matter at another time. Now, within a fortnight after, or thereabouts ( [...] by chance, or by intention, it is not known) it came to pass, that his highness going to dinner, had washed, sir Thomas Seymour holding the [...] son, the king said to him, Go directly to [...] unto my lord of Canterbury, and desire him [...] with me at two o'clock this afternoon, and see that he fail not. Sir Thomas immediately went to Lambeth, and as he came to the gate, the porter bring in the lodge, came out and conveyed him into the hall, which was richly furnished, and full of houshold servants and strangers, with four [...] messes of officers, as daily was the custom. [...] sir Thomas Seymour saw the large stately hall [...] well set and furnished, being therewith abashed, [...] sensible of the untruth told to the king before, [...] turned back, and would [...] have gone to [...] archbishop by the [...] and not through the hall. Richard Nevil, [...] then steward of the houshold, perceiving [...] to retire, [...] and desired to know whether he [...] my lord: sir Thomas answered, that he [...] do so, for he came from the king's highness, saying▪ I am going this way to [...]y lord's grace. Sir, [...] the steward, you canno [...] go that way, for the door is fast shut at dinner time; so very courteously conducted him through the hall into the chamber where my lord was at dinner; with whom he di [...]d after he had delivered his message, whose com [...] fare might always well become a right honorable personage. Dinner was scarce ended, when sir Thomas took his leave of my lord, and went again to court.
[Page 171]AS soon as the king saw him, he said unto him, Have you been with my lord of Canterbury? Sir Thomas answered, I have and please your majesty, he will be with your highness immediately. Did you not dine with him, said the king? Yes, my liege, said he, I have. And when he had said these words, whether he espied by the king's countenance, or by his words any thing tending to displeasure, but presently without delay he kneeled down upon his knee, and said, I beseech your majesty to pardon me for the great untruth I lately told you concerning my lord of Canterbury's house-keeping; but from henceforward I intend never to believe that person which did put that false tale into my head; for I assure your highness that I never saw so honourable a hall set in this realm, except your majesty's, in all my life, with better order, and so well furnished in each degree. If I had not seen it myself, I could never have believed it, and his own table so honourably served.
WHAT, said the king have you now espied the truth? I thought you would have told me another tale when you had been there. He was a wicked person, continued the king, that told you that tale; for he spendeth (ah! good man) all that he hath in house-keeping. But now I perceive which way the wind bloweth. There is a set of you to whom I have liberally given of the possessions and rever [...] of the suppressed monasteries, which as you have lightly gotten, so have you more unthriftily spent, some at dice, others in gaudy apparel, and other ways worse I fear; and now that all is gone, you would fain have me make another disposal of the bishop [...]nds, to accomplish your greedy appeti [...]es, [...] let no other bishops bestow their revenues [...] than my lord of Canterbury doth, then shall you have no cause to complain of their house-keeping.
AND thus the conversation being ended by the king himself, neither sir Thomas Seymour, nor any other on his behalf ever after durst renew or revive that suit, or any other against the archbishop in king Henry's days; so that it may be evident to all impartial men, the liberality of the archbishop in house-keeping what it was, which being defended and commended by the prince himself may rather give a good example to his posterity to follow, than was then to be depraved of any private subject, such as knew him not.
MOREOVER this is not to be forgotten of the good archbishop, touching the relief of the poor, impotent, sick, and such as then came from the wars at Bullen, and other parts beyond the seas, lame, wounded and destitute: for whom he provided, besides his mansion-house at Beckisborn, in Kent, the parsonage barn well furnished with certain lodgings for the sick and wounded soldiers. To whom were also appointed the almoner, a physician, and a surgeon to attend upon them, and to dress and cure such as were not able to go home to their own countries, having daily from the bishop's kitchen hot broth and meat; for otherwise the common alms of the houshold was bestowed upon the poor neighbors of the shire. And when any of the impotent did recover and were able to travel, they had convenient money to bear their charges, according to the number of miles from that place distant. And this good example of mercy and lib [...]ral benignity, I thought here good not to pass over in silence, that thereby others may be moved, according to their vocation, to walk in the steps of no less liberality, than in him in this behalf appeared.
One that loveth Goodness, sober-minded, righteous, holy, and temperate.
AS concerning these qualities, the business of his life before joined with his benign and gentle disposition, do testify that he could not be void of these virtues [...] in him, which was so abundantly adorned wit [...] [...] other, as we have before declared.
To cleave fast unto the true Word of Doctrine, that he may be able to exhort with wholesome Learning, and to reprove them that say against it.
THEN concludeth St. Paul with the most excellent virtue of all others to be wished in a prelate of the church. For if this constancy be not in him to this end, that is, "To cleave fast unto the true word of doctrine, that he may be able to exhort with [Page 172] wholesom [...]earning, and to reprove them that say against it;" [...]f he be void, I say, of there gifts and graces, he is worthy of no commendation, but shall seem an idol, and a deceiver of the world. Neither shall he deserve the name of a bishop, if either for dread or reward, affection or favor, he do at any time, [...] any point swerve from the truth. As in this [...] the worthy constancy of this said archbishop ne [...]r, for the most part, shrunk from any manner of storm, but was so many ways tried, that neither the fear nor favor of his prince, nor any other respect could alienate or change his purpose, grounded upon that infallible doctrine of the gospel. Notwithstanding, his constant defence of God's truth was ever joined with such meekness toward the king, that he never took occasion of offence against him.
AT the time of setting forth the six articles, this archbishop was the man, and the only man that opposed them, and disputed with the whole parliament three days together against them. Insomuch that the king who could not mislike his reasons, and yet would needs have the articles pass, required him to absent himself for a time out of the chamber while the act should pass, and so he did; and soon after the king sent all the lords to Lambeth to comfort and chear up his heart, that he might not be discouraged.
AND this was done during the time of the lord Cromwel's authority; but that the archbishop's constancy did not decay with the fall of the lord Cromwel, will appear by what followeth.
AFTER the apprehension of the lord Cromwel, the adversaries of the gospel thought all things sure and safe on their own side, it was so appointed amongst them, that ten or twelve bishops, and other learned men, joined together in commission, should come to the archbishop of Canterbury for the establishing of certain articles of our religion, which the papists then thought to win to their purpose against the said archbishop. For having now the lord Cromwel fast and sure, they thought all had been safe and sure for ever: as indeed to all men's reasonable consideration, that time appeared so dangerou [...], that there was no manner of hope that religion reformed should stand one week longer, such account was made of the king's untowardness thereunto. Insomuch that of all those commissioners there was not one left to stay on the archbishop's side, but he alone against them all stood in d [...]rence of the truth; and those that he most trusted [...] namely, bishop Heath and bishop Skip, left him in the plain field, who then so turned against him▪ that they took upon them to persuade him to their purpose: and having him down from the rest of the commissioners into his gardens at Lambeth, there by all manner of persuasions intreated him [...] leave off his overmuch constancy, and to incline unto the king's intent, who was fully determined [...] have it otherwise than he then had penned, or [...] to have it sent abroad. When those two, his [...] miliars, with one or two of his other friends▪ had used all their eloquence and policy, he little regarding their inconstancy and remissness in God's [...] and quarrel, very notably said unto them.
YOU make much ado (said the archbishop) [...] have me come to your purpose, alledging, that [...] the king's pleasure to have the articles, in the [...] you have devised them, to proceed; and now [...] you do perceive his highness, by sinister information, to be bent that way, you think it a convenient thing to apply unto his highness's mind. You are both my friends, especially one of you I did recommend to his majesty as a man of trust. Beware, I say, what you do: there is but one truth in our articles to be concluded upon, which if you do hide from his highness by consenting unto a contrary doctrine, and then after in process of time, when the truth cannot be hidden from him, his highness will perceive how that you have dealt treachero [...] with him, I know his majesty's nature so w [...]ll (said the archbishop) that he will never after trust no [...] credit you, nor put any good confidence in you. And as you are both my friends, therefore I wish you to beware thereof in time, and discharge your consciences in maintenance of the truth.
BUT all this would not serve, for they still swerved; and in discharging his conscience, and declaring the truth unto the king, God so wrought with the king, that his highness joined with him against all the rest, so that the book of articles passing on his side, he won the prize from them all, con [...]rary to all their expectations, when many wagers were [Page 173] laid in London, that he would have been laid up with Cromwel at that time in the Tower, for his bold standing up to his principles. After that day there could neither chancellor, bishop, nor papist, bring him out of the king's favour.
NOTWITHSTANDING, not long after that, certain of the council, whose names need not be mentioned, by the enticement and provocation of his old enemy the bishop of Winchester, and others of the same sect, attempted the king against him, declaring plainly, that the realm was so infected with heresies and heretics, that it was dangerous for his highness farther to permit it unreformed, l [...]st peradventure by long suffering, such contention should arise, and ensue in the realm among his subjects, that there might spring horrible commotions and uproars, as was the case in some parts of Germany not long ago. The enormity whereof they could not impute to any so much as to the archbishop of Canterbury, who by his own preaching, and his chaplains, had filled the realm with divers and pernicious heresies. The king would needs know his accusers. They answered, forasmuch as he was a counsellor no man durst take upon him to accuse him: but if it would please his highness to commit him to the Tower for a time, there would be accusations and proofs enough against him: for otherwise, just testimony and witness against him would not appear, and therefore your highness (said they) must needs give us the council, liberty and leave to commit him to prison.
THE king perceiving their importune suit against the archbishop, (but yet meaning not to have him wronged and utterly given over into their hands) granted unto them that they should the next day commit him to the Tower for his trial. When night came, the king sent sir Anthony Deny about midnight to Lambeth to the archbishop, willing him forthwith to resort unto him at the court. The message done, the archbishop speedily addressed himself at the court, and coming into the gallery where the king walked and ta [...]ried for him, his highness said, Ah, my lord of Canterbury, I can tell you news. For divers weighty considerations it is determined by me and the council, that you to morrow by nine of the clock, should be committed to the Tower, for that you and your chaplains (as information is given us) have taught and preached, and thereby sown within the realm such a number of execrable heresies, that it is feared, the whole realm being infected with them, no small contentions and commotions will arise thereby among my subjects, as in late days the like was in divers parts of Germany: and therefore the council have requested me, for the trial of the matter, to suffer them to commit you to the Tower, or else no man dare come forth, as witness in these matters, you being a counsellor.
WHEN the king had spoke his mind, the archbishop kneeled down, and said, I am content, if it please your grace, with all my heart, to go thither at your highness's commandment, and I most humbly thank your majesty that I may come to my trial; for there be those that have many ways slandered me, and now by this way I hope to clear myself of such report.
THE king perceiving the man's uprightness, joined with such simplicity, said, O Lord! what manner of man be you! what simplicity is in you! I thought that you would rather have sued to us to have taken the pains to have heard you and your accusers together for your trial, without any such imprisonment. Do you not know what state you be in with the whole world, and how many great enemies you have? Do you not consider what an easy thing it is, to procure three or four false knaves to witness against you? Think you to have better luck that way than your master C [...]rist had? I see by it you will run headlong to your own ruin, if I would suffer you. Your enemies shall not so prevail against you, for I have otherwise devised with myself to keep you out of their hands. Yet notwithstanding to morrow when the council shall sit, and send for you, resort unto them, and if, in charging you with this matter, they do commit you to the Tower, require of them, (because you are one of them a counsellor) that you may have your accusers brought before them without any further confinement, and use for yourself as good arguments that way as you may devise; and if no intreaty or reasonable request will serve, then deliver unto them this my ring (which then the king delivered unto the archbishop), and say unto them, If there be no remedy, my lords, but that I must needs go [Page 174] to the Tower, then I revoke my cause from you, and appeal to the king's own person, by this his token unto you all; for (said the king to the archbishop) as soon as they shall see this my [...], they will know it so well, that they shall understand that I have resumed the whole cause into mine own hands and determination, and that I have discharged them thereof.
THE archbishop perceiving the king's benignity so much towards him, had much ado to forbear tears. Well, said the king, go your ways, my lord, and do as I have bidden you. My lord, humbling himself with thanks, took his leave of his majesty for that night.
ON the morrow about nine of the clock before noon, the council sent a gentleman usher for the archbishop, who, when he came to the council-chamber door, could not be let in, but of purpose (as it seemed) was compelled there to wait among the pages, lacquies, and serving men. Dr. Butts, the king's physician, resorting that way, and seeing how my lord of Canterbury was used, went immediately to the king's highness, and said, May it please your grace, my lord of Canterbury is well promoted; for he is now become a footman: yonder he hath stood this half hour at the council-chamber door amongst them. Sure it is not so! (quoth the king) the council hath not so little discretion as to use the metropolitan of all the realm in that manner, especially being one of their own number. But let him alone (said the king), you shall hear more by and by.
AT last the archbishop was called into the council-chamber, to whom was alledged, as before is rehearsed. The archbishop answered as the king had before advised him; and in the end, when he perceived that no manner of persuasion or intreaty could serve, he delivered the king's ring, revoking his cause into the king's hands. At this the whole council were much amazed, and it is an easy matter to imagine how foolishly they looked upon one another. The earl of Bedford with a lo [...]d voice, and [...] oath, said, When you first began the matter, my lords, I told you what would come of it. Do you think that the king will suffer this man's [...]inger to ake? much more, I warrant you, will he defend his life against brabbling varlets. You do but encumber yourselves to hear tales and fables against him And so immediately, upon receipt of the king's token, they all arose, and carried the king his ring, surrendering the matter, as the order and custom was, into his own hands.
WHEN they were all come into the king's presence, his highness, with a severe countenance, said unto them, Ah, my lords, I thought I had [...] men of my council than I now find you. What discretion was this in you, thus to make the prima [...] of all the realm, and one of you in office, to wait [...] the council chamber door amongst footmen▪ You might have considered that he was a counsellor as well as you, and that you had no such commission of me so to handle him. I was willing th [...] you should try him as a counsellor, and not as a mean subject. But now I well perceive that thi [...] be done against him maliciously, and if some of you might have had your minds, you would have tried him to the uttermost. But I would have you all to know, and I do protest, that if a prince may be beholden to his subject, (solemnly laying his hand on his breast) by the faith I owe to God, I take this man here, my lord of Canterbury, to be of [...] others a most faithful subject unto us, and one [...] whom we are much beholden, giving him great commendations otherwise. And with that one [...] two of the chief of the council, making their [...] declared, that in desiring his confinement, it [...] rather meant for his trial, that he might have [...] opportunity of clearing himself of the slandero [...] reports of the world, than for any malice conceiv [...] against him. Well, well, quoth the king, take [...] and use him well, as he is worthy to be, and [...] no more ado. And with that every man [...] him by the hand, and made fair weather altogether, which might easily be done with him.
AND it was much to be marvelled, that they would go so far with him, thus to seek his ruin when they well knew that the king most intirely loved him, and would always stand in his defence▪ whosoever spake against him; as many other times the king's patience was tried by sinister informations against him; insomuch that the lord Cromwel was commonly wont to say unto him, My lord of Canterbury, you are most happy of all men; [Page 175] for you may do and speak what you list; and say what all men can against you, the king will never believe one word to your detriment or hindrance. I am sure I take more pains than all the council doth, and spend more largely in the king's affairs, as well beyond the seas as on this side: yea I assure you, even very spies in other foreign realms at Rome and elsewhere, cost me above a thousand marks a year: and do what I can to bring matters to knowledge, for the advantage of the king and the realm, I am every day chidden, and many false t [...]es now and then believed against me; and therefore you are most happy, for in no point can you be discredited with the king. To this the archbishop answered, If the king's majesty were not good to me that way, I were not able to stand and endure one whole week; but your wisdom and policy is such, that you are able to shift well enough for yourself.
NOW when the king's highness had thus benignly and mercifully dispatched the said archbishop from this fore accusation by the council laid against him, all wise men would have thought that it had been mere folly afterwards to have attempted any matter against him: but yet look where malice reigneth, there neither reason nor honesty can take place. Such therefore as had conceived deep rancour and displeasure against him, ceased not to persecute him by all possible means. Then brought they against him a new kind of accusation, and caused sir John Gostwike, knig [...]t, a man of a contrary religion, to accuse the archbishop openly in the parliament-house, laying to his charge his sermon preached at Sandwich, and his lectures read at Canterbury, wherein should be contained m [...]nifest heresies against the sacrament of the altar, &c. Which accusation came to the king's ear. Why (quoth the king) where dwelleth Gostwike? as I take it, either in Bedfordshire or Buckinghamshire, and hath he so open an ear that he can hear my lord of Canterbury preaching out of Kent? This is very likely, said the king. If he had been a Kentish-man, there had been something worthy of consideration: but as for Gostwike, I know him well enough, and what good religion he is of. Go to him and tell him, said the king to one of his privy chamber, if he goes not to my lord of Canterbury, and so reconcile himself to him, that he may become his good lord, I will pull the goslin's feathers so, that hereafter he shall have little lust to slander the metropolitan, or any other learned man. When sir John Gostwike heard these words, there was no need to bid him hasten to Lambe [...]h unto the metropolitan, making to him as many friends as possibly he might. When he came to the archbishop, he was fain to disclose unto him, by what means he was procured to do that which he did; requesting his clemency to be his good lord, or else he took himself to be utterly undone, being so in the king's indignation, as he understood he was by that before declared, which petition was soon granted by that good-natured archbishop, who not only forgave sir John all his ingratitude, but also went to the king, and procured him his majesty's favour again. And thus the king made a short end of this accusation.
WELL, here you may perceive that malicious invention went not the wisest way to work, to procure a stranger dwelling afar off, to accuse the archbishop of his doctrine preached in his diocese: and therefore hath blind malice learnt some more wisdom now to accuse their archbishop in such a manner as he shall never be able to avoid it. And therefore it was procured by his ancient enemies, that not only the prebendaries of his cathedral church in Canterbury, but also the most famous justices of the peace in the shire should accuse him, and article against him; which in very deed was most substantially brought to pass, and the articles both well written and subscribed, were delivered to the king's highness as a thing of such effect, that there must needs follow to the said archbishop, both indignation of the prince, and condign punishment for his grievous offence committed by him and his chaplains, in preaching such erroneous doctrine as they did within his diocese of Canterbury; whereof they being such witnesses of credit, no man had cause to doubt of their circumspect doings. This accusation particularly sent out, was delivered to the king by the means of some of the council: when the king had perused the book, he wrapt it up, and put it in his sleeve; and finding occasion to solace himself upon the Thames, came with his barge, furnished with his musicians, along by Lambeth-bridge towards Chelsea. The noise of the musicians provoked the archbishop to resort to the bridge to do his duty, and to salute his prince. Whom when [Page 176] the king had perceived to stand at the bridge, immediately commanded the waterman to draw towards the shore, and so came straight to the bridge.
Ah, my chaplain (said the king to the archbishop [...], come into the barge to me. The archbishop told his highness that he would take his own barge, and wait on his majesty. No, said the king, you must come into my barge, for I want to talk with you. When the king and the archbishop were both together alone in the barge, the king said to the archbishop, I have news out of Ke [...]t for you my lord. The archbishop answered, Good, I hope, if it please your highness. Marry, quoth the king, it is so good that I now know the greatest heretic in Kent, and with that pulled the book of articles out of his sleeve against both the archbishop and his preachers and gave the book to him, desiring him to peruse the same. When the archbishop had read the articles, and saw himself so uncourteously handled of his own church whereof he was head, I mean the prebendaries of his cathedral, and of such his neighbours as he had many ways gratified, I mean the justices of the peace it much grieved him. Notwithstanding he kneeled down to the king, and besought his majesty to grant out a commission to whomsoever it pleased his highness, for them to try out the truth of this accusation. In very deed, said the king, I do mean so to do, and you yourself shall be chief commissioner, to adjoin to you such two or three more as you shall think good yourself. Then it will be thought, quoth the archbishop, that it is not fair and impartial that I should be my own judge and my chaplains also. Well, said the king, I will have none other but yourself, and such as you will appoint: for I am sure that you will not halt with me in any thing, although you be driven to accuse yourself, and I know partly how this affair proceedeth, and if you handle the matter wisely, you shall find a pret [...]y conspiracy devised against you. Whom will you have with you, said the king? Whomsoever it shall please your grace to name, quoth the archbishop. I will appoint Dr. Belhouse for one, name you the other, said the king, meet for that purpose. My chancellor, Dr. Cox, and Hussey, my register, said the archbishop, are me [...] expert to examine such troublesome [...]. Well, said the king [...] a commission made forth, and out of hand get you into Kent, and advertise me of your doings.
THEY came into Kent, and there they [...]a [...] abo [...]t three weeks to find out who was the first oc [...]asion of this accusation, for thereof the king would chie [...] be informed. Now the inquisition being begun [...] the commissioners, every m [...]n shrunk in his [...] ▪ and no man would confess any thing to the purpo [...] ▪ For Dr. Cox and Hussey, being friendly to the [...]pists, handled the matter so, that they would [...] nothing material to come to light. This [...] being well perceived by the archbishop's secret [...] he wrote immediately to Dr. Buts and Mr. [...] ▪ declaring, that if the king did not send some [...] to assist my lord, than those that then were [...] with him, it were impossible that any thing [...] come to light: and therefore wished that Dr. [...] or some other spirited man that had been [...] in the king's ecclesiastical affairs in his visita [...], might be sent to the archbishop. Upon [...], Dr. Lee was sent for to court by the [...] and having the king's mind farther declared [...] him when he came to court, he departed [...] into Kent, so that on All-hollow-eve [...]livered to the archbishop the king's ring, [...] declaration of his highness's farther pleasure and after his message was delivered, he advised the [...] bishop to name him a dozen or sixteen of [...] and gentlemen, such a had both discreti [...] [...] and penetration, to whom he gave in [...] from the king, to search both the purses, [...] and chambers of all those that were deemed [...] to be of this confederacy, both [...] cathedral church and without, and such [...] writings as they could find about them, [...] them to the archbishop and him.
THESE men thus appointed, went in one [...] instant to all the houses and places they were [...] pointed to; and within four hours afterwards the whole conspiracy was disclosed by finding of letters some from the bishop of Winchester, some from Dr. London, at Oxford, and from justices of the s [...]re, with others; so that the first beginning, th [...] pr [...] ceeding, and what should have been the [...]nd of their [...] manifest. Certain chambers and [...] of gen [...]leman of the shire were also [...], where [...] [Page 177] to this purpose. Amongst others, two letters came to my lord's hands, the one wrote by the suffragan of Dover, and the other by Dr. Barbar, a civilian, whom the archbishop continually retained in his house for the expedition of matters in suit before him, as a counsellor in the law when need required. These two men being well promoted by the archbishop, he used ever in such familiarity, that when the suffragan, being prebendary of Canterbury, [...] to him, he always had him at his own mess, and the other never from his table, as men in whom he had much delight and comfort, when time of care and pensiveness happened. But that which they did was altogether counterfeit, and the [...] wil was turned into the angel of light, for they were both of this confederacy.
WH [...] my lord had gotten these their letters into his [...], he one day when the suffragan happened [...] to him at his house at Bekisburn, called him into his study along with Dr. Barbar, saying, Come your ways with me, for I must have your [...]dvi [...]e in a matter. When they were both with him in his study, he said to them, You two are men in whom I have had much confidence and trust; you must now give me some good counsel, for I am shamefully abused by one or two, to whom I have trusted all my secrets from time to time, and did trust them as myself. The matter is so now fallen out, that they not only have disclosed my secrets, but have also taken upon them to accuse me of heresy, and are become witnesses against me. I require you therefore with your good advice to instruct me how I shall behave myself towards them. You are both my friends, and such as I have always used when I needed counsel. What say you to the matter, said the archbishop?
MARRY, quoth Dr. [...]arbar, such villains and knaves (saving your honour) are not worthy to live, but out to be hanged out of hand without any other law. Hanging were too good quoth the suffragan, and if there lacked one to do execution, I would be hangman myself.
AT these words the archbishop, being astonished, cast up his hands to heaven, and said, O Lord most merciful God, whom may a man trust now a-days! It is most true which is said, "Cursed is he who putteth his trust in man, and in his own strength." There was never man used as I am: but O Lord, thou hast evermore defended me, and lent me one great friend and master (meaning the king) without whose protection I were not able to stand upright one day without being overthrown, I praise thy holy name therefore: and with that he pulled out of his bosom their two letters, and said, Know ye these letters, my masters? With that they fell down upon their knees, and desired forgiveness, declaring, how they a year before were tempted to do the same; and so very lamentingly weeping and bewailing their doings, besought his grace to pardon and forgive them. Well, said the gentle archbishop, God make you both good men, I never deserved this at your hands: but ask God forgiveness, against whom you have highly offended. If such men as you are not to be trusted, what should I do alive? I perceive now, that there is no fidelity or trust amongst men. I am brought to this point now, that I fear my left hand will accuse my right hand. I need not marvel much hereat, for our Saviour Christ truly prophesied of such a world to come in the latter days. I beseech him of his great mercy to finish that time shortly; and so departing he dismissed them both with gentle and comfortable words, in such sort that never after appeared in his countenance or words, any remembrance thereof.
NOW, when all these letters and accusations were found, they were put into a chest, the king's majesty minding to have perused some of them, and to have punished the principals of them. The chest and writings were brought to Lambeth; at which time began the parliament. Lord, what ado there was to procure the king a subsidy, to the intent that thereupon might ensue a pardon, which indeed followed, and so nothing was done other than their falsehood known. This was the last push that was attempted against the archbishop during king Henry the Eighth's days: for never after durst any man alledge any matter against him while he lived.
AND thus have you both the plotting and disclosing of this popish conspiracy against this worth archbishop and martyr of Christ, Thomas Cranmer. In which conspiracy, forasmuch as complaint was [Page 178] also made to the king against his chaplains and good preachers in Kent, it shall not be forgotten to mention something concerning them, especially of Richard Turner, then preacher in the archbishop's diocese, and curate to Mr. Morrice, the archbishop's secretary, in the town of Chatham, by whose diligent preaching a great part of this heart-burning of the papists took it's first kindling against the archbishop. Touching the description of which story, because nothing shall be said by me, neither more nor less than is the truth; you shall hear the very certainty thereof, truly compiled in a letter sent the same time to Dr. Buts, and sir Anthony Deny, to be shewed unto the king, and so it was written by the aforesaid Mr. Morrice, then secretary to the archbishop, farmer of the benefice of Chatham, and patron to Mr. Turner, there minister and preacher aforesaid.
A LETTER Of Apology written by Mr. MORRICE to Sir WILLIAM BUTS, and Sir ANTHONY DENY, defending the Cause of Mr. RICHARD TURN [...], Preacher, against the Papists.
THE letter first beginning in these words: "I am certain (right worshipful) that it is not unknown to your discreet wisdom," &c. And after a few lines, coming to the matter, thus the letter proceedeth.
AS your worships well know, it was my fortune to be brought up under my lord of Canterbury, my master, in writing of the ecclesiastical affairs of this realm, as well concerning reformation of corrupt religion, as concerning the advancement of that pure and sincere religion received by the doctrine of the gospel; which I take to be so substantially handled and built upon the doctrine of the prophets and apostles, that hell-gates shall never prevail against it. The consideration whereof compelled me, being a farmer of the parsonage of Chatham, in Kent, to retain with me one named Richard Turner, a man not only learned in the scriptures of God, but also in conversation of life towards the world irreprehensible, whom for discharging of my conscience I placed at Chatham, aforesaid, to be curate there. This man because he was a stranger in the country there, was therefore void of grudge, displeasure [...] any old rancour to any individual, and through [...] [...]nd other good qualities gained him credit i [...] [...] doctrine; but where malice once taketh fire agai [...] truth, no policy I see is able to quench it. [...] this man as he knew what appertained to his [...] so he spared not weekly both Sundays and [...] to open the gospel and epistle unto his [...] such a sort, when occasion served, that as [...] his vehement inveighing against the [...] Rome's usurped power and authority, as in [...] earnest setting forth and advancing of the [...] majesty's supremacy, innumerable of the peopl [...] [...] the country resorting unto his sermons, [...] their opinions, and favoured effectually the relig [...] received The confluence of the people so daily [...]creased, that the church being a fair, ample, [...] large church, was not now and then able [...] the number. The fame of this new [...] the people was so blazed abroad, that the [...] priests were wonderfully amazed and displeased [...] see their pope so defaced, and their prince so hig [...] advanced.
NOW, thought they, it is high time for us to work, or else all here will be utterly lost by this [...] preaching: some of them went with capons, some with hens, some with chickens, some with [...] thing, some with another, unto the justices, suc [...] [...] then favoured their cause and faction, and such as were no small fools, as sir John Baker▪ sir Christopher Hales, sir Thomas Moile, knights, with other justices. The prebendaries of Christ's-church, [...] Canterbury, were made privy hereof, giving their succour and aid thereunto. So that in [...] poor Turner, and other preachers, were grievously complained of unto the king's majesty. Wh [...] upon my lord of Canterbury, and certain other commissioners, were appointed at Lambeth to [...] upon the examination of these seditious preach [...]. However, before Turner went up to his examination, I obtained of Sir Thomas Moile, that he i [...] Easter week was content to hear Turner preach a rehearsal sermon in his parish church at Westwell, of all the doctrine of his sermons preached at his cure in Chatham: which he most gently [...] heard Turner both before noon and [...] the Wednesday in Easter week last past, and as it seemed, took all things in good part, remitting [Page 179] Turner home to his said cure with gentle and favourable words. I supposed by this means to have s [...]ayed Mr. Turner at home for further examination, hoping that sir Thomas Moile would have answered for him at Lambeth before the commissioners. Notwithstanding, after Mr. Moile's coming to [...], such information was laid in against Tur [...] ▪ [...] he was sent for to make answer himself before the said commissioners; and there appearing before them, he made such an honest, perfect, and [...]ned answer unto the articles objected, that he [...] with a good exhortation discharged home again, without any manner of recantation or other injunction.
NOW when the pope-catholic clergy of Kent understood of his coming home without controulment, [...] that he preached as freely as he did before, agai [...] [...]eir blind and dumb ceremonies, straightway by the help of Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, they found a new means to put him to [...]ter confusion, devising that he came home from examination in such glorious pomp by the highways side in the woods adjoining, that five hundred persons met him then with banqueting dishes to welcome him home, stirring the people rather to an uproar and commotion, than to keep them in any quiet obedience: when▪ in very deed, contrary to this surmise, (as God would) on this side Rochester, a mile or two, for avoiding all such light and glorious talk with any of his familiars or acquaintance, he of purpose left the highway, and came through the woods all alone above eighteen miles together on foot, so wearied and fatigued for want of [...], that when h [...] came into my house at Chatham, he was not well [...] to stand or speak for faintness and thirst.
THIS malicious tale being reported to the king's highness, his majesty was so sore grieved therewith, that he sent for the archbishop of Canterbury, willing him to cause Turner to be whipped out of the country. By means whereof the archbishop of Canterbury sent again for Turner: I hearing thereof immediately made report by my letters, with such vehemency proving it were malice, that the archbishop understanding the truth, pacified again the king's wrath. Home cometh Turner once again to his cure without blot; which so wrung the papists, in that, they could not prevail, that they thought it all in vain any further to attempt against him concerning any accusation for matters in Kent, the archbishop of Canterbury being his ordinary. Well, yet would they not thus leave him undiscredited. Then was there one new matter devised, how that he had preached erroneous doctrine in other counties before he came into Kent, laying to his charge that he had both translated the mass into English, and said, or ministered the same, and that he had preached against purgatory, pilgrimages, and praying for the dead, &c. By means whereof he was now convented before the whole council by the bishop of Winchester, who sent Syriake Petite, gentleman, for him, who brought him up to London bound, (as I heard say) and being examined before the said bishop of Winchester and others, he was committed to ward for a season.
IN the mean time, the archbishop of Canterbury being in Kent about the trial of a conspiracy purposed against himself by the justices of the shire and the prebendaries of Christ's church, Turner is now sent down to the archbishop to the intent he should recant that doctrine which long ago he, in other places out of Kent, had preached, to the utter subversion and defacing of all that he had most godly and earnestly here in Kent taught, both to the glory of God, and the furtherance and setting forth of the king's highness's proceedings. If his majesty will thus permit learned honest men thus daily to be insulted and trodden under foot with a sort of tyrannous or rather traiterous papists (who cannot abide to hear his majesty's supremacy advanced, nor the sincere word of God preached), it were better for men to dwell amongst the infidels and miscreants than in England.
WHAT reason is this, that Turner should recant here in Kent the doctrine which in other counties he hath taught, to the wounding and overthrowing most desperately of five hundred men's consciences and above, (I dare say) who lately by his sincere preaching, have embraced a right good opinion, both of the king's supremacy, and also of the reformed religion received? All good subjects may well lament the king's majesty's estate in this behalf, that no man may dare to be so bold to advance his highness's title, but that every ignorant and malicious [Page 180] papist shall spurn against him, seeking his utter undoing, and that by the aid of papistical justices set in authority. I bese [...]ch your worships to pardon me of my rude and homely terms. They herein deserve worse if worse may be devised. For what honest man can bear with this, that so noble a prince's ears shal [...] be thus impudently abused with manifest li [...]s and fables, as this one is of Turner's coming home in such a triumph as they craftily and falsely had devised? It is easily to be espied what they mean to go about, that, the prince being alive, dare take in hand so uncourteously to abuse both the gentle nature of the prince, and his godly preacher, the advancer and extoller of his just authority.
WHAT think your worships they would attempt, if his majesty were at God's mercy, (as God forbid that ever any of us should see that day, without better reformation) that can thus daily with his highness, blinding his eyes with mists, while he liveth and reigneth amongst us in most prosperity? As for my lord of Canterbury, he dare do nothing for the poor man's delivery, he hath done so much for him already. And his grace hath told me plainly, that it is put into the king's head that he is the maintainer and supporter of all the heretics within the realm; nor will he permit me or my neighbours to resort unto the council for his purgation while he was at Chatham, saving only I have obtained this at his hand, that I may become a suiter in writing to my friends and good masters in the court for his delivery.
AND therefore it is (right worshipful) that I have now taken pen in hand, thus to discourse and open our misery unto you concerning the extreme handling of this poor honest man, Mr. Turner, that if it ma [...] possibly be brought to pass by your godly wisdom, the poor man may be released and discharged of his recantation; you cannot do to God and your prince a more acceptable service in my poor opinion. For otherwise if he should be driven to recant, (as I am sure he will sooner die) both the cause of God and the king will suffer no small detriment amongst his poor loving subjects here. For if there be no better stay for the maintenance of these godly preachers, the king's authority concerning his supremacy shall lie entirely hidden in the act of [...], and not in the hearts of his subjects.
IF they [...] bring to pass that Turner may [...] to the defacing of his good doctrine preached [...] then have they that for which they have th [...] [...]vailed. And yet in effect shall not Turner [...] but king Henry the Eighth in Turner's person [...] most odiously recant, to the wounding of all [...] consciences here. If the king's majesty do [...] esteem his authority given to his highness by [...] word and his parliament; it were well done that [...] preachers had good warning to talk no more [...] people thereof, rather than thus to be tossed [...] troubled for doing their duties by the member [...] [...] Antichrist.
AND now to the intent that they might [...] for ever slander Turner's doctrine [...] have indicted him for offending against the [...]ticles this last sessions, by the witness of two [...] of the parish of Chatham, his utter enemies, S [...]ders and Brown by name, for a sermon preache [...] Chatham on Passion-Sunday, which chanced [...] Gregory's even, they both being absent that [...] Wye fair, as it is well proved, namely, for that [...] preached against the mass: saying, that our Savior Christ was the only sole priest, which sung mass [...] the altar of the cross, there sacrificing for the sins of the world once for ever, and that all other mas [...] were but remembrances and thanksgiving for that one sacrifice; or such words in effect.
WHEREFORE, to conclude, (right worshipful) knowing your godly zeal, as well towards the preferment of sincere religion, as your no less affection toward [...] the king's majesty's person and his godly proceedings, I most humbly beseech you, in the bowels of our Saviour Christ, so to ponder the weighty consideration of the premises, as by your travails unto the king's majesty, or to the honourable council, we here in Kent that have now of lat [...] our hearts bent towards the observation of t [...]e law of God and the prince, through Turner's godly persuasions, may receive from your worships some comforts of his deliverance, or else certainly many an honest and simple man, lately embracing the truth, may perhaps fall away desperately from the se [...]e, not without danger of their souls. In accomplishing [Page 181] whereof your worships shall not only do [...] Almighty God and the prince most true and accep [...]ble service, but also bind the said Mr. Turne [...], wi [...]h all others to whom this cause doth appertain, both daily to pray for your prosperities, and also to be at your commandments during their lives. From Canterbury, the second day of November.
AND thus much containeth the letter sent (as is said) by Mr. Morrice to Dr. Buts and sir Anthony Deny. Now, what success and speed this letter had, hereafter shall be declared. For Dr. Buts, the king's physician aforesaid, after the receipt of th [...]se letters, considering the weighty contents of the [...], as he was ever a forward friend in the gospel's cause, so he determined to act in this matter to the uttermost of his diligence, and so watching his opportunity, when the king was in trimming and in washing (as his manner was at certain times to call for his barbar), Dr. Buts, whose manner was at such times ever to be present, and with some pleasant conceits to refresh and solace the king's mind, brought with him, in his hand, this letter. The king asking what news, Dr. Buts pleasantly and merrily beginneth to insinuate to the king the effect of the matter, and so at the king's command read out the letter; which, when the king had heard, and paused a little thereon, commanded the letter to be read again. The hearing and consideration whereof so altered the king's mind, that whereas before he commanded the said Turner to be whipped out of the country, he now commanded him to be retained as a faithful subject. And here is an end of that matter. Let us now return to the archbishop again.
ALTHOUGH he was encompassed about (as is said) with mighty enemies, and by many crafty trains impugned, yet through God's more mighty providence, working in the king's heart so to favour him, he lived out all king Henry's time without blemish o [...] soil, by means of the king's protection; who not only defended the said archbishop against such conspired adversaries, but also extended special favour to him.
THEN after the death of king Henry, immediately succeeded his son king Edward, under whose government and protection the state of this archbishop, being his godfather, was not impaired, but rather more advanced.
DURING all this time of king Henry aforesaid, until the entering in of king Edward, it seemed that Cranmer was scarcely yet thoroughly persuaded in the right knowledge of the sacrament, or at least was not yet fully ripened in the same; wherein shortly after he being more grounded and confirmed by conference with bishop Ridley, in process of time did so profit in more [...] knowledge, that at last he took upon him the defence of that whole doctrine, that is, to refute and throw down first the corporal presence; secondly, the fantastical transubstantiation; thirdly, the idolatrous adoration; fourthly, the false error of the papists, that wicked men do eat the natural body of Christ; and lastly, the blasphemous sacrifice of the mass. Whereupon in conclusion he wrote five books for the public instruction of the church of England, which instruction to this day standeth, and is received in the church of England.
AGAINST these five books of the archbishop, Stephen Gardiner, the arch-enemy to Christ and his gospel, being then in the Tower, drew up a certain answer such as it was, which he in open court exhibited at Lambeth, being there examined by the archbishop aforesaid, and other the king's commissioners in king Edward's days, which book was entitled, "An explication and assertion of the true catholic faith, touching the blessed sacrament of the altar, with a confutation of a book written against the same."
AGAINST this explication, or rather cavilling sophistication of Stephen Gardiner, doctor of law, the archbishop of Canterbury learnedly and copiously replied again, which also he published abroad to the eyes and judgments of all men.
THE unquiet spirit of Stephen Gardiner being not yet contented, after all this he thrust out another book in Latin of the like popish argument, but after another title, named Marcus Antonius Constantinus. Whereunto first the archbishop again [Page 182] intending a full confutation, had already absolved three parts of his answer lying in prison. Of which parts two perished in Oxford; the other is fallen in my hands, worthy to be seen and set forth, as the Lord shall see good. Also bishop Ridley, lying likewise the same time in prison, having there the said book of Marcus Antonius, for lack of pen and paper, with the lead of a window, in the margin of the book wrote annotations, as streightness [...] time would serve him, in refutation of the same book. And finally, because these worthy martyrs had neither liberty nor leisure to go through with that travail, that which lacked in them, for the accomplishm [...]n [...] of that behalf, was supplied shortly by Peter Martyr, who abundantly and substantially hath overthrown that book in his learned defence of the truth, against the false sophistication of Marcus Antonius aforesaid.
BESIDES these books above cited of this archbishop, divers other things there were also of his doing, as the book of the reformation, the catechism, with the book of homilies, whereof part was by him contrived, part by his procurement approved and published. Whereunto also may be adjoined another writing of confutation of his against eighty-eight articles by the convocation devised and propounded, but yet not ratified nor received in the reign of king Henry the Eighth.
AND thus much concerning the actions of this archbishop of Canterbury, during the lives of king Henry the Eighth, and of king Edward his son. During whose lives this archbishop lacked no stay of maintenance against all his enemies.
AFTERWARD, this king Edward, a prince of most worthy qualifications, falling sick, when he perceived that his death was at hand, and the force of his painful disease would not suffer him to live longer, and knowing that his sister Mary was wholly wedded to the popish religion, bequeathed the succession of this realm to the lady Jane (a lady of great birth, but of greater learning, being niece to king Henry the Eighth by his sister) by consent of the council and lawyers of the realm. To this testament of the king's, when all the nobles of the realm, estates, and judges had subscribed, they sent for the archbishop, and required him that he [...] would subscribe. But he excusing himself [...] manner, said, That it was otherwise in the [...] of king Henry his father, and that he had sworn [...] the succession of Mary, as then the next heir▪ [...] oath he was so bound, that without manifest perjury he could not go from it.
THE council answered, that they were not ignorant of that, and that they had conscience as [...] as he; and moreover, that they were sworn to [...] testament, and therefore he should not think th [...] which was any danger therein, or that he should be in more peril of perjury than the rest.
TO this the archbishop answered, that he [...] judge of no man's conscience but his own: [...] therefore as he would not be prejudicial to others, so he would not commit his conscience unto other men's facts, or cast himself into danger, seeing [...] every man should give account of his own cons [...]ence, and not of other men's. And as concer [...] the subscription, before he had spoken with the [...] himself, he utterly refused to do it.
THE king therefore being demanded of the archbishop concerning this matter, said, That the nobles and lawyers of this realm counselled him unto it, and persuaded him that the bond of the first testament could nothing hinder, but that this lady Jane might succeed him as heir, and the people without danger acknowledge her as their queen. Who then demanding leave of the king that he might first talk with certain lawyers that were in the co [...]t; when they all agreed that by law of the realm it might be so, returning to the king, with much ado he subscribed.
WELL, not long after this king Edward died, being almost sixteen years old, to the great sorrow, but greater calamity of the whole realm. After whose decease, immediately it was commanded that the lady Jane (who was unwilling thereunto) should be proclaimed queen. Which thing the common people much disliked, not that they did so much favour the lady Mary, before whom they saw the lady Jane preferred, as for the hatred conceived against some whom they could not favour.
[Page 183]BESIDES this, there happened also other causes of [...] between the nobles and commons the same [...] what injuries of commons and enclosures wrongfully held, with other inordinate pollings and [...]ncharitable dealings between the landlords and tenants, I cannot tell. But in fine, thus the matter [...]ell out, that the lady Mary hearing of the death of her brother, and shifting for herself, was so assisted by the commons, that she soon prevailed. Who being established in the possession of the realm, not long after came to London: and after she had first caused the two fathers, the duke of Northumberland, and the duke of Suffolk, to be beheaded (as [...] been already related), she likewise caused the lady Jane, being both in age tender, and innocent from this crime, after she could by no means be earned from the constancy of her faith, together with her husband, to be beheaded.
THE rest of the nobles, paying fines, were forgiven, the archbishop of Canterbury only excepted: [...] though he desired pardon, by means of his [...], could obtain none; insomuch that the queen would not once vouchsafe to see him. For as yet the old grudge against the archbishop for the divorcement of her mother, remained hid in the bottom of her heart. Besides this divorce, she remembered the state of religion changed: all which was imputed to the archbishop as the cause thereof.
WHILE these things were doing, a rumour was in all men's mouths, that the archbishop, to gain favour with the queen, had promised to say a dirge mass after the old custom, for the funeral of king Edward, her brother. Neither wanted there some who reported that he had already said mass at Canterbury; which mass indeed was said by Dr. Thornton. This rumour Cranmer thinking speedily to stop, gave forth a writing of his purgation: the tenor whereof being before expressed, I need not here again recite.
THIS bill being thus written, and lying openly in a window in his chamber, cometh in by chance Mr. Story, then bishop of Rochester, who after he had read and perused the same, required the archbishop to have a copy of the bill. The archbishop granting the same, and by Mr. Story's lending it to another friend, there were divers copies taken, and the thing published abroad among the common people, insomuch that almost every scrivener's shop was occupied in copying out the same: and so at length some of these copies coming to the bishop's hands, and so brought to the council, and they sending it to the commissioners, the matter was known, and so he commanded to appear.
WHEREUPON Dr. Cranmer appeared at the day prefixed, before the said commissioners, bringing a true inventory, as he was commanded, of all his goods. That done, a bishop of the queen's privy council, being one of the said commissioners, after the inventory was received, made mention of the bill: My lord, said he, there is a bill put forth in your name, wherein you seem to be aggrieved with setting up the mass again; we doubt not but you are sorry that it is gone abroad.
TO whom the archbishop answered, As I do not deny myself to be the author of that bill or letter, so must I confess here unto you, concerning the same bill, that I am sorry that the said bill went from me in such sort as it did. For when I had written it, Mr. Story got the copy from me, and it is now come abroad, and as I understand, the city is full of it. For which I am sorry, that it so passed my hands: for I intended otherwise to have made it in a more large and ample manner, and minded to have set it on St. Paul's-church door, and on the doors of all the churches in London, with mine own seal joined thereunto.
AT which words, when they saw the constancy of the man, they dismissed him, affirming they had no more at present to say unto him, but that shortly he should hear farther. The said bishop declared afterwards to one of Dr. Cranmer's friends, that notwithstanding his attainder of treason, the queen's determination at that time was, that Cranmer should only be deprived of his archbishopric, and have had a sufficient living assigned him, upon his exhibiting of a true inventory, with commandment to keep his house without meddling in matters of religion. But how true that was I have not to say. This is certain, that not long after this, he was sent to the Tower, and soon after condemned for treason. Notwithstanding the queen, when she could not honestly deny him his pardon, seeing all the rest were [Page 184] discharged, and especially, seeing he last (of all others) subscribed to king Edward's request, and that against his own will, released to him his action of treason, and accused him only of heresy, which the archbishop liked well, and came to pass as he wished, because the cause was not his own but Christ's; not the queen's but the church's. Thus stood the cause of Cranmer, till at length it was determined by the queen and the council, that he should be removed from the Tower where he was prisoner, to Oxford, there to dispute with the doctors and divines. And privily word was sent before to them of Oxford to prepare themselves, and make them ready to dispute. And although the queen and the bishops had concluded before what should become of him, yet it pleased them that the matter should be debated with arguments, that under some honest shew of disputation the murder of the man might be covered. Neither could their hasty speed of revenge abide any long delay; and therefore in all haste he was carried to Oxford.
WHAT this disputation was and how it was handled, what were the questions and reasons on both sides, and also touching his condemnation by the university and prolocutor, because it hath been sufficiently declared, we intend now therefore to proceed to his final judgment and order of condemnation, which was the twelfth day of September, 1555, and seven days before the condemnation of bishop Ridley and Mr. Latimer, as is before-mentioned. The story whereof here followeth, faithfully corrected by the report and narration (coming by chance to our hands) of one who being both present thereat, and also a devout favourer of the see and faction of Rome, can lack no credit (I think) with such who seek what they can to discredit whatsoever maketh not with their fancied religion of Rome.
AFTER the disputations done and finished in Oxford between the doctors of both universities, and the three worthy bishops, Drs. Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer, ye heard then how sentence condemnatory, immediately upon the same, was administered against them by Dr. Weston and others of the university; whereby they were judged to be here [...], and so committed to the mayor and sheriffs of Oxford. But forasmuch as the sentence given against them was void in law, (for at that time [...] authority of the pope was not yet received into the land) therefore a new commission was sent from Rome, and a new process framed for the conviction of these reverend and godly learned men aforesaid. In which commission, first was Dr. James Brooks, bishop of Gloucester, the pope's sub delegate, with Dr. Martin and Dr. Story, commissioners in the king and queen's behalf for the execution of the same. Of which three commissioners above-named, as touching Dr. Martin, this by the way is to be understood, that although he was used for an instrument of the pope's side to serve a turn (whose book also is extant against the lawful marriage of priests) yet notwithstanding neither was he so bitter an enemy in this persecution as the other commissioners were; and also in the time of queen Elizabeth, were divers other doctors of the arches refused to be sworn against the pope, he denied not the oath; and yet notwithstanding not altogether here to be excused. But to the purpose of this st [...]ry. Whereof, first, it shall be requisite to decla [...] the circumstance, and the whole state of the ma [...] ter, as in a general description, before we come to their orations, according as, in a part of a certain letter concerning the same, it came to our hands.
IMPRIMIS, Here is to be understood, that at the coming down of the aforesaid commissioners, which was upon Thursday the 12th of September, 1555, in the church of St. Mary, and in the east end of the said church, at the high altar, was erected a solemn scaffold for bishop-Brooks aforesaid, representing the pope's person ten feet high. The seat was made that he might sit under the sacrament of the altar. And on the right hand of the pope's delegate, beneath him sat Dr. Martin, and on the left hand sat Dr. Story, the king and queen's commissioners, who were both doctors of the civil law, and underneath them other doctors, scribes and pharisees also, with the pope's collector, and a number of such others.
AND thus these bishops being placed in their pontificials, the archbishop of Canterbury was sent for to come before them. He having intelligence of [Page 185] them that were there, thus ordered himself. He came forth of the prison to the church of St. Mary, set forth with bills and spears for fear he should start away, being clothed in a fair black gown, with his hood on both shoulders, such as doctors of divinity use to wear in the university. Who, after he came into the church, and did see them sit in their pontificals, he did not pull off his cap to any of them, but stood still till he was called.
AND anon one of the [...]octors for the pope, also his doctor, called, Thomas, archbishop of Canterbury, appear here and make answer to what shall be laid to thy charge; that is to say, for blasphemy, incontinence and heresy; and make answer here to the bishop of Gloucester, representing the pope's person.
UPON this he being brought nearer unto the scaffold, where the aforesaid bishop sat, he first well viewed the place of judgment, and espying where the king and queen's majesties' proctors were, putting off his cap, he first humbly bowing his knee to the ground, made reverence to the one, and after to the other.
THAT done, beholding the bishop in the face, he put on his bonnet again, making no manner of token of obedience towards him at all. Whereat the bishop being offended, said unto him, that it might beseem him right well, weighing the authority he did represent, to do his duty unto him.
WHEREUNTO Dr. Cranmer answered and said, That he had once taken a solemn oath, never to consent to the admitting of the bishop of Rome's authority into this realm of England again; and that he had done it advisedly, and meant by God's grace to keep it; and therefore would commit nothing either by sign or token, which might argue his consent to the receiving of the same; and so desired the said bishop to judge him, and that he did it not for any contempt to his person, which he could willingly have honoured as well as any of the others, if his commission had come from as good an authority as their's. This he answered both modestly, wisely, and patiently, with his cap on his head, not once bowing or making any reverence to him that represented the pope's person, which was wonderously marked by the poople that were there present and saw it, and marked it as high as could be possible.
WHEN after many means used they perceived that the archbishop would not move his bonnet, the bishop proceeded in these words following.
The Oration of Dr. BROOKS, Bishop of Gloucester, unto Dr. CRANMER, Archbishop of Canterbury, in the Church of St. Mary, at Oxford, March 12, 1556.
MY lord, at this present we are to come to you as commissioners, and for you, not intruding ourselves by our own authority, but sent by commission, partly from the pope's holiness, partly from the king and queen's most excellent majesties, not to your utter discomfort, but to your comfort if you will yourself. We come, not to judge you, but to put you in remembrance of what you have been, and may be. Neither come we to dispute with you, but to examine you in certain matters; which being done, to make relation thereof to him that hath power to judge you. The first being well taken, shall make the second to be well taken. For if you, of your part, be moved to come to a conformity, then shall not only we on our side take joy of our examination, but also they that have sent us.
AND first, as charity doth move us, I would think good somewhat to exhort you, and that by the second chapter of St. John in the Revelations, "Remember from whence thou art fallen, and do the first works, or if not,"—and you know what followeth. Remember yourself from whence you have fallen. You have fallen from the universal and catholic church of Christ, from the very true and received faith of all Christendom and that by open heresy. You have fallen from your promise to God, from your fidelity and allegiance, and that by open preaching, marriage, and adultery. You have fallen from your sovereign prince and queen by open treason. Remember therefore from whence you are fallen. Your fall is great, the danger cannot be seen. Wherefore, when I say, Remember from whence you are fallen, I put you in [Page 186] mind not only of your fall, but also of the state you were in before your fall. You were some time, as I and other poor men, in a mean estate; God I take to witness, I speak it to no reproach or abasement of you, but to put you in memory, how God hath called you from a low to an high degree, from one degree to another, from better to better, and never gave you over, till he had appointed you an ambassador, metropolitan of all England, and pastor of his own flock: such great trust did he put you in, in his church; what could he do more? for even as he ordained Moses to be a ruler over his church of Israel, and give him full authority of the same; so did he make you over his church of England. And when did he this for you? forsooth when you gave no occasion or cause of mistrust either to him or to his magistrates. For although it be conjectured, that in all your time you were not upright in the honour and faith of Christ, but rather set up on purpose as a fit instrument, whereby the church might be spoiled and brought into ruin; yet may it appear by many of your doings otherwise, and I, for my part, as it behoveth each one of us, shall think the best. For who was thought as then more devout? who was more religious in the face of the world? who was thought to have more conscience of a vow-making, and observing the order of the church, more earnest in the defence of the real presence of Christ's body and blood in the sacrament of the altar than you were? and then all things prospered with you; your prince favoured you; yea, God himself favoured you; your candlestick was set up in the highest place of the church, and the light of your candle was over all the church; I would to God it had so continued still.
BUT after you begin to fall by schism, and would not acknowledge the pope's holiness as supreme head, but would stoutly uphold the unlawful requests of King Henry the Eighth, and would bear with what should not be borne withal, then began you to fancy unlawful liberty; and when you had exiled a good conscience, then ensued great shipwreck in the sea, which was out of the true and catholic church into the sea of desperation; for, as he saith, without the church there is no salvation. When you had forsaken God, God forsook you, and gave you over to your own will, and suffered you to fall from schism to apostacy, from apostacy to heresy, and from heresy to perjury, from perjury to treason, and so in conclusion into the full indignation of our sovereign prince, which you may think a just punishment of God for your other abominable opinions.
AFTER that, ye fell lower and lower and now [...] the lowest degree of all, to the end of honour and life. For if the light of your candle be as it ha [...] been hitherto dusky, your candlestick is like to be removed, and have a great fall, so low, and so far out of knowledge, that it be quite out of God's favour, and past all hope of recovery: for in [...] there is no redemption. The danger whereof being so great, very pity causeth me to say, "Remember from whence thou hast fallen;" I add also, and whither you fall.
BUT here peradventure you will say to [...] ▪ What, sir, my fall is not so great as you make it▪ I have not yet fallen from the catholic church. [...] that is not the catholic church that the pope i [...] [...] of. There is another church. But as [...] that I answer, You are sure of that as the Donati [...] were, for they said they had the true church, and that the name of true Christians remained only in Africa, where only their seditions were preached. And as you think, so thought Novatus, that all they that did acknowledge their supreme head at the see of Rome, were out of the Church of Christs. But here St. Cyprian, defending Cornelius against Novatus, Book ii. Epist. 6. saith on this wise, The church is one, which church, whereas it is one, it cannot be here and there. So that if Novatus was in the church, then was not Cornelius, who indeed by lawful succession succeeded pope Fabian. Here St. Cyprian intendeth by the whole process to prove, and concludeth thereupon, that the true church was only at Rome. Gather you then what will follow your fall. But you will you say peradventure, that you fell not by heresy, and so said the A [...]ians, alledging for themselves that they had scripture, and went about to support their schism by scripture; for indeed they had more places by two and forty, which by their torture seemed to depend upon scripture, than the catholics had.
SO did the Marcions endeavour to prove their heresy by scripture. But those are not scriptures; [Page 187] for they are not truly alledged, nor truly interpreted, but untruly wrested and wrong, according to their own fantasies. And therefore were they all justly condemned for their wrong taking of the scriptures, and the church replieth against them, saying, What make you here in my heritage? from whence came you? the scripture is mine inheritance; I am right heir thereof: I hold it by true succession of the apostles; for as the apostles required me to hold, so do I hold it. The apostles have received me, and put me in my right, and have rejected you as bastards, having no title thereunto.
ALSO you will deny that you have fallen by apostacy, by breaking your vow; and so Vigilantius said, insomuch that he would admit none to his ministry, but those who had their wives bagged with children. What now? shall we say, that Vigilantius did not fall therefore? Did not Donatus Novatus fall, because they said so, and brought scripture for their defence? Then let us believe [...] we list, pretending well, and say so: for except the church which condemneth them for their saying so, do approve us for so doing, then will she condemn you also: so that your denial will not stand. And therefore I tell you, Remember from whence you are fallen, and how long you shall fall if you hold on as you do begin. But I trust you will not continue, but revoke yourself in time, and the remedy followeth.
REPENT, and do thy first works, for by such means as you have fallen you must rise again. First, your heart hath fallen, then your tongue and your pen, and besides your own damage, hath caused many more to fall. Therefore first your heart must turn, and then shall the tongue and pen be quickly turned; or else I will come unto thee quickly, and will remove thy candlestick out of his place.
I need not to teach you a method to turn; you know the ready way yourself. But I would God I could but exhort you to the right and truth, then the way should soon be found out. For if you remember how many you have brought by abominable heresy into the way of perdition, I doubt not but very conscience would move you, as much for them as for yourself, to come again. And so would you spare neither tongue nor pen, if the heart were once reformed; for as touching that point, the Holy Ghost toucheth their hearts very near by the mouth of his holy prophet Ezekiel, when he requireth the blood of his flock at the priest's hands, for lack of good and wholesome food. How much more should this touch your guilty heart, having overmuch diligence to teach them the way of perdition, and feeding them with baggage and corrupt food, which is heresy; "He that shall convert a sinner from his wicked life, shall save his soul from death, and shall cover the multitude of sins." So that if it be true, that he who converteth a sinner, saveth a soul; then the contrary must needs be true, that he that perverteth a soul, and teacheth him the way to perdition, must needs be damned.
ORIGEN, on the epistle of St. Paul to the Romans, saith the damnation of those that preach heresy doth increase to the day of judgment. The more that perish by heretical doctrine, the more grievous shall their torment be, that minister such doctrine. Berengarius, who seemed to fear that danger, provided for it in his life-time, but not without a troubled and disquiet conscience. He did not only repent, but recant, and not so much for himself, as for them whom he had with most pestilent heresies infected. For as he lay on his deathbed, upon Epiphany-day, he demanded of them that were present, Is this (quoth he) the day of Epiphany, and appearing of the Lord? They answered him, Yea. Then (quoth he) this day shall the Lord appear to me, either to my comfort, or to my discomfort. This remorse argueth, that he feared the danger of them whom he had taught and led out of the faith of Christ. Origen, upon him, saith in this wise, "Although his own blood was not upon his head, for that he did repent, and was sorry for his former errors, yet being converted, he feared the blood of them whom he had infected, and who received his doctrine."
LET this move you even at the last point. Insomuch as your case is not unlike to Berengarius, let your repentance be like also. And what should stay you (tell me) from this godly return? Fear that you have gone so far ye may not return? Nay, then I may say as David said, "You fear where you [Page 188] have no cause to fear." For if you repent and be heartily sorry for your former heresy and apostacy, you need not to fear. For as God, of his part, is merciful and gracious to the repentant sinner, so is the king, so is the queen merciful, which you may well perceive by your own case, since you might have suffered a great while ago for treason committed against her highness, but you have been spared and reserved upon hope of amendment, which she conceived very good of you, but now (as it seemeth) is but a very desperate hope. And what do you thereby? "According to the hardness of your heart you treasure up to yourself anger in the day of wrath."
WELL, what is it then, if fear do not hinder you? Shame, to unsay that you have said? Nay, it is no shame, unless you think it shame to agree with the true and catholic church of Christ. And if that be shame, then blame St. Paul, who persecuted the disciples of Christ with the sword; then blame St. Peter, who denied his master Christ with an oath, that he never knew him. St. Cyprian, before his return being a witch; St. Austin, being nine years out of the church; they thought it no shame after their return, because that they had returned. Shall it then be a shame for you to convert and consent with the church of Christ? No, no.
WHAT is it then that doth hinder you? Glory of the world? Nay, as for the vanity of the world, I for my part judge not in you, being a man of learning and knowing your estate.
AND as for the loss of your estimation, it is ten to one that where you were archbishop of Canterbury, and metropolitan of all England, it is ten to one (I say) that you shall be well still, yea, and rather better.
AND as for the winning of good men, there is no doubt but all that are here present, and the whole congregation of Christ's church also, will more rejoice at your return, than they were sorry for your fall. And as for the other, you need not to doubt, but they will all come after; and to say the truth, if you should lose them for ever it were no force, you should have no loss thereby at all. I do not here intimate them which should confirm your estimation. For as St. Paul, after his conversion, [...] received into the church of Christ, with wonderful joy to the whole congregation, even so shall you be▪ The fame of your return shall be spread abroad throughout all Christendom, where your face [...] never known.
BUT you will say perhaps, your conscience will not suffer you. My lord, there is a good conscience, and there is a bad conscience. The good conscience have not they, as St. Paul declareth to Timothy, concerning Hymeneus and Alexander. The evil and bad conscience is, saith St. Cyprian, well to be known by his mark. What mark? This conscience is marked with the print of heresy. This conscience is a wicked, filthy, and a branded conscience, which I trust is not in you. I have conceived a better hope of you than so, or else I would never go about to persuade or exhort [...] But what conscience should stay you to return to the catholic faith and universal church of Christ▪ What conscience doth separate you to that divili [...]h and several church? To a liberty which never [...] ground in the holy scriptures? If you judge your liberty to be good, then judge you all Christendom to do evil besides you.
O what a presumptuous persuasion is this, upon this utterly to forsake the church of Christ? Under what colour or pretence do you this? For the abuses? As though in your church were no abuses: yes, that there were. And if you forsake the universal church for the abuses, why do you not then forsake your particular church, and so be flitting from one to another? That is not the best way, to slip from the church for the abuses; for if you had seen abuses, you should rather have endeavoured for a reformation than for a defection. He is a good surgeon, who for a little pain in the toe will cut off the whole leg. He helpeth well the toothach, which cutteth away the head by the shoulders. You are like Diogenes; for Diogenes on a time envying the cleanliness of Plato, said on this wise, Behold, I tread on the pride of Plato. Plato answered, But with another sort of pride. So that Diogenes seemed more faulty of the two.
BUT when we have said all that we can, peradventure you will say, I will not return. And to [Page 186] that I say, I will not answer. Nevertheless, hear what Christ saith to such stiff-necked people in the parable of the supper. When he had sent out his men to call them in that were appointed, and they would not come, he bade his servants go into the highways and streets, to compel men to come in. If then the church will not lose any member that may be compelled to come in, you must think it good to take the compulsion, lest you lose your part of the supper which the Lord hath prepared for you, and this compulsion standeth well with charity.
BUT it may be perhaps, that some that animated you to stick to your tackle, and not to give over, bearing you in hand that your opinion is good, and that you shall die in a good quarrel, and God shall accept your oblation. But hear what Christ saith of a meaner gift; If thou come to the altar to offer thy oblation, and knowest that thy brother hast somewhat to say against thee, leave there thy gift, and go and be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer up thy gift, or else thy brother will make thy offering unsavoury before God. This he said unto all the world, to the end they should know how their offerings should be received, if they were not according.
REMEMBER you therefore before you offer up your offering, whether your gift be qualified or no. Remember the church of Rome, and also of England, where not one only brother, but a number have matter against you, so just that they will make your burnt-offering stink before God, except you be reconciled. If you must needs appoint upon a sacrifice, make yet a mean first to them that have to lay against you. I say no more than the church hath allowed me to say. For the sacrifice that is offered without the church is not profitable. The premises therefore considered, for God's sake I say, "Remember therefore from whence [...]hou art fallen, and repent, and do thy first works, or else I will come unto thee quickly, and will remove thy candlestick out of his place, except thou repent." Cast not yourself away, spare your body, spare your soul, spare them also whom you have seduced, spare the shedding of Christ's blood for you in vain. Harden not your heart, acknowledge the truth, yield to the prescript word of God, to the catholic church of Rome, to the received verity of all Christendom. Wed not yourself to your own self-will. Stand not too much in your own conceit. Think not yourself wiser than all Christendom is besides you. Leave off this unjust cavil. How? Leave what? Leave reason, leave wonder, and believe as the catholic church doth believe and teach you. Persuade with yourself, that without the church there is no salvation. And thus much have I said of charity. If this poor simple exhortation of mine may sink into your head, and take effect with you, then have I said as I would have said, otherwise not as I would, but as I could for this present.
AND thus bishop Brooks finishing his oration, sat down. After whom, Dr. Martin taking the matter in hand, began thus.
The Oration of Dr. MARTIN.
ALTHOUGH there are two governments, the one spiritual, the other temporal, the one having the keys, and the other the sword, yet in all ages we read, that for the honour and glory of God both these powers have been adjoined together. For if we read the Old Testament, we shall find that so did Josias and Ezekias. So did the king of the Ninivites compel a general fast through all the whole city. So did Darius in breaking the great idol Bell, and delivering godly Daniel out of the den of lions. So did Nebuchadonosor make and institute laws against the blasphemers of God. But to let pass these examples, with a great number more, and to come to Christ's time, it is not unknown what great pains they took to set forth God's honour: and although the rule and government of the church did only appertain to the spirituality, yet for the suppression of heresies and chisms, king's were admitted as aiders thereunto. First, Constantine the Great called a council at Nice for the suppression of the Arian sect, where the same time was raised a great contention among them. And after long disputation had, when the fathers could not agree upon the putting down the Arians, they referred their judgment to Constantine. God forbid, said Constantine; you ought to rule me, and not I you. And as Constantine did, so did Theodosius against the Nestorian [...], so did Marcianus against Manicheus, Jovinian made a law, that no man [Page 190] should marry with a nun, that had wedded herself to the church.
SO had king Henry the Eighth the title of Defender of the Faith, because he wrote against Luther and his accomplices. So these nine hundred years the king of Spain had the title of Catholic, for the expulsion of the Arians; and, to say the truth, the king and queen's majesties do nothing degenerate from their ancestors, taking upon them to restore again the title to be Defender of the Faith, to the right heir hereof, the pope's holiness.
THEREFORE these two princes, perceiving this noble realm, how it hath been brought from the unity of the true and catholic church, which you and your confederates do and have renounced; perceiving also that you do persist in your detestable errors, and will by no means be revoked from the same, have made their humble request and petition, to the pope's holiness, Paul the Fourth, as supreme head of the church of Christ, declaring to him, that whereas you were archbishop of Canterbury, and metropolitan of England, and at your consecration took two solemn oaths for your due obedience to be given to the see of Rome, to become a true preacher or pastor of his flock, yet contrary to your oath and allegiance, for unity have sowed discord; for chastity, marriage and adultery; for obedience, contention; and for saith, you have been the author of all mischief. The pope's holiness, considering their request and petition, hath granted them, that according to the censure of this realm process should be made against you.
AND whereas in this late time you both excluded charity and justice, yet hath his holiness decreed, that you shall have both charity and justice shewed unto you. He willeth you should have the laws in most ample manner to answer in your behalf, and that you shall here come before my lord of Gloucester, as high commissioner from his holiness, to the examination of such articles as shall be proposed against you, and that we should require the examination of you in the king and queen's majesties' behalf. The king and queen as touching themselves, because by the law they cannot appear personally, [ quia sunt illustris. personae] have appointed as their attornies, Dr. Story and me. Wheref [...] here I offer to your good lordship our proxy, [...] with the broad seal of England, and offer my [...] to be proctor in the king's majesty's behalf. I exhibit here also certain articles, containing the [...] nifest adultery and perjury: also books of [...] made partly by him, and partly set forth by [...] authority. And here I produce him as party principal to answer to your good lordship.
THUS when Dr. Martin had ended his oration▪ the archbishop began as follows.
Shall I then make my answer?
As you think good, no man shall hinder you.
AND here the archbishop kneeling down on both knees towards the west, said the Lord's prayer. Then rising up, he recited the articles of the creed. Which done, he entered his protestation in form [...] follows.
The Faith and Profession of Dr. CRANMER, Archbishop of Canterbury, before the Commissioners.
THIS I do profess as touching my faith, and make my protestation, which I desire you to note. I will never consent that the bishop of Rome shall have any jurisdiction within this realm.
Take a note thereof.
Mark, Mr. Cranmer, how you answer for yourself. You refuse and deny him, by whose laws you do remain in life, being otherwise attainted of high-treason, and but a dead man by the laws of the realm.
I protest before God I was no traitor, but indeed I confessed more at my arraignment than was true.
That is not to be reasoned at this present. You know you were condemned for a traitor, and a cause determined is taken for a truth. But proceed to your matter.
I will never consent to the bishop of Rome, for then I should give myself to the devil; for I have made an oath to the king, and I must obey the king by God's laws. By the scripture the king is chief, and no foreign person in his own realm above him. There is no subject but to a king. I am a subject, I owe my fidelity to the crown. The pope is contrary to the crown. I cannot obey both; for no man can serve two masters at once, as you in the beginning of your oration declared by the sword and keys, attributing the keys to the pope, and the sword to the king. But I say the king hath both. Therefore he that is subject to Rome, and the laws of Rome, he is perjured; for the pope's and the judge's laws are contrary.
A priest indebted, by the laws of the realm shall be sued before a temporal judge▪ by the pope's laws contrary.
THE pope doth the king injury in that he hath his power from the pope. The king is head of his own realm: but the pope claimeth all bishops, priests, curates, &c. So the pope in every realm hath a realm.
AGAIN, by the laws of Rome the benefice must be given by the bishop, by the laws of the realm the patron giveth the benefice. Herein the laws be as contrary as fire and water.
NO man can by the laws of Rome proceed in a premunire, but so is the law of the realm, and the king standeth accursed in maintaining his own lands. Therefore in consideration that the king and the queen take their power of him, as though God should give it to them, there is no true subject, unless he be abrogate, seeing the crown is held of him being out of the realm.
THE bishop of Rome is contrary to God, and injurious to his laws; for God commanded all men to be diligent in the knowledge of his law; and therefore hath appointed one holy day in the week at the least, for the people to come to the church and hear the word of God expounded unto them, and that they might the better understand it, to hear it in their mother tongue which they know. The pope doth contrary; for he willeth the service to be had in the Latin tongue, which they do not understand. God would have it to be perceived; the pope will not. When the priest giveth thanks, God would that the people should do so too, and God will have them to confess altogether; the pope will not.
NOW as concerning the sacrament, I have taught no false doctrine of the sacrament of the altar: for if it can be proved by any doctor, above a thousand years after Christ, that Christ's body is there really, I will give over. My book was made seven years ago, and no man hath brought any authors against it. I believe that whoso eateth and drinketh that sacrament, Christ is within them, whole Christ, his nativity, passion, resurrection, and ascension; but not that corporally that sitteth in heaven.
NOW Christ commanded all to drink of the cup: the pope taketh it away from the laymen: and yet one saith, that if Christ had died for the devil, that he should drink thereof. Christ biddeth us to obey the king, but the bishop of Rome biddeth us to obey him; therefore unless he be Antichrist, I cannot tell what to make of him. Wherefore if I should obey him, I cannot obey Christ.
HE is like the devil in his doings; for the devil said to Christ, If thou wilt fall down and worship me, I will give thee all the kingdoms of the world. Thus he took upon him to give that which was not his own. Even so the bishop of Rome giveth princes their crowns, being none of his own; for where princes either by election, or by succession, or by inheritance obtain their crown, he saith that they should have it of him.
CHRIST saith, that Antichrist shall be. And who shall he be? Forsooth he that advanceth himself above all other creatures. Now if there be none already that hath advanced himself after [...]uch sort beside the pope, then in the mean time let him be Antichrist.
Pleaseth it you to make an end?
For he will be the vicar of Christ, he will dispense with the Old and New Testament also, yea and with apostasy.
[Page 192]NOW I have declared why I cannot with my conscience obey the pope. I speak not this for hatred I bear to him that now supplieth the room, for I know him not. I pray God give him grace not to follow his ancestors. Neither say I this for my defence, but to declare my conscience for the zeal that I bear to God's word trodden under foot by the bishop of Rome. I cast fear apart, for Christ said to his apostles, that in the latter days they should suffer much sorrow, and be put to death for his name's sake: fear them not
but fear him who, when he hath killed the body, hath power to cast the soul into fire everlasting. Also Christ saith, that he that will live shall die, and he that loseth his life for my name's sake, shall find it again. Moreover he said, Confess me before men, and be not afraid; for if you do so, I will stand with you; for if you shrink from me, I will shrink from you. This is a comfortable and terrible saying, this maketh me set all fear apart. I say therefore the bishop of Rome treadeth under foot God's laws and the king's.
THE pope would give bishoprics, so would the king. But at last the king got the upper hand, and so are all bishops perjured, first to the pope and then to the king.
THE crown hath nothing to do with the clergy. For if a clerk come before a judge, the judge shall make process against him, but not to execute any laws. For if the judge should put him to execution, then is the king accursed in maintaining his own laws. And therefore say I, that he is neither true to God, nor to the king, that first received the pope. But I shall heartily pray for such counsellors as may inform the king and queen of the truth; for if they be well informed, they will do well.
As you understand, then if they maintain the supremacy of Rome, they cannot maintain England too.
I require you to declare to the king and queen what I have said, and how their oaths do stand with the realm and the pope. St. Gregory saith, he that taketh upon him to be head of the universal church, is worse than the Antichrist. If any man can shew me, that it is not against God's word to hold his stirrup when he taketh his horse, and kiss his feet (as kings do), then will I kiss [...] feet also.
AND you, for your part, my lord, are perjured▪ for now you sit judge for the pope, and yet you did receive your bishopric of the king. You have taken an oath to be adversary to the realm; for the pope's laws are contrary to the laws of the realm.
You were the cause that I did forsake the pope, and did swear that he ought not to be supreme head, and gave to king Henry the Eighth, that he ought to be; and this you made me do.
To this I answer: You report [...] ill, and say not the truth, and I will prove it [...] before you all. The truth is, that my [...] ▪ archbishop Warham, gave the supremacy to [...] Henry the Eighth, and said, that he ought to have it before the bishop of Rome, and that God's word would agree therewith. And upon the same was there sent to both the universities, Oxford [...] Cambridge, to know what the word of God would do touching the supremacy, and it was reasoned upon, and argued at length. So at the last both the universities agreed, and set to their seals, and sent it to king Henry the Eighth to the court, that he ought to be supreme head, and not the pope. Whereupon you were at that time doctor of divinity, and your consent was thereunto, as by [...] hand doth appear. Therefore you mis-report me, that I was the cause of your falling away from the pope, but it was yourself. All this was in archbishop Warham's time, and while he was alive, so that it was three quarters of a year ere ever I had the archbishopric of Canterbury in my hands, and before I might do any thing. So that here you have reported of me that which you cannot prove, which is ill done.—All this while his cap was on his head.
We come to examine you, and you, methinks, examine us.
Dr. STORY'S Oration.
PLEASETH it your good lordship, because it hath pleased the king and queen's majesties to appoint my companion and me to hear the examination of this man before your good lordship, to give me somewhat to talk in that behalf. Although I know that in talk with heretics there cometh hurt to all men; for it wearieth the stedfast, troubleth the doubtful, and taketh in snare the weak and simple: yet because he saith, he is not bound to answer your lordship sitting for the pope's holiness, because of a premunire, and the word of God as he termeth it; I think good somewhat to say, that all may see how he runneth out of his race of reason into the rage of common talk, such as here I trust hath done much good. And as the king and queen's majesties will be glad to hear of your most charitable dealing with him; so will they be weary to hear the blundering of this stubborn heretic. And where he alledgeth divinity, [...]gling right and wrong together, he should not have been heard. For shall it be sufficient for him to alledge, the judge is not competent? Do we not see that in the common law it is not lawful for a man in Westminster-hall to refuse his judge? and shall we dispute against one that denies principals? Although there be here a great company of learned men, that know it unmeet so to do, ye have I hear, a plain canon, wherein he declareth himself convicted, ipso facto. The canon [as we have translated it into English] is this; "Let it be to their own destruction whosoever acts contrary to the apostolic decrees, let them have no place amongst the priests, but be put out from the holy ministry, neither be capable of holding any cure, seeing they, are condemned by the holy apostolic church for their disobedience and presumption; but let them be cast out by the greater excommunication, to whom the discipline of the holy church being committed, not only ought to obey themselves, but also teach others to do so, yet will resist her divine pontifical services, and so disobey the apostolical precepts."
HE hath alledged many matters against the suprimacy, but maliciously. You say the king in his realm is supreme head of the church. Well, sir, you will grant me that there was a perfect catholic church before any king was christened. Then if it were a perfect church, it must needs have a head, which must needs be before any king was member thereof; for you know Constantinus the emperor was the first christened king that ever was. And although you are (as St. Paul saith) to obey your rulers, and kings have the rule of the people, yet doth it not follow that they have the cure or souls: for if you argue from the more powerful, the head may do that which the minister cannot do; but the priest may consecrate, and the king cannot; therefore the king is not head.
IT was licensed by Christ to every man to bring into the sheepfold, and to augment the flock, but not to rule, for that was only given to Peter.
AND where the apostles call upon men to obey their princes, to pay tribute to whom tribute is due, custom to whom custom; they perceiving that men were bent to a kind of liberty and disobedience, were enforced to exhort them to obedience and payment of their tribute, which exhortation extendeth only to temporal matters.
AND again, where you say that the bishop of Rome maketh laws contrary to the laws of the realm; that is not true: for this is a maxim in the law, That which is true in a part, cannot be false in the whole.
NOW as touching that monstrous talk of your conscience, that is no conseience that you profess; it is but private judgment, choice, and opinion. And as yet for all your glorious babble, you have not proved by God's laws that you ought not to answer to the pope's holiness.
THE canons which be received of all Christendom compel you to answer, therefore you are bound so to do. And although this realm of late time, through such schismatics as you were, hath exiled and banished the canons, yet that cannot make for you; for you know yourself, that equal things produce equal things, nor can a part oblige the whole. Wherefore this island, being indeed but a member of the whole, could not determine against the whole. That notwithstanding the same laws, [Page 194] being put away by parliament, are now received again by a parliament, and have as full authority now as they had then, and they will now that you answer to the pope's holiness; therefore by the laws of this realm you are bound to answer him. Wherefore, my lord, all that this Thomas Cranmer (I cannot otherwise term him, considering his disobedience) hath brought for his defence, shall nothing prevail with you, nor take any effect. Require him therefore to answer directly to your good lordship; command him to set aside his trifles, and to be obedient to the laws and ordinances of this realm. Take witness here of his stubborn contempt against the king and queen's majesties, and compel him to answer directly to such articles as we shall here lay against him, and on refusal your lordship is to excommunicate him.
AS soon as Dr. Story had thus ended his tale, Dr. Martin began his speech to the archbishop; which discourse I thought proper here to mention, although the report of the same be such, as the author thereof seemeth very partial in his writings; for as he expresseth the speech of Dr. Martin in full, and to the uttermost of his diligence, leaving out nothing in that part that either was or could be said more; so again on the other part, how raw and weak he leaveth the matter, it is easy to perceive, who neither comprehendeth all that Dr. Cranmer again answered for his defence, nor yet in those short speeches which he expresses, seemeth to discharge the part of a sincere and faithful reporter. Notwithstanding, such as it is thought good to let the reader understand, who in perusing the same may use therein his own judgment and consideration.
Conversation between Dr. MARTIN and Archbishop CRANMER.
Mr. Cranmer, you have told here a long glorious tale, pretending some matter of conscience in appearance, but in verity you have no conscience at all. You say that you have sworn once to king Henry the Eighth, against the pope's jurisdiction, and therefore you may never forswear the same; and so you make a great matter of conscience in the breach of the said oath. Here will I ask you a question or two. What if you made an oath to an harlot, to live with her [...] continual adultery, ought you to keep it?
I think not.
What if you did swear never to [...] poor man one penny, ought you to keep it?
I think not.
Herod did swear whatsoever his harlot asked of him he would give her, and he g [...]ve her John Baptist's head; did he well in keeping [...] oath?
I think not.
Jephtha one of the judges of Israel, did swear unto God, that if he would [...] him the victory over his enemies, he [...] offer unto God the first soul that came forth of [...] house; it happened that his own daughter [...] first, and he slew her to save his oath. Did he well?
I think not.
So saith St. Ambrose, De [...] ▪ "It is a miserable necessity which is paid [...] parricide." Then Mr. Cranmer, you can [...] less confess by the premises, but that you ought [...] to have conscience of every oath, but if it be just, la [...]ful, and advisedly taken.
So was that oath.
That is not so, for first it was unjust, for it tended to the taking away of another man's right. It was not lawful, for the laws of God and the church were against it. Besides, it was not voluntary; for every man and woman were compelled to take it.
It pleaseth you to say so.
Let all the world be judge. But, sir, you that pretend to have such a conscience to break [Page 195] an oath, I pray you, did you never swear and break the same?
I remember not.
I will help your memory. Did you never swear obedience to the see of Rome?
Indeed I did once swear unto the same?
Yea, that you did twice, as appeareth by records and writings here ready to be shewed.
But I remember I saved all by protestation that I made by the councll of the best learned men I could get at that time.
Hearken good people to what this man saith. He [...] a protestation one day, to kee [...] never a wh [...]t of that which he would swear [...] next day; was this the part of a christian man? [...] a christian man would bargain with a Turk, and before he maketh his bargain solemnly, before witness readeth in his paper that he holdeth secretly in his hand, or peradventure protesteth before one or two, that he mindeth not to perform whatsoever he shall promise to the Turk; I say, if a christian man would serve a Turk in this manner, that the christian man were worse than the Turk. What would you then say to this man, that made a solemn oath and promise unto God and his church, and made a protestation before quite contrary.
That which I did, I did by the best learned men's advice I could get at that time.
I protest before all the learned men [...]ere, that there is no learning will save your perjury herein; for there are two rules of the civil law clean contrary against you, and so brought forth his rules, which being done he proceeded further. But will you have the truth of the matter. King Henry the Eighth even then meant the lamentable change which after you saw come to pass, and to further his pitiful proceedings from the divorcement of his most lawful wife, to the detestable department from the blessed unity of Christ's church, this man made the aforesaid protestation; and on the other side, he refused not to make two solemn oaths quite contrary, and why? for otherwise by the laws and canons of this realm, he could not aspire to the archbishopric of Canterbury.
I protest before you all, there was never a man came more unwillingly to a bishopri [...] ▪ than I did to that. Insomuch that when king Henry sent for me in post, that I should c [...]me over, I prolonged my journey by seven weeks at the least, thinking that he would be forgetful of me in the mean time.
You declare well by the way that the king took you to be a man of good conscience, who could not find within all his realm any man that would set forth his strange attempts, but was enforced to send for you in post to come out of Germany. What may we conjecture hereby, but that there was a compact between you, being then queen Anne's chaplain, and the king: Give me the archbishopric of Canterbury, and I will give you licen [...]e to live in adultery.
You say not true.
Let your protestation, joined with the rest of your talk, give judgment. [ Hinc prima mali labes.] Of that your execrable perjury, and his coloured and too shamefully suffered adultery, came heresy and all mischief to this realm.
AND thus have I spoken as touching the conscience you make for breaking your heretical oath made to the king. But to break your former oath made at two sundry times both to God and his church, you have no conscience at all. And [...] to answer another part of your oration, wherein you bring in God's word, that you have it on your side and no man else, and that the pope hath devised a new scripture contrary to the scripture of God; you play herein as the pharisees did, which cried [Page 196] always, The word of the Lord, the word of the Lord, when they meant nothing so. This bettereth not your cause, because you have God's word for you; for Basilides and Phontinus the heretics said, that they had God's word to maintain their heresy. So Nestorius, so Macedonius, so Pelagius, and briefly, all the heretics that ever were, pretended that they had God's word for them; yea, and so the devil being the father of heresies alledged God's word for him, saying, it is written: so said he to Christ: Cast thyself downward, which you applied most falsly against the pope. But if you mark the devil's language well, it agreed with your proceedings most truly. For, cast thyself downward, said he, and so taught you to cast all things downward. Down with the sacrament, down with the mass, down with the altars, down with the arms of Christ, and up with a lion and a dog; down with the abbeys, down with chauntries, down with hospitals and colleges, down with fasting and prayer, yea, down with all that good and godly is. All your proceedings and preachings tended to no other, but to fulfil the devil's request, cast thyself downward. And therefore tell not us that you have God's word. For God hath given us by his word a mark to know that your teaching proceeded not of God, but of the devil, and that your doctrine came not of Christ, but of Antichrist. For Christ foretold, there should come against his church, ravening wolves, and false apostles. But how should we know them? Christ teacheth us, saying, By their fruits ye shall know them. Why, what are their fruits? St. Paul declareth, After the flesh they walk in concupiscence and uncleanness, they contemn powers. Again, in the latter days there shall be perilous times. Then shall there be men loving themselves, covetous, proud, disobedient to parents, treason-workers. Whether these be not the fruits of your gospel, I refer me to this worshipful audience; whether the said gospel began not with perjury, proceeded with adultery, was maintained with heresy, and ended in conspiracy.
NOW, sir, two points more I marked in your raging discourse that you made here: the one against the holy sacrament; the other against the pope's jurisdiction, and the authority of the see apostolic.
TOUCHING the first, you say you have God [...] word with you, yea, and all the doctors. I would here ask you one question, whether God's word be contrary to itself, and whether the doctors teach doctrine contrary to themselves, or no? For you, Mr. Cranmer, have taught in this high sacrament of the altar three contrary doctrines, and yet you pretended in every one the word of the Lord.
Nay I taught but two contrary doctrines in the same.
What doctrine taught you when you condemned Lambert, the sacramentary in the king's presence in Whitehall.
I maintained then the papists doctrine.
That is to say, the catholic and universal doctrine of Christ's church. And how [...] king Henry died? Did you not translate [...] Jonas's book?
I did so.
Then there you defended another doctrine touching the sacrament, by the same token, that you sent to Lynn, your printer, that wherea [...] in the first print there was an affirmative, that is to say, Christ's body really in the sacrament, you [...] then to your printer to put in a [not,] whereby it came miraculously to pass, that Christ's body was clean conveyed out of the sacrament.
I remember there were two printers of my said book, but where the same [not] was put in, I cannot tell.
Then from a Lutheran you became a Zwinglian, which is the vilest heresy of all in the high mystery of the sacrament, and for the [...] heresy you will help to burn Lambert the sacramentary, which you now call the catholic faith, and God's word.
I grant that then I believed otherwise than I do now, and so I did until my lord of London, Dr. Ridley, did confer with me, and by sundry [Page 197] persuasions and authorities of doctors drew me quite from my opinion.
Now, sir, as touching the last part of your oration, you denied that the pope's holiness [...] [...]upreme head of the church of Christ.
I did so.
Who say you then is supreme head?
Christ.
But whom hath Christ left here on earth his vicar and head of his church?
Nobody.
Ah, why told you not king Henry this when you made him supreme head? and now nobody is. This is treason against his own person, as you then made him.
I mean not but every king in his own realm and dominion is supreme head, and so was he supreme head of the church of Christ in England.
Is this always true? and was it ever so in Christ's church?
It was so.
Then what say you by Nero? He was the mightiest prince of the earth after Christ was [...] ▪ was he head of Christ's church?
Nero was Peter's head.
I ask whether Nero was head of the church or no? If he were not, it is false that you said before, that all princes are, and ever were heads of the church within their realms.
Nay it is true, for Nero was head of the church: that is, in worldly respect of the temporal bodies of men, of whom the church consisteth; for so he beheaded Peter and the apostles. And the Turk too is head of the church in Turkey.
Then he that beheaded the heads of the church, and crucified the apostles, was head of Christ's church; and he that was never member of the church, is the head of the church, by your new found understanding of God's word.
IT is not to be supposed to the contrary, but much other matter passed in this communication between them, especially on the archbishop's behalf. Whose answer I do not think▪ to be so slender, not altogether in the same form of words framed, if the truth as it was, might be known: but so it pleased the notary thereof, being two much partially addicted to his mother see of Rome in favour of his faction, to diminish and drive down▪ the other side, either in not shewing all, or in reporting the thing otherwise then it was; as the common guise is of most writers, to what side their affection most weigheth, their oration commonly inclineth. But let us proceed further in the story of this matter.
IT followed then (said this reporter) when the archbishop thus had answered, and the standers by began to murmur against him, the judges not content with his answers, willed him to answer directly to the interrogatories, which interrogatories articulated against him in form of law, were these following.
Interrogatories objected to the Archbishop, with his Answers Annexed to the same.
1. INTERROG. First was objected, That he the aforesaid Thomas Cranmer, being yet free, and before he entered into holy orders, married one Joan, surnamed Black, or Brown, dwelling at the sign of the Dolphin in Cambridge.
Answer. Whereunto he answered, that whether she was called Black or Brown, he knew not, but that he married there one Joan that he granted.
2. Interrog. That after the death of the aforesaid [Page 198] wife, he entered into holy orders, and after that was made archbishop by the pope.
Answer. He receved (he said) a certain bull of the pope, which he delivered unto the king, and was made archbishop by him.
3. Interrog. Item, That he being in holy orders, married another woman as his second wife, named Anne, and so was twice married.
Answer. To this he granted.
4. Interrog. Item, In the time of king Henry the Eighth, he kept the said wife secretly, and had children by her.
Answer. Hereunto he also granted, affirming that was better for him to have his own, than to do like other priests, holding and keeping other men's wives.
5. Interrog. Item, In the time of king Edward, he brought out the said wife openly, affirming and professing publicly the same to be his wife.
Answer. He denied not but he so did, and lawfully might do the same, forasmuch as the laws of this realm did so permit him.
6. Interrog. Item, That he shamed not openly to glory himself to have had his wife in secret many years.
Answer. And though he so did (he said), there was no cause why he should be ashamed thereof.
7. Interrog. Item, That the said Thomas Cranmer falling afterward into the deep bottom of errors, did fly and refuse the authority of the church, did hold and follow the heresy concerning the sacrament of the altar, and also did compile, and caused to be set abroad divers books.
Answer. Whereunto when the names of the books were recited to him, he denied not such books which he was the author of. As touching the trea [...]ise of Peter Martyr upon the sacrament, he denied that he ever saw it before it was abroad, yet he [...] approve and well like the same. As for the ca [...] chism, the book of articles, with the other book against Winchester, he granted the same to be his doings.
8. Interrog. Item, That he compelled many against their wills to subscribe to the same articles.
Answer. He exhorted (he said) such as were willing to subscribe; but against their wills he compelled none.
9. Interrog. Item, Forasmuch as he ceased [...] to perpetrate enormous and inordinate crimes, he was therefore cast into the tower, and from [...] was brought to Oxford, at what time it was [...] monly thought that the parliament should [...] held.
Answer. To this he said, that he knew no [...] enormous and inordinate crimes that ever he committed.
10. Interrog. Item, That in the said city of Oxford he did openly maintain his heresy, and [...] was convicted for the same.
Answer. He defended (he said) there the [...] of the sacrament; but that he was convicted of the same, that he denied.
11. Interrog. Item, When he persevered still in the same, he was by the public censure of the university pronounced an heresie, and his book heretical.
Answer. That he was so denounced he denied not, but that he was an heretic, or his books heretical, that he denied.
12. Interrog. Item, That he was and is notoriously infamed with the note of schism, as one who not only receded himself from the catholic church and see of Rome, but also moved the king and subjects of this realm to the same.
[Page 199] Answer. As touching the receding, that he well granted; but that receding or departing (said he) was only from the see of Rome, and had in it no matter of any schism.
13 Interrog. Item, That he had been twice sworn to the pope; and with that Dr. Martin brought out the instrument of the public notary, wherein was contained his protestation made when he should be consecrated, asking if he had any thing else protested.
Answer. Whereunto he answered, that he did nothing but by the laws of the realm.
14. Interrog. Item, That he, the said archbishop of Canterbury, did not only offend in the premises, but also in taking upon him the authority of the see of Rome, in that without leave or licence from the said see, he consecrated bishops and priests.
Answer. He granted that he did execute such things as were wont to be referred to the pope, at whatever time it was permitted him by the public laws and determination of the realm.
15. Interrog. Item, That when the whole realm had subscribed to the authority of the pope, he only persisted in his error.
Answer. That he did not permit the pope's authority, he confessed to be true. But that he erred in the same that he denied.
16. Interrog. Item, That all and singular the premises be true.
Answer. That likewise he granted, excepting those things whereunto he had objected.
AFTER he had thus answered to the objections aforesaid, and the public notary had entered the same, the judges and commissioners▪ as having now accomplished that for which they came, were about to arise and depart. But the bishop of Gloucester thinking it not proper so to dismiss the people, being somewhat stirred with the words of the archbishop, began his oration in the hearing of the people, thus to declaim.
The Oration of Bishop BROOKS, in closing up his Examinations against Dr▪ CRANMER, Archbishop of Canterbury.
MR. Cranmer (I cannot otherwise term you, considering your obstinacy) I am right sorry, I am right heartily sorry to hear such words escape your mouth so unadvisedly. I had conceived a right good hope of your amendment. I supposed that this obstinacy of your's came not of a vainglory, but rather of a corrupt conscience, which was the occasion that I hoped so well of your return. But now I perceive by your foolish babble that it is far otherwise. You are so puffed up with vain-glory, there is such a notorious mark of heresy crept into your conscience, that I am clean void of hope, and my hope is turned into perdition. Who can save what will be lost? God would have you to be saved, and you refuse it. Thy perdition is only upon thyself, O Israel; only in me is thy salvation, saith the Lord by the prophet. You have uttered such enormous talk, with such open malice against the pope's holiness, with such open lying against the church of Rome, with such open blasphemy against the sacrament of the altar, that no mouth could have expressed more maliciously, more lyingly, more blasphemously.
TO reason with you, although I would of myself to satisfy this audience, yet may I not by our commission, neither can I find how I may do it with the scriptures: for the apostle doth command, that such a one should not only not be talked with, but also shunned and avoided; saying, An heretical person after once or twice conferring, shun, knowing that he is perverse and sinneth, being of his own judgment condemned. You have been conferred with not once nor twice, but oftentimes; you have often been lovingly admonished, you have often been secretly disputed with. And the last year in the open school, in open disputations, you have been openly convicted, you have been openly driven out of the school with hisses: your book which you brag you wrote seven years ago, and no man answered it, Marcus Antonius hath sufficiently [Page 200] detected and confuted, and yet you still persist in your wonted heresy.
WHEREFORE being so often admonished, conferred with, and convicted, if you deny you are the man whom the apostle noteth, hear then what Origin saith, who wrote above 1300 years ago, and interpreteth the saying of the apostle in this wise, in Apologia Pamphili; "All those ought to be esteemed heretics, who professing to believe in Christ, judge otherwise of his truth, than the ecclesiastical tradition." Even now you have professed a kind of christianity and holiness unto us, for at your beginning you fell down upon your knees, and said the Lord's prayer (God knows like an hypocrite), and then standing upon your feet, you rehearsed the articles of your faith, but to what end I pray you but to cloak that inward heresy rooted in you, that you might blind the poor, simple, and unlearned people's eyes? For what will they say or think, if they do not thus say? Good Lord, what mean these men to say that he is an heretic, they are deceived, this is a good christian, he believeth as we believe.
BUT is this sufficient to escape the name of an heretic? To the simple and unlearned it is sufficient, but for you who have professed a greater knowledge and higher doctrine, it is not enough to recite your belief. For unless (as Origen saith) you believe all things that the church hath decreed besides, you are no christian man. In which because you do halt, and will come to no conformity: from henceforth you are to be taken for an heretic, with whom we ought neither to dispute, nor to reason, but whom we ought rather to eschew and avoid.
NEVERTHELESS, although I do not intend to reason with you, but to give you up as an abject and an out cast from God's savour, yet because you have uttered, to the annoying of the people, such pestilent heresies as may do harm among the rude and unlearned, I think proper to say something herein; not because I hope to have any good at your hands, which I would willingly wish, but that I may establish the simple people which are here present, lest they being seduced by your diabolical doctrine, may perish thereby.
AND first (as it behoveth every man to purge himself first before he enter with any other) where you accuse me with an oath made against the [...] of Rome, I confess it, and deny it not; and [...] do say with the rest of this realm, good and catholic men, the saying of the prophet, "We have sinned with our fathers, we have done [...] and wickedly. The sins of my youth, and my [...]norances, O Lord, do not remember." I was [...] a young man, and as young a scholar here in the university.
I knew not then what an oath did mean, and [...] to say the truth, I did it compulsed, compulsed▪ say by you, Mr. Cranmer, and here were you the author and cause of my perjury, and are to be blamed, and not I. Now where you say I [...] two oaths, the one contrary to the other, it [...] so, for the oath I made to the pope's holiness [...] pertaineth only to spiritual things; the other [...] that I made to the king pertaineth only to tempo [...]l things: that is to say, that I do acknowledge [...] my temporal livings to proceed only from the [...] and from none else. But all men may see▪ as [...] agree in this, so you agree in the rest of [...] opinions.
NOW, sir, as concerning the supremacy which is only due to the see of Rome, a word or two. Although there be a number of places which do confirm that Christ appointed Peter [...] of the church, yet this is a most evident place▪ When Christ demanded of his apostles, whom men called [...] answered, some Elias, some a prophet, &c. But Christ replied unto Peter and said, Whom saye [...]t thou, Peter, that I am? Peter answered, Thou art Christ the Son of God: and Christ replied, Thou art Peter, and upon this rock will I build my chur [...] ▪ The doctors interpreting this place, Upon this rock, expound it thus, Not only on the faith of Peter, but upon Peter himself. And why did Christ charge his name from Simon to Peter, which in Latin is a Stone, but only to declare that he was only the foundation and head of the church?
AGAIN, where Christ demanded of Peter, being amongst the rest of his apostles, three times over, Peter, lovest thou me? he gave him charge over his sheep, Feed my sheep, feed my lambs. Which [Page 201] place Chrysostom interpreting, saith, Feed, that is, be you in my stead, and head of your brethren. To conclude, when they came that required Didrachma of Christ, he commanded Peter to cast his net into the sea, and to take out of the fish's mouth that he took, a piece of money which was a double Did [...]hma, and give it, says he, for thee▪ and me. Which words do signify, that when he had paid for them two, he had paid for all the rest. For as in [...]old law were appointed two heads over the people of Israel, Moses and Aaron; Moses as chief, and Aaron next head under him; so in the new law there were two heads of the church, which were Christ and Peter. Christ is head of all, and Peter next under him. St. Austin, in 75 quest. Veteris & Novi Testamenti, saith, "Our Saviour Christ commanding the tribute to be given for him and [...], meant thereby the same to be given for all others, for he appointed him to be head of them." What can be more plain than this? But I will not tarry on this matter.
NOW as touching the pope's laws, where you say they [...] [...]ntrary, because the service which should be (as you say) in English, is in Latin; I answer, Whosoever will take the pains to peruse the fourteenth chapter of the first epistle to the Corinthians, shall find, that his meaning is concerning preaching, and by the way only of praying.
AGAIN, where you say, that the pope's holiness doth take away one part of the sacrament from the lay men, and Christ would have it under both, you can say no more but this, Drink ye all of this. And what followeth, And all drank thereof. Now if a man would be so froward with you, he might say [...] Christ gave it only to his disciples, in whose places suceeded priests, and not laymen.
AND admit that Christ commanded it to be received under both kinds, yet the church hath authority to change that as well as others. You read, that Christ calling his apostles together, said unto them▪ "Go, and preach the gospel to every nation, baptizing them in the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." But the apostles being desirous to publish Christ's name every where, did baptize only in Christ's name. Again, Christ before his last supper washed his apostles feet, saying, "If I have washed your feet, being your Lord and Master, also you ought to wash the feet of one another. I have given you example." This was a precept, yet hath the church altered it, that the simple people should not think a re-baptization in it. "So because, saith the apostle, I have received of the Lord the same which I have delivered unto you, that our Lord, the same night in which he was betrayed," &c. Notwithstanding that this was a precept that the sacrament should be administered after supper, the church hath altered it, and commanded it to be received fasting. And where Christ did break the bread, we receive the whole host. Christ administered sitting at the table, we standing at the altar.
IT was also commanded in Acts xxv. that Christians should abstain from things strangled and blood. But the church perceiving it to be a precept but for a time, hath altered it. Christ commanded to keep holy the sabbath day, and the church hath altered it to Sunday. If then the church may change things that are so expressed in the scriptures, she may also change the form of receiving of laymen under both kinds, for divers occasions.
FIRST, that in carrying it to the sick, the blood may not be shed, lost, or misused.
AND next, that no occasion might be given to heretics to think that there is not so much under one kind as under both.
BUT why would you have it under both kinds, I pray you else, but only to pervert and contradict the commandment of the church? For when you had it under both kinds, you believed in neither. And we having but one, believe both kinds. Now, sir, as concerning the sacrament of the altar, where you say, you have a number of doctors on your side, and we none of our side, that is to say, to confirm the real presence of Christ in the sacrament of the altar, indeed one to stop your mouth I think it not possible to find. Nevertheless where you request is to have one shewed unto you, and [...] you will recant, I will shew you two.
ST. Austin, upon Psalm xxxiii. He carried himself in his own hands: I find not how this is true in [Page 202] David (saith he) literally, that he was borne in his own hands; but in Christ I find it literally, when he [...] his body to his disciples at his last supper.
AGAIN, St. Cyprian de Coena Domini, saith, The bread which our Lord gave to his disciples, was not a bare likeness, but the nature being changed, was made flesh by his almighty word. What can be more plain than this? yet to your exposition it is not plain enough. But give me your figurative, significative, and other such like terms, and I will defend that Christ hath not yet ascended; no nor yet that he was incarnate, &c. Wherefore I can do no other but put you in the number of them, whom Chrysostom spake of in this wise, saying, Hear, O thou christian man, wilt thou do more than Christ could do? Christ confuted the pharisees, yet he could not put them to silence; and art thou stronger than Christ? Wilt thou go about to bring them to silence that will receive no answer? As much as to say, thou canst not. Thus much have I said, not for you, Mr. Cranmer, for my hope that I conceived of you is now gone and past; but somewhat to satisfy the rude and unlearned people, that they perceiving your arrogant lying, and lying arrogancy, may the better eschew your detestable and abominable schism.
AND thus the prelate ended his worshipful tale. After whom Dr. Story took the matter, and thus inferred in words, as followeth.
MR. CRANMER, you have made a goodly process concerning your heretical oath made to the king, but you forgot your oath made to the see apostolic. As concerning your oath made to the king, if you made it to him only, it took an end by his death, and so it is released; if you made it to his successors, well, sir, the true successors have the empire, and they will you to dissolve the same, and become a member of Christ's church again, and it standeth well with charity.
TO this the archbishop answered again, saith the reporter: but what his answer was, that he suppresseth, and returneth to the words of Dr. Story, who imperiously turning his speech again to the archbishop, said as follows:
HOLD your peace, sir, and so it shall right well become you, considering that I gave you licence before to say your fancy. Your oath was no oath: for it lacked the three points of an oath, that is to say, judgment, righteousness, and truth.
THESE, with the like words to the same [...] being uttered by Dr. Story, seeking to break [...] and make an end of that session, he immediat [...] called for witnesses to [...] produced, who should [...] sworn upon the book, to utter and declare the [...] day whatsoever they knew, or could remember to be inferred against Dr. Cranmer's heresy. The names of the witnesses are these following:
- DR. Marshall, commissary, and dean of Christ-church.
- DR. Smith, under commissary,
- Dr. Tresham,
- Dr. Crook,
- Mr. London,
- Mr. Curtop,
- Mr. Warde,
- Mr. Serles.
AFTER the deposition of which witnesses being taken, Dr. Story admonished the archbishop, [...] mitting him to make his exceptions, if he thought any of the said witnesses were to be refused. The archbishop refused them all, as being men perj [...] ▪ and not in Christian religion. For if to swear, said he, against the pope were unlawful, they should rather have given their lives, than their oath. [...] if it were lawful, then they are perjured, to [...] him whom they forswore before. Nevertheless this answer of the archbishop being lightly regarded, as little to the purpose appertaining, he [...] commanded again to the place from whence [...] came. Who at his departing out, like as at his [...] coming in, payed low obedience to Dr. Martin and Dr. Story, the queen's commissioners. Then Dr. Story pointing to the bishop of Gloucester, said, that he ought rather to shew reverence unto him. So the most reverend archbishop departing without any obeisance exhibited to the said bishop of Gloucester, the pope's delegate, all the others rose up, and departed every one to his own. And that broke up the session for that day, about two o'clock in the afternoon.
AND thus much hitherto concerning the summary [Page 203] effect of this action or session, with the orations, discourses, and articles commenced against the archbishop of Canterbury, also with the reasons and answers of the said archbishop to their objections and interrogatories. Touching which his answers, forasmuch as they being recited by report of a [...] (as is aforesaid) seem to be partially handled, [...] therefore not greatly be out of the matter, [...] have heard the orations of bishop Brooks, with [...] reasons and talk of the other commissioners, amplified and set forth at large on the one side, so [...] in repeating the words and answers of the other part, to declare and set forth somewhat more amply and effectually, what speech the said archbishop used for himself in the said action, by the faithful relation and testimony of certain others, who were likewise there present, and do thus report the effect of the archbishop's words, answering to the first oration of bishop Brooks in manner as follows.
A more full Answer of Dr. CRANMER, Archbishop of Canterbury, to the first Oration of Bishop [...].
MY lord, you have very learnedly and eloquently in your oration, put me in remembrance of many things touching myself, wherein I do not mean to spend the time in answering of them. I acknowledge God's goodness to me in all his gifts, and thank him as heartily for this state wherein I find myself now, as ever I did for the time of my prosperity; and it is not the loss of my promotions that grieveth me. The greatest grief I have at this time is, and one of the greatest that ever I had in all my life, to see the king and queen's majesties by their proctors here to become my accusers, and that in their own realm and country, before a foreign power. If I have transgressed the laws of the land, their majesties have sufficient authority and power both from God, and by the ordinance of the realm, to punish me, whereunto I both have, and at all times shall be content to submit myself.
ALAS! what hath the pope to do in England; whose jurisdiction is so far different from the jurisdiction of this realm, that it is impossible to be true to the one, and true to the other. The laws also are so diverse, that whosoever sweareth to both, must needs incur perjury to the one. Which as often as I remember, even for the love that I bear to her grace, I cannot but be heartily sorry to think upon it, how that her highness the day of her coronation, at which time she took a solemn oath to observe all the laws and liberties of this realm of England, at the same time also took an oath to the bishop of Rome, and promised to maintain that see. The state of England being so repugnant to the supremacy of the pope, it was impossible but she must needs be forsworn in the one. Wherein if her grace had been faithfully advertised by her council, then surely she would never have done it.
THE laws of this realm are, that the king of England is the supreme and sole governor of all his countries and dominions: and that he holdeth his crown and sceptre of himself, by the ancient laws, customs, and descents of the kings of the realm, and of none other. The pope saith, that all the emperors and kings hold their crowns and regalities of him, and that he may depose them when he will; which is high treason for any man to affirm and think, being born within the king's dominions.
THE laws of England are, that all bishops and priests offending in cases of felony or treason, are to be judged and tried by the laws and customs of the realm. The pope's laws are, that the secular power cannot judge the spiritual power, and that they are not under their jurisdiction; which robbeth the king of the one part of his people.
THE laws also of England are, that whosoever hindereth the execution or proceeding of the laws of England for any other foreign laws ecclesiastical or temporal, incurreth the danger of a [...]. The pope's laws are, that whosoever hindereth the proceedings or executions of his laws, for any other laws, of any other king or country, both the prince himself, his council, all his officers, scribes, clerks, and whosoever give consent or a [...]d to the making or executing of any such laws, stand accursed. An heavy case (if his curse were any thing worth) that the king and queen cannot use their own laws, but they and their's must stand accursed.
THESE things and many more examples he alledged, which (he said) stirred him, that he could not give his consent to the receiving of such an [Page 204] enemy into the realm, so subverting the dignity and ancient liberties of the same.
AND as for the matter of heresy and schism, wherewith he was charged, he protested, and called God to witness, he knew none that he maintained. But if that were an heresy to deny the pope's authority, and the religion which the see of Rome hath published to the world these latter years, then all the ancient fathers of the primitive church, the apostles, and Christ himself taught heresy; and he desired all then present to bear him witness, that he took the traditions and religion of that usurping prelate to be most [...]rroneous, false, and against the doctrine of the [...] scripture; which he had often times well proved by writing, and the author of the same to be very Antichrist, so often preached of by the apostles and prophets, in whom did most evidently concur all signs and tokens whereby he was painted out to the world to be known.
FOR it was most evident that he had advanced himself above all emperors and kings of the world, who he affirmeth to hold their estates and empires of him, as of their chief, and to be at his commandment to depose and erect at his good will and pleasure, and that stories make mention of his intolerable and insolent pride and tyranny, used over them in such sort, as no king would have used to his christian subjects, nor yet a good master to his servants, setting his feet on the emperor's neck, affirming that to be verified in him, which was spoken only of our Saviour Jesus Christ, in these words, "Thou shalt go upon the lion and adder, the young lion and the dragon shalt thou tread under thy feet." Others he had to hold his stirrup, others he had displaced and removed from their empires and seats royal: and not content herewithal, more insoent than Lucifer, he hath occupied not only the highest place in this world, above kings and princes, but hath further presumed to sit in the seat of Almighty God, which only he reserved to himself, which is the conscience of man; and to keep the possession thereof, he hath promised forgiveness of sins toties quoties.
HE hath brought in gods of his own framing, and invented a new religion, full of pain and lucre, quite [...] to the doctrine of the holy scripture, only for the maintaining of his kingdom, displacing Christ from his glory, and holding his people in a miserable servitude of blindness, to the loss of a great number of souls, which God at the latter [...] shall exact at his hand; boasting many times in his canons and decrees, that he can dispense " [...] Peter, against Paul, against the Old and New [...]: and that he, of the fulness of power, [...] do as much as God." O Lord! who ever [...] such blasphemy? if there be any man that [...] advance himself above him, let him be judg [...] Antichrist.
THIS enemy of God and of our redemption, [...] so evidently pointed out in the scriptures by such manifest signs and tokens, which all so clearly appear in him, that except a man will shut up his eyes and heart against the light, he cannot but kno [...] him: and therefore, for my part, I will never give my consent to the receiving of him into this church of England. And you, my lord, and the rest [...] sit here in commission, consider well and exam [...] your own consciences; you have sworn against [...] ▪ you are learned, and can judge of the truth. I pray God you be not wilfully blind. As for me, I have herein discharged mine own conscience toward the world, and I will write also my mind to her grace, touching this matter.
THE copy of the letter sent to the queen, may be found after in the end of his story. While he thus made his answer, ye heard before how Dr. Martin and Dr. Story interrupted him divers times with blasphemous talk, and would fain have had the bishop of Gloucester to put him to silence: who notwithstanding did not, but suffered him to end his tale at full. After this you heard also how they proceeded to examine him of divers articles, whereof the chief was, that at the time of being created archbishop of Canterbury, he was sworn to the pope, and had his institution and induction from him, and then promised to maintain the authority of that see, and therefore was perjured: wherefore he should rather stick to his first oath, and return to his old sold again, than to continue obstinate in an oath forced in time of schism.
TO that he answered, sa [...]ing his protestation, (which term he used above all his answered, That [Page 205] at such time archbishop Warham died, he was ambassador in Germany for the king, who thereupon sent for him home, and having intelligence by some of his friends (who were near about the king), how he intended to bestow the archbishopric upon him, and therefore counselled him in that case to make [...], he feeling in himself a great inability to [...] promotion, and very sorry to leave his study, [...] considering by what means he must [...], which was clean against his conscience, which he could not utter without great peril and danger, devised an excuse to the king of matter of great importance, for which his longer abode there should be most necessary, thinking by that [...] in his absence, that the king would have bestowed it upon some other, and so remained there by that device, one half year after the king had written for him to come home. But after that no such matter fell out, as he seemed to make suspicion of, the king sent for him again. Who, after his return, understanding still the archbishopric to be [...]served for him, made interest by divers of his best friends to shift it off, desiring rather some smaller living, that he might more quietly follow his book.
TO be brief, when the king himself spake with him, declaring that his full intention, for his service sake, for the good opinion he conceived of him, was to bestow that dignity upon him, after long disabling of himself, perceiving he could by no persuasions alter the king's determination, he freely opened his conscience unto him, mostly craving his grace's pardon, for what he should declare unto his highness. Which obtained, he declared, that if he accepted the office, then he must receive it at the the pope's hand, which he neither would nor could do, for that his highness was only the supreme governor of this church of England, as well in causes ecclesiastical as temporal, and that the full right and donation of all manner of bishoprics and benefices, as well as of any other temporal dignities and promotions, appertained to his grace, and not to any other foreign authority, whatsoever it was, and therefore if he might in that vocation serve God, him, and his country, seeing it was his pleasure so to have it, he would accept it, and receive it of his majesty, and of none other stranger, who had no authority within this realm, neither in any such gift, nor in any other thing. Whereat the king, said he, [...]aying a while and pausing, asked me how [...] was able to prove it. At which time I alledged many texts out of the scriptures, and the fathers also, approving the supreme and highest authority of king's in their realms and dominions, disclosing therewithal the intolerable usurpation of the pope of Rome.
AFTERWARDS it pleased his highness (quoth the archbishop) many and sundry times to talk with me of it, and perceiving that I could not be brought to acknowledge the authority of the bishop of Rome, the king himself called Dr. [...] other civil lawyers, and devised with [...] bestow it upon me, inforcing [...] against my conscience. Who thereupon [...] him, that I might do it by the way of [...], and so one to be sent to Rome who might take the oath, and every thing in my name. Which when I understood I said, he should do it super animam suam: and I indeed, bona fide, made my protestation, that I did not acknowledge his authority any further than as it agreed with the express word of God, and that it might be lawful for me at all times to speak against him, and so to impugn his errors, when time and occasion should serve me. And this my protestation I did cause to be inrolled, and there I think it remaineth.
THEY objected to him also that he was married, which he confessed. Whereunto Dr. Martin said, that his children were bondmen to the see of Canterbury. At which saying the archbishop smiled, and asked him, if a priest at his benefice kept a concubine, and had by her bastards, whether they were bondmen to the benefice or no, saying, I trust you will make my children's causes no worse.
AFTER this Dr. Martin demanded of him, who was supreme head of the church of England? Marry, quoth my lord of Canterbury, Christ is head of this member, and as he is of the whole body of th [...] universal church. Why, quoth Dr. Martin, you made king Henry the Eighth supreme head of the church. Yea, said the archbishop, of all the people of England, as well ecclesiastical as temporal. And not of the church, said Dr. Martin? No, said he▪ for Christ is the only head of the church, and of [Page 206] the faith and religion of the same. The king is head and governor of his people, which are the visible church. What, quoth Martin, you never durst tell the king so. Yes, that I durst, quoth he, and did in the publication of his stile, wherein he was named supreme head of the church, there was never other thing [...]. A number of other trifling and foolish objections were made, with a repetition whereof I thought not to trouble the reader.
THUS after they had received his answers to all their objections, they cited him (as is aforesaid) to appear at Rome within fourscore days, to make there his [...] answers: which he said, if the king and [...] would send him, he would be content to do▪ and so thence was carried to prison [...] continually remained, notwithstanding that he was commanded to appear at Rome.
WHEREIN all men that have eyes to see, may easily perceive the crafty practice of these prelates, and the vizored face of their justice, as though the court of Rome would condemn no man before he answered for himself, as all law and equity required. But the very same instant of time, the holiness of that unholy father, contrary to all reason and justice, sent his letter executory unto the king and queen to degrade and deprive him of his dignity: which thing he did not only before the fourscore days were ended, but before there were twenty days spent. Furthermore, whereas the said archbishop was first detained in straight confinement, so that he could not appear (as was notorious both in England and also in the Romish court), and therefore had a lawful and most just excuse for his absence by all laws, both popish and others: yet in the end of the said fourscore days, was that worthy martyr decreed Co [...]tumax, that is▪ sturdily, frowardly, and wilfully absent, and in pain of the same his absence condemned and put to death.
Dr. THIRLBY and Dr. BONNER come with a [...] Commission to sit upon the Archbishop, February 14.
THIS letter or sentence definitive of the pope was dated about the first day of January, and was [...] here in England about the middle of February. Upon the receipt of which letters, [...] session was appointed, for the archbishop [...] appear the 14th day of February, before [...] commissioners directed down by the queen, the [...] whereof was the bishop of Ely, Dr. [...] Concerning which Dr. Thirlby by the way [...] to be noted, that although he was not [...] archbishop's houshold chaplain, yet he was so [...] acquainted with him, so dearly [...] inwardly accepted and advanced of him (not [...] chaplain, but rather like a natural brother) that [...] was never any thing in the archbishop's house is dear, were it plate, jewels, horse, maps, books, [...] any thing else, but if Thirlby did ever so [...] commend it (a subtle kind of begging), the [...] bishop soon after either gave it to him, or else [...] it after him to his house. So greatly was the ar [...]bishop enamoured with him, that whosoever would obtain any thing of him, most commonly [...] make their way before by Dr. Thirlby. [...] character of the said Dr. Thirlby I thought [...] to recite; not so much to upbraid the man with [...]vice of unthankfulness, as chiefly and only for [...] ▪ to admonish him of old benefits received, whereby he may the better remember his old benefactor, and so to favour the cause and quarrel of him whom he was so singularly bounden unto.
WITH the said Dr. Thirlby, bishop of Ely, was also assigned in the same commission Dr. Bonner, bishop of London; which two coming to Oxford, upon St. Valentine's day, as the pope's delegates, with a new commission from Rome, by the virtue thereof commanded the archbishop aforesaid to come before them, in the quire of Christ's-church, before the high altar, where they sitting (according to their manner), in their pontificals, first began, as the fashion is, to read their commission: wherein was contained, how that in the court of Rome all things being indifferently examined, both the articles laid to his charge, with the answers made unto them, and witnesses examined on both parts, and council heard as well on the king and queen's behalf, his accusers, as on the behalf of Thomas Cranmer. the party guilty, so that he wanted nothing appertaining to his necessary defence, &c. which foresaid commission, as it was in reading, O Lord, said the archbishop, what lies be these, that I being continually in prison, and n [...]er could be suffered to have [Page 207] counsel or advocate, at home, should produce witness and appoint my counsel at Rome: God must need [...] punish this open and shameless lying. They [...] on the commission which came from the pope, plenitudine potestatis, supplying all manner of defects in law or process, committed in dealing with the archbishop, and giving him full authority to proceed to deprivation and degradation of him, and so upon excommunication to deliver him up to the [...] power.
WHEN the commission was read thus, they proceeding thereupon to his degradation, first cloathed and disguised him, putting on him a surplice, and then an albe; after that the vestment of a sub-deacon, and every other furniture, as a priest ready to say mass.
WHEN they had apparelled him so far; What, said he, I think I shall say mass: Yea, said Cosins, one of Bonners chaplains, my lord, I trust to see you say mass for all this, Do you so, quoth he? that shall you never see, nor will I ever do it.
THEN they invested him in all manner of robes of a bishop and archbishop, as he was at his installment, saving that as every thing then is most rich and costly, so every thing here was of canvass and old rags, with a mitre and a pall of the same suit put upon him in mockery, and then the crosier-staff was put in his hand.
THIS done after the pope's pontifical form and manner, Bonner, who for the space of many years had borne, as it seemed, no great good-will towards him, and now rejoiced to see this day wherein he might triumph over him, and take his pleasure at full, began to stretch out his eloquence, making his oration to the assembly, after this manner:
THIS is the man that hath ever despised the pope's holiness, and now is to be judged by him. This is the man that hath pulled down so many churches, and now is come to be judged in a church. This is the man that contemned the blessed sacrament of the altar, and now is come to be condemned before that blessed sacrament hanging over the altar. This is the man that like Lucifer sat in the place of Christ upon an altar to judge others, and now is come before an altar to be judged himself.
WHEREUNTO the archbishop interrupting him, said, that in that he belied him, as he did in many other things: for that which he would now seem to charge him withal, was his own fault, if it was any, and none of his. For the thing you mean was in Paul's church, said he, where I came to sit in commission; and there was a scaffold prepared for me and others, by you and your officers, and whether there were any altar under it or not, I could not perceive it, nor once suspected it, wherefore you do wittingly evil to charge me with it.
BUT Bonner went on still in his rhetorical repetition, lying and railing against the archbishop, beginning every sentence with, This is the man, this is the man, till at length every man gr [...]w tired of his unmannerly usage of him in that time and place; insomuch that the bishop of Ely dives▪ times pulled him by the sleeve to make an end, and said to him afterward when they went to dinner, that he had broken promise with him; for he had intreated him earnestly to use him with reverence.
AFTER all this done and finished, they began then to bustle toward his degrading, and first to take from him his crosier-staff out of his hands, which he held fast, and refused to deliver, and withal imitating the example of Martin Luther, pulled an appeal out of his left sleeve under the wrist, which he there and then delivered unto them, saying I appeal to the next general council; and herein I have comprehended my cause and the form of it, which I desire may be admitted; and prayed divers of the standers by, by name to be witnesses, and especially Mr. Curtop, to whom he spake twice.
THE copy of which appellation because it was not printed before, I thought here to exhibit, ad rei memoriam, as in form here followeth.
The Tenor of the APPEAL of the Archbishop of Canterbury from the Pope to the next General Council.
IN the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.
[Page 208]FIRST, my plain protestation made, that I intend to speak nothing against one holy catholic and apostolical church, or the authority thereof, (which authority I have in great reverence, and to whom my mind is in all things to obey) and if any thing peradventure, either by slipperiness of tongue, or by indignation of abuses, or else by the provocation of mine adversaries be spoken or done otherwise than well, or not with such reverence as becometh me, I am most ready to amend it.
ALTHOUGH the bishop of Rome (whom they call pope) beareth the room of Christ in earth, and hath authority of God, yet by that power or authority he is not become unsinnable, neither hath he received that power to destroy, but to edify the congregation. Therefore if he shall command any thing that is not right to be done, he ought to take it patiently, and in good part, in case he be not therein obeyed. And he must not be obeyed, if he command any thing against the precepts of God: no, rather he may lawfully be resisted, even as Paul withstood Peter. And if he being aided by help of princes, deceived perchance by false suggestion, or with evil counsel, cannot be resisted, but the remedies of withstanding him to be taken away, there is nevertheless one remedy of appealing, (which no prince can take away) uttered by the law of nature: forasmuch as it is a certain defence, which is meet for every body by the law of God, of nature, and of man.
AND whereas the laws do permit a man to appeal, not only from the griefs and injuries done, but also from such as shall be done hereafter, or threatened to be done, insomuch that the inferior cannot make laws of not appealing to a superior power; and since it is openly enough confessed, that a holy general council, lawfully gathered together in the Holy Ghost, and representing the holy catholic church is above the pope, especially in matters concerning faith; that he cannot make decrees that [...] shall not appeal from him to a general coun [...] ▪ therefore I Thomas Cranmer, archbishop of C [...]terbury, or in time past ruler of the metropoliti [...]l church of Canterbury, doctor in divinity, do [...] and publish before you the public notary, and witnesses here present, with mind and intent to challenge and appeal from the persons and grief [...] underneath written, and to proffer myself in place and time convenient and meet to prove the articles that follow. And I openly confess, that I would lawfully have published them before this day, if I might have had either liberty to come abroad myself, or license of a notary and witnesses. But further than I am able to do, I know well is not required of the laws.
1. FIRST, I say and publish, that James by the mercy of God, priest, called Cardinal of the Pit, and of the title of our lady in the church of Rome, judge and commissary specially deputed of our holy lord the pope, as (he affirmeth) caused me to be cited to Rome, there to appear fourscore days after the citation served on me, to make answer to certain articles touching the peril of my state and life: and whereas I was kept in prison with most strait ward, so that I could in no wise be suffered to go to Rome, nor to come out of prison (and in so grievous causes concerning state and life, no man i [...] bound to send a proctor); and though I [...] ever so fain send my proctor, yet by reason of poverty I am notable (for all that ever I had, wherewith I should bear my proctor's costs and charges, is quite taken from me); nevertheless the most reverend cardinal aforesaid doth sore threaten me, that whether I shall appear or not, he will nevertheless yet proceed in judgment against me; wherein I feel myself so grieved, that nothing can be imagined more mischievous or further from reason.
2. SECONDLY, The reverend father James Brooks, by the mercy of God, bishop of Gloucester, judge and under-deputy (as he affirmeth) of the most reverend cardinal, caused me to be cited at Oxford, (where I was then kept in prison) to answer to certain articles, concerning the danger of my state and life. And when I being unlearned and ignorant in the laws, desired counsel of the learned in the laws, that thing was most unrighteously denied me, contrary to the equity of all laws both of God and man. Wherein again I feel myself most wrongfully grieved
3. AND when I refused the bishop of Gloucester [...]o be my [...]dge, for most just causes, which I then [Page 209] declared, he nevertheless went on still, and made process against me, contrary to the rule of the laws of appealing which say, A judge that is refused ought not to proceed in the cause, but to leave off. And when he had required of me answers to certain articles, I refused to make him any answer: I said I would gladly make answer to the most renowned king and queen's deputies or attornies then present, with this condition notwithstanding, that [...] should be extrajudical, and that was permitted me. And with this my protestation made and admitted, I made answer; but my answer was sudden and unprovided for: and therefore I desired to have a copy of mine answers, that I might add [...] take away, change, and amend them; and this was also permitted me. Nevertheless contrary to [...] promise made unto me, no respect had to my protestation, nor licence given to amend mine answer the said reverend father bishop of Gloucester ( [...] hear) commanded mine answers to be inacted [...] to the equity of the law. In which thing again I feel myself much grieved.
4. FURTHERMORE, I could not, for many causes, admit the [...]ishop of Rome's usurped authority in this realm, nor consent to it: for my solemn oath hindering me which I made in the time of king Henry the Eighth, of most famous memory, according to the laws of England. Secondly, because I knew the authority of the bishop of Rome, which he usurpeth, to be against the crown, customs, and laws of this realm of England, insomuch, that neither the king can be crowned in this realm, without the most grievous crime of perjury, nor may bishops enjoy their bishoprics, nor judgments to be used according to the laws and customs of this realm, except by the bishop of Rome's authority, be accursed both the king and queen, the judges, writers and executers of the laws and customs, with all that consent to them. Finally, the whole realm shall be accursed.
5. MOREOVER, that heinous and usurped authority of the bishop of Rome, through reservations of the bishoprics, provisions, annuates, dispensations, pardons, appellations, bulls, and other merchandize of Rome, was wont exceedingly to spoil and consume the riches and substance of this realm, all which things should follow again by recognizing and receiving of that usurped authority unto the infinite loss of this realm.
6. FINALLY, it is most evident by that usurped authority, not only the crown of England to be under the yoke, the laws and customs of this realm to be thrown down, and trodden under foot, but also the most holy decrees of councils, together with the precepts both of the gospel and of God.
WHEN in times past the Sun of righteousness being risen in the world, christian religion, by the preaching of the apostles began to be spread very far abroad, and to flourish, insomuch that their sound went out into all the world; innumerable people, which walked in darkness, saw a great light, God's glory every where published did flourish, the only [...]rk and care of the minister of the church was purely and sincerely to preach Christ; the people to embrace and follow Christ's doctrine. Then the church of Rome, as it were lady of the world, both was, and a [...]so was [...] worthily the mother of other churches, foreasmuch as then she first begat to Christ, nourished with the food of pure doctrine, did help them with their riches, succoured the oppressed, and was a sanctuary for the miserable, she rejoiced with [...]hem that rejoiced, and wept with them that wept. Th [...]n by the examples of the bishops of Rome, riches were despised, worldly glory and pomp was trodden under foot, pleasures and riot nothing regarded. Then this frail uncertain life, being full of miseries, was laughed to scorn, whilst through the example of Romish martyrs, men did every where [...] forward to the life to come. But afterward, when the ungraciousness of damnable ambition, never [...] avarice, and the horrible enormity of vices, had corrupted and taken the see of Rome, there followed every where almost the deformities of all churches, growing out of kind into the manners of the church their mother, leaving their former innocency and purity, and slipping into foul and heinous usage [...].
FOR the aforesaid and many other griefs and abuses, (which I intend to prove, and to proffer myself in time convenient to prove hereafter) since reformation of the above-mentioned abuses is not to be looked for of the bishop of Rome, neither can I hope, by reason of his wicked abuses and usurped [Page 210] authority, to have him an equal judge in his own cause: therefore I do challenge and appeal in these writings from the pope, having no good council, and from the above named pretences, commissions, and judges, from their citations, processes, and from all other things that have or shall follow thereupon, and from every one of them, and from all their sentences, censures, pains, and punishments of cursing, suspension, and interdicting, and from all others whatsoever their denouncings and declarations (as they pretend) of schism, of heresy, of adultery, deprivation, degrading by them, or by any of them, in any manner or way attempted, done, and set forward to be attempted, to be done and to be set forward hereafter (saving always their honours and reverences) as unequal and unrighteous, most tyrannical and violent, and from every grief to come, which shall happen to me, as well for myself as for all and every one that cleaveth to me, or will hereafter be on my side, unto a free generall council, that shall hereafter lawfully be, and in a sure place, where I, or a proctor deputed by me, may freely and with safety come, and to him or them, to whom a man may by the law, privilege, custom, or otherwise challenge and appeal.
AND I desire the first, the second, and third time, instantly, more instantly, and most instantly, that I may have messengers, if there be any man that will and can give me them. And I make open promise of prosecuting this mine appellation, by the way of disannulling, abuse, inequality, and unrighteousness, or otherwise as I shall be better able: choice and liberty reserved to me, to put to, diminish, change, correct, and interpret my sayings, and to reform all things after a better fashion, saving always to me every other benefit of the law, and to them that either be, or will be on my part.
AND touching my doctrine of the sacrament, and other my doctrine, of what kind soever it be, I protest that it was never my mind to write, speak, or understand any thing contrary to the most holy word of God, or else against the holy catholic church of Christ, but purely and simply to imitate and teach those things only, which I had learned of the sacred scripture, and of the holy catholic church of Christ from the beginning, and also according to the exposition of the most learned fathers and [...] of the church.
AND if any thing hath peradventure cha [...]ed otherwise than I thought, I may err, but [...] cannot be, forasmuch as I am ready in all things [...] follow the judgment of the most sacred [...] God, and of the holy catholic church, desiring [...] other thing, than meekly and gently to be taught [...]f any where (which God forbid) I have swerved from the truth.
AND I protest and openly confess, that in all [...] doctrine and preaching, both of the sacrament, and of my other doctrine whatsoever it be, not [...] mean and judge of those things, as the [...] church, and the most holy fathers of old, with [...] accord, have meant and judged, but also I would gladly use the same words that they used, and [...] use any other words, but to set my hand to all [...] singular their speeches, phrases, ways, [...] speech, which they do use in their treatises upon [...] sacrament, and to keep still their interpretation. But in this thing I am only accused for an heretic▪ because I allow not the doctrine lately brought [...] of the sacrament, and because I consent not to word▪ not accustomed in scripture, and unknown [...] ancient fathers, but newly invented and broug [...] [...] by men, and belonging to the destruction of [...], and overthrowing of pure and old religion. Yea, even, &c.
THIS appeal being put up to the bishop of Ely, he said to the archbishop, My lord, our commission is to proceed against you, omni appellatione [...], and therefore we cannot admit it.
WHY (quoth the archbishop) then you do me the more wrong; for my case is not as every private man's case. The matter is immediately between the pope and me, and none otherwise: and I think no man ought to be a judge in his own cause.
WELL, quoth Ely, if it may be admitted, it shall, and so received it of him. And then he began earnestly to persuade the archbishop to consider his state, and to weigh it well, while there was time to do him good, promising to become a suiter to the king and queen for him; and so protested his great [Page 211] love and friendship that had been between them, heartily weeping, so that for a time he could not go on with his tale. After going forward, he earnestly affirmed, that if it had not been the king and [...] commandment, whom he could not deny, [...] no worldly advantage should have made him to [...] done it; concluding that to be one of the sorrowfullest things that ever happened unto him. The archbishop gently seeming to comfort him, [...], he was very well content withal: and so they proceeded to his degradation: the perfect form whereof, with all the rites and ceremonies thereunto appertaining, taken out of the pope's pontifical, we have already described.
TO be short, when they came to take off his pall, (which is a solemn vesture only belonging to an archbishop) then said he, Which of you hath a pall, to take off my pall? which imported as much as they being his inferiors, could not degrade him. Whereunto one of them answered, confessing that as they were but bishops they were inferior to him, and therefore not competent judges; but, as being the pope's delegates, they had authority to take the pall, which accordingly they did; and, so proceeding, took every thing in order from him, as it was put on. Then a barber clipped his hair round about, and the bishop scraped the tops of his fingers where he had been anointed, wherein bishop Bonner behaved himself as roughly and unmannerly, as the other bishop was to him soft and gentle. Whilst they were thus doing, All this, quoth the archbishop, needed not; I had myself done with this gear long ago. Last of all they stripped him out of his gown into a jacket, and put upon him a poor yeoman beadle's gown, full bare and nearly worn, and as ill-shaped as one might probably see, and a townsman's cap on his head, and so delivered him to the secular power.
AFTER this pageant of degradation, and all was finished, then spake lord Bonner, saying to him, Now are you no lord any more: and so whenever he spake to the people of him, (as he was continually barking against him) he ever used this term, This gentleman here, &c.
AND thus, with great compassion and pity of every man, in this evil savoured gown was he carried to prison. Whom there followed a gentleman of Gloucestershire, with the archbishop's own gown, who standing by, and being thought to be toward one of the bishops had it delivered unto him; who by the way talking with him, said the bishop of Ely protested his friendship with tears. Yet (said he) he might have used a great deal more friendship towards me, and never have been worse thought on, for I have well deserved it: and going up into the prison with him, asked him if he would drink. He answered him, saying, if he had a piece of salt fish, that he had a better will to eat: for he had been that day somewhat troubled with this matter, and had eaten little, but now that it is past, my heart (said he) is well quieted. Whereupon the gentleman said, he would give him money with all his heart, for he was able to do it. But he being doubtful of the law, and fearing Mr. Farmer's case, durst therefore give him nothing, but gave money to the bailiffs that stood by, and said that if they were good men they would bestow it on him (for my lord of Canterbury had not one penny in his purse to help him) and so left him, my lord bidding him earnestly farewell, commending himself to his prayers and all his friends. That night this gentleman was detained by Bonner and Ely, for giving him this money: and but for the help of his friends, he had been sent up to the council. Such was the cruelty and iniquity of the time, that men could not do good without punishment.
MEAN time, while the archbishop was thus remaining in durance (whom they had kept now in prison almost the space of three years), the doctors and divines of Oxford busied themselves all that ever they could about Dr. Cranmer, to persuade him to recant, endeavouring by all the crafty practices and allurements they could invent to bring their purpose to pass. And to the intent they might win him the more easily, they entertained him in the dean of Christ-church's house, in the said university, where he lacked no delicate fare, played at bowls, had his pleasure for walking, and all other things that might bring him from Christ. And besides all this, they secretly suborned certain men, who when they could not prevail by arguments and disputation, should by entreaty and other fair promises, or any other means allure him to a recantation, perceiving otherwise what a great wound [Page 212] they should receive, if the archbishop had stood stedfast in this sentence; and again on the other side what great profit they should get, if he, as the principal standard-bearer, should be overthrown. By reason whereof the wily priests flocked about him, with threatening, flattering, intreating and promising, and all other means; especially Henry Sydal, and Friar John de Villa Garcina, a Spaniard, to the end to drive him, to the uttermost of their possibility, from his former sentence to recantation.
FIRST, they set forth how acceptable it would be both to the king and queen, and especially how gainful to him, and for his soul's health the same should be. They added moreover, how the council and the noblemen bare him good will. They put him in hope, that he should not only have his life, but also be restored to his ancient dignity, saying, it was but a small matter, and so easy that they required him to do, only that he would subscribe to a few words with his own hand; which if he did, there should be nothing in the realm that the queen would not easily grant him, whether he would have riches or dignity, or else if he had rather live a private life in quiet rest, in whatsoever place he liked, without all public ministry, only that he would set his name in two words to a little leaf of paper; but if he refused there was no hope of health and pardon: for the queen was so purposed that she should have Cranmer a catholic, or else no Cranmer. Therefore he should chuse whether he thought it better to end his life shortly in the flames and fire-brands now ready to be kindled, than with much honour to prolong his life until the course of nature did call him; for there was no middle way.
MOREOVER, they exhorted him that he would look to his wealth, his estimation and quietness, saying, that he was not so old, but that many years yet remained in this his so lusty age; and if he would not do it in respect of the queen, yet he should do it for respect of his life, and not suffer that other men should be more careful for his health than he was himself; saying, that this was agreeable to his learning and notable virtues; which being adjoined with his life would be profitable both to himself and to many others; but being extinct by [...] should be fruitful to no man: that he should [...] heed that he went not too far; yet there was time enough to restore all things safe, and nothing [...], if he wanted not to himself. Therefore [...] would have him lay hold upon the occasion of [...] health while it was offered, le [...]t if he would [...] it, he might hereafter seek, it when he [...] not have it.
FINALLY, if the desire of life did nothing [...] him, yet he should remember that to die is grievous in all ages, and especially in these his years and [...] of dignity it were more grievous: but to die [...] the fire and such torments is most grievous of [...] ▪ With th [...]se and like provocations these fair flatte [...]ers ceased not to solicit and urge him, using all po [...]sible means they could to draw him to their [...] ▪ whose force his manly constancy did a great [...] resist. But at last when they made no end of [...] and crying upon him, the archbishop being overcome, whether through their importunity▪ or by his own imbecility, or of what mind I cannot tell, at length gave his hand.
IT might be supposed that it was done for the hope of life, and better days to come. But as we may since perceive by a letter of his sent to a lawyer, the greatest cause why he desired his time to be d [...]layed, was that he would make an end of Marc [...] Antonius, which he had already begun: but howsoever it was plain against his conscience. The form of which recantation, made by the friars and doctors, whereto he subscribed, was this:
The Copy and Words of Dr. CRANMER'S Recantation.
I THOMAS CRANMER, late archbishop of Canterbury, do [...]nounce, abhor, and detest, all manner of heresi [...] and errors of Luther and Zuinglius, and all other teachings which are contrary to sound and true doctrine. And I believe most constantly in my heart, and with my mouth I confess one holy and catholic church visible, without which there is no salvation; and thereof I acknowledge the bishop of Rome to be supreme head on earth, whom I acknowledge to be the highest bishop [Page 213] and pope, and Christ's vicar, unto whom all [...] people ought to be subject.
AND as concerning the sacraments, I believe and [...] the sacrament of the altar the very body [...] of Christ, being contained most truly under the forms of bread and wine; the bread through [...] [...]ighty power of God being turned into the body of our Saviour Jesus Christ, and the wine into his blood.
AND in the other six sacraments, also (like as in this) I believe and hold as the universal church [...], and the church of Rome judgeth and [...].
FURTHERMORE, I believe that there is a place of purgatory, where souls departed be punished for a [...] for whom the church doth godly and whole- [...] pray, like as it doth honour saints and make prayers to them▪
FINALLY, in all things I profess, that I do not otherwise believe, than the catholic church and church of Rome holdeth and teacheth. I am sorry that ever I held or thought otherwise. And I beseech Almighty God, that of his mercy he will vouchsafe to forgive me, whatsoever I have offended against God or his church, and also I desire and beseech all christian people to pray for me.
AND all such as have been deceived either by mine example or doctrine, I require them by the blood of Jesus Christ, that they will return to the unity of [...] church that we may be all of one mind, without [...]hism or division.
AND to conclude, as I submit myself to the catholic church of Christ, and to the supreme head thereof, so I sumbit myself unto the most excellent majesties of Philip and Mary, king and queen of this realm of England, &c. and to all other their laws and ordinances, being ready always as a faithful subject ever to obey them. And God is my witness, that I have not done this for favour or fear of any person, but willingly and of mine own conscience, as to the instruction of others.
THIS recantation of the archbishop was not so soon conceived, but the doctors and prelates without delay caused the same to be imprinted, and set abroad in all men's hands. Whereunto for better credit, first was added the name of Thomas Cranmer, with a solemn subscription, then followed the witnesses of this recantation, Henry Sydal, and friar John de villa Garcina. All this time Cranmer had no certain assurance of his life, although the same was faithfully promised to him by the doctors; but after they had their purpose, the rest they committed to all adventure, as became men of that religion to do. The queen, having now gotten a time to revenge her old grief, received his recantation very gladly: but of her purpose to put him to death she would nothing relent.
NOW was Dr. Cranmer in a miserable case, having neither inwardly any quietness in his own conscience, nor yet outwardly any help in his adversaries.
BESIDES this, on the one side was praise, on the other side scorn, on both sides danger, so that he could neither die honestly, nor yet honestly live. And whereas he sought profit, he fell into double disprofit, that neither with good men he could avoid secret shame, nor yet with evil men the [...] of dissimulation.
IN the mean time while these things were doing (as I said) in the prison amongst the doctors, the queen taking secret counsel how to dispatch Cranmer out of the way (who as yet knew not of her secret hate, and not expecting death) appointed Dr. Cole, and secretly gave him in commandment, that against the 21st of March he should prepare a funeral sermon for Cranmer's burning, and so instructing him orderly and diligently of her will and pleasure in that behalf, sent him away.
SOON after the lord Williams, of Tame, and the lord Shandois, sir Thomas Bridges, and sir John Brown, were sent for, with other worshipful men and justices, commanded in the queen's name to be at Oxford on the same day, with their servants and retinue, lest Cranmer's death should raise there any tumult.
DR. Cole having this lesson given him before, [Page 214] and charged by her commandment, returned to Oxford, ready to play his part; who as the day of excution drew near, even the day before, came into the prison to Dr. Cranmer, to try whether he abode in the catholic faith wherein before he had left him. To whom, when Cranmer had answered, that by God's grace he would be daily more confirmed in the catholic faith; Cole departing for that time, the next day following repaired to the archbishop again, giving no signification as yet of his death that was prepared. And therefore in the morning, which was the 21st day of March, appointed for Cranmer's execution, the said Cole coming to him, asked him if he had any money, to whom when he had answered that he had none, he delivered fifteen crowns to give to the poor to whom he would: and so exhorting him as much as he could to constancy in faith, departed thence about his business, as to his sermon appertained.
BY this partly, and other like arguments, the archbishop began more and more to surmise what they were about. Then because the day was not far past, and the lords and knights that were looked for were not yet come, there came to him the Spanish friar, witness of his recantation, bringing a paper with articles, which Cranmer should openly profess in his recantation before the people, earnestly desiring him that he would write the said instrument with the articles with his own hand, and sign it with his name: which when he had done, the said friar desired that he would write another copy thereof which should remain with him, and that he did also. But yet the archbishop being not ignorant whereunto their secret devices tended, and thinking that the time was at hand in which he could no longer dissemble the profession of his faith with Christ's people, he put his prayer and his exhortation written in another paper secretly into his bosom, which he intended to recite to the people before he should make the last profession of his faith, fearing lest if they heard the confession of his faith first, they would not afterwards have suffered him to exhort the people.
SOON after about nine o'clock, the lord Williams, sir Thomas Bridges, sir John Brown, and the other justices, with certain other noblemen, that were sent of the queen's council, came to Oxford with a great train of waiting-men. Also of the [...] multitude on every side (as is wont in such [...]) was made a great concourse, and greater [...]pectation: for first of all, they that were of [...] pope's side were in great hope that day to [...] something of Cranmer that should establish the [...] of their opinion: the other part, who [...] endued with a better mind, could not yet [...] that he who by continual study and labour for so many years, had set forth the doctrine of the gospel, either would or could now in the last act of [...] life forsake his part. Briefly, as every [...] inclined, either to this part or to that, so according to the diversity of the desires every man [...] and hoped for. And yet because in an uncertain thing the certainty could be known of none [...] would be the end; all their minds were hanging between hope and doubt. So that the greater [...] expectation was in so doubtful a matter, the [...] was the multitude that was gathered thither to [...] and behold.
DURING this great expectation, Dr. Cranmer [...] length came from the prison of Bocardo unto [...] Mary's church, because it was a foul and rainy [...] the chief church in the university in this order. The mayor went before, next him the alderman [...] their place and degree; after that was Cranmer brought between two friars, which mumbling [...] and fro psalms in the streets, answered one another until they came to the church door, and there they began the song of Simeon, Nunc Dimittis; and entering into the church, the psalm-saying friar [...] brought him to his standing, and there left him. There was a stage set over against the pulpit, of a mean height from the ground, where Cranmer had his standing, waiting until Dr. Cole made ready for his sermon.
THE lamentable case and sight of that man was a sorrowful spectacle to all christian eyes that beheld him. He that lately was archbishop, metropolitan, and primate of all England, and the king's privy counsellor▪ being now in a bare and ragged gown, and ill savouredly clothed, with an old square cap, exposed to the contempt of all men, did admonish even not only of his own calamity, but also of their state and fortune. For who would not pity his case, and might not fear his own chance, to see [Page 215] such a prelate, so grave a counsellor, and of so long continued honour, after so many dignities, in his old years to be deprived of his estate, adjudged to die, and in so painful a death to end his life, and now presently from such fresh ornaments, to descend [...] such vile and ragged apparel?
IN this habit, when he had stood a good space upon the stage, turning to a pillar near adjoining thereunto, he lifted up his hands to heaven and prayed unto God once or twice, till at length Dr. Cole coming into the pulpit, and beginning his sermon, entered first into mention of Tobias and Zachary; whom after he had praised in the beginning of his sermon for their perseverance in the true worshipping of God, he then divided his whole sermon into three parts (according to the solemn custom of the schools) intending to speak first of the mercy of God: secondly, of his justice to be shewed: and last of all, how the prince's secrets are not to be opened. And proceeding a little from the beginning, he took occasion by and by to turn his [...] to Cranmer, and with many hot words reproved him, that he being one endued with the favour and feeling of wholesome and catholic doctrine, fell into a contrary opinion of pernicious error; which he had not only defended by writings, and all his power, but also allured other men to do the like, with great liberality of gifts, as it were appointing rewards for error; and after he had allured them, by all means did cherish them.
IT were too long to repeat all things, that in long order were pronounced. The sum of his tripartite declamation was, that he said God's mercy was so tempered with his justice, that he did not altogether require punishment according to the merits of offenders, nor yet sometimes suffered the same to go altogether unpunished, yea, though they had repented. As in David, who when he was bidden to chuse of three kinds of punishment which he would, and he had chosen pestilence for three days; the Lord forgave him half the time, but did not [...] all: and that the same thing came to pass in him also, to whom although pardon and reconciliation was due according to the canons, seeing he repented of [...] errors, yet there were causes why the queen and the council at this time judged him to death; of which, lest he should marvel too much, he should hear some.
FIRST, That being a traitor, he had dissolved the lawful matrimony between the king and queen, her father and mother; besides the driving out of the pope's authority, while he was metropolitan.
SECONDLY, That he had been an heretic, from whom as from an author and only fountain, all heretical doctrine and schismatical opinion, that so many years have prevailed in England, did first rise and spring; of which he had not been a secret favourer only, but also a most earnest defender even to the end of life, sowing them abroad by writings and arguments, privately and openly, not without great ruin and decay of the catholic church.
AND further, it seemed meet, according to the law of equality, that as the death of the late duke of Northumberland, made even with Thomas Moore, chancellor, that died for the church, so there should be one that should make even with Fisher, of Rochester: and because that Ridley, Hooper, and Farrar, were not able to make even with that man, it seemed that Cranmer should be joined to them to fill up their part of equality.
BESIDES these, there were other just and weighty causes, which appeared to the queen and council, which was not meet at that time to be opened to the common people.
AFTER this, turning his tale to the hearers, he bid all men beware by this man's example, that among men nothing is so high that can promise itself safety on the earth, and that God's vengeance is equally stretched against all men and spareth none: therefore they should beware and learn to fear their prince. And seeing the queen's majesty would not spare so notable a man as this, much less in the like cause would she spare other men, that no man should think to make thereby any defence of his error, either in riches or any kind of authority. They had now an example to teach them all, by whose calamity every man might consider his own fortune; who from the top of dignity, none being more honourable than he in the whole realm, and next the king, was fallen into such great misery, as [Page 216] they might see, being a person of such high degree, s [...]met [...]me one of the chief prelates of the church, and an archbishop, the chief of the council, the s [...]cond person in the realm a long time, a man thought in greatest assurance, having a king on his side▪ notwithstanding all his authority and defence, to be de [...]ased from [...]igh [...]state to a low degree, of a counsellor to become a caitiff, and to be set in so wretched a state, that the poorest wretch would not chang [...] condition with him; briefly so heaped with misery on all sides, that neither was left in him any hope of better fortune, nor place for worse.
THE latter part of his sermon he converted to the archbishop, whom he comforted and encouraged to take his death well, by many places of scripture, as with these and such like; bidding him not to mistrust, but he should incontinently receive what the thief did, to whom Christ said, "This day thou shalt be with me in paradise:" and out of St. Paul he armed him against the terror of fire by this, "The Lord is faithful, which will not suffer you to be tempted above your strength:" by the example of the three children, to whom God made the flame to seem like a pleasant dew; adding also the rejoicing of St. Andrew on his cross, the patience of St. Laurence in the fire, assuring him, that God, if he called on him, and to such as die in his faith, either would abate the fury of the flame, or give him strength to abide it.
HE glorified God much in his conversion, because it appeared to be only his work, declaring what travail and conference had been with him to convert him, and all prevailed not, till that it pleased God of his mercy to reclaim him, and call him home. In discoursing of which place, he much commended Cranmer, and qualified his former doings, thus tempering his judgment and talk of him, that all the time (said he) he flowed in riches and honour, he was unworthy of his life▪ and now that he might not live, he was u [...]worthy of death. But lest he should carry with him no comfort, he would diligently labour (he said), and also did promise in the name of all the priests that were present, that immediately after his death where should be dirges, masses, and funerals executed for him in all the churches of Oxford, for the succour of his soul.
ALL this time with [...]hat great g [...]ief of [...] Cran [...]mer stood hearing this sermon, the outward shews of his body and countenance did better express, than any man can declare; one while lifting up his hands and eyes unto heaven, and then again for shame letting them down to the earth. A man might have seen the very image and shape of perfect sorrow lively in him expressed. More than twenty several times the tears gushed out abundantly, dropping down marvellously from his fatherly face. They that were present do testify, that they never saw in any child more tears than came from him at that time, during the whole sermon; but especially when they recited his prayer before the people. It is marvellous what commiseration and pity moved all men's hearts, that beheld so heavy a countenance, and such abundance of tears in an old man of so revered dignity.
AFTER Cole had ended his sermon, he called back the people to prayers that were ready to depart. Brethren (said he) lest any man should doubt of this man's earnest conversion and repentance, you shall hear him speak before you, and therefore I pray you, Mr. Cranmer, to perform that now which you promised not long ago; namely, that you would openly express the true and undoubted profession of your faith, that you may take away all suspicion from men, and that all men may understand that you are a catholic indeed. I will do it (said the archbishop), and that with a good will; who, by rising up, and putting off his cap, began to speak thus unto the people.
GOOD christian people, my dearly beloved brethren and sisters in Christ, I beseech you most heartily to pray for me to Almighty God, that he will forgive me all my sins and offences, which be many without number, and great above measure. But yet one thing grieveth my conscience more than all the rest, whereof, God willing, I intend to speak more hereafter. But how great and how many soever my sins be, I beseech you to pray to God of his mercy to pardon and forgive them all. And here kneeling down he said the following prayer.
The Prayer of Dr. CRANMER, Archbishop of Canterbury.
O Father of heaven, O Son of God, Redeemer of the world, O Holy Ghost, three persons [Page 217] and one God, have mercy upon me, most wretched caitiff and miserable sinner. I have offended both against heaven and earth, more than my tongue can express. Whither then may I go, or whether shall I flee? To heaven I may be ashamed to lift up mine eyes, and in earth I find no place of refuge or succour. To thee therefore, O Lord, do I run; to thee do I humble myself, saying, O Lord my God, my sins be great, but yet have mercy upon me for thy great mercy. The great mystery that God became man, was not wrought for little or few offences. Thou didst not give thy Son, O Heavenly Father, unto death for small sins only, but for all the greatest sins of the world, so that the sinner return to thee with his whole heart, as I do at this present. Wherefore have mercy on me, O God, whose property is always to have mercy; have mercy upon me, O Lord, for thy great mercy. I crave nothing for mine own merits, but for thy name's sake, that it may be hallowed thereby, and for thy dear Son Jesus Christ's sake. And now therefore, O Father of heaven, hallowed be thy name," &c. And then he rising, said:
EVERY man (good people) desireth at the time of his death to give some good exhortation, that others may remember the same before their death, and be the better thereby: so I beseech God grant me grace, that I may speak something at this my departing, whereby God may be glorified, and you edified.
FIRST, It is a heavy cause to see that so many folk so much dote upon the love of this false world, and be so careful for it, that of the love of God, or the world to come, they seem to care very little or nothing. Therefore this shall be my first exhortation: That you set not your minds overmuch upon this deceitful world, but upon God, and upon the world to come, and to learn to know what this lesson meaneth which St. John teacheth, "That the love of this world is hatred against God."
THE second exhortation is, That next under God you obey your king and queen willingly and gladly, without murmuring or grudging: not for fear of them only, but much more for the fear of God; knowing that they be God's ministers, appointed by God to rule and govern you: and therefore whosoever resisteth them, resisteth the ordinance of God.
THE third exhortation is, That you love altogether like brethren and sisters. For, alas! pity it is to see what contention and hatred one christian man beareth to another, not taking each other as brother and sister, but rather as strangers and mortal enemies. But I pray you learn and bear well away this one lesson, To do good unto all men, as much as in you lieth, and to hurt no man, no more than you would hurt your own natural loving brother or sister. For this you may be sure of, that whosoever hateth any person, and goeth about maliciously to hinder or hurt him, surely, and without all doubt, God is not with that man, although he think himself ever so much in God's favour.
THE fourth exhortation shall be to them that have great substance and riches of this world, That they will well consider and weigh three sayings of the scripture: one is of our Saviour himself, who saith, Luke xviii. "It is hard for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of heaven." A sore saying, and yet spoken by him who knoweth the truth.
THE second is of St. John, 1 John iii. whose saying is this, "He that hath the substance of this world, and seeth his brother in necessity, and shutteth up his mercy from him, how can he say that he loveth God?"
THE third is of St. James, who speaketh to the covetous rich man, after this manner, "Weep you and howl for the misery that shall come upon you: your riches do rot, [...] clothes be moth-eaten, your gold and your silver doth canker and rust, and their rust shall bear witness against you, and consume you like fire; you gather a hoard or treasure of God's indignation against the last day." Let them that be rich ponder well these three sentences: for if they ever have occasion to shew their charity, they have it now at this present, the poor people being so many, and victuals so dear.
AND now forasmuch as I am come to the last end of my life, whereupon hangeth all my life past, and all my life to come, either to live with my master [Page 218] Christ for ever in joy, or else to be in pain for ever with wicked devils in hell, and I see before mine eyes presently either heaven ready to receive me, or else hell ready to swallow me up: I shall therefore declare unto you my very faith how I believe, without any colour of dissimulation: for now is no time to dissemble, whatsoever I have said or written in times past.
FIRST, I believe in God the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, &c. And I believe every article of the catholic faith, every word and sentence taught by our Saviour Jesus Christ, his apostles and prophets, in the New and Old Testament.
AND now I come to the great thing which so much troubleth my conscience, more than any thing that ever I did or said in my whole life, and that is the setting abroad of a writing contrary to the truth; which now here I renounce and refuse, as things written with my hand contrary to the truth which I thought in my heart, and written for fear of death, and to save my life, if it might be; and that is, all such bills and papers which I have written or signed with my hand since my degradation, wherein I have written many things untrue. And forasmuch as my hand hath offended, writing contrary to my heart, therefore my hand shall first be punished: for when I come to the fire, it shall be first burned.
AND as for the pope, I refuse him, as Christ's enemy and Antichrist, with all his false doctrine.
AND as for the sacrament, I believe as I have taught in my book against the bishop of Winchester, which my book teacheth so true a doctrine of the sacrament, that it shall stand at the last day before the judgment of God, where the papistical doctrine contrary thereto shall be ashamed to shew her face.
HERE the standers-by were all astonished, marvelled, and amazed, and looked upon one another, whose expectation he had so notably deceived. Some began to admonish him of his recantation, and to accuse him of falshood.
BRIEFLY, it was strange to see the doctors beguiled of so great an hope. I think there was never cruelty more notably or better in time deluded and deceived. For it is not to be doubted, but they looked for a glorious victory, and a perpetual triumph by this man's retractation.
AS soon as they heard these things, they began to let down their ears, to rage, fret, and fume; and so much the more, because they could not revenge their grief: for they could now no longer threaten or hurt him. For the most miserable man in the world can die but once: and whereas of necessity he must needs die that day, though the papists had been ever so well pleased: being ever so much offended with him, yet could he not be twice killed by them. And so when they could do nothing else unto him, yet lest they should say nothing, they ceased not to object unto him his falshood and dissimulation.
UNTO which accusation he answered, Ah, my masters (quoth he), do you not take it so. Always since I lived hitherto, I have been a hater of falshood, and a lover of simplicity, and never before this time have I dissembled; and in saying this, all the tears that remained in his body appeared in his eyes. And when he began to speak more of the sacrament and of the papacy, some of them began to cry out, yelp, and baul, and especially Cole cried out upon him, Stop the heretic's mouth, and take him away.
AND then Cranmer being pulled down from the stage, was led to the fire, accompanied with those friars, vexing, troubling, and threatening him most cruelly. What madness (said they) hath brought thee again into this error, by which thou wilt draw innumerable souls with thee into hell? To whom he answered nothing, but directed all his talk to the people, saving that to one troubling him in the way he spake, and exhorted him to get him home to his study, and apply to his book diligently; saying, if he did diligently call upon God, by reading more he should get knowledge.
BUT the other Spanish barker, raging and foaming, was almost out of his wits, always having this in his mouth, Non fecisti? Didst thou it not?
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[Page 219]BUT when he came to the place where the holy bishops and martyrs of God, bishop Latimer and bishop Ridley, were burnt before him for the confession of the truth, kneeling down he prayed to God, and not long tarrying in his prayers, putting off his garments to his shirt, he prepared himself to death. His shirt was made long down to his feet. His feet were bare; likewise his head, when both his caps were off, was so bare that one hair could not be seen upon it. His beard was so long and thick, that it covered his face with marvellous gravity; and his reverend countenance moved the hearts both of his friends and enemies.
THEN the Spanish friars, John and Richard, of whom mention was made before, began to exhort him and play their parts to him afresh, but with vain and lost labour. Cranmer with stedfast purpose abiding in the profession of his doctrine, gave his hand to certain old men, and others that stood by, bidding them farewel.
AND when he had thought to have done so likewise to Mr. Ely, the said Ely drew back his hand and refused, saying, it was not lawful to salute heretics, and especially such a one as falsely returned unto the opinions that he had forsworn. And if he had known before that he would have done so, he would never have used his company so familiarly, and c [...]id those sergeants and citizens, who had not refused to give him their hands. This Mr. Ely was a student in divinity, and lately made a priest, being then one of the fellows in Brazen-nose college.
THEN was an iron chain tied about Cranmer, and they commanded the fire to be set unto him.
AND when the wood was kindled, and the fire began to burn near him, he stretched forth his right hand, which had signed his recantation, into the flames, and there h [...]ld it so stedfast that all the people might see it burnt to a coal before his body was touched. In short, he was so patient and constant in the midst of these extreme tortures, that he seemed to move no more than the stake to which he was bound; his eyes were lifted up to heaven, and often he rep [...]ated his unworthy right hand, so long as his voice would suffer him; and as often [...]sing the words of the blessed martyr St. Stephen, "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit," till the fury of the flames putting him to silence he gave up the ghost.
THIS fortitude of mind, which perchance is rare not found among the Spaniards, when friar John saw, thinking it came not of fortitude, but of desperation, although such manner of examples which are of like constancy, have been common here in England, he ran to the lord Williams of Tame, crying that the archbishop was vexed in mind, and died in great desperation. But he, who was not ignorant of the archbishop's constancy being unknown to the Spaniards, smiled only, and as it were by silence rebuked the friar's folly. And this was the end of this learned archbishop, whom, left by evil subscribing he should have perished, by well recanting, God preserved▪ and lest he should have lived longer with shame and reproof, it pleased God rather to take him away, to the glory of his name and profit of his church. So good was the Lord both to his church, in fortifying the same with the testimony and blood of such a martyr; and so good also to the man with this cross of tribulation, to purge his offences in this world, not only of his recantation, but also of his standing against John Lambert and Mr. Alien, or if there were any other, with whose burning or blood his hand had been any thing before polluted. But especially he had to rejoice, that dying in such a cause, he was numbered amongst the martyrs of Christ, and much more worthy of the name of St. Thomas of Canterbury, than he whom the pope falsely before did canonize.
AND thus you have the full story concerning the life and death of this reverend archbishop and martyr of God, Thomas Cranmer, and also of divers others, of whom this archbishop was the last that suffered in the middle of the reign of queen Mary, and almost the middle man that was burnt in her time.
NOW we proceed to exhibit the letters which this worthy martyr left behind him, beginning first with his famous letter to queen Mary, which he wrote immediately after he was cited up to Rome by bishop Brooks and his fellows, the tenor whereof is as followeth.
LETTER I. The Archbishop of Canterbury to Queen MARY.
MAY it please your majesty to pardon my presumption, that I dare be so bold to write to your highness. But very necessity constraineth me, that your majesty may know my mind, rather by mine own writing than by other men's reports. So it is, that upon Wednesday, being the 12th day of this month, I was cited to appear at Rome the eighteenth day after, there to make answer to such matters as should be objected against me on behalf of your most excellent majesties, which matters the Thursday following were objected against me by Dr. Martin and Dr. Story, your majesty's proctors before the bishop of Gloucester, sitting in judgment by commission from Rome. But (alas) it cannot but grieve the heart of a natural subject to be accused of the king and queen of his own realm; and especially before an outward judge, or by authority coming from any person out of this realm: where the king and queen, as if they were subjects within their own realm, shall complain and require justice at a stranger's hands against their own subject, being already condemned to death by their own laws. As though the king and queen could not do or have justice within their own realms against their own subjects; but they must seek it at strangers' hands in a strange land; the like whereof (I think) was never seen. I would have wished to have had some meaner adversaries: and, I think, that death shall not grieve me much more, than to have my most dread and gracious sovereign lord and lady, to whom, under God, I do own all obedience, to [...]e mine accusers in judgment within their own realm, before any stranger and outward power. But forasmuch as in the time of the prince of most famous memory, king Henry the Eighth, your grace's father, I was sworn never to consent, that the bishop of Rome should have or exercise any authority or jurisdiction in this realm of England, therefore lest I should allow [...]is authority contrary to mine own oath, I refused to make answer to the bishop of Gloucester sitting herein judgment by the pope's authority, lest I should run into perjury.
ANOTHER cause why I refused the pope's authority, is this, that his authority, as he claimeth it, is repugnant to the crown imperial of this realm, and to the laws of the same; which every true subject is bound to defend. First, for that the pope saith, that all manner of power, as well temporal as spiritual, is given first to him of God; and that the temporal power he giveth unto emperors and kings, to use it under him, but so as to be always at his commandment and be [...]k.
BUT contrary to this claim, the imperial crown and jurisdiction temporal of this realm is taken immediately from God, to be used under him only, and is subject to none but God alone.
MOREOVER, to the imperial laws and customs of this realm the king in his coronation, and all justices when they receive their offices, be sworn, and all the whole realm is bound to defend and maintain. But contrary hereunto, the pope by his authority maketh void, and commandeth to blot out of our books, all laws and customs being repugnant to his laws, and declareth accursed all rulers and governors, all the makers, writers, and executors of all such laws or customs, as it appeareth by many of the pope's laws, whereof one or two I shall rehearse. In the decrees, Dict. 10. it is written thus, "The constitutions or statutes enacted against the canons and decrees of the bishops of Rome or their good customs, are of none effect." Also, "We excommunicate all heretics of both sexes, what name soever they be called by, and their favourers, receptors, end defenders; and also them that shall hereafter cause to be observed the statutes and customs made against the liberty of the church, except they cause the same to be put out of their records and chapters within two months after the publication thereof. Also we excommunicate the statute-makers and writers of those statutes, and all the protestates, powers, consuls, governors, and counsellors of places, where such statutes or customs shall be made or kept; and also that shall presume to give judgment according to them, or shall notify in public form the matter so adjudged."
NOW by these laws, if the bishop of Rome's authority which he claimeth by God, be lawful, all your grace's laws and customs of your realm, being contrary to the pope's laws, be naught, and as well your majesty, as your judges, justices, and all other [Page 221] executors of the same, stand accursed amongst heretics, which God forbid. And yet this curse can never be avoided (if the pope hath such power as he claimeth) until such times as the laws and customs of this realm (being contrary to his laws) be taken away and blotted out of the law-books. And although there be many laws of this realm contrary to the laws of Rome, yet I named but a few; as to convict a clerk before any temporal judge of this realm for debt, felony, murder, or for any other crime; which clerks by the pope's laws are so exempt from the king's laws, that they can be no where sued, but before their ordinary.
ALSO the pope by his laws may give all bishopprics and benefices spiritual; which by the laws of this realm can be given but only by the king and other patrons of the same, except they fall into lapse.
BY the pope's laws, jus patronatus shall be sued only before the ecclesiastical judge; but by the laws of the realm it shall be sued before the temporal judge.
AND to be short, the laws of this realm do agree with the pope's like fire and water. And yet the kings of this realm have provided for their laws by the praemunire; so that if any man have let the execution of the laws of this realm by any authority from the see of Rome, he falleth in the praemunire.
BUT to meet with this, the popes have provided for their laws by cursing. For whosoever hindereth the pope's laws to have full course within this realm, by the pope's power standeth accursed: so that the pope's power treadeth all the laws and customs of this realm under his feet, cursing all that execute them, until such time as they do give place unto his laws.
BUT it may be said▪ that notwithstanding all the pope's decrees, yet we do still execute the laws and customs of this realm. Nay, not all quietly without interruption of the pope. And where we do execute them, yet we do it unjustly, if the pope's power be of force, and for the same we stand excommunicate, and shall do until we leave the execution of our own laws and customs. Thus we be well reconciled to Rome, allowing such authority, whereby the realm standeth accursed before God, if the pope have any such authority.
THESE things (as I suppose) were not fully opened in the parliament-house when the pope's authority was received again within this realm; for if they had, I do not believe that either the king or queen's majesty, or the nobles of this realm, or the commons of the same, would ever have consented to receive again such a foreign authority, so injurious, hurtful, and prejudicial, as well to the crown as to the laws and customs and state of this realm, as whereby they must needs acknowledge themselves to be accursed. But none could open this matter well but the clergy, and such of them as had read the pope's laws, whereby the pope had made himself as it were a god. These seek to maintain the pope whom they desired to have their chief head, to the intent they might have, as it were a kingdom and laws within themselves, distinct from the laws of the crown, and wherewith the crown may not meddle; and so being exempted from the laws of the realm, might live in this realm like lords and kings, without damage or fear of any man, so that they please their high and supreme head at Rome. For this consideration (I think) some that knew the truth, held their peace in [...] parliament, whereas if they had done their duties to the crown and whole realm, they should have opened their mouths, declared the truth, and shewed the perils and dangers that might ensue to the crown and realm.
AND if I should agree to allow such authority within this realm, whereby I must needs confess, that your most gracious highness, and also your realm should ever continue accursed, until ye shall cease from the execution of your own laws and customs of your realm; I could not think myself true either to your highness, or to this my natural country, knowing that I do know. Ignorance, I know may excuse other men; but he that knoweth how prejudicial and injurious the power and authority which he challengeth every where, is to the crown-laws and customs of this realm, and yet will [Page 222] allow the same, I cannot see in any wise how he can ke [...]p his due allegiance, fidelity, and truth to the crown and state of this realm.
ANOTHER cause I alledged, why I could not allow the authority of the pope, which is this: That by this authority he subserveth not only the laws of this realm, but also the laws of God: so that whosoever be under his authority, he suffereth them not to be under Christ's religion purely, as Christ did command.
AND for one example I brought forth, that whereas by God's laws all christian people be bounden diligently to learn his word, that they may know how to believe and live accordingly, for that purpose he ordained holydays, when they ought, leaving apart a [...]l other business to give themselves wholly to know and serve God. Therefore God's will and commandment is, that when the people be gathered together, ministers should use such language as the people may understand and take profit thereby, or else hold their peace. For as an harp or lute, if it give no certain sound that men may know what is played, who can dance after it? for all the sound is in vain. So is it in vain, and profiteth nothing, saith Almighty God by the mouth of St. Paul, if the priest speak to the people in a language which they know not; "For else he may profit himself, but profiteth not the people," saith St. Paul. But herein I was answered thus; that St. Paul spake only of preaching, that the preacher should preach in a tongue which the people did know, or else his preaching availeth nothing: but if the preaching availeth nothing, being spoke in a language which the people understand not, how should any other service avail them, being spoken in the same language? And yet that St. Paul meant not onl [...] of preaching, it appeareth plainly by his own words. For he speaketh by name expressly of praying, singing, and thanking of God, and of all other things which the priests say in the churches, whereunto the people say Amen; which they use not in preaching, but in other divine service; that whether the priests rehearse the wonderful works of God, or the great benefits of God unto mank [...]nd above all other creatures, or give thanks unto God, or make open profession of their faith, or humble confession of their sins, with earnest request of mercy and forgiveness, or make suit or request unto God for any thing; then all the people understanding what the priests say, might give their minds and voices with them, and say, Amen, that is to say, allow what the priests say; that the rehearsal of God's universal works and benefits, the giving of thanks, the profession of faith, the confession of sins, and the requests and petitions of the priests and of the people, might ascend up into the ears of God altogether, and be as a sweet [...]avour, odour, and incense in his nose: and thus was it used many hundred years after Christ's ascension.
BUT the aforesaid things cannot be done when the priests speak to the people in a language not known, and so they (or their clerk in their name) say Amen, but they cannot tell whereunto. Where [...] St. Paul saith, "How can the people say Amen to thy well saying, when they understand not what thou sayest?" And thus was St. Paul understood by all interpreters, both the Greeks and Latins, old and new, school authors and others that I have read, until above thirty years past. At which time one Eckius, with others of his sort, began to devise a new exposition, understanding St. Paul of preaching only.
BUT when a good number of the best learned men reputed within this realm, some favouring the old, some the new learning, as they term it, (where indeed that which they call the old is the new, and that which they call new is indeed the old) but when a great number of such learned men of both sorts, were gathered together at Windsor for the reformation of the service of the church, it was agreed by both, without controversy (not one saying contrary) that the service of the church ought to be in the mother tongue; and that St. Paul in the fourteenth chapter to the Corinthians was so to be understood. And so St. Paul was understood in the civil law, more than a thousand years past, where Justinian, a most godly emperor, in a synod writeth in this manner: "We command that all bishops and priests celebrate the holy oblation and prayer used in holy baptism, not after a still and close manner, but with a clear loud voice, that they [Page 223] may be plainly heard by the faithful people, so as the hearers minds may be lifted up thereby with the greater devotion, in uttering the praises of the Lord God. For so St. Paul teacheth also in the epistle to the Corinthians. If the Spirit do only bless (or say well) how shall he that occupieth the place of a private person say Amen, to thy thanksgiving? for he perceiveth not what thou sayest: thou dost give thanks well, but the other is not edified." And not only the civil law, and all other writers a thousand and five hundred years continually together, have expounded St. Paul not of preaching only, but of other service said in the church; but also reason saith the same, that if men be commanded to hear any thing, it must be spoken in a language which the hearers understand, or else (as St. Paul saith) what availeth it to hear? So that the pope giving a contrary commandment, that the people coming to the church shall hear they know not what, and shall answer they know not whereto, taketh upon him to command, not only against reason, but also directly against God.
AND again I said, whereas our Saviour Christ ordained the sacrament of his most precious body and blood to be received by all christian people under the forms of bread and wine, and said of the cup, "Drink ye all of this:" the pope giveth a clean contrary commandment, that no layman shall drink of the cup of their salvation: as though the cup of salvation by the blood of Christ pertained not to laymen. And whereas Theophilus Alexandrinus (whose works St. Jerome did translate about eleven hundred years past) saith, That if Christ had been crucified for the devils, his cup should not be denied them; yet the pope denieth the cup of Christ to christian people, for whom Christ was crucified. So that if I should obey the pope in these things, I must needs disobey my Saviour Christ.
BUT I was answered hereunto (as they commonly answer), that under the form of bread is both Christ's flesh and blood: so that whosoever receiveth the bread, receiveth as well Christ's blood as his flesh. Let it be so, yet in the form of bread only, Christ's blood is not drank, but eaten; nor is it received in the cup in the form of wine, as Christ commanded, but eaten with the flesh under the form of bread. And moreover the bread is not the sacrament of his blood, but of his flesh only▪ nor is the cup the sacrament of his flesh, but of his blood only. And so the pope keepeth from all lay-persons the sacrament of their redemption by Christ's blood, which Christ commandeth to be given unto them.
AND furthermore, Christ ordained the sacrament in two kinds, the one separated from the other, to be a representation of his death, where his blood was separated from his flesh, which is not represented in one kind alone: so that the lay-people receive not the whole sacrament whereby Christ's death is represented as he commanded.
MOREOVER, as the pope taketh upon him to give the temporal sword, by royal and imperial power, to kings and princes; so doth he likewise take upon him to depose them from their imperial states, if they be disobedient to him, and commandeth the subjects to disobey their princes, assoiling the subjects as well of their obedience, as of their lawful oaths made unto their true kings and princes, directly contrary to God's commandment, who commandeth all subjects to obey their kings, or their rulers under them.
ONE John, patriarch of Constantinople, in the time of St. Gregory, claimed superiority above all other bishops. To whom St. Gregory writeth, that therein he did injury to his three brethren, which were equal with him; that is to say, the bishop of Rome, the bishop of Alexandria, and of Antioch: which three were patriarchal sees, as well as Constantinople, and were brethren one to another. But (saith St. Gregory) if any one shall exalt himself above all the rest, to be the universal bishop, the same passeth in pride. But now the bishop of Rome exalteth himself not only above all kings and emperors, and above all the whole world, but takes upon him to give and take away, to see up and pull down as he shall think good. And as the devil, having no such authority, yet took upon him to give unto Christ all the kingdoms of the world, if he would fall down and worship him; in like manner the pope taketh upon him to give empires and kingdoms, being none of his, to such [Page 224] as will fall down and worship him, and kiss his feet.
AND moreover, his lawyers and glossers so flatter him, that they faign he may command emperors and kings to hold his stirrup when he lighteth from his horse, and to be his footmen: and that if any emperor or king give him any thing, they give him nothing but what is his own, and that he may dispense against God's word, against both the Old and New Testament, against St. Paul's epistles, and against the gospel. And furthermore, whatsoever he doth, although he draw innumerable people by heaps with himself into hell, yet may not mortal man reprove him, because he being judge of all men may be judged of no man. And thus he sitteth in the temple of God as if he were a god, and nameth himself God's vicar, and yet he dispenseth against God. It this be not to play Antichrist's part I cannot tell what Antichrist is, which is no more to say, but Christ's enemy and adversary? who will sit in the temple of God advancing himself above all other, yet by hypocrisy and feigned religion, shall subvert the true religion of Christ, and under pretence and colour of Christ's religion shall work against Christ, and therefore hath the name of Antichrist. Now if any man lift himself higher than the pope hath done, who lifteth himself above all the world; or can be a greater adversary to Christ, than to dispense against God's laws; and where Christ hath given any commandment, to command directly the contrary, that man must needs be taken for Antichrist. But until the time that such a person may be found, men may very easily conjecture where to find Antichrist.
WHEREFORE seeing the pope thus to overthrow both God's laws and man's laws, taking upon him to make emperors and kings to be vassals and subjects unto him, especially the crown of this realm, with the laws and customs of the same; I see no reason how I may consent to admit his usurped power within this realm, contrary to mine oath, mine obedience to God's laws, mine allegiance and duty to your majesty, and my love and affection to this realm.
THIS that I have spoken against the power and authority of the pope, I have not spoken (I take God to record and judge) for any malice I owe to the pope's person, whom I know not, but I shall pray to God to give him grace, that he may seek above all things to promote God's honor and glory, and not to follow the trade of his predecessors in these latter days.
NOR have I spoken it for fear of punishment, and to avoid the same, thinking it rather an occasion to aggravate than to diminish my trouble; but I have spoken it for my most bounden duty to the crown, liberties, laws, and customs of this realm of England, but most especially to discharge my conscience i [...] uttering the truth to God's glory, casting away all fear by the comfort which I have in Christ, who saith, "Fear not them that kill the body, and cannot kill the soul, but fear him that can cast both body and soul into hell fire." He that for fear of losing this life will forsake the truth, shall lose the life everlasting: and he that for the truth's sake will spend his life, will find everlasting life. And Christ promiseth to stand fast with them before his Father, which will stand fast with him here; which comfort is so great, that whosoever hath his eyes fixed upon Christ, cannot greatly set his heart on this life, knowing that he may be sure to have Christ stand by him in the presence of his Father in heaven.
AND as touching the sacrament, I said; Forasmuch as the whole matter standeth in the understanding of these words of Christ, "This is my body, this is my blood;" then surely Christ in these words made demonstration of the bread and wine, and spake figuratively, calling bread his body, and wine his blood, because he ordained them to be sacraments of his body and blood. And where the papists say in those two points contrary unto me, that Christ called not bread his body, but a substance uncertain, nor spoke figuratively: herein I said, I would be judged by the old church, and which doctrine could be proved the elder, that I would stand unto. And forasmuch as I have alledged in my book many old authors, both Greeks and Latins, which above a thousand years after Christ continually taught as I do: if they could bring forth but one old author, that saith in these two points as they say, I offered six or seven years [Page 225] ago, and do offer ye [...] still, that I will give place unto them.
BUT when I bring forth any author that saith in most plain terms as I do, yet saith the other part, that the authors meant not so; as much as to say, that the authors spake one thing, and meant clean contrary. And upon the other part, when they cannot find any one author, that saith in words as they say; yet they say, that the authors meant as they say. Now, whether I or they speak more to the purpose herein, I refer me to the judgment of all impartial hearers; yea, the old church of Rome, above a thousand years together, neither believed nor used the sacrament, as the church of Rome hath done of late years.
FOR in the beginning, the church of Rome [...] a pure and a sound doctrine of the sacrament. But after that the church of Rome fell into new doctrine of transubstantiation; with the doctrine they changed the use of the sacrament contrary to that Christ commanded, and the old church of Rome used above a thousand years. And yet to deface the old, they say that the new is the old: wherein for my part I am content to stand to the trial. But their doctrine is so foolish and uncomfortable, that I marvel how any man would allow it, if he knew what it was. But howsoever they hear the people in hand, that which they write in their books hath neither truth nor comfort.
FOR by their doctrine, of one body of Christ is made two bodies: one natural having a distance of members, with form and proportion of man's perfect body, and this body is in heaven: but the body of Christ in the sacrament, by their own doctrine, must needs be a monstrous body, having neither distance of members, nor form, fashion, or proportion of a man's natural body. And such a body is in the sacrament (teach they), and goeth into the mouth with the form of bread, and entereth no further than the form of bread goeth, and tarrieth no longer than the form of bread is by natural heat in digesting. So that when the form of bread is digested, that body of Christ is gone. And forasmuch as evil men are as long in digesting as good men, the body of Christ (by their doctrine) entereth as far, and tarrieth as long in wicked men as in godly men. And what comfort can be herein to any christian man, to receive Christ's unshapen body, and it to enter no further than the stomach, and to depart by and by as soon as the bread is consumed?
IT seemeth to me a more sound and comfortable doctrine, that Christ hath but one body, and that hath form and fashion of a man's true body: which body spiritually entereth into the whole man, body and soul: and though the sacrament be consumed, yet whole Christ remaineth, and feedeth the receiver unto eternal life, if he continue in godliness, and never departeth until the receiver forsake him. And as for the wicked, they have no [...] Christ within them at all, who cannot be where Belial is. And this is my faith, and (as I judge) a sound doctrine, according to God's word, and sufficient for a christian to b [...]l [...]eve in that matter. And if it can be shewed unto me that the pope's authority is not prejudicial to the things before mentioned, or that my doctrine in the sacrament is erroneous (which I think cannot be shewed), then I never was nor will be so perverse to [...] wilfully in mine own opinion, but I shall with all humility submit myself unto the pope, not only to kiss his feet, but another part also.
ANOTHER cause why I refused to take the bishop of Gloucester for my judge, was the respect of his own person, being more than once perjured. First, for that he being divers times sworn never to consent that the bishop of Rome should have any jurisdiction within this realm, but to take the king and his successors for supreme heads of this realm, as by God's laws they are: contrary to that lawful oath the said bishop sat then in judgment by authority from Rome, wherein he was perjured, and not worthy to sit as judge.
THE second perjury was, that he took his bishopric both of the queen's majesty and of the pope, making to each of them a solemn oath, which oaths are so contrary that the one must needs be perjured. And furthermore in [...] to the pope to maintain his laws, decrees, constitutions ordinances, reservations, and provisions, he declareth himself an enemy to the imperial crown, and to the laws and state of this realm, whereby he declareth himself [Page 226] not worthy to sit as a judge, within this realm. And for these considerations I refused to take him for my judge.
LETTER II. From the Same to the Same.
I LEARNED by Dr. Martin, that on the day of your majesty's coronation, you took an oath of obedience to the pope of Rome, and the same time you took another oath to this realm, to maintain the laws, liberties and customs of the same. And if your majesty did make an oath to the pope, I think it was according to the other oaths which he useth to administer to princes; which is, to be obedient to him, to defend his person, to maintain his authority, honour, laws, lands, and privileges. And if it be so, (which I know not but by report) then I beseech your majesty to look upon your oath made to the crown and realm, and to compare and weigh the two oaths together, to see how they do agree, and then do as your majesty's conscience shall direct you; for I am surely persuaded, that willingly your majesty will not offend, nor do against your conscience for any thing.
BUT I fear that there are contradictions in your oaths, and that those which should have informed your grace thoroughly, did not their duties therein. And, if your majesty ponder the two oaths diligently, I think you shall perceive you were deceived; and then your highness may use the matter, as God shall put in your heart. Furthermore, I am kept here from the company of learned men, from books, from counsel, from pen and ink, except at this time to write unto your majesty, which were all necessary for a man in my case. Wherefore I beseech your majesty, that I may have such of these as may stand with your majesty's pleasure. And as for my appearance at Rome, if your majesty will give me leave, I will appear there. And I trust that God shall put in my mouth to defend his truth there, as well as here. But I refer it wholly to your majesty's pleasure.
LETTER III. From Archbishop CRANMER, to Dr. MARTIN [...] Dr. STORY.
I HAVE me commended unto you. And as I promised, I have sent my letters unto the queen's majesty unsigned, praying you to sign [...] and deliver them with all speed. I might [...] sent them by the carrier sooner, but not surer. [...] hearing Mr. Bailiff say, that he will go to [...] Friday, I thought him a safe messenger to send [...] letters by. For better is later and surer, than [...] and never to be delivered. Yet one [...] have written to the queen's majesty inclosed [...] sealed; which I require may be so delivered [...] out delay, and not to be opened until it be delivered unto her grace's own hands. I have written [...] that I remember I said, except that, which I [...] against the bishop of Gloucester's own person, [...] I thought not meet to write. And in some [...] I have written more than I said, which I [...] have answered to the bishop, if you would, [...] suffered me.
YOU promised I should see mine answers to the sixteen articles, that I might correct, amend, and change them where I thought good, which you [...] promise you kept not. And mine answer was not made upon mine oath, nor repeated, nor [...] judicio, but extra judicium, as I protested; nor to the bishop of Gloucester as judge, but to you the king and queen's proctors. I trust you [...] with me, without fraud or craft, and use me as you would wish to be in like case you [...] Remember, that what measure you mete, the [...] shall be measured to you again. Thus fare you well, and God send you his Spirit to induce you into truth.
YE heard before how archbishop Cranmer in the month of February was cited up to Rome, and in the month of March next following was degraded by the bishop of Ely, and bishop Bonner. In time of which his degradation he put up his appeal.
[Page 227] [...] this i [...] is appeal, because [...]he needed the help of some good lawyer, he writeth to a friend of his about the same: the copy of which letter I thought good here to insert as follows.
LETTER IV. From Archbishop CRANMER, to a Lawyer, for the Drawing out of his Appeal.
THE law of nature requireth all men, that so for forth as it may be done without offence to God, every one should seek to defend and preserve his own life. Which thing when I about three days ago▪ bethought myself of, and therewithal remembered how that Martin Luther▪ appealed in his time from pope Leo the Tenth to a general council ( [...]est I should seem rashly and unadvisedly to cast away myself), I determined to appeal in like [...] to some lawful and free general council. But [...] the order and form of an appeal pertaineth to the lawyers, whereof I myself am ignorant, and seeing that Luther's appeal cometh not to my hand, I purposed to break my mind in this matter to some faithful friend, and skilful in the law, whose help I might use in this behalf, and you only among others came to my remembrance, as a man the most proper in this university for my purpose. But this is a matter that requireth great secresy, so that no man know of it before it be done. It is so that I am summoned to make mine answer at Rome, the 16th day of this month, before which day I think it good, after sentence pronounced, to make mine appeal. But whether I should first appeal from the judge delegate to the pope, and so afterward to the general council, or else leaving the pope, I should appeal immediately, to the council, herein I stand in need of your counsel.
MANY causes there are for which I think good to appeal. First, because I am by an oath bound never to consent to the receiving of the bishop of Rome's authority into this realm. Besides this, whereas I utterly refused to make answer to the articles objected unto me by the bishop of Gloucester, appointed by the pope to be my judge, yet I was content to answer Martin and Story with this protestation, that mine answer should not be taken as made before a judge, nor yet in pl [...]ce of judgment, but as pertaining nothing to judgment at all: moreover, after I had made mine answer, I required to have a copy of the same, that I might either by adding thereunto, or by altering or taking from it, correct and amend it as I thought good: which, though both the bishop of Gloucester, and the king and queen's proctors promised me, yet have they altogether broke their promise with me, and have not permitted me to correct my said answers according to my request; and yet notwithstanding have (as I understand) registered the [...]me as acts formally done in place of judgment.
FINALLY, forasmuch as all this my trouble cometh upon me, for my departing from the bishop of Rome, and from the popish religion, so that now the quarrel is between the pope himself and me, and no man can be a lawful and indifferent judge in his own cause; it seemeth (methinks) good reason, that I should be suffered to appeal to some general council in this matter; especially seeing the law of nature (as they say) denieth no man the remedy of appeal in such cases.
NOW, since it is very requisite that this matter should be kept as close as may be, if perhaps for lack of perfect skill herein you shall have need of further advice; then I beseech you even for the fidelity and love you bear to me in Christ, that you will open to no creature alive whose the case is. And forasmuch as the time is now at hand, and the matter requireth great expedition, let me obtain thus much of you, I beseech you, that laying aside all other your studies and business for the time, you will apply to this my matter only, till you have brought it to pass. The chief cause in very deed (to tell you the truth) of this mi [...] appeal is, that I might gain time (if it shall so please God) to live until I have finished mine answer against Marcus Antonius Constantius, which I have now in hand. But if the adversaries of the truth will not admit mine appeal, as I fear they will not, God's will be done; I pass not upon it, so that God may therein be glorified, be it by my life, or by my death. For it is much better for me to die in Christ's quarrel, and to reign with him, than here to be shut up and kept in the prison of this body, unless it were to continue yet still a while in this warfare, for [Page 228] the advantage and profit of my brethren, and to the further advancing of God's glory. To whom be all glory for evermore, Amen.
THERE is also yet another cause why I think good to appeal, that whereas I am cited to go to Rome to answer there for myself, I am notwithstanding kept here fast in prison, that I cannot there appear at the time appointed: and moreover, forasmuch as the state I stand in, is a matter of life and death, so that I have great need of learned counsel, for my defence in this behalf: yet when I made my earnest request for the same, all manner of counsel and help of proctors, advocates and lawyers, was utterly denied me.
LETTER V. From Archbishop CRANMER to Mrs. WILKINSON, Exhorting her to fly in the time of Persecution.
THE true Comforter in all distress is only God, through his son Jesus Christ; and whosoever hath him, hath company enough if he were in a wilderness all alone: and he that hath twenty thousand in his company, if God be absent, is in a miserable wilderness and desolation. In him is all comfort, and without him is none. Wherefore I beseech you seek your dwelling there where you may truly and rightly serve God, and dwell in him, and have him ever dwelling in you. What can be so heavy a burden as an unquiet conscience, to be in such a place as a man cannot be suffered to serve God in Christ's religion? If you are loth to depart from your kindred and friends remember that Christ calleth them his mother, sisters and brothers, that do his Father's will. Where we find therefore God truly honoured according to his will, there we can want neither friend nor kindred.
IF you be loth to depart for the slander of God's word, remember that Christ, when his hour was not yet come, departed out of his country into Samaria, to avoid the malice of the scribes and pharisees; and commanded his apostles, that if they were persecuted in one place they should fly to another. And was not Paul let down by a [...] out at a window, to avoid the persecution of A [...] tas? And what wisdom and policy he used from time to time to escape the malice of his enemies▪ the Acts of the Apostles do declare. And after the same sort did the other apostles, although, when it came to such a point, that they could no longer escape danger of the persecutor of God's true religion, then they shewed themselves, th [...] their flying before came not of fear, but of godly wisdom to do more good; and that they would not rashly, without urgent necessity, offer themselves to death, which had been but a temptation of God. Yea, when they were apprehended, and could no longer avoid, then they stood boldly to the profession of Christ; then they shewed how little they dreaded death; how much they feare God more than man; how much they loved and preferred the eternal life to come above this short and miserable life.
WHEREFORE I exhort you as well by Christ's commandment, as by the example of him and his apostles, to withdraw yourself from the malice of your's and God's enemies, into some place where God is most purely served; which is no slandering of the truth, but a preserving of yourself to God, and the truth, and to the society and comfort of Christ's little flock. And what you will do, do it with speed, lest by your own folly you fall into the persecutor's hands. And the Lord send his Holy Spirit to lead and guide you wheresoever you go, and all that be godly will say, Amen.
UNTO these former letters of Dr. Cranmer, archbishop, written by him unto others, it seemeth to me not much out of place to annex withal a certain letter also of Dr. Taylor, written to him and his fellow prisoners; the tenor of which letter here followeth.
To my dear Fathers and Brethren Dr. CRANMER, Dr. RIDLEY, and Mr. LATIMER, Prisoners in Oxford for the faithful Testimony of God's holy Word.
RIGHT reverend fathers in the Lord, I wish you to enjoy continually God's grace and peace through Jesus Christ; and God be praised [Page 229] again for this your most excelent promotion, which you are called unto at this present, that is, that you are counted worthy to be allowed amongst the number of Christ's recorders and witnesses. England hath had but a few learned bishops, that would stick to Christ, ad ignem, inclusively. Once again I thank God heartily in Christ for your most happy onset, most valiant proceeding, most constant suffering of all such infamies, hissings, clappings, taunts, open rebukes, loss of living and liberty, for the defence of God's cause, truth, and glory, I cannot utter with pen how I rejoice in my heart for you three such captains in the foreward under Christ's cross, banner, or standard, in such a cause and skirmish, when not one or two of our dear Redeemer's strong holds are besieged, but all his chief castles, ordained for our safeguard, are traiterously assaulted. This your enterprize, in the fight of all that be in heaven, and of all God's people in earth, is most pleasant to behold. This is another manner of nobility than to be in the forefront in worldly warfares. For God's sake pray for us, for we fail not daily to pray for you. We are stronger and stronger in the Lord, his name be praised, and we doubt not but you be so in Christ [...]s own sweet school. Heaven is all and wholly of our side; therefore, rejoice always in the Lord: and again, rejoice and be glad.
The HISTORY of AGNES POTTEN, and JOAN TRUNCHFIELD, Martyrs, persecuted in Suffolk.
IN the history of Robert Samuel mention was made before of two godly women of the same town of Ipswich, who shortly after him suffered likewise, and obtained the crown of martyrdom: the name of the first was Agnes, the wife of Robert Potten, and anothor, wife of Michael Trunchfield, a shoemaker, both dwelling in one town: who, about the same time that the archbishop aforesaid was burnt at Oxford, suffered likewise in the aforesaid town of Ipswich, either in the same month of M [...]rch, or (as some say) in the end of February before.
THEIR opinion or persuasion was this, that in the sacrament was the memorial only of Christ's death and passion [...]: for (said they) Jesus Christ is ascended up [...]nto heaven, and is on the right hand of God the Father, according to the scriptures, and not in the sacrament, as he was born of the virgin Mary.
FOR this they were burnt. In whose suffering their constancy was worthy to be wondered at, who being so simple women, so manfully stood to the confession and testimony of God's word and verity: insomuch that when they had prepared and undressed themselves ready to the fire, with comfortable words of the scripture they earnestly required the people to credit and to lay hold on the word of God, and not upon man's devices and inventions, despising the ordinances and institutions of the Romish Antichrist, with all his superstitions and rotten religion; and so continuing in the torment of fire, they held up their hands and called unto God constantly so long as life did endure.
THIS Potten's wife one night a little before her death, being asleep in her bed, saw a bright burning fire, right up as a pole, and on the [...] of the fire she thought there stood a number of [...] Mary's friends looking on. Then being asleep, she seemed to muse with herself whether her fire should burn so bright or no; and indeed her suffering was not far unlike her dream.
THIS also I thought further to no [...]e, how th [...]se two being always together in prison, the one which was Michael's wife, seemed to be nothing so ardent and zealous as Potten's wife was, although (God be thanked) they did both stoutly stand to the confession of the truth; but when the said Michael's wife came to the stake, and saw nothing but present death before her, she much exceeded the other in joy and comfort; although both of them did so joyfully suffer, that it was marvelled at by those who knew them, and did behold their end. And thus these two martyrs ended their lives with great triumph: the Lord grant we may do the like, Amen.
The HISTORY of JOHN MAUNDREL, WILLIAM COBERLY, and JOHN SPICER, Martyrs, persecuted in the Diocese of Salisbury.
JOHN MAUNDREL was the son of Robert Maundrel of Rowd, in the county of Wilts, farmer; he was from his childhood brought up in [Page 230] husbandry, and when he came to man's estate, he dwelt in a village called Buchampton, in the parish of Kevel, in the county aforesaid, where he lived in good repute with his wife and children. After the scripture was translated into English by William Tindal, this John Maundrel became a diligent hearer thereof, and a fervent embracer of God's true religion, so that he delighted in nothing so much, as to hear and speak of God's word, never being without the New Testament about him, although he could no [...] read himself. But when he came into any company that could read, his book always ready, having a very good memory, so that he could recite by heart most places of the New Testament; his life and conversation being very honest and charitable, as his neighbours could testify.
SO it was, that in the days of king Henry the Eighth, at which time D. Trigonion and Dr. Lee did visit the abbeys, the said John Maundrel was brought before Dr. Trigonion at an abbey called Edyngton, in Wiltshire; where he was accused that he had spoken against the holy water and holy bread, and such like ceremonies, and for the same did wear a white sheet, bearing a candle in his hand about the market, in the town of the Devizes, which is in the said county. Nevertheless his fervency did not abate, but by God's merciful assistance he took better hold, as the sequel thereof did declare.
FOR in the days of queen Mary, when popery was restored again, and God's true religion put to silence, the said John Maundrel left his own house and went into Gloucestershire, and into the north part of Wiltshire, wandering from one to another to such men as he knew feared God, with whom as a servant to keep their cattle, he there did remain with one John Bridges, or some other at Kingswood; but after a time he returned to his own country, and there coming to the Devizes to a friend of his named Anthony Clee, had talk and conference with him in a garden, of returning home to his house.
AND when the other exhorted him by the words of scripture, to fly from one city to another, he replied again by the words of the Revelations xxi. of them that be fearful, and said that he [...] needs go home, and so did. Where he with [...] and Coberly used at times to resort and [...].
AT length upon the Sunday following [...] agreed together to go to the parish church, call [...] Revel, where the said Maundrel, and the other [...] seeing the parishioners in the procession follo [...] and worshipping the idol there carried, advised them to leave the same, and to return to the living God particularly speaking to one Robert Barksdale, [...] man of the parish, but he paid no regard to [...] words.
AFTER this the vicar came into the pulpit, who there being about to read his bed-roll, and to [...] for the souls in purgatory; the said John M [...] drel, speaking with an audible voice, said, that [...] the pope's pinfold, the other two affirming the same. After which words, by command of the priest, they were had to the stocks, where they remai [...] till the service was done, and then were brought [...] a justice of peace, and the next day [...] three carried to Salisbury, and presented before bishop Capon, and William Geffrey, being [...] of the diocese. By whom they were imprisoned and oftentimes examined concerning their faith, [...] their houses, but seldom openly. And at the [...] examination these were the articles which the chancellor alledged against them, being accompanied by the sheriff of the shire, Mr. St. Johns, and other popish priests in the parish church of Fisherton Anger, demanding how they did believe.
THEY answered, as christian men should and ought to believe: and first they said, they believed in God the Father, and in the Son, and in the Ho [...]y Ghost, the twelve articles of the creed, the holy scripture from the first of Genesis to the last of Revelations.
BUT that faith the chancellor would not allow. Wherefore he proposed them in particular articles: First, whether they did not believe, that in the sacrament of the altar (as he termed it), after the words of consecration spoken b [...] the priest at mass, there remained no substance of bread nor wine, but Christ's body, flesh and blood, as he was born of [Page 231] [...] virgin Mary. Whereunto they answered [...], saying, that the popish mass was abominable idolatry, and injurious to the blood of Christ; but conffessing, that in a faithful congregation, receiving [...] sacrament of Christ's body and blood, being duly administered according to Christ's institution, Christ's body and blood is spiritually received of the faithful believer.
ALSO, being asked whether the pope was supreme head of the church, and Christ's vicar on earth; they answered negatively, saying, that the bishop of Rome doth usurp over emperors and kings, being Antichrist, and God's enemy.
THE chancellor said, Will you have the church without a head? They answered, Christ was head of his church, and under Christ the queen's majesty.
What, said the chancellor, a woman head of the church? Yea said they, within her grace's dominion [...].
ALSO, whether the souls in purgatory were delivered by the pope's pardon, and the suffrages of the church.
THEY said, they believed faithfully that the blood of Christ had purged their sins, and the sins of them that were saved, unto the end of the world, so that they feared nothing of the pope's purgatory, nor esteemed his pardons.
ALSO, whether images were necessary to be in the churches, as lay-men's books, and saints to be prayed unto and worshipped.
THEY answered negatively, John Maundrel adding, that wooden images were good to roast a shoulder of mutton, but evil in the church; whereby idolatry was committed.
THOSE articles thus answered (for their articles were one, and their answers in manner alike), the chancellor read their condemnation, and so delivered them to the sheriff. Then spake John Spicer, saying, O mas [...] sheriff, now must you be their butcher, that you may be guilty also with them of innocent blood before the Lord. This was the 23d day of March, 1556, and the 24th day of the same month they were carried out of the common goal to a place between Salisbury and Wilton, where were two posts set for them to be burnt at. Which men coming to the place, kneeled down, and made their prayers secretly together, and then being uncloathed to their shirts, John Maundrel spake with a loud voice, Not for all Salisbury. Which words men judged to be an answer to the sheriff, who offered him the queen's pardon if he would recant. And after that in like manner spake John Spicer, saying, This is the joyfullest day that ever I saw. Thus were the three burnt at two stakes: where most constantly they gave their bodies to the fire, and their souls to the Lord, for the testimony of his truth.
AS touching William Coberly, [...] [...]oreover is to be noted, that his wife also called Alice, being apprehended, was detained in the keeper's house at the same time that her husband was in prison. Where the keeper's wife, named Agnes Penicote, had secretly heated a key fire-hot, and laid it in the grass in the back-yard. So speaking to Alice Coberly to fetch her the key in all haste, the said Alice went with all speed to bring it, and taking it up in haste did piteously burn her hand, Whereupon she crying out on the sudden burning of her hand, Ah thou drab, quoth the other, thou that canst not abide the burning of the key, how wilt thou be able to abide burning thy whole body? and so she afterward revoked.
BUT to return again to the story of Coberly, who being at the stake, was somewhat long a burning as the wind stood: after his body was s [...]rched with the fire, and his left arm drawn and taken from him by the violence of the fire, that the flesh being burnt to the white bone, at length he stooped over the chain, and with the right hand, which was less injured, knocked upon his breast softly, the blood and matter issuing out of his mouth. Afterward when they all thought he had been dead, suddenly he rose upright with his body again. And thus much concerning these three Salisbury martyrs.
An Account of the Death of Six other Martyrs suffering at London, whose Names follow.
ABOUT the 23d day of April, 1556, were burned in Smithfield, at one fire, these six constant martyrs of Christ, suffering for the profession of the gospel, viz. Robert Drakes, minister. William Tyms, curate. Richard Spurge, sheerman. Thomas Spurge, fuller. John Cavel, weaver. George Ambrose, fuller.
THEY were all of Essex, and so of the diocese of London, and were sent up, some by the lord Rich, and some by others at sundry times, unto Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, then lord chancellor of England, about the 22d day of March, 1555; who after a short examination, sent them, some unto the King's-Bench, and others unto the Marshalsea, where they remained almost the whole year, until the death of the said bishop of Winchester, and had during that time nothing said unto them. Whereupon, after that Dr. Heath, archbishop of York, was chosen to the office of lord chancellor, four of these persecuted brethren, being now weary of this their long imprisonment, made their supplication unto the said Dr. Heath, requiring his favour and aid for their deliverance: the copy whereof here followeth.
To the Most Reverend Father in God, Thomas, Archbishop of York, Lord Chancellor of England.
MAY it please your honourable good lordship, for the love of God to tender the humble suit of your lordship's poor petitioners, whose names are subscribed, who have lain in the Marshalsea for ten months or more, at the commandment of the late lord chancellor, to their utter ruin, with their wives and children. In consideration whereof your lordship's said supplicants do most humbly pray and beseech your good lordship to suffer them to be brought before your honour; and there if any man of good conscience can lay any thing to our charge, we trust either to declare our innocence against their accusations, or if otherwise their accusations can be proved true and we faulty, we are [...] (God helping us) with our con [...]ign punishments to [...] the law according to your wise judgment, as [...] hope, full of fatherly mercy towards us and [...] men, according to your godly office, and in which we pray for your godly success to the good pleasure of Almighty God, Amen.
THIS supplication was sent (as is said) and subscribed with the names of these four under written:
- Richard Spurge.
- Thomas Spurge.
- George Ambrose.
- John Cavel.
RICHARD SPURGE.
UPON the receipt hereof, it was not long after, but sir Richard Read, knight, then one of the officers of the court of Chancery, the 16th day of January, was sent unto the Marshalsea to examine the said four prisoners; and therefore beginning first with Richard Spurge upon certain demands, received his answers thereunto: the effect whereof was, that he with others were complained upon by the parson of Bocking, unto the lord Rich, for not coming to their parish church of Bocking, where they had inhabited; thereupon he was by the said lord Rich, sent unto the late lord chancellor, about the 22d of March, 1555.
AND farther, he said, that he came not to the church since the first alteration of the English service into Latin (Christmas day then a twelve-month only excepted)▪ and that because he misliked both the same and the mass also, as not consonant and agreeing with God's holy word.
MOREOVER, he required that he might not be any more examined upon the matter, unless it pleased the lord chancellor that then was, to know his fault therein, which to him he would willingly utter.
THOMAS SPURGE.
THOMAS SPURGE being then next examined, made the same answer in effect that the other had done; confessing that he absented [Page 233] himself from the church, because the word of God was not there truly taught, nor the sacraments of Christ duly administered in such sort as was prescribed by the same word. And being further examined of his belief concerning the sacrament of the altar, he said, that if any could accuse him thereof, he would then make answer as God had given him knowledge therein.
GEORGE AMBROSE.
THE like answer made George Ambrose, adding moreover, that after he had read the late bishop of Winchester's book De vera Obedientia, with Bonner's preface thereunto annexed, inveighing both against the authority of the bishop of Rome, he did set much less by their doings than before.
JOHN CAVEL.
JOHN CAVEL agreeing in other matters with them answered, that the cause why he did forbear coming to the church, was, that the parson there had preached two contrary doctrines. For first, in a sermon that he made at the queen's first entry to the crown, he did exhort people to believe the gospel, for it was the truth, and if they did not believe it, they should be damned. But in a second sermon, he preached that the Testament was false in forty places, which contrariety in him was a cause, amongst others, of his absenting from the church.
ROBERT DRAKES.
ABOUT the fourth day of March next after, Robert Drakes was also examined, who was parson of Thundersley, in Essex, and had there remained for the space of three years. He was first made deacon by Dr. Taylor of Hadley, at the commandment of Dr. Cranmer, late archbishop of Canterbury. And within one year after (which was the third year after king Edward) he was, by the said archbishop and Dr. Ridley, bishop of London, admitted minister of God's holy word and sacraments, not after the order then in force, but after such order as was after established; and was present [...] to the said benefice of Thundersley by the lord Rich, at the suit of Mr. Canston and Mr. Tr [...] heron; and now notwithstanding was sent up by the said lord Rich, with the others before mentioned: and at his coming to the bishop of Winchester, was by him demanded whether he could conform himself like a subject to the laws of this realm then in force. To whom he said, he would abide all laws that stood with the laws of God; and thereupon was committed to prison, where he, and the rest above-named did remain ever since.
The HISTORY of WILLIAM TYMS, Deacon, and Curate of Hockley, in Essex.
IN the days of queen Mary there were two sermons preached in the woods at Hockley, which woods belonged to one Mr. Tyrel; one was called Plumborough Wood, and the other Beches Wood, and there was at the same sermons an honest man and his wife, whose name was John Gye, and servant to Mr. Tyrel at the farm called Plumborough. Shortly after it was known to Mr. Tyrel that his woods were polluted with sermons, which he took very ill, and much matter did arise about it as an unlawful assembly, which was laid to John Gye's charge, because he did not disclose that unlawful act to his master, being then i [...] the commission of the peace, appointed at that time to keep down the gospel, which he did to the utmost, as it may appear by many of his acts.
SOON after Mr. Tyrel came to Hockley to sift out this matter, and to know who was at these preachings. And there were found many faulty; for it is supposed there were an hundred persons at the least. So it pleased Mr. Tyrel to begin first with John Gye, and asked where that naughty fellow was that served their parish, one Tyms; for it in told me, said he, that he is the cause of these naughty fellows coming into the country. Therefore I charge thee, Gye, to fetch me this naughty fellow Tyms; for thou knowest where he is. No, said Gye, I do not know. So in no wise could he make him fetch him.
THEN stepped forth another of Mr. Tyrel's men, willing to please his master, whose name was Richard Sheriff▪ and said to him; Sir, I know where he is. Well, said his master go to the constables, and charge them to bring him to me.
[Page 234]SO this Richard Sheriff being very diligent, made sure work, and had him brought by the constables (whose names were Edward Hedge and John James) before his master.
THEN Mr. Tyrel commanded all the rest to depart; and it was wisely done, for he was not able to open his mouth against Tyms without reproach; and there he kept him about three hours. But there were some that listened at the walls, and heard Mr. Tyrel say thus to Tyms.
METHINKETH, said he, when I see the blessed rod, it maketh me think of God.
WHY, sir, said Tyms, if an idol that is made with man's hands, doth, make you remember God, how much more ought the creatures of God, as man being his workmanship, or the grass, or the trees, that bring forth fruit, make you remember God?
SO Mr. Tyrel ended his talk with Tyms, as it were in a heat, calling him a traitorous knave.
WHY, sir, said Tyms, in king Edward's days you affirmed the truth that I do know now.
AFFIRM! quoth Tyrel, nay, by God's body, I never thought it with my heart.
WELL, said Tyms, I pray you, Mr. Tyrel, bear with me, for I have been a traitor but a while, but you have been a traitor six years.
AFTER this Tyms was sent to London to the bishop, of Winchester, and so from him to the King's Bench, and then was Mr. Tyrel's rage over with them that were in the woods at the sermons. So Mr. Tyrel took away Gye's coat, and gave it to John Traiford, and sent him to St. Tosies to see good rule kept there.
WHEN Tyms came before the bishop of London, there was at that time the bishop of B [...]th, and William Tyms was examined of his faith before them both. So mightily God wrought with this true hearted man▪ that he had wherewith to answer them both: for the constables said, that brought the [...] before the bishop, that they never heard the [...] ▪ Then the bishop (as though he would have [...] Tyms to turn from the truth) said to the constables▪ I pray you give him good counsel, that he may turn from his error. My lord, said the constables, he is at a point, for he will not turn.
THEN both the bishops began to grow weary of him, for he had troubled them about six or seven hours. Then the bishop's began to pity Tym's case, and to flatter him, saying, Ah good fellow, (said they) thou art bold, and thou hast a good fresh spirit, we would thou hadst learning to thy spirit. I thank you, my lords, said Tyms, and both you be learned, and I would you had a good spirit to your learning.
SO thus they broke up, and sent Tyms to the bishop of Winchester, and then were Edward Hedge and John James the constables aforenamed discharged, and Tyms was commanded to the King's Bench, where he was mightily strengthened with the good men that he found there.
AND thus hitherto you have heard, first upon what occasion this William Tyms was apprehended, how he was treated by Mr. Tyrel the justice, and by him sent up to the ordinary of the diocese, which was bishop Bonner; who, after some talk, and debating with the said Tyms, at length directed him to the bishop of Winchester, being then lord chancellor, and was commanded by him upon the same to the King's Bench.
HERE by the way is to be understood, that Tyms as he was but a deacon, so he was but simply, or at least not priestly apparelled, forasmuch as he went not in a gown, but in a coat; and his hose were of two colours, the upper part white, and the other stocks of sheep's russet. Wherupon the prelate sending for him to come before him, and seeing his simple attire, began to mock him, saying, Ah, sirrah, are you a deacon? Yes, my lord, that I am, quoth Tyms. So methinketh, said the bishop, you are decked like a deacon. My lord said Tyms, my vesture doth not so much vary from a deacon; but methinketh your apparel doth as much vary from an apostle.
[Page 235]SO then there spake one of the bishop's gentlemen, My lord, (said he in mockery) give him a chair, a toast and drink, and he will be lusty. But the bishop ordered him away, and commanded him to come before him again the next day at an hour appointed.
BUT Winchester, for lack of leisure, or because of sickness growing upon him, or for what cause else I know not, either would not, or could not attend unto him, but returned him again to his ordinary bishop from whence he came. So William Tyms being put off again to bishop Bonner, was placed together and coupled with the other five martyrs above-named, and with them brought together to public examination before the bishop the 21st day of March, first in the bishop's palace of London, where the said bishop, after his accustomed manner proceeding against them, inquired of them their faith upon the sacrament of the altar. To whom they answered, that the body of Christ was not in the sacrament of the altar really and corporally, after the words of consecration spoken by the priest: of which opinion they had been a long time, some later, some sooner, even as God of his mercy did call upon them unto the knowledge of his gospel.
THEN the bishop's chaplains began to reason with them, but with no great authorities either of the scriptures or of the ancient fathers, as other their large conferences with the learned do already declare.
Another Examination of W. TYMS and R. DRAKES, &c. before the Bishop of London.
THE 23d of the same month of March, the bishop sent again for Tyms and Drakes, and ex officio did object unto them certain articles, the sum and manner whereof were the same which before were objected to Whittle, Green, Tudson, &c. And the 26th day of the same month he sent for the other four, administering to them also the same general articles. Unto which they all in effect answered in matters touching their faith, as did the said Bartlet Green and the rest. Other appearings they had, as the bishop's common manner of proceeding was more (as I have often said) for order and form of law, than for any zeal of justice.
BUT in conclusion, the 28th day of the said month, William Tyms and Robert Drakes, with the other four above-named, were brought to the open consistory in St. Paul's before the said bishop of London, to be condemned for heresy.
THE bishop first began in this manner: Tyms, said he, I will begin with thee first, for thou art and hast been the ringleader of these thy companions, thou hast taught them heresies, and confirmed them in their erroneous opinions, and hast endeavoured as much as in thee lieth, to make them like unto thyself. If thy fault had not tended to the hurt of others, I would then have used thee more charitably, and not have brought thee to this open rebuke. I would, according to the rule of Christ, in the 18th of Matthew, have told thee thy fault between me and thee; if thou wouldest not have heard me, I would not so have left thee, but I, with two or three others, would have exhorted thee; if that would not have served, then would I have told the church, &c. But for that thy fault is open and manifest to the world, and thou thyself remainest stout in thine error, this charitable dealing is not to be extended towards thee: I have therefore thought good to proceed by another rule, whereof St. Paul speaketh, 1 Tim. v. "Such as sin, rebuke them openly, that others may fear." For this cause art thou brought before me in the face of this people to receive judgment according to thy deserts. Let me see what thou canst say; why I should not proceed against thee as thine ordinary?
MY lord, quoth Tyms, will you now give me leave to speak? Yea, quoth the bishop. Then said Tyms, my lord, I marvel that you will begin with a lie. You call me the ringleader and teacher of this company, but how untruly you have said shall shortly appear: for there is none of all these my brethren, which are brought hither as prisoners, but when they were at liberty and out of prison, they dissented from you and your doings, as much as they do at this present; and for that cause they are now prisoners.
[Page 236]SO it is evident, that they learned not their religion in prison. And as for me, I never knew them until such time as I, by your commandment, was prisoner with them; how could I then be their ringleader and teacher? so that all the world may see how untruly you have spoken. And as for my fault which you make so grievous, whatsoever you judge of me, I am well assured that I hold none other religion than Christ preached, the apostles witnessed, the primitive church received, and now of late the apostolical and evangelical preachers of this realm have faithfully taught: for which you have cruelly burnt them, and now you seek our blood also. Proceed on hardly by what rule you will, I oppose not, neither refuse you for mine ordinary.
THEN, said the bishop, I perceive thou wilt not be counted their ringleader. How sayest thou, wilt thou submit thyself to the catholic church as an obedient child? In so doing thou shalt be received, and do well enough, otherwise thou shalt have judgment as an heretic.
THEN one of the prisoners (whose name is not certainly known) said, My lord you are no upright judge, for you judge after your own lust. But if you will judge us according to the Holy Testament of Christ, which is the word of truth, we will accord to your judgment; for unto that word we wholly submit ourselves. But as for your judgment without the truth, God shall condemn. This was very earnestly expressed, insisting that they should be judged by the word of God.
AT this the bishop was offended, calling him busy knave, and commanded him to hold his tongue, or else he should be had away to a place of smaller ease.
THEN Tyms answered and said, My lord, I doubt not but I am of the catholic church, whatsoever you judge of me. But as for your church, you have before this day renounced it, and by corporal oath promised never to consent to the same. Contrary to which you have received into this realm the pope's authority, and therefore you are falsely perjured and forsworn all the sort of you. Besides this, you have both spoken and written very ear [...]nestly against that usurped power, and now you burn men that will not acknowledge the pope to be [...]preme head.
HAVE I, quoth the bishop? where have I written any thing against the church of Rome?
MY lord, quoth Tyms, the bishop of Winchester wrote a very learned oration, intitled, De ver [...] Obedientia, which containeth worthy matter against the Romish authority: unto which book you made a preface, inveighing against the bishop of Rome▪ reproving his tyranny and falsehood, calling his power false and pretended. The book is extant, and you cannot deny it.
THEN was the bishop somewhat ashamed, and looking upon those that were present, spake very gently, saying, Lo, here is a good matter indeed. My lord of Winchester being a very learned man, did write a book against the supremacy of the pope's holiness, and I also did write a preface before the same book, tending to the same effect▪ And thus did we because of the perilous times that then were. For then was it made treason by the laws of this realm, to maintain the pope's authority, and great danger it was to be suspected a favourer of the see of Rome; and therefore fear compelled us to comply with the time, for otherwise there had been no way but one. You know when any uttered his conscience in maintaining the pope's authority he suffered death for it.
AND then turning his tale upon Tyms, he said, But since that time, even since the coming in of the queen's majesty, when we might be bold to speak our consci [...]nce, we have acknowledged our faults▪ and my lord of Winchester shamed not to recant the same [...]t St. Paul's Cross And also thou thy self seest [...]hat I stand nor in it, but willingly have submitted myself. Do thou also as we have done.
MY lord, quoth Tyms, that which you have written against the supremacy of the pope, may be well approved by the scriptures. But that which you now do, is against the word of God, as I can well prove.
[Page 237]THEN Another, I suppose it was Dr. Cooke, said Tyms, I pray the let me talk with thee a little, for I think we two are learned alike. Thou speakest much of the scripture, and yet understandest it not. I will tell thee to whom thou mayst be compared: thou art like to one who intending to go a hunting, riseth up early in the morning, taketh his hounds, and forth he goeth, up to the hills, and down into the vallies; he passeth over the fields, over hedge and ditch, he searcheth the woods and thickets; thus laboureth he all the whole day, without finding any game, at night home he cometh, weary of his travel, not having caught any thing at all; and thus fareth it by thee. Thou labourest in reading of the scriptures, thou takest the letter, but the meaning, thou knowest not, and thus thy reading is as unprofitable unto thee, as hunting was unto the man, I spake of even now.
SIR, quoth Tyms, you have not well applied your similitude; for I praise God, I have not read the scriptures unprofitably: but God, I thank him, hath revealed unto me so much as I doubt not is sufficient for my salvation.
THEN, said the bishop, you brag much of knowledge, and yet you know nothing: you speak much of scripture, and you know not what scripture is. I pray thee tell me; how knowest thou that thing to be the word of God, which thou callest scripture?
TO this answered Robert Drakes, that he knew it to be the word of God, because it shewed unto men their salvation in Christ, and doth revoke and call all men back from their wicked lives, unto a pure and undefiled conversation,
THE bishop replied, that the heathen writers have taught precepts of good living, as well as the scripture, and yet their writings are not esteemed to be God's word.
THEN said Tyms, the Old Testament beareth witness of those things which are written in the New; for (quoth he) there is nothing taught in the New Testament but it was fore-shewed in the law and the prophets.
I will deny all, quoth the bishop, I will deny all; what sayest thou then? Then Robert Drakes alledged a sentence in Latin out of the 59th chapter of Isaiah's prophecy; Spiritus meus qui est in te, &c. that is, "My Spirit which is in thee, and my words which I have put in thy mouth, shall not depart out of the mouth of thy seed, nor out of the mouth of the seed of thy seed from henceforth even for ever;" meaning thereby to prove that he who had the Spirit of God, could thereby discern and judge truly which was God's word: but before he could explicate his mind, he was interrupted by the bishop, who spoke unto Dr. Pendleton, saying,
MR. Doctor, I pray you say somewhat to these folks that may do them some good. Then Dr. Pendleton leaning near the bishop, covered his face with both his hands, to the end he might the more easily devise what to say; but another conversation was presently brought forward, so that for that time he said nothing.
AND thus much William Alsbury, witness hereof, being present thereat, so far as he heard, hath faithfully recorded and reported. What more was said (for, they had not yet made an end) because he departed then out of the house, he doth not know nor did hear.
THEN the bishop, after this, and such like communication, proceeded at length in form of law, causing both the articles and his answers to the same to be then and there openly read; the sum of which his confession recorded and left in his own hand writing, is in effect as follows.
The Articles for which WILLIAM TYMS, of Hockley in Essex, was condemned in the Consistory of St. Paul's, the 28th of March, with his Answers and Confession upon the same.
FIRST, I did truly confess and believe that I was baptised in the true catholic church of Christ; for when I was baptised, there was the element and the word of God, according to Christ's institution. And my godfathers and godmothers did promise for me, that I should forsake the devil, [Page 238] and all his works, and that I should keep God's commandments, and believe all the articles of the christian faith; all which I do believe at this day, and with God's help I trust to do while I live; for it was not the wickedness of the minister that made the sacrament of none effect, &c.
ITEM, I confessed two sacraments, and but two in Christ's true church; that is, the sacrament of baptism, and the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ, and that Christ is present with his sacraments, as it pleaseth him.
ITEM, I confessed, that Christ hath a visible church, wherein the word of God is truly preached, and the sacraments truly administered.
ITEM, I confessed the see of Rome to be as the late bishop of Winchester hath written in his book, De vera Obedientia, to which I said unto the bishop of London, that he had made a godly preface; and also John Bale hath plainly declared in his book, called, The image of both churches, even so much as I believe thereof.
ITEM, I confessed the mass to be blasphemy to Christ's death and passion.
ITEM, I confessed that in the sacrament of the altar, Christ is not present either spiritually or corporally; but as they use it, it is an abominable idol.
LAST of all, I confessed the bishop of London to be mine ordinary.
AFTER this the bishop fell to intreaty and pers [...]sions, earnestly exhorted him to revoke his heresie (as he termed them) and to reform himself unto the church of Rome, and not to stick so much to the literal sense of the scriptures, but to use the in [...]pretation of the old fathers.
TO which Tyms answered, I will not reform myself thereunto. And I thank God for this day; for I trust he will turn your cursings into blessings.
AND furthermore, asking this question, he said; And what have you to maintain the real presence of Christ in the sacrament, but only the bare letter?
WE have (quoth the bishop) the catholic church.
NO, said Tyms, you have the popish ch [...]ch of Rome for you, for which you are perjured and forsworn. And the see of Rome is the see of Antichrist; and therefore to that church I will not conform myself, nor once consent unto it.
THEN the bishop seeing his constant boldness to be unmoveable, proceeding to his condemnation▪ pronounced the sentence definitive upon him, and gave him over to the secular power.
AFTERWARDS calling for Robert Drakes, he used towards him the like manner of exhortation that he did before.
TO whom Drakes replied, As for your church of Rome, I utterly defy and deny it, with all the works thereof, even as I deny the devil and all his works.
THE bishop then using his accustomed order of law, with his like exhortations, at last gave him the like blessing that Tyms had, and so charged the sheriff with him.
THOMAS Spurge being next demanded if he would return to the catholic church, said as follows; As for your church of Rome, I do utterly deny it: but to the true catholic church I am content to return, and continue in the same, whereof I believe the church of Rome to be no part o [...] member.
THEN in short calling the rest in their turn, and upon the like demands receiving the like answers▪ the said bishop gave unto each of them their several judgments; and so ridding his bloody hands, committed them unto the custody of the sheriffs of London, who sent them unto Newgate, where they all went most joyfully abiding there the Lord's good time, wherein they should seal this their faith with the shedding of their blood; which they most stoutly and willingly performed, in the month of April.
LETTER I. From WILLIAM TYMS to his faithful Sister in the Lord, AGNES Glascock, Parishioner in the Town of Hockley
THE grace, mercy, and peace of God our Father, through Jesus Christ our Lord and Saviour, with the sweet comfort, of his holy and mighty Spirit, to the performance of his will, to your everlasting comfort, be with you my dear sister Glascock, both now and evermore, Amen.
MY most dear and entirely beloved sister, yea mother I might right well call you for the motherly care which you have always had for me, I have most heartily commended myself unto you, giving God most hearty thanks for you, that he hath given you so loving a heart to Christ's poor gospel, and his poor afflicted flock for the same: and as you have full godly begun, so I beseech God to give you power to go forward in the same, and never more to look back, fearing neither fire nor sword; and then I warrant you, you have not far to run.
AND now (my dear heart) remember well what I have taught you when I was present with you, and also written being absent, and no doubt we shall shortly meet again with a most joyful meeting. I go on Friday next to the bishop of London's coal-house, which is the 20th day of March, where I think it will be hard for any of my friends to speak with me. However I trust I shall not long tarry there, but shortly after be carried up after my dear brethren and sisters, which are gone before me into heaven in a fiery charriot: therefore now I take my leave of you till we meet in heaven; and hasten you after.
I have tarried a great while for you, and seeing you are so long making ready, I will tarry no longer for you. You shall find me merrily singing, Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God of Sabbath, at my journeys end. Therefore now (my dear heart) make good haste and loiter not by the way, lest night take you, and so you be shut out of the gate with the foolish virgins. And now (my sister) in witness that I have taught you nothing but the truth, here I write my name with my blood for a testimonial unto you, that I will seal the simple doctrine which I have taught you with the rest. And thus fare you well: and God defend you from Antichrist, and all his ministers, the false priests, Amen.
These words following were written with his own blood.
Continue in prayer.
Ask in faith.
And obtain your desire.
LETTER II. From WILLIAM TYMS, comforting his Sister GLASCOCK, being in great Sorrow and Repentance for going to the Mass.
GOD be merciful unto you, pardon and forgive all your sins, and send you faith to believe the same, that you may be partaker of his heavenly kingdom, Amen.
MY dear sister, I have me most heartily commended unto you; and as I have lamented your falling from God, by being partaker with that idolatrous priest, so have I since I heard of your earnest repentance, very much rejoiced, and also praised Almighty God for his mercy shewed unto you, in that he hath not left you to yourself, but since your denial he hath shewed his mercy on you, by looking back on you as he did on Peter, and so caused you to repent as Peter did, and bitterly to weep for your sins: whereas if God had left you to yourself, you had run forward from one evil to another, till at length your heart would either have been hardened, or else you would have despaired of the mercy of God. And seeing that God hath been so merciful unto you as he hath been, be you not unthankful unto him for the same. For I certify you that your sorrowful heart that you have had, doth declare unto me that God hath pardoned and forgiven all your sins for the blood-shedding of that immaculate Lamb, Jesus Christ our Lord and Saviour.
[Page 240]THEREFORE as Peter, after the time that Christ had forgiven him his sin, did boldly confess Christ before all his enemies; even so, my dear heart in the Lord, seeing that God hath so mercifully pardoned and forgiven you your sins, now cleave unto him, and be at defiance with his enemies the papists; and as they do bear witness with their father the devil, by going to the church, and shedding the innocent blood of those that will not go with them, even so do you bear witness with Christ, by not coming there; for all those that do go thither shall be partakers of their brethren's blood, that is shed for the testimony of Christ, except they repent and amend; which grace that they may so do, I beseech the eternal God for his Christ's sake, if it be his good will, to give them in his good time. And the same good God that hath been so merciful unto you to call you to repentance, him I beseech to keep you in his fear and love, that you may always have affiance in him, and evermore seek his honour and glory to your everlasting comfort in Christ, Amen. Thus fare you well. From the King's-bench, the 28th of August.
LETTER III. From WILLIAM TYMS to certain godly Women of his Parish, Followers of the Gospel.
GRACE, mercy, and peace from God the Father, through our Lord Jesus Christ, be with you both now and evermore, Amen.
DEAR sisters, I have me most hearily recommended unto you, thanking you for the great kindness shewed unto me in this time of mine imprisonment, and not only unto me, but also unto my poor wife and children; and also for the great kindness that you shew unto all the living saints that are dispersed abroad, and are obliged to hide their heads for fear of this cruel persecution.
DEAR sisters, when I do remember your constancy in Christ▪ I call to remembrance the constancy of divers godly women, as Susannah, Judith▪ Esther and the good wife of Nabal, that throug [...] her godly conditions saved both her husband's life, and all her houshold, when David had thought to have slain him for his churlish answer that he sen [...] him. Also I do remember Rahab that lodged the Lord's spies, how God preserved her and her whole houshold for her faithfulness that she bare to God's people. So I do believe that when the Lord shall send his angel to destroy these idolatrous Egyptians here in England, and shall find the blood of the Lamb sprinkled on the door post of your hearts, he will go by and not hurt you, but spare your whole housholds for your sakes. Also I remember Mary Magdalen, how faithful she was; for she was the first that preached the resurrection of Christ. Remember the blessed martyr, Anne Askew, in ou [...] time, and follow her example of constancy, and for the love of God take heed that in no case you do consent to idolatry, but stand fast to the Lord, a [...] the good woman did that had her seven sons put to death before her face, and she always comforting them, yea, and last of all suffered death herself, for the testimony of her God, which is the living God. Thus I beseech God to send you grace and strength to stand fast to the Lord, as she did, and then you shall be sure of the same kingdom that she is sure of; to which kingdom I pray God bring both you and me, Amen.
LETTER IV. From WILLIAM TYMS to his Friends in Hockley.
THE grace of God the Father, through the merits of his dear Son Jesus, our Lord and only Saviour, with the continual aid of his holy and mighty Spirit, to the performance of his will, to our everlasting comfort, be with you my dear brethren, both now and evermore, Amen.
MY dearly beloved, I beseech God to reward the great goodness that you have shewed unto me, seven-fold [Page 241] into your bosoms; and as you have always [...] a most godly love unto his word, even so I beseech him to give you grace to love your own souls, and then I trust you will flee from all those things that should displeasure our good and merciful God, and hate and abhor all the company of those that would have you to worship God any otherwise than is contained in his holy word, and beware of those masters of idolatry, that is these papistical priests. My dear brethren, for the tender mercy of God, remember well what I have said unto you, and also written, which I am now ready to seal with my blood. I praise God that ever I lived to see the day, and blessed be my good and merciful God, that ever he gave me a body to glorify his name. And, dear hearts, I do now write unto you for none other cause, but to put you in remembrance that I have not forgotten you, to the end that I would not have you forget me, but to remember well what I have simply by word of mouth and writing taught you. Which although it were most simply done, yet truly, as your own conscience beareth me record: and therefore in any case take heed that you do not that thing which your own conscience doth condemn. Therefore come out of Sodom, and go heavenward with the servants and martyrs of God, lest you be partakers of the vengeance of God that is coming upon this wicked nation, from which the Lord God defend you, and send us a joyful meeting in the kingdom of heaven, unto which God bring you all, Amen. Thus now I take my leave of you for ever in this world, except I be burned amongst you, which thing is uncertain unto me as yet.
LETTER V. From WILLIAM TYMS to his Parishioners, giving Thanks for their Charity shewed to his Wife, being brought to Bed of a Child in his Captivity.
THE everlasting peace of our dear Lord and only Saviour Jesus Christ, with the sweet comfort of his holy and mighty Spirit, to the increase of your faith, to the performance of his will, and to your eternal comfort in the everlasting kingdom of heaven, be with you, my dear brethren and sisters, both now and ever, Amen.
MY most dear brethren and sisters in our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, I have me most heartily commended unto you, with hearty thanks for all the great liberality that you have shewed unto me, and especially now in the time of my necessity, when that God hath sent my poor wife a child in my captivity; which is no little care [...]o me, so to provide, that I might keep both the child and my wife from the antichristian church: which thing I thank my God, through his most gracious providence, I have yet done, though it be (as ye know) great charge, not to me, but to the congregation of God, and i [...] grieveth me that I have been so chargeable to them [...]s I have been, and especially to you my dear brethren, I being so unworthy a member as I have been, and also of so small acquaintance: but such is the merciful goodness of God, so to move your hearts with charity towards me. And as he hath moved your hearts so to do, even so I beseech God to give you power to forsake and reject all things which are displeasing in his sight, and to do all things which are requisite to a christian; and send you grace to go forwards in the same, as you have godly begun, neither fearing fire nor sword. And, my dear hearts, remember well the simple plain docrine which I have taught you, and also written unto you, which was the truth, and for a testimony of the same I trust that you shall shortly hear, or else see that I will seal the same with my blood.
AND in the mean time I desire you all to remember me in your prayers, as I know you do, and as with God's help I will do for you, that God, for his dear Son Christ's sake will so finish the day [...] of our pilgrimage, that we may rest together with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in the everlasting kingdom of heaven, to which I beseech the eternal Lord for his Christ's sake to bring both you and all your's, Amen.
LETTER VI. From WILLIAM TYMS to his Sisters COLFOX and AGNES GLASCOCK.
GRACE and peace from God the Father of all mercy, through the merits of our dear Saviour Jesus Christ, be perceived and felt in the hearts of you, my dearly beloved sisters in the Lord, by the mighty working of the Holy Ghost the Comforter, both now and evermore, Amen.
MY most dear and entirely beloved sisters in the Lord, after my most hearty commendations, according to my most bounden duty, I do as I am accustomed, or at least ought to do, that is, I give you warning of your enemies, which are the priests, and take good heed of them, for they serve a crafty master; yea, and as St. Peter saith, He sleepeth no [...], but goeth about like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour. For your old familiar friends, or worldly companions, when they see that you will not run into the idols temple with them, it will seem a strange thing unto them, that ye run not to the same excess of riot, as St. Peter saith, and therefore they will speak evil of you, rail on you, and persecute you.
BUT, my dear sisters, let it not trouble you, for it is but to try you, and let it not seem a strange thing unto you▪ But when they do so, remember wherefore it is, and for whose sake, even because you will not forsake God as they do. For the hatred they bea [...] you, is for the word of God, and then it is God's cause, and I tell you he will revenge it. And therefore if ye be railed on, and troubled for his sake, think yourselves most happy. For if you suffer with the patriarchs, prophets, and apostles, then shall ye be sure to be partakers of the same joy that they are in. Yea, you have heard by the word of God, how cruelly the tyrants have always persecuted the true members of Christ, as he himself hath promised that they shall do unto the end of the world.
BY the way I will bring to your remembrance the holy martyr St. Stephen, who for favouring, maintaining, and defending the same doctrine that we now suffer for, was called a blasphemer, and stoned to death at Jerusalem. And Christ's apostles were diversly afflicted all over the world for the same [...] this viperous generation. Antipas the faith [...]l witness of Christ was slain at Pergamu [...] [...] Jason [...] receiving Paul and Silas, with o [...]er disciples [...] teachers of the gospel, was brought before [...] council at Thessalonica, and accused for a [...] traitor against Caesar. No marvel therefore thou [...] at this day we are vexed on the same sort, maintaining the same cause, and favouring the teache [...] thereof. Is there any other reward following the true servants of God now, than hath been aforetimes? No surely, for so hath Christ promised▪ And if they have persecuted him, they needs [...] persecute his members; if they have called [...] Master of the house Beelzebub, so will they do his houshold; "You shall be hated of all men, ( [...] Christ) for my name's sake."
IT is no new thing, my dear hearts, to see the [...] members of Christ handled as in our days they [...] as it is not unknown to you how they are cru [...]l [...] treated, and blasphemed without any reason [...] [...] cause. For heretics must they be taken, who follow not their tradition [...]. And then they may as well call Christ an heretic, for he never went to a p [...]cession with a cope, cross, or candlestick. He nev [...] sensed image, nor sang Latin service. He never sat in confession. He never preached of purgato [...]y nor of the pope's pardons. He never honoured saints, nor prayed for the dead. He never said mass, mattins, nor even-song. He never commanded to fast on Friday nor vigil, lent nor advent. He never hallowed church nor chalice, ashes no [...] palms, candles nor bells. He never made holy water nor holy bread, with such like. But such dumb ceremonies, not having the express commandment of God, he calleth the leaven of the pharise [...], and damnable hypocrisy; admonishing his disciples to beware of them. He curseth all those that add to his word such beggerly shadows, wiping their names clean out of the book of life. St. Paul saith, they have no portion with Christ which entangle themselves again with such yokes of bondage.
THEREFORE, my dear hearts, seeing that our good God hath, by the light of his holy word, delivered us from all such dark, blind, dumb, beggarly traditions [Page 243] of men, stand fast in the liberty wherewith Christ [...] hath made you free, bring not yourselves again into the yoke of bondage. But let [...]s always be [...]ady, looking for the coming of our Lord and [...]viour Jesus Christ, which as St. Peter saith, [...] will come as a thief in the night." And our c [...]ptain Christ saith, "If the good man of the house kn [...]w what hour the thief would come, he would surely watch."
THEREFORE, my dear hearts, be of good comfort, although the world [...]age ever so sore against you. And for your comfort mark well the great mercy of God, who according to his promise for the weak [...]ss of our nature hath so assuaged the heat of the fire, that our dear brethren that have gone before us, to the sight of all men, have found it rather to be joy than pain. And think you surely God will be as merciful unto you, as he hath been unto them; and say with St. Paul, Rom. viii. "Who shall sep [...]rate us from the love of God? Shall tribulation, [...] anguish, or persecution, or hunger, or nakedness, [...] peril, or sword? as it is written, for thy sake [...] we killed all the day long," &c.
THEREFORE, my dear sisters, if to save your lives, any dissembling gospellers would have you to go to the idol's temple with them, say unto them, No: for my master Christ saith, Matth. x. "He that would save his life shall lose it." And in another place to comfort us, he saith, "There shall not one hair fall from your head, without it be your heavenly Father's will." And therefore say that you will not be of that sort, that be neither hot nor cold, lest God should spue you out of his mouth. But make them this answer, saying, St. Paul saith, [...] Cor. vi. "Bear no strange yoke with the unbelievers. For what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness, what company hath light with darkness, what concord hath Christ with Belial, o [...] what part hath he that believeth with an infidel? How agreeth the temple of God with images?" And ye are the temple of God, as God saith, "I will dwell among them, walk among them, and will be their God, and they shall be my people. Wherefore come out from among them, and separate yourselves, saith the Lord, and touch no unclean thing [...] so will I receive you, and will be a Father unto you, and ye shall be my sons and daughters, saith the Lord."
THUS, mine own bowels in the Lord, as I began, so make I an end, bidding you beware of your enemies, and take up your cross, and follow your captain Christ in at the narrow gate here by persecution, and then you shall be sure to reign and rejoice with him in his everlasting kingdom, which he himself hath purchased with his own most precious blood: to whom, with the Father, and the Holy Ghost, be all honour both now and for ever, Amen.
LETTER VII. From WILLIAM TYMS, exhorting all God's faithful Servants to eschew the Society of Idolaters, and God's Enemies.
GRACE be with you, and peace from God the Father, and from the Lord Jesus Christ.
I thank my God with all remembrance of you always in my prayers for you, and pray with gladness, because of the fellowship which ye have in the gospel, from the first day that I knew you, until this day; and I am surely certified of this, that he who hath begun a good work in you, shall go forth with it, until the day of Jesus Christ, as it becometh me to judge of you; whom I have in my heart, and as companions of grace with me, even in my bonds. And thus I pray, that your love may increase more and more in knowledge. Good brethren, I most heartily desire God, that as you have a willing mind to comfort my vile earthly body in this time of persecution, so he will strengthen you with his Holy Spirit, that my imprisonment do not discomfort, but rather strengthen and comfort you, to see the goodness of God shewed unto me, in that being a man without learning, and brought before three such bishops concerning worldly wisdom▪ he gave me both mouth and wisdom; insomuch that the bishop of London went away in a great haste from me; and after that he sent his man with a Bible, turn [...]ng to the ninth chapter to the Hebrews, [Page 244] and the bishop of Bath looking on it, said, What meaneth my lord? this maketh nothing for his purpose. Then I looked on it, and said, My lord seeth that I was weak, and therefore he hath holpen me; for here he hath condemned the sacrifice of your mass: for you say that you offer a daily sacrifice in your mass, both for the quick and the dead; and here St. Paul saith, "Without blood-shedding there is no forgiveness of sins; therefore that is here condemned. He answered, Yea, saith he so? So say all such heretics, and so forth, with many like arguments, which my neighbours that heard them can declare, therefore I leave them. This have I written that you should not be afraid, but call upon God as he hath commanded us to ask and we shall have; seek and you shall find; knock and it shall be opened unto you. Also he hath commanded us to call on him in the day of trouble, and he hath promised to hear us. Therefore if we have not mouth and wisdom at his hand, the fault is in us, that either we will not repent us of our wickedness, and amend our lives, or else we will be unfaithful, and believe not the promises of God; and so we ourselves are the cause that this wisdom is lacking in us. Therefore let us repent and amend our lives, and God is merciful. And in any case, as I have always said unto you, since I first knew you, so say I now, beware of idolatry, and of your good intents; if not, mark what hath followed upon them that have left God's commandments, and done their own good intents. Remember when the children of Israel had made them a golden calf, did not God say they had marred all, and would have destroyed them, had not Moses earnestly prayed for them? I let many other places alone that prove the wrath of God to come upon the people for idolatry: therefore as we will avoid the wrath of God, let us keep unstained from it. You have examples out of the Old Testament, how loth the godly fathers were to be partakers with the wicked: and yet to see how little we regard it, it would make any christian man's heart to weep. God send us more grace.
FIRST, look in the 11th and 12th of Genesis; Abraham, because he would not be partaker of their idolatry, fled from the people of Chaldea, being his native country. And in the 19th of Genesis, Lot at the commandment of the angels departed from Sodom, lest he tarrying with the Sodomites should have been consumed with them. In the 21st of Genesis, Sarah would not suffer Ishmael, who [...] given to mocking, to keep company with [...] lest he should also become a mocker. Look in the 16th of Numbers; Moses at God's appointment commanded the people to depart from the dwelling [...]places of Koran, Dathan, and Abiram, lest they [...] should be all wrapped in their sins, and so perish among them. So do I, even as Moses commanded them that they should not keep company with those wicked people, lest the vengeance of God should light on them; so do I (I say) give you warning that you should not keep company with the idolaters, in their idolatrous temples, lest the wrath of God come upon you to destroy you.
LOOK what St. Paul saith in the second epistle▪ and the sixth chapter to the Corinthians: " [...] yourselves (saith he) therefore at large, and bear no strange yoke with the unbelievers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? wh [...] company hath light with darkness? what [...] hath Christ with Belial? or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel? How agreeth the temple of God with images? And ye are the temple of God, as saith God; I will dwell among them, and they shall be my people. Wherefore come [...] from among them, and separate yourselves, saith the Lord, and touch no unclean thing."
GOOD brethren, mark what cometh of keeping company with the wicked. Syrach saith, "He that toucheth pitch, shall be defiled therewith; and he that keepeth company with the proud, shall clothe himself with pride." Even so he that is familiar with idolaters, cannot be unstained with idolatry, except he do it to win them to Christ, as there be but few that do. Yea, it may not be where idolatry is openly committed, as for an example; Peter, so long as he continued with Christ and Christ's disciples, continued in the truth, preached the truth, confessed openly Christ to be the Son of the living God, and promised that he would not only go to prison, but also to very death with him: but when he came once into the court of the bishop's house, he straightway was stricken with such fear, by a poor maiden, and a simple ruffian (such a one as my lord of London hath, that said, By God's [Page 245] blood, if I meet with any of these vile heretics, I will thrust an arrow in him) that when, I say, he was amongst them, he denied his master, and swore that he never knew him, whom he, before he came there, boldly confessed before all men: and again, after that he had repented him of his wicked deed, he boldly preached to the believing Jews, comm [...]nding them, among other his godly exhortations, to save themselves from that untoward generation. How many of our priests before this storm of persecution, when the gospel was truly preached, were bold, and could say, They would die rather than deny their master! but when they come once into the bishops houses, they preach no more Christ, but utterly deny him; therefore I pray God keep them from thence, or else send them more grace and strength. It is needful to pray; therefore watch i [...] prayer.
PAUL, all the while he was among the bishops, was a cruel persecutor; but after he was called by God from the bishops, he became a true preacher: therefore God keep all christian men out of the hands of our bishops. St. Paul, in the 15th to the Romans, saith, I dare not speak any of those things that Christ hath not wrought by me. He saith also, Rom. xvi. "I beseech you, brethren, mark them that make division, and give occasion of evil, contrary to the doctrine that ye have learned, and avoid them: for they that are such, serve not the Lord Jesus Christ, but their own bellies, and with sweet and flattering words deceive the hearts of the [...]." Our master Christ himself hath given us warning which they be; for he hath set the plain mark on them, in the 24th of Matthew, "If they say here is Christ, or there is Christ, believe them not. If they say, he is in the desart, go not forth. If they say, he is in the secret place, believe them not.' And I pray you, where can he be more secret, than in so small a piece of bread? For my lord of London, like a liar, said to me▪ that after the words be spoken, there remaineth neither bread nor wine. Then I asked him what he said to David, where he saith, "Thou shalt not suffer thy Holy One to see corruption." How say you to that? Will not the sacrament of the altar putrify or corrupt? He answered, Yes. I asked him, what it was that did corrupt, if there were neither bread nor wine. He answered, and said, the accidents▪ I said unto him, It was a mad accident without substance: for you say, there is neither bread nor wine, and then there is nothing to corrupt; with many such like arguments.
THEREFORE beware of them, for they go about to deceive you with such arguments. Say not but ye be warned, and a great deal the more worthy of your damnation, if they deceive you, because you have had so much warning. Repent ye betimes of your sinful lives, and amend, and then no doubt but God will either turn their hearts, or else take them away, or else he will give us that which he promised to his disciples, if we be contented to take the same reward they had. And if we disdain the one, let us not look for the other. For he that will be his father's heir, must be contented to receive his father's correction. For St. Paul saith in the 12th to the Hebrews, "If we be not under correction, whereof all are partakers, then are we bastards and not sons."
AND you know what belongeth to a bastard; he shall not be his father's heir. And if we remember ourselves well; how negligent we have been to our father's commandment, we shall find ourselves worthy to be corrected at his hand. If we refuse his correction, he will refuse us to be his sons. I pray you look what he promised to his disciples, and I pray you also look how willingly they received it: and so must we do if we will be partakers with them. First let us see what Christ promised to his disciples. Look in the tenth chapter of St Matthew, and there shall you see these words, "Behold, I send you forth as sheep among wolves. Be wise therefore as serpents, and innoc [...]nt as doves. Beware of men, for they shall deliver you up to the councils, and shall scourge you in their synagogues: ye shall be brought before the head rulers and kings for my name's sake. But when they put you up, take ye no thought how or what you shall speak: for it shall be given you in the same hour what you shall speak. For it is not you that speak, but the Spirit of my Father," &c. Read the whole chapter, for it is very comfor [...]able to a christian man; and mark it well, and you shall find what we ought to do in the time of persecution. Also look into the fourth chapter of the second epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthian [...], [Page 246] where it is said, "For we which live are always delivered unto death for Jesus' sake, that the life also of Jesus might appear in our mortal flesh." Thus have you heard that St. Paul doth boast of persecution; even so should we, for it is the way to bring us to rest.
THEREFORE let us strive to enter in at the narrow gate, and let us remember the saying of St. Paul in the 21st chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, when he was going to Jerusalem. When he was in the house of Philip the Evangelist, there came in a prophet, and took off his girdle, and bound his hands and his feet, saying, "Thus shall they do with the man that owneth this girdle, when he cometh to Jerusalem." When the disciples heard that, they would have persuaded him that he should not go thither. Here you shall see what answer this pastor made them; he was a faithful shepherd; "What do ye weeping and breaking of my heart? I am not only ready to be bound, but also to die at Jerusalem, for the name of the Lord Jesus."
YET I think there are some that will say, that I needed not to have been taken, if I would have kept me out of the way. But I say unto them, that the shrinking away of so many of our shepherds as are gone, maketh so many of the flock to scatter; which will be required at their hands, by the master of the sheep. What will he say to them on the day of account, when they shall come to receive their wages? He shall say to them, depart from me ye wicked hirelings, for when ye saw the wolf come, ye [...]an away, and left my sheep▪ in the wilderness. If you had been good shepherds, you would rather have lost your lives than have lost one sheep committed to your charge, through your fault. And I pray you, what case are the sheep in, when the shepherd runneth away from them? I need not tell you, you know the danger that followeth so well.
THEREFORE let us pray to God to send us faithful shepherds, and also obedient sheep, that will not hear a stranger's voice. I would all men would mark well the saying of St. Paul in the eighth chapter of his epistle to the Romans, where he thus faith, "Who shall separate us from the love of God? Shall tribulation, or anguish, or persecution▪ or nakedness, or peril, or sword? As it is written▪ For thy sake are we killed all the day long, and [...] counted as sheep appointed to be slain: nevert [...] less, we overcome stongly through his help that [...] us. Yea, I am sure, that neither death [...] life, neither angels nor rule, nor power, nor [...] present, nor things to come, neither heighth [...] depth, nor any other creature shall be able to se [...] rate us from the love of God." &c. Also he [...] in another place, "All that will live godly [...] Christ Jesus must suffer, persecution, 2 Tim, [...] ▪ Thus I prove it to be our heavenly Father's [...] ▪ therefore let us thankfully receive it like [...] children, and then our Father will love us.
YET hear what St. Peter saith in his first epistle▪ and the fourth chapter, "Dearly beloved, ( [...] he) be not troubled in this heat which is now [...] among you to try you, as though some stra [...] thing had happened unto you; but rejoice in [...] much as ye are partakers of Christ's passions, [...] when his glory appeareth you may be merry [...] glad. If ye be railed on for the name of Chri [...] ▪ happy are ye, for the Spirit of glory, and the Spirit of God resteth upon you. On their part he is evil spoken of, but on your part he is glorified." Here St. Peter saith, it is no strange thing; and that [...] have partly proved before, because we have nothing else promised us in this world.
THEREFORE let us call on God for grace. Be [...]e sure that they can do nothing to us, till God permit it. As for example, look in the first book of Samuel, chap. xix. you shall see how Saul persecuted David, purposing to kill him: but his labour was in vain.
ALSO in the 19th chapter of the first book of Kings, Jezebel threatened and sware to slay Elias, but the Lord preserved him. Also in the second chapter of Job, you see that satan could do nothing to Job till God suffered him, neither exercise his cruelty any further than God had appointed him. The godly woman Susannah, through the false accusation of the wicked judges, was even at a point to die, yet God wonderfully delivered her. This have I written to put you in remembrance that man can do no more than is the will of God: therefore [Page 247] let us not resist his will, but refer all to him: and let us be doing that thing that God hath command [...] [...] in his holy word.
DEAR brethren, for the blood of Christ refuse not [...] the cross of Christ, but remember the saying of the godly man David in his 119th Psalm, where he saith, "It is good for me that I have been in trouble, that I may learn thy statutes." In the same place he saith, "Before I was in trouble I went wrong, but now I have kept thy word." Even so it is in trouble with us, for the word of God was never so sweet and comfortable as it is [...] that we are in trouble. Also St. Paul saith in the fifth chapter to the Romans, "We rejoice in tribulation: for we know that tribulation bringeth patience, patience bringeth experience, experience bringeth hope, and hope maketh not ashamed."
ALSO I pray remember the saying of St. Paul in the first chapter of the second epistle to Timothy, where he saith, "Be not ashamed to testify the Lord: neither be ashamed of me." Even so I say unto you, dear brethren be not ashamed of my imprisonment, neither sorry, but rejoice with me, that it hath pleased God of his goodness to call me to such a dignity, as this shall be unto me, if I may have his grace to lose my life (which I regard as most vile) for his name's sake: for then I shall be sure to find it again with advantage. Therefore I desire you all that you will pray with me unto Almighty God, that he of his merciful goodness will send me his grace and strength, that I may continue unto the end; as I will pray for you, that God will preserve you from all the wicked ways of Antichrist, and strengthen and comfort you, if it be his good pleasure, that you shall suffer any thing for his name's sake, as he hath faithfully promised to do.
AND I certify you, that if all men knew the comfort they should receive at the hand of God being in prison, I think there would come more to prison than there do. For surely we find such comfort at the hand of God since we have been in prison, that we had rather die than be abroad to see the idolatry that is committed among them that are abroad; beside the seeking of one anothers blood, with other wickedness too much; God send me more grace. But I trust, among you there be none such: and if there be, repent and amend, lest it be verified in you, that which is spoken by the prophet Jeremy, the second chapter, where he saith, "My people hath committed two great evils: they have forsaken me the fountain of living waters, and digged them pits; pits (I say) that are broken, and can hold no water." Also in the seventh chapter he saith, "Hear not the words of the prophets, that preach their own dreams." Good brethren▪ beware of those false prophets that I have given you warning of.
DEARLY beloved, here I make an end for this time, desiring the same health both of body and soul unto you all that I would have myself, and I end with the same that St. Peter saith in the fifth chapter of his first epistle: "Submit yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God, that he may exalt you when the time is come. Cast all your care on him, for he careth for you. Be sober and watch, for your adversary the devil like a roa [...] ing lion walketh about seeking whom he may d [...] vour, whom resist stedfast in faith:" remembering that ye do but fulfil the same afflictions, that are appointed to your brethren that are in the world. The God of all grace that called you unto his et [...]rn [...]l glory by Christ Jesus, shall himself, after you have suffered a little affliction, make you perfect, shall settle, strengthen and establish you. To him be glory and dominion for ever, and while the world endureth, Amen.
GREET one another with an holy kiss of love. Peace be with you all which are in Christ Jesus. I pray you all say, Amen.
THERE are in the same prison where I am, the bishop of St. David's, Dr. Taylor, of Hadley, Mr. Philpot, and my singular good father Mr. Bradford, with five others, laymen of Sussex.
I desire some good brother to write this over again, for I wrote it (as I do many times) with f [...]ar. For if the keepers had seen me, they would have taken it from me, and my pen and ink also.
[Page 248]GOOD brethren, I am kept alone, and yet I thank God he comforteth me past all the comfort of any man: for I thank him, I was never merrier in Christ.
ABOUT this time certain commissioners assigned by the queen and council, came to Norfolk, (as they did to other counties) to inquire after matters of religion; unto which commissioners there was a supplication then exhibited by some well disposed men dwelling about those parts. Which supplication, for the worthy matter contained in it, I thought proper here to insert.
The Supplication exhibited by certain Inhabitants of the County of Norfolk, proper to be read and observed by all Men.
IN most humble and lowly wise, we beseech your honours, right honourable commissioners, to tender and pity the humble suit of us poor men, and true, faithful, and obedient subjects, who as we have ever heretofore, so intend we, with God's grace, to continue in christian obedience unto the end, and (according to the word of God) with all reverend fear of God, to do our bounden duty to all those superior powers, whom God hath appointed over us, doing as St. Paul saith, Rom. xiii. "Let every soul be subject to the superior powers. For there is no power but of God: but those powers that are, are ordained of God. Wherefore whosoever resisteth the powers, the same resisteth God, and they that resist get themselves judgment." These lessons (right honourable commissioners) we have learned of the holy word of God in our mother tongue.
FIRST, That the authority of a king, queen, lord, and other their officers under them, is no tyranical usurpation, but a just, holy, lawful, and necessary estate for a man to be governed by, and that the same is of God, the fountain and author of righteousness.
SECONDLY, That to obey the same in all things not against God, is to obey God; and to resist them, is to resist God. Therefore, as to obey God in his ministers and magistrates bringeth life; so to resist God in them, [...]ringeth punishment and death. The same less [...] [...]ave we learned of St. Peter, 1 Pet. ii. saying, Be ye subject to all human ordinances for the Lord's sake▪ whether it be to the king, as supreme, or unto gove [...]nors, as unto them that are sent by him, for the punishment of evil-doers, and for the praise of them that do well. For so is the will of God, that with well-doing ye may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men. As free and not using your liberty for a cloak of maliciuosness, but as the servants of God."
WHEREFORE considering with ourselves, [...] that the magistrates' power is of God, and that for the Lord's sake we are bound by christian obedience unto them, having now presently a commandment, as though it were from the queen's majesty; with all humble obedience due to the regal power and authority ordained of God (which we acknowledge to stand wholly and perfectly in her grace), and with due reverence unto her grace's commissioners, we humbly beseech you with patience and pity to receive this our answer unto this commandment, given unto us.
FIRST, Right honorable commissioners, we have considered ourselves to be not only Englishmen, but also christians, and therefore bound by the holy vow made to God in our baptism, to prefer God's honour in all things, and that all obedience (not only of us mortal men, but even of the very angels and heavenly spirits) is due unto God's word; insomuch that no obedience can be true and perfect, either before God or man, that fully and wholly agreeth not with God's word.
THEN have we weighed the commandment concerning the restitution of the late abolished Latin service, given unto us to dissent and disagree from God's word, and to command manifest impiety, and the overthrow of godliness and true religion, and to import a subversion of the regal power of [Page 249] this our native country and realm of England, with the bringing in of the Romish bishop's supremacy, with all errors, superstitions and idolatry, wasting of our goods and bodies, destroying of our souls, bringing with it nothing but the severe wrath of God, which we already feel, and fear lest the same shall be more fiercely kindled upon us. Wherefore we humbly protest that we cannot be persuaded, that the same wicked commandment should come from the queen's majesty, but rather from some other▪ abusing the queen's goodness and favour, and studying to work some mischief against the que [...]n, the crown, and the realm, to please with it the Romish bishop, at whose hands the same thinketh hereafter to be advanced.
AS the Agagite Haman wrought maliciously against the noble king Ahasuerus, and as the princes of Babel wrought against the good king Darius; so think we the queen's most gentle heart to be abused by some, who seeking themselves and their own vain glory, procure such commandments as are against the glory of God. For we cannot have so evil an opinion of her majesty, that she should subvert the most godly and holy religion, (so accordingly to God's word set forth by the most noble, virtuous, and innocent king, our late most dear king Edward, her grace's brother) except she were wonderfully abused; who, as hating reformation, will rather the destruction of all others, than acknowledge their errors, and to be according to God's word reformed. For truly, the religion lately set forth by king Edward, is such in our consciences, as every christian man is bound to confess to be the truth of God, and every member of Christ's church here in England must needs embrace the same in heart, and confess it with mouth, and if need require lose and forsake not only lands and possessions, riches, wife, children, and friends; but also (if God will so call them) gladly to suffer all manner of persecution, and to lose their lives in the defence of God's word and truth set out amongst us, For our Saviour Christ requireth the same of us. saying, "Whosoever shall be ashamed of me and my word before this adulterous and sinful generation, the Son of man will also be ashamed of him, when he shall come in the glory of his Father with the holy angels." And again he saith, "Whosoever will confess me before men, I will confess him before my Father which is in heaven. And whosoever will deny me before men, I will also deny him before my father that is in heaven. And whosoever shall speak a word against the So [...] of man it shall be forgiven him; but whosoever shall rail against the Holy Ghost, it shall not be forgiven him."
WE humbly beseech the queen's majesty, and you her honourable commissioners, be not offended with us, for confessing this truth of God, so straitly given us in charge of Christ; neither bring upon us that great sin that never shall be forgiven, and shall cause our Saviour Jesus Christ, in the great day of judgment, before his heavenly father and all his angels, to deny us, and to take from us the blessed price and ransom of his blood, wherewith we are redeemed.
FOR in that day, neither the queen's highness, nor you, nor any man shall be able to excuse us, nor to purchase a pardon of Christ for this horrible sin and blasphemy of casting aside and condemning his word. We cannot agree nor consent unto this so horrible a sin; but we beseech God for his mercy to give us and all men grace, most earnestly to flee from it, and rather (if the will of God be so) to suffer all extremity and punishment in this world, than to incur such damnation before God.
MANASSES, who restored again the wickedness of idolatrous religion, (before put down by Ezekias his father) brought the wrath of God upon the people, so that the scripture saith, 2 Kings xxiii. "Notwithstanding the reformation made by Josias, the Lord turned not from the fierceness of his great wrath wherewith he was angry against Judah, because of the provocation with which Manasses provoked him. And the Lord said, Even Judah will I cast away from my presence, as I cast away Israel: and I will cast away this city of Jerusalem, and the house whereof I said, My name shall be there." Jeroboam, who at Bethel, and Dan erected a new found service of God, and not only sinned himself, but also made all Israel sin with him, so that not only he was damned for commanding, but the wrath of God came upon all Israel for obeying that his ungodly commandment: yet was it not so heinous an offence to bring in an idolatry never yet heard of, as after reformation made by the godly [Page 250] kings and princes, by the virtuous and holy bishops▪ by the prophets and servants of God, to reject and cast off the word and true religion of God, and to receive again a blasphemous impiety.
THIS most heinous offence is now offered unto us, although the same be both painted and coloured with the name of reformation, restoring of religion, ancient faith, with the name of the catholic church, of unity, catholic truth, and with the cloak of feigned holiness. These are sheep skins, under which (as Christ saith) ravening wolves hide themselves. But Christ willeth us to look upon their fruits, whereby we may know them; and truly that is no good fruit to cast aside God's word, and to banish the English service out of the churches, and in the place of it to bring in a Latin tongue unknown to the people. Which as it edifieth no man, so it hath been occasion of all blindness and error among the people. For before the blessed reformation begun by the most noble prince of Godly memory, the queen's good father; and by our late holy and innocent king, her good brother, finished; it is not unknown what blindness and error we were all in, when not one man in all this realm, unlearned in the Latin, could say in English the Lord's prayer, or knew any one article of his belief, or rehearse any one of the ten commandments. And that ignorance, the mother of mischief, was the very root and well spring of all idolatry, Sodomitical monkery, and whorish chastity of unmarried priests, of all whoredom, drunkenness, covetousness, sweating, and blasphemy, with all other wicked sinful living. These brought in the severe wrath and vengeance of God, plaguing them with famine and pestilence; and at last the sword consumed and avenged all their impiety and wicked living. As it is greatly to be [...] the same or more grievous plagues shall now again follow.
WE cannot therefore consent nor agree that the word of God and prayers in our English tongue, which we understand, should be taken away from us, and for it a Latin service, we know not what, (for none of us understand it) to be again brought in amongst us, especially seeing that Christ hath said, "My sheep hear my voice, and follow me, and I give to them everlasting life." The service in English teacheth us, that we are the Lord's people, and the sheep of his pasture, and commandeth that we harden not our hearts, as when they provoked the Lord's wrath in the wilderness, lest [...] swear unto us, as he did swear unto them, that they should not enter into his rest.
THE service in Latin is a confused noise; which if it be good (as they say it is) yet unto us that lack understanding, what goodness can it bring? St. Paul commandeth, that in the churches all things should be done to edifying, which we are sure is God's commandment. But in the Latin service nothing is done to edifying, but contrarily all it destroy those that are already edified and to drive us from God's word and truth, and from believing of the same, and so to bring us to believe lies and fables▪ that tempting and provoking God, we should be brought into that judgment that blessed Paul speaketh of, saying, "Antichrist shall come according to the working of Satan, with all manner of power and signs, and lying wonders, in all deceivableness of unrighteousness in those that perish: because they have not received the love of truth, that they might be saved. And therefore God will send them strong delusion, that they should believe lies and be damned, as many as have not believed the truth, but have approved unrighteousness."
THUS, altogether drawn from God, we shall fall into his wrath through unbelief, till he sware unto us as he did unto the unfaithful Jews, that such infidels shall not enter into his rest.
IN the administration of the Lord's supper, which we confess to be the holy communion, and partaking with Christ and his holy congregation, we have learned God's holy commandments, and at the rehearsal of every one of them to ask God mercy for our most grievous transgressions against them, and to ask grace of God, to keep them in time to come, that the same may not only outwardly sound in our ears, but also inwardly by the Holy Ghost be written in our hearts.
WE have learned also the holy prayer made for the queen's majesty: wherein we learn that her power and authority is of God; therefore we pray to God for her, that she, and all magistrates under her, [Page 251] may rule according to God's word, and we, her subjects, obey according to the same.
TRULY, most honourable commissioners, we cannot think these things evil, but think them most worthy to be retained in our churches, and we should not think ourselves to have true subject hearts, if we should go about to put away such godly prayers, as put us perpetually in memory of our bounden obedience and duty to God and our rulers. For, as we think, at this present the multitude had more need to have these things more often and earnestly beaten and driven into them, especially given in many places to stir and trouble) than to take them from that blessed doctrine, whereby only they may, to their salvation, be kept in quiet.
FURTHERMORE, we cannot forsake that blessed partaking of the body and blood of our Saviour Jesus Christ's institution, ministered with such godly prayers, exhortations and admonitions, teaching us the knowledge of God, the exceeding love and charity of our loving Redeemer Christ, breaking his body upon the cross for our sins, and shedding his most precious blood for our redemption: which we, in eating of that blessed bread, and drinking of the blessed cup, assuredly believe that we receive, and are perfectly joined with Christ in his holy catholic church into one body, and into one unity and brotherly love, whereby every member faithfully embraceth each other. We must needs confess this institution of Christ to be most holy and godly, whereof we have the only comfort in conscience against sin and damnation, with the assurance of salvation, and whereof hath ensued reformation of many heinous sins much lawing, strife, and contention being ended; drunkenness, whoredom, and other vices in some reformed; goodness and virtue increased and nourished.
IN the Latin mass we never had any such edifying, but [...]nly we saw a great many ceremonies and strange gestures; as turning of the priest, crossings, blessings, breathings, washing of hands, and spreading abroad of his arms, with like ceremonies that we understand not. And concerning the Latin tongue, wherein the priest prayeth, we know not whether he blesseth or curseth us. We are not partakers of the sacrament, as Christ's institution appointeth we should be.
IN the ministering of the sacrament, the priests alter the institution of Christ, committing theft and sacrilege, robbing us of the cup of Christ's blood, contrary to Christ's commandment, saying, Drink ye all of this.
THEY rob us also of God's word, speaking all things in Latin, which nothing edifieth us either in faith or manners. Christ commandeth not that his supper should be administered is an unknown tongue▪ but forasmuch as faith cometh by hearing, and hearing cometh by God's word, how can we believe Christ's word and promise made unto us in the holy sacrament, saying, "This is my body broken for you, and this is my blood of the New Testament, which is shed for you, for the remission of sins; if the same promises of Christ either be not at all recited, or else so recited in Latin, that the congregation understandeth not, or heareth not what is spoken? St. Paul saith thus, reciting the saying of Isaiah, "As truly as I live, saith the Lord, all knees shall bow unto me, all tongues shall give praise unto God." Also he saith, "All tongues must confess that Jesus Ch [...]ist is the Lord, unto the glory of God the Father." The Holy Ghost came upon the apostles in fiery tongues, so that they spake the tongues of all nations under heaven. St. Paul ministered to the Corinthians, and preached to them in their own mother tongue, and rebuked the bringing in of strange tongues into the congregations. We cannot think that to be right, which so holy an apostle rebuked. And whatsoever virtue the Latin tongue hath to such as understand it, to us Englishmen not understanding it, it is altogether without virtue and edification, and therefore unmeet for our churches.
THE priests complain that we laymen love them not, nor have them in honour, but it is their own fault: for ho [...] should we love them that only seek to keep us in blindness and ignorance, to damn our souls, to destroy our bodies, to rob and spoil our goods and substance under a colour of pret [...]ded holiness? We know (right honourable commissioners) what honour is due to such wolves, and how by the authority of God's word such are to be [Page 252] avoided as pestilences to the Lord's lambs, whom they miserably murder daily.
BUT we have rather chosen, by this our meek supplication, humbly to desire the queen's majesty, and you her honourable commissioners, to restore God's word again unto the churches, and to permit us freely to enjoy the same. For we certainly know, that the whole religion lately set out by the holy saint of God, our late most dear king Edward, is Christ's true religion written in the holy scripture of God, and by Christ and his apostles taught unto his church. Wherefore we cannot allow with safe consciences this refusal of it, and casting of it out of our churches; forasmuch as to refuse, cast off, and to reject it, is to cast off Christ himself, and to refuse our part in his blessed body broken for our sins, and his blood shed for our redemption. Which thing whoso doth, the same without repentance can look for no sacrifice for his sins, but must fearfully wait for the judgment, and for that vehement fire that shall destroy Christ's adversaries. For if he that despiseth the law of Moses, is without mercy put to death under two or three witnesses, how much more grievous torments shall he suffer that treadeth under foo [...] the Son of God, and esteemeth the blood of the Testament (whereby he was sanctified as a profane thing, and contumelously useth the Spirit of grace?
WHEREFORE we most humbly pray and beseech the queen's gracious majesty, to have mercy and pity upon us her poor and faithful subjects, and not compel us to do the thing that is against our consciences, and so incurably wound us in heart, by bringing into the church the Latin mass and service that nothing edifieth us, and by casting out Christ's holy communion and English service, so causing us to sin against our redemption. For such as wittingly and willingly against their consciences shall so do, (as it is to be feared many a one doth) they are in a miserable state, until the mercy of God turn them; which if he do not, we certainly [...] that they shall eternally be damned: and as in this world the deny Christ's holy word and communion before men, so shall Christ deny them before his heavenly father and his Angels.
AND whereas it is very earnestly required, that we should go in procession (as they call it), at which time the priests say in Latin such things as we are ignorant, the same edifieth nothing at all unto godliness, and we have learned that to follow Christ's cross is another matter, namely, to take up our cross, and to follow Christ in patient suffering for his love, tribulations, sickness, poverty, prison, or any other adversity, whensoever God's holy will and pleasure is to lay the same upon us. The triumphant passion and death of Christ, whereby in his own person he conquered death, sin, hell, and damnation, hath most lively been preached unto us, and the glory of Christ's cross declared by our preachers; whereby we have learned the causes and effects of the same more lively in one sermon, than in all the processions that ever we went in, or ever shall go in.
WHEN we worshipped the Divine Trinity kneeling, and in the Litany invocating the Father, the Son, and the holy Ghost, asking mercy for our sins, and desiring such petitions as the need of our frail state and this mortal life required, we are edified both to know unto whom all christian prayers should be directed, and also to know that of God's hand we receive all things, as well to the salvation of our souls, as to the relief of our mortal necessities. And we humbly beseech the queen's majesty, that the same most holy prayers may be continued amongst us; that our ministers praying in our mother tongue, and we understanding their prayers and petitions, may answer, Amen, [...]. At evening-service we understood our ministers prayers, we were taught and admonished by the scriptures then read; which in the Latin even-song is all gone.
AT the ministration of holy baptism, we learned what league and covenant God had made with us, and what vows and promises we upon our part had made, namely, to believe in him, to forsake Satan and his works, and to walk in the way of God's holy word and commandments.
THE christian catechism continually taught and called to remembrance the same, where [...] before no m [...]n kn [...]w any thing at all. And ma [...]y [...]ood m [...]n of forty years, that had be [...]n godfather [...] children, knew no more of the godfather's [...]stice, but to wash their hands ere [...] departed the [Page 253] church, or else to fast five Fridays with bread and water.
O merciful God, have pity upon us. Shall we be altogether cast from thy presence? We may well lament our miserable state, to receive such a commandment, to reject and cast out of our churches all these most godly prayers, instructions, admonitions, and doctrines; and thus to be compelled to deny God, and Christ our Saviour, his holy word, and all his doctrine of our salvation, the candle to our feet, and the light to our steps, the bread that cometh down from heaven that giveth life, which whoso eateth, it shall be to him a well-spring streaming unto eternal life; whereby we have learned all righteousness, all true religion, all true obedience towards our governors, all charity one towards another, all good works that God would have us to walk in, what punishment abideth the wicked, and what heavenly reward God will give those that reverently walk in his ways and commandments.
WHEREFORE, right honourable commissioners, we cannot without impiety refuse and cast from us the holy word of God which we have received, or condemn any thing set forth by our late godly king Edward and his virtuous proceedings, so agreeable to God's word. And our most humble suit is, that the commandment may be revoked, so that we may not be constrained thereunto. For we protest before God, we think if the holy word of God had not taken some root amongst us, we could not in times past have done that poor duty of our's, which we did in assisting the queen, our most dear sovereign, against her grace's mortal foe, that then sought her destruction. It was our bounden duty, and we thank God for the knowledge of his word and grace, that we then did some part of our bounden service.
AND we meekly pray and beseech the queen's majesty for the dea [...] p [...]ssion of Jesus Christ▪ that the same word may not be taken away out of our churches, [...] from like necessity should hereafter [...], (which God for his mercy's sake so bid, and ever save and de [...]nd her grace, and us all) the want of knowledge and due remembrance of God's word m [...]y be occasion of great [...] to an infinite number of her grace's true subjects. And truly we judge this to be one subtle part of the devil (enemy to all godly peace and quietness) that by taking God's word from among us, and planting ignorance, he may make a way to all mischief and wickedness▪ and by banishing the holy gospel of peace he may bring upon us the heavy wrath of God, with all manner of plagues▪ as death, strange sickness, pestilence, murrain, most terrible uproars, commotions, and seditions. These things did the Lord threaten unto the Jews for refusing his word, saying, "Go, and thou shalt say unto this people, Ye shall hear indeed, but ye shall not understand, ye shall plainly see and not perceive. Harden the heart of this people, stop their ears, and shut their eyes, that they see not with their eyes, hear not with their ears, understand not with their hearts, and be converted and healed. And I said, How long, Lord? And he answered, Until the cities are destroyed, utterly wasted without inhabitants, and the houses without men, till the land also be desolate, and lie unbuilded." And the prophet Micah in the seventh chapter, considering the contempt of God's word among the Israelites, threatened them thus; "When the day that thy preachers warned thee of cometh, thou shalt be wasted away. And let no man believe his friend, or put confidence in his brother. Keep the door of thy mouth from her that lieth in thy bosom: for the son shall put his father to dishonour, and the daughter shall rise against her mother, the daughter-in-law against the mother-in-law; and a man's foes shall be even they of his own houshold." The same plague Christ threatened unto the Jews, for refusing his peace proffered them in the gospel, and he wept on the city of Jerusalem which murdered the prophets, and stoned such as were sent unto her.
THE same plagues, we are afraid, will also fall upon us. For whereas heretofore with the receiving of Christ's word and peaceable gospel, we had great benedictions of God, especially this christian concord and holy peace, so that all were at a full and perfect stay in religion, and no man offended with another, but as the sons of peace, each of us with christian charity embraced other: now, alas, for pity, the devil (riding upon the red horse, [...]ewed unto St. John in the Revelations) is come forth, and power is given unto him to take peace from [Page 254] the earth. For now a man can go to no place, but malicious busy bodies curiously search out his deeds, mark his words, and if he agree not with them in despising God's word, then will they spitefully and hatefully rail against him and it, calling it error and heresy, and the professors thereof heretics and schismatics, with other odious and spiteful names, as traitors and not the queen's friends, nor favourers of the queen's proceedings; as if to love God's word were heresy, and as though to talk of Christ were to be schismatic; as though none could be true to the queen that were not false to God; as though none were the queen's friends, but such as despitefully rail on her grace's father and brother, and on God's word that they set forth: as though none favoured the queen's majesty, but such as hate all godly knowledge.
AND in very deed these things that all this turmoil is made for, are mere inventions of popes, brought into the church of their own imaginations without commandment or example either of Christ or of his apostles: and there is not one word in the Bible, that being truly alledged, maintaineth them, nor any doctor of antiquity before St. Augustine's days, as it hath been divers times sufficiently proved before all the whole parliament and convocation of this realm. Yet these being mere traditions of bishops, are set out for God's commandments; and the queen's authority (given to her of God to maintain his word) must be abused to put down God's word. And you, right honourable justices, and keepers of laws and righteousness, are also abused and made the bishops operate [...], to set forth such Romish trash as is to Christ's dishonour, and against the supreme authority of the regal state of this realm. And we poor subjects, for speaking of that which is truth, and our bounden allegiance, are daily punished, railed upon, and noted for seditious, and not the queen's friends.
BUT God (who is blessed for ever) knoweth that they slander us, and pull the thorn out of their own foot, and put it in our's: for the searcher of hearts knoweth, that we bear a faithful and true heart unto her [...], and unto all her proceedings, that are not against God and his holy word. And we daily pray unto the heavenly Father, to enlighten her grace's royal heart with the glorious light of the gospel, that she may establish and confirm that religion, which her grace's brother, our most dear king, did set amongst us; and so governing and ruling this her realm in the fear and true way of God, she may long live, and with prosperity, peace, and honour reign over us.
BUT we cannot think that those men do seek either God's honour, or her grace's prosperity, or wealth of the realm, that take from her grace's faithful subjects God's word, which only is the root of all love and faithful obedience under her grace, and of all honesty, good life, and virtuous concord among her commons. And this we fear lest the root being taken away, the branches will soon wither and be fruitless. And when the Philistines have stopped up the well-spring, the fair streams that should flow shall soon be dried up. All our watchmen, our true preachers have taught us, that as long as we retained God's word, we shall have God our gracious merciful Father; but if we refused and cast off the Lord's yoke of his doctrine, then shall we look for the Lord's wrath and severe visitation to plague us, as he did the Jews for the like offences. And Paul saith, Rom. ii. "God gave them the spirit of unquietness and uproar, eyes wherewith they should not see, and ears wherewith they should not hear, until this day:" and as David said, Psalm lxix. "Let their table be made a snare to catch them, and a stumbling-block to fall at. Let their eyes be blinded that they see not, and bow thou down their backs always."
O merciful God, all this is now come upon us, and daily more and more increased, and we fear [...] last it will so bow down our backs, that we shall be utterly destroyed; he troublesome spirit of uproars and unquietness daily troubleth men's hearts, and worketh such unquietness in all places, that no man that loveth quietness can tell where to place himself. Men have eyes, and see not how grievous an offence it is to cast off the yoke of God's doctrine, and to bear the heavy burden that hypocrites lay upon us. We have ears, and hear not the warning of God's word calling us to true repentance, nor his threats against our impiety. Our most sweet [...] of Christ's word and most holy communion is taken away, and turned to a most perilous snare, through the brawling disputations of [...]. And [Page 255] as the idol of abomination betokened final subversion unto the Jewish nation, so we fear this setting aside of the gospel and holy communion of Christ, and the placing in of a Romish religion, betokeneth the desolation of this noble realm of England to be at hand.
FOR the plagues of hunger, pestilence, and sword, cannot long tarry; but except we repent, and turn again to the Lord, our backs shall be so bowed, that the like horrible plagues were never seen. And no marvel: for the like offence was never committed, as to reject and cast off Christ and his word, and in plain English to say, We will not have him to reign over us. O Lord, how terrible is that which followeth in the gospel? "Those mine enemies that would not have me to reign over them, bring them hither, and slay them before me," Luke xix. God be merciful to us, and move the heart of the queen's majesty, and the hearts of her honourable council, and your hearts, right worshipful commissioners, to weigh these dangers in due time; and to call God's word into your council, and then you shall see how it agreeth with this unreasonable commandment; and to be as wary to avoid the contempt of the eternal God, and dangers of the same, as you are prudent and wise in matters of this world, lest, if the Almighty be contemned, he stretch forth his arm, which no man can turn, and kindle his wrath, which no man can quench.
WE have humbly opened to you our consciences, doubtless sore wounded and grieved by this commandment; and we meekly pray and beseech the queen's majesty, for the precious death and blood-shedding of Jesus Christ our Saviour, to have mercy and pity upon us her grace's poor commons, faithful and true subjects, members of the same body politic, whereof her grace is supreme head. All our bodies, lands, goods, and lives, are ready to do her grace faithful obedience, and true service of all commandments that are not against God and his word; but in things that import a denial of Christ, and refusal of his word and holy communion, we cannot consent nor agree unto it. For we have bound ourselves in baptism to be Christ's disciples, and to keep his holy word and ordinances. And if we deny him before men, he will deny us before his heavenly Father and his holy angels in the day of judgment: which we trust her benign grace will not require of us.
AND we humbly beseech her majesty, that we be not enforced unto it; but as we serve her grace with body and goods, and due obedience, according to God's commandment; so we may be permitted freely to serve God and Christ our Saviour, and keep unto him our souls, which he hath with his precious blood redeemed, that so, as Christ teacheth, we may render to Caesar that which is due to Caesar, and to God that which is due to God.
FOR we think it no true obedience unto the queen's majesty, or to any other magistrate ordained of God under her to obey in things contrary to God's word, although the same be ever so straitly charged in her grace's name. The bishop of Winchester hath truly taught in this point, in his book of true obedience, that true obedience is in the Lord, and not against the Lord: as the apostles answered before the council at Jerusalem, commanding them no more to preach in the name of the Lord Jesus: "Judge you (said they) whether it be right in the sight of God, to hear you rather than God." And again they said, "We must obey God rather than man." Wherefore we learn, that true obedience is to obey God, King of all kings, and Lord of all lords, and for him, in him, and not against him and his word, to obey princes and magistrates of this world, who are not truly obeyed when God is disobeyed, nor yet disobeyed when God is faithfully obeyed.
TOBIAS disobeyed not his king, although contrary to his commandment, and contrary to the usage of all others, when they went to Dan and Bethel, he went unto Jerusalem, and worshipped in the temple of the Lord. The three young men in Babylon, refusing Nebuchadnezzar's commandment, pleased God more than the whole multitude that obeyed. And Daniel that prayed to the God of heaven, contrary to king Darius's commandment, bare a more true and faithful heart to the king, than those wicked counsellors that procured that wicked law, or those that for fear or flattery obeyed it. Which two pestilences (fear and flattery) have ever destroyed true obedience to God [Page 256] and man; when wicked men (that care not if the devil were worshipped, so they might get and obtain riches, promotions, dignity, and worldly glory) turn to and fro as every wind bloweth; and weak and frail men, fearing loss of goods, punishment, or death, do outwardly in body that thing which their hearts and consciences inwardly abhor, and so outwardly disobey God, and in heart dissemble with man, which dissimulation we think worthy the hate of all men, and most uncomely with christian men.
WHEREFORE we humbly beseech the queen's majesty, with pity and mercy to tender the lamentable suit of us her poor subjects, which be by this commandment sore hurt, and wounded in our consciences, and driven to many miseries, and by the malicious attempts of wicked men suffer great wrongs and injuries, slanders, loss of goods, and bodily vexations. We think not good, by any unlawful stir or commotion to seek remedy; but intend, by God's grace, to obey her majesty in all things not against God and his holy word. But unto such ungodly commandments as are against God, we answer with the apostles, "God must be obeyed rather than man." If persecution shall ensue, which some threaten us with, we desire the heavenly Father, according to his promise, to look from heaven, to hear our cry, to judge between us and our adversaries, and to give us faith, strength, and patience to continue faithful unto the end, and to shorten these evil days for his chosen's sake; and so we faithfully believe he will.
NOTWITHSTANDING, we trust the queen's gracious and merciful heart will not suffer such tyranny to be done against her poor, innocent, faithful, and obedient subjects, that daily pray unto God for her; which have no remedy in this world but to sue unto her highness, our most gracious and benign sovereign; whom we pray and beseech, for the dear blood of Christ, to pity our lamentable case and hurt of conscience, and to call back all such commandments as are against God's honour, as the good king Darius, Ahasuerus, Trajan, Theodosius, and divers others have done, and permit the holy wo [...]d of God and true religion (set forth by our most holy and innocent king Edward) to be restored again unto our churches, to be frequented amongst us. So shall we grow and increase in the knowledge of God and of Christ in true repentance and amendment of life: so shall we exhibit true obedience to our lawful magistrates, and all superiors ordained of God: so shall love and charity (of late through this commandment so decayed) be again restored, the honour of her regal estate the more confirmed and established, and godliness and a virtuous life among her loving subjects increased and maintained.
AND we most heartily pray you (right honourable commissioners) to be means unto the queen's highness, and to her honourable council, that this our humble suit may be favourably tendered, and graciously heard and granted. And we shall not cease day and night to pray unto the heavenly Father, long to preserve her grace, and all other magistrates, in his fear and love, and in prosperous peace and wealth, with long life and honour, Amen.
The HISTORY of JOHN HARPOLE of Rochester, and JOAN BEACH, Widow, of Tunbridge, Martyrs.
TOUCHING the examination of Joan Beach, widow, and of John Harpole, within the diocese of Rochester, by Maurice, bishop of the said diocese, mention was made before in the history of Nicholas Hall, wherein were declared the four articles consistorial of the bishop, objected and laid, as unto the said Nicholas Hall and his company, so also to this Joan Beach, widow: whereof the first was this;
1. THAT she was of the parish of Tunbridge, in the diocese of Rochester.
2. ITEM, That all persons who preach, teach, believe, or say otherwise or contrary to that their mother holy catholic church of Christ doth, are excommunicate persons and heretics.
3. ITEM, That the said Joan Beach hath, and yet doth affirm, maintain, and believe contrary to [Page 257] the said mother church of Christ, namely that in the blessed sacrament of the altar, under the form of bread and wine, there is not the very body and blood of our Saviour in substance, but only a token and memorial thereof; that the very body and blood of Christ is in heaven, and not in the sacrament.
4. ITEM, That she hath been, and yet is amongst the parishioners of Tunbridge, openly noted, and vehemently suspected to be a sacramentary and heretic.
TO which aforesaid articles her answers were as follow:
1. THAT she was and is of the said parish of Tunbridge, in the diocese of Rochester.
2. THAT all persons which do preach and hold otherwise and contrary to that which the holy catholic church of Christ doth, are to be reputed for excommunicate and heretics; adding withal, that nevertheless she believeth not the holy catholic church to be her mother, but believeth only the Father of heaven to be her Father.
3. THAT she hath, and yet doth verily believe, hold, and affirm, in the sacrament of the altar, under the forms of bread and wine, not to be the very body and blood of our Saviour in substance, but only a token and remembrance of his death to the faithful receiver, and this his body and substance is only in heaven, and not in the sacrament.
LASTLY, As touching bow she hath been or is noted, and reputed among the parishioners of Tunbridge, she said she could not tell; however she believed she was not so taken and reputed.
THE like matter, and the like four articles were also the same present time and place ministered to John Harpole, by the aforesaid bishop Maurice; who, after the like answers received of him, as of the other before, adjudged and condemned them both together to death, by one form of sentence, according to the tenor and course of their several sentences, which may be read before in the history of Mr. Rogers.
An Account of JOHN HULLIER, Minister and Martyr.
JOHN HULLIER, minister, was first brought up in Eaton-school, from whence he went to King's College, in Cambridge. He suffered under Dr. Thirlby, bishop of Ely, and his chancellor, for the sincere preaching of the gospel. In whose behalf it is much to be lamented, that among so many fresh wits and stirring pens in that university, so little matter is left unto us concerning the process of his judgment, and order of his suffering, who so innocently gave his life in such a cause amongst the midst of them. By certain letters which he himself left behind, it appeared that he was zealous and earnest in that doctrine of truth, which every true christian man ought to embrace. His martyrdom was on the second day of April, in the year 1556.
LETTER I. From JOHN HULLIER to the Christian Congregation, exhorting them faithfully to abide in the Doctrine of the Lord.
IT standeth now in hand (O dear christians) all them that look to be accounted of Christ's flock at the great and terrible day, when a separation shall be made of the sort that shall be received, from, the other that shall be refused, faithfully in this time of great afflictions to hear our master Christ's voice, the only true shepherd of our souls, who saith, "Whosoever shall endure to the end, shall be safe." For even now is that great trouble in hand (as here in England we may well say) that our Saviour Christ spake of long before, which should follow the true and sincere preaching of his gospel. Therefore in this time we must needs either shew that we are his faithful soldiers, and continue in his battle unto the end, putting on the armour of God, the buckler of faith, the breast-plate of love, the helmet of hope and salvation, and the sword of his holy word (which we have heard plentifully), with all instance of supplication and prayer; or else if we do not work and labour with [...], we are apostates and false soldiers, shrinking most unthankfully from our gracious and sovereign lord [Page 258] and captain Christ, and leaning to Belind. For as he saith plainly, Luke xiv. "Whosoever beareth not my cross, and followeth me, he cannot be my disciple." And Matth. vi. "No man can serve two masters: for either he must hate the one, and love the other, or else he shall lean to the one and despise the other." Which thing the faithful prophet Elias signified, when he came to the people, and said, "Why ha [...]t ye between two opinions? If the lord, be God, follow him, or if Baal be he, then follow him," 1 Kings xviii.
NOW let us not think but that the same was recorded in writing for our instruction, whom the ends of the world are come upon, as the apostle of St. Paul saith, Rom. xv. "Whatsoever things are written aforehand, they are written for our learning." If Christ be that only good and true shepherd that gave his life for us, then let us that bear his mark, and have our consciences sprinkled with his blook, follow altogether, for our salvation, his heavenly voice and calling, according to our profession and first promise. But if we shall not so do, certainly, (say what we can) although we bear the name of Christ, yet we be none of his sheep indeed. For he saith very manifestly, John x. "My sheep hear my voice, and follow me: a stranger they will not follow, but will flee from him, for they know not the voice of a stranger."
THEREFORE let every man take heed in these perilous days, (whereof we have had so much warning aforehand) that he be not beguiled by the goodly outward shew and appearance, as Eve was of our old subtle enemy, whose craft and willness is so manifold and divers, and so full of close windings, that if he cannot bring him directly and the plain strait way to consent to his suggestions, then we will allure him and wind him in by some other false ways, (as it were by a train) that he shall not perceive it, to deceive withal, and to steal from him that goodly victory of the incorruptible and eternal crown of glory, which no man else can have, but he that fighteth lawfully: as at this present day, if he cannot induce him thoroughly, as others do, to favour his devilish religion, and of good will and free heart to help to uphold the same, yet he will inveigle him to resort to his wicked and whorish school house, and at the least wise to be conversant and keep company with his congregation there, and to hold his peace and say nothing, whatsoev [...] [...] think, so that he be not a diligent soldier [...] good labourer on Christ's side, to further his ki [...]dom: by that subtle means flattering him the [...] shall both save his life, and also his good, and [...] in quiet. But if we look well on Christ's holy [...] and testament, we shall perceive that he came [...] to make any such peace upon earth, nor yet that [...] gave any such peace to his disciples; "I [...] peace with you (saith he), my peace I give yo [...] not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let [...] your heart be troubled, nor fearful, These things have I spoken unto you, that in me you should have peace. In the world ye shall have affliction, [...] be of good cheer, I have overcome the [...] The servant is not greater than his lord and [...]: if they have persecuted me, they shall [...] persecute you. If any man come to me, and [...] not his own father, and mother, wife, children▪ sisters, yea, and moreover his own life, it is [...] for him to be my disciple. Blessed be [...] now weep, for ye shall laugh, and [...] be [...] that now laugh, for ye shall mourn and weep [...] that will find his life, shall lose it."
THEREFORE the God of that true peace and [...] preserve and keep us, that we never [...] such a false flattering, which at length will pay [...] home once for all, bringing for temporal peace and quietness, everlasting trouble, vexation and disquietness; for these vain and transitory goods, [...] loss and utter damage of the eternal treasure and inheritance; for this mortal life, deprivation of the most joyful life immortal; finally, the entrance into endless death most miserable, unmeasurable [...] and torment both of body and soul.
NOW conferring these two schoolmasters together, let us consider the thing well, and determine with ourselves which way we ought to take, and not to take the common broad way which seemeth here most pleasant, and that the most part of the people take. Surely I judge it to be better to go to school with our master Christ, and to be under his ferula and rod, (although it seemeth sharp and grievous for a time) that at length we may be inheritors with him of everlasting joy, than to keep company with the devil's scholars, the adulterous generation, in his school that is all full of pleasure for a while, and at the end to be paid with the wages [Page 259] of continual burning in the most horrible lake which burneth evermore with fire and brimstone without any end. What shall then these vain goods and temporal pleasures avail? Who shall th [...]n help, when we cry incessantly, Woe, woe, alas, and weal away, for unmeasurable pain, grief and [...]row? O let us therefore take heed betime, and rather be content to take pains in this world for a [...], that we may please God. Our Saviour Christ the true teacher saith, "Every branch that bringeth not forth fruit in me, my Father will take away," John xv.
IT is also not written in vain, Eccles. xli. "The children of the ungodly are abominable children, and so are they that keep company with the ungodly." What doth he else, I pray you, that resorteth to the administration and service that is most [...] and contrary to Christ's Holy Testament, [...] keeping still silence, and nothing reproving [...], but in the face of the world, by his very [...] itself, declare himself to be of a false, fearful, [...]sembling, feigned, and unfaithful heart, and to have laid away from him the armour of light, discouraging as much as lieth in him all the residue of Christ's host, and giving a manifest offence to the [...], and also confirming, encouraging and rejoicing the hearts of the adversaries in all their evil doings. By which example he doth shew himself neither to love God, whom he seeth to be dishonoured and blasphemed by an Antichristian minister, nor yet his neighbour before whom he should rebuke the evil, as it is expressly commanded in God's holy law, where it is said, "Thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbour, that thou bear not sin for his sake," Lev. xviii▪ Wherefore let such a one never fancy to deceive himself, that his name is registered in the book of life, to have the stipend of Christ's soldier, except he do the duty, and perform the part of a faithful and right true soldier, as others have done before. For such fearfulness cometh not from God, as testifieth St. Paul, 2 Tim. [...]. saving, "God hath not given us the spirit of fear, but of power and love. Be not ashamed, saith he, to testify our Lord, but suffer adversity also with the gospel, through the power of God, which saved us, and called us with an holy calling."
TO be now fearful when most need is that we should be of strong hearts, is utterly the rejecting of the fear of God, and plain unfaithfulness and disobedience to the express commandment of our Saviour Christ, who saith in his holy gospel, Matth. x. "Fear not them that kill the body," &c. For what faithfulness do we express towards him, when he saith thus to us, and yet we declare in our doings the very contrary, being ever fearful, even as the unbelieving Isrelites, who unfaithfully feared God's enemies the Canaanites, whereas he had often given them commandment by his true prophet Moses, to do the contrary? For which cause all the whole number of that sect were destroyed in process of time in the wilderness, and enjoyed not the pleasant land of promise. That was a bodily figure shewed before, and now agreeing to the promise of the heavenly inheritance, which shall be given to none other, but only to such as with love unfeigned be wholly bent, without any fear of man, to fulfil God's holy will and pleasure. But all they that pertain to the lively faith, to the winning of the soul, will faithfully stick to the commandment, trusting most firmly and faithfully that he that gave the same, will also give strength plentifully to perform it, even in the weakest vessels of all, as we have heard and seen by divers examples; he only therefore be praised.
ST. Peter saith, 1 Pet. iii. "Fear not though they seem terrible unto you, neither be troubled, but sanctify the Lord God in your hearts." "Only (saith St. Paul, Phil. i.) let your conversation be as it becometh the gospel of Christ. Continue in one spirit, and in one soul, labouring as we do, to maintain the faith of the gospel, and in nothing fearing your adversaries, which is to them a token of damnation, and to you of salvation, and that of God: for unto you it is given that not only should believe in Christ, but also suffer for his sake." Wherefore let us be right well assured, that we shall yield a most strict account, if we transgress the said most wholesome precepts given us of our master Christ, and of his apostles, and now in this troublesome time wherein the gospel is persecuted, shew ourselves fearful soldiers; as it is manifestly declared in the Revelation of St John, chap. [...]. where it is written, "That the fearful shall have their part with the unbelieving and abominable, [Page 260] in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone, which is the second death." Again, it is written in the same book for our warning, chap. [...]ii. "Because thou art betwixt both, and neither cold nor hot, I will spew thee out of my mouth.
NOW therefore (good Christians) these true testimoies of God's lively word deeply considered and weighed, let us chiefly stand in awe of his most terrible judgments, and be not as they that presumptuously tempt him. Let him always be our fear and dread. He now chasteneth, he now nurtureth us for our profit, delighteth in us even as a loving father in his beloved child, to make us perfect, and to have us to be partakers of his holiness. He now judgeth us (not utterly taking away his everlasting love and mercy from us, as he doth from the malignant and wicked) that we should not be condemned with the wicked world: but if we now refuse his most loving chastising, and follow the world, we must needs have our portion with the world. Wide is the gate, and bro [...]d is the way that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat: but strait is the gate, and narrow is the way that leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it. O how much better is it to go this narrow way with the people of God, than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a time!
IN consideration whereof, let us without any more slacking and furthering delays in this great warning by God's loving visitation, submit ourselves betime under his mighty hand, that he may exalt us when the time is come. And thus I wholly commit you to him, and to the word of his grace, which is able to build farther, beseeching you most heartily to pray for me, that I may be strong thro' the power of his might, and stand perfect in all things, being always prepared and ready, looking for the mercy of our Lord unto eternal rest; and I will pray for you as I am most bound. So I trust he will graciously hear us for his promise sake made unto all the faithful of his dearly beloved Son Christ our alone Saviour, whose grace be with your spirit most dear christians, for ever. So be it.
LETTER II. To the Congregation of Christ's faithful Foll [...]w [...]rs. John Hullier being a long time prisoner, and now openly judged to die for the testimony of th [...] Lord Jesus, wisheth heartily to the whole [...] gregation of God, the strength of his [...] Spirit, to their everlasting health both of [...] and soul.
I NOW, most dear christians, having the [...] comfort of God's saving health, and being c [...] firmed with his free Spirit, (he only therefore▪ [...] praised) am constrained in my conscience, thin [...] it my very duty to admonish you, as ye tender [...] salvation of your souls, by all manner of means to separate yourselves from the company of the pop [...] hirelings, considering what is said in the Revelation of St. John, by the angel of God, touching all [...] ▪ The words are these: "If any man worship [...] beast and his image, and receive his mark in [...] forehead, or in his hand, the same shall drink [...] wine of the wrath of Gdd, which is poured into [...] cup of his wrath, and he shall be punished with fire and brimstone before the holy angels, and before the Lamb, and the smoke of their torment asc [...] eth up evermore." Mark well here, good c [...]r [...] tians, who is this beast and worshippers that shall be partakers of that unspeakable torment. The beast is none other but the carnal and fleshly kingdom of Antichrist, the pope with his rabble of [...] prophets and ministers, as it is most manife [...]: which to maintain their high titles, worldly promotions and dignities, do with much cruelty, daily more and more set forth and establish their own traditions, decrees and decretals, contrary to God's holy ordinances, statutes, laws and commandments, and wholly repugnant to his sincere and pure religion, and true worship.
NOW what do they else but worship this beast and his image, who after they had once already escaped from the filthiness of the world, through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, are yet again entangled therein and overcome, using dissimulation unfaithfully▪ for fear of their displeasure, doing one thing outwardly, and thinking inwardly another; so having them reverence [Page 261] under a cloak and colour, to whom they ought not so much as to say, God speed; and adjoining themselves to the malignant congregation, which they ought to abhor as a den of thieves and murderers, and as the brothel-house of most blasphemous fornicators: whose voices being contrary to Christ's voice, if they were of his flock, they [...]ould not know, but would flee from them; as he himself being the good shepherd of our souls, doth full well in his holy gospel testify. Again, what do they else, I pray you, but receive the beast's mark in their forehead's and their hands, which do bear a fair face and countenance outwardly in supporting them as others do, being ashamed openly to confess C [...]rist and his holy gospel? But this feignedness a [...]d dissimulation Christ and his gospel will in no [...] allow. Of whom it is said, Luke ix. "Whoso [...]r shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation, of him also [...]all the Son of man be ashamed, when he shall come in the glory of his Father, with his holy an [...]els." Therefore saith Almighty God by his prophet Malachi, Mal. 1. Cursed be the dissemblers." Ye were once enlightened, and tasted of the word of God, and of the power of the world to come. And our Saviour saith, Luke vi. "No man that [...] his hand to the plough, and looketh back, is [...] for the kingdom of God." Therefore St. John the apostle useth this for a manifest token, that the back-sliding of the true preachers of God's word declare evidently, that they be not of the number of them. For, saith he, 1 John ii. "They went out from us, but they were not of us; for if they had been of us, no doubt they would have continued with us." Surely so long as we use dissimulation, and to play on both hands, we are not in the light. For whatsoever is manifest, the same is light, as the elect ve [...]el of God St. Paul witnesseth in the fourth chapter to the Ephesians.
WHEREFORE, good christians, for God's most dear love, deceive not yourselves through your own wisdom, and through the wisdom of the world, which is foolishness before God▪ but certify and stay your own conscience with the sure truth and faithful word of God, and with the infallible testimonies of holy scripture. For although God's mercy is over all his works; yet it doth not extend but only to them that hold fast the confidence and rejoicing of hope unto the end, not being weary in well doing, but rather waxing every day stronger and stronger in the inward man. Therefore in the Revelation of St. John, where it treats of the beast and his image, it is said, "Here is the sufferance of the saints, and here are they that keep the commandments, and the faith of Jesus Christ," Rev. xiii. Whereby Almighty God doth shew plainly, that he doth use those wicked men as instruments for a time, to try the patience and faith of his peculiar people, without the performance whereof we can have no part among the living; but as it is said in the same Revelation, "The fearful shall have their part in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone, which is the second death."
BUT peradventure ye will object and say unto me, What shall we do? shall we cast ourselves headlong to death? I say not so. But this I say, that we are all bound (if ever we look to receive salvation at God's hand) in this case wholly to be obedient to his determinate counsel and foreknowledge, expressed by the gift of the Spirit in holy scripture; and then to cast all our care upon him, who worketh all in all for the best unto them that love him: and thus he giveth commandment, saying, "Come away from her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues," Rev. xviii. Now, who hearing this terrible voice of God, which must needs be fulfilled, will not with all speed and diligence apply himself to do hereafter, except such as will presumptuously tempt him? and as touching such, the wise man saith. Eccles. iii. "He that loveth peril and danger, shall perish therein." But they that be of the faith of Abraham, even as he did, so will they in all essays and trials be obedient to the heavenly voice, howsoever it seemeth contrary to their own natural will and carnal reason, according to the sure word of faith, which saith, "Hope thou in the Lord, and keep his way: hold thee still in the Lord, and abide patiently upon him." Let not thy jealousy also move thee to do evil. Come out from among them, and join not yourselves to th [...] unlawful assemblies; ye [...], do not once shew yourselves with the least part of your body to favour their wicked doings, but glorify God (as most right is) as well in your whole body outwardly, as inwardly in your spirit, or else you can do neither of [Page 262] both well; for your body doth belong to God as well as your spirit. At the dreadful day of judgment we shall all receive the works of our bodies, according to that we have done, whether it be good or bad.
THEREFORE whatsoever we do, we may not bring the spirit in bondage to the body, but contrariwise must subdue the body and the will of the flesh to spirit, that the spirit may freely accomplish the will of God in all things; for otherwise ye shall never be partakers of his promise, with the true children of Abraham. For, as St. Paul saith, "They which are the children of the flesh, are not the children of God. If we shall live according to the flesh, we shall die. For to be carnally minded is death; but to be spiritually minded, is life and peace; because that the fleshly mind is enmity to God: for it is not obedient to the law of God, neither can be. So [...] they that are in the flesh cannot please God." Now chuse you which way you will take; either the narrow way that leadeth unto life, which Christ himself, and his faithful followers have gone thro' before; or else the broad path-way that leadeth to destructio [...] ▪ which the wicked worldlings take their pleasure i [...] for a while. I, for my part, have now written this short admonition unto you of good will, (as God is my witness) to exhort you that way, which at length you yourselves shall approve and find to be best, yea and rejoice thereof. And I do not only write this, but I will also (with the assistance of God's grace) ratify and confirm, and seal the same with the effusion of my blood, when the full time shall be expired that he hath appointed; which (so far forth as I may judge) must needs be within these few days. Therefore I now bid you all most heartily farewel in the Lord, whose grace be with your spirit, Amen. Watch and pray. So be it.
The Martyrdom of six constant Professors of Christ, burned at Colchester, for the Testimony of the Gospel, the 28th Day of April.
NOT long after the death of Robert Drakes, William Tyms, and the other Essex martyrs, who suffered in Smithfield, as is before specif [...] ▪ followed in the same order likewise of mar [...]y [...]d [...] at one fi [...]e in the town of Colchester, (wher [...] [...] of them inhabited) six other martyrs, [...] be these:
CHRISTOPHER Lyster, of Dagneham, [...] man; John Mace, of Colchester, apothecary; [...] Spencer, of Colchester, weaver; Simon [...] sawyer; Richard Nichols, of Colchester, [...] John Haminond, of Colchester, tanner▪
WITH these six was also joined another, [...] name was Roger Grasbroke, but he [...] submitted himself. Of these above named [...] bishop, because he (as it seemed by the [...] recorded by his register) waxed [...] made a very quick dispatch. For soon [...] they were delivered unto one John [...] batchelor of the civil law, and then [...] the bishop, by the earl of Oxford, and othe [...] [...] missioners, (as appeareth by a bill indented, [...] between the commissioners and the said [...] for the receipt of the said prisoners, d [...]tad [...] 28th, in the second and third years of the rei [...] [...] [...]ing Philip and queen Mary, which was in the [...] of our Lord 1556) and by him sent unto [...] and master, the bishop caused them to be [...] unto his house at Fulham; where, in the [...] church, judicially were ministered unto them [...] same articles that we propounded unto [...] Green and others, mentioned before. To [...] they made their several answers, agreeing altog [...] in one truth, as by the sum and effect thereof [...] ensuing more plainly appeareth.
1. TO the first article they all consented [...] agreed; John Spencer adding further thereto, [...] the church malignant, which is the chruch of [...] in no part of Christ's catholic church; and that he neither hath nor doth believe the doctrine and religion taught and set forth in the said Romish [...] malignant church.
2. TO the second they answered, That they b [...] lieved that in the true catholic church of Chri [...] there be but two sacraments; that is to say, the sacrament of baptism, and the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ.
[Page 263]3. TO the third article they all agreed, confess [...]ng that they were baptized in the faith and belief of the catholic church, and that their godfathers and [...]dmothers had prof [...]ssed and promised for them, [...] contained in the same article.
4. TO the fourth they answered, That they al [...]ays were, and yet did continue in the faith and [...] wherein they were baptized; Richard [...] addi [...]g also, that he had more plainly [...] the truth of his profession by the doctrine [...] forth in king Edward the Sixth's days, and [...]r [...]upon he had built his faith, and would conti [...] in the same to his life's [...]nd, God assisting [...]
5. TO the fifth they answered, That they neither [...] nor went away from the catholic faith of [...]. However, they confessed, that within the [...] specified, (and before) they had misliked, and [...] spoken against the sacrament of the altar▪ [...] that they would not come to hear or be [...] thereof, because they had, and then did [...], that it was set forth and used contrary to [...] word and glory. And moreover they did [...], that they had spoken against the usurped [...] of the bishop of Rome, as an oppressor of [...] church and gospel, and that he ought not to have any authority in England. For all which sayings they were no whit sorry, but rather rejoiced and were glad.
6. TO the sixth they answered, That they never refused, nor yet then presently did refuse to be reconciled to the unity of Christ's catholic church: but they said they had, and then did, and so ever would hereafter utterly refuse to come to the church of Rome, or to acknowledge the authority of the seat thereof, but did utterly abhor the same, for putting down the book of God, the holy Bibl [...] and setting up the Babylonical mass, with all other of Antichrist's merchandize.
7. TO the seventh article, the effect thereof they all granted. And Simon Joyne declared further, that the cause of his refusing to be partaker of their trumpery was, because the commandments of God were there broken, and Christ's ordinances changed and put out, and the bishop of Rome's ordinances instead thereof put in. Moreover, as touching the sacrament of Christ's body. Christopher Lyster affirmed, that in the said sacrament there is the substance of bread and wine, as well after the w [...]rds of consecration as before, and that there is not in the same the very body and blood of Christ really, substantially and truly, but only sacramentally and spiritually by faith in the faithful receivers; and that the mass is not propitiatory for the quick or for the dead, but mere idolatry and abominations.
8. TO the eighth they said, That they were sent to Colchester prison by the king and queen's commissioners, because they would not come to their parish churches, and by them sent unto the bishop of London to be thereof further examined.
9. TO the ninth they all generally agreed, That [...]hat which they had said in the premises [...] true, and that they were of the di [...]c [...]se of London.
THESE answers thus made, the bishop dismissed them for that present until the afternoon. At which time, having first their articles and answers read unto them again, and they standing most firmly unto their christian profession, they were by divers ways and means essayed and tried if they would revoke the same their professed faith, and return to the unity of Antichrist's church.
WHICH when they refused, the bishop [...]outly pronounced sentence of condemnation against them, committing them unto the secular power. Who, upon the receipt of the king and queen's writ, s [...]nt them unto Colchester, where the 28th day of April, most chearfully ended their lives, to the glory of God's holy name, and the great encouragement of others.
An Account of the Martyrdom of HUGH [...], an old M [...]n, and JOHN APPRICE, a blind Man, burned at Stratford the Bow.
IN the discourse of this parcel or part of history, I know not whether more to marvel at the great and unsearchable mercies of God, (with whom there [Page 264] is no respect in degrees of persons, but he chuseth as well the poor, lame and blind, as the rich, mighty and healthful, to set forth his glory) or else to note the unreasonable, or rather unnatural doings of these unmerciful catholics, I mean bishop Bonner and his accomplices, in whom was so little favour or mercy to all sorts or kinds of men, that they spared neither impotent age, neither lame nor blind, as may well appear by these poor creatures, whose names and stories hereunder follow.
HUGH Laverock, of the parish of Barking, painter, of the age of sixty-eight, a cripple. John Apprice, a blind man.
THESE two poor and simple creatures being alike accused by some promoting neighbour of their's, unto the bishop and other of the king and queen's commissioner's, were sent for by their officers; and being brought and delivered into the hands of the said bishop, were the first day of May examined before him in his palace at London; where he first propounded and objected against them those nine articles whereof mention is made before, ministered as well unto Bartlet Green, as also unto many others. To which they answered in effect as Christopher Lyster, John Mace, and others before mentioned had done.
WHEREUPON they were again sent to prison, and beside other times, the ninth day of the same month, in the consistory of St. Paul [...]s were again openly produced, and there (after the old order) intreated withal to recant their opinions against the sacrament of the altar.
WHEREUNTO Hugh Laverock first said, I will stand to mine answers, and to that I have confessed; and I cannot find in the scriptures, that the priests should lift up over their head a cake of bread.
THE bishop then turned unto John Apprice, and asked what he would say.
TO whom he answered, Your doctrine that you set forth and teach, is so agreeable with the world, and embraced of the same, that it cannot be agreeble with the scripture of God. And you are not of the catholic church; for you make laws to [...]ill men, and make the queen your hangman.
AT which words the bishop belike somewhat [...] led, and therefore very loth to delay their condemnation any longer, (such was now his hot burning charity) commanded that they should be broug [...] after him unto Fulham, whither he went [...] dinner, and there in the afternoon▪ after his [...] manner, in the open church, he pronounced the [...] finitive sentence of condemnation against them, [...] so delivering them into the hands of the tempo [...] officer, thought to dispatch his hands of them, [...] could not so dispatch his conscience before [...] judgment of God, from the guiltiness of inno [...] blood.
THE poor men being now in the temporal [...] hands, might not be suffered long to remain [...] and therefore the fifteenth day of May, very [...] in the morning, they were carried in a cart [...] Newgate to Stratford the Bow, and most quiet [...] the fire praising God, yielded up their soul [...] [...] his hands through a lively faith in Jesus [...] ▪ whom unto the end they did most consta [...]ly confes [...].
AT their death, Hugh Laverock, after he [...] chained, cast away his crutch, and comforting [...] Apprice his fellow-martyr, said unto him, Be [...]f good comfort, my brother, for my lord of Lon [...] is our good physician. He will heal us both shortly, thee of thy blindness, and me of my lamen [...]. And so patiently they suffered together.
An Account of the Martyrdom of CATHERINE HUT, ELIZABETH THACKVEL, and JOAN HO [...], Smithfield.
THE next day after the martyrdom of this [...] and blind man above specified, in the [...] month of May, were brought to the fire three [...]omen, with whom also was adjoined another, [...]ho being in the same constancy with them, was likewise partaker of the said condemnation. Their names were,
CATHERINE Hut, of Bocking, widow. Joan [Page 265] Horns, of Billerica, maid. Elizabeth Thackvel, of Great Bursted, maid. Margaret Ellis, of Billerica, maid.
HOW these with divers others were persecuted and sent up, especially by sir John Mordaunt, and Edmund Tyrel, esquire, justices of peace, the following letter will declare.
A LETTER From Sir JOHN MORDAUNT, Knight, and EDMUND TYREL, Esq Justices of Peace for the County of Essex, to BONNER, Bishop of London.
OUR humble commendations to your lordship: these shall be to advertise you, that we have sent unto your good lordship, Joan Potter, the wife of Hugh Potter, James Harris, servant of William Harris, of Bromhill, and Margaret Ellis, for that they are not conformable to the orders of the church, nor to the real presence of Christ's body and blood in the sacrament of the altar, to use your lordship's pleasure with them, as you think good; not doubting, with the punishment of these and others before sent to your lordship, but that the parish of Great Bursted and Billerica shall be brought to good conformity. Thus, committing your good lordship to the tuition of the Almighty God, we take our leave. From Great Bursted, this second day of March, 1556.
- JOHN MORDAUNT,
- EDMUND TYREL.
AFTER the receipt of these letters, bishop Bonner entering into the examination of these four women above named, laid and objected the like articles to them, as after his usual form he was used to administer, and are before expressed: whereunto the said women likewise agreeing in the same unity of spirit and doctrine, accorded in their answers, much agreeing unto the other before them.
AS first, to the article in the first place objected, they consented and granted, believing the said article to be true in every part thereof.
TO the second, partly they answered, they could not tell what a sacrament is; Elizabeth Thackvel, and Catherine Hut, adding moreover, that matrimony, and baptism, and the Lord's supper, were sacraments ordained in the church: but whether the other specified in this article be sacraments (as they heard them called) ordained by God or not, they could not tell. Margaret Ellis, being examined separately, as the others were, upon the same, how many sacraments there were, answered (as a young maid unskilled, in her simple ignorance) that she could not tell. However, she had heard (she said) that there was one sacrament, but what it was she could not tell, &c.
TO the third likewise they granted, that they were baptized by their godfathers and godmothers, which godfathers and godmothers (said Margaret Ellis) did not then know so much, as she doth now know: Catherine Hut adding withal, and saying, that she was baptized; but what her godfather and godmothers did then promise for her in her name, she could not tell, &c.
TO the fourth article, Margaret Ellis, and Elizabeth Thackvel, did grant thereunto: Catherine Hut said moreover, that she being of the age of fourteen, was of the same faith wherein she was christened; and yet nevertheless the said faith in that age (she said) was but a dead faith, because she did not then understand what she did believe. Joan Horns added, that she being eleven years of age, began to learn the faith set forth in king Edward the Sixth's days, in which faith and religion (she said) she hath hitherto, and yet doth, and so will for ever hereafter continue, God so assisting her.
TO the fifth article they answered and confessed, according all in this effect, that as touching the mass, they knew no goodness in it; and as touching the sacrament of the altar, they believed that Christ's natural body is in heaven, and not in the sacrament of the altar: and as concerning the see of Rome, they acknowledged no such supremacy in that see, neither have they any thing to do therewith.
IN answering the sixth article, they did all generally refuse to be reconciled or united to the church [Page 266] of Rome, or any other church, contrary to that wherein they now stood and did profess.
TO the seventh article they answered likewise, that they had so done and said in all things, as it is in this article contained: Catherine Hut adding moreover the reason why; for that (said she) neither the service in Latin, mass, mattins, and evensong, nor the sacraments, were used and ministered according to God's word: and furthermore, that the mass is an idol, neither is the true body and blood of Christ in the sacrament of the altar, as they make men believe.
THE answer to the eighth article declared, that they were all and every one sent up to Bonner, by sir John Mordaunt, knight, and justice of peace in Essex, (the Lord of his mercy send us better justices, I beseech him) for that they could not affirm the presence of Christ's body and blood to be truly and really in the sacrament, and for that they came not to their popish parish church.
TO the ninth article they answered, and confessed the premises thereof to be true, and denied not the same; save that Catherine Hut said, that she was from Bocking, in Essex, of the peculiar jurisdiction of Canterbury, and not of the diocese and jurisdiction of London.
AFTER these their answers received they were produced again about the thirteenth of April to further examination, and so at length to their final judgment; where Catherine Hut, widow, standing before the bishop, boldly and constantly stood to that which she had said before, neither yielding to his fair promises, nor overthrown with his terror. Who being required to declare her mind concerning the sacrament, and to reform herself unto the fellowship of the catholic faith, openly protested saying, I deny it to be God, because it is a dumb god, and made with men's hands. Wherein the good and faithful martyr of Christ firmly persisting, so received her sentence, being condemned to the fire by bishop Bonner; which she with great constancy sustained by the grace and strength of the Lord, and did abide for the cause and love of Christ.
JOAN HORNS, maid produced likewise to [...] judgment and condemnation, with like firmness and christian fortitude declared herself a true martyr and follower of Christ's testament, giving no place to the adversary: but being charged that she did not believe the sacrament of Christ's body and blood to be Christ himself, of which sacrament (contrary to the nature of a sacrament) the adversaries are wont to make an idol service; to this she protesting openly her mind, said as follows: If you can make your god to shed blood, or to shew any condition of a true lively body, then will I believe you: but it is but bread, (as touching the substance thereof) meaning the matter whereof the sacrament consisteth; and that which you call heresy, I trust to serve my Lord God in, &c.
AND as concerning the Romish see, she said, My lord, (speaking to Bonner) I forsake all his abominations, and from them good Lord deliver us. From this her stable and constant assertion, when the bishop was too weak to remove her, and too ignorant to convince her, he knocked her down with the butcherly ax of his sentence. And so the holy virgin and martyr was committed to the shambles of the secular sword, and offered up with her other fellows a burnt sacrifice to the Lord, in the savour of a sweet and pleasant smell.
AS touching Margaret Ellis, she likewise persevering in her aforesaid confession, and resi [...]ting the false ca [...]holic errors of the papists, was by the said Bonner judged and condemned; but before the time of her burning came, prevented by death in Newgate, where she d [...]parted and slept in the Lord.
NO less strength in the grace of the Lord appeared in the other maid Eliz [...]beth Thackvel, whose heart and mind the Lord had so confirmed in his truth, so armed with patience, that as her adversaries could by no sufficient knowledge of scripture disprove her affi [...]mation, so by no forcible attempts could they remove her confession. Whereupon she standing to the d [...]ath, being in like sort condemned, by the said unbishoplike persecutor [...]ave her life willingly and mildly for the con [...]rmation and s [...]aling up of the sincere truth of God's word.
[Page 267]THESE three innocent and godly women, thus falsely and wrongfully by men condemned for the just quarrel and cause of God's gospel, were brought to Smithfield, and there cruelly bound to the stake, gave their bodies to the tormentors, their spirits they commended to God. For whose glory they were willing and ready to suffer whatsoever the cruel hands of their enemies should work against them, dying more joyfully in the flaming fire, than some of them that burned them did peradventure in their beds. Such a Lord is God, glorious and wonderful in all his saints. The martyrdom of these saints of God was on the sixteenth day of May, 1556.
An Account of the Martyrdom of THOMAS DROWRY, a blind Boy, and THOMAS CROKER, Bricklayer.
A Little before, ye have heard of two men, the one blind and the other lame, which suffered about the 15th of May. And here is not to be forgotten another as godly a couple, who suffered the like passion and martyrdom for the same cause of religion at Gloucester: of which two, the one was a blind boy, named Thomas Drowry, mentioned before in the history of bishop Hooper, whom the same virtuous bishop confirmed then in the Lord, and in the doctrine of his word.
HOW long this blind boy was in prison, and in what year he suffered, I am not certain. Of this credible intelligence I have received by the testimony of the then register of Gloucest [...]r, named John Taylor, alias Barker, that the said blind boy, at his last examination and final condemnation, was brought (by the officers, under whose custody he had remained) before Dr. Williams, then chancellor of Gloucester, sitting judicially with the said register in the consist [...]ry, near unto the south door, in the nether end of the church of Gloucester. Where the said chancellor then ministered unto the boy such usual articles as are accustomed in such cases, and are s [...]ndry times mentioned in this book. Amongst which, he chiefly urged the article of transubstantiation, saying in effect as follows.
Dost thou not believe, that after the words of consecration spoken by the priest, there remaineth the very real body of Christ in the sacrament of the altar?
TO whom Thomas Drowry answered, No, that I do not.
Then thou art an heretic, and shalt be burned. But who hath taught thee this heresy?
You, master chancellor.
Where, I pray thee?
Even in yonder place: pointing with his hand, and turning towards the pulpit, standing on the north side of the church.
When did I teach thee so?
When you preached there
a sermon to all men as well as to me, upon the sacrament. You said the sacrament was to be received spiritually by faith, and not carnally and really, as the papists have heretofore taught.
Then do as I have done, and thou shalt live as I do, and escape burning.
Though you can so easily dispense with yourself, and mock with God, the world, and your own conscience, yet will I not so do.
Then the Lord have mercy upon thee, for I will read the condemnation sentence against thee.
God's will be fulfilled.
THE register being herewith somewhat moved, stood up and said to the chancellor:
FIE for shame, man, will you read the sentence against him, and condemn yourself? Away, away, and substitute some other to give sentence and judgment.
No, register, I will obey the law, and give sentence myself according to mine office.
AND so he read the sentence condemnatory against the boy, (with an unhappy tongue, and a more unhappy conscience) delivering him over to the secular power. Who the said fifth day of May, brought the said blind boy to the place of execution, at Gloucester; together with one Thomas Croker, a bricklayer, condemned also for the like testimony of the truth. Where both together in one fire most constantly and joyfully yielded their souls into the hands of the Lord Jesus.
PERSECUTION in the County of SUFFOLK.
AFTER the death of these above rehearsed, were three men burnt at Beckles, in Suffolk, in one fire about the 21st day of May, Anno 1556. Whose names are here specified.
THOMAS Spicer, of Winston, labourer; John Denny and Edmund Poole.
THIS Thomas Spicer was a single man, of the age of nineteen years, and by vocation a labourer, dwelling in Winston, in the county of Suffolk, and there taken in his masters house in summer, about, or soon after sun-rising (being in his bed) by James Ling and John Keretch, of the same town, and William Davies, of Debnam, in the said county.
HE was apprehended for not coming to hear mass, and because he would not receive their idol at the commandment of sir John Tyrrel, knight, of Gipping-hall in Suffolk, and certain other justices there, who sent both him and them to the dungeon, in the town of Eye, in Suffolk, from whence they were all three [...]ogether brought before Dunning, then chancellor of Norwich, and Mr. Mings the register sitting at the town of Beckles, to be examined.
AND there the chancellor endeavoured, but to no purpose, to persuade them from the truth. Wherefore minding in the end to give sentence on them, he burst out into tears, intreating them to remember themselves, and to turn again to the holy mother church, for that they were deceived and out of the truth, and that they ought not wilfully to cast themselves away with such like words.
AS he was thus labouring with them, and seemed very loth to read the sentence (for they were the first that he condemned in that diocese), the regis [...] there sitting by, being weary belike of tarrying, or else perceiving the constant martyrs to be at a point [...] called upon the chancellor in haste to rid them ou [...] of the way, and to make an end. At which wor [...] the chancellor read the condemnation over the [...] with tears, and delivered them to the secul [...] power.
THE articles objected to these, and commonly to all others condemned in that diocese by Dr. Hop [...]on, bishop of Norwich, and by Dunning his chancellor [...] were these:
1. FIRST, it was articulate against them, th [...] they believed not the pope of Rome to be supreme head, immediately under Christ, in earth of the universal catholic church.
2. ITEM, That they believed not holy bread and holy water, ashes, palms, and all other like ceremonies used in the church, to be good and laudable for stirring up the people to devotion.
3. ITEM, that they believed not, after the words of consecration spoken by the priest, the very natural body of Christ, and no other substance of bread and wine to be in the sacrament of the altar.
4. ITEM, That they believed it to be idolatry [...] worship Christ in the sacrament of the altar.
5. ITEM, That they took bread and wine in remembrance of Christ's passion.
6. ITEM, That they would not follow the cros [...] in procession, nor be confessed to a priest.
7. ITEM, that they affirmed no mortal man to have in himself free-will to do good or evil.
FOR this doctrine and these articles they were all [Page 269] three condemned by Dr. Dunning, and committed to the secular power, sir John Silliard being high [...]eriff of Norfolk and Suffolk at the same time.
AND the next day following they were all burnt together in the town of Beckles. Whereupon it is to be thought that the writ De Comburendo, was not yet come down, nor could be, the lord chancellor Heath being at London the same time. Which, if it be true, then it is plain that they both went beyond their commission, that they were the executioners, and also the clergy which were the instigators thereof, cannot make good what they now pretend; saying, that they did nothing but by law. But this let the Almighty find out when he seeth his time.
IN the mean time while these good men were at the stake, they prayed, and said their belief▪ and when they mentioned the catholic church, sir John Billiard spoke to them; That is well said, sirs, quoth he, I am glad to hear you say you do believe the catholic church. That is the best word I have heard of you yet.
TO which his sayings Edmund Poole answered, That though they did believe the catholic church, yet do they not believe in their popish church, which is no part of Christ's catholic church, and therefore no part of their belief.
WHEN they rose from prayer, they all went joyfully to the stake, and being bound thereto, and the fire burning about them, they praised God in such an audible voice, that it was wonderful to all those that stood by and heard them.
THEN one Robert Bacon, dwelling in the said [...]eckles, a great enemy of God's truth [...] and a persecutor of his people, being there present within he [...]ring thereof, willed the tormentors to throw o [...]e faggot to stop the breath of the knaves, as he [...]rmed them; so hot was his burning charity. But these good men not regarding their malice, confessed the truth, and yielded their lives to death for the testimony of the same, very gloriously and joyfully. Which constancy the Lord grant we may imitate, whether it be by death or life, to glorify the name of Christ, Amen.
AND forasmuch as we have here entered into the persecution of Norfolk and Suffolk, it cometh therefore to mind, by occasion hereof, briefly to touch by the way, some part (for the whole cannot be so expressed as it was done) touching the troubles of the town of Winson and Mendlesam, in Suffolk, raised and stirred by the said sir John Tyrrel and other justices there of the like affinity. The sum and effect of which briefly is thus signified to me in writing.
The Persecution in the Towns of Winson and Mendlesam, in Suffolk.
BY the procurement of sir John Tyrrel, knight, and others of his colleagues, there were persecuted out of the town of Winson, in Suffolk, these persons hereafter following.
- Mrs. Alice Twaites, gentlewoman, of the age of threescore years and more, and two of her servants.
- Humphrey Smith, and his wife.
- William Catchpoole, and his wife.
- John Mauling, and his wife.
- Nicholas Burlingham, and his wife.
- And one Rought, and his wife.
SUCH as were persecuted and driven out of the to [...]n of Mendlesam, in the county of Suffolk, now follow.
- Symon Ha [...]lstone, and Catherine his wife, with his five children.
- William Whitting, and Catherine his wife.
- Thomas Dobson, and his wife.
- Thomas Hubbard, and his wife.
- John Doncon, and his wife and maid.
- William Doncon.
- Thomas Woodward, the elder.
- — Konnold's wife.
- A poor widow.
- One mother Semon's maid.
BESIDES those that were constrained to do against their conscience by the help of the parish priest.
THESE are the chief causes why those above named were persecuted.
[Page 270]FIRST, They held and believed the holy word of God to be sufficient unto their salvation.
SECONDLY, they denied the pope's usurped authority and did hold all that Church of Antichrist to be Christ's adversaries. And further, they refused the abused sacraments, defied the mass and all popish service and ceremonies, saying, they robbed God of his honour, and Christ of his death and glory, and would not come to the church, without it were to the defacing of that they did there.
THIRDLY, They did hold that the ministers of the church by God's word might lawfully marry.
FOURTHLY, They held the queen to be as chief head, and wicked rulers to be a great plague sent of God for sin, &c.
FIFTHLY, They denied man's free-will, and held that the pope's church did err, and many other in that point with them, rebuking their false confidence in works, and their false trust in man's righteousness. Also when any rebuked those persecuted for going so openly, and talking so freely, their answer was, They acknowledged, confessed and believed, and therefore they must speak: and that their tribulation was God's good will and providence, and that his judgments were right, to punish them with others for their sins; and that of very faithfulness and mercy God had caused him to be troubled, so that one hair of their heads should not perish before the time, but all things should work unto the best to them that love God; and that Christ Jesus was their life and only righteousness, and that only by faith in him, and for his sake, all good things were freely given them, also forgiveness of sins, and life everlasting.
MANY of these persecuted were of great substance, and had possessions of their own.
Give God the praise.
FORASMUCH as we are now in the month of May, before we overpass the same, and because the story is not long, and not unwor [...]hy peradventure of noting, it shall not grieve the studious re [...]der, a little to give the hearing thereof, whereby to learn to marvel and muse at the great works of the Lord. "They that go down (saith the psalmist) into the sea, labouring upon the water, have seen the works of the Lord, and his mighty wonders upon th [...] deep," Psal. cvi. The truth whereof may well appear in this following story; which, as it was written to me by the very person himself, one Thoma [...] Morse, who was the doer thereof, so I thoug [...]t proper to insert the same in the following man [...].
The HISTORY of one GREGORY CROW, who was miraculously preserved with his New Testament [...] the Seas, May 26.
UPON Tuesday in Whitsun-week, May [...], 1556, (or else, as he rather thinketh, in [...] year immediately before) a certain poor man, named Gregory Crow, Dwelling in Maulden, went to sea, intending to have gone into Ke [...]t for full [...] earth, but by the way being b [...]d weather, was driven upon a sand, where presently the boat sunk, and was full of water, so that the men we [...]e forced to hold by the mast of the boat, and all things that could swim, did swim out of her. Am [...]ngst which Crow saw his testament in the water, and caught it, and put it into his bosom. Now it was ebbing water, so that within one hour the boat was dry, b [...] so broken that they could not save her; but they went themselves upon the s [...]nd (being [...]t least ten miles from the land) and there made their prayers together, that God would send some ship to their assistance (being in all two m [...]n and one boy) for they could stay there but an hour longer before it would be flood. In which time they found their chest, wherein were five pounds, six shil [...]ings and eight pence, be [...]onging to the said Crow; which money the other man (whose name I know not) took up, and gave it to the owner, who cast it into the sea, saying, if the Lord wi [...]l save our lives he will provide us a living; and so they got upon the mast, and there hung by the arms and legs for the space of ten hours, in which time the poor boy was so wea [...]y and beaten with the sea, that he fe [...] off and was drowned.
AND when the water was gone again, and the [Page 271] [...]and dry, Crow said to the other man, It were best for us to take down our masts, and when the flood cometh we will sit upon them, and so it may please God to bring us to some ship that may take us up. Which accordingly they did, and so at ten of the clock in the night of the same Tuesday, the flood did bear up the mast whereon they sat.
And upon Wednesday in the night the man died, being overcome with hunger and watching. So that there was none left but Crow, who driving up and down in the sea, called upon God as he could, and might not sleep for fear that the sea would have beaten him off.
SO at length I myself (said Thomas Morse) being laden to Antwerp with my crayer, going from [...]ee upon Friday, having within my vessel, of mariners and merchants, to the number of forty-six persons, and so coming to the Foreland, the wind was not very good, so that I was constrained to go some what out of my way, being in the afternoon about six of the clock, where at the last we saw a thing afar off, appe [...]ring unto us like a small buoy, that the fisherman do use to l [...]y with their hooks.
WHEN we saw it, some said, Let us have some fish. And I said to him that was at the helm, Keep your course away, for we shall but hinder the fisherman, and have no fish neither: and so at my command he did. But at length he at the helm standing higher than all we did, said, Methinks, master, it is a man. But yet they, being in doubt that it was but a fisherman's buoy, turned the ship from him again to keep their course.
CROW beholding the ship to turn from him, being then in utter despair, and ready now to perish with watching, famine, and moreover miserably beaten with the seas, at last took his mariners cap from his head, and holding up the same with his arm as high as he could, thought by shaking it as well as he might, to give them some token of better sight.
WHEREUPON the steerman, more sensibly perceiving a thing t [...] move, advertised us again, decla [...]ing how he die plainly, see a man's arm; and with th [...]t we all [...] him well, and so came to him and took him up. And as soon as we had him in our ship, he began to put his hand into his bosom, and one asked him if he had money there. No, said he, I have a book here, I think it be wet; and so drew out his Testament, which we then dried. But the sea had so beaten him, that his eyes, nose, and mouth, were almost closed with salt, that the heat of his face and the weather ha [...] made. So that we made a fire and shifted him with dry cloaths, and gave him aqua composita to drink, and such meat as was in the ship, and then let him sleep.
THE next day we awaked him about eight of the clock in the morning, and his blood began somewhat to appear in his flesh (for when we took him up, his flesh was even as though it had been sodden, or as a drowned man's is), and then we talked with him of all the matter before rehearsed. And so sailing to Antwerp, the merchants who saw the thing, published the same in Antwerp; and because it was wonderful, many of the people there both men and women, came to the ship to see him. Some gave him a petticoat, and some a shirt, some hose, and some money (always noting how he cast away his mon [...]y and k [...]pt his book).
AND many of the women wept when they heard and saw him. And Master Governour of the English nation there had him before him, and talked with him of all the matter; and pitying his case, commanded the officer of the English house to go to the free Oste-houses amongst the English merchants, and I with them, and at three houses there were given him six pounds ten shillings. And so from thence he went to Roan, [...] the people also came to him to see him, marve [...]ing at the great works of God.
AND thus much concerning this poor man, with his New Testament p [...]eserved in the sea, (which Testament the pope's clergy condemn on the land) ye have heard, as I received by the relation of the p [...]rty above named, who was the doer thereof, and yet alive dwelling in Lee, well known to all merchants of London. In which story, this by the way und [...]rst [...]nd, good reader, (which rightly may be supposed) that if this poor man, thus found and preserved in the sea with a New Testament in his bosom, had had instead of that a pix with a consecrated [Page 272] host about him, no doubt it had been rung ere this time all Christendom over for a miracle, so far as the pope hath any land.
BUT let the pope with his false miracles go, let us return again and adjoin another history, of much like condition, testified likewise by the information of the said Thomas Morse above-mentioned, to the intent to make known the worthy acts of the Almighty; that he may be magnified in all his wondrous works. The story is thus declared, which happened Anno 1556, about Michaelmas.
Another STORY of God's Providence in the Preservation of three Men at Sea.
THERE was a ship (saith the said Thomas Morse) whereof I had a part, going toward the Bay for salt, with two ships of Bricklesey, which were altogether going for salt as before is said. At the time we were within ten miles of the North Foreland, otherwise called Tenet, the wind did come so contrary to our ship, that we were forced to go clean out of the way, and the other two ships kept their course still, until our ship was almost out of sight of them. And then they saw a thing driving upon the sea, and hoisted out their boat and went into it; and it was three men sitting upon a piece of their ship, who had sat so two days and two nights.
THERE had been in their ship eight men more, who were drowned, being all Frenchmen, dwelling in a place in France, called Ollorone. They had been at Dantzick, and lost their ship about Orford Ness, as might be learned by their words. They were men that feared God, the one of them was owner of the ship. Their exercise, while they were in our ship, was, that after their coming in, they gave thanks for their deliverance: both morning and evening they exercised prayer, and also before and after meat; and when they came into France, our ships went to the same place where these men dwelt, and one of these men did fell unto our men their ship's lading of salt, and did use them very courteously and friendly, and not at that time only, but always whensoever that ship cometh thither, (as he hath been there twice since) he always doth for them, so that they can lack nothing. I should have noted, that after our ship had taken up those three men out of the sea, they had the wind fair presently, and came and overtook the other two ships again, and so they proceeded in their voyag [...] together.
FOR the more credit of this story above recited, to satisfy either the doubtful, or to prevent [...] quarreller, I have not only alledged the [...] of the party which was the doer thereof, b [...] also expressed the matter in his own words, [...] I received it of him; the party and report [...] himself being yet alive, and dwelling at Lee▪ a man so well known amongst the merchants of London, that whosoever heareth the nam [...] of Thomas Morse, will never doubt thereo [...] ▪ And again, the matter itself being so notoriou [...] ly known to the merchants at well here as [...] Antwerp, that though his name were not expressed, the story can lack no witnesses.
THE last day of the said month of May, in the year aforesaid, William Slech being in prison for the said doctrine of the Lord's gospel, and the confession of his truth died in the King's-Bench, and was buried, in the back-yard of the said priso [...] for that the Roman catholic spirituality thought him not worthy to come within pope-holy churchyards, neither in any other christian burial-place, as they call it.
The HISTORY of four Men condemned at Lewes, June 6.
IN June next following, about the sixth day of the same month, four martyrs suffered together at Lewes, whose names were these:
- Thomas Harland, of Woodmancote, carpenter.
- John Oswald, of Woodmarcote, husbandman.
- Thomas Avington, of Ardingly, turner.
- Thomas Read.
TO Thomas Harland, I find in the bishop of [Page 273] London's registers, to be objected to for his not coming to church. Whereunto he answered, That after the mass was restored▪ he never had will to hear the same, because (said he) it was Latin, which he did not understand, therefore as good, quoth he, never a whit, as never the better.
JOHN Oswald denied to answer any thing, until his accuser [...] should be brought face to face before him; and nevertheless said, That fire and faggots could not make him afraid: but as the good preachers which were in king Edward's time have suffered and gone before, so was he ready to suffer and come after, and he would be glad thereof.
THESE four, after long imprisonment in the King's Bench, were burned together at Lewes in [...], in one fire.
[...] the same town of Lewes, and in the same month likewise, were burned Thomas Whood, minister, and Thomas Miles, about the twentieth day of the same month, for refining the erroneous and heretical doctrine of the pretended catholic church of Rome.
ON the 24th of the same month likewise William Ad [...]erhall, minister, died in the prison of the King's Bench, and was buried in the b [...]ck yard: also John Clement, wheelwright, who dying in the said prison, was buried in like manner upon the dunghill in the back yard, viz. the 25th of June.
THE next day following of the said month, we read of a certain young man, a merchant's servant, who for the like godliness suffered cruel persecution from the papists, and was burnt at L [...]icester the 26th day of June, 1556.
An Account of Thirteen Martyrs, burned at Stratford the Bow.
NOT long after the death of the merchant's servants before mentioned, there followed in this blessed order of martyrs, burned in one fire at Stratford the Bow, by London, eleven men and two women, whose dwellings were in sundry places in Essex, and whose names hereafter follow.
- Henry Adlington.
- Lyon Cawch.
- Laurence Parnam.
- Ralph Jackson.
- Henry Wye.
- John Derisall.
- William Hallywel.
- John Routh.
- Thomas Bowyer.
- Elizabeth Pepper.
- George Searles.
- Agnes George.
- Edmund Hurst.
UNTO whom, the sixth of June, 1556, Dr. Darbyshire, bishop Bonner's chancellor, in form of law ministered the same articles that were pronounced unto Thomas Whittle and his companions, mentioned before, to which they made their several answers, in simplicity and in a good conscience. The sum and effect whereof ensueth.
TO the first, they all answered affirmatively; but Lyon Cawch added further, that he believed that the true faith and religion of Christ is, wheresoever the word of God is truly preached.
TO the second article the all answered in effect▪ denying that there be seven sacraments▪ some [...]ffirming, that in the church of Christ there are but two sacraments, that is to say, baptism, and the Lord's supper: others referring themselves to believe as the scripture teacheth them: and other refused to make answer because of their simplicity.
TO the third article they all answered affirmatively.
TO the fourth article they all answered affirmatively, except John Routh, who said he would make no answer thereunto. But Lyon Cawch added, that he believed the article to be true; but it was because he had no better knowledge. And Agnes George added, that in the time of king Edward the Sixth she went from her old faith and religion, and believed in the faith and religion that was thei [...] taught and set forth.
TO the fifth they all answered in effect aff [...]matively, except John Routh, who [...]e answer was that the mass is such a thing, which neither can nor will ent [...]r into his conscience. And Henry Adlington answered, that for nine or ten years before, [Page 274] he misliked the mass, and also the sacrament of the altar, because they cannot be proved by the scriptures. And as touching the authority of the see of Rome, he being but fourteen years of age, took an oath against the same, which oath, he said, he intended to keep by the grace of God.
TO the sixth they all answered affirmatively, except John Routh and William Hallywel, who both refused to answer, because they knew not what they meant by this article. But the two women added, that they refused to be reconciled to the faith and religion that was then used in the realm of England. And Laurence Pernam added, that he never refused to be reconciled and brought to the unity of the catholic church of Christ.
TO the seventh article they all answered affirmatively; but William Hallywel denied that ever he called the mass idolatry and abomination. And Henry Wye affirming the article to be true: yet he confessed his infirmity, that he went to his parish-church and received, before he was put to prison.
TO the eighth article Edmund Hurst, Ralph Jackson, and George Searles, answered affirmatively: Henry Wye said, he was brought before certain justices of the peace in Essex, concerning one Higbed his late master, and thereupon he was committed to Colchester castle, and from thence sent to London to the bishop to be further examined. William Hallywel affirmed the like confession as Henry Wye did, only Higbed excepted. John Derisall said he was called before Lord Rich and Mr. Mildmay, of Chelmsford, and was by them sent to Bonner, bishop of London, to be further examined. Thomas Bowyer said he was brought before Mr. Wiseman, of Felsed, and by him was sent to Colchester castle, and from thence was carried to Bonner, bishop of London, to be by him further examined. Lyon Cawch said, that he was sent for to come before the king and queen's commissioners, and appearing before them three times, was sent to bishop Bonner, to be by him further examined. Henry Adlington said, that he coming to New-gate to speak with one Gratwike there, being prisoner for the testimony of Jesus Christ, was apprehended and [...]brought before Dr. Story, and by him sent to bishop Bonner, to be by him further examined. John Routh said, that he was conv [...]ted before the earl of Oxford, and by him was sent to the castle of Colchester, and from thence conveyed to bishop Bonner, and to be by him further examined. Laurence Pernam said, that he was committed to Hertford prison, because he would not go to church, and from thence sent to bishop Bonner, to be by him further examin [...]d. Agnes George said, that she was committed to prison in Colchester, at the command of Mr. Maynard, an alderman of the town, because she would not go to church, and from thence was sent to bishop Bonner, to be by him further examined. Elizabeth Pepper said, she was apprehended by two constables and an alderman, for that she would not come to church, and by them was sent to Bonner, bishop of London, to be by him further examined.
TO the the ninth article, they believed the premises all to be true as above by them confessed, [...] that they were of the diocese and jurisdiction of London. But Elizabeth Pepper added, that [...] was of the town of Colchester.
AND Agnes George added, that she was of the parish or Barefold. And Lyon Cawch added, that he was at that present a merchant there.
HENRY Wye, brewer, was of the parish of Stantford l [...] Hore, and 32 years of age.
WILLIAM Hallywel was a smith, of the parish of Waltham Holy-Cross, and of the age of 2 [...] years, or thereabouts.
RALPH Jackson was a serving man of Chippi [...]g-Ongar, and of the age of 25 years.
LAURENCE Pernam was a smith of Hodsdon, within the parish of Amwell, in the county of Hertford, and of the age of 12 years.
JOHN Derisall was a labourer, of the parish of Rettington, in Essex, and of the age of 50 years and above.
EDMUND Hurst, labourer, of St. James's, in Colchester, was 50 years of age.
THOMAS Bowyer was a weaver of Much D [...] mow, and of the age of 36 years.
[Page 275]GEORGE Searles was a taylor, between 20 and 21 years of age, of the parish of White Nottle, where he was taken and carried to the lord Rich, who sent him to Colchester castle, with a commandment that no friend he had in the world should speak with him. There he lay six weeks, and was sent up to [...]don, where he was some time in the bishop's coal-house, some time in Lollards' tower, and last of all in Newgate. He was apprehended in Lent, about a fortnight before Easter, in the place aforesaid.
LYON Cawch was a broker in Flanders, but when he was apprehended he resided in the city of London, and of the age of 28 years.
HENRY Adlington was a sawyer, of Greensted, in the county of Sussex, of the age of 30 years.
JOHN Routh was a labourer, of the parish of Wickes, in Essex, of the age of 26 years.
ELIZABETH Pepper was the wife of Thomas Pepper, weaver, of the parish of St. James, in the town of Colchester, of the age of 30 years, or thereabouts, who when she was burnt at Stratford, was eleven weeks gone with child, as she then testified to one Bosom's wife, who unloosed her handkerchief, saying moreover, when she was asked why she did not tell them, Why, said she, they knew it well enough. O! such be the bloody hearts of this cruel generation, that no occasion can stay them from their mischievous murdering of the innocent saints of the Lord, who trully profess Christ crucif [...]ed only and alone for the satisfaction of their sins.
AGNES George was the wife of Richard George, husbandman, of West Barefold, in the County of Essex, and of the age of 26 years. This Richard George had another wife before her, who was burnt in the Postern, at Colchester, and himself lay in prison till queen Elizabeth came to the crown, and then he was released.
WHEN these thirteen were condemned, and the day appointed that they should suffer, which was the 27th of June, 1556, they were carried from Newgate in London the same day, to Stratford-Bow, (the place appointed for their martyrdom) and there divided into two parts, in two several chambers. Afterwards the sheriff, who there attended upon them, came to the one part, and told them that the other had [...]ecanted, and their lives therefore should be saved, willing and exhorting them to do the like, and not to cast themselves away.
UNTO whom they answered, that their faith was not built upon man, but on Christ crucified. Then the sheriff perceiving no good to be done with them, went to the other part, and said (like a liar) the like to them, that they with whom he had been before had recanted, and should therefore not suffer death, counselling them to do the like, and not wilfully to kill themselves, but to play the wise men, &c.
UNTO whom they answered as their brethren had done before, that their faith was not built on man, but on Christ and his word, &c.
NOW when he saw it needless to persuade (for they were, God be praised, surely grounded on the rock Jesus Christ) he then led them to the place where they should suffer, and being there all together, they most earnestly prayed unto the Lord, and then joyfully went to the stake and kissed it, and embraced it very heartily.
THE eleven men were tied to three stakes, and the two women loose in the middle without any stake, and so they were all burnt in one fire, with such love to each other, and constancy in our Saviour Christ, that it made all the lookers on to marvel. The Lord grant us the like grace in the like need, according to the good pleasure of his will, Amen.
IN the company of these aforesaid thirteen, were three more condemned to die, whose names are hereunder specified.
THOMAS Freeman, William Stannard, and William Adams.
THESE three answered to the same articles that were propounded to the aforesaid thirteen, in effect as they did. And being thus in the hands of the secular power, Cardinal Poole sent his dispensation [Page 276] for their lives, by what occasion I cannot safely say, but by means thereof they then escaped.
THE Sunday after these aforesaid sixteen were condemned, Fecknam, dean of St. Paul's, preached at Paul's Cross, where he declared, that they had as many sundry opinions as they were sundry persons. At the hearing whereof they drew out their faith, and set to their hands as hereafter followeth, and directed the same to their friends, and the faithful congregation, as followeth.
BE it manifest to all unto whom this certificate shall be seen, that whereas, upon Saturday, being the thirteenth day of June, at Fulham before the bishop of London, sixteen of us (whose names are hereunder subscribed) were condemned to die for the most pure and sincere truth of Christ's veri [...]ty; which most godly truth hath been from the beginning with the wicked adversaries thereof continually defeated, and is by the devil and his imps, even at this present, likewise daily slandered: upon this occasion, dearly beloved brethren, we are moved, yea constrained, in the ears of all men to manifest our belief, and also briefly the articles whereof we are condemned, for the avoiding of false reports and slanderous tongues, which might happen by the most ungodly and uncharitable sermon lately preached at Paul's Cross, the fourteenth of the said month, being Sunday, by Mr. Fecknam, now dean of the same church; where he, in that most worthy audience, defamed us to be in sixteen sundry opinions, which were a thing prejudicial to all christian verity; and for a testimonial thereof, this hereunder written shall answer our cause, and therefore we pray you that are of God to judge.
THE first, We believe we were baptized in the faith of Christ's church, and incorporate unto him, and made members of his church, in which faith we continue. And although we have erred for a certain time, yet the root of faith was preserved in us by the Holy Ghost, which hath reduced us into a full certainty of the same, and we do persist, and will by God's assistance to the end. Now mark, that although the minister were of the church malignant, yet his wickedness did not hurt us, for th [...]t he baptized us in the name of the Father, the So [...], and the Holy Ghost.
THERE was both the word and the element, and our godfathers and godmothers renouncing for us the devil and all his works, and confessing the articles of the christian faith for us, and also witnesse [...] that we are baptized, not in the faith of the church of Rome, but in the faith of Christ's church.
1. Item, There are but two sacraments in Christ's church, that is, the sacrament of baptism, and the Lord's supper. For in these are contained the faith of Christ's church; that is, the two testaments, the law and the gospel. The effect of the law is [...] pentance, and the effect of the gospel remission of sins.
2. Item, We believe that is a visible church, wherein the word of God is preached, and the holy sacraments truly administered, visible to the wick [...] world, although it be not credited, and by the death of saints confirmed, as it was in the time of Eli [...] the prophet as well as now.
3. Item, The see of Rome is the set of Antichrist, the congregation of the wicked, &c. whereof the pope is head under the devil.
4. Item, The mass is not only a profanation of the Lord's supper, but also a blasphemous idol.
5. Item, God is neither spiritually nor corporally in the sacrament of the altar, and there remaineth no substance in the same, but only the substance of bread and wine.
FOR these articles of our belief, we being condemned to die, do willingly offer our corruptible bodies to be dissolved in the fire, all with one [...] assenting and consenting thereunto, and in no point dissenting or disagreeing from any of our former articles.
APPARENT also let it be and know, that bei [...] examined on the former articles before the blood [...] bishop, the said day and time [...] we affirmed to [...] lieve all that he or they would prove by the scriptures. [Page 277] But he said that he would not stand to prove it with heretics, but said they themselves were the holy church, and that we ought to believe them, or also to be cut off like withered branches.
- Ralph Jackson,
- Henry Adlington,
- Lyon [...]awch,
- William Hallywel,
- George Searles,
- John Routh,
- John Derifall,
- Henry Wye,
- Edmund Hurst,
- Laurence Parnam,
- Thomas Bowyer,
- Elizabeth Pepper,
- Agnes George,
- Thomas Freeman,
- William Stannard,
- William Adams.
ABOUT the 14th of June, in the same year, John Colstock, who was lately come from London, and no [...] dwelling at Wellington, though he did not suffer martyrdom, yet he sustained some trouble, being examined by the bishop, named Ralph Bane, for his religion, especially for two points, in holding against the reality of Christ in the sacrament, and against auricular confession to be made to the priest. For which cause being compelled to recant, he was enjoined in the church of St. Cedde to bear a faggot before the cross bareheaded, having in the one hand a taper, and in the other a pair of beads, &c.
AMONGST divers others which in the same diocese, and at the same time, were suspected and troubled for the like, was Thomas Flier, of Uttoxater, shoemaker; Nich. Ball, of Uttoxater; Thomas Pyot, of Chedull.
ITEM, Henry Crimes, for marrying his wife on Palm-Sunday eve, &c. Some others also there were which had the like penance enjoined on them, as Thomas Johnson, about the 26th day of this month of June, because he sware by the holy mass before the bishop sitting in judgment, who for the same was driven to go before the cross with his taper and beads, &c.
IN the same month of June one Thomas Parret died in the prison of the King's-Bench in Southwark, and was buried in the back-yard the 27th day of the said month.
ALSO Marti [...] Hunt (as is reported) was famished in the same prison the 29th day. At which time likewise died in the same prison, as I find recorded, one John Norice, and after the same sort as the other was buried in the back-yard of the said prison.
The Martyrdom of ROGER BERNARD, ADAM FOSTER, and ROBERT LAWSON.
WHEN Roger Bernard came before the bishop, first he asked, whether he had been with the priest at Easter to be shriven, and whether he had received the blessed sacrament of the altar, or no? Unto whom Roger Bernard answered, No: I have not been with the priest, nor confessed myself unto him, but I have confessed my sins to Almighty God and I trust he hath forgiven me▪ whereof I sha [...] not need to go to the priest for such matters, who cannot help himself.
Surely, Bernard, thou must needs go, and confess thyself unto him.
That shall I not do (by God's grace) while I live.
What a stout heretic is this! How impudently he answereth!
My lord, it grieveth me no whit (I thank God) to be called heretic at your hands: for so your forefathers called the prophets and confessors of Christ long before this time.
AT these words the bishop rose up in a great heat, and bade Bernard follow him. Then the bishop went and kneeled before what they call the sacrament of the altar; and as he was in his prayers kneeling, he looked back, and asked Bernard why he came not and did as he did. Unto whom Bernard answered, I cannot tell why I should do so. Why, quoth the bishop, thou lewd fellow, whom seest thou yonder? pointing to the pyx over the altar.
I see no body there. Do you, my lord?
Why, naughty man, dost thou not see thy Maker?
My Maker? No, I see nothing but a few clouts hanging together on a heap.
WITH that the bishop rose up sore displeased, and commanded the gaoler to take him away, and to lay irons enough on him. For, said he, I will tame him ere he go from me; I think so: and so he was carried away.
THE next day Bernard was brought again before the bishop, who asked him, if he did not remember himself since the day before that he was before him.
Yes, my lord, I have remembered myself very well, for the same man I was yesterday, I am this day, and I hope shall be all the days of my life, concerning the matter you talked with me of.
THEN one of the guard standing by, said, My lord, I pray you, trouble not yourself any more with him, but let me have the examining of him, I shall handle him after another sort, I think, and make him a fair child ere he go, you shall see.
SO he was committed to him, and brought by him to an inn, where were a great many priests assembled together, and there they all fell to flatter him, and persuaded him with fair enticing words, what they could; but when they could not prevail therein, then they began to threaten him with whipping, stocking, burning, and such like. Unto whom Bernard said, Friends, I am not better than my master Christ, and the prophets, which your fathers served after such sort; and I, for his name's sake, am content to suffer the like at your hands, if God shall so permit, trusting that he will strengthen me in the same according to his promise, in spite of the devil and all his ministers. So when they could not make him relent or yield, they said, Behold a right scholar of John Fortune, whom they had then in prison. Then they carried him to the bishop, who immediately condemned him as an heretic, and delivered him to the secu [...]ar power.
THIS Roger Bernard was a single man, and [...] his vocation a labourer, dwelling in Framsde [...], [...] Suffolk, who was taken in the night by Mr. [...] age's men, because he would not go to church [...] hear their unsavoury service, and so by them carried to prison.
The History of ADAM FOSTER.
ADAM FOSTER, of the age of 26 years, husbandman, being married, dwelling i [...] Mendlesam, in the county of Suffolk, was taken at home in his house, a little before the sun's going down, by the constables of the said town, George Revet and Thomas Mouse, at the commandmen [...] [...]f sir John Tyrrel, knight, of Gipping-hall, in S [...] folk, because he would not go to the church [...] hear mass, and receive at Easter, except he might have it after Christ's holy ordinance. When they came for him, they told him he must go with them unto the justice. Unto whom Adam Foster said, For Christ's cause, and to save his conscience, [...] was well contented; and so they led him to sir John Tyrrel, and he sent him to Eye dungeon, in Suffolk, from whence at length he was sent to Norwich, and there condemned by bishop Hopton.
NOW after his apprehension, the said Thomas Mouse and George Revet were stricken with a great fear and sickness, whereby Mouse pined and consumed away, even unto death, although he was [...] young man. But George Revet, who was the [...] Mouse's fellow, and a great reader of the scriptu [...] or (as many term it) a talkative gospeller, would not be premonished by the works of God, but set his son to help the priest at mass, and to be clerk of the same town of Mendlesam for lucre sake; yet was there a fair warning given him of God, altho' he had not the grace so to consider it, which thing was this:
A young man of the same parish, newly married, called Robert Edgore, being of a ripe wit and sound judgment, was clerk in the said church before the said Revet set his son in that room, and executed the office a little; yea, alas, too long against his own conscience; whereby at length the Lord so took [Page 279] away his wits, that many years after, his poor and woful wife, good woman, was compelled to keep him chained, and bound continually [...] lest he should unawares do himself or some other some mischief, as many times (the more pity) he was ready enough to do.
THIS (as I said) would not admonish Revet, but needs he must persist in his wicked purpose. Notwithstanding at length, as many men were offended with him in the parish, so honest women especial [...]y, (being mightily grieved at his ungodly doings) came to him and said, Neighbour Revet, are you not afraid to let your son help the naughty priest to say mass, and to serve that abominable idol? And he said, No.
THEN said they, We fear not to go to church and hear mass, seeing you, being a man that so much profess christianity, will let your son help the priest to say mass, &c.
AT which words Revet waxed angry, and in his rage immediately made his prayer unto God after this manner, or with such like words, saying, O Lord, if it be not thy will that my son should so do, then I beseech thee send some strange token, to let me understand what thy good pleasure is therein, &c. So according to his petition, within a short space after, his neighbour's bull came in to his pasture and he having a very proper gelding, which was his felicity above any thing he had, the bull running upon him, did so wound and gore him, that immediately thereof his gelding died, and he thereby nothing amended. For although he knew and confessed, that it was the Lord's hand upon him for the sufferance of his son in that wicked vocation; yet would he not take him from it, but permitted him to use and frequent the same against his own conscience.
AT last the Lord sent upon him a great swelling in his legs, which did so grievously vex and trouble him, by reason it swelled upward, that at length, having thereby brought upon him a very strange sickness, he died most miserably, in so impatient a manner, that it terrified all good hearts to hear of. The Lord grant, for Christ's sake, that we may observe his judgments better, to his glory and our comfort, Amen.
The HISTORY of ROBE [...]T LAWSON.
ROBERT LAWSON was a single man, of the age of thirty years, and by vocation a linenweaver, who was apprehended in the night, by one Robert Kereth, at the command of sir John Tyrrel, of Gipping-hall, in Suffolk, knight, and so was immediately carried to Eye dungeon, in Suffolk, where he remained a certain time, and after was led to Bury. The cause of his being taken, was for that he would not go to church to hear mass, and receive their pop [...]sh idol.
WHEN these three aforesaid martyrs were carried to their death, namely Roger Bernard, Adam Foster, and Robert Lawson of Bury, after they had made their prayer, being at the stake, and the tormentors attending the fire, they most triumphantly ended their lives, in such a happy and blessed condition, as did notably set forth their constancy and joyful end, to the great praise of God, and their commendation in him, and also to the encouragement of others in the same quarrel to do the like. The Lord of strength fortify us to stand as his true soldiers in what standing soever [...]e shall think it good to place us, Amen.
IN the examination of Roger Bernard, you heard a little before, how he was compared by the priests there to John Fortune, and called his scholar. This John Fortune, otherwise called Cutler, of Hintl [...] s [...]am, in Suffolk, was by his occupation [...] blacksmith, whom they had before them in examination, a little before, on the 20th day of April. In spirit he was zealous and ardent, in the scriptures ready, in Christ's cause stout and valiant, in his answer [...] marvellous, and no less patient in his wrongful suffering, than constant in his doctrine. Whether he was burnt or died in prison, I cannot certainly find; but I rather suppose that he was burnt. Certain it is howsoever, he was made away with, as he never yielded. What his answers and examinations were before Dr. Parker and the bishop, you shall hear, although not with his own mouth spoken, yet with his own hand writte [...] what he did say, as followeth.
The First Examination of JOHN FORTUNE, before Dr. PARKER and Mr. FOSTER.
FIRST, Dr. Parker asked me how I belleved in the catholic faith.
AND I asked him which faith he meant; whether the faith that Stephen had, or the [...]ith of them that put Stephen to death.
DR. Parker being moved, said, What an impudent fellow is this? You shall soon see anon, he will deny the blessed sacrament of the altar.
THEN said Mr. Foster, I know you well enough. You are a busy merchant. How sayest thou by the blessed mass?
AND I stood still and made no answer.
THEN said Foster, why speakest thou not, and make the gentleman an answer?
AND I said, Silence is a good answer to a foolish question.
THEN said Dr. Parker, I am sure he will deny the blessed sacrament of the altar also.
AND I answered, I know none such but only the sacrament of the body and blood of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
THEN said Dr. Parker, You deny the order of the seven sacraments. And why dost thou not believe in the sacrament of the altar.
AND I answered, Because it is not written in God's book.
THEN, said he, you will not believe unwritten verities.
AND I answered, I will believe that those unwrit [...]ten verities that agree with the written verities be true: but those unwritten verities that are of your own making, and inventions of your own brain, I do not believe.
WE [...]L, s [...]id Mr, Foster, you shall be whipped and bu [...]ned for his gear.
THEN answered I, If you knew how these words do rejoice my heart, you would not have spoken them.
THEN said Mr. Foster, Away, thou fool, d [...] thou rejoice in whipping?
YES, answered I, for it is written in the scriptures, and Christ saith, Thou shalt be whipt for my name's sake: and since the time tha [...] the sword of tyranny came into your hands, I heard of none tha [...] were whipped. Happy were I, if I had the maiden-head of this persecution.
AWAY with him then, said he, for he is ten ti [...] worse than Samuel: and so he was carried to prison again.
The Second Examination of JOHN FORTUNE, before [...] Bishop of Norwich.
WHEN I came before the bishop, he asked me if I did not believe in the catholic church.
I answered, I believe in that church whereof Christ is the head.
THEN said the bishop, Dost thou not believe that the pope is supreme head of the church?
AND I answered, No, Christ is the head of the true church.
So do I believe also: but the pope i [...] God's vicar upon earth, and the head of the chur [...] and I believe that he hath power to forgive sins also.
The pope is but a man, and the prophet David saith, "That no man can deliver his brother, nor make agreement unto God for him; for it cost more to redeem their souls, so that he must let that alone for ever."
AND the b [...]shop again f [...]tching about a g [...]eat circumstance, said. Like as the b [...]d weather weareth the b [...]ll, and is the head of the flock of sh [...]ep: so i [...] the pope our head. And as the hives of bee [...] have [Page 281] a master bee that bringeth [...] bee [...] to the hive again: so doth our head bring u [...] home again to [...] true church.
THEN I asked him, whether the pope were a spi [...]ritual man. And he said, Yea. And I said again [...] They are spiteful men; or in 17 months there [...] three popes, and one poisoned another for that presumptuous seat of Antichrist.
It is maliciously spoken, for thou must obey the power and not the man. And thus was the pope denied to be supreme head. Well, what [...] thou to the ceremonies of the church▪
AND I answered, "All things that are not plant [...]d [...]y my heavenly Father, shall be plucked up by [...] roots," saith our Saviour: for they are not from the beginning, neither shall they continue to [...]e end.
They [...] good and godly, and necessary to be used.
St. Paul called them weak and begg [...]rly.
No, that is a lie.
I hearing that, said, that St. Paul writeth thus in [...] fourth chapter to the Galatians, "You foolish [...] (saith he) who hath bewitched you, that y [...] seek to be in bondage to these weak and beggarly ceremonies?" Now which of you doth lie, you [...]. And also it is said, That works instituted▪ and enjoined with the commandment of God, pertain not to the worship of God, according to the [...], Matth. xv. "In vain do men worship me with men's traditions and commandments," and St. Paul, "Wherefore do ye carry us away from the grace of Christ to another kind of doctrine?" And Christ openly rebuked the scribes, lawyers, pharisees, doctors, priests, bishops, and hypocrites, for making God's commandments of none effect, to support their own tradition.
Thou liest, there is not such a word in all the scriptures [...] thou impudent heretic. Thou art worse [...] other heretics: for Hooper and Bradford allow them to be good▪ and [...] not. Away with him.
HERE you may per [...]ive [...] the [...]tholic c [...]rch cannot err, but whatsoever [...] true. And so my lord bishop cannot lie, as it may appear to all men plainly [...].
The third examination of [...] FORTUNE, before the Bishop of Norwich.
THE next day I was brought [...] the [...] bishop again, where he preac [...]d a sermon upon the sixth chapter of St. John's gosp [...], from Christ's words, "I am the bread that [...] do [...]n from heaven," &c. And thereupon had a great bibble babble to no purpose. So in the [...]nd I was called before him, and he said to me:
How believest tho [...] in the [...] the altar? Dost thou not believe, that after the consecration, there is the real substance of the body of Christ?
That is the greatest plague that ever came into England.
Why so?
If I were a bishop, and you a poor man as I am, I would be ashamed to ask such a question: for a bishop should be apt to teach and not to learn.
I am appointed by the law to teach, you are not.
Your law breaketh out very well: for you have burned up the true bishops and preachers, and maintained liars in their stead.
Now you may understand he is a traitor, for he denieth the higher powers.
I am no traitor: for St. Paul [...], "All souls must obey the higher powers [...]" and I resist not the higher p [...]ers concerning my body but [...] must res [...]st [...]our evil doctrine wherewith you would infect my soul.
[Page 282]THEN said a doctor, My Lord, you do not well; let him answer shortly to his articles.
How sayest thou? make an answer qui [...]ly to those articles.
St. Paul saith, Heb. [...]. "Christ did one sacrifice once for all, and sat him down at the right hand of his Father," triumphing over hell and death, making intercession for sins.
I ask that no such question, but make answer to this article.
If it be not God before the consecration, it is not God after: for God is without beginning and without ending.
Lo, what a stiff heretic is this! He hath denied all together: how sayest thou? Is it idolatry to worship the blessed sacrament or no?
God is a Spirit, and will be worshipped in spirit and truth.
I ask thee no such question: answer me directly.
I answer, that this is the God Mauzzim, that robbeth God of his honour.
It is a pity that the ground beareth thee, or that thou ha [...]t a tongue [...]o speak.
THEN said the scribe here are a great many more articles.
THEN said the bishop, Away with him: for he hath spoken too much.
The last Examination of J. FORTUNE.
WHEN I came to mine examination again, the bishop asked me if I would stand unto mine answers that I had made before: and I said, yea; for I had spoken nothing but the truth. And after that he made a great circumstance upon the sacrament.
THEN I desired him to stand to the text, and [...] read the gospel in Corpus Christi day, which [...] "I am the bread that came down from heaven [...] believest thou not this? and I said, Yea truly.
AND he said, Why dost thou deny the sacra [...]
BECAUSE your doctrine is false, said I.
THEN, said he, how can that be false [...] spoken in the scripture?
AND I answered, Christ said, "I am the bread▪ and you say the bread is he. Therefore your doctrine is false.
And he said, Dost thou not believe the bread i [...] he? I answered, No.
I will bring thee to it by the script [...].
Hold that fast, my lord: for [...] the best argument that you have had yet.
Thou shalt be burned like an heretic.
Who shall give judgment upon me?
I will judge an hundred such as thou [...], and never be shriven upon it.
Is there not law for the spiritual [...]y, as well as for the temporality?
AND sir Clement Higham said, Yes, what [...] thou by that?
When a man is perjured by the [...], he is cast over the bar, and sitteth no more in judgment. And the bishop is a perjured man, and ought not to sit in judgment.
How provest thou that?
Because you took an oath in king Henry's days to resist the pope. So both spiritual and temporal are perjured, that here can be no true judgment.
Thinkest thou to escape judgment by [...]. No: for my chancellor shall judge thee. He took no oath, for he was then out of the realm.
It is time to [...] out such fellows as you are, indeed.
Good fellow, why believest thou not in the sacrament of the altar?
Because I find it not in God's book, no [...] yet in the doctors. If it were there I would believe it with all my heart.
How knowest thou it is not there?
Because it is contrary to the second commandment: and seeing it is not written in God's book, why do you then rob me of my life?
THEN the bishop having no more to say, commanded the bailiff to take him.
AND thus much concerning the examination of this man. Now whether he died in fire, or was otherwise prevented with death, as I said before, I am uncertain.
IN the register of Norwich this I do find that his sentence of condemnation was drawn and registered; but whether it was pronounced, is not expressed in the said register, according as the usual manner of the notary is so to declare, in the end of the sentence. Nevertheless this is most certain, that he never abjured nor recanted, howsoever it ple [...]d the Lord by death to call him out of the world.
The Death of JOHN CARELESS, prisoner in the King's-bench.
ABOUT the first of July, John Careless, of Coventry, weaver, died in the King's-bench prison: who though he were by the secret judgment of Almighty God prevented by death, so that he come not to the full martyrdom of his body, yet is he no less worthy to be counted in honour and place of Christ's martyrs, than others that suffered most cruel torments; as well because he was for the same truth's sake a long time imprisoned, as also for his willing mind and zealous affection he had thereto, if the Lord had so determined it, as may well appear by his examination before Dr. Martin. Which examination, because it contained nothing almost but wrangling inter [...]ogatori [...], and matters of contention, wherein D [...]. [...] would [...] into no communication about the articles of his accusation, but only urged him to d [...]ect his fellows, it is not therefore greatly material to express the whole, but only to insert so much [...] pertains to the question of predestination, which may bring some fruit to the reader.
The Effect of JOHN CARELESS'S Examination, inf [...]r D. MARTIN, briefly declared.
FIRST, Dr. Martin calling John Careless to him in his chamber, demanded what was his name? To whom when the other had answered, that his name was John Careless, then began Dr. Martin to discant at his pl [...]sure upon that name, saying, that it would appear by his condition, by that time he had done with him, that he would be a true careless man indeed. And so after a deal of unnecessary talk there spent about much needl [...]ss matter, then he asked him where he was born.
FORSOOTH, saith Careless, at Coventry.
At Coventry? What, so far, man? How camest thou hither? Who sent thee to the King's-bench prison?
I was brought hither by a writ, I think; what it was I cannot tell. I suppose master Marshal can tell you.
In good faith I cannot tell what the matter is; but indeed my lord chief justice se [...]t him from the bar.
Well, Careless, I would thou shouldst play the wise man's part. Thou art a handsome man, and it is a pity but thou shouldst do well, and save that which God hath bought.
I thank your good mastership most heartily: and I put you out of doubt, that I am most sure and cert [...]in of my salvation by Jesus [Page 284] Christ; so that my soul is safe already, whatsoever pains my body suffer here for a little time.
Ye [...] mar [...]y, you say [...]. For thou art so predestinate to life▪ that thou c [...]nst not perish in whatsoever opinion thou dost die.
That God hath predestinate [...] me to eternal life in Jesus Christ, I am most certain, and even so am I sure that his Holy Spirit (wherewith I am sealed) will preserve me from all heresies and evil opinions, that I shall die in none at all.
Go to, let me hea [...] thy faith in predestination. For that shall be written also.
Your mastership shall pardon me herein. For you said yourself er [...] now, that you had no commission to examine my conscience. I will trouble myself with answering [...]o more matters than I needs must, until I [...] [...]fore them that shall have mo [...] authority further to examine me.
I tell thee then I have a commission and commandment from the council to examine the [...] ▪ for they delivered me [...]y articles.
Yea, I think indeed that your mastership is appointed to examine me of my articles, which you have there in writing, and I have told you the truth. I do confess them to be mine own fact and deed: but you do now examine me of pr [...]estination, whereof my articles speak nothing at [...]
I tell thee yet again that I must also examine thee of such things as be in controversy between thee and thy fellows in the King's-bench, whereof predestination is a part, as thy fellow N— hath confessed, and thyself dost not deny it.
I do not deny it. But he that first told you that, might have found himself much better occupied.
Why, what if he had not told me, thinkest thou that I would not have known it? Ye [...], or else thou shouldst have withstood my commission. For I tell thee the truth, I may now examin [...] thee of the blessed [...] that I like, but that would shew thee [...]avour, [...] not be too hasty with thee at the first.
Yea indeed, Careless▪ Mr. Docto [...] ha [...] a commission to examine you or any [...]ther of [...] fellows.
Yea, marry that I have, I tell thee th [...] truth of it.
Then let your scribe set his pen to the paper, and you shall have it roundly, even as the truth is. I believe that Almighty God, our most dear loving Father, of his great mercy and [...] goodness, did elect in Christ.
Tush, what need of all that long ci [...] cumstance? Write, I believe God elected; [...] make no more ado.
No, not so, Mr. Doctor: it is an high mystery, and ought reverently to be spoken of. And if my words may not be written as I do utter them, I will not speak at all.
Go to, go to, write what he will. Here is more business than needeth.
I believe that almighty God, our mo [...] dear and loving Father of his great mercy and infinite goodness (through Jesus Christ), did elect and appoint in him before the foundation of the earth was laid▪ a church or congregat [...]on, which he dot [...] continually guide and govern by his grace and Holy Spirit, so that not one of them shall ever finally perish.
WHEN this was written, Mr. Doctor took it [...] his hand and read it, saying,
WHY, who will deny this?
If your mastership do allow this, and other learned men when they shall see it, I have m [...] heart's desire.
And do you hold no otherwise than is here written?
No verily, nor never did.
Write what he saith, Otherwise he holdeth not. So that was written.
It was told me also, that thou dost affirm, That Christ did not die effectually for all men.
Whatsoever hath been told you, it is not much material unto me. Let the tellers of such tales come before my face, and I trust to make them answer. For indeed I do believe that Christ did effectually die for all those that do effectually rep [...]nt and believe, and for no other. So that was written also.
Now, sir, what is Trew's faith of predestination? He believeth that all men are predest [...]ate, and that none shall damned, doth he not?
No forsooth, that he doth not.
How then?
Truly I think he doth believe as your mastership and the rest of the clergy do believe of predestination, that we are elected in respect of our good works, and so long elected as we do them, [...] no longer.
Write what he saith, That his fellow Tr [...]w believeth of predestination as the papists do believe.
Ah, master doctor, did I so term you? Seeing that this my confession shall come before the council, I pray you place my terms as reverently as I speak them.
Well, well, write that Trew is of the same faith as the catholics be.
I did not so call you nei [...]her, I wonder what you mean.
You said the clergy, did you not?
Yes forsooth did I. So then it was written of the clergy.
Now sir, what say you more?
Forsooth I have no further to say in this matter.
Well, Careless, I pray thee prove thyself a wise man, and do not cast away thy life wilfully.
Now the Lord he knoweth, good Mr. Doctor, I would full gladly live, so that I might do the same with a safe conscience. And your mastership shall right well perceive that I will be no wilful man, but in all things that I stand upon I will have sure ground.
Now the Lord knoweth good Ca [...]eless, that I would gladly make some means to preserve thy life. But thou speakest so much of the Lord, the Lord; wilt thou be co [...]tent to go with my lord Fitzwater into Ireland? Me [...]hinks thou art a handsome fellow, and would do the [...] a service there. What sayest thou?
Verily Mr. Doctor, whether I be in Ir [...]land, France, or Spain, or any place els [...], I am ready to do her grace the best servic [...] that I [...] ▪ with body, goods, and life, so long as it doth last.
That is honestly said▪ I promise [...] every man will not say so. How say you▪ Mr. Marshal? This man is meet for all manner of servic [...] [...] ▪ Indeed thou art worthy, Careless, to have the more favour.
Indeed, sir, I hope to be meet and ready unto a [...] things that [...] subject to do. And if her grace or [...] under her do require of me to do any thing [...] to Christ's religion, I am ready also to do my service in Smithfield for not observing it, [...] bed fellow and other worthy brethren have done, praised be God for them.
By my troth thou art as pleasant a fellow a [...] eve [...] I talked with of all the protestants, [...] cept [Page 286] it were Tomson. I am sorry that I must depart from thee so soon; but I have such business now, that I can tarry with thee no longer. Well, yet thou canst not deny, but you are at variance among yourselves in the King's-bench, and it is so throughout all your congregation: for you will not be a church.
No, master Doctor, that is no so. There is a thousand times more variety in opinions among your doctors, which you call of the catholic church, yea, and that in the sacrament, for which there is so much blood shed now-a-days, I mean of your latter doctors and new writers; as for the old, they agree wholly with us.
No, Careless, this is not so; there thou art deceived.
Verily it is so, master Doctor; I am not deceived therein any thing at all, as it hath been, and is evidently proved by such as God hath i [...]d [...]ed with great learning.
THE [...] he turned to the marshal, and whispered with him a while.
TURNING to me again▪ he said, Farewel, Care [...]s [...]: fo [...] I can [...]rry no longer with thee now, my business [...] such.
God be with you, my good master Doctor, the Lord give your mastership health of body and soul.
God have mercy, good Careless, and God keep thee from all errors; and give thee grace to do as well as I would wish myself.
I thank your good mastership: I pray God I may do always that which is acceptable in his sight. Whereunto they all said, [...]. And so I departed with a glad heart; God only have the whole praise, Amen.
IT appeareth by the examination of the said John Careless that he suffered two whole years imprisonment, having a wife and children. When he as in Coventry gaol, he was in such credit with the keeper, that upon his word he [...] out [...] in the peagant about the city with his compani [...], always returning punctually to prison ag [...] [...] hour appointed.
AFTER that, being brought to London, [...] indued with such patience and constant [...] that he longed for nothing more earnestly, than the promotion of dying in the fire for the [...] his faith: but it pleasing God to prevent him [...] d [...]ath in the prison, he was buried in the [...] dunghill.
WHILE he was prisoner in the King's-ben [...] ▪ [...] happened to be very much troubled i [...] [...] whereupon he wrote to Mr. Philpot, then in bishop Bonner's coal-house: upon occasion whereof, Mr. Philpot sent him an epistle of consolation, wh [...] [...] inserted before among Mr. Philpot's letters. [...] which epistle Mr. John Careless made the followi [...] answer.
LETTER I. From Mr. JOHN CARELESS, in answer to his [...] Epistle sent to him by Mr. JOHN PHILP [...]T.
A faithful friend is a strong defence; [...] findeth such a one, findeth a treasure.
A faithful friend hath no peer; the weight [...] gold and silver is not to be compared to the goodness of his faith.
A faithful friend is a medicine of Life, and the [...] that fear the Lord shall find him, Eccles. [...]i.
THE Father of mercy and God of all c [...]solation, comfort you with his eternal Spirit, my most dear and faithful loving friend, good Mr. Philpot, as you have comforted me by the mighty operation of the same; the everlasting God therefore be praised for ever, Amen.
AH, my dear heart, and most loving brother, if I should do nothing else day and nig [...]t, so long as the days of heaven do endure, but kneel on my knees, and read psalms, I can never be able to render unto God sufficient thanks, for his great mercy, fatherly kindness, and most loving compassion [...]xtended unto [Page 287] [...] most vile, sinful, wicked, and unworthy wretch. O that the Lord would open my mouth, and give [...] a thankful heart, that from the bottom of the same might flow his continual praise. O that my sinful flesh (which is the cause of sorrow) were [...] separated from me, that I might sing psalms of thanksgiving unto the Lord's name for ever; that with good Samuel's mother, I might continually record this noble verse following, which by the good experience I have found most true, praised be my God therefore.
"THE Lord▪ (saith that good woman) killeth and maketh alive; he bringeth down to hell, and fe [...]eth up again. Praised be the Lord for ever, y [...], and praised be his name for that he hath given me true experience and lively feeling of the same. Blessed be the Lord God, whose mercy endureth for ever, which hath not dealt with me according to my deser [...]s, nor destroyed me in his displeasure whe [...] I had justly deserved it. Oh, what reward shall I give again unto the Lord for all the great benefits that he hath done for my soul! I will gladly receive the cup of salvation at his hand, [...] will worship his name with prayer and with praise."
AH, my dear heart, yea most dear to me in the Lord, think not this sudden change in me to be some fickle fantasy of my foolish head, (as indeed some others would suspect it to be) for doubtless it is the marvellous doing of the Lord, most merciful unto me his most unworthy creature. God, for his great mercy's sake, give me grace to be more thankful unto him than I heretofore have been, and keep me that I never fall from his favour again.
AND now, my dear brother, and most blessed messenger of the Lord, whose beautiful feet have brought many glad tidings to my soul, what shall I do or say unto you, in the least part to recompense the fatherly affection and godly care that you continually keep for me? O that God would give me the spirit of fervent prayer, that I might yet that way supply some little part of my duty toward you. Ah, my true loving friend, how soon did you lay aside all other business, to make a sweet plaister for my wounded conscience, yea, and that out of a painful pair of stocks, which place must neede be uneasy to write in; but God hath brought you into a strait place, that you might set my soul at liberty. Out of your pinching and painful seat, you have plentifully poured your precious ointment, the sweet savour whereof hath greatly refreshed my tired soul. The Lord likewise refresh you, both body and soul, by pouring the oil of his gracious Spirit in your sweet heart.
AH, good Jeremy, hath Phassor put thee into the stocks? why, now thou hast the reward of a prophet. Thy glory never began to appear until now. I doubt not but shortly, instead of Ah [...]kam, the son of Shapham, JESUS the Son of the living God will come and deliver thee forth of the hands of all thine enemies, and also make good, against them and their antichristian synagogue, all the words that thou hast spoken in his name. The Lord hath made thee this day a strong defenced tower, an i [...]on pillar, and a brazen wall against the whole rabble of Antichrist: and though they fight against [...] ever so fiercely, yet shall they not [...] thee▪ for the Lord himself is with thee to help and deliver thee: and he will rid thee out of the [...] of the wicked, and will deliver thee out of the hand [...] of the tyrants. And in that you are not busy in casting pearls before swine, nor in giving the holy things unto dogs, you are much to be [...] in my simple judgment. And sure I [...] circumspect and modest behaviour hith [...]rto [...] been as much to God's glory, and to the shame and confusion of your enemies, as any men's doing [...] that are gone before you.
WHEREFORE my advice and most earnest [...] is, with all other of your loving friends, that you still keep that order with those blood-thirsty sheep-biters, bishops I should say, that you [...] begun. For though in conclusion they will surely have your blood, yet shall they come [...] it with shame enough, and to their perpetual [...] whil [...] the world doth endure. They would indeed condemn you in private, to darken God's glory, if it be: but Satan's thoughts are not unknown to [...] and the depth of his subtilty is by you well foreseen. Therefore let them do whatsoever God shall suffer them to do: for I know all things shall turn to you [...] benefit. Though you lie in the dark, sullied with [Page 288] the bishop's black coal-dust; yet shall you be shortly restored to the heavenly light, and be made as white as snow in Salmon, as the wings of a dove that is covered with silver wings, and her feathers like gold You know the vessel, before it is made bright is soiled with oil and other things, that it may scour the better.
O happy be you that you be now in the scouring house; for shortly you shall be set upon the celestial shelf as bright as angels, Therefore, my dear heart, I will now, according to your loving request, cast away all care, and rejoice with you, and praise God for you, and pray for you day and night; yea, I will now, with God's grace, sing psalms of praise and thanksgiving with you. For now my soul is turned to her old rest again, and hath taken a sweet nap in Christ's lap. I have cast my care upon the Lord, who careth for me, and will be careless, according to my name, in that respect you would have me. I will leave out my unseemly addition as long as I live▪ for it can take no place where true faith and hope i [...] resident. So soon as I had read your most godly and comfortable letter, my sorrows vanis [...]ed away as smoke in the wind, my spirit revived, and comfort came again, whereby I am sure the Spirit of God was the author of it.
O my good Mr. Philpot, which art a principal [...]t indeed filled with most precious liquor, as it appeareth by the plenteous pouring sorth of the same: O pot most happy, of the high Potter ordained to honour, which dost contain such heavenly treasure in the earthen vessel: O pot thrice happy, in whom Christ hath wrought a great miracle, altering thy [...], and turning water into wine, and that of the best, where [...]ut the master of the feast hath filled my cup so full, that I am become drunken in the joy of the Spirit through the same. When martyrdom shall break thee, O vessel of honour, I know the fragrant [...]avour of thy precious ointment will m [...]ch [...] the heavy hearts of Christ's true members, although the Judases will grudge and murmur at the same; yea, and burst out into words of s [...]ander, saying, It is but loss and waste.
BE not offended, dear heart, at my metaphorical speech; for I am disposed to be merry and with David to dance before the ark of the Lord: and though you play upon a pair of organs n [...] [...] comely or easy to the flesh, yet the sweet found [...] came from the same, causeth me thus to do. O that I were with you in body, as present I am in spirit, that I might sing all care away in Christ: for now the time of comfort is come. I hope [...] with you shortly, if all things happen right; [...] old friends of Coventry have put the council [...] remembrance of me, not six days ago, saying, [...] more worhty to be burned than any that was bur [...]ed yet. God's blessing on their hearts for their good report. God make me worthy of that dignity, and hasten the time that I may set forth his glory.
PRAY for me, dear heart, I beseech you, and desire all your company to do the same, and I will pra [...] God for you all, so long as I live. And now farewel in Christ, thou blessed of God's own mouth. I will for a time take my leave, but not my [...]. Blessed be the time that ever I came into [...] King's Bench, to be joined in love and fellowsh [...] with such dear children of the Lord. My go [...] brother Bradford shall not be dead while you [...] alive: for verily the spirit of him doth rest on y [...] in a most ample manner. Your letters of comfort unto me in each point do agree, as though the o [...] were a copy of the other. He hath planted in [...] and you do water, the Lord give good incre [...]. My dear brethren and fellow-prisoners here, [...] them humbly and heartily commended unto you [...] your company, mourning for your misery, but yet rejoicing for your plenteous consolation and comfort in Christ. We are all c [...]earsm and merry [...] our cross, and do lack no necessaries, [...] God for his providence and great mercy towards [...] for evermore, Amen.
LETTER II. From Mr. JOHN CARELESS to his Wife.
AS by the great mercy of God, at the time of his good will and providence appointed, my dearly beloved wife, you and I were joined together in the holy and christian state of godly matrimony, as well to our great joy and comfort in Christ, as also to the increase of his blessed church and faithful congregation, by having lawful children by and in [Page 289] the same, with which God of his mercy hath blessed us, praised be his name therefore: even so now by his merciful will and divine ordinance, the time is come (so far as I can perceive) wherein he will, for his glory and our eternal comfort, dissolve the same, and separate us asunder again for a time. Wherefore I thought it good, yea and my bounden duty, by this simple letter to provoke, stir, and admonish you, to behave yourself in all your doings, sayings, and thoughts, most thankfully unto our good God for the same. And therefore, my dear wife, as you have heartily rejoiced in the Lord, and oftentimes given God thanks for his goodness, in bringing us together in his holy ordinance: even so now I desire you, when this time of our separation shall come, to rejoice with me in the Lord, and to give him most hearty thanks, that he hath (to his glory and our endless advantage) separated us again for a little time, and hath mercifully taken me unto himself, out of this miserable world into his celestial kingdom; believing and hoping also assuredly, that God of his goodness, for his Son Christ's sake, will shortly bring you, and your dear children, thither to me, that we may most joyfully together sing praises unto his glorious name for ever. And yet once again I desire you, for the love of God, and as ever you loved me, to rejoice with me, and to give God continual thanks for doing his most merciful will upon me.
I hear say, that you do oftentimes repeat this godly saying, "The Lord's will be fulfilled." Doubtless it rejoiceth my poor heart to hear that report of you; and for the Lord's sake use that godly prayer continually, teach your children and family to say the same day and night: and not only say it with your tongue [...] ▪ but also with your heart and mind, and joyfull [...] submit your will to God's will in very deed, knowing and believing assuredly, that nothing shall come to you or any of your's, otherwise than it shall be his almighty and fatherly good will and pleasure and for your eternal comfort and advantage. Which thing to be most true and certain, Christ testifieth in his holy gospel, saying, "Are not two little sparrows sold for a farthing, and yet not one of them shall perish without the will of our heavenly Father?" And he concludeth, saying, "Fear not ye therefore, for ye are better than many sparrows." As though he should have said, If God have such respect and care for a poor sparrow, which is not worth one farthing, that it shall not be taken in the lime-twig, net, or pitfal, unless it be his good will and pleasure; you may be well assured, that not one of you (whom he so dearly loveth, that he hath given his only dear Son for you) shall perish, or depart out of this miserable life, without his almighty good will and pleasure.
THEREFORE, dear wife put your trust and confidence wholly and only in him, and ever pray that his will be fulfilled, and not your's, except it be agreeable to his will; which I pray God it may ever be, Amen. And as for worldly things, take you no care, but be you well assured the Lord, your dear God and Father, will not see you and your's lack, if you continue in his love and childly fear, and keep a clear conscience from all kind of idolatry, superstition, and wickedness, as my trust is that you will do, although it be with the loss and danger of this temporal life. And, good Margaret, fear not them that can kill the body (and yet can they not do that until God give them leave), but fear to displease him that can kill both body and soul, and c [...]st them into hell fire. Let not the remembrance of your children keep you from God. The Lord himself will be a father and a mother, better than ever you or I could have been unto them. He himself will do all things necessary for them. He hath given his angels charge over them, therefore commit them unto him. But if you may live with a clear conscience, (for else I would not have you to live) and see the bringing up of your children yourself, look that you nurture them in the fear of God, and keep them far from idolatry, superstition, and other kind of wickedness; and for God's sake help them to some learning if it be possible, that they may increase in virtue and godly knowledge, which shall be a better dowry to marry them withal, than any worldly substance; and when they are come to age, provide them such husbands as fear God, and love his holy word. I charge you take heed that you match them not with papists; and if you live and marry again yourself (which thing I would wish you to do if need require, or else not), good wife take [Page 290] heed how you bestow yourself, that you and my poor children be not compelled to wickedness. But if you shall be well able to live God's true widow, I would counsel you to live so still, for the more quietness of yourself and your poor children. Take heed Margaret, and play the wise woman's part. You have warning by others, if you will take an example. And thus I commit you and my sweet children unto God's most merciful defence. The blessing of God be with you, and God send us a merry meeting together in heaven, Farewel in Christ, farewel mine own dear hearts all. Pray pray.
LETTER III. From Mr. JOHN CARELESS to Mr. BRADFORD.
THE peace of God in Jesus Christ▪ the eternal comfort of his sweet Spirit, which hath surely sealed you unto eternal salvation, be with you, and strengthen you in your journey towards the celestial Jesusalem (my dear friend, and most faithful brother Mr. Bradford), to the setting forth of God's glory, and to your eternal joy in Christ, Amen.
EVER since that good Mr. Philpot shewed me your last latter, my dear heart in the Lord, I have continued in great heaviness and perplexity; not for any hurt or discommodity that I can perceive coming towards you, unto whom doubtless death is made life and great felicity, but for the great loss that God's church here in England shall sustain by the taking away of so godly, worthy, and necessary an instrument as the Lord hath made you to be. O that my life, and a thousand more of such wretched lives might go for your's. O why doth God suffer me and such caterpillers to live, that can do nothing but consume the alms of the church, and take away you, so worthy a workman and labourer in the Lord's vineyard? But woe be to our sins and great unthankfulness, which is the greatest cause of the taking away such worthy instruments of God, as should set forth his glory, and instruct his people. If we had been thankful unto God for the good ministers of his word, we had not been so soon deprived both of it and them. The Lord forgive our great ingratitude and sins, and give us true repentance and faith, and hold his hand of mercy over us, for his dear son Christ's sake. Take not away all thy true preachers out of this realm, O Lord, but leave us a seed, lest Eng [...]nd be made like to Sodom and Gomorrah, when thy true Lots be gone.
BUT why go I about to mingle your mirth with my mourning and your just joy with my deserved sorrow? If I lov [...] you indeed, as I have pretended, I should surely rejoice with you most heartily, and praise God on your behalf from the very bottom of my heart. I should praise God day and night for your excellent election in and through his great mercy, and should give him most humble thanks for your vocation by his gospel, and your true knowledge in the same; I should earnestly praise him for your sweet justification, whereof you a [...] most certain by God's grace and Spirit, and should instantly pray unto him for your glorification, which sha [...]l shortly ensue; should rejoice and be glad to see you so dignified by the crown of martyrdom, and to be appointed to that honour, to testify his truth, and to seal it with your blood; I should highly extol the Lord, who hath given you a glorious victory over all your enemies, visible and invisible, and hath given you grace and strength to finish the tour that you have begun to build. Finally, if I loved you, I should most heartily rejoice and be glad to see you delivered from this body of sin, and vile prison of the flesh, and brought into that heavenly tabernacle where you shall be safely kept, and never offend him more.
THIS and much more should I do, if I had a good heart towards God, or you his dear child. But, alas! I am an hypocrite, and do seek nothing but mine own advantage; I would have God's everlasting providence give place to my peevish will and purpose, although it were to the hindrance of his glory, and your sweet comfort. God forgive me my horrible ingratitude, sins and offences against him: and, good brother, do you forgive me my negl [...]gence and unthankfulness towards you, and henceforth I promise you, I will put my will to God's will, and pray that the same may be fulfilled in you▪ as long as you be on this earth; and when you are taken hence, I will most heartily praise the Lord for you, so long as I have my being in this [Page 291] world. Ah, my dear heart, now I must take my leave of you, and as I think, my last farewel in this life, but in the life to come I am right well assured we shall merrily meet together, and that shortly I trust. And in taking of my leave of you, my dear heart in the Lord, I shall desire you faithfully to remember all the sweet messages that the Lord our good God and most dear loving Father hath sent you by me his most unworthy servant, which as they ar [...] most true, so shall they be most truly accomplished upon you eternally; and for the more assurance and certificate thereof to your godly conscience, he hath commanded me to repeat the same unto you again, in his own name and word.
THEREFORE now give ear and faithful credence, Hearken, O ye heavens, and thou earth give ear, and bear me witness at the great day, that I do here faithfully and truly the Lord's message unto his dear servant, his singularly beloved and elect child, John Bradford. John Bradford thou art a man so specially beloved of God, I pronounce and testify unto thee in the word and name of the Lord Jehovah, that all thy sins, whatsoever they be, be they ever so many, so grievous, or so great, be fully and freely pardoned, released, and forgiven thee, by the mercy of God in Jesus Christ, thine only Lord and sweet Saviour, in whom thou dost undoubtedly believe. Christ hath cleansed thee with his blood, and cloathed thee with his righteousness, and hath made thee in the sight of God his Father, without spot or wrinkle; so that when the fire doth its appointed office, thou shalt be received (as a sweet burnt sacrifice) into heaven, where thou shalt joyfully remain in God's presence forever, as the true inheritor of his everlasting kingdom, unto which thou wast undoubtedly predestinate and ordained by the Lord's infallible purpose and decree, before the foundation of the world was laid. And that this is most true that I have said, I call the whole Trinity, the Almighty and Eternal Majesty of God the Father, the Son, and the holy Ghost, to my record at this present; whom I humbly beseech to confirm and establ [...]sh in thee the true and lively feeling of the same, Amen.
NOW with a merry heart and joyful spiri [...] ▪ something mixed with lawful tears, I take my farewel of you, my own dear brother in the Lord, who will send us shortly a merry meeting in his kingdom, that we may both sing prais [...]s together unto him with his holy angels and blessed spirits for ever and ever. Farewel thou blessed in the Lord, farewel in Christ, depart unto thy rest in the Lord; and pray for me for God's sake.
AS I had made an end of this simple letter, I heard some comfort both of good Mr. Philpot's servant and your's; but, alas, I do scarcely believe them. Well, I will hope in God, and pray all night that God will send me some comfort to morrow, let me near four words of comfort from you, for God's sake. The blessing of God be with you now and forever▪ Amen.
IN reading this letter of John Careless to Mr. Bradford above prefixed, wherein he maketh so much mention of a certain letter of his sent to him, and of the exceeding great consolation he received of the same, thou wilt wish, peradventure (good loving reader) in thy mind, to have some sight also of the said letter of Mr. Bradford; wherefore to satisfy thy desire, or rather to prevent thy petition, I have hereunto annexed the same▪ to the intent thou mayest not only understand the contents thereof, but also receive fruit thereof to thy consolation likewise. The purport of the letter here followeth.
LETTER IV. From Mr. BRADFORD to Mr. CARELESS.
ALMIGHTY God our dear Father, through and for the merits of his dearly beloved Son Jesus Christ, be merciful unto us, pardon us our offences, and under the wings of his mercy protect us from all evil, from henceforth and for ever, Amen.
DEAR brother Careless, I heartily pray you to [Page 292] to God for me, for the pardon of manifold sins and most grievous offences, which need no other demonstration unto you than this, namely, that I have behaved myself so negligently in answering your godly triple letters, which are three witnesses against me. God lay no [...] them, nor any other to my charge to condemnation, though to correction, not my will, but his be done. Concerning your request of absolution, my dearest brother, what shall I say, but even as truth is? that the Lord of all mercy, and Father of all comfort, through the merits and mediation of his dear Son thy only Lord and Saviour, hath clearly remitted and pardoned all thy offences whatsoever they be, that ever hitherto thou hast committed against his majesty: and therefore he hath given to thee as to his child, dear brother, John Careless, in token that thy sins are pardoned; he (I say) hath given thee a penitent and believing heart, that is, a heart which desireth to repent and believe: for such a one is taken of him, he accepting the will for the deed, for a penitent and believing heart indeed.
WHEREFORE, my good brother, be merry, glad, and of good cheer, for the Lord hath taken away thy sins; thou shalt not die. Go thy ways; the Lord hath put away thy sins. The East is not so far from the West, as the Lord hath now put thy sins from thee. Look how high the heavens are in comparison of the earth, so far hath his mercy prevailed towards thee his dear child, Jo [...] Careless, through Christ the beloved. Say therefore with David, Praise the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me praise his holy name: for he hath forgiven thee all thy sins; as truly he hath. And hereof I desire you to be a witness. God make me worthy to hear from you the like true message for myself. Mine own dearly beloved, you have cause to thank God most heartily that he hath given you such repentance and faith; the Lord increase the same in, and me a most miserable wretch, whose heart is harder than an adamant stone, or else I could not thus long have stayed from writing unto you. If I live and may, I purpose and promise you to make amends. Pray for me, my most dear brother, I heartily beseech you, and forgive me my long silence. God our father be with us for ever, Amen.
LETTER V. From JOHN Careless to his most dear and faithful Brethren in Newgate, condemned to die for the Testimony of God's everlasting Truth.
THE everlasting peace of God in Jesus Christ, the continual joy, strength and comfort of his most pure, holy, and mighty Spirit, with the increase of faith and lively feeling of his eternal mercy, be with you, my most dear and faithful loving brother Tyms, and with all the rest of my dear hearts in the Lord, your faithful fellow-soldiers, and most constant companions in bonds, yea of men condemned most cruelly for the sincere testimony of God's everlasting truth, to the full finishing of that good work, which he hath so graciously begun in you all, that the same may be to his glory, the advantage of his poor afflicted church, and to your everlasting comfort in him, Amen.
AH, my most sweet and loving brethren, and dearest hearts in the Lord, what shall I say, or how shall I write unto you, in the least point or part to utter the great joy that my poor heart hath conceived in God, through the most godly example of your constancy and sincere confession of Christ's verity? Truly my tongue cannot declare, nor my tongue express the abundance of spiritual mirth and gladness, that my mind and inward man hath felt, ever since I heard of your hearty boldness and modest behaviour before that bloody butcher, in the time of all your crafty examinations, especially at your cruel condemnation, in their cursed consistory place. Blessed be God the Father of all mercy, and praised be his name, for that he hath so graciously performed upon you his dear darlings, his most sweet and comfortable promises, in not only giving you the continual aid, strength, and comfort of his Holy and Mighty Spirit to the faithful confession of his Christ, for whose cause (O most happy man!) you are condemned to die: but also in giving you such a mouth and wisdom, as all your wicked enemies were not able to resist, but were fain to cry, Peace, peace, and not suffer you to speak [...] As truly as God liveth, my dear brethren, this is not only unto you a most evident probation that God is on your side, and a sure certainty of yo [...] everlasting salvatio [...] i [...] him but also to your cruel adversaries, or rather God's cursed [Page 293] enemies, a plain demonstration of their just eternal woe and damnati [...]n, which they shall be full sure shortly to feel, when ye shall full sweetly possess the place of felicity and pleasure prepared for you from the beginning.
THEREFORE, my dearly beloved, cease not so long as ye be in this life, to praise the Lord with a lusty courage, for that of his great mercy and infinite goodness he hath vouched you worthy of this great dignity, to suffer for his sake, not only the loss of goods, wife, and children, and long imprisonment, cruel oppression, &c. but also the very deprivation of this mortal life, with the great disso [...]ution of your bodies in the fire; which is the greatest promotion that God can bring you or any unto in this vale of misery; yea, so great an honour, as the highest angel in heaven is not permitted to have; and yet hath the Lord for his dear Son Christ's sake reputed you worthy of the same, yea, and that before me and many others, who have both long looked and longed for the same.
AH, my most dear brother Tyms, whose time resteth altogether in the hands of the Lord, in a full happy time camest thou into this troublesome world, but in a much more blessed hour shalt thou depart out of the same: so that the sweet saying of Solomon, or rather of the Holy Ghost, shall be full well verified upon thee, yea, and all thy faithful fellows, "Better is the day of death (saith he) than the day of birth," Eccles. vii. This saying cannot be verified upon every man, but upon thee, and such as thou art, whose death is most precious before God, and full dear shall your blood be in his sight. Blessed be God for thee, my dear brother Tyms, and bessed be God again that I ever knew thee, for in a most happy time I came first into thy company. Pray for me, dear brother, pray for me, that God will once vouchsafe me worty of that great dignity whereunto he hath brought you.
AH, my loving brother Drakes, whose soul now draweth nigh unto God, of whom ye have received the same, full glad may you be that God ever gave you a life to leave for his sake: full w [...]ll will he restore it to you ag [...]in in a thousand fold more glorious. Praise God, good brother, as you have a great cause, and pray for me, I beseech you, who am so unworthy (so great are my sins) of that great dignity whereunto the Lord hath called you and the rest of your godly brethren, whom I beseech you to comfort in the Lord, as you can full well; praised be God for his gifts, which you have heartily applied to the setting forth of his glory, and the profit of his poor afflicted church. Which thing shall surely redound to your everlasting joy and comfort, as you shall most effectually feel before it is long, though the wicked of the world judge far otherwise.
AH, mine own hearts, and most dearly beloved brethren, Cavel, Ambrose and both the Spurges; blessed be the Lord on your behalf, and praised be his name, who [...] you such a glorious victory; full valiant [...] you shewed yourselves in the Lord's fight, and as faithful in your painful service. Faint not, but go on forward as you have most godly begun, for great shall your reward be at the end of this your travail. Ah, my good faithful brethren all, what shall I say, or what shall I write unto you? But even the same that good Elizabeth did say to her godly kinswoman Mary, the blessed mother of Christ, "Happy art thou (quoth that good woman) which hast believed: for all things which the Lord hath spoken to thee, shall be fulfi [...]led," Luke i. So I say to you, my dear hearts in the Lord, happy are ye all, yea twice happy shall ye be for evermore, because ye have stedfastly believed the most sweet promises which God the Father hath made unto you with his own mouth, in that he hath promised you (who are the faithful seed of the believing Abraham) that ye shall be blessed for ever, world without end. The promises of God your most sweet Father as ye do believe, so do ye bear record that God is true. The testimony whereof ye have full worthily borne to the world, and shortly will full surely seal the same with your blood, yea even to-morrow, as I understand.
O constant christians! O valiant soldiers of the high captain Jesus Christ! who for your sake hath conquered the devil, death, sin and hell, and hath given you full victory over them for evermore. O worthy witnesses, and most glorious martyrs, whose invincible faith hath overcome that proud, sturdy, bragging prince of the world, and all his wicked [Page 294] army, ever whom ye shall shortly triumph for evermore. Ah, my sweet hearts, the everlasting treasures are full surely laid up for you in heaven. The never fading and most glorious crown of victory is already made and prepared for you, to be shortly clapt upon all your happy heads. The holy angels of your heavenly Father are already appointed to conduct your sweet souls into Abraham's bosom. All the heavenly host rejoiceth already, for that they shall shortly receive you with joy and felicity into their blessed fellowship, Selah.
REJOICE with double joy, and be glad, my dear brethren, for doubtless ye have more cause than can be expressed. But, alas, I that for my sins am left behind, may lie and lament with the holy prophet, saying, "Woe is me that the days of my joyful rest are prolonged." Ah, cursed Satan, which hath caused me so sore to offend my most dear and loving Father, whereby mine exile and banishment is so much prolonged. O Christ, my dear advocate, pacify thy Father's wrath which I have justly deserved, that he may take me home to him in his sweet mercy. O that I might now come home unto thee with thy blessed brethren. Well, thy will, O Lord, be effectually fulfilled, for it alone is good, and turneth all things to the best, for such as thou in thy mercy hast chosen.
AND now farewel, my dear hearts, most h [...]ppy in the Lord: I trust in my good God, yet shortly to see you in the celestial city, whereof undoubtedly the Lord hath already made you free citizens. Though you be yet with us for a little time, your very home is in heaven, where your treasure doth remain with your sweet Lord and Redeemer Jesus Christ, whose calling you have heard with the ears of your hearts, and therefore ye shall never come into judgment, but pass from death to life. Your sins shall never more be remembered, be they ever so many, so grievous, or so great: for your Saviour hath cast them all into the bottom of the sea; he hath removed them from you, as far as the East is from the West, and his mercy hath much more prevailed over you, than is distance between heaven and earth; and hath given you for everlasting possession of the same, all his holiness, righteousness, and justification, yea, and the Holy Ghost into your hearts, wherewith ye are sealed unto the day of redempti [...]n, to certify you of your eternal election, and that ye are hi [...] true adopted sons, whereby ye may boldly cry unto God, Abba, dear Father, for evermore; so that now no creature in heaven, earth nor hell, shall be able to accuse you before the throne of the heavenly king. Satan is now cast out from you; he hims [...]lf is judged, and ha [...] at no part in you. He will once more bite you by the he [...]l, and then he hath done, for that time you will squeeze his head through your own good Christ, and so have your final victory for evermore. In j [...]yful triumph whereof ye shall sweetly ascend into the place of eternal rest, whither your eldest brother Christ is gone before you to take possession for you, and to prepare your place under the holy altar, with Cranmer, Latimer, Ridley, Rogers, Hooper, Saunders, Farrar, Taylor, Bradford, Philpot, with many others, who will be full glad of your coming, to see six more of their appointed number, that their blood may so much the sooner be revenged on them that dwell on the earth.
THUS I make an end, committing you all to God's most merciful defence, whose quarrel ye have defended, whose cause ye have promoted, whose glory ye have set forth, and whose name ye have constantly confessed. Farewel for a while, my dear hearts in the Lord, I will make as much haste after you as I can. All our dear brethren salute you. They pray for you, and praise God for you continually. "Blessed be the dead that die in the Lord, for they rest from their labours, saith the Holy Ghost, and their works follow them,"
YE heard before the letter of Thomas Whittle, written to John Careless, wherein he yieldeth great thanks unto him for the singular joy and consolation received by his letters. A copy of which is here [...].
LETTER VI. From JOHN CARELESS, to Mr. GREEN, Mr. WHITTLE, and certain other Prisoners in Newgate, condemned, and ready to be burnt for the Testimony of our Lord Jesus.
THE everlasting peace in Jesus Christ, the continual comfort of his most pure and Holy Spirit, be with you, my dear and faithful brethren and sisters in Newgate, the Lord's appointed sheep unto the slaughter, to the good performance of the great and noble work of the Lord, which he hath so graciously begun in you all, that the same may redound to the setting forth of his glory, the advan [...]tage of his church, and to your own everlasting comfort in him. So be it.
AH, my dear hearts, and most faithful brethren and sisters in the Lord, what high lauds and praise, yea, what humble and continual thanks am I bound to give to God our Father for you and on your most happy behalf, who so mightily hath magnified himself in you thus far forth, in giving you his holy and mighty Spirit, to the constant confessing of Christ's verity, even to the cruel condemnation, and I doubt not but he will do the same to the death. O happy and blessed are you that ever you were born, that the Lord will vouch you worthy of this great dignity to die for his sake. Doubtless it is the greatest honor that God can give you in this life. Yea, if they be so blessed of God that die in the Lord, as the Holy Ghost saith they be; how much more blessed and happy are they that die not only in the Lord, but also for the Lord. O that it were the good will of God, that the good hour were now come, that I might go with you. Ah that my sins made me not unworthy of such an excellent dignity.
BE thankful, dear hearts be thankful and rejoice in the Lord: for mighty is his mercy towards you, and great is your reward in heaven, which you like faithful persons have plucked to you with a godly violence of an in [...]incible faith. O worthy warriors of the most high captain: O constant confessors of the everlastiny verity! How glorious a crown of victory shall you shortly receive, which is prepared for all such as do continue to the end! O you sweet saints of the Lord, how precious shall your death be in his sight! O how dear are your souls to your Redeemer, in whose hand they shall most joyfully rest, and the pains of death shall never touch you! O how blessed shall you be, when Christ shall appear, at which time you shall receive your bodies again full of immortality! O how joyful shall you be when Christ, according to his promise, shall acknowledge you before his Father and his holy angels, as you have most constantly confessed him to be your Lord and only Saviour before men.
O blessed Green, thou meek and loving lamb of the Lord, how happy art thou to be appointed to die for his sake! Fresh and green shalt thou be in the house of the Lord, and thy fruits shall never wither nor decay. Although thou here go forth sowing thy good fruit with tears, the time shall come that thou shalt reap with joy and gladness the fruits of everlasting life, and that without ceasing. Be merry therefore and fear not, for it is thy Father's will to give thee a kingdom whereunto he hath chosen thee before the foundations of the world were laid.
O happy minister, thou man of God, how glad mayst thou be of God's most gracious favour, which hath prevented thee in the day of thy trial! O happy Peter, whose part thou hast well played; therefore thy reward and portion shall be like unto his. Now hast thou good experience of man's infirmity, but much more proof and taste, yea sense and feeling of God's abundant bottomless mercy. Although Satan desired to sift thee, yet Christ thy good captain prayed that thy faith should not fail. God's strength is made perfect by thy weakness, and his grace is sufficient for thee his dear child. Thine example did so encourge and strengthen thy poor brethren, that God is every way glorified by thee, and shortly will he glorify thee with himself, with that glory which he hath prepared for thee his elect darling before the world was made. Therefore rejoice and be glad, for thou hast good occasion, in finding such favour in his sight.
THIS is most true, O my other brethren, whom I do not know, neither have I heard much of you; [Page 296] happy are you that ever you were born, and blessed be our God who hath given you such victory over the bloody beast; shortly shall you be clothed in white garments, and fine robes of righteousness, and so shall you follow the Lamb on Mount Sion with new songs of mirth and melody, for your delivery from Satan's power and tyranny. God for evermore be blessed for you, and strengthen you to the end, as I doubt not but he will; for he never failed them that put their trust in him.
O my dear and faithful sister Joan Warne, what shall I say to thee? Thy trial hath been great; thy victory in Christ hath been notable. Thou hast overcome many a sharp shower and storm. Shortly shalt thou arrive at the haven of quiet rest, and receive the reward due to a constant martyr. Thou shalt go home to thy heavenly Father, and possess for ever the inheritance which Christ hath purchased for thee, where thy earthly parents be still looking for thee, who have triumphed over Antichrist most victoriously. O blessed parents of happy children, who have shewn such an example as the like hath been seldom seen! I salute thee, dear sister of like constant mind, whose constant example is worthy of continual memory. Praised be God for you mine own sweet sisters, who hath made you play such wise virgins' parts. He hath plentifully poured the oil of his Spirit into the lamp of your faith, so that the light thereof shall never be extinct. You shall enter with your bridegroom into everlasting joy, whereunto you were chosen in him from the beginning.
O my dear brethern and sisters, you blessed saints of the Lord, how much, and how deeply am I bound to praise God for you both day and ni [...]ht. Pray, pray for me, my dear hearts, for the tender mercy of God, that I may be made worthy to fol [...]low your steps. O that I had run the race of my life as far as you have done your's, and were as nigh my journey's end as you are to your's. But, alas, I lie like the lame man at the pool's side by Solomon's porch, and every man goeth into the place of health before me. But God will appoint m [...] o [...], one day to put me in. I trust my lord of London's coal house is empty, and all his officers idle. Therefore they must shortly fetch more she [...]p to the shambles; for he is the common slaughter-slave of all England. But happy are you that are passed through the pikes, and delivered out of his hands, and from all the angels of the darkness of this world, which long tempted you in the wilderness of the same; but now shall the angels of God come and minister unto you; for they are your servants to hold you up in their hands, that you shall not hurt your feet, no nor one hair of your head shall perish. They shall carry you up to heaven in a fiery chariot, though you leave your mantle behind you for a time, until God restore the same again in a more ample and glorious manner.
THUS in haste, as it doth appear, I am constrained to make an end, committing you all to God's most merciful defence, who ever have you in his blessed keeping, desiring you all to remember me in your godly faithful prayers, as I will not forget you in mine, by God's grace. The blessing of God be with you all, my dear brethren and sisters. All our brethren and fellow prisoners here have them most heartily commended unto you, and pray for you without ceasing. God send us a merry meeting in his kingdom, Amen.
LETTER VII. From JOHN CARELESS to his dear and faithful Brother, WILLIAM TYMS, Prisoner in Newgate.
THE everlasting peace of God in Jesus Christ, with the continual joy, comfort, and strength of his sweet Spirit, be multiplied, and daily more and more increased in your good heart (my most faithful and dear brother Tyms), to the full quieting of your conscience, and beating back all the fiery darts of the wicked, that you may shortly receive the glorious crown of victory, and in the same triumph over all your enemies, for evermore, Amen.
I cannot express the exceeding great joy and consolation of my poor heart, considering the marvellous works of God most graciously wrought upon [Page 297] you, not only in proving you and trying your faith by his great and huge crosses both inwardly and outwardly, but also in giving you so great consolation and const [...]ncy in the mi [...]st of the same. Faithful is God and true of his promises, who hath said, "That he will never suffer his chosen children to be tempted a [...]ove their strength, but in the midst of their temptation will make an out scape for them," by such means as may make to his glory and their everlasting consolation. My dea [...] he [...]rt, great cause have you to be of good comfort; I see in you as lively a token of God's everlasting love and favour in Jesus Christ, as ever I perceived in any man. In respect whereof, I do even in my heart love, honour, and reverence you, beseeching God for his glorious name's sake, in the bowels and blood of our Lord and only Saviour Jesus Christ, to finish his good work in you, as I doubt not but he will do, according to his infallible promises; yea, I am well assured thereof, forasmuch as you have so effectually received his Holy Spirit into your heart, as a pledge and a sure seal of your eternal redemption, and a testimony of your adoption in Christ Jesus. For which cause Satan so sore envieth you, that he hath now bent all his fierce ordnance against you, thinking thereby utterly to destroy the invincible fort of your faith, founded most firmly upon the the immoveable rock Christ, against which neither the devil, sin, nor hell-gates shall ever prevail.
THEREFORE, mine own bowels in the Lord, be not discomforted for this your conflict, which doubtless shall greatly increase your crown of glory, triumph, and victory; but take a good heart unto you, and buckle boldly with Satan, both in himself and his subtle members. It is the very divine ordinance of God, that all his regenerate people shall be tempted, proved, and tried, as we see by the example of our Saviour Christ; who [...] as soon as he was baptized, was straitways led by the Holy Ghost into the wilderness, there to be tempted of the devil. But there got he such a glorious victory over Satan, that he could never since finally prevail against any of his poor members, but in every assault that he mak [...]th, either inwardly or outwardly g [...]teth a soil, and taketh shame: so that now he rageth with all the rage possible, especially because he knoweth his t [...]me is but short. St. James testifieth that he is but a very coward, that he will soon flee if he be f [...]ithfully resisted [...] And as for his tempting tools, the Lord hath made them manifest unto us, so that he cannot dec [...]ive us though he assault us [...] for as St. Paul saith, "his thoughts are unknown to us," as it doth in you largely appear, praised be the Lord's name therefore.
YOU see, dear brother, that now to molest you and such as you are, that be even passing from this vale of misery, he hath but two ways or two pieces of ordnance to shoot at you, with which he cannot hurt you, because you have two bulwarks to defend you. The first of these two terrible guns that Satan hath shot at you, is the very same that he continually shooteth at me, that is to say, fear and infidelity; for the ugliness of death and horror of my sins, which be so many, grievous, and great. But this pellet is easily put away with the sure shield of faith, in the most precious death and bloodshedding of our dear Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, whom the Father hath given unto us wholly to be our's for evermore, and with him hath given us all things, as St. Paul saith; so that though we be ever so great sinners, yet Christ is made unto us holiness, righteousness, and justification. He hath clothed us with all his merits, mercies, and most sweet sufferings, and hath taken unto him all our misery, wretchedness, sin, and infirmity. So that if any should now be condemned for the same, it must needs be Jesus Christ, which hath taken them upon him. But indeed he hath made satisfaction for them to the uttermost jot; so that for his sake they shall never be imputed to us, if they were a thousand times as many as they are. This do you most effectually feel and know (dear brother) a great deal better than I can tell you, blessed be God ther [...]fore.
And now Satan, seeing that he cannot prevail with his boisterous battery against this bulwark of faith, which doth so quench all his fiery darts, that they can do you no harm, but rather do you good service to cast you down, under the mighty hand of God, that he may take you up by his holy gr [...]ce and power, and so you may render him all the glory by Jesus Christ (which thing the enemy can in no wise abide), therefore he shooteth off his other piece [Page 298] most pestilent, to provoke you to some part of your trust and confidence in yourself, and in your own holiness and righteousness, that you might that way rob God of his glory, and Christ of the honour and dignity of his death.
BUT blessed be the Lord God, you have also a full strong bulwark to beat back this p [...]stiferous pellet also, even the pure law of God, which proveth the best of us all damnable sinners in the sight of God, if he would [...]nter into judgment with us according to the severity of the same, and that even our best works are polluted and defiled in such sort as the prophet describeth them. With which manner of speaking our free-will pharisees are much offended; for it felleth all men's righteousness to the ground (I had like to have said to the bottom of hell), and extolleth only the righteousness of Jesus Christ, which is allowed before God, and is freely given to all those that firmly believe, as blessed be God you [...]o.
AH, my good brother Tyms, Satan hath put his hand in a wrong box when he beginneth to tempt you either to vain glory or mistrust; for you are an old beaten soldier, and have had good experience of these kinds of temptations, both by yourself and others, whom you know were well beloved of God. Be of good cheer therefore, dear heart, be of good cheer, for now Satan hath wrought all his malice, he hath done all that he can, and hath shot off his last pieces, wherewith he had thought to have done most mischief; but now he seeth he cannot prevail (the strong tower of our faith being so invincible), he will pluck up all his tents, and get him to some other place to practise the same assaults, and then will the angels of God come and minister unto you the most sweet and heavenly consolations of the Holy Ghost. To him therefore who is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we can desire or think, I do most heartily commit you, with all the rest of your godly fellow prisoners, who comfort, strengthen, and defend you with his grace and mighty operation of his Holy Spirit, as he hath hitherto done, that you having a most glorious victory over the subtle serpent and all his wicked seed, may also receive the crown of glory and immortality prepared for you before the foundations of the world were laid, and is so surely kept for you in the hands of him whose promise is infallible, [...] the devil, sin, death, or hell, shall never be able [...] deprive you of the same. The blessing of Go [...] be with you now and for ever more, Amen. [...] for me.
LETTER VIII. From JOHN CARELESS to his dear and faithful Brother, AGUSTINE BERNHER.
THE peace of God in Jesus Christ, the help, comfort, and assistance of his Eternal Spirit, be with you, my dear and faithful brother Augustine, and with all the rest of my good brethren and sisters of the houses of Baxterley and Mance [...] (which mourn for the misery of God's people), to your everlasting consolation in him, Amen.
RIGHT glad I am to hear (my dear and faithful brother Augustine) that God of his great mercy and infinite goodness hath yet so graciously delivered and preserved you out of the enemies hands, beseeching Almighty God also from the bottom of my heart, to be your continual defence unto the end, as hitherto he hath most graciously been, that you may live and die both to God's glory, the advantage of his church, and to the increase of your own everlasting joy and comfort in him.
KNOW you, dear brother, that I have received your letter, for which I heartily thank you. Indeed I think it very short, although it seemeth something sharply to rebuke in the beginning, for the breach of my promise in not writing to you this long time. Well, brother, I am content to bear it with patience, considering that you are troubled otherwise (the Lord comfort you and all heavy hearts); neither will I spend ink and paper for my purgation in this point. God knoweth whether I be so mindless of my promise as it appeareth in your sight I am. You request I will truly perform to the uttermost of my power, as gladly as any poor wretch shall do in the world, and I thank God I have done no less of a long time. And as my poor prayer shall be a handmaid to wait upon you which way soever you [Page 299] ride or go; so I beseech you that my simple counsel may take some place in you, in this time of your pilgrimage, which you pass in no small peri [...]. God keep and preserve you for his name's sake.
I do not disallow, but much praise and commend hearty boldness in discharging your conscience, when any one of God's people needeth your help in any point. But yet I would not have you thrust yourself in danger, when you can do them no good, or leastwise when they may well enough spare that good you would do them: for if you shall then chance to be taken, you shall not only be no comfort unto them, but also a great discomfort, adding sorrow unto their sorrow.
I do not persuade you to absent yourself from any place where your presence of necessity is requir [...]d; for in all such places I know, God will preserve you as he hath hitherto wonderfully done, praised therefore be his name: or if it shall please him to permit you in any such place to be taken, I know he will most sweetly comfort your conscience with this consideration, that it is the very providence and appointment of God, that you should there and then be taken up for a witness of his truth unto the world: but I cannot allow, nor he contented that you should rashly or negligently thrust yourself into that place where your wicked enemies do continually haunt, yea, and lay wait for you, when no necessity of yourself, nor of any other of God's people, do [...]h require your company. If they need any of your godly counsel, you may write unto them that thing that you thi [...]k good; which I dare s [...]y will be sufficient unto them. For continual thanks and pr [...]ises be given unto the everlasting God, th [...]re is none of those that are cruelly condemned for God's truth, that now are we [...]klings; for they have manfully passed through the pikes, and th [...]y have bol [...]ly stood in the brunt of the battle, a [...]d the [...]efore I reckon the worst is past with them already. So that now and then a godly letter from you to them shall do as much good as your company can do, and perchance more too; for writing sti [...]keth longer in the memory than words do, yea though your letters were as short to them as your last was to me, so that the same are something sweeter, and not altogether so sharp.
THIS, dear brother, is the simple counsel which I would gladly have you observe, partly for that I heartily pray for your preservation for the advantage of Christ's church, and partly for that I unfeignedly wish the peace, comfort and tranquillity of your own conscience, which I know will be quickly ready to accuse you, if you do any thing wherein you have not the word of God for your warrant. For as in a glass that is clear, a small mote will soon appear: even so the good conscience of God's chosen children, being more clear than chrystal, will soon accuse them at the least fault they do commit; whereas the wicked worldlings have their conscience so clogged and corrupted through the custom of sin, that they cannot once see or perceive their shameful deeds and wicked works, until God set the same before them for their utter destruction, and then they immediately despair. But seeing that God hath given you a clear conscience, and a pure, sharp, quick, and lively sight in your soul, I would wish you to beware that you do nothing unadvisedly, but upon a good ground. For an accusing conscience is a sore thing when death doth approach, and then satan will not stick to tell you that you have two much tempted God, when peradventure you have done nothing so at all. For this cause, I say, partly I have thought it good to admonish you (as I have done often) to be circumspect according to the counsel of Christ, which biddeth you beware of men. Other things I have not to write, for I know this bearer can certify you of all things at large, better than I can declare it by writing.
I beseech you, good Augustine, help me forwards with your hearty prayers, for I trust I have but a small time to tarry in this troublesome world. Dr. Story told our marshal, that we should all be dispatched so soon as he came from Oxford, whither he and other bloody butchers be gone to make slaughter of Christ's sheep that lie there appointed to be slain. God, for Christ's sake, put them and such like beside their cruel purpose, if it be his good will and pleasure, Amen, good Lord. I pray you give my most hearty commendations to my dear sister and faithful friend, good Mrs. Mary Glover. I beseech God be her comfort, as I doubt not but he is. I am very glad to hear that she doth so joyfully and so patiently bear this great cross that [Page 300] God hath laid upon her. I pray God strenghthen her, and all his o [...]her saints to the end, Amen▪ Commend me unto my dea [...] and faithful sister Elizabeth B. I thank her most heartily for my napkin, and so I do your dear broth [...]r for my shirt. Truly, that day that we were appointed to come to our answer before the commissioners (who had sent word the same [...]ing that they would come to the King's-Bench by eight of the clock, and the house and all things were trimmed and made ready for them), I got that shirt on my back, and that napkin in my hand, and methought they did help to harness me, and arm me well to go to fight against that bloody beast of Babylon. And trust, me, truly if they had come▪ I would have struck three strokes the more for your two sakes, as well as God would have enabled me to set them on, as by God's grace I will not fail to do at the next skirmish that I come to. Wherefore I pray you pray for me, that I may be strong and hardy to lay on a good l [...]ad. Oh that I might so s [...]rike him down, that [...]e should never be able to rise again. But that stroke belongeth only unto the Lord, to strike at his coming, which I trust will be shortly. O hasten it, good Lord, and shorten these sorrowful and sinful days, for thy great mercy [...]s sake.
FAREWEL, my dear and faithful loving brother. The Lord defend, keep, and preserve you from the power of your enemies, visible and invisible, and send us a most joyful and merry meeting here or elsewhere, as it shall please his goodness to appoint us.
IN the mean time I shall most earnestly desire you to pray for me, for I never had more need in my life, and doubtless you shall never want my poor praye [...], if it shall please God to acc [...]pt the prayer of so sinful a wretch as I am. The Lord impute not my sins to me, for Jesus Christ's sake; unto whose most merciful defence I do most heartily commit you. The blessing of God be with you now and for ever, Amen. I pray you give my most hearty commendations unto Mr. John Glover. I do not forget him in my daily prayers, and I trust he doth remember me.
LETTER IX. From Mr. JOHN CARELESS to HENRY ADLIN [...]TO [...], Pri [...]oner in Lollard's Tower.
THE everlasting peace of God in Jesus Christ, the continual aid, strength joy and comfort of his most pure, holy, and mighty Spirit, with th [...] increase of faith and lively feeling of his mercies be most effectually wrought in your heart, my dear and faithful loving brother Adlington, and in the hearts of all y [...]ur other godly fellow-prisoners, to the full fini [...]hing of that good work, which the Lord hath most graciously begun in you; that the same may be to the advancing and setting forth of his glory, the advantage of his poor afflicted church, and to your own eternal joy and com [...]ort in him, Amen.
MY most dear and faithful loving brother in the Lord, I wi [...]h all the rest of my loving brethren here wi [...]h me, do most humbly and he [...]rtily recommend us unto you with all faithful remembrance of you in daily prayers, giving God e [...]rnest thanks on your most happy behalf, for that he hath given you such hearty boldness and christian cons [...]ncy in the faithful confession of h [...]s everlasting verity. Blessed be God for thee, my dearly beloved brother, who hath vouchsafed the [...] worthy of so great a dignity, as to suffer for his sake, and setting forth of his glory▪ Oh, glad in h [...]art mayst thou b [...], to whom it is given, not only to believe in thy Lord and Christ most E [...]ly, but also to suffer for his sake, as one of his sily sheep appoint [...]d to the slaughter. Be of good comfort therefore, my good brother, for your calling unto the cross of Christ was after a marvellous mann [...]r. Surely it was only the Lord's appointment, and therefore he will perform his own work in and upon you, to the great magnifying of his glory, and comfort of your brethren, whose hearts are mightily refreshed, to hear how heartily you have behav [...]d yourself hitherto.
THIS present day I received a letter from you, at the reading whereof my brethren and I were not a little comforted, to see your cons [...]ience so qui [...]ted in Christ, and your con [...]inuance so stedfast in him, which things be the special gifts of God, not given unto every man, but to you his darling elect and [Page 301] chosen in Christ, and such as you be. And where as you do require to know my simple mind concerning your answer unto Dr. Story the chancellor; truly I say you did answer them very well: for there are but two sacraments ind [...]ed, that is to say, the sacrament of baptism, and the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ, as you have full well answe [...]ed them, praised be God for his good gifts, who chuseth the weak to co [...]found the strong, and the foolish to confound the worldly wise. If, when you come before them again, they do ask you what a sacrament is; s [...]y you, that a sacrament, being administered according to Christ's insti [...]ution, is a visible grace, and hath the promise of God [...]s mercy annex [...]ed unto it, available to all such as do worthily receive it and not unworthily worship it, as they would have us to do, contrary to God's commandment. And these properties belonging to Christ's true sacraments, cannot be applied unto any one of those five sacraments which they have invented of their own brain, since Antichrist began to reign, to blind the people withal.
I perceive, dear heart, that upon Friday they do [...]end to condemn you, and give you your judgment. Therefore I think they will have no great reasoning with you, but bid you answer them directly, either yea or nay, to all such things as they have to charge you withal, which they have gathered of you since you came to their cruel hands. But if they will needs make words with you, because you are but a simple man, and therefore perchance they will be the busier with you to trouble you with many questions, to [...]cumber your knowledge, and then seem to triumph over you and that [...] that you do hold; if (I say) they do this, as perchance for some evil purpose they will, then be you so plain and as short as you can, saying roundly unto them th [...]se or such like words as nigh as you can.
BE it known unto you▪ that I in all points do believe as it becometh a true christian, and as I have been truly taught in the days of the good king Edward, of such godly preachers and prophets sent of God, as have sealed their doctrine wit [...] their blood, from whom I will dissent in no point [...]: for I am a poor man without learni [...]g, but I am commanded of God to follow the counsel of his constant preachers, and so I intend to do, God giving me grace and assistance thereto.
AS for you, I know you to be none of Christ's shepherd's, but ravening wolves, which come to ki [...]l and scatter the stock of Christ, as the Lord said you should; and doth will us to beware of you and your poisoned doctrine▪ bidding us to judge you according to your fruits, whereby all men may see and know what ye are, that will not be wil [...]ully blind. But the good shepherds have given their l [...]ves for the defence of Christ's flock; and I am commanded to follow their faithful and godly example, and to confess with them one truth, even to the fire, if God shall see it good; and this is a true christian, I have hitherto done, and henceforth by God's grace intend to.
AND if the same God shall suffer you to take away my life, as you have done their's, I am contented therewith: his will be done, for that only is good. But of this be you sure, the Lord will shortly call you to account for all the innocent blood that is shed within this realm; which you have brought into a most woeful case, and made many a heavy heart in the same, and more I perceive you will make so long as the Lord for our sins will suffer you to prosper, until the same that your iniquities shall be full ripe. But then be you sure the Lord will sit in judgment upon you, as well as you do now upon his saints, and will reward you according to your deservings; to whom with my whole heart I commit my cause, and he will make answer for me, when the full time of my refreshing comet [...]. In the mean space▪ I will keep silence with this that I have said, trusting [...] that I have sufficiently discharged my conscience in confessing my faith and religion to you, declaring of what church I am even of the catholic church of Jesus Christ, which was well known to [...] here in England in our late good king Edward's days, by two special tokens which cannot deceive me, nor yet suffer me to be deceived; that is to say, the pure preaching of his holy word, and the due administration of his holy sacraments, which is not to be seen in your Romish church, and therefore it cannot jus [...]ly be called the church and spouse of Christ▪ I believe in the Holy Trinity, and all the other articles of the christian faith contained in the [Page 302] three creeds; and finally all the canonical scripture to be true in every sentence. And I detest all sects both of the Arians and Anabaptists, or any other that divide themselves from the true church of Christ, which is his mystical body, the ground and pillar of truth, and the very house of the living God. And if for these things you take away my life, and make yourselves guilty of my blood, you may; for I am in your hand as the sheep brought to the shambles, abiding the grace of the butcher. And be you sure judgment sleepeth not, but when you cry peace, peace, and all is safe, then shall your plagues begin like the sorrow of a woman travailing with child, according to Christ's infallible promise.
THIS kind of answer, my dear heart, it will be best for you to make; and by God's grace I do intend to take the same order myself in time to come, when the Lord shall vouchsafe me worthy of that great dignity, whereunto he hath called you. And if they shall laugh you to scorn, as I know they will, saying, Thou art a fool, and an unlearned ass-head, and art able to make answer to nothing, &c. care you not for it, but still commit your cause [...]nto God, who will make answer for you, and tell them that they have been answered again and again of divers godly and learned men; but all will not help: for you have one solution of all manner of questions, even a fair fire and faggots, this will be the end of your disputations. Therefore I pray you trouble me no more, but do that which you are appointed, when God [...]all permit the time, I am no better than Christ, his apostles, and others of my good brethren that are gone before me.
THIS kind of answer will have most effect against them, and edify the people that stand by, so that the same be done coolly, with sobriety, m [...]ekness, and patience; as I heard say our sweet brethren Thomas Harland and John Oswald did at Lewes, in Suffex, to the great [...]joicing of the children of God that were in those parts: and I hear say, that they were dissolved from this earthly tabernacle at Lewes on Saturday last, and were condemned but the Wednesday before; so that we may perceive the papists have quick work in hand, that they make such haste to send us home to our heavenly Father. Therefore let us make ourselves ready to ride in the fiery chariot, leaving these mantles and old cloaks behind us for a time, which God shall restore us again in a more glorious wise.
MY good brother Henry, you shall understand that bragging John T— hath beguiled his keepers (who trusted him too well), and is run away from them, and hath brought the poor men into great danger by the same. The one of them is ca [...]t by the council into the Gat [...]house at Westminster, the other is fled out of the country for fear.
THUS you may see the fruits of our free-will men, that made so much boast of their own strength. But that house which is not built surely upon the unmoveable rock, will not long stand against the boisterous winds and storms, that blow so strongly in these days of trouble.
BUT my dearly beloved brother, blessed be God for you, and such as you, who have played the parts of wise builders. You have digged down past the sand of your own natural strength, and beneath the earth of your own worldly wisdom, and are now come to the hard stone and unmoveable rock Christ, who is your only keeper; and upon him alone have you built your f [...]ith and most firmly, without doubting, mistrust, or wavering. Therefore neither the storms nor tempests, winds, nor weathers that Sat [...]n and all his wily workmen can bring against you, wi [...]h the very gates of hell to hel [...] the [...], shall ever [...] once to move your house, much less to overthrow it, for the Lord God hims [...]lf, and not man, is the builder thereof and hath promised to p [...]eserve and keep the same for ever. Unto his most merciful defence therefore I do heartily commit you and all your good company desiring him for his sweet Son Jesus Christ's sake, to confirm and strengthen you all, that you may be cond [...]m [...] unto the very end, and that after the fin [...]l victory is once gotten, you may receive the n [...]v [...]r fading crown of glory of God's free gift, through his great mercy in Jesus Christ our only Saviour. To whom with [...]he Father and the Holy Ghost, be all honour, glory, praise, thanks, power [Page 303] rule, and dominion for ever and evermore, Amen. The blessing of God be with you all.
LETTER X. From Mr. JOHN CARELESS, returning Thanks to a faithful Friend of his by whom he had received much Comfort in his inward Trouble.
BLESSED be God the Father of all mercy, for the great comfort and christian consolation which he has so mercifully ministered unto my poor afflicted heart by your means, most dear and faithful brother. Truly methinketh your words, or rather God's words by you uttered, have a wonderful power and efficacy working in my heart at the hearing and reading of them. Rejoice therefore, my dear brother, and be thankful unto God; for verily he both is and will be mightily magnified in you, and that divers and many ways, both to the strengthening of them that stand in his truth, and also to the raising of such as are [...] from the same. God make me thankful for you, and on your behalf; for verily great is the goodness of God towards me, in giving me acquaintance in faithful love and amity with you; God's name therefore be praised forever, and he perform all his merciful promises unto you, as I doubt not but he will, for his sake in whom you trust.
I thank my God most heartily, and also you my good brother, for that you are careful for me in your faithful prayers, remembering my just deserved sorrows, as though they were your own, and labouring so much to solace the same. Ah, my gracious God, what am I, for whom thou and thy dear children should be so careful? O sweet Lord, forgive me my great ingratitude and sin, and grant that I may never abuse thy great benefits. O let the love of thine elect, who love me for thy sake, be a sure sign and token, yea, a mos [...] firm testimony and seal to my sinful conscience of thine everlasting love and mercy toward me in Christ▪ as verily it would and ought to be, if min [...] infidelity did not hinder it. O [...] therefore the foreskin of my heart, that I may with lively faith behold thy great love towards me in all thine elect, that I may always be thankful for the same, and love thee and them again most heartily and unfeignedly.
AH, my dear heart, how sweetly and how truly, yea how godly and how comfortably have you rehearsed the sweet saying of Solomon concerning prosperity with true and godly friends? I will join w [...]th it the sentence that goeth a little before, for doubtless it may be well v [...]rified on you. "A sure friend (saith the wise man, in Eccles. vi.) will be unto thee even as thine own soul, and deal faithfully with thy houshold folk. If thou suffer trouble and adversity, he is with thee, and hideth not his face from thee. A faithful friend is a strong defence: whoso findeth such an one, findeth a treasure. A faithful friend hath no peer: the weight of gold is not to be compared to the goodness of his faith. A faithful friend is a medicine of life, and they that fear the Lord shall find him," &c. Lo, my dear heart in the Lord, here is a lively image or description of you; for verily such an one have I always found you unto me, not only sorrowing for my great sorrow, but also oftentimes making me merry and joyful, with such joys as the world cannot feel. Now let the world brag of it's feigned friendship; but I will boast of this true friendship in God, and esteem it a greater treasure than all transitory things. And as for my mourning, dear brother, God hath made you to turn it into mirth; for God hath put you instead of them to be my comfort, whom he hath in his great mercy taken away. I trust henceforth to leave the mourning for my great loss, and to praise God for gaining unto himself so great glory by his chosen children. God make me a true mourner of Sion, both for mine own sin, and wickedness, and also to see his honour defaced, that I may be ma [...]e meet and apt to bear the joyful and comfortable message that your beautiful feet shall bring me. God bless thee, my dear heart, and faithful loving brother, and increase his good gifts of grace in thee, as he hath most happily begun, that you may daily more effectually fee [...] and lively perceive the certainty of God's grace wherein you stand, and firmly testify the same to the conversion or confusion of all gainsayers, and to the comfort and confirmation of all [Page 304] God's dear children, Amen. Farewel, mine own sweet brother, farewel as mine own heart.
IN the letters of William Tyms, ye heard much mention made of Agnes Glascock. This Agnes Glascock, through infirmity, and her husband's persuasions, was allured to go to mass. For which cause she falling into great sorrow and repentance, was raised up again by the comfortable letters of William Tyms and John Careless, as before you may read; and after that was constant in the more sincere profession of the verity, and in danger of persecution for the same; unto whom John Careless wrote this following letter.
LETTER XI. From JOHN CARELESS to AGNES GLASCOCK.
THE everlasting peace of God in Jesus Christ, the continual aid, strength, and comforts of his most pure, holy, and mighty Spirit, be with you, my [...] and faithful sister Glascock, to the good performan [...] of th [...] good work which God hath so gra [...]usly begun in you, to his glory, the profit of his poor afflicted church, and to your own eternal comfort in him, Amen.
IN our Lord I have my most humble and hearty commendations unto you, my dear sister and faithful mother Glascock, with all remembrance of you in my daily prayers, giving God most hearty laud, praise, and thanks for you, and on your behalf, in that he of his great mercy hath hitherto so mightily strengthened you, constantly to cleave unto your captain Christ, notwithstanding the great assaults and manifold temptations that you have had to the contrary Doubtless, dear heart, it cannot be expressed what joy and comfort it is unto my very soul, to see how mightily the Lord hath magnified himself in you▪ whom he will shortly glorify with himself, as he hath done others of his sweet saints that are gone before you. Rejoice therefore and be glad; for verily you have good cause, if you diligently consider the great dignity that God [...] called you unto, [...] now in your old age, [...] [...]n [...] of his worthy witnesses unto the world: [...] I think you shall with me and other your [...] in bonds, seal the Lord's verity with the testimon [...] of your blood. Surely, sweet sister, this is [...] great [...]st promotion that God can bring you [...] other unto in this life; and an honour that [...] highest angel in heaven is not permitted to have.
THEREFORE happy are you, O faithful [...] of Abraham, that the Lord will now prefer [...] before many others, yea, or any others of [...] age that I do know in England. O faithful [...] virtuous matron, which wilt not be moved from the sure rock Christ, upon whom you have so [...] built your house, that neither storms nor [...] neither yet hell-gates, or any other temptatio [...] shall ever be able to prevail against it. Full well doth it appear by your constant continuance, th [...] you have played the part of a wise builder, in counting the cost beforehand, belonging to the finishing up of your tower. And I doubt not [...] through God's gift, you have sufficient to the performance thereof, that the hypocrites of their [...] shall have no just cause to triumph against you, [...] to mock you, saying, Lo, this woman began [...] build, but is not able to make an end. Therefore go on boldly and fear not; for God is faithful, as St. Paul saith, who will not suffer you to be temp [...]d above your strength, but he will either give you grace and strength, to stand unto the death (which is the gate and entrance into life), or else he will make such an out-scape for you, as shall be to the setting forth of his glory; which above all other things, we that are chosen children ought to s [...]ek, yea even with the loss of our own lives, being yet well assured that the same shall not be shortned one minute of an hour before the time that God hath appointed.
CAST therefore, dear sister, all your care upon the Lord, who, as St. Peter saith, careth for you. Great is his providence for you, and mighty is his [...]ove and mercy towards y [...]u. With his grace he will defend you, and with his Holy Spirit he will evermore guide you, wherewith he hath surely sealed you unto the day of redemption; he hath [Page 305] also given you the same in earnest for the recovery of the purchased possession, which he hath prepared for you before the foundation of the world was laid. Be strong therefore, and take a good heart, as I hear say you be. God for ever be blessed for you, who hath so gras [...]ed his love in your good heart, that nothing is able to separate you from the same, but will ra [...]her chuse to suffer adversity with the people of God, than to enjoy the ple [...]sure of sin for a little season. O happy woman, that canst find in thy heart to esteem the rebukes of of Christ to be greater riches than all the treasures of the world, as good Moses did. Doubtless, great is your reward in heaven; which you shall shortly receive of his free gift, and not of any deserving.
THUS, dear mother Glascock, I have been bold to trouble you with my rude and simple letters, desiring you to take them in good part, being done in great haste, as it doth appear, but yet proceeding from a poor heart which floweth over in love towards you, as my daily prayers for you can testify, which I trust shall supply that part of my duty towards you that my pen now wanteth. I thank you, dear heart, for all your loving tokens, and for the great kindness you have hitherto shewed unto my poor brother Tyms, and his wife and children, with all others of God's people, to whom you daily do good: the Lord recompense the same sevenfold into your bosom, as I doubt not but he will, according to his infallible promises. I pray you have my hearty commendations unto your husband. I beseech the Lord strengthen him in the confession of his truth (as my trust is that he will), that we may all joyfully est with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in the kingdom of God; unto which may he bring us, that with his most precious blood hath bought us. The blessing of God be with you now and for ever, Amen.
LETTER XII. From JOHN CARELESS, containing a brief Admonition to Mrs. AGNES GLASCOCK, found in a Book of her's, when she came to the Prison to visit him.
THERE is nothing that the holy scripture throughout doth so much commend unto us, as true saith and stedfast truth in the promises of God's eternal mercies towards us in Jesus Christ. For from the same, as forth of the chief fountain and well-spring of li [...]e, do flow all kinds of virtues and godly fruits, especially true love towards God, in which we ought purely to serve him all the days of our life; and also christian charity towards our neighbours, as well to help them at all needs, as also not to hurt them by any means. Therefore pray earnestly for the increase of faith and lively feeling of God's mercy; for all things are possible unto him that can undoubtedly believe. Faith is that thing which assureth us God's mercy, and whereby we vanquish all the fiery darts of the devil; our victory that overcometh the world; the knife that killeth and mortifieth the flesh: and finally, that which setteth us at peace with God, and quieteth our consciences always before him, and maketh us merry and joyful under the cross, with many more things than I can now express. Pray therefore for faith, in faith. And for the Lord's sake beware of popery and popish idolatry, the idol of the wicked mass, and other idolatrous service. Make not your body, which is a member of Christ, a member Antichrist. Remember that we shall receive of God according to that we do in the body, be it good or evil. Therefore glorify God in your body, which is dearly bought. Betray not the truth, lest the Lord deny you. If God be God, follow him. You cannot serve two masters. I write not this as doubting you, but by the way of admonition. God keep you from all evil.
LETTER XIII. From JOHN CARELESS to Mrs. AGNES GLASCOCK, comforting her in her Repentance, after she had been at Mass, proper to be read by all those who are fallen, and are willing to rise again▪
THE peace of God in Jesus Christ, the eternal comforts of his sweet Spirit be with you, and strengthen and comfort you, my dear and faithful sister, Amen.
ALTHOUGH the perilous days be come, whereof Christ prophesied, that if it were possible the very elect should be deceived; yet let the true faithful christians rejoice and be glad, knowing that the Lord himself is their keeper, who will not suffer one hair of their heads to perish without his almighty good will and pleasure, neither will he suffer them to be further tempted than he will give them strength to bear, but will in the midst of their temptation make a way for them to escape out; so good and gracious a God is he to all his chosen children. And though sometimes he do let his elect stumble and fall, yet (no doubt) he wil raise them up again to the further increase of their comfort, and to the setting forth of his glory and praise. Which thing my dear and faithful loving sister, I trust shall be well verified on you. For I do hear say, that by the manifold allurements, inticements, procurements, yea, and inforcements that you, dear heart, have had, your foot hath chanced to slip out of the way, to the great discomfort of your soul, and the heaviness of your heart. But, my good sister, be of good chear, for the Lord wi [...]l not so leave you, but he will raise you up again, and make you stronger than ever you were: so that your fall shall turn to his glory and your profit. For if you had not by this proved the experience of your own strength, or rather your own weakness, you would have stood too much in your own conceit, or perchance have gloried in yourself, and have despised and condemned other weak persons that have committed the like offence. Therefore now you may see what the best of us all can do, if God leaves us to ourselves. Which thing ought to move you to be diligent to call earnestly upon God for the grace and strength of his Holy Spirit, (without which we are not able to stand one hour) and to be most thankful for the same when you have it, and then to be more circumspect in time to come.
THEREFORE (dear sister) seeing that you have done otherwise than the word of God and your own consci [...]ce would allow; yet dear heart, do not think that God will cast you clean away, but know that he hath mercy enough in store for them that truly repen [...] and believe in him, although the sins of them were as many in number as the sands in the sea, and as great as the sins of the whole world. Therefore, good sister, beware in any wise, that you do [...]ot once mistrust the promise of God's mercy towards you; but know for a very surety, that all your sins be utterly forgiven you for Christ's sake, be they ever so many, grievous or so great.
BUT now, dear heart, take heed, and beware that you do not cloak that sin, and increase the same daily, in communicating with the wicked in their idolatry and devilish doings at their den of thieves. Do not, I say, dear sister, be at any of their Antichristian service, lest by little and little you utterly lose a good conscience, and at length esteem it for no offence; as alas, a great number do at this day, to the great peril of their souls. The Lord be merciful to them, and give them grace to repent in time, and turn to the Lord, and then they shall be sure to find mercy at the Lord's hand, as doubtless you have done, praised therefore be his name.
AH, my dear sister, you may now see the words of Christ verified upon yourself, that a man's greatest foes shall be they of his own houshold; for your husband hath gotten you to do that, which all the tyrants in the world could never have made you to do. Doubtless he may be sorry for it. God give him grace to repent, or else, without doubt, it will be laid to his charge one day, when he would not by his will hear it for all the goods in the world. Well, I think my brother Tyms will write him a letter shortly that will touch his conscience, if he has any conscience at all.
BUT now again to you, dear sister. The thing that is done cannot be undone, and you are not the [Page 307] first that hath offended, neither are you so good and so holy, as hath not at any time [...] out of the way. Ther [...]fore I would not have you to be so much discomforted as I hear s [...]y you be, as though God were not as able to forgive you your o [...]fen [...]e as he was to forgive his d [...]ar saints that offended him in times past; or as though God were not as merciful n [...]w, as ever he was. Whereas in very deed, there is with the Lord (as the prophet saith) mercy and plentiful redemption, and his mercy far surmounteth all his works: and he never faileth any that put their whole trust and confidence in him, how great an offender, or how wicked a trespasser soever he be: no he maketh their faults and backslidings many times to turn to their greater profit and advantage, and to the se [...]ing forth of his glory; as doubtless, dear sister, your [...]s shall do, if you put your whole faith, hope, and trust only in his infinite and eternal sweet mercies.
O what a subtle, crafty, lying serpent is that Satan our old enemy? that when he seeth that he cannot make us to continue in our wickedness to do him service, would then bring us into a doubting and mistrusting of the mercy of God, which is the greatest offence that can be; yea infidelity is the root and original of all other sins. Therefore (my sweet sister) give no place to that cruel adversary of mankind, who hath been a liar and a murderer from the beginning, but stedfastly believe the Lord, who hath sent you word by me his most unworthy servant, that all your sins be pa [...]doned, forgiv [...]n, and clean released for Jesus Christ's sake our only Lord and Saviour. To whom with the Father and the Holy Ghost, be all honour, glory, praise, thanks, power, rule, and dominion for ever and ever, Amen. Farewel, my d [...]ar sister, be of good ch [...]er. Believe in the Lord, and you shall liv [...] for ever. The Lord increase your faith, Amen, Amen.
LETTER XIV. From Mr. JOHN CARELESS to a faithful Minister of the Lord containing certain fruitful Precepts of Matrimony.
I BESEECH the same everlasting Lord (my dear and faithful brother) that blessed young [...]obias with his wife Sarah, and brought them together in due time with reverence and fear, preserve and bless you both, and your seed after you, that they may increase the number of the faithful by thousands and thousands. And as the Lord of his great mercy and fatherly providence hath been always careful for you, and now hath for your comfort accomplished his good work in coupling you with a faithful mate; to see that you be thankful to his providence towards you, that it may every way in you be an increase of love and godliness, yea, of christian joy and gladness in these sorrowful days, but yet so, that you mourn with the true mourners of Sion, and be sorry (yet in measure) for the hurt of the same. Pray also in faith for her prosperity, that the Lord may build up the walls of Jerusalem again.
OH that the Lord would turn Sion's [...] as the rivers into the south! Then should [...] hearts be made glad, and our mouths filled [...] laughter. Then would the heathen hypocrites say, The Lord hath done much for them. O, the Lord hath done great things for us already, whereof let us heartily rejoice, and praise his name therefore. For though we now sow in tears, yet we shall be sure to reap with gladness: and as we now go forth weeping, bearing forth good seed, so shall we come again with joy, and bring our sheaves full of corn. Yea, the death of the martyrs (which is most precious in his sight) shall be the life of the gospel, in spite of the papists' hearts.
PRAY for me (dear heart) that I may be counted worthy to sow some seed amongst the sweet saints of the Lord, that I may reap the same again, without ceasing a [...] the harvest. It is now sowing time of the y [...]r, men say in the country, and I think I shall make an end of sowing before March be past; [Page 308] for I hear say I shall prove how my plough will enter into the stony ground of the hard-hearted papists, within these four days. I hope to hold fast, and not to look back, neither for fear nor flattery, until I have made an end of sowing, and then will I set me down and rest me, and ask them all no leave, and look for the lively fruit and increse thereof with joy and gladness.
MY dear brother, the time approacheth near (for which I praise God) that I must put off this sinful tabernacle, and go home to my heavenly Father, where divers of my brethren are already looking and wishing for me. I beseech you therefore that you will help me forward with your faithful prayers, as I know you do, for I do feel the comfort and advantage thereof.
THAT you have observed my simple counsel I am right glad, and I trust in the Lord God, you shall find comfort in the same. And that you may so do indeed, I have been so bold to write these few words unto you, because I shall see you no more in this corruptible life; therefore mark them well. First, and above all things, you must be very circumspect to keep the band of love, and beware that there never spring up the root of bitterness between you. If at any time there happens to arise any cause of unkindness beween you, as it is impossible always to be free from it, see that you weed up the same with all lenity, gentleness, and patience, and never suffer yourself nor your wife to sleep in displeasure.
IF you have cause to speak sharply, and sometimes to reprove, beware that you do not the same in the presence of others, but keep your words until a more convenient time, (which is the point of a wise man, saith Solomon) and then utter them in in the spirit of meekness, and the groaning spirit of perfect love; which you must also let sometimes to cover faults, and wink at them if they be not intolerable. Whatsoever loss and mis [...]hance shall happen unto you, take it patiently, and bear it merrily; and though the same should come partly thro' your wife's negligence, yet let it rather be a loving warning to take heed in time to come, than a cause of sorrow for that which is past and cannot be holpen. I know by mine own experience, that we are in this life subject to many inconveniences, and that of nature we are prone to displeasure, and ready to think unkindness for every little trifle, and especially with our best friends, yea soonest with our loving wives, who be most loth to displease us.
BUT let us beware of this cankered corruption, and consider that we ought most of all in love to bear with them according to Christ's example towards his congregation, for whom he gave himself, to cleanse it, &c. I had thought to have treated this matter at large, but even now I am intermitted, and otherwise hindered. I doubt not but you know your duty therein a great deal better than I can describe it unto you; and as you know it, so well do it: but I love to be bold with you. I intend to write to your wife very shortly, and so take my last farewel of you for ever in this world. And thus in great haste I am now constrained to make an end. The blessing of God be always with you. Pray, pray, pray with faith.
LETTER XV. From Mr. JOHN CARELESS to ELIZABETH, Wife of the aforesaid Minister, containing certain godly Precepts of Matrimony pertaining to her Duty.
THE everlasting peace of God in Jesus Christ, the continual aid, strength, and comfort of his most holy and mighty Spirit, with increase of knowledge, faith and perfect feeling of God's eternal mercy, be with you my dear and faithful loving sister, and with your godly loving husband and my dear and faithful brother, to the full performance of that good which he hath so graciously begun in you, that in all things you may be made rich and belssed in him, and your seed after you, now and ever, Amen.
AS I have been long desirous to write unto you, (my dear heart in the Lord) not only being thereto bound of duty, but also often provoked by him to whom I owe myself and all that I am able to do, (I mean even that blessed of the Lord's own mouth, [Page 309] whom God hath joined with you in that holy and christian state of matrimony); even so at last I have obtained time and occasion in some part to perform that which I have long purposed.— And forasmuch as the Lord of his great mercy and fatherly care and providence over you his dear child, hath now graciously accomplished that good work amongst many others, which I (as a friend of the bridegroom) have full heartily wished, and often prayed for: I think it good, yea, and my bounden duty, to treat of such things as may be profitable to preserve mutual love and faithful amity between you, which I know Satan will chiefly labour to diminish, if he cannot altogether destroy the same, lest by many joyful occasions you should be provoked continually to praise God for his good gift, which that enemy hath by all means sought to hinder you from.
AS for all other things, I know you are sufficiently instructed, and also have a most learned companion, who is well able further to teach you if need do require: but in this particular I know my experience is more than his. Therefore (my good sister) first and before all things see that you diligently consider, that as every good and perfect gift pertaining to the soul and body, is given from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights: even so to whomsoever the Lord dealeth any of his benefits, of them he doth chiefly require always a thankful heart for the same; for else he wi [...]l either take away his good gifts again, or turn the same to their great disadvantage, and in the end to the increase of their damnation: so detestable in his sight is the sin of ingratitude. But to such as be thankful for his benefits, he doth not only to the old ever add new, [...]ut also maketh the goodness of his former gifts ever more and more to increase, until by them they are fully persuaded and thoroughly certified of his everlasting love in Christ Jesus, which is eternal life itself: so much doth he of his great mercy delight in a thankful heart.
THEREFORE I do yet once again earnestly request you, that above all things you be thankful to God for his benefits; not only for your election, creation, redemption, and preservation; but also for his other temporal gifts, wherewith he hath indued you; amongst which the chief and most excellent is (as testifieth the Holy Ghost) you [...] good, faithful, and loving husband. For as the wise man saith, goods and possessions may come to a man by the death of his friends, but a good wife is the gift of God, which the Lord will give for a good portion to such as fear him.
AND the like is of a good husband, as the Lord hath now given you, praised be his holy name. He hath not given you an ignorant, froward, churlish, brawling, wasteful, rioting, drunken husband, wherewith he hath plagued many others (as he might also have done you); but he hath given you a most godly, learned, gentle, loving, quiet, patient, thrifty, diligent, and sober husband, who will nourish, cherish, keep and defend you, instruct and teach you, yea care and provide for you and your children (which he will also by him give you) such things as be necessary for you. He hath not dealt so with every body; and yet he hath done this much more for you, my dear sister, and will thereto increase love and joy between you. For as he delighteth in the love and godly agreement of man and wife together; so it is he only that maketh them all the whole houshold to be of one mind. Unto which his gracious work he requireth your diligence, and will use you as his instrument and mean, the more effectually to accomplish the same. And therefore I now require you to observe this my simple counsel, which I have here written as a testimonial of my good will towards you, because I think in this life I shall never more see you.
NOW as I have shewed you how you should be thankful unto God for his good gifts, so I exhort you, and, as much as in me lieth, charge you to be evermore thankful unto your dear and loving husband, who hath given himself unto you; who is a more precious jewel in the church of God, than perchance you are yet aware of. Think yourself unworthy to be matched with such an instrument of God; and also reverence evermore the gifts of God in him, and seek with true obedience and love to serve him, in recompence of his true and painful heart towards you. Be loth in any wise to offend him, yea rather be careful and diligent to please him, that his soul may bless you. If at any time you shall chance to anger him, or to do or speak [Page 310] any thing that shall grieve him, see that you never rest until you have pacified him and made him merry again.
IF at any time he shall chance to blame you without a cause, or for that you cannot do therewith with (which thing happeneth sometimes to the best man living), see that you bear it patiently, and give him no uncomely or unkind word for it; but always look upon him with a loving and chearful countenance, and rather take the fault upon you than seem to be displeased.
BE always merry and chearful in his company, but not with too much lightness. Beware in any wise of swelling, pouting, or louring, for that is a token of a cruel and unloving heart; except it be in respect of sin, or in the time of sickness.
BE not sorrowful for any adversity that God sendeth; but beware that nothing be split or go to waste through your negligence. In any wise see that you be quick and cleanly about his meat and drink, and prepare him the same according to his diet in due season. Go cleanly and well-favouredly in your apparel, but beware of pride in any wise.
FINALLY, in word and deed shew yourself wise, humble, merry, and loving towards him, and also towards such as he doth love, and you shall lead a blessed life. I could speak of many things, which I have learned and proved true by experience; but I know that you will do in all things much better than I can teach you, because you have that anointing that teacheth you all things, who hath also given you an heart to obey and serve him. Yet I trust you will not be offended for this which I have written, but rather accept my good will towards you, whom I love in the Lord, as well as I do my daughter Judith.
THUS as mine own soul I commend you both to God, desiring him to bless you with all manner of spiritual blessings in heavenly things, and also with the dew of heaven, and fatness of the earth, that in all things you may be made rich in Jesus Christ our Lord and only Saviour. The Lord increase and bless the fruit of your bodies, that your children may stand round about your table, thick, fresh, and lusty, like the olive branches. God give you both a long life, that you may see and bless your children's children, unto the third and fourth ge [...] tion, and teach them the true fear and love of God, and that faith for which▪ they shall be accepted in his sight.
GOD let you see the prosperity of Sion, for whose lying in the dust let your hearts mourn. The Lord make perfect your love together in him, and always increase the same, and bring you both in peace to your graves at a good age. And now I bid you both most heartily farewel; and I think l shall now take my leave of you for ever in this life, I beseech you both to a [...]d me with your continual prayers, (as I will not forget you in mine) that I may have a joyful victorv through Jesus Christ: to whose most merciful protection I do most heartily for ever commend you to be kept unblame [...]ble until his coming. Which I beseech him to hasten for his mercy's sake.
The History and Martyrdom of
JULIUS PALMER, a learned and virtuous young Man, sometime Fellow of Magdalen College, in Oxford; with two other Martyrs, name
JOHN GWIN, and
THOMAS ASKIN, burnt together at a place called the Sand Pits, in Newbury, about the
16th of July.
The HISTORY of JULIUS PALMER.
AS all the works of God are wonderful in calling all sorts of men to confirm his truth, and to bear witness to his assured and infallible word, which the adversaries have depraved and corrup [...]ed with their false glosses, to establish the fleshly kingdom of Antichrist, and to purchase security in t [...]e world, which possession they seek, and by all possible means endeavour to keep; rather cursing with the thunderbolt of excommunication, burning, [...]anging, drowning, recking, scourging, and persecuting by secret practi [...]e, and open violence, the simple sheep of our Saviour Christ, that their false forged packing should be d [...]tested, their estimation [Page 311] impaired, their kitchen cooled, and their rents, revenues, goods, lands, and possessions abated: I say, as God's works are admirable in chusing some of all sorts to confess his g [...]spel; so there is no one example, in the whole godly fellowship of martyrs, more remarkable and amazing than this, that a person, who in all the days of king Edward, was a papist in the university of Oxford, so rigid and obstinate, that he utterly abhorred all godly prayer, and sincere preaching; and he himself as little respected, and, as it were, pointed at, by almost all those with whom he lived: that such a person, I say, should suffer persecution and death by the papists for the truth of the gospel in the reign of queen Mary (as he readily and zealously did), is very admirable and surprising.
HE was born in Coventry, where also his parents dwelt. His father had sometime been mayor of the city, and occupied merchandize, although he was an upholsterer by business. How he was brought up in his youth and tender years, from his first entering, we know not, but as we have le [...]rned, he was sometime scholar to Mr. Harley of Magdalen-college in Oxford; by whose diligence, and the goodness of his own capacity, he became a toward young scholar in prose and verse. For he had a very prompt and ready memory, a wit sharp and pregnant. He spake Latin with great facility of utterance, and wanted not competent knowledge in the Greek tongue; insomuch that divers times he sup [...]lied the room of the Greek reader in his house. He was a subtle d [...]sp [...]ter, both in the public schools, and also at home. He used to say, that he was never so ple [...]santly occupied, as when he came to the hard debating of profound questions in philosophy; so that he hath oftentimes watched and spent the whole night in the discussing and searching out the truth of deep and difficult questions. And this he used to do sundry times with divers of his equals.
IN familiar talk he greatly delighted, for the exercise of his learning, to defend the contrary to that which was affirmed, yet with modesty, and without all ostentation. For he greatly abhorred all cavilling, all frivol [...]s talk, and unsavoury babbling. He was not c [...]prious, but would reason so soberly, and with such probability, that even his adversaries would no less marvel at the dexterity of his invention, than at his comely and decent behaviour in prosecuting the same.
AND although he applied to divinity very late, it appeareth that he recompensed the small time of his study with the greatness of his diligence bestowed in the same, and his late coming to the truth with his earnest and zealous proceeding therein. For by the secret inspiration of God's Holy Spirit inwardly working in his heart, he gave an apparent signification in his young years, that if God had spared his life longer, he would have grown to such maturity and ripeness of judgment, as thereby he would have been an ornament to Christ's church, and an honour to his country.
AND somewhat to speak of his civil behaviour, he was of manners courteous without curiosity, of countenance chearful, without high looks, of speech pleasant, without affectation, he was affable and lowly as any child, and yet quick spirited, and vehement in reasoning. He practised no deceit toward any man, for he of was such simplicity, that he was apter to be deceived than to deceive, and was so great a contemner of all reproaches, that he would say, None were to be counted valiant, but such as could despise injury.
IN private study he was so indefatigable, that he arose ordinarily every morning at four o'clock, and went to bed before ten at night. Insomuch that he grew in years and understanding, so he came to a bachelor of arts, and at length for the hope appearing in him, to the preferment of a fellowship in Magdalen-college, where also he was admitted to the office of a reader in logic, Anno 1550. Now if he had at first favoured sincere religion, so much as he followed his book, then had we the less matter to note in him. But indeed he was so much (as is before said) addicted to the Romish faith, that his company and conversation in the same house was altogether with such as were utter enemies to the gospel of Christ. If he came to common prayer at any time, it was by violence and compulsion, for otherwise he came not. Sermons would he hear none himself, nor yet suffer his schol [...]s to resort unto them by his good will: for he was fully persuaded, that they might be better occupied at home. The preachers themselves he did both disdain and [Page 312] despise, and all such as were setters forth of sound doctrine beside. For which con [...]umacy and stubbornness, he was so often called before the officers of the college, and punished sometimes by the purse, sometimes by the lack of his commons, and otherwise by certain tasks, and exercises of learning enjoined unto him, that divers supposed him to have endeavoured, of set purpose, continually to seek oc [...]asion, whereby he might be accounted a sufferer for the fanatical religion of the Romish church.
IN the end, not long before the death of king Edward, certain slanderous libels and railing verses were privily fixed to the walls and doors in sundry places of the college against the president, which was then Dr. Haddon, whereby was administered further matter of trouble to Palmer. For whereas it was well known that he and some of his companions had a very little time before spoken contumelious words against the president, it could not be now avoided, but that thereby arose a vehement surmise and suspicion, that he conspiring with others, had contrived, made, and scattered abroad the said slanderous writings. Great inquisition was made in the college, to search out the author of so malicious and despiteful a deed, but nothing could be found and proved against Palmer or any of his companions. Now Palmer being hereupon examined by the officers, did not only with stout courage deny the fact to have been his, but also spake further many reproachful words touching the said officers, and sent the same to them in writing, whereby he was by them adjudged to be an unworthy member of that society. And so for this and other popish pranks (continuing obstinate still) he was expelled the house.
AFTER he was thus expelled, he was obliged for his maintenance to apply himself to be a teacher of children in the house of sir Francis Knolles, in which trade he continued until the coming in of queen Mary. And when her visitors were sent to Magdale [...]-college, under a title of reformation (whereas [...] things were better before), that is, displace seve [...]al [...] the fellows that were learned, and [...]o put ri [...]ht [...] holies (as they called them) in their rooms; th [...]n c [...]me this Julius Palmer, waiting to be restored to his living again, of which he had been deprived before, thinking by good right to be restored by them, whose faith and religion as (he said) he did to the uttermost of his power defend and maintain. And indeed at length he obtained the same. Then after he was restored again to his house in queen Mary's reign, God dealt so mercifully with him, that in the end he became of an obstinate papist, an earnest and zealous protestant.
CONCERNING whose conversion to the truth, for the more credit to be given to the same, we have here inserted a letter written by one Mr. Bullingham, fellow, in some part of the king Edward's time, with the said Palmer, then also of the same religion with him, and toward the latter end of the said king's reign a voluntary exile in France for popery; in queen Mary's days likewise a chaplain unto Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester; and after the coming in of queen Elizabeth, such an one as for his own obstinacy was discharged from all his livings by her majesty's commissioners: and yet now (God be praised for it) a most constant professor and earnest teacher of the word of God. This man, at the request of a certain friend of his in London, being desirous to know the certain truth thereof, wrote unto him concerning this Julius Palmer. The copy of which letter we thought good hear to insert, because the parties being alive can testify the same to be true, if any man shall doubt thereof.
A LETTER From Mr. BULLINGHAM to his Friend.
MASTER BULLINGHAM, I wish you and all your' [...] continual health in the Lord. Hitherto have I not written any thing unto you concerning Julius Palmer, that constant witnses of God's truth, for that his doings and sayings known unto me, were worn out of my remembrance; and to write an untruth, it were rather to deface and blemish than to adorn and beautify him. After his conversion to the most holy g [...]spel, I never saw his face. Wherefore the less have I to certify you of. But so much as seemeth to me to serve most [Page 313] unto the purpose, here I commend unto you; and in witness that my sayings are true, I subscribe my name, willing and bes [...]eching you to publish the s [...]me to whole world, &c. At the time I Bullingham intended to forsake England, and fly into France for the wicked pope's sake, (which came to pass indeed, for I was in R [...]an for a time) this Julius Palmer and Richard Duck, brought me onwards in my journey till we came to London: where on a day, Julius Palmer and I walked to St. James's, the queen's palace; and as we leaned at the great gate of that palace, Palmer spake thus unto me:
"BULLINGHAM, you know in what misery and calamities we are fallen for the pope and his religion. We are young men, abhorred of all men now presently, and like to be abhorred more. Let us consider what hangeth over our heads. You are departing into a strange country, both friendless and moneyless, where I fear you shall taste of sourer sauces than hitherto you have done. And as for me, I am at my wit's end. The face of hell itself is as amiable unto me, as the sight of Magdalen-college; for there I am hated as a venemous toad. Would God I were raked under the earth. And as touching our religion, even our consciences bear witness that we taste not such inward sweetness in the profession thereof, as we understand the gospellors taste in their religion: yea, to say the truth, we maintain we know not what, rather of will than of knowledge. But what then? rather than I will yield unto them, I will beg my bread."—So Palmer bequeathed himself to the wide world, and I passed over into Normandy. At my return into England, my chance was to meet Palmer in St. Paul's, where a rood was set up. (This our meeting was in the beginning of queen Mary's reign, and our miserable departure not long before the end of king Edward's days.) Then after our greeting, thus said Palmer: Bullingham, is this our God, for whom we have smarted? No, Palmer, (quoth I) it is an image of him. And image! (quoth he [...] I tell thee plainly, Bullingham, John Calvin, whose institutions I have perused since our departure, telleth me plainly by God's word, that it is an idol, and that the pope is Antichrist, and his clergy the filthy sink hole of hell, and now I believe it; for I feel it sensibly. O that God had revealed these matters unto me in times past. I would have bequea [...]hed this Romish religion, or rather irreligion, to the devil of hell, from whence it came. Believe them not, Bullingham. I will rather have these knees pared off, than I will kneel to yonder bl [...]ck of wood (meani [...]g the rood). God help me, I am born to trouble and adversity in this world. Well, Palmer, (said I) is the wind in that corner with you? I warrant you it will blow you to little ease, at the end. I will never have to do with you again. So I left Palmer walking in St. Paul's, who through the element of fire is exalted above clouds, where eternal rest is prepared for persecuted martyrs. Thus much is true, and let it be known, that I Bullingham affirm it to be true. More I have not to say. In these words and deeds it appeareth that God had elected him.
WHEN he was, by the visitors restored to his college, although he began something to savour and taste of God's truth, by conference and company of certain godly and zealous men abroad, in the time of his expulsion, especially at the house of sir Francis Knolles; yet he was not thoroughly persuaded, but in most points continued for a while either blind, or else doubtful. Neither could he chuse, but utter himself in private reasoning from time to time, both in what points he was fully resolved, and also of [...] points he doubted. For such was always his nature, both in popery and in the gospel, utterly to detest all dissimulation; insomuch, that by the means of his plainness, and for that he could not flatter, he suffered much trouble, both in king Edward's, and also in queen Mary's time. Whereas he might at the first have lived in great quietness, if he could have dissembled, and both done and spoken against his conscience, as many stirring papists then did. And likewise he might have escaped the flames in queen Mary's time, if he would either have spoken, or kept silence against his conscience, as many weak gospellers did. But Palmer could in no wise dissemble.
NOW, within a short time, God so wrought in his heart, that he became very inquisitive, to hear and understand how the martyrs were apprehended [Page 314] what articles they died for, how they were used, and after what manner they took their death. Insomuch that he spared not, at his own charges, to send over one of his scholar [...], in company with a bachelor of that house, to Gloucester, to see and understand the whole order of bishop Hooper's death, and to bring him true report thereof. Which some think he rather did because he was wont in king Edward's time to say, that none of them all would stand to death for their religion. Thus he learned with what great, extreme, and horrible cruelty the martyrs of God were tried, and how valiantly they overcame all kind of torments to the end. Whereof he himself also did see more experience afterwards, at the examination and death of those holy confessors which were burnt at Oxford before his eyes; insomuch that the first hope which the godly conceived of him, was at his return from the burning of bishop Ridley and bishop Latimer. At which time, in the hearing of divers of his friends, he broke out into these or such like words, O raging cruelty! O tyranny tragical, and more than barbarous!
FROM that day forward he studiously endeavoured to understand the truth, and therefore with all speed he borrowed Peter Martyr's commentaries on the first to the Corinthians, who was one of Magdalen's yet alive, and good books of other men. And so through hearty prayer, and diligent search and conference of the scriptures, at length he believed and embraced the truth with great joy; and so profited in the same, that daily more and more, he declared it both in word and deed: insomuch that ever afterwards he loved truth as much as he before had hated it, when it pleased God to open his eyes, and to reveal unto him the light of his word. And now again when he should come to church, in those days of popery, there to be occupied among the rest, in singing of responds, reading of legends, and such like stuff allotted to him, he had as much pleasure, he said, to be at them, as a bear to be baited and worried with dogs. When he came, it was (as it appeared) more to avoid displeasure and dang [...]r, than for any good will, and ready affection.
AT length through God's grace, he grew up to such maturity and ripeness in the truth, that he spared not to declare certain sparks thereof in [...] outward behaviour. For when he should [...] his bowing measures at the Confiteor (as the custom there was) in turning himself to and [...] sometimes eastward, sometimes westward, and [...] terwards knock his breast at the time of ele [...]atio [...] against these idolatrous adorations his heart did, vehemently rise, that sometimes he would [...] himself from them, and being there, he would [...] at the sacring (as they termed it) get him out of [...] church to avoid these ungodly gestures, and idol [...]trous adoration. To be short, perceiving aft [...] a while, that he was greatly suspected as well as [...] respected, Mr. Cole, the president then being, [...] divers others who before had been his friends, [...] finding great torment of conscience daily [...] upon him, in his conversation with idolaters; [...] also seeing that his new life and old way of [...] could not well quietly stand together, he prepared himself to depart the house. For he thought it [...] best to abide the danger of expulsion, as he did at first, seeing the heat of the times increasing apac [...], And being demanded at that time by a partic [...]l [...] friend (who would gladly have persuaded him to stay there longer) whither he would go, or how he would live, he made this answer, Domini est tur [...] & plenitudo ejus, that is, The earth is the Lord's, and the fulness thereof. Let the Lord work, [...] commit myself to God and the wide world.
HERE I think it expedient, before I write of the painful surges that he suffered after he came abroad into the perilous gulfs and deep sea of this wretch [...] wide world, first, to rehearse one or two exam [...] of his outward behaviour, at such times at we [...]d recourse to the college, after his last departu [...], whereby the reader may yet better understand his simplicity and plainness, and how far wide he was from all cloaked dissimulation in God's cause, which certain godless persons have sought maliciously to charge him withal. Being at Oxford at a certain time, in Magdalen-college, and having knowledge that the Spanish friar John (who succeeded Dr. Peter Martyr in the office of divinity lecturer) would preach there that present Sunday, he would not at the first consent to be present at it. At length a friend of his, a fellow of that house, persuaded him so much, that he was content to accompany his said friend to the church. But suddenly, as the friar [Page 315] vehemently inveighed against God's truth, in defending certain popish heresies, Palmer, having many eyes bent and directed towards him, departed from amongst the midst of the auditory, and was found in his friend's chamber weep [...]ng bitterly. Afterwards, being asked why he slipped away on such a sudden, O, said he, if I had not openly departed, I should have openly stopped mine ears; for the friar's blasphemous talk, in disproving, or rather depraving the verity, made mine ears not to glow, but my heart worse to smart than if ears had been cut from my head.
IT chanced another time, that the same friend of his named Mr. Shipper, being then butler of the h [...]use, asked him to dinner in his chamber. Palmer not knowing what guests were also thither invited and bidden, happened there (contrary to his expectation) to meet with the aforesaid friar, with whom were present Dr. Smith, Dr. Tresham, and divers other papists, whose company Palmer could not well bear: and therefore whispering his friend in the ear, he said he would be gone, for that was no place for him: I will go, said he, to the butler's [...]ble in the great hall. The butler understanding his mind, desired him of all friendship not so to depart, alledging that it was the next way to betray himself, and as it were on purpose to cast himself into the briars, with many other persuasions, as the shortness of time would permit. In the end he condescended to his request, and tarried. Now as he came to the fire-side, the friar saluted him chearfully in Latin, for he could not speak English. Palmer with an amiable countenance gently returned it: but when the friar offered him his hand, he casting his eye aside, as though he had not seen it, found matter to talk to another standing by, and so avoided it; which thing was well marked by some, not without great grudge of stomach.
AFTER they were set and had well eaten, the friar with a pleasant look offering him the cup, said, Propono tibi, juvenis erudite, that is, I drink to you, learned young man. Palmer at that word, blushing as red as scarlet, answered, Non agnosco nomen, domine, that is, I acknowledge no such name, O sir. And therewith taking the cup at his hand, he set it down by him, as though he would have pledged him anon, but in the end it was also well marked, that he did it not. When dinner was done, being sharply rebuked by the said butler his friend, for his so unwise, uncivil, and unseemly behaviour (as he termed it), he made answer for himself, and said, Oleum eorum non demulcet, sed frangit caput meum, that is, The oil of these men doth not supple, but breaketh my head.
ANOTHER time, which was also the last time of his being at Oxford, not long before his death, one Barwick, an old acquaintance of his, being sometime clerk of Magdalen's, and then fellow of Trinity-college, a rank papist, began to reason with him in his friend's chamber aforesaid, and perceiving him to be zealous and earnest in the defence of the verity, he said unto him, in the hearing of Mr. Thomas Parry, and others there present: Well, well, now art thou stout, and hardy in thine opinion, but if thou wert once brought to the stake, I believe thou wouldst tell me another tale. I advise thee beware of the fire, it is a shrewd matter to burn. Truly, said Palmer, I have been in danger of burning once or twice, and hitherto, I thank God, I have escaped it. But I judge verily, it will be my end at the last, welcome be it, by the grace of God. Indeed it is a hard matter for them to burn, that have the mind and soul linked to the body, as a thief's foot is tied in a pair of fetters: but if a man be once able, through the help of God's Spirit, to separate and divide the soul from the body, for him it is no more mastery to burn, than for me to eat this piece of bread.
THUS much by the way concerning his plainness, without dissimulation, and how he feared not openly to shew himself more grieved in heart to hear the word of God blasphemed, than to suffer any worldly pains. Now let us proceed in our story, and faithfully declare the occasion and manner of his death.
WITHIN a short time after he had yielded up his fellowship in Oxford, he was through God's providence (who never faileth them that first seek his glory) placed schoolmaster by patent in the grammar-school of Reading, where he was well accepted by all those that feared God and favoured his word, as well for his good learning and knowledge, and also for his earnest zeal and profession of the truth. But Satan the enemy of all godly attempts, envying [Page 316] his good proceedings, and prosperous success in the same, would not suffer him long there to be quiet. Wherefore he stirred up against him certain double-face [...] hypocrites, who by dissimulation and crafty insinuation had crept in, to understand his secrets, under pretence of a zeal to the gospel. Which men he (suspecting no deceit) right joyfully embraced, making them privy to all his doings. For as he himself was then fervently inflamed with the love of heavenly doctrine. so he had an incredible desire by all means possible to allure and encourage others to the profession of the same.
THESE faithful and trusty brethren, so soon as they had found good opportunity, spared not in his absence to rifle his study of certain godly books and writings; amongst which [...] was his Replication to Morewine's verses, touching Winchester's epitaph, and other arguments both in Latin and English, written by him against the popish proceedings, and especially against their brutish tyranny, executed towards the martyrs of God. When they had thus done, they were not ashamed to threaten him that they would exhibit the same to the council, unless he would without delay depart out of their coasts, and give over the school to a friend of their's. The truth of this story appeareth in part, by a letter written with his own hand, out of prison, eight days before he was burnt; which, because it is of certain credit, and came to our hands, therefore we are the bolder to avouch it for a truth.
THUS then was this slly young man, for the safe-guard of his life, forced to depart on a sudden from [...]eading, leaving behind him in the hands of his enemies his goods, and one quarter's stipend, and so he took his journey towards Ensham, where his mother then dwelt, hoping to obtain at her hands certain legacies due to him by his fathers last will, which he should have received certain years [...]; and taking his journey by Oxford, he requested certain of his friends to accompany him thither. His mother understanding his state and errand by Mr. Shipper and his brother (whom he had sent before to intreat for him), as soon as she beheld him on his knees, asking her blessing, as he had been accustomed to do: Thou shalt, said she, have Christ's curse and mine wheresoever tho [...] [...] est. He pausing a little, as one amazed at so he [...] vy a greeting, a [...] length [...] said, O mother, your o [...] curse you may give me, which God knoweth I [...] ver deserved, but God's curse you cannot give [...], for he hath al [...]eady blessed me. Nay, said [...], thou didst go from God's blessing into the [...] sun, when thou wert banished for an heretic out of that worshipful house in Oxford, and now for the like knavery, art driven out of Reading too. Al [...], mother, said he, you have been misinformed [...] I was not expelled nor driven away, but freely [...] of mine own accord. And heretic I am no [...], for I stand not stubbornly against any true doctrine, but defend it to my power. And you may before, the use not to expel nor banish, but to burn heretics (as they term them). Well, quoth she, I am sure thou dost not believe as thy father and I, and all our forefathers have done: but as we were taught by the new law in king Edward the Sixth's time, which is damnable heresy.
INDEED I confess, said he, that I believe that doctrine which was taught in king Edward's days, which is not heresy but truth, neither is it new, but as old as Christ and his apostles. If thou art at that point, said she, I require thee to depart from my house, and out of my sight, and never take [...] more for thy mother hereafter. As for money and goods I have none of thine, thy father bequeathed nought for heretics. Faggots I have to burn the [...], more thou gettest not out at my hands. Mothe [...], said he, whereas you have cursed me, I again pray God to bless you, and prosper you all your life long; and with like soft talk, sweet words, and abundance of tears trickling down his cheeks, he departed from her [...] wherewith he so molified her hard heart, that she hurled an old angel after him, and said, Take that to keep thee a true man.
THUS poor Palmer, being destitute of worldly friendship, and cruelly repelled by her whom he took to have been his surest friend, knew not which way to turn his face. Soon after, when he had bethought himself, it came to his mind to return secretly to Magdalen-college, upon the assured trust and affiance, that he had a secret friend or two in that house. At which time by the suit of Alane [Page 317] Copo, then fellow of the house, he obtained letters commendatory from Mr. Cole, president there, for his preferment to a school in Glouc [...]stershire. So he getteth him away, committed by his friends to God's divine protection, of whom some accompanied him as far as Ensam Ferry, and some to Bur [...]d.
AFTERWARD as he went alone musing and pondering of matters, it came in his head (at he writeth in an epistle to one of his friends (to leave his appointed journey, and to return privately to Reading, trusting there by the help of friends to receive his quarter's stipend, and convey his goods to the custody of some trusty body. To Reading he cometh, and taketh up his lodgings at the Cardinal's Hat, desiring his hostess instantly to assign him a close chamber, where he might be alone from all resort of company. He came not so closely, but that this viperous generation had knowledge thereof. Wherefore without delay they laid their heads together, and consulted what way they might most safely proceed against him, to bring their old cankered malice to pass. And soon it was concluded, that one Mr. Hampton (who then bare two faces under one hood, and under the colour of a brother played the part of a dissembling hypocrite) should resort to him under the pretence of friendship, to feel and fish out the cause of his repair to Reading.
PALMER, as he was a simple man, and without all wrinkles of cloaked deceit, opened to him his whole intent. But Hampton earnestly persuaded him to the contrary, declaring what danger might ensue if this were attempted. Against his counsel Palmer replied very much, and as they waxed hot in talk, Hampton flung away in a fury, and said, As he had fished so should he fowl for him. Palmer not yet suspecting such devised mischief, as by this crooked and pes [...]iferous generation was now in brewing against him, called for his supper and went quietly to bed. But quietly he could not long rest there; for within a short space after, the officers and their retinue came rushing in with lanthorns and bills, requiring him in the king and queen's name to make himself ready, and quietly to depart with them; and led him away as a lamb to the slaughter, and committed him to ward, whom the keeper as a ravening wolf gre [...]dy of his prey, brought down into a vile, stinking, and dark dungeon, prepared for theives and murderers, and there he left him for a time, hanging by the hands and feet in a pair of flocks, so high, that well near no part of his body touched the ground. In this cave or dungeon he remained about ten days under the tyranny of this unmerciful keeper.
AFTER this he was brought before the mayor of Reading, and there, by the procurement of certain false brethren, divers grievous and enormous crimes were laid to his charge, as treason, sedition, surmised murder, and adultery.
TO whom Palmer answered, that if such horrible and heinous crimes might be proved against him, he would patiently submit himself to all kinds of torments that could be devised. But O ye cruel blood-suckers, (saith he) ye follow the old practices of your progenitors, the viperous and wolfish generation of pharisees and papists: but be ye well assured, that God already seeth your subtle devices and crafty packing, and will not suffer the outrageous fury of your venemous tongues and fiery hearts to escape unpunished.
ALL this while no mention was made of heresy or heretical writings.
THEIR greatest Proofs against him were these:
FIRST, That Palmer said, the queen's sword was not put in her hand to execute tyranny, and to kill and murder the true servants of God.
ITEM, That her sword was too blunt toward the papists, but toward the true christians it was too sharp.
ITEM, That certain servants of sir Francis Knolles and others, r [...]rting to his lectures, had fallen out among themselves, and were like to have committed murder, and therefore he was a sower of sedition, and a procurer of unlawful assemblies.
ITEM, That his hostess had written a letter unto him, (which they had intercepted) wherein she required him to return to Reading, and sent him her commendations, by the token that the knife lay [Page 318] hid under the beam, [...]hereby they gathered that she had conspired with him to murder her husband.
ITEM, That they found him alone with his hostess by the fire side in the hall, the door being shut to them forsooth.
WHEN the evidence was given up, the mayor dismissed them and went to dinner, commanding Palmer to the cage, to make him an open spectacle of igmony to the eyes of the world. It being given out, that he was so punished for his evil life and wickedness already proved against him.
IN the afternoon Palmer came to his answer, and did so mightily and clearly deface their evidence, and defend his own innocency, proving also that the said letters were forged by themselves, that the mayor himself was much ashamed that he had given such credit to them, and so much borne with them, so that he sought means how they might convey him out of the country privily.
BUT here among otherr things this is not to be passed over in silence, that one John Galant, a zealous professor of the gospel, a little after this came to the prison, and found him somewhat better treated than before. When we beheld him, O Palmer, saith he, thou hast deceived divers men's expectation: for we hear that you▪ suffer not for righteousness' sake, but for your own demerits.
O brother Galant, saith he, these are the old practices of that Satanical brood. But be you well assured, and God be praised for it, I have so purged myself, and detected their falshood, that from henceforth I shall be no more molested therewith. And there, having pen and ink, he wrote somewhat whereby part of his story here rehearsed, is well confirmed. But now to these bloody adversaries.
AFTER this, when they saw the matter frame so ill-favouredly, fearing that if he should escape secretly, their doing would tend no less to their shame and danger, than to the mayor's dishonesty, they devised a new policy to bring to pass their long hi [...] den and festered malice against him, which was by this extreme refuge. For whereas before they were partly ashamed to accuse him of heresy, [...] they had been counted earnest brethren themselves and partly afraid, because they had broken up his study and committed theft; yet now, lest their in [...] quity should have been revealed to the world, the [...] put both fear and shame aside, and began to [...] up the old sore, the [...]ear whereof had been [...] superficially cured, as you have heard; and so to colour their former practises with the pretence of his reformation in religion, they charged him with the writing that they had stolen out of his study.
THUS Palmer was once again called out of the prison to appear before the mayor, and Bird the official, and two other justices, to render an account of his faith before them, and answer to such articles and informations as were laid against him. And when, they had gathered of his own mouth sufficient matter to intrap him, they devised a certificate, or bill of instructions against him, to be directed to Dr. Jeffrey; who had determined to hold his visitation the next Tuesday at Newbury, which was the 16th of July. And thus were the false witnesses and bloody accusers winked at, and the innocent delivered to the lion to be devoured. When it was therefore concluded that Palmer should be sent over to Newbury, the said letters testimonial were conveyed over together with him; the contents whereof shall partly appear hereafter; in the mean time I think it good here to rehearse one example among others, both of charitable affection towards him, and of his modesty correspondent to the same.
MR. Rider, of Reading, a faithful witness of God's truth, hearing how cruelly Palmer had been dealt withal in the prison, and pined away for the lack of necessaries, and how evident he had proved himself innocent before the officers, of such crimes as were objected against him, he sent to him his servant secretly the night before his departure of Newbury, with a crooked groat in token of his good heart towards him, requiring him to let him understand if he lacked necessaries, and he would provide for him. Palmer answered, The Lord reward your master for his benevolence towards me a miserable object in this world, and tell him that (God be praised) I lack nothing.
[Page 319]IN the morning before they took their journey, Thomas Ask [...]n, a [...]ias Roberts, being fellow-prisoner with him in Christ's cause, sitting at breakfast, and beholding Palmer very sad, leaning to the window in a corner of the house, asked why he came not to breakfast. Because I lack money, said Palmer, to discharge the shot. Come on man, quoth [...]e, God be praised for it I have enough for us both. Which thing when Mr. Rider heard of, it cannot be expressed how much it grieved him that Palmer had deceived him with so modest an answer.
THUS to Newbury they came on Monday night, and forthwith they were committed to the comfortable hostry of the blind house, where they found John Gwin, their faithful brother in the Lord. Now when they came before the consistory of Dr. Jeffrey, and how Palmer was examined, it doth in part appear by this examination hereunto annexed, which, although it be not perfectly and orderly penned, as the report goeth it was spoken, nor perchance altogether in such form of words, yet as exactly as we are able to compact and dispose it, being gathered out of several notes of Richard Shipper, John Hunt, John Kirry, of Newbury, Richard White, of Marlborough, who were eye-witnesses, and present at the hearing thereof.
The second Examination of JULIUS PALMER, at Newbury, in the Hearing of more than three hundred Persons.
ON the l6th of July, in the year l556, four or five seats were prepared in the choir of the parish church of Newburv, for the visitors whose names here ensue. Dr. Jeffrey, for the bishop of Sarum, sir Richard Abridges, knight, and then high shiriff of the county, sir William Ramsford, knight, John Winchcomb, esquire, and the parson of Inglefield. After the prisoners were presented, the commission read, and other things done in order accordingly. Dr. Jeffrey called to Palmer, and said, Art thou that jolly writer of three-half-penny books that we hear of?
I know not what you mean.
Have you taught Latin so long, that now you understand not English?
TO this he answered nothing.
THEN Dr. Jeffrey standing up, said, We have received certain writings and articles against you, from the right worshipful the mayor of Reading, and other justices, whereby we understand, that being convented before them, you were convicted of certain heresies.
FIRST, That you deny the supremacy of the pope's holiness.
SECONDLY, That there are but two sacraments.
THIRDLY, That the priest sheweth up an idol at mass; and therefore you went to no mass, since your first coming to Reading.
FOURTHLY, That there is no purgatory.
LAST of all, That you are a sower of sedition, and have sought to divide the unity of the queen's subjects.
You were best see first what he will say to his own handy-work.
You say truth. Tell me, Palmer art thou he that wrote this fair volume? Look upon it.
I wrote it indeed, and gathered it out of the scripture.
Is this doggish rhyme your's also? Look.
I wrote this, I deny it not.
And what say you to these Latin verses, entitled. Epicedion, &c. Are they your's too?
Yea, sir.
Art thou not ashamed to affirm it? It [Page 320] came of no good spirit, that thou didst both rail at the dead, and slander a learned and catholic man yet alive.
If it be slander, he hath slandered himself: for I do but report his own writing, and open the folly therein declared. And I rekon it no railing to inveigh against Annas and Cai [...]phas being dead.
Sayest thou so? I will make thee recant and wring peccavi out of thy lying lips, before I have done with thee.
But I know, that although of myself I be able to do nothing, yet if you and all mine enemies, both bodily and spiritual, should do your worst, you shall not be able to bring that to pass, neither shall you prevail against God's mighty Spirit, by whom we understand the truth, and speak it so boldly.
Ah, are you full of the Spirit? Are you inspired with the Holy Ghost?
Sir, no man can believe, but by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost. Therefore, if I were not a spiritual man, and inspired with God's Holy Spirit, I were not a true christian: Qui Spiritum Christi non habet, hic non est ejus; that is, He that hath not the Spirit of Christ, is none of his.
I perceive you lack no words.
Christ hath promised not only to give us store of words necessary, but with them such force of matter, as the gates of hell shall not be able to confound or prevail against.
Christ made such a promise to his apostles: I hope you will not compare yourself with them.
With the holy apostles I may not compare, neither have I any affiance in mine own wit or learning, which I know is but small: yet this promise I am certain pertaineth to all such as are appointed to defend God's truth against his enemies, in the time of their persecution for the same.
Then it pertaineth not to thee.
Yes, I am right well assured, that through his grace it appertaineth at this present to me, as it shall (I doubt not) appear, if you give me leave to dispute with you before this audience, in defence of all that I have there written.
Thou art but a beardless boy, yesterday an upstart of the schools, and darest thou presume to offer disputation, or to encounter with a doctor?
Remember, Mr. Doctor, "The Spirit breatheth where it pleaseth him," &c. And again, "Out of the mouth of babes hast thou ordained strength." And in another place, "Thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes." God is not tied to time, wit, learning, place, nor person. And although your wit and learning is greater than mine, yet your belief in the truth, and zeal to defend the same, is no greater than mine.
Sir, if you suffer him thus impudently to trif [...]e with you, he will never have done.
Well, you shall understand, that I have it not in commission at this present to dispute with you, neither were it meet that we should call again into question such articles as are already discussed, and perfectly defined by our mother the holy church, whom we ought to believe without why or wherefore, as the creed telleth us. But the cause why you be now called hither, is, that you might be examined upon such articles as are administered against you, and such matter as is here contained in your hand-writing, that it may be seen whether you will stand to it, or no. How say you to this?
By your holy church you mean the synagogue of Rome, which is not universal, but a particular church of shavelings. The catholic church I believe, yet not for her own sake, but because she is holy, that is to say, a church that [Page 321] grounded her belief upon the word of her spouse Christ.
Leave railing, and answer me directly to my question. Will you stand to your writing, or will you not?
If you prove any sentence therein comprized not to stand with God's word, I will presently recant it.
Thou impudent fellow, have I not told thee, that I came not to dispute with thee, but to examine thee?
HERE the parson of Inglefield pointing to the Pyx, said, What seest thou yonder?
A canopy of silk broidered with gold.
Yea, but what is within it?
A piece of bread in a clout, I suppose.
Thou art as froward an heretic as ever I talked with.
HERE was much spoken of Confiteor, and other parts of the mass.
Do you not believe that they which receive the holy sacrament of the altar, do truly eat Christ's natural body?
If the sacrament of the Lord's supper be administered as Christ did ordain it, the faithful receivers do indeed spiritually and truly eat and drink in it Christ's very natural body and blood.
The faithful receivers? You cannot bl [...]r our eyes with such sophistry. Do not all manner of receivers, good and bad, faithful and unfaithful, receive the very natural body in form of bread?
No, sir,
How prove you that?
By this place, He that eateth me, shall live for me.
See that fond fellow, whilst he taketh himself to be a doctor of the law, you shall [...] me prove him a st [...]k foolish d [...]w. Do you not rea [...] likewise, Whosoever invocateth the name of the Lord shall be saved? Ergo, Do none but the godly call upon him? Therefore you must mark how St. Paul answereth you: He saith, That the wicked do eat the true body to their condemnation.
AS Palmer was [...] to answer him at the full, the parson interrupted him, crying still, What sayest thou to St. Paul?
I say that St. Paul hath said no such words.
See, the impudent fellow denieth the plain text: He that eateth and drinketh the body of the Lord unworthily, is guilty of judgment.
I beseech you lend me your book.
Not so.
I pray you lend him your book.
SO the book was given to him.
Your own book hath, Qui manduca [...] hunc panem, &c. He that eateth this bread.
But St. Jerome's translation hath, Corpus, Body.
Not so, Mr. Parson, and God be praised that I have in the mean season shut up your lips with your own book.
It is no matter whether you write Bread or Body, for we are able to prove that he meant the body. And whereas you say, they eat it spiritually, that is but a blind shift of descant.
What should I say else?
As the holy church saith, really, carnally, substantially,
And with as good scripture, I may say grossly or monstrously.
Thou speakest wickedly. But tell me, Is Christ present in the sacrament, or no?
He is present.
How is he present?
The doctors say, Modo in [...]ffabili, In a manner not to be expressed. Therefore why do you ask me? Would to God you had a mind ready to believe it, or I a tongue to express it unto you.
What say you to the baptism of infants?
I say that it standeth with God's word, and therefore ought of necessity to be retained in the church.
You have forgotten yourself, I believe, for you write that children may be saved without it.
So I write, and so I say.
Then it is not necessary to be frequented and continued in the church.
Your argument is not good, Mr. Doctor.
Will you stand to it?
Yea, Mr. Doctor, God willing.
Note it, register.
MORE of his examination in that time and place is not come [...]o our hands; wherefore we must leave it. In the mean season we are credibly informed of this, that sir Richard Abridges, the same day after dinner, sent for him to his lodging, and there, in the presence of divers persons yet alive in Newbury and elsewhere, friendly exhorting him to revoke his opinion, to spare his young years, wit, and learning. If thou wilt be conformable, and shew thyself corrigible and repentant, in good faith, said he, I promise thee before this company, I will give thee meat and drink, and books, and ten pounds yearly, so long as thou wilt dwell with me. And if thou wilt set thy mind to marriage, I will procure thee a wife and a farm, and help to furnish and sit thy farm for thee. How sayest thou?
PALMER thanked him very courteously, and made him further answer concerning [...]is religion somewhat at large, but very modestly and reverently; concluding in the end, that as he had already in two places renounced his living for Christ's sake, so [...] wo [...]ld with God's grace be ready to surrender and yield up his life also for the same, when God should think proper.
WHEN sir Richard perceived that he would by no means relent: Well, Palmer, saith he, I perceive one of us twain shall be damned. For we be of two faiths, and certain I am there is but one faith that leadeth to life and salvation.
O sir, I hope that we both shall be saved.
How may that be?
Right well, sir. For as it hath pleased our merciful Saviour, according to the gospel's parable, to call me at the third hour of the day, even in my flowers, at the age of four and twenty years, even so I trust he hath called, and will call you at the eleventh hour of this your old age, and give you everlasting life for your portion.
Sayest thou so? Well, Palmer, well, I would I might have thee but one month in my house, I doubt not but I would convert thee, or thou shouldst convert me.
THEN said Mr. Winchcomb, Take pity on thy golden years, and pleasant flowers of lusty youth, before it be too late.
Sir, I long for those springing flowers, that shall never fade away.
If thou be at that point, I have done with thee.
THEN was Palmer commanded again to the Blind, [Page 323] house, but the other two men were led again the same afternoon to the consistory, and there were condemned, and delivered to the secular power of the sheriff there present, sir Richard Abridges.
IT is reported also, that Dr. Jeffrey offered Palmer a go [...]d living, if he would outwardly shew himself conformable, keeping his conscience secret to himself, or at least to declare that he doubted which was the truest doctrine. But I cannot affirm it for a surety.
THE next morning, the 16th of July, Palmer was required to subscribe to certain articles, which they had drawn out▪ touching the cause of his condemnation: in the front whereof were heaped together many heinous terms, as horrible, heretical, damnable, devilish, and execrable doctrine. To these words Palmer refused to subscribe, affirming that the doctrine which he professed was not such, but good and sound doctrine.
You may see, good people, what shifts these heretics seek, to escape burning, when they see justice administered unto them. But I tell thee, this stile is agreeable to the law, and therefore I cannot alter it.
Then I cannot subscribe to it.
Wilt thou then crave mercy, if thou likest not justice, and revoke thy heresy?
I forsake the pope and his popelings, with all popish heresy.
Then subscribe to the articles.
Alter tho epithets, and I will subscribe.
Subscribe, and qualify the matter with thine own pen. So he subscribed. Whereupon Dr. Jeffrey proceeded to read the popish sentence of his cru [...] condemnation, and so was he delivered to the charge of the secular power, and was burnt the same day in the afternoon, about five o'clock.
WITHIN one hour before they went to the place of execution, Palmer, in the presence of many people, comforted his companions with these words. Brethren, said he, be of good cheer in the Lord, and faint not. Remember the words of our Saviour Christ, where he saith, "Happy are you when men revile you and persecute you for righteousness' sake. Rejoice and be glad, for great is your reward in heaven. Fear not them that kill the body, and be not able to touch the soul. God is faithful, and will not suffer us to be tempted further than we shall be able to bear." We shall not end our lives in the fire, but make a change for a better life. Yea, for coals, we shall receive pearls. For God's Holy Spirit certifieth our spirit, that he hath even now prepared for us a sweet supper in heaven for his sake who suffered first for us.
WITH these and such like words, he did not only comfort the hearts of his weak brethren that were with him appointed as sheep to be slain, but also wrested out plentiful tears from many that heard him. And as they were singing a psalm, came sir Richard Abridges, the sheriff, and the bailiffs of the town, with a great company of armed men, to conduct them to the fire. When they were come to the place appointed for their suffering, they all three fell to the ground, and Palmer, with an audible voice pronounced the 31st psalm, but the other two made their prayers secretly to Almighty God.
AND as Palmer began to arise, there came behind him two popish priests, exhorting him yet to recant and save his soul. Palmer answered and said, Away, away, tempt me no longer. Away, I say, from me all you that work iniquity; for the Lord hath heard the voice of my tears. And so forthwith they put off their raiment, and went to the stake and kissed it. And wh [...] they were bound to the post, Palmer said, Good people, pray for us, that we may persevere to the end. And for Christ's sake beware of popish teachers, for they deceive you.
AS he spake this, a servant of one of the bailiffs threw a faggot at his face, so that the blood gushed out in divers places. At which the sheriff was very angry, and called him a cruel tormentor, and with his walking-staff broke his head, that the blood [Page 324] likewise ran down about his ears. When the fire was kindled, and began to take hold upon their bodies, they lifted up their hands towards heaven, and quietly and chearfully, as though they had felt no smart, they cried, Lord Jesus strengthen us, Lord Jesus assist us, Lord Jesus receive our souls. And so they continued without any struggling, holding up their hands, and knocking their breasts, and calling upon Jesus until they had ended their mortal lives.
IT was very remarkable that when their three heads by force of the devouring flames were fallen together in a lump, insomuch that the spectators thought they were all certainly dead, Palmer, as a man awaked out of sleep, moved his tongue and jaws, and was heard to pronounce this word JESUS. So being dissolved into ashes, he yielded to God as joyful a soul (confirmed with the sweet promises of Christ) as any one that ever was called beside to suffer for his blessed name. God grant us all to be moved with the like Spirit, working in our hearts constantly to stand in defence and confession of Christ's holy gospel to the end, Amen.
On the Martyrdom of JULIUS PALMER.
A memorable Story of AGNES WARDALL, in the Town of Ipswich, persecuted for the true Faith of Christ's Gospel.
ABOUT the month of July, in this present year, 1556, there was one Richard Argentine, alias Sexten, a doctor of physic, with certain others dwelling in the town of Ipswich, not many in number, but maliciously bent upon the destruction of the gospel, and the favourers of the same. Among whom were Philip Ulmes, Edmund Leach▪ John S [...]eward, and Matthew Butler, a curious singing-man, a fine player on the organ, a perfect pa [...]ist, and a diligent persecutor of good men. This Butler being then constable in the town of Ipwich, as he was on the watch by night upon Cornhil, Dr. Argentine came to him in great haste, giving him intelligence of one Agnes Wardall, being the [...] lately come home to her house in Ipswich. Whereupon immediately such a way was contrived between them, that the said Agnes Wardell forthwith should be apprehended: but God, in whose providence the direction of all things consisteth, by whose disposition they have their operation, so graciously provided for his servant, and so prevented their malignant devices, that they came to nought, notwithstanding all their zeal and diligence; as by th [...] further relation of the story you shall find.
THIS Agnes Wardall was a woman that liv [...] in God's fear, and defied popish trash, desiring rather with hard fare and bad lodging to be abroad, than to be at home in her house, and among the te [...] of the ungodly: her husband also being a man living in the fear of God, and for the testimony of [...] conscience being also hunted, by force of the [...] was constrained to avoid his house, and g [...]t [...] crayer with an honest man, serving as a sailor, [...] occupation which till now he had been a stranger to; and also what rendered him more incapable was his having a stumped foot, which prevented [...] ready climbing to the top and yard; yet it pleased God to enable him with strength that he did good service, as they can well witness that were of his company.
THE said Agnes Wardall happened one day to come home to her house to see her poor children, who were under the management of a young maid, and being espied, the news was soon brought to Dr. Argentine, who immediately went to the constable, the apothecary as aforesaid, and told him what a notable cure was to be wrought on Wardall's wife in the apprehending of her. Which was more like to speed than miss, had not the good providence of God ordered it.
THE watch was speedily charged, and each company sent to its place. Argentine and the constable
[Page 325] took a good number with them, and forth they went to the house of this poor woman to lay hands upon her, which they [...]eset on both sides, some lying in the fields▪ and others were sent to the house of Ward [...]ll's mother, which was not far from his house. This do [...], one knocked at the street door, where Augustine and [...] was, with one of their we [...]pons, and no answer was made; the second time somewhat harder, but had no answer. In the mean [...] they fearing that some conveyance was made, knocked the third time harder than before.
THERE was not far from the door where they knocked, a certain day-window, where one might look out and speak: and so at the third knocking, a woman, who, at that time, was tenant to Robert Wardall's mother, and had but two nights before lain in the house, speaking out hard by their ears, asked who was there?
AH, sirrah, said Argentine, are you so nigh and will not speak? How happened it that you spake not at the first, being so nigh?
HOW fortuned it, said the woman, marry I shall tell you: I am but a stranger here, and I have heard say, that there are spirits walking hereabouts, which if a man do answer at the first call or second, he stands in great danger, and I was never so afraid in my life. At this her answer they laughed, and commanded her to open the door in the queen's name, for they were the queen's watch.
AGNES Wardall being at that time in bed in an inner chamber, having h [...]r maid with her, and her two children, she being at that time very heavy asleep, heard not the knocking. Her maid hearing at the second knock, called and jogged her dame, and with much ado awaked her, and said, The watch is at the door. What, the watch? said she. Yes, truly, said the maid, and hath knocked twice. With that she arose with all speed, and put on her clothes very slightly, and took with her a buckram apron, which afterwards she cast on her head, when she was fain to creep into a ditch full of nettles, and so passed down into a parlour, wherein stood a cup-board with a fair press, into which the maid did lock her.
IMMEDIATELY she went up to a chamber which was hard by the street, where she might see and speak to the watch, and said, Who is there? Then they bade her open the door. And she said, We have no candle. And they said, Open the door, or we will lay it on the floor. With that she came down and opened the door. Then asked they the maid, who is within? And she said, None but a woman that dwelleth with us, and [...]wo children. Then said they, Where is thy dame? Truly, said she, I cannot tell, she is not within. She was [...]here in the evening, said they. Yea, said the maid, but she went forth I know not whither. Notwithstanding they charged her that she knew where she was, which she denied. Then got they a candle lighted at one of the neighbour's houses, and came in, and in the entry met the woman which had answered them at the window, and said she was afraid of spirits. Argentine looking upon her, clapped her on the back, and said, Thou art not the woman whom we seek.
SO they entered the house, and searched a parlour next the street where the young woman lay which was her mother's tenant, and a young child that sucked on her breast, and not only in the bed, but also under the bed, behind the painted clothes, and up into the chimney; and finding the bed hot, said, Who lay here in the bed? The woman said, I and the child. And none else? quoth they. No, said the woman. When they could find nothing there for their purpose, from thence they went into an inner parlour, in which stood the cupboard wherein she was, and searched the parlour, which was but a little one. And one of the company laying his hand on the cupboard, said, This is a fair cupboard, she may be here for any thing that is done. That is true, saith another of them. Notwithstanding they looked no farther, but went from that into the chamber above, wherein the said Agnes had [...]in with her maid and children, with all other rooms and chambers.
AT length they came down into the yard, where they found a horse tied at at a pale eating shorn grass. Then asked they the maid, Whose horse is this? She answered, It is her horse indeed, and she came in b [...]fore night, and went abroad again, but I know not whither. Then were they in good hope to find their prey, and bestirred them with speed, and went into an out-chamber that was in the yard, in [Page 326] which was a boy in bed, of twelve or fourteen years old. And being in his dead sleep, they suddenly awaked him and examined him for his dame. Who answered, He knew not where she was; and unto that stood firmly, although their threats were vehement, not only to the poor silly boy, but also to the good simple plain maid. Then they caused him to arise and dress, and sent both maid and boy up to the cage, where they put the maid, but kept the boy among their trusty soldiers, so that one of them should not speak with the other.
NOW while some were on the corn hill, and others searching the neighbours' houses and back yards, the wife of Wardall being in the press fast locked up, and almost smothered for want of breath, desired the woman her mother's tenant, when she heard her in the parlour, to let her out. She asked her where the keys were, who answered, they were in a hamper, which she found, and endeavoured to unlock the press, but could not, though she tried a long time. Then she desired her to break it open; for (said she) I had rather fall into their hands, than to kill myself. Then she sought for her husband's hammer and chissel, but could not find them, to break it open withal, and came aga [...]n and told her, she could find nothing for the purpose.
THEN, said she, try once more, for I trust God will give power to open it. And being within in great extremity, she heartily prayed to God, who heard her prayer, and helped her: for at the fir [...]t turn of the key it opened it easily When she came out, she looked as pale and as bleak as if she had been dead and laid out, as she herself looked afterwards when she was really dead, as the same woman reported who then let her out, and was also at her death long after, in queeen Elizabeth's reign, and she was all in a violent sweat like drops of rain.
THEN she went out into the back-yard, where towards the fields, were pales fixed for the defence of the garden, one or two of which being loose▪ both she and her husband had often gone out and came in that way; out she got into the fields, and passing one little field, and over a stile, she hid herself in a deep ditch full of nettles, and covered her head with the buckram apron before-mentioned, and so crept low, and lay in the ditch. After long search to no purpose in the town, some of the watch returned again in the field's side; among whom was one George Manning, and John Bate, the crier of the same town, coming together. This Manning was an honest plain man, but Bate a very enemy, and one that in queen Mary's time would have been a priest, as it was reported, if he had not been married.
MANNING espying where she lay, gave a Hem, and made a noise with his bill, he being before Bate; at which she lay still, at last they departed to the street side to the constable. All this time the maid was in the cage, and the boy with the rest of the watch until perfect day-light. Then went they up and let out the maid, and sent her home, and the boy also; but they made the maid believe they had found her dame. Who answered, If you have her, keep her fast.
ON the morrow Manning sent her word to beware that she hid herself no more so near.
THUS by the might and power of God was his faithful servant delivered from their cruelty, and they known to be his adversaries, not only at that time, but divers times before and after. Notwithstanding, the said Argentine, at his first coming to Ipswich, came in a serving-man's coat. And then being in the days of king Henry the Eighth, he would accustomably use the reading of lectures himself; in which he was well commended at that time, Afterwards he obtained the office of ushe [...] of the free grammar school, and the master dying, got to be master himself. And being married to a very honest woman, remained there the days of king Edward; and when God took him from us for our just deserved plague, and queen Mary came to the crown, none more hot in all popery and supersti [...]ion than he, p [...]ting the posts of the town with Viva! Regina Maria, and in every corner.
FURTHERMORE, after the death of his wife, (who was an honest woman) he was made a priest, taking upon him divers times to preach (but never without his white min [...]ver-hood) such doctrine as was shameful to hear, saying mass, and carrying about [Page 327] the Pyx in high processions. Furthermore, leading the boy S. Nicholas with his minerver-hood about the streets for apples and belly chear. And whoso would not receive him he made them heretics, and such also as would not give his faggot to the bonfire for queen Mary's child. And thus continued he at Ipswich the most part of queen Mary's days, molesting there good men, some for not going to the church, some for not being confessed, some for not receiving, &c. till at length, toward the end of queen Mary's reign, he came to London, and in queen Elizabeth's time began to shew himself again a perfect protestant. And thus much of the famous Dr. Argentine.
An Account of the Trouble of PETER MOON and his Wife, and of other godly Protestants, at Bishop HOPTON'S Visitation in Ipswich.
IN the year 1556, a visitation was held by Dr. Hopton, then bishop of Norwich, and Miles Dunnings, his chancellor, at Ipswich, in Suffolk, where divers godly protestants, through the accusation of evil men, were much troubled; among whom were Peter Moon, a taylor, and his wife; they were accused of disobedience to the law, in not coming to church, and refusing to partake of such Romish observances as at that time were used.
AND first the said Peter Moon was commanded to come before the bishop, where he was examined of three several articles, viz. 1. Whether the pope were supreme head. 2. Whether the king and queen were right heirs to the crown. 3. And whether in the sacrament of the altar was the very body of Christ substantially and really there present.
UNTO which the said Peter Moon being timorous and weak, fearing more the face of man than the heavy wrath of God, affirmed, and in a manner granted unto their demands. Whereupon the bishop being in good hope, that although he had not come to church, nor received the sacrament of the altar, no [...] been ready to do his duty as the law had commanded, yet there shewed his mind, said, that he liked the man well: for such as have been, said he, earnest in evil things, will also be earnest in that which is good and godly, if once they be won.
THUS as this spiritual father was commanding his carnal child, and rather preferring him to hell-fire▪ than unto the sincere word and commandments of God, it happened amongst many others in the chamber, was one of the portmen of the same town, named Smart, an earnest member of their Romish law, doing of a very good conscience what he did, who after the death of queen Mary lived not many years, but rendered his life in godly repentance, protesting, that if God should suffer him to live, he would never be the man he had been before, what laws soever should come again: so that before the time of his sickness he frequenting earnestly the sermons in the same town, made by divers godly and learned men, would weep as if he had been a child, being notwithstanding of courage as stout as any man in Ipswich. Such is the marvellous mercy of God in calling to his heavenly kingdom, whom, and when he pleaseth.
THIS portman aforesaid, perceiving the bishop thus, as it were, at an end with the said Moon, and so he like to be discharged, said to the bishop, My lord, I have a good opinion of the man, and that he will be conformable; but, my lord, he hath a perilous woman to his wife. For I tell you, my lord, she never came to church yet since the queen's reign, except it were at even-song, or when she was churched, and not till mass were done. Wherefore your good lordship might do a good deed to cause her to come before you, and to see if you could do any good. And therefore I beseech your good lordship to command him to pray her to come before your lordship.
AT which words Moon was somewhat moved, in that he said, Command him to pray her to come before your lordship. And he said unto him, under my lord's correction I speak, I am as able to command her to come before my lord, as you are to command the worst boy in your house. Yea, my lord, said the other, I crave your lordship's [Page 328] mercy: I have informed your lordship with an untruth, if this be so. But if he be so able as he saith, he might have commanded her to have come to church in all this time, if it had pleased him. Well, said the bishop, look you come before me at afternoon, and bring your wife with you; I will talk with her.
AS my lord's dinner at that time was serving up, Moon departed, and tarried not to take part thereof, having such an hard breakfast given him before to digest. At afternoon Moon delayed and waited his time, bethinking when he might most conveniently come, especially when his accuser and his wife should not have been there. And according to the commandment came with his wife, which was not so secretly done, but his accuser had knowledge thereof, and came with all expedition in such post speed, that he was in a manner breathless when he entered the bishop's chamber.
THE bishop hearing that Moon and his wife were come, called for them, and said to Moon, Is this your wife, Moon? Yea, my lord, said he. O good Lord, said the bishop, how a man may be deceived in a woman! I promise you a man would take her for as honest a woman, by all outward appearance, as can be. Why, my lord, said Moon's wife, I trust there is none that can charge me with any dishonesty, as concerning my body; I defy all the world in that respect.
NAY, quoth the bishop, I mean not as concerning the dishonesty of thy body: but thou hadst done better to have given the use of thy body unto twenty sundry men, than to do as thou hast done. For thou hast done as much as in thee lieth, to pluck the king and the queen's majesties out of their royal seats through thy disobedience, in shewing thyself an open enemy unto God's laws, and their proceedings.
THEN the bishop began to examine the said Moon again with the aforesaid articles, and his wife also. And she hearing her husband relent, did also affirm the same, which turned to their great trouble of mind afterwards; but yet neither were they like thus to escape, but that in the mean time Dunning, the bishop's chancellor, came up in great haste, and brought news to the bishop, that there was such a number of heretics come, of which some came from Boxford, some from Lanham, and about from the cloth country, that it would make a man out of his wits to hear them: and there are among them both heretics and anabaptists, said he. And thus Dr. Dunning with his blustering words interrupting Moon's ex [...]mination, went down again as the devil had driven him, to keep his stir among them, and to take order what should be done with them.
THE bishop beginning to bewail the state of the country, in that it was so infected with such a number of heretics, and rehearsing part [...]y their opinions to those that were at that time in the chamber, Moon's wife had a young child which she nursed herself, and the child being brought into the yard under the bishop's chamber, cried, so that she heard it; and then said, My lord, I trust you have done with me. My child crieth beneath, I must go give my child suck, with such like words. And the bishop being (as it were) out of mind to talk with them any more, said, Go your way, I will talk with you in the morning; look you, be here again in the morning: with this they both departed.
AND beneath in the stone hall of the same house, the chancellor Dunning being very busy about his bloody business, espied Moon and his wife coming, and must needs pass by the place where he stood, and said, Nay, soft, I must talk with you both; for ye are as evil as any that are here to-day. To whom Moon's wife answered, My lord hath had us in examination, and therefore [...]ou shall have nought to do with us. Nay, quoth he, ye shall not so escape, I must talk with you also. Unto whom Moon answered, In the presence of the greater, the less hath no power; my lord hath taken order with us, and therefore we are as his lordship hath appointed, and must repair again before him tomorrow. At which he let them go, although he was earnestly importuned by the party above specified to have shewed his quality, which was nothing else but tyranny.
SO Moon departed and his wife without hurt of body: but afterwards when they with Peter the apostle, behold the face of Christ, they were sore wounded in their consciences, ashamed of their doings, [Page 329] and also at the door of desperation. Insomuch that when he came home to his house, and entering into a parlour alone by himself, considering his estate, and seeing where a sword of his did hang against a wall, he was earnestly allured by the enemy Satan to have taken it down, and therewith to have slain himself: but God, which casteth not away the penitent sinner, repenting his fall with a sincere heart, defended his unworthy servant from that temptation, and hath (I trust) left him to the amendment of life by the assistance of his Holy Spirit, and to make him one among the elect that shall be saved.
THE morrow they both remained and kept house with no small grief of conscience, waiting and looking with fear when to be sent for to the bishop, rather than offering their diligence to keep the bishop's appointment: but God so wrought, that when the time drew near that they feared the bishop's call, the bells run for his departure out of town. For which they were not only glad, but also many a good heart in Ipswich rejoiced and gave thanks to God. God for his mercy grant, that our sins may never deserve to provoke God's anger, lest the like days should come again. And if they so do, God make us, with all other weaklings strong and worthy soldiers to encounter with the spiritual enemies, the world, the [...], and the devil; and boldly to stand to the co [...]ession of Christ and his gospel, saying with the apo [...]es, "Whether it be right in the sight of God, th [...] we should obey you more than God, judge ye."
A tragical and most lamentable History, or an account of the cruel Murder of three Women and an Infant, viz. the Mother, her two daughters, and the Child, the Isle of Guernsey, July 18th, 1556.
OF all the singular and tragical histories in this book, nothing can be more barbarous, if any thing can come up to the inhumanity of this execution upon three woman and one infant, whose names be these following; Catherine Cawches, the mother; Gulliemine Gilbert, the daughter; Perotine Massey, the other daughter; and an infant, the son of Perotine.
BEFORE I come to the story itself, it will be necessary, for the better explaining of it, to relate the circumstances, from whence this cruelty did originally spring, which was as followeth.
THE 17th day of May, in the year 1556, in the Isle of Guernsey (which is a member of England), in a town there called St. Peter's Port, was a naughty women named Vincent Gosset, who being evil disposed, went (the day aforesaid) to the house of one Nicholas le Conronney, dwelling in the town of the said St. Peter's Port, about ten of the clock at night, and there taking the key of the house (lying under the door) entered into a chamber toward the street, where she espying a silver cup within the cup-board, took it away, and so conveyed herself out of the house again. Who immediately after this fact was done, (whether by counsel, or by what occasion else I know not) brought the cup to the abovesaid Perotine Massey, an honest woman, dwelling in the said town, desiring her to lend her sixpence upon the same.
PEROTINE seeing the cup, and suspecting (as the truth was) the same to be stolen, answered that she would not take it: yet nevertheless, having knowledge of the owner thereof, took it to restore it again to whom it did belong; and to the end she should not carry it to another gave her sixpence immediately. Where moreover is to be noted, that Thomas Effart saith and testifieth, that knowledge was given by the said Perotine to Conronney touching the stealing of this cup, who soon upon the misliking thereof charged the said Vincent Gosset of the trespass; who being apprehended and examined upon the same, immediately confessed the fact, desiring to have one sent with her (which was Collas de Lutre) with sixpence to fetch the cup again, which he accordingly did.
THE next day following, the king's officers being informed of the premises by one Nicholas Cary, of the said town, Constable, assembled the justices there to inquire and examine further, as well upon the fact of Vincent Gosset, as upon other griefs and things there amiss. So that after declaration made by the officers and constable before the justice, for that the said cnostable did report to have found a certain vessel of pewter in the house of the [Page 330] aforesaid Perotine Massey (who then dwelt with her mother Catharine Cawches, and her sister Guillemine Gilbert), which vessel did bear no mark, and especially for that there was a pewter dish, whereof the name was scraped out, their bodies upon the same were attached and put in prison, and their moveable goods taken by inventory. Within a few days after these things thus done and past, these three poor women, abiding thus in dur [...]n [...]e in the castle, made their supplication to the justices to have justice ministered unto them, viz. If they had offended the law, then to let them have law: if not, beseeching to grant them the benefit of subjects, &c. which supplication put up, they were thereupon appointed to come to their answer the fifth day of June in the year aforesaid. Upon which day, after strict examination of the matter, and the honest answering of the cause of the said women, at last they submitted themselves to the report of their neighbours, that they were no thieves, nor evil disposed persons, but lived truly and honestly, as became christian women to do, notwithstanding the false report of their accusers.
SO the cause being thus debated, after the inquiry made by the king's officers, they were found by the said neighbours not guilty of what they were charged with, but had always lived as honest women amongst them; saving only that to the commandments of the holy church they had not been obedient, &c. Upon this trial and verdict of their neighbours, is was, in fine, adjudged, first, that the said Vincent Gosset, being attain [...]ed of felony, and condemned for the same, should be whipped, and after her ear being nailed to the pillory, should so be banished out of the isle without farther punishment. As touching the other three women, the mother with her two daughters, for their not coming to church, they were returned prisoners again into the castle the first of July. And thus far concerning the true discourse of this matter, with all the circumstances and app [...]rtenances of the same, in every point, as the case stood, according to the faithful tenor and testimony of the Guernsey men, written with their own hands both in the French and English tongue. Wherein you see what false surmised matter was pretended against these women, and nothing proved, and how by the attestation of their neighbours they were fully cleared of the fact, and should by the temporal court have been dismissed▪ had not the spiritual clergymen picked matter of religion against them, exercised such extremity [...] persecuring these miserable prisoners, that in no [...] they should escape their bloody hands, till at length they had brought, them (as you shall hear) to their end. For after the time of this declaration abovementioned made by the neighbours, whereby they were purged of all other things, and being their known of their not coming to church, the bailiff's lieutenant and the justices thinking the matter not to pertain to them, but to the clergy, forthwith wrote their letters or mandate under their [...]ign [...] to the dean, whose name was James Amy, and curates of the said isle: the contents whereof here follow.
LETTER Sent from the Bailiffs, Lieutenant, and Jurates of St. Peter's-Port, to the Dean and Curates of the isle of Guernsey.
MASTER Dean and justices in your court and jurisdiction, after all amicable recommendations, pleaseth you to know that we are informed by the deposition of certain honest men, passed [...] fore us in manner of an inquiry; in which inquiry Catharine Cawches and her two daughters have submitted themselves in a certain matter criminal▪ wherein we are informed that they have been disobedient to the commandments and ordinances of the same, against the will and commandment of our sovereign lord the king and queen. Whereof we send you the said matter, forasmuch as the matter is spiritual, to the end you may proceed there [...] after your good discretions, and as briefly as you can possible, and also that it pertaineth to your office, recommending you to God, who give you grace to do that which pertaineth to right and justice. Written the first day of the month of July, in the year of our Lord 1556.
AFTER these letters and information thus addressed to Jaques Amy, dean, and the other clergy▪ the said women were again convented before the justice aforesaid, with his assistants. In the presen [...] of whom they, being examined of their faith, concerning the ordinances of the Romish church, [...] [Page 331] their answer that they would obey and keep the ordinances of the king and queen, and the commandments of the church, notwithstanding that they had said and done the contrary in the time of king Edward the Sixth, in shewing obedience to his ordinances and commandments before. After which answer taken, they were returned again to prison, until the others had an answer of their letter from the dean and his accomplices. During which time, the dean and curate gave their information touching the said women, and delivered the same to the bailiff and jurates, condemning and reputing them for heretics, the women neither hearing of any information, neither being ever examined at any time before of their faith and religion. Whereupon, when the said bailiff and jurates understood that the said clean and curates had not examined the women of their faith, they would not sit in judgment on that day, but ordained the women to come first before the dean and curates to be examined of their faith. And so the officers, at the commandment of the justices, did fetch and present them before the said dean and curates; which being done, they were examined apart, and then returned [...] prison again.
THE fourteenth day of the said month of July, in the year aforesaid, after the examination above mentioned before Elier Gosselin, bailiff in the presence of Thomas Devike, Pierres Martin, Nicholas Cary, John Blundel, Nicholas de Lisle, John Laverchaunt, John le Fever, Pierres Bonamy, Nicholas Martime, John de la March, jurates; sir James Amy dean, and the curates did deliver before the justice under the seal of the dean, and under the signs of the curates, a certain act and sentence, the sum whereof was, that Catherine Caw [...]es and her two daughters were found heretics, and such they reputed them, and have delivered them to justice, to do execution according to the sentence; the tenor of which h [...]re f [...]lloweth▪
"IN the year of our Lord 1556, July 13, at the church of St. Peter's Port, in the isle of Guernsey, inquiry being made by us the dean and curates, concerning the catholic faith and the sacraments of the church, viz. of baptism, confirmation, penance, orders, marriage, eucharist, and extreme unction, as also about ecclesiastical ceremonies, and the honour and worship of the virgin Mary and the saints, also of the mass, and it's efficacy; where Catherine Cawches, and her two daughters, Perotine and Guillemine, being called together, and separately according to law; and although often desired and exhorted to confess their faults, and ask pardon, yet they obstinately denied whatever they had formerly said vilely and dishonestly against the catholic faith, the sacraments of the church, and other ecclesiastical ceremonies; wherefore their denial, attestation and deposition, being heard, and we seeing, considering, and well weighing the evidence against them; as also the opinions of the curates and vicars there assisting, have found and do declare the said Catherine and Perotine, as also Guillemine, to be guilty of heresy; wherefore we command them back from whence they came."
- Thomas le [...]oll,
- John Alles,
- William Panquet,
- Peter Tardise,
- John Ma [...]ti [...]l.
WHEN this was done, the king's officers were commanded to go to the castle to [...]tch the said women, to hear the sentence against them in the presence aforesaid. And they appearing before them, said in the ears of all the auditory, that they would see their accusers, and know them that have deposed against them, because they might make answers to their sayings and personages, and to have their libel accordingly; for they knew they had not offended the majesties of the king and queen, nor of the church, but entirely would obey, serve, and keep the ordinances of the king and queen, and of the church, as all good and true subjects are bound to do. And for any breach of the king and queen's laws that they had done, they required justice. Notwithstanding all which their reasons and alallegations, the said poor women were condemned, and adjudged to be burnt until they were consumed to ashes, according to a sentence given by Elier Gosselin, bailiff: of which sentence the substance here followeth:
"Catherine Cawches, Perotine Massey, and Guillemine Gilbert, are all condemned and judged this day to be burned, until they be consumed to ashes in the place accustomed, with the confiscation of all their good's, moveables and heritages, to be in the hands of the king and queen's majesties, according and after the effect of a sentence delivered [Page 332] in justice by the dean and the curates, the 17th day of July, 1556, in which they have been approved heretics." In the presence of Thomas Devicke, Pierres Martin, Nicholas Cary, John Blundel, Nicholas Devise, John le Merchant, &c. jurates.
AFTER which sentence pronounced, the said women appealed to the king and queen, and their honorable council, saying, That against reason and right they were condemned, and for that cause they made their appeal; notwithstanding they could not he heard, but were delivered by the said bailiff to the king and queen's officers, to see the execution done on them according to the said sentence.
THE time then being come when these innocents should suffer, in the place where they should consummate their martyrdom were three stakes set up. At the middle post was the mother, the eldest daughter on the right hand, the youngest on the other, they were first strangled, but the rope brake before they were dead, and so the poo [...] women fell into the fire. Perotine who was then great with child, did fall on her side, where happened a rueful sight, not only to the eyes of all that stood there, but also to the ears of all true hearted christians that shall read this history. For as the belly of the woman burst asunder by the vehemency of the flame, the infant being a fair man-child, fell into the fire, and being immediately taken out by one W. House, was laid upon the grass.
THEN was the child carried to the provost, and from him to the bailiff, who gave order, that it should be carried back again and cast into the fire. And so the infant baptised in his own blood, to fill up the number of God's innocent saints, was both born and died a martyr, leaving behind to the world, which it never saw, a spectacle wherein the whole world may see the Herodian cruelty of this graceless generation of popish tormentors, to their perpetual shame and infamy.
NOW forasmuch as this story, perhaps for the horrible strangeness of the fact, will be hardly believed by some, but rather thought to be f [...]rged, or else more amplified by me than truth will hear me out, therefore to discharge my credit herein, I have not only foretold thee a little before, how I received this story by the faithful relation both of the French and English, of them which were there present witnesses and lookers on, but also have hereto annexed the true supplication of the said inhabitants of Guernsey, and of the brother of the said two sisters▪ complaining to the queen and her commissioners, concerning the horribleness of the act; which supp [...]ication for the more evidence, hereunder followeth▪
To the Right Honourable the Queen's most gracious Commissioners, for the hearing and determining of Matters of Religion, and Causes Ecclesiastical.
MOST lamentably and woefully complaining▪ sheweth unto your gracious and honourable lordships, your poor and humble orator Matthew Cawches, of the isle of Guernsey, that where James Amy, clerk, dean of the isle aforesaid, assisted by the curates there, against all order, law, and reason, by colour of a sentence of heresy, pronounced against Catherine Cawches, the sister of your honours said supplicant, and Perotine and Guillemine her two daughters, did cause the said Catherine, being a poor widow, and her said two daughters, most cruelly to be burned, although the said persons, nor any of them, did hold, maintain, or defend a [...]y thing directly against the ecclesiastical laws then in place, under the reign of the late queen Mary, but in all things submitted themselves obediently to the laws then in force: and yet the cruelty of the said dean and his accomplices, in perpetrating such murder as aforesaid, raged so far, that whereas, whilst the said persons did consume with violent fire, the womb of the said Perotine being burnt, there did issue from her a goodly man-child which by the officers was taken up and handled, and after in a most despiteful manner thrown into the fire, and there also with the innocent mother cruelly burnt: in tender consideration whereof, and forasmuch as this bloody murder was not in due form of any law, or in any manner according to justice, but of mere malicious hatred, as the true copy of the whole proceeding in this matter, by the said dean and his accomplices, here ready to be [...] to your honours, will make very plain and manifest: may it therefore please your good and [Page 333] gracious lordships, of the zeal that you bear to justice, and for our Lord Jesus Christ's sake, to have due consideration in justice of such horrible murder, so cruelly committed as aforesaid, according to the right demerit thereof. And that it may please your honourable lordships to order and de [...]ee also, that all the goods of the said parties, by pretence aforesaid wrongfully taken as confiscate, may be delivered to your said poor beseecher, to whom of right they do belong. And your honours said suppliant will daily pray to God for your long preservation, to his glory, and your everlasting health.
THIS supplication being presented in manner aforesaid to the queen's honourable commissioners, in the year 1562, such order therein was taken, that the matter being returned again down to the said country, further to be examined, the dean was committed to prison, and dispossessed of all his livings. So that in conclusion, both he, and all other partakers of that bloody murder, whether of conscience, or for fear of the law, were driven to acknowledge their trespass, and to submit themselves to the queen's mercy. The tenor of whose several submissions, as they are left in the Rolls, I thought proper here to publish to the world, for a memorial of the truth of this story.
The several Submissions of certain Guernsey Men, confessing their trespass in the wrongful Condemnation of the three Women above specified.
ELIER GOSSELINE, of the parish of St Peter le Port, in Guernsey, merchant, Nicholas Cary, the elder, John Merchant, Peter Bonamy, of the parish of St. Martin, and Nicholas Martin, son of John, having humbly submitted themselves to the queen's most excellent majesty, acknowledging their erroneous judgments, as well against Catherine Cawches, and Guillemine and Perotine her two daughters, and the [...]nfant of the said Perotine, executed by fire for supposed heresy, as also for the acquitting of Nicholas Norman, a wilful murderer, and other matters contained in their several submissions; pray the pardon of the queen's majesty for the said crimes and others committed in their several submissions.
JOHN Blundel, the elder, of the parish of St. Saviour, within the isle of Guernsey, upon like submission, and acknowledging of his offence, prayeth like grace and pardon for his consent given to the execution of the said three women.
RICHARD Devicke, of the parish of St. Peter le Port, merchant, prayeth like grace and pardon for his consent and judgment given for the acquitting of the said Norman, according to his supplication and submission late presented by Peter Bonamy, the same Devicke, and Peter Pelley, of the parish of St. Peter le Port, merchant.
THE said Peter Pelley prayeth the benefit of the said pardon to be extended unto him, according to his submission in the said supplication.
JAMES Amy, clerk, prayeth the benefit of the said pardon for his sentence with the clergy against the said women, according to his submission.
THOMAS Effart, of the parish of St. Peter le Port, humbly prayeth, as procurator lawfully constituted by the chapter, bailiff, and jurates, that the same pardon may extend to acquit all the inhabitants of the said isle of their arrears, &c.
The Copy of the Queen's Pardon to them of Guernsey.
THE Queen, to all unto whom these presents shall come, greeting. Be it known unto you, that We of Our special favour, certain knowledge, and mere motion, have pardoned, remitted, and forgiven; and for Us, Our heirs, and successors, by these presents do pardon, remit, and forgive, Elier Gosseline, of the parish of St. Peter's Port, within Our island of Guernsey, merchant; John Blundel, the elder, of the parish of St. Saviour, in the aforesaid island of Guernsey, merchant; Nicholas Cary, the elder, of the afor [...]said parish of St. Peter's Port, within the said isle of Guernsey, merchant; John Merchant, of the said parish and island, gentleman; Nicholas Martin, son of John, of the said parish of St. Peter's Port, within the aforesaid island of Guernsey, merchant; Richard Devicke, of the said parish of St. Peter's Port, within the aforesaid island of Guernsey, merchant; Peter Pelley, [Page 334] of the said parish of St. Peter's Port, in the aforesaid island of Guernsey, merchant; and James Amy, of the parish of St. Saviour, within the said island of Guernsey, clerk; and to all of them jointly and separately, whether by any other name or names, sirnames or additional name or sirname of trades, arts, or places, the same Elier, Nicholas Cary, John, Nicholas Martin, John Blundel, Peter and James, are known▪ called, or named, or by any other name, sirname, or additional name, or sirname of degree, trade, art, or place, any of the said Elier, Nicholas Cary, John Merchant, Nicholas Martin, John Blundel, Richard, Peter and James are known, called, or named, or lately were known, called, or named, all and all manner of murder, man-slaughter, felony, and felonious killings of Catherine Cawches, and Guillemine and Perotine, daughters of the said Catherine, of every one of these, and the accessaries of them, and all and singular felonies, insultings, strikings, woundings, burnings, transgressions, offences, riots, routs, unlawful meetings, assemblings, gatherings together, plottings, conspiracies, accessary helps, combinings, procurings, abettings, strengthenings and supportings, concealments, forfeits, contempts assaultings, neglects, and whatever other evil deeds done appertaining to the murder, man-slaughter, and felonious killing of the aforesaid Catherine, Guillemine and Perotine, or any of them, in any part or concern by the aforesaid Elier, Nicholas Cary, John Merchant, Nicholas Martin, John Blundel, Richard Devicke, Peter Pelley, and James Amy, or any one or mo [...]e of them, by reason, or occasion of the murde [...] ▪ man-slaughter, or felonious killing of the aforesaid, done or practised, and that so fully and intirely, and in so ample a manner and form as if every one of the aforesaid El [...]r Gosseline, Nicholas Cary, John Merchant, Nicholas Martin, John B [...]ndel, Richard Devicke, Peter Pelley, and James Amy, had separately Our letters patent of pardon.
ALSO We have pardoned, remitted, and forgiven, and by these presents do pardon, remit, and forgive, for Us, Our heirs and successors, the aforesaid Elier Gosseline, Nicholas Cary, John Merchant, Nicholas Martin, John Blundel, Richard Devicke, Peter Pelley, James Amy, and every one of their heirs, executors, administrators, and assigns, their neglects, all and all manner of incroachments, breakings [...] enterings, by all or some of them, or by the pro [...] agents or ministers of all or any of them, in all [...] singular our manors, lands, tenements, possessi [...] and hereditaments whatsoever, and where [...]o [...] lying within the aforesaid island of Guernsey, late chauntries, guilds, cloisters or colleges of Our's [...] any one or more of Our predecessors, before the 17th of November, in the first year of Our reig [...] done, performed or committed; and all and singular debts, returns, accompts, arrears, collectio [...] receivings, detainings, and duties of grain, [...] other returns, outgoings, or profits whatsoever, [...] Us or any one of Our predecessors for the [...] chauntries, guilds, cloisters or colleges, one or [...] of them, in whatever manner before the afore [...] 17th day of November, in the first year of [...] reign, owing, belonging, or appertaining.
WE have pardoned, remitted and forgiven, [...] of Our special favour, certain knowledge, and [...] motion to the aforesaid, for Us, Our heirs and s [...] cessors, by these presents do pardon, remit and forgive the aforesaid Elier Gosseline, Nicholas [...] ▪ John Merchant, Nicholas Martin, and Robert Devicke, and each of them, the freedom, flight, escape▪ and restoring to his liberty, Nicholas Norman▪ lately of the parish of St. Saviour within the aforesaid island, yeoman, of man-slaughter or murder lately judged, attainted and convicted, being [...] the killing or murdering of John Breghault, of the said parish of St. Saviour, within the island aforesaid, husbandman, but all and all manner of felonies, crimes, offences, punishments, deaths, penalties, forfei [...], contempts, neglects, ignorance, and other faults and offences whatsoever, touching o [...] in any manner concerning the aforesaid escape, flight, and setting at liberty of the aforesaid Nicholas Norman, by the aforesaid El [...]r Gosseline, Nicholas Cary, John Merchant, and Richard Devick [...], or any one or more of them, before this present day, after what manner soever practised, done, committed or happened.
ALSO, We have pardoned, remitted, and forgiven, and by these presents of Our certain knowledge and mere motion, for Us, Our heirs and successors, do pardon, remit, and forgive the aforesaid Elier Gosseline, Nicholas Cary, John Merchant, [Page 335] Nicholas Martin, John Blundel, Richard Devicke, Peter Pelley, and James Amy, all and all manner of riots, routs, unlawful meetings, and gatherings together to the disturbance of Our peace, by the aforesaid Elier, Nicholas Cary, John Merchant, Nicholas Martin, John Blundel, Richard Devicke. Peter Pelley, and James Amy, or any one or more of them before this in whatsoever manner within the aforesaid island, practised, committed, done, or perpetrated, &c.
A Defence of the foregoing History of Guernsey against Mr. HARDING.
THUS have you the true narration of this history, discoursed without corrupting or fal [...]fying any part or sentence thereof, no less faithfully on my part reported, than I received of them, who dwelling in the same isle, and being present the same time, were best acquainted with the matter, and have given sufficient evidence not only to me, but also to the queen's highnesses's commissioners, concerning the same, as both by the l [...]tter of the bailiff, by the sentence of the dean, by the supplication of the plaintiff, and the submission of the parties, and likewise by the queen's pardon granted unto them may well appear.
BY all which proofs and circumstances thus debated, it remaineth manifest for all men to perceive, what cruelty and wrong was wrought against these poor women above specified, and no less matter offered, in a case so unjust, justly to expostulate, or rather to wonder at the hard hearts of these men, but especially of the Romish clergy of Guernsey, who professing the gospel of peace and charity, should after the example of Christ, walk in the steps of meekness and mercy, and yet contrary, not only to all christian charity and good nature, but also against all order of equity or humanity, were so extreme and rigorous to condemn them to the burning fire, under the pretended colour of heresy. Who if they had been heretics indeed, yet mercy would have corrected the error, and saved life; equity would have considered man's frailty and weakness, at least true justice would have heard both the parties advisedly, and also substantially have surveyed the cause, and not have thundered [...]ut the sentence of death so hastily a [...] they did: yea, and though they had been heretics indeed, yet true christian charity would have stretched farther, and at least have given them leisure and respite of time to reclaim themselves. But now, what is here to be said? they being no heretics at all, as neither it could then, nor yet can be proved. For if king Edward's religion (which was objected to them) were heresy, yet were they then no heretics, when they revoked the same; and if queen Mary's religion were heresy, then were they much more heretics themselves, who condemned them for heresy.
BUT most of all we have herein to wonder at Mr. Harding, who in his late Rejoinder, written against the bishop of Salisbury, notwithstanding all these evidences and demonstrations so certain and manifestly appearing, yet goeth about first to deny the story, terming it to be a fable; and afterwards being forced to fly from denying it, to admit the story, he strives to turn it another way; and seeking by all means to clear the clergy from the spot of cruelty, transferreth the whole blame only upon the women that suffered, but principally upon poor Perotine, whom he specially chargeth with two capital crimes, viz. whoredom and murder.
AND first, touching his accusation of whoredom, let us hear how he proveth this matter: "Because (saith he) by story it is granted, that she was with child: and yet the historiographer doth not declare (neither durst for shame) who was her husband or father to the child," &c. As though the historiopher, being occupied in setting forth the persecution of God's people, suffering death for the religion and doctrine of Christ, were bound, or had nothing else to do but to play the sumner, and to bring forth who were husbands to their wives, and fathers to their children; which new found law of history was never required before, nor observed by any writers. If Mr. Harding now shall exact of me, first let him begin with himself, and shew us (as wise as he is) who was his own father, if he can. And yet I think not contrary but his mother was an honest woman. And no less also do I think of this Perotine aforesaid; whereof more shall be said (God willing) hereafter.
BUT in the mean time here cometh in the ca [...] ling [Page 336] objection of Mr. Harding, who beareth the reader in hand, as though "for shame I durst not, or of purpose would not express it," &c. My answer whereunto is this: First, To express every minute of matter in every story occurrent▪ what story-writer in the world is able to perform it. Secondly, Although it might be done, what reasonable reader will require it? Thirdly, Albeit some curious readers would so require it, yet I suppose it neither requisite nor convenient to be observed And, fourthly, What if it were not remembered by the author? what if it were to him unknown? what if it were of design omitted, as a matter not material to the purpose? Many other causes besides might occur, which the reader knoweth not of. And shall it then by and by be impu [...]ed to shame, whatsoever in every narration is not expressed? or doth Mr. Harding himself, in all his sermons, never omit any thing that might conveniently be inferred? Who was the husband of this Perotine, the historiographer hath not expressed, I grant: and what thereof? Ergo, thereupon concludeth he, That for shame I durst not. Nay, I may marvel rather, that he durst not for shame utter such untidy arguments, or so asseverantly pronounce of another man's mind and purpose, which is as privy to him, as then it was to me unknown what was her husband's name. And though it had been known, what was that material in the story to be uttered? or what had it relieved the cruel parts of them, who burned both the mother and the infant together, though the infant's father had been expressed? And how then did I for shame conceal tha [...] which was not in my knowledge at that time (if I would) to express, nor in my suspicion to misdeem?
NEVERTHELESS, if he be so greatly desirous (as he pretendeth) to know of me who was this infant's father, I will not stick with Mr. Harding, although I cannot swear for the matter, yet to take so much pain for his pleasure to go as near as I may. For precisely and determinately to point out the right father, either of this or any child, I suppose, neither will Mr. Harding require it of me, neither is he able peradventure himself, being asked, to demonstrate his own. And yet, as much as I may, to satisfy his dainty desire herein, and partly to help the innocency of the woman concerning this demand, Who should be the infant's father? Who, say I, but his own mother's husband: the name [...] which husband was David Jores, a minister, and married to the said Perotine in king Edward's time, in the church of our Lady's Castle parish, at Guernsey; the party which married them being named Mr. No [...]l Regnet, a Frenchman, and yet alive, wi [...]ness hereunto, and now dwelling in London, in St. Martins le Grand.
THUS th [...]n, after my knowledge, I have shewed forth, for Mr. Harding's pleasure, the right husband of this Perotine, and what was his name, who was also alive, his wife being great with child, and partak [...]r of the persecution of the same time, and a schoolmaster afterwards in Normandy, &c. Now if Mr. Harding can take any such advantage hereof to disprove what I have said, or be so privy to the begetting of this child, that he can prove the said David Jores, who was the right husband to this wife, not to be the right father to this infant; let him shew herein his cunning by what mighty demonstrations he can induce us to think the contrary; and as I shall see his reason, I shall shape him [...] answer, in such sort (I trust) that he will perceive, that whoredom, wheresoever I may know it, shall find no support by me; I wish it might find as little amongst the chaste catholics of Mr. Harding's church.
FROM this I proceed now to the second part of his infamous accusation, wherein he chargeth her of murder. A strange case, that she which was murdered herself with her child, and died before him, should yet be accused to murder the child. Murder doubtless is an horrible iniquity in any person; but the mother to be the murderer of her own infant, is a double abomination, and more than a monster, so far disagreeing from all nature, that it is not lightly to be surmised of any one without vehement causes of manifest probation.
WHEREFORE to try out this matter more thoroughly, touching this murdering mother, let us see, First, What hand did she lay upon the child? None. What weapon had she? None. Did she then drown it, or cast it into some pond, as we read of the strumpets at Rome, whose children's hea [...] [Page 337] were taken up in pope Gregory's mote by hundreds, when priest's began first to be restrained of lawful wedlock? Or else did she throw it by the walls into some private corner, as I am credibly certified, that in the eighth year of queen Elizabeth, certain scalps and other young infants' bones were found and taken out with a stick in the hole of a stone wall, in Lenton Abbey, by certain gentlemen within the county of Nottingham, James Barusse, Richard Loveit, and W. Lovelace, walking in the prior chamber; witness the said W. Lovelace, with others who saw the bones aforesaid? Or otherwise did she take any hurtful drink to poison the child within her, as commonly it is reported few nunneries to have been in England, wherein such a tree hath not been growing within their ground, meet for practising of such a purpose? Neither so, nor so. What then? did she purposely and wittingly thrust herself into jeopardy, to the destruction of her child, when she needed not, as Pope Joan, when she might have kept her bed, would needs adventure forth in procession, where both she and her infant perished in the open street?
WELL then, thus much by this hitherto alledged and granted, we have gotten this woman here to be accused of murdering her child, who neither laid hand upon it, nor used weapon against it; neither used any other practice in drowning, hanging, breaking, burying, poisoning, or any other wilful means, whereby to destroy it. And how then? By what manner of way was this woman a murderer of her own babe? Forsooth (saith Mr. Harding) when she was accused and condemned to be burnt, she did not claim the benefit of her belly, whereby the life both of herself for the time might have been delayed, and the child preserved.
WHETHER she did or no, I have not perfectly to say. No more, I suppose, hath Mr. Harding. However this is certain, and by witness known, that she uttered no less to her spiritual father in confession. And what if she had opened the same to the judges? They would (said he) have spared her life for the time, and so the innocent had been preserved. And how is Mr. Harding sure of this, more than was the life spared of the young lady, and sometime the mistress, of Mr. Harding, who suffered notwithstanding she was reported of some to be with child; because the law (saith he) is beneficial to women in her case, claiming the benefit thereof.
THE law so giveth, I grant. But it followeth not therefore, whatsoever the law giveth or prescribeth, the same to be put into execution.
BUT many times the law goeth as it pleaseth them who have the handling of the law▪ As for example; the law willeth none to be condemned by sentence of death for heresy, which the first time revoke their opinion, and yet contrary to this law they condemned her unlawfully. Again, the like law, none to be executed for heresy, before the writ be sent down De Comburendo, and yet contrary to this law, without any such writ, as far as I yet understand, they burnt her most cruelly. And what law then was here to be looked for of these men, who in their doings herein seemed neither to observe the law, nor to regard honesty, nor much to care for charity? And although she had claimed ever so much the privilege of the law, what had that availed with those men, whose hunting altogether (as by their own proceedings may appear) seemed to be for the houshold goods of these unfortunate women, which after their death they immediately took into their hands.
BUT be it admitted, that she neither demanded this benefit of the law, nor that the judges would ever have denied her if she had so done; yet it had been the part of a grave accuser, before he had descended into such a [...]ailing action of murder against a poor woman now dead and gone, first to have advised wisely w [...]th himself whether it migh [...] be, that she had no such intelligence what benefi [...] the law would have given, in case it had been required. For not unlike it is, and well may b [...] thought, rather yea than no, that the simple woman, brought up all her life-time in her mother [...] house in an obscure island, and in such an out-co [...] ner of the realm, far off from the court, and practice English laws, never had heard of any such bene [...] of the law; and therefore upon mere simplici [...] and for want of skill, required it not, because [...] knew not what to require. Peradventure also [...] senses might be so astonished with the greatness [...] suddenness of the fear, that it was out of her [...]membrance. Certainly it had been the duty [...] [Page 338] the judges, which knew the law, and having the woman before them could not be ignorant of her case, to have questioned with her thereof, and to have helped her simplicity in that behalf. Or at least, if they had disdained, yet had been the priest's part, who was her spiritual father, and made privy thereunto, either to have instructed her, or to have stayed the execution of her death for safeguard of the child.
BUT all this denieth Mr. Harding, and to aggravate the matter, inferreth, that she not of any simple unskilfulness of the law, "but only of mere wilfulness, for avoiding of worldly shame, concealed her own turpitude, and so became a murderer of her babe," &c. These are are the words of Mr. Harding, written by him not of any sure ground, but only upon his catholic conjecture; for other demonstration certainly to prove this true, he bringeth none. Wherefore to answer conjecture by conjecture, thus I reply to him again, That in case she had been asked the question by the judges and inquisitors, whether she had been with child, and then denied the same; or else if she, by any other colourable means, had cloaked her being with child, whereby it should not appear, this accuser might have spoken probable advantage against the woman. Now, as she was never demanded of their parts any such question, nor did ever deny any such matter; so to answer this man with as good probability, I hold, that in case they had required that matter of her she would never have denied it. And therefore whereas she is accused for her not uttering of her being with child; why may she not, by as good reason, again be defended for not denying the same?
BUT she should have uttered it, saith he. It had been well done, said I; and I would she had: but yet that is not the question between him and me, what she should have done, but why she did it not. Mr. Harding wandering in his blind surmises, fancieth the cause only to be, "for hiding her dishonesty, and for that she would not shame the gospel." To this effect tendeth all his accusation.
PEROTINE being big with child, at her condemnation did not shew it to the judges:
Ergo, She did it to conceal her turpitude, and because she would not shame the gospel.
BUT here this accuser must understand, if he has not forgot his logic, that such arguments which do truly hold a signis, do always presuppose, that the signs which go before the things signified, must be necessary, perpetual, and firm, as is between causes natural and their effects. Otherwise, if the signs be doubtful, voluntary, or accidental, there is [...] firm consequent can proceed therefrom.
NOW, if the said accuser should be put to his proof, how to justify this his sequel to be true by evident demonstration, that she did it only for covering her dishonesty, I suppose verily he should be found to say more than he is able to make good, and in conclusion should be brought into the like case as were the pharisees, who coming to accuse the adulteress before Christ, went away mute, with as much shame out of the temple, as the woman herself came in, having not one word to answer. For a man to pronounce assuredly upon the secret thought and intent, either of man or woman, farther than by utterance of speech is to him signified, passeth his capacity, and is to be left only to him, who is a God searching the heart and the reins.
BUT forasmuch as Mr. Harding worketh, as I said, by surmises, confirming every thing to the worst, let us see what may be surmised as much to the contrary, concerning the quality of this surmised murder; wherein divers things are to be considered, as hereunder followeth.
THE first conjecture is this, That such manner, of women, who for worldly shame are disposed to murder their children, have other ways to compass that wickedness, than by keeping silence. Now, as touching this Perotine's going to be burnt, neither could this silence save her, if she would, from worldly shame; neither is it to be thought any such intent ever to be in her, to murder her child; as might well appear in her mother's house, where if she might have continued her whole time out, she intended no less but honestly to be brought to bed, and to nurse her child, neither caring for the shame of the world, nor fearing any slander to the gospel. Whereby may be argued that no such intent of murder was ever in her thought.
[Page 339]FOR how is it likely that she, which had gone so long with child, almost to the full time of her deliverance, and never thought nor wrought any hurt to the infant all that time, should now, going to her own death, mind more hunt to her child, than she did before, hoping herself to live?
SECONDLY, How knoweth Mr. Harding to the contrary, but that she was known in the town to be with child, and went boldly abroad without note of any shame, before the time she came in trouble? Which being true, shame then could be no cause why she should conceal her child more now after her condemnation, than she did before she was condemned.
THIRDLY, Admit the case it was not known before, what advantage thereby should arise to her being now appointed to die, by concealing her being with child? She should have avoided (saith Mr. Harding) the public shame and slander of the world, in that none should have known her to be with child. First, what shame was it for a married wife to be noted to be with child? Again, what gain had that been to her, to avoid the shame and fame of the world, being now condemned to die?
FOURTHLY, How is it like, that for shame she meant to conceal that from the world, which both knew she should not live in the world, and also should suffer that kind of death whereby her child could not be hidden from the sight of the world, though she had gone about herself ever so much to conceal it?
FIFTHLY, How is it to be thought, that any woman going to such a sharp punishment of fire to be consumed, would let for any worldly shame to risque her own life from so bitter torment, at least so long as she might, beside the safe guard also of her child, if by any means she had known any remedy?
SIXTHLY, Forasmuch as Mr. Harding doth so heinously charge her with the wilful murdering of her own natural child, let all indifferent consciences consider this with themselves, what was the cause that moved her so willingly to recant as she did, but partly to save her own life, and especially the poor innocent. Whereby it is manifest to be understood, what a motherly affection she had to save her infant, if the father of the spirituality had not been so cruel, against all order of law, to cast both her and her child away, all this her said recantation notwithstanding.
SEVENTHLY and lastly, When Mr. Harding hath inveighed all that ever he can against this poor woman, yet is all the same but a bye-matter from this principal purpose pretended, supposing thereby, through his depraving of her, to justify and excuse the pope's holy clergy, who wrought her death. Which will not be: for whatsoever her life was besides, yet forasmuch as the cause of her death and condemnation was neither for theft, whoredom, nor murder, but only and merely for religion, which deserved no death; I therefore having in my story no further to deal, as I said before, so do I say again, that the cause of her condemnation was wrongful, her death was cruel, the sight of the babe was rueful, the proceeding of the judges was unlawful, the whole story is pitiful, and of all this the priests and clergy were the principal authors. All which being considered and well expended, Mr. Harding, I trust, may stand sufficiently contented. Or, if he think murder to be a thing, which ought not (as it ought not indeed) to be lightly passed over, let him then find out murder where it is, and tell us truly without affection of partiality, where the true murder lieth, whether in the poor woman, who together with her child was murdered, or in them, who without all law and conscience brought them both to death.
BRIEFLY and finally to conclude with this man, whatsoever the woman was, she is now gone. To bite so bitterly against the dead, is little honesty. And though the accusation had in it some truth, yet this accusation here needed not. Now the same being false, is too much unmerciful. At least being doubtful, and to him unknown, charity would have judged the best; humanity would have spared the dead, and if he could not afford her his good word, yet he might have left her cause unto the Lord who shall judge both her and him. To pray for the dead he findeth in his mass, but to backbite the dead, he neither findeth in his mass, [Page 340] mattins, nor even-song: and no doubt but in his Dirge and commendations he commendeth many a one, less deserving, to be commended than this woman, let catholic affection be set aside. And tho' the merits of her cause deserved not his commendations, yet did she never deserve at Mr. Harding's hand to receive such unmerciful treatment after her departure. Cruelty she suffered enough alive, though Mr. Harding had not added this cruel invective to her former afflictions: wherein notwithstanding he hurteth not her, but hurteth peradventure himself, neither so much destaineth her honesty, as he blemisheth his own. It hath been the manner of learned men in time past, ever to be more ready with their defending oration, than to accuse. And if they did at any time accuse, yet never but when forced; neither did they accuse any but such only as were alive, and that neither but in such matters, wherein either the common-wealth or themselves were vehemently touched.
NOW if this grieve him so greatly, that in my story I have termed her to be a martyr, let him consider the cause whereof she suffered, which was neither for felony, murder nor whoredom, but only for the religion in king Edward's time received; and when he hath consulted that religion, I shall cross her out of the book and fellowship of martyrs. In the mean time my exhortation to Mr. Harding shall be this;
FIRST, That if he will needs become a writer in these so furious and outrageous days of our's, he will season his vein of writings with more mildness and charity, and not give such example of railing to others.
SECONDLY, That he will moderate his judging and condemning of others with more equity and indifferency, and not be so rash and partial. For if she be to be accounted a murderer, who so carefully went about by recantation to save both herself and her child from the fire; what is to be said of them who so cruelly condemned her, and caused both her and her infant to be burned, notwithstanding that she for safeguard of their lives had (as I said) recanted. And yet so partial is he, that in all this invective, crying out so intemperately against the woman and the child that were burned, he spake never a word of their condemners and true murderers indeed.
THIRDLY, Forasmuch as Mr. Harding is here in hand with infanticide, and with a casting away young children's lives, I would wish, that as he has sifted the doings of this woman to the uttermost, who was rather murdered than a murderer; so he would with an indifferent eye look on the other side a little upon them of his own clergy, and see what he could find there amongst those wilful con [...]emners of immaculate marriage. Not that I do accuse any of incontinency whose lives I know not, but there is one above that well knoweth and seeth all things, be they ever so secret to man, and most certainly at length will pay home with fire and brimstone when he seeth his time.
I say no more, and not so much as I might, following herein the painters, who wh [...]n their colo [...] will not serve to express a thing that they me [...], shadow it with a veil. But howsoever he goeth with them, whether they may or may not be suspected touching this crime aforesaid of infanticide; most sure and manifest it is that they are more than worthily to be accused of homicide in murdering the children and servants of God, both men and women, wives and maids, old and young, blind and lame, mad and unmad, discreet and simple innocents, learned and unlearned, and that of all degrees, from the high archbishop to the clerk and sexton of the church, and that most wrongfully and wilfully, with such effusion of innocent christian blood, as crieth up daily to God for vengeance▪
AND therefore Mr. Harding, in my mind, should do well to spare a little time from these his invectives, wherewith he impeacheth the poor protestants of murder, whom they have murdered themselves, and exercise his pen with some more fruitful matter, to exhort these spiritual fathers first to cease from murdering their own children, to spare the blood of innocents, and not to persecute Christ so cruelly in his members as they do: and furthermore, to exhort in like manner these Agamists, and wilful rejecters of matrimony, to take to themselves lawful wives, and not to resist God's holy ordinance, nor encounter his institution with [Page 341] another contrary institution of their own devising, lest perhaps they being prevented by fragility, may fall into danger of such inconveniencies above hinted: which if they be not in them, I shall be glad; but if they be, it is neither their railing against the poor protestants, nor yet their secret [...]u [...]icular confession, that shall cover their iniquities from the face of the Lord, when he shall come to reveal the hidden things of darkness, and judge the world by fire.
AND thus for lack of further leisure, I end with Mr. Harding; having no more at this time to say unto him, but with him to fear God, to embrace his truth, to remember himself, and to cease from this uncharitable railing, especially against the dead, which cannot answer him; or if he will [...]eeds continue still to be such a vehement accuser of others, yet that he will remember what belongeth to the part of a right accuser: First, that his accusation be true; Secondly, That no blind affection of partiality be mixed with it; Thirdly, Whosoever taketh upon him to carp it, and impeach the crimes of others, ought themselves to be sincere and upright, and to see what may be written in their own foreheads.
WHOREDOM and murder are grievous offences, and worthy to be accused: but to accuse of murder the parties that were murdered, and to leave the other persons untouched that were the true murderers, is the part of an accuser, who deserveth himself to be accused of partiality.
AS verily I think by this woman, that if she had been a catholic papist, and a devout follower of their church, as she was a protestant, she had neither been condemned then alive of them, nor accused being dead, by Mr. Harding. But God forgive him, and make him a good man, if it be his will.
An Account of three Martyrs burnt at Greenste [...]d in Sussex.
NEAR about the same time that these three women with the infant, were burnt at Guernsey, suffered other three likewise at Greenstead, in Sussex, two men and one woman; the names of whom were Thomas Dungate, John Foreman, and Mother Tree, who for righteousness' sake gave themselves to death and torments of the fire, patiently abiding what the furious rage of man could say or work ag [...]inst them, at the said town of Greenstead, ending their lives the 18th of July, and in the year aforesaid.
An Account of the Martyrdom of THOMAS MOOR, in the Town of Leicester, June 26, 1556.
AS the bloody rage of this persecution spared neither man woman, nor child, wife nor maid, lame nor blind, and so through all men and women, as there was no difference either of age or sex considered, so neither was there any condition or quality respected of any person; but whosoever he were that held not as they did on the pope and the sacrament of the altar, were he learned or unlearned, wise, simple, or innocent, all went to the fire, as may appear by this simple poor creature and innocent poor soul, named Thomas Moor, retained as a servant in a man's house in the said town of Leicester, about the age of 24 years, and after the manner of a husbandman, who for speaking certain words, that his Maker was in heaven, and not in the pyx, was thereupon apprehended in the country, being with his friends. Who coming before his ordinary, first was asked, whether he did not believe his Maker to be there, pointing to the high altar. Which he denied.
HOW then, said the bishop, dost thou believe?
THE young man answered, As my creed doth teach me.
THEN said the bishop, and what is yonder that thou seest above the altar?
HE answered, Forsooth, I cannot tell what you would have me to see. I see there fine clothes, with golden tassels, and other gay matters hanging about the pyx; what is within I cannot see.
WHY, dost thou not believe, said the bishop, Christ to be there, flesh, blood, and bone?
[Page 342]NO, that I do not, said he.
WHEREUPON the ordinary making short with him, read the sentence, and so condemned the faithful servant of Christ to death in St. Margaret's church in Leister; who was burnt, and suffered a joyful and glorious martyrdom for the testimony of righteousness, in the same town, about the 26th day of June, 1556.
TO this Thomas Moor, we have also annexed the examination and answers of one John Jackson, before Dr. Cook, one of the commissioners, for that it belongeth much unto the same time.
The Examination of JOHN JACKSON, before Dr. COOK, March 11, 1556.
FIRST, when I came before him, he railed on me, and called me heretic.
I answered and said, I am no heretic.
Yes, thou art. For Mr. Read told me, that thou wert the rankest heretic of all of them in the King's Bench.
I know him not.
No? Yes, he examined thee at the King's-bench.
He examined five others, but not me.
Then answer me: what sayest thou to the blessed sacrament of the altar? Tell me.
It is a vague question, to ask me at the first setting off.
What an heretic is this?
It is easier to call a man heretic, than to prove him one.
What church art thou of?
What church? I am of the same church that is built on the foundation of the prophets and the apostles, Jesus Christ himself being the head corner-stone.
Thou art an heretic.
How can that be, seeing that I am of that church? I am sure thou that thou will not say that the prophets and apostles were heretics.
No. But what sayest thou to the blessed sacrament of the altar again? Tell me.
I find it not written.
No? Keeper, away with him.
YET I tarried there long, and did talk with him; and I said, Sir, I am content to be tractable, and obedient to the word of God.
DR. Cook answered and said to me, that I know not what the word of God meant, nor yet whether it were true or not.
Yea, that I do.
Whereby.
Hereby, said I. Our Saviour Christ saith, "Search the scriptures; for in them you have eternal life. For they be they that testify of me."
This is a wise proof.
Is it so? What say you then to these words that the prophet David said? "Whatsoever he be that feareth the Lord, he will shew him the way that he hath chosen: his soul shall dwell at ease, and his seed shall possess the land. The secrets of the Lord are among them that fear him, and he sheweth them his covenant."
Well, you shall be rid shortly one way or other.
My life lieth not in men's hands, therefore no man shall do more unto me than God will suffer him.
No? Thou art a stubborn and naughty fellow.
You cannot so judge of me, except you did see some evil by me.
No? Why may not I judge thee, as well as thou and thy fellows judge us, and call us papists.
Why, that is no judgment: but Christ saith, "If you refuse me, and receive not my word, you have one that judgeth you. The word that I have spoken unto you now, shall judge you in the last day."
I pray thee tell me, who is the head of the congregation?
Christ is the head.
But who is head on earth?
Christ hath members here on earth.
Who are they?
They that are ruled by the word of God.
You are a good fellow.
I am that I am.
THEN Dr. Cook said to my keeper, Have him to prison again.
I am contented with that, said I, and so we departed.
I answer no further in this matter, because I tho't he should not have my blood in a corner. But I hope in the living God, that when the time shall come, before the congregation I shall shake their building after another manner of fashion. For they build but upon the sand, and their walls are daubed with untempered mortar, and therefore they cannot stand long.
THEREFORE, good brothers and sisters, be of good cheer: for I trust in my God, I and my other fellow-prisoners shall go joyfully before you, praising God most heartily, that we are counted worthy to be witnesses of his truth. I pray you accept my simple answer at this time, committing you unto God.
OF this John Jackson, beside these his foresaid answers and examination before Dr. Cook, one of the commissioners, no more came to our hands.
An Account of the Martyrdom of JOAN WASTE, a blind Woman, in the Town of Derby.
THE first day of August, suffered likewise at the town of Derby, a poor honest woman, being blind from her birth, and unmarried, about the age of 22, named Joan Waste, of the parish of Alhallows. Of them that sat upon this poor woman's blood, the chief was Ralph Baine, bishop of the diocese, Dr. Draicot, his chancellor, sir John Port, knight, Henry Vernon, esquire, Peter Finch; official of Derby, with the assistance also of divers others, Richard Ward and William Bembridge the same time being bailiffs of the town of Derby, &c.
FIRST, after the above-named bishop and Dr. Draicot had caused the said Joan Waste to be apprehended in the town of Derby, suspecting her to be guilty of certain heresies, she was divers times privily examined, as well in prison as out of prison by Peter Finch, the official: and after brought to public examination before the bishop: at last, she was burnt in Derby, as i [...] above said. Concerning whose life, bringing up, and conversation, somewhat more amply we mind to discourse, as by faithful relation hath come to my hands.
FIRST, This Joan Waste was the daughter of William Waste, an honest poor man a barber, who sometimes also use [...] to make ropes. His wife had the same Joan and one other at one birth, and she was born blind.
[Page 344]WHEN she was about twelve or fourteen years old, she learned to knit hose and sleeves, and other things, which in time she could do very well. Furthermore, as time served, she would help her father to turn ropes, and do such other things as she was able, and in no case would be idle. Thus she continued with her father and mother during their lives. After whose decease she lived with her brother Roger Waste, and in the time of king Edward the Sixth, of blessed memory, gave herself daily to hear divine service read in the vulgar tongue. And thus by hearing homilies and sermons, she became marvellously affected to the religion then taught. So at length having saved so much money as would buy her a New Testament, she caused one to be provided for her. And although she was of herself unlearned, and by reason of her blindnes [...] unable to read, yet for the great desire she had to understand, and have imprinted in her memory the sayings of the holy scriptures contained in the New Testament, she acquainted herself chiefly with John Hurt, then prisoner in the common hall of Derby for debts.
THE same John Hurt being a grave sober man, of the age of threescore and ten years, by her earnest intreaty, and being a prisoner, and many times idle and without company, did for his exercise daily read unto her some one chapter of the New Testament. And if at any time he were otherwise occupied or hindered through sickness, she would repair unto John Pemerton, clerk of the parish church of All-Saints▪ in the town of Derby, or some other person which could read, and sometimes she would give a penny or two (as she might spare) to such persons as would freely read unto her, appointing unto them beforehand how many chapters of the New Testament they should read, or how often they should repeat one chapter for such a price.
MOREOVER in the said Joan Waste this was notorious, that she being utterly blind, could notwithstanding, w [...]thout a guide, go to any church within th [...] said [...] of Derby, or to any other place or person, with whom she had any such exercise. By which exercise she so profited, that she was able not [...] many chapters of the New Testament, but also could aptly disprove, by divers places of scriptures, as well sin, as such c [...]uses in religion, as then were too much in use [...] divers and sundry persons.
AS this godly woman thus daily increased in the knowledge of God's holy word, and no less in her life expressed the v [...]tuous fruits and exercise of the same: not long after, through the fatal dea [...] of blessed king Edward, followed the woeful [...] of religion in the reign of queen Mary his sister. In which alteration, notwithstanding the general backsliding of the greatest part and multitude of the whole realm into popery again, yet this po [...] blind woman, continuing in a constant conscien [...], proceeded still in her former exercise, being bo [...] zealous in that she had learned, and also refu [...] to communicate in religion with those, which taught contrary with that she had before learned in king Edward's time.
FOR which she was called and convented before the aforesaid bishop and Dr. Draicot, with divers others called in to bear witness.
THE articles ministered unto her, and wherewith she was charged, were these: First, that she did hold the sacrament of the altar to be only a memory or representation of Christ's body, and material bread and wine, but not his natural body, unless it were received. And that it ought not to be reserved from time to time over the altar, but immediately to be received, &c.
Item, That she did hold in receiving of the sacrament of the altar, she did not receive the same body that was born of the virgin Mary, and suffered upon the cross for our redemption, &c.
Item, She did hold, that Christ at his last supper did not bless the bread that he had then in his hands, but was blessed himself, and by the virtue of the words of consecration, the substance of the bread and wine is not converted and turned into the substance of the body and blood of Christ.
[Page 345] Item, That she did grant that she was of the pa [...]ish of Alhallows, in Derby, &c.
Item, That all and singular the premises [...] true and notorious by public report and [...]ame, &c.
WHEREUNTO she answered, that she believed therein so much as the holy scripture taught her, and according to that she had heard preached unto has by divers learned men. Whereof some suffered in prisonment, and others suffered death for the [...] doctrine▪ among whom she named, besides [...], Dr. Ta [...]lor, who, she said, took it of his conscience, that the doctrine which he taught was [...], and asked them if they [...]ould do so in [...]ike [...] for their doctrine: which if they would not, [...] desired them for God's sake not to trouble her, being a blind, poor, and unlearned woman, with nay further talk, saying, that by God's assistance, she was ready to yield up her life in that faith, in such sort as they should appoint.
AND yet notwithstanding being pressed by the said bishop and Dr. Draicot, with many arguments of Christ's omnipotence, as, Why was not Christ able as well to make the bread his body, as to turn water into wine, or raise Lazarus from the dead? and such other like arguments; and many times being threatened with grievous in prisonments, torments, and death. The poor woman thus being as it were half▪ astonished through their terrors and threats, and probably desirous to prolong her life, offered to the bishop then present, that if he would before that company, take it upon his conscience, that the doctrine which he would have her to believe concerning the sacrament was true, and that he would at the dreadful day of judgment answer for her therein (as the said Dr. Taylor in divers of his sermons did offer), she would then further answer them.
WHEREUNTO the bishop answered he would. But Dr. Draicot, his chancellor, hearing that, said, My lord you know not what you do, you may in no case answer for a heretic. And he immediately asked the poor woman whether she would recant or no; she said she should answer for herself. Unto whose sayings the bishop also conformed himself.
THE poor woman perceiving this, answered again, that if they refused to take of their conscience that it was true they would have her to believe, [...]he would answer n [...] farther, but desired them to do their pleasure; and so after certain circumstances, they pronounced sentence against her, and delivered her to the bailiffs of the said town of Derby aforenamed; who after they had kept her about a month or five weeks, there came unto them a writ De Heretico Comburendo; by virtue whereof they were appointed by the said bishop to b [...]ing her to the parish church of All-Saints at a day appointed, where Dr. Draicot was to make a sermon.
WHEN the time was come that this innocent martyr should suffer, first came to the church Dr. Draicot, accompanied with divers gentlemen, a [...] Mr. Thomas Powthread, Mr. Henry Vernon, Mr. [...]ethick▪ of Newal, and divers others. This done, and all things now in readiness, at last the poor blind creature and servant of God was brought and set before the pulpit, where the said doctor being entered into his sermon, and there inveighing against many matters, which he called heresies, declared unto the people that that woman was condemned for denying the sacrament of the altar to be the very body and blood of Christ really and substantially, and was thereby cut off f [...]om the body of the catholic church; and said, that she was not only blind of her bodily eyes, but also blind in the eyes of her soul. And he said, As her body should be presen [...]ly consumed with material fire, so her soul should be burned in hell with everlasting fire, as soon as it shall be separated from the body, and there remain world without end; and said it was not lawful for the people to pray for her: and so with many terrible threats he made an end of his sermon, and commanded the bailiffs and those gentlemen to see her executed. Then this blessed servant of God was carried away from the church to a place called the Windmill Pit, near to the said town; and holding Roger Was [...]e her brother, by the hand, she prepared herself, and desired the people [Page 346] to pray with her, and said such prayers as she before had learned, and cried upon Christ to have mercy upon her, as long as life served. In this mean season the said Dr. Draicot went to his inn, for great sorrow of her death, and there laid him down and slept, during all the time of her execution. And thus much of Joan Waste.
NOW, forasmuch as I am not ignorant (faithful reader) in this and other stories set forth of the martyrs, will not want carpers and markers enough, ready to seek all holes and corners how to defame the memory of God's good saints, and to condemn these histories as lies and untruths, espec [...]ally histories wherein they see their shameful acts and unchristian cruelty detected and brought to light; therefore for the better confirmation of this history above written, and to stop the mouths of such persons, this shall be to admonish all and singular readers hereof, that the discourse of this poor blind woman's life and death, in such sort as is above prefixed, hath been confessed to be very true, by divers persons of worthy credit, and yet living; and also hath been carefully perused and examined by W. Bambridge, then bailiff of Derby; who as well of his own knowledge, as by special inquiry and conference by him made, with divers others, hath certified the same to us to be undoubted; beside the testimony of John Cadman, curate of the said town, and of others also, upon whose honesty well known, and their report herein nothing differing from such as were best acquainted with that matter, I have been here the more bold to commit this story to posterity, for all good men to consider and judge upon.
An Account of EDWARD SHARP, John HART, THOMAS RAVENSDALE, a Shoemaker, a Currier, a Carpenter, JOHN HORN, and a Woman.
ON the 8th day of September (which was the next month following) a certain godly, aged, devout person, and zealous of the Lord's glory, born in Wiltshire, named Edward Sharp, of the age of forty years, or thereabouts, was condemned at Bristol to the like martyrdom, where he constantly and manfully persisting in the just quarrel of Christ's gospel, for misliking and renounc [...] the ordinances of the Romish church, was tried [...] gold, and made a lively sacrifice in the fire: in whose death, as in the death of all his other saints, the Lord be glorified and thanked for his grea [...] gra [...] of constancy; to whom be praise for eve [...] ▪ Amen.
ON the 24th of the same month, 1556, John Hart, Thomas Ravensdale, a shoemaker, and [...] currier, suffered at Mayfield in Sussex: who being at the place where they should suffer, after they ha [...] made their prayers, and were at the stake ready [...] undergo the force of the fire, they constantly and joyfully yielded their lives for the testimony of the glorious gospel of Jesus Christ, unto whom [...] praise for ever and ever, Amen.
THE day following, which was the 25th of the said month, a young man, by trade a carpent [...] (whose name we have not) was put to death for the like testimony of Jesus Christ, at Bristol, where he yielded himself to the torments of the fire, g [...]ve up his life into the hands of the Lord, with such joyful constancy and triumph, as all the church of Christ have just cause to praise God for him.
ON the 27th of the same month of September, John Horn and a woman suffered death by fire [...] Wooton-under-edge in Gloucestershire, and [...] very gloriously in a constant faith to the terror of the wicked, and comfort of the godly. So gloriously did the Lord work in them, that death unto them was life, and life with a blotted conscience was death.
The unmerciful Handling of WILLIAM DANGERFIELD and JOAN his Wife, being in Child-bed, taken out of her House, with her sucking Infant of fourteen Days old, and laid in the common Gaol among Thieves and Murderers.
WHEN I had written and finished the story of the [...] Guernsey women, with the young infant there [...] with them, and also had passed the burning of the poor blind woman Joan Waste at Derby, [...] hoped I should have foun [...] [Page 347] no more such stories of unmerciful cruelty shewed upon innocent women with their children and young infants: but now to the persecution in Gloucestershire about the parts of Bristol, I find another story of such unmercifulness shewed against a woman in child-bed, as far from all charity and humanity, as any other story that hath hitherto been rehearsed, as by the sequel hereof may appear.
IN the parish of Wotton-under-edge, not far from Bristol, dwelt William Dangerfield, an honest poor man, who by his wife Joan had nine children, and she now lying in bed of the tenth. This William, after he had been abroad from his house a certain space for fear of persecution, hearing that his wife was brought to bed, repaired home to visit her, as natural duty required, and to see his children, she being delivered four days before,
THE return of this man was no sooner known to some of his unkind and uncharitable neighboure, but they incensed with the spirit of popery, immediately beset the house▪ and apprehended him, and carried him to prison, and so at length he was brought to the bishop, Dr. Brooks, in whose cruel handling he remained so long, till his legs almost were fretted off with irons.
AFTER the apprehension of the husband, the wife likewise was taken, with her young born-child being but fourteen days old, out of her child-bed, and carried into the common goal, and there confined among thieves and murderers: where she and her innocent babe found so little charity, that she could never come to any fire, but was driven to warm the clothes that she should put about the child in her bosom.
IN the mean season, while the husband and wife lay thus inclosed in different prisons, the bishop began to practise not with the woman first, as the serpent did with Eve but the man, craftily deceiving his simplicity with fair glossing words, falsely persuading him that his wife had recanted, and asking him, wherefore he should more stand in his own conceit, than she, being as well learned as he; and so subtily drew out a form of recantation, wherewith he deceived the simple soul. Whereunto after that he had once granted that he would consent, although he had not yet recanted, they suffered him to go to his wife, where she lay in the common gaol.
THEN they with melting hearts opening their minds one to another, when he saw his wife not released, and perceiving that he had not done well, he declared unto her the whole matter, how falsely he was circumvented by the subtle flatterings of the bishop, telling him that she had certainly recanted: And thus deceiving me, (said he) brought this unto me, and so plucked out of his bosom the copy of the recantation, whereunto he had granted his promise. At the sight whereof the wife hearing what her husband had done, her heart clave asunder, saying, "Alack, thus long have we continued one, and hath Satan so prevailed, to cause you to break your first vow made to Christ in baptism?" And so parted the said William and Joan his wife, with what hearts the Lord knoweth. Then began he greatly to bewail his promise made to the bishop, and to make his prayer to Almighty God, desiring him that he might not live so long as to call evil good, and good evil; or light darkness, or darkness light; and so he departed toward his house: where by the way homeward (as it is affirmed) he took his death, and shortly after departed, according to his prayer, after he had been in prison twelve weeks.
AFTER this, Joan his wife continued still in prison with her tender infant, till at last she was brought before that bishop to be examined. Whereunto what her answers were, it is not certainly known. Howbeit most like it is, whatsoever they were, they pleased not the bishop, as appeared by his anger increased against the poor woman, and her long continuance in the prison, together with her tender babe, which also remained with her in the gaol, partaker of her martyrdom, so long as her milk would serve to give it suck, till at length the child, being starved for cold and famine, was sent away when it was past all remedy, and so shortly after died: and not long after the mother followed. Besides, the old woman, which was mother of the husband, of the age of eighty years and upward, who b [...]ing left in the house after their apprehension, for lack of comfort there perished also.
[Page 348]AND thus have ye [...] in one story the death of four together; first of the old woman, then of the husband, after that of the innocent child, and lastly of the mother. What became of the other nine children, I am not perfectly sure, but that I partly understand they all were undone by the same.
THIS story is reported and testified as well by others, as namely by Mrs. Bridges dwelling in the same town, and partaker then of the like afflictions, who hardly escaped with her life.
IN the month of October following, was burnt at the town of Northampton a shoemaker, a true witness and disciple of the Lord, who, according to the grace of God given unto him, cleaving fast to the sound doctrine and preaching of God's word, renounced the untrue and false coloured religion of the Romish see, wherein many a good man hath been drowned.
AFTER him, not long after, in the same month of October, died also in the castle of Chichester, three godly confessors, being there in bonds for the like cause of Christ's gospel, who also should have suffered the like martyrdom, had not their natural death, or rather (as it is to be suspected) the cruel handling of the papists, made them away before, and afterwards buried them in the fields.
I read moreover, that in this present year, to wit, 1556, one named Hooke, a true witness of the Lord's truth, was burnt at Chester.
An Account of five Persons famished in Canterbury Castle, by the unmerciful Tyranny of the Papists, about the beginning of November.
AS among all the bishops, Bonner, bishop of London, principally excelled in persecuting the poor members and saints of Christ; so of all archdeacons, Nicholas Harpsfield, archdeacon of Canterbury, (as may evidently appear) was the forest, and of least compassion, (only Dunning of Nor [...]ich excepted) by whose unmerciful and surly disposition very many were put to death in that diocese of Canterbury, not only in the bloody time of queen Mary, but some also in the beginning of the reign of our most renowned and most gracious queen Elizabeth, as by the grace of Christ hereafter shall appear.
OF those that suffered in the diocese of Canterbury in the time of queen Mary, some are recited already, with the order and form of such articles a [...] then were most commonly administered to the examinates by Thornton, suffragan of Dover, and the said Nicholas Harpsfield, and others, as before mentioned.
NOW to proceed in order and course of time where we left, next followeth the month of November.
IN the beginning whereof, fifteen godly and i [...] nocent martyrs were together in the castle of Canterbury, of which number not one escaped with life, but either were burnt, or else famished in prison: of which two sorts, which is the easier death, God knoweth, is hard to judge. Notwithstanding, the truth is, that of these fifteen, ten suffered in the fire, of whom in the next book, more, God willing, shall be said: the other five pined, and were must cruelly famished in the close prison, of whom we shall treat. Their names were as follow; John Clark, Dunston Chittenden, William Foster, of Stone, Alice Potkins, John Archer, of Crambroke, weaver.
OF these five prisoners, the two first were uncondemned, the other three were condemned, and should have been burned, but suffered no less torments than if they had abode the fire, for they pined to death by famine. What their articles and their answers were I need not here recite, seeing all they in the time of queen Mary commonly suffered for one manner of cause, that is, for holding against the seven sacraments, against the reality of Christ's being in his supper, for speaking against the church of Rome, and determinations of the same, against images set up and worshipped in the church, for not coming to church, &c.
FIRST, William Foster answering to these and like articles, said, That he believed well in all the articles of the creed; but to believe that there be more sacraments than two, and to pray to saints [Page 349] either to profit us, or to pray for souls in purgatory to profit by them; that faith and works do justify, or to allow the popish ceremonies in the church, that he denied. Moreover he said, to carry candles upon Candlemas-day, were as good for him as to carry a dung-fork; and that it is as necessary to carry the gallows about, if his father was hanged, as the cross. Come to the church he could not, he said, with a safe conscience. Concerning fish-days and flesh-days, he granted it good to put difference therein, except where necessity required the contrary.
THIS William Foster was a labouring man, of the age of forty years. He was apprehended and imprisoned by sir Thomas Moyle, knight.
ALICE Potkins, for the like confession, was condemned to be burnt, for that she was not, neither would be confessed to the priest, for that she received not the sacrament of the altar, because she would not pray to saints, nor creep to the cross, &c. Being demanded of her age, she said that she was forty-nine years old, according to her old age; and according to her young age, since she learned Christ, she was of one year's age, and was committed to prison by Mr. Roberts.
THE answer and confession of John Archer of Crambroke was much in like sort. And although some of these upon ignorant simplicity swerved a little in the number of the sacraments, some granting one sacrament, that is, the body of Christ hanging upon the cross, some more, some less, &c. yet in the principal matter concerning the doctrine of salvation for faith to stay upon, and in disagreeing from the dreaming determinations of the popish church, they most agreed. Concerning the not praying to saints, and for the dead in purgatory, for not creeping to the cross, for faith only to justify, for taking of an oath, and other such like, be granted as the other had done. This father Archer, by his occupation a weaver, of the town of Crambroke, of the age of fifty years, was imprisoned by sir John Gilford, knight.
AND thus have ye the cause and imprisonment of these five prisoners. Now as touching the cruelty of their death, that ye shall not surmise the suspicion or relation thereof to proceed of myself, you shall hear their own testimony by their own letter, thrown out of the prison, concerning the unmerciful dealing of the popish tyrants in famishing them, as is aforesaid. The copy of their letter is this.
The Copy of a Letter written and cast out of the Castle of Canterbury by the Prisoners there in Bonds for God's Word, declaring how the Papists went about to famish them to death; of which Company f [...]e were already most cruelly famished among them.
BE it known unto all men that shall read, or hear read these our letters, that we the poor prisoners in the castle of Canterbury for God's truth, are kept and lie in cold irons, and our keepers will not suffer any meat to be brought us to comfort us. And if any man do bring us any thing, as bread, butter, cheese, or any other food, the said keeper will charge them that so bring us any thing, except money or raiment, to carry it them again; or else if he do receive any food of any for us, he doth keep it for himself, and he and his servants do spend it, so that we have nothing thereof; and thus the keeper keepeth away our victuals from us: insomuch that there are four of us prisoners there for God's truth, famished already, and thus is it his mind to famish us all: and we think he is appointed thereunto by the bishops and priests, and also of the justices, so to famish us, and not only us of the said castle, but also all other prisoners in other prisons for the like cause to be also famished: notwithstanding we write not these our letters, with a view to signify our unwillingness to be famished for the Lord Jesus's sake, but for this cause and intent, that they, having no law so to famish us in prison, should not do it privily, but that the murderers hearts should be openly known to all the world, that all men may know of what church they are, and who is their father. Out of the castle of Canterbury.
The Persecution of divers good People in the Diocese of Litchfield.
THESE aforesaid months of September, November, and December, as they were troublesome to many other places, and especially to the [Page 350] diocese of Canterbury by reason of the archdeacon above named; so likewise they brought no little business in the country to Litchfield and Coventry, by a cruel bishop there, named Ralph Baine, and a more cruel chancellor called Dr. Draicot, through the fierce inquisition of whom great stir was there among the people, being called to examination of their faith, and many caused to bear faggots. Who, although they were not put to the torment of death, yet because it may appear what a number there is in the countries of England abroad, who in their hearts have a misliking of the pope's Romish laws and religion, if for fear they durst utter their minds, I thought to make a rehearsal of their names, which in the aforesaid diocese of Coventry and Litchfield were taken on suspicion, and examined for their religion.
AND first amongst them that were detected and enjoined to the popish penance, that is, to bear a faggot, candle, and beads about in procession, were Agnes Foreman, detected, examined, and by witness convicted, and bare a faggot the 12th of September. Likewise Margery Kirry, Thomas Norris, Thomas Stiffe, William Kaime, Robert Katrenes, Thomas Smith, John Borsley, the younger▪ Item, John Waterhouse, against whom came as witnesses and accusers Richard Cuaerbanke, J. Edge, William Smith, Robert Cooke, laying ag [...]inst him for seldom coming to church, for giving no reverence at the elevation of the sacrament, but looking upon his book, for not kissing the pyx, &c. Robert Bissel, Leonard West, Richard Baily, of the parish of Whitacre.
These were deprived.
NICHOLAS Cartright, doctor; Richard Jurdain, priest; Edmund Crokel, priest; Thomas Whitehead, priest; William Taylor, priest: Anselme Sele, priest; Richard Slavy, priest, married; Edward Hawkes, priest, married; Robert Aston, priest, deprived; Henry Tecka, priest, deprived; Robert Mossey, priest, married, and deprived.
THERE were divers oth [...]r besides these, who in like manner were detected, [...]ccused, and examined, although they bare no faggot, but were dismissed; as Richard Kempe, John Franklin, William Marler, Julius Dudley, Eustache Bysacre, William Shene, Anthony Afterwhittle, Thomas Steilb [...] ▪ Henry Birdlim, William Moseley, John L [...]ch, John Richardson, Anthony Jones, alia [...] Pu [...] ▪ Thomas Wilson, Thomas Lynacies, and Hugh Lynacres, his son, Isabel Parker, Martin Newman▪ William Enderby, Cicely Preston, Thomas [...] ▪ John Stamford, shoemaker, Richard Woodburn [...], Thomas Arnal, shoemaker, John Robinson, Hugh Moore, shoemaker, John Adal [...], Thomas [...] ▪ Frances Ward, John Avines, Richard Foxal, Thomas Underdonne, Richard Weaver.
THESE forenamed persons, with many more following in the next year after, although they did subscribe and relent through fear of death; yet for this cause I do here recite them, that by them i [...] might appear what a number there were not only in the country of Litchfield, but also in other parts, if that fear rather than conscience had not compelled them to the contrary.
THUS have you the whole persecution of this year declared, with the names of all them which suffered martyrdom within the compass of the year 1556▪ the number of all which, slain and martyred in divers places of England at sundry times this year, came to above eighty-four persons, whereof many were women, wives, widows, and maidens; besides those who by secret practices were otherwise made away, or driven from their goods, out of their houses, or out of the realm, or else within the realm were put to penance and obliged by forcible violence to recant; save only that I have omitted the story of sir John Cheeke, knight, and sometime school-master to king Edward. The worthiness of which man deserveth much to be said of him; but his fall should rather be covered in silence and oblivion. Only to note a word or two of a few things to the present short story most principally appertaining, it shall suffice.
SIR John Cheeke being in the country of Germany, out of all danger of persecution, w [...]h many more of his own country [...] and acquaintance, was not only in safety, but also with reputation accordingly esteemed among the Germans, [...]nd also [Page 351] well placed in the city of Strasburg. Where if he had contented himself to have remained, rather giving place to time, than to presume upon adventures, peradventure it had been better for him. But what fatal instigation wrought in his mind, I know not. In the end it so fell, that he would needs take a journey with sir Peter Carew, from High Germany to Brussels, and that (as I have credibly heard of them which knew the affair) not without the forecasting of his adventured journey by the constellation of the stars, and disposition of the heavens above. For as he was a man famously expert, and travelled in the knowledge of sundry arts and sciences, so was he a little too much addicted to the curious practising of this star divinity, which we call astrology. But howsoever it was, or whatsoever it was that the stars did promise him, the truth was, that men here on earth kept little promise with him. For having, as it is said, king Philip's safe conduct to pass and repass, and by the means, as I find, of the lord Paget, and sir John Mas. pledging for his safe-guard king Philip's fidelity, he came to Brussels to see the queen's ambassadors: and having brought the lord Paget on his way toward England, in the return between Brussels and Antwerp, he was taken with sir Peter Carew by the Provost Marshal, spoiled of their horses, and clapped into a cart, their legs, arms, and bodies tied with halters to the body of the cart, and so shipped, blind-fold under the hatches, and brought to the Tower of London.
THUS the good man being intrapped, and in the hands now of his enemies, had but one of these two ways to take, either to change his religion, or to change his life, other remedy with those holy catholics there was none. Neither could hi [...] conscience excuse him, nor truth defend him, nor his learning help him.
HOWEVER Mr. Fecknam, whether suborned by the queen, or upon his own devotion and friendship toward his old acquaintance, took upon him the defence and commendation of sir John Cheeke, speaking in his behalf: yet no mercy could be had with the queen, but he must needs recant, and so he did.
THEN after this recantation, he was through the crafty handling of the papists, allured first to dine and accompany with them, at length unawares to sit in the place, were the poor martyrs were brought before Bonner and other bishops to be condemned▪ the remorse whereof so mightily wrought in his heart, that not long after he left this mortal life. Whose fall, although it was full of infirmity, yet his rising again by repentance was great, and his end comfortable, the Lord be praised.
THE NEW AND COMPLETE BOOK of MARTYRS; OR, AN Universal History of Martyrdom: BEING FOX'S BOOK OF MARTYRS, Newly Revised and Corrected, with Additions and great Improvements.
BOOK III. CONTAINING An HISTORICAL ACCOUNT of the LIVES, ACTS, MONUMENTS, PERSECUTIONS, SUFFERINGS, and TRIUMPHANT DEATHS, of the PROTESTANT MARTYRS; Together with many other interesting Particulars, relative to the Protestant Cause, during the Cruel Reign of MARY I. commonly called BLOODY QUEEN MARY.
CHAP. I. The ORDER and MANNER of CARDINAL POOLE'S Visitation in CAMBRIDGE, with the condemning, taking up, and burning the BONES and BOOKS of MARTIN BUCER and PAULUS PHAGIUS, January 9, 1557.
CARDINAL POOLE, three years after his return into England, having somewhat withdrawn his mind from other affairs of the realm, and having in all points established the Romish religion began to have an eye to the university of Cambridge, which place among others, especially seemed to have need of reformation out of hand. To perform this charge were chosen Cuthbert Sco [...], not long before [...] bishop of Chester, Nicholas [...], arch priest of the people Bodolon, in the [...] of Vernon, professed in both the laws, and [...]ea [...]ing the name of the pope's Da [...]ary▪ Thomas Wa [...]son, e [...]ected bishop of Lincoln, Christopherson, elected bishop of Chichester, and Henry Cole, provost of the college of Eaton. There was good cause why the matter was especially committed to these persons: for as touching Ormanet, it is well known that he was a man of much estimation with Julius the third, at that time bishop of Rome, and was appointed to come into England with cardinal Poole, because without his knowledge (as in whom he put his chief trust and confidence) the bishop would have nothing done that was of any importance or weight.
THERE persons thus appointed (in the mean while as the visitors were preparing themselves for their journey) sent their letters with the cardinal's citation before to Dr. Andrew Perne, then vice-chancellor of Cambridge, with the other commissioners associate, commanding him to warn all the graduates of the university, in their name, to be in readiness the 11th day of January, between eight and ten o'cloc [...], in the church of St. Mary the [Page 354] virgin: willing him especially to be there himself in person, and also to set forward all the residue, to whose charge it belonged, that they should search out all statutes, books, privileges, and monuments appertaining to the university, or to any of the colleges, or finally to any of themselves, and these to present the same before them at the day appointed, and every man to appear there personally; for they would not fail being there at the same time, to lay before them such things as should seem necessary to this charge of reforming the university, and further to give charge of all such things as should seem most for the profit and benefit of the same, together with such things as were to be done on their part, according as should seem most agreeable to the decrees of the canon law.
THIS citation of the cardinal, being brought to Cambridge by Mr. Bullock, was first examined in the convocation-house of regents, and there openly read by the orator of the university the 11th of December.
AFTER this, upon the 24th of December, which was Christmas Eve, the vice chancellor with the heads of the houses, meeting together in the school [...], it was there conluded, that the visitors' charges should be borne by the university and colleges (which then cost the university an hundred pounds) and also that no master of any college should suffer any of the fellows, scholars, or ministers, to go forth of the town, but to return before the visitation.
ON Friday the 8th of January, the queen's commissioners, namely, Dr. Perne, vice-chancellor, Dr. Sedgwick, Dr. Harvey, Mr. Frank, Mr. Kust, and another who is here nameless, and also sir James Dyer, the recorder, Mr. Chapman, and Evered sitting together in the hall, some were there called by the appointment of L. Hawes, and charge given what should be done. And first the commission was read. Then were all the high-constables called to bring in their precepts, and sworn. Also two of every parish of ten or twelve hundreds, were sworn to inquire of heresy, lollardy, conspiracy, seditious words, tales, and rumours against the king and queen. Item, For heretical and seditious books, for negligences and misdemeanours in the church, for observation of ceremonies, for ornaments, and stock of the church.
WE said at the first, that the cardinal thought the university to have need of reformation. The reason why he should think so was this; either because the same of long continuance had cast off the bishop of Rome, and cleaved to the wholesome doctrine of the gospel; or else by reason that both for the late schism, not ye [...] wo [...]n out of memony, and for the doctrine of Martin Bucer, who not long before openly in the said university interpreted holy scripture, they saw many so sore corrupted and spott [...]d with this infection, that (even as when fire is spread in a town) unless a speedy remedy were applied out of hand, it were not possible to their thinking, to quench it many years after. Who also feared (if it were not looked to in time) lest this mischief should take root, and by little and little infect all the members next unto it, which yet were whole and sound.
THIS was in the year 1556. To the intent therefore to make a salve for this sore, the inquisitors, of whom we spoke before, came unto Cambridge the ninth day of January. And as they were yet on their journey, and far from the town, divers of the masters and presidents of the colleges met them, and brought them courteously, first into th [...] town, and after to their lodgings. They were entertained in Trinity-college by Mr. John Christopherson, master of the said house, and a little before elected bishop of Chichester. Notwithstanding they were desired, some to one place, and some to another, as occasion served, either to do their duties, or to shew their good wills; Dr. Cole to the King's college, and Dr. Watson to St. John's. But whether it were for the acquaintance of Christopherson, or for the largeness of the house, which seemed most convenient for their purpose, they all took up their lodgings in the said college with Mr. Christopherson.
AT their coming thither an oration was made by a fellow of the house, who in the name of all the rest, with long protestation declared that they were most heartily welcome thither, and that he and his fellows gave them great thanks, that it had pleased their lordships to have so good an opinion of them, [Page 355] as to chuse their house especially to lodge in, whereby they had both encouraged them to stand in hope of some further benevolence towards them, and also done great honour to their college by their being there: wherefore they should look at their hand again for as much duty and reverence, as lay in their power to perform.
TO this oration Dr. Watson made answer, That this forward and earnest good wills and minds of their's, in doing such courtesy, was right thankfully taken both of him and his, exhorting them to continue stedfastly in the [...] and to proceed also when need should require [...] was so far from any of their thoughts, to [...] them in this their race, that they would ra [...]he [...] haste them forward to run through more speed [...]ly, being not without good cause persuaded to conceive good hope of their benevolence towards them, inasmuch as they would do for them whatsoever might turn to their profit and advantage.
THIS day, forasmuch as it was towards evening before they came, and the sun was going down, nothing else was done. The next day, being the tenth of January, they bestowed in recreating themselves after their journey, and in setting other things to rights. Nevertheless, to the intent the same should not escape altogether without doing somewhat, they interdicted the two churches, namely, St. Mary's, where Mr. Bucer▪ and St. Michael's, where Paulus Phagius lay buried.
THESE men were dead a good while before, Paulus Phagius had scarce yet shewed the proof of his wit and learning when he departed to God 1549. Bucer lived but a little after. During which time somewhat by writing, but chiefly by reading and preaching openly, (wherein the old man, being painful in the word of God, never spared himself nor regarded his health) he brought all men into such ad [...]i [...]at [...]on of him, that neither his friends could sufficiently praise him, nor his enemies in any point find fault with his singular life and sincere doctrine. A most certain token whereof may be his sumptuous burial, solemnized with such great assistance and gladness of all the degrees of the university, that it was not possible to devise more to the setting out and amplifying of the same. The whole manner and order of the doing whereof being written by Mr. Nicholas Carre, a learned man, in a little treatise to sir John Cheeke, knight, with an epistle full of consolation, as likewise concerning his departure added thereunto, was sent afterward unto Peter Martyr, then abiding at Oxford.
FROM the burial of Bucer and Phagius, unto the coming of these visitors, three or four years were passed. And from the time of the decease of king Edward the Sixth unto that day, the priests celebrated their masses and other kinds of ceremonies in those places, and that without scruple of conscience, as far as men could perceive. But after the time that these commissioners came hither, those things that before were accounted sacred and holy, began to be denounced profane and unholy. For they commanded that all those assemblies that should hereafter be made for the executing of holy ceremonies, should be removed to the King's-Chapel, which is a place far more stately than all the others.
NOW was come the 11th day, in which the chancellor of the university, with the masters and presidents of colleges, and all the other graduates of every house, were commanded to appear before the said commissioners in their habits. It was commanded, that the scholars also should come in their surplices, but that was not done. They assembled in great numbers to Trinity-college, having the university cross borne before them, and in the Gatehouse a form was set and covered with cushions, and a carpet for the visitors. Where the vice-chancellor, having on a tissue cope, sprinkled holy-water on them, and purposed to cense them, but they refused i [...] there, which notwithstanding afterward in the Queen's-college, and elsewhere, they refused not.
THERE Mr. John Stokes, common orator of the university, made a Latin oration in the name of all the rest: a copy whereof, now rendered into English, here followeth.
[Page 356] [...] Oration to Queen MARY'S Visitors at [...] Cambridge, Jan. 11, 1557.
[...] university, most reverend fathers, has [...] a long time solicitous about your [...] pleased freely beholds your [...] as a testimony of her willingness, [...]rself and all her treasures. Assembled [...] the Cambridge scholars, all orders [...] assure your lordships upon my own [...], one and all congratulate your much [...]. For we are all persuaded, that the [...] this day, through God's assistance, and [...], will prove auspicious to the [...] of this university; nor, in a matter so [...] to the common good, will your help be [...] And by many things I am confirmed in [...], but I shall mention only those that so [...] to the business in hand, that they [...] be omitted; and these truly in number [...] and finite, but in their virtue and power [...], that no faculty of speech is able to [...] [...]cause, as I said before, the joy this [...] [...]ceived from your coming was very great, [...] you▪ while briefly I relate the manner, [...] favourable ear.
[...] most reverend father in Christ, cardinal [...], who hath restored oppressed religion, [...] the ruins of his country, brought back [...] our laws; he, I say, that English Poole, [...] true Moses, was the author of your visita [...] [...] whose excellent virtue many laws have [...] to all parts of his country. Yet there [...] and nearer cause than the bond of [...] [...]eeing we were part of that republic, which [...]eparately taken the government of on him▪ [...]or the year before he most kindly took on [...] the government of this university, which [...] with so much prudence, that he not [...]oved whatever might impede our studies, [...] added such ornament, as greatly increased [...] of our university; these things confirmed [...] hopes, and now brings so fresh to our [...] at we cannot chuse but think all his kind [...] [...] collected in this vsitation, from which [...] all those things which the remarkable [...] great chancellor, who looked on our [...] as his proper pupil, promised. And I wish truly that he himself, was it not detrimental to the public, could have been here at this time; that he with his rays might have illuminated his university, inveloped in darkness and a profound night, with the glory of the true religion. But this our desire is repugnant to the public good, and the interest of the most holy apostolic see; the [...]egate therefore has appointed you his substitutes, whose natural parts for wisdom, whose persons for worth and whose minds for knowledge, he judged most fit for this employment: I can therefore assure you truly, we all esteem you, as men whose religion we love, virtue we honour, and on whose good will, belief and counsel for the public good we depend on. For after by the singular and extraordinary virtue of the legate, cardinal Poole, from the darkness and night of former times, we began to review the light in public, together with a clearer sight of our former unhappiness, to the greatness of which our ignorance of it contributed not a little; for, in my opinion, we ought to be accounted so much the more miserable, who labouring under so damnable an heresy, yet saw not the danger we were in. As that distemper is by much the worse, which destroys nature without being perceived to afflict the senses; and the man is often dead before he knew he was sick. This was the disease of our university, which however sharp-sighted other ways, in this ease of religion, the head of the church being hurt, (whence springs all the power of judging) became stupid, lethargic, and as it were without any sense; till about three years ago, the divine compassion of the most holy father Julius, to us English almost dead, again corporated us in his most holy church, again restored health to our bodies, and peace to our minds▪ How easy was it then for Britannia to see how near she had approached the jaws of hell this university especially plainly discerned, and our nation was miserably afflicted with this desolation and schism of religion. There is no need here to repeat the dissol [...]tion of the monasteries, the robbing the church, the slaying the priests, the murdering the nobles, the riots and tumults of the people, the impoverishing the whole kingdom, these things might possibly have happened and we blameless, but here the judgment was so remarkable▪ that we must needs look on it as a punishment for our sins and wickednesses. But granting these things only the sport of chance, we [Page 357] suffered worse in our religion and conscience. Piety towards God was vanished, the chastity of the priests was turned into open prostitution, the soul lay as it were fast asleep, no religious ceremonies to awaken it; the mind by the variety of opinions so distracted so differing from itself, that it embraced an infinity of errors, among which there were two principal fountains, of the streams of which this university drinking a little too much, we confess became intoxicated. The first owed it's birth from unnatural separation from the unity of the catholic church, not unlike what Meneius Agrippa mentions of the members and the belly. The second arose from Wickliffe's mud and mire, which made the celebration of the sacrament of the altar an abomination. For the truth of which let any man consult himself: for we imitating philosophers, and those none of the best, have borrowed a light to the scripture from the school of the Epicureans. For whereas Christ (in the truth of whose words is placed the foundation of our faith) affirms every where, distinctly, and without exception, the true and perpetual presence of his body, yet we are truly to interpret these expressions as if they were imperfect, or had another meaning, unless we had recourse to the atoms of Epicurus, and that the true body and blood of Christ was only as it were the body and blood. But this is not a time to make mention of all the things that have past; no, I rather wish they could be eternally forgot, that no remembrance of them might be handed down to our posterity. Yet I thought myself obliged to say something in the general, as a confession of our past errors; still remembering, that as this university received her wounds from her former visitors, so from you her present, she may be restored to her former health. And here she promises both for herself and her's, by her unwearied preaching of repentance, to bring back to the true religion all her er [...]ing children, and make them so diligent in the present, as to redeem the time past. For they that are first in this race, contend so earnestly, as makes it plainly appear they voluntarily entered it; and they that came in last, and as it were at the eleventh hour, shew such zeal for their religion, as well witnesses they l [...]ft it rashly, and not on mature judgment and deliberation; our university thus restored, the desired religion seems more to please, than had her precepts been constantly obeyed, and her glory never obscured.
WHEREFORE this university suppliant and prostrate first begs pardon and peace of the eternal God, and that he will preserve the right faith of her and her's, and cause this university once more to flourish and abound. Then for her and her's, all and singular, she offers this petition to your highnesses, that the industry of her present sons may make amends for the errors and offences of the former. For the rest she submits wholly to the sentence your great wisdom and singular love shall pronounce, hoping your justice will find her cause good, or your mercy make it so: either will be an equal benefit, whether you judge this university innocent from the justice of her cause, or whether you make her so by the abundance of your love. Now to return you thanks, we again promise you, the greatest regard to things sacred, unwearied diligence in searching the scriptures and fathers, a perpetual love of the true religion, and an eternal remembrance of your favours.
WHEN he had made an end of speaking, the bishop of Chester answered thereunto:
THAT they took in right good part, that the mother of the university had made so open a declaration of her good will toward them: for which he gave most hearty thanks, desiring her to perform in deed, and in her works, the things that she had so largely promised of herself in words and communication.
AS concerning their good wills, there was no cause to mistrust. For their coming thither was not to deal any thing roughly with such as fell to the amendment: but both the cardinal himself, and they also, were fully minded to shew favour, devising how to bring all things to peace and tranquillity, desiring nothing more earnestly, than that they which have erred and gone astray▪ should return into the right path again. The right reverend father, the lord cardinal, whom he wishe [...] [...] have been present, wished the self-same thing a [...] desiring nothing so much as he with his own [...] to sustain and hold up, now ready to fall, or [...] [Page 358] to raise up already fallen to the ground, the university of his ward: for he gladly taketh upon him the name and duty of her guardian, whom it greatly grieved, that the infections of the time past had spread abroad such grievous diseases, that even the university itself was touched with the contagious air thereof. For he would more gladly have come hither to visit and salute it, then to correct it, if the weighty affairs of the realm would have permitted it. But now seeing he could not so do, he had appointed this commission, in which he had assigned them to be his deputies, which (because they knew him to set so much store by the university) should extend the more favour to it, and (because they themselves had been there brought up would the more earnestly embrace it. The chief matter that they came for, tended to this end, that such as had erred should confess their faults, and return into the right way again For they were in great forwardness of healing, that acknowledge themselves to have offended. And therefore it was wisely propounded on his part, that be would not altogether excuse the faults of the university, nor of other men, but confess and acknowledge the crime, as there were many things that had need to be corrected and amended.
THE cause why they were sent thither, was to raise up them that were fallen, and to receive into favour such as were sorry and would amend, wherein, if (contrary to their expectation) they should not be able to do so much with some men as they would, yet notwithstanding according to their duty, they would shew themselves so diligent for their part, as that no lack might be found in them. For it was more openly known, than it could be denied, that many men did many things of a froward wilfulness, and took stoutly upon them: wherewith as they were greatly moved and grieved as reason was so they cove [...]ed to remedy the mischief. Against whom, if any thing should seem hereafter to be straightly determined, it was to be imputed to their own deserts, and not the wills of them. Neither ought such as are whole and sound, to be moved at the chastisement of others, forasmuch as it pertained not only to the wiping out of the soul blot which now sticked on the university, but also to the health of many others which had taken much hurt by the infection of them. For their own parts, they more inclined unto mercy than rigour. Howbeit, considering that so great diseases could not by gentle medicines be healed, they were drive [...] of necessity to use stronger. And yet if they would be contented to be brought again to their right minds, which thing they chiefly cove [...]ed, (for they wished that all should amend and be led by wholesome counsel) and would yet▪ at length wax weary of their errors, and instead of them frequent again the ancient customs of themselves, and of their forefathers, they might boldly look for all kind of humanity and gentleness at their hands, in all this their business of reformation, which they had now entered and begun, requesting no more of the university but to do as became them: which being performed, he promised that their benevolence, neither in any public nor in any private person's case, should in any wise be behind hand.
THESE things being finished, they were brought in procession to the King's college, by all the graduates of the university, where was sung a mass of the Holy Ghost with great solemnity, nothing wanting in that behalf that might make to the setting forth of the same. In this place it was marked, that Nicholas Ornamet, commonly sirnamed Datary, (who, although he was inferior in estate unto Chester, being a bishop, yet was superior to them all in authority) while the mass was celebrating, sometimes standing, anon sitting, and afterwards kneeling on his knees, observed certain ceremonies, which afterwards were required to be observed of all others, as in process hereof was to be seen.
FROM thence they all attended upon the legates to St. Mary's church, which we declared before to have been interdicted. In which place, forasmuch as it was suspended, although no mass might be sung, yet there was a sermon made in open audience by Mr. Peacock in the Latin tongue, preaching against heresies and heretics, as Bilney, Cranmer, Latimer, Ri [...]ley, &c. Which being ended, they immediately proceeded to [...] visitation: where first Dr. [...]arvy, did, in the cardinal's name, exhibit the commission to the bishop of Chester, with a few words in Latin. Which being accepted, and by Master [...]lerk openly read to the end, then the vice chancellor with an oration did exhibit the certificate [Page 359] under his seal of office with the cardinal's citation annexed, containing every man's name in the university and colleges, with the officers and all masters of houses. Among whom was also Robert Brassey, master of King's-college, a worthy old man, both for his wisdom and his hoary hairs: who hearing his name recited after the vice-chancellor's, said, He was there present as all the others were: nevertheless, forasmuch as the reformation of his house was wholly reserved to the discretion of the bishop of Lincoln, not only by the king's letters patent, but also by grant of confirmation from the bishop of Rome himself, under a penalty if he should suffer any strangers to intermeddle, he openly protested, in discharge of his duty, that unless their commission gave them authority and jurisdiction upon the college, either by express words, or manifest sense, he utterly exempted himself from being present.
THIS his exception they all took with great displeasure; alledging that they were fully authorized for the order of the matter by the cardinal, out of whose jurisdiction no place nor person was exempted: wherefore he had done evil to call into question their authority, so well known to all men. The bishop of Chester seemed to be more moved with the matter than all the others; and that was because Brassey had a little before obtained the worship of that room, even utterly against his will, he doing the worst he could against him.
AFTER the formal solemnity of these things thus accomplished, the commission being read, and the citation exhibited, all the masters of houses being openly cited, every man for a while departed home to his own house, with command to be at the common schools of the said university, at one o'clock the same day. When the degrees of the university, commonly called regents and non-regents, were assembled thither, they spent the rest of the day in reading over the charters granted to the university by kings and princes, in searching out of bulls and pardons from the pope, and in perusing of other monuments pertaining to the university.
THE next day following, being the 12th of January they resorted to the King's-college to make inquisition, either because the same for the worthiness thereof was chief and sovereign of all the residue, or else because that that house especially before all others, had been accounted time out of mind, never to be without an heretic or two (as they termed them). And at that present time, although that many now of late had withdrawn themselves from thence, yet they judged there were some still remaining. The order and manner how they would be entertained by every college, when they should come to make inquisition, they themselves appointed, which was in this sort.
THEY commanded the master of every house, together with the residue, as well fellows as scholars, apparalled in priest-like garments (which they call habits), to meet them at the uttermost gate of their house towards the town. The master himself to be dressed in like apparel as the priest when he dresseth himself to mass, saving that he should put on his habit uppermost, as the rest did.
THE order of their going they appointed to be in this wise: The master of the house to go foremost; next under him every man in his order, as he was of degree, seniority, or of years. Before the master should be carried a cross, and holy water to sprinkle the commissioners withal, and then after that the said commissioners to be censed. And so after this meeting, and mumbling of a few devotions, they determined with this pomp and solemnity to be brought to the chapel.
MANY thought they took more honour upon them than belonged to the state of man. Others (forasmuch as at that time they not only pretended the jurisdiction of the cardinal, but also represented the power and authority of the bishop of Rome himself, who was accounted to be more than a mortal man (said, It was far less than of duty appertained to his holiness, in that the honour that was done to his legates, was not done to them, but to his holiness.
NOW was the hour come, at which they appointed to meet: and being entered the King's-college gate, where they looked for the master and fellows [Page 360] of the house, seeing no man came to meet them, they proceeded to the church door, where they stayed. There perceiving how the master and the rest of the house were dressing themselves as fast as they could, in such order as was appointed before, they came in suddenly upon them, before they had set a foot out of their places.
THEN the master first excused himself, that he was ready no sooner, acknowledging that it had been his duty to have been in readiness. Secondly, he said he was very glad of their coming, promising first in his own name, and after in the name of all the rest, as much reverence as might be, in all matters concerning their common utility, which he doubted not but should be performed at their hands, according to his expectation. But, like as he had done the other day in St, Mary's chuch, the same exception he made to them now also; which his doing he besought them not to be offended withal. For seeing he did it only for the discharge of his duty, he had juster cause to be held excused.
HE had scarcely yet finished his tale, but the bishop of Chester with a frowning look, and an angry countenance, interrupted him in his talk; and said, he needed not to repeat the things he had protested before, nor they to make answer any more to those things wherein they had sufficiently informed him before. He rather feared, that their quarrel was not good, that they made such ado about it, and sought such star [...]ing holes. For so were diseased persons oftentimes wont to do, when for the pain and grief they are not able to abide a strong medicine. As though that any man were able to grant so strong a privilege, as to withstand the pope's authority. As for the pope's letters, he said, they must needs make on his side, and with such as were with him, and could not in any wise be alledged against him. Therefore he admonished him to desist from his unprofitable altercation, and to confirm h [...]self, and his, to such things as then were in doing.
AFTER this they went to mass. Which finished, with great solemnity, first they went to the high alter of the church, and having there saluted their God, and searching whether all were well about him or no, they walked thorough all the inner chapels of the church. The church goods, the cross [...], the chalices, the mass-books, the vestments, an [...] whatsoever ornaments were besides▪ were commanded to be brought out unto them. When they had sufficiently viewed all things, and had called [...] by name every fellow and scholar of the house, th [...]y went to the master's lodging, where first and foremost swearing them upon a book, to answer to all such interrogatories as should be propounded unto them (as far as they knew,) they examined first the master himself, and afterward all the residue, every man in his turn. But there were some that refu [...] to take this oath, because they had given their [...] to the college before, and also because they thought it against all right and reason to swear against themselves: for it was contrary to all law, that a man should be compelled to betray himself, and not [...] suffered to keep his conscience free, when there [...] no manifest proof to be laid to his charge; but much more unjust it is, that a man should be constrained by force to accuse himself. Nevertheless the [...] persons also, after such altercation, at length (conditionally, that their faith given before to the college were not impeached thereby) were contented to be sworn.
THREE full days lasted the inquisition there. This was now the third day of their coming, and it was thought that the case of Martin Bucer and Phagius was delayed longer than needed. For they looked to have had much wrangling and business about the matter. Now forasmuch as the present state of the case required good deliberation and advice, the vice-chancellor and the masters of the colleges assembled at the common schools, where every man gave his verdict what he thought meet to be done in this matter of Bucer. After much debating, they agreed all together in this determination:
THAT forasmuch as Martin Bucer, while he lived, had not only sowed pernicious and erroneous doctrine among them, but also had himself been a sectary and famous heretic, erring from the catholic church, and giving others occasion to fall from the same likewise; a supplication should be made to the lords commissioners, in the name of the whole university, that his dead carcase might forthwith be digged up (for so it was needful to be done) to the intent that inquisition might be made [Page 361] as touching his doctrine, which being brought in examination, if it were not found to be good and wholesome, the law might proceed against him: for it was against the rule of the holy canons, that his body should be buried in christian burial. Yea, and besides that it was to the open derogation of God's honour, and the violating of his holy laws, with the great peril of many men's souls, and the offence of the faithful, especially in so difficult and contagious a time as that was. Wherefore it was not to be suffered, that they, which utterly dissented from all other men in the trade of their living, laws, and customs, should have any part with them in the honour of burial. And therefore the glory of God, first and before all things, ought to be defended, the infamy (which through this thing riseth on them) with all speed put away, no room at all left unto those persons to rest in, who even in the same places where they lay, were injurious and noisome to the very elements; but the place ought to be purged, and all things so ordered as might be to the satisfying the consciences of the weak. In executing whereof, so notable an example ought to be given to all men, that no man hereafter should be so bold to attempt the like.
THEY gave the same verdict by common consent [...] Phagius also.
UNTO this writing they annexed another, by which they lawfully authorized Andrew Perne, the vice-chancellor, to be the common factor for the university. He was a man fittest for the purpose, both for the office that he bare, and also because that by the testimony of Mr. Christopherson, he was judged to be the most catholic of all others. This supplication, confirmed by the consent of all the degrees of the university, and signed with their common seal, the next day, which was the 13th day of Ja [...]uary, the vice-chancellor put up to the commissioners.
NOT [...] here, good reader, what a feat of conveyance this was, to suborn the university under a colourable pretence, to desire this thing of them by way of petition. As much as to say, if they had not done so, the other would never have gone about it of themselves.
BUT this gloss was soon found out. For the commissioners had given the vice-chancellor instructions in writing before. But now peradventure the thought by this means to remove the envy of this act from themselves.
THUS the vice-chancellor came unto the commissioners, according to the appointment made the day before, about seven of the clock in the morning. He had scarce declared the cause of his coming, but that he had not only obtained his suit, but also even at the very same time received the sentence of condemnation, for taking up Bucer and Phagius, fair copied out by Ormanet the datary himself. This was to be confirmed by the consent of the degrees of the university. Whereupon a solemn convocation, called Congregatio Regentium & non Regentium, for the same purpose was appointed to be at nine of the clock; where the graduates being assembled together, the demand was propounded concerning the condemnation of Bucer and Phagius, and the grace asked, which was this:
PLEASETH it you that Martin Bucer, for the heresies now recited, and many others by him written, preached and taught, wherein he died without repentance, and was buried in christian burial, may be exhumate and taken up again, &c,
IMMEDIATELY after this grace was granted, the sentence of condemnation being drawn by the datary, was openly read, and another grace asked, that the same might be signed with the common seal. Which request was very easily obtained; and it was [...]o marvel.
FOR after the death of king Edward, when the realm was governed by queen Mary, all such persons were driven away as had rejected the Romish religion (in whom alone well nigh rested whatsoever wit and learning was in the whole university besides,) and such a sort of men were put in their room, that all places now swarmed with unlearned chaplains: to whom nothing was greater pleasure, than to cause all men to speak reproachfully of Bucer. There were divers yet left among them to speak against their demands. But they (because as it commonly cometh to pass▪ that might overcometh [Page 362] right) could nothing avail. For this is a common custom in all such matters and ordinances, that what the great number decreeth, is published in the name of all: and that which the better part disalloweth, seemeth as though no man at all allowed it.
THE next day, being the 14th of January, all the visitors (Mr. Christopherson only excepted) came to the King's-college: where first going into the church, and there making their prayers at the greesings, they so proceeded into the stalls, there sitting all the mass time, the company standing in their copes, and singing a solemn respond in honour of the visitors. After the respond done, the provost made to them his protestation, unto whom the bishop of Chester made answer also in Latin, declaring that he could not perceive to what purpose his protestation was, notwithstanding they would accept it and bear with him. Then went they to mass, which ended, the catholic visitors approached up to the altar, and took down the sacrament, and searched the pyx, but first the two bishops censed the sacrament.
THEN they went into the vestry, and opened the chalices, corporas cases, and chrysmatory, and viewed all those things: and so returning into the provost's chamber, divided themselves in examination of the provost, vice-provost, and the rest of the company. The same day Dr. Bacon, master of Gonvil-hall, invited the vice-chancellor, Dr. Young, Dr. Harvy, Swineborn, Maptide, with others, home to dinner. These men immediately after dinner, caused the common seal of the university to be put to the aforesaid instrument of condemnation, according as was determined the day before by the general consent of the graduates of the university: and afterwards they carried the same to the commissioners to their lodging. Which when they had received and carefully perused, it pleased them not in all points, and therefore they razed out some things, some they interlined, others they changed; so that in fine, they were fain to take the pains to ingross it again.
TO the signing whereof a congregation was immediately cal [...]ed of all the graduates of the university against the next day, which there being read over, a new grace again, was asked and granted for setting the seal. Then were the graduates dismissed, with command to resort forthwith to St. Mary's church, whither the commissioners also repaired. When they had taken their places, Dr▪ Harvy presented to them before all the company, a new commission to make inquest upon heresy then newly sent from the cardinal, which was immediately read by Ormanet's clerk. This done, Dr. Perne, who was factor for the university, exhibited to the commissioners in the name of the university, the sentenc [...] of the aforesaid condemnation. This condemnation being openly read, then Dr. Perne desired to send out process to cite Bucer and Phagius to appear, or any other▪ that would take upon them to plead their cause, and to stand to the order of the court against the next Monday: to the intent that when they had exhibited themselves the court might the better determine what ought to be done to them by order of law.
THE commissioners condescended to his request▪ and the next day process went out to cite the offenders. This citation Vincent of Noally, their common notary, having first read it over before certain witnesses appointed for the same purpose, caused to be fixed up in places conveni [...], to wit, upon St. Mary's church door, the door of the common schools, and the cross in the market-place of the same town. In this was specified, that whosoever would maintain Bucer and Phagius or stand in defence of their doctrine, should at the eighth day of the same month stand forth before the lords commissioners in St. Mary's church, which was appointed the place of judgment, and there every man should be sufficiently heard what he could say. This commandment was set out with many words.
SHORTLY after the matter drew toward judgment. Therefore the day before the limited day, which was the 17th of January, the vice-chancellor called to him to Peter-house (whereof he was master) Dr. Young, Dr. Sedgwick, and with them Bullock, Taylor, Parker, Redman, Whitlock, Mitch, and certain others. These men cast their heads together how they might bear witness against Bucer and Phagius, to convince them of heresy. For seeing the matter was brought in face of open court, and because it might so come to pass, that some patron [...] [Page 363] of their cause would come out, they thought it needful to have witnesses to despose of their doctrine. What came of this their consultation is not perfectly known.
THE eighteenth day, the vice-chancellor going to the inquisitors, sitting at the King's-College, put them in remembrance, that that was the day on which by their process, sent forth the 16th, they had commanded to appear in St. Mary's church, such as would take upon them to defend Bucer and Phagius by the law. He desired therefore that they would vouchsafe to sit there, if perchance any man would try the adventure of the law. They soon condescended thereunto. When the vice-chancellor had brought them thither, he exhibited unto them the process of the citation which he had received of them to publish a little before, saying that he had diligently executed whatsoever the contents of the same required. After that they had taken their places, and no man putting forth himself to answer for the offenders, the judges called aside Dr. Young, Sedgwick. Bullock, Taylor, Maptide, Hunter, Parker, Redman, above-mentioned. Also Brown, Gogman, Rud, Johnson, Mitch, Raven, and Carre, who had before written out the burial of Bucer, with a singular commendation of him, and sent it to sir John Cheeke, knight. These men taking first their oath upon a book, were commanded to bear witness against the heresies and doctrine of Bucer and Phagius. The twenty-second day of the same month was limited to this jury to bring in their verdict.
IN the mean while, Ormanet and Dr. Watson abode at home in their lodging to take the depositions of them, whom we shewed you before to have been called to Peter-house, and to have communicated with the vice-chancellor as concerning that matter, whose depositions (as I told you) never came to light. The bishop of Chester, and Dr. Cole this day visited them of Catherine-hall, where, as far as could be learned, nothing was done worthy of rehearsal.
AS Ormanet, the pope's datary was sitting at Trinity-college, John Dale, one of Queen's college, came to him, whom he had commanded before to bring with him the pyx, wherein the bishop of Rome's god of bread is wont to be enclosed▪ For Ormanet told them that he had a precious jewel; the same was a linen clout that the pope had consecrated with his own hands, which he promised to bestow upon them for a gift. But Dale misunderstanding Ormanet, instead of the pyx brought the chalice and a singing cake called the host, which he had wrapped up and put in his bosom. When he was come, Ormanet demanded if he had brought him the thing he had sent him for. To whom he answered, he had brought it. Then give it me, quoth he. Dale pulled out the chalice, and the singing cake. When Ormanet saw that, he stepped somewhat back, as it had been in a wonder, calling him blockhead, and little better than a mad-man, demanding what he meant by these things, saying, he desired him to bring him none of that stuff, and that he was unworthy to enjoy so high a benefit: yet notwithstanding, forasmuch as he had promised before to give it them, he would perform his promise. Whereupon with great reverence and ceremony, he pulled out the linen cloth and laid it in the chalice, and the bread with it, commanding them both for the holiness of the thing, and also for the author of it, to keep it among them with such due reverence as belonged to so holy a relic.
ABOUT the same time the commissioners had commanded the masters of the colleges, that every man should put in writing what books he had, with the author's names. And to the intent that every man should execute it without deceit, they took an oath of them. This command some executed exactly and diligently; others, forasmuch as they deemed it wrongfully, executed it slack enough.
WE mentioned before, that the eighteenth day was limited for the day of judgment. When the day came, and that neither Bucer nor Phagius would appear at their call in the court, nor that any put forth himself to defend them, yet the courteous commissioners would not proceed to judgment; which nevertheless for their contumacy in absenting themselves, they might have done, considering how that day was preparatory. But these men, being bent altogether to equity and mercy, had rather shew some favour, than to do the uttermost they might by the law. Whereupon Vincent published the second process, and set it up in the same places, [Page 364] as in manner before. The meaning thereof varied not much from the first, but that it put off the judgment-day unto the 26th of the same month. Upon which day the vice-chancellor was sent for to their lodging, with whom they agreed concerning the order of publishing the sentence. And because there should want no solemnity in the matter, they commanded him further to warn the mayor of the town to be there at the day appointed with all his burgesses, which the vice-chancellor did speed with all readiness.
THIS day (as I said) was the twenty-sixth of January, which being now come, first all degrees of the mother university were assembled. And to fill up this pageant, thither came also the mayor and townsmen, and all met together in St. Mary's church, to behold what there should be determined upon these men. After long attendance, at length the commissioners came forth, and went up to a scaffold that was somewhat higher than the residue, prepared [...]or the same purpose. When they had taken the [...] [...]laces, Dr. Perne, the vice-chancellor, the player of this interlude, fashioning his countenance with great gravity, reached to them the process that was lately published to cite them, saying these words: I bring forth again (said he) to you, right reverend father, and commissioners of the most reverend my lord cardinal Poole, this citation executed according to the purport and effect of the same; omitting nothing for his part that might to the commendation of this matter.
WHEN he had thus finished his tale, the bishop of Chester, after he had viewed the people a little, began in the following manner.
The Oration of Dr. SCOT, Bishop of Chester, before the Condemnation of BUCER and PHAGIUS.
YOU see how sore the university presseth upon us, not only to denounce Bucer and Phagius, which these certain years past have spread most pernicious doctrine among you, to be heretics, as they be indeed, but also that they will command their dead carcases, which unto this day have obtained honourable burial among you, to be digged up, and as it is excellently ordained by the canon law, to be cast into the fire, or whatsoever is more grievous than fire, if any can be. For the degree [...] of the university deal not slightly nor slackly with [...] in this case, but do so press upon us, and follow the suit so earnestly, that they scarce give us any resp [...]t of delay. And I assure you, although this case of itself be such, as that even the unworthiness of [...] persons, though there were no further cause, ought to induce us to the doing thereof, much the rather moved with these so wholesome petitions; it is meet and convenient we should grant it. For howsoever we of ourselves are inclined to mercy in our hearts, (than which we protest there is nothing under the sun to us more dear and acceptable) yet notwithstanding the very law riseth up to revenge, so that the common salvation of you all, which the [...] provided for, must be preferred before the private charity of our minds. Neither ought any [...] negligence to overtake us for our parts, that we, being scarce yet escaped out of the shipwreck of our former calamity, should now suffer this inexpiable mischief to disquiet any longer the conscience [...] of the weak.
MOREOVER, it is but reason that we should do somewhat at the so earnest intreaty and suit of the university. I need not speak much of ourselves. For if we had been desirous to enterprize this [...] ter, had been lawful after the first citation, to have proceeded to judgment; but because we were [...]illing that their defenders should be heard, and that the matter should be denounced and tried by law, we sent out the second process.
IF we had desired revenge, we might have shewed cruelty upon them that are alive: of which (alas, the more pity) there are too many that embrace this doctrine. If we thirsted for blood, it was not to be sought in withered carcases and dry bones. Therefore you may well perceive, it was no pa [...] of our wills that we now came hither; but partly induced at the intreaty of the university, partly moved with the unworthiness of the case itself; but especially for the care and regard we have of your health and salvation, which we covet by all means to preserve.
FOR you yourselves are the cause of this business▪ [Page 365] you gave occasion for this confession, among whom this day ought to be a notable example, to remain as a memorial to them that shall come after, as in that which you may learn not only to shake off the filth which you have taken of these persons; but also to beware hereafter that you fall no more so shamefully as you have done. But I trust God will defend you, and give you minds to keep yourselves from it.
AS concerning the parties themselves, whose case now hangeth in law, they bear about the name of the gospel, whereas indeed they wrought nothing else but thievery and deceit. And so much the more wicked were they in that they sought to cover such shameful acts with the cloak of so fair and holy a name. Wherefore it is not to be doubted, but that God will punish this despite, of itself wicked, to you pernicious, but to the authors thereof shameful and abominable.
BUT if God, as he is slow to wrath and vengeance, will wink at it for a time, yet notwithstanding if we, upon whom the charge of the Lord's [...]ock leaneth, should permit such execrable crimes to escape unpunished, we should not live in quiet one hour.
WHEN he had thus spoken, he recited the sentence out of a scroll, and condemned Bucer and Phagius of heresy; the form and tenor of which sentence, now rendered into English, here followeth:
The Sentence of Condemnation again MARTIN BUCER and PHAGIUS.
WE Cuthbert, by the grace of God and the apostolic see, bishop of Chester, Nicholas Ormanet, archbishop of Verone, within the diocese aforesaid, auditor of the reverend lord cardinal and legate; Thomas Watson, dean of Durham; and Henry Cole, provost of Eton-college, visitors to the university and town of Cambridge, within the diocese of Ely, also to all persons dwelling in the said town and places adjacent, for certain motions, causes and reasons thereunto moving, we are to inquire, and in what manner we think fit proceed against those, who have run into vile heresies, and condemn their memory; we are impowered by letters from the most illustrious and reverend father in Christ, Reginald Poole, cardinal and priest of the most holy Roman church, legate de Latere from our most holy lord the pope, and the apostolic see, to the most serene Philip and Mary, king and queen of England, and to the whole kingdom, to depute commissioners or delegates, sufficiently instructed in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ, and having the fear of God before their eyes, to constitute a court, and by this our definitive sentence, which we give according to the opinion of the most learned divines and lawyers, herein contained, to condemn these sons of iniquity, Martin Bucer and Paulus Phagius, by nation Germans, but both of old living and dying in this town▪ whom we here declare, pronounce, judge and condemn as notorious heretics whilst they lived; for truly Martin Bucer, contrary to the rules and precepts of the holy fathers, as also to the traditions of the apostolic Roman church and holy councils, and of the christian religion, whose rights and processions (which are every year on the day of the supper of our Lord celebrated and read by the Roman priests, in which among others the Wickliffians and Lutherans, and all other heretics are condemned and anathematized) of the sacraments having continued in the church hitherto, he especially taught and preached about the number of them, contrary to what our holy mother the church had preached and observed: and he denied and openly condemned the authority of the holy apostolic see, and the supremacy of our great high-priest, and he especially held this article:
"THAT the church may err in faith and worship."
THIS he particularly defended in the public assemblies, and there maintained and determined it to be true, and many others, as well by John Wickliffe, Martin Luther, and other chief heretics invented, and condemned by the church, especially that,
"THAT all things were governed by fate and an absolute necessity."
AS by himself first broached, believing and following [Page 366] false a [...] heretical principles, and moreover also writing books, and causing them to be printed, and publishing them being printed, and in reading these writings publicly, and defending them in public disputations, as also by an obstinate living and dying i [...] this manner, not only as a notorious heretic, but as [...] founder of heresy.
ALSO Paulus Phagius, who among other things which savour of heresy, scattered up and down in his writings, printed and commonly read, not only approves, but gives the highest en [...]omiums to the impious memory of John Cecolampadius, the aforesaid Martin Bucer, Philip Melancthon, John Brent, and their doctrines; which manifectly shews, he not only favoured heretics, but assented, believed, and approved their false principles, and endeavoured to induce others to believe and approve the same: thus he lived a common, notorious heretic, and died impenitent. We therefore pronounce the said Martin Bucer and Paulus Phagius excommunicated and anathematized, as well by the common law, as by letters of process; and that their memory be condemned, we also condemn their bodies and bones (which in that most wicked time of schism, and other heresies flourishing in this kingdom, were rashly buried in holy ground) to be dug up, and cast far from the bodies and bones of the faithful, according to the holy canons; and we command that they and their writings, if any be there found, be publicly burnt; and we interdict all persons whatsoever of this university, town or places adjacent, who shall read or conceal their heretical books, as well by the common law, as by our letters of process.
AFTER the sentence thus read, the bishop commanded their bodies to be digged out of their graves, and being degraded from holy orders, delivered them into the hands of the secular power. For it was not lawful for such innocent persons as they were, abhorring all bloodshed, and detesting all desire of murder, to put any man to death.
The Effect of Dr. PERNE'S Sermon against MARTIN BUCER.
BESIDES this oration and sentence of Dr. Scot, came in also Dr. Perne, vice-chancellor, with his sermon tending to the same effect, to the depraving of Mr. Bucer, taking for his theme the place of the 133d Ps. "Behold how good and pleasant a thing it is," &c.
WHERE beginning first with the commendation of concord, and of the mutual knitting together of the minds, he alledged, that it was not possible to hold together, unless the concord were derived out of the head, which he made to be the bishop of Rome, and that it also rested in the same.
AFTER he had made a long protestation hereof, he passed forth to Bucer, upon whom he made a shameful railing, saying, that his doctrine gave occasion of division in the commonwealth, and that there was not so grievous a mischief, as that which by his means had been brought into the realm.
ALTHOUGH all men might perceive by the books he had compiled, what manner of doctrine it was; yet notwithstanding (he said) he knew it more perfectly himself than any did, and that he had learned it apart at the author's hand himself.
FOR at such time as they had communication secretly among themselves, Bucer (said he) would oftentimes wish he might be called by some other name, than by the name he had; for this purpose, as though knowing himself guilty of so grievous a crime, he might by this means escape unknown unto the world, and avoid the talk that went among men of him.
MOREOVER, among other things, he told how Bucer held an opinion (which thing he should confess to him his own self) that God was the author and well-spring, not only of good, but also of evil; and that whatsoever was of that sort flowed from him, as from the head-spring and maker thereof. Which doctrine he held to be sincere; howbeit, for offending divers men's consciences, he durst not put it into men's heads.
MANY other things he patched together of like purport and effect, as of the supremacy of the bishop of Rome, of the marriage of priests, of divorcements and shameful usury also, as though he had deemed the same lawful to be used among christian people, with divers others of the like sort.
[Page 367]IN all which his allegations, considering how lewdly, without all shame, he lied upon Bucer, (as his writings evidently declare) he did not so much hurt his name with railing upon him, as win unto himself an inexpiable infamy, by forging such shameful lies upon so worthy a man.
BUT what needeth witness to prove him a liar? his own conscience shall make as much against him as a number of men.
IT was reported for a truth, and testified by his own familiar friends, that the said Dr. Perne himself, either immediately after his sermon, or else somewhat before he went to it, striking himself on the breast, and in manner weeping, wished at home in his own house, with all his heart, that God would grant his soul might even then present [...] depart and remain with Bucer's. For he knew well enough that his life was such, that if any man's soul was worthy of heaven, he thought his especially to be most worthy.
WHILE he was thus talking to the people, in the mean time the leaves of the church doors were covered over with verses, in which the young men to shew their folly, who scarce knew him by sight, blazed Bucer's name with most reproachful poetry.
THESE things being dispached, Dr. Perne (as though he had sped his matter marvellously well) was for his labour, of courtesy bidden to dinner to Trinity-college by the commissioners. Where, after the table was taken up, they caused the sentence of condemnation to be copied out with all speed: which being signed with the bishop of Chester's seal, the next day following was for a triumph sent to London, with divers of those verses and slanderous libels.
BESIDES this, they sent also their own letters, wherein they both advertised the cardinal how far they had proceeded in that matter, and also desired his grace, that he would cause to be sent out of hand to Smith, the mayor of the town, the commandment, commonly called a writ, for the burning of heretics. For unless he had the queen's warrant to save him harmless, he would not have to do in the matter: and that which remained to be done in that case, could not be dispatched till that warrant came.
WHILE this pursuivant went on his journey, they ordered to be brought unto them the books that they commanded to be searched out. For they determined to throw them into the fire with Bucer and Phagius.
ABOUT the same time Dr. Watson taking occasion upon the day, because it was a high feast, in which was wont to be celebrated the memorial of the purification of the blessed virgin, made a sermon unto the people upon that psalm, "We have received thy mercy, O Lord, in the midst of thy temple," &c. In which sermon he spake much of Bucer and Phagius, and of their doctrine.
HE said, that these men, and all the heretics of our time that were of the same opinion, (which for the most part, he said, were budded out of Germany) among other things which they had perniciously put into men's heads, taught to cast away all ceremonies. Whereas, notwithstanding, the apostle himself commanded all things to be done in due order.
AND upon that deed of the blessed virgin and Joseph, which was done by them as upon that day, it was manifestly apparent, that they with our Saviour, being then a little babe, observed these rites and ceremonies for catholic men to teach. For he said, that they came to the temple the same time with wax candles in their hands, after the manner of procession (as they term it) in good order with much reverence and devotion, and yet we were not ashamed to laugh and mock at these things with the heretics and schismatics.
AS he was speaking of Christ, Mary, and Joseph, one of them that heard him, a pleasant and merry-conceited fellow, turning himself to him that stood next him, And if it be true, said he, that this man preacheth, which of them I pray you (if a man might ask him a question) bare the cross [Page 368] before them? for that might not be missing in such solemn ceremonies. Not only this man jested at the preacher's folly, but divers others also laughed at his manifest unshamefacedness, in preaching these so vain and foolish superstitions.
WHILE he was thus talking to his audience, John Christopherson, elected bishop of Chichester, being stricken with a sudden sickness, fell down in a swoon among the press; and came not to himself for a good while after: in the mean time babbling many things, as though he had been out of his wits. Some thought it came upon this occasion, because he had been greatly accused before the commissioners for mispending and misordering the goods of the college, and therefore was grieved with the matter, knowing that they had been offended with him, by reason Ormanet had cancelled before his face, a lease of his, by which he had let to farm to his brother-in-law a certain manor of that college, because the covenants seemed unreasonable.
BY this time the pursuivant was returned again, who (as we said before) was sent to London with with the commissioners letters, and brought with him a warrant for the burning of these men.
UPON the receipt whereof, they appointed the sixth day of February for the accomplishment of the matter: for it had been in hand a great while already.
THEREFORE when the said day was come, the commissioners sent for the vice-chancellor, demanding of him in what case things stood, whether all things were in a readiness for the accomplishment of this business. Understanding by him that all things were ready, they commanded the matter to be broached out of hand.
THE vice-chancellor therefore taking with him Marshal the common notary, went first to St. Michael's church where Phagius was buried. Then he called forth An [...]rew Smith, Henry Sawyer, and Henry Adams, men of the same Parish, and bound them with an oath to dig up the bones of Phagius, and to bring them to the place of execution. Marshal took their oaths, receiving the like of Roger Smith and William Hasell, the town serjeants, and of John Caper, warden of the same church, [...] doing the like with Bucer. Smith, the [...] the town, who should be their executioner, (for [...] was not lawful for them to intermeddle in cases [...]f blood) commanded certain of his townsmen to [...] upon him in harness, by whom the dead bodies were guarded; and being bound with ropes, and laid upon men's shoulders (for they were inclosed in chests, Bucer in the same that he was buried, and Phagius in a new one), they were carried into the midst of the market-place, with a great train of people following them.
THIS place was prepared before, and a great [...] was set fast in the ground to bind the carcases [...] and a great heap of wood was laid ready to [...] them withal.
WHEN they came thither, the chests were set up on end with the dead bodies in them, and fastened on both sides with stakes, and bound to the [...] with a long iron chain, as if they had been alive. Fire being forthwith put to, as soon as it began to flame round about, a great many books that were condemned with them were cast into the same.
THERE was that day gathered into the town a great multitude of country folks (for it was market-day), who seeing men borne to execution, and learning by inquiry that they were dead before, partly detested and abhorred the extreme cruelty▪ of the commissioners toward the rotten carcases, and partly laughed at their folly in making such preparations. For what needeth any weapon, said they? As though they were afraid that the dead bodies, which felt them not, would do them some [...]rm. Or to what purpose serveth that chain wherewith they are tied, since they might be burnt loose without peril? for it was not to be feared that they would run away.
THUS every body that stood by found fault with the cruelty of the deed, either sharply or else lightly, as every man's mind gave him. There were very few that liked their doing therein.
IN the mean time that they were roasting in the fire, Dr. Watson went into the pulpit in St. Mary's church, and there before his audience railed upon [Page 369] their doctrine, as wicked and erroneous, saying, that it was the ground of all the mischief that had happened for a long time in the common-wealth. For behold (said he) as well the prosperity as the adversity of these years that ensued, and you shall find that all things have chanced unluckily to them that have followed this new-found faith; as contrarily, all things have happened fortunately to them that have eschewed it. What robbing and polling (quoth he) have we seen in this realm, as long as religion was defaced with sects; the common treasure (gathered for the maintenance of the whole public weal) and the goods of the realm shamefully spent in waste for the maintenance of a few people's lusts, all good order broken, all discipline cast aside, holidays appointed to the solemnizing of ceremonies neglected; and what is more the places themselves beaten down, flesh and other kind of prohibited sustenance eaten every where upon days forbidden, without remorse of conscience, the priests had in derision, the mass railed upon, no honour done to the sacraments of the church; all estates and degrees given to such a licentious liberty, without check, that all things seemed to draw to their utter ruin and decay.
AND yet in the mean time the name of the gospel was pretended outwardly, as though that for it men ought of duty to give credit to their erroneous opinions; whereas indeed there is nothing more different, or more to the slander of God's word than the same. For what other thing taught they to remain in that most blessed and mystical sacrament of the body of our Lord, than bare unleavened bread? And what else do the remnant of them teach unto this day? Whereas Christ by express words doth assure it to be his very body. How perilous a doctrine is that which concerneth the fat [...]l and absolute necessity of predestination? And yet they set it out in such wise, that they have left no choice at all in things. As who should say, it skilled nor what a man purposed of any matter, since he had not the power to determine otherwise than the matter should come to pass. Which was the peculiar opinion of them, that made God the author of evil, bringing them through this persuasion into such a careless security of the everlasting eternity, that in the mean season it made no matter either toward salvation, or damnation, what a man did in this life. These errors (which were not even among the heathen men) were defended by them with great stoutness.
THESE and many other such things he slanderously and falsely alledged against Bucer, whose doctrine (in such sort as he himself taught it) either he would not understand, or else he was minded to slander. And yet he was not ignorant, that Bucer taught none other things than the very same whereunto both he and Scot, in the reign of king Edward the Sixth, had willingly assented, by subscribing thereto with their own hands. While he talked in this wise before the people, many of them that had written verses before, did now set up others, in which, like a sort of water frogs, they spewed out their venemous malice against Bucer and Phagius. This was the last act of this interlude, and yet there remained a few things to be done, among which was the reconciling of two churches, of our Lady, and of St. Michael, which we declared before to have been interdicted.
THIS was done the next day following by the aforesaid bishop of Chester, with as much ceremonial solemnity as the law required. But that breaden god, whom Bucer's carcase had chased from thence, was not yet turned thither again: neither was it lawful for him to come there any more unless he was brought thither with great solemnity: as I suppose, during all the time of his absence, he was entertained by the commissioners at Trinity college, and there continued as a sojourner. For thither came all the graduates of the university, the 8th of February, out of gentleness and courtesy, to bring him home again. Amongst which number, the bishop of Chester (worthy for his estate to come nearest to him, because he has a bishop) took and carried him, clad in a large tippet of [...]a [...]senet about his neck, wherein he wrapped his idol also. Ormanet had given the same a little before to the university, for that and such like purposes.
WHEN this idol should return home, he went not out the straitest and nearest way as other folks are wont to go, but he fetched a compass about most parts of the town, and roamed through so many of the streets, that it was an hour or more [Page 370] before he could find the way into this church again. I believe the ancient Romans observed a custom not much unlike this in their processions when they made supplications at the shrines of all their gods. The order of which procession was this: the masters regents went before, singing with a loud voice, Salve festa dies, &c. Next them followed the bishop of Chester, about him went Ormanet and his fellow-commissioners, with the masters of the colleges, bearing every man a long taper lighted in his hand. After whom, a little space off, followed other degrees of the university. Lastly came the mayor and his townsmen. Before them all went the beadles, crying to such as they met, that they should bow themselves humbly before the host; if any refused so to do, they threatened to send them forthwith to the Tolbooth. Their god being led with this pomp, and pacified with great sacrificed hosts of Bucer and Phagius, at length settled himself again in his accustomed room.
DR. SCOT, bishop of Chester, prayed with many words, that that day might be lucky and fortunate to himself, and to all that were present, and that from that day forward (now that God's wrath was appeased, and all other things set in good order) all men should make themselves conformable to peace and quietness, namely, in matters pertaining to religion.
AFTER this they bestowed a few days in punishing and amercing such as they thought had deserved it. Some they suspended from giving voices either to their own preferment, or to the preferment of any other. Some they forbade to have the charge of pupils, lest they should infect the tender youth (being pliable to take what print soever should be laid upon them) with corrupt doctrine and heresy; others they chastised wrongfully without any dese [...]t; and many a one they punished, contrary to all right and reason.
LAST of all they set forth certain statutes, by which they would have the university hereafter ordered. Wherein they enacted many things, as concerning the direction of their officers of the university, of keeping and administering the goods of the university, and of many other things. But especially they handled the matter very circumspectly for religion. In which they were so scrupulous, that they replenished all things either with op [...] blasphemy or with ridiculous superstition. For they prescribed at how many masses every man should be day by day, and how many Pater Nost [...] and Aves every man should say when he should enter into the church; and in his entrance, after what sort he should bow himself to the altar, and how to the master of the house, what he shou [...]d do there, and how long he should tarry, how many, and what prayers he should say, what, and how he should sing, what meditations others should use while the priest is in his memento, mumbling secretly to himself, what time of the mass a man should stand, and when he should sit down, when he should make a courtesy, when exclusively, when inclusively, and many other superstitious toy [...] they decreed, that it was a sport then to behold their superstitions, and were tedious now to recite them.
MOREOVER these masters of good order, for fashion's sake, ordained that every man should put on a surplice, not torn nor worn, but clean, forbidding them in any wise to wipe their noses thereon.
THESE things thus set at a stay, when the commissioners were now ready to go their ways, the university for such great benefits (which she should not suffer to fall out of remembrance many years after) coveting to shew some token of courtesy towards them again, dignified Ormanet and Col [...] with the degree of doctorship; for all the re [...] saving Christopherson, who now, by reason he was elected bishop, prevented that degree, had received that order before. Thus at length were sent away these peace-makers, that came to pacify strifes and quarrels; who, through provoking every man to accuse one another, left such gaps and breaches in men's hearts at their departure, that for years after they could never be closed nor joined together again.
THESE commissioners, before they departed out of the university, commanded, that the masters of every house should copy out their statutes, which besides common ordinances, contained in them certain rules of private order for every house particularly. [Page 371] Swinborn (who as I said was master of Clare [...]hall) being demanded whether he would have those ingrossed in parchment or in paper, answered, That it made no matter in what they were written: for the paper, or slighter thing that were of less continuance than paper, would serve the turn well enough: for he said, a slenderer thing than that would last a deal longer than those decrees would stand in force. Nei [...]her was the man deceived in his conjecture: for within two years after, God beholding us with mercy, called queen Mary out of this life the 17th of November, 1558, after whom her sister Elizabeth succeeding in the kingdom, raised to life again the true religion. Whereupon, as the church of Christ began by little and little to flourish, so the memory of Bucer and Phagius (although their bones were burnt by cardinal Poole) was restored again by the godly queen Elizabeth, who gave then in commission to Matthew Parker, then archbishop of Canterbury, to Edmund Grindal, then bishop of London, to Mr. Walter Haddon, and others: for the performance of which commission, the said reverend bishops addressed their letters to the vice-chancellor, &c.
The Oration of Mr. ACKWORTH, Orator of the University, at the restitution of MARTIN BUCER and PAULUS PHAGIUS.
I Am in doubt, whether I may treat for the praise and commendation of so great a clerk (for the celebrating whereof, this assembly and concourse of your's is made this day), or the vices and calamiites, out of which we be newly delivered, or of them both, considering the one cannot be mentioned without the other. In which times you felt so much anguish and sorrow, my right dear brethren, that if I should repeat them, and bring them to remembrance again, I fear I should not so much work a just hatred in us towards them, for the injuries received in them, as renew our old sorrow and heaviness. Again, men must needs account me unadvised and fool [...]sh in my doing, if I should think myself able to make him who hath lived before our eyes in praise and estimation, more famous and notable by my oration, which he by his living and conversation hath oftentimes polished. But the wickedness of the times, which endeavoured to wipe clean out of remembrance of men, the name that was so famous and renowned in every man's mouth, did much profit [...]him. Insomuch, that both in his life-time all things redounded to his continual renown, and especially after his decease, nothing could be devised more honourable, than with so solemn furniture and ceremonies, to have gone about to have hurt the memory of such a worthy man, and yet could not bring to pass the thing that was so sore coveted; but rather brought that thing to pass, which was chiefly sought to be avoided. For the desire that men have of the dead hath purchased to many men everlasting fame, and hath not taken away immortality, but amplified and increased the same. By means whereof it cometh to pass, that he that will treat of these things that pertain to the praise of Bucer after his death, cannot chuse but speak of the crabbedness of the times past, upon which riseth a great increase and augmentation of his praise. By his life so excellently set forth, not only by the writings of the clerks, Cheeke and Carre, and by the lively voice of the right famous Dr. Haddon, uttered in this place to the great admiration of all the hearers, when his body should be laid into his grave to be buried; and after his burial, by the godly preachings of the right reverend father in Christ the archbishop of Canterbury, that now is Dr. Redman, which for the worthiness and excellency of them, ought to stick longer in our minds unwritten, than many things that are penned and put in print; but also by the great assembly of all the degrees of the university the same day, in bringing him to his grave, and the next day after by the industry of every man that was indued with any knowledge in the Greek or Latin tongues; of which there was no man but set up some verses as witness of his just and unfeigned sorrow, upon the walls of the church; that neither at that time any reverence or duty which is due to the dead departing out of this life, was then over-slipped, or now remaineth undone, that may seem to pertain either to celebrating of the memorial of so holy and famous a person, or to the consecrating of him to everlasting memory.
WE at that time saw with our eyes this university flourishing by his institutions, the love of sincere religion not only ingendered, but also confirmed and strengthened through his continual and daily preaching. Insomuch that at such time as he was [Page 372] suddenly taken from us, there was scarce any man that for sorrow could find in his heart to bear with the present state of this life, but that either he wished with all his heart to depart out of this life with Bucer into another, and by dying to follow him into immortality; or else endeavoured himself with weeping and siging to call him again, being dispatched of all troubles, into the prison of this body out of which body he is escaped, lest he should leave us as it were standing in battle without a captain, and he himself as one cashiered, depart with his wages, or as one discharged out of the camp, withdraw himself to the everlasting quietness and tranquillity of the soul. Therefore all men evidently declared at that time, both how sore they took his death to heart, and also how hardly they could away with the loss of such a man. As long as the ardent love of his religion (wherewith we were inflamed) flourished, it wrought in our hearts an incredible desire of his presence among us. But after the time that the godly man ceased to be any more in our sight, and in our eyes, that ardent and burning love of religion, by little and little, waxed cold in our minds; and according to to the times that came after (which were both miserable, and to our utter undoing), it began not by little and little to be darkened, but it altogether vanished away and turned into nothing. For we fell again into the troublesomeness of the popish doctrine; the old rites and customs of the Romish church were restored again, not to the adorning and beautifying of the christian religion (as they surmised), but to the utter defacing, violating, and defiling of the same. Death was set before the eyes of such as persevered in the christian doctrine that they had learned before. They were banished the realm that would not apply themselves to the times, and do as other men did: such as remained were forced either to dissemble, or to hide themselves, and creep into corners, or else as it were by drinking of the charmed cup of Circe, to be turned and altered, not only from the nature of man into the nature of brute beasts, but (what is far worse and more monstrous) from the likeness of God and his angels, into the likeness of devils. And all England was infected with this malady. But I would to God the corruption of those times, which overwhelmed all the whole realm, had not at leastwise yet pierced every part and member thereof. Of which there was not one, but (that besides the grief that it felt with the residue of the body, by reason of the sickness and contagion spread into the whole) had some sorrow and calamity peculiar by itself. And to omit the rest (of which to treat, this place is not appointed nor the time requireth ought to be spoken) this dwelling place of the Muses (which we call the university) may be a sufficient witness what we may judge of all the rest of the body▪ For certainly, my brethren, the thing is not to be dissembled that cannot be hidden. We, applying ourselves to those most filthy times, have most shamefully yielded, like faint-hearted cowards, who had not the stomachs to sustain the adversities of poverty, banishment, and death. Which in our living and conversation kept neither the constancy taught us by philosophy, nor yet the patience taught us by holy scripture, which have done all things at the commandments of others. And therefore that which the poet, although in another sense, hath aptly spoken, may well be thought to have been truly prophesied upon us:
DIVERS of them that were of a pure and sincere judgment as concerning religion, being driven from hence and troubled, the rest that remained tasted and felt of the inhumanity of them in wh [...] hands the authority of doing things here consisted; although to say the truth, I have used a gentler term than behoved. For it is not to be accounted inhumanity, but rather immanity and beastly cruelty: who when they had exercised all kinds of torments and punishments upon the living, when they had cruelly taken life from such as canstantly persevered; from others riches, honours, and all hope of promotion, yet they could not be so satisfied, but that incensed and stirred with a greater fury, it began to outrage even against the dead. Therefore whereas in every singular place was exercised a singular kind of cruelty, insomuch that there was no kind of cruelty that could be devised, but it was put in practice in one place or other, this was proper or peculiar to Cambridge, to exercise the cruelty upon the dead, which in other places was extended but to the living. Oxford burnt up the right reverend fathers, Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer, [Page 373] the noble witnesses of the clear light of the gospel. Moreover, at London perished these two lanthorns of light, Rogers and Bradford: in whom it is hard to say, whether there were more force of eloquence and utterance in preaching, or more holiness of life and conversation. Many others, both here and in other places, were consumed to ashes for bearing record to the truth. For what city is there that hath not flamed, I say not with burning of houses and buildings, but with burning of holy bodies? But Cambridge, after there were no more left alive, upon whom they might spew out their bitter poison, played the mad Bedlam against the dead. The dead men, whose living no man was able to find fault with, whose doctrine no man was able to reprove, were by false slanderous accusers indicted, contrary to the laws of God and man, sued in the law, condemned, their sepulchres violated and broken up, their carcases pulled out and burnt with fire. A thing surely incredible, if we had not seen it with our eyes, and a thing that hath not lightly been heard of. But the heinousness of this wicked act was spread abroad as a common talk in every man's mouth, and was blown and dispersed through all Christendom.
BUCER, by the excellency of his wit and doctrine known to all men, of our countrymen in manner craved, of many others intreated and sent for, to the end he might instruct our Cambridge-men in the sincere doctrine of the true religion, being spent with age, and his strength utterly decayed, forsook his own country, refused not the tediousness of that long journey, was not afraid to venture himself upon the sea, but had more regard of the dilating and amplifying of the church of Christ, than of all other things. So in conclusion he came, every man received and welcomed him: afterward he lived in such wise, as it might appear he came not hither for his own sake but for our's. For he sought not to drive away the sickness that he had taken by troublesome travel of his long journey: and albiet his strength were weakened, yet he regarded not the recovery or his health, but put himself to immoderate labour and intolerable pain, only to teach and instruct us. And yet to reward this so noble and worthy a person, while he lived were shewed all the tokens of humanity and gentleness, reverence and courtesy that could be; but when he was dead, the most horrible cruelty and spite that might be imagined. For what can be so commendable, as to grant unto the living house and abiding place, and to the dead burial? Or what is he that will find in his heart to give entertainment, and to cherish that person in his house with all kinds of gentleness that he can devise, upon whom he could not vouchsafe to bestow burial when he is dead? Again, what an inconsistency is it, with great solemnity, and with much advancement and commendation of his virtues to bury a man honourably and anon after to break up his tomb, and pull him out spitefully, and wrongfully to slander him being dead, who during his life-time always deserved praise? All these things have happened unto Bucer, who whilst he lived had free access unto the most gorgeous buildings and stately palaces of the greatest princes; and when he was dead, could not be suffered to enjoy so much as his poor grave. Who being laid in the ground nobly to his eternal fame, was afterwards spitefully taken up and burned. Which things, although they did no harm to the dead, (for the dead carcases feel no pain, neither doth the fame of godly persons depend upon the report of the vulgar people, and the light rumours of men, but upon the rightful censure and just judgment of God) yet manifest the extreme cruelty and insatiable desire of revenge in them which offer such utter wrong to the dead. These persons therefore whom they have pulled out of their graves and burned, I believe (if they had been alive) they would have cast out of house and home, they would have driven out all men's company, and in the end with most cruel torments have torn them in pieces, being nevertheless aliens, being strangers, and being also fetched hither by us out of such a country, where they not only needed not to fear any punish [...]t▪ but on the contrary were always had in much reputation, as well among the noble and honourable, as also among the vulgar and common people. But yet how much more gentle than these men was bishop Gardiner, otherwise an earnest defender of the popish doctrine? who against his own countrymen, let pass no cruelty whereby he might extinguish with fire and sword the light of the gospel: and yet he spared foreigners, because the right of them is so holy, that there was never nation so barbarous, that [Page 374] would violate the same. For when he had in his power the renowned clerk Peter Martyr, then teaching at Oxford, he would not keep him to punish him, but (as I have heard reported) when he should go his way, he gave him wherewith to bear his charges. So that the thing that he thought he might of right do his countrymen, he judged unlawful to do to strangers. And whom the law of God could not with-hold from the wicked murdering of his own countrymen, him did the law of man bridle from killing of strangers, which hath ever appeased all barbarous beastliness, and mitigated all cruelty. For it is a point of humanity for man and man to meet together, and one to come to another, though they be ever so far separated and set asunder, both by sea and by land. without which access there can be no intercourse of merchandise, there can be no conference of wits, which first of all ingendered learning, nor any commodity of society long to continue. To repulse them that come to us, and to prohibit them our countries is a point of inhumanity. Now to entertain them evil, that by our sufferance dwell among us, and have increase of houshold and houshold-stuff, is a point of wickedness. Wherefore this cruelty hath far surmounted the cruelty of all others, which to satisfy the unsatiable greediness thereof, drew to execution not only strangers, brought hither by our intreaty and sending for, but even the withered and rotten carcases digged out of their graves; to the intent that the unmeasurable thirst which could not be quenched with shedding the blood of them that were alive, might at the least be satisfied in burning of dead men's bones.
THESE my brethren, these I say, are the just causes which have so sore provoked the wrath of God against us; because that in doing extreme injury to the dead we have been prone and ready: but in putting the same away we have been slow and slack. For verily I believe (if I may have liberty to say freely what I think ye shall bear with me, if I chance to cast forth any thing unadvisedly in the heat and hasty discourse of my oration) that even this place, in which we have so oftentimes assembled, being defiled with that new kind of wickedness, such as man never heard of before, is a le [...]t and hindrance unto us, when we call for the help of God by means whereof our prayers are not excep [...] ed which we make to appease the Godhead, and [...] win him to be favourable unto us again.
THE blood of Abel shed by Cain called and [...] from the earth that sucked it up: likewise the [...] deserved burning of those bodies, calleth upon [...] mighty God to punish us, and crieth, that not only the authors of so great a wickedness, but also the ministers thereof are impure, the places defiled [...] which these things were perpetrated, the air infec [...] which we take into our bodies, to the intent that by sundry diseases and sicknesses we may receive punishment for so execrable wickedness. Look [...] about you (my dear brethren), and consider with yourselves the evils that are past; and ye shall [...] how they took their beginning at Bucer's death▪ following one on the neck of another even to [...] day. First and foremost, when we were even in the chiefest of our mourning, and scarcely yet comforted of our sorrow for his death, the [...] sickness lighted upon us, which passed swiftly [...] all England, and as it were in haste dispatched [...] innumerable company of men. Secondly, the untimely death of our most noble king Edward VI. (whose life in virtue surmounted the opinion of all men, and seemed worthy of immortality) happened contrary to men's expectation in that age, in which, unless violence be used, few do die. The conv [...] sion of religion, or rather the eversion and turning thereof into popery: the incursion and denomination of strangers, under whose yoke our necks were almost subdued: the great cruelty of the bishop against the christians, which executed that wickedness, for making satisfaction whereof we are gathered together this day. These are the things that ensued after his death; but after his burning ensued yet more grievous things: namely, new kinds of plagues, and contagious diseases, unknown to the very physicians, whereby either every man's health was impaired, or else they were brought to their graves, or else very hardly recovered. Bloody battles without victory, whereof the profit redounded to the enemy, and to us the slaughter with great loss. Which things do evidently declare, that God is turned from us, and angry with us, and that he giveth no ear to our prayers, and that he is not moved with our cries and sighs, but that he looketh at this our meeting and assembly should be [Page 375] [...] this end, that forasmuch as we have violated their crops, we should do them right again; so that the memorial of these most holy men may be commended unto posterity unhurt and undefamed. Wherefore amend yet at length (my brethren), which hitherto, by reason of the variableness and unconstancy of the times, have been wavering and unstedfast in your hearts; shew yourselves chearful and forward in making satisfaction for the injury you have done to the dead, whom with so great wickedness of late you have injured and defiled; not censing them with the perfumes of those odours and spices now worn out of use, and put to flight, but with a true and unfeigned repentance of heart, and with prayer, to the intent that the heavenly Godhead, provoked by our doings to be our enemy, may by our humble submission be intreated to be favourable and agreeable to all our other requests.
WHEN Mr. Ackworth had made an end of his oration, Mr. James Pilkington, the queen's reader of the divinity lecture, going up into the pulpit, made a sermon upon the 112th Psalm, the beginning whereof is, "Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord."
WHERE intending to prove, that the remembrance of the just man shall not perish, and that Bucer is blessed, and that the ungodly shall fret at the fight thereof, but yet that all their attempts shall be to no purpose, (to the intent that this saying may be verified, I will curse your blessings, and bless your cursings) he took his beginning of his own person; That although he were both ready and willing to take that matter in hand, partly for the worthiness of the matter itself; and especially for certain singular virtues of those persons, for whom that congregation was called, yet notwithstanding, he said, he was not fit to take that charge upon him.
FOR it were more reason, that he which before had done Bucer wrong, should now make him amends for the displeasure. As for his own part, he was so far from working any evil against Bucer, either in word or deed; that for their singular knowledge almost in all kinds of learning, he embraced both him and Phagius with all his heart: but yet he somewhat more favoured Bucer, as with him he had more familiarity and acquaintance. In consideration whereof, although that it was scarce convenient that he at that time should speak, yet notwithstanding he was contented for friendship and courtesy's sake not to fail them in their business.
HAVING made this preface, he entered into the pith of the matter, wherein he blamed greatly the barbarous cruelty of the court of Rome, so fiercely extended against the dead. He said it was a more heinous matter than was to be borne with, to have shewed such extreme cruelt [...] to them that were alive; but for any man to misbehave himself in such wise toward the dead, was such a thing as had not lightly been heard of: saving that he affirmed this custom of excommunicating and cursing of dead bodies to have come first from Rome. For Evagrius reporteth in his writings, that Eutychius was of the same opinion, induced by the example of Josias, who slew the priests of Baal, and burnt up the bones of them that were dead, even upon the altars. Whereas before the time of Eutychius this kind of punishment was well near unknown, neither afterward usurped by any man (that ever he heard of) till nine hundred years after Christ. In the latter times (which how much the further they were from the golden age of the apostles, so much the more they were corrupted) this kind of cruelty began to creep further. For it is manifestly known, that Stephen the Sixth, pope of Rome, digged up Formosus, his last predecessor in that see, and spoiling him of his apparel, buried him again in a layman's apparel (as they call it), having first cut off and thrown into the Tyber his two fingers, with which, according to their accustomed manner, he was wont to bless and consecrate. Which his unspeakable tyranny used against Formosus, within six years after Sergius the Third increased also against the same Formosus: for taking up his dead body, and setting it in a pope's chair, he caused his head to be smitten off, his other three fingers to be cut from his hand, and his body to be cast [...] the river Tyber, abrogating and disannulling all his decrees, which thing was never done by any man before that day. The cause why such great cruelty was exercised (by the report of Nauclerus) was this: because that Formosus [Page 376] had been an adversary to Stephen and Sergius when they sued to be made bishops.
THIS kind of cruelty, unheard of before, the popes a while exercised one against another. But now, before ever they had sufficiently felt the smart thereof themselves, they had turned the same upon their necks. Wherefore it was to be wished, that seeing it began among them, it might have remained still with the authors thereof, and not have been spread over thence unto us. But such is the nature of all evil, that it quickly passeth into example, for others to do the like. For about the year of the Lord 1400, John Wickliffe was in like manner digged up, and burnt to ashes, and thrown into a brook that runneth by the town where he was buried. Of which self-same sauce tasted also one William Tracy, of Gloucester, a man of a worshipful house, because he had written in his last will, that he should be saved only by faith in Jesus Christ, and that there needed not the help of any man thereto, whether he were in heaven or in earth; and therefore bequeathed no legacy to that purpose, as all other men were accustomed to do. This deed was done since we may remember, about the twenty-second year of the reign of king Henry the Eighth, in the year of our Lord 1530.
NOW seeing they extended such cruelty to the dead, he said it was an easy matter to conjecture what they would do to the living. Whereof we have had sufficient trial by the examples of our own men, these few years past. And if we would take the pains to peruse things done somewhat longer ago, we might find notable matters out of our own chronicles. However, it was sufficient for the manifest demonstration of that matter, to declare the beastly butchery of the French king, executed upon the Waldenses at Cabrier, and the places near thereabout, by his captain Miner, about the year of our Lord 1545, than which there was never thing read of more cruelly done, no not even of the barbarous pagans. And yet for all that, when divers had shewed their uttermost cruelty both against these and many others, they were so far from their purpose, in extinguishing the light of the gospel, which they endeavoured to suppress, that it increased daily more and more. Which thing Charles the Fifth (than whom all Christendom had not a more prudent prince, nor the church of Christ almost a sorer enemy) easily perceived; and therefore when he had in his hand Luther dead, and Melancthon and Pomeran with certain other preachers of the gospel alive, he not only determined not any thing extremely against them, nor violated their graves, but also intreating them gently, sent them away, not so much as once forbidding them to publish openly the doctrine that they professed. For it is the nature of Christ's church, that the more that tyrants spurn against it, the more it increaseth and flourisheth. A notable proof assuredly of the providence and pleasure of God in sowing the gospel, was that coming of the Bohemians unto us, to the intent to hear Wickliffe, of whom we spoke before, who at that time read openly at Oxford; and also the going of our men to the said Bohemians when persecution was raised against us. But much more notable was it, what we have seen come to pass in our days; that the Spaniards, sent for into the realm on purpose to suppress the gospel, as soon as they were returned home, replenished many parts of their country with the same truth of religion, to which before they were utter enemies.
BY which examples it might evidently be perceived, that the princes of this world labour in vain to overthrow it, considering how the mercy of God hath sown it abroad, not only in those countries that we speak of, but also in France, Poland, Scotland, and almost all the rest of Europe. For it is said, that some parts of Italy (although it be under the pope's nose) yet do of late incline to the knowledge of the heavenly truth; wherefore sufficient argument and proof might be taken by the success and increase thereof, to make us believe that this doctrine is sent us from heaven, unless we will wilfully be blinded. And if there were any that desired to be persuaded more at large in the matter, he might advisedly consider the voyages that the emperor and the pope, with both their powers together, made jointly against the Bohemians. In which the emperor met such an unw [...]thy repulse of so small a handful of his enemies, that he never almost in all his life took the like dishonour in any [...]ace. Hereof also might be an especial example of the death of Henry, king of France, who the same day [Page 377] that he had purposed to persecute the church of Christ, and to have burned certain of his guard whom he had imprisoned for religion, at whose execution he had promised to have been himself in person, in the midst of his triumph at Tournay, was wounded so sore in the head with a spear by one of his own subjects, that he soon after died.
IN which behalf, the dreadful judgments of God were no less approved in our own countrymen. For one that was a notable slaughter-man of Christ's saints rotted alive, and before he died, such a rank smell steamed from all his body, that none of his friends were able to come to him, but they were ready to vomit. Another, being in utter despair well nigh of all health, howled out miserably. The third ran out of his wits. And divers others, that were enemies to the church, perished miserably in the end. All which things were certain tokens of the favour and defence of the Divine Majesty towards his church, and of his wrath towards the tyrants. And forasmuch as he had made mention of the Bohemians, he said it was a most apt example that was reported of their captain Zisca, who, when he should die, ordered his body to be flayed, and of his skin to make a parchment to cover the head of a drum: for it should come to pass, that when his enemies heard the sound of it, they should not be able to stand against them. The like counsel (he said) he himself now gave them as concerning Bucer: that like as the Bohemians did with the skin of Zisca, the same should they do with the arguments and doctrine of Bucer. For as soon as the papists should hear the noise of him, their gewgaws would forthwith decay. For saving that they used violence to such as withstood them, their doctrine contained nothing that might seem to any man (having but mean understanding in holy scripture) to be grounded upon any reason. As for those things that were done by them, against such as could not play the mad-men as well as they, some of them savoured of open force, and some of ridiculous foolishness. For what was this first of all? Was it not frivolous, that for the space of three years together, mass should be sung in those places where Bucer and Phagius rested in the Lord, without any offence at all? And as soon as they took it to be an offence, straightway to be an offence if any were heard there: or that it should not be as good then as it was before: as if that then upon a sudden it had been a heinous matter to celebrate it in that place, and that the fault that was past should be counted the more grievous, because it was done of longer time before. Moreover this was a matter of none effect, that Bucer and Phagius only should be dug up, as much as to say, that they only had embraced the religion which they call heresy. It was well known how one of the burgesses of the town had been inclined toward the popish religion: who, when he should die, desired neither ringing of bells, dirges, nor any other such kind of trifles to be done for him in his anniversary, as they term it, but rather that they should go with instruments of music before the mayor and council of the city, to celebrate his memorial; and also that yearly a sermon should be made to the people, bequeathing a piece of money to the preacher for his labour. Neither might he omit in that place to speak of Ward the painter, who, although he was a man of no reputation, yet was not to be despised for the religion's sake which he diligently followed. Neither were divers others to be passed over in silence, who were known of certainty to have continued in the same sect, and to rest in other church-yards in in the town of Cambridge, and indeed through the whole realm, and yet defiled not their masses at all.
ALL which persons (forasmuch as they were all of one opinion) ought to have been taken up, or else all have been let to lie with the same religion: unless a man would grant, that it lieth in their power to make what they like lawful and unlawful at their own pleasure.
IN the condemnation of Bucer and Phagius, to say the truth, they used too much cruelty, and too much violence. For howsoever it went with the doctrine of Bucer, certainly they could find nothing whereof to accuse Phagius, inasmuch as he wrote nothing that came abroad, except a few things that he had translated out of the Hebrew and Chaldee tongues into Latin. After his coming into the realm, he never read, he never disputed, he never preached, he never taught; for he died soon after, so that he could in that time give no occasion for his adversaries to take hold on, whereby to accuse him whom they never heard speak. In that they [Page 378] hated Bucer so deadly, for the allowing marriage of the clergy, it was their own malice conceived against him, and a very slander raised by themselves. For he had for his defence in that matter (besides other helps) the testimony of pope Pius the Second, who in a certain place saith, That upon weighty considerations, priests' wives were taken from them, but for more weighty causes were to be restored again. And also the statute of the emperor, (they call it the Interim) by which it is enacted, That such of the clergy as were married, should not be divorced from their wives.
THUS turning his style from this matter to the university, he reproved in few words their unfaithfulness towards these men. For if the Lord suffered not the bo [...]s of the king of Edom, being a wicked man, to be taken up and burnt without revengement (as saith Amos), let us assure ourselves he will not suffer so notable a wrong done to his godly preachers unrevenged.
AFTERWARD when he came to the condemnation (which we told you in the former action was pronounced by Dr. Perne the vice-chancellor, in the name of them all) being somewhat more moved at the matter, he admonished them how much it behoved them to use great circumspection, what they decreed upon any man by their voices, in admitting or rejecting any man to the promotions and degrees of the university. For that he which should take his authority from them, should be a great prejudice to all the other multitude, which (for the opinion that he had of their doctrine, judgment, allowance, and knowledge) did think nothing but well of them. For it would come to pass, that if they would bestow their promotions upon none but fit persons, and let the unfit go as they come, both the commonwealth should receive much advantage and profit by them, and besides that, they should highly please God. But if they persisted to be negligent in doing thereof, they should grievously injure the commonwealth, and worthily work their own shame and reproach. Over and besides that, they should greatly offend the majesty of God, whose commandment (Not to bear false witness) they should in so doing break and violate.
IN the mean while that he was speaking these and many other things before his audience, many of the university, to set out and defend Bucer withal, beset the walls of the church and church-porch on both sides with verses; some in Latin, some in Greek, and some in English, in which they made a manifest declaration how they were minded both toward Bucer and Phagius. Finally, when his sermon was ended, they made common supplication and prayers. After thanks rendered to God for many other things, but especially for restoring of the true religion every man departed his way.
FORASMUCH as mention hath been made of the death of the worthy and famous clerk Martin Bucer, and of the burning of his bones after his death, it will not be improper here to insert the funeral verse of Dr. Redman upon Bucer's death, now translated into English.
The Epitaph, or Funeral Verse, of Dr. REDMAN upon the Death of MARTIN BUCER.
The despiteful Handling and Madness of the Papists toward PETER MARTYR'S Wife at Oxford, who was taken up from her Grave at the Command of Cardinal POOLE, and afterwards buried in a Dunghill.
AND because one university should not mock the other, like cruelty was also declared upon the dead body of Peter Martyr's wife at Oxford, an honest, grave, and sober matron while she lived, and always a great helper of the poor people, as many dwelling there can well testify.
IN the year of our Lord 1552, she departed this life, with great sorrow of all those needy persons, whose necessities many times and often she had liberally eased and relieved. Now when Brooks, bishop of Gloucester, Nicholas Ormanet, datary, Robert Morwen, president of Corpus Christi college, Cole and Wright, doctors of the civil law, came thither as the cardinal's visitors, they among other things had in commission to take up this good woman again out of her grave, and to consume her carcase with fire; not doubting but that she was of the same religion that her husband had professed before, when he read the king's lecture there. And to make a show that they would do something orderly, they called all those before them that had any acquaintance with her or her husband. They administered an oath to them, that they should not conceal whatsoever was demanded. In fine, their answer was, that they knew not what religion she was of, by reason they understood not her language.
TO be short after these visitors had sped their business they came for, they went to the cardinal again, certifying him that upon due inquisition made, they could learn nothing upon which by the law they might [...]urn her. Notwithstanding the cardinal did not leave the matter so, but wrote down his letters a good while after to Marshall, then dean of Frideswide's, that he should dig her up, and lay her out of Christian burial, became she was interred nigh unto St. Frideswide's relics, sometime had in great reverence in that college. Dr. Marshall calling his spades and mattocks together in the evening, when he was well fuddled, caused her to be taken up and buried in a dunghill.
HOWEVER, when it pleased God under good queen Elisabeth to give quietness to his church, long time persecuted with prison and death, then Dr. Parker, archbishop of Canterbury, Edmund Grindall, bishop of London, Richard Goodrick, with divers others her majesty's high commissioners in matters of religion, (nothing ignorant how far the adversaries of the truth had transgressed the bounds of all humanity, in violating the sepulchre or grave of that good and virtuous woman) willed certain of that college, in which this uncourteous fact was attempted or done, to take her out of the dunghill where she lay, and solemnly in face of the whole town to bury her again in a more descent grave. For though the body being once dead, no great estimation were to be had, how or where the bones were laid; yet was some reverence to be used toward her for sex and womanhood sake. Besides, to say the truth, it was a great shame, that he who had travelled so far at king Edwards request, from the place wherein he had dwelt quietly, and had taken so earnest pains, being an old man, in reading and setting forth the truth all he could, with learning to teach and instruct, and so well deserved of that university; should with such ungentle a recompence of ingratitude be rewarded again, as to have his wife that was a godly woman, a stranger, good to many, especially to the poor, and hurtful to none, either in word or deed without just deserving, and beside their own law, not proceeding against her according to the order thereof, spitefully to be laid in a stinking dunghill.
TO all good people the fact seemed odious, and of such indued with humanity, utterly to be abhorred. [Page 380] Wherefore Mr. Calfield, then sub-dean of the college, diligently provided, that from Marshall's dunghill she was restored and translated to her proper place again, yea, and withal coupled her with Frideswide's bones, that in case any cardinal will be so mad hereafter to remove this woman's bones again, it shall be hard for them to discern the bones of her from the other. And to the intent the same might be notified to the minds of men the better, the next day after, which was Sunday, Mr. Rogerson preached unto the people, in which sermon by the way he declared the rough dealing of the adversaries, which not contented to practise their cruelty against the living▪ but they must also rage against one that was dead, and lain two years in her grave. God grant them once to see their own wickedness, Amen.
AND thus much touching the noble acts and strangeness of this worthy cardinal in both the universities; whereunto it will not be impertinent, here also consequently to adjoin and set forth to the eyes of the world the blind and bloody articles set out by cardinal Poole, to be inquired upon, within his diocese of Canterbury, whereby it may the better appear what yokes and snares of fond and fruitless traditions were laid upon the poor flock of Christ, to intangle and oppress them with loss of life and liberty. By which, wise men have to see what godly fruits proceeded from that catholic church and see of Rome. In which, although thou seest (good reader) some good articles interspersed, let that nothing more thee; for else how could such poison be ministered, but it must have some honey to relish the reader's taste.
The Articles set forth by Cardinal POOLE, to be inquired upon in his ordinary Visitation, within his Diocese of Canterbury.
Touching the Clergy.
1. FIRST, Whether the divine service in the church at times, days, and hours, be observed and kept duly, or no.
2. Item, Whether the parsons, vicars, and curates▪ do comely and decently in their manners and doings behave themselves, or no.
3. Item, Whether they do reverently and duly administer the sacraments or sacramentals, or no.
4. Item, Whether any of their parishioners die without ministration of the sacraments, through the negligence of their curates, or no.
5. Item, Whether the said parsons, vicars, or curates, do haunt taverns or ale-houses, increasing thereby infamy and slander, or no.
6. Item, Whether they be diligent in teaching the midwives how to christen children in time of necessity, according to the canons of the church, or no.
7. Item, Whether they see that the font be comely kept, and have holy water always ready for children to be christened.
8. Item, If they do keep a book of all the names of them that be reconciled to the duty of the church.
9. Item, Whether there be any priests that of late unlawfully had women under pretended marriage, and hitherto are are not reconciled, and to declare their names and dwelling places.
10. Item, Whether they do diligently teach their parishioners the articles of the faith, and the ten commandments.
11. Item, Whether they do decently observe those things that do concern the service of the church, and all those things that tend to a good and christian life, according to the canons of the church.
12. Item, Whether they do devoutly in their prayers pray for the prosperous estate of the king and queen's majesties.
13. Item, Whether the said parsons and vicars do sufficiently repair their chancels, rectories, and vicarages, and do keep and maintain them sufficiently repaired and amended.
14. Item, Whether any of them do preach or [Page 381] teach any erroneous doctrine, contrary to the catholic faith and unity of the church.
15. Item, Whether any of them do say the divine service, or do administer the sacraments in the English tongue, contrary to the usual order of the church.
16. Item, Whether any of them do suspiciously keep any women in their houses, or do keep company with men suspected of heresies, or of evil opinion.
17. Item, Whether any of them that were under pretence of lawful matrimony married, and now reconciled, do privily resort to their pretended wives, or whether the said women do privily resort unto them.
18. Item, Whether they do go decently apparalled as it becometh sad, sober and discreet ministers, and whether they have their crowns and beards shaven.
19. Item, Whether any of them do use any unlawful games, as dice, cards, and other like, whereby they grow to slander and evil report.
20. Item, Whether they do keep residence and hospitality upon their benefices, and do make charitable contributions according to all laws ecclesiastical.
21. Item, Whether they do keep the book of registers of christenings, buryings, and marriages, with the names of the godfathers and godmothers.
Touching the Lay-people.
1. FIRST, Whether any manner of person, of what estate, degree or condition soever he be, do hold, maintain, or affirm any heresies, errors or erroneous opinions, contrary to the laws ecclesiastical, and the unity of the catholic church.
2. Item, Whether any person do hold, affirm, or say, that in the blessed sacrament of the altar there is not contained the real and substantial presence of Christ: or that by any manner of mean [...] do contemn and despise the said blessed sacrament, or do refuse to do reverence or worship thereunto.
3. Item, Whether they do contemn or despise by any manner of means any other of the sacraments, rites, or cer [...]monies of the church, or do refuse or deny auricular confession.
4. Item, Whether any do absent or refrain, without urgent or lawful impediment, to come to the church, and reverently to hear the divine service upon Sundays and holy-days.
5. Item, Whether being in the church, they do not apply themselves to hear the divine service, and to be contemplative in holy prayer, and not to walk jangle, or talk, in the time of divine service.
6. Item, Whether any be fornicators, adulterers, or do incest, or be bawds, and receivers of evil persons, or be vehemently suspected of any of them.
7. Item, Whether any do blaspheme and take the name of God in vain, or be common swearers.
8. Item, Whether any be perjured, or have commited sinomy or usury, or do still remain in the same.
9. Item, Whether the churches and churchyards be well and honestly repaired and inclosed.
10. Item, Whether the churches be sufficiently garnished and adorned with all ornaments and books necessary, and whether they have a rood in their church of a descent stature, with Mary and John, and an image of the patron of the same church.
11. Item, Whether any do with-hold, or draw from the church any manner of money or goods, or that do with-hold their due and accustomed tithes from their sons and vicars.
12. Item, Whether any be common drunkards, [Page 382] ribalds, or men of evil living, or do exercise any lewd pastimes, especially in the time of divine service.
13. Item, If there be any who do practise or exercise any arts of magic or necromancy, or do use or practise any incantations, sorceries, or witchcraft, to be vehemently suspected thereof.
14. Item, Whether any be married within the degrees of affinity or consanguinity, prohibited by the laws of holy church, or that do marry, the ba [...]s not asked, or do make any private contracts.
15. Item, Whether in the time of Easter l [...]t, any were not confessed, or did not receive the blessed sacrament of the altar, or did irreverently believe themselves in the receiving thereof.
16. Item, Whether any do keep any secret c [...] venticles, preachings, lectures, or readings, in matters of religion, contrary to the laws.
17. Item, Whether any do now not duly keep thy fasting and ember-days.
18. Item, Whether the altars in the churches be consecrated or no.
19. Item, Whethet [...]er the sacrament be carried devout to them that fall sick, with light, and with a little sacring bell.
20. Item, Whether the common schools be well kept, and that the school-masters be diligent in teaching, and be also catholic, and men of good and upright judgment, and that they be examined and approved by the ordinary.
21. Item, Whether any do take upon them to administer the goods of those that be dead, without authority from the ordinary.
22. Item, Whether the poor people in every parish be charitably provided for.
23. Item, Whether there do burn a lamp or a candle before the sacrament. And if there do not▪ that then it be provided for with expedition.
24. Item, Whether infants and children be brought to be confirmed in convenient time.
25. Item, Whether any do keep, or have in their custody, any erroneous or unlawful books.
26. Item, Whether any do with-hold any money or goods bequeathed to the amending of the highways, or any other charitable deed.
27. Item, Whether any have put away their wives, or any wives do withdraw themselves from their husbands, being not lawfully divorced.
28. Item, Whether any do violate or break the Sunday and holy-days, doing their daily labours and exercises upon the same.
29. Item, Whether the taverns or alehouses, upon Sundays and holy days, in time of mass, mattins, and even song, do keep open their doors▪ and do receive people into their houses to drink and eat, and thereby neglect their coming to the church.
30. Item, Whether any have or do deprave or contemn the authority or jurisdiction of the pope's holiness, or the see of Rome.
31. Item, Whether any minstrels or any other persons, do use to sing any songs against the holy sacraments, or any other ri [...]es and ceremonies of the church.
32. Item, Whether there be any hospitals within your parishes, and whether the foundations of them be duly and truly observed and kept; and whether the charitable contributions of the same be done accordingly.
33. Item, Whether any goods, plate, jewels, or possessions be taken away, or with-held from the said hospitals, and by whom.
An Account of Ten Martyrs condemned and burnt within the Diocese of Canterbury.
MENTION was made a little before of the persecution in Kent: where we declared that 15 were imprisoned and condemned in the castle of [Page 383] Canterbury. Of which 15 we declared five to be famished to death within the said castle, and buried by the high-way, about the beginning of November. The other ten in January, 1557, were committed unto the fire, and there consumed to ashes, by Thornton, suffragan of Dover, and Nicholas Harpsfield, archdeacon of Canterbury.
THEIR names are these; John Philpot, of Tenterden, William Waterer, of Beddingden, Stephen Kempe, of Norgate, William Hay, of Hithe, Thomas Hudson, of Salenge, Matthew Bradbridge, of Tenterden, Thomas Stephens, of Beddingden, Nicholas Final, of Tenterden, W. Lowick, of Cranbroke, W. Prowting, of Thornham.
OF these ten godly martyrs, six were burnt at Canterbury about the 15th of January, that is, Kempe, Waterer, Prowting, Lowick, Hudson and Hay. The other two, Stephens and Philpot, at Wye, about the same month. The other two, Final and Bradbridge, were burnt together at Ashford the 16th of the same.
WHAT the ordinary articles were that were commonly objected to them of Canterbury diocese, is before rehearsed, save only that to some of these, as to them that follow after, as the time of their persecution did grow, so their articles withal did increase to the number of two and twenty, containing such like matter as seemed to the maintenance of the Romish see.
THEIR answers likewise to these articles need not be rehearsed, seeing they all agreed together, though not in the same form of words, yet to the same effect, &c.
THE next month following, which was February, came out another bloody commission from the king and queen, to kindle up the fire of persecution, as though it were not hot enough already; the contents of which commission I thought here not to omit; not for lack of matter, whereof I have too much; but that the reader may understand how kings and princes of this world, like as in the first persecutions of the primitive church under Valerian, Decius, Maximinian, Dioclesian, Licinius, &c. so now also in these latter perilous days, have set out all their main force and power, with laws, policy, and authority, to the uttermost they could devise against Christ and his gospel. And yet notwithstanding all these laws, institutions, injunctions, and terrible proclamations provided against Christ and his gospel, Christ yet still continueth, his gospel flourisheth, and truth prevaileth; kings and emperors in their own purposes overthrown, their devices dissolved, their counsels confounded; as examples both of this and of all times and ages do make manifest. But now let us hear the intent of this commission, in tenor as followeth.
A bloody Commission given forth by King PHILIP and Queen MARY, to persecute the poor Members of Christ.
PHILIP and Mary, by the grace of God king and queen of England, &c. To the right reverend father in God our right trusty and well-beloved counsellor Thomas, bishop of Ely, and to our right trusty and well-beloved William Windsor, knight, lord Windsor, Edward North, knight, lord North, and to our trusty and well-beloved counsellor J. Bourne, knight, one of our chief secretaries, J. Mordaunt, knight, Francis Englefield, knight, master of our wards and liveries, Edward Walgrave, knight, master of the rolls, Thomas Pope, knight, Roger Cholmley, knight, Richard Rede, knight, Rowland Hill, knight, William Rastal, serjeant at law, Henry Cole, clerk, dean of St. Paul's, William Koper and Ralph Cholmley, esquires, William Cook, Thomas Martin, John Story, and John Vaughan, doctors of the law, greeting.
FORASMUCH as divers devilish and slanderous persons have not only invented, noised, and set forth divers false rumours, tales, and seditious slanders against Us, but also have sown divers heresies, and heretical opinions, and set forth divers seditious books within this Our realm of England, meaning thereby to stir up division, strife, contention, and sedition, not only amongst Our loving subjects, but also betwixt Us and Our said subjects, with divers others outrageous misdemeanors, enormities, contempts and offences, daily committed and done, to the disquieting of Us and Our people, We, minding the due punishment of such offenders, and the [Page 384] repressing of such like offences, enormities, and misbehaviours from henceforth, having special trust and confidence in your fidelities, wisdoms and discretions, have authorised, appointed and assigned you to be Our commissioners, and by these presents do give full power and authority unto you, or any three of you, to inquire as well by the oaths of twelve good and lawful men, as by witnesses and all other means and politic ways you can devise, of all and singular heretical opinions, lollardies, heretical and seditious books, concealments, contempts, conspiracies, and all false rumours, tales, seditious and slanderous words or sayings, raised, published, bruited, invented, or set forth against Us, or either of Us, or against the quiet governance and rule of Our people and subjects, by books, lies, tales, or otherwise, in any county, key, bowing, or other place or places, within this Our realm of England or elsewhere, in any place or places beyond the sea, and of the bringers in, utterers, buyers, sellers, readers, keepers, or conveyers of any such letter, books, rumour and tale, and of all and every their co-adjutors, counsellors, comforters, procurers, abettors, and maintainers, giving unto you, or any three of you, full power and authority by virtue hereof, to search out and take into your hands and possessions, all manner of heretical and seditious books, letters, and writings, wheresoever they or any of them shall be found, as well in printers' houses and shops, as elsewhere, willing you and every of you to search for the same in all places according to your discretions.
AND to inquire, hear, and determine all and singular enormities, disturbances, misbehaviours, and negligences committed in any church, chapel, or other hallowed place within this realm, and also for and concerning the taking away or with-holding any lands, tenements, goods, ornaments, stocks of money, or other things belonging to every of the said churches and chapels, and all accounts and reckonings concerning the same.
AND also to inquire and search out all such persons as obstinately do refuse to receive the blessed sacrament of the altar, to hear mass, or to come to their parish churches, or other convenient places appointed for divine service, and all such as refuse [...] go in procession to take holy bread or holy water▪ or otherwise do misbehave themselves in any church or other hallowed place, wheresoever any of the same offences have been, or hereafter shall be committed within this our said realm.
NEVERTHELESS, Our will and pleasure is, that when, and as often as any person or persons, hereafter being called or convened before you, do obstinately persist or stand in any kind of heresy, or heretical opinion, that then you or three of you do immediately order, that the same person or persons, so standing or persisting, be delivered and committed to his ordinary, there to be used according to the spiritual and ecclesiastical laws.
AND also we give unto you, or three of you, full power and authority to inquire and search out all vagabonds, and masterless men, barrators, quarrellers, and suspected persons, abiding within Our [...] of London, and ten miles compass of the same, and all assaults and affrays done and committed within the same city and compass.
AND further to search out all wastes, decays, and ruins of churches, chancels, chapels, parsonages, and vicarages in the diocese of the same, being within this realm, giving you, and every of you, full power and authority by virtue hereof to bear and determine the same and all other offences and matters above specified and rehearsed, according to your wisdoms, consciences, and discretions, willing and commanding you, or three of you, from time to time, to use and devise all politic ways and means, for the trial and searching out of the premises, as by you, or three of you, shall be thought most expedient and necessary: and upon inquiry and due proof had, known, perceived, and tried out, by the confession of the parties, or by sufficient witnesses before you, or three of you, concerning the premises or any part thereof, or by any other ways or means requisite, to give and award such punishment to the offenders, by fine, imprisonment, or otherwise, and to take such order for redress and reformation of the premises, as to your wisdoms shall be thought meet and convenient.
[Page 385]FURTHER willing and commanding you and every three of you, in case you shall find any person or persons obstinate or disobedient, either in their appearance before you, or three of you, at your calling or assignment, or else in not accomplishing, or not obeying your decrees, orders, and commandments in any thing or things, touching the premises or any part thereof, to commit the said person or persons so offending to ward, there to remain, till by you, or three of you, he be discharged or delivered, &c.
The Apprehension of twenty-two Prisoners in Essex.
AFTER this bloody proclamation or commission thus given out at London, which was the eighth day of February, in the third and fourth years of the reign of the king and queen, these new inquisitors, especially some of them, began to [...]le, and to take upon them not a little; so that all quarters were full of persecution, and prisons almost full of prisoners; namely, in the diocese of Canterbury, whereof (by the leave of Christ) we will say more presently.
IN the mean time, about the town of Colchester, the wind of persecution began fiercely to rise; insomuch that three and twenty together, men and women, were apprehended at one time; of which number one escaped; the other twenty-two were driven up like a flock of christian lambs to London, with two or three leaders with them at most, ready to give their skins to be plucked off for the gospel's sake. Notwithstanding the bishops, afraid perhaps of the number, to put so many at once to death sought means to deliver them, and so they did, drawing out a very easy submission for them, or rather suffering them to draw it out themselves; notwithstanding divers of them were afterwards taken again and suffered, (as God willing) ye shall hear hereafter. Such as met them by the way coming up, saw them in the fields scattering in such sort, as that they might easily have escaped away. And when they entered into the towns, their keepers called them again into array, to go two and two together, having a band or line going between them, they holding the same in their hands, every one having another cord about his arm, as though they were tied. And so were these fourteen men and eight women carried up to London, the people by the way praying to God for them, to give them strength. At their entering into London, they were pinioned, and so came into the city. But first let us declare concerning their being taken and their attachers, contained in the commissary's letter written to Bonner; then the indenture made between the commissioners and the popish commissary. The letter of the commissary is this:
AFTER my duty done in receiving and accomplishing your honourable and most loving letters, dated August 7, be it known unto your lordship, that on the 28th of August, the lord of Oxenford, lord Darcy, H. Tyrel, A. Brown, W. Bendlows, E. Tyrel, R. Weston, R. Appleton, published their commission, to seize the lands, tenements, and goods of the fugitives, so that the owners should have neither use nor advantage thereof, but by inventory remain in safe keeping, until the cause was determined. And also there was likewise proclaimed the queen's warrant for the restitution of the church goods within Colchester, and the hundreds thereabout, to the use of God's service. And then were called the parishes particularly, and the heretics partly committed to my examination. And that divers persons should certify to me of the ornaments of their churches, betwixt this and the justices' next appearance, which shall be on Michaelmas next. And the parishes which had presented at two several times, to have all ornaments with other things in good order, were exonerated for ever, till they were warned again, and others to make their appearance from time to time. And those names blotted in the indenture, were indicted for treason, fugitives, or disobedience, and were put forth by Mr. Brown's commandment. And before the sealing, my lord Darcy said unto me apart, and Mr. Bendlows, that I should have sufficient time to send unto your lordship, yea, and if need were, the heretics to remain in confinement till I had an answer from you, yea till the lords legates graces commissioners come into the country.
AND Mr. Brown came unto my lord Darcy's house and parlour belonging to Mr. Barnaby, before [Page 386] my said lord and all the justices, and laid his hand on my shoulder, with a smiling countenance, and desired me to make his hearty commendations to your good lordship, and asked me if I would: and I said, Yea, with a good will. Wherefore I was glad, and thought that I should not have been charged with so sudden carriage.
BUT after dinner, the justices counselled, with the bailiffs, and with the jailers, and then after took me unto them, and made collation of the indentures, and sealed them; and then Mr. Brown commanded me this afternoon, being the 30th of August, to go and receive my prisoners by and by. And then I said, it is an unreasonable commandment, for that I have attended on you here these three days, and this Sunday early I have sent home my men. Wherefore I desire you to have a convenient time appointed, wherein I may know, whether it will please my lord, my master, to send his commissioners hither, or that I shall make carriage of them unto his lordship. Then Mr. Brown said, We are certified that the council have written to your master to make speed, and to rid these prisoners out of hand: therefore go receive your prisoners in haste. I answered, Sir, I shall receive them within these ten days. Then Mr. Brown said, The limitation lieth in us, and not in you, wherefore get you hence.
I replied, Sir, you have indicted and delivered me by this indenture, whose faith or opinions I knew not, trusting that you will grant me a time to examine them, lest I should punish the catholics. Well, said Mr. Brown, for that cause you shall have time betwixt this and Wednesday. And I say unto you, Mess. Bailiffs, if he do not receive them at your hands on Wednesday, set open your door, and let them go.
THEN I said, My lord, and masters all, I promise to discharge the town and country of these heretics within these ten days. The lord Darcy answered, Commissary, we do and must all agree in one. Wherefore do you receive them on or before Wednesday.
TO which I replied, My lord, the last I carried, I was going betwixt the castle and St. Catherine's chapel two hours and a half, and in great press and danger; wherefore this may be to desire your lordship, to give in commandment unto Mr. Sayer, my bailiff, here present, to aid me through his liberties▪ not only with men and weapons, but that the town-clerk may be ready there with his book to write the names of the most busy persons, and this upon three hours warning; all which both my lord and Mr. Brown commanded.
THE 31st of August, William Goodwin, of Muc [...] birch, husbandman, this bringer, and Thomas Alsey, of Copford, your lordship's apparator of your consistory in Colchester, covenanted with me, that they should hire two other men at the least, whereof one should be a bow-man, to come to me the next day about two of the clock in the afternoon, so that I might recite this bargain before Mr. A [...] deacon, and pay the money, that is, forty-six shillings and eight-pence. Wherefore they should then go forth with me unto Colchester, [...] Wednesday, before three of the clock in the morning, receive there at my hand within the castle and mote-hall, fourteen men and eight women, bou [...] with cords and fetters, and drive, carry, or lead and feed with meat and drink, as heretics ought to be found continually, unto such time that the [...] Goodwin and Alsey shall cause the said two and twenty persons to be delivered to my lord of London's officers, and within the safe keeping of my said lord, and then to bring unto me the said fetters, with a perfect token of or from my said lord, and then this covenant to be void, or else, &c.
MR. Bendlows said unto me in my lord of Oxenford's chamber, at the King's head, after I had said mass before the lords, that on the morrow after Holy-Rood day, when we shall meet at Chelmsford for the division of these lands, I think, Mr. Archdeacon, you, and Mr. Smith, shall be fain to ride with certain of the jury to those portions and manors in your part of Essex, and in like case divide yourselves, to tread and view the ground with the quest, or else I think they will not labour the matter, and so do you say unto Mr. Archdeacon.
ALICE, the wife of William Walley, of Colchester, hath submitted herself, abjured her erroneous opinions, asked absolution, promised to do her solemn penance in her parish church of St. Peter's [Page 387] on Sunday next, and to continue a catholic and a faithful woman as long as God shall send her life. And for these covenants her husband standeth bound in five pounds. Which Alice is one of the nine women of your indenture, and she is big with child. Wherefore she remaineth at home, and this done in the presence of the bailiffs, aldermen, and town-clerk. And because Mr. Brown was certified there was no curate at Lexdon, he inquired who was the former? The answer was made, sir Francis Jobson. Who is the parson? They of the questmen, answered sir Roger Ghostlow. When was he with you? Not these fourteen years. How is you [...] cure served? Now and then. Who is the patron? My lord of Arundel. And within a short time after, sir Francis Jobson came with great courtesy unto my lord Darcy's place. And of all gentlemen about us I saw no more come in.
SIR Robert Smith, priest, and sometime canon of Bridlington, now curate of Appledore in the wild of Kent, came to Colchester the 28th day of August, with his wife big with child, of late divorced, taken on suspicion, examined by the lords, and Mr. Brown told me that they have received letters from the council for the attachment of certain persons, and especially one priest, whose name is Pullen (but his right name is Smith), doubting this priest to be the said Pullen, although neither he nor his wife would confess the same.
WHEREFORE he still lieth in prison, but surely this is not Pullen. If it please your lordship to have in remembrance, that the householders might be compelled to bring every man his own wife to her own seat in the church in time of divine service, it would profit much. And also there be yet standing hospitals, and others of like foundation about Colchester, which I have not known to appear at any visitation, as the masters and lazars of Mary Magdalen in Colchester, the proctor of St. Catherine's chapel in Colchester, the hospital or breadhouse of the foundation of the lord H. Harney in Laremarry, the hospital and beadmen of Little Horksley. Thus presuming on your lordship's goodness, I am more than bold ever to trouble you with this worldly business, beseeching Almighty God to send your honourable lordship a condign reward.
Eastthorp, 30th day of August.
WE found a letter concerning the marriage of priests in the hands of the aforesaid sir Robert Smith. Also I desired Mr. Brown, the doer of all things, to require the audience to bring in their unlawful writings and books; who asked me if I had made the proclamation? I said, yea. Then he said openly upon the bench, that they should be proclaimed once every quarter. And then take the constables and officers, and they alone take and punish the offenders accordingly.
An Indenture made between the Lords and Justices within specified, and BONNER'S Commissary, concerning the Delivery of the Prisoners abovementioned.
THIS indenture made the nineteenth day of August, in the third and fourth years of the reign of our sovereign lord and lady, Philip and Mary, by the grace of God, king and queen of England, France, both Sicilies, Jerusalem and Ireland, defenders of the faith, archdukes of Austria, dukes of Burgundy, Millain, and Brabant, counties of Hasburgh, Flanders, and Tirol, between the right honourable lord John de Ve [...]e, earl of Oxford, lord high chamberlain of England, Thomas lord Darcy of Chich, Henry Tyrel, knight, Anthony Brown, the king and queen's serjeant at law, Edmund Tyrel, Richard Weston, Roger Appleton, esquires, justices of oyer and terminer, and of the peace within the said county of Essex, to be kept of the one party, and John Kingston, clerk, bachelor at law, commissary to the bishop of London, of the other party, witnesseth, that Robert Colman, of Walton, in the county of Essex, labourer; Joan Winseley, of Horsley Magna, in the said county, spinster; Stephen Glover, of Rayley, in the county aforesaid, glover; Richard Clerke, of Much Holland, in the said county, mariner; William Munt, of Much Bently, in the said county, sawyer; Margaret Field, of Ramsey, in the said county, spinster; Agnes Whitlock, of Dovercourt, in the said county, spinster; Rose Allin, of the said town and county, spinster; Richard Bongeor, of Colchester, in the said county, currier; Richard Atkin, of Halstead, in the said county, weaver; [Page 388] Robert Barcock, of Wiston, in the county of Suffolk, carpenter; Richard George, of Westbarhoult▪ in the county of Essex, labourer; Richard Jolly, of Colchester, in the said county, mariner; Thomas Feeresanne, of the same town and county, mercer; Robert Debnam, late of Dedham, in the said county, weaver; Cicely Warren, of Cockfall, in the said county, spinster; Christian Pepper, widow, of the same town and county; Allin Simpson▪ Helen Euring, Alice the wife of William Wallis, of Colchester, spinster; William Bongeor, of Colchester, in the said county, glazier; being indicted of heresy, are delivered to the said John Kingston, clerk, ordinary to the bishop of London, according to the statute in that case provided.
IN witness whereof to the one part of this indenture remaining with the said earl, lord, and other the justices, the said ordinary hath set to his hand and seal; and to the other part remaining with the said ordinary, the said earl, lord, and other justices have set to their several hands and seals, the day and year above written.
- Oxenford,
- Thomas Darcy,
- Henry Tyrel,
- Anthony Brown,
- William Bendlows,
- Edmund Tyrel,
- Richard Weston,
- Roger Appleton.
THE twenty-two aforesaid prisoners thus sent from Colchester to London, were brought at length to bishop Bonner; concerning whom Bonner him [...]self writeth to cardinal Poole, in the following manner:
A Letter from Bishop BONNER to Cardinal POOLE.
MAY it please your grace, with my most humble obedience, reverence, and duty to understand, that going to London on Thursday last, and thinking to be troubled with Mr. Germaine's matter only, and such other common matters as are accustomed, enough to weary a right strong body, I had the day following, to comfort my stomach withal, letters from Colchester, that either that day or the day following, I should have sent me from thence twenty-two heretics, indicted before the commissioners, and indeed so I had, and compelled to bear their charges as I did of the others, both of which cost me above twenty nobles, a [...] money that I thought full evil bestowed. [...] these heretics, notwithstanding they had [...] catholic keepers to conduct and bring them [...] me, and all the way from Colchester to Stratf [...]dle Bow did go quietly and obediently, yet coming to Stratford they began to take heart of grace, [...] to do as pleased themselves, for they began to [...] their guard, which generally increased till they came to Aldgate, where they were lodged on [...] day night.
AND although I took order that the said her [...] should be with me very early on Saturday morning to the intent they might quietly come and be [...]amined by me; yet it was between ten and eleven of the clock before they would come, and they would take no way but through Cheapside, so that they were brought to my house with about a thousand persons. Which thing I took very strange and spake to sir John Gressarn being then with [...] to tell the mayor and the sheriffs that this thing was not well suffered in the city. These [...] heretics, all the way they came through Cheapside▪ both exhorted the people to their part, and [...] much comfort from the promiscuous multitude▪ and being entered into my house, and talked with [...] ▪ they shewed themselves desperate, and very obstinate: yet I used all the honest means I could, bo [...] of myself and others, to have won them, causing divers [...]earned men to talk with them; and finding in them nothing but pride and wilfulness, I thought to have had them all hither to Fulham, and here to give sentence against them. Nevertheless, perceiving by my last doing that your grace was offended, I thought it my duty before I any thing further proceeded herein, first to inform your grace hereof, and know your good pleasure, which I beseech your grace I may do by this trusty bearer. And thus most humbly I take my leave of your good grace, beseeching Almighty God always to preserve the same. At Fulham, Anno. 1556.
BY this letter of bishop Bonner to the cardinal, is to be understood, what good will was in this [Page 389] bishop to have the blood of these men, and to have passed sentence of condemnation against them, had not the cardinal somewhat (as it seemed) stayed his fervent headiness. Concerning which cardinal, although it cannot be denied by his acts and writings, but that he was a professed enemy, and no otherwise to be reputed but for a papist; yet again it is to be supposed, that he was none of the bloody and cruel sort of papists, as may appear not only by staying the rage of this bishop, but also by the solicitous writing, and long letters written to Cranmer, also by the complaints of certain papists, accusing him to the pope, to be a bearer with the heretics, and by the pope's letters sent to him upon the same, calling him up to Rome, and setting friar Peto in his place, had not queen Mary, by special intreaty, kept him out of the pope's danger. All which letters I have (if need be) to shew; and besides also, that it is thought of him that toward his latter end, a little before his coming from Rome to England, he began somewhat to favour the doctrine of Luther, and was no less suspected at Rome: [...] ▪ and furthermore, did there at Rome convert a certain learned Spaniard from papism to Luther's side; notwithstanding the pomp and glory of the world afterward induced him to play the papist thus as he did. But of this cardinal enough.
TO return now to this godly company again: first, ye have heard how they were brought up in bands to London; also how Bonner was about to have read the sentence of death upon them, and how he was stopped by the cardinal, ye understand. A [...] touching their confession, which they articled up in writing, it were to tedious to recite the whole at length. Briefly touching the article of the Lord's supper (for which they were chiefly troubled) they wrote as follows:
The Supper of the Lord.
WHEREAS Christ, at his last supper, took bread, and when he had given thanks he brake it, and gave it to his disciples, and said, "Take, eat, this is my body:" and likewise took the cup and thanked, &c we understand it to be a figurative speech, the most part of his language being in parables and dark sentences, that they which are carnally minded should see with their eyes and not perceive, and hear with their ears, and not understand; signifying this, that as he did break the bread among them, being but one loaf, and they all were partakers thereof, so we through his body, in that it was broken, and offered upon the cross for us, are all partakers thereof, and his blood cleanseth us from all our sins, and hath pacified God's wrath toward us, and made the atonement between God and us, if we walk henceforth in the light, even as he is the true light.
AND in that he said further, "Do this is remembrance of me," it is a memorial and token of the suffering and death of Jesus Christ: and commanded it for this cause, that the congregation of Christ should come together to shew his death, and to thank and laud him for all his benefits, and magnify his holy name, and so to break the bread, and drink the wine, in remembrance that Christ had given his body, and shed his blood for us.
THUS you may well perceive, though Christ called the bread his body, and the wine his blood, yet it followeth not, that the substance of his body should be in the bread and wine; as divers places in scripture are spoken by Christ and the apostles in like phrase of speech, as in John xv. "I am the true vine." Also in John x. "I am a door." And as it is written in the ninth chapter to the Hebrews, and in Exod. xxiv. how Moses took the blood of calves, and sprinkled both the book and all the people, saying, "This is the blood of the covenant or testament." And also in the fifth chapter of Ezekiel, how the Lord said unto him concerning the third part of his hair, saying, This is Jerusalem, &c.
THUS we see the scriptures how they are spoken in figures, and ought to be spiritually examined, and not as they would have us to say, that the bodily presence of Christ is in the bread, which is a blasphemous understanding of the godly word, and is contrary to all holy scriptures. Also we do see that great idolatry is sprung out of the carnal understanding of the words of Christ. "This is my body," and yet daily springeth, to the great dishonour of [Page 390] God; so that men worship a piece of bread for God, yea, and hold that to be their Maker.
AFTER this confession of their faith and doctrine being written and exhibited, they also devised a letter withal, in manner of a short supplication, or rather an admonition to the judges and commissioners, requiring that justice and judgment, after the rule of God's word, might be ministered unto them. The copy of which their letter I thought good also to shew unto the reader in form as followeth:
A Supplication of the Prisoners to the Judges.
TO the right honourable audience, whom these our simple writings, and the confession of our faith shall come to be heard or seen, we poor prisoners, being fast in bonds upon the trial of our faith, which we offer to be tried by the scriptures, pray most heartily, that forasmuch as God hath given you power and strength over us as concerning our bodies, under whom we submit ourselves as obedient subjects in all things due, you being officers and rulers of the people, may execute true judgment, keep the laws of righteousness, govern the people according to right, and hear the poor and helpless in truth, and defend their cause.
GOD, for his Son Jesus Christ's sake, give you the wisdom and understanding of Solomon, David, Hezekiah, Moses, with divers other most virtuous rulers, by whose wisdom and most godly understanding, the people were justly ruled and governed in the fear of God, all wickedness was by them overthrown and beaten down, and all goodness and virtue did flourish and spring. O God, which art most high, the creator and maker of all things, and of all men both great and small, and carest for all alike, who dost try all men's works and imaginations, before whose judgment-seat shall come both high and low, rich and poor: we most humbly beseech thee to put into our rulers hearts the pure love and fear of thy name, that even as they themselves would be judged, and as they shall make answer before thee, so may they hear our causes, judge with mercy, and read over these our requests and confessions of our faith, with deliberation and a godly judgment.
AND if any thing here seemeth to your [...] audience to be errononeous or [...] the scripture, if it shall please your [...] hear us patiently, which do offer ourselves to [...] scriptures, thereby to make answer and to be [...] in so doing we poor subjects being in much [...] and bondage, are most bound to pray for [...] noble estate and long preservation.
THE request of these men being so just, [...] doctrine so sound, yet all this could not prevail [...] the bishop and other judges, but that [...] should have proceeded against them immediately had not the goodness of the Lord better [...] for his servants, than the bishop had intended. [...] as they were now under the edge of the axe, [...] to be condemned by sentence, it was thought [...]wise by the cardinal, and some other heads; [...] belike, lest by the death of so many together, [...] disturbance might arise peradventure among the people; and so it was decreed among themselves▪ that they should rather make some submi [...] [...] confession such as they would themselves, [...] be sent home again, as they were indeed; [...] divers of them were afterward apprehended [...] to death. But in the mean time, as touching [...] submission which they made, this it was as in [...] here followeth:
The Submission or Confession of the aforesaid [...]soners.
BECAUSE our Saviour Christ at his last [...] took bread, and when he had given [...] he brake it, and gave it to his disciples, and [...] "Take, eat, this is my body which is given for you, this do in remembrance of me;" therefore according to the words of our Saviour Jesus Christ▪ we do believe in the sacrament to be Christ's body. And because he took the cup, gave thanks, and gave it to his disciples, and said, "This is my blood of the New Testament which is shed for many;" therefore likewise we do believe that it is the blood of Christ, according as Christ's church doth administer the same. Unto which catholic church of Christ we do in this like as in all other matters submit ourselves, promising therein to live as it be cometh good christian men, and here in this realm to use ourselves as it becometh faithful subjects unto [Page 391] our most gracious king and queen, and to all superiors, both spiritual and temporal, according to our [...] duties.
THE names of those who subscribed to this submission, were these:
JOHN Atkin, Alyn Sympson, Richard George, Thomas Firefanne, William Munt, Richard Jo [...]y, [...] Gr [...]twicke, Thomas Winsley, Richard Ro [...]he, Richard Clark, Stephen Glover, Robert C [...]an, Thomas Merse, William Bongeor, Robert Bercock, Margaret Hide, Elyn Euring, Chri [...] Pepper, Margaret Feld, Alice Munt, Joan [...]insley, Cicely Warren, Rose Alin, Ann White [...], George Barker, John Saxby, Thomas Lock [...], Alice Locker.
An Account of Five godly Martyrs, burnt at one Fire in Smithfield, on the 12th Day of April, [...]67.
TO proceed further in this history of persecuted martyrs, next in order follow these five, namely,
- Thomas Loseby,
- Henry Ramsey,
- Thomas Thirtell,
- Margaret Hide,
- and Agnes Stanley.
WHO being, some by the Lord Rich, some by other justices of the peace, and constables (their own neighbours), at the first accused and apprehended for not coming to their parish churches, were in the end sent unto Bonner, bishop of London, and by his commandment, the 27th day of January, were examined before Dr. Darbyshire, then chancellor to the said bishop, upon the former general articles mentioned.
Answers to the Articles.
WHOSE answers thereunto were, that as they confessed there was one true and catholic church, whereof they stedfastly believed, and thought the church of Rome to be no part or member: so in the same church they believed there were but two sacraments, that is to say, baptism, and the supper of the Lord. However, some of them attributed the title and honour of a sacrament to the holy estate of matrimony, which undoubtedly was done rather out of simple ignorance than of any wilful opinion, and are thereof to be adjudged as before is admonished.
MOREOVER, they acknowledged themselves to be baptized into the faith of that true church, as in the third article is specified. And here in reading, as well of these articles, as of the rest, mark, I beseech you, the crafty subtlety of these catholic companions, who intermixing certain points of faith, and of the true church, with the idolatrous and superstitious trash of their Romish synagogue, caused the poor and simple people, for lack of knowledge, oftentimes to fall into their crafty nets.
FOR after they had made them grant a true church, with the sacraments of the same, though not in such a number as they would have them, and also that they were christened in the faith thereof, that is, in the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, they craftily now in their objections, descending, as it were, from the faith of the Trinity unto their idolatrous mass and other superstitious ceremonies, would make them grant, that in denying thereof, they have severed themselves from the faith of the true church, whereinto they were baptized, which is most false▪ for though the true light of God's gospel and holy word was marvellously darkened, and in a manner utterly extinguished, yet the true faith of the Trinity, by the merciful providence of God, was still preserved, and into the faith thereof were they baptized, and not into the belief and profession of their horrible idolatry and vain ceremonies.
THESE things not thoroughly weighed by these poor, yet faithful and true members of Christ, caused some of them ignorantly to grant, that when they came to the years of discretion, and understood the light of the gospel, they did separate themselves from the faith of the church, meaning none other but only to separate themselves from admitting or allowing of such their popish and erroneous trash as they now had defiled the church [Page 392] of England with, and not from their faith received in baptism, which in express words in their answers to the other articles they constantly affirmed, declaring the mass and sacrament of the altar to be most wicked blasphemy against Jesus Christ, and contrary to the truth of his gospel, and therefore they utterly refused to assent unto them, or to be recon [...]d again thereunto.
THESE answers in effect being thus taken by the said chancellor, they were for that time dismissed; but the bishop, taking the matter into his own hands, the 6th day of March, propounded unto them certain other new articles: the copy whereof here followeth:
Other Articles objected by BONNER, Bishop of London, against THOMAS LOSEBY, HENRY RAMSEY, THOMAS THIRTELL, MARGARET HIDE, and AGNES STANLEY, the 6th Day of March, being the second Time of Examination.
FIRST, That thou hast thought, believed and spoken, within some part of the city and diocese of London, that the faith, religion, and ecclesiastical service here observed and kept, as it is in the realm of England, is not a true and a laudable faith, religion, and service, especially concerning the mass, and the seven sacraments, nor is agreeable to God's word and testament; and thou canst not find in thy heart without murmuring, grudging, or scruple, to receive and use it to conform thyself unto it, as other subjects of this realm customably have done and do.
2. Item, That thou hast thought, &c. that the English service set forth in the time of king Edward the Sixth, here in this realm of England, was and in good and godly, and catholic in all points, and that it alone ought here in this realm to be received, used, and practised, and none other.
3. Item, Likewise thou hast thought, &c. that thou art not bound to come to thy parish church, and there to be present, and hear mattins, mass, even-song, and other divine service, sung or said there.
4. Item, Thou hast thought, &c. that [...] art not bound to come in procession to the [...] upon days and times appointed, and to go [...] same with others of the parish, singing or [...] then the accustomed prayers used in the [...] nor to bear a taper or candle on Candlem [...] [...] nor take ashes upon Ash-Wednesday, nor to [...] to the cross upon days accustomed, nor to [...] and kiss the [...]pyx at mass-time, nor to [...] holy water and holy bread, nor to accept and [...] the ceremonies and usages of the church▪ [...] the manner and fashion as they are used in [...] realm.
5. Item, Thou hast thought, &c. that [...] not bound at any time to confess thy sins to [...] priest, and to receive absolution at his [...] God's minister, nor to receive at any time the [...] sacrament of the altar, especially as it is used [...] this church of England.
6. Item, Thou hast thought, &c. that [...] of religion and faith, thou must follow [...] believe thine own conscience only, and [...] credit to the determination and common order [...] the catholic church, and the see of Rome, [...] any member thereof.
7. Item, Thou hast thought, &c. that all thing [...] do chance of an absolute and precise mere [...] ▪ so that whether man do well or evil, he could not chuse but do so, and that therefore no man [...] any free will at all.
8. Item, Thou hast thought, &c. that [...] fashion and manner of christening of infants [...] agreeable to God's word, and that none can [...] effectually baptized, and thereby saved, except [...] be of years of discretion to believe himself, and so willingly accept or refuse baptism at his pleasure.
9. Item, Thou hast thought, &c. that prayers to saints, or prayers for the dead, are not available▪ and not allowable by God's word, or profitable in any wise, and that the souls departed do straightways go to heaven or hell, or else do sleep till the day of doom, so that there is no place of purgation at all.
[Page 393]10. Item, Thou hast thought, &c. that all such as in the time of king Henry the Eighth, or in the time of queen Mary in England, have been burned [...] heretics, were no heretics at all, but faithful and good christian people; especially Barnes, Garret, Jerome, Frith, Rogers, Hooper, Cardmaker, Latimer, Taylor, Bradford, Philpot, Cranmer, Ridl [...]y, and such like; and that thou didst allow, like, and approve all their opinions, and dost mislike [...] condemnations and burnings.
11. Item, Thou hast thought, &c. that fasting and prayers used in this church of England, and the appointing of days for fasting, and the abstaining from flesh upon fasting-days, and especially in the [...] of Lent is not laudable nor allowable by God's word, but is hypocrisy and foolishness; and [...] men ought to have liberty to eat at all times all [...]ds of meat.
12. Item, Thou hast thought, &c. that the sacrament of the altar is an idol, and to reserve and keep it, or to honour it, is plain idolatry and superstition: and likewise of the mass and elevation of the sacrament.
13. Item, Thou hast thought, &c. that thou of any else, convented before an ecclesiastical judge concerning matters of belief and faith, are not, nor is bound to make answer at all, especially under an oath upon a book.
Their Answers to the above Articles.
CONCERNING the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, ninth, tenth, and twelfth, they generally granted unto, saving that they denied the souls of the departed to sleep till the day of judgment, as i [...] mentioned in the ninth article.
AND as concerning the sixth objection, they thought themselves bound to believe the true catholic church, so far forth as the same doth instruct them according to God's holy word, but not to follow the determinations of the erroneous and Babylonical church of Rome.
AS for the seventh, eighth, and thirteenth, they utterly denied, that ever they were of any such absurd opinions as are contained therein, but they granted that man of himself, without the help and assistance of God's Holy Spirit, hath no power to do any good thing acceptable in God's sight.
TO the eleventh they said, that true fasting and prayer, used according to God's word, are allowable and available in his sight, and that by the same word every faithful man may eat all meats at all times, with thanksgiving to God for the same.
AFTER this, the first day of April, they were again convented before the bishop in his palace at London, where little appeareth to be done, except it were to know whether they would stand to their answers, and whether they would recant or no. But when they refused to recant, and deny the received and infallible truth, the bishop caused them to be brought into the open consistory, the third day of the same month of April in the forenoon, where first understanding by them their immutable constancy and stedfastness, he demanded particularly of every one what he had to say, why he should not pronounce the sentence of condemnation.
TO whom Thomas Loseby first answered, God give me grace and strength to stand against you and your sentence, and against your law, which is a devouring law, for it devoureth the flock of Christ. And I perceive there is no way with me but death, except I would consent to your devouring law, and believe in that idol the mass.
NEXT unto him answered Thomas Thirtell, saying, My lord, I say thus, if you make me an heretic, then you make Christ and all the twelve apostles heretics; for I am in the true faith and right belief, and I will stand in it, for I know full well I shall have eternal life therefore.
THE bishop then asked the like question of Henry Ramsey; who sayed again, My lord, will you have me to go from the truth that I am in? I say unto you, that my opinions be the very truth, which I will stand unto, and not go from them: and I say unto you further, that there are two churches upon the earth, and we (meaning himself and other true martyrs and professors of Christ) be of the true church, and ye be not.
[Page 394]UNTO this question next answered Margaret Hide, saying, My lord, you have no cause to give sentence against me, for I am in the true faith and opinion, and will never forsake it: and I do wish that I were more strong in it than I am.
LAST of all answered Agnes Stanley, and said, I had rather every hair of my head were burned, if it were ever so much worth, than that I will forsake my faith and opinion, which is the true faith.
THE time being now spent, they were commanded to appear again in the afternoon in the same place: which commandment being first obeyed, the bishop first called for Loseby, and after his accustomed manner ordered his articles and answers to be read: in reading whereof, when mention was made of the sacrament of the altar, the bishop with his colleagues put off their caps. Whereat Loseby said, My lord, seeing you put off your cap, I will put on my cap; and therewith did put on his cap. And after the bishop continuing in his accustomed persuasions, Loseby again said unto him, My lord, I trust I have the Spirit of truth, which you detest and abhor, for the wisdom of God is foolishness unto you. Whereupon the bishop pronounced sentence of condemnation against him.
AND delivering him unto the sheriff, called for Margaret Hide, with whom he used the like order of exhortations. To whom she said, I will not depart from my sayings till I be burnt: and, my lord, said she, I would wish you to instruct me with some part of God's word, and not give me instructions of the holy bread and holy water, for it is no part of the scripture.
BUT neither himself nor any of his colleagues, being able rightly to accomplish her request, to make short work, used his final reason of convincement, which was the sentence of condemnation. And therefore leaving her off, called for another, viz. Agnes Stanley, who upon the bishop's like persuasions made this answer:
MY lord, where you say I am an heretic, I am none; neither yet will I believe you, nor any man that is wise will believe as you do. And as for these that you say were burnt for heresy, I believe them true martyrs before God: therefore I will [...] go from my opinion and faith as long as I live.
HER talk thus ended, she received the [...] [...] ward that the others had. And the bishop then turning his tale and manner of enticement [...] Thomas Thirtell, received of him likewise [...] final answer, My lord, I will not hold with you [...] idolatrous ways, as you do: for I say, the mass [...] idolatry, and will stick to my faith and belief, [...] long as the breath is in my body. Upon [...] words he was also condemned as an heretic.
LAST of all Henry Ramsey was demanded [...] would, as the rest, stand unto his answers, [...] recanting the same, come home again, and [...] member of their church. Whereunto he answered I will not go from my religion and belief a long as I live; and, my lord (said he), your doctrine [...] naught, for it is not agreeable to God's word.
AFTER these words, the bishop (to conclude) pronouncing the sentence of condemnation against him and the rest (as you have heard), charged [...] sheriffs of London with them: who being there [...] to commanded the 12th day of the same month of April, brought them into Smithfield, where they all together in one fire most joyfully and constantly ended their temporal lives, receiving therefore the life eternal.
An Account of Three Martyrs burned in St. George's Fields, in Southwark.
IN the month of May following, William Mo [...]rant, Stephen Gratwick, and — King, suffered in St. George's Fields, in Southwark.
AMONG other histories of the persecuted and condemned saints of God, I find the condemnation of none more strange nor unlawful than of this Stephen Gratwick: who first was condemned by the bishop of Winchester and the bishop of Rochester, who were not his ordinaries.
Secondly, When he did appeal from these incompetent [Page 395] judges to his right ordinary, his appeal could not be admitted.
Thirdly. When they had no other shift to colour their inordinate proceedings withal, they suborned one of the priests to come in for a counterfeit and a false ordinary, and sit upon him.
Fourthly, Being openly convinced and overturned in his own arguments, yet Dr. White, the said bishop of Winchester, neither would yield to the force of truth, nor suffer any of the audience once to say, God strengthen him.
Fifthly, As they brought in a false ordinary to [...]it upon him, so they pretended false articles against him, which were no part of his examination, but of their devising, to have his blood.
Sixthly and lastly, Having no other ground nor just matters against him, but only for saying these word, "That which I have said, I have said," they read the sentence of death upon him.
AND this was the dealing of these men, who needs will be reputed for catholic fathers of the spirituality, succeeders of the apostles, disciples of Christ, pillars of the holy church, and leaders of the people. Of whose proceedings, how agreeable they are to the example of Christ and his apostles, I leave to discuss, referring the judgment hereof to them who who know the institution of Christ's religion and doctrine.
NOW lest peradventure the disordered mis-rule of these Christmas lords will not be credited upon the simple narration of the story, you shall hear the whole discourse of this process registered by the hand of the martyr himself, who, as he could best tell what was done, so I am sure he would not testify otherwise than the truth was, according as you shall hear by his own declaration here following.
The Declaration of STEPHEN GRATWICK concerning his own Story and Condemnation.
ON the 25th day of May, in the year 1557, I Stephen Gratwick came before Dr. White, bishop of Winchester, in St. George's church, in Southwark, at eight o'clock in the morning, and then he called me before him, and said unto me:
Stephen Gratwick, how standeth the matter with thee now? Art thou contented to revoke thy heresies, which thou hast maintained and defended here within my diocese, oftentimes before me? And also upon Sunday last you stood up in the face of the whole church maintaining your heresies, so that you have offended within the liberty of my diocese: and now I being your ordinary, you must answer to me directly, whether you will revoke them or not, which I have here in writing: and if so be that you will not revoke them, then I will excommunicate you, and therefore note well what you do, for now I read here the articles against you.
AND so when he had ended, he bade me answer unto them.
My lord, these articles which you have here objected against me, are not mine, but of your own making; for I never had any of mine examinations written at any time, and therefore these are objections that you lay against me as a snare to get my blood. Wherefore I desire your lawful favour, to allow my lawful appeal to mine ordinary: for I have nothing to do with you. And whereas you do burden me, that I have offended within your diocese, I say it is not so: for I have not enterprised either to preach or teach within your diocese, but was apprehended by mine own bishop, and sent prisoner into your diocese, by the consent of the council and mine own ordinary; and therefore I so being in your diocese, you have no cause to refuse my lawful appeal.
AND with that came the bishop of Rochester, (whom the bishop of Winchester gladly received) according to their determinate purpose before invented; and so followed the archdeacon of Canterbury; and then the bishop again started up, as a man half ravished of his wits for joy, embracing him with many gentle words, and said, that he was very glad of his coming. making ignorant thereof, as he thought it should appear to me. Then said Winchester.
Sir, I am very glad of your coming; for here I have one before me, who hath appealed unto you, being his ordinary. Then said the archdeacon of Canterbury:
I know this man very well. He hath been divers times before me. And then I answered and said:
My lord, I am not of his diocese by five miles: for his diocese reacheth on that part no farther than the clifts of Lewes, and I dwelt at Brighthelmstone, five miles beyond, in the diocese of the bishop of Chichester; and therefore I am not of his diocese.
THEN the bishop of Winchester, the bishop of Rochester, and the archdeacon of Canterbury, cast their heads together and laughed: and then they said my ordinary would be here by and by, and so they sent forth for a counterfeit instead of mine ordinary: and then I saw them laugh; when I spoke to them, and said:
Why do you laugh? Are you confederate together for my blood, and therein triumph? You have more cause to look weightily upon the matter; for I stand here before you upon my life and death. But you declare yourselves what you are: for you are clothed in lamb's apparel, but I would to God you had coats according to your assembly here, which is scarlet gowns, for I do here perceive you are bent to have my blood.
AND then came rushing in that counterfeit bishop, who was the hired servant to deliver me into the hands of the high priest; and the bishop hearing him come, with haste inquired of his man who was there: and he said, My lord of Chichester. Then the bishop with haste rose up and said:
You are most heartily welcome; and required him to sit down; and then said the bishop of Winchester to me, Lo, here is your ordinary; what have you now to say to him?
I have nothing to say to him. If he has nothing to say to me, I pray you let me depart. Then answered my counterfeit ordinary and said:
Here you stand before my lord [...] and me in trial of your faith, and if you bring the truth, we shall by compulsion give place unto you, as it is to be proved by the word; and your doctrine to be heard and embraced for a truth.
Then I demanded of him whether he meant by author [...]ty, or by the judgment of the Spirit of God in his members
AND he answered me, By authority as well as by the Spirit.
THEN, said I, now will I turn your own argument upon you; for Christ came before the high priests, scribes and pharisees, bringing the truth with him, being the very truth himself, which truth cannot lie, yet both he and his truth were condemned, and took no place with them: and also the apostles▪ and all martyrs that died since Christ: therefore I turn your argument upon you; answer it if you can.
THEN the said counterfeit ordinary, with great heat and choler, said to the bishop of Winchester▪ Object some articles against him, for he is obstinate, and would fain get out of our hands, therefore hold him to some particular: so that no other answer could I have to this argument.
THEN the bishop of Winchester began to read objections of his own making against me, and he bade me answer to them.
AND I said, No, except you will set the law [...] ▪ because I see you are mindful of my blood.
Now you may see he will not answer to these, but as he hath aforesaid.
THEN spake the counterfeit ordinary again, and said, My lord, Ask him what he saith to the sacrament of the altar. Then the bishop asked me, in my counterfeit ordinary required him.
My lord, I do believe that in the sacrament of the supper of the Lord, truly administered in both kinds, according to the institution of Christ, unto the worthy receiver, he eateth mystically [Page 397] by faith the body and blood of Christ. Then I asked him if it were not the truth, and he said, Yes; then said I, Bear witness of the truth.
THEN the bishop of Winchester, whose head being subtlest to gather upon my words, said, My lord, see you not how he creepeth away with his heresies, and covereth them privily? Note how he here separateth the sacrament of the altar from the supper of the Lord, meaning it not to be the true sacrament, and also how he condemneth our administration in one kind, allowing that the unworthy receiver doth not eat and drink the body and blood of Christ; which before matters truly weighed, being covered very craftily with his subtle shifts and sophistry, but he shall answer directly before he depart.
My lord, that is but your gathering of my words, for you before confessed the same sayings to be the truth, and thus you catch at me, and fain would have an advantage for my blood: but seeing you judge me not to mean the sacrament of the altar, now come to the probation of the same sacrament, and prove it to be the true sacrament, and I am with you; or else if you can prove your church to be the true church, I am also with you.
BUT then he called to memory the last probation of the church and sacraments, how he before was driven to forsake the scriptures, and to shew me by good reason how they might administer the sacrament in one kind: and his reason was this, Like as a man or woman dieth on a sudden, and so when we have given him the body of Christ, in the mean time the party dieth, and so he eateth the body of Christ, and drinketh not his blood. And this was his simple shift in the proving of their sacraments: so that he was now half ashamed to begin the matter again.
BUT yet a little shift he brought in, and [...]:
What sayest thou by the administration of the priests every day for themselves, and they minister in both kinds?
TO that I answered, You have two administrations, for I am sure at Easter you administer but in one kind, and therefore it is not according to the institution of Christ, but after your own imaginations.
Why then, what sayest thou to these words, "Take, eat, this is my body▪" These are the words of Christ. Wilt thou deny them?
My lord, they are the words of scripture, I affirm them, and not deny them.
Why then, thou dost confess the sacrament of the altar to be a real presence, the selfsame body that was born of the virgin Mary, and i [...] ascended up into heaven.
My lord, what do you now mean? Do you not also mean a visible body? For it cannot be, but of necessity, if it be a real presence, and a natural body, but it must be a visible body also.
Nay, I say unto thee, it is a real presence and a material body, and an invisible body too.
My lord, then it must needs be a fantastical body, for if it should be material and invisible, as you affirm, then it must needs be a fantastical body: for it is apparent that Christ's human body was visible and seen.
THEN the bishop brake out and said, When didst thou see him? I pray thee tell me.
TO that I answered and said, A simple argument it is; because our corporal eyes cannot comprehend Christ, doth it prove or follow, that he is invisible, because we cannot see him?
AND with that the bishop began to grow weary of his argument, and removed his talk to Judas in eating the sacrament, and said, He eat him wholly, as the apostles did.
AND then I asked him, If he meant Christ's flesh and blood, which he speaketh of in the sixth of John, and saith, "He that eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, hath eternal life in me."
[Page 398]TO that he answered and said, Yea.
THEN said I, of necessity Judas must needs be saved, because he did eat the flesh and drink the blood of Christ, as you have affirmed, and also all the ungodly that die without repentance, because they have eaten your sacrament, which you say is the flesh and blood of Christ: therefore of necessity they shall receive the benefit thereof, that is, eternal life. Which is a great absurdity to grant, and then of necessity it must follow, that all that eat not, and drink not of your sacrament, shall finally perish and be damned; for Christ saith, "Except ye eat my flesh and drink my blood, ye have no life in you." And you have afore said that of your sacrament, which you say is the same flesh and blood which Christ speaketh of: and here I prove, that all children then that die under age to receive the sacrament, by your own argument must be damned, which is horrible blasphemy to speak. Now here I turn your own argument upon you, answer it if you can.
My lord, do you not see what deceitful arguments he bringeth in here against us, mingled with sophistry, and keepeth himself so that we can get no hold of him? But I say unto thee, thou perverse heretic, I see now thou art a perverse fellow. I had a better opinion of thee, but now I see we lose our time about thee; yet I answer thee, St. Paul doth open the sixth of St. John plainly, if thou wilt see: for he saith, "They eat Christ's body and drink his blood unworthily," and that was the cause of their damnation.
My lord, take heed you do not add unto the text, for he that addeth to the text is accursed of God, and I am sure here you have brought more than Paul hath spoken: for he saith not, Because they have eaten his body and drank his blood unworthily; but St. Paul saith, "Whosoever shall eat of this bread and drink of this cup unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood of Christ." Note, m [...] lord he saith not as you have affirmed, but clean contrary. And with that they were all in a great rage.
THEN the bishop of Winchester said I belied the text.
AND then I called for the text.
I asked thee even now if thou [...] understand Latin, and thy answer was, Whether thou didst or no, the people shall bear witness [...] English.
And so I called again for the Testament, whether it were Latin or English, for the trial of the text.
AND then when the bishop of Winchester sa [...] that I cared not which of the translations I had, he stood up, thinking to beguile some simple m [...]n that had a book there, and bade him that had an English Testament to bring it in, that he might get some hold of him that should bring a Testament: but God disappointed him thereof, and so he flew away from the matter, and began to rail upon me, and said, my subtle arguments should never serve: for if I would not answer directly, I should nevertheless be excommunicated. For (said he) I see a [...] toy in thine head; thou gloriest much in thy [...], and thinkest now the people are come about [...], that thou shalt encourage them with thy constant heretical opinion. For the last day, when thou wast before me upon Sunday in St. Mary Overy's church, thou there repro [...]edst my sermon, and hadst a thousand by thee at least, to bid God strengthen thee; but now let me see him here that dare open his mouth to bid God strengthen thee; he shall did the death thou shalt die.
TO that I answered, My lord, I know your cruelty far exceeds your pity. I know from experience that you keep men in prison a year or two, taking their books from them, permitting them not so much as a Testament to look upon for their soul's comfort, which all men ought to have: and so you treat them more like brute beasts than christian [...].
No, sir, we will use you as we will use the child: for if the child will hurt himself with the knife, we will keep the knife from him. So because you will damn your soul with the word, therefore you shall not have it.
My lord, a simple argument you [Page 399] bring to maintain and cover your fault. Are you not ashamed to make the word the cause of our damnation? I never knew any man but only you that did not affirm our sins to be the cause of our damnation, and not the word, as you say: and therefore if your argument be good, then this is good also. Because that some men do abuse drink, therefore the benefit of drink should be taken from all men, or any other such like good gift.
My lords, here we lose much time, for this fellow is perverse, speaking nothing but sophistry and perverse questions: so that we can get no advantage of him.
THEN▪ spake my counterfeit ordinary, as one half asleep all this while; yet somewhat with haste [...]hen he was awaked he began to tell his tale, and said:
Read these articles against him once more, and if he will not answer them, take him upon his first words, "That which I said, that I have said."
THEN the bishop of Winchester began to read them again.
BUT I said unto him I would not answer them, because they were none of mine examinations, but objections of their own making, because they would have my blood. But yet, I said, if they would set the law apart, I would talk my conscience freely to them.
THEN my counterfeit ordinary began to speak again, charging me with the saying of St. Peter, that I should render an account of such hope as was in me.
So I can do, yet I shall not please you, for here I now render my hope as St. Peter willeth me: I believe only in Jesus Christ to have my salvation in him, by him, and through him: but I perceive you would have me render my faith in such sort, as you may have my blood, and therefore you bring good scriptures, and evil apply them.
Why, this fellow is perverted, and we shall get no more at his hands than we have already; therefore let us pronounce sentence against him, for we do but lose our time.
Nay, my good lord, seeing you will needs have my blood, let me say a little more for myself.
ON Sunday last, when I was before you, you preached this which was a truth, and agreeable to the doctrine of the apostle St. James, and said, "If any man think himself a religious man, and in the mean time seduce his tongue or his heart, the same man's religion is a vain religion;" and so my lord, you standing there in the pulpit, in the mean time seduced your tongue to slander us poor prisoners, being there present in iron bands, burdening us with the sect of Arians, and with the sect of Herodians, and with the sect of Anabaptists, and with the sect of Sacramentaries, and with the sect of Pelagians.
AND when we stood up to purge ourselves thereof, you said you would cut out [...] tongues, and cause us to be pulled out of the church by violence. But there you gave yourself a shrewd blow, for your tongue in the mean time slandered your neighbour. For I, my lord, will give my life against all these heresies, which you there burdened us withal, even as I will give my life against that wherein I now stand before you. And with that he was raging angry, and caught my condemnation, and said:
Thou wilt grant here no more but this word, "That I have said, I have said:" and here I gather matter enough to condemn thee, for this is a confirmation of all that thou hast heretofore said.
THEN I answered, If you can prove that ever any of my examinations were written, it is enough: but you have nothing against me but objections of your own making.
Have at thee now, if thou wilt not yield, I will pronounce sentence against thee; and [Page 400] so he proceeded forward, cursing and banning in Latin▪ so that I told him if the people might hear it in English, they would think him an uncharitable bishop.
AND then I said, Stay, my lord, and mind what you do: for you have neither temporal nor spiritual law here against me in any cause.
THEN stopped forth a gentleman, and said unto my lord, Take heed what you do: for he doth here say, that you have no title or cause why you should condemn him.
THEN the bishop looked about him again, and asked me if I would recant.
I asked him, whereof I should recant.
THEN said the bishop, Are you there? Nay then I know what I have to do: and so he proceeded forth in reading my condemnation. And there was another gentleman which began to s [...]ap and snatch at me: and then I said, I would to God I had known this before ever I had come from home, I would surely have put on [...], and not had my skin [...] torn. And all this while the bishop read [...] still.
AT last his chaplains cried, Stop, stop, my lord: for now he will recant. And then the bishop asked me again.
TO which I answered, My lord, my faith is grounded more stedfastly, than to change in a moment; it is no process of time can a [...]er me, unless my faith were [...] the waves of the sea: and so the bishop made an end, and delivered me into the hands of the sheriff, to be again carried to the Marshalses. And when I was condemned, I desired God with a loud voice, that be would not lay my blood to their charge, if it were his good will, and they refused my prayer, and sent me away. Then I began to talk as I went, and they cried, Cut out his tongue, or stop his mouth: and so I was brought to the Marshalses, and bound in iron [...]. And therefore I pray unto God that they unto whom thi [...] present writing shall come, may take example by my death and warfare. So be it.
[...] for want of time, I left out many [...] because the Lord hath hastened the time, so [...] have written but the briefness of the matter [...] [...] bation of faith, and the reward of faith, which [...] bishop of Rochester and I debated upon [...] matter I would have been very glad to [...] down in writing.
ALSO much more talk there was, that [...] of Winchester and I had concerning my [...] friends and personal estate: for he played [...] with me, he carried me up to the mountains, [...] there told me my learning was good, and [...] eloquence, also my knowledge, save that I [...] abuse it, said he: and then he fell to pr [...]sing of my person, that it was comely, and worthy to [...] a prince. Thus Satan flattered with me, to [...] me answer to such objection [...] as he would lay [...] me, that I might fall into his diocese.
THUS this christian martyr Stephen Gratwick, being wrongfully condemned by the bishop of Winchester (as you have heard), was burnt with W▪ Moraunt, and one named King, in St. George [...] fields, about the latter end of May.
The History of seven godly Martyrs, five Women and two Men, burnt at Maidstone for professing the true Religion of Christ.
I SHEWED a little before, how after the universal proclamation was set forth by the king and queen in the month of February last, the storm of persecution began in all places to rise (whereof some part also is declared before), but yet in no place more than in the diocese of Canterbury, by reason of the aforesaid inquisitors, being now armed with authority, but especially by reason of Richard Thornton, suffragan of Dover, and the archdeacon of Canterbury, who of their own nature were so furious and fiery against the harmless [Page 401] flock of Christ, that there was no need of any proclamation to stir up the coals of their burning cruelty, by reason whereof many a godly saint lieth slain under the altar.
AND now to return to the said diocese of Canterbury again, in the month following, being the 18th day of June, were seven christian and true faithful martyrs of Christ burned at Maidstone, whose names here follow:
- Joan Bradbridge, of Staplehurst.
- Walter Appleby, of Maidstone.
- Petronil, his wife.
- Edmund Allin, of Frytenden.
- Catherine, his wife.
- John Manning's wife, of Maidstone.
- Elizabeth, a blind maiden.
AS concerning the general articles commonly objected to them in the public consistory, and the order of their condemnation, it differeth not much from the usual manner expressed before, neither did their answers in effect much differ from the others that suffered under the same ordinary in the aforesaid diocese of Canterbury.
NOW as touching their answers and manner of apprehension, and their private conflicts with their adversaries, I find no great matter coming to my hands, save only of Edmund Allin some in [...]ation is given me, how his troubles came, what was his cause and answers before the justices, as here consequently you shall understand.
The Examination of EDMUND ALLIN.
THIS Allin was a miller, of the parish of Frytenden, in Kent, and in a dear year, when many poor people were like to starve, he fed them, and sold his corn cheaper by half than others did; and not only that, but also fed them with the food of life, reading to them the scriptures, and interpreting them. This being known to the popish priests dwelling thereabouts, by the procurement of them, namely of John Taylor, parson of Frytenden, and Thomas Henden, parson of Staplehurst, he was soon complained of to the justices, and brought before sir John Ba [...]r, knight, wh [...] first sending for them, committed both him and his wife to prison, but not long after they were let out, I know not how, and so went over to Calais: where, after he had continued some time, he began to be troubled in conscience, and there meeting with one Webb, from the same parish of Frytenden (who had likewise fled from the tyranny of sir John Baker and parson Taylor), said unto him, that he could not be quiet there, whatsoever the cause was; for God, said he, had something to do for him in England: and shortly after he returned to his parish of Frytenden, where was the cruel priest, parson Taylor.
THIS parson being informed by his sexton, that Edmund Allin, the miller, and his wife were returned▪ and were not at mass-time in the church▪ as he was the same time in the midst of his mass, upon a Sunday, a little before the elevation (as they term it), even almost at the lifting up of his Romish god, he turned him to the people in a great rage, and commanded them with all speed to go unto their house, and apprehend them, and he would come unto them as soon as lie could. Which promise he well performed, for he had no sooner made an end of Ille missa est, and the vestments off his back, but presently he was at the house, and there laying hands on the said Allin, caused him again to be brought to sir John Baker, with a grievous complaint of his exhorting and reading the scriptures to the people; and so he and his wife were sent to Maidstone prison. Witnessed by Richard Fletcher, vicar of Crambroke, and John Webb, of F [...] tenden.
NO sooner were they in prison, but sir John Baker immediately sent certain of his men to their house, namely, John Dove, Thomas Best, Thomas Linley, Percival Barber, with the aforesaid John Taylor, parson of Frytenden, and Thomas Henden, parson of Staplehurst, to take an inventory of all the goods that were in the house. Where they found in the bed straw a little chest locked with a padlock, wherein they found a sackcloth bag of money, containing the sum of thirteen or fourteen pounds, partly in gold and partly in silver: which money after they had told, and put in the bag again, like good carvers for themselves, they carried it away with them.
[Page 402]BESIDES also they found there certain books, as psalters, bibles, and other writings. All which books, with the money, were delivered to the aforesaid priest, Thomas Henden, parson of Staplehurst, and afterwards in the fifth year of the reign of queen Elizabeth it was by right law recovered from him again, as in records remaineth to be seen.
THUS good Edmund Allin and his wife, being maliciously accused, wrongfully imprisoned, and cruelly robbed and spoiled of all their goods, were brought, as is aforesaid, before sir John Baker, the justice to be examined; who taunting and reviling him without all mercy and pity, asked him if those were the fruits of his gospel, to have conventicles to gather people together, to make conspiracies to sow sedition and rebellion; and thus he began to reason with him.
A Conference between Sir JOHN BAKER, COLLINS, his Chaplain, and EDMUND ALLIN.
WHO gave thee authority to preach and interpret? Art thou a priest? Art thou admitted thereunto? Let me see thy licence.
COLLINS, sir John Baker's schoolmaster, said, Surely he is an arrant heretic, and worthy to be burned.
If it pleases your honour to permit me to answer in the cause of my faith, I am persuaded that God hath given me this authority, as he hath given to all other christians. Why are we called christians, if we do not follow Christ, if we do not read his law, if we do not interpret it to others that have not so much understanding? Is not Christ our Father? Shall not the son follow the father's steps? Is not Christ our master? and shall the scholar be inhibited to learn and preach his precepts? Is not Christ our Redeemer, and shall not we praise his name, and serve him that hath redeemed us from sin and damnation? Did not Christ, being but twelve years of age, dispute with the doctors, and interpret the prophet Isaiah? and yet, notwithstanding he was neither of the tribe of Levi, which were priests, but of the royal tribe of Judah, neither had taken any outward priesthood; wherefore if we be christians we must do the same.
Please your honour, what a [...] this, that compareth himself with Christ?
Let him alone, he will pump out presently an infinite number of heresies. Hast [...] any more to say for thyself?
Yea, that I have. Adam was licensed of God, and Abraham was commanded to [...] children and posterity, and so David [...] divers Psalms: and Solomon also preached to the people, as the book of the preacher very well proveth, where he teacheth that there is no [...] felicity in this life, but in the next. And [...] taught them that were disobedient in his days, [...] therefore is called "The eighth preacher of righteousness," in the second epistle of Peter. Also in the 11th chapter of Numbers, where Moses had chosen seventy elders to help him to teach and [...] the rest, Eldad and Medad preached in the [...] ▪ wherefore Joshua being offended, complained [...] Moses, that Eldad and Medad did preach without licence. To whom Moses answered, and [...] that all the people could do the like.
These are authorities of the Old Testament, and therefore abrogated; but thou art a [...], and knowest no school points. Is not the law divided into the law ceremonial and judicial?
I grant that the ceremonies ceased when Christ came, as St. Paul proveth to the Hebrews, and to the Colossians, where he saith, "Let no man judge you in any part of the Sabbath-day, [...] moon, or other ceremonies, which are figures of things to come: for [...] body."
And are not the judicials abrogated by Christ?
They are confirmed both by Christ in the fifth chapter of Matthew, and by Paul in the first epistle of Timothy. The law, saith he, is not set forth for the virtuous and godly, but for man slayers, perjurers, adulterers, and such like.
Thou art an heretic. Wilt thou call the judicials of Moses again? Wilt thou have adultery punished with death? disobedient children [...] their parents to be stoned? wilt thou have Legem T [...]nis? But thou art an ass. Why should I speak Latin to thee, thou erroneous rebel? shall we now smite out eye for eye, tooth for tooth? Thou art worthy to have thy teeth and tongue plucked out.
If we had that law, we should neither have disobedient children, neither false witness bearers, nor ruffians.
Master Collins, let us return to our first matter. Why did you teach the people, whom you said you had fed both bodily and spiritually, being no priest?
Because that we are all kings to rule our affections, priests to preach out the virtues and word of God, as Peter writeth, and lively stones to give [...] to others. For as out of flint stones cometh forth that which is able to set the world on fire; so out of christians should spring the beams of the gospel, which should inflame all the world. If we must give a reckoning of our faith to every man, and now to you demanding it, then must we study the scriptures, and practise them. What availeth it a man to have meat, and will eat none; and apparel, and will wear none, or to have an occupation, and to teach none; or to be a lawyer, and to utter none? Shall every artificer be suffered, yea and commended to practise his faculty and science, and the christian forbidden to exercise his? Doth not St. Paul forbid any man's spirit to be quenched? Doth he prohibit any man that hath any of these gifts, which he repeateth, 1 Cor. xiv. to practise the same? Only he forbiddeth women, but no man. The Jews never forbad any. Read the Acts of the Apostles. The restraint was made by Gregory, the ninth pope of that name, as I heard a learned man preach in king Edward's days.
This villian, please your honour, is mad. By my priesthood, I believe that he will say that a priest hath no more authority than another man. Doth not a priest bind and loose?
No, my sin bindeth me, and my repentance looseth. God forgiveth sin only, and no priest. For every christian, when he sinneth, bindeth himself, and when he repenteth, looseth himself. And if any other be loosed from his sin by my exhortation, I am said to loose him; and if he persevere in sin notwithstanding my exhortation, I am said to bind him, although it is God that bindeth, and looseth, and giveth the increase. Therefore, saith Christ, Matth. xviii. "Wheresoever two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them; and whose soever sins they forgive they are forgiven, and whose soever they retain, they are retained." Neither hath the pope any keys, save the keys of error; for the key that openeth the lock to God's mysteries and salvation, is the key of faith and repentance. And as I have heard learned men reason, St. Austin, Origen, and others, are of this opinion.
THEN they reviled him, and laid him in the stocks all night. Wherewith some that were better minded, being offended with such e [...]tremity, desired Allin to keep his conscience to himself and to follow Baruch's counsel, in the sixth chapter. "Wherefore when ye see the multitude of people worshipping them, behind and before, say ye in your hearts, O Lord, it is thou that ought only to be worshipped."
WHEREWITH he was persuaded to go to hear mass the next day, and suddenly before the sacring, went out and considered in the church-yard with himself, that such a little cake between the priest's fingers could not be Christ, nor a material body, neither to have soul, life, sinews, bones, flesh, legs, head, arms, nor breast, and lamented that he was seduced by the words of Baruch, which his conscience told him was no scripture, or else had another meaning: and after this he was brought again before sir John Baker, who asked why he did refuse to worship the blessed sacrament of the altar.
It is an idol.
It is God's body.
It is not.
By the mas [...] it [...].
It is bread.
How provest thou that?
When Christ sat at his supper, and gave them bread to eat.
Bread, knave?
Yes, bread, which you call Christ's body. Sat he still at the table, or was he both in their mouths, and at the table? If he was in their mouths, and at the table, then had he two bodies, or else he had a fantastical body; which is an absurdity.
Christ's body was glorified, and might be in more places than one.
Then he had more bodies than one, by your own placing of him.
Thou ignorant ass, the schoolmen say, that a glorified body may be every where.
If his body was not glorified till it rose again, then was it not glorified at his last supper; and therefore was not at the table, and in their mouths by your own reason.
A glorified body occupieth no place.
That which occupieth no place, is neither God nor any thing else: but Christ's body, you say, occupieth no place; therefore it is neither God, nor any thing else. If it be nothing, then is your religion nothing. If it be God, then have we four in one Trinity, which is the person of the Father, the person of the Son, the person of the Holy Ghost, and the human nature of Christ. If Christ be nothing, which you must needs confess, if he occupieth no place, then is our study in vain, our faith frustrate, and our hope without reward.
This rebel will believe nothing but scripture. How knowest thou that it is the scripture but by the church? and so saith St. Austin.
I cannot tell what St. Austin saith, but I am persuaded that it is scripture by divers arguments: First, that the law worketh in me my condemnation. The law telleth me, that of myself I am damned; and this damnation, Mr. Collins, you must find in yourself, or else you shall never [...] to r [...]pentance. For as this grief and sorrow [...] [...]science, without faith, is desperation; so is a [...]rious and Romish faith, without the lamentation [...] a man's sins, presumption.
THE second is the gospel, which is the power and Spirit of God. "This Spirit (saith St. Paul) certifieth my spirit that I am the son of God, and that these are the scriptures."
THE third are the wonderful works of God which cause me to believe that there is a God, though we glorify him not as God, Rom. i. The sun, the moon, the stars, and other his wor [...]s ( [...] David discourseth in Psal. xix.) declare that there is a God, and that these are the scriptures, because [...] they teach nothing else but God and [...], majesty and might; and because the [...] teacheth nothing disagreeing from this [...] of nature. And fourthly, because that the [...] of God gave authority to the church in paradise [...] ing, that the seed of the woman should break [...] the serpent's head. This seed is the gospel; this is all the scriptures, and by this we are assured of eternal life; and these words, "The seed of the woman shall break the serpent's head," gave authority to the church, and not the church to the word.
I heard say that you spake against [...] and bishops.
I spake for them; for now they have so much living, and especially bishops, archdeacon, and deans, that they neither can nor will teach God's word. If they had a hundred pounds apiece, then would they apply to their study; now they cannot for their affairs.
Who will then set his children to school?
Where there is now one sent to school for that end, there would be forty; because that one bishop's living divided into thirty or forty parts, would find so many men, as well learned as the [Page 405] bishops now are who have all this living: neither had Peter or Paul any such revenue.
Let us dispatch him; he will mar all.
If every man had a hundred pounds, as he saith, it would make more learned men.
But our bishops would be angry, if that they knew it.
It would be for the common good to have such bishoprics divided, for the further increase of learning.
What sayest thou to the sacrament?
As I said before.
Away with him.
THEN he was carried to prison, and afterward burned. And thus much concerning the particular [...] of Edmund Allin and his wife: who with the [...] other martyrs above named, being seven, were all together burned at Maidstone, the 18th of June, 1557.
Another Story of like Cruelty, shewed upon three Men and four Women, who were burnt at Canterbury.
AMONG such infinite seas of troubles in these most dangerous days, who can with-hold from tears to see the madding rage of these pretended catholics, who being never satisfied with blood to maintain their carnal kingdom, presume so highly to violate the precise law of God's commandments, in slaying the simple poor lambs of the glorious congregation of Jesus Christ, and that for the true testimony of a good conscience, in confessing the immaculate gospel of their salvation? What heart will not lament the murdering mischief of these men, who for want of work do so wrack their time on silly poor women, whose weakness the more strength it lacketh by natural imperfection, the more it ought to be helped, or at least pitied, and not oppressed of men that be stronger, and especially of priests that should be charitable.
BUT blessed be the Lord Omnipotent, who supernaturally hath endued from above such weak creatures with such manly fortitude, so constantly to withstand the uttermost extremity of these merciless persecutors: as he did before strengthen the mother of the seven sons in the Maccabees, and as he hath done since with divers other godly women in these our days, partly before mentioned, and partly to be mentioned hereafter, as many appear by the martyrdom of the seven following, of which four were women, and three men, burnt together at Canterbury the 30th day of the said month of June 1557, whose names are these:
- John Fishcock,
- Nicholas White,
- Nicholas Pardue,
- Barbara Final, widow.
- Bradbridge's widow,
- Wilson's wife,
- Benden's wife.
AS it would be tedious exactly and particularly to relate the several stories of every one of these martyrs; so I cannot pass over untouched the cruel and unchristian handling of Alice Benden during her imprisonment, according as I have received by the faithful relation of them who were best acquainted with her, and partly also some doers in the matter, being her own natural brethren. The story is thus:
ALICE Benden, wife of Edward Benden, of the parish of Staplehurst, in the county of Kent, was first brought before Mr. Roberts, of Cranbroke, in the said county, the 14th of October, 1556, of whom she was demanded why she would not go to the church? To which she answered, that she could not do so with a good and clear conscience, because there was much idolatry committed against the glory of God. For which with many mocks and taunts she was sent to prison, where she lay fourteen days: and on the 20th day of October, her husband required his neighbours, the wealthy men of Staplehurst, to write to the Bishop of Dover, who had the chief government of the tyrannical sword in Kent for those days, which they did, desiring him to send her home.
WHEREFORE the bishop called her before him, and asked her if she would go home, and go to the church. Whereunto she answered, If I would [Page 406] have so done, I need not to have come hither. Then wilt thou go home, and be confessed by thy parish priest? And she said, No, that she would not.
WELL, said he, go thy ways home, and go to the church when thou wilt. Whereunto she answered nothing. But a priest that stood by, said, She saith she will, my lord. Wherefore he let her go, and she came home forthwith.
ON the Saturday following her husband desired her to go to the church; which she refused to do: wherefore on the Sunday fortnight after, he going to the church, came into the company of divers inhabitants of the same parish; among whom, thro' his foolish talk and behaviour, he procured her to be sent to sir John Gilford, who commanded her to prison again: yea, and the more to utter his own shame, they said her husband took money of the constable to carry her to prison, the price of his wife's blood, meaning indeed to carry her to prison himself. But she having much more care of his honest and good report, than he had regard (as it is easy to see) of his own infamy, and no less ashamed of his unnatural doings, chose rather to commit herself willingly into the hands of her enemies, than that the world should bear witness against her husband of so wicked a fact. Wherefore she went to the constable, desiring him to go with her: but he answered that he could not; yet he granted her his boy to go with her, with whom she went to prison, namely, the castle of Canterbuy, according to the commandment given.
HERE this one thing is worthy to be noted, that while she was in this prison, she practised with a fellow-prisoner of her's the wife of one Potkin, to live both of them on two-pence halfpenny a day, to try thereby how well they could sustain penury and hunger, before they were put to it. For they had heard, that when they should be removed from thence to the bishop's prison, their allowance should be but three farthings apiece a day, and did indeed both so live for 14 days before she was from thence removed.
THE 22d day of January following, her husband went again to the bishop, desiring him to deliver his wife out of prison: but he said she was an obstinate heretic, and would not be reformed; and therefore said that he could not deliver her.
THEN said he, My lord, she hath a brother, whose name is Roger Hall, who resorteth unto [...] ▪ If your lordship could keep him from her, [...] would turn; for he comforteth her, giveth her money, and persuadeth her not to return or relent.
THIS caution was no sooner given, but it was as quickly taken, and as cruelly put in execution. For the bishop commanding her upon the same to a prison called Monday's Hole, there also he gave a strict charge, that if at any time her brother came, he should be taken and apprehended.
THIS prison was within a court where the prebend's chambers were, being a vault beneath the ground, and being before the window inclosed with a pale about four feet and an half high, and three feet distance from the same, so that she looking from beneath, might only see such as stood at the p [...]le. After this, her brother sought often for her, with no less danger of life than diligence. But for the unknown situation of the place, it being also but rarely used for a prison and the matter as closely kept, as it was secretly done, he could never come to understand of her being there, until through God's merciful will and unsearchable providence, he coming thither very early in the morning, her keeper being then gone to the church to ring, for he was a bell-ringer,) happened to hear her voice, as she was pouring out her sorrowful complaints unto God, saying the Psalms of David: and there could he no otherwise relieve her, than by putting money in a loaf of bread, and sticking the same on a pole, and so reached it to her; for neither with meat nor drink could he sustain her. And this was five weeks after her coming thither, in all which time no creature was known to come at her more than her keeper.
HER lying in that prison was only upon a little straw between a pair of stocks and a stone wall; being allowed three farthings a day, that i [...], one half-penny for bread, and a farthing for drink, neither could she get any more for her money. Wherefore she desired to have her whole allowance in [Page 407] bread, and used water for her drink. Thus did she lie nine weeks. During all which time she never changed her apparel; whereby at last she became a very piteous and loathsome creature to behold.
AT her first coming into this place she did grievously bewail, with great sorrow and lamentation, and reasoned with herself, why her Lord God did suffer her with such heavy justice to be sequestered from her loving fellows into such extreme misery.
IN these dolorous mournings did she continue, till on a night as she was in her sorrowful supplication, rehearsing this verse of the Psalm, "Why art though so heavy, O my soul?" And again, "The right hand of the Most High can change all:" she received comfort in the midst of her misery, and after that continued very joyful till her delivery from the same.
ABOUT the 25th day of March, in the year 1557, she was called before the bishop, who demanded of her, whether she would now go home, and to the church or no, promising her great favour, if she would be reformed and do as they did.
TO whom she answered, I am thoroughly persuaded by the great extremity that you have already shewed me, that you are not of God, neither can your doings be godly: and I see that you seek my utter destruction; shewing how [...]ame she was by hunger and cold while she lay in the dismal prison, whereby she was not able to move herself without great pain.
THEN the bishop delivered her from that filthy hole, and sent her to West-gate, where being kept clean, her skin did peel and scale off as if she had been poisoned by some mortal venom. Here she continued till the latter end of April, when she was called before them, and with others condemned, and committed to a prison called the Castle, where she lay till the 19th day of June, and then she resigned her life in the flames.
WHEN she was at the stake she threw her handkerchief to one John Banks, requiring him to keep it in memory of her; and from about her middle she took a white lace, which she gave to the keeper, desiring him to give the same to her brother Roger Hall, and to tell him, that it was the last band she was bound with, except the chain. A shilling also, of Philip and Mary, she took forth which her father had bent and sent her when she was first sent to prison, desiring that her said brother should with obedient salutation render the same to her father again, and shew him that it was the first piece of money that he sent her after her troubles began, which (as she protested) she had kept, and now sent to let him understand, that she never wanted money while she was in prison.
ALICE Benden, and the other five before mentioned, were burnt at the same time. Being brought to the place of martyrdom, they all undressed themselves joyfully at the fire, and being ready, they all seven (like the communion of saints) kneeled down, and made their humble prayers to the Lord with such zeal and affection, as even the enemies of the cross could not but like it. When they had made invocation together, they arose and went to the stake, where being soon encompassed with horrible flames of fire, they yielded their souls and lives gloriously into the hands of the Lord.
TH [...] Bradbridge's wife had two children, the one named Patience, the other Charity, and when she was condemned by the bishop, she desired (if she must needs be burnt) that he would take Patience and Charity (meaning her two children) and keep them. Nay, quoth the bishop, by the faith of my body, I will meddle with neither of them.
The Troubles and Examinations of MATTHEW PLAISE.
MATTHEW PLAISE, of the parish of Stone, in the county of Kent, weaver, and a faithful christian, being apprehended and imprisoned in the castle of Canterbury, was brought to examination in the year 1557, before Thornton, bishop of Dover, arch-deacon Harpsfield, commissary Collins, and other inquisitors, in the following manner:
Art thou of the diocese of Canterbury, and where dwellest thou?
I am of the parish of Stone, in Kent, and subject to the king and queen of England.
Thou wert indicted by twelve men at the sessions of Ashford, for heresy.
That is sooner said than proved.
I have spoken the truth, and can prove it.
I desire to hear it, and then I will answer to it.
No, no; you shall answer to the article, yea or nay.
You cannot prove it; for I was not at Ashford, and therefore you have nothing to lay to my charge, but now I perceive you go about to lay a net to have my blood.
Peace, peace, we do not desire thy blood, but we are glad to hear that though art no heretic,
yet thou art suspected of heresy; and if thou wilt be content to confess how thou dost believe as concerning these articles, we shall gladly teach thee.
I do not think so, for I talked with one of your doctors, and after long talk, he would needs know how I believed in the sacrament, and I recited unto him the text, and because I would not make my exposition to him upon it, he would teach me nothing: yet I prayed him for my instruction, to write his mind, and if it were the truth I would believe him; and this I desired of him for the love of God, but it would not be.
I dare swear upon a book, that it is not so.
Nay, I can prove it to be true.
I will tell thee the truth
I am sure that the same doctor doth believe as I do.
How do you know that? Seeing St. Paul doth say, That no man knoweth what is in man, but the Spirit which dwelleth in him: but if you knew what Christ meant by these words, "I require mercy and not sacrifice," Matthew xii. you would not kill innocents.
I charge thee in the name of the king and queen and the lord cardinal, to answer yea or nay to the articles.
I command you in the name of Him who shall come in flaming fire with his mighty angels to render vengeance to the disobedient, and [...] all those that believe not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ, who shall be punished with everlasting damnation, that you shall speak nothing but the truth grounded upon Christ and his apostles, and then I will answer you, or else not.
Unless thou wilt answer to every article, I will immediately condemn thee.
Well, If you do, you shall be guilty of my blood, and prove yourself a murderer.
THEN the archdeacon took the articles in his hand and read the second article, which was, That I was a christian man, and did believe in their mother the catholic church, and the determination thereof.
I am a christian man indeed, and therefore you have nothing against me.
What sayest thou to the catholic church, which hath so long continued, except it were nine or ten years, that this heresy hath sprung up here in this realm?
No man can accuse me of any thing spoken against the catholic church of Christ.
Dost thou not believe the creed?
Yes verily, I believe my creed, and all that is written in the Testament of Christ, with the rest of the scriptures.
Thou dost confess that there is a catholic [Page 409] church, I am glad of that; but tell me, are the king and queen of that church or no?
Well, now I percieve you go about to be both mine accuser, and also my judge, contrary to all right. I confess Christ hath a church upon earth, which is built upon the apostles and prophets, Christ being the head thereof; and as touching the king and queen, I answer, I have nothing to do with any man's faith but mine own: neither came I hither to judge; for I judge not myself, but the Lord must judge me.
Is there no part of that church here in England?
Well, I perceive you would fain have something to lay to my charge. I will tell you where; Christ saith, Where two or three be gathered together in his name, there is he in the midst among them.
THEN the archdeacon stood up with his mocks, to put me out of countenance, and said to the people that I had no wit, but that I thought all they were deceived so long a time, and that half a dozen of us should have the truth in a corner, and that all they should be deceived, with such like taunts and mocks; but would not suffer me to speak one word. Then he read the article of the sacrament, and said I did deny the real presence to be in the sacrament after it was once consecrated, and that I said, Christ's body was in heaven, and no where else, and that the bread was nothing but a sign, token, or remembrance.
You have to shew where and what my words were.
HEREOF we talked a great while.
AT last the bishop was so angry, that he charged me in the names of the king, queen and cardinal, before the mayor and his brethren, taking them to witness, if I did not say yea, or nay, he would condemn me.
THEN said I, Seeing you have nothing to accuse me of, wherefore should I answer?
THEN the archdeacon said I was guilty, and that I was like a thief at the bar, who would not confess his fault because his accusers were not present; with a great many more words, and would not let me open my mouth against him.
THEN I saw whereabouts they went, granting to answer them by the word, or else I think they would have condemned me for holding my peace; and this was my beginning▪ I believe that Christ took bread, and when he had given thanks, he brake it, and gave it to his disciples, and said, "Take, eat, this is my body which is given for you; this do in remembrance of me."
Dost thou believe that Christ meant even as he said?
Christ was no dissembler, but he spake the very truth.
Thou hast very well said, we will take no advantage of thy words.
THEN he praised me with many words, going about to prove his body real and substantial, and said, Christ called himself bread: and this to prove, when Christ said, "This is my body;" the bread was his body, said he, indeed, real and substantial, not so long and so big as it hung on the cros [...], as the Capernaites did think; but we eat it, as man's weak nature can eat Christ. Therefore when he had said, This is my body, the bread was his body in very deed.
What did Christ mean by these words, "Which is given for you?"
Christ spake that by the bread also.
Is Christ's body made of bread? Was bread given for our redemption? Or was the bread crucified for us or not?
No, by St. Mary, I say not so.
You have said the truth indeed, and even as I believe
THEN he stood up with a great many words, and [Page 410] said, that I thought it but bare bread still, as other bread is; but he was sure Christ calleth it his body, and then it was his body indeed, for he would believe Christ.
WHEN he had spoken his pleasure by me, thinking to have condemned me by his law, I said, he had not judged right of me, for I had not so spoken, but did believe the words of Christ as well as he, and as much as he could prove by the word.
What dost thou say it is?
I do believe it was that which he gave them.
What was that?
That which he brake.
What did he break?
That which he took.
What did he take?
The text saith, "He took bread."
Well then, thou sayest it was but bread that his disciples did eat, by thy reason.
Thus much I say, Look, what he gave them, they did eat it indeed.
Why, then, was not that his body which they did eat?
It was that which he brake.
Well, I perceive thy meaning well enough▪ for thou dost think it but bread still, and that he was not able to make it his body.
That is your exposition upon my mind.
What didst thou receive when thou didst receive last?
I do believe that I did eat Christ's flesh, and drink his blood; for he saith, "My flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed."
THEN he said, I had answered well, thinking to have had some advantage over me, and prayed me to tell him how I did eat Christ's flesh, and drink his blood.
THEN I said, I must answer you by the word which Christ saith, "He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood, dwelleth in me and I in him."
THEN he faced out the matter with sophistry, and said, I did eat Christ as that Church was in [...] eye, with many such mocks, but would not [...] answer one word.
COMMISSARY Collins then asked me, if I did not remember St. Paul, who rebuked the Corinthians for their evil behaviour, and because they made [...] difference of the Lord's body, and brought in to prove his matter, how he called himself bread in the sixth of John. So Paul saith, "So oft as ye eat of this bread, (meaning Christ's body) unworthily, ye eat and drink your own damnation, because ye make no difference of the Lord's body." For thus saith Christ, "The bread that I will give you is my flesh." Now it is no bread, but it is his flesh. And thus he alledged every scripture false, to make up the matter.
I believe the words of St. Paul very well, even as he hath spoken them. For thus he saith, "He that eateth and drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh his own damnation, because he maketh no difference of the Lord's body."
What is the cause that he eateth his own damnation?
St. Paul declareth it plainly with these words, "If ye had judged yourselves, ye should not have been judged of the Lord."
I marvel that you will not say, that he called the bread his body, seeing Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer, with many others, called it his body.
You have condemned them as heretics, and you would have me say with them, because you would kill me.
In that they said it was his body, they said the truth.
Wherefore were they killed, seeing they said the truth.
I had all their answers, and they did not believe as they said. For they said Christ called it his body, but it was not his natural body: but thou shalt answer me by and by, whether it be his body or not, or else I will anger thee.
I have answered you by the word already, and I believe it also; therefore if you condemn me for that, my life is not dear to me, and I am sure you shall not escape unpunished: for God will be revenged on such murderers.
THEN the archdeacon intreated me to be ruled by him, and take mercy while it was offered; for if I were condemned, I must needs be burned. Yet he would not say but my soul might be saved; with many more words, and desired me that I would believe him, for he would speak the truth: beginning with how Christ fed five thousand people with four loaves, and how he turned the water into wine; even so Christ took bread and blest it, and when he had done, he brake it and said, "This is my body," and then he commanded them to eat it: and therefore it must needs be his body.
I desire you to speak the text right, or else I will not believe you.
THEN archdeacon Harpsfield stood up, and put off his cap, and thanked me for teaching of him, and said, I was a stubborn fellow, and took [...]orn to be taught.
I ought to hold you accursed, if you teach contrary to Christ and his apostles.
Do you believe that Christ gave that he took or not?
I do believe as much as can be proved by the scripture, and more I will not believe.
THEN he began with Moses's rod, how God commanded him to lay it down, and it was turned into a serpent. Seeing that this was by Moses be [...]ng but a man, how much more Christ, being both God and man, took one thing and gave to his disciples another?
Your comparison is nothing like, for Moses's rod when it was laid down, he saw that it was turned into a very serpent indeed; but in this sacrament no man can see either quality or yet quantity to be changed.
Your opinion and faith is like unto the Capernaites.
Your's is more like their opinion than mine.
THEN Harpsfield asked me, whether Christ took not one thing and gave another?
What he brake he gave unto them, and bade them eat; and no other answer will I make, contrary to the word.
THEN the archdeacon said, he marvelled why I would not believe them, seeing this learning had continued this 1500 years: neither yet did say, as others had before, how Christ did call it his body.
When Cranmer, who was here bishop, was in authority, he said, that he held the truth, and commanded us to believe him, and he hath given his life for his opinion, and would you have me to believe you, because you say that you hold the truth? And that which makes me believe chiefly, is the scripture, which I am sure is the truth indeed.
I have spoken the truth, and you will not believe.
If you do not now speak the truth, I am sure you have spoke the truth:
THEN the rest of my articles were read; which I answered, and in every article he had up this breaden god. And they sent for a lighted candle, and I thought they would have condemned me, [Page 412] but God would not suffer their cruel hearts to have their pleasure that time: blessed be his name for evermore, Amen.
THEN the archdeacon was angry, and began to chide me, because I would not desire a day of the bishop, and said, I was a naughty stubborn fellow, and that it had been my duty to have desired him to have been good to me, that I might have a day.
I have spoken the truth; and therefore will not ask him for a day, except he would give me a day of his own mind.
THEN the commissary said, Dost thou not think that thou mayest be deceived, seeing he may be deceived that hath gone to study all the days of his life?
Yea, I might be deceived in that I was a man; but I was sure God's word could not be deceived.
THEN the commissary prayed me to be content, and confessed that I might learn; and said, they would be glad to teach me.
I will be as glad to learn as any man.
And thus they rose up and went away, saying nothing.
WHAT became of this Matthew Plaise afterwards, whether he died in prison, or was executed, or delivered, I have as yet no certain knowledge.
The History of Ten Martyrs, who were burnt in one Fire at Lewes.
IN the town of Lewes, on the 22d of June, the ten following persons suffered in one fire.
RICHARD Woodman. George Stevens. William Mainard. Alexander Hosman, his servant. Thomasin Wood, Mainard's maid. Margery Moris. James Moris, her son. Denis Burgis. Ashdon's wife, Grove's wife.
Of which number Richard Woodman was the first, who by his occupation was an iron-maker, dwelling in the parish of Warbleton, in the county of Sussex, and diocese of Chichester, about the age of 30 years. The occasion of his first apprehension was this.
THERE was one Fairbanke, who had sometime been a married priest, and served the cure of Warbleton, where he had often persuaded the people not to credit any other doctrine but that which he then preached, taught and set forth in king Edward's days. And afterward, in the beginning of queen Marys reign, the said Fairbanks preached clean contrary to that which he had before taught.
WHEREUPON Richard Woodman hearing him preach so contrary to himself, admonished him of his inconstancy, how before time he had taught them one thing, and now another, and desired him to teach them the truth. For which words he was apprehended, and brought before Mr. Jo [...] Ashburnham, Mr. Tonston, Mr. Culpepper, and Mr. Roberts, justices of the peace in the county of Sussex, and by them committed to the King's-Beach, where he continued from June, the space of almost a year and a half; and from thence was transferred by Dr. Story into Bishop Bonner's Coal-house, where he remained a month before he came to examination.
AT length, the same day when Mr. Philpot was burned, which was the 18th of December, he with four other prisoners was set at liberty by bishop Bonner. Notwithstanding shortly after he was sought for again, and at last taken by means of his father, brother, and other friends, and was sent up again to bishop Bonner, where he remained in the Coal-house eight weeks. He was there six times examined, and 26 times before, so that his examinations were in all 32, from his apprehension to his condemnation. And forasmuch as the matter is something strange, and will perhaps scarce find credit upon my narration, with them who deny all things that please them, you shall hear himself speak and testify both of the manner of his troubles, and also his own examinations, as recorded by himself in the following manner:
A true Certificate written by RICHARD WOODMAN, of his Apprehension and Imprisonment, and how he was there used, till he was brought before the Bishop of Chichester, at Black-friars, London, together with his Examinations.
GENTLE reader, you will here perceive how the scriptures be partly fulfilled on me, being one of the least of these poor lambs. First, you shall understand, that since I was delivered out of the bishop of London's hands in the year 1555, and the same day that Mr. Philpot was burned, which was the 18th of December, I lay in his Coal-house eight weeks, wanting one day: and before that I was almost a year and a half in the King's-Bench after my first apprehension, for reproving a preacher in the pulpit, in the parish of Warbleton, where I dwelt. Wherefore I was at two sessions before I was sent to prison, and carried [...] two more while I was in prison, twice before the bishop of Chichester, and five times before the commissioners; and then sent to Bonner's Coal-house, and many times called before him, as it appeared by my examinations which I have written.
AND it pleased God to deliver me with four more out of the butcher's hands, requiring nothing else of us but that we should be honest men, and members of the true catholic church that was built upon the prophets and apostles, Christ being the true head of the church; to which we all affirmed, that we were members of the true church, and purposed by God's help therein to die. And hereupon we were delivered; but he ordered us many times to speak well of him. And no doubt he was worthy to be praised, because he had been so faithful a servant in his master the devil's business. For he had burnt good Mr. Philpot the same morning, in whose blood his heart was so drunken (as I suppose) that he could not tell what he did, as it appeared to us both before and after. For but two days before he promised us that we should be condemned that same day that we were delivered; yea, and the morrow after that he had delivered us, he sought for some of us again, yea, and that earnestly. He waxed dry after his great drunkenness, wherefore he is like to have blood to drink in hell as he is worthy, if he repent it not with speed. The Lord turn all their hearts, if it be his will.
THIS have I written, chiefly to certify to all peop [...]e how we were delivered, because many carnal gospellers and papists have said, that it was prescribed that we should be so delivered, because they think that God is subject to man, and not man to God. For if they did they would not blaspheme him as they do, or if they thought they should give an account for it. Have not many of them read how God delivered Israel out of Egypt, and Daniel out of the lions den? Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, out of the burning oven? with divers other such like examples; yea God is the same God that he was then. He is no older, nor less in power, as some count him, in wondering at his works. Now to the matter.
AFTER I was delivered, the papists said, that I had consented to them, whereof they made themselves glad; which was the least part of my thought, (I praise God for it) as they well perceived, and knew the contrary in a short time. For I went from parish to parish and talked with them, to the number of thirteen or fourteen, and that of the chiefest in all the country; and I angered them so, that they with the commissioners complained of me to the lord chamberlain that then was to the queen▪ sir John Gage, shewing him that I baptized children, and married people, with many such lies, to bring me into their hands again. Then the commissioners sent out certain citations to bring me to the court. The lord chamberlain had directed out three or four warrants for me, that if I had come there I should have been attached and immediately sent to prison; which was not God's will, for I had warning of their lying in wait for me, and went not thither, but sent my deputy, and he brought me word that the bailiffs waited for me there, but they missed of their prey for that time, whereupon they were displeased.
THEN within three days after, my lord sent three of his men to me, whose names were Dean, Jeffrey, and Francis. I being at plough with my folks, right in the way as they were coming to my house, least mistrusting them of all others, came and spake to them, asking them how they did. And they said they arrested me in the name of the king and queen, and that I must go with them to their master the lord chamberlain. Which words made my [Page 414] flesh to tremble and quake, being suddenly surprised. But I answered them that I would go with them. Yet I desired them that they would go with me to my house, that I might break my fast, and put on some other apparel; and they said I should. Then I remembered myself, and said in my heart, Why am I thus afraid? they can lay no evil to my charge. If they kill me for well doing, I may think myself happy. I remembered how I was willing gladly before to die in that quarrel, and so had continued ever since; and should I now fear to die? God forbid; for then were all my labour vain.
SO by and by I was persuaded, I praise God, considering it was but the frailty of my flesh, which was loth to forego my wife and children, and goods: for I saw nothing but present death before mine eyes. And as soon as I had determined in my mind to die, I had regard to nothing in this world, but I was as merry and as joyful, I praise God, as ever I was. This agitation lasted not a quarter of an hour; but it was sharper than death itself for the time it lasted.
SO after I had my breakfast, I desired them to shew me their warrant, thinking thereby I should know for what cause I was arrested, that I might the better defend myself when I came before their master. And one of them answered, they had not their warrant there. Which words made me astonished, and it was put in my mind by God, that I need not go with them, unless they had their warrant. Then said I to them, That is a wonder that you will come to take a man without a warrant. It seemeth to me that you come of your own mind to get thanks of your master; for indeed I heard say, (said I) that there were four or five warrants out for me, but they were all called in again, because I had certified to my lord and the commissary, by a letter I had sent to the commissary's court, that I was not guilty of that they had charged me with, which was baptizing of children, and marrying folks; which I never did; for I was never a minister appointed to do any such thing: wherefore set your hearts at rest, I will not go with you, unless you will carry me by force, and if you will do so be it at your peril. And so I rose from the table, and stepped into my chamber, meaning to go from them if I could possibly, seeing God had mad [...] the way so open for me. I meant to play [...] part with them, but God would not it should [...] but sent a fear amongst them, that as soon [...] gone into my chamber, before I could [...] again, they were gone out of my house.
WHEN I saw that, I knew it was God's [...] set me at liberty once again. Yet I was [...] to speak to them, and said, If you have a [...] desire you for God's sake to shew it [...] go with you with all my heart: if not, I [...] in God's peace and the king's to depart: [...] I will not go along with you without the [...] law; for I have been too simple in such thing [...] [...] ready. For before I was sent to prison first, [...] the justices at two sessions without any [...] commandment, but had word by one of [...] and I went justly to them, and they sent [...] and kept me there almost a year and [...] without all right or equity, as it is openly [...] not hearing any cause gently debated. [...] seemeth strange to me that I should be [...] handled; and therefore I will go to none [...] at all henceforth, without the extremity [...] law.
THEN one of them answered me, and said [...] have not the warrant here, but it is at [...] house; the worst is, you can but make us [...] Then said I, Fetch it if you will; but if you [...] in my house before you have it, at your [...] it. So I shut my door, and went [...] way [...] the other door. So they got help to [...] house, whilst one of the [...] fetched the constable, [...] many more, thinking to have carried me away [...] a licence; but, as God would have it, I [...] before. Notwithstanding they sought every corner of my house, but to no purpose. I suspected they would search it that night again, and kept myself abroad; and indeed there came seven of his [...], and the constable, and searched my house. And when they found they could not meet with me, they were ready to rend their clothes, that I had so escaped them, knowing that they should have a check from their master. When I heard that they had so sought for me again, I perceiving that they were greedy of their prey, came home, and my wife told me all things.
[Page 415]THEN I supposed that they would search all the country for me, and the sea coast, because I should not go over, and then I thought that they would not imagine that I would dare to be near home. So I told my wife that I would take my lodging in a wood near my house, as indeed I did, even under a tree, and there had my bible, pen and ink, and other necessaries, and there I continued six or seven weeks, my wife bringing me meat daily as I had feed. Yea, I thought myself blessed of God, that I was cou [...]d worthy to lie in woods for the name of Christ▪ Then there came word into the country, that I was seen and spoke with in Flanders; whereupon they left laying in wait for me: for they had sought all the country for me, and the sea-coast from Portsmouth to Dover, even as God put it in mind they would.
SO when all was hushed, I went abroad among [...] friends and brethren, and at length I went [...] the sea both into Flanders and in France; but I thought every day seven years whilst I was there; so I came home again as soon as it was possible. I was there but three weeks, before the priests of [...] discovered me, who procured warrants out against me, causing my house to be searched sometimes twice in a week. This continued from St. James's tide to the first Sunday in Lent. Sometimes I went privily, at other times openly; sometimes I went from home a fortnight or three weeks, at other times I was at home a month or five weeks together, living there most commonly and openly, about my ordinary business, and yet all mine enemies could lay no hands on me, till the hour was fully come: and then by the voice of the country, and by manifest proofs, mine own brother as concerning the flesh, delivered me into their hands, because he knew that I was at home.
MY father and he had as much of my effects in their hands as would produce 56l. a year clear. It was a lordship and an honour, and half an honour that I had delivered into their hands to pay my debts, and the rest to remain with my wife and children. But they had reported that it would not pay my debts; which grieved me sore, for it was 200l. better than the goods came to; which caused me to speak to some of my friends, that they would speak to them to come to some sort of reckoning with me, and to take all such money again of me as they were charged with, and to deliver to me such writings and writs as they had of mine again, or to whom I should appoint them.
SO it was agreed betwixt my father and me, that I should have it again, and the day was appointed that the reckoning should be made and sent to me the same day that I was taken; my brother supposing that I should have put him out of most of all that he possessed▪ for it was all mine, in a manner, that he occupied, as all the country can and do know. Whereupon (as it is reported) he told one Cardillar, my next neighbour, and some of Mr. Gage's men, or Mr. Gage himself: and so he sent to his brother, and his brother sent twelve of his men (he being sheriff) in the night before I was taken, and lay in the bushes near my house, till about nine o'clock, even the hour that was appointed among themselves; for about the same time they thought to have had me within my house.
THEY had taken a man of mine, and two of my children that were abroad in the land, and kept them with them till their hour was appointed to come in; and then a little girl, one of my children, saw them come together, and came running in, and cried, Mother, mother, yonder comes twenty men. I sitting in my bed, and making of shoe-thongs, heard the words, and suspecting straitway that I was betrayed, I put on my hose, thinking to have gone out of the door before they had come. My wife being amazed at the child's words, looked out at the door, and they were by. Then she clapped to the door, and barred it fast, even as I came out of my chamber into the hall, and barred the other. They immediately beset the house, and commanded the doors to be opened, or they would break them in pieces. Then I had no shift, but I must either shew myself openly, or make some other remedy.
SO there was a certain place in my house which was never found out, and which was at the least, I dare say, searched twenty times, and sometimes almost by twenty men at once: into which place I went. And then my wife opened the door, and [Page 416] they came in and asked for me: and she said I was not at home. Then they asked her why she shut the door if I was not at home. She said, because she had been made afraid divers times with such as came to search us; and therefore she shut the door: for it is reported (said she) that whosoever can take my husband, may hang him or burn him straitway; and therefore I doubt they will serve me or my children so; for I think they may do so unto us as well as to him. Well, said they, we know he is in the house, and we must search it, for we are the sheriff's men; let us have a candle: it is told us there are many secret places in your house. So she lighted a candle, and they sought up and down in every corner that they could find, and had given over, and many of them were gone out of my house into the church-yard, and there talking with my father and with some he had brought with him.
NOW when they could not find me, one of them went to my brother who informed them I was at home, and said, we cannot find him. Then he asked them whether they had sought over a window that was in the hall (as it was known afterward), for that same place I had told him of myself. For many times when I came home, I would send for him to bear me company▪ yet as it chanced, I had not told him the way into it. Then they began to search anew. One looked up over the window, and spied a little loft, with three or four chests, and the way went in between two of the chests, but no man could perceive it. Then he asked my wife which was the way into it: here is a place that we have not sought yet. When she thought they would see it by one means or other, she said, the way into it was out [...] even now. So she sent them up, and cried, Away, away. Then I knew there was no remedy, but made the best shift for myself that I could. The place was boarded over and fast nailed, and if I had come out the way that I went in, I must needs come out amongst them all in the hall. Then I had no shift; but set my shoulders to the boards that were nailed to the rafters to keep out the rain, and brake them in pieces, which made a great noise; and they that were in the other chamber, seeking the way into it, heard the noise, and looked out of a window, and spied me, and made an out-cry. But yet I got out and leaped down, having [...] on.
SO I took down a lane that was full of sharp [...] ders, and they came running after with a great [...] with their swords drawn, crying, Strike him, [...] him: which made me look back, and there [...] never a one nigh me by an hundred feet: and [...] was but one, for all the rest were a great [...] behind. And I turned about hastily to go my [...] and stepped upon a sharp cinder with one foot, and saving of it, I stepped into a great [...] hold, and fell down withal, and before I could [...] away, he was come up with me. His [...] Parker the Wild, as he is counted in all [...] But if I had had on my shoes, they had been like to have gone away errandless, if there had been [...] hundred more, if I had caught the plain [...] once, to which I had not a stone's cast: but it [...] not God's will; for if it had, I should have [...] from them all, if there had been ten thousand of them.
THEN they took me and led me home [...] put on my shoes, and such clothes as I had [...]. Then said John Fauconer, Now your master [...] deceived you. You said you were an angel, and if you had been an angel, why did you not [...] away from us? Then said I, Who are they [...] ever heard me say that I was an angel? It [...] the first lie of a thousand that they have made of me. Angels were never begotten of men, nor born of women: but if they had said, they had heard me say, that I do trust I am a saint, they had not said amiss. What, do you think to be a saint? Yea that I do, and am already in God's [...], I [...] in God; for he that is not a saint in God's sight already, is a devil. Therefore he that thinketh scorn to be a saint, let him be a devil. And with that word they had brought me to mine own door, where I met with my father, who desired me to remember myself.
TO whom I answered, I praise God, I am well remembered whereabout I go. This way was appointed of God for me to be delivered into the hands of mine enemies, but woe unto him by whom I am betrayed. It had been good for that man that he had never been born, if he repent not with speed. [Page 417] The scriptures are now fulfilled on me, "For the father shall be against the son, and the brother shall deliver the brother to death," as it is this day come to pass. Then said one, He doth accuse his father, a good child indeed. I accuse him not, but say my mind; for there was no man knew I was at home, but my father, my brother, and one more, who I dare say would not hurt me for all the good in this town.
THERE was one George Beching that married one of my sisters, and he thought that I had meant him, that he had betrayed me; and he said, Brother, I would you should not think that I was the cause of your taking. To whom I answered, that I meant him not; I meant one that was nearer of my blood than he was. Then one from Lause said, that I had been a gospeller, and stood from them when I was brought to a sessions at Lause; and he said, I thought you would have been an honest man when you were at Lause, and I offered Hussey the sheriff to be bound for you, that you should go home to your wife, and come to him again. Then I remembered what he was, and said, Be you the pewterer? And he said, Yea. Then said I, It has happened to you according to the true proverb, as St. Peter saith, "The dog is turned to his vomit again, and the sow that is washed, to wallow in the mire," and the end of all such will be worse than the beginning. Then his mouth was stopped, so that he had nothing to say.
ALL this time I stood on the outside of my door; for they would not let me go in. So I put on my shoes and my clothes; then they put an harness about my arms made of a dog's slip, which rejoiced my heart that I was counted worthy to be bound for the name of God. So I took my leave of my wife and children, my father, and other of my friends, never expecting to see them any more in this world. For it was so thought by all the country, that I should not live six days after my apprehension; for they had so reported. But yet I knew it was not as they would, unless God would grant it; I knew what God can do; but what he will do I know not: but I am sure he will work all things for the best to them that love and fear him. So we drank and went our way, and came to Firle about three o'clock. And thus much touching the causes and effect of the troubles of Richard Woodman. Now let us see his examinations, which follow in this order.
The first Examination of RICHARD WOODMAN, before Dr. CHRISTOPHERSON, Bishop of Chichester, Dr. STORY, Dr. COOK, and others.
ON the 12th day of April, in the year of our Lord 1557, I was sent from the sheriff's to London, and afterwards on the 14th of the same month I was brought before the bishop of Chichester, Dr. Story, and Dr. Cook. So the sheriff's men delivered my warrant and me to the bishop. Then the bishop asked me what my name was. My name (quoth I) is Richard Woodman.
I am sorry for you, and so are all the worshipful men of your country. For it hath been reported to me, that you have been a man of good estimation with all the country, amongst the poor and rich, till now of late. Wherefore look well upon yourself, your wife and children, your father, and other of your friends, and be ruled by me. Think not yourself wiser than all the realm. Be informed, and you shall have the favour of them all, as much as ever you had.
You have charged me with many things wherein I have never offended: as, if you will give me leave, I will shew you.
Yes, I pray you say your mind.
May it please you, you have charged me as though I made myself wiser than all the realm; God doth know, I stand to learn of every man that will or can teach me the truth. And whereas you say, I have been well esteemed both by the rich and poor, God doth know, I know not that I have given any just offence either to rich or poor. And as for my wife and children, God doth know how I love them in him, and my life also. My life, my wife, and my children, are all in God's hands, and I have them all as I had them not, I trust, according to St. Paul's word's. But if I had ten thousand pounds of gold, I had rather forego it all, than them, if I might have my choice, and not displease God.
The sheriff took pains to come to me out of love, which he bare to you as to himself; and said you were desirous to speak with me.
I thought it meet to appeal to mine ordinary. For they go about to shed my blood unrighteously, and they have laid many unjust things to my charge. Wherefore I thought it meet to appeal to you, that if you can find any fault in me meet to be reformed by God's word, I stand to be reformed; and likewise if my blood shall be shed unrighteously, that it might be required at your hands, because you have taken upon you to be the physician of our country.
Is not this a perperse fellow, to lay to your charge, that his blood shall be required at your hands? Thinkest thou that thou shalt be put to death unjustly, that thy blood should be required? No, if he should condemn an hundred such heretics as thou art. I helped to rid a good many of you: and I promise thee, I will help to rid thee too, the best that I can.
THEN I would have answered him, but the bishop desired us both to give him place.
Well, neighbour Woodman, I call you neighbour, because you are one of my diocese; and you are sent to me that I should give you spiritual counsel: for I am your spiritual pastor. Therefore hear what I shall say to you.
First, I desire you to hear me a few words. You have said, you will give me spiritual counsel; are you sure you have the Spirit of God?
No, I am not sure of that.
No! be you not sure of that?
No, by St. Mary I dare not be so bold to say so; I doubt that.
Then you are like the waves of the sea, as saith St. James, that be tossed about with the wind, and are unstable in all their ways and can look for no good thing at the Lord's hand: yea, you are neither hot nor cold, and therefore God will spew you out of his mouth, as saith St. John.
THEN they were in a great fury, especially Dr. Story, who said,
WHAT a perverse fellow is this? He hath the devil within him, and is mad. He is worse than the devil. Now I perceive that it is true what is reported of thee, and it is the pride of all such heretics to boast themselves.
Yea surely, he is sent to me to learn, and taketh upon him to teach me.
The Jews said to Christ, he had the devil, and was mad, as you have said here by me. But I know the servant is not above his master. And God forbid that I should learn of him, who confesseth that he hath not the Spirit of God.
Why, do you think that you have the Spirit of God?
I believe verily that I have the Spirit of God.
You boast more than ever Paul did, or any of the apostles, which is great presumption.
I boast not in myself, but in the gift of God, as Paul did; for he said he believed verily that he had the Spirit of God, making thereof no doubts, in 1 Cor. vii.
It is not so, you bely the text.
If it be not so, let me be burnt to-morrow.
Thou shalt not be burned to-morrow, but thou shalt be burned within these six days, I promise thee.
If it be so, it is wrong translated, as it is in a thousand places more.
THEN one looked in a Latin Testament and another in a Greek Testament, and they said it was in them both, that Paul supposed that he had the Spirit of God, but he was not sure.
Even so I hope and suppose that I have the Spirit of God, but am not sure.
If that place be wrong translated, and so many places of the bible as you say, then I may say with Christ, it cannot be avoided but offences must be given; but woe unto them by whom they come. I may say, Woe unto false translators: for cursed are they that add or take away. But take you heed that you bely not the translators: I believe they had the fear of God more before their eyes, than you report of them. And yet if that place be wrong translated, I can prove by places enough, that Paul had the Spirit of God, as I myself and all God's elect have.
How prove you that?
"No man can believe that Jesus is the Lord but by the Holy Ghost," 1 Cor. vii. I do believe that Jesus Christ is my Redeemer, and that I shall be saved from all my sins by his death and blood-shedding, as Paul and all the apostles did; and as all faithful people ought to do: which no man can do without the Spirit of God. And as there is no damnation to them that are in Christ Jesus; so is there no salvation to them that are not in Christ Jesus. "For he that hath not the Spirit of Christ, is none of his, but is a cast-away," as he saith in the same text. And again, "We have not received the spirit of bondage, to fear any more, but we have received the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba Father. The same Spirit certifieth our spirits, that we are the sons of God." Here are proofs enough that Paul was sure that he had the Spirit of God. Also St. John saith, "he that believeth not that Christ is come in the flesh, is an Antichrist, and denieth both the Father and the Son: which is Sin against the Holy Ghost, and shall never be forgiven in this world, nor in the world to come. Besides all this, "He that believeth in God, dwelleth in God, and God in him." So it is impossible to believe in God, unless God dwell in us. O good God! what more injury can be done unto thee, than to mistrust that we have received thy Holy Spirit by thy gift? Thus may all men see their blindness, and whose servants they be, as they do declare themselves both by their words and deeds.
O my lord, what an heretic is this same? Why hear you him? Send him to prison to his fellows in the Marshalsea, and they shall be dispatched within these twelve days.
WHEN I heard him say so, I rejoiced greatly in my heart, desiring God, if it were his will, to keep him in that mind: for I looked surely to have gone to the bishop of London's Coal-house, or Lollards-Tower, yea, I thought myself happy if I might have gone to Lollard's-Tower; but it pleased God to put in their hearts to send me to the Marshalsea amongst our brethren and my old fellow-prisoners. So merciful hath God dealt with me in easing of my burden that I looked for.
AND when they perceived that I feared not imprisonment, but rather rejoiced, as they well perceived, the bishop then said, Methinks he is not afraid of the prison.
No, I praise the living God.
This is an heretic indeed. He hath the right terms of all heretics: the living God! I pray you be there dead gods, that you say the living God?
Are you angry with me, because I speak the words that are written in the Bible?
Bibble babble, bibble babble. What speakest thou of the Bible? there is no such word written in all the Bible?
Then I am much to blame if it be not so written. "Behold, for the offences you have done, you shall be carried away captive by Nebuchodnosor to Babylon, and there you shall be seven generations: and when you be there, you shall see gods of gold, of silver, of wood, and of store, borne before you and behind you upon men's shoulders, to cast out a fear among the heathen. When you shall see all these abominations, then say in your heart, "It is the living God that ought to be worshipped" Here I prove my saying true, both that there is a living God, and that there be dead gods. Also David saith in the Psalms, "My soul hath a desire and longing to enter into the courts of the Lord: my heart and my flesh rejoice in the living God;" with divers other places that I could recite. Wherefore I marvel that you rebuke me for speaking the truth.
I do not deny but it [...] written, and [...] th [...] truth, and I know it [...] well [...] but such is the speech of all heret [...]s.
My lord, I will tell you how you shall know an heretic by his words, because I have been more used to them than you have been; that is, they will say [the Lord,] and [we praise God,] and [the living God]. By these words you shall know an heretic.
All these words are written for our learning, and we are commanded by the prophets to use them daily, as this; "The Lord's name be praised from the rising up of the sun unto the going down of the same." Also, "As many as fear the Lord, say always, the Lord be praised."
My lord send him to prison, you shall do no good with him, I will go to church, and leave you here. This is an old heretic. Wast thou never before me ere now?
Yea, forsooth, that I have.
Yea, I thought so; and I sent thee to the bishop of London, and he released thee, and thou promised him to be an honest man, and that thou wouldst be of the true catholic church, which thou hast not fulfilled.
I promised him nothing but I have fulfilled it. No man is able to prove the contrary.
Well, it will be tried well enough. My lord, I will take my leave, I fear you will do this man no good.
I would not have you to use such speeches as you do, as the Lord be praised, and the living God, with such like words. Can you not say as well, our Lord, or our God, as otherwise?
I marvel why you should reprove me for it, seeing they be the words of God. I do not refuse to say, our God, or our Lord, when I talk of the scripture where it is written. If I should, it must follow, I denied the words of God, and must needs be an heretic; but I do not. Wherefore I ma [...]v [...]l what you mean to [...] therein. It seemeth to me, that you mistrust that I believe not as you do.
Yea, that is my meaning indeed.
I believe in the living God, if you do not so▪ then our bel [...]efs be not alike indeed. But if it please you to examine me upon any particular matter, now or at any other time I will make answer thereto by God's help.
Though you believe in God, I can prove you believe not as you ought to do, as I can she [...] you by your hand-wri [...]ing. You have denied the catholic church. Wherefore he that erreth from the church, it cannot be said that his faith is good. Wherefore be ruled by the church from which you have err [...]d.
I will not deny my hand by God's help· For I have written nothing at any time but the truth. There may be things written against me, reporting it to be mine, and yet be not: but my hand cannot well be counterfeited, there are enough that know my hand.
Do you know it yourself if you see it.
Yea, that I do.
THEN he arose and brought a great bundle of writings, and opened them, and bide me come see. I looked on them, and it was my hand indeed.
How say you, is it not your own hand-writing.
Yea surely it is.
How say you to this, is not this your hand also?
Yea verily is it.
Well, you know what it meaneth, I dare say.
Yes, I know it very well; here is a great deal, which I had thought had been in my house, but I thank God that it is here: for in this you shall try whether it be true or not. For in this is contained all the talk that was between the [Page 421] commissioners▪ and me, when I was before them five times, and also [...] the bishop of London divers time [...] and I am sure▪ neith [...]r you nor they shall find any words false therein written: and I think the sheriff's men, when they searched my house for me, when I was taken, found this, and carried it with them, but I never knew it before now. But I am not sorry [...] it, but am rather glad: for herein you may see all the wrong that I received at their hands, and how long I was in prison, and how I was tossed up and down, and how I was delivered at length, and by this you may try whether it be so or not. I dare say they that found it, and they that brought it to you, had thought it would have turned to my displeasure; but in very deed all things work for the best to them that fear God.
Indeed, I find no great fault in this; but here is perillous gear, here is sedition. This was set up upon the church door, you know it well enough.
Indeed I wrote it to the priest, and to others that took upon them to fetch my child out of my house without my leave, and used it at their pleasure, when they knew it was baptized already, as they were well certified before. Wherefore my conscience compelled me to shew them my mind in writing, wherein is contained nothing but the scriptures of God, rebuking them for their folly.
Yea, but it is terribly meant, and un [...]charitably. It is such gear coupled together I pro [...]mise you, as I [...] saw the like. But I promise you, I will make the best of it. And I protest before God, I would you should do as well as mine own soul and body. Be contented to be r [...]formed God hath done his part on you. Cast not yourself away. Remember your wife and your children, and the poor that [...] your occupying. Mean to follow your vocation. Remember you are not called to be a teacher nor preacher. St. Paul saith, "Let ev [...]ry man walk wherein he is called, and therein [...]." Remember you are called to another vocation, for God's sake walk therein It is not your office to do as you have done. You might do as much good by the report of worshipful men, as any man might do in all the country by your example, and if you would follow the laws of the catholic church, [...] would be an occasion to bring a [...]reat many into the true church, that are out, as you are.
I would not that you should say, that I am out of the church of God, for I am not, but do allow the church of God according to his word. Yea, if I were abroad, if I could win any into the true church, that be out, by any means that I could use, I should be very glad. For God knoweth I love all people as myself. And where you say I have been a preacher, it is not so. I never took any such thing upon me, as it is well known. But as for teaching I cannot deny; for it becometh every man to teach and instruct his houshold in the fear of God, and all others (as far as he can) that desire it of him. And whereas you have blamed me for reading the scripture, and leaving my vocation (as you say), I left not my vocation in reading of the scripture: for I trust I followed my vocation the better for it. And the greatest reason that compelled me to read the scriptures, was because the preachers and teachers were so changeable.
No? Did you not preach at a fair?
No surely, but it was so reported. I was at a fair indeed. While I was in prison, I had leave of the council to go home to pay my debts, and then I went to a fair to sell cattle, and there I met with divers poor men that I had set to work, who lovingly asked me how I did, and how I could away with imp [...]isonment. And I shewed them how God had dealt with me, and how he would also deal with them that put their trust in him; and this they called preaching. And since that it hath been reported that I have baptized children, and married folks, which I never did; for I never was a minister. And if I had done so, I had done contrary to the order of the apostles, which God forbid I should.
I am well paid if you be faultless in the [...] things; for I have heard the contrary
I have shewed you the truth, and that no man living shall be able to prove the contrary.
You said you did not disallow the true catholic church.
No, that I do not.
Why do you not then go to the church? I am informed you do not go there
I trust I am in the true church every day. But to tell you the truth, I come not to the church where they most do resort. For if I was, I should offend and be offended: for the last time that I was there, I offended many, and was offended myself. For conscience sake therefore I would not come there. I was sent to prison for my coming there, and now I am sent to you for biding thence. So they will not be pleased any way with me, for they seek my life. Wherefore look you to it, for I am now in your hands, and you ought to be an house of defence against mine enemies. For if you suffer them to kill me, my blood shall be required at your hands. If you can find any just cause in me worthy of death by God's word, you may condemn me yourself, and not offend God: wherefore look to it, the matter is weighty, deliver me not into their hands, and think so to be discharged.
I tell you truth, I can do little in the matter. For I have not full authority as yet of mine office: but I will send for you and talk with you, if I thought I should do you any good.
I should be glad to talk with you, and to let you know my mind in any thing you shall demand of me, now, or at any other time.
So then he desired the sheriff's men to tarry and dine with him; that this man (said he) may dine with me also: for it may be he may have no great store of meat where he is going.
SO we tarried to dinner with him, and had no further talk, neither how to prove where the true church of God is, nor of the sacraments, nor of any thing pertaining toward me, for the space of two hours or more: but he entered into talk with me, how I understodd many scriptures, and for bishops and priests marriages, and whether Paul had a wife or not. To whom I answered, It is a thing that I have little to do with, as concerning marriages; but I am very well cont [...] [...] to talk with you in the matter, as far as my poor learning will serve. So when he had talked with me of divers scriptures, he liked my discourse [...]. He asked me how I said by St. Paul, whether [...] were married or not? To whom I answered, I can prove by the scriptures that he was never married.
How prove you that?
I will prove it well enough, by [...] help. But yet I will prove that Paul might have had a wife, as well as the other apostles had.
Why? had the apostles wives?
Yes, all, saving Paul and Barnabas, [...] I understand it. For these are Paul's words in the ninth chapter of the first epistle to the Corinthi [...] ▪ "Am I not an apostle? am I not free? have I [...] seen Jesus Christ? Are not ye my work in [...] Lord? and if I be not an apostle to others, yet to you I am an apostle: for you are the seal of mine apostleship in the Lord. Mine answer to them that ask me, is this, Have we not power to eat and to drink? or have we not power to lead about a sister to wife, as well as the other apostles have, and as the brethren of the Lord? Or have not Barnabas and I power thus to do?" So this [...] proveth that Paul and Barnabas were unmarried. But Paul declareth, that the rest had wives, and that they had power likewise so to have, but that they found no need thereof. But Paul declareth in the seventh chapter of the first ep [...]stle to the Corinthians, that he that hath no power over his flesh may marry: "For it is better to marry than to burn. Wherefore to avoid fornication (saith he) let every man have his wife." He saith, "Let every man have his wife, and every woman her husband." By this text of scripture I understand, that bishops and priests may have wives, because they are men, rather than burn, or commit fornication. But I think ver [...]ly he that can abstain, having power of his own will, doeth best; but if he marrieth he sinneth not.
SO then he debated the scriptures with me divers ways, that a bishop or priest ought not to have a [Page 423] wife; but I proved by divers scriptures both in the old law and in the new, that women were at first made for the help of the men, which was spoken generally to all men. Wherefore (said I) every man may have a woman, and sin not, in honest matrimony, as well bishops and deacons, as other men, which you call priests, if they be true ministers of Jesus Christ, and of that order that bishops and deacons were in Paul's time. For Paul declareth to Timothy, in the first epistle and third chapter, "That a bishop should be the husband of one wife," and how they should be honestly appalelled, and should bring up their children, and likewise the deacons. This (said I) proveth more plainly, that both bishops and deacons had wives in the apostles' time, which he could not deny. But then he alledged, that no bishop or priest might take a wife, after he had taken upon him that office; but if he had a wife before he took the office, tried meet for the purpose for his life and for his learning, he might keep his wife and bring up his children according to St. Paul's meaning to Timothy, or else might they have no wives.
THEN said I, I think Paul's meaning in that place, was, that a man that hath had two wives might not be made a bishop nor a deacon, if he had ever so much learning. But that text doth not say, that a bishop or a deacon may not marry after they be made bishops and deacons. For I am sure that Paul was in the state of a bishop, when he said, "He had power to lead about a sister to wife, as well as the other apostles had." Here Paul declares, that it was in his power to have a wife, after he had the office of a bishop, which was not in his power, if he had been forbidden of God.
THUS have I shewed you my mind in this behalf, both of Paul, and also for the marriages of bishops and priests, as I understand the scriptures. However, it is a thing which I have little to do with: but as you required me to give you my sentiments on that matter, I have done so.
Marry, I am glad that you have said as you have done. Many do affirm boldly that Paul had a wife, and cannot prove whether he had or not, by the scriptures; but you have said very well. I am glad that you are contented to be ruled by God's word. And if you will be contented in other matters, no doubt you will do well: therefore gentle, good Mr. Woodman, be ruled. God hath given you a good wit. I protest before God, I would you should do as well as my own soul and body, and so would (I dare say) all the worshipful men in the country, as they have reported to me.
Why, my lord, I take God to record (whom I trust to serve) that I would be as glad to live in rest and peace, as any man in all the world, if I might. And I stand to learn, and am contented to be reformed of any thing that I hold, if it can be proved that it be not agreeable to God's word. And the truth is so, I have talked with a dozen priests at the least, since I was delivered out of prison, of certain matters, and they have not been able to certify me in any thing that I have asked them: and therefore they have complained of me to the sheriff and justices, forging tales and lies of me, to turn me to displeasure, as much as in them lieth. I promise you, there be as many unlearned priests in your diocese, as in any one diocese in England, I think; the more it is to be lamented.
I promise you, I do much lament it myself: for I hear say no less, but it is true that you say. I wish I could remedy it, but I cannot: but I will do the best that I can when I come into the country; and I will be glad to talk with you at some other time, when I am somewhat better at ease. You see I am very tender now, as I have been this half year and more. Come to dinnner; our dinner is ready. I caused you not to tarry for any grea [...] cheer that you should have, nor would I have you think that I go about to win you with my meat. But you are welcome with all my heart. Come, sit down.
I thanked him, and went to dinner; and there dined with him, a merchant-man, one of the sheriff's men, and I, and no more, and we had good cheer, God be praised therefore. We had no talk of the scriptutes all the dinner time: but when dinner was done, the bishop said,
Now call Mr. Story's man. For the [Page 424] commissioners have committed you to prison: but I will send for you before it be long, and I pray God I may do you good. I should be very glad of it.
If it please you to send for me, I should be very glad to talk with you, for I like your talk well. And then if it please your lordship to examine me upon any particular matter, I will shew you my mind therein, by God's grace, without dissimulation. But I pray you let me have nothing to do with Mr. Story, for I think he is a man without reason.
Well before you go what say you to the seven sacraments? Let me hear what you say to them, that I may be the more willing to lead for you again.
I know not seven sacraments.
Then what shall I talk with you? How many do you know?
I know but two; one the sacrament of baptism, and the other the supper of the Lord. But if you can justly prove by God's word, that there be more than two, I stand to be reformed.
If I prove not seven by God's word, then believe me not: and so he bade farewell.
THEN the sheriff's two men, and one of Dr. Story's men carried me to Dr. Cook's house, when Dr. Cook commanded them to carry me to the sheriff's prison in Southwark, saying, he shall be called before us again shortly and all his fellows, and we shall dispatch them from troubling the country any more.
AND so I was brought to the Marshalsea, where I now am merry (God be praised therefore), looking for judgment of my flesh: for they intend to dispatch me shortly, if God will give them leave: but God hath their hearts in his hands, and they can do nothing to me but as God will give them leave. Wherefore I commit my cause to God only, and I am sure there shall not one hair of my head perish without my heavenly Father's will, although I undergo ever so much trouble. Job perished not although God gave the devil leave to trouble and by him divers and many ways, as God hath suffered his members to trouble and try me divers and many ways, I praise God. They shall as little prevail against my faith (I have no mistrust), as the devil-prevailed against Job, whatsoever they do with my goods, life, or body. For he that kept Job in all his trouble, neither slumbereth nor sleepeth, but keepeth me, and all his elect, that whether we live or die, it shall be to the praise and glory of God. For if we live, we live at the Lord's will, and if we die, we die to the Lord's will [...] whether we live or die, we are the Lord's, therefore blessed be his name.
WHEREFORE, dear brethren and sisters, to whom this my writing shall come, be of good cheer, and fear not what man do unto you. For they can but kill the body: but fear him that hath power to destroy both body and soul. And yet once again I bid you be of good cheer. For the sheriff, with divers other gentlemen and priests, whilst I was at the sheriff's house, said to me, that all the heretics in the country hung on me, as the people did in times past upon St. Augustine or St. Ambrose, or such like. Wherefore said they look on it, you have have a great thing to answer for. To the which I answered, I pray God lay nothing [...] before my charge, than he will do for heresy, as [...] am sure he will not. For he hath set my sins as far from me as it is from the east to the west: so that I am sure they shall never come near to me any more. Yea and in that they call heresy, we serve God withal. And I am sure there is no man nor woman that hangeth on me, but on God. But yet that is their imagination and thoughts, that if they might w [...] me to them, they should win a great many likewise; and thinking to kill me, if they cannot win me as I trust in God, and am sure they never shall by God's grace, if it were possible for them to kill me, ten times. For I am so linked to Christ in a chain by faith, it is impossible for men to loose us asunder, neither for life nor death, I praise my Lord God therefore. And no doubt their full intent and purpose is to kill me, thinking thereby to make others afraid. Which death of my body were best of all for me, if God were so pleased. But if I may live for the comfort of others, his [Page 425] name be praised therefore: I know what he can do; but what he will do I know not. But if death be offered me, so that I cannot refuse it without displeasing of God I trust in God, I shall not offend my brethen in receiving death, but shall be rather the cause of their faith being strengthened, by chusing and receiving of it and that with joy. For as Christ hath given his life for us, so ought we to give our lives for the defence of the gospel, and comfort of our brethren. And whereas the bishop saith, he will prove seven sacraments, be you out of doubt he will never be able to do it, no more than he hath proved other arguments with me already.
THUS fare ye well, from the Marshalsea, where I now am, as a sheep appointed to be slain, God be praised therefore.
The second Examination of RICHARD WOODMAN, before the Bishop of Chichester, two of his Chaplains, and Dr. STORY, on April 27.
FIRST, I was sent for to the Mashalsea by Dr. Story, and was carried to his house near to St. Nicholas Shambles; when I had spoken to him, he sent me to the bishop of Chichester, and said he would himself come to him presently: and when we were in the bishop's hall, we had not been long there before I was sent for by the bishop; and when I came before him, I paid obeisance to him.
THEN said the bishop, You are welcome; how do you now?
Well, I praise God, thanking your lordship for the gentle talk that you had with me at our last interview.
Well good Mr. Woodman, I have sent for you out of love and good will to talk with you, and would have you to tell me your mind in few words. For indeed the last time that I talked with you, our talk was so long, that I fell into a great drought thereby, and have been worse in my body ever since. Wherefore, I pray you, let me know your mind briefly in those particular matters that I shall demand of you, according to the promise that you made the last time you were with me. How say you, will you?
Yea forsooth, I will answer to any thing that you shall demand of me (by God's help) as well as I can.
How say you by seven sacraments? for there we left off, and there we will begin again. You said then there were but two. How say you now to it? Will you deny all except two?
I say now as I said then. You said, there be se [...] sacraments; and I said I knew but two: but [...] you could prove seven by God's word, when I came before you again, I must needs grant them. And you said, if you could not prove them by God's word, I should not believe them: and now I am come to see how well you can prove them.
AT which words the bishop and his chaplains were moved.
By God and my troth, I believe he thinketh I cannot prove them. How say you to the sacrament of matrimony?
Why, my lord, St. Paul saith to Timothy, A bishop should be faultless; and you use much swearing, which is the greatest fault in a bishop of all others, that should be an example to the flock.
THEN the bishop and his priests were in a great rage with me, because I reproved him of his swearing.
What, I perceive this man is worse than he was the last day: what he taketh upon him to teach me to speak, as though I could not tell what I had to do.
So I think, my lord, he is a stout fellow indeed, as we have seen.
Yea, I am stout, becasue I do what I am commanded. I dare not for my life hold my peace, for I should bear your sin, which I will not do for any of you all, I tell you plainly.
Where find you that you are commanded to reprove me?
If thou see thy brother sin, reprove him; [Page 426] if he repent thou hast won thy brother. But you repent it not, but rather go about to maintain the same. Christ saith, "He that breaketh one of the least or my commandments, and teacheth men so, shall be [...] least in the kingdom of heahven," and you go about to teach men so, as far as I see.
Why, my lord, this man is past cure. I see no hope in him.
No, so I think. I will never tal [...] wit [...] him more. Go call Mr. Story; let him do with him what he will. He hath been with his fellows in the Marshalsea, and now he is worse than he was before. I had some hope in him the other day, but now I see none.
No, I praise God my faith hangeth upon no man, but upon God,
Nay, my lord, I think he is not the worse for them: but I fear me they be the worse for him, I know this man of old, before my old lord.
Well, my lord, look well to it: will you deliver me to other men to shed my blood, and so think to wash your hands of me, as Pilate did by Christ? Nay, you cannot be so discharged.
I have nothing to do with you: but of my gentleness I have sent for you, because you said, you would declare your mind in any particular matter I would demand of you.
Why, I do not deny I will do so, if you do demand it of me. But you go about to deliver me to others to kill me; and I know that there is none that hath to do with me but you.
I am not yet consecrated: wherefore my lord cardinal may examine you and condemn you, or my lord of London: for you are now in his diocese.
Yea, my lord, is the matter even so? Then I perceive whereabout you go. Nay, I will talk no more with you then if you be at that point. Ask me what you will, but I will shew you nothing of my mind. I promise you I will not answer in particular matters, so that you may accuse me to others, and they to kill me.
I go not about to kill you, but would be glad to hear your mind respecting the sacraments, and if you understand them not aright, I should be glad with all my heart to let you know how I understand them. For I would [...] should do as well as mine own self.
If you would talk with me to do me good, I would be content to hear you, and tell you my mind; otherwise I should be loth.
Nay, I will promise you, if I can do you no good I will do you no harm: for if I meant to do you harm, I would lay your own hand-writing against you, but I will not: wherefore be in [...]o doubt of me. What say you to the sacrament of of matrimony? is it a sacrament or no? What think you of it?
I think it is an holy institution ordained by God in paradise, and so to continue to the world's end.
Lo, now you shall see how you be deceived in that as you be in all the rest. Come hither. You can read Latin I am sure.
Yes, I can read Latin, but I understand very little.
Come to me, you shall see that Paul calleth it an holy sacrament For these are his words, "For this cause shall a man leave his father and mother, and shall be joined to his wife: and two shall be made one flesh:" this is a great sacrament.
I remember such a saying, but St. Paul calleth it not a sacrament, but he saith, "It is a great mystery?"
Where saith he so.
I am not sure in what text it is, but I am [Page 427] sure these are St. Paul's words, and that he calleth it not a sacrament in all his writings.
What, the last day you were full of scriptures! here it is written, and there it is written. Why, we can rehearse the scriptures as well as you. Wherefore, if we are sure it is written, it is no great matter for the place, Come hither, I will shew you the place, where I think that you mean
I looked, and it was written Sacram [...]tum. I know it is a great mystery, in the English translation.
I permit it to be a mystery. What is a mystery?
A mystery is (as I take it) unseen; for he saith he speaketh betwixt Christ and the congregati [...]on: so the great mystery that he speaketh of, I take to be the faith of them that are married, which is hid in Christ, which we see not, but Christ. But the deed which is in the congregation, which is the outward marriage we see, but the inward marriage of the heart we see not. Wherefore Paul calleth it a mystery. And therefore if it be a sacrament, it is invisible to us: it is not seen, as other sacraments are.
Nay, I tell you it is a visible sacrament, seen as the others are: for is not the marriage seen, is not the man nor woman seen?
My lord I pray you, what is a sacrament?
It is a sign of a holy thing.
Methinks you have certified me very well. There need not be a sign of a holy thing where the holy thing is itself.
THEN his chaplains would have interrupted me, but I desired my lord I might speak my mind in the matter. So with much ado he bade me say what I could.
THERE need not be a sign of a thing, where the thing is itself. Matrimony is an holy thing itself, and is ended outwardly, and need no more signs but themselves: wherefore it cannot be a sacrament as others be.
Lo, how much you speak against yourself. And for example, I come by an hosier's shop, and there hangeth a pair of hose, which hose, be and are a sign that hose is sold within.
What say you to this? Now my lord hath hit you home indeed.
He hath hit me perilously, I tell you, with sophistry to blind mine eyes withal. I wonder you are not all ashamed of it. I can answer that to all your shames, if I might be justly heard I tell you plainly.
What, you are angry, methinks.
I am not angry, but I am in earnest, I tell you, to see your blindness and folly. I talked of the scriptures that be written, and it is God's word, to prove my matter true by, and you will prove your matter true by a pair of hose. And you can as well prove it by that as by God's word.
Why, is there nothing true but what is written in the Bible?
St. Paul saith to the Galatians, chap. i. "If an angel come from heaven, and preach any other doctrine than may be proved by God's word, hold him accursed:" and so do I, I tell you plainly.
Here is a Testament in my hand, if I hurl it into the fire and burn it, have I burned God's word, or not? I will buy a new one for sixteen-pence.
I say you have burned God's word, and I believe he that will burn a Testament willingly, would burn God himself, if he were here, if he could; for he and his word are all one.
THEN they made a great laughing at it.
Laugh on. Your laughing will be turned [Page 428] to weeping, and all such joy will be turned to mourning, if you repent it not with speed.
THEN the bishop began to cloak the priest's folly, saying, Why, if my counting-house were full of books, and if my house shall be on fire by cha [...], and so burned, was God's word burned?
No, my lord, because they were burned aga [...]st your will: but yet if you should burn them willingly, or think it well, and not be sorry for it, you burn God's word as well as he. For he that is not sorry for a shrewd turn, doth allow it to be good.
Follow your vocation; you have a little learning. "We have an altar, whereof you may not eat." What meaneth St. Paul thereby?
There is no man so foolish to eat stones, I suppose.
What mockers and scorners be you, to say, no man will be so foolish to eat stones? it is a plain mock.
Why, my lord, you said I had no learning, nor knowledge, nor understanding: wherefore it becomes you to make things more plain to me, and not to ask me such dark questions, and yet blame me too; methinks it is too much.
I dare say you know what it meaneth well enough. The greatest fool in my house will understand my meaning better than you do.
THERE stood some of his men at a distance talking together by a window. He called one of them by his name.
Come hither, I say to thee thou shalt not eat of this table. What do I mean thereby?
Forsooth, my lord, you would not have me eat of this table, laying his hand thereon.
WITH this answer he made all them in the house to fall a laughing, and I could not hold it in, but burst out with a laughter, and said,
He hath expounded the matter almost as well as I.
He meaneth well enough, if you would understand him.
ANSWER me again, to make it more plain. I say to thee thou shalt not eat of this table. What mean I thereby?
Forsooth, you would not have me eat this table.
THESE words made them all laugh. Wherewith the bishop was almost angry, because the answer proved no better, and said,
He meaneth that I would not have him eat any of the meat that is set upon this table. How sayest thou, dost thou not mean so?
Yes forsooth, my lord, that was my meaning indeed.
Yea, my lord, now you have told him what you mean, he can say so too: and so could I have done (as litte wit as I have) if you had said, Paul meant that no man should eat of that which was offered upon the altar, but the priests.
Yea, I perceive you understand the meaning of Paul well enough, but that you like to cavil with me.
Why, my lord, do you think I understand such dark places of the scripture without learning? You said even now, I had no knowledge nor learning, wherefore I answered you as you judged of me.
Well, let this matter pass, and let as turn to the principal again. How say you by the sacrament of the altar?
You mean the sacrament of the body and blood of Jesus Christ.
I mean the sacrament of the altar, and so I say.
You mean Christ to be the altar, do you not?
I mean the sacrament of the altar in the church. What, is it so strange to you?
It is strange to me indeed, if you mean the altar of stone.
It is that altar that I mean.
I understand not the altar so.
No, I think so indeed: and that is the cause that you be deceived. I pray you, how do you understand the altar then?
If you will give me leave till I have done, I will shew you how I understand the altar, and where it is.
Yes, you shall have leave to say your mind as much as you will.
It is written, Matt. xviii. "That wheresoever two or three be gathered together in Christ's name, there is he in the midst among them; and whatsoever they ask the Father upon earth, it shall be granted them in heaven." Agreeing to the fifth of Matthew, saying, "When thou comest to offer thy gift at the altar, and there rememberest that thy brother hath ought against thee, leave there thy offering, and go first and be reconciled to thy brother, and then offer thy gift." The priests would have interrupted me, but the bishop bade them let me alone, for (said he) you shall hear a pretty conclusion anon.
I pray you let me make an end, quoth I, and then find fault with me if you can. Now to the matter. In these two places of scripture, I prove that Christ is the true altar, whereon every man and woman ought to come and offer their gifts. First, wheresoever the people are gathered together in Christ's name, there is he in the midst; and where he is, there is the altar, so that we may be bold to come and offer our gift, if we be in love and charity; if we be not we must leave there our offering, and go first and be reconciled to our brother, and agree with him quickly, and so forth, and then come and offer our gift. Some will say, How shall I agree with mine adversary, when he is not nigh by an hundred miles? May I not pray till I have spoken with him? To all such I answer, If thou dost presume to pray among the faithful, wishing any evil to any man, woman or child, thou asketh vengeance upon thyself. For no such asketh any thing else of the Lord in his prayer. Wherefore agree with thine adversary, that is, make thy life agreeable to God's word. Say in thy heart without dissimulation, that thou askest God and all the world forgiveness from the bottom of thy heart, intending never to offend them any more. Then all such may be bold to come and offer their gift, their prayer on the altar, where the people of God are gathered together. Thus have I shewed you my mind, both of the altar, and of the offering, as I understand it.
Do you understand the offering and the altar so? I never heard any man understand it so, no not Luther, the great heretic, that was condemned by a general council, and his picture burned.
If he were an heretic I think he understood it not so indeed, but I am sure all christians ought to understand it so.
O what vain-glory is in you, as though you understood all things, and other men nothing? Hear me; I will shew you the true understanding both of the altar, and the offering on the altar. We have an altar (said St. Paul, Heb. xiii.) "that ye may not eat of." Meaning thereby, that no man might eat of that which was offered on the altar, but the priest. For in Paul's time all the living that the priest had, the people came and offered it on the altar, money or other things: and when the people came to offer it, and then remembered that they had any thing against their brother, then they left their offering upon the altar, and went and were reconciled to their brother: and they came again offered their gift, and the priest had it. This is the true understanding of the place that you rehearsed; wherefore you be deceived.
My lord, that was the use in the old law. Christ was the end of that. But indeed I perceive [Page 430] by Paul's words, the sacrifice was offered in Paul's time: yet that maketh not that it was well done, but he rebuked it. Wherefore it seemeth to me that you be deceived.
Who shall be judges between us in this matter?
The 12th of John declareth who shall be judge in the last day.
You mean the word shall judge the word, how can that be?
St. Peter saith, "The scripture hath no private interpretation;" but one scripture must be understood by another.
You will understand it one way, and I will understand it another way; and who shall be judge between us then?
The true church of God is able to discuss all doubts: to whom I refer it.
I am glad you say so, if you mean so indeed.
My lord, I never meant otherwise.
The church of God doth allow the sacrament of the altar.
What do you now offer upon the altar.
We offer up, in the blessed sacrament of the altar, the body of Christ to pacify the wrath of God the Father; and therewith they all put off their caps to the abominable idol.
St. Paul saith to the Hebrews, in the 10th chapter, "We are sanctified by offering of the body of Jesus Christ upon the cross once for all:" and every priest is daily ministering, and oftentimes offereth one manner of offering, which can never take away sins; and that is the offering that you use [...]o offer. As far as I can see, you be priests after the order of Aaron, that offered up sacrifice for their own sins, and the sins of the people.
Nay, Aaron's sacrifice was with blood, which [...] the death of Christ, the which was ended upon the [...] by his blood shedding; but we ar [...] priests after the order of Mel [...]hisedek, which offereth bread to the king in remembrance, and signifieth the giving of Christ's body in bread and wine at the last supper, which he gave to his disciples, and commanded [...] to be used to the end of the world. This is the sacrifice that we offer, according to his word.
I think you have made the matter very plain to me, that as Christ was the end of all sacrifices, so was he the beginning of the sacraments, willing them to be used in remembrance of him, to the world's end.
What in remembrance of him, and not himself, as his word saith, "Take, eat, this is my body; it is not the sign only, but the thing itself. How say you? is it not his body, after the words are spoken by the priest? How say you? Go briefly to work, for I cannot long tarry with you.
My lord, if you will answer me to one sacrament, I will answer you to another.
Yes, I am very well content with that.
If you say the words of baptism over the water, and there be no child there, is there true baptism?
No, there must be the water, the word, and the child, and then it is baptism.
Very well. Then if a child be baptized in the name of the Father, and of the Son, it is not truly baptized.
No: the child must be baptized in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, or else it is not truly baptized.
Then there may be nothing added, nor taken away from the sacraments; may there?
No.
Now, my lord, I will answer to you, if it please you.
Well, how say you, "Take, eat, this is my body;" is it not Christ's body, as soon as the words be said?
My lord, I will answer you by your own words, that you answered me, which are true; the water, the word, and the child, all these together make baptism; the bread, wine, and the word, make the sacrament; and the eater, eating in true faith, maketh it his body. Here I prove it is not Christ's body, but to the faithful receiver. For he said, "Take, eat, this is my body." He called it not his body before eating, but after eating. And St. Augustine saith, Believe and thou hast eaten. And St. John saith, "He that believeth in God, dwelleth in God, and God in him:" wherefore it is impossible to dwell in God, and to eat his body, without a true faith.
Then the faith of the receiver maketh it his body; and not his word, by your saying. I pray you what did Judas eat?
Judas did eat the sacrament of Christ, and the devil withal.
He eat the body of Christ unworthily, as St. Paul saith.
Nay, St. Paul saith no such thing. He speaketh not of eating his body unworthily, but of the sacrament unworthily. For he saith, "Whosoever eateth of this bread, and drinketh of this cup unworthily, eateth and drinketh his own damnation, because he maketh no difference of the Lord's body; and not because he eateth the Lord's body. If Judas had eat Christ's body, it must needs follow, that Judas is saved. For Christ saith in the 6th of John, "Whosoever eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, hath eternal life, and I will raise him up again at the last day."
My lord, this man is an interpreter after his own mind.
I see it is but folly to talk with you; it is but lost labour. How say you? do you not believe that after the words be said, there remaineth neither bread nor wine, but the very body of Christ really? Make me a plain answer, for I will talk no more with you.
I will make you a direct answer, how I believe of the true sacrament. I do believe, that if I come to receive the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ truly ministered, believing that Christ was born for me, and that I shall be saved from my sins by his blood shedding, and so receive the sacrament in that remembrance, then I believe I do receive wholly Christ, God and man, mystically by faith: this is my belief.
Why, then it is no body without faith; God's word is of no force, as you count it.
My lord, I have told you my mind without dissimulation, and more you get not of me, without you will talk with me by the scriptures: and if you will do so, I will begin anew with you, and prove it more plainly three or four manner of ways, that you shall not say nay to that I have said.
THEN they made a great laughing, and said, This is an heretic indeed, it is time he were burned. Which words moved my spirit, and I said to them, Judge not, lest you be judged. For as you judge me, you shall be judged yourselves. For that you call heresy, I serve God truly with, as you all shall well know, when you shall be in hell, and have blood to drink, and shall be compelled to say for pain, This was the man that we jested on, and whose talk we thought foolishness, and his end to be without honour: but now we may see how he is counted among the saints of God, and we are punished. These words you shall say, being in hell, if you repent not with speed, if you consent to the shedding of my blood: wherefore look to it, I give you counsel.
What, you are angry, methinks. Now I will say more to you than I thought to have done. You were at Baxill a twelvemonth ago, and sent for the parson, and talked with him in the church-yard, and would not go into the church: for you said it was the idol's temple. Yea, I was with mine old lord, when he came to the King's-Bench to you, and you said many stout words to him.
That I said, I said: and where you said I was angry, I take God to my record, I am not, but am zealous in the truth, and speak out of the Spirit of God with chearfulness.
The Spirit of God? hough, hough, hough! Think you that you have the Spirit of God?
I believe surely that I have the Spirit of God, I praise God for it; and you are deceivers, mockers, and scorners before God, and are the children of hell, all the sort of you, as far as I can see. And therewith came in Dr. Story, pointing at me with his finger, speaking to [...] bishop in Latin, saying to me at length:
I can say nothing to him, [...]ut he is an heretic. I have heard you talk this hour and a half, and can [...]ear no reason in him.
Judge not, lest you be judged: for as you judge, you shall be judged yourself,
What, be you a preaching? you shall preach at a stake shortly with your fellows. My lord, troubl [...] yourself no more with him.
WITH these words, one brought word that the abbot of Westminster was come to dine with the bishop, and many other gentlemen and ladies. Then there was rushing away with speed to him.
THEN said Dr. Story to my keeper, Carry him to the Marshalsea again, keep him close, and let nobody come to speak with him.
AND so they departed. Then one of the priests began to flatter me, and said, For God's sake remember yourself. God hath given you a good wit: you have [...]ead the scriptures well, and have borne them well in memory. It were a great pity you should do amiss.
What a flatterer be you, to say my wit is good, and that I have read the scriptures well; and but even now you said I was an heretic, and despised me. If I be an heretic, I can have no good wit, as you have confessed. But I think your own conscience doth accuse you. God give you grace to repent, if it be his will.
I call it a good wit, because you are expert in all questions.
You may call it a wicked wit, if it agree not with God's word. Then one cried, Away, away, here come strangers. So we departed, and I came again to the Marshalsea with my keeper.
The Third Examination of Mr WOODMAN, (copied with his own Hand) before Dr. LANGDALE, Chaplain to my Lord MONTAGUE, and Mr. JAM [...] GAGE, at my Lord MONTAGUE'S House near St. Mary Overy's in Southwark, May 12, 1557.
THE 12th of May the Marshal came to the Marshalsea, and sent for me to speak with him. When I came before him and had done my duty, he asked my name, and what countryman I was; I informed him both. Then he asked me when I was abroad in the city. To whom I answered, [...] it shall please your mastership, I was abroad in the city on Monday was seven-night.
What took you abroad?
The bishop of Chichester sent for me to talk with me at his house, near St. Nichol [...]'s Shambles.
Were you abroad no otherwise th [...] so?
No, forsooth: I was never abroad since I was sent hither, but then. For I have nothing [...] do abroad, unless they send for me.
This is a marvellous matter. I promise you I was not so rebuked these seven years, [...]s I was for you within these three days. It is rep [...]ted that you were abroad in the city at certain taverns, and spake seditious words both in the tavern [...] and streets as you went.
Sir, the truth is, I was in never a house or tavern while I was abroad, but in the bishop's house, as my keeper can, and will (I am sure) testify: nor did I ever talk with any man in the streets [Page 433] as I came, but with my keeper, except one man indeed, of the parish of Framfield, in Sussex, where Mr. James Gage dwelleth. His name is Robert Smith, being one of my greatest enemies; who stood in a wain as we came by, and was unlading of ch [...]ese but a little way from the Marshalsea. Indeed I bade him God speed, and asked him how he did: and he said, well, he thanked me. And he asked me how I did: and I said, well, I praise God; and that was all the talk that we had. And these words were spoken as I came by him: I promise you, sir, I stood not still while I spake them, as my keep [...] can [...]ell: and I think these words were not sedi [...]ious words, but might be spoken well enough, I thi [...], or else it were very strait.
Then it is to be thought, that that [...] reported otherwise than it was. I am glad it [...] you say. Well, make you ready: for you [...] go forth straightway, where you shall be examined of that and of other things, where you shall answer for yourself. Go make haste, for I will tar [...]y till you be ready.
SO I departed, and went to my fellow-prisoners, and took my leave of them, desiring them to pray for me, for I expected to see them no more. I did suppose I should have gone before the council, because the marshal said, he would tarry for me himself▪ and especially because he said, it was reported that I had spoken seditious words, it made me imagine they had contrived false things against me to bring me to my end. I remembered what Christ said, "The servant is not above his lord." Seeing the Jews brought false witness against Christ, I thought they would do much more, or at least do so to me, if God would suffer them, which made me think the worst. But I was sure that all the world could not justly accuse me of any such thing, the consideration of which made me merry and joyful, being confident withal, that they could do no more against me than God would permit. I took my leave of my fellow-prisoners, and went to the marshal in the porter's lodge, and he delivered me to one of his own men, and one of my lord Montague's men, and bade me go with them: and they carried me to my lord Montague's Place, in Southwark, not far from St. Mary Overy's, and brought me into a chamber in my lord Montague's house; and there was one Dr. Langdale▪ chaplain to my lord. My keepers said to the doctor, this is the man that we went for.
Is your name Woodman?
Yea, forsooth▪ that is my name.
THEN he began with a great circumstance, and said, I am sorry for you, that you will not be ruled, but stand so much in your own conceit, displeasing your father and others, [...]udging that all the realm doth evil, saving a few that do as you do: what think you of them that died long ago, your grandfather, with their fathers before them? You judge them to be damned, and all others that use the same that they did throughout all Christendom, unless it be in Germany, and here in England a few years, and in Denmark; and yet they are returned again. Thus we are sure this is the truth, and I would you should do well. Your father is an honest man, and one of my parish, and hath wept to me divers times because you would not be ruled: and he loveth you well, and so doth all the country, both rich and poor, if it were no [...] for those evil opinions that you hold.
I pray give me leave to speak a few words to you.
Yes, say your mind.
You have told a great long tale, as it were against me (as you think,) saying, I hold this and that; I judge my father and my grandfather, and almost all the world, without it be a few of our sect. But I judge no man. But the 12th of John declareth, who it is that judgeth, and shall judge in the last day. The father shall not [...]ear the son's offences, nor the son the father's offences: but that soul that sinneth shall die, as saith the prophet. And again, We may not follow a multitude to do evil, as saith the prophets for the most go the wrong way. And Christ saith in the 12th of Luke, that his flock is a little flock. Here are places enough to discharge me, although I do not as the most do. But can any man say that I do not as I ought to do? where are my accusers?
What, you be full of scriptures me [Page 434] [...]hinks, and call your accusers as though you were afraid to utter your mind to me. But I would have you not be afraid to talk with me, for I mean no more hurt to you than I do to myself, I take God to be my record.
I cannot tell; it is hard trusting to fair words. When a man cannot trust his father nor brother, nor others that have been his familiar friends, but they deceive him, a man may lawfully follow the example Christ towards them that he never saw before, saying, "Be as wise serpents, and as innocent as doves. Beware of men, for they go about to betray you." And it maketh me much to suspect you, because you blame me for answering with the scriptures. It maketh me to doubt that you would take advantage of me, if I should speak mine own words. Wherefore I will take as good heed as I can, because I have been deceived already by them I trusted most. Wherefore blame me not, though I answer circumspectly. It shall not be said, by God's help, that I will run wilfully into mine enemy's hands, and yet I praise God my life is not dear to myself, but it is dear with God: wherefore I will do the uttermost that I can to keep it.
You are afraid where no fear is, for I was desired by my master Sheriff and his brother, and other friends, to talk with you, and they told me that you were desirous to talk with me, and now you make the matter as though you had nothing to do with me, and as though you were sent to prison for nothing: for you call for your accusers, as though there were no man to accuse you. But if there were no man to accuse you, your own hand writing did accuse you enough, that you set upon the church-door (if you remember it,) and other letters that you let fall abroad, some at one place and some at another. Wherefore you need not call for your accusers. Your own hand will accuse you, I warrant you; it is kept safe enough. I would not for two hundred pounds there were so much against me.
I will not deny mine own hand; for it cannot easily be counterfeited. I do not deny but I wrote a letter to the priest, and others of the parish, declaring their folly and presumption, to come into my house without my love or leave, and take out my child, and use it at their pleasure: which moved me to write my mind unto them: and because I could not tell how to convey it to them▪ I set it on the church door: which letter my [...] of Chichester hath; for he shewed it me when I was before him: wherein is contained nothing [...] the very scriptures, to their reproach. Let it [...] laid before me when you or he will, I will answer [...] it by the help of God, to all their shames that I wrote it to. And as for any other letters, I wrote none, as you said I did, neither had I wrote that, [...] they had done like honest neighbours. Wherefore if they be offended with me for that, I will answer them with Christ's words, in Matthew xviii. Woe unto themselves, because they gave me the dec [...] sion.
AND whereas you said, I was desirous [...] with you, and that master Sheriff and his [...] and other of my friends, willed you to talk with [...] and that I fare now as though I had nothing [...] with you, and as though I were sent to prison [...] nothing: the truth is, I know no more wherefore I am sent to prison, than the least child in this [...] knoweth. And as for me, I desired not [...] Sheriff to speak with you; but indeed he [...] me that I would speak with you, and utter [...] to you. For he supposed that I did not [...] well, and he reported you to be learned. [...] refused to talk with you at the first. For I rem [...] bered not that you were the parson at [...] wherefore I said to him, I would not [...] faith to any but the bishop. I said, he is mine [...] dinary: wherefore I appeal unto him. I am commanded by St. Peter, in the first epistle, the third chapter, to render account of my hope that I have in God, to him that hath authority: wherefore I will talk with none in that matter, but with him. Wherefore send me to him if you will, or else there shall no man know my faith, I tell you plainly.
THESE words then made the sheriff angry, and he went his way: and when he was gone from me, I remembered that it was you that he would have me to talk with; and then I remembered that I had made the promise to my father and Goodman [Page 435] Day, of Vefield, not past a fortnight before I was [...]ken, that whensoever you came into the country, I would speak with you by God's help, because they praised you so much, that you were learned, and they would fain hear us talk.
SO all these things called to remembrance, I de [...]red my keeper, which was the sheriff's man, to [...]ell his master that I would fain speak with him; [...] I had remembered things that were not in my mind before, when I spake to him. So he went to his master, and shewed him the matter, and he [...] to me; and then I told him my mind, and what promise I had made; and he said, he would send for you on the morrow, as he did, and the messenger brought word you could not come; you preached before the queen, he said. Whereupon the sheriff came up himself, and spoke to bishop Christopherson, that he should come down, but he was sick. So when he came home again, he sent me to the bishop, and I have talked with him twice already, and I am sure he can find no fault in me, if he say justly; and yet I know not where [...]ore I was sent to prison; for I was not guilty of [...]at which was laid to my charge, that I had bap [...]ed children, the which I never did, as God knoweth; wherefore I had wrong to be thus handled.
Indeed it hath been reported, that you have christened children; and that you christened your own child; but since I heard say, you would not have the child christened, which is a damnable way, if you deny baptism: and they said, your child was not christened in a fortnight or three weeks after it was born, and the chiefest of the parish were obliged to fetch it out of your house against your will. Wherefore you wrote railing words against the priest and them for their good will: the which declareth that you allow not the baptizing of children. And if the child had died, it had been damned, because it was not christened, and you should have been damned, because you were the hindrance thereof.
What abominable lies have you told? Be you not ashamed to speak such words as you have done? First you say, I christened mine own child, and by and by you say, I denied baptizing of children, and that my child was a fortnight or three weeks old before it was baptized. What abominable lies be these? I neither baptized my child myself, neither held against the baptizing of it, but did most gladly allow it; for it was baptized as soon as it was born, and I was glad thereof; therefore you are to blame to report such things of me.
I pray you, who baptized it? some unthrist of your providing.
Nay, surely, the midwife baptized it.
But it was your mind that it should be so.
Nay sure, I was not nigh home by almost twenty miles, nor heard that my wife was brought to bed till four days after the child was christened. But it was not like to live, and therefore the midwife baptized it.
Would you have had it to church to have been christened, if it had not been christened?
That is no matter what I would have done. I am sure you cannot deny but it is sufficiently done, if the midwife do it, and I hold not against the doing of it, neither did I it myself, as you said I did.
Wherefore were you displeased with them that carried it to church?
First tell me whether the child were not truly baptized by the midwife.
Yes, it was truly baptized, if she baptized it in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.
Yes, that I am sure she did, and you grant that was sufficient: and the cause that I blamed them for, was because they did more to it than need was, by your own saying. Yea, they fetched it out of my house without my leave: which was not well done.
They had it to church to confirm what was done.
Yea, but that was more than needs. But God forgive them, if it be his will. But let that matter pass. But I would you should not say, that I hold against baptizing of children; for I do not, I take God to record; but do allow it to be most necessary, if it be truly used. But methought you spake words even now that were uncomely to be spoken; if a child die, and be not baptized, it is damned. How think you? be all damned that receive not the outward sign of baptism?
Yea, that they be.
How prove you that?
"Go, saith Christ, and baptize in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, and he that believeth, and is baptized, shall be saved: and he that believeth not, shall be damned." These be the words of Christ which are my warrant.
Then by your saying, baptism bringeth faith, and all that be baptized in water shall be saved. Shall they? How say you?
Yea, that they shall; if they die before they come to discretion, they shall be saved every one of them; and all that be not baptized, shall be damned every one of them.
Then my spirit was moved with him sharply, because I had manifest scriptures fresh in my mind against his saying. Then said I:
O Lord God how dare you speak such blasphemy against God and his word, as you do? How dare you for your life take upon you to preach, and teach the people, and understand not what you say? For I protest before God you understand not the scriptures, but as far as natural reason can comprehend. For if you did, you would be ashamed to speak as you do.
Wherein have I spoken amiss? take heed, you have a toy in your head will make you despair: I dare say you cannot tell what you say. Wherefore reprove you me as you do?
Because you blaspheme God; and as for despairing, take heed to yourself. For I cannot [...] but you be out of your wits already; and as for me, I praise God, I can te [...] what I say, and [...] you have said; which shall turn to your [...] you will talk by the scriptures with me.
SO when he perceived that I spake earnestly, and challenged him to talk by the word, his colour b [...] gan to change, and his flesh began to tremble [...] quake. And I said:
PROVE your sayings true, if you can; for I [...] prove them false, with God's help. You said, [...] children, or others, that be not baptized with wa [...]ter, shall be damned. I dare not say so for all [...] good in the world. And you brought in the saying of Christ for your warrant. In Mark xvi. it is written, "Whoso believeth, and is baptized, shall be saved;" which words be very true: "and [...] so believeth not, shall be damned." Which [...] be very true also. He says, "He that [...] not, shall be damned." 'Yea, St. John saith, " [...] that believeth not, is condemned already, [...] he believeth not." But neither of these two [...], nor any other scipture in all the New Testa [...]ment, saith, That he that is not baptized shall [...] damned, or is damned already; but if he [...] not, he shall be damned, and is damned already▪ [...] is aforesaid. Then he would have interrupted [...] and would have laid to my charge, that I was [...] Anabaptist. But I would give him no place [...] speak, but said:
LET me make an end, and then say what you can. You shall have as much to do, with God's help, in this matter, as ever you had to answer a thing in your life. You know, I am sure, it is [...] manners to pluck a tale out of a man's mouth, not [...] it the order of reasoning, as you know that bett [...]r than I can tell you. Then Dr. Langdale bade [...] say on.
My saying was, that they that believe not, shall be damned, and are damned already. But I dare not say for all the goods under heaven, that all they that receive no material baptism by water shall be damned, as you have said: yet I would you should not gather of these words, that I [Page 437] [...] baptism, as you were about to lay to my [...], before ever I had half told out my tale. [...]ut I would not have you, nor any man so rash in [...], to condemn the thing that they are not [...] prove by the word, and to make it seem to [...], that the outward washing of water were [...] cause of faith.
Why, is it not so? Will you deny it? How say you? Will you deny it? I say, the child [...] no faith before it is baptized; and therefore the baptizing bringeth faith. How say you to it? Make me a plain answer to this question.
Now I perceive you go about nothing [...] to take advantage of my words. But, by [...] help, I will answer you so, that you shall [...] your sayings untrue. And yet I will not [...] mine own words, but the words of the Holy [...] out of the mouth of the prophets and apos [...] ▪ and then ask them whether they will deny it.
YOU said, that faith cometh by baptism, had by [...] of material water. I must be so bold to ask [...] Jacob was baptized before he had faith. [...] Paul saith in the ninth chapter to the Romans, [...] ever, the children were born, before ever they had done either good or bad, that the purpose of God▪ which is by election, might stand, not by [...] of works, but the grace of the Caller, [...] elder shall serve the younger. Jacob have I [...]ayed, and Esau have I hated." How think you, [...] this child faith before he were born, or no? [...] to this if you can.
What, you speak of the old law. Jacob [...] christened, but circumcised. I speak of baptism, and you are gone from baptizing to the time of circumcision; answer me to the baptizing. And [...]member by your talk, you deny original sin and free-will, by the words that you brought in of St. Paul.
FOR if children can be saved without baptism, then it must needs follow, that children have no original sin, which is put away in baptizing. But I think you know not what original sin is, nor free will neither.
Yes, I praise God, I think I can tell them better than you can. First, I pray you what free-will hath man to do good of himself? Tell me this first, and then I will answer to all other questions that you have objected against me.
I say that all men have as much free will now, as Adam had before his fall.
I pray you how prove you that?
Thus I prove it, that as sin entered into the world, and by the means of one that sinned all men became sinners, which was by Adam; so by the obedience of one man, righteousness came upon all men that had sinned, and set them as free as they were before their fall, which was by Jesus Christ, Rom. v.
O Lord, what an overthrow have you given yourself here in original sin, and yet cannot see it? For in proving that we have free will, you have denied quite original sin. For here you have declared that we be set as free by the death of Christ, as Adam was before his fall, and I am sure that Adam had no original sin before his fall. If we be as free now as he was then, I marvel wherefore Paul complained thrice to God, to take away the sting of it, God making him answer, and saying, "My grace is sufficient for thee."
THESE words, with divers others, prove original sin in us; but not that it shall hurt God's elect people, but that his grace is sufficient for all his. But you say in one place, it is not without baptism; and in another place, you put it away quite by the death of Christ; and in very deed you have spoken truer in the matter than you are aware of For all that believe in Christ are baptized in the blood of Christ that he shed on the Cross, and in the water that he sweat for pain, and the putting away of our sins at his death. And yet I say with David in the 51st Psalm, "In sin was I born, and in sin hath my mother conceived me:" but in no such sin that shall be imputed, because I am born of God by faith, as St. John saith, chap. ii. Therefore I am blessed, as saith the prophet, Psalm xxiii. "Because the Lord imputeth not my sin," and not because I have no sin; but because God hath not imputed [Page 438] my sins. Not of our own deserving, but of his free mercy he hath saved us. Where is now your boasted free will that you speak of? If we have free will, then our salvation cometh of our own selves, and not of God; which is great blasphemy against God and his word.
AND St. James saith, chap. i. "Every good and perfect gift cometh from above, from the Fathers of light, with whom is no variableness, neither is he changed into darkness. Of his own will he begat [...]. For the wind bloweth where it listeth, and we hear the sound thereof," as likewise saith St. John, chap. iii. "but we cannot tell from whence it cometh neither whither it goeth: even so is it with every one that is born of God." For St. Paul saith, Phil. ii. "It is God that worketh in us both to will and to do of his good pleasure." Seeing then that every good and perfect gift cometh from above, and alighteth upon whom it pleaseth God, and that he worketh in us both to will and to do, methinks all the rest of our own will is little worth, or naught at all, unless it be wickedness. So methinks here be places enough to prove that a man hath no free will to do good of himself; with an hundred places more that I could recite, if time did serve. And as for original sin, I think I have declared my mind therein, how it remaineth in man; which you cannot deny, unless you deny the word of God. Now, if you will suffer me I, will prove my saying of Jacob and Esau, that I brought in to prove that faith was before baptism, and you refused it, because (you said) Jacob was not baptized. If you will give me leave, you shall hear what I can say therein: for I suppose you think my talk long. This I said, because I peceived he much offended at my sayings.
Say what you can; for what I have said to you is ineffectual. I was desired to send for you, to teach you, but you go about to reprove me. Say what you will, for me.
I take not upon me to teach you, but to answer such things as you shall lay to my charge: and I speak not mine own mind, but the mind of the Holy Ghost, written by the prophets and apostles. Will you give me leave to answer briefly in this matter, that you may report to others the opinions I hold? And he said he was contented▪ [...] I think it was for nothing but to have taken [...] of my words.
FIRST, If you remember you said, that [...] child had died without baptism, if I had [...] cause that it had not been baptized, the child [...] have been damned, and I too. How say you▪
Yea, that you should.
That is most untrue. For the [...] saith, "The father shall not bear the child's [...], nor the child's the father's: but the [...] sinneth shall die." What could the child have [...] withal, if it had died without baptism? the [...] could not do withal. What say you to this? I [...] sure that which I brought in, in the old law, to [...] that faith is before baptism, is not disagree [...] the word. For circumcision was a figure [...]. And that I may bring to prove [...] by, as well as Peter did: for he brought in [...] flood, which was a long time before Jaco [...] [...] Esau, to prove baptism, saying, "While [...] was preparing, wherein few (that is to say [...] souls) were saved by water, like a baptism also [...] saveth us, not in putting away of the f [...]ith of [...] flesh, but there is a good conscience [...] God."
HERE Peter proveth, that water had not sav [...] [...] and the other seven no more than it saved all [...] if it had not been for their faith, which faith [...] saveth us, not in putting away the filthy soil [...] flesh, by the washing of the water, but by a [...] conscience consenting unto God.
BUT you said, If they be baptised with water, [...] they die before they come to years of discretion, they [...] all saved; which St. Peter is clean against unless you grant that children have faith before they are baptized.
NOW I ask you what consent of conscience the children have, being infants. For you say, they believe not before they are baptized: therefore, they consent not ot believe not. And by this it followeth, that none shall be saved, although they they be baptized. I would fain know how you can answer this.
YOU are the most perverse man that [...] I knew. You know not what you say. The children are baptized in their godfather's and godmother's faith, and that is the good conscience that St. Peter speaketh of: and the christening is the [...]ping of the law that St. Peter speaketh of, saying▪ Neither is circumcision any thing worth, nor [...]circumcision any thing worth, but keeping of [...] law is all together. Like as the circumcision was keeping of the old law, so is baptism the keeping of the new law.
Ah, I thought if you would talk with [...] you should be fain to bring in the old law to [...] your sayings by (for all that you refused [...]) when I brought it in. But yet it serveth not [...] your purpose, so much as you think for; [...] you have confessed, that neither circumci [...] [...]ileth, nor uncircumcision; which you [...] coupled with baptism, proving that [...] them availeth, but keeping of the law is all [...]: which law is kept (you say) by the outward signs; which is not so: for Abraham believ [...] [...], and that was counted to him for [...] ▪ and this was before he was circumcised. [...] children believe before they be either circumci [...] baptized, according, to my first saying of Jacob [...], "Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated·" These [...] declare that Jacob had faith in his mother's [...]: and John Baptist was sanctified in his [...] womb, and therefore it was counted to them [...] righteousness: and I am sure, if they had [...] before they had either received circumcision or [...], as concerning the outward deed, they [...]hould have been saved. For God's gifts and callings are such, that he cannot repent of them. But, be your saying, he doth both repent and change. For you say, keeping of the outward law is all together; but a bad excuse is as good as none at all. And where you said, the children are baptised in their godfathers' and godmothers' faith, they being all unbelievers, in what faith is that child baptized then? In none at all, by your own saying. Which words made him stamp and stare.
What? then you would count that there were very few believers, if there be not one of three that believeth. You enter into judgment against the people. Possibly you think there be none that believe well unless they be of your mind. Then indeed Christ's flock was a very little flock.
Indeed these are Christ's words in the 12th of Luke, which we may see to be very true. Yea, you said, if there were not one amongst three, there were very few. But there is not one amongst three hundred, for any thing that I can see. For if there were, there would not be so many that would seek their neighbour's goods and lives as there be.
Is the flock of Chirst such a little flock as you speak of? You may call it a great flock. How many be there of them, can you tell me?
A pretty question, I think it is that you ask me: as though I did make myself equal with God. No, no, you shall catch no such advantage of my words, nor do I know how many there be. But I will tell you as near at I can.
Yea, I pray you tell me as much as you can, seeing you be so cunning,
You shall see my judgment in it by and by. First, the prophet saith, "Follow not a multitude to do evil, for they must go the wrong way. "For the most go the wrong way. There is one to know them.
THEN Christ saith in the 7th of Matthew, "Broad is the way, and wide is the gate that leadeth unto destruction, and many there be that go in thereat; and straight is the gate, and narrow is the way that leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it." And in the 22th of Luke, it is written (which words were spoken of Chirst), "Come you little flock, it is my Father's will to give you a kingdom." The third point is this, in the third of Mark, and second of Matthew, "You (saith Christ, shall know the tree by the fruit. A good tree bringeth forth good fruit, and a bad tree brineth forth bad fruit:" so by the fruits I know them: for every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit, must be hewn down, and cast into the fire (into hell I think Christ meant), and your fruits declare that you be one of them. Thus have I proved four ways, that the people who shall be saved make but a small company in comparison with the rest. [Page 440] But if that be not enough, for the proffof thereof, I have twenty more ways to prove it by, and you were never the nearer your purpose.
What a naughty man are you! you would make the most patient man in the world angry with you. I think your talk is nothing but pride and vain-glory, with mockery, despising and judging of men. It is time such a fellow were apprehended indeed. Such a one is enough to trouble a whole country. I think he is blessed of God that took you; for you are not fit to be in a common-wealth.
WITH divers other such like words that I cannot recite, they came out so thick, with such stamping, as though he had been out of his wits. I held my peace until he had made an end of his talk, and then I spake.
WHEREIN have I said amiss? or have I not answered you unto every question that you have demanded of me? what fault can you find in one word that I have said? I dare say you can find none. I marvel why you take on thus against me, having no cause so to do.
No, no, you have not answered me to original sin, you deny original sin.
WITH these words Mr. James Gage came in at the door; and I think he stood at the door a good while before he came in, and that Mr. Langdale saw him: for his face was towards the door, and my face was from it.
Ah, Woodman, I think Mr. Doctor and you cannot agree.
Yes, sir, I think we agree very well.
Without doubt, sir, he is the naughtiest man that ever I talked with in my life: for he will have his own way in all things.
Woodman, leave that pride. Do not trust too much to your own wit. Harken to this man, this is a learned man I tell you. He is known to be learned; or else he would not be allowed to preach before the queen's majesty; and I dare say he will tell thee nothing, nor will thee [...] do any thing, but that he will do himself: [...] dare say, he will not go to the devil to bring you there. How say you Mr. Doctor? You would think us mad, if we would hurt ourselves to [...] you. No, I promise you, my brother, neither I, [...] any gentleman in the country, I think of my conscience, but would you should do as well as their own souls and bodies, as a great many of them have said to thy face whilst thou was at my brother's, and which you cannot deny.
I can say no otherwise but that I can gently treated at your brother's, both with [...] and drink, and gentle words, both by you and him, and divers other gentlemen: and I am sure neither you nor they can say, that you found me unreas [...] able at any time. For I said I was contente [...] [...] learn of them that were able to teach me, and so I am, as God knoweth: and here, Mr. Doctor, I think, can say no otherwise; for I dare say he [...] find no fault in the talk that we have had.
No, marry, I can find nothing [...] you. I promise you, Mr. Gage if you [...] here, you would have said so yourself. He [...] me up indeed, and said, he wondered how I [...] preach. For he said, I understood not the [...], but as far as natural reason comprehended▪ as though he understood all, and I nothing. With many other such like words he made a great complaint to him of me, and said to Mr. James Gage, he would make you believe that I could find [...] fault in him. Yes, I understand, he denies [...] sin.
Doth he so? by St. Mary that is a great matter: Woodman, leave your pride. That pride will come to nought. Can you live without sin?
Sir, now I perceive he will soon be lie me behind my back, when he will not stick to lie before my face.
HE saith, I denied original sin; and it was he himself, as I will let you be judge in the matter. For as he went about to prove that man had free [Page 441] will, he said, we were set as free by the death of Christ, as Adam was before his fall: which words prove plainly, that we have no original sin: and I took him withal, and said, Had Adam original sin before his fall? and then he could not tell what to say, but cavilled with words, and said he meant not so; and therefore I marvel he is not ashamed to tell such lies to my face. These words made them both astonished.
Mr. Doctor, he said even now you could find no fault in all his talk. I will bid you ask him a question, and I'll warrant you, you will find fault enough. I pray you ask him, how he believeth in the sacrament of the altar. I think he will make but a bad account thereof.
Yes, I will make account good enough of that, by God's help.
Well, how say you to the sacrament of the altar?
I say, I know no such sacrament, unless Christ be the altar that you mean.
Lo! I told you you should soon find fault in him, if you came to the point with him. You should have begun with that first, and never have talked with him about other things. What, know you not the sacrament of the altar?
No sure, I know no such, unless Christ be the altar that you mean; for Christ is [...]he altar of all goodness. And if you mean Christ to be the altar of the sacrament you speak of, you shall soon hear my mind and belief therein.
Well, we mean Christ to be the altar. Say your mind, and go briefly to work; for I think it almost dinner-time.
I pray you go roundly to work, that you may make an end before dinner.
Yes, you shall soon hear my mind therein, by God's help. I do believe, that whensoever I come to receive the sacrament of the body and blood of Jesus Christ, being truly ministered according to Christ's institution, I believing that Christ was born of the virgin Mary, and that he was crucified on the cross, and shed his blood for the remission of my sins, and so take and eat the sacrament of bread and wine in that remembrance, that then I do receive whole Christ, God and man, mystically by faith. This is my belief of the sacrament, which no man is able to disprove.
By St. Mary I can find no fault in this. How say you, Mr. Doctor?
Sir, you see not so much as I do. For he goeth craftily to work, I tell you as I have heard. For though he hath granted, that the faithful receiver receiveth the body of Christ, God and man, yet he hath not granted that is is the body of Christ before it be received, as you shall see by and by, I warrant you, by his own words. How say you? Is it the body of Christ as soon as the words be spoken by the priest, or not? for these words will try him more than all the rest.
Doth the word say that it is his body before it is received? If it do, I will say so too.
Why then we shall agree well enough, if you will be tried by the word.
Yes indeed, that I will; God forbid else.
Why, the word saith it is his body before it is eaten.
Those words would I fain hear; but I am sure they be not in the Bible.
No? That you shall see presently, and then turned to the 22d of Luke, and there he read, "When supper was done, Christ took bread, gave thanks, and brake it, and gave to his disciples, and said, Take, eat, this is my body:" Then they spake both at once, Here he saith it is his body.
Mr. Gage, I do not deny that he called it his body, but not before eating, as I said before; wherefore I pray you mark the words. Christ said, "Take, eat:" I pray you, sir, mark these words that he said, "Take and eat," and then he said, "it was his body." So you see, eating goeth before. For he said, "Eat, this is my body." So [Page 442] according to the very word, I do believe it is his body. Which words made them both astonished.
Why, then by your saying, Judas eat not the body of Christ. How say you, did he not?
Nay, I ask you. Did he?
I a [...]k you.
And I ask you.
And I ask you.
Marry, I ask you: and I bid you answer if you dare for your life; for whatsoever you answer, unless you say as I have said, you will damn your own soul. For, Mr. Gage, I protest before God, I would you should do as well as mine own soul and body; and it lamenteth my heart to see how you be deceived with them; they be deceivers all the sort of them. He cannot answer to this, but either he must prove Judas to be saved, or else he must prove that it is no body before it be received in faith, as you shall well perceive, by God's help, if he dare answer the question.
Yes, I dare say he dareth. What, you need not to threaten him so.
Then let him answer if he can.
THEN he said he knew what I would say to him; therefore he was much in doubt to answer the question.
Mr. Gage, I will tell you in your ear what are the words he will answer me with, before I speak to him.
THEN he told Mr. Gage a tale in his ear, and said, I have told Mr. Gage what you will say.
Yea, and I will speak the truth for both parties.
Well, how say you? Did Judas eat the body of Christ, or not?
Yes, I say Judas did eat the body of Christ.
Then it must needs follow, that Judas hath everlasting life: for Christ saith in the 6th of John, "Whoso eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, hath eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day." If Judas did eat Christ's body, I am sure you cannot deny but that he did both eat his flesh, and drink his blood, and then is Judas saved by Christ's own words. Therefore now are you compelled to say that it was not Christ's body, or else that Judas is saved.
Surely these be the very words that Master Doctor told me in mine ear that you would say to him.
Well, let us see how well he can avoid this argument.
Judas is damned, and yet he eat the body of Christ; but he eat it unworthily▪ and therefore he is damned.
Where find you that Judas did eat the body of Christ unworthily?
They be St. Paul's words, 1 Cor. xi.
Master Gage, I desire you for God's sake mark well the words that I say. If St. Paul speak any such words there, or in any other place; if there be any such words written in all the Bible, that ever any man eat the body of Christ unworthily, then say that I am the falsest man that ever you heard speak with a tongue. But indeed, these are the words of St. Paul, "Whoso eateth of this bread, and drinketh of this cup unworthily, eateth and drinketh his own damnation, because he maketh no difference between the sacrament and other bread and drink. And that is St. Paul's meaning, and not that any man doth or can eat the body of Christ unworthily. For whosoever eateth the body of Christ, hath everlasting life, as is aforesaid in the 6th of John; with these words one came for them to dinner in all haste.
I am sorry, I would fain hear more of this talk, but we can have it another day well enough.
Nay, master Gage, I will never talk with him any more; for he is the most unreasonable man that ever I talked with in all my life.
THEN Mr. Gage put off his cap, and desired him that he would not refuse to talk with me, and that it might not be grievous to him. For, said he, we will seek all means possible to make him an honest man, and to keep him from burning, if we could; for if it had not been for me and my brother, he had been burnt before this.
Sir, for your sake, and for my master your brother's sake, and for his father's sake, and other of his friends sakes, that have spoken to me many times with weeping tears, I will do the best to him that I can; but for no love nor favour that I bear to him, I tell you the truth.
Woodman, you hear what master Doctor saith: when will you come again?
Even when you will send for me. For I am a prisoner, and cannot come when I would. Or if I should desire to come, it will cost me money, and I have none to give: but if you send for me, it will cost me none.
Well, I will send for you on Friday or Saturday at farthest, for to-morrow I must ride out of town; and I would fain hear you talk.
Sir, I would be very glad you should hear our talk always, and I trust in God you shall hear me say nothing, but the word of God shall warrant.
SO Mr. Gage took his leave, and went away to his lodging, which was right in my way to the prison; and when he came without my lord Montague's gate, there we met with one Hood, of Bursted, a smith.
THEN said Mr. Gage, Woodman, I had forgot one thing, that Hood hath brought me in remembrance of as soon as I saw him; for he heard when the tale was told me. Hood, did you not hear when Smith, of Framfield, told me that he saw Woodman abroad in the city at liberty.
Yea forsooth, that I did.
Yea surely, and I was very glad, for I had well hoped you had been conformable. But I heard otherwise afterwards again, that you had leave of the keeper to go abroad and speak openly in the streets as you went up and down.
Indeed so the marshal told me to-day. But indeed I was never abroad since I came to prison, but when I was se [...]t for; and indeed the same time I was abroad with my keeper, coming from the bishop, and as I was coming, even not far from the Marshalsea, I saw Goodman Smith stand in a wain unloading of cheese, and I asked him how he did, even as I went by, and never staid for the matter, and thereupon it did arise. So I departed from them, with my keeper to the Marshalsea again, where now I a [...] as a sheep appointed to be slain, but I am merry, I praise God.
The Fourth Examination of RICHARD WOODMAN, before the Bishop of Winchester, the Bishop of Rochester, and a certain Doctor, with divers other Priests and Gentlemen, May 25, 1557.
I Was brought from the Marshalsea to the said bishops and priests, sitting in St. George's church, in Southwark, by one of the marshal's men, and one of the sheriff's men. When I came before them, and had done my duty to them as nigh as I could, then said the bishop of Winchester,
WHAT is your name?
My name is Richard Woodman.
Ah, Woodman! you were taken and apprehended for heresy about three years ago, and were sent to prison in the King's-Bench, and there remained a long time. Mine old lord of Chichester, being a learned famous man, well known in this realm of England, and almost throughout all Christendom, I think came to prison to you, and there, and at other places, called you before him divers times, travailing with you, and persuading you many times (because he was your ordinary) to pluck you from your heresies that you held, but he could by no means reform you.
[Page 444]WHEREUPON you were delivered to the commissioners, and they could do no good with you neither. Then they sent you unto my lord of London. My lord of London calling you before him divers times, means was made to him by your friends, that you might be released. My lord having a good hope in you, that you would become an honest man, because he had heard so of you in times past, yea and of yourself promising him, that you would go home and recant the heresies which you held, delivered you; sending also a letter of your recantation to the commissary, that he should see it done. But as soon as you were out of his hands, you were as bad as ever, and would never fulfil your promise, but have hid yourself in the woods, bushes, dens, and caves, and thus have you continued ever since, till it was now of late. Then the sheriff of that county (being a worshipful man) hearing thereof, sent certain of his men, and took you in a wood, and so carried you to his house. I cannot tell his name. What is your sheriff's name?
His name is sir Edward Gage.
Well, you were apprehended for heresy, and being at master Gage's three weeks or more, you were gently treated there; he and other gentlemen persuading you divers times, little prevailed.
THEN you appealed to the bishop of Chichester that now is. The sheriff, like a worshipful man, sent you to him, and he hath travailed with you, and others also, and can do no good with you, whereupon we have sent for you.
Then I spake to him: for I thought he would be long before he would make an end. I thought he was too long in telling of those lies against me there already. Yea, I kept silence from good words, but it was great pain and grief to me, as David said. At length the fire was so kindled in my heart, that I could not chuse but speak with my tongue; for I feared lest any of the company should have departed before I had answered to his lies, and so the gospel be slanderd by long silence. So I said, My lord, I pray you let me now answer for myself, for it is time.
I permit you to answer to these things that I have said.
I thank God for that, and I think myself happy (as Paul said when he was brought before king Agrippa) that I may this day answer for myself. My lord, I promise you there is never a word of your saying true that you have alledged against me.
I cannot tell, but thus it is reported of you. As for me, I never saw you before this day; but I am sure it is not all lies that I have said, as you report.
Yes, my lord, there is never a true wo [...] in all that you have said. And further, where yo [...] said you never saw me before this day, you have both heard me and seen me before this day, l dare say.
I think I heard you indeed on Sunday, where you played the malapert fellow: but I cannot tell that I saw you. But I pray you, were yo [...] not taken in the woods by the sheriff's men?
No, I was taken near my own house, I being in my house when they came, wherefore that is not true.
Were you not three weeks at the sheriff's?
Yes that I was, just a month, and was gently treated by him; I can say no otherwise; for I had meat and drink enough, and fair words.
It is not all lies then, as it chance. For I spake but of three weeks, and you confess a month yourself.
Yet your tale is never the truer for that: for you said I was there three weeks for heresy, which is not so: for I was not apprehended for heresy at the first, neither did my old lord of Chichester travail with me to pull me from heresy as you said; for I held none then, neither do I now, as God knoweth, neither was I sent so the commissioners, nor to the bishop of London for [Page 445] heresy, neither was I delivered to him for any such thing, nor promised him to recant, as you said I did. Wherefore I marvel that you are not ashamed to tell so many lies, being a bishop, that should be an example to others.
Lo, what an arrogant heretic he is. He will deny God; for he that denieth his own hand, denieth God.
My lord, judge not lest you be judged yourself: for as you have judged me, you shall be judged, if you repent not; and if I have set my hand to any recantation, let it be seen to my shame before this audience; for I will never deny mine own hand, by God's help.
It is not here now, but I think it may be had well enough; but if it cannot be found, by whom will you be tried?
By my lord of London; for he dealt like a good man with me in that matter for which I was sent to prison. For it was upon the breach of a statute, as master Sheriff here can tell. For he was sheriff then, as he is now, and can tell how I was tossed up and down from sessions to sessions; and because I would not consent that I had offended therein, they sent me to prison again.
THEN my lord of Chichester being mine ordina [...]ry, and I being his tenant, came to me, to persuade me to consent to them, and to find myself in fault, when I was in none: to which I would not agree; but I desired that he would see me released of my wrong; but he said he could not; but willed me or my friends to speak to the commissioners for me, because it was a temporal matter: and when I came before them, the [...] sent me to my lord of London, and my lord of London was certified by the hands of almost thirty men, both esquires, gentlemen, and yeomen▪ the chief in all the country where I dwelt, that I had not offended in the matter that I was sent to prison for: whereupon he delivered me, not requiring me to recant heresies, for I held none (as God knoweth), neither do I [...]ow: nor do I know for what I was sent to prison, no more than any man here knoweth: for I was [...]ken away from my work.
No? Why then did you appeal to my lord of Chichester, if it were not for heresy?
Because there were laid to my charge that I had baptized children, and married folks, which I never did, for I was no where minister. Wherefore I appealed to mine ordinary, to clear myself thereof, which I have done. Wherefore if any man have any thing against me, let him speak: for I came not hither to accuse myself, neither will I.
Master Sheriff, can you tell upon what breach of statute he was sent to prison first?
Yea, my lord, that I can.
My lord, if you will give me leave, I will shew you the whole matter.
Nay, master Sheriff, I pray you tell the matter, seeing you know it.
My [...], it was for speaking to a curate in the pulpit, as I remember.
Ah, like enough, that he would not stick to reprove a curate. For did you not see how he fashioned himself to speak to me in the pulpit on Sunday? He played the impudent fellow with me; and therefore it is no great wonder that he played that part with another.
Why, you will not blame me for that, I am sure. For we spake for no other cause, but to purge ourselves of those hereresies that yo [...] laid to our charge. For these were your words [...] people, these men that be brought before us, [...]eing here, deny Christ; to be God, and the Holy Ghost to to be God
which might seem to the whole audience, that you meant us all. Wherefore to clear ourselves thereof we spake, and said we held no such thing. And you said you would cut out our tougues. But I am sure you have no such law.
Yes that we have, if you blaspheme, and as it chanced, I found such amongst you.
Indeed after we spake, you declared who they were, but not before: for you spake generally. Wherefore we blasphemed not, but purged ourselves.
But I pray you how can you purge yourself for speaking to the curate, that it is not heresy?
Forsooth these be the words of the statute; Whosoever doth interrupt any preacher or preachers, lawfully authorized by the queen's majesty, or by any other lawful ordinary, that all such shall suffer three months imprisonment, and furthermore be brought to the quarter sessions, there (being sorry for the same) to be released upon his good behaviour one whole year. But I had not so offended, as it was well proved; for he that I spoke to was not lawfully authorized, nor had put away his wife. Wherefore it was not lawful for him to preach by your own law; and therefore I brake not the statute, though I spake to him.
I am glad I perceive this man speaketh against priests' marriages; he is not contented with priests that have wives. He is an honester man than I took him for, master Sheriff, have him away. I am glad he loveth not priests' marriages.
Then I would have answered to his saying, but he would in no wise hear me, but bade the sheriff have me away. So the sheriff took me by the hand, and plucked me away, and would not let me speak, but going out of the chancel door, I said, I would shew him the whole matter, if he would have given me leave, but seeing he will not, if he will let me go so, they shall see whether I will not go home to my wife and children, and keep them, as my bounden duty is, by the help of God. So I was sent to the Marshalsea again, where I now am merry, I praise God therefore, as a sheep appointed to be slain.
MOREOVER, I was credibly informed by one of our brethren that heard our talk, that the bishop said when I was gone, that they would take me whilst I was somewhat good. Which words seemed to many of the people that were there, that I spake against priests' marriages, but I did not, but did only answer to such questions as he asked me, as you shall perceive well by the words, if you mark them, whi [...] words were these:
HOW can you purge yourself from heresy, for talking to the curate in the pulpit, and not offend the statute? said the bishop; meaning thereby, I think to have advantage of my words; but it was not God's will that he should at that time. For I answered him by the words of the statute, which words be as hereafter followeth, (that is) W [...]soever doth interrupt any preacher or preachers, [...] fully authorized by the queen's majesty, or by [...] other lawful ordinary, that all such shall suffer th [...] months imprisonment. But I prove that this m [...] was not lawfully authorized to preach (by their own law) because he had not put away his wife. For their law is, that no priest may say mass, [...] preach with the mass, but he must first be separated from his wife. That is, because honest marriag [...] be good and commendable, and their's naught [...] abominable; therefore they cannot dwell together.
NOW I give you all to understand, that I did not reprove this priest because he had a wife, but because he taught false doctrine, which grieved m [...] soul, because he had been a fervent preacher against the mass, and all the idolatry thereof seven years before, and then came and held with it again for which cause I reproved him in the pulpit; and the words that I spake to him are written in divers of my examinations at my first imprisonment. But in very deed, I knew not of the statute when I reproved him. But because I was sent to prison upon the breach of it, I bought a statute book, and when I had perused it, I peceived I had not offended by their own law; and therefore still when I was called to answer, I answered them with their own law. But yet they kept me in prison, a year and almost three quarters before I was released. I was at mine answer for that eighteen times. If any think I do not allow bishops and priests' marriages, let them look in my first examination before the bishop of Chichester that now is, during this my imprisonment, and there they will find what I have said on the matter. The truth is, I looked to be condemned with my brother that same day: but [...] all see that they can do nothing but as God will permit [Page 447] them to do. But when the time is fully come, I trust in God I shall run that joyful race that my brethren have done. Thus I commit you all into the hands of God, who is the preserver, defender, and keeper of all his elect for evermore. Amen.
The Fifth Examination of Mr. RICHARD WOODMAN, before the Bishop of Winchester, the Archdeacon of Canterbury, Dr. LANGDALE, a fat Priest, and others whose Names I know not, at St. Mary Overy's Church, in Southwark, June 15, 1557.
WOODMAN, you was before us the last day, and would not be known in any wise that you were sent to prison for heresy, and called for your accusers, and stood stoutly in defending of yourself, and on your departing I had thought you had spoke against priests' marriages, thinking by your words we should have found you an honest man, and conformable, when we had called you before us again. You told such a fair tale for yourself, as [...] you had been free from all that was laid to your charge: for you said it was all lies that I told against you; but since I have proved the contrary, as here is your own hand to shew. By which I have proved, that you reproved not the priest for lacking of authority, and because he had not put away his wife, but because you liked not his preaching. For indeed I took it, that you reproved him because he was not lawfully authorized, but I have proved the contrary since.
I told you not that I did either reprove him for lack of authority, or because I liked not his preaching, but I told you wherefore I was first sent to prison. For you said it was for heresy, and made a long tale against me. And indeed I told you that there was never a word of your sayings true, but were all lies, as they were indeed. For I never was sent to prison for heresy, neither held I any then, nor do now; I take heaven and earth to witness; but I told you I was sent to prison upon the breach of a statute, which was for speaking to a priest in the pulpit, and for that cause the justices of that country thought that I had offended the statute, and called me before them, and would have had me bound to my good behaviour, and because I refused it they sent me to prison. And these be the words of the statute, as I told you the last day: "If any man do interrupt any preacher or preachers, lawfully authorized by the queen's majesty, or by any other lawful ordinary, that then every party that so offendeth, shall suffer three months imprisonment, and furthermore be brought to the quarter-sessions, and there being sorry for the same, and also bound for his good behaviour one whole year, to be released, or else to return to prison again."
AND when I was in prison I bought a statute book, which when I had perused over, I found by the words thereof that I had not offended, because he was not lawfully authorized, as the bishop of London was certified by the hands of almost thirty of the chief men in the country. For he had not put away his wife, and therefore the statute took not place on me, as I told you the other day. Wherefore my lord of London, seeing me have so much wrong, did like a good man to me in that matter, and released me. Now when I had told you this matter, you bade the sheriff take me away; you said you were glad I held against priests' marriages, because I answered to the question you asked me.
My lord, do you not hear what he saith by my lord of London? He saith he is a good man in that he released him, but he meaneth that he is good in nothing else.
What? can you tell me what I mean? let every man say as he findeth; he did justly to me in that matter. I say, if he be not good in any thing else, as you say, he shall answer for it, and not I; for I have nothing to do with other matters.
Well, how say you? How liked [...]ou his preaching? I pray you tell us.
That is no matter how I liked it. Howsoever I liked it, I offended not the statute. Wherefore you have nothing to say to me for that, I am sure.
Well, how like you this then? Here is your own hand-writing. I am sure you will not deny it. Will you look on it?
It is mine own hand-work indeed, which [Page 448] by God's help I will never deny, nor ever yet did.
And here is good gear, I tell you. I pray you hearken well to it: these be the words before the commissioners. How say you? Do not you believe as soon as the words are spoken by the priest, that there remaineth neither bread nor wine, but only the very body of Christ, both flesh and blood, as he was born of the virgin Mary? These were the words of the commissioners.
AND then thou saidst, thou durst not say otherwise than the scripture saith. I cannot find (say you) that it is the body of Christ before it is received by faith, bringing in the 22d of Luke, saying, Christ said, "Take, eat, this is my body." So I cannot prove it is his body before it be eaten. Then said the commissioners, Did not Judas eat Christ's body? And if you can prove that Judas is saved (said you), I must grant that he eat his body. For Christ saith in the 6th of John, "Whoso eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, hath eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day;" which words prove, said you, that if Judas eat the body of Christ, he must needs be saved. How say you now? Did Judas eat the body of Christ, or not?
Then I perceived he went about nothing but to catch words of me in his diocese, to condemn me with. Though I should confound him ever so much, I perceived that he was fully bent thereto, To whom I answered and said:
I will answer you to no such thing, for I am none of your diocese; wherefore I will not answer to you.
Thou art within my diocese, and thou hast offended within my diocese; and therefore I will have to do with thee.
Have to do with me if you will; but I will have nothing to with you, I tell you plainly. For though I be now in your diocese, I have not offfended in your diocese; if I have, shew we wherein.
Why hear is thy own hand-writing, which thou affirmedst in my diocese.
I do not deny but it is my own hand-writing; but that does not prove that I have offended in your diocese; for that doth but declare what talk there was betwixt the commissioners and me, with which you have nothing to do.
No, hold him a book, and thou shal [...] swear whether thou holdest now or not, and whether thou didst not write it in my diocese, as I think thou didst; lay thy hand on the book.
I will not be sworn for you; for I [...] not of your diocese; and therefore you have nothing to do with me: and as for the writing of the same, I never wrote a word of it in your diocese.
No, did you not? my lord, let me [...]e; I will find where he wrote it.
THEN he took it and looked o [...] it, and prese [...] he found that I was sent for out of the King's [...] to come before the commissioners.
My lord, here you may see it was in th [...] King's Bench, which is in your diocese.
Although I was fetched out of the King's Bench, that does not prove I wrote it there▪ [...] did I, I assure you.
Where did you write it then?
Nay, I owe you not so much servi [...]e in to tell you; find it out as well as you can: for I perceive you go about to shed my blood.
It is no matter where it was written, it is here, and he does not deny writing it. You shall hear more of. Here the commissioners asked you, whether Judas did eat any more than bare bread.
WHEREUPON they sent you away back to the King's Bench again, and asked you nothing more, for which cause (as you have written here) you had a hell burning in [...] [...]onscience. For you had thought they would have sent a discharge to the [Page 449] King's Bench, and so let me go (said you) and register my name in their books, that I had granted that Judas did eat the body of Christ, and so the gospel should have been slandered by me. For which cause I was in such case, I could scarcely eat, drink, or sleep for that space, as all my fellow-prisoners can testify. If all you, I say, that go to the church of Satan, and there hear the detestable doctrine that they spit and spew out in their churches and pulpits, to the great dishonour of God; if all you, I say, that come there, had such a hell burning in your conscience for the time, as I had till I came before them ag [...]in, and had uttered my conscience more plainly, I dare say you would come there no more. All this is your writing; is it not? What say you.
I do not deny but it was mine own deed.
And I pray you where is there such spitting and spewing out false doctrine as you speak of?
In the synagogue of Satan, where God is dishonoured with false doctrine.
And I pray you, where is one of them?
Nay, that judge yourself; I came not hither to be a judge.
Well, here you have affirmed, that Judas (your master) eat more than bread, but yet he eat not the body of Christ, as you have declared by your words. For you had a hell burning in your conscience, because you were in doubt, that the commissioners understood by your words, that Judas had eaten the body of Christ, because you said, he eat more than bare bread. Therefore thou hadst a great many devils in thee: for in hell be many devils: and therefore the devil and Judas is thy master, by thine own words.
Nay, I defy Judas, the devil, and his servants; for they be your masters, and you serve them, for any thing that I can see, I tell you truth.
Nay, they be thy masters. For the devil is master where hell is, and thou saidst thou hadst a burning hell in thee. I pray you tell me how you can avoid it, but that the devil was in thee by thine own saying?
The hell that I had, was the loving correction of God towards me, to call me to repentance, that I should not offend God and his people in leaving things so dark, as I left that. For which cause my conscience bare me record, I had not done well, as at all times I have felt the sting of it, when I have broken the commandments of God by any means, as all God's people do, I dare say; and it is the loving kindness of God towards them, to drive them to repentance. But it is to be thought, that your conscience is never troubled, how wickedly soever you do. For if it were, it should not be so strange to you as you make it, which plainly proves whose servant you be.
What a naughty fellow is this? This is such a perverse villian as I never talked with in all my life. Hold him a book, I will make him swear to answer directly to such things as I will demand of him; and if he will not answer, I will condemn him.
Call you me a fellow? I am such a fellow, I tell you, that will drive you all to hell, if you consent to the shedding of my blood, and you shall have blood to drink, as St. John saith in his Revelation, chap. ix. and being in hell, you shall be compelled to say for pain of conscience, This is the man that we have had in derision, and thought his life madness, and his end to be without honour; but now we may see how he is counted among the saints of God, and we are punished. This shall you see in hell, if you repent it not, if you do condemn me. This you shall find in [...]he fifth chapter of the Book of Wisdom; and therefore take heed what you do, I give you counsel.
Wisdom! what speakest thou of wisdom? thou never hadst it; for thou art as great a fool as ever I heard speak.
Do you not know, that the foolish things of this world must confound the wise things? [Page 450] Wherefore it doth not grieve me that you call me a fool.
Nay, thou art none of those fool [...] thou ar [...] an o [...]stina [...]e fool, and an [...], L [...] thy b [...]d on the book, and a [...]swer to such things as I will say against thee.
I will lay hold of the book for none of you all. You are not my bishop; and therefore I will have nothing to do with you.
I will have to do with you. This man is without law, he careth not for the king nor queen, I dare say; for he will not obey their laws, Let me see the king's commission. I will see whether he will obey that or not.
I would you loved th [...]king and queen's majesty no worse than I do, if it pleased God: you would not do then as yo [...] do now.
Hold him a book, he is a rank heretic. Thou shalt answer such things as I will demand of thee.
I take heaven and earth to record I am no heretic, neither can I tell wherefore I am brought to prison, no more than any man here can tell, and therewith I looked round about on the people, and said to the bishop, If you have any just cause against me worthy of dea [...]h, lay it against me, and let me have it; for I refuse not to die, (I praise God) for the truth's sake, if I had ten lives. If you have no cause, let me go home, I pray you, to my wife and children [...] see them kept, and other poor people that I would set to work by the help of God. I have set to work an hundred persons before this, all the year together, and was unjustly taken from them; but God forgive them that did it, if it be his will.
Do you not see how he looketh about for help? but I would not see any man shew thee a chearful countenance, and especially you that be of my diocese. If any of you bid God strengthen him, or take him by the hand, or embrace him, or shew him a che [...]rful countenance, you shall be excomm [...]icated, a [...]d shall not be received in again, till you have done open penance; and therefo [...] beware of it.
I look for no help of men, for God is on my side, I praise him for it; and therefore I need not to care who be against me, neither do I care.
THEN they cried; Away with him, and bring u [...] another. So I was carried to the Marshalsea, where I am now merry (I praise God therefore) as a sheep appointed to be slain. But for want of time, I have left out much of our talk; but this is the chiefest of it.
The Sixth and Last Examination of Mr. WOODMAN, written with his own hand.
BE it known unto all men by this present writing, that I Richard Woodman, sometime of the parish of Warbleton, in the county of Suffex, was condemned for God's everlasting truth, July 16, 1557, by the bishop of Winchester, in the church of St. Mary Overy's, in Southwark, there sitting with him the same time the bishop of Chichester, the archdeacon of Canterbury, Dr. Langdale, Mr. Roper, with a fat-headed priest, I cannot tell his name. All these consented to the shedding of my blood, upon this occasion, as hereafter followeth.
I affirmed, that Judas received the sacrament with a sop and the devil withal; and because I would not be sworn upon a book, to answer directly to such articles as he would declare to me; and because I would not believe that there remained neither bread nor wine after the words of consecration, and that the body of Christ could not be received of any but of the faithful: for these articles I was condemned, as hereafter shall follow more at large, by the help of God.
FIRST, the bishop said when I came before him:
You were before us on Monday last, and there you affirmed [...] in heresies. How say you now? Do you hold them still, or will you revoke them?
I hold no heresies then, neither do [...]now, as the Lord knoweth.
No? Did you not affirm, that Judas received bre [...]d? Which is a heresy, unless you tell what more than bread.
Is it heresy, to say Judas received no more than bread? I said he received more than bare bread, for he received the same sacrament that was prepared to shew forth the Lord's death, and because he presumed to eat without faith, he eat the devil withal, as the words of Christ declare; after he eat the sop, the devil entered into him, as you cannot deny.
Hold him a book. I would have you answer directly, whether Judas did eat the body of Christ or no.
I will answer no more, for I am not of your diocese; wherefore I will have nothing to do with you.
No? You be in my diocese, and you are of my diocese, because you have offended in my diocese.
I am not of your diocese, although I am in your diocese; and I was brought into your diocese against my will: and I have not offended in your diocese; if I have, tell me wherein.
Here is your own hand-writing, which is heresy. These be the words, "I cannot find (say you) that it is the body of Christ to any, before it is received in faith." How say you? Is not this your hand writing?
Yea, I do not deny but it is my own hand writing▪ but when, or where was it written, or where were the words spoken?
Before the commissioners, and here is one of them, Master Roper, the words were spoken before you, were they not?
Yes indeed they were. Woodman, I am sure you will not deny them; for you have written the words even as you spake them.
No, sir, indeed I will not deny but that I spake them, and am glad that you have seen it. For you may see by that whether I lie or not.
Indeed the words be written word for word as you spake them.
Well, here you affirm, that it is your own deed. How say you now? Will you be sorry for it, and become an honest man?
My lord, I trust no man can say, but that I am an honest man; and as for that, I marvel that you will lay it to my charge, knowing that my lord of London discharged me of all matters that were laid against me, when I was released by him.
You were released, and it might happen it was not laid to your charge then; therefore we lay it to your charge now, because you are suspected to be an heretic: and we may call you before us, and examine you upon your faith upon suspicion.
Indeed St. Peter willeth me to render an account of my hope that I have in God, and I am contented so to do, if it please my bishop to hear me.
Yes, I pray you let us hear it.
I do believe in God the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, and all things visible and invisible, and in one Lord Jesus Christ my Saviour, very God and very man, I believe in God the Holy Ghost, the Comforter of all God's elect people, and that he is equal to the Father and the Son. I believe the true catholic church, and all the sacraments that belong thereto. Thus have I rendered an account of my hope that I have of my salvation.
And how believe you in the blessed sacrament of the altar? And with that they all put off their caps.
I pray you be contented, for I will not answer to any more questions; for I perceive you go about to shed my blood.
No, hold him a book. If he refuse to swear, he is an Anabaptist, and shall be excommunicated.
I will not swear for you, excommunicate me if you will. For you be not meet to take an oath; for you laid heresies to my charge in yonder pulpit, which you are not able to prove; wherefore you are not meet to take an oath of any man. And as for me, I am not of your diocese, nor will have any thing to do with you.
I will have to do with thee, and I say thou art a strong heretic.
Yea, all truth is heresy with you; but I am content to shew you my mind, how I believe on the sacrament of the body and blood of Jesus Christ, without flattering. For that you look for, I am sure. But I will meddle no further, but what I hold myself of it. I will not meddle with any other man's belief on it.
Why? I am sure all men's faith ought to be alike.
Yea, I grant you so, that all true christian's faith ought to be alike. But I will answer for myself.
Well, let us hear what you have to say to it.
I do believe, that when I come to receive the sacrament of the body and blood of Jesus Christ, if it be truly ministered according to Christ's institution, I coming in faith, as I trust in God I will whensoever I come to receive it, I believing that Christ was born for me, and that he suffered death for the remission of my sins, and that I shall be saved by his death and blood [...]shedding, and so receive the sacrament of bread and wine in that remembrance that then I do receive whole Christ, God and Man, mystically by faith: this is my belief on the sacrament.
THEN they spake all at once, saying, Mystically by faith!
What a fool art thou▪ Mystically by faith! thou canst not tell what mystical is.
If I be a fool, so take me: but God hath chosen such fools of this world to confound such wise things as you are.
I pray thee, what is mystically?
I take mystically to be the faith that is in us, that the world seeth not, but God only.
He cannot tell what he saith. Answer to the sacrament of the altar, whether it be the body of Chist before it be received, and whether it be not the body of Christ to whomsoever receiveth it? Tell me, or else I will excommunicate thee.
I have said as much as I will say; [...]xcommunicate me if you if will. I am not of your diocese. The bishop of Chichester is mine ordinary. Let him do it if you will needs have [...] blood, that it may be required at his hands.
I am not consecrated yet; I told [...] when you was with me.
No indeed, your kin [...] bring forth nothing but cow-calves, as it now happeneth; meaning thereby he had not his bulls from Rome.
THEN they were all in a great rage with me, and called me all to nought, and said I was out of my wits, because I spake fervently to every man's question; all which I cannot remember, but I said:
SO Festus said to Paul, when he spake the words of soberness and truth out of the Spirit of God, [...] I do. But as you have judged me, you be yourselves. You will go to hell all the sort of you, if you condemn me, if you repent it not with speed.
THEN my keeper, and the sheriff's deputy, Fuller, rebuked me, because I spake so sharply to them. And I said, I pray you let me alone; I must answer for my life.
[Page 453]THEN there was much ado that I should keep silence, and so I held my peace. Then spake the bishop of Winchester, and the archdeacon of Canterbury, saying, We go not about to condemn thee, but go about to save thy soul, if thou wilt be ruled, and do as we would have thee.
To save my soul? nay, you cannot save my soul. My soul is saved already, I praise God. There can no man save my soul, but Jesus Christ; and he it is that hath saved my soul before the foundation of the world was laid.
What an heresy is that, my lord! here is an heresy. He saith his soul was saved before the foundations of the world were laid. Thou canst not tell what thou sayest. Was thy soul saved before it was?
Yes, I praise God, I can tell what I say, and I say the truth. Look in the first of the Ephes [...]ans, and there you will find it, where Paul saith, chap. i. "Blessed be God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all manner of spiritual blessings in heavenly things, by Christ, according as he hath chosen us in himself, before the foundation of the word was laid, that we should be holy and without blame before him through love, and thereto were we predestinated." These are the words of Paul, and I believe they be most true. And therefore it is my faith, in and by Jesus Christ, that saveth, and not you or any man else.
What! Faith without works! St. James saith, Faith without works is dead, and we have free will to do good works.
I would not have you think that I disallow good works. For a good faith cannot be without good works. Yet not of ourselves, but it is the gift of God, as saith St. Paul to the Philippians, chap. ii. "It is God that worketh in us both to will and to do, even of his good pleasure."
Make an end; answer to me. Here is your ordinary, the archdeacon of Canterbury; he is made your ordinary by my lord cardinal, and he hath authority to examine you of your faith upon a book, to answer to such articles as he will lay to you and I pray you refuse [...]t not; for the danger is great if you do. Wherefore we desire you to shew yourself a subject in [...] matter.
THEN they all spoke, an [...] said, Lo, my lord desireth you gently to answer unto him, and so we do all. For if you refuse to take an oath, he may excommunicate you. For my lord cardinal may put whom he will in the bishop's office until he is consecrated.
I know not so much. If you will give me time to learn the truth of it (if I can prove it to be as you say) I will tell you my mind in any thing that he shall demand of me, without any flattering.
My lord and we all, tell thee it is true; and therefore answer to him▪
I will believe none of you all, for you are turn coats and changelings, and be wavering minded, as St. James saith; you be neither hot nor cold, as St. John saith, theref [...]e God will spew you out of his mouth. Wherefore I can believe none of you all, I tell you truth.
What be we turn-coats and changelings' what meanest thou by that?
I mean, that in king Edward's time you taught the doctrine that was set forth then, every one of you, and now you teach the contrary: and therefore I call you turn-coats and changelings, as I may well enough. Whic [...] words made the most part of them to quake.
Nay, not all as is chanced.
No? I pray where were you then?
I was in the Tower, as the lieutenant will bear me record.
If you were in the Tower, it was not therefore, I dare say, it was for some other matter.
THEN they all took heart of grace, and said, My [Page 454] lord, he comes to examine you, we think: if he will not answer to the article [...], you had best excommunicate him.
He is the naughtiest varlet of an heretic that ever I knew. I will read the sentence against him.
THEN they spake all at once, and I answered them as fast as I could. But I cannot remember all, the words came out so thick, I spared them not, I praise God therefore; for I spake freely.
THEN they that stood by rebuked me, and said, You cannot tell to whom you speak.
No? think you so? they are but men. I am sure I have spoken to as good as they are, and better than they will ever be, for any thing that I can see, if they repent not with speed.
Give ear! for I will read sentence against you.
Will you so? Wherefore will you? You have no just cause to excommunicate me; and therefore if you do condemn me, you will be condemned in hell, if you repent not: and I praise God, I am not afraid to die for God's sake, if I had an hundred lives.
For God's sake? Nay, for the devil's sake. Thou sayest thou art not afraid to die; no more was Judas that hanged himself, as thou wilt kill thyself wilfully, because thou wilt not be ruled.
Nay, I defy the devil, Judas and all their members. And Judas' flesh was not afraid, but his spirit and conscience was afraid, and there despaired and hung himself. But I praise God, I feel no loathsomeness in my flesh to die, but a joyful conscience, and a willing mind thereto. Wherefore my flesh is subdued to it, I praise God; and therefore I am not afraid of death.
Woodman, for God's sake be ruled. You know what you said to me at my house. I could say more, if I would.
Say what you can; the most fault that you found in me was, because I praised the living God, and because I said, I praise God, and the Lord; which you ought to be ashamed of, if you have any grace; for I told you where the words we [...] written.
Well, how say you? will you confess that Judas received the body of Christ unworthily? Tell me plainly.
My lord, if you, or any of you all can prove before all this audience, in all the Bible, that any man ever eat the body of Christ unworthily, then I will be with you in all things that you will demand of me; of which matter I desire all this people to be witness.
Will you so? Then we shall agree well enough: St. Paul saith so.
I pray you where saith he so? Rehearse the words.
In the 11th chapter of the first epistle to Corinthians, St. Paul saith. "Whoso eateth of of this bread, and drinketh of this cup unworthithily, eateth and drinketh his own damnation, because he makes no difference of the Lord's body."
Do these words prove that Judas, eat the body of Christ unworthily? I pray you let me see them. They were contented. Then said I, these be the words even that you said. Good people hearken well to them, "Whoso eateth of this bread and drinketh of this cup unworthily,: he saith not, Whoso eateth of this body unworthily, or drinketh of this blood unworthily: but he saith, "Whoso eateth of this bread, and drinketh of this cup unworthily, (which is the sacrament) eateth and drinketh his own damnation," because he maketh no difference between the sacrament which representeth the Lord's body, and other bread and drink. Here, good people, you may all see they they are not able to prove their saying true. Therefore I cannot believe them in any thing they say.
Thou art a rank heretic indeed. Art thou an expounder? Now I will read sentence against thee.
Judge not lest you be Judged. For as [Page 455] you have judged me, such be you yourself [...] Then he read the sentence. Why, said I, will you read sentence against me and cannot tell wherefore.
Thou art an heretic, and therefore thou shalt be excommunicated.
I am no heretic, I take heaven and earth to witness. I defy all heretics, and if you condemn me, you will be damned, if you repent not. But God give you all grace to repent, if it be his will; and so he read the sentence in Latin, but what he said, God knoweth and not I. God be judge between them and me. When he had done, I would have talked my mind to them, but they cried, Away with him. So I was carried to the Mars [...]lsoa, again, where I am and shall be as long as it shall please God: and I praise God most heartily, that ever he hath elected, and predestinated me to come to such high dignity, as to bear rebuke for his name's sake; his name be praised therefore, for ever and ever, Amen.
AND thus you have the examinations of this blessed Woodman, or rather Goodman; wherein may appear as well the great grace and wisdom of God in that man, as also the gross ignorance and barbarous cruelty of his adversaries, especially of Dr. White, bishop of Winchester. Now followeth likewise the effect of his letter.
A godly Letter of RICHARD WOODMAN, written to Mrs. ROBERTS, of Hawkhurst.
GRACE, mercy, and peace from God the Father, and from his Son our only Saviour Jesus Christ, by the [...]peration of the Holy Ghost, be multiplied plenteously upon you, dear sister Roberts, that you may the more joyfully bear the cross of Christ that you are under, unto the end, to your only comfort and consolation, and to all our brethren and sisters that are round about you both now and ever, Amen.
IN my most humble wise I commend me unto you and to all our brethren and sisters in those parts, that love our Lord unfeignedly, certifying you, that I and all my brethren with me are merry and joyful, we praise God, looking daily to be dissolved from these our mortal bodies, according to the good pleasure of our heavenly Father, praising God also for your constancy, and gentle benevolence, that you have shewed unto God's elect people, in this troublesome time of persecution, which may be a sure pledge and token of God's good will and favour towards you, and to all others that hear thereof. For blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy. Wherefore the fruits declare always what the tree is. For a good man or woman, out of the good treasure of their heart, bring forth good things.
WHEREFORE (dear sister) it is not as many affirm in these days (the more to be lamented) that say, God asketh but a man's heart; which is the greatest injury that can be devised against God and his word. For St. James saith; shew me thy faith without deeds, and I will shew thee my faith by my deeds; saying, the devils believe and tremble for fear, and yet shall be but devils still, because their minds were never to do good. Let us not therefore be like them, but let our faith be made manifest to the whole world by our deeds, and in the midst of a crooked and perver [...] nation, as St. Paul saith, let our light shine as in a dark place.
O dear hearts, now is the gospel of God overwhelmed with many black and troublesome clouds of persecution, for which cause very few go about to have their eyes made clear by the true light of the gospel, for fear of losing their treausures of this world, which are but vain, and shall perish.
LET not us therefore be like unto them who light their candle, and put it under a bushel; but let us set our candle upon a candlestick, that it may give light unto all them that are in the house; that is to say, let all the people of the houshold of God see our good works, in suffering all things patiently that shall be laid upon us for the gosple's sake, if it be death itself. For Christ died for us, leaving us an example, that we should follow his steps; and as he hath given his life for us, so ought we to give our lives for the defence of the gospel, to the comfort of our brethren.
HOW is it then that some will say, that their faith is good, and yet they do all the deeds of antichrist the devil, and be not ashamed to alledge certain scriptures to maintain their wickedness? St. Paul saith, [Page 456] To believe with the heart justifieth, and to confess with the mouth maketh a man safe. Oh good God, here may all men see, that no man or woman can have a true faith, unless they have deeds also; and he that doubteth, is like the waves of the sea tossed about by the wind, and can look for no good thing at the Lord's hands. May not a man judge all such to be like those which St. John speaketh of, that be neither hot nor cold; and therefore God will (he saith) spue them out of his mouth? If we judge evil of such, have not they given us occasion? Had it not been better for them to have had a millstone tied about their necks, and to have been cast into the sea, than they should give such offences to God's elect people in condemning them as they do, in going to the synagogues of Satan; and there to receive the mark of the beast, in that they see and hear God blasphemed there, and hold their peace? Doth not that declare to the whole world, that they allow their doings to be good? And these do not only defile themselves, but also be an occasion to confirm the papists in their popery, and so be an occasion of our weak brother's falling, which will be all required at their hands, which will be too heavy a burthen for them to bear, if they repent it not with speed. For they that know their master's will, and do it not, shall be beaten with many stripes. Oh do we not perceive, that now is the acceptable time that Christ speaketh of? Yea even now is the axe put to the roots of the trees, so that every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit now, must be hewn down, and cast into the fire.
NOW is the Lord come with his fan in his hand to try the wheat from the chaff. The wheat will he gather into his barn, and the chaff he will burn as aforesaid. Now is the time come that we must go to meet the bridegroom with oil in our lamps. We are also bidden to the feast, let us make no excuses. Yea, our master hath delivered his talents unto us, God give us grace to occupy them well, that at his coming he may receive his own with advantage. Yea, now is the Lord come to see if there be any fruit upon his trees; so that if the Lord come and find none, he will serve us as he did the wild fig-tree, that is never fruit shall grow on us more; also, if we go to meet the bridegroom without oil in our lamps, and should go to buy, the doubt is, we should be served as were the foolish virgins; that was, God said to them; depart, I know you not. Or if we would make excuses to come to the feast, others shall be bidden in o [...]r room; if we occupy not our talents well, they, shall be taken from us and given to others, and all such unprofitable servants shall be cast into prison in hell, where shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth.
OH good God! what a sort of fearful sayings is here contained? What christian heart will not hearken diligently hereto? Oh, may not all people well perceive now that this is the time that our master Christ speaketh of, that the fa [...]her should [...] against the son, and the son against the father, [...] one brother against another; that the brother [...] deliver the brother to death? yea, and that the wicked shall say all manner of wicked sayings agaist us for his name's sake? Which I have well found by ex [...] rience, I paise God therefore, that hath give [...], [...] strength to bear it. For I think there can be [...] evil devised, but it hath been imagined against [...], and that of my familiar friends, as David saith: but I praise my Lord God, they are not [...] prove any of their sayings true, but that [...] about to find fault in them that God hath [...], because they themselves will not take up their cr [...]ss and follow Christ; and therefore they speak [...] of the thing that they know not, who shall give account of it before him that is ready to judge [...] the quick and the dead.
BUT my trust is, that all the people of God will be ruled by the counsel of St. John, saying: My sheep will hear my voice, stangers they will not hear: meaning thereby, tha [...], you should not believe strangers, counting them strangers that go about to subvert the gospel. Wherefore mark well what they be, and try them well before you give credit to them, according to St. John's counsel in his epistle, saying: Believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they be of God, or not; meaning thereby, that if they be not of God [...] will speak good of none but of them that be as they be. Wherefore (dear sister) be of good cheer, and give no credit to such people, whatsoever you hear them say. For I have no mistrust by God's help, but that all the world shall see and know that my blood shall not be dear in mine own sight, whensoever it shall please God to give my adversaries leave to shed it. I do earnestly believe, that God which hath begun his good work in me will perform it to [Page 457] the end, as he hath given me grace, and will always, to bear this easy yoke and light burden; which I have always sound, I praise my Lord God.
FOR when I have been in prison, wearing sometimes bolts, sometimes shackels, sometimes lying on the bare ground, somtimes sitting in the stocks, sometimes bound with cords, that all my body hath been swoln, much like to be overcome with the pain that hath been in my flesh, sometimes fain to lie abroad in the woods and fields, wandering to and fro, few I say, that durst keep my company for fear of the rulers, sometimes brought befo [...] [...]he justices, sheriffs, lords, doctors, and bishops, sometimes called dog, sometimes devil, heretic, whoremonger, traitor, thief, deceiver, with divers others such like; yea, and even they that did eat of my bread, that should have been most my friends by nature, have betrayed me: yet for all this I praise my Lord God that hath separated me from my mother's womb, all this that happened unto me hath been easy, light, and most delectable and joyful of any treasure that ever I possessed; for I praise God they are not able to prove one jot or tittle of thir sayings true. But that way that they call heresy, I serve my Lord God, and at all times before whomsoever I have been brought, God hath given me mouth and wisdom, which all my adversaries have not been able to resist, I praise God therefore.
WHEREFORE (dear sister) be of good comfort with all your brethren and sisters, take no thought what you shall say, for it shall be given you the same hour, according to the promises, as I have always sound, and as you and all other of God's elect shall well find, when the time is full come. And whereas I and many others have hoped, that this persecution would have been at an end before this time, now I perceive God will have a further trial to root out all dissemblers, that no man should rejoice in himself, but he that rejoiceth, shall rejoice in God.
WHEREFORE if prophecy should fail, and tongues should cease, yet love must endure. For fear hath painfulness, but perfect love casteth out all fear: which love I have no mistrust but God hath poured it upon you so abundantly, that nothing in the world shall be able to separate you from God. Neither high nor low, rich nor poor, life nor death, shall be able to put you from Christ; but by him I trust you shall enter into the new Jerusalem, there to live for ever, beholding the glory of God with the same eyes that you now have, and all other faithful people that continue to the end. Give all honour and glory to God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost, three persons and one God, to be honoured now and ever, Amen.
AFTER these examinations thus had and commenced between Richard Woodman and the bishops, he was (as is aforesaid) judged by sentence of condemnation, and so deprived of his life: with whom also were burned nine others, to wit, five men and four women, which were taken two or three days before their judgment. Ther names of which being also before expressed, here again follow in this order, Richard Woodman, George Stevens, William Maynard, Alexander Hofman, his servant, Thomasine Wood, his maid, Margery Morris, James Morris, her son, Denis Burgis, Ashdowne's wife, Grove's wife.
THESE persons above-named were put to death at Lewes the 22d of June.
OF which number the eight last were apprehended (as is said) either the same day, or the second or third day before, and so with the said Woodman and Stevens, were committed together to the fire; in which space no writ could come down from London to the justices, for their burning. Wherefore what is to be said to such justices, or what reckoning they will make to God and to the laws of this realm, I refer that to them that have to do in the matter. The like whereof is to be found also of other justices, who without any lawful writ of discharge or order of law, have unlawfully and disorderly burnt the servants of Christ (whose blood the law both may and also ought to revenge); especially at Salisbury, Canterbury, and Guernsey. But concerning these matters, though man's law do wink, or rather sleep at them, yet they shall be sure God's law will find such murderers out at length. I pray God the doers may repent betime.
An Account of the Condemnation of Mr. RICHARD LUSH.
IN the registers of Gilbert, bishop of Bath and Wells, I find a certificate made to king Philip and queen Mary, of one Richard Lush, there condemned and given to the secular power to be burned for the cause of heresy, whose affirmations in the said certificate are expressed in tenor and effect, as follows.
1. FOR denying the verity of the body and blood of Christ in the sacrament of the altar.
2. Item, For denying auricular confession to be made to the priest.
3. Item, For affirming that there be only three sacraments; to wit, of baptism, of the supper, and of matrimony.
4. Item, For refusing to call the Lord's supper by the name of the sacrament of the altar.
5. Item, For denying purgatory, and that prayers and alms profit not the dead body.
6. Item, That images are not to be suffered in the church, and that all that kneel to images of the church, be idolaters.
7. Item, That they which were burnt of late for religion, died God's servants and good martyrs.
8. Item, For condemning the single life of priests, and other votaries.
9. Item, For denying the universal and catholic church, meaning the church of Rome.
FOR these assertions as they are expressed, he was condemned and committed to the sheriffs, and also a certificate directed by the bishop aforesaid, to the king and queen.
A Note concerning JOHN HULLIER, Minister and Martyr, who was burned at Cambridge.
CONCERNING the story of John Hullier, martyr, partly mentioned before, for the more full declaration of the death and martyrdom of that good man, because the story is before but rawly and imperfectly touched; for the more perfecting thereof I thought thereunto to add that which since hath come to my hand, as followeth.
FIRST, John Hullier was brought up at Eaton college, and after, according to the foundation of that house, he was elected scholar in king's college, where also not tarrying full three years of probation, before he was fellow of the college, he after some time was one of the ten conducts in the king's college, which was Anno. 1539. Then at length, in process of time, he came to be curate of Babram, three miles from Cambridge, and went afterwards to Lynn; where he, having divers conflicts with the papists, was from thence carried to Ely, to Dr. Thurlby, then bishop there; who after divers examinations, sent him to Cambridge castle, where he remained but a while.
FROM thence he was conveyed to the town prison, commonly called the Tolbooth, lying there almost a quarter of a year, till at length he was cited to appear at great St. Mary's on Palm-Sunday eve, before divers doctors, both divines and lawyers, amongst whom was chief Dr. Shaxton, Dr. Young, Dr. Sedgewike, Dr. Scot, and others. Where after examination, because he would not recant, he was first condemned, the sentence being read by Dr. Fuller.
THEN consequently he was degraded after their popish manner, with scraping crown and hands. When they had degraded him, he said chearfully, This is the joyfullest day that ever I saw, and I thank you all, that ye have delivered and lightened me of all this paltry.
IN the mean time whilst it was doing, one standing by, asked Hullier what book he had in his hand. Who answered, a Testament. Whereat this man in a rage took it and threw it violently from him. Then was he given over to the secular powers, Brasey being mayor, who carrying him to prison again, took from him all his books, writings, and papers.
ON Maunday Thursday coming to the stake, he exhorted the people to pray for him, and after [Page 459] holding his peace, and praying to himself, one spake to him, saying, The Lord strengthen thee. Whereat a serjeant, named Briefly, [...]ayed and bade him hold his tongue, or else he should repent it.
NEVERTHELESS Hullier answered and said, Friend, I trust that as God hath hitherto begun, so also he will strengthen me, and finish his work upon me. I am bidden to a Maundy, whither I trust to go, and there to be shortly. God hath laid the foundation, as I by his aid will end it.
THEN going to a stool (prepared for him to sit on) to have his hose plucked off, he desired the people to pray for him again, and also to bear witness that he died in the right faith, and that he would seal it with his blood, certifying them, that he died in a just cause, and for the testimony of the verity and truth, and that there was no other rock but Jesus Christ to build upon, under whose banner he fought, and whose soldier he was; and while speaking, he turned himself toward the east, and exhorted the people there likewise.
GEORGE Boyes, Henry Barley, and one Gray, all three arch-priests of Trinity college, Cambridge, stood on a bank hard by. This Boyes was one of the proctors of the university that year. To whom Mr. Gray spake, sa [...]ing, Hear you not, master proctor, what blasphemy this fellow [...]? Surely it is ill done to suffer him.
AT whose words, this Boyes spake with a loud voice, Mr. Mayor, what mean you? If you suffer him thus to take lib [...]rty, I tell you, the council shall hear of it, and we take you not to be the queen's friend. He is a p [...]rnicious person, and may do more harm than you are aware of [...] Whereat simple Hullier, as meek as a lamb, taking the matter very patiently, made no answer, but made himself ready, uttering his prayer. Which d [...]ne, he went meekly himself to the stake, and being bound with chains, was beset with reed and wood, standing in a pitch barrel, and the fire being set to, not marking the wind, it blew the flame to his back. Then he feeling it, began earn [...]stly to call upon God. Nevertheless his friends perceiv [...]ng the fire to be ill kindled, caused the serjeants to turn it, and fire it in that place where the wind might blow it in his face.
THAT done, there was a parcel of books which were cast into the fire, and by chance a communion book fell between his hands, who receiving it joyfully, opened it, and read so long till the force of the flame and smoak caused him that he could see no more: and then he fell again to prayer, holding his hands up to heaven, and the book betwixt his arms next his heart thanking God for sending it: and at that time the day being very fair and hot, yet the wind was somewhat up, and it caused the fire to be the fiercer, and when all the people thought he had been dead, he suddenly uttered these words; Lord Jesus, receive my spirit, dying very meekly.
THE place where he was burned, is called Jesus Green, not far from Jesus College. Seagar gave him certain gunpowder, but little to the purpose [...] for he was dead before it took fire. All the people prayed for him, and many a tear was shed for him. Which the papists seeing, cried, he was not to be prayed for, and being but a damned man, it could profit him nothing: nevertheless they continued praying; whereat the papists fell into such a rage that they menaced them with terrible threatenings. His flesh being consumed, his bones stood upright even as if they had been alive. Of the people, some took what they could get of him, as pieces of bones. One had his heart, which was distributed so far as it would go: one took the scalp, and looked for the tongue, but it was consumed, except the very root.
An Account of the Martyrdom of SIMON MILLER and ELIZABETH COOPER, who were burnt at NORWICH.
IN the month of July next followed the martyrdom of Simon Miller and Elizabeth Cooper. This Simon dwelling in the town of Lynn, a pious and zealous man in the knowledge of the Lord and his truth, detesting and abhorring the contrary enforced religion then set forth, came from Lynn to Norwich, where he standing in the press and hearing of the people, began to ask them, as they came [Page 460] out of the church from their popish service, where he might go to have the communion. At which, divers marvelled to h [...]ar and see his boldness: one that was an evil disposed papist, hearing the same, said, that if he would needs go to a communion, he would bring him thither where he should be sped of his purpose. Whereupon he was brought to the chancellor of Norwich, (whose name was Dunning) who after a few words, and small talk passed with his examinate, committed him to ward.
IN the mean while as he was in examination, he had in his shoe his confession, written in a certain paper, whereof a piece appearing above his shoe, was spied and taken out. The chancellor asking if he would stand to the confession of the same faith therein contained, he constantly affirmed the same. Whereupon, as is said, he was committed. Thus the said Simon being in the bishop's house, under custody of the keeper there called master Fellow, how it happened is not certain, whether by gentleness of the keeper, (who was somewhat gentle that way) or by leave given of the bishop, or else whether he had condescended on that purpose to their articles, he was dismissed, and went home to his house at Lynn, where he continued a certain space, till he had disposed and set all things in order.
THAT done, he returned again to the bishop's house to his prison and keeper, till the time at length, he constantly abiding in his professed purpose, and defence of God's truth, was by the said bishop and his chancellor, condemned and committed to the fire about the 13th day of July.
WITH this Simon Miller also was burnt one Elizabeth Cooper, (as is aforesaid) a pewterer's wife, dwelling in St. Andrew's parish, in Norwich, where she had before recanted, and being unquiet for the same, and greatly troubled inwardly, at last she came into the said St. Andrew's church, the people being at their p [...]ish service, and there standing in the same, said she revoked her recantation [...]fore made in that place, and was heartily sorry that ever she did it, willing the people not to be deceived, [...]ither to take her doings before for an example, &c. These or such like words she spake in the church.
THEN cried one Bacon of the said parish, laying his arms abroad, saying, Mr. Sheriff, will you suffer this? and repeating the same, urged him to go from the church to her house, at whose knocking she came down, and was taken and sent to prison.
THE sheriff (named Mr. Thomas Sutton) and she had before been servants together in one house; and for the friendship he bare unto her, and more for the gospel's sake, he was very loth to do it, but he was enforced by those other persons before mentioned much against his own conscience, which [...] now earnestly repenteth.
THIS good woman being condemned with Simon Miller to be burnt, at the stake, when the fire came to her, she shrunk a little thereat, with a loud voic [...] crying, ah! When the said Simon Miller heard the same, he put his hand behind him towards her, and desired her to be strong and of good cheer: for, good sister, (said he) we shall have a joyful and sweet supper. At which she being, as it seemed, ther [...]by strengthened, stood as still and quiet, as one most glad to finish that good work, which she before had so happily begun. And thus she and her companion joyfully ended their lives, committing their souls into the hands of Almighty God.
An Account of the Martyrdom of Five Men and Five Women, at Colchester, Five in the Forenoon, and Five in the Afternoon.
AS it is no new thing in those whom we call prelates and priests of the church, to be raisers up of persecution against Christ and his poor flock; so it is much to be marvelled, or rather lamented, that noble persons, and men of honour and worship, should be made such ministers, to serve the desires of these tyrants, as is now common, as well in the sorrowful reign of the late queen Mary, as likewise in this present story is to be remarked.
AND first thou rememberest, gentle reader, how mention was made a little before of twenty-two, which were sent up prisoners together from Colchester to London, by the earl of Oxford, the lord [Page 461] Darcy, Mr. Tyrrel, of St. Osithes, and other commissioners and justices, &c. which twenty-two, as aforesaid, [...]hrough a gentle submission put to them, were afterwards relea [...]ed and set at liberty.
IN the number of these aforesaid twenty-two, was one William Munt, of Muchbentley in Essex, husbandman, with Alice his wife, and Rose Allin, maid, daughter to the said Alice Munt; who coming home again to their house at Muchbentley aforesaid, refrained themselves from the unsavoury service of the popish church, and frequented the company of good men and women, who gave themselves diligently to reading and calling upon the name of God, through Christ: whereby they so fretted the wicked priest of the town, called sir Thomas Tye, and others like unto him, that laying their heads together, they made a supplication to the lord Darcy, in the name of the whole parish: the substance whereof is as followeth.
A Supplication to the LORD DARCY, and by him delivered to SIR JOHN KINGSTON, Priest and Commissary.
PLEASETH your honourable lordship to be advertised, that we confess whilst your good lordship lay here in the country, the people were stayed in good order, to our great comfort: but since your lordship's departure, they have made digression from good order in some places, and namely in the parish of Muchbentley, by reason of three seditious persons, William Munt and his wife, and Rose her daughter, who by their colourable submission (as it doth appear) were dismissed and sent down from the bishop of London; and since their coming home they have not only in their own persons shewed manifest signs and tokens of disobedience, in not coming to the church, nor yet observing other good orders, but also most maliciously and seditiously have seduced many from coming to the church, and from obeying all other good orders; mocking also those that frequent the church, and calling them also church-owls, and blasphemously calling the blessed sacrament of the altar a blind God, with divers such like blasphemies. In consideration whereof, may it please your honour, (for the love of God, and for the tender zeal your good lordship beareth to justice, and the common peace and quietness of the king and queen's majesty's loving subjects) to award out your warrant for the said William Munt, his wife, and Rose her daughter, that they being attached and brought before your good lordship, we trust the rest will fear to ofte [...]d (their ringleaders of sedition being apprehended) the quietness of their obedient subjects.
THIS being done, the said sir Thomas Tye bethought with himself where the persecuted did resort: for in the beginning of queen Mary's reign, for a twelvemonth and more he came not to the church, but frequented the company of godly men and women, who abstained from the same, and, as they thought, he laboured to keep a good conscience, but the sequel shewed him to be a false brother.
NOW (as I said) he partly knowing the places of refuge for honest men, did further inquire of other men about the same: and being thereof sufficiently (as he thought) instructed to his purpose, immediately about the time the supplication above specified was exhibited to the said lord Darcy, wrote a letter secretly to bishop Bonner, wherein he maketh his account how he had bestowed his time, and complained of divers honest men, among whom was the said William Munt and his company: the tenor of which letter here followeth.
A Letter from Sir THOMAS TYE, Priest, to Bishop BONNER.
RIGHT honourable lord, after my bounden duty done in most humble wise, these shall be to signify unto your lordship the state of our parts concerning religion. And first, since the coming down of the twenty-two rank heretics dismissed from you, the detestable sort of schismatics were never so bold since the king and queen's majesty's reign, as they are now at this present. In Muchbentley, where your lordship is patron of the church, since William Munt, and Alice his wife, with Rose [Page 462] Allin her daughter, came home, they do not only absent themselves from the church and service of God, but do daily allure many others away from the same, which before did outwardly shew sign [...] and tokens of obedience.
THEY assemble together upon the sabbath-day in the time of divine service, sometimes in one house, sometimes in another, and there keep their private conventicles and schools of heresy. The jurates say, the lords commission is out, and they are discharged of their oath. The questmen in your archdeacon's visitation alledged, that forasmuch as they were once presented and now sent home, they have no more to do with them nor any other. Your officers say, namely Mr. Boswel, that the council sent them not home without great consideration. I pray God some of your officers prove not favourers of heretics. The rebels are stout in the town of Colchester.
THE ministers of the church are hem'd at in the open streets, and called knaves. The blessed sacrament of the altar is blasphemed and railed upon in every house and tavern. Prayer and fasting is not regarded. Seditious talks and news are rife both in town and country, in as ample and large a manner, as though no honourable lords and commissioners had been sent for reformation thereof. The occasion riseth partly by reason of John Love, of Colchester Heath (a perverse place), which John Love was twice indicted of heresy, and thereupon fled with his wife and houshold, and his goods seized within the town of Colchester, to the king and queen's majesty's use. Nevertheless the said John is come home again, and nothing said or done to him. Whereupon the heretics are wonderfully encouraged, to the great discomfort of good and catholic people, which daily pray to God for the profit, unity, and restoration of his church again: which thing shall come the sooner to pass, through the travail and pains of such honourable lords and reverend fathers as your lordship is, unto whom I wish long life and continuance, with increase of much honour. From Colchester, December 18.
WHEN this wicked priest had thus wrought his malice against the people of God, within a while after the storms began to arise against those poor persecuted Wiliam Munt and his company, whereby they were enforced to hide themselves from the heat thereof. And continued so a little space, at last, the seventh day of March, 1557, being the first Sunday in Lent, and by two of the clock in the morning, one Mr. Edmund Tyrrel (who came to the house of the Tyrrels which murdered king Edward V. and his brother) took with him the bailiff of the hundred, called William Samuel, dwelling in Colchester, and the two constables of Muchbentley aforesaid, named John Baker, and William Harris, with many others; and besetting the house of the said William Munt round above, called to them at leng [...]h to open the door: which being done, Mr. Tyrrel with some of his company went into the chamber where the said Munt and his wife lay, willing them to rise: for, said he, you must go with us to Colchester-castle. Mother Munt hearing that, being very sick, desired that her daughter might fetch her some drink; for she was (she said) very ill.
THEN he gave her leave and bade her go. So her daughter, the forenamed Rose Allin, maid, took a stone pot in one hand, and a candle in the other, and went to draw drink for her mother: and as she came back again through the house, Tyrrel met her, and willed her to give her father and mother good counsel, and advertise them to be good catholic people.
Sir, they have a better instructor than me. For the Holy Ghost doth teach them, I hope, which I trust will not suffer them to err.
Why, said Mr. Tyrrel, art thou still in that mind, thou naughty housewife? marry, it is time to look upon such heretics indeed.
Sir, with what you call heresy, do I worship my Lord God, I tell you truth.
Then I perceive you will burn, gossip, with the rest, for company's sake.
No, sir, not for company's sake, but for Christ's sake, if so I be compelled, and I hope in his mercy, if he call me to it, he will enable me to bear it.
So he turning to his company, said▪ Sirs, this gossip will burn: what do you think of her? why truly, sir, said one, prove her, and you shall see what she will do by and by.
THEN that cruel Tyrrel, taking the candle from her, held her wrist, and the burning candle under her hand, burning cross-ways over the back of thereof, so long that the very sinews cracked asunder. Witness hereof, William Chandler, then living at Muchbentley, who was there present and saw it. Also Mrs. Bright of Rumford, with Ann Starkey her maid, to whom Rose Allin also declared the same, and the said Mrs. Bright also ministered salve for the curing thereof, as she lay in her house at Rumford, going up towards London with other prisoners.
IN which time of hi [...] tyranny, he said often to her, Why, whore, wilt [...]ou not cry? Thou young whore, wilt thou not cry? To which she always answered, that she thanked God she had no cause, but rather to rejoice. But she said, he had more cause to weep than she, if he considered the matter well. In the end, when the sinews (as I said) brake, that all the house heard them, he then thrust her violently from him, saying, A strong whore, thou shameless beast, thou beastly whore, &c. with such like vile words. But she quietly suffering his rage for the time, at last said, Sir, have you done what you will do? He said▪ yea, and if thou think not well of it, then mend it.
Mend it? nay, the Lord mend you, and give you repentance, if it be his will. And now, if you think it good, begin at the feet, and burn the head also: for he that set you to work, shall pay you your wages one day, I warrant you: and so went and carried her mother drink as she was commanded. Likewise, after searching the house for more company, at last they found one John Thrustan and Margaret his wife, whom they also carried to Colchester castle immediately.
AND this said Rose Allin, being prisoner, told a friend of her's this cruel act of the said Tyrrel; and shewing him the manner thereof, she said, while my own hand was a burning, I having a pot in my other hand, might have struck him on the face with it, if I had had a mind, for no man held my hand to hinder me therefrom. But I thank God, said she, with all my heart I did it not.
ALSO being asked of another, how she could abide the painful burning of her hand, she said, at first it was some grief to her; but afterwards, the longer she burned, the less she felt it, or well near none at all.
AND because Mr. Tyrrel shall not go alone in this kind of cruelty, you shall hear another like example of a blind harper's hand, burnt by bishop Bonner, as is testified by the relation of Valentine Dingley, sometime gentleman to the said bishop, who declared before credible witnesses, as followeth: How the said bishop Bonner, having this blind harper before him, spake thus unto him, That such blind abjects, which follow a sort of heretical preachers, when they come to the feeling of the fire, will be the first to fly from it.
TO whom the blind man answered, that if every joint of him were to be burnt, yet he trusted in the Lord he should not fly. Then Bonner signifying privily to certain of his men about him what they should do, they brought him a burning coal; which coal being put into the poor man's a hand, they closed it fast again, which burned his hand most piteously. Among the doers thereof was the said Mr. Valentine Dingley, witness and reporter hereof, as is declared.
WE read in Titus Livius, of the story of king Porfenna, who after the burning of the right hand of Marcus Scevola, who came purposely to kill him, being only contented therewith, sent him home again. But thus to burn the hands of poor men and women, who never meant any harm to them, and not contented with that, but also to consume their whole bodies without any just cause, we find no example of such barbarous tyranny, neither in Titus Livius, nor in any other story among the heathen.
[Page 464]BUT to return to our Colchester martyrs again. With the said William Munt and his family, was joined also in the same prison at Colchester, another faithful brother, named John Johnson, alias Aliker, of Thorp in the county of Essex, labourer, thirty-four years of age, having no wife alive, but three young children, who was also indicted with them of heresy, and so all these four lay together in Colchester castle.
THE other six prisoners lay in Mote-hall in the said town of Colchester, whose names were,
1. WILLIAM Bongeor, of the parish of St. Nicholas in Colchester, glazier, of the age of sixty years.
2. THOMAS Benold, of Colchester, tallow-chandler.
3. W. Purcas of Bocking in Essex, fuller, of the age of twenty years.
4. AGNES Silverside, alias Smith, dwelling in Colchester, widow, of the age of forty years.
5. HELEN Ewring, the wife of John Ewring, miller, dwelling in Colchester, of the age of forty-five years, or thereabouts, who was one of the twenty-two prisoners mentioned before, sent up in bands from Colchester to London, and after being delivered with the rest, repaired home to Colchester again to her husband, where notwithstanding she enjoyed her liberty not very long: for shortly after her return, one Robert Maynard, then bailiff of Colchester, met with her, came to her, and kissed her, and bade her welcome home from London. Unto whom she answered again, and said, That it was but a Judas's kiss: for in the end, quoth she, I know you will betray me, as indeed it came to pass: for immediately after that discourse she was apprehended by him, and lodged with the rest in the town prison (as is aforesaid), called the Mote-Hall.
6. THE sixth of this company was Elizabeth Folks, a young maid, and servant in Colchester, of the age of twenty years. These six were imprisoned in the town prison of Colchester, called Mote-Hall, as the other four before-mentioned were in the castle.
DIVERS examinations these good men and women had at sundry times before divers justices, priests, and officers, as Mr. Roper, John Kings [...], [...]ommis [...]ary, John Boswell, priest, and Bonn [...] scribe, and several others, in the presence of the two bailiffs of Colchester, Robert Brown and Robert Maynard, with divers other justices both of the town and country, and a great many other ge [...] men: at which time and place, and before the [...] persons, they had sentence of condemnation [...] against them, chiefly for not affirming the real p [...] sence of the sacrament of their altar. The effect of their words therein was as follows:
First, The Prisoners in Mote-Hall.
WILLIAM BONGEOR, of the paris [...] [...] St. Nicholas in Colchester, glazier, [...] that the sacrament of the altar was bread, is [...] and so remaineth bread; and that the consecratio [...] made it not more holy, but rather the worse. To this he did stand, as also against all the rest [...] their popish doctrine: and so had sentence [...] against him.
THOMAS Benold, of Colchester, tallow-chandl [...], affirmed to the like effect as William Bongeo [...] did: and so had sentence also read against him.
W. Purcas of Bocking said, that when [...] [...] ceived bread in an holy use, that preached [...] remembrance of Christ dying for him. To this [...] stood, and against other their popish matters: and so also had sentence read against him.
AGNES Silverside, alias Smith, said, that she [...] no consecration; for the bread and wine, she [...] was rather made worse thereby than better. [...] good old woman answered them with such [...] judgement and boldness, to every thing they [...] her, that it rejoiced the hearts of many, and especially to see the patience of such a reverend old age, against the taunts and checks of her enemies. To this she also stood, and had sentence read again [...] her in like manner.
[Page 465]HELEN Ewring answered to the like effect, as the other did, utterly denying all the laws set forth by the pope, with her whole heart. This good woman was somewhat thick of hearing, but yet in the Lord's matters was quick of understanding, whose name therefore be praised. Against her also was sentence read.
ELIZABETH Folks, the young maiden, being examined whether she believed the presence of Christ's body to be in the sacrament substantially and really, [...]; answered, that she believed that is was a substantial lie, and a real lie. At which words, the p [...]i [...]sts and others, were very angry, and asked her again, whether after the consecration there remained not the body of Christ in the sacrament. To which she answered, that before consecration and after, it is but bread; and the man that blesseth without God's word, is cursed and abominable by the word, &c. Then they examined her about [...] to the priest, of going to church to hear [...], of the authority of the bishop of Rome, &c. To all which she answered, that by the grace of God, she would neither use nor frequent any of [...] at all, but utterly detest and abhor them from the bottom of her heart, and all such trumpery.
THEN they read the sentence of condemnation against her; at which Dr, Chadsey wept, that the t [...]rs trickled down his cheeks. So the sentence being read, she kneeled down on her knees, lifting up her hands and eyes unto heaven with servant prayer and audible voice praising God, that ever she was born to see that most blessed and happy day, that the Lord would count her worthy to suffer for the testimony of Christ: and Lord, said she, if it be thy will, forgive them that have done this against me, for they know not what they do. Then rising up, she exhorted all those on the bench to repentance, especially those who brought her to [...], as Mr. Robert Maynard the bailiff, and such like; which Maynard commonly, when he sat in judgment upon life and death, would sit sleeping on the bench oftentimes, so careful was his mind on his office.
FURTHER, she desired halting gospellers to beware of blood, for that would cry for vengeance, &c. And in the end she told them all, laying her hand upon the bar, that if they did not repent their wicked doings therein, [...] that undoubtedly the very bar would be a witness against them at the day of judgment, that they had that day shed innocent blood.
THIS Elizabeth Folks, the day before she was condemned, was examined only upon this article, whether she believed there was a catholic church of Christ, or not. To which she answered, Yea. Then was [...]he immediately (by Boswell's means, the scribe) delivered unto her uncle Holt, of the same town of Colchester, to keep, who carried her home to his house: and she being there might have departed thence many times, if she had pleased; for there was means offered to convoy her away. But she hearing that some doubted that she had yielded to the pope (although it was untrue), would in no wise content herself, but wept, and was in such anguish of mind and terror of consc [...] ence, that by no means she would yield to the papists for any persuasions that could be. And coming before them at Cosin's house at the White Hart in Colchester, she was at utter defiance with them and their doctrine: and so had, as you have heard, in the end a papistical reward, as the rest of her brethren had.
The Prisoners in Colchester Castle.
WILLIAM MUNT, of Much-bently in Essex, of the age of 61 years, said that the sacrament of the altar was an abominable idol, and that if he should observe any part of their popish proceedings, he should displease God, and bring his curse upon him, and therefore for fear of his vengeance he durst not do it. This good father was examined of many things, but God be thanked he stood to the truth, and in the end thereof had sentence of condemnation read against him. John Johnson, of Thorp in Essex, widower, thirty-four years of age, was examined as the rest, and made answer in such sort, as the papists counted him none of their's, and therefore condemned him in their b [...]oody sentence, as they had done the rest before. This John Johnson affirmed, that in the receiving of the sacrament according to Christ's institution, he receiveth the body of Christ spiritually, &c.
[Page 466]ALICE Munt, the wife of the said William Munt, forty-one years of age, being also examined as the rest, said and confirmed the same in effect as her husband did, and was therefore also condemned.
ROSE Allin, maid, daughter of the said Alice Munt, of the age of twenty years, being examined of auricular confession, going to the church to hear mass, of the popish seven sacraments, &c. answered stoutly, that they stank in the face of God, and she durst not have to do with them for her life, neither was she (she said) any member of their's; for they were the members of Antichrist, and so should have, if they repent not, the reward of Antichrist. Being asked further what she could say of the see of the bishop of Rome, whether she would obey his authority or no; she answered boldly that she was none of his. As for his see (said she) it is for crows, kites, owls, and ravens to swim in, such as you be: for by the grace of God I shall not sw [...]m in that see while I live, neither will I have any thing to do therewith. Then they read the sentence of condemnation against her, and sent her to prison again unto the rest, where she sung with great joy, to the wonder of many.
THUS these poor condemned lambs, being delivered into the hands of the secular power, were all sent to the prison from whence they came, where they remained with much joy and great comfort (in continual reading and invocating the name of God), ever looking and expecting the happy day of their dissolution. In which time the cruel papists left not their mischievous attempts against them, although they would seem now to have no more to do with them. For bloody Bonner, whose throat never cried ho, shortly after got a writ for the burning of the aforesaid persons; and to shew the more diligence in his cause, he sent a trusty man of his named Edward Cosin, down with it, and also with his letter, for the furtherance of the matter, the next month after the conde [...]nation.
THE writ being thus received by the said bailiffs, and they having then no leisure thereabouts, appointed the day of execution thereof, to be the s [...] cond day of August next following. And because the faithful souls were in two several prisons as the castle was for the country, and Mote-Hall for the town; therefore it was agreed among them, that they in Mote-Hall should be burnt in the [...] ▪ and those at the castle, by the sheriff of the [...], in the afternoon.
THE second day of August, l557, betwixt [...] and seven of the clock in the morning, [...] brought from Mote-Hall unto a plat of [...], hard by the town-wall of Colchester on th [...] [...] side, William Bongeor, William Purcas, [...] Benold. Agnes Silverside, alias Smith, [...] ring, and Elizabeth Folks before mentioned, [...] being there, and all things prepared for the [...] [...] tyrdom, they kneeled down, and made their [...] prayers to God, but not in such a manner as [...] would, for the cruel tyrants would not suffer th [...]: especially one Mr. Clere among the rest (who s [...] time had been a gospeller) shewed himself [...] [...] treme unto them; the Lord give him [...] (if it be his good will) and grace to be a [...] man. When they made their prayers, they [...] and made themselves ready for the fire: and [...] Folks, when she had plucked off [...] coat, would have given it to her mother, [...] came and kissed her at the stake, and exhorted [...] to be strong in the Lord) but the wicked [...] [...] tending, would not suffer her to give it. [...] taking the said petticoat in her hand, she [...] away from her, saying, farewel all the world, farewel faith, farewel hope; and so taking th [...] [...] in her hand, said welcome love, &c. Now [...] at the stake, and one of the officers [...] chain about her, in the striking of the [...] missed the place, and gave her a great stroke [...] the hammer on the shoulder bone: at [...] turning her head, lifted up her eyes to the [...], and smilingly praying, gave herself to [...] the people again.
WHEN they were all nailed to the stake, an [...] [...] fire about them, they clapped their hands fo [...] [...] in the fire, that the standers by, (which were [...] estimation thousands) almost all cried, The Lord strengthen them, the Lord comfort them, the Lord pour his mercies upon them, with such like wo [...], as were wonderful to hear.
THUS yielded they up their souls and bodies into [Page 467] the Lord's hand, for the testimony of his truth. The Lord grant we may imitate the same in the like quarrel, for his mercy's sake. Amen.
IN like manner, the said day in the afternoon, were brought forth into the castle-yard, to a place appointed for the same, William Munt, John Johnson, Alice Munt, and Rose Allin aforesad: who after they had made their prayers, were joyfully tied to the stakes, calling upon the same name of God, and earnestly exhorting the people to flee from idolatry, suffered martyrdom with such triumph and joy, that the people did no less shout thereat to see it, than at the others that were burnt the same day in the morning.
[...] ten persons happily ended their [...] for the testimony of the gospel. God grant we may well spend our years and days likewise to his glory. Amen.
YOU have heard before the taking of John Thurston at Muchbentley, in the house of William Munt of the same town; which said John Thurston, about the month of May, 1557, died in Colchester-castle, a constant confessor of Jesus Christ.
The History of GEORGE EAGLES, otherwise called Trudge-over.
AMONG other martyrs of singular virtue and constancy, one George Eagles deserveth much to be commended, for that he having little or no learning, most manfully served and fought under the banner of Christ's church. For oftentimes the will and pleasure of God is to beautify and adorn [...] kingdom with the weak and simple instruments of this world; such as Amos was in the Old Testament, who with many others of obscure and unknown names, were called from the herds and folds to the honour of prophets; as likewise we read of the apostles, who were called from the fisherman's craft, and put into churches. Wherefore this George Eagles is not to be despised for his base occupation, whom Christ hath called thence to set forth and declare abroad his gospel. We ought rather to glorify God the more, who by his grace, in so blind a time, inspired him with the gift of preaching, and constancy of suffering: who after he had used the occupation of a taylor, for some time, being eloquent and of a good utterance, gave and applied himself to the service of Christ's church.
WHICH man, as before in those most bright and clear days of king Edward the Sixth, he had not fruitfully shewed and preached the power and force of the Lord, so afterwards in the tempestuous time and fall of the church (at which time the confessors of Christ and his gospel were troubled, divers of them murdered, some of them banished, and others through fear constrained from appearing publicly), he expressed and uttered his mind with courage. For he, wandering abroad into divers and far countries, where he could find any of his brethren, did there most earnestly encourage and comfort them, now tarrying in this town, and sometimes abiding in that, certain [...]onths together, as occasion served, lodging sometimes in the country, and sometimes for fear living in the fields and woods, who, for his immoderate and unreasonable going abroad, was called Trudge-over. Oftentimes did he li [...] abroad in the night without cover, spending the most part in devout and earnest prayer.
HIS diet was so spare and slender above measure, that he used, almost for the space of three years, to drink nothing but water, whereunto he was compelled through necessity in the time of persecution: but when he perceived that by God's providence his body proved well enough with his diet, he thought best to innure himself to it against all necessities.
NOW when he had profited Christ's church in this sort, going about and preaching the gospel a year or two, especially in Colchester and the places thereabout, that privy enemy which envieth always the salvation and blessed estate of the good, lurked and laid wait by all means possible for him, so that there were divers spies sent out, who had in commandment wheresoever they found him, to bring him either alive or dead.
BUT when this their attempt could not prevail, but was all in vain, (the said Eagles with his brethren [Page 468] keeping in close, and hiding themselves in secret places, as in barns, thickets, holes, &c.) his adversaries, went about another way to compass this their enterprise of taking him.
FOR in the queen's name a grievous edict was proclaimed throughout four shires, Essex, Suffex, Kent, and Norfolk, promising the person that took him twenty pounds for his pains; doubtless a worthy hire to entice any Jew to treachery. For being inflamed with greedy desire of the money, they devised and invented all ways possible to be enriched with the hurt and destruction of this poor man.
AT lenght it came to pass, that he being seen at Colchester, upon Mary Magdalen's day, at which time they kept a fair in the town, would have been taken by his adversaries, if he had not speedily conveyed himself away, a great multitude pursuing after, and seeking diligently for him. Who first hid himself in a grove, and afterwards in a corn-field hard by, and so lay secretly crouched from the violence of his enemies, insomuch that they were all, except one, past hope of taking him, and therefore were ready to depart their way.
THIS one, having more subtlety and wicked craft in his head than the rest, would not depart thence with his fellows, [...]ut climbed up into a high tree, there to view and spy if he might see Eagles any where stir or move. The poor man thinking all sure enough, by reason that he heard no noise abroad, rose up on his knees, and lifting up his hands, prayed unto God. And whether it were for that his head were above the corn, or because his voice was heard, the lurker perceiving his desired prey that he hunted after, forthwith came down, and suddenly laying hands on him, brought him as a prisoner to Colchester. Notwithstanding the greedy and Judas knave, which had so much promised him, was fain to be contented with a very sm [...]l reward, and glad to take that too, lest he should have had nothing at all.
GEORGE Eagles being thus taken, was committed to prison at Colchester, and from thence within four days after conveyed to Chelmsford, where he abode all that night in devout prayer, and would not sleep neither would eat nor drink but bread [...]d water. The next day he was carried to Londo [...] to the Bishop or the council, and there remained a certain time, and then was brought down to Chel [...]sford to the sessions, and there was indicted and [...] cused of treason, because he had assembled c [...] panies together, contrary to the laws and [...] of the realm in that case provided. For it was [...] dained a little before, to avoid sedition, that if [...] should assemble secretly together, above the [...] of six, they should be attached of treason.
AND although it was well known, that [...] Eagles did never any thing seditiously against [...] queen, yet to cloak an honest matter withal, and [...] cause him to be the more hated of the people, [...] turned religion into a civil offence an [...] crime, [...] though he defended his cause stoutly and [...] making a full declaration of his religion, of [...] before the judges; yet could he not bring it [...] by any means, but that he must needs be [...] (as is said) of treason; whose indictment [...] much after this fashion.
"GEORGE Eagles, thou art indicted b [...] the [...] of George Eagles, otherwise Trudge-ov [...] [...] World, for that thou didst such a day make [...] prayer that God should turn queen Mary's h [...]rt, [...] else take her away."
HE denied that he prayed that God should [...] her away, but he confessed, he prayed th [...] [...] would turn her heart in his prayer. Well, [...] withstanding he was condemned for a traitor, [...] though the meaning thereof was for religion.
THIS being done, he was carried to the sign of [...] Crown, in Chelmsford, and being there, one [...] Potto, the elder, an inn-holder, dwelling at [...] sign of the Cock, in the same town, did much trouble him, in persuading him to confess he had offended the queen in his prayer, which he was condemned for, and to ask her forgiveness.
TO whom he said, he had not offended her gr [...] in that behalf. So in process of time, he was laid upon a sledge, with an hurdle on it, and drawn to [Page 469] the place of execution, being fast bound, having in his hand a psalm book, of which he read very devoutly all the way with a loud voice, till he came there: and being on the ladder, the said Potto did much trouble him with the matter aforesaid; but the sheriff commanded Potto to hold his peace, and trouble him no more.
SO he made his confession, and stood very constant still; then he was turned off the ladder. With him were cast certain thieves also, and the next day, when they were brought out to be executed with him, there happened a thing that did much set forth and declare the innocency and piety of this [...]. For being led between two thieves to the place where he should suffer, when as he exhorted both them and all others to stand stedfastly to the truth, one of them turned the counsel he gave into a [...] matter, and made but a flout at it.
WHY should we doubt to obtain heaven, said he, forasmuch as this holy man shall go before us, [...] captain and leader unto us in the way. We [...]all [...]lee thither straight, as soon as he hath once made us the entry.
IN this, George Eagles and the other did greatly reprove him, who on the other side gave good [...]eed to George's exhortation, earnestly bewailing his own wickedness, and calling to Christ for mercy. But the more that tho first was bid to be still, and to leave off his scoffing, the more perverse he continued in his foolishness, and his wicked behaviour. At length they came to the gallows, where they should be hanged, but George was carried to another place hard by to suffer. Between the two he went foremost who was most serious, who being upon the ladder, after he had exhorted the people to beware and to take heed to themselves, how they did transgress the commandments of God, and then having committed his soul into God's hands, he ended his life after a godly and quiet manner.
THE mocker's turn came next, who would have likewise said somewhat, but his tongue faultered in his head, that he was not able to speak a word. He would fain have uttered his mind, but he could not bring it out. Then the under-sheriff bade him say the Lord's prayer, which he could not say neither but stutteringly, as a man would say, one word to-day and another to-morrow. Then one did begin to say it, and desired him to say after.
SUCH as were there and saw it, were much astonished, especially those that beheld the just punishment of God against him that had mocked so earnest a matter. George Eagles in the mean time, after he had hanged a small space, having a great check with the halter, immediately one of the bailiffs cut it assunder, and he fell to the ground being still alive, although much amazed with the check he had off the ladder.
THEN one William Swallow, of Chelmsford, a bailiff, drew him to the siedge that he was drawn thither on, and laid his neck thereon, and with a cleaver, such as is occupied in many men's kitchens, and blunt, did hackle off his head, and sometimes hit his neck, and sometimes his chin, and did sadly mangle him, and so op [...]ed him. Notwithstanding, this blessed martyr of Christ abode stedfast and constant in the very midst of his torments, till such time as his tormentor, William Swallow, did pluck the heart out of his body. The body being divided into four parts, and his bowels burnt, was brought to the aforesaid Swallows door, and there laid upon the fish-stalls before his door, till they had made ready a carriage to carry his qu [...]rter [...], one to Colchester, and the rest to H [...]rwich, Chelmsford, and St. Rouse's.
HIS head was set up at Chelmsford, on the market-cross on a long pole▪ and there stood, till the wind blew it down, and lying certain days in the street tumbled about, one caused it to be buried in the church-yard in the night. Also a wonderful work of God was in that he shewed on this wicked bailiff Swallow, who within a short space after this was so punished, that all the hair went well near off his head, his eyes were as it were closed up, and could scarcely see, the nails of his fingers and toes went clean off. He was in such case of his body as though he had been a leper, and now in his old age almost a very beggar, and his wife, which he a little after married, God hath punished with the falling sickness, or a disease like unto that: which may be [Page 470] a warning or glass for all men and women to look in, that be enemies to God's true servants.
NO less a token of his marvellous judgment did God shew upon the aforesaid Richard Potto, who did so much trouble this George Eagles in the inn, and at the place of execution, as is above specified. He lived till the beginning of queen Elizabeth's reign, all which time he little joyed, and being on a time in a great chafe with one or two of his neighbours in his own house, feeling himself not well, he said to one of his servants, go with me into the chamber: and when he came there, he fell down on a low bed, as heav [...] as it had been lead, and lay there foaming at the mouth, and could never speak after, neither understood what was said to him, but lay as senseless as if he had been a dumb beast, and within three or four days died. God grant that this token sent of God, with many more such, may be a warning to us ever hereafer, while we live unto the world's end.
BESIDES this, God hath wonderfully shewed his work. For on a time when they laid great wait for George Eagles, that it was thought impossible but that he should be taken, being so beset; his friends put him into apprentice's apparel, viz. watchet-hose, as their manner is, and an old cloak, and set him on a pack of wool, as though he had ridden to carry wool to the spinners, so he rode through the midst of his adversaries, and escaped them all for that time. Another chief troubler of the said George Eagles, was also one justice Brown, who enjoyed not his cruelty many years after.
ALSO when he was at the sessions at Chelmsford, there was a rumour raised, that he had accused divers honest men that did keep him in their houses, and were conversant with him, and all to discredit him; which rumour was very false and utterly untrue. Witness one Raynold, with divers others dwelling in Chelmsford.
An Account of the Examination of RICHARD CRASHFIELD, of Wymundham, condemned to Death for the Testimony of Jesus Christ.
ABOUT this time suffered at Norwich, a godly man, named Richard Crashfield, whose examinations before the chancellor, named Dunning, as he penned them with his own hand, so have we faithfully recorded the same.
HOW say you, sirrah, said the chancellor, to the ceremonies of the church?
THEN said I, What ceremonies?
HE said unto me, Do you not believe that all the ceremonies of the church are good and godly?
MY answer was, I do believe so many as are grounded in the testimony of Jesus Christ.
TUSH, said he, do you believe in the sacrament of the altar?
I said, I knew not what it was.
THEN, said he, Do you not believe that Christ took bread, and gave thanks, brake it, and said, "Take, eat, this is my body?"
YES verily, said I, and even as Christ did speak, so did he perform the work.
TUSH, said he, do you not believe this, that after the words spoken by the priest, there is the substance of Christ's body, flesh, and blood? How say you, do you not believe this? Speak, man.
I do believe that Christ's body was broken for me upon the cross, and his blood shed for my redemption, whereof the bread and wine is a perpetual memory, the pledge of his mercy, the ring and seal of his promise, and a perpetual memory for the faithful unto the end of the world. So then I was commanded into prison until the next day.
Another Examination of RICHARD CRASHFIELD.
THE day following I was brought forth. Then the chancellor said unto me, Richard, how say you? Are you otherwise minded than you were yesterday? He rehearsing all the words that we had before, said, Are not these your words? Whereunto I answered, Yes.
THEN said he, How say you, can you not find in [Page 471] your heart, when you come to the church, to kneel down before the rood, and make your prayer?
I answered and said, No; rehearsing the commandment of God forbidding the same.
HE said, Have you not read or heard, that God commanded an image to be made?
I answered, What image?
HE said, The brazen serpent.
I said, Yes, I have heard it read, how that God did command it to be made, and likewise to be broken down.
THEN doctor Bridges said, Wherefore did God command the seraphims and cherubims to be made?
I said, I could not tell; I would fain learn.
THEN said the chancellor but how say you to this? Can you find in your heart to fall down before the picture of Christ, which is the rood.
I answered, No, I fear the curse of God: for it is written, that God cursed his hands that make them, yea, and the hands that make the tools wherewith they are carved.
THEN doctor Bridges, raged, and said, Listen now what a piece of scripture he hath here gotten to serve his purpose, for he will not allow but where he listeth.
THEN said the chancellor, How say you to confession to the priest? When were you confessed?
I said, I confess myself daily unto the eternal God, whom I most grievou [...]ly offend.
THEN the chancellor said, Do you not take confession to the priest to be good?
I answered, No, but rather wicked.
THEN the chancellor said, How say you by yonder gear, yonder singing, and yonder playing on the organs? Is it not good and godly?
I said, I could perceive no godliness in it.
THEN he said, Why, is it not written in the Psalms, that we should praise God with hymns and spiritual songs?
I said, Yes, spiritual songs must be had: but yonder is of the flesh, and of the spirit of error. For to you it is pleasant and glorious, but to the Lord it is bitter and odious.
THEN said the chancellor, Why, is it not written, my house is an house of prayer?
I said, Yes. It is written also, that you have made my house a den of thieves.
WITH that the chancellor looked and said, Have we?
I answered and said, Christ said so. Then was I commanded to ward.
THE Thursday next following, doctor Bridges was sent to me to examine me of my faith. And he said, Country-man, my lord bishop (for love he would have you saved) hath sent me unto you, because to-morrow is your day appointed: therefore my lord hath thought it proper, that you should declare your faith unto me. For to-morrow my lord will not have much ado with you.
I answered and said, Hath my lord sent you?
IT is not you, to whom I am disposed to shew my mind.
THEN he said to me, I pray you let me know your mind concerning the sacrament of the altar.
I answered, Are you ignorant of what I have said?
HE said, No, for it was well written, except you believe, saith he, as the church hath taught, you are damned both soul and body.
[Page 472]I answered and said, Judge not, lest you be judged: condemn not, lest you be condemned.
AND he said, Lo, we shall have a traitor as well as an heretic: for he will disallow the king's judgment.
I said, No, I do not disallow the king's judgment, but your's I do disallow. For I pray you tell me, how came you by this judgment?
HE answered and said, By the church: for the church hath power to save and condemn: for if you be condemned by the church, be you sure, that you be damned both body and soul.
THEN I said If you have this power, I am sore deceived. [...] believe that Christ shall be our judge. But no [...] I perceive that you will do much for him, that you will not put him to the pain.
THEN he said, Stand nearer country-man: why stand you so far off?
I answered, I am near enough, and a little too near.
THEN he said, Did not Christ say, is not my flesh meat, and my blood drink indeed?
I asked, To whom spake Christ those words?
HE answered, To his disciples.
I (intending to rehearse the text) said, Whereat did Christ's disciples murmur inwardly?
HE said, No, they did not murmur, but they were the Infidels, (saith he) for the disciples were satisfied with these words.
I said, Did not Christ say thus, as he taught at Capernaum, whereat his disciples murmured, saying, This is an hard saying, who can abide the hearing of it? Jesus perceiving their thoughts, said, Doth this offend you?
THEN he raged and said, Oh, thou wrestest the text for thine own purpose: for the disciples did never murmur, but the unbelievers as thou art.
I answered, Yes, but I perceive you know not the text.
THEN he said with much rage, I will lay my head thereon it is not so.
THEN I said, I have done with you.
TO which he answered, What shall I tell my lord of you?
IF you have nothing to tell him, your errand shall be sooner done, said I. And so he departed.
THEN on Friday I was brought forth to receive judgment, when the chancellor said unto me, Are you a new man, or are you not?
I answered, I trust I am a new man born of God.
GOD give you grace so to be, said he. So he re [...]hearsed all my examination and said, How say you, are not these your words?
I answered, Yes, I will not deny them.
THEN he said to Dr. Pere, standing by, I pray you talk with him. Then he alledging to me many fair flattering words, said, "Take, eat, this is my body." How say you to this? Do you not believe that it is Christ's body? Speak.
I answered, Have you not my hand, why do you trouble me?
HE said, What did Christ give you? Was it bread, or was it not?
I said, Christ took bread, and gave thanks, and gave it, and they took bread and did eat. And St. Paul maketh it more manifest, where he saith, "So oft as ye shall eat of this bread, and drink of this cup, ye shall shew forth the Lord's death until he come." St. Paul saith not here as you say: for he saith, "So oft as ye shall eat of this bread." He doth not say, Body.
SO they intending that I should go no further in the text, said, Tush, you go about the bush. Answer to the first question. Let us make an end of that.
[Page 473]WHAT say to you the bread which Christ gave? Let me have your mind in that.
I answered, I have said my mind in it.
THEN the chancellor said, No, we will have y [...]r mind in that.
I answered, I have said my mind in it.
THEN said the chancellor, No, we will have your mind more plainly: for we intend not to have many words with you.
I said, My faith is fully grounded and established, that Christ Jesus the Easter Lamb hath offered his blessed body a sacrifice to God the Father, the priest of my redemption. For by that only sacrifice are all the faithful sanctified, and he is our only Advocate and Mediator, and he hath made perfect our redemption. This hath he done alone, without any of your daily oblations.
THEN Dr. Bridges started up and said, Truth, your words are true indeed: you take well the literal sense: but this you must understand, that like as you said that Christ offered his body upon the cross, which was a blood sacrifice, and a visible sacrifice; so likewise we daily offer the self-same body that was offered upon the cross, but not bloody and visible, but invisible, unto God the Father.
DO you offer Christ's body? I said: Why then Christ's sacrifice was not perfect. But Christ is true, when all men shall be liars.
THEN he said, Thou shalt not fear him that hath power to kill the body; but thou shalt fear him that hath power to kill both body and soul.
I answered and said, It is not so. But the text is thus, "Thou shalt not fear them that have power to kill the body, and then have done what they can. But thou shalt fear him that hath power to kill both body and soul, and cast them both into hell-fire," and not them.
HE said, Yes: for it is the church.
I answered, Why, Christ saith, "I give my life for the redemption of the world. No man taketh my life from me (saith he), but I give it of my own power, and so I have power to take it again." Therefore Christ the Son of God did offer his body once for all. And if you will presume to offer his body daily, then your pow [...]er is above Christ's power. With that he was angry, and said, What shall we have doctrine? You are not hereto appointed.
THEN the chancellor stood up and said, Will you turn from this wicked error, and be an example of goodness, as you have been an example of evil? (for by your wicked reading you have persuaded some simple women to be in this error) and you shall have mercy.
AND I said, It is of God that I do crave mercy, whom I have offended, and not you.
THEN the chancellor said, When were you at your parish church? You have stood excommunicate these two years and more: wherefore you are condemned. And so I was condemned.
THUS hast thou, gentle reader, the examinations of this pious young man, set forth in writing with his own hand, who, soon after his condemnation, was brought to the stake by the sheriffs and officers, where with much patience and constancy he endured his martyrdom. At whose burning, one Thomas Carman was apprehended, whose story hereafter followeth in its order and place.
ABOUT the same time one named Fryer, with a woman accompanying him, who was the sister of George Eagles, suffered the like martyrdom by the unrighteous papists, whose tyranny the Lord of his mercy abate and cut short, turning that generation, if it be his will, to a better mind.
An Account of the Apprehension and Death of Mrs. JOYCE LEWES, the Wife of Mr. THOMAS LEWES, of Manceter.
MISTRESS Joyce Lewes, a gentlewoman born, was first married to one Appleby, and afterwards to Thomas Lewes, of Manceter. [Page 474] In the beginning of queen Mary's time she went to church and heard mass as others did, but when she heard of the burning of that most godly and learned martyr Laurence Saunders, who suffered in Coventry, she began to take more heed to the matter, and enquired earnestly of such as she knew feared God, the cause of his death: and when she perceived it was because he refused to receive the mass, she began to be troubled in conscience, and waxed very unquiet. And because her house was even hard by Mr. John Glover's house, of whom mention was made before, a man of blessed memory, and a singular example of his unfeigned godliness, and manifold troubles which he suffered for the gospel, she did oftentimes resort to him, and desired him to t [...]ll her the faults that were in the mass, and other things that at that time were urged as necessary to salvation.
NOW he perceiving both her unquiet mind, and the desire she had to know the truth, did most diligently instruct her in the way of the Lord, proving unto her out of God's holy word, that the mass, with all other papisticai inventions, was odious in God's sight; and besides this, reproved her for that she delighted in the vanities of this world so much. By which godly counsel, she began to grow weary of the world, and thoroughly sorrowful for her sins, being inflamed with the love of God, and desirous to serve him according to his word, purposing also to flee from those things which displeased him. And because she had learned the mass to be evil and abominable, she began to hate it. And when at a time she was compelled by the furiousness of her husband to come to church, at the same time when the holy water was cast, she turned her back towards it, and shewed herself to be displeased with their blasphemous holy water, injurious to the blood of Christ. Whereupon she was accused before the bishop for despising of their sacramentals.
IMMEDIATELY a citation was sent for her to her husband's house, to appear before the bishop. The sumner that brought the citation delivered it to her husband, who looking upon it, was moved with anger, and desired the sumner to take the citation with him again, or else he would make him eat it. The sumner refused to take it again, for he thought no man durst be so bold to him. But in the end Lewes compelled the said sumner to eat the citation indeed, by setting a dagger to his heart; and when he had eaten it, he caused him to drink, and so sent him away. But immediately after, the said Lewes with his wife were commanded to appear before the bishop, where the said Lewes by and by submitted himself, and desiring the bishop to be good to him, excusing himself after the best fashion he could. Whereupon the bishop was content to receive his submission, with condition that his wife should submit herself also. But she stoutly told the bishop, that by refusing of the holy water she had neither offended God, nor any part of his laws. At which words the bishop being grievously offended, yet because she was a gentlewoman, he would not take' her at the worst (as he said), but gave her one month's respite, binding her husband in an hundred pound to bring her again unto him at the month's end, and so they were both let go.
WHEN they came to their own house, the said Mrs. Joyce Lewes gave herself to most diligent prayer, and invocating the name of God, resorting continually to the abovenamed man of God, Mr. John Glover, who did most diligently instruct her with God's word, willing her in any case not to meddle with that matter in respect of vain glory, or to get herself a name, shewing her the great danger she was like to cast herself in, if she should meddle in God's matter otherwise than Christ doth teach.
WHEN the month was now almost expired, and the time at hand that she should be brought before the said bishop, her husband being advertised by the said Mr. John Glover and others, not to carry her to the bishop, but to seek some way to save her, or if the worst should come, to be content to forfeit so much money, rather than to cast his own wife into the fire; he answered, he would not lose or forfeit any thing for her sake; and so, like a murderer of his own wife, he carried her to the bloody bishop, where she was examined, and found more stout, than she was before death was threatened. And to begin withal, she was sent to such a stinking prison, that a certain maid, which was appointed to keep her company, did swoon in the same prison.
[Page 475]BEING thus kept in prison, and oftentimes examined, at length she was brought to judgment, and pronounced an heretic worthy to be burned. When the bishop reasoned with her, why she would not come to the mass, and receive the sacrament and sacramentals of the Holy Ghost; she answered, Because I find not these things in God's word, which you so urge and magnify, as things most needful for men's salvation. If these things were in the word of God commanded, I would, with all my heart, receive, esteem, and believe them. The bishop answered, If thou wilt believe no more than is in the scripture, concerning matters of religion, thou art in a damnable case. At which words she was wonderfully amazed, and being moved by the Spirit of God, told the bishop, that his words were ungodly and wicked.
AFTER her condemnation, she continued a whole twelve-month in prison, because she was committed to the sheriff, that was of late chosen, who could not be compelled to put her to death in his time, as he affirmed; for which things, after her death he was sore troubled, and in danger of his life. All the time she was in prison, her behaviour was such both in words and deeds, that all they, that had any spark of godliness and honesty, did greatly lament her case, that she should be put to death.
NOW when the time drew near which God had appointed for her deliverance, the writ De comburendo (as they term it) being brought down from London, she desired some of her friends to come to her, with whom, when they came, she consulted how she might behave herself, that her death might be more glorious to the name of God, comfortable to his people, and also most discomfortable to the enemies of God. As for death (said she) I do not greatly heed it: when I behold the amiable countenance of Christ my dear Saviour, the ugly face of death doth not greatly trouble me. In which time also she reasoned most comfortably out of God's word, of God's election and reprobation.
IN the evening before her suffering, two of the priests of the close of Litchfield, came to the under sheriff's house, where she lay, and sent word to her by the sheriff, that they were come to her confession; for they would be sorry she should die without. She sent them word again, she had made a confession to Christ her Saviour, at whose hands she was sure to have forgiveness of her sins. As concerning the cause for which she should die, she had no cause to confess that, but rather to give most humble praise to God, that he had made her worthy to suffer death for his word: and as concerning that absolution that they were able to give unto her, being authorized by the pope, she did defy the same, even from the bottom of her heart.
WHICH when the priests heard, they said to the sheriff, Well, to-morrow her stoutness will be proved and [...]ied: for although perhaps she hath now some [...]riends that whisper in her ears, tomorrow we will see who dare be so hardy as to come near her: and so they went their ways with anger, that their confession and absolution was so set at nought.
ALL that night she was wonderfully chearful and merry, with a certain gravity, insomuch that the majesty of the Spirit of God did manifestly appear in her, who did expel the fear of death out of her heart, spending the time in prayer, reading and talking with them that were purposely come unto her, to comfort her with the word of God.
ABOUT three o'clock in the morning, Satan (who never sleepeth, especially when death is at hand) began to stir himself busily, shooting at her that fiery dart, which he is wont to do against all that are at defiance with him, by questioning her, how she could tell that she was chosen to eternal life, and that Christ died for her. I grant that he died, but that he died for thee, how canst thou tell: whilst she was troubled with this suggestion, they that were about her counselled her to follow the example of St. Paul, Gal. ii. where he s [...]ith, "Which hath loved me, and given himself for me." Also, that her vocation and calling to the knowledge of God's word, was a manifest token of God's love, and that love towards God working in her heart, that love and desire towards God to please him, and to be justified by him through Christ, &c. By these and like persuasions, and especially by the comfortable promises of Christ, brought out of the scripture, Satan was put to flight, and she comforted in Christ.
[Page 476]ABOUT eight o'clock, Mr. Sheriff came into her chamber, saying these words, Mrs. Lewes, I am come to bring you tidings of the queen's pleasure, which is, that you shall live but one hour longer in this world: therefore it behoveth you to prepare yourself for it. At which words, being so grossly uttered, and so suddenly, by such an officer as he was, made her somewhat cast down. Wherefore one of her friends and acquaintance standing by, said these words: Mrs. Lewes, you have great cause to praise God, who has vouchsafed so soon to take you out of this world, and made you worthy to be a witness of his truth, and to bear record unto Christ, that he is the only Saviour.
AFTER which words, she said, Mr. Sheriff, your message is welcome to me, and I thank my God that he has made me worthy to offer my life for his service. At which words the sheriff departed: but in the space of an hour he came back again, with swords and clubs; and when he came up into her chamber, one of her friends desired him to give him leave to go with her to the stake, and to comfort her, which the sheriff granted at that time; but afterwards, when she was dead, he was sore troubled for the same.
NOW when she was brought through the town by a number of bill-men, a great number of people being present, she was led by two of her friends, namely, Mr. Michael Reniger, and Mr. Augustine Bernher, and so brought to the place of execution: and because the place was far off, and the throng of people great, and she not acquainted with the fresh air, (being so long in prison) one of her friends sent a messenger to the sheriff's house for some drink: and after she had prayed three several times, in which prayers she desired God most instantly to abolish the idolatrous mass, and to deliver this realm from popery (at the end of which prayers most part of the people cried, Amen; yea, even the sheriff that stood hard by her, ready to cast her into the fire for not allowing the mass, at this her prayer said with the rest of the people, Amen): when she had thus prayed, she took the cup into her hands, saying, I drink to all them that unfeignedly love the gospel of Jesus Christ, and wish for the abolishment of popery. When she had drank, they that were her friends drank also. After that a great number, especially the women of that town, drank with her; who afterwards were put to open penance in the church by the cruel papists, for drinking with her.
WHEN she was chained to the stake, she shewed such chearfulness, that it passed man's reason, being so well coloured in her face, and being so patient, that most of them that had honest hearts were moved, and even with tears bewailed the tyranny of the papists. When the fire was set to her, she made no other resistance than by lifting up her hands towards heaven, being dead very soon▪ for the under sheriff, at the request of her friends, had provided such stuff, that she was suddenly dispatched out of this miserable world.
THIS, amongst other things, is not to be forgotten, that the papists had appointed some to rail upon her, and to revile her, both as she went to the place of execution, as also when she was at the stake. Amongst others there was an old priest, who had a pair of writing tables, wherein he set down the names of those women that drank of the cup, (as before mentioned), and also described her friends by their apparel, for he could not presently learn their names, and afterwards inquired for them: and so immediately after process was sent out for them, both to Coventry and other places: but God, whose providence sleeps not, did defend them from the hands of these cruel tyrants. Unto which God, with the Son and the Holy Ghost, be honour and glory for ever, Amen.
The Martyrdom of RALPH ALLERTON, JAMES AUSTOO, MARGERY AUSTOO, and RICHARD ROTH, at Islington.
ABOUT the seventeenth day of September, were burned at Islington, near London, these four professors of Christ, Ralph Allerton, James Austoo, Margery Austoo his wife, and Richard Roth. Among which it first appeareth, that this Ralph Allerton was, more than a year before his condemnation, apprehended and brought before the lord Darcy, of Colchester, and was there accused, as well for that he would not consent to come unto [Page 477] the idolatry and superstition which then was used, as also that he had by preaching enticed others to do the like.
BEING examined thereupon, he confessed that he coming into his parish of Bentley, and seeing the people sitting there, either gazing about, or else talking together, he exhorted them that they would fall unto prayer, and meditation of God's most holy word, and not sit so idly: to which they willingly consented. Then after prayer ended, he read to them a chapter out of the New Testament, and so departed.
IN which exercised he continued until Candlemas, and then being informed that he might not so do by the law, (for that he was no priest or minister) he left off, and kept himself close in his house till after Easter. At which time, certain men sworn for inquiry of such matters came unto his house, and attached him for reading in the parish of Welley.
BUT when they understood that he had read but once, and that it was of obedience (whereunto he earnestly moved the people) they let him for that time depart. Notwithstanding for fear of their cruelty, he was not long after constrained to forsake his own house, and keep himself in woods, barns, and other solitary places, until the time of his apprehension.
AFTER his examination, the lord Darcy sent him up to the council; but they (not minding to trouble themselves with him) sent him unto Bonner, who by threatenings and other subtle means, so abused the simple and fearful heart of this man, that within a short time he won his most wicked will, and made him revoke and recant his former profession, and thereupon set him at liberty of body; which yet brought such a bondage and terror of soul and conscience, and so cast him down, that except God (whose mercies are immeasureable) had supported and lifted him up again, he had perished for ever.
BUT God, who never suffereth his children utterly to fall, casting his pitiful eyes on his lost sheep, with his merciful and fatherly chastisements, did, with Peter, raise him up again, giving unto him not only hearty and unfeigned repentance, but also a most constant boldness to profess again, even unto death, his most holy name and glorious gospel. Wherefore at the procurement of Thomas Tye, priest, sometime an earnest professor of Christ, but now a fierce persecutor of the same (as appeareth more at large before in the history of William Munt and his wife), he was again apprehended, and sent to bishop Bonner, before whom he was the eighth day of April, and also sundry other times, examined. The report of which examination, written by his own hand with blood, for lack of other ink, here followeth.
The Examination of RALPH ALLERTON at his second Apprehension, before the Bishop of London, at Fulham, April 8, 1557.
AH, sirrah, how chanceth it that you are come hither again on this fashion? I dare say thou art accused wrongfully.
Yea, my lord, so I am. For if I were guilty of such things as I am accused of, then I would be very sorry.
By St. Mary that is not well done. But let me hear, art thou an honest man? For if I can prove no heresy by the [...], then shall thine accusers do thee no harm at all. Go on, let me hear thee; for I did not believe the tale to be true.
My lord, who did accuse me? I pray you let me know, and what is mine accusation, that I may answer thereunto.
Ah, wilt thou so? Before God, if thou hast not dissembled, then thou needest not be afraid, nor ashamed to answer for thyself. But tell me in faith, hast thou not dissembled?
If I cannot have mine accusers to accuse me before you, my conscience doth constrain me to accuse myself before you: for I confess, that I have grievously offended God in my dissimulation, at my last being before your lordship, for which I am very sorry, as God knoweth.
Wherein, I pray thee, didst thou dissemble when thou wast before me?
Forsooth, my lord, if your lordship remember, I did set my hand to a certain writing, the contents whereof (as I remember) were, That I believe in all things as the catholic church teacheth, &c. In which I did not disclose▪ my mind, but shamefully dissembled, because I made no difference between the true church and the untrue church.
Nay, but I pray thee let me hear no more of this trash. For I fear me thou wilt smell of an heretic anon. Which is the true church as thou sayest? Dost thou not call the heretics' church the true church, or the catholic church of Christ? Now which of these two are the true church, sayest thou? Speak, for in faith I will know of thee, before I leave thee.
As concerning the church of heretics, I utterly abhor the same, as detestable and abominable before God, with all their enormities and heresies; and the church catholic is it that I only embrace, whose doctrine is sincere, pure, and true:
By St. Augustine, but that is well said of thee. For, by God Almighty, if thou hadst allowed the church of heretics, I would have burned thee with fire for thy labour.
THEN said one Morton, a priest, My lord, you know not yet what church it is that he calleth catholic. I warrant you he meaneth naughtily enough.
Think you so? Now by our blessed lady, if it be so, he might have deceived me. How say you, sirrah, which is the catholic church?
Even that which hath received the wholesome sound, spoken of by Isaiah, David, Malachi, and Paul, with many other more. Which sound, as it is written, hath gone throughout all the earth in every place, and unto the ends of the world.
Yea, thou savest true before God. For this is the sound that hath gone throughout all Christendom, and he that believeth not the sound of the holy church, as St. Cyprian saith, doth err. For he saith, that whosoever is out of the church, is like unto them that were out of Noah's ship, when the flood came upon all the whole world; so the ark of Noah is likened unto the church; and therefore thou hast well said in thy con [...]ssion. For the church is not alone in Germany, nor was here in England in the time of the late schisms, as the heretics do affirm. For if the church should be there alone, then were Christ a liar: for he promised that the Holy Ghost should come to us, and lead us unto all truth, yea, and remain with us, unto the end of the world. So now, if we will take Christ for a true sayer, then must we needs affirm, that the way which is taught in France, Spain, Italy, Flanders, Denmark, Scotland, and all Christendom over, must needs be the true catholic church.
My lord, if you remember, I spake of all the world, as it is written, and not of all Christendom only, as methinks your lord [...]h [...]p takes it, which kind of speaking you do not find in all the bible. For I am sure, that the gospel hath been both preached and persecuted in all lands: First, In Jewry, by the scribes and pharisees, and since that time, by Nero, Dioclesian, and such like, and now here in these our days by, your lordship knoweth whom. For true it is that the church which you call catholic, is none otherwise catholic than was figured in Cain, observed of by Jeroboam, Ahab, Jezabel Nabuchodonosor, Antiochus, and Herod, with innumerable more of the like: and as both Daniel and Esdras make mention of these last days, by a p [...]ain prophecy, and now fulfilled, as appeareth, and affirmed by our Saviour Christ and his apostles, saying, There shall come grievous wolves to devour the flock.
Now, by the blessed sacrament of the altar, Mr. Morton, he is the rankest heretic that ever came before me. How say you? Have you heard the like?
I thought what he was, my lord, at the first.
Now, by All-hallows, thou shalt be burnt with fire for thy lying, thou whoreson, varlet, and prick-louse thou. Dost thou find a prophecy in David of us? Nay, you knave, it is you that he speaketh of, and of your false pretended holiness. [Page 479] Speak, let me hear what is the saying of Esdras, and take heed you make not a lie, I advise you.
The saying of Esdras is this; "The heat of a great multitude is kindled over you, and they shall take away certain of you, and feed the idols with you, and he that consenteth unto them, shall be had in derision, laughed to scorn, and trodden under foot: yea, they shall be like mad-men, for they spare no man: they shall spoil and waste such as fear the Lord," &c.
And have you taken this thing, to make your matter good? Ah, sirrah, wilt thou so? By my saith, a pretty instruction, a necessary thing, to be taught among the people. By my troth, I think there be more of this opinion. I pray thee tell me: is there any that understandeth this scripture on this fashion? Before God, I think there are none in all England, but thou.
Yes, my lord, there are in England three religions.
Sayest thou so? Which be these three?
The first is that which you hold, the second is clean contrary to the same; and the third is a neuter, b [...]ing indifferent: that is to say, observing all things that are commanded outwardly, as though he were of your part, his heart being set wholly against the same.
And of these three which art thou? For now thou must needs be one of them.
Yea, my lord, I am of one of them; and that which I am of, is even that which is contrary to that which you teach to be believed under pain of death.
Ah, sir, you were here with me at Fulham, and had good cheer, yea, and money in your purse when you went away, and by my faith I had a favour unto thee, but now I see thou wilt be a naughty knave. Why wilt thou take upon thee to read the scripture, and canst understand never a word? for thou hast brought a text of scripture, which maketh clean against thee. For Esdras speaketh of the multitude of you heretics, declaring your hate against the catholic church, making the simple or idle people believe, that all is idolatry that we do, and so intice them away until you have overcome them.
Nay, not so my lord. For he maketh it more plain, and saith on this wise: "They shall take away their goods, and put them out of their houses, and then shall it be known who are my chosen (saith the Lord), for they shall be tried, as the silver or gold in the fire." And we see it come to pass, even as he hath said. For who is not now driven from house and home, yea, and his goods taken up for other men that never sweat for them, if he do not observe as you command and set forth? Or else, if he be taken, then must he either deny the truth, as I did, in dissembling, or else he shall be sure to be tried, as Esdras saith, even as the gold is tried in the fire. Whereby all the world may know, that you are the bloody church, figured in Cain the tyrant, neither are you yet able to avoid it.
I promise you, my lord, I like him better now than ever I did, when he was here before you the other time. For then he did but dissemble, as I perceive well enough; but now methinks he speaketh plainly.
Marry, sir, as you say indeed, he is plain. For he is a plain heretic, and shall be burned. Have the knave away. Let him be carried to Little-ease, at London, until I come.
And so I was carried to London unto Little-ease, and there I remained that night, and on the next morning I appeared before him again, the dean of St. Paul's and the chancellor of London being present. Then were brought forth certain writings that I had set my hand unto.
Come on your ways, sirrah. Is not this your hand, and this, and this?
Yea, they are my hand all of them; I confess the same, neither yet will I deny any thing that I have set my hand unto. But if I have set my hand to any thing that is not lawful, therefore am [Page 480] I sorry. Nevertheless, my hand I will not deny to be my doing.
Well said, now you must tell me; were you never at church since you went from me, at mass, mattins? &c.
No, my lord, not at mass, mattins, nor any other strange worshipping of God.
Yea, sayest thou so? Wast thou neither at thine own parish church, nor at any other? And dost thou also say, that it is a strange worshipping? Why, I pray thee, wilt thou not believe the scripture to he true?
Yea, my lord, I believe the scripture to be true, and in defence of the same I intend to give my life, rather than I will deny any part thereof, God willing.
My lord, this fellow will be an honest man, I hear by him. He will not stand in his opinion; for he sheweth himself gentle and patient in his talk.
Oh, he is a glorious knave. His painted terms shall no more deceive me. Ah, whore's-son, prick-louse, doth not Christ say, This is my body? And how darest thou deny these words, thou knave? I have a writing to shew, and thine own hand to the same. Let me see, pray wilt thou deny this? Is not this thine own hand?
Yes, my lord, it is mine own hand, neither am I ashamed thereof, because my confession is agreeable to God's word. And whereas you do lay unto my charge, that I should deny the words of our Saviour Jesus Christ; oh good Lord, from whence cometh this rash▪ hasty, and untrue judgment? Forsooth not from the Spirit of truth; for he leadeth men into all truth, and is not the father of liars. Whereupon should your lordship gather or say of me so defamously; wherefore, I beseech you, if I deny the scriptures canonical, or any part thereof, then let me die.
My lord, he is a very seditious fellow, and persuadeth other men to do as he himself doth, co [...]trary to the order app [...]nted by the queen's highness and the clergy of the realm. For a great many of the parish will be gathered one day to one place, and another day to another place to hear him, so that very few come to the church to hear divine service: and this was not only before that he was taken and brought unto the council, but also since his return home again, he hath done much harm. For where both men and women were honestly disposed before, by St. Ann now they are almost as bad as he. And furthermore, he was not ashamed to withstand me before all the parish, saying, that we were of the malignant church of Antichrist, and not of the true church of Christ, alledging a great many scriptures to serve his purpose, saying, Good people, take heed, beware of these blood-thirsty dogs, &c. And then I commanded the constable to apprehend him, and so he did. Nevertheless, after this apprehension, the constable let him go about his business all the next day, so that without putting in of sureties, he let him go into Suffolk and other places, for no goodness, I warrant you, my lord: it were alms to teach such officers their duty, how they should let such rebels go at their own liberty, after that they be apprehended and taken, but to keep them fast in the stocks until they bring them before a justice.
As I said before, so say I now again, thou art not of the church of Christ, and that I will prove, if I may be suffered. And where you said, that you commanded the constable to apprehend me, you did so indeed, contrary to the laws of this realm, having neither treason, felony, nor murder to lay to my charge: no, neither had you precept, process, nor warrant to serve on me; and therefore I say without a law was I apprehended. And whereas you seek to trouble the constable, because he kept me not in the stocks three days and three nights, it doth shew in part what you are. And my going into Suffolk was not for any evil, but only to buy half a bushel of corn for bread for my poor wife and children, knowing that I had no long time to [...] with them. But if I had run away, then you [...]ould surely have laid something to his charge.
Go to, thou art a merchant indeed. Ah, sirr [...], before God thou shalt be burnt with fire. Thou [...] Richard Roth, dost thou not? [Page 481] [...] same mind that thou art of, or no? canst thou tell?
He is of age to answer, let him speak for himself; for I hear say that he is in your house.
Lo, what a knave here is. Go, Cluny, fetch me Roth hither. By my troth he is a false knave; but yet thou art worse than he. Ah, sirrah, did you not set your hand to a writing the tenor whereof was, that if you should at any time say, or do heretically, then it should be lawful for me to [...] thee with a relapse, and to proceed in sentence agi [...]st thee?
Yea, that is so. But here is to be asked, whether it is sufficient, that my hand or name in writing be able to give authority to you or to any other to kill me? For if I by writing can do so much, then must my authority be greater than your's. Nevertheless, I have neither said nor done heretically, but like a true christian man have I [...] myself. And so I was committed unto prison again, and the 24th day of the same month▪ I was brought before the bishop, the lord North, Dr. Story, and others, and after a long talk in Latin amongst themselves (unto which I gave no answer, because they spake not to me, although they spake of me), at last the bishop said:
How say you, sirrah? Tell me briefly at one word, wilt thou be contented to go to Fulham with me, and there to kneel down at mass, shewing thyself outwardly as though thou didst it with a good will? come, speak.
I will not say so.
Away with him, away with him.
THE second day of May I was brought before the bishop, and three Noblemen of the council, whose names I do not remember.
Lo, my lords, this same is the fellow that was sent unto me from the council, and did submit himself, so that I had half a hope of him: but by St. Anne I was always in doubt of him. Nevertheless, he was with me, and fared well; and when I delivered him, I gave him money in his purse. How sayest thou? Was it not so as I tell my lords here?
Indeed, my lord, I had meat and drink enough, but I never was in bed all the while. And at my departing you gave me twelve pence, although I asked none, nor would have any.
Be good to him, my lord. He will be an honest ma [...].
Before God, how should I trust him? He hath deceived me once already. But ye shall hear what he will say to the blessed sacrament of the altar. How say you sirrah? After the words of consecration be spoke by the priest, there remaineth no bread, but the very body of our Saviour Jesus Christ, God and man, and none other substance, under the form of bread.
Where find you that written, my lord?
Lo, sir, Why doth not Christ say, "This is my body?" How sayest thou? Wilt thou deny these words of our Saviour Christ? Or else was he a dissembler, of speaking one thing and meaning another? Go to, now I have taken you.
Yea, my lord, you have taken me indeed, and will keep me unti [...] you kill me. However, my lord I marvel why you leave out the beginning of the institution of our Lord? For Christ said, "Tak [...] ye, and eat ye, this is my body." And if it will please you to join the former words to the latter, then shall I make you an answer. For sure I am, that Christ was no dissembler, neither did he say one thing, and mean another.
Why, then must thou needs say, that it is his body; for he saith it himself, and thou confessest that he will not lie.
No, my lord; he is true, and all men are liars. Notwithstanding, I utterly refuse to take the words of our Saviour so fantastically as you teach us to take them: for then should we conspire with certain heretics called the Nes [...]orians; for they deny that Christ had a true natural body, and so methinks you do, my lord. If you will affirm his body to be there, as you say he is, then must you [Page 482] needs also affirm, that it is a fantastical body; therefore look to it for God's sake, and let these words go before; "Take ye and eat ye," without which words the rest are not sufficient; but when the worthy receivers do take and eat, even then are fulfilled the words of our Saviour unto him, or every of them that so receiveth.
Ah, I feel well thou canst not understand these words: I wil [...] shew thee a parable. If I would set a piece of beef before thee, and say, Eat, it is beef: and then take part of it away, and send it to my cook, and he shall change the fashion thereof, and make it look like bread: what, wouldst thou say that it were no beef, because it hath not the fashion of beef?
Let me understand a little further, my lord, shall the cook add nothing thereunto, nor take any thing therefrom?
What is that to the matter, whether he do or not, so long as the shape is changed into another likeness?
Ah, will you so, my lord? your sophistry will not serve; the truth will have the victory nevertheless, as Isaiah saith, He that restraineth himself from evil, must be spoiled. And Amos hath such like words also: For the wise must be fain to hold their peace; so wicked a time it is, saith he; nevertheless, he that can speak the truth, and will not, shall give a strait account for the same.
By my lord's leave, here methinks thou speakest like a fool. Wilt thou be a judge of the scripture? Nay, thou must stand to learn, and not to teach: for the whole congregation hath determined the matter long ago.
No, by your leave, we have a church, and not a congregation. You mistake that word, Mr. Doctor.
Then said I to my fellow-prisoners standing by, My brethren, do ye not hear how these men help one another? Let us do so also. But we never came all in together. Then I was carried away for that time. The 9th day of May I was brought before the bishops of Rochester and [...] chester, with [...].
Were you a companion of George [...] gles otherwise called Trudge-over? My lord of London telleth me that you were his fellow [...]mpanion.
I know him very well my lord.
By my faith, I had him once, and th [...] he was as drunk as an ape, for he stunk so of [...], that I could not abide him; and so sent him away.
My lord, I dare say you took your mark amiss. It was either yourself or some of [...] own company, for he did neither drink wine, [...] nor beer, for a quarter of a year before that [...] and therefore it was not he forsooth.
THE rest of mine examinations you shall have [...] ter I am condemned, if I can have any time [...] my coming into Newgate, when I trust I [...] touch the matter a great deal more plainly [...] the pithy matters are yet unwritten. Th [...] [...] you well, good friends all. Yea, I say, [...] for ever in this present world. Greet ye one [...] ther, and be joyful in the Lord. Salute the [...] widows among you, with all the rest of the cong [...] gation in Barfold, and Dedham, and Colchester.
THIS promise of his, being either not performed [...] for that he might not thereto be permitted, or [...] if he did write, the same not coming to my [...] I am fain in the rest of his examinations to follow the only report of the register, who witnesseth, that the 15th day of May, 1557, in the Bishop's palace at London, he was examined upon certain inte [...] gatories, the contents whereof be these.
FIRST, That he was of the parish of Muchbe [...]tly, and so of the diocese of London.
SECONDLY, That the 10th day of January, then last past, Mr. John Morant preaching at St. Paul's, the said, Ralph Allerton did there openly subscribe himself unto the church of Rome, with the rites and ceremonies thereof.
[Page 483]THIRDLY, That he did consent and subscribe as well unto the same submission, as also to one other bill, in which he granted, that if he should at any time turn again unto his former opinions, it should be then lawful for the bishop immediately to denounce and adjudge him as an heretic.
FOURTHLY, That he had subscribed to a bill, wherein he affirmed, that in the sacrament, after the words of consecration be spoken by the priest, there remaineth still material bread and material wine; and that he believeth that the bread is the bread of thanksgiving, and the memorial of Christ's death; and that when he receiveth it, he receiveth the body of Christ spiritually in his soul, but material bread in substance.
FIFTHLY, That he had openly affirmed, and also advisedly spoken that which is contained in the said [...]mer fourth article above specified.
SIXTHLY, That he had spoken against the bishop of Rome with the church and see of the same, and also against the seven sacraments and other ceremonies and ordinances of the same church, used th [...] within this realm.
SEVENTHLY, That he had allowed and commended the opinion and faith of Mr. Canmer, Ridley, and Latimer, and others of late that were burned within this realm, and believed that their opinions were good and godly.
EIGHTHLY, That he had divers time affirmed, that the religion used within this realm, at the time of his apprehension, was neither good, nor agreeable to God's word, and that he could not conform himself thereunto.
NINTHLY, That he had affirmed, that the book of common prayer, set forth in the reign of king Edward VI. was in all parts good and godly; and that the said Ralph and his fellow prisoners, did daily use amongst themselves in prison some part of the book.
TENTHLY, That he had affirmed, that if he were out of prison, he would not come to mass, mattins, nor evensong, nor bear taper, candle, nor palm, nor go in procession, nor would receive holy water, holy bread, ashes, or pax, or any other ceremony of the church then used within this realm.
ELEVENTHLY, That he had affirmed, that if he were at liberty he would not confess his sins to any priest, nor receive absolution of him; nor yet would receive the sacrament of the altar, as it was then used.
TWELFTHLY, That he had affirmed, that praying to saints, and praying for the dead, were neither good nor profitable, and that a man is not bound to fast and pray, but at his own will and pleasure; neither that it is lawful to reserve the sacrament, or to worship it.
THIRTEENTHLY, That the said Allerton hath according to these his affirmations, abstained and refused to come to his parish church ever since the tenth day of January last, or to use, receive, or allow any ceremonies, sacraments or other rites then used in the church.
TO all these articles he answered affirmatively, denying precisely none of them; saving to this clause contained in the twelfth article, that a man is not bound to fast and pray but at his own will and pleasure, he said that he had affirmed no such thing, but he confessed that he had not fasted nor prayed so oft as he was bound to do. And unto this answer he also subscribed in this sort.
THE next examination was the fourth day of July; the act whereof, because they do appear more amply is his other examination, on the tenth of September, I here omit, giving you farther to understand, that on the seventh day of July, he was brought before Dr. Darbishire in the bishop's palace, who examined him again on the former articles, and after persuaded him to recant, threatening him that otherwise he should be burned. To whom he boldly answered, I would I might be condemned even to-morrow; for I perceive my lord (meaning Bonner) doth seek nothing but men's blood. Upon [Page 484] which saying Dr. Darbishire committed him again to prison, and the tenth of September the bishop caused him (with the other three above-named) to be brought unto Fulham, and there in his private chapel within his house, he judicially propounded unto him certain other new articles; of which, the tenor of the first, fifth, sixth, and seventh are already mentioned in the second, third, and fourth former objections: as for the rest, their contents here follow.
"THOU, Ralph Allerton, canst not deny, but that the information given against thee, and remaining now in the acts of this court of thine ordinary, Edmund Bishop of London, was and is a true information."
THIS information was given by Thomas Tye, curate of Bentley (of whom you have already heard), and certain others of the same parish and affinity; as namely, John Painter, William Harris, John Barker, John Carter, Thomas Candeler, Jeffry Bestwood, John Richard, Richard Meer.
THE effect thereof was, that one Laurence Edwards, of Bentley aforesaid, had a child that was unchristened, and being demanded by the said Tye, why his child was not baptized, he made answer, it should be when he could find one of his religion (meaning a true professor of Christ's gospel). Whereat the curate said, Ah, you have had some instructer that hath schooled you of late. Yea, (quoth Edwards) that I have, and if your doctrine be better than his, then I will believe you; and thereupon fondly offered to fetch him.
WHEREUPON the constable going with him, they brought before the said curate the said Ralph Allerton; of whom in this information they make this report, that he was a seditious person, who since his coming down from the bishop, had set upon the constable's door seditious let [...]rs, moving and persuading thereby the people to follow his malicious disobedience; and that these his persuasions had taken effect in many: and farther, that the said Ralph Allerton (the curate asking him whether he had instructed this Laurence Edwards, that it was against God's commandment to enter into the church) casting his hands abroad, should say, Oh, good people, now is fulfilled the saying of the godly priest and prophet Esdras, who saith, 4 E [...]. 1 [...]. "The fire of a multitude is kindled against a [...] they have taken away their houses, and spoiled their goods," &c. Which of you hath not seen this, [...] day? who is he here amongst you, that seeth [...] all these things done upon us this day? The chur [...] which they call us to, is the church of Antichri [...] a persecuting church, and the church malignant. With these, and many more words (said they, [...] malicously and falsely alledged out of the scriptures) he thus persuaded a great multitude th [...]t present (as much as in him lay) unto disobedien [...]. For which cause the constables did then appreh [...] him.
3 Item, thou, Ralph Allerton, canst not de [...], but the letter sent unto me by my lord Darcy, beginning with these words, [Pleaseth it your lordship, &c.] was thine own letter, and was [...] by thine own hand.
THE contents of the letter mentioned in this [...] ticle, and written by Allerton unto the lord Dar [...] was a confession of his demeanour before his [...] apprehension, the effect and purport whereof, because it appeareth in the beginning of his history, I do here omit.
4. Item, thou Ralph Allerton, canst not deny, but that the other letter, sent also to me from my said lord Darcy, beginning thus, [Pleaseth it your lordship, &c.] and ending with these words, [whensoever it be] is thine own letter, and subscribed with thine own hand.
THIS was also another letter written by him unto the lord Darcy, the contents whereof were, that where the said lord had commanded him to declare where he had been ever since Whitsuntide last before his first apprehension, this was to certify his lordship, that he was not able so to do, otherwise than as he had already shewed him by his former letters. And moreover, whereas he charged him to have read unto the people abroad in the woods, he certified him that he did never read any thing abroad, saying once when he was in the company of George Eagles, and others, Richard Roth took a writing out of his bosom, and desired the said [Page 485] Ralph to read it, which request he then accomplished▪ and demanding of him whose doing the same was, the said Roth told that it was Mr. Cranmer's, late archbishop of Canterbury; and farther he could not shew him. Nevertheless, he was ready and willing to suffer such punishment as his lordship should think meet, desiring yet that the same might be with favour and mercy, although he feared neither punishment nor death: praying the Lord, that it might be in his fear, whensoever it should be.
8. Item, Thou Ralph Allerton, canst not deny, but that the letters written with blood, beginning with these words, [Grace, mercy, and peace] and ending thus, [Farewell in God,] remaining now registered in the acts of this court, were written voluntarily with thine own hand.
HE wrote this letter in the prison with blood for lack of other ink, and did mean to send the same unto Agnes Smith, alias Silverside, at that time imprisoned, and afterwards burned at Colchester for the testimony of the gospel of Christ, as before mentioned. The copy of which letter here ensu [...].
LETTER I. From RALPH ALLERTON unto AGNES SMITH, Widow.
GRACE, mercy, and peace from God the father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ, with the assistance of God's Holy Spirit, and the abundant health both of soul and body, I wish unto you, as to my own soul, as God knoweth, who is the searcher of all secrets.
FORASMUCH as it pleaseth almighty God of his infinite mercy, to call me to the state of grace, to suffer martyrdom for Jesus Christ's sake, although heretofore I have most negligently dallied therewith; and therefore far unworthy I am of such an high benefit, to be crowned with the most joyful crown of martyrdom: nevertheless, it hath pleased God not so to leave me, but hath raised me according to his promise, which saith, "Although he fall, yet shall he not be hurt: for the Lord upholdeth him with his hand, Psal. xxxvii." Wherefore we perceive God's election to be most sure, for undoubtedly he will preserve all those that are appointed to die. And as he hath begun this work in me, even so do I believe that he will finish the same to his great glory, and to my wealth, through Jesus Christ, so be it.
DEARLY beloved sister (I am constrained so to call you, because of your constant faith and love unfeigned), consider, that if we be the true servants of Christ, then may not we in any wise make agreement with his enemy Antichrist. For there is no concord and agreement between them, saith the scriptures, and a man cannot serve two masters, saith Christ. And also it is prefigu [...]ed unto us in the old law, where the people of God were most straitly commanded that they should not mingle themselves with the ungodly heathen, and were also forbidden to eat, drink, or to marry with them. For as often as they did either marry unto their sons, or take their daughter's unto them, or to their sons; even so often came the great and heavy wrath of God upon his own people, to overthrow both them and all their cities, with the holy sanctuary of God; and brought in strange princes to reign over them, and wicked rulers to govern them, so that they were sure of hunger, sword, pestilence, and wild beasts to devour them. Which plagues never ceased, until the good people of God were clean separated from the wicked idolatrous people.
OH, dearly beloved, this was written for our learning, that we, through patience and comfort of the scriptures, might have hope. And is it not in like case happened now in this realm of England? For now are the people of God had in derision, and trodden under foot, and the cities, towns, and houses where they dwelt, are inhabited with them that have no right thereunto, and the true owners are spoiled of their labours: yea, and the holy sanctuary of God's most blessed word is laid desolate and waste, so that the very foxes run over it, &c. yet is it the food of our souls, the lantern of our feet and the light unto our paths; and where it is not preached, the people perish. But the prophet saith "He that refraineth himself from evil men, must be spoiled, Isai. lix." Why should men then be ashamed to be spoiled, seeing that it is told us before, [Page 486] that it must so happen unto them that refrain from evil? And thus I bid you farewell in God.
Item. Thou, Ralph Allerton, canst not deny, but that the letter written with blood, beginning with these words in the over part thereof, [The angel of God, &c.] and ended thus, [Be with you, Amen,] and having also this postscript [Do ye suppose that our brethren, &c.] remaining now registered in the acts of this court, is thine own hand writing.
9. FOR the better understanding of this article, I have also inserted the copy of the letter mentioned in the same; which letter he wrote (by his own confession) unto Richard Roth, then in danger of the subtle snares of that bloody wolf Bonner.
LETTER II. From RALPH ALLERTON unto RICHARD ROTH, his Fellow Martyr.
THE angel of God pitch his tent about us, and defend us all in our ways, Amen, Amen.
O dear brother, I pray · for you: for I hear say, that you have been divers times before my lord in examination. Wherefore take heed for God's sake what the wise man teacheth you, and shrink not away when you are enticed to confess an untruth, for hope of life, but be ready always to give an answer of the hope that is in you. For whosoever confesseth Christ before men, him will Christ also confess before his Father. But he that is ashamed to confess him before men, shall have his reward with them that do deny him [...] And therefore, dear brother, go forward: you have a ready way, so fair as ever had any of the prophets or apostles, or the rest of our brethren, the holy martyrs of God. Therefore covet to go hence with the multitude while the way is full. Also (dear brother) understand that I have seen your letter, and although I cannot read it perfectly, yet I partly perceive your meaning therein, and very gladly I would copy it out, with certain comfortable additions thereunto annexed. The which as yet will not be brought to pass for lack of paper, until my lord be gone from hence, and then your request shall be accompli [...] God willing without delay. Thus fare you [...] in God. Our dear brother and fellow in [...], Robert Allin, saluteth you, and the [...] of the Holy Ghost be with you, Amen.
P. S. Do you suppose that our brethren [...] sisters are [...]t yet dispatched out of this [...] I think that either they are dead, or shall be [...] in these two days.
AND for the other objection yet remaining, [...] not specified, if it were not more somewhat to [...] the folly of these bloody tyrants (which of s [...] [...] tri [...]es take occasion to quarrel with the [...] God) than for any weighty thing therein [...] I would neither trouble you with the reading [...] of, nor yet myself with writing. But that yo [...] [...] judge of them as their actions do give [...] will now proceed in the matter.
Item. Thou, Ralph Allerton, canst not [...] but confessest, that the writing of letters in a [...] piece of paper on both sides or it, with this [...] following on the one side, "Look at the [...] the stocks for a knife," and the following [...] on the other side, "Look between the [...] the wall for two books and two epistles, leave [...] here when you go," remaining now in the [...] and acts of this court, is voluntarily writte [...] [...] thee, Ralph Allerton, with thine own hand.
Item. Thou, Raph Allerton, canst not [...] but that thou art privy to a certain writing, [...]maining now in the register and acts of this [...] the beginning whereof is with these words, I would have men wise," &c. and ending th [...], "From house to house."
Item. Thou, Ralph Allerton, canst not deny, but that thou art privy, and by consent and mai [...] tenance, to a certain great wood-knife, a long sword, a hook, a stone, and a trencher written upon with chalk, having this sentence, "All is gon [...] and lost, because of your folly:" also of two boards written upon with chalk, the one h [...]ing th [...]s sentence, "Under the stone look:" and the [Page 487] other having this sentence, "Whereas you bid me take heed, I thank you, I trust in God that I shall be at peace with him shortly:" remaining now registered in the acts of this court.
FOR answer unto all these articles, he granted that the first nine were true, as the register recorde [...]. Howbeit, I find noted on the backside of the information, specified in the second article (although crossed out again), that he denied such things as were there on information against him. Therefore it is not likely that he did simply grant the contents of the second article, but that he only affirmed, that such an information was given against him, and not that the same was true.
THUS much I thought to acquaint the reader of, le [...]t in mistaking his answers, it might seem that he granted himself to be a seditious and a rebellious p [...]son; of which fact he was both clear and innocent. And being farther demanded upon the contents of the eighth article, where he wrote that letter withal? He said, that Richard Roth, sometime f [...]llow-prisoner with him, did make his nose bleed, [...] thereby he got the blood wherewith he did [...] write. The bishop again asked him, to whom he would have sent the same. He answered, Unto one Agnes Smith, alias Silverside, of Colchester. Why (says the bishop) Agnes Smith was an heretic, [...] burnt for heresy. Nay, said Allerton, she is i [...] better case than I myself, or any of us all. And being again demanded, upon the ninth objection, to whom he would have sent the letter mentioned in the same: he answered, that he intended to have sent it unto Richard Roth, at that time separated [...]rom him. Whereupon the bishop farther inquired, what he meant by these words, "Brethren and sisters," specified in the said letter? He answered, that he meant thereby, such as were lately condemned at Colchester, and were like (at the writing thereof) shortly to be burned. As for the contents of the tenth and eleventh articles, he utterly denied them. But to the twelfth, he confessed, that he wrote upon the said trencher and other boards, the words mentioned in the said article, and that he did leave the same in the prison-house, to the intent that Richard Roth should read them. Bonner also bringing out the wooden sword, mentioned in the said articles, asked him who made it, and for what purpose. Whereunto he answered, that he was the maker thereof, howbeit for no evil purpose. But being idle in the prison, and finding there an old board, he thought the time better spent in making thereof, than to sit and do nothing at all.
THE forenoon being now spent, the rest of this tragedy was deferred till the afternoon. Wherein was ministered unto him yet certain other objections; the tenor whereof was,
First, That he had misliked the mass, calling upon saints, and carrying the cross in procession, with other ceremonies, calling them idolatry, and also had dissuaded them therefrom.
2. Item, That he was much desirous to have the people believe as he did; and therefore being in prison with his fellows, did sing psalms and other songs against the sacrament of the altar, and other ordinances of the church, so loud that the people abroad might hear them and delight in them.
3. Item, That he had divers times conspired against his keeper, and had provided things to kill him, and so to break the prison and escape away.
4. Item, That he had railed against the bishop, being his ordinary, calling him a bloody butcher, tyrant, and ravening wolf, and also against his officers, especially Cluny, his sumner, calling him his butcher's cur, with other such names.
5. Item, That he had murmured, grudged, disdained, and misliked, that the bishop had proceeded against some of his diocese, and had condemned them as heretics, or that he should proceed now against him and others yet remaining in errors, notwithstanding that he and his chaplains had charitably admonished and exhorted them from the same.
6. Item, That he ought faithfully to believe, that there is one catholic church, without which there is no salvation; of which church Jesus Christ is the very priest and sacrifice, whose body and blood is really and truly contained in the sacrament of the altar, under the forms of bread and wine; [Page 488] the bread and wine power transubstantiated into his being by the divine body and blood.
7. Item, That he had kept himself, and also distributed to others, certain heretical and corrupt books, condemned and reproved by the laws of this realm.
8. Item, That he had, contrary to the orders and statutes of this realm, kept company with that seditious heretic and traitor, George Eagles, commonly called Trudge-over, and had heard him read in woods and other places, yet not accusing, but allowing and praising him.
UNTO which articles, because they were for the most part foolish and full of lies, he would in a manner make no answer, saving he granted, that he misliked their mass and other ceremonies, because they were wicked and naught. And moreover, he told the bishop, that he and his accomplices did nothing but seek how to kill innocents.
THE bishop then asked him, whether he would believe in all points touching the sacrament of the altar, as is contained in the general council holden and kept under Innocent the Third, and therewithal he did read the decree of the said council concerning the sacrament.
WHEREUPON Allerton again made answer and said, I believe nothing contained in the same council, neither have I any thing to do therewith; and it were also very necessary, that no man else should have to do therewith.
THEN (quoth Bonner) thou art of the opinion that the heretics lately burnt at Colchester were of.
YEA, said he, I am of their opinion, and I believe that they are saints in heaven.
THIS done, the bishop perceiving that he would not recant, demanded what he had to say, why he should not pronounce the sentence of condemnation against him. To whom he answered, You ought not to condemn me as an heretic, for I am a good christian. But now go to, do as you have already determined: for I see right well, that right and truth is suppressed and cannot appear upon the earth.
THESE words ended, the bishop pronounced the sentence of condemnation, and so delivered him to the temporal officers: who kept him in their cu [...]tog [...] till the 17th of September, at which time, both [...] and the other three before mentioned, were [...] burned, as you have already heard. Of which other three, because as yet little is said, I wi [...] therefore now proceed to declare such cause of [...] cruel deaths, as in the register is recorded.
An Account of JAMES AUSTOO, and MAR [...] his Wife.
I Cannot find why these two persons were [...] apprehended; howbeit, as the days then [...], it was no hard or strange matter to fall into [...] hands of such, as with cruelty persecuted the [...] professors of God's gospel, especially having [...] many promoters, and unkind neighbours to [...] them forwards. By which kind of people, [...] not unlike these two godly yoke-fellows [...] and taken: and being once delivered [...] merciless hands of Bonner, their examinatio [...] [...] may be sure) were not long deferred. For the [...] of July, 1557, they were brought before hi [...] [...] London; where first he demanded of the [...] James Austoo (amongst other questions) where [...] had been confessed in Lent, and whether he [...] ceived the sacrament of the altar at Easter, or not?
TO whom he answered, that indeed he had [...] confessed of the curate of Allhallows Barking, [...] to the Tower of London, but that he had not [...] ceived the sacrament of the altar; for he def [...]ed it from the bottom of his heart.
WHY (quoth the bishop) dost thou not believe, that in the sacrament of the altar, there is the true body and blood of Christ?
NO, said Austoo, not in the sacrament of the altar, but in the supper of the Lord, to the faithful receiver is the very body and blood of Christ by faith.
[Page 489]BONNER, not well pleased with this talk, asked then the wife, how she liked the religion then used in the church of England?
SHE answered, that she believed, that the same was not according to God's word, but false and corrupted, and that they that did go thereunto, did it more for fear of the law, than otherwise.
THEN he again asked her, if she would go to the church and hear mass, and pray for the prosperous estate of the king, being then abroad on his affairs.
WHEREUNTO she said, that she defied the mass with all her heart, and that she would not come into any church wherein were idols.
AFTER this the bishop objected to them certain articles, to the number of eighteen. The tenor whereof (because they touch only such common and tri [...]ing matters as are already mentioned in divers pl [...]ces before) I do here for brevity's sake omit and pass over; giving you yet thus much to understand, that in the matters of faith they were as sound, and answered as truly as ever any did, especially the woman, to whom the Lord had given the greater knowledge, and more fervency of spirit. Notwithstanding, according to the measure of grace that God gave them, they both stood most firmly unto the truth. And therefore to conclude, the 10th day of September they were (with Ralph Allerton) brought again before this bishop within his chapel at [...]Fulham, where he speaking unto them, said first on this wise; Austoo, dost thou know where thou art now, and in what place, and before whom, and what thou hast to do?
YEA, quoth Austoo, I know where I am; for I am an idol's temple.
AFTER which words, their articles being again read, and their constancy in faith perceived, Bonner pronounced against either of them severally the sentence of condemnation, and delivering them unto the sheriff there present, did rid his hands (as he thought) of them; but the Lord in the end will judge that: to whom I refer his cause.
An Account RICHARD ROTH.
IN the godly fellowship of the forenamed three martyrs, was also this Richard Roth, as is already specified; who being apprehended and brought up unto the bishop of London, was by him examined the fourth day of July, at which time the bishop earnestly persuaded him to believe that in the sacraments of the altar (after the words of consecration duly spoken) there remained the very substance of Christ's body and blood, and none other. Whereunto (at that present) he made only this answer; that if the scripture did so teach him, and that he might be by the same so persuaded, he would so believe, otherwise not. But at another examination (which was the 9th of September) he declared plainly, that in the said sacrament of the altar, as it was then used, there was not the very body and blood of Christ, but that it was a dead god, and that the mass was detestable, and contrary to God's holy word and will, from which faith and opinion he would not go or decline.
THE next day, being the tenth of the said month, the bishop, at his house at Fulham (by way of an article), laid and objected against him, That he was a comforter and supporter of heretics: and therefore had written a letter to that effect unto several that were burned at Colchester; the copy whereof followeth.
A LETTER From RICHARD ROTH to his Friends at Colchester.
O Dear brethren and sisters, how much reason have you to rejoice in God, that he hath given you such faith to overcome this blood-thirsty tyrant thus far? And no doubt he that hath begun that good work in you, will fulfil it unto the end. O dear hearts in Christ, what a crown of glory shall ye receive with Christ in the kingdom of God? O that it had been the good will of God that I had been ready to have gone with you. For I lie in my lord's Little- [...]ase in the day, and in the night I lie in the coal-house, from Ralph Allerton, or any other: and we look every day when we shall be condemned. For he said, that I should be burned within ten days before Easter; but I lie still at the [Page 490] pool's brink, and every man goeth in before me; but we abide patiently the Lord's leisure, with many bonds, in setters and stocks; by which we have received great joy of God. And now fare you well, dear brethren and sisters, in this world, but I trust to see you in the heavens face to face.
OH, brother Munt, with your wife and my sister Rose, how blessed are you in the Lord, that God hath found you worthy to suffer for his sake! with all the rest of my dear brethren and sisters known and unknown. O be joyful even unto death. Fear it not, saith Christ, for I have overcome death. Oh dear hearts, seeing that Jesus Christ will be our help, oh tarry you the Lord's leisure. Be strong, let your hearts be of good comfort, and wait you still for the Lord. He is at hand. Yea, the angel of the Lord pitcheth his tent round about them that fear him, and delivereth them which way he seeth best. For our lives are in the Lord's hands; and they can do nothing unto [...]s before God suffer them. Therefore give all thanks to God.
O dear hearts, you shall be clothed in long white garments upon the mount of Sion, with the multitude of saints, and with Jesus Christ our Saviour, who will never forsake us. O blessed virgins, ye have played the wise virgins part, in that you have taken oil in your lamps, that ye may go in with the bridegroom, when he cometh, into the everlasting joy with him. But as for the foolish, they shall be shut out, because they made not themselves ready to suffer with Christ, neither go about to take up his cross. Oh dear hearts, how precious shall your death be in the sight of the Lord! For dear is the death of his saints. O fare you well, and pray. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all, Amen.
THIS letter he confessed indeed (upon the said ex amination) that he had written with his blood, and that he meant to have sent the same unto such as were condemned at Colchester for the gospel of Jesus Christ, and were afterwards burned there, as you have already heard.
THE bishop then farther asked him, what he thought his fellow-prisoner, Ralph Allerton, to be.
HE answered, that he thought him to be one of the elect children of God; and that if at any time hereafter he happened to be put to death for his faith and religion, he thought he should die a true martyr. And moreover, finding himself grieved with the bishop's privy and secret condemning of God's people, he said unto him in this sort: My lord, because the people should not see and [...] your doings, you cause me and others to be brou [...]t to our examinations by night, being afraid to do it by day.
THE bishop not minding his talk, proceeded [...] examine him of other matters, amongst which [...] high and weighty thing was one, How he did like the order and rites of the church then used here in England.
TO whom he said, That he ever had, and [...] the [...] did abhor the same with all his heart.
THEN divers of the bishop's accomplices intreated and persuaded him to recant, and crave mercy of the bishop.
NO (quoth Ralph), I will not ask mercy of him that cannot give it. Whereupon he was (as the rest before-mentioned) condemned and delivered unto the sheriff, and the 17th day of September they all most joyfully ended their lives in one [...] at Islington, for the testimony of Christ.
The Martyrdom of AGNES BONGEOR, and MARGARET THURSTON, two pious women, burnt at Colchester, for the sincere profession of Christ's Gospel.
A Little before (gentle reader) mention was made of ten that suffered martyrdom at Colchester; at which time there were also two other women, one called Margaret Thurston, and the other Agnes Bongeor, that should have suffered with them, and were likewise condemned at the same time and place, for the l [...]ke cause with the other ten before mentioned, and answered also in [Page 491] their examinations to the same effect as the other did. But the one, namely Margaret Thurston, the morning she should suffer with those that went from the castle, was for that time deferred. What the cause was, the Testimony of Joan Cook shall declare unto us. Which Joan Cook, now the wife of John Spark, being then in the castle of Colchester for religon, did demand of this Margaret Thurston, whose husband died in prison, being imprisoned for religion, wherefore the said Margaret, being a condemned woman, should be reserved when the others suffered in the castle Baily? She answered, That it was not for any fear of death; but being prepared, as the rest were that suffered the same day, she was taken with a great shivering and trembling of the flesh: whereupon, forsaking the company, she went aside to pray; and whilst she was a praying, she thought she was lifted up by a mighty [...] that came round about her. Even at that instan [...] came in the goaler and company with him, and whilst she turned herself to fetch her psalter, [...] [...]ook the other prisoners and left her alone. Sh [...]rtly after she was moved out of the castle, and put into the town-prison, where she continued until Friday seven-night after her company were bun [...]. Th [...] day, not two hours before her death, she was brought to the castle again, where she declared thus much to the aforesaid Joan Cook.
THE other named Agnes Bongeor, who should have suffered in like maner with the six that went out of Mote-Hall, was also kept back at that time, but not in like sort, because her name was wrong written within the writ.
THE same morning the second of August, that the said six in Mote-Hall were called out to go to their martyrdom, Agnes Bongeor was also called with them, by the name of Agnes Bower. Wherefore the bailiffs, understanding her to be wrong named within the writ, commanded the said Agnes Bongeor to prison again, as you have heard in the letter before-mentioned, and so that day sent her from Mote-Hall to the castle, where she remained till her death.
BUT when she saw herself separated from her fellow prisoners in such a mannner, oh! what piteous complaints that good woman made; how bitterly she wept, what strange thoughts came into her mind, how naked and desolate she esteemed herself, and to what a plunge of despair and care her poor soul was brought, it was both sad and moving to behold; and all because she went not with them to give up her life for the cause of Christ; for of all things in the world, life was the least thing that she expected. For the morning, on which she was kept back from burning, she had put on a smock that she had prepared only for that purpose. And also having a child, a little young infant suckling on her, whom she kept with her tenderly all the time she was in prison, that day likewise did she send away to another nurse, and prepared herself presently to give herself for the testimony of the glorious gospel of Jesus Christ. So little did she look for life, and so greatly did God's gifts work in her above nature, that death seemed much better welcome than life. But this took not effect at that time as she thought it would, and therefore (as I said) she was greatly troubled.
[...] in this great perplexity of mind, a friend of her's came to her, and required to know whether Abraham's obedience was accepted before God, for that he did sacrifice his son Isaac, or in that he would have offered him? Unto which she answered thus.
I know, said she, that Abraham's will before God was allowed for the deed, in that he would have done it, if the angel of the Lord had not stayed him: but I (said she) am unhappy, the Lord thinketh me not worthy of this dignity, and therefore Abraham's case and mine is not alike.
WHY then, said her friend, would you not willingly have gone with your company, if God should so have suffered it?
YES, said she, that I would with all my heart, and because I did not, it is now my chief and greatest grief.
THEN, said her friend, my dear sister, I pray thee consider Abraham and thyself well, and thou shalt see thou dost nothing differ with him in will at all.
ALAS, said she, there is a far greater matter in [Page 492] Abraham than in me; for Abraham was tried with the offering of his own child, but so am not I; and therefore our cases are not alike.
GOOD sister, said her friend, weigh the matter but indifferently. Abraham, I grant, would have offered his son: and have not you done the like in your little sucking babe? But consider further than this, my good sister (said he), where Abraham was commanded but to offer his son, you are heavy and grieved because you offer not yourself, which goeth somewhat more near you than Abraham's obedience did; and therefore before God, assuredly, is no less accepted and allowed in his holy presence; which further the preparing of your shroud also doth argue full well, &c. After which talk between them she began a little to stay herself, and gave her whole exercise to reading and prayer, wherein she found a great deal of comfort.
DURING the time that these aforesaid good women were prisoners, one in the castle, and the other in Mote-Hall, God by a secret means called the said Margaret Thurston unto his truth again; who having her eves opned by the working of his Spirit, did greatly sorrow and lament her backsliding before, and promised faithfully to the Lord in hope of his mercies, never more while she lived to do like again, but that she would constantly stand to the confession of the same, against all the adversaries of the cross of Christ. After which promise made, came in a short time a writ from London for the burning of them, which was accordingly executed the 17th day of September, in the year aforesaid.
NOW when these aforesaid women were brought to the place at Colchester, where they should suffer, they fell down upon their knees, and made their humble prayers to God, which being done, they rose and went to the stake joyfully, and were immediately chained thereto, and after the fire had incompassed them about, they with great joy and glorious triumph gave up their souls, spirits, and lives, into the hands of the Lord, under whose government and protection, for Christ's sake, we beseech him to grant us his holy defence and help for evermore, Amen.
An Account of JOHN KURDE, Martyr.
IN the Story before, something was mentioned of a certain shoemaker suffering at Northampton, being un-named; yet, because we understand by a letter sent from the said parties, that he suffered in this year, 1557, and in the month of Septemeber, we therefore thought to place him there. His na [...] was John Kurde, a shoemaker, late of the parish of Syrsam, in Northamptonshire, who was imprisoned in Northampton castle for denying the popish tra [...] substantiation, for which cause William [...], bachelor of law, and chancellor unto the Bishop of Peterborough, and now archdeacon of Northampton, did pronounce sentence of death against [...] said Kurde, in the church of All-Saints, in Northampton. in August 1557, and in September following, at the commandment of sir Thomas Tr [...] am, sheriff then of the shire, he was led by his o [...] cers without the North-gate of Northampton, [...] in the stone pits was burned. A popish priest [...] by, whose name was John Rote, vicar of [...] Giles's in Northampton, did declare unto him, that if he would recant, he was authorised to give him his pardon. His answer was, that he had his pardon by Jesus Christ, &c.
An Account of the apprehending of JOHN NOYES, of Laxfield, in the County of Suffolk, Shoemaker, April 19, 1557.
IN the month of September this present year, or (as some report) in the year past, suffered the blessed martyr, John Noyes, whose Story here followeth.
FIRST, Mr. Thomas Lovel, being then chief constable of Hoxton Hundred, in the county aforesaid, and one John Jacob, and William Stannard, then being under-constables of the aforesaid town of Laxfield, and Welfren Dowsing, and Nicholas Stanard, of the same town, being then accounted [Page 493] faithful and catholic christians, though undoubtedly they proved most cruel hinderers of the true profession of Christ and his gospel, with others, were commanded to be that present day before the justices, whose names were Mr. Thurston, sir John Tyrrel, and Mr. Kene, and sir John Silliard being high sheriff.
THESE sitting at Hoxton, in the county of Suffolk aforesaid, and there the said townsmen aforesaid, having commandment of the said justices to enquire in their town if there were any that would n [...]glect to come to their service and mass, further to examine the cause why they would not come, and thereupon to bring the true certificate to the said justices within fourteen days then next ensuing; they then coming homeward, being full of hatred against the truth, and desirous to get promotion, without any such commandment of the justices (as far as we can learn), took counsel one with another how to attach the said John Noyes without any more delay.
THIS devilish enterprise agreed upon, chiefly through the counsel of Mr. Thomas Lovel, Wolfren Dowsing, and Nicholas Stannard, aforesaid, with expedition his house was beset on both sides. This done, they found the said John Noyes in the back side of the said house, going out; and Nicholas Stannard called the said John, and said, Whither goest thou? and he said, To see some of my neighbours. And the said Nicholas Stannard said, Your master hath deceived you; you must go with us now. But the said John Noyes answered, No, but take you heed your master deceive not you. And so they took him and carried him to the justices the next day. After his appearence and sundry causes alledged, the justices and sheriff together cast him into Eye-dungeon, and there he lay a certain time; and then was carried from thence to Norwich, and so came before the bishop, where were ministered unto him these positions following:
FIRST, Whether he believed that the ceremonies used in the church were good and godly, to stir up men's minds to devotion.
2. Item, Whether he believed the pope to be supreme head of the church here on earth.
3. Item, Whether he believed the body of our Lord Jesus Christ to be in the sacrament of the altar under the forms of bread and wine, after the consecration.
FIRST which sentence at last was read by the bishop against him, in the presence of these there sitting the same time, Dr. Dunning, chancellor, sir W. Woodhouse, sir Thomas Woodhouse, Mr. George Heyden, Mr. Spencer, Mr. Farrar, alderman of Norwich, Mr. Thurston, and Win [...]sden, with divers others.
NO more of his examination than this came to our hands.
IN the mean time his brother-in-law, Nicholas Fisk, of Dinnigton, to comfort him at such time as he remained in the Guildhall of Norwich, after christian exhortation, asked him if he did fear death when the bishop gave judgment against him, considering the terror of the same; and the said Noyes answered, he thanked God he feared death no more at that time than he or any other did, being at liberty. Then said Nicholas required of him to shew cause of his condemnation. Upon which request the said John Noyes wrote with his own hands as follows.
I said that I could not believe, that in the sacrament of the altar there is the natural body of Christ, that same body that was born of the virgin Mary. But I said, that the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ is received by christian people in the remembrance of Christ's death as a spiritual food, it be if ministered according to Christ's institution.
BUT they said, That I could not tell what spiritual meant.
THE bishop said, That the sacrament was God, and must be worshipped as God. So said the chancellor also.
THEN answered I, and said, My lord, I cannot so believe.
[Page 494]THEN said the bishop, Why? Then say thou dost believe. Notwithstanding, th [...]se collusions could not prevail.
NOW being condemned, he was sent again from Norwich to Eye-prison, and about the 21st day of September, about midnight, he was brought from Eye to Laxfield, to be burned; and on the next morning was brought to the stake, where were waiting for [...]is coming, the aforesaid justice, Mr. Thurston, one Mr. Waller, being then under-sheriff, and Mr. Thomas Lovell, high constable, as is before expressed; who commanded men to make read [...] all things meet for this sinful purpose. Now the fires in most houses of the street were put out, saving that a smoak was espied by the said Thomas Lovell, proce [...]ding out from the top of a chimney, to which house the sheriff and Grannow his man went, and broke open the door, and thereby got fire, and brought the same to the place of execution. When John Noyes came to the place where he should be burned, he kneeled down and said the [...] Psalm, with other prayers, and then they making haste bound him to the stake, and being bound, the said John Noyes said, "Fear not them that kill the body, but fear him that can kill both body and soul, and cast it into everlasting fire."
WHEN he saw his sister weeping and making moan for him, he told her that she should not weep for him, but weep for her sins.
THEN one Nicholas Cadman brought a faggot and set against him; and the said John Noyes took up the faggot and kissed it, and said Blessed be the time that ever I was born to come to this.
THEN he delivered his psalter to the Under sheriff, desiring him to be good to his wife and c [...] dren, and to deliver her that same [...]ook; and the sheriff promised him that he would, notwithstanding he never performed his promise. Then the said John Noyes said to the people, They say they can make God of a piece of bread, believe them not.
THEN said he, Good people, be [...]e witness that I do believe to be saved by the merits and passion of Jesus Christ, and not by mine own deeds; and so the fire was kindled, and burning about him, [...]: then said, Lord, have mercy upon me. Christ [...] mercy upon me. Son of David, have mercy upon me.
AND so he yielded up his life, and when his [...] was burned, they made a pit to bury the [...] and ashes, and amongst the same they found one [...] his feet that was unburned, whole up to the arch with the hose on, and that they buried with [...]
NOW while he was burning, there stood [...] John Jarvis, a servant in the same town [...] fellow, who said, Good Lord, how the [...] his arms shrink up. And there stood behind [...] Grannow and Benet, the sheriff's men, and the [...] [...] their master, that John Jarvis said, What [...] wretches are these? And their master ordered [...] to apprehend him, and they took him, and [...] him, and carried him before the justice [...] day, and the justice did examine him of the [...] aforesaid, but he denied them, and answered [...] said nothing but this, Good Lord, how the [...] of his arms shrink up. But for all this the [...] did bind his father and his master in 50 l. a piece, [...] he should be f [...]thooming at all times. [...] the Wednesday following, he was brought [...] before the justices, Mr. Thurston and Mr. [...] they sitting at Freling [...]eld, in Hoxton [...] and there they did appoint and command, that [...] said John Jarvis should be set in the stocks [...] next market-day, and whipt about the market [...]. But his master, one William Jarvis [...] after crave friendship of the constables, and th [...] did not set him in the stocks till Sunday [...], and in the afternoon they did whip [...] about the market with a dog whip having, [...] cords, and so they let him go.
A LETTER. From JOHN NOYES to his Wife to comfort her at [...] Time as he lay in Prison.
WIFE, you desired me that I would send you some tokens that you might remember me. As I did read in the New Testament, I thought it good to write unto you certain places of the scripture for a remembrance. St. Peter saith, 1 Pet. [Page 495] [...]. Dearly beloved, be not troubled with this [...] come among you to try you, as though [...] strange thing had happened unto you, but rejoice, insomuch as ye are partakers of Christ's sufferings, that when his glory appeareth ye may be merry and glad. If ye be raised on for the name of Christ, happy are ye, for the Spirit of glory, and the Spirit of God resteth upon you.
"IT is better if the will of God be so, that ye [...]ffer for well doing than for evil doing.
"See that none of your suffer as a murderer, or as [...] thief, or an evil-doer, of as a busy body in other men's matters; but if any man suffer as a christian man, let him not be ashamed, but let him glorify God [...]n this behalf; for the time is come that [...] must begin at the house of God. If it [...]rst b [...]gin at us, what shall the end of them be that [...]lieve not the gospel of God? Wherefore let [...]em that suffer according to the will of God, com [...]it their souls to him in well doing."
ST. Paul saith, 2 Tim. iii. "All that will live godly in Christ Jesus, must suffer persecution."
ST. John saith, 1 John ii. "See that ye love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world, as the lust of flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world [...] which vanisheth away and the lust therereof, but he that fulfilleth the will of God abideth for ever."
ST. Paul saith, Col. i [...]i. "If ye be risen again with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God. Set your affection on things that are above, and not on things which are on earth."
OUR Saviour Christ saith, Matt. xviii. "Whosoever shall offend one of these little ones that believe in me, it were better for him that [...] millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were cast into the sea."
THE prophet David saith, Psal. xxxiv▪ "Great are the troubles of the righteous, but the Lord delivereth them out of all.
"FEAR the Lord, ye saints▪ for they that fear him lack nothing.
"WHEN the righteous cry, the Lord heareth them, and delivereth them out of all their troubles: but misfortune shall slay the ungodly, and they that hate the righteous shall perish.
"HEAR, O my people. I assure thee, O Israel, if thou wilt hearken unto me, there shall no strange god be in thee, neither shalt thou worship any other God. Oh that my people would obey me: for if Israel would walk in my ways, I should soon put down their enemies, and turn my hand against thine adversaries.
OUR Saviour Christ saith, "The disciple is not above the master, nor yet the servant above his lord. It is enough for the disciple to be as his master is and that the servant be as his lord is. If they have called the master of the house Beelzebub, how much more shall they call them of his [...]oushold [...] fear not them therefore."
ST. Paul saith, 2 Cor. iv. "Set yourselves there at large, and bea [...] not a stranger's yoke with the unbelivers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? what company hath light with darkness? o [...] what part hath the believer with the infidel [...] &c. w [...]erefore come out from among them, and separat [...] ourselves now (saith the Lord), and touch no unclean thing; so will I receive you, and I will be a Father unto you, and ye shall [...]e my sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty.
"FOR neither eye hath seen, nor the ear hath heard, neither can it enter into the heart of man what good things the Lord hath prepared for them that love him." 1 Cor. ii.
"Ye are bought neither with silver nor gold, but with the precious blood of Christ," 1 Pet. i.
"There is none other name given to men wherein we must be saved," Acts iv.
So [...] ye well, wife and children; and leave worldly care, and see you [...]e diligent to pray.
[Page 496]"TAKE no thought, (saith Christ, Matt. vi.) saying, What shall we eat or what shall we drink, or wherewith shall we be clothed? (for after all these things seek the Gentiles) for your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things, but seek ye first the kingdom of heaven, and the righteousness thereof, and all these things shall be ministered unto you."
The Martyrdom of CICELY ORMES, at Norwich.
ABOUT the 2 [...] day of the said month of September, next after the others above-mentioned, suffered at Norwich, Cicely Ormes, wife of Edmund G [...]mes, worsted-weaver, dwelling in St. Laurence parish in Norwich: she being of the age of twenty-two, or more, was taken at the death of Simon Miller and Elizabeth Cooper above-mentied in a place called Lollard's Pit without Bishopsgate, at the said Norwich, for that she said that she would pledge them of the same cup that they drank of. For so saying, one Mr. Corbet, of Sprowson, by Norwich, took her and sent her to the chancellor. When she came before him, he asked her what she said unto the sacrament of Christ's body. And she said, she did believe that it was the sacrament of the body of Christ. Yea said the chancellor, but what is that the priest holdeth over his head? she answered him and said, It is bread: and and if you make it any better, it is worse. At which words the chancellor sent her to the bishop's prison, to the keeper called Fellow, with many threatenings and hot words, as a man being in great rage.
THE twenty-third of July she was called before the chancellor again, who sat in judgement with Mr. Bridges and others. The chancellor offered her if she would go to the church and keep her tongue, she should be at liberty, and believe as she would. But she told him she would not consent to his wicked desire therein, do with her what he would; for if she should, she said, God would surely plague her. Then the chancellor told her, he had shewed more favour to her, than ever he did to any, and that he was loth to condemn her, considering that she was an ignorant, unlearned and foolish woman. But she not weighing his words, told him, if he did, he should not be so desirous of her sinful [...], as she would (by God's grace) be content [...] in so good a quarrel. Then he rose and read [...] bloody sentence of condemnation against her, and so delivered her to the secular care of the sheri [...] of the city, Mr. Thomas Sutherton, and Mr. L [...] nard Sutherton, brethren, who immediately [...] her to Guildhall in Norwich, where she rem [...]i [...] ed until her death.
THIS Cicely Ormes was a very simple woman, but yet zealous in the Lord's cause, being born i [...] East Deram, and was the daughter of one [...] Haund, taylor. She was taken the 5th day of July, and did for a twelve-month before she [...] taken recant, but never after was she quiet in c [...] science, until she was utterly driven from all [...] popery. Between the time that she recanted, [...] that she was taken, she had got a letter [...] give to the chancellor, to let him know that [...] repented her recantation from the bottom of [...] heart, and would never do the like again while [...] lived. But before she exhibited her bill, she [...] taken and sent to prison as is before said. [...] was burnt the 23d of September, between [...] and eight in the morning, the said two sheri [...] being there, and to the number of two hundr [...] people. When she came to the stake, she [...] down, and made her prayers to God: that [...] done, she rose up and said, Good people, I believe in God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost, three persons and one God.
THIS do I not, nor will I recant; but I recant utterly from the bottom of my heart [...] doings of the pope of Rome, and all his pop [...] priests I utterly refuse, and never will have to [...] with them again by God's grace. And, good people, I would you should not think of me, that I believe to be saved in that I offer myself [...] unto the death of the Lord's cause, but I believe to be saved by the death and passion of Christ; [...] this my death is and shall be a witness of my faith unto all here present. Good people, as many of you that believe as I believe, pray for me.
THEN she came to the stake, and laid her hand on it, and said, "Welcome the cross of Christ." Which being done, she looked on her hand, and seeing it blacked with the stake, she wiped it upon [Page 497] her smock, for she was burnt at the same stake that Simon Miller and Elizabeth Cooper was. Then after she had touched it with her hand, she came and kissed it, and said, "Welcome the sweet cross of Christ," and so gave herself to be bound thereto. After the tormentors had kindled the fire to her, she said, "My soul doth magnify the Lord, and my spirit rejoiceth in God my Saviour:" and in saying so she set her hands together right against her breast, casting her eyes and head upward, and so stood, heaving up her hands by little and little, till the very sinews of her arm did break asunder, and then they fell; but she yielded her life unto God, as quietly as if she had been in a slumber, or as one feeling no pain: so wonderfully did the Lord work with her: his name therefore be praised evermore, Amen.
AFTER the death and martyrdom of Mrs. Joyce Lewes, a little above specified, diverse good men and women in the same town of Litchfield were had up before the bishop and his chancellor, for kissing the said Joyce Lewes, and drinking with her about the time of her death; the names of which persons were these; John Love, Elizabeth Smith, Margaret Biddle, Helen Bouring, Margaret Cootesfore, Nicholas Bird, John Haristone and his wife, Agnes Glyn, Agnes Glover, Agnes Penifather, &c. These with others were produced to their examination before the bishop and his chancellor for the cause above-named, and therefore adjudged for heretics, because they did pray and drink with the said Mrs. Lewes, but especially Agnes Penifather sustained the most trouble, for that she accompanied the said Joyce Lewes going to her death. Which Agnes being examined further of the said bishop, what words she had spoken to two priests of the church of Litchfield, called John Ady and James Fox, concerning the said Joyce Lewes after her burning, said as followeth, That she being asked by the said two priests being at her father's house in the city of Litchfield, at such time as she came from the burning of the said Joyce Lewes, why she the said Agnes did weep for such an heretic, meaning Joyce Lewes, whose soul they said was in hell; the said Agnes Penifather to their demand made this answer, That she thought the said blessed martyr to be in better case than the said two priests were.
WITH which words being charged, and desired to submit herself as the others had done above rehearsed to such penance as they should enjoin unto her, she refused so to do, and therefore was commanded to close prison, the sheriffs being charged with her under pain of an hundred pounds, that none should have any access unto her. At length, at the persuasion of her friends, she was compelled to do as the others had done before. And thus much concerning things done at Litchfield.
AND now from Litchfield we come to Chichester, although we have but little to report thereof, for want of certain relation and records of that country, yet it seemeth no little trouble and persecution to have there raged also, as in other countries. For what place was there almost in all the realm, where the pope's ministers did not bestir them, murdering some or other, as in the acts of this ecclesiastical history may sufficiently appear? Wherefore as this plague of the pope's tyranny was general to all other people and countries of England, so likewise in the diocese of Chichester, divers and many there were condemned and martyred for the true testimony of righteousness within the compass of queen Mary's reign. In the number of whom were these: John Foreman, of Estgrenested. John Warner, of Berne. Christian Grover, of the arch-deaconry of Lewes. Thomas Athoth, priest. Thomas Avington, of Erdingly. Dennis Burgis, of Buxsted. Thomas Ravensdale, of Rye. John Milles, of Hellinglegh. Nicholas Holden, of Withiam. John Hart, of Withiam. Margery Morice, of Hethfield. Anne Try, of Estgrenested. John Oseward, of Woodmancote. Thomas Harland▪ of Woodmancote. James Morice, of Hethfield. Thomas Dougate, of Estgrenested. John Ashedon, of Katherfield.
THE greatest actors against these faithful martyrs were these: Christopherson, the bishop of Chichester, Richard Briefly, doctor of law, and chancellor of Chichester, Robert Taylor, batchelor of the law, his deputy, Thomas Piccard, civilian, Anthony Clarke, Albane Longdale, batchelor of divinity, &c.
The Examination of THOMAS SPURDANCE, one of Queen Mary's Servants, before the Chancellor of Norwich.
THE bishop's chancellor asked me if I had been with the priest, and confessed my sins unto him.
AND I said, No, I had confessed my sins to God, and God saith, in what hour soever a sinner repenteth and is sorry for his sins, and asketh forgiveness, willing no more so to do, he will no more reckon his sin unto him; and that is sufficient for me.
THEN said the chancellor, Thou deniest the sacrament of penance.
I said, I deny not penance, but I deny that I should shew my sins unto the priest.
THEN said the chancellor, That is denying of the sacrament of penance.
WRITE this article.
HAVE you received the blessed sacrament of the altar (said he) at this time of Easter?
AND I said, No.
AND why have you not? said he.
I said, I dare not meddle with you in it, as you use it.
WHY, do we not use it truly? said he.
I said, No: for the holy supper of the Lord serveth for the Christian congregation, and you are none of Christ's members; and therefore I dare not meddle with you, lest I be like unto you.
WHY are we none of Christ's members? said the chancellor.
I said, Because you teach laws contrary to God's laws.
WHAT laws are those? said he.
I said, These three articles, that you swear the people unto here, be false and untrue, and you do evil to swear the people unto them.
THEN said he, Good people take no heed unto his words; for he is an heretic, and teacheth you disobedience: and so he would no more speak of that matter.
THEN said he, How believest thou in the blessed sacrament of the altar: dost not thou believe that after it is consecrated, it is the very same body that was born of the Virgin Mary?
I said, No, not the same body in substance; [...] the same body hath a substance in flesh, blood, and bones, and was a bloody sacrifice, and this is a [...] sacrifice.
AND I said, Is the mass a sacrifice?
UNTO which a doctor answered that sat by hi [...], It is a sacrifice both for the quick and the dead.
THEN said I, No, it is no sacrifice; for St. P [...]l saith, that Christ made one sacrifice once for all, and I do believe in none other sacrifice that [...] Lord Jesus Christ made once for all.
THEN said the doctor, That sacrifice that Christ made was a wet sacrifice, and the mass is a dry sacrifice.
THEN said I, That same dry sacrifice is a sacrifice of your own making, and it is your sacrifice, it is none of mine.
THEN said the chancellor, He [...]is an heretic, he denieth the sacrament of the altar.
THEN said I, Will ye know how I believe in the holy supper of the Lord?
AND he said, Yes.
THEN said I, I believe that if I come rightly and worthily as God hath commanded me to the holy supper of the Lord, I receive him by faith, as by believing in him. But the bread being received is not God, and the bread that is yonder in pyx is not [Page 499] God. God dwelleth not in temples made with hands, neither will he be worshipped with the works of men's hands. And therefore you do very evil to cause the people to kneel down and worship the bread; for God did never bid you hold it above your heads, neither had the apostles such use.
THEN said the chancellor, He denieth the presence in the sacrament. Write this article also. He is a very heretic.
THEN said I, The servant is not greater than his master. For your predecessors killed my master Christ, the prophets and apostles, and holy virtuous men, and now you also kill the servants of Christ, so that all the righteous blood that hath been shed, even from righteous Abel until this day, shall be required at your hands.
WELL, said the chancellor, have him away.
Another Examination of SPURDANCE, before the Bishop in his House.
SIRRAH, dost thou not believe in the catholic faith of the holy church?
I believe Christ's catholic church.
Yea in Christ's church, of which the pope is head? Dost thou not belive that the pope is supreme head of the catholic church?
No. I belive not that he should be above the apostles, if he take them to be his predecessors. For when there came a thought among the apostles, who should be the greatest when their master was gone, Christ answered them unto their thoughts, "The kings ot the earth bear dominion above each other, but ye shall not so do. For he that will be greatest among you shall become servant unto all. How is it then (said I) that he will climb so high above his fellows? And also we were sworn in my master king Henry's time, that we should, to the utmost of our power, never consent to him again. And theref [...]re as he hath nothing to do here in England, so neithe [...] hath he in his own country more than a bishop hath in his diocese.
Yea, what of that? We were then in error and sin, now we are in the right way again, and therefore thou must home again with us, and acknowledge thy fault, and become a christian man, and be sworn unto the pope as our supreme head. Wilt thou be sworn unto the pope? How sayest thou?
No, I warrant you, by the grace of God, not as long as I live. For you cannot prove by the scripture that the pope is head of the church, and may do therein what he listeth.
No? yes I trow; for as the bell-weather which weareth the bell, is head of the flock of sheep, even so is the pope the head of the church of Christ. And as the bees in the hive have a master bee, when they are gone out, to bring them home to the hive; even, so the pope, when we be gone astray, and wandered from the fold, from the hive, &c. then is ordered our head by succession of Peter, to bring us home again to the true church: as thou now, my good fellow, hast long wandered out of the way like a scattered sheep, &c. Hear therefore that bell-weather, the master bell, &c. and come home with us again to thy mother the church.
My lord, all this is but natural reason, and no scripture: but since you cannot prove the pope to be authorized by scripture, you answer me not a [...] I thought you would.
Ha, I see well you will be stout, and will not be answered; therefore you shall be compelled by law, whether you will or no.
My lord, so did your forefathers treat Christ and his apostles. They had a law, and by their law they put him to death; and so likewise you have a law which is tyranny, and by that you would enforce me to believe as you do; but the Lord, I trust, will assist me against all your beggarly ceremonies, and make your foolishness known to all the world.
When were you at church, or joined in the procession, and did the ceremonies of the church?
Never since I was born.
No? How old are you?
I think about forty.
Why, how did you use yourself at church twenty years ago?
As you do now.
And even now, you said you did not use the ceremonies since you were born.
No more I did since I was bora a-new; as Christ said unto Nicodemus, "Except ye he born a-new ye cannot enter into the kingdom of heaven."
THEN said a doctor that sat by, He is a very anabaptist: for that is their opinion plain.
No, sir, you say falsely, for I am no anabaptist: for they deny children to be baptized, which I do not.
Well, why dost thou not go to church, and do the ceremonies?
Because they are contrary to God's word and laws, as you yourself have taught: but now you say it is good again: and I think if there were a return to-morrow, you would say that was false again which you hold now. Therefore, I may well say, there is no truth in you.
Then thou art a stubborn fellow, and an heretic, and a traitor.
No, I am no traitor, for I have done I think, better service to the crown imperial of England than you.
If you had done such good service, you would be obedient to the laws of the realm.
So I am. There is no man alive, I thank God, that can accuse me justly that ever I was disobedient to any civil laws, but you must consider my lord, that I have a soul and body, and my soul is none of the queen's, but my body and my goods are the queen's. And I must give God my soul, and all that belong unto it, that is, I must do the laws and commandments of God; and whosoever commandeth laws contrary to God's laws. I may not do them for losing of my soul, but must rather obey God than man.
Why dost thou not these laws then? Are they not agreeable to God's laws?
No, you cannot prove them to be God's laws.
Yes, that I can.
Then if you can prove by the word of God, that you should have any graven images made to set in your churches for laymen's books, or to worship God by them, or that you should have the ceremonies in your church as you have, prove them by the word of God, and I will do them.
Then it is a good and decent order to furnish the church: as when you shall go to dinner, you have a cloth upon the table to furnish the table before the meat shall come upon it; so are these ceremonies a comely, decent order to be in the church among christian people.
These are inventions and imaginations our of your own brain, without any word of God to prove them. For God saith, Look what you think good in your own eyes, if I command the the contrary, it is abominable in my sight. And these ceremonies are against God's laws. For St. Paul saith, they be weak and beggarly, and rebuketh the Galatians for doing them.
Well, if you will not do them, seeing they be laws of the realm, you are an heretic and di [...] obedient: and therefore come again and confess your faults with us, that you have been in error, &c. Will you do so?
No, I have been in no error; for the spiritual laws were never more truly set forth than in my [Page 501] master king Edward's time, and I trust unto God I shall never leave them while I live.
THEN came a gentleman to me and said, Are you wiser than all men? and have you more knowledge than all men? Will you cast away your soul willingly? My lord and other men also, would fain you would save yourself: therefore chuse some man where you will, either spiritual or temporal, and take a day, my lord will give it you.
If I save my life, I shall lose it: and if I lose my life for Christ's sake, I shall find it in life everlasting. And if I take a day, when the day cometh, I must say then even as I do now, except I will lie, and therefore that needeth not.
WELL, then have him away, said the bishop.
THIS above-named Thomas Spurdance was one of queen Mary's servants, and was taken by two of his fellows, the said queen's servants, named John Haman, otherwise called Barker, and George Looson, both dwelling in Codman, in the county of Suffolk, who carried him to one Mr. Gosnal, dwelling in the said Codman, and by him he was sent to Bury, where he remained in prison, and was afterwards burned in the month of November.
An Account of the Martyrdom of JOHN HALLINGDALE, WILLIAM SPARROW, and RICHARD GIBSON.
SOON after the martyrdom of the two good women at Colchester, the three above-mentioned persons were put to death in Smithfield, at London, the 18th of November.
BEING brought before Bonner, bishop of London, the 5th day of November, 1557, the following articles were exhibited unto them.
Articles ministered unto JOHN HALLINGDALE.
FIRST, That the said John Hallingdale is of the diocese of London, and so subject to the jurisdiction of the bishop of London.
SECONDLY. That the said John, before the reign of king Edward the Sixth, late king of England, was of the same faith and religon that was then observed, believed, taught and set forth in this realm of England.
THIRDLY, That during the reign of the said king Edward the Sixth, the said John Hallingdale, upon occasion of the preaching of certain ministers in that time, did not abide in his former faith and religion, but did depart from it, and so did and doth continue till this present day, and so determineth to do (as he saith) till his life's end.
FOURTHLY, That the said John Hallingdale hath thought, believed, and spoken divers times, that the faith, religion, and ecclesiastical service received, observed, and used now in this realm of England, is not good and laudable, but against God's commandment and word, especially concerning the mass, and the seven scraments; and that he the said John, will not in any wise conform himself to the same, but speak and think against it during his natural life.
FIFTHLY, That the said John absenteth himself continually from his own parish church of St. Leonard's, neither hearing mattins, mass nor even-song, nor yet confessing his sins to the priest, nor receiving the sacrament to the altar at his hands, or using other ceremonies as they are now used in this church and realm of England: and as he remembereth, he never came but once to the parish church of St. Leonard's, and careth not if he never comes there any more, the service being as it there, and so many abuses being there, especially the mass, the sacraments, and the ceremonies and service set forth in Latin.
SIXTHLY, That the said John, when his wife, called Alice, was brought to bed of a male-child, caused the said child to be christened in English, after the same manner and form in all points, as it was used in the time of the reign of King Edward the Sixth, aforesaid, and caused it to be called Josua, & would not have the said child christened in Latin, after the form and manner as it is now used in [Page 502] the church and realm of England, nor will have it by his will to be confirmed by the bishop
UNTO all which articles the said John Hallingdale made answer, confessing them all, and every part of them to be true, and saying, that he would not revoke his said answers, but stand unto them according as it was in every article above written.
FURTHERMORE, the said John Hallingdale, being demanded by the said Bonner, whether he firmly believed, that in the sacrament, commonly called the sacrament of the altar, there is really and truly the very body and blood of our Saviour Christ, or no; made answer, that he neither in the time of the said king Edward the Sixth, nor at the present did believe, that in the said sacrament there is really the body and blood of Christ. For he said, that if he had so believed, he would (as others had done) have received the same, which he did not, because he had and then did believe, that the very body of Christ is only in heaven and no where else. And furthermore the said John Hallingdale said, that Cranmer, Latimer, Ridley, Hooper, & generally all that have of late been burned for heretics, were no heretics at all, because they did truly preach the gospel; upon whose preaching he grounded his faith and conscience, as he said, according to the saying of St. John, Rev. xviii. where he saith, That the blood of the prophets, and of the saints, and of all them that were slain upon earth, was found in the Babylonical church, by which, he said, is understood the church where the pope is the head.
AFTER which examination, the said John was sent unto prison again. And the next day, being the sixth of the said month, he was called before the bishop again, who persuading him with some wrested sentences of the scripture, the said John Hallingdale answered▪ Because I will not, saith he, come to your Babylonical church, therefore (speaking unto Bonner), you go about to condemn me. And being further demand by bishop Bonner, whether he would persevere and stand in his opinions or no: he made answer, that he would continue and persist in them unto his death. Then Bonner read the sentence of condemnation. At which time the said John affirmed openly, that (thanking God) he never came into the church since the abomination [...] into it, and so he was sent to prison again.
UPON the same forenoon, William Sparrow was brought before the bishop, and had the following articles laid to him.
Articles ministered to WILLIAM SPARROW.
FIRST, That thou William Sparrow, wast in times detected and presented lawfully un [...] thy ordinary, the bishop of London, called Edmund, who also is now thine ordinary of the [...] diocese, and thou wast presented and detected [...] him for heresy, error, and unlawful opinions, which thou didst believe, set forth, and hold.
SECONDLY, That thou before the said ordinary didst openly and judicially confess the said heresies, errors, and unlawful opinions, as appears plainly [...] the acts of the court, had and made before the said ordinary.
THIRDLY, That thou, after the premises, di [...] make thy submission in writing, and didst [...] and deliver the same as thy deed, to thy said ordinary; openly confessing and recognizing thy heresies, errors, unlawful opinions, and thine offences and transgressions in that behalf.
FOURTHLY, That thou, after the premises, did [...] promise unto thy said ordinary, voluntarily and of thine own mind, that always after the said submission, thou wouldst in all points conform thyself unto the common order of the catholic church observed and kept here in this realm of England, and in no wise fall again to heresies, errors, or unlawful opinions.
FIFTHLY, That thou, since thy said submission, hast willingly fallen into certain heresies and errors, and hast holden and set forth divers unlawful opinions, to the great hurt of thine own soul, and also to the great hinderance and loss of several others, especially against the sacrament of the altar, against auricular confession, with the other sacraments of the catholic church.
[Page 503]SIXTHLY, That thou, since the said commission, hast wilfully gone about divers places within the diocese of London, and sold divers heretical, erroneous, blasphemous ballads about, and wast apprehended and taken with the said ballads about thee, and committed to prison.
UNTO the firist, second, third, and fourth articles, he answered affirmatively.
TO the fifth article he answered, That if he had spoke against them, he had spoke but the truth: for they are naught, meaning the contents of the [...] article.
TO the sixth, he granted to the article, adding, that he did sell the said ballads, and that the same did contain God's word.
AFTER which answers, the said William Sparrow was sent unto prison. And the same day in the afternoon, being brought before the bishop again, and there charged with his said submission made [...]he year before unto the bishop, he answered thus: I am sorry, said he, that ever I made it, and it was the worst deed that eve [...] I did: adding further unto them, Hold up your abomination as long as you can. Also being laid unto him, and charged by the bishop that he went to church, and there was confessed and heard mass: he made answer and confessed, that he did so, but with a troubled conscience, he said, God knoweth.
AND being further demanded of Bonner, whether he would persist and continue in the same; he made answer, That he would not go from his opinions: and adding thereunto, he said, That which you call heresy, speaking to the bishop, is good and godly, and if every hair of my head were a man, said he, I would burn them all rather than go from the truth.
THEN being demanded, What ground of learning he had to cleave to his opinions: he made answer and said, That all the laws now used (meaning the ecclesiastical laws) are naught and abominable. Which words being spoken, the bishop immediately read the sentence of condemnation against him, and so delivered him to the secular power, by whom he was sent to prison again.
An Account of Mr. RICHARD GIBSON, Martyr.
WITH the other two above-named, suffered also in the same fire, Richard Gibson, who first was cast into the Compter, in the Poultry (where he had been prisoner for the space of two years for surety in a matter of debt, and then stood upon his deliverance), then upon suspicion and evil will was accused to bishop Bonner, because he was never confessed in the prison, nor received at at the popish altar; by reason whereof he was called for, and sustained divers conflicts and examinations in the cause of his faith and religion. But first he seemed to make certain submission, which he also exhibited with the other twenty-eight before mentioned: but because it seemed in words to differ something from the other, it appeareth not to be received: or whether it was received or no, it is not fully certain. This is certain, that although his submission was recorded in the bishop's register, yet he was not delivered from imprisonment till the day of his burning.
THE greatest matter which he was charged with, was for not coming to confession, being thereunto required, for not receiving of the sacrament of the popish making, and for that he would not swear to answer to their interrogatories laid against him.
NOTWITHSTANDING after these his first examinations, he continued in the prison of the Compter, from the month of May to November, when he was again produced against the final judiciary. Where is to be noted, that Mr. Gibson being a very big and tall man, of a personal and heroical stature, was sent for by Bonner by a little man, a promoter, like Robin Papist, called Robin Caley.
THIS Robin Caley having the conducting of the said gentleman from the Poultry, would needs haul him through Cheapside, the gentleman desiring him to turn some other way. But the more the gentleman intreated, the more fierce was he upon him; and drawing and holding him by the arm, would needs haul him through the High-street, [Page 504] that all the world might see what he could do in his office. Mr. Gibson, desirous to go without holding, intreated him to let his arm loose, and he would go quietly with him whither he would, only craving that he might go by him freely without being noticed by the people.
BUT he saucily answered him▪ Nay, thou shalt not escape me so, come on thy ways. Thou shalt not chuse but come; and so reaching at his arm, would needs drag him unto the bishop. The gentleman content to go, yet loth to be noted in the streets, gently requested again and again, that refraining his hold, he would suffer him to go of his own free will, he should not need to fear him, for he would not start from him. To which he replied, Come on thy way, I will hold thee fast, spite of thy beard, and whether thou wilt or no.
MR. GIBSON beholding his intolerable bragging, and being greatly moved therewith, could bear no longer; but said, Wilt thou? adding moreover, That if he did not immediately pluck away his hand, he would wring his head from his body. Whereupon he let go his hold, and so they proceeded unto the bishop to be examined again before him.
AFTER this, another day being assigned him to appear again, much talk passed between him and Darbyshire, then chancellor. But in fine, being required to swear that he should answer unto all they would demand, he denied to answer unto all things the bishop should command him as ordinary: For he is not, saith he, mine ordinary, and so bade him go tell the bishop. Before which bishop, he being then commanded to appear the Friday following, was brought into the Justice-hall, without Newgate, where he had the like conflicts with the aforesaid bishop and divers other Justices. At length he was assigned the Saturday following, to be present at the bishop's consistory court, to hear his final sentence. At which day and place, the said examinate appearing as he was commanded, the bishop, after other matter of communication, asked him if he knew any cause why the sentence should not be read against him. To whom Mr. Gibson answered, that the bishop had nothing whereof justly to condemn him. The bishop's reason was again objected to him, that men said he was an evil man. To whom Gibson replying again; Yea, saith he, and so may I say of you also. To be short, after this and such other talk, the bishop hasted unto the sentence. Which being read, Gibson yet again admonished him to remember himself, and to save his soul: [...] said, that he would not hear the bishop's babbling▪ and said moreover, boldly protesting and affirming that he was contrary, and an enemy to them all in his mind and opinion, although he had before [...] it secret in mind, for fear of the law. And sp [...] ing to the bishop, Blessed, said he, am I, that [...] cursed at your hands. We have nothing now, [...] thus will I: for as the bishop saith, so must it [...] And no heresy it is to turn the truth of God's word into lies, and that do you, meaning the [...] shop and his fellows.
THUS this valiant soldier, fighting for the [...]spel sincere doctrine of Christ's truth and [...] against falshood and error, was committed, [...] his fellows, to the secular power.
AND so these three godly men, John Hallingdale, William Sparrow, and Mr. Gibson [...] thus appointed to the s [...]aughter, were, the [...] day after their condemnation (which was the ei [...] teenth day of November,) burnt in Smith [...] ▪
AND being brought thither to the stake, [...] their prayer made, they were bound thereunto with chains, and wood set unto them, and [...] wood, fire, in which being compassed about, and the fiery flames consuming their flesh, at last they yielded gloriously and joyfully their souls and lives into the holy hands of the Lord, to whose tuition and government I commend thee good, reader. Amen.
An account of the Martyrdom of JOHN ROUGH, Minister, and MARGARET MEARING, burned at London, December 22.
JOHN ROUGH was born in Scotland, who, (as himself confesseth in his answers to Bonner's articles) because some of his kinsfolk would have kept him from his right of inheritance which he had to certain lands, did at the age of seventeen years▪ [Page 505] in despite (and rather to displease his friends,) profess himself into the order of the black friers at Stirling, in Scotland; where he remained the space of sixteen years, until such time as the lord Hamilton, earl of Arran, and governor of the realm of Scotland (as a favour unto him) did apply unto the archbishop of St. Andrew's, to have him out of his professed order, that as a secular priest he might serve him for his chaplain. At which request the archbishop caused the provincial of that house, having thereto authority, to dispense with him for his habit and order.
THIS suit being thus obtained by the earl, the said Rough remained in his service one whole year: during which time it pleased God to open his eyes▪ and to give him some knowledge of his truth, and was thereupon sent by the said governor to preach in the freedom of Ayre, where he continued four years, and then after the death of the cardinal of Scotland, he was appointed to abide at St. Andrew's, and there had assigned unto him a yearly pension of twenty pounds, from Henry the Eighth, king of England. However, at last weighing with himself his own danger, and also abhorring the idolatry and superstition of the country, and hearing of the freedom of the gospel within this realm of England, he determined with himself not to tarry any longer there: and therefore, soon after the battle of Musselborough, he came first unto Carlisle, and from thence unto the duke of Somerset, then lord protector of England, and by his assignment had appointed unto him out of the king's treasury twenty pounds of yearly stipend, and was sent (as a preacher) to serve at Carlisle, Berwick, and New-Castle, where he married. From whence he was called by the archbishop of York that then was, unto a benefice in the town of Hull, where he continued till the death of good king Edward VI.
BUT in the beginning of the reign of queen Mary (perceiving the alteration of religion, and the persecution that would thereupon arise, and feeling his own weakness) he fled with his wife into Friezeland, and dwelt there at a place called Norden, labouring truly for his living, in knitting of caps, and hose, and such like things, till about the end of the month of October, before his death. At which time, lacking [...]arn, and other such necessary provision for the maintenance of his occupation, he came over again into England, here to provide for the same, and the tenth day of November arrived at London. Where, hearing of the secret society, and holy congregation of God's children there assembled, he joined himself unto them, and afterwards being elected their minister and preacher, did continue most virtuously exercised in that godly fellowship, teaching and confirming them in the truth of the gospel of Christ. But in the end (such was the providence of God, who disposing all things to the best) the twelfth day of December, he with Cutbert Simpson and others, through the crafty and traitorous suggestion of a false hypocrite and dissembling brother, named Roger Serjeant, taylor, were apprehended by the vice-chamberlain of the queen's house, at the Saracen's Head in Islington; where the congregation had then purposed to assemble themselves to their accustomable exercises of prayer, and hearing the word of God: which pretence, for the safeguard of all the rest, they yet at their examinations covered and excused, by hearing of a play that was then appointed to be at that place. The vice-chamberlain, after he had apprehended them, carried Rough and Simpson unto the council, who charged them to have assembled together to celebrate the communion or supper of the Lord, and therefore after sundry examinations they sent them unto the bishop of London, with a letter signed with their hands: the copy whereof here follows.
A LETTER From the Queen's Council to BONNER, Bishop of London, cancerning the Examination of JOHN ROUGH, Minister.
AFTER our hearty commendations to your good lordship, we send you here inclosed the examination of a Scottish man, named John Rough, who, by the queen's command, is just sent to Newgate, being of the chief of them that upon Sunday last, under the colour of coming to see a play at the Saracen's Head, at Islington, had prepared a communion to be celebrated and received there among other certain seditious and heretical persons. And forasmuch as by the said Rough's examination, containing the story and progress of his former life, [Page 506] it well appeareth of what sort he is; the queen's highness hath willed us to remit him unto your lordship, to the end that being called before you out of prison, as oft as your lordship shall think good, you may proceed, both to his further examination, and otherwise ordering of him according to the laws, as the case shall require. And thus we bid your lordship heartily well to fare. From St. James's, December 15, 1557. Your lordship's loving friends, Nicholas Ebor, F. Shrewsoury, Edward Hastings, Anthony Mountague, John Bourne, Henry Iernegam.
BONNER, now minding to make quick dispatch, did, within three days after the receipt of the letter, send for Rough out of Newgate, to be examined before him and others; who, when they perceived his constancy, determined the next day after to bring him openly into the consistory, there to adjudge and condemn him as an heretic. Which purpose they accomplished: for the twentieth day in the afternoon, in the presence of the bishop of London, and St. David's, with Fecknam, abbot of Westminster, and others, he was there produced. Where, after many persuasions, Bonner read unto him the articles and answers, in which they charged him to have received the orders of the church, and therefore might not marry: and that he had refused to consent to the Latin service then used in the church. Whereunto he then answered and said, That their orders were nothing at all, and that he being a priest, might lawfully marry, and that the children which he had by his wife were lawful. And concerning the service then used, he utterly detested it, saying, That if he should live as long as did Metnuselah, yet he would never come to the church to hear the abominabe mass and other service being as it was then. Upon which words the bishop proceeded▪ to the degradation of the said Rough; and after condemning him as an heretic, committed his body to the secular power, who taking him into their custody, carried him to Newgate.
MOREOVER, as touching the said Mr. Rough, this is further to be noted, that he being in the north country in the days of king Edward VI. was the cause of saving Dr. Watson's life (who in queen Mary's days was bishop of London), for a sermon that he had preached there. The said Watson after that, being with Bonner at the examination of the said Mr. Rough, to requite him i [...] saving his life, detected him there to be a pernicious heretic, who did more hurt in the [...]orth parts th [...] an hundred besides of his opinion. Unto [...] Mr. Rough said, Why, sir, is this the reward I have for saving your life, when you preached [...]oneous doctrine in the da [...]s of king Edward [...] This Mr. Rough said, he had lived thirty years▪ and yet had never bowed his knee to Baal: and being before Bonner, among other talk he affirm [...] that he had been twice at Rome, and there had [...] plainly with his eyes, which he had many [...] heard of before, namely, that the pope was [...] very Antichrist: for there he saw him carried [...] men's shoulders, and the false-named sacram [...] borne before him: yet there was more [...] given to him, than to that which they count [...] [...] be their god. When Bonner heard this, rising [...] and making as though he would have torn his [...], Hast thou, said he, been at Rome, and [...] our holy father the pope, and dost thou blasph [...] him after this sort? and with that flying upon [...] he plucked off a piece of his beard, and [...] making speedy haste to his death, he burnt [...] half an hour before six o'clock in the morning, [...] cause the day belike should not be far spent▪ [...] fore he had done a mischievous deed.
LETTER I. From John Rough, to some of his Friends, confirming and strengthening them in the Truth, which he [...] before taught.
THE comfort of the Holy Ghost make you abl [...] to give consolation to others in these dangerous days, when Satan is let loose, but to the trial only of the chosen, when it pleaseth our God to [...]ift his [...] from the chaff. I have not leisure and [...] write the great temptations I have been under. I speak to God's glory; my care was to have the senses of my soul open, to perceive the voice of God, saying, Whosoever denieth me before men, him will I deny before my Father and his angels. And to save the life corporal, is to lose the li [...]e eternal. And he that will not suffer with [Page 507] Christ, shall not reign with him. Therefore, most tender ones, I have by God's Spirit given over the flesh, with the fight of my soul, and the spirit hath the victory. The flesh shall now before it be long, leave off to sin, the spirit shall reign eternally. I have chosen death to confirm the truth by me taught. What can I do more? Consider with yourselves, that I have done it for the confirmation of God's truth. Pray that I may continue unto the end. The greatest part of the assault is past, I praise my God. I have in all my assaults felt the present aid of my God, I give him most hearty thanks therefore. Look not back, nor be ye ashamed of Christ's gospel, nor of the bonds I have suffered for the same, thereby you may be assured it is the true word of God. The holy ones have been sealed with the same mark. It is no time for the loss of one man in the battle, for the camp to turn back. Up with men's hearts, down with the [...]ubed walls of heresy. Let one take the banner, and the other the trumpet; I mean not to make corporal resistance, but pray, and ye shall have Elias's defence, and Elizeus's company to fight for you. The cause is the Lord's. Now, my brethren, I can write no more, time will not suffer, and my heart with pangs of death is assaulted; but I am at home with my God, yet alive. Pray for me, and salute one another with the holy kiss. The peace of God rest with you all, Amen. From Newgate prison in haste, the day of my condemnation.
LETTER II. From John Rough, written unto the Congregation two Days before he suffered.
THE Spirit of consolation be with you, aid you, and make you strong to run to the fight that is laid before you, wherewithal God in all ages hath tried his elect, and hath found them worthy of himself, by coupling to their head Jesus Christ; in whom, whoso desireth to live godly, the same must needs suffer persecution. For it is given unto them, not only to believe, but also to suffer. And the servant or scholar cannot be greater than his lord and master: but by the same way the head is entered, the members must follow: no life is in the members which are cut from the body: likewise we have no life but in Christ: for by him we live, move, and have our being. My dear sons, now departing this life to my great advantage, I make change of mortality with immortality, of corruption to put on incorruption, to make my body like unto the corn cast into the ground, which except it die first, it can bring forth no good fruit. Wherefore death is to me great advantage: for thereby the body ceaseth from sin, and after turneth into the first original; but after shall be changed, and made brighter than the sun or moon. What shall I write of this corporal death, seeing it is decreed of God, that all men shall once die? Happy are they that die in the Lord, which is to die in the faith of Christ, professing and confessing the same before many witnesses. I praise my God I have passed the same journey by many temptations, the devil is very busy to persuade, the world to entice with promises and fair words: which I omit to write lest some might think I did hunt after vain glory, which is farthest from my heart. Lastly, the danger of some false brethren, who before the bishop of London purposed to confess an untruth to my face: yet the God that ruled Balaam, moved their hearts; where they thought to speak to my accusation, he made them speak to my purgation. What a journey (by God's power) I have made these eight days before this day, it is above flesh and blood to bear: but as St. Paul saith, I may do all things in him which worketh in me, Jesus Christ. My course, brethren, have I run, I have fought a good fight, the crown of righteousness is laid up for me, my day to receive it is at hand. Pray, brethren, for the enemy doth yet assault. Stand constant unto the end, then shall you possess your souls. Walk worthily in that vocation wherein you are called. Comfort the brethren. Salute one another in my name. Be not ashamed of the gospel of the cross, by me preached, nor yet of my suffering; for with my blood I affirm the same. I go before, I suffer first the baiting of the butcher's dogs; yet I have not done what I should have done; but my weakness▪ I doubt not, is supplied in the strength of Jesus Christ; and your wisdom and learning will accept the small talent, which I have distributed unto you, as I trust, as a faithful steward: and what was undone, impute that to frailty and ignorance, and with your love cover that [Page 508] which is and was naked in me. God knoweth ye are all tender unto me, my heart bursteth for the love of you. Ye are not without your great pastor of your soul, who so loveth you, that if men were not to be sought out, (as God be praised there is no want of men) he would cause stones to minister unto you. Cast your care on that rock, the wind of temptation shall not prevail: fast and pray, for the days are evil. Look up with your eyes of hope, for the redemption is not far off (but my wickedness hath deserved that I shall not see it). And also that which is behind of the blood of our brethren, which shall also be laid under the altar, shall cry for your relief. Time will not now suffer me to write long letters. The Spirit of God guide you in and out, rising and sitting, cover you with the shadow of his wings, defend you against the tyranny of the wicked, and bring you happily unto the port of eternal felicity, where all tears shall be wiped from your eyes, and you shall always abide with the Lamb.
An Account of MARGARET MEARING, Martyr.
IT is before related, that in the company of John Rough, was burned one Margaret Mearing, who, as the register maketh mention, was at one time and day brought with the said Rough forth to examination: where the bishop having no private matters to charge her withal, did the 18th day of December object against her those common and accustomable articles mentioned before. To which she answered as follows:
1. THAT there is here on earth a catholic church, and that there is the true faith of Christ observed and kept in the same church.
2. ITEM, That there were only two sacraments in the church, namely, the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ, and the sacrament of baptism.
3. ITEM, That she was baptized in the faith and belief of the said church, renouncing there, by her godfathers and godmothers, the devil and all his works, &c.
4. ITEM, That when she came to the age of fourteen years, she did not know what her true belief was, because she was not then of discretion to understand the same, neither yet was taught it.
5. ITEM, That she had not gone from the catholic faith at any time; but she said that the ma [...] was abominable before the sight of God, and before the sight of all true christian people, and [...] it is the plain cup of fornication, and the who [...] [...] Babylon. And as concerning the sacrament of the altar, she said, she believed there was no such [...] in the catholic church. Also she said, [...] she utterly abhorred the authority of the bishop [...] Rome, with all the religion observed in the [...] Antichrist's church.
6. ITEM, She answered to the sixth article▪ [...] the first before specified.
7. ITEM, That she hath refused to come to the parish church, because the true religion of [...] was not then used in the same; and further [...] that she had not come unto the church for [...] space of one year and three quarters, then last [...] neither yet did mean any more to come [...] same in these idolatrous days.
8. ITEM, As touching the manner of her app [...]hension, she said, That Cluney, the bishop's [...], did bring her to the bishop.
THESE answers being then registered, they [...] again (with the said articles) propounded [...] her the 20th day of December, and there being demanded if she would stand unto those her answers, she said, I will stand to them unto [...] ▪ for the very angels of heaven do laugh you to scorn, to see your abomination that you use in the church. After which words, the bishop pronounced the sentence of condemnation against her; and then delivering her unto the sheriffs, she was with the before mentioned John Rough carried [...] Newgate. From whence they were both together led unto Smithfield, the 22d of December, and there most joyfully gave their lives for the profession of Christ's gospel.
CHAP. II. Continuation of the Persecution of PROTESTANTS during the Reign of QUEEN MARY I. with the providential Deliverances of many from their cruel Enemies the PAPISTS.
An Account of the Sufferings and cruel Torments of CUTBERT SYMSON, Deacon of the Christian Congregation in London.
CUTBERT SYMSON was a man of a faithful and zealous heart to Christ and his true flock, insomuch that he never ceased labouring, and studying most earnestly, not only how to preserve them without corruption of the popish religion, but also his care was very vigilant, how to keep them together without danger or peril of persecution. The pains, travail, zeal, patience, and fidelity of this man, in caring and providing for this congregation, as it is not easily to be expressed; so it is wonderful to behold the providence of the Lord by vision, concerning the troubles of this faithful minister and godly deacon, as in this here following may appear.
THE Friday night before Mr. Rough, minister of the congregation (of whom mention was made before), was taken, being in his bed he dreamed, that he saw two of the guards leading Cutbert Symson, deacon of the said congregation, and that he had the book about him, wherein were written the names of all them which were of the congregation. Whereupon being sore troubled he awaked, and called his wife, saying, Kate, strike a light, for I am much troubled with my brother Cutbert this night. When she had so done, he began to read in his book a while, and there feeling sleep to come upon him, he put out the candle, and so gave himself again to rest. Being asleep, he dreamed the like dream again; and, awaked therewith, he said, Oh Kate, my brother Cutbert is gone. So they lighted a candle again, and rose. And as the said Mr. Rough was making him ready to go to Cutbert to see how he did, in the mean time the said Cutbert came in with the book containing the names and accounts of the congregation. Whom when Mr. Rough had seen, said he, Brother Cutbert, you are welcome; for I have been sore troubled with you this night, and so told him his dream. After he had so done, he desired him to lay the book away from him, and to carry it no more about him. Unto which Cutbert answered, he would not so do; for dreams, he said, were but fancies, and not to be credited. Then Mr. Rough straitly charged him in the name of the Lord to do it. Whereupon the said Cutbert took such notes out of the book, as he had desired him to do, and immediately left the book with Mr. Rough's wife.
THE next night following, the said Mr. Rough had another dream in his sleep, concerning his own trouble. The matter whereof was this: he thought in his dream that he was carried himself forcibly to the bishop, and that the bishop pluckt off his beard, and cast it into the fire, saying these words▪ Now I may say I have had a piece of an heretic burned in my house, and so accordingly it came to pass.
NOW to return to Cutbert again; as we have touched something concerning these visions, so now remaineth to mention his pains and sufferings upon the rack, and otherwise, like a good Laurence for the congregation's sake, as he wrote with his own hand.
A true Account how he was used in the Tower of London, being sent thither by the Council, the 13th day of December.
ON the Thursday after, I was called into the Warehouse, before the constable of the Tower, and the recorder of London, Mr. Cholmley; they commanded me to tell, whom I did will to come to the English service. I answered, I would [Page 510] declare nothing. Whereupon I was set in a rack of iron, the space of three hours, as I judged.
THEN they asked me if I would tell them. I answered as before. Then was I loosed, and carried to my lodging again. On the Sunday after I was brought into the same place again, before the lieutenant and the recorder of London, and they examined me. As before I had said, I answered. Then the lieutenant did swear by God I should tell. Then did they bind my two sore fingers together, and put a small arrow betwixt them, and drew it through so fast that the blood followed, and the arrow brake.
THEN they racked me twice. Then was I carried to my lodging again, and ten days after the lieutenant asked me if I would not confess that which they had before asked me. I answered, I had said as much as I would. Then five weeks after he sent me unto the high priest, where I was greatly assaulted, and at whose hand I received the pope's curse, for bearing witness of the resurrection of Jesus Christ. And thus I commend you unto God, and to the word of his grace, with all them that unfeignedly call upon the name of Jesus, desiring God of his endless mercy, through the merits of his dear Son Jesus Christ, to bring us all to his everlasting kingdom, Amen. I praise God for his great mercy shewed upon us. Sing Hosanna unto the Highest with me Cutbert Symson. God forgive me my sins. I ask all the world forgiveness, and I do forgive all the w [...]ld, and thus I leave this world, in hope of a joyful resurrection.
A Note of Cutbert Symson's Patience.
NOW as touching this Cutbert Symson, this is further to be noticed, that Bonner in his consistory, speaking of Cutbert Symson, gave this testimony of him there to the people, saying, You [...] this man, saith he, what a p [...]r [...]nable man he is; and after he had thus commended his person, added moreover, And furthermore concerning his pa [...]i [...]nce, I say unto you, that [...]f he were not an heresie, [...]e is a man of the greatest patience that ever yet came before me: fo [...] I tell you, he hath been thrice racked upon one day [...] the Tower. Also in my house he hath felt some sorrow, and yet I never saw his patience broken, &c.
IT is thought and said by some, that that arrow which was grated between his singers, being tied together, was not in the Tower, but in the bishop's house.
THE day before this blessed deacon and martyr of God, Cutbert Symson, after his painful racking, should go to his condemnation before Bonner to be burned, being in the stocks in the bishop's [...]odhouse, he had a very strange vision or apparitio [...] which he himself with his own mouth declared to that learned man Mr. Austen, to his own wife, and Thomas Symson, and to others besides, in the p [...] son of Newgate a little before his death. The relation whereof I stand in no little doubt whether [...] report abroad or not, considering with myself [...] great diversity of men's judgments, by the reading of histories, and variety of affections. Some I [...] will not believe it, some will deride the same, [...] also will be offended with the setting forth [...] uncertain things of that sort, esteeming all things [...] be uncertain and incredible which appears any way strange from the common order of nature.
OTHERS will be perhaps grieved, thinking with themselves, or else reasoning with me, that although the matter were as is reported, yet, forasmuch [...] the common error of believing tho [...]e rash miracle [...] ▪ fancies visions, dreams, and apparitions, thereby may be confirmed, it is thought more expedient [...] the same to be omitted.
THESE, and such like, will be, I know, the sayings of many. Whereunto briefly I answer, granting first, and admitting with the words of Basil, Not every dream is straightway a prophesy. Again, neither am I ignorant that the papists in their books and legends of saints, have their prodigious visions and apparitions of angels, of our lady, of other saints, and of Christ: which as I will not admit to be believed as true; so will they ask me, why should I require more to be credited by them, than their's by us.
FIRST, I write not this to oblige any man precisely to believe the same, as they do their's, but only [Page 511] report it [...] it hath been h [...]ard of persons known▪ naming also the parties who were the hearers there of, leaving the judgment thereof notwithstanding [...]e unto the arbi [...]r [...]ment of the reader. Al [...]ho' it is no good argument, proceeding from the singular or particular, to the universal, to say that visions be not true in some: Ergo, they be true in none. And if any shall mus [...], or object again, Why should such visions be given to him▪ or a few other singular persons, more than to all the rest, seeing the others were in the same cause and quarrel, and died also martyrs as well as he? To this I say, concerning the Lord's times and doings I have not to meddle nor make, who may work where and when it pleaseth him. And what if the Lord thought chiefly above others with singular consolation to respect him, who is chiefly above the other, and singularly did suffer most exquisite torments for his sake? What great marvel herein? But, as I said, of the Lord's secret times I have not to reason. This only which hath out of the man's own mouth been received, so as I received it of the par [...]ies, I thought here to communicate to the reader, for him to judge thereof as God shall rule his mind. The matter is this.
THE day before Symson was condemned, he being in the stocks, Cluney, his keeper, cometh in with the keys about nine o'clock at night (after his usual manner) to view his prison, and see whether all were present, who when he espied the said Cutbert to be there, departed again, locking the doors after him. Within two hours after, about eleven o'clock toward midnight, the said Cutbert (whether being in a slumber▪ or being awake I cannot say) heard one coming in, first opening the outward door, then the second, after the third door, and so looking in to the said Cutbert, having no candle or torch that he could see, but giving a brightness and light most comfortable and joyful to his heart, saying unto him▪ Ha [...] and departed again. Who it was he could not tell, neither dare I define. This that he saw he himself declared four or five times to the said Mr. Austen, and others. At the sight whereof he received such joyful comfort, that he also expressed no little solace in telling and declaring the same.
A LETTER From Cutbert Symson to his Wife, written in the Coal-House.
DEARLY beloved in the Lord Jesus Christ, I cannot write as I do wish unto you.
I beseech you with my soul, commit yourself under the mighty hand of our God, trusting in his mercy, and he will surely help us, as shall be most unto his glory and our everlasting comfort, being sure of this, that he will suffer nothing to come unto us, but that which will be most profitable for us.
FOR it is either a correction for our sins, or a trial of our faith, or to set forth his glory, or for all together, and therefore must needs be well done. For there is nothing that cometh unto us by fortune or chance, but by our heavenly Father's providence. And therefore pray unto our heavenly Father, that he will ever give us his grace to consider it. Let us give him most hearty thanks for these his fatherly corrections; for as many as he loveth he correcte [...] ▪ And I beseech you now be of good cheer, and count the cross of Christ greater riches, than all the vain pleasures of England. I do not doubt (I praise God for it), but that you have supped with Christ at his Maundy; I mean, believe in him: for that is the effect, and then must you drink of his cup, I mean his cross (for that doth the cup signify unto us). Take the cup with a good stomach, in the name of God, and then shall you be sure to have the good wine, Christ's blood, to thy poor thirsty soul. And when you have the wi [...]e, you must drink it out of this cup. Learn this when you come to the Lord's supper. In all things give thanks.
The Martyrdom of HUGH FOXE and JOHN DEVENISH.
WITH Cutbert Symson likewise were apprehended and also suffered Hugh Foxe and John Devenish; who being brought unto their examinations with the said Cutbert, before Bonner, bishop of London, March 19, had articles and interrogatories ministered unto them by the said officer.
The general Answers of Cutbert Symson, Hugh Foxe, and John Devenish, to the Articles proposed to them by the Bishop.
TO the first article they all answered affirmatively: but John Devenish added, That that church is grounded upon the prophets and apostles, Christ being the head corner [...]stone, and how in that church there is the true faith and religion of Christ.
TO the second article they all confessed and believed, That in Christ's catholic church, there are but two sacraments, namely, baptism and the supper of the Lord; otherwise they do not believe the contents of this article to be in any part thereof.
TO the third, fourth, and fifth articles they all answered affirmatively.
TO the sixth article they all answered, and denied to acknowledge the authority of the see of Rome to be lawful and good, or yet his religion.
TO the seventh article they all answered affirmatively, that they have and will do still while they live; and John Devenish adding thereto, said that the sacrament of the altar, as it is now used, is no sacrament at all.
TO the eighth article they all confessed, and believed all things above by them acknowledged and declared to be true, and that they are of the diocese of London, and jurisdiction of the same.
THESE three above-named persons, Cutbert, Foxe, and Devenish, as they were altogether apprehended at Islington, so they all three suffered together in Smithfield, about the 28th day of March, [...] whose perfect constancy the same Lord (in who [...] cause and quarrel they suffered), giver of [...] grace, and governor of all things, be exalted for ever, Amen.
An Account of the Martyrdom of WILLIAM NICHOL of Haversord-West, in Wales.
WE find in all ages from the beginning, [...] Satan hath not ceased at all times to [...] the church of Christ with one affliction or [...] to the trial of their faith, but yet never so [...] at any time to all the world, as [...] Lord hath permitted him power over the [...] his saints to the shedding of their blood, [...] of their religion; for then sleepeth [...] I warrant you, from the murdering of the [...] unless they will fall down with Ahab and [...] to worship him, and so kill and poison their [...] souls eternally; as in these miserable latter [...] queen Mary we have felt, heard, and seen [...] upon God's people. Among whom we [...]corded an honest poor man, named Willi [...] [...]chol, who was apprehended by the [...] the pope, for speaking certains words aga [...] [...] cruel kingdom of Antichrist, and on the 9th [...] April, 1558, was burnt in Wales, ending his [...] a most happy and blessed state, gloriously [...] his soul into the hands of that God, whose [...] be praised for ever, Amen.
THIS William Nichol [as we are informed] [...] so simple a good soul, that many esteemed him [...] foolish. But what he was in that respect we [...] not, but this we are sure he died a good man, [...] in a good cause, whatsoever they judge of [...] And the more simplicity and feebleness of wit appeared in him, the more beastly and wretched doth it declare their cruel tyrannical act therein. Th [...] Lord give them repentance, if it be his blessed will, Amen.
An Account of the Martyrdom of WILLIAM SEAMAN, THOMAS CARMAN, and THOMAS HUDSON, at Norwich, in the County of Norfolk.
IMMEDIATELY after William Nichol, succeeded in that honourable and glorious vocation of martyrdom three constant godly men at Norwich, in Norfolk, who were cruelly put to death for the true testimony of Jesus Christ, the 19th of May, 1558, whose names be these: William Seaman, Thomas Carman, and Thomas Hudson.
WILLIAM SEAMAN was an husbandman, of the age of 26 years, dwelling in Mendlesham, in the county of Suffolk, who was divers times sought after at the command of sir John Tyrrel, knight, and at last he himself searched his house and other places for him; notwithstanding he somewhat mis [...]d of his purpose, God be thanked. Then he gave charge to his servants, Robert Baulding and [...]nes Clarke, with others, to seek for him. They, having no officer, went in the evening to his house, [...]e being at home, took him and carried him to their master, sir John Tyrrel. This Baulding being Seaman's near neighbour, and one whom Seaman trusted as an extraordinary friend, notwithstanding, to do his master a pleasure, now became an enemy to his chief friend, and was one of the busiest in the taking of him. And as they were going to carry him to their master, sir John Tyrrel, [...] the night, it is credibly reported that there fell a [...]ight between them out of the elements, and parted them, this Baulding being in company with the rest when the light fell; and although he was then in the prime of his age, yet after that time never enjoyed a good day, but pined away even to death.
WELL, for all that strange sight (as I said), they carried him to their master. Who, when he came, asked him why he would not go to mass, and receive the sacrament, and so worship it? To which William Seaman answered (denying it to be a sacrament) and said, It was an idol, and that he would not receive it. After which words sir John Tyrrel sent him to Norwich, to Hopton, then bishop, and there after conference and examination had with him, the bishop read his bloody sentence of condemnation against him; and afterward delivered him to the secular power, who kept him till the day of martyrdom.
THE said William Seaman left behind him, when he died, a wife, and three children very young: and his wife with her said young children, was persecuted out of the said town of Mendlesham, because she would not go to hear mass, and all her corn and goods seized and taken away, by Mr. Christopher Cole's officers, he being lord of the said town.
THOMAS CARMAN (who, as is said, pledged Richard Crashfield at his burning, and thereupon was apprehended), being prisoner in Norwich, was one time with the rest examined and brought before the said bishop, who answered no less in his Master's cause than the others; and therefore had the like reward that the others had, which was the bishop's bloody blessing of condemnation, and delivered also to the secular power, who kept him with the others until the day of slaughter, which was not long after.
THOMAS HUDSON was of Ailesham, in Norfolk, by his occupation a glover, a very honest poor man, having a wife and three children, labouring always truly and diligently in his vocation, being thirty years of age, and bearing so good a will to the gospel, that he in the days of king Edward the Sixth, two years before queen Mary's reign, learned to read English of Anthony and Thomas Norgate, of the same town, wherein he greatly profited about the time of the alteration of religion; for when queen Mary came to reign, and had changed the service in the church, putting in for wheat, chaff and darnel, and for good preaching, blasphemous crying out against truth and godliness; he then avoiding all their ceremonies of superstition, absented himself from his house, and went into Suffolk a long time, and there remained travelling from one place to another, as occasion offered. At last he returned back to his house at Ailesham, to comfort his wife and children, being heavy and troublesome with his absence.
NOW when he came home, and perceived his continuance there would be dangerous, he and [...] devised to make him a place among [...] [Page 514] to hide himself in, where he remained all the day reading and praying continually, for the space of half a year, and his wife, like an honest woman being careful for him, used herself faithfully and diligently towards him.
IN the mean time came the vicar of the town (who was one of the bishop's commissaries, a very wicked man), and inquired of Thomas Hudson's wife for her husband. Unto whom she answered, as not knowing where he was. Then the said Berry waxed angry, and threatened to burn her, because she would not tell where her husband was. After that when Hudson understood it, he grew every day more zealous than before, and continually read and sung psalms, the people openly resorting to him, to hear his exhortations and prayers.
AT last he walked abroad for certain days openly in the town, crying out continually against the mass and all their trumpery, and in the end coming home to his house, he sat him down, having his book by him, reading and singing psalms continually without ceasing, for three days and three nights together, to the great wonder of many.
THEN one John Crouch, his next neighbour, went to the constables, Robert Marsham and Robert Lawes, in the night to certify them thereof: for Berry commanded openly to watch for him, and the constables understanding the same, went to catch him at break of day, the 22d of April, 1558.
AND when Hudson saw them come in, he said, Now mine hour is come: welcome friends, welcome. You be they that shall lead me to life in Christ. I thank God for it, and the Lord enable me thereto for his mercy's sake. Then they took and led him to Berry, the commissary, who was vicar of the town, and the said Berry asked him, first, Where he kept his church for four years before? To which the said Hudson answered thus, Wheresoever he was, there was the church.
DOST thou not believe, said Berry, in the sacrament of the altar? What is it?
It is worms meat: my belief is in Christ crucified.
Dost thou not believe the mass to put away sins?
No, God forbid; it is a patched monster, and a disguised puppet, more tedious a pieceing than ever was Solomon's temple.
AT which words Berry stamped, fumed, and shewed himself a mad-man, and said, Well, tho [...] villain, thou—I will write to the bishop, my good lord, and trust unto it, thou shalt be handled according to thy deserts. O sir, said Hudson, there is no Lord but God, though there be many lords and many gods. With that Berry thrust him back with his hand. And one Richard Cliffar, standing by, said, I pray you, sir, be good to the poor man. At which words Berry was more mad than before, and would have had Cliffar bound in a recognizance of forty pounds for his good behaviour both in word and deed; but his desire took no effect. Then he asked Hudson whether he would recant, or not: to which Hudson answered, The Lord forbid! I had rather die many deaths than do so.
THEN after long talk, the said Berry, seeing it to no purpose to persuade him, took his pen and ink▪ and wrote letters to the bishop thereof, and sent this Hudson to Norwich, bound like a thief, to him, which was eight miles from thence, who went thither singing with joy, as merry as ever he was in his life before. He was a month in prison, where he spent his time in reading and invocating the name of God.
THESE three christian and constant martyrs, William Seaman, Thomas Carman, and Thomas Hudson, after they were, (as you have heard) condemned the 19th day of May, 1558, were carried out of prison to the place where they should suffer, which was without Bishopsgate, at Norwich, called Lollard's Pit. And being all there, they made their humble petitions to the Lord. That being done, they arose and went to the stake, and standing all there with their chains about them, immediately Thomas Hudson came forth from them under the [Page 515] chain, to the great surprize of all the spectators; many doubted his constancy, fearing he should recant; others thought he wanted a reprieve for further conference; and some imagined he came forth to ask his parents blessing. In the midst of this confusion his two companions at the stake did all they could to comfort and encourage him, exhorting him in the bowels of Christ to be of good cheer, &c. But alas! he felt more in his conscience than they could conceive, for he was encompassed with intolerable grief of mind, not for fear of death, but for lack of an inward sensible feeling of the love of his Saviour: and therefore, being very careful, he humbly fell upon his knees, and vehemently prayed to God, who at last (according to his old mercies) sent him comfort; and then he arose in ecstasy of joy, as a new man changed even from death to life, and said, Now I thank God I am strong, and care not what man can do unto me. So going again to his companions at the stake, they all suffered death most joyfully, constantly, and manfully together, to the terror of the wicked, the comfort of good people, and the glory of God, whose name be praised for ever. Amen.
AFTER this, the aforesaid commissary Berry made a great stir about others who were suspected in the town of Ailesham, and caused two hundred to creep through the cross at Pentecost, besides other punishments which they suffered.
ON a time this Berry gave a poor man of his parish of Marsham a blow with a flail, for a word's speaking, that presently thereon he died; and it is reported that the said Berry held up his hand at the bar for the same.
AT another time one Alice Oxes, of the same parish came to his house, and going into the hall he met her, and, being in an ill humour, he struck her with his fist, whereupon she was fain to be carried home, and the next day was found dead in her chamber.
THE number of whores and concubines he had is incredible to all, but to those that lived near him. He was rich, and of great authority, and as great a reprobate, persecuting the gospel, and compelling men to idolatry; he burnt all the good books he could lay hands on, and divorced many men and women for religion.
WHEN he heard that queen Mary was dead, and the glory of her triumph quelled, the Sunday after (being the 19th of November, 1558) he made a great feast, and had one of his concubines there, with whom he was in his chamber after dinner until even-song. Then went to church, where he had ministered baptism; and in his return from even-song, between the church-yard and his house, being but a little space (about the breadth of the church-yard) he fell down suddenly to the ground with a groan, and never stirred after, neither shewed any one token of repentance. And those that had his great riches since his death have so consumed them, that they be poorer now than they were before they had them.
NOW let the reader observe the difference between the end of a martyr, and the end of a persecutor.
ABOUT this time Joan Seaman, mother to the aforesaid William Seaman, being of the age of sixty-six years, was persecuted by the said sir John Tyrrel also, because she would not go to mass and receive against her conscience: which good old woman being from her house, was glad some time to lie in bushes, groves, and fields, and sometimes in her neighbour's house when she could. And her husband being at home, about 80 years old, fell sick; and she hearing thereof, with speed returned home to her house again, not regarding her life, but considering her duty, and shewed her diligence to her husband most faithfully, till God took him away by death. Then by God's providence she fell sick also, and died in her own house soon after. When one Mr. Symonds, the commissary, heard of it, he (dwelling in a town hard by, called Thornton) commanded that she should not have christian burial (as they termed it), and her friends were compelled to lay her in a pit under a mote's side. Her husband and she kept a good house, and had a good report amongst their neighbours, willing always to receive strangers, and to comfort the poor and sick, and lived together in the holy estate of matrimony very honestly above forty years; and departed this life willingly and joyfully, with a stedfast faith [Page 516] and a good remembrance of God's promise in Jesus Christ.
A woman, called Mother Bennet, a widow, who lived in the town of Wetherset, near Mendlesham, was persecuted out of the town for not going to mass, but at last she returned home again secretly to her house, and there departed this life joyfully. But sir John Tyrrel, and Mr. Symonds, the commissary, would not let her be buried in the church-yard. So she was laid in a grave by the high-way side.
THIS good old woman met one of mother Seaman's neighbours, and asked how mother Seaman did; and the neighbour answered, that she did very well, God be thanked. O, said mother Bennet, mother Seaman hath stepped a great step before me; for she was never covetous, that I could perceive.
HER husband in his mirth would say unto her, O woman, if thou wert sparing, thou mightest have saved me an hundred marks more than thou hast. To which she would gently answer, O man, be content, and let us be thankful, for God hath given us enough, if we can see it. Alas, good husband, would she say, I tell you truth, I cannot firkin up my butter, and keep my cheese in the chamber, waiting for a great price, and let the poor want, and so displease God. But, husband, let us be rich in good works, and so shall we please the Lord, and have all good things given us, &c.
IN the month of May likewise, William Harris, Richard Day, and Christian George, suffered at Colchester, and there joyfully and fervently made their prayers to God.
AND being settled at the stake, and chained to the posts, with the fire flaming fiercely round about them, they, like constant christians, triumphantly praised God within the same, and offered up their bodies a lively sacrifice unto his holy Majesty, in whose habitation they have now their everlasting tabernacles: his name be therefore praised for evermore, Amen.
THE said Christian George's husband had another wife burnt before this Christian, whose name was Agnes George, who suffered as you have heard, at Stratford the Bow. And after the death of the said Christian, he married an honest godly woman again▪ and so they both (I mean the said Richard George and his last wife) in the end were taken also, and laid in prison, where they remained till the death of queen Mary, and at last were delivered by our most gracious sovereign lady queen Elizabeth.
IN the month of June came out a proclamation from the king and queen, against wholesome and godly books, which under the false title of heresy and sedition were wrongfully condemned in the said proclamation, which here follows.
By the King and Queen.
WHEREAS divers books, filled both with heresy, sedition, and treason, have of [...], and be daily brought into this realm out of foreign countries and places beyond the seas, and [...] also covertly printed within this realm, and [...] abroad in sundry parts thereof, whereby not only God is dishonoured, but also an encouragement given to disobey lawful princes and governors [...] the king and queen's majesties, for redress hereof, do by this their present proclamation declare [...] publish to all their loving subjects, that whosoever shall, after the proclaiming hereof, be found to have any of the said wicked and seditious boo [...] ▪ or finding them, do not forthwith burn the same without shewing or reading the same to any other shall in that case be reputed and taken for a rebel, and shall without delay be executed for that offence, according to the order of martial law.
The Apprehension of certain godly Men and Women, praying together in the Fields about Islington.
SECRETLY in a back close in a field by Islington, were gathered together a company of innocent persons, to the number of forty men and [Page 517] women. Who there sitting together at prayer, and virtuously occupied in the meditation of God's holy word, first cometh a certain man to them unknown, who looking over unto them, stayed and saluted them, saying, that they looked like men that meant no hurt. Then one of the said company asked the man, if he could tell whose close that was, and whether they might be so bold to sit there. Yea, said he, because ye seem to be such persons as intend no harm; and so departed. Within a quarter of an hour after, came the constable of Islington, named King, with six or seven more, one with a bow, another with a bill, and the rest with weapons. Six or seven of this company were left behind in a private place, to be ready in case they were wanted, while the constable, and one with him went before to view them; they both went amongst them, looking and viewing what they were doing, and what books they had: and so going a little forward, and returning back again, ordered them to deliver their books. They understanding that he was a constable, refused not so to do. Then came up the rest of their fellows, before-mentioned, who bade them stand and not depart. They answered again, they would be obedient and ready to go whithersoever they would have them, and they were first carried to a brew-house at a small distance, while some of the company went to the nearest justice; but he being not at home, they were carried before sir Roger Cholmley. In the mean time some of the women escaped away from them, some in the close where they sat, and others before they came to the brew-house. For so they were carried, ten with one man, eight with another, with some more, with others less, in such a manner as it was not hard for them to escape that would. In fine, they that were carried to sir Roger Cholmley, were twenty-seven, and sir Roger and the recorder taking their names in a bill, and calling them one by one, so many as answered to their names he sent to Newgate, which were twenty-two out of twenty-seven. They continued in prison seven weeks; and before they were examined, word was sent by Alexander, the keeper, that if they would hear a mass, they should all be delivered, but thirteen of them were burnt, seven in Smithfield, and six at Brentford; two died in prison, and the other seven, with much trouble (through God's providence) escaped death. Their names were these:
- John Willes,
- Thomas Hinshaw,
- R. Bailey, woolpacket,
- Robert Willes,
- Hudleys,
- T. Coast, haberdasher,
- Roger Sandy.
THE names of the seven martyrs that were apprehended amongst others, in the close at Islington, and afterwards burnt in Smithfield, were as follows:
- Henry Pond,
- Rainol Eastland,
- Robert Southam,
- Matthew Ricarby,
- John Floyd,
- John Holiday,
- Roger Holland.
THESE seven godly men had several articles administered to them by bishop Bonner, in the usual form; to which they returned their answers, and absolutely refusing to acknowledge the doctrine of the Romish church, were altogether condemned, the sentence being read against them, and so all seven by secular magistrates being sent to Newgate the 17th of June▪ not long after, about the 27th of the said month were brought to Smithfield, and there ended their lives in the glorious cause of Christ's gospel. Their particular examinations never came to our hands, except only those of Roger Holland, which here follow in the order and manner as we have received them by the information of some that were there present at the same.
The Examination and Condemnation of ROGER HOLLAND.
THIS Roger Holland, a merchant-taylor of London, was first an apprentice with one Mr. Kempton at the Black Boy in Watling-street, where he served his apprenticeship with much trouble to his master, in breaking him of the licentious liberty which he had before been trained and brought up in, giving himself to riot, as dancing, fencing, gaming, banquetting, and wanton company; and besides all this, being a stubborn and obstinate papist, far unlike to come to any such end as God called him unto.
[Page 518]HIS master, notwithstanding his lewdness, trusted him with his accompts; and on a time he received the sum of thirty pounds for his master, and falling into ill company, lost every groat at dice, being past all hope which way to answer it, and therefore he purposed to convey himself beyond the seas, either into France or Flanders.
HAVING determined with himself thus to do, he called betimes in the morning on a servant in the house, an ancient and discreet maid, whose name was Elizabeth, who professed the gospel, with a life agreeing unto the same, and at all times much rebuking the wilful and obstinate papistry, as also the licentious living of this Roger Holland. To whom he said, Elizabeth, I would I had followed thy gentle persuasions and friendly rebukes; which if I had done, I had never come to this shame and misery which I am now fallen into; for this night I have lost thirty poudns of my master's money, which to pay him and to make up mine accounts I am not able. But this much, I pray you, desire my mistress, that she would entreat my master to take this note of my hand, that I am thus much indebted to him; and if I am ever able, I will see him paid, desiring him that none of my kindred and friends may ever understand this my lewd part: for if it should come to my father's ears, it would bring his grey hairs with sorrow to the grave: and so was he departing.
THE maid considering that it might be his utter ruin, Stay, said she; and having a sum of money by her, which was left her by a kinsman at his death, who was thought to be Dr. Redman, she brought unto him thirty pounds, saying Roger, here is thus much money, I will let the [...] have it, and I will keep this note. But since I do thus much for thee, to help thee, and to save thy honesty, thou shalt promise me to refuse all lewd and wild company, all swearing and ribaldry talk; and if ever I know thee to play one twelve-pence at either dice or cards, then will I shew this thy note unto my master. And furthermore thou shalt promise me to resort every day to the lecture at All-hallows, and the sermon at St. Paul's every Sunday, and to cast away all thy books of popery and vain ballads, and get thee the Testament and book of service, and read the scriptures with reverence and fear, calling unto God still for his grace to direct thee in his truth. And pray fervently to God, desiring him to pardon thy former offences, and not to rememb [...] the sins of thy youth; and ever be afraid to break his laws, or offend his majesty. Then shall Go [...] keep thee, and send thee thy heart's desire.
AFTER this time, within one half year God [...] wrought such a change in this man, that he [...] become an earnest professor of the truth, and detested all popery and ill company; so [...] he was in admiration to all them that [...] known him, and seen his former life and wi [...]edness.
THEN he repaired to hi [...] father in [...] and brought divers good books with him, and [...] stowed them among his friends, so that his [...] and others began to taste the sweetness of the [...] and to detest the mass, idolatry, and [...] and in the end his father gave him fifty [...] begin the world withal.
THEN he came to London again, and went [...] the maid that lent him the money to pay his [...] withal, and said unto her, Elizabeth, here i [...] [...] money I borrowed of thee, and for the friend [...] [...] good will, and good council I have received at [...] hands, to recompense thee I am not able, [...] wise than by making thee my wife; and soon [...] they were married, which was in the first ye [...] [...] the reign of queen Mary. And having a child [...] her, he caused Mr. Rose to baptize it in his [...] house. Notwithstanding he was betrayed to, [...] enemies, and he being gone into the country [...] convey the child away, that the papists should [...] have it in their anointing hands, Bonner caused hi [...] goods to be seized on, and most cruelly used [...] wife.
AFTER this he remained closely in the city, and in the country, in the congregations of the faithful▪ until the last year of queen Mary. Then he with six others before-named, were taken in, or not [...] from St. John's Wood, and brought up to Newgate upon May-day in the morning, 1558.
THEN being called before the bishop, Dr. Chedsey, both the Harpsfields, and certain others, after [Page 519] many other fair and crafty persuasions of Dr. Chedsey, to allure him to their Babylonical church; thus the bishop began with him.
HOLLAND, I for my part do wish well unto thee, and the more for thy frie [...]d's sake. And as Dr. Standish telleth me, you and he were born in one parish, and he knoweth your father to be a very honest catholic gentleman: and Mr. Doctor told me that he talked with you a year ago; and found you very wilfully addicted to your own conceit. Divers of the city also have shewed me of you, that you have been a great procurer of men's servants to be of your religion, and come to your congregations; but since you be now in the danger of the law, I would wish you to act the wise man's part: so shall you not want any favour I can do or procure for you, both for your own sake, and also for your friends, who are men of worship and credit, and wish you well, and by my troth, Roger, so do I.
THEN said Mr. Eglestone, a gentleman of Lancashire, and near kinsman to Roger, being there present, I thank your good lordship; your honour meaneth good unto my cousin, I beseech God he have the grace to follow your counsel.
Sir, you crave of God you know not what. I beseech God to open your eyes to see the light of the word.
Roger, hold your peace, lest you fare worse at my lord's hands.
No, I shall fare as it pleaseth God, for man can do no more than God doth permit him,
THEN the bishop and the doctors, with Johnson, the register, casting their heads together, in the end saith Johnson, Roger, how sayst thou? wilt thou submit thyself unto my lord, before thou be entered into the book of contempt?
I never meant but to submit myself unto the magistrates, as I learn of St. Paul to the Romans, chap. xiii. and so he recited the text.
Then I see you are no anabaptist.
I mean not yet to be a papist; for they and the anabaptists agree in this point, not to submit themselves to any other prince or magistrate, than those that must first be sworn to maintain them and their doings.
Roger, remember what I have said, and also what my lord hath promised he will perform with further friendship. Take heed, Roger, for your ripeness of wit hath brought you into these errors.
Mr. Doctor, I have yet your words in memory, though they are of no such force to prevail with me.
THEN they whispered together again, and at last Bonner said, Roger, I percieve thou wilt not be ruled by good counsel, for any thing that either I or your friends can say.
I may say to you, my lord, as Paul said to Felix and to the Jews, as doth appear in the 22d of the Acts, and in the 15th of the first Episstle to the Corinthians. It is not unknown unto my master to whom I was apprentice withal, that I was of your blind religion that now is taught, and therein did obstinately and wilfully remain, until the latter end of king Edward, in manner, having that liberty under your auricular confession, that I made no conscience of sin, but trusted in the priest's absolution, he for money doing also som [...] penance for me: which after I had given, I [...]red no further what offences I did, no more th [...] [...] minded after he had my money, whether he tasted bread and water for me, or no: so that [...], swearing, and all other vices, I accounted [...] offence of danger, so long as I could for money have the [...] absolved. So straitly did I observe your rules of religion, that I would have ashes upon Ash Wednesday, though I had used ever so much wickedness at night. And albeit I could not of conscience eat flesh upon the Friday, yet in swearing, drinking, [Page 520] or dicing all the night long, I made no conscience at all. And thus I was brought up, and herein I have cont [...]nued till now of late, that God hath opened the light of his word, and called me by his grace to repentance of my former idolatry and wicked life; for in Lancashire their blindness and whoredom is much more than may with chasle ears be heard. Yet these my friends, which are not clear in these notable crimes, think the priest with his mass can save them, though they blaspheme God, and keep concubines beside their wives, as long as they live. Yea, I know some priests very devout, my lord, yet such as have six or seven children by four or five sundry women.
MR. Doctor, now to your antiquity, unity, and universality, (for these Dr. Chedsey, alledged as notes and tokens of their religion) I am unlearned. I have no sophistry to shift my reasons withal; but the truth I trust I have, which needeth no painted colours to set her forth. The antiquity of our church is not from pope Nicholas, or pope Joan, but our church is from the beginning, even from the time that God said unto Adam, that the seed of the woman should break the serpent's head; and so to faithful Noah; to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, to whom it was promised, that their seed should multiply as the stars in the sky; and so to Moses, David and all the holy fathers that were from the beginning unto the birth of our Saviour Christ. All they that believe these promises were of the church, though the number were oftentimes but few and small, as in Elias's days, when he thought there was none but he that had not bowed their knees to Baal, when God had reserved seven thousand that never had bowed their knees to that idol: as I trust there be seven hundred thousand more than I know of, that have not bowed their knees to the idol your mass, and your God Ma [...]zim; the upholding whereof is your bloody cruelty, while you daily persecute Elias and the servants of God, forcing them (as Daniel was in his chamber) closely to serve the Lord their God; and even as we by this your cruelty are forced in the fields to pray unto God, that his holy word may be once again truly preached amongst us, and that he would mitigate and shorten these idolatrous and bloody days wherein all cruelty reigneth. Moreover, of our church have been the apostles and evangelists, the martyrs and confessors of Christ, that have at all times and in all ages been persecuted for the testimony of the word of God. But for the upholding of your church and religion, what antiquity can you shew? Yea, the mass, that idol and chief pilla [...] of your religion, is not yet four hundred years old▪ and some of your masses are younger, as that of S [...]. Thomas Becket, the traitor, wherein you pray, that you may be saved by the blood of St. Thomas. And as for your Latin service, what are we of the l [...]ity the better for it? I think he that should hear [...] priests mumble up their service, although he did well understand Latin, yet should [...]e under [...]nd few words thereof, the priests do so champ [...] and chew them, and post so fast, that they [...] understand what they say, nor they that hear [...] and in the mean time the people, when they [...] pray with the priest, are set to their beads to [...] our lady's psalter. So crafty is S [...]tan to [...] these his dreams (which you defend with faggo [...] [...] fire), to quench the light of the word of [...] which, as David saith, should be a lanthorn [...] feet. And again, wherein shall a young [...] his ways, but by the word of God? And [...] your will hide it from us in a tongue unknown, [...] Paul had rather have five words spoken with [...] derstanding, than ten thousand in [...]n [...] tongue; and yet will you have your Latin [...] and praying in a strange tongue, whereof the [...] are utterly ignorant, to be of such antiquity▪
THE Greek church, and a good part of Chryste [...] dom besides, never received your service in an unknown tongue, but in their own natural language, which all the people understand, neither yet your transubstantiation, your receiving in one kind, [...] purgatory, your images, &c.
AS for the unity which is in your church, what is it else but treason, murder, poisoning one another, idolatry, superstition, and wickedness? What unity was in your church, when there were three popes [...] once? Where was your head of unity when you had a woman pope? Here he was interrupted, and could not be suffered to proceed.
[Page 521]THE bishop then said, Roger, these thy words are downright blasphemy, and by the means of thy friends thou hast been suffered to speak, and art over malepert to teach any here. Therefore, keeper, take him away.
The second Examination of ROGER HOLLAND.
THE day that Henry Pond and the rest were brought forth to be again examined, Dr. Chedsey said, Roger, I trust you have now better considered of the church than you did before.
I consider thus much: that out of the church there is no salvation, as divers ancient doctors say.
That is well said. Mr. Eglestone, I trust your kinsman will be a good catholic man. But, Roger, you mean, I trust, the church of Rome.
I mean that church which hath Christ for her head; which also hath his word and his sacraments according to his word and institution.
THEN Chedsey interrupted him, and said, Is that a Testament you have in your hand?
Yea Mr. Doctor, it is [...] New Testament. You will find no fault with the translation (I think). It is your own translation; it is according to the great Bible.
How say you? How do you know that it is the Testament of Christ, but only by the church? For the church of Rome hath and doth preserve it, and out of the same hath made decrees, ordinances, and true expositions.
NO (saith Roger), the church of Rome hath and doth suppress the reading of the Testament. And what a true exposition, I pray you, did the pope make thereof, when he set his foot on the Emperor's neck, and said, "Thou shalt walk upon the lion and the asp; the young lion and the dragon shalt thou tread under thy foot," Psalm xci.
THEN said the bishop, Such unlearned wild heads as thou and others, would be expositors of the scripture. Would you then the ancient learned (as there are some here as well as I) should be taught of you?
Youth delighteth in vanity. My wildness hath been somewhat the more by your doctrine, than ever I learned out of this book of God. But (my lord) I suppose some old doctors say, if a poor layman bring his reason and argument out of the word of God he is to be credited before the learned, though they be ever such great doctors. For the gift of knowledge was taken from the learned doctors, and given to poor fishermen. Notwithstanding, I am ready to be instructed by the church.
That is very well said, Roger. But you must understand that the church of Rome is the catholic church. Roger, for thy friend's sake (I promise thee) I wish thee well, and I mean to do thee good. Keeper, see he want nothing. Roger, if thou lackest any money to pleasure thee, I will see thou shalt not want. This he spake unto him alone, his companions being apart, with many other fair promises, and so he was sent to prison again.
The last Examination of ROGER HOLLAND.
THE last examination of Roger Holland was, when he with his fellow-prisoners were brought into the consistory, and there all excommunicated, except Roger, and ready to have their sentence of judgment given, with many threatening words to affright them withal: the lord Strange, sir Thomas Jarret, M. Eglestone, Esq. and divers others of worship, both of Cheshire and Lancashre, that were Roger Holland's kinsmen and friends, being there present, who had been earnest suitors to the bishop in his favor, hoping for his safety of life. Now the bishop hoping yet to win him with his fair and flattering words, began after this manner.
Roger, I have divers times called thee before me at my own house, and have conferred with thee, and being not learned in the Latin tongue, it do [...]h appear unto me that thou hast a good memory, and very sensible in talk, but something [Page 522] over hasty, which is a natural impediment incident to some men. And surely they are not the worst natured men. For I myself am now and then too hasty, but mine anger is soon over. So, Roger, surely I have a good opinion of you, that you will not with these fellows cast yourself headlong from the church of your parents and your friends that are here, very good catholics (as it is reported unto me). And as I mean thee good, so Roger, play the wise man's part, and come home with the lost son, and say, I have run into the church of schismatics and heretics, from the catholic church of Rome: and you shall, I warrant you, not only find favour at God's hands, but the church that hath authority, shall absolve you, and put new garments upon you▪ and kill the fatling to make thee good cheer withal, that is, in so doing, as meat doth refresh and cherish the mind, so shalt thou find as much quietness of conscience in coming home to the church, as did the hungry son that had been fed before with the hogs, as you have done with these heretics that sever themselves from the church. I give them a homely name, but they be worse
than hogs: for they know the church, and will not follow it. If I should say thus much to a Turk, he would (I think) believe me. But, Roger, if I did not bear thee and thy friends good will, I would not have said so much as I have done, but I would have let mine ordinary alone with you.
AT these words his friends there present thanked the bishop for his good will, and for the pains he had taken in his and their behalf.
THEN the bishop proceeded, saying, Well, Roger, how say you? Do you not believe, that after the priest hath spoken the words of consecration, there remaineth the body of Christ really and corporally, under the forms of bread and wine? I mean the self same body as was born of the virgin Mary, that was crucified upon the cross, that rose again the third day.
Your lordship saith, the same body which was born of the virgin Mary, which was crucified upon the cross, which rose again the third day: but you leave out, which ascended into heaven; and the scripture saith, he shall there remain until he come to judge the quick and the dead. Then he is not contained under the forms of bread and wine, by Hoc est corpus meum, &c.
Roger, I perceive my pains and good will will not prevail, and if I should argue with thee, thou art so wilful (as all thy fellows be, standing in thine own singularity and foolish conceit), that thou wouldst still talk to no purpose this seven years, if thou mightest be suffered. Answer whether thou wilt confese the real and corporal presence of Christ's body in the sacrament, or wilt not.
My lord, although God by his sufferance hath here placed you, to set forth his truth and glory in us his faithful servants, notwithstanding your meaning is far from the zeal of Christ; and for all your words, you have the same zeal that Annas and Caiaphas had, trusting to their authority, traditions, and ceremonies, more than to the word of God.
If I should suffer him, he would fall from reasoning to raving, as a frantic heretic.
ROGER (said the lord Strange), I perceive my lord would have you tell him, whether you will submit yourself to him or no.
YEA, said Bonner, and confess this preface that I have spoken of.
WITH this Roger turned to the lord Strange, and the rest of his kinsmen and friends, and very chearfully kneeled down upon his knees and said, God, by the mouth of his servant St. Paul, hath said, "Let every soul submit himself unto the higher powers, and he that resisteth, receiveth his own damnation;" and as you are a magistrate appointed by the will of God, so do I submit myself unto you, and to all such as are appointed for magistrates.
That is well said, I see you are no anabaptist. How say you then to the presence of Christ's body and blood in the sacrament of the altar?
I say and beseech you all to mark and bear witness with me (for so you shall do before the judgment-seat of God) what I speak; for here is the conclusion: and ye, my dear friends
I pray you shew my father what I do say, that he may understand I am a christian man. I say and believe, and am therein fully persuaded by the scriptures, that the sacrament of the supper of our Lord, ministered in the holy communion according to Christ's institution, I being penitent and sorry for my sins, and minding to amend and lead a new life, and so coming worthily unto God's board in perfect love and charity, do there receive by faith the body and blood of Christ. And though Christ in his human nature sit at the right hand of his Father, yet (by faith I say) his death, his passion, his merits are mine, and by faith I dwell in him, and he in me. And as for the mass, transubstantiation, and the worshipping of the sacrament, they are mere impiety and horrible adolatry.
I thought so much said Bonner, (suffering him to speak no more) how he would prove a very blasphemous heretic as ever I heard. How irreverently doth he speak of the blessed mass? And so read his sentence of condemantion, adjudging him to be burned.
ALL this while Roger was very patient and quiet, and when he should depart, he said, My lord, I beseech you suffer me to speak two words. The bishop would not hear him, but bade him away. Notwithstanding, being requested by one of his friends, he said, Speak, what hast thou to say?
Even now I told you that your authority was from God, and by his sufferance: and now I tell you God hath heard the prayer of his servants, which hath been poured forth with tears for his afflicted saints, whom you daily persecute, as now you do us. But this I dare be bold in God to say, (by whose Spirit I am moved) that God will shorten your hand of cruelty, that for a time you shall not molest his church. And this you shall in a short time well perceive, my dear brethren, to be most true. For after this day, in this place there shall not be any by him put to the trial of fire and faggot: and after that day there were none that suffered in Smithfield for the truth of the gospel.
THEN said Bonner, Roger, thou ar [...], I perceive as mad in these thy heresies as ever was Joan Butcher. In anger and in fume thou wouldst become a railing prophet. Though thou and all the rest of you would see me hanged, yet I shall live to burn, yea and I will burn all the sort of you that come into my hands, that will not worship the blessed sacrament of the altar, for all thy prattling: and so he went his way.
THEN Roger Holland began to exhort his friends to repentance, and think well of them that suffered for the testimony of the gospel, and with that the bishop came back, charging the keeper that no man should speak to them without his licence, and if they did, they would be committed to prison. In the mean time Henry Pond and Roger spake still unto the people, exhorting them to stand firm in the truth: adding moreover, that God would shorten these cruel and evil days for elect's sake.
THE day they suffered, a proclamation was made, that none should be so bold to speak or talk any word unto them, or receive any thing of them, or to touch them upon pain of imprisonment, without either bail or mainprize; with other cruel threatening words contained in the same proclamation. Notwithstanding the people cried out, desiring God to strengthen them: and they likewise still prayed for the people, and the restoring of his word. At length Roger, embracing the stake and the reeds, said these words:
"Lord, I most humbly thank thy Majesty, that thou hast called me from the state of death, unto the light of thy heavenly word, and now unto the fellowship of thy sainte, that I may sing and say, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God of hosts. And, Lord, into thy hands I commit my spirit. Lord bless these thy people." And so he ended his life, looking up unto heaven, praying to, and praising God, with the rest of his fellow-saints. For whose joyful constancy the Lord be praised.
An Account of the Martyrdom of Six Men, who suffered at Brentford, for the true Testimony of JESUS CHRIST.
THESE six martyrs were of the company of those who were apprehended in a Close, near Islington (as is before-mentioned), and sent to prison. Whose names here follow:
- Robert Mills,
- Stephen Cotton,
- Robert Dynes,
- Stephen Wight,
- John Slade,
- William Pikes, alias
- Pikes, the tanner.
THESE six martyrs were burnt at Brentford, seven miles from London, on the 14th of July, 1558. They had their articles ministered to them by T. Darbyshire, Bonner's chancellor, at sundry times, to which they made their answers much after the same manner as others have done before.
WHEN these good men came before Bonner's chancellor, Thomas Darbyshire, and had the articles ministered unto them, and they answered unto the same; in the end the chancellor commanded them to appear before him again the 11th day of July, at St. Paul's. Where when they came, he required of them, whether they would turn from their opinions to the holy mother church; and if not, that then, whether there were any cause to the contrary, but that he might proceed with the sentence of condemnation. Whereunto they all answered, That they would not go from the truth, nor relent from any part of the same while they lived. Then he charged them to appear before him again the next day in the afternoon, between one and two o'clock, to hear the definitive sentence read against them, according to the ecclesiastical laws then in force. At which time he sitting in judgment, talking with these godly and virtuous men, at last came into the said place, sir Edward Hastings, and sir Thomas Cornwallis, knights, two of queen Mary's officers of her house, and being there, they sat them down over against the chancellor, in whose presence the chancellor condemned those poor innocent lambs, and delivered them over to the secular power, who received and carried them to prison immediately, and there kept them in safety till the day of their death.
IN the mean time this naughty chancellor slept not, I warrant you, but that day in which they were condemned, he made a certificate unto the lord chancellor's office, from whence the next day after a writ was sent to burn them at Brentford, which accordingly was accomplished. Whereunto being brought, they made their humble prayers to the Lord Jesus, undressed themselves, went joyfully to the stake, whereunto they were bound, and the fire flaming about them, they yielded their souls, bodies, and lives into the hands of the omnipotent God, for whose cause they did suffer, and to whose protection I commend the gentle reader, Amen.
AMONG these six was one William Pikes, a tanner (as you have heard), who some time dwelt in Ipswich, a very godly man, and of a virtuous disposition, a good keeper of hospitality, and beneficial to the persecuted in queen Mary's days. In the third year of queen Mary, a little after Midsummer, he (then being at liberty) went into his garden, and took with him a Bible of Roger's translation, where he, sitting with his face towards the South, reading in the said Bible, suddenly there fell, between eleven and twelve o'clock, at mid-day, four drops of fresh blood upon the Bible, and he knew not from whence it came. At which he was sore astonished, and could by no means learn (as I said) from whence it should fall; and wiping out one of the drops with his finger, he called his wife and said, in the virtue of God, wife, what meaneth this? Will the Lord have four sacrifices? I see well enough the Lord will have blood: his will be done, and give me grace to abide the trial. Wife, let us pray, for I fear the day draweth nigh. Afterwards he daily expected to be apprehended, and it came to pass accordingly, as you have heard. Thus much I thought good to write, in order to stir up our dull minds in considering the wonderful works of the Lord, and reverently to honour the same.
WHEN he was so sick in Newgate that nobody expected him to live six hours, he expressed a great desire of martyrdom, saying, that he had been twice in persecution before, and that now he desired the Lord, if it were his will, that he might glorify [Page]
[Page 525] his name at the stake; and so as he prayed it came to pass at Brentford.
Verses upon BONNER'S Effigy.
An Account of the scourging of THOMAS HINDSHAW, by Bishop Bonner.
WHEN bishop Bonner found that his examinations, persuasions, threats, and imprisonments, were to no purpose with Thomas Hinshaw, he (the said bishop) took him with him to Fulham, where immediately after his coming, he was set in the stocks, remaining there all the first night with bread and water.
THE next morning the bishop came and examined him himself, and perceiving no yielding in his mind, he sent Mr. Harpsfield to talk with him; who, after long talk, in the end fell to raging words, [...]lling the said Thomas Hinshaw peevish boy, and [...]sked him whether he thought he went about to damn his soul, or no, &c. Unto which the said Thomas answered, That he was persuaded that they laboured to maintain their dark and devilish kingdom, but not for any love to truth. Then Harpsfield, being in a mighty rage, told the bishop thereof. Whereat the bishop fumed and fretted, that for anger being scarce able to speak, he said, Dost thou answer my archdeacon so, thou naughty boy? I shall handle thee well enough be assured; so he sent for a couple of rods, and caused him to kneel against a long bench in an arbour in his garden, where the said Thomas, without any inforcement of his part, offered himself to the bearing, and did abide the fury of the said Bonner, so long as the fat paunched bishop could endure with breath, and through w [...]ariness was obliged to cease, and give place to his shameful act. He had two willow rods, but he wasted but one, and so left off.
NOW after this scourging, the said Thomas Hinshaw, notwithstanding, did sustain divers conflicts and examinations sundry times. At last being brought before the said bishop in his chapel at Fulham, there he had procured witnesses, and gathered articles against him, which the young man denied, and would not affirm, or consent to any interrogatory there and then ministered, do what they could.
ABOUT a fortnight after he fell sick of a burning ague, whereby he was delivered through much intreaty unto his master, Martin Pugson, in St. Paul's church-yard; for then the bishop thought verily he was more like to die than to live. Which sickness endured a twelve-month or more, so that in the mean time queen Mary died. Then he shortly after recovered health, and escaped death, being at the writing of this, both witness and reporter of the same, the Lord therefore be praised. Amen.
An Account of the scourging of JOHN WILLES, by Bishop Bonner.
BESIDES the above-named, was scourged also by the hands of the said bishop, one John Willes, a capper, a right faithful and true honest man in all his dealings and conditions, who was brother to the aforesaid Richard Willes, burned at Brentford, as is before said. Who also was apprehended in the same number at Islington, as also is mentioned before: and being brought before Bonner, [Page 526] and there examined, but was commanded to the Coal-house, with the aforesaid Thomas Hinshaw, where they remained one night in the stocks. From thence he was sent to Fulham, where he, with the said Hinshaw, remained eight or ten days in the stocks▪ during which time he sustained divers conflicts with the said Bonner, who had him often in examination, urging him, and with a stick which he had [...]n his hand, often rapping him on the head, and flirting him under the chin, and on the ears, saying he looked down like a thief. Moreover, after he had assayed all manner of ways to make him recant, and could not, at length taking him to his orchard, there within a little arbour, with his own hands beat him first with a willow rod, and that being worn well nigh to the stumps, he called for a birch rod, which a lad brought out of his chamber. The cause why he so beat him was this: Bonner asked him when he had crept to the cross. He answered, not since he came to the years of discretion, neither would though he should be torn with wild horses. Then Bonner desired him to make a cross on his forehead, which he refused to do. Whereupon he had him immediately to his orchard, and there calling for rods, shewed his cruelty upon him, as he had done upon Thomas Hinshaw.
THIS done, he had him immediately to the parish church of Fulham, with the said Thomas Hinshaw, and Robert Willes, to whom there being severally called before him, he ministered certain articles, asking if he would subscribe to the same. To which he made his answer according to his conscience, denying them all except one article, which was concerning king Edward's service in English. Shortly after this beating, Bonner sent a certain old priest lately come from Rome, to him in prison, to conjure out the evil spirit from him, who laying his hand upon his head, began with certain words pronounced over him, to conjure as he had been won [...] before to do. Willes marvelling at what the old man was about, said, I trust no evil spirit is in me, and laughed him to scorn.
AS this John Willes was divers times called before Bonner, so much communication passed between them as is too tedious to recite. It is enough to make the reader laugh to see the blind and unsavoury reasons with which that bishop endeavoured to delude the ignorant, some of which were in the following manner: Bonner going about to persuade Willes not to meddle with matters of scripture, but rather to believe other men's teaching, who had more skill in the same, asked him first, if he did believe the scripture: Yea, said he, that I do. Then (quoth the bishop) St. Paul saith, If the man sleep, the woman is at liberty to go to another man. If thou wert asleep having a wife, wouldst thou be content that thy wife should take to another man? And yet this is the scripture.
ALSO, if thou wilt believe Luther, Zuinglius, and such, then thou canst not go right; but if thou wilt believe me, &c. thou canst not err: and if th [...] shouldst err, yet thou art in no danger, thy blood should be required at our hands. As if th [...] shouldst go to a far country, and meet with a fatherly man, as I am (these were his words), and ask the way to the city, and he should say, this way, and thou wilt not believe him, but should follow Luther, and other heretics of late days, and go a contrary way; how wilt thou come to the place thou askest for? So if thou wilt not believe me, but follow the leading of other heretics, thou shalt be brought to destruction, and burn both body and soul.
AS truly as thou seest the bodies of them is Smithfield burnt, so truly their souls do burn in hell, because they err from the true church.
OFT-TIMES speaking to the said John Willes, he would say, They call me bloody Bonner. A vengeance on you all: I would fain be rid of you, but you have a delight in burning. But if I might have my will, I would sew up your mouths, and put you in sacks and drown you.
THE same day that he was delivered, Bonner came to the stocks where he lay, and asked him how he liked his lodging, and his fare.
WELL (said Willes), if it would please God, I might have a little straw to lie or sit upon.
THEN (said Bonner) thou wilt shew no token of a christian man. And upon this his wife came in unknown to him▪ being very great with child, every [Page 527] hour expecting her labour, and intreated the bishop for her husband, saying, that she would not go from thence, but that she would there stay, and be delivered in the bishop's house, unless she had her husband with her. How sayest thou (quoth Bonner to Willes), if thy wife miscarry, or thy child, or children, if she be with one or two, should perish, the blood of them would be required at thy hands. Then to this agreement he came, that he should hire a bed in the town of Fulham, and her husband should go home with her the morrow after, upon this condition, that his kinsman there present (one Robert Rouse) should bring the said Willes to his house at St. Paul's the next day.
TO which Willes would not agree, but insisted upon going then. At length, his wife being importunate for her husband, and Bonner seeing she would not stir without him, fearing belike the rumour that might come upon his house ther [...]by, and also probably fearing to be troubled with a lying-in woman, bade Willes make a cross, and say, In nomine Patris, & Filii, & Spiritus Sancti, Amen.
THEN Willes began to say, In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, Amen. No, no (saith Bonner), say it me in Latin; Willes understanding the matter of that Latin to be good, said the same, and so went home with his wife, his aforesaid kinsman being charged to bring him the next day to St. Paul's; else, said Bonner, if thou dost not bring him, thou art an heretic as well as he. Notwithstanding, the charge being no greater, his kinsman did not bring him, but he of his own accord came to the bishop within a few days after, where he put to him a certain writing in Latin, to subscribe unto, containing, as it seemed to him, no great matter, that he needed greatly to stick at, although, what the bill was he could not certainly tell: so he subscribed to the bill, and returned home. And thus much concerning the 22 taken at Islington.
The History of RICHARD YEOMAN, Dr. TA [...]OR'S Curate, at Hadley.
RICHARD YEOMAN, a devout old man, was Dr. Taylor's curate, at Hadley, and well versed in the scriptures, and giving godly exhortations to the people: with him Dr. Taylor left his cure at his departure. But as soon as Mr. Newall had gotten the benefice, he put out Mr. Yeoman, and set in a popish curate to maintain and continue their Romish religion, which now they thought fully established. Then he wandered from place to place, exhorting all men to stand faithfully to God's word, earnestly to give themselves unto prayer, with patience to bear the cross now laid upon them for their trial, with boldness to confess the truth before their adversaries, and with an undoubted hope to wait for the crown and reward of eternal felicity. But when he perceived his adversaries to lie in wait for him, he went into Kent, and with a little packet of laces, pins and points, and such like things, he travelled from village to village, selling such things, and by that shift subsisted himself, his wife and children.
AT last justice Moyle, of Kent, took Mr. Yeoman and set him in the stocks a day and a night, but having no evident matter to charge him with, he let him go again. So he came secretly again to Hadley, and tarried with his poor wife, who kept him secretly in a chamber of the town-house, commonly called the Guildhall, more than a year. All which time the good old father abode in a chamber locked up all the day, and spent his time in devout prayer, and reading the scriptures, and in carding of wool which his wife did spin. His wife did also go and beg bread and meat for herself and her children, and by such poor means they sustained themselves. Thus the saints of God sustained hunger and misery, while the prophets of Baal lived in jollity, and were costly pampered at Jezabel's table.
AT last parson Newall (I know not by what means) perceived that Richard Yeoman was so kept by his poor wife, and taking with him the bailiff's deputies and servants, came in the nighttime, and broke open five doors to get at Yeoman, whom he found in bed with his wife and children; whom when he had so found, he angrily cried, I thought I should find an harlot and an whore together. And he would have plucked the cloaths off from them: but Yeoman held fast the cloaths, and said unto his wife, Wife, arise, and put on thy [Page 528] cloaths. And unto the parson he said, Nay, parson, no harlot, nor whore, but a married man and his wife, according to God's ordinance, and blessed be God for lawful matrimony. I thank God for this great grace, and I defy the pope and all his popery. Then they led Richard Yeoman unto the cage, and set him in the stocks until it was day.
THERE was then also in the cage an old man named John Dale, who had sat there three or four days, because when the said parson Newall with his curate used the Romish service in the church, he spake openly unto him, and said, O miserable and blind guides, will ye ever be blind leaders of the blind? will ye never amend? will ye never see the truth of God's word? will neither God's threats nor promises enter into your hearts? will the blood of martyrs nothing mollify your stoney stomachs? O obdurate, hard-hearted, perverse, and crooked generation! O damnable sort, whom nothing can do good unto.
THESE, or the like words, he speak in fervency of spirit against the superstitious religion of Rome. Wherefore parson Newall caused him forthwith to be attached, and set in the stocks in a cage. So was he kept there till sir Henry Doile, a justice, came to Hadley.
WHEN poor Yeoman was taken, the parson called earnestly upon sir Henry Doile to send them both to prison. Sir Henty Doile earnestly intreated the parson to consider the age of the men, and their mean condition; they were neither persons of note nor preachers; wherefore he would desire him to let them be punished a day or two, and so let them go, at least John Dale, who was no priest: and therefore seeing he had so long sat in the cage, he thought it punishment enough at this time. When the parson heard this, he was exceeding mad, and in a great rage called them pestilent heretics, unfit to live in the commonwealth of christians. Wherefore I beseech you, sir, (quoth he) according to your office, defend the holy church, and help to suppress these heresies, &c. which are false to God, and thus boldly set themselves to the evil example of others, against the queen's gracious proceedings Sir Henry Doile seeing he could do no good in the matter, and fearing also the danger of meddling too much in it, made out the writ, and caused the constables to carry them to Bury gaol. For now all the justices, though ever so many, were afraid of a shaven crown, and stood in as much awe of them, as Pilate did of Annas and Caiaphas, and the pharisaical brood, who cried, "Crucify him, crucify him; if thou let this man go, thou art not Caesar's friend."
WHEREFORE whatsoever their consciences were, yet (if they would escape danger) they must needs be the popish slaves and vassals. So they took Richard Yeoman and John Dale pinioned, and bound them like thieves, set them on horseback, and bound their legs under the horses bellies, and so carried them to Bury gaol, where they were laid in irons; and because they continually rebuked popery, they were thrown into the lowest dungeon, where John Dale, through sickness of the prison, and evil keeping, died in prison, whose body, when he was dead, was thrown out and buried in the fields. He was a man of forty-six years of age, a weaver by his occupation, well learned in the holy scriptures, faithful and honest in all his conversation, stedfast in confession of the true doctrine of Christ set forth in king Edward's time; for which he joyfully suffered prison and chains, and from this worldly dungeon he departed in Christ to eternal glory, and the blessed paradise of everlasting felicity.
AFTER that John Dale was dead, Richard Yeoman was removed to Norwich prison, where after strait and evil keeping, he was examined of his faith and religion. Then he boldly and constantly confessed himself to be of the faith and confession that was set forth by king Edward VI. and from that he would no wise vary. Being required to submit himself to the holy father the pope; I defy him (quoth he) and all his detestable abominations: I will in no wise have to do with him, nor any thing that appertaineth to him. The chief articles objected to him, were his marriage and the mass sacrifice. Wherefore when he continued stedfast in confession of the truth, he was condemned, degraded, and not only burnt, but most cruelly tormented [Page 529] in the fire. So he ended his poor and miserable life, and entered into the blessed bosom of Abraham, enjoying with Lazarus the comfortable quietness that God hath prepared for his elect saints.
The Story of JOHN ALCOCK.
THIS young man was by occupation a sheerman, and came to Hadley to seek work; he being in church one Sunday, and parson Newall coming by with the procession, would not once move his cap, nor shew any sign of reverence, but stood behind the font. The parson perceiving this, when he was almost out of the church door, ran back again, and caught him, and called for the constable.
THEN came Robert Rolfe, with whom this young man had wrought, and said, What hath he done, Mr. Parson, that you are in such a rage with him?
HE is an heretic and traitor (quoth the parson), and despiseth the queen's proceedings. Wherefore I command you in the queen's name, have him to the stocks, and see he be forthcoming.
WELL (quoth Rolfe) he shall be forthcoming, proceed in your business, and be quiet.
HAVE him to the stocks, quoth the parson.
I am constable, quoth Rolfe, and I may bail him, and will bail him; he shall not be put in the stocks, but he shall be forthcoming: so the good parson went forth with his holy procession, and so to mass.
IN the afternoon Rolfe said to this young man, I am sorry for thee, for truly the parson will seek thy destruction, if thou take not good heed what thou answerest him.
THE young man said, Sir, I am sorry that it is my hap to be a trouble to you. As for myself, I am not sorry, but I commit myself into God's hands, and I trust he will give me mouth and wisdom to answer according to right.
WELL, quoth Rolfe, yet beware of him, for he is malicious and a blood-sucker, and beareth an old hatred against me, and he will handle you the more cruelly, because of displeasure against me.
I fear not, quoth the young man: he shall do no more to me, than God will give him leave; and happy shall I be if God will call me to die for his truth's sake.
THEN they went to the parson, who at the first asked him, Fellow, what sayst thou to the sacrament of the altar?
I say, quoth he, as ye use the matter, ye make a shameful idol of it, and ye are false idolatrous priests, all the sort of you.
I told you (quoth the parson) he was a stout heretic.
SO after long talk, the parson committed him to prison, and the next day he rode up to London, and carried the young man with him; and so the young man came no more to Hadl [...]y: but after a long imprisonment in Newgate, where after many examinations and troubles, for that he would not submit himself to ask forgiveness of the pope, and to be reconciled to the Romish religion, he was cast into the lower dungeon, where with ill keeping and sickness of the house, he died in prison. Thus died he a martyr to God's truth, which he heartily confessed, and received the garland of a well-fought battle at the hand of the Lord. His body was cast out, and buried in a dunghill▪ for the papists would in all things be like themselves; therefore they would not so much as suffer the dead bodies to have convenient burial.
The History of THOMAS BENBRIDGE, Gentleman and Martyr, wrongfully condemned and put to death for the Testimony of Christ.
THOMAS BENBRIDGE, a gentleman, (unmarried) in the diocese of Winchester, although he might have lived a gentleman's life, in the wealthy possessions of this world; yet to follow Christ had rather enter into the strait gate of persecution, to the heavenly possession of life in the Lord's kingdom, than here to enjoy present pleasure [...] with unquietness of conscience. Wherefore ma [...]fully standing against the papists for the defence o [...] the sincere doctrine of Christ's gospel, he spared not himself to confirm the truth of the same. For which cause he being apprehended for an adversary to the Romish religion, was forthwith had to examination before the bishop of Winchester, where he sustained sundry conflicts for the truth against the said bishop and his colleague; for which he was condemned, and some time after brought to the place of martyrdom, by sir Richard Pecksal, sheriff.
WHEN standing at the stake, he began to untie his points, and to prepare himself; then he gave his gown to the keeper, being belike his [...]ee. His Jerkin was laid on with gold lace fair and brave, which he gave to sir Richard Pecksal, the high-sheriff. His cap of velvet he took from his head and threw it away. Then lifting his mind to the Lord, he made his prayers.
THAT done, being now fastened to the stake, Dr. Seaton willed him to recant, and he should have his pardon▪ but when he saw it prevailed not to speak, the said dreaming doctor willed the people not to pray for him unless he would recant, no more than they would pray for a dog.
MR. Benbridge, standing at she stake with his hand [...] together in such a manner as the priest holdeth his hands in his Memento, the said Dr. Seaton came to him again and exhorted him to recant: unto whom he said, Away Babylonian, away.
THEN said one that stood by, Sir, cut out his tongue, and mother being a temporal man, railed on him worse than Dr. Seaton did, who, (as it [...] thought) was set on by some other.
THUS when they saw he would not yield, they bade the tormentors to set to fire, and yet he [...] nothing like covered with faggots. First, the fire took away a piece of his beard, whereat he did not shrink at all. Then it came on the other side and took his legs, and the nether stockings of his hose being leather, made the fire to pierce the sharper, so that the intolerable heat thereof made him to [...], I recant: and suddenly he thrust the fire from [...] And having two or three of his friends by [...] wished his life, they stepped to the fire, and [...] to take it from him also, who for their labour [...] sent to prison. The sheriff also of his own [...] took him from the stake, and sent him to [...] again, for which he was sent unto the Fleet, [...] there some time. But before he was taken [...] the stake, the said Dr. Seaton wrote articles to have him subscribe unto them, as touching the pope, the sacrament, and such other trash. But the said [...] Benbridge made much ado before he would [...] scribe them, insomuch that Dr. Seaton order [...] them to set to fire again. Then with much pain and grief of heart he subscribed to them upon man's back.
THAT being done, he had his gown given [...] again, and so was led to prison. Being in prison, he wrote a letter to Dr. Seaton, and recanted th [...]s [...] words he spake at the stake, unto which he had subscribed: for he was grieved that ever he subscribed unto them. Whereupon expressing his conscience, he was the same day seven-night after burnt indeed, where the vile tormentors did rather broil than burn him. The Lord give his enemies repentance.
An Account of the Martyrdom of JOHN COOKE, a Sawyer, ROBERT MILES, alias PLUMMER, Sheerman, ALEXANDER LANE, a Wheel-wright, JAMES ASHLEY, Bachelor.
THE examination of these above-mentioned persons, being severally called before the bishop of Norwich, and sir Edward Walgrave, [Page 531] with others, was partly upon these articles following.
FIRST, sir Edward Walgrave called John Cooke to him, and said, How doth it happen that you go not to your church?
I have been there.
What is the cause that you go not thither now in these days?
Because the sacrament of the altar is an abominable idol, and the vengeance of God will come upon all them that do maintain it.
O thou rank traitor, if I had as good commission to cut out thy tongue, as I have to sit h [...]re this day, thou shouldst be sure to have it done▪
THEN he commanded the constable to take him away, saying, he was both a traitor and a rebel.
THEN he called Robert Miles, and said, How happeneth it, that you will not go to church?
Because I will follow no false gods.
THEN said the bishop, Who told thee that it is a god?
EVEN you, quoth Miles, and such as you are.
THEN the bishop commanded him aside, and to appear before him the next day.
THEN the called Alexander Lane before him, and asked him how it chanced, that he would not go to the church.
HE said, that his conscience would not serve him so to do.
SIR Edward said, How dost thou believe?
LANE answered, Even as it is written in God's book.
THEN sir Edward commanded him to say his belief.
THEN Lane, being somewhat abashed, said his belief to these words, which he missed unawares, "Born of the virgin Mary."
THEN said sir Edward, What, was he not born of the virgin Mary?
YES, said Lane, I would have said so.
NAY, said sir Edward, you are one of Cooke's scholars, and so commanded him away, and to come before him the next day.
AFTER the like manner they passed also with James Ashley, whom they warned the next day likewise to appear before them again. So in [...]ine they appearing again, had their condemnation. And thus these four blessed martyrs innocently suffered together at St. Edmund's-Bury, as is aforesaid, about the beginning of August, not long before the sickness of queen Mary.
An Account of the Martyrdom of two godly Persons [...] Ipswich, for the everlasting Testimony of Christ▪ namely, ALEXANDER GOUCH, and ALICE DRIVER.
MR. NOONE, a justice in Suffolk, dwelling in Martlesham, hunting after good men to appreh [...]nd them, (as he was a bloody tyrant in the time of trial) at length had intelligence of one Alexander Gouch, of Woodbridge, and Driver's wife, of Grosborough, to be at Grosborough together, a little from his house, and immediately took his men with him, and went thither, and made diligent search for them; where the poor man and woman were compelled to get into an hay-loft to hide themselves from their cruelty. At length they came to search the hay for them, and by gaging thereof with pitchforks, at last found them: so they took them and led them to Melton gaol, where they remaining a good while, at last wer [...] carried to Bury, against the assize at St. James's-tide, and being there examined of matters of faith, did boldly stand to confess Christ crucified, defying the pope [...] his papistical trash. And among other things, Driver's wife likened queen Mary in her persecution to Jezabel; and so in that sense called [...] [Page 532] Jezabel: for that sir Clement Higham, being chief judge there, ordered her ears immediately to be cut off, which was done accordingly, and she joyfully yielded herself to the punishment, and thought herself happy that she was counted worthy to suffer any thing for the name of Christ.
AFTER the assize at Bury, they were carried to Melton gaol again, where they remained a time. This Alexander Gouch was of the age of 36 years, or thereabouts, and by his occupation a weaver of shreding coverlets, dwelling at Woodbridge, in Suffolk, and born at Uxford, in the same county. Driver's wife was a woman about the age of 30 years, and dwelt at Grosborough, (where they were taken) in Suffolk: her husband did use husbandry. These two were carried from Melton gaol, to Ipswich, where they remained, and were examined. Which examination, as it [...]me to hands, hereafter followeth.
The First Examination of Alice Driver, before Dr. Spenser, the Chancellor of Norwich.
FIRST, she coming into the place where she should be examined, with a smiling countenance, Dr. Spenser said, Why, woman, dost thou laugh us to scorn?
Whether I do or no, I might well enough, to see what fools ye be.
THEN the chancellor asked her wherefore she was brought before him, and why she was laid in prison.
Wherefore? I think I need not tell you; for you know it better than I.
No, by my troth, woman, I know not why.
Then have you done me much wrong thus to imprison me, and know no cause why; for I know no evil that I have done, I thank God, and I hope there is no man that can accuse me of any notorious fact that I have done, justly.
Woman, woman, what sayest thou to the blessed sacrament of the altar? Dost thou not believe that it is very flesh and blood, after the words be spoken of consecration?
Driver's wife at those words held her peace, and made no answer. Then a great chuff- [...]eaded priest that stood by spake, and asked her why she made not the chancellor answer. With that the said Driver's wife looked upon him austerely, and said, Why, priest, I come not to talk with thee, but I come to talk with thy master: but if thou wilt I shall talk with thee, command thy master to hold his peace. And with that the priest put his nose in his cap, and spake never a word more. Then the chancellor bid her make answer to that he demanded of her
Sir, pardon me though I make no answer, for I cannot tell what you mean thereby; for in all my life I never heard nor read of any such sacrament in all the scripture.
Why, what scriptures have you read, I pray you?
I have (I thank God) read God's book.
Why, what manner of book is that you call God's book?
It is the Old and New Testament. What call you it?
That is God's book indeed, I cannot deny.
That same book have I read throughout, but yet never could find any such sacrament there; and for that cause I cannot make you an answer to that thing I know not. Notwithstanding, for all that, I will grant you a sacrament, called the Lord's supper: and therefore seeing I have granted you a sacrament, I pray you shew me what a sacrament is.
It is a sign. And one Dr. Gascoin being by, confirmed the same, that it was the sign of a holy thing.
You have said the truth, sir. It is a sign indeed, I must needs grant it: and therefore seeing it is a sign, it cannot be the thing signified also. Thus far we do agree; for I have granted your own saying.
THEN stood up the said Gascoin, and made an oration with many fair words, but little to the purpose, being both offensive and odious to the minds of the godly. In the end of which long tale, he asked her if she did not believe the omnipotency of God, and that he was almighty, and able to perform that he spake. She answered, Yes; and said, I do believe that God is almighty, and able to perform that he spake and promised.
Very well. Then he said to his disciples, "Take, eat, this is my body:" Ergo, it was his body. For he was able to perform that he spake, and God useth not to lie.
I pray you did he ever make any such promise to his disciples, that he would make the bread his body?
Those be the words. Can you deny it?
No; they be the very words indeed, I cannot deny it; but I pray you, was it not bread that he gave unto them?
No; it was his body.
Then was it his body that they did eat over night?
It was his body.
What body was it then that was crucified the next day?
It was Christ's body.
How could that be, when the disciples had eaten him over night? except he had two bodies, as by your argument he had; one they did eat over night, and he was crucified the next day. Such a doctor, such doctrine! Be you not ashamed to teach the people, that Christ had two bodies? In the 22d of Luke, "He took bread and brake it to his disciples, saying, "Take, &c. and do this in remembrance of me." St. Paul saith, 1 Cor. xi. "Do this in remembrance of me: for as often as ye shall eat this bread, and drink this cup, ye shall shew the Lord's death till he come:" and therefore I marvel you blush not before all this people, to lie so manifestly as you do.
WITH that Gascoin held his peace, and made her no answer; for, as it seemed, he was ashamed of his doings. Then the chancellor lift up his head off from his cushion, and commanded the gaoler to take her away.
Now ye be not able to resist the truth, ye command me to prison again. Well, the Lord in the end shall judge our cause, and to him I leave it. So away she went with the gaoler.
The Second Examination of Alice Driver.
THE next day she came before them again, and the chancellor then asked her, what she said to the blessed sacrament of the altar?
I will say nothing to it: for you will neither believe me nor yourselves: for yesterday I asked you what a sacrament was, and you said, it was a sign; and I agreed thereto, and said it was the truth, confirming it by the scriptures, so that I went not from your own words; and now you come and ask me again of such a sacrament as I told you I never read of in the scriptures.
Thou liest, naughty woman, we did not say that it was a sign.
Why, masters, be ye not the men that you were yesterday? Will ye eat your own words? Are ye not ashamed to lie before all this multitude here present, who heard you speak the same?
THEN stood up Dr. Gascoin, and said, she was deceived; for there are three churche [...], the malignant church, the church militant, and the church triumphant. So he would fain have made matter, but he could not tell which way.
Sir, is there mention made of so many churches in the scripture?
Yea.
I pray you where find you this word [church] written in the scripture?
It is written in the New Testament.
I pray you, sir, shew the place where it is written.
I cannot tell the place, but there it is. With that she desired him to look in his Testament: then he fumbled and sought about him for one; but at that time he had none, and that he knew well enough, though he seemed to search for it. At last she said, Have you none here, sir?
No.
I thought so much indeed, that you were little acquainted withal. Surely▪ you are a good doctor. You say you sit here to judge according to the law, and how can you give judgment, and have not the book of the law with you? At which words Dr. Gascoin was out of countenance, and asked her if she had one.
NO, said she.
THEN, said he, I am as good a doctor as you.
Well, sir, I had one, but you took it from me (as you would take me from Christ, if you could), and since you would not suffer me to have [...] book at all; so burning is your charity. But you may well know (I thank God), that I have exercised the same; else I could not have answered you (to God's glory be it spoken) as I have. Thus she put them all to silence, so that one looked on another, and had not a word to speak.
Have you no more to say? God be honoured. You be not able to resist the Spirit of God in me, poor woman. I was an honest poor man's daughter, never brought up in the university as you have been, but I have driven the plough before my father many a time: yet notwithstanding, in defence of God's truth, and in the cause of my master Christ, by his grace I will set my foot against the foot of any of you all, in the maintenance and defence of the same; and if I had a thousand lives, they should go for payment thereof. —So the chancellor rose up, and read the sentence of condemnation in Latin, and committed her to the secular power; and so she went to prison again as joyfully as the bird of day, praising and glorifying the name of God.
Martyrdom of ALEXADER GOUCH and ALICE DRIVER.
THIS Alexander Gouch was examined chiefly of the sacrament and other ceremonies of the popish church. And for that his belief was, that Christ was ascended into heaven, and there remaineth, and that the sacrament was the remembrance of his death and passion, and for refusing the mass, and the pope to be supreme head of Christ's church, for these causes was he condemned, and died with Alice Driver▪ at Ipswich, the 4th of November, which was the Monday after All Saints, 1558.
THESE two persons being come to the place where the stake was set, by seven o'clock in the morning, notwithstanding they came the same morning from Mel [...]on gaol, which is six miles from Ipswich, being at their prayers, and singing of psalms both of them together, sir Henry Dowel, being then sheriff, was very much offended with them, and desired the bailiffs of Ipswich to bid them make an end of prayers; they kneeling upon a broom faggot, one of the bailiffs, whose name was Richard Smart, commanded them to make an end, saying, On, on, have done; make an end, nail them to the stake; yet they continued in prayer.
THEN sir Henry sent one of his men, whose name was Richard Cove, that they should make an end.
THEN Gouch stood up and said unto the sheriff, I pray you, Mr. Sheriff, let us pray a l [...]ttle while, for we have but a little time to live here.
THEN said the bailiff, Come, have them to the fire.
[Page 535]THEN the said Gouch, and Alice Driver, said, Why, Master Sheriff, and Master Bailiff, will you not suffer us to pray?
AWAY, said sir Henry, to the stake with them.
GOUCH answered, Take heed, Mr. Sheriff, if you forbid prayer, the vengeance of God hangeth over your heads. Then they being tied to the stake, and the iron chain being put about Alice Driver's neck, O (said she) here is a goodly handkerchief, blessed be God for it.
THEN divers came and took them by the hands as they were bound standing at the stake. The sheriff cried, Lay hands on them, lay hands on them. With that a great number ran to the stake. The sheriff seeing that, let them all alone, so that there was not one taken.
THERE was one Bate, a barber, a busy doer about them, who having then a frieze gown upon him, sold it immediately, saying, It stunk of heretics; with other foul words. Within three or four weeks after this, God's hand was upon him, and he [...]ied very miserably in Ipswich.
ALTHOUGH our history hasteth apace (the Lord be praised) to the happy death of queen Mary, yet she died not so soon but that some were burned before her death, and more would have been burned soon after, if God's provision had not prevented her with death. In the number of them which suffered in the same month when queen Mary died, were three that were burned at Bury, whose names were these, Philip Humfrey, John David, and Henry David, his brother.
CONCERNING the burning of these three, here is to be noted, that sir Clement Higham, about a fortnight before the queen died, issued out a writ for the burning of them, notwithstanding that the queen was then known to be past remedy of her sickness.
An Account of Mrs. PREST, Martyr.
ALTHOUGH in such a great number of persons who in sundry parts of these realms were put to death in queen Mary's time, it be hard exactly to recite every particular person that suffered but that some escape us either unknown, or omitted; yet I cannot pass over a certain poor woman, I mean a Mrs. Prest, burned under the said queen's reign, in the city of Exeter, who dwelling sometime about Cornwall, having a husband and children there, much addicted to the superstitious sect of popery, was many times rebuked by them, and driven to go to the church, to their idols and ceremonies, to confession, to follow the cross in procession, to give thanks to God for restoring Antichrist again in this realm, &c. which when her spirit could not abide to do, she made her prayer to God, calling for his help and mercy, and so at length lying in her bed, about mid-night, she thought there came to her a certain motion and feeling of singular comfort. Whereupon in short space, she began to grow in contempt of her husband and children, and so taking nothing from them, but what she had on, departed from them; seeking her living by labour and spinning as well as she could, here and there for a time. In which time she never ceased [...] utter her mind as well as she durst against their popery; however, she at that time was brought home to her husband again. Where at last she was accused by her neighbours, and so brought up to Exeter, to be presented to the bishop and his clergy. The name of the bishop who had her in examination, was Dr. Troublevile. His chancellor (as I gather) was Blackstone. The chiefest matter whereupon she was charged and condemned, was for the sacrament (which they call) of the altar, and for speaking against idols, as by the declaration of those which were present, I understand, who report the talk between her and the bishop on this wise:
Thou foolish woman, I hear say, that thou hast spoken certain words against the most blessed sacrament of the altar, the body of Christ. Fie for shame. Thou art an unlearned person, and a woman: wilt thou meddle with such high [Page 536] matters, which all the doctors of the world cannot define? Wilt thou talk of such high mysteries? Keep thy work, and meddle with that thou hast to do. It is no woman's matter, at cards and tow to be spoken of. And if it be as I am informed, thou art worthy to be burned.
My lord, I trust your lordship will hear me speak.
Yea, marry, for that cause I sent for you.
I am a poor woman, and do live by my hands, getting a penny truly, and of what I get, I give part to the poor.
That is well done. Art thou not a man's wife?
AND here the bishop entered into conversation about her husband.
TO whom she answered again, declaring that she had a husband and children; and had them not. So long as she was at liberty, she refused neither husband nor children: but now standing here as I do, said she, in the cause of Christ and his truth, where I must either forsake Christ, or my husband, I am contented to stick only to Christ, my heavenly spouse, and renounce the other.
AND here she making mention of the words of Christ, "He that leaveth not father or mother, sister or brother, husband," &c. the bishop inferred, that Christ spake that of the holy martyrs, who died because they would not sacrifice to the false gods.
Surely, sir, and I will rather die than I will do any worship to that idol, which with your mass you make a god.
What, heretic, will you say that the sacrament of the altar is a foul idol?
Yes truly, there was never such an idol as your sacrament is made by your priests, and commanded to be worshipped of all men, with many fond phantasies, where Christ did command it to be eaten and drank in remembrance of his most blessed passion for our redemption.
See this prattling woman. Dost thou not hear, that Christ did say over the bread, "This is my body," and over the cup, "This is my blood?
Yes, forsooth, he said so, but he meant that it is body and blood, not carnally, but sacramentally.
Lo, she hath heard prating among th [...]se new preachers, or read some peevish book. Alas, poor woman, thou art deceived.
No, my lord, what I have learned was of godly preachers, and of godly books which I have heard read. And if you will give me leave, I will declare a reason why I will not worship the sacrament.
Marry, say on, I am sure it will be goodly gear.
Truly such gear as I will loose this poor life of mine for.
Then you will be a martyr, good wife.
Indeed, if the denying to worship that bready god be my martyrdom, I will suffer it with all my heart.
Say thy mind.
You must bear with me, a poor woman.
So I will.
I will demand of you, whether you can deny your creed, which doth say, That Christ doth perpetually sit at the right hand of his Father, both body and soul, until he come again; or whether he be there in heaven our Advocate, and to make prayer for us unto. God his Father? If it be so, he is not here on earth in a piece of bread. If [Page 537] he be not here, and if he do not dwell in temples made with hands, but in heaven, what, shall we seek him here? If he did offer his body once for all, why make you a new offering? If with once offering he made all perfect, why do you with a false offering make all imperfect? If he be to be worshipped in Spirit and in truth, why do you worship a piece of bread? If he be eaten and drank in faith and truth, if his flesh be not profitable to be among us, why do you say you make his flesh and blood, and say it is profitable for body and soul? Alas, I am a poor woman, but rather than I will do as you, I would live no longer. I have said, sir.
I promise you, you are a jolly protestant. I pray you in what schools have you been brought up?
I have upon the Sundays visited the sermons, and there have I learned such things as are so fixed in my breast, that death shall not separate them.
O foolish woman, who will waste his breath upon thee, or such as thou art? But how chanceth it that thou wentest away from thy husband? if thou wert an honest woman, thou wouldst not have left thy husband and children, and run about the country like a fugitive.
Sir, I laboured for my living; and as my master Christ counselleth me, when I was persecuted in one city, I fled into another.
Who persecuted thee?
My husband and my children. For when I would have them to leave Idolatry, and to worship God in heaven, he would not hear me, but he with his children rebuked me, and troubled me. I fled not for whoredom, nor for theft, but because I would be no partaker with him and his, of that foul idol the mass; and wheresoever I was, as oft as I could, upon Sundays and holidays, I made excuses not to go to the popish church.
Belike then you are a good housewife, to fly from your husband, and the church.
My housewifery is but small; but God give me grace to go to the true church.
The true church, what dost thou mean?
Not your popish church, full of idols and abominations, but where two or three are gathered together in the name of God, to that church will I go, as long as I live.
Belike then you have a church of your own. Well, let this mad woman be put down to prison till we send for her husband.
No, I have but one husband, who is here already in this city and in prison with me (from whom I will never depart). And so their communication, for that time, brake off. Blackstone and others persuaded the bishop that she was not in her right senses (which is no new thing for the wisdom of God to appear foolishness to the carnal men of this world), and therefore they consulted together, that she should have liberty to go at large. So the keeper of the bishop's prison had her home to his house, where she fell to spinning and carding, and did work as a servant in the said keeper's house, and she went abou [...] the city when and where she pleased, and many people took great delight in talking with her: and all her discourse was about the sacrament of the altar, which of all things they could least abide.
THEN her husband was sent for, but she refused to go home with him, with the blemish of the cause and religion, in defence whereof she there stood before the bishop and the priests.
THEN divers of the priests endeavoured to persuade her to leave her wicked opinion about the sacrament of the altar, the natural body and blood of our Saviour Christ. But she made them answer, that it was nothing but very bread and wine, and that they might be ashamed to say, that a piece of bread should be turned by a man into the natural body of Christ, which bread doth corrupt, and mice oftentimes do eat it, and it doth mould, and is burned: God's body will not be so handled, nor kept in prison, or boxes or aumbries. Let it be your god, it shall not be mine; for my Saviour [Page 538] sitteth on the right hand of God, and doth pray for me. And to make that sacramental or significative bread instituted for a remembrance, the very body of Christ, and to worship it, is very foolishness and devilish deceit.
NOW truly, said they, the devil hath deceived thee.
NO, said she, I trust the living God hath opened mine eyes, and caused me to understand [...]he right use of the blessed sacrament, which the true church doth use, but the false church doth abuse.
THEN stepped forth an old friar, and asked her what she said of the holy pope.
I (said she) say, that he is Antichrist and the devil.
THEN they all laughed.
NAY, said she, you have more need to weep than to laugh, and to be sorry that ever you were born, to be the chaplains of that whore of Babylon. I defy him and all his falshood; and get you away from me, you do but trouble my conscience. You would have me follow your doings; I will first lose my life. I pray you depart.
WHY, thou foolish woman, said they, we come to thee for thy profit and soul's health.
O Lord God, said she, what profit ariseth by you, that teach nothing but lies for truth? how save you souls, when you preach nothing but damnable lies, and destroy souls.
HOW provest thou that? said they.
DO you not damn your souls, said she, when you teach the people to worship idols, stocks, and stones, the wo [...]ks of men's hands? and to worship a false god of your own making, of a piece of bread, and teach that the pope is God's vicar, and hath power to forgive sins? and that there is a purgatory, when God's Son hath by his passion purged all? and say, you make God, and sacrifice him, when Christ's body was a sacrifice once for all? Do you not teach the people to number their sins in your ears, and say they be damned, if they confess not all: when God's word saith, Who can number his sins? Do you not promise them trentals and di [...] ges, and masses for souls, and sell your prayers for money, and make them buy pardons, and trust to such foolish inventions of your own imaginations? Do you not altogether against God? Do you not teach us to pray upon beads, and to pray unto saints, and say they can pray for us? Do you not make holy water and holy bread to fray devils? Do you not a thousand more abominations? And yet you say, you come for my profit, and to save my soul. No, no, one hath saved me. Farewel, you with your salvation. Much other talk there was between her and them, which here were too tedious to express.
IN the month's liberty, which was granted her by the bishop, as is before-mentioned, she went into St. Peter's church, and there found a cunning Dutchman th [...]t had made new noses to certain fine images which were disfigured in king Edward's time; to whom she said, What a mad man art thou to make them new noses, which within a few days shall all lose their heads? The Dutchman accused her, and laid it hard to her charge. And she said unto him, Thou art accursed, and so are thy images. He called her whore. Nay, said she, thy images are whores, and thou art a whore-hunter; for doth not God say, You go a who [...]ing after strange gods, figures of your own making? and thou art one of them. Then she was sent for, clapped fast, and from that time she had no more liberty.
DURING the time of her imprisonment, divers resorted to visit her, some sent by the bishop, some of their own voluntary will; amongst whom was one Daniel, a great preacher sometime of the gospel, in the days of king Edward, in those parts of Cornwal and Devonshire: whom after that she perceived by his own confession to have revolted from that which he preached before, through the grievous imprisonments, as he said, and fear of persecution which he had partly sustained by the cruel justices in those parts, earnestly she exhorted him to repent with Peter, and to be more constant in his profession.
[Page 539]MOREOVER, there resorted to her a certain worthy gentlewoman, the wife of one Walter Rauly, a woman of noble wit, and of a good and godly opinion; who coming to the prison, and talking with her, she said her creed to the gentlewoman; and when she came to the article, He ascended, there she staid, and bid the gentlewoman to seek his blessed body in heaven, not on earth, and told her plainly that God dwelleth not in temples made with hands, and the sacrament to be nothing else but a remembrance of his blessed passion; and yet, said she, as they now use it, it is but an idol, and far wide from any remembrance of Christ's body; which, said she, will not continue, and so take it good mistress. So that as soon as she came home to her husband, she declared to him, that in her life she never heard a woman (of such simplicity to look on) talk so godly, so perfectly, so sincerely, and so earnestly; insomuch, that if God were not with her, she could not speak such things, to which I am not able to answer, though I can read, and she cannot.
ALSO there came to her one William Kede, and John his brother, not only brethren in the flesh, but also in the truth, and men in that country of great credit, whose father, R. Kede, all his life suffered nothing but trouble for the gospel. These two good and faithful brethren were present with her, both in the hall, and also at the prison, and (as they reported) they never heard the like woman, of so godly talk, so faithful or so constant; and as godly exhortations she gave them.
THUS this good matron was by many ways tried, both by hard imprisonment, threatenings, taunts and scorns, called an anabaptist, a mad woman, a drunkard, a runagate. She was proved by liberty to go whether she would; she was tried by flattery, with many fair promises; she was tried with her husband, her goods and children; but nothing could prevail, her heart was fixed, she had cast her anchor, utterly contemning this wicked world; a rare example of constancy to all professors of Christ's gospel.
IN the hill of my information, it is so reported to me, that albeit she was of such simplicity, and without learning, yet you could declare no place of scripture, but she would tell you the chapter; you, she would recite you the names of all the books of the bible. For which cause one Gregory Basset, a rank papist, said she was out of her wits, and talked of the scripture as a dog rangeth far off from his master when he walketh in the fields, or as a stolen sheep out of his master's hands, she knew not whereat, as all heretics do; with many other taunts, which she utterly defied. Whereby as Almighty God is highly to be praised, working so mightily in such a weak vessel, so men of stronger and stouter nature have also to take example how to stand in like case; whereas we see this poor woman, how manfully she went through with such constancy and patience.
AT last when they perceived her to be past remedy, and had consumed all their threatenings, that neither by imprisonment nor liberty, by menaces nor flattery, they could bring her to sing any other song, nor win her to their vanities and superstitious doings, then they cried out, An anabaptist, an anabaptist. Then in one day they brought her from the bishop's prison to the Guild▪ hall, and after that delivered her to to the temporal power, according to their custom, where she was by the gentlemen of the country exhorted yet to call for grace, and to leave her opinions: and go home to thy husband, said they, thou art an unlearned woman, thou art not able to answer to such high matters.
I am not, said she; yet with my death I am content to be a witness of Christ's death; and I pray you make no longer delay with me: my heart is fixed, I will never say otherwise, nor turn to your superstitious doings.
THEN the bishop said, the devil did lead her.
NO, my lord, said she, it is the Spirit of God which leadeth me, and which called me in my bed, and at midnight opened his truth to me.
THE [...] there was a great shout and laugh amongst the priests and others,
DURING the time that this good woman was thus under these priests' hands, amongst many other baitings and sore conflicts which she had [...] them, here is moreover not to be forgotten, [Page 540] how that Dr. Blackstone aforesaid, being treasurer of the church, had a concubine, who sundry times resorted to him, with other of his gossips: so that always when they came, this said good woman was called forth to his house, there to make his minio [...], with the rest of his company, some mirth, he examining her with such mocking and grinning, deriding the truth, that it would have vexed any christian heart to have seen it. Then when he had long used his foolishness in this sort, and had sported himself enough in deriding this christian martyr; in the end he sent her to prison again, and there kept her very miserably, except that sometimes he would send for her, when his aforesaid guests came to him, to use with her his accustomed folly. But in fine, these vile wretches, (after many combats and scoffing persuasions) when they had played the part of the cat with the mouse, at length condemned her, and delivered her over to the secular power.
THEN the sentence being given, that she should go the place from whence she came, and from thence to the place of execution, there to be burned with flames, till she be consumed; lifted up her voice and thanked God, saying, I thank thee, my Lord my God; this day have I found that which I have long sought. But such outcries as were again, and such mockings were never seen upon a poor innocent woman: all which she most patiently took. And yet this favour they pretended after her judgment, that her life should be spared, if she would turn and recant. Nay, that will I not, said she: God forbid that I should lose the life eternal for this carnal and short life. I will never turn from my heavenly husband, to my earthly husband; from the fellowship of angels to mortal children; and and if my husband and children be faithful, then am I their's; God is my father, God is my mother, God is my sister, my brother, my kinsman; God is my friend most faithful.
THEN was she delivered to the sheriff, innumerable people beholding her, and led by the officers to the place of execution, without the walls of Exeter, called Sothenhey, where again these superstitious priests assaulted her, and she prayed them to have no more talk with her, but cried still, God be merciful to me a sinner. And so while they were tying her to the stake, thus still she cried, and would give no answer to them, but with much patience took her cruel death, and was with flames of fire consumed▪ and so ended this mortal life, as constant a wom [...]n in the faith of Christ, as ever was upon the earth. She was as simple a woman to appearance, as a [...] might behold; of a very little and short stature, somewhat thick, about 54 years of age. She had a chearful countenance, so lively, as though she had been prepared for the day of her marriage to meet the Lamb; most patient in her words and answers; sober in apparel, meat and drink, and would never be idle, but a great comfort to as many as would talk with her; good to the poor▪ and in her trouble she would take no money, because (said she) I am going to a city where money beareth no mastery; whilst I am here, God hath promised to feed me. Thus was her mortal life ended. For whose constancy God be everlastingly praised, Amen.
The Persecution and Martyrdom of RICHARD SHARPE, THOMAS BANION, and THOMAS HALL.
RICHARD SHARPE, weaver of Bristol, was brought the ninth day of March, 1556, before Mr. Dalby, chancellor of the city of Bristol, and after examination concerning the sacrament of the altar, was persuaded by the said Dalby and others to recant; and the 29th of the said month was enjoined to make his recantation before the parishioners in his parish church. Which when he had done, he felt in his conscience such a tormenting hell, that he was was not able quietly to work in his occupation, but decayed and changed both in colour and liking of his body; who shortly after upon Sunday came into his parish church, called Temple, and after high mass came to the choir door, and said with a loud voice, Neighbours, bear me record that yonder idol (and pointed to the altar) is the greatest and most abominable that ever was▪ and I am sorry that ever I denied my Lord God. Then the constables were ordered to [Page 541] apprehend him, but none stepped forth, but suffered him to go out of the church. After, at night, he was apprehended and carried to Newgate, and shortly after he was brought before the lord chancellor, where he denied the sacrament of the altar to be the body and blood of Christ, and said i [...] was an idol; and therefore was condemned to be burned by the said Dalby. He was burnt the 7th of May, 1557, and died godly, patiently, and constantly, confessing the articles of our faith.
An Account of THOMAS HALE, Martyr.
THE Thursday night before Easter, in the year 1557, came one Mr. David Harris, alderman, and John Stone, to the house of one Thomas Hale, shoemaker, of Bristol, and caused him to rise out of his bed, and brought him forth from his door. To whom the said Thomas Hale said, You have sought my blood these two years, and now much good may it do you. He being committed to the watchmen, was carried to Newgate the 24th of April in the year aforesaid, was brought before Mr. Dalby the chancellor, committed by him to prison, and after by him condemned to be burned for saying, The sacrament of the altar was an idol. He was burnt the 7th day of May with the aforesaid Richard Sharpe, patiently embracing the fire with his arms. They were both bound back to back.
An Account of THOMAS BANION.
THOMAS BANION, a weaver, at the commandment of the commissioners, was brought by a constable, the 13th day of August, 1557, before Mr. Dalby, chancellor of Bristol, who committed him to prison for saying there was nothing but bread in the sacrament, as they used it. Wherefore, the twentieth day of August, he was condemned by the said Dalby to be burnt for denying five of their sacraments, and affirming two, that is, the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ, and the sacrament of baptism. He was burnt the 27th of the said month, in the same year, and died godly, constantly, and patiently, with confessing the articles of our christian faith.
The Martyrdom of JOHN CORN [...]FORD, of Wortham, CHRISTOPHER BROWNE, of Maidstone, JOHN HERST, of Ashford, ALICE SNOTH, and CATHARINE KNIGHT, alias TINLEY, an aged Woman.
THESE five were the last that suffered in queen Mary's reign, for the testimony of that word for which so many had died before, and gave up their lives meekly and patiently, suffering the violent malice of the papists: who although they they then might have either well spared them, or else deferred their death, knowing of the sickness of queen Mary; yet such was the implacable spite of that generation, that there be some that say, the archdeacon of Canterbury the same time being at London, and understanding the danger of the queen, immediately made post haste home to dispatch these whom he had before then in his cruel custody.
THE matter why they were judged to the fire, was for believing the body not to be in the sacrament of the altar, unless it be received; saying moreover, that we receive another thing also, besides Christ's body, which we see, and is a temporal thing, according to St. Paul, "The things that be seen, be temporal," &c.
Item, For confessing that an evil man doth not receive Christ's body, "Because no man hath the Son, except it be given him of the Father."
Item, That it is an idolatry to creep to the cross, and St. John forbidding it, saith, Beware of images.
Item, For confessing that we should not pray to our lady, and other saints, because they be not omnipotent.
FOR these and other such like articles of christian doctrine, were these committed to the fire. Against whom, when the sentence should be read, and they excommunicated, after the manner of the papists, one of them, John Corneford by name, stirred with a vehement spirit of the zeal of God, [Page 542] proceeding in a more true excommunication against the papists, in the name of them all, pronounced sentence against them, in these words as follow▪
"IN the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of the most mighty God, and by the power of his holy Spirit, and the authority of his holy catholic and apostolic church, we do here give into the hands of Satan to be destroyed, the bodies of all those blasphemers and heretics, that do maintain any error against his most holy word, or do condemn his most holy truth for heresy, to the maintenance of any false church or feigned religion, so that by this thy just judgment, O most mighty God, against thy adversaries, thy true religion may be known to thy great glory and our comfort, and to the edifying of all our nation. Good Lord, so be it, Amen."
THIS sentence of excommunication being the same time openly pronounced and registered, proceeding so, as it seemeth, from an inward faith and hearty zeal to God's truth and religion, took such effect against the enemy, that within six days after queen Mary died, and the tyranny of all English papists with her. Albeit, notwithstanding the sickness and death of that queen, whereof they were not ignorant, yet the archdeacon and others of Canterbury, thought to dispatch the martyrdom of these men before.
IN which fact, the tyranny of this archdeacon seemeth to exceed the cruelty of Bonner, who notwithstanding he had some at the same time under his custody, yet was not so importunate in hauling them to the fire, as appeareth by father Lining and his wife, and divers others, who being the same time under custody of Bishop Bonner, were delivered by the death of queen Mary.
THESE godly martyrs, in their prayer which they made before their martyrdom, desired God that their blood might be the last that should be shed, and so it was.
THIS Catharine Tinley was the mother of one Robert Tinley, dwelling in Maidstone, which Robert was in trouble all queen Mary's time. To whom his mother coming to visit him, asked him how he took this place of Scripture which she had seen, not by reading of the scripture (for she had yet in manner no taste of religion), but had found it by chance in a book of prayers, "I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh, and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy; your old men shall dream dreams, and your young men shall see visions. And also upon the servants, and upon the maids in those days will I pour my Spirit," &c. Which place after that he had expounded to her, she began to take hold on the gospel, growi [...]g more and more in zeal and love thereof, and [...]o continued unto her martyrdom.
AMONG such women as were burned at Canterb [...]ry, it is recorded of a certain maid, and supposed to be this Alise Snoth mentioned in this story, or else to be Agnes Snoth above mentioned, that when she was brought to be executed, she being at the stake, called for her godfather and godmothers. The justice hearing her, sent for them, but they durst not come. Notwithstanding the justices willed the messenger to go again, and to shew them that they should incur no danger thereof.
THEN they hearing that, came to know the matter of their sending for. When the maid saw them, she asked them what they had promised for her, and so she immediately rehearsed her faith, and the commandments of God, and required of them, if there were any more that they had promised in her behalf; and they said, No.
THEN, said she, I die a christian woman, bear witness of me; and she was consumed in fire, and gave up her life joyfully for the testimony of Christ's gospel, to the terror of the wicked, and comfort of the godly, also to the stopping of the slanderous mouths of such as falsely do quarrel against the faithful martyrs, for going from that religion wherein by their godfathers and godmothers they were at first baptized.
The History and Condemnation of JOHN HUNT, and RICHARD WHITE, who escaped the Fire by the Death of Queen Mary.
BESIDES these three martyrs above-named, there were several others imprisoned in divers parts of the realm, whereof some were but newly taken and not yet examined, some examined but not condemned, certain were both examined and condemned, but for lack of the writ escaped.
OTHERS there were also, both condemned, and the writ also was brought down for their burning, and yet by the death of the chancellor, the bishop, and of queen Mary, happening [...]ogether about one time, they most happily and marvellously were preserved, and lived many years after. In the number of whom was one John Hunt, and Richard White, imprisoned at Salisbury. Touching which history, something is here to be shewed.
THESE two good men, and faithful servants of the Lord, had remained a long time in prison at Salisbury, and other places thereabouts, the space of two years and more. During which time, they were often called to examination, and manifold wayes were impugned by the bishops and priests. All whose examinations, as I thought not much needful here to prosecute or to search out, for the length of the volume; so neither again did I think it good to leave no memory at all of the same, but some part to express, namely, of the examination of Richard White, before the bishop of Salisbury, the bishop of Gloucester, with the chancellor and other priests, not unworthy here to be rehearsed.
THE bishop of Salisbury at that time was Dr. Capon, the bishop of Gloucester was Dr. Brookes. These, with Dr. Geffery, the chancellor of Salisbury, and a great number of priests sitting in judgment, Richard White was brought before them. With whom first the bishop of Gloucester, who had the examination of him, began thus.
Is this the prisoner?
Yea, my lord.
Friend, wherefore camest thou hither?
My lord, I trust to know the cause: for the law saith in the mouth of two or three witnesses things must stand.
Did not I examine thee of thy [...]aith when thou camest hither?
No, my lord, you did not examine me, but commanded me to the Lollard's-Tower, and that no man should speak with me. And now I do require mine accuser.
THEN the Register said, The mayor of Marlborough apprehended you for words that you spake there; and for that I commanded you to be conveyed hither to prison.
You had the examination of me at Marlborough. Say what I have said, and I will answer you.
Thou shalt confess thy faith befo [...]e thou depart; and therefore say thy mind freely, and be not ashamed so to do.
I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, because it is the power of God to salvation unto all that believe: and St. Peter saith, "If any man do▪ ask thee a reason of the hope that is in thee, make him a direct answer, and that with meekness." Who shall have the examination of me?
My lord of Gloucester shall have the examination of thee.
My lord, will you take the pains to wet your coat in my blood? Be not guilty thereof; I warn you before hand.
I will do nothing contrary to our law.
My lord, what is it that you do request at my hands?
I will pose thee upon certain articles, and principally upon the sacrament of the altar: how dost thou believe of the blessed sacrament of the altar? Believest thou not the real, carnal, and corporal presence of Christ in the same, even the very same Christ that was born of the virgin Mary, [Page 544] that was hanged on the cross, that suffered for our sins? And at these words they all put off their caps, and bowed their bodies.
My lord, what is a sacrament?
It is the thing itself which it representeth.
That cannot be; for he that [...]presenteth a prince cannot be the prince himself.
How many sacraments findest thou in the scriptures called by the name of sacraments?
I find two sacraments in the scriptures, but not called by the names of sacraments. But I think St▪ Augustine first gave them the name of sacraments.
Then thou findest not that word sacrament in the scriptures.
No, my lord.
Did not Christ say, This is my body, and are not his words true?
I am sure the words are true; but you play by me as the devil did by Christ: for he said. If thou be, &c. Matt. iv. For it is, &c. Psal. xci. But the words that followed after be clean left out, which are these: Thou shalt walk on the lion and the asp, &c. These words the devil left out, because they were spoke against himself; and even so do you recite the scriptures.
Declare thy faith upon the sacrament.
Christ and his sacraments are alike, because of their natures; for in Christ are two natures, a divine and an human nature; so likewise in the sacraments of Christ's body and blood there be two natures, which I divide into two parts, that is, external and internal. The external part is the element of bread and wine, according to the saying of St. Augustine. The internal part is the invisible grace, which by the same is represented. So there is an external receiving of the same sacrament, and an internal. The external is with the hand, the eye, the mouth, and the ear. The internal is by the Holy Ghost in the heart, which worketh in me faith; whereby I apprehend all the merits of Christ, applying the same wholly unto my salvation. If this be truth, belie [...] it; and if it be not, reprove it.
This is Oecolampadius's doctrine, and Hooper taught it the people.
Dost thou not believe, that after the words of consecration there is the natural presence of Christ's body.
My lord, I will answer you, if you will answer me to one question. Is not this article of our belief true? "He sitteth at the right hand of God the Father Almighty:" if he be come from thence to judgment, say so.
No. But if thou will believe the scriptures, I will prove to thee that Christ was both in heaven and in earth at one time.
As he is God, he is in all places; but as for his manhood, he is but in one place.
St. Paul saith, 1 Cor. xv. "Last of all he was seen of me," &c. Here St. Paul saith he saw Christ, and St. Paul was not in heaven.
St. Paul's chief purpose was by this place to prove the resurrection. But how do you prove that Christ, when he appeared to St. Paul, was not still in heaven; like as he was seen of Stephen, sitting at the right hand of God? St. Augustine saith, the head that was in heaven, did cry for the body and members which were on the earth, and said, "Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me?" And was not Paul taken up into the third heaven; where he might see Christ? as he witnesseth, 1 Cor. xv. For there he doth but only say he saw Christ, but concerning the place he speaketh nothing. Wherefore this place of scripture proveth not that Christ was both in heaven and earth at one time.
I told you before he would not believe. [Page 545] Here be three opinions, the Lutherans, the Oecolampadians, and we the Catholics. If you the Oecolampadians have the truth, then the Lutherans and we the Catholics be out of the way. If the Lutherans have the truth, then you the Oecolampadians and we the Catholics be out of the way. But if we the Catholics have the truth, as we have indeed, then the Lutherans and you the Oecolampadians are out of the way, as you are indeed, for the Lutherans do call you heretics.
My lord, you have troubled me greatly with the scriptures.
Did I not tell you it was not possible to remove him from his error? Away with him to the Lollards' Tower, and dispatch him as soon as you can.
THIS was the effect of my first examination. More examinations I had after this, which I have no time now to write out.
AMONGST many other examinations of the aforesaid Richard White, it happened one time, that Dr. Blackstone, chancellor of Exeter, sat upon him, with divers others, who alledging certain doctors, as Chrysostom, Cyprian, Tertullian, against the said Richard White, and being reproved by him for his false patching of the doctors, fell into such a trembling and shaking, (his conscience belike accusing him) that he was fain, stooping down, to lay both his hands upon his knees to stay his body from trembling.
THEN the said John Hunt, and Richard White, after many examinations and long captivity, at length were called for and brought before Dr. Geffery, the bishop's chancellor there to be condemned, and so they were. The high sheriff at that present was sir Anthony Hungerford, who being then at the sessions, was there charged with these two condemned persons, with other malefactors there condemned likewise at the same time, to see them put to death.
IN the mean time Mr. Clifford, of Bosco, in Wiltshire, son-in-law to the said sir Anthony Hungerford, the sheriff, came to his father, exhorting and counselling him in no case to meddle with the death of these two innocent persons; and if the chancellor and priests would needs be instant upon him, yet he should first require the writ to be sent down, De comburendo, for his discharge.
SIR Anthony Hungerford hearing this, and understanding justice Brown to be in the town the same time, went to him to ask his advice and counsel in the matter, who told him that without the writ sent down from the superior powers, he could not be discharged: and if the writ were sent, then he must by the law do his charge.
THE sheriff understanding by justice Brown, how far he might go by the law, and having at that time no writ for his warrant, let them alone, and the next day after taking his horse, departed.
THE chancellor all this while marvelling what the sheriff meant, and yet disdaining to go unto him, but looking rather the other should have come first to him, at last hearing that he was rid away, took his horse and rid after him; who at length overtaking the sheriff, declared unto him how he had committed certain condemned prisoners to his hand, whose duty had been to have seen execution done; the matter, he said, was great, and therefore willed him to look well unto it how he would answer the matter. And thus began he fiercely to lay to his charge.
WHEREIN note, good reader, by the way, the close and covert hypocrisy of the papists in their dealings; who in the form and stile of their own sentence condemnatory, pretend a petition unto the secular power, in the wounds of Jesus Christ, that the rigour of the law may be mitigated, and that their life may be spared. And how standeth this now with their doings and dealings, when this chancellor (as you see) is not only contented to give sentence against them, but also hunteth after the officer, not suffering him to spare them, altho' he would? What dissimulation is this of men, going and doing contrary to their own words and profession? But let us return to our matter again.
THE sheriff hearing the chancellor's words, and seeing him so urgent upon him, told him again that [Page 546] he was no babe, which now was to be taught of him. If he had any writ to warrant and discharge him in burning those men, then he knew what he had to do. Why, saith the chancellor, did not I give you a writ, with my hand and eight more of the close set unto the same? Well, quoth the sheriff, that is no sufficient discharge for me; and therefore as I told you, if you have a sufficient writ and warrant from the superior powers, I know then what I have to do in my office; otherwise, if you have no other writ but that, I tell you, I will neither burn them for you, nor any of you all, &c.
WHERE note again (good reader) how by this it may be thought and supposed, that the other poor saints and martyrs of God, such as had been burned at Salisbury before, were burned belike without any authorised or sufficient writ from the superiors, but only from the information of the chancellor and of the close, through the uncircumspect negligence of the sheriffs, who should have looked more substantially into the matter. But this I leave and refer unto the magistrates. Let us return to the [...]ory again.
DOCTOR Geffery, the chancellor, thus sent away from the sheriff, went home, and there fell sick upon the same, (for anger belike) as they signified unto me, who were the parties themselves, both godly and grave persons, who were then condemned, the one of them, which is Richard White, being yet alive.
THE under sheriff to this sir Anthony Hungerford, above-named, was one Mr. Michell, a godly man. So that not long after this came down the writ to burn the above-named Richard White and John Hunt; but the under sheriff receiving the said writ, said, I will not be guilty of these men's blood, and immediately burnt the writing, and departed his way. Within four days after the chancellor died; concerning whose death this cometh by the way to be noted, that these two aforesaid, John Hunt and Richard White, being the same time in a low and dark dungeon, being Saturday, toward evening (according to their accustomed manner) fell to evening prayer. Who kneeling there together, as they should begin their prayer, suddenly fell both to such a strange weeping and tenderness of heart (but how they could not tell)▪ that they could not pray one word, but so continued a great space, bursting out in tears. After that night was past, and the morning come, the first word they heard was that the chancellor, their great enemy, was dead. The time of whose death they found to be the same hour when they fell into such a sudden weeping. The Lord in all his works be praised, Amen. Thus much concerning the death of that wicked chancellor.
RICHARD White and John Hunt, after the death of the chancellor, the bishop also being dead a little before, continued still in prison till the [...] coming in of queen Elizabeth; and so were set [...] liberty.
An Account of the Martyrdom of a young Lad [...] ▪ Eight Years old, scourged to Death in Bishop B [...] ner's House in London.
IF bloody torments and cruel death of a poor innocent, suffering for no cause of his own, [...] in the truth of Christ and his religion, do make a martyr, no less deserveth the child of John Fetty, to be reputed in the catalogue of holy martyrs, who in the house of bishop Bonner, was unmercifully scourged to death, as by the sequel of this [...] here following may appear.
AMONGST those that were persecuted and miserably imprisoned for the profession of Christ's gospel, and yet mercifully delivered by the providence of God, there was one John Fetty, a godly poor man, dwelling in the parish of Clerkenwell, and was by vocation a taylor, of the age of twenty-four years or thereabouts, who was accused and complained of unto one Brokenbury, a parson of the same parish, by his own wife, because he would not come unto the church, and be partaker of their idolatry and superstition; and therefore, through the said priest's procurement, he was apprehended by Richard Tanner, and his fellow constables there, and one Martin the headborough. However, immediately upon his apprehension, his wife (by the just [Page 547] judgment of God) was stricken mad, and divested of her wits, which declared a marvellous example of the justice of God against such unfaithful and unnatural treachery. And although this example (perhaps for lack of knowledge and instruction in such cases) little moved the consciences of these simple poor men to cease their persecution; yet natural pity towards that ungrateful woman wrought so in their hearts, that for the preservation and support of her and her two children (like otherwise to perish) they for that present let her husband alone, and would not carry him to prison, but suffered him to remain quietly in his house. During which time, he as it were forgetting the wicked and unkind fact of his wife, did yet so cherish and provide for her, that within the space of three weeks (thro' God's merciful providence) she was well amended, and had recovered again some stay of her wits and senses.
BUT such was the power of Satan in the malicious heart of that wicked woman, that notwithstanding his gentle dealing with her, yet so soon as she had recovered some health, she did again accuse her husband; whereupon he was the second time apprehended, and carried unto sir John Mordaunt, knight, one of the queen's commissioners, and he upon examination sent him by Cluny, the bishop's sumner, unto the Lollards' Tower: where he was put into the painful stocks, and had a dish of water set by him, with a stone put into it. To what purpose God knoweth, except it were to shew that he should look for little other sustenance. Which is credible enough, if we consider their like practices upon divers before-mentioned in this history, as amongst others, upon Richard Smith, who died through their cruel imprisonment; touching whom, when a godly woman came to Dr. Story, to have leave that she might bury him, he asked her if he had any straw or blood in his mouth; but what he meant thereby, I leave to the judgment of the wise.
AFTER the aforesaid John Fetty had thus lain in prison for the space of fifteen days, hanging in the stocks, sometimes by one leg and one arm, sometimes by the other, and sometimes by both, it happened that one of his childran (a boy of the age of eight or nine years) came unto the bishop's house to see if he could get leave to speak with his father. At his coming thither, one of the bishop's chaplain [...] met with him, and asked him what he lacked, and whom he would have. The child answered, that he came to see his father. The chaplain asked again who was his father. The boy then told him and pointing towards Lollards' Tower, shewed him that his father was there in prison. Why, said the priest, thy father is an heretic: the child being of a bold and quick spirit, and also godly brought up, and instructed by his father in the knowledge of God, answered and said, my father is no heretic; for you have Balaam's mark.
WITH that the priest took the child by the hand, and carried him into the bishop's house, and there amongst them did they most shamefully, and without all pity, so whip and scourge, being naked, this tender child, that he was all in a gore of blood, and then in jolly brag of their catholic tyranny, they caused Cluny, having his coat upon his arm, to carry the child in his shirt unto his father being in prison, the blood running down his heels.
[...] his coming unto his father the child fell down upon his knees, and asked his blessing. The poor man then beholding his child, and seeing him so cruelly arrayed, cried out for sorrow, and said, Alas, Will, who hath done this to thee? The boy answered, that as he was seeking to come to see his father, a priest with Balaam's mark took him into the bishop's house, and there he was so handled. Cluny therewith violently plucked the child away out of his father's hands, and carried him back again into the bishop's house where they kept him three days after.
AND at three days end, Bonner (minding to make the matter whole, and somewhat to appease the poor man, for this their horrible fact) determined to release him; and therefore caused him early in the morning to be brought out of Lollards' Tower into his bed-chamber, where he found the bishop bathing of himself against a great fire; and at his first entering into the chamber, Fetty said, God be here, and peace. God be here, and peace I said Bonner; that is neither God speed nor good morrow. If you kick against this peace (said Fetty), then this is not the place that I seek for.
[Page 548]A CHAPLAIN of the bishop's standing by, turned the poor man about, and thinking to deface him, said in a mocking manner, what have we here, a player? Whilst Fetty was thus standing in the bishop's chamber, he espied hanging about the bishop's bed, a great pair of black beads; whereupon he said, My lord, I think the hangman is not far off; for the halter, pointing to the beads, is here already. At which words the bishop was in a marvellous rage.
THEN he immediately after espied also standing in the said bishop's chamber in the window a little crucifix. Then he asked the bishop what it was; and he answered that it was Christ. Was he handled so cruelly as he is here pictured, said Fetty.
YEA, that he was, said the bishop.
AND even so cruelly will you handle such as come before you: for you are unto God's people as Caiaphas was unto Christ.
THE bishop being in a great fury, said, Thou art a vile heretic, and I will burn thee, or else I will spend all that I have unto my gown.
NAY, my lord, said Fetty you had better give it to some poor body, that he may pray for you. But yet Bonner bethinking himself of the danger that the child was in by their whipping, and what peril might ensue thereupon▪ thought better to discharge him; which thing was accomplished.
WHEREUPON, after this and such like talk, the bishop at last discharged him, willing him to go home, and carry his child with him; which he did, and that with a heavy heart to see his poor boy in such extreme pain and grief. But within fourteen days after the child died, whether through his cruel scourging, or any other infirmity, I know not; and therefore I refer the truth thereof unto the Lord, who knoweth all secrets, and also to the discreet judgment of the reader. But however it was, the Lord yet used their cruel and detestable fact, as a means of his providence for the delivery of this good poor man and faithful christian; his name therefore be ever praised, Amen.
An Account of the cruel Handling and Burning of NICHOLAS BURTON, an English Merchant, in Spain.
I THINK it not amiss in this place to mention the story of Nicholas Burton, being such as is not unworthy to be known, as well for the example of his singular constancy, as also for the noting of the extreme dealing and cruel revenge of th [...]se catholic inquisitors of Spain▪ who under the pretended visor of religion, do nothing but seek their own private gain and advantage, with crafty rifling and spoiling of other men's goods, as by noting of this story may appear.
THE fifth day of November, about the year of our Lord, 1560, this Nicholas Burton, citizen sometime of London, and merchant, dwelling in the parish of Little St. Bartholomew, peaceably and quietly following his traffic in the trade of merchandize, and being in the city of Cadiz, in the party of Andalusia, in Spain, there came into his lodging a Judas, or, as they term them, a familiar of the fathers of the inquisition. Who asking for the said Nicholas Burton, feigned that he had a letter to deliver into his own hands; by which means he spake with him immediately. And having no letter to deliver to him, then the said promoter, or familiar, at the motion of the devil his master, whose messenger he was, invented another lie, and said, that he would take lading for London in such ships as the said Nicholas Burton had freighted to lade, if he would let any; which was partly to know where he loaded his goods, that they might attach them, and chiefly to detract the time until the serjeant of the inquisition might come and apprehend the body of the said Nicholas Burton; which they did incontinently.
HE then well perceiving that they were not a [...]le to burden or charge him that he had written, spake, or done any thing there in that country against the ecclesiastical or temporal laws of the same realm, boldly asked them what they had to lay to his charge that they did so arrest him, and bade them to declare the cause, and he would answer the [...] Notwithstanding they answered nothing, but commanded [Page]
[Page 549] him with cruel threatening words to hold his peace, and not to speak one word to them.
AND so they carried him to the filthy common prison of the town of Cadiz, where he remained in irons fourteen days amongst thieves.
ALL which time he so instructed the poor prisoners in the word of God, according to the good talent which God had given him in that behalf, and also in the Spanish tongue to utter the same, that in short space he had well reclaimed several of those superstitious and ignorant Spaniards to embrace the word of God, and to reject their popish traditions.
WHICH being known unto the officers of the inquisition, they conveyed him laden with irons from thence to a city called Seville, into a more cruel and straiter prison called Triana, where the said fathers of the inquisition proceeded against him secretly according to their accustomable cruel tyranny, that never after he could be suffered to write or speak to any of his nation: so that to this day it is unknown who was his accuser.
AFTERWARD, the 20th of December, they brought the said Nicholas Burton, with a great number of other prisoners, for professing the true christian religion, into the city of Seville, to a place where the said inquisitors sat in judgment, which they called Auto, with a canvas coat, whereupon in divers parts was painted the figure of a huge devil, tormenting a soul in a flame of fire, and on his head a copping tank of the same work.
HIS tongue was forced out of his mouth with a cloven stick fastened upon it, that he should not utter his conscience and faith to the people, and so he was set with another Englishman of Southampton, and divers other condemned men for religion as well Frenchmen [...] as Spaniards, upon a scaffold over against the said inquisition, where their sentences and judgments were read and pronounced against them.
AND immediately after the said sentences given, they were carried from thence to the place of execution without the city, where they most cruelly burned them, for whose constant faith, God be praised.
THIS Nicholas Burton by the way, and in the flames of fire, had so chearful a countenance, embracing death with all patience and gladness, that the tormentors and enemies which stood by, said, that the devil had his soul before he came to the fire; and therefore they said his senses of feeling were past him.
IT happened that after the arrest of Nicholas Burton aforesaid, immediately all the goods and merchandize which he brought with him into Spain by the way of traffic, were (according to their common usage) seized, and taken into the sequester; among which they also rolled up much that appertained to another English merchant, wherewith he was credited as factor. Whereof so soon as news was brought to the merchant as well of the imprisonment of his factor, a [...] of the arrest made upon his goods, he sent his attorney into Spain, with authority from him to make claim to his goods, and to demand them; whose name was John Fronton, citizen of Bristol.
WHEN his attorney was landed at Seville, and had shewed all his letters and writings to the holy house, requiring them that such goods might be delivered into his possession, answer was made him that he must sue by bill, and retain an advocate (but all was doubtless to delay him), and they forsooth of courtesy assigned him one to frame his supplication for him, and other such bills of petition, as he had to exhibit into their holy court, demanding for each bill eight rials, albeit they stood him in no more stead than if he had put up none at all. And for the space of three or four months this fellow missed not twice a day attending every morning and afternoon at the inquisitor's palace, suing unto them upon his knees for his dispatch, but especially to the bishop of Tarracon who was at that very time chief in the inquisition at Seville, that he of his absolute authority would command restitution to be made thereof; but the booty was so good and great, that it was very hard to come by it again.
AT length, after he had spent four whole months in suits and requests, and also to no purpose, he received this answer from them, That he must shew better evidence, and bring more sufficient certificates [Page 550] out of England for proof of this matter, that those which he had already presented to the court. Whereupon the party forthwith posted to London, and with all speed returned to Seville again with more ample and large letters testimonial, and certificates, according to their requests, and exhibited them to the court.
NOTWITHSTANDING the inquisitors still shifted him off, excusing themselves by lack of leisure, and for that they were occupied in more weighty affairs, and with such answers put him off for four months after.
AT last, when the party had well nigh spent all his money, and therefore sued the more earnestly for his dispatch, they referred the matter wholly to the bishop. Of whom, when he repaired unto him, he made this answer, That for himself, he knew what he had to do; howbeit he was but one man, and the determination, appertained to the other commissioners as well as unto him: and thus by posting and passing it from one to another, the party could obtain no end of his suit. Yet for his importunity's sake, they were resolved to dispatch him, it was on this sort: one of the inquisitors, called Gasco, a man very well experienced in these practices, willed the party to resort unto him after dinner.
THE fellow being glad to hear this news, and supposing that his goods should be restored unto him, and that he was called in for that purpose to talk with the other that was in prison, to confer with him about their accounts, rather through a little misunderstanding, hearing the inquisitors cast out a word▪ that it should be needful for him to talk with the prisoner, and being thereupon more than half persuaded, that at length they meant good faith, did so, and repaired thither about the evening. Immediately upon his coming, the goaler was forthwith charged with him, to shut him up close in such a prison where they appointed him.
THE party hoping at the first that he had been called for about some other matter, and seeing himself, contrary to his expectation, cast into a dark dungeon, perceived at length that the world went with him far otherwise than he supposed it would have done.
BUT within two or three days after he was brought into the court, where he began to demand his goods; and because it was a device that well served their turn without any more circumstance, they bid him say his Ave Maria; "Ave Maria grat [...] plena, Dominus tecum, benedicta tu in mulieribus, et benedictus fructus ventris tui Jesus, Amen."
THE same was written word by word as he sp [...]ke it, and without any more talk of claiming his goods, because it was needless, they commanded him to prison again, and entered an action ag [...]inst him as an heretic, forasmuch as he did not say his Ave Maria after the Romish fashion, but ended it very suspiciously, for he should have added more [...] ver; "Sancta Maria mater Dei, ora pro nobis pe [...] catoribus:" by abbreviating whereof, it was [...]dent enough (said they) that he did not allow the mediation of saints.
THUS they picked a quarrel to detain him in prison a longer season, and afterwards brought him forth upon their stage disguised after their manner▪ where sentence was given, that he should lose all the goods which he sued, though they were not his own, and besides this, suffer a year's imprisonment.
IN the year 1560, several other Englishmen suffered in Spain, among whom John Baker and William Burgate were apprehended, and burnt the second day of November in the city of Seville.
MARK BRUGES, an Englishman, master of an English ship called the Minion, was burnt in a city in Portugal.
WILLIAM HOOKER, a young man about the age of sixteen years, being an Englishman, was stoned to death by certain young men in the city of Seville, for the same righteous cause.
BUT of these and such other matters which happened in Spain, because they fell not within the [Page 551] reign of queen Mary, but since her time, we shall treat more hereafter, when we come to the reign of queen Elizabeth, where we shall give an account, not only of the martyrs abroad, but also the whole inquisition of Spain and Flanders, with the tragical tumults and troubles happening within the last memory of these our latter unhappy days.
A Treatise concerning those that were scourged by the Papists, for the Cause of the Gospel.
AFTER this bloody slaughter of God's saints and servants thus ended and discussed, let us now proceed (by God's assistance) to treat of such as for the same cause of religion have been, though not put to death, yet whipped and scourged by the enemies of God's word, first beginning with Richard Wilmor and Thomas Fairfax, who about the time of Anne Askew, were miserably rent and tormented with scourges and stripes, for their faithful standing to Christ and his truth, as by the story and examination of them both may appear.
The Scourging of RICHARD WILMOT and THOMAS FAIRFAX.
AFTER the first recantation of Dr. Crome, for his sermon which he made the fifth Sunday in Lent, at St. Thomas Acres, being the Mercers' chapel, his sermon was an Epistle of the same day, written in the tenth chapter to the Hebrews; wherein he very learnedly proved by the same place of scripture and others, that Christ was the only and sufficient sacrifice unto God the Father for the sins of the whole world, and that there was no more sacrifice to be offered for sin by the priests, forasmuch as Christ had offered his body on the cross, and shed his blood for the sins of the people, and that once for all. For which sermon he was apprehended by Bonner, and brought before Stephen Gardiner and others of the council, where he promised to recant his doctrine at St. Paul's Cross, the second Sunday after Easter. And accordingly he was there and preached, Bonner with all his doctors sitting before him: but he so preached and handled his matter, that he rather verified his former saying, than denied any part of that which he before had preached. For which the protestants praised God, and heartily rejoiced.
BISHOP Bonner and his champions were not at all pleased therewith, but yet notwithstanding they took him home with them, and was so handled among the wolfish generation, that they made him come to the Cross again the next Sunday.
AND because the magistrates should now hear him, and be witness of this recantation which was most blasphemous, to deny Christ's sacrifice to be sufficient for penitent sinners, and to say that the sacrifice of the mass was good, godly, and an holy sacrifice, propitiatory and available both for the quick and the dead: because (I say) that they would have the nobles to hear this blasphemous doctrine, the viperous generation procured all the chief of the council to be there present.
NOW to come to our matter: at this time, the same week, between his first sermon and the last, and while Dr. Crome was in durance, one Richard Wilmot being apprentice in Bow-lane, of the age of 18 years, and sitting at work in his master's shop, in the month of July, one Lewis, a Welchman, being one of the guard, came into the shop, having things to do for himself.
ONE asked him what news at the court, and he answered, that the old heretic, Dr. Crome, had recanted now indeed before the council, and that he should on Sunday next be at St. Paul's Cross again, and there declare it.
THEN Wilmot sitting at his master's work, and hearing him speak these words, and rejoicing in the same, began to speak unto him, saying, that he was sorry to hear this news: for (said he) if Crome should say otherwise than he hath said, then is it contrary to the truth of God's word, and contrary to his own conscience, which shall before God accuse him.
LEWIS answered and said, that he had preached and taught heresy; and therefore it was meet that he should in such a place revoke it.
[Page 552]WILMOT told him that he would not so say, neither did he hear him preach any doctrine contrary to God's written word, but that he proved his doctrine▪ and that sufficiently, by the scriptures.
LEWIS then asked him how he knew that?
WILMOT answered, By the scriptures of God, wherein he shall find God's will and pleasure, what he willeth all men to do, and what not to do; and also by them he should prove and try all doctrines, and the false doctrine from the true.
LEWIS said, it was never well since the Bible was translated into English; and that he was both an heretic and a traitor that caused it to be translated into English (meaning Cromwell), and therefore was rewarded according to his deserts.
WILMOT answered again, What his deserts and offences were to his prince a great many do not know, neither is it of any force whether they do or no; since, he was sure that he lost his life for offending his prince, and the law did put it in execution: adding moreover, concerning that man, that he thought it pleased God to raise him from a low estate, and to place him in high authority, partly unto this, that he should do that which all the bishops in the realm yet never did, in restoring again God's holy word, which being hid long before from the people in a strange tongue, and now coming abroad amongst us, will bring our bishops and priests, said he, in less estimation among the people.
LEWIS asked, Why so?
WILMOT said, Because their doctrine and living is not agreeable to his word.
THEN said Lewis, I never heard but that all men should learn of the bishops and priests, because they are learned men, and have been brought up in learning all the days of their lives. Wherefore they must needs know the truth, and our fathers did believe their doctrine and learning, and I think they did well, for the world was far better then, than it is now.
WILMOT answered, I will not say so: for we must not believe them because they are bishops, neither because they are learned, neither because our [...] fathers did follow their doctrine. For I have [...] in God's book, how that bishops and learned men have taught the people false doctrine, and likewise the priests from time to time, and indeed those people our forefathers believed as they taught, and [...] they thought, so thought the people. But for all this Christ calleth them false prophets, thieves, and murderers, blind leaders of the blind, willing the people to take heed of them, lest they should both fall into the ditch.
MOREOVER we read, that the bishops, [...] ▪ and learned men have been commonly resiste [...] of the truth from time to time, and have always persecuted the prophets in the old law, as their succe [...] did persecute our Saviour Christ and his disciples [...] the new law. We must take heed therefore [...] we credit them no further than God will [...] neither follow them nor our forefathers other [...] than he commandeth us. For Almighty [...] hath given to all people, as well to kings and pri [...]ces, as bishops, priests, learned and unlearned [...] ▪ a commandment and law, unto which he willeth all men to be obedient. Therefore if any bishop [...] priest, preach or teach, or prince or magistrate, command any thing contrary to his commandment, we must take heed how we obey them. For [...] better for us to obey God than man.
MARRY, sir, quoth Lewis, you are an holy doctor indeed. By God's blood, if you were my man, I would set you about your business a little better, and not suffer you to look upon books, and so would your master if he were wise. And with that in came his master, and a young man with him, who was a servant to Mr. Daubney, in W [...] ling-street.
HIS master asked him what was the matter.
LEWIS said that he had a knavish boy here to his servant, and how that if he were his, he would rather hang him than keep him in his house.
THEN his master being somewhat moved, asked his fellows what the matter was.
[Page 553]THEY said, they began to talk about Dr. Crome.
THEN his master asked what he had said, swearing a great oath, that he would make him tell him.
HE said, that he trusted he had said nothing, wherewith either he or Mr. Lewis might justly be offended. I pray (quoth Wilmot), ask him what I said.
MARRY (said Lewis), this he said, That Dr. Crome did preach and teach nothing but the truth, and how that if he recanted on Sunday next, he should be sorry to hear it, and that if he do, he is made to do it against his conscience. And more he saith, that we must not follow our bishops' doctrine and preaching: for, saith he, they be hinderers of God's word, and persecutors of that; and how Cromwel (that traitor) did more good in setting forth the Bible, than all our Bishops have done these hundred years: thus reporting the matter worse than it really was.
HIS master hearing this, was in a great fury, and rated him, saying that either he would be hanged or burned, swearing that he would take away all his books and burn them.
THE young man (Mr. Daubney's servant) standing by hearing this, began to speak on his part unto Lewis, and his talk confirmed all the sayings of the other to be true.
THIS young man was learned, his name was Thomas Fairfax. Lewis hearing this man's talk as well as the other's, went his way in a rage to the court.
ON the next day they heard, that the said Wilmot and Fairfax were sent for to come to the lord mayor. The messenger was Mr. Smart, the sword-bearer of London. They came before dinner to the mayor's house, and were commanded to sit down to dinner in the hall; and when dinner was done, they were both called into a parlour, where the mayor and sir Roger Cholmley was, who examined them severally, the one not hearing the other.
THE effect of their discourse was this; sir Roger Cholmley said to Wilmot, that my lord mayor and he had received a commandment from the council, to send for him and his company, and to examine them of certain things which were laid to their charge.
THEN said Mr. Cholmley to him, Sirrah, what countryman art thou? He answered, That he was born in Cambridgeshire, and in such a town. Then he asked him, how long he had been in the city. He told him.
THEN he asked what learning he had. He said, little learning and small knowledge. Then (deridingly) he asked how long he had known Dr. Crome. He said about two years. Then he called him a lying boy, and said that he (the said Wilmot) was his son.
THE other said unto him, that was unlike, for that he never saw his mother, nor she him. Cholmley said he lied. Wilmot said he could prove it to be true. Then he asked him how he liked his sermon that he made at St. Thomas Acres chapel in Lent. He said that indeed he heard him not. He said yes, and the other nay. Then said he, What say you to his sermon made at the Cross the last day, heard you not that?
Yes, and in that sermon he deceived a great number of people.
How so?
For that they looked that he should have recanted his doctrine that he taught before, and did not, but rather confirmed it.
Yea, sir, but how say you now to him? For he hath recanted before the council; and hath promised on Sunday next to be at the Cross again; how think you of that?
If he so did, I am the more sorry to hear it; and said▪ he thought he did it for fear and safeguard of his life.
But what say you? Was his first sermon heresy or not?
No, I suppose it was no heresy. For if it were, St. Paul's epistle to the Hebrews was heresy, and Paul an heretic that preached such doctrine; but God forbid that any christian man should so think of the holy apostle; neither do I so think.
Why, how knowest thou that St. Paul wrote those things that are in English now, to be true, whereas Paul never wrote English or Latin?
I am certified that learned men of God, that did seek to advance his word, did translate the same out of the Greek and Hebrew into Latin and English, and that they durst not presume to alter the sense of the scripture of God, and last will and testament of Christ Jesus.
THEN the lord mayor, being in a great fury, asked him what he had to do to read such books, and said, that it was a pity that his master did suffer him so to do, and that he was not set better to work; and in fine said unto him, that he had spoken evil of my lord of Winchester, and bishop Bonner, those reverend and learned fathers and counsellors of this realm, for which his fact he saw no other but he must suffer, as was due to the same. And Mr. Cholmley said, Yea, my lord, there is such a sort of heretics and traitorous knaves taken now in Essex by my lord Rich, that it is too wonderful to hear. They shall be sent to the bishop shortly, and shall be hanged and burned all.
I am sorry to hear that of my lord Rich, for that he was my godfather, and gave me my name at my baptism.
CHOLMLEY asked him when he spake with him. He said, not these twelve years.
If he knew that you were such a one, he would do the like by you, and in so doing he should do God great service.
I have read the same saying in the gospel that Christ said to his disciples, "The time shall come, saith he, that whosoever killeth you, shall think that he shall do God good service."
WELL sir, said Cholmley, because you are so full of your scripture, and so well learned, we consider you lack a quiet place to study in. Therefore you shall go to a place where you shall be most quiet, and I would wish you to study how you will answer to the council of those things which they have to charge you with, for else it is like to cost you your best joint. I know my lord of Winchester will handle you well enough when he heareth thus much. Then was the officer called in to have him to the Compter, in the Poultry, and the other to the [...] Compter, not one of them to see another; and [...] they remained eight days. In which time [...] masters made great suit to the lord mayor, and [...] sir Roger Cholmley, to know their offences, [...] that they might be delivered.
AT length they procured the wardens of the company of Drapers to labour with them in [...] suit to the mayor. The mayor went with them to the council: but at that time they could find no grace at Winchester's hand, and sir Anthony Browne's, but that they had deserved death, and that they should have the law.
AT length, through much intreaty, he granted them this favour, that they should not die as [...] had deserved, but should be tied to a cart's tail, and be whipped three market-days through the city. Thus they came home that day, and went another day, and the master and wardens of the company petitioned on their knees to have this open punishment released, forsomuch as they were servants of so worshipful a company, and that they might be punished in their own hall before the wardens and certain of the company, which at length was granted.
THE next day they appeared before the masters in the hall, their own masters being present, where they were charged with heresy and treason, for which, they were told, they deserved death, and this was declared with a long process by Mr. Brookes, the master of the company, declaring what labour and suit the mayor and wardens had made for them, to save them from death, which they (as he said) [Page 555] had deserved, and from open shame, which they should have had, being judged by the council to have been whipped three days through the city at a cart's tail, and from these two dangers they had laboured to deliver them, but not without great trouble and change. For (said he) the company hath promised to the council for this their mercy towards them, an hundred pounds, notwithstanding we must see them punished in our hall within ourselves for those their offences. After these and many other words, he commanded them to prepare themselves to receive their punishment.
THEN they were put asunder, and stripped from the waist upward one after another, and had into the midst of the hall, where they were wont to make their fire; there was a great ring of iron, to which there was a rope tied fast, and one of their feet tied fast to that.
THEN came down two men disguised in mummers apparel, with visors on their faces, and they beat them with great rods till the blood flowed out of their bodies. As for Wilmot, he could not lie in his bed for six nights after, for Brookes played the tyrant with them; so that with the pain and fear, they were never in health afterwards, as the said Wilmot with his mouth hath credibly informed us, and we can do no less than testify the same.
THUS have we briefly declared this little tragedy. wherein we may note the malice of the enemies at all times to those who profess Christ, and take his part, of what estate or degree soever they be, according to the apostle's saying, "It is given unto you not only to believe, but also to suffer with him." To whom be honour and glory, Amen.
The Scourging of THOMAS GREEN, Printer, written by his own Hand.
IN the reign of queen Mary, I Thomas Green, being brought before Dr. Story by my master, whose name is John Wayland, a Printer, for a book called Antichrist, which had been distributed to certain honest men; he asked me where I had the book, and said I was a traitor. I told him I had the book of a Frenchman. Then he asked me more questions, but I told him I could tell him no more. Then he said, it was no heresy, but treason, and that I should be hanged, drawn, and quartered; and so he called for Cluny, the keeper of the Lollards' Tower, and bid him set me fast in the stocks; and he took me out, and carried me to the Coal-House, and there I found a Frenchman lying in the stocks, and he took him out, and put a bolt and a fetter on my right leg, and another on my left hand, and so he set me cross fettered in the stocks, and took the Frenchman away with him, and there I lay a day and a night. On the morrow after, he came and said, Let me shift your hand and your leg, because you shall not be lame; and he made as though he pitied me, and said, Tell me the truth, and I will be your friend.
AND I said, I had told the truth, and could tell no otherwise. Then he put only my leg in the stocks, and so went his way, and there I remained six days, and would come to no answer.
THEN Dr. Story sent for me, and asked whether I would tell him the truth, where I had the book. I said I had told him, of a Frenchman. He asked me where I came acquainted with the Frenchman, where he dwelt, and where he delivered me the book. I said, I came acquainted with him in Newgate, I coming to my friends who were put in for God's word and truth's sake, and the Frenchman coming to his friends also, there we talked together, and became acquainted one with another, and did eat and drink together there with our friends, in the fear of God.
THEN Story scoffed at me and said, Then there was brother in Christ, and brother in Christ; and reviled me, and called me an heretic, and asked me if I had the book of him in Newgate. I said no; and I told him, as I went on my business in the street I met him, and he asked me how I did, and I him also; so falling into discourse, he shewed me that book, and I desired him that he would let me have it.
IN this examination Story said, it was a great [Page 556] book, and asked me whether I bought it, or had it given me. I told him I bought it. Then he said, I was a thief, and had stolen my master's money. And I said, a little money served, for I gave him but four-pence, but I promised him, that at our next meeting I would give him twelve-pence more. And he said, that was boldly done, for such a book as spake both treason and heresy.
THEN Story required me to bring him two sureties, and watch for him that I had the book of, and I should have no harm. I made him answer, I would bring no sureties, nor could I tell where to find them. Then, said he, this is but a lie; and so called for Cluny, and bid him lay me fast in the Coal-house, saying, he would make me tell another tale at my next coming: and so I lay in the stocks day and night, but only when I eat my meat, and there remained ten days before I was called for again.
THEN Dr. Story sent for me again, and asked if I would yet tell him the truth; I said, I neither could▪ nor would tell him any other truth than I had done already. And while I was there standing, there were two brought, which I took to be prisoners.
[...] Mrs. Story fell in a rage, and swore a great oath, that it were a good deed to put a hundred or two of these heretic knaves in an house, and I myself (said she) would set it on fire. So I was committed to prison again, where I remained fourteen days, and came to no answer.
THEN Story sent for me again, and called me into the garden, where I found with him my lord of Windsor's chaplain, and two gentlemen more, and he told them all what they had said and done, They said, the book was a wondrous evil book, and had both treason and heresy in it. They then asked me what I said of the book. And I said, I knew no evil by it.
AT which wor [...] Story chafed, and said he would hang me up by the hand with a rope; and said also, he would cut out my tongue, and mine ears also from my head. After this they alledged two or three things unto me out of the book. And I answered, I had not read the book throughout, and therefore I could give no judgment of it.
THEN my lord of Windsor's chaplain and the other two gentlemen took me aside, and intreated me very gently, saying, Tell us where you had the book, and of whom, and I will save you harmless. I made them answer, that I had told all I could [...] Dr. Story, and began to tell it them again: but they said, they k [...]ew that already; so they left that talk, and went again with me to Story.
THEN Story burdened me with my faith, and [...] I was an heretic. Whereupon the chaplain [...] me how I did believe. Then I began to rehear [...] the articles of my belief, but he bid me let that alone. Then he asked me how I believed in Chris [...] I made him answer, that I believed in Christ was died and rose again the third day, and sitteth on the right hand of God the Father.
WHEREUPON Story asked me mockingly, [...] is the right hand of God? I made him answer, I thought it was his glory. Then said he, So [...] say all. And he asked me when he would be [...] of sitting there. Then my lord of Windsor's ch [...] lain asked me what I said of the mass. I said, I never knew what it was, nor what it meant, [...] understood it not, because I never learned any Latin, and since the time I had any knowledge, I had been brought up in nothing but in reading of English, and with such men as have taught the same; with many more questions, which I cannot rehearse.
MOREOVER, he asked me if there were not the very body of Christ, flesh, blood, and bone, in the mass, after the priest had consecrated it. And I made him answer, As for the mass I cannot understand it; but in the New Testament I read, that as the apostles stood looking after the Lord when he ascended up into heaven, an angel said to them, "Even as ye see him ascend up, so shall he come again." And I told them another sentence, where Christ saith, "The poor shall you have always with you, but me ye shall not have always."
[Page 557]THEN Mr. Chaplain put many more questions to me, to which I made no [...]swer. Among others he brought Chrysostom and St. Hierome for his purpose. To whom I answered, that I neither minded nor was able to answer their doctors, neitheir knew whether they alledged them right or no, but to that which is written in the New Testament I would answer. Here they laughed me to scorn, and called me fool, and said, they would reason no more with me.
THEN Dr. Story called for Cluny, and bid him take me away, and set me fast, and let no man speak with me. So I was sent to the Coal-house; where I had not been a week, but there came in fourteen prisoners: but I was kept still alone without company, in a prison called Salt-house, having upon my leg a bolt and a fetter, and my hands manacled together with irons, and there continued ten days, having nothing to lie on, but bare stones or a board.
ON a time whilst I lay there in prison, the bishop of London coming down a pair of stairs on the backside undrest, in his hose and doublet, looked through the grate, and asked wherefore I was put in, and who put me in.
I made him answer, that I was put in for a book called Antichrist, by Dr. Story. And he said, You are not ashamed to declare wherefore you were put in, and said it was a very wicked book, and bid me confess the truth to Story. I said, I had told the truth to him already, and desired him to be good unto me, and help me out of prison, for they had kept me there a long time. And he said, he could not meddle with it; Story hath begun, and he must end it.
THEN I was removed out of the Salt-house to give place to two women, and carried to the Lollards' Tower, and put in the stocks; and there I found two prisoners, one called Lion, a Frenchman, and another with him: and so I was kept in the stocks more than a month both day and night, and no man suffered to come to me, or to speak with me, but only my keeper, who brought me meat.
THUS we three being together, Lion, the Frenchman, sung a psalm in the French tongue, and we sang with him, so that we were heard down in the street, and the keeper coming up in a great rage, sware that he would put us all in the stocks; and so took the Frenchman, and commanded him to kneel down upon his knees, and put both his hands in the stocks, where he remained all that night till the next day.
AFTER this, I being in Lollards' Tower seven days, since my last being with Story, he sware a great oath, that he would rack me, and make me tell the truth. Then Story sending for me, commanded me to be brought to Walbrook, where he and the commissioners dined; and by the way my keeper told me that I should go to the Tower to be racked. So when they had dined, Story called for me in, and there I stood before them, and some said I was worthy to be hanged for having such heretical books. After I had staid a little while before them, Story called for the keeper, and commanded him to carry me to the Lollards' Tower again, and said, he had other matters of the queen's to do with the commissioners, but he would find another time for me. Whilst I lay yet in the Lollards' Tower, the woman which brought the books over, being taken, and her books, was put in the Clink, in Southwark, by Hussey, one of the arches; and I Thomas Green do here testify before God, that I neither discovered the man nor the woman, of whom I had the books.
THEN I lying in the Lollards' Tower, being sent for before Mr. Hussey, he required of me, wherefore I was put into the Lollards' Tower, and by whom. To whom I made answer, that I was put there by Dr. Story, for a book called Antichrist. Then [...] made as though he would be my friend, and said he knew my friends, and my father and mother, and [...]id me tell him of whom I had the book, and said, Come on, tell me the truth. I told him as I had told Dr. Story before.
THEN he was angry, and said, I love thee well, and therefore I sent for thee, and looked for a further truth; but I could tell him no other: whereupon he sent me again to the Lollards' Tower. At [Page 558] my going away he called me back again, and said, that Dixon gave me the books, being an old man, dwelling in Birchin-lane; and I said he knew the matter better than I. So he sent me away to the Lollards' Tower, where I remained seven days and more.
THEN Mr. Hussey sent for me again, and required of me to tell him the truth. I told him I could tell him no other truth than I had told Dr. Story before.
THEN he began to tell me of Dixon, of whom, he said, I had the books, who had made the matter manifest before; and he told me of all things touching Dixon and the books, more than I could myself, insomuch that he told me how many I had, and that he had a sack full of them in his house, and knew where the woman lay, better than myself. Then I saw the matter so open and manifest before my face, that it signified nothing for me to stand in it. He asked me what I had done with the books, and I told him I had but one, and that Dr. Story had. He said I lied, for I had three at one time, and he required me to tell him of one.
THEN I told him of one that John Beane had of me, being apprentice with Mr. Tottle. So he promised me before and after, and as he should be saved before God, that he should have no harm. And I kneeling down upon my knees, desired him to take my blood, and not to hurt the young man. Then he said, Because you have been so stubborn, the matter being made manifest by others and not by you, being so long in prison, tell me if you will stand to my judgment. I said, Yes, take my blood, and hurt not the young man.
THEN he told me, I should be whipped like a thief and a vagabond: and so I thanked him, and went my way with my keeper to the Lollards' Tower, where I remained two or three days, and so was brought by the keeper Cluny, by the commandment of the commissioners, to Christ's-Hospital, sometime the Grey-Friars, and accordingly had there for that time the correction of thieves and vagabonds; and so was delivered to Trinian, the porter, and put into a stinking dungeon.
AND after a few days, I finding friendship, was let out of the dungeon, and lay in a bed in the night, and walked in a yard by the dungeon in the day-time, and so remained prisoner a month and more.
AT length Dr. Story came and two gentlem [...]n with him, and called for me, and I was brought before them. Then he said to the gentlem [...]n▪ Here cometh this heretic, of whom I had the book called Antichrist; and began to tell them how many times I had been before him, and said, I have intreated him very gently, and he would never [...] me the truth, till it was found out by othe [...] ▪ Then said he, it were a good deed to cut [...] tongue, and thine ears off thy head, to make [...] an example to all other heretic knaves. And [...] gentlemen said, Nay, that were pity. [...] asked if I would not become an honest man: [...] said, Yes, for I have offended God many [...] Whereupon he burdened me with my faith; I [...] him that I had made him answer of my [...] before my lord Windsor's chaplain as much [...] could.
SO in the end he commanded me to be [...], he standing by me, and called for two of the [...] and the whips to whip me; and the two [...] came with a cord, and bound my hands toge [...]er▪ and the one end of the cord to a stone pillar. The [...] one of my friends, called Nicholas Priestman, [...] ing them call for whips, hurled in a bundle of [...], which seemed something to pacify the mind of hi [...] cruelty; and they scourged me with rods. [...] they were whipping of me, Story asked me if I would go unto my master again, and I said, [...] And he said, I perceive now he will be worse [...] ever he was before: but let me alone (quoth he)▪ I will find him out if he be England. And so [...] many other things, which I cannot rehearse, when they had done whipping of me, they bid me pay my fees, and go my ways.
DR. Story commanded that he should have an hundred stripes, but the gentlemen so intrea [...]d, that he had not so many, Story saying, If I might have my will, I would surely have his tongue cut out.
A LETTER From STEPHEN COTTEN to his Brother, declaring how he was beaten twice by Bishop BONNER, before he was burnt at Brentford.
BROTHER, in the name of the Lord Jesus, I commend me unto you, and I do heartily thank you, for your godly exhortation and counsel in your last letter declared to me. And albeit I do perceive by your letter, you are informed, that as we are divers persons in number, so we are of contrary sects, conditions, and opinions, contrary to the good opinion you had of us at your last being with us in Newgate▪ be you most assured, good brother, in the Lord Jesus, we are all of one mind, one faith, one assured hope in the Lord Jesus, whom I trust we altogether with one spirit, one brotherly love, do daily call upon for mercy and forgiveness of our sins, with earnest repentance of our former lives, and by whose precious blood-shedding we trust to be saved only, and by no other means. Wherefore, good brother, in the name of the Lord seeing these impudent people, whose minds are altogether bent to wickedness, envy, uncharitableness, evil speaking, do go about to slander us with untruth, believe them not, neither let their wicked sayings once enter into your mind. And I trust one day to see you again, although now I am in God's prison, which is a joyful school for them that love their Lord God, and to me, being a simple scholar, most joyful of all.
GOOD brother, once again I do, in the name of our Lord Jesus, exhort you to pray for me, that I may fight strongly in the Lord's battle, to be a good soldier to my captain Jesus Christ our Lord, and desire my sister also to do the same, and do not ye mourn or lament for me, but be ye glad and joyful of this my trouble: for I trust to be loosed out of this dungeon shortly, and to go to everlasting joy, which never shall have end. I heard how ye were with the commissioners. I pray you, sue no more for me, good brother. But one thing I shall desire you, to be at my departing out of this life, that you may bear witness with me that I shall die, I trust in God, a true christian, and, I hope, all my companions in the Lord our God: and therefore believe not these evil-disposed people, who are the authors of all untruths.
I pray you provide me a long shirt against the day of our deliverance; for the shirt you gave me last, I have given it to one of my companions, who had more need than I; as for the money and meat you sent us, the bishop's servants delivered none to us, neither he whom you had so great trust in. Brother, there is none of them to trust to, for the master and servant are both alike. I have been twice beaten, and threatened to be beaten again by the bishop himself. I suppose we shall go into the country to Fulham, to the bishop's house, and there be arraigned. I would have you to hearken as much as you can. For when we shall go, it will be suddenly done. Thus fare you well. From the Coal-house, this present Friday.
The Scourging of JAMES HARRIS.
IN this society of the scourged professors of Christ, was also one James Harris, of Billerica, in Essex, a stripling of the age of seventeen years; who being apprehended and sent up to Bonner in the company of Margaret Ellis, by sir John Mordaunt, knight Edmond Tyrrel, justice of peace (as appeareth by their own letters before mentioned), was and by Bonnor divers times strictly examined. In which examinations he was charged not to have come to his parish church for the space of one year or more. Whereunto he granted, confessing therewithal, that once, for fear, he had been at the church, and there had received the popish sacrament of the altar, for which he was heartily sorry, detesting the same with all his heart.
AFTER this, and such like answers, Bonner (the better to try him) persuaded him to go to confession. The lad, somewhat to fulfil his request, consented to go, and did. But when he came to the priest, he stood still, and said nothing. Why, quoth the priest, sayest thou nothing? What shall I say, said Harris? Thou must confess thy sins, said the priest. My sins, said he, be so many, that they connot be numbered. With that the priest told Bonner what he had said; and he, of his accustomed devotion, took the poor lad into his garden, and there, with a [Page 560] [...]od, taken from off a cherry-tree, did most cruelly whip him.
The Scourging of ROBERT WILLIAMS, a Smith.
ROBERT WILLIAMS, who being apprehended in the same company, was so tormented after the same manner with rods in his arbour, who there subscribing and yielding himself by promise to obey the laws, after being let go, refused so to do: whereupon he was earnestly sought for, but could not be found, for that he kept himself close, and went not abroad but by stealth: and now in the mean time of this persecution, this Robert Williams departed this life, and so escaped the hands of his enemies. The Lord therefore be honoured for ever, Amen.
AND forasmuch as I have begun to write of Bonner's scourging, by the occasion thereof cometh to mind to infer by the way, his beating of other boys and children, and drawing them naked through the nettles, in his journey, rowing towards Fulham. The story, though it touch no matter of religion, yet because it sheweth something of the nature and disposition of that man, and may refresh the reader, wearied perhaps with other doleful stories, I thought not to omit.
BONNER, passing from London to Fulham by water, having John Willie and Thomas Hindshaw above-mentioned with him, both prisoners for religion, by the way as he went, was saying even song with Harpsfield, his chaplain, in the barge, and being about the middle of their orisons, they espied some young boys swimming and washing themselves in the Thames, over against Lambeth, or a little above: unto whom he went and gave very gentle language, and fair speech, until he had set his men on land.
THAT done, his men ran after the boys to get them, as the bishop commanded them before, beating some with nettles, drawing some through bushes of nettles naked, and some they made to leap into the Thames to save themselves, that it was [...] velled they were not drowned.
NOW as the children for fear did cry, and [...] skirmishing was between them, immediately ca [...] a greater lad thither, to know what the matter [...] that the boys made such a noise. Whom [...] the bishop espied, he asked him whether he [...] maintain them in their doings or no. Unto [...] the young fellow made answer stoutly, Yea. [...] the bishop commanded him to be taken also▪ [...] he ran away with speed, and then avoided [...] [...] shop's blessing. Now when the bishop saw him [...] away, and another man sitting upon a rail in the [...] where he ran, he desired him likewise to stop the [...] and because he would not, he commanded his [...] to fetch that man to him also; but he hearing [...] ran away as fast as he could, and by leaping [...] the ditch, escaped the bishop in like manner.
THEN the bishop, seeing the success of his [...] to prove no better, cried to a couple of ferry [...] to run and hold him that last run away. And [...] cause they said they could not (as indeed it was [...]) therefore he caused his men to take and beet [...] The boys hearing that, le [...]pt into the water [...] themselves; notwithstanding they were caught [...] in the water by the bishop's men held and beat▪
NOW, after the end of this skirmish, the bishop's men returned to their master again into the [...] and he and Harpsfield his chaplain, went to their even-song afresh where they left, and so forso [...] the rest of their service, as clean without malice, [...] an egg without meat. The Lord give him repen [...]tance (if it be be his will), and grace to become a new man, Amen.
The Whipping of a Beggar at Salisbury.
UNTO these above specified, is also to be added the miserable whipping of a poor starved beggar, who, because he would not receive the sacrament at Easter in the town of Colingborow, was brought to Salisbury with bills and glieves to the [Page 561] chancellor Dr. Genery, who cast him into the dungeon, and after caused him miserably to be whipped by two catch-poles. The sight whereof made all godly hearts to rue it, to see such tyranny to be shewed upon such a simple and silly wretch: for they that saw him him have reported, that they never saw a more simple creature. But what pity [...] move the hearts of merciless papists.
BESIDES these above-named, divers others also suffered the like scourgings and whippings in their [...]od [...]s for their f [...]thful standing in the truth. Of whom it may be said, as it is written of the apostles in the Acts, "Which departed from the council, [...]joicing that they were coun [...] worthy to suffer for the name of Jesus."
Another Treatise of such as being pursued in Queen MARY'S Time, were in great Danger, and yet through the good Providence of God, mercifully were preserved.
ALTHOUGH the secret purpose of Almighty God which disposeth all things, suffered a great number of his faithful servant both men and women, and that of all ages and degrees, to fall into the enemy's hands, and to abide the brunt of this persecution, to be [...]ried with rods, whips, with racks, with [...]tters, with famine, with burning of hands, with p [...]cking off beards, with burning also both hand, [...], and body, &c.
[...] notwithstanding some there were again, and that a great number, who miraculously by the merciful providence of God, against all men's expectation, in safety were delivered out of the fiery rage of this persecution, either by quitting the realm, or shifting of place, or the Lord so blinding the eyes of the persecutors, or disposing the opportunity of time, or working some such means or other for his servants, as not only ought to stir them up to perpetual thanks, but also may move all men both to behold and magnify the [...]wondrous works of the Almighty.
ABOUT the time it began to be known that queen Mary was sick, divers good men were in hold in divers quarters of the realm, some at Bury, some at Salisbury, as John Hunt, and Richard White, of whom we have treated before, and some at London, amongst whom was William Living, with his wife, and John Lithal, of whom something remaineth now compendiously to be touched.
An Account of the Persecution and Deliverance of WILLIAM LIVING, with his Wife, and of JOHN LITHAL, Ministers.
ABOUT the latte [...] end of queen Mary's reign, she then being sick, came [...] Cox, a promoter, to the house of William Living, about six o'clock, accompanied with one John Launce, of the Greyhound. They being not ready, they demanded some buttons, saying, they should be as well paid for them as any; and he would come about three hours after for them again,
IN the mean time he procured one Mr. Dean, the constable, and G [...]rge Hancock, the [...]eadle of Astronomy, called the work of Joannas de Sacro Bo [...]o de Sp [...]e [...], with figures, some round, some triangle▪ some quadrangle; which book, because it was guilt, seemed to him the chief book there, and that he carried open in the street, saying, I have found him at length. It is no wonder the queen be sick, seeing there be such conjurers in privey corners; but now I trust he shall conjure no more; and so brought him and his wife from Shoe-lane through Fleet-street, into St. Paul's church-yard, with the constable, the beadle, and two others following them, till they entered into Darbishire's house, who was bishop Bonner's chancellor: and after the constable and they had talked with Darbishire, he came forth, and walked in his yard, and said to him,
What is your name?
William Living.
What are you? a priest?
Yea.
Is this your wife that is come with you?
That she is.
Where were you made priest?
At Obourne.
In what bishop's days?
[...] bishop of Lincoln, that was king Henry's s [...]ri [...]ual father in Cardinal Wolsey's time.
You are a schismatic and a traitor.
I would be sorry that were true. I am certain I never was a traitor, but always have taught obedience according to the tenor of God's word; and when tumults and schisms have been stirred, I have preached God's word, and assuaged them as in the time of king Edward.
What, you are a schismatic. You be not in the unity of the catholic church: for you pray not as the church of Rome doth: you pray in English.
We are certain we be in the true church.
There be that doubt thereof, forsomuch as there is but one true church. Well, you will learn against I talk with you again▪ to know the church of Rome, and to be a member thereof.
If the church of Rome be of that church whereof Christ is the head, then I am a member thereof, for I know no other church but that.
Well, Cluny, take him with thee to the Coal-house.
THEN he called Cluny again, and spake secretly to him, but what he said I know not.
THEN said Cluny, Wilt thou not come? And so plucked me away violently, and brought me to his own house in Paternoster-row, where he robbed me of my purse, my girdle, and my Psalter, and a New Testament of Geneva, and then brought me to the Coal-house to put me in the stocks, saying, Put in both your legs and your hands; and [...] you fine with me, I will put a collar about [...] neck. What is the fine, quoth I? Forty shillings, said he: I am never able to pay it, said I.
THEN said he, You have friends that be able▪ I denied it; and so he put both my legs into [...] stocks till supper-time, which was six o'clock▪ [...] then a cousin of my wife's brought me me [...], who seeing me sit there, said, I will give you forty- [...] and [...]et him go at liberty: and he took her [...] and presently let me forth in her sight, to [...] supper. And at seven o'clock he put me in the stocks again, and I remained till two o'clock▪ [...] next day, and so he let me forth till night. [...] woman above-mentioned, was Griffin's first [...] brother dwelling then in Aldermanbury, [...] in Cheapside.
THE Thursday following, in the afterno [...] [...] I called to the Lollards' Tower, and there put [...] the stocks, having the honour to put my [...] that hole which Mr. John Philpot's leg was [...] so lay all that night, no body coming to [...] with meat or drink.
AT eleven o'clock on the Friday, Cluny [...] me with meat, and let me forth, and about [...] o'clock he brought me to Darbishire's house, [...] drew forth a scroll of names, and asked me [...] knew none of them: I said, I knew none of [...] but Foster. And so I kneeled down [...] knees, and prayed him that he would not [...] thereof any farther. And with that came forth [...] godly women, who said, Mr. Darbishire▪ [...] enough; and so became sureties for me, and [...] to Cluny fifteen shillings for my fees, and [...] go with them.
AND thus much concerning William Living▪ After this came his wife to examination, [...] answers to Darbishire, the chancellor, h [...]re likewi [...] follow.
The Examination of Julian Living, Wife to William Living.
AH, sirrah: I see by your going you be one of the sisters.
I wear not my gown for sisterhood, neither for nunnery, but to keep me warm.
Nun▪ No, I dare say you be none: is that man your husband?
Yea.
Is he a priest?
No, he saith no mass.
What then? he is a priest. How darest thou marry him?
THEN he shewed me a roll of certain names of citizens.
TO whom I answered, I knew none of them.
THEN said he, You shall be made to know them.
THEN said I, Do no other but justice and right, for the day will come, that thou shalt answer for it.
Why, woman, thinkest thou not that I have a soul?
Yes, I know you have a soul; but whether it be to salvation or damnation, I cannot [...]ell.
Ho, Cluny, have her to the Lollards'-Tower. And so he took me, and carried me to his house, where was one Dale, a promoter, which said to me, Alas, good woman, wherefore be you here?
WHAT is that to you? said I.
YOU be not ashamed, quoth Dale, to tell wherefore you come hither.
NO, quoth I, that I am not; for it is for Christ's Testament.
CHRIST'S Testament? quoth he. It is the devil's Testament.
O Lord, quoth I, God forbid that any man should speak any such word.
WELL, well, said he, you shall be ordered well enough. You care not for burning, quoth he. God's blood, there must be some other means found for you.
WHAT, quoth I, will you find any worse than you have found?
WELL, quoth he, you hope, and you hope: but your hope shall be cut off. For though the queen fail, she that you hope for shall never come at it; for there is my lord cardinal's grace, and many more between her and it.
THEN, quoth I, my hope is in none but God.
THEN said Cluny, Come with me; and so I went to the Lollards' Tower. On the next day Darbyshire sent for me again, and inquired of those citizens that he inquired of before.
I answered, I knew them not.
WHERE were you, quoth he, at the communion on Sunday was fortnight?
AND I said, In no place.
THEN the constable of St. Bride's being there, made suit for me.
AND Darbishire demanded of him, if he would be bound for me.
HE answered, Yea. And so he was bound for my appearance betwixt that and Christmas.
THEN Darbishire said, You be constable, and should give her good counsel.
SO I do, quoth he. For I bid her go to mass, and to say as you say. For, by the mass, if you say the crow is white, I will say so too.
AND thus much concerning the examination of William Living and his wife, whom although thou seest here delivered through the request of women, his sureties, yet it was no doubt, but that the deadly sickness of queen Mary abated and bridled, rather than the cruelty of those papists, which otherwise would never have let them go.
An Account of the Trouble and Deliverance of JOHN LITHAL.
AT the taking of William Living, it happened that some of his books were in the custody of one John Lithal; which known, the constable of the ward of Southwark, with other of the queen's servants, were sent to his house, who breaking open his doors and chests, took away not only the books of the said William Living, but also all his own [...] books, writings, and bills of debts, which he never had again. All this while Lithal was not at home.
THE next Saturday after, as he was returned, and known to be at home, John Avales and some of the queen's servants beset his house all the night, with such careful watch, that as he in the morning issued out of doors, thinking to escape their hands, John Avales bursting out upon him, cried Stop the traitor, stop the traitor. Whereat Lithal being amazed, looked back.
AND so John Avales came running to him, with others that were with him, saying, Ah, sirrah, you are a traitorous fellow indeed, we have had somewhat to do to get you. To whom he answered, that he was a truer man to the queen's majesty than he. For you, said he, are commanded by God to keep holy the Sabbath-day, and you seek to shed your neighbour's blood on the Sabbath-day. Remember that you must answer it to God. But he said, Come on, you villian, you must go before the council. So Lithal was brought into St. Paul's church-yard to the bishop's chancello [...] by John Avales, saying, that they had there caught the captain of these fellows, and so caused him to be called to examination before Dr. Darbishire, who began with him in this wise:
What country man are you?
I am an Englishman, born in Staffordshire.
Where were you brought up?
In this our country of England.
In what university?
In no university, but in a free-school.
We had certain books from your house, and writing, wherein is both treason and heresy.
Sir, there is neither treason nor heresy in them.
THEN the chancellor asked for certain other men that I knew.
If you have ought to lay to my charge, I will answer it; but I will have no other [...] blood upon my head.
Why come you not to the church? Of what church be you, that you come not to [...] own parish church?
I am of the church of Christ, the [...] of all goodness.
Have you no ministers of your [...] but Christ?
We have others.
Where be they?
In the whole world, dispersed, preaching and professing the gospel and faith only in our Saviour Jesus, as he commanded them.
You b [...]ast much every one of you of [...] faith and belief: let me hear therefore the [...] how you believe.
I believe to be justified really by Christ Jesus, according to the saying of St. Paul to the Ephesians, without either deeds or works, or any thing that may be invented by man▪
Faith cannot save without works.
That is contrary to the doctrine of the Apostles.
John Avales, you and the keeper have this fellow to prison.
THEN John Avales, and Cluny the keeper, had [Page 565] me into St. Paul's, and would have had me seen the Apostles' mass.
I know none the apostles had, and therefore I will see none.
Come and kneel down before the rood, and say a Paternoster, and an Ave in the worship of the five wounds.
I am forbidden by God's own mouth to kneel to any idol or image: therefore I will not.
THEN they pulled me with great extremity, one having me by one arm, and the other by the other; but God gave me at that present time more strength than both these, his name be praised for it.
THEN when they could not make me to kneel before the rood, neither to see the mass, there gathered a great company about us, and all against me. Some spit on me, and said, Fi [...] on thee, heretic; and others said, it was a pity I was not burned already.
THEN they carried me to Lollards'-Tower, and hanged me in a great pair of stocks, in which I lay three days and three nights, till I was so lame that I could neither stir nor move.
THEN I offered the keeper some money and gold that I had about me, to release me out of the stocks: and he said, I would not be ruled by him, either to see mass, or to kneel before the rood, and therefore T should lie there still. But I said, I would never do the thing that should be against my conscience; and though you have lamed my body, yet my conscience is whole, I praise God for it. So shortly after he let me out of the stocks, more for the love of my money (as it may be thought), than for any other affection; and within four or five days my wife got leave of Mr. Chancellor to come to me, to bring me such things as were needful for me, and there I lay five weeks and odd days. In which time divers of my neighbours and friends made suit to the chancell [...]r [...]or my deliverance; the bishop, as they said, at that time being sick at Fulham. So my neighbours being there, about twenty of them▪ the chancellor sent for me out of [...]ollars [...]-Tower to his own house, and said as follows▪
Lithal, here are some of thy neighbours who have been with me to intreat for thee, and they have informed me, that thou hast been a very honest and quiet neighbour among them, and I think it be God's will that I should deliver thee before my lord come home. For if he come, and thou go home again, I shall be burned for thee; for [...] know his mind already in that matter.
I give you hearty thanks for you [...] gentleness, and my neighbours for their good report.
Lithal, if thy neighbours will be bound for thy forth-coming▪ whensoever thou shalt be called for; and [...] if thou wilt be an obedient subject, I shall be content to deliver thee.
If it please your worship, we [...] bound for him in body and goods.
I will require no such bonds of you, but that two of you will be bound in twenty pounds a piece, that he shall come to answe [...] when he shall be called.
Where find you, Mr. Chancellor, in all the scriptures, that the church of God did bind [...] man for the profession of his faith? Which profession you have heard of me, that all our justifi [...] tion, righteousness, and salvation▪ cometh only and freely by the merits of our Saviour Jesus Christ, and all the inventions and works of men, be they ever so glorious, be altogether vain, a [...] the wise man saith.
Lo, where is he now, I put no such matter to you; for in that I believe as you do: but yet St. James sait [...] ▪ "That a man is justified by works."
St. James spake to them that boasted themselves of faith, and shewed no works of faith: but O, Mr. Chancellor, remember I pray you, how all the promises and prophecies of the holy scripture, even from the first promise that God made to [Page 566] Adam, and so even to the latter end of the Revelation of St. John, do testify that in the name of Jesus, and only by his merits, all that believe shall be saved from all their sins and offences. Isaiah saith, chap. lxv. "I am found of them that sought me not, and am manifest to them that ask not after me:" but against Israel he saith, "All day long have I stretched out my hand to a people that believe not." And when the jailer asked St. Paul, what he would do to be saved, the apostle said, Acts xvi. "Believe on the Lord Jesus, and thou shalt be saved, and all thy houshold."
AGAIN, St. John saith in the Revelation, that there was none, neither in heaven nor on earth, neither under the earth, that was able to open the book nor the seals thereof, but only the Lamb Jesus, our only Saviour. And St. Paul saith, Heb. ix. "With one offering hath he made perfect for ever them that are Sanctified."
With vain glory you rehearse much scripture, as all the rest of you do: but you have no more understanding than my sheep. But to the purpose. Will you that your neighbours shall enter into bonds for you, or not?
By my mind they shall not. Wherefore I desire you that you would not bind me, but let me serve God with my conscience freely. For it is written, Rev. xiii. "They that lead into captivity, shall go into captivity, and they that strike with the sword, shall perish with the sword."
ALSO it is written in the gospel of our Saviour Jesus Christ, Matt. xviii. "That whoso doth offend one of these little ones which believe in me, it were better for him that a mill-stone were hanged about his neck, and that he were cast into the depth of the sea." Of which I am assured by his holy Spirit that I am one. Wherefore be you well assured that such mercy as you shew, unto you shall be shewed the like.
You are a mad man. I would not bind you, but that I must needs have somewhat to shew for your deliverance. Then he called two of his neighbours, Thomas Daniel and Saunders Maybe, who offered themselves to be bound, and called me before them, and said, I have a letter of his [...] hand-writing, with his name and seal at it, [...] book also against the regiment of women, for which I could make him to be hanged, drawn, and quartered; but on my faith I will him no more [...] than I mean to my own soul.
I desire you that be my neighbour [...] [...] friends, that you will not enter into bonds for [...] ▪ for you know not the danger thereof, neither I myself; it goeth against my conscience that [...] should so do.
Why, I will not bind you to do any [...] against your conscience.
THEN they made the bond, and sealed to [...] willed me that I should seal to it also▪ and [...] that I would not, neither could I observe the [...] and therefore I would not set to my hand.
It is pity that thou hast so much [...] shewed thee: yet for these honest mens' [...] will discharge thee.
NOTWITHSTANDING all these dissembling [...] of Dr. Darbishire, pretending for favour [...] sureties to set him at liberty, it was no such [...] nor any zeal of charity that moved him so [...] but only fear of the time, understanding [...] [...] gerous and irrecoverable sickness of queen [...] which then began somewhat to assuage the [...] proceeding of these persecutors, whereby they [...] not do what they would: for else Lithal was [...] likely to have escaped so easily.
MOREOVER, there was one Edward Grew, pri [...], and Appline, his wife, compelled to fly from [...] dwelling at a town called Broke; and the man [...] ing very aged, travelled abroad to keep a go [...] conscience.
AT last he was taken and cast into Col [...]he [...]-castle, where he remained till queen Elizabeth [...] to her regal seat, and by the alteration of religion he was delivered. His wife, good woman, was i [...] great care for him, and to her power did what she could to succour him.
WILLIAM Brown, parson of little Sta [...]ham, in [Page 567] the county of Suffolk, made a sermon in the said town, soon after the burial of our good king Edward, and in his sermon he said, There goeth a report that our good king is buried with a mass by the bishop of Winchester, he having a mitre upon his head. But if it were so, said he, they are all traitors that so do, because it is both against the truth, and the laws of this realm, and it is great idolatry and blasphemy, and against the glory of God; and they are no friends either to God, the king, or unto the realm that so do. For this his preaching, one Robert Blomefield, an adversary to the truth, being then [...]onstable of the town, and bailiff unto sir John Jerningham, knight, (the lord of the town) immediately rode forth, and brought home with him one Edward Golding, who was then under-sheriff, sir Thomas Cornwallis, being then high-sheriff.
SO the said Golding and Blomefield sent for certain men of the same town, and examined them for the sermon▪ whereupon they made but a small answer. Then the sheriff made a bill, and so terrified the men, that two or three of them set to their hands, and one of them never enjoyed himself after, but it was grief to him till he died.
THEN they took men with them to the parson's house, and in the night they took him, and with muchmen kept him till it was day. Then should he have been carried the next day to the council; but the said Robert Blomefield was taken so sick, that he was like to die: so that he could not carry him for his life.
THEN the said sheriff sent him to Ipswich again, and there he was for a time. Then he was sent to B [...]y prison, and from thence to the council, and then into the Fleet; and so he lay in prison from the beginning of harvest till near Christmas, and said, God gave him such answers to make when he was examined, that he was delivered with quietness of conscience. And having his liberty, he came again to the aforesaid town; and because he would not go to mass, his living was taken away, and he and his wife were constrained to fly here and there for his life and conscience. In the last year of queen Mary's reign God took him out of this life in peace.
WHERE moreover is to be noted, that this Robert Blomefield above-named, immediately after he had apprehended the said Brown, fell very sick; and although at that time he was a wealthy man and of great substance (beside his land which was better than twenty pounds a year), after this time God plagued his houshold, that his eldest son died, and his wife had a pining sickness till she departed this life also.
THEN he married another, a rich widow; but all would not help, and nothing would prosper; for he had a sore pining sickness, being full of blotches and sores, whereby he wasted away both body and goods till he died.
SO when he died, he was above ninescore pounds in debt, and it was never heard of any repentance he had; but a little before his death, he threatened a good man, one Simon Harlston, to put him forth to the officers, because he did wear no surplice when he said service.
WHEREFORE it is pity such baits of popery are left to the enemies to take christians in. God take them away, or ease us from them: for God knoweth they be the cause of much blindness and strife amongst men.
The Persecution of ELIZABETH YOUNG.
YOU heard before of the scourging of Thomas Greene, how he was troubled and beaten by Dr. Story, for a certain book called Antichrist, which he received of a woman, because in no case he would detect her.
THIS woman was one Elizabeth Young, who coming from Emden to England, brought with her divers books, and dispersed them abroad in London; for which she being at length apprehended and laid fast, was brought to examination thirteen times before the catholic inquisitors of heretical pravity. Some of which examinations have come to our hands, and are as follow:
The First Examination of Elizabeth Young before Mr. Hussy.
WHERE was you born, who was your father and mother?
Sir, all this is but vain talk, and very superfluous. I [...] is to fill my head with fantasies, that I should not be able to answer unto such things as I came for. You have not, I think, put me in prison to know who is my father and mother. But, I pray you, go to the matter I came hither for.
Wherefore wentest thou out of the realm?
To keep my conscience clean.
When wast thou at mass?
Not these three years.
Then wast thou not there three years before that?
No, sir, nor yet three years before that: for if I were I had evil luck.
How old art thou?
Forty and upwards.
Twenty of those years you went to mass.
Yea, and twenty more I may, and yet come home▪ as wise as I went thither first, for I understand it not.
Why wilt thou not go to mass?
Sir, my conscience will not suffer me: for I had rather all the world should accuse me, than mine own conscience.
What if a lou [...]e or a [...]lea stick upon thy skin, and bite thy flesh? thou must make a conscience in taking her off, is there not a conscience [...]n it?
That is but a sorry argument [...] place the scriptures, and especially in such a [...] my salvation dependeth upon: for it is but an [...] conscience that a man can make.
But why wilt thou not swear [...] evangelists before a judge?
Because I know not what a book [...]
THEN he began to teach her the book [...]
Sir, I do not understand it, [...] fore I will not learn it.
Thou wilt not understand it; [...] that rose up and went his way.
The Second Examination of Elizabeth Young, [...] Martin.
THOU art come from beyond [...] and hast brought with [...] heresy and treason, and thou must confess [...] translated them, printed them, and who [...] over, (for I know thee to be but a mess [...]ng [...] [...] in so doing the queen's highness will be [...] thee (for she hath forgiven greater things [...] and thou shalt find as much favour as i [...] [...] But if thou be stubborn, and wilt not [...] wilt be very ill-handled: for we know [...] already; but this we do, only to see wheth [...] [...] wilt be true to thy word or no.
Sir, you have my confession, and [...] than that I cannot say.
Thou must say more, and [...] more. Dost thou think that we will be [...] by this confession that thou hast [...] Thou rebellious whore, and traitorous heretics [...] dost refuse to swear upon the evangelists [...] judge, I hear say. Thou shalt be racked by [...] meal, thou traitorous whore and heretic, [...] shalt swear before a judge before thou go: yea, [...] thou shalt be made to confess how many books [...] hast sold, and to whom.
Sir, I understand not what an oath is, [Page 569] and therefore I will take no such thing upon me. And no man hath bought any books of me as yet, for those books that I had your commissioners have got them all.
Thou traitorous whore, we know that thou hast sold a number of books, yea, and to whom: and how many times thou hast been here, and where thou layest, and every place that thou hast been in: dost thou think that thou hast fools in hand?
No, sir, you be too wise for me; for I cannot tell how many places I have been in myself, but if it were in Turkey, I should have meat, and drin [...], and lodging for my money.
Thou rebellious whore, thou hast spoken evil words of the queen, and thou dwellest amongst a set of traitors and rebels that cannot give the queen a good name.
I am not able to accuse any man thereof, neither is there any man that can prove any such things of me as you lay to my charge. For God's word hath taught me my duty to my queen, and therefore I am sure you accuse me wrongfully.
Thou rebel and traitorous whore, thou shalt be so racked and tormented, that thou shalt be an example to all such traitorous whores and heretics; and thou shalt be made to swear by the holy evangelists, and confess to whom thou hast sold all and every of these heretical books that thou hast sold: for we know what number thou hast sold, and to whom; but thou shalt be made to confess it in spite of thy blood.
Here is my carcase; do with it what you will, and more than that you cannot have. Mr. Martin, you can have no more than my blood.
THEN he raved as though he were stark mad, and said, Martin! Why callest thou me Martin?
Sir, I know you well enough, for I have been before you ere now. You delivered me once at Westminster.
Where didst thou dwell then?
I dwelt in the Minories.
I delivered thee and thy husband both▪ and I thought then that thou wouldst have done otherwise than thou dost now. For if thou hadst been before any other bishop in England, and said the words that thou didst before me, thou hadst fried a faggot: and though thou didst not burn the [...], thou art like to burn or hang now.
Sir, I promised you then, that I would never be fed with an unknown tongue, and no more will I yet.
I shall feed thee well enough. Thou shalt be fed with that (I warrant thee) which will be little to thine ease.
Do what God shall suffer you to do: for more you shall not. And then he arose, and so departed, and went to the keeper's house, and asked his wife, whom she had suffered to come to this traitorous whore (as he called her). Then said the keeper's wife, As God receive my soul, there came neither man, woman, nor child to ask for her.
If an [...] man, woman, or child, come to ask for her, I [...]arge thee on pain of death, that they be laid fast; and give her one day bread, and another day water.
If you take away my meat, I trust that God will take away my hunger: and so he departed, saying, that was too good for her; and then she was shut up under two locks in the Clink, where she was before.
The Third Examination of Mrs. E. Young, before Dr. Martin.
ELIZABEH, wilt thou confess these things that thou hast been examined upon; for thou knowest that I have been thy friend, and in so doing I will be thy friend again; [Page 570] giving her many fair words, and then demanding of her how many gentlemen were beyond the seas.
It is too much for me to tell you how many are on the other side.
No, I mean but in Frankfort and Emden, where thou hast been.
Sir, I did never take account of them; it is a thing that I look not for.
When shall I have a true word come out of your mouth?
I have told you the truth, but because that it foundeth not to your mind, therefore you mind, therefore you will not credit it.
Wilt thou yet confess? And if thou wilt, that which I have promised I will do; and if thou wilt not, I promise thee thou must go even hence to the rack, and therefore confess.
I can say no more than I have said.
Well, forsomuch as she will confess no more, have her away to the rack, and then she will be marred.
THEN answered a priest that sat there, and said, Woman, take an oath, and confess: wilt thou be hurt for other men?
I can confess no more than I have. Do with my carcase what you will.
Did ye ever hear the like of this heretic? What a stout heretic is this? We have the truth, and we know the truth, and yet look whether she will confess. There is no remedy, but she must needs to the rack, and therefore away with her, and so commanded her out of the door, and called her keeper unto him, and said [...]o him, There is no remedy but this heretic must be racked; and talked with him more, but what it was she did not hear.
THEN he called her in again, and said, Wilt thou not confess, and keep thee from the rack? I advise thee so to do; for if thou wilt not, thou knowest not the pain yet, but thou shalt do.
I can confess no more; do with my [...] case what you will.
Keeper, away with her. Thou knowest what I said. Let her know the pain of the rack. And so she departed, thinking no less, but that she should have gone to the rack, till she saw the keeper turn toward the Cli [...]k again. And thus did God alienate their hearts, and diminish their tyrannous power, unto the time of further examinations; for she was brought before the bishop, the dean, and the chancellor, and other commissioners, first and last, thirteen times.
The Fourth Examination of Mrs. E. Young, before the Bishop of London, Sir Roger Cholm [...]ey, Dr. Cook, the Recorder of London, Dr. Roper, and Dr. Martin.
FIRST she being presented by Dr. Martin before the bishop of London, Dr. Martin beg [...]n to declare against her, saying, The lord chancellor hath sent you here a woman, who hath brought books over from Emden, where all these books of heresy and treason are printed, and hath therewith filled all the land with treason and heresy; neither yet will she confess who translated them, nor who printed them, nor yet who sent them over. Wherefore my lord chancellor commit [...]eth her unto my lord of London, to do with her as he shall think good. For she will confess nothing but that she bought these said books in Amsterdam, and so brought them over to sell for gain.
Let her head be trussed in a small line, and make her confess.
The book is called Antichrist, and so may well be called, for it speaketh against Jesus Christ, and the queen. Besides that, she hath a certain spark of the anabaptists, for she refuseth to swear upon the four Evangelists before a judge: for I myself and Mr. Hussy have had her before us four times, but we cannot bring her to swear. Wherefore my lord chancellor would that she should abstain and fast, for she hath not fasted a great [Page 571] while: for she hath lain in the Clink a good while, where she had too much liberty.
THEN said the bishop, Why wilt thou not swear before a judge; that is the right trade of the anabaptists.
My lord, I will not swear that this hand is mine.
NO, said the bishop; and why?
My lord Christ saith, That whatsoever is more than yea, yea, or nay, nay, it cometh of evil. And moreover, I know not what an oath is: and therefore I will take no such thing upon me.
THEN said Cholmley, Twenty pounds it is a man in woman's clothes; twenty pounds it is a man.
Think you so, my lord.
Yea, my lord.
My lord, I am a woman.
Swear her upon a book, seeing it is but a question asked.
THEN, said Cholmley, I will lay twenty pounds it is a man.
THEN Dr. Cook brought her a book, commanding her to lay her hand thereon.
No, my lord, I will not swear, for I know not what an oath is. But I say that I am a woman, and have children.
That we know not; wherefore swear.
Thou ill-favoured whore, lay thy hand upon the book; I will lay on mine; and so he laid his hand on the book.
So will not I.
THEN the bishop spake a word in Latin out of St. Paul, as concerning swearing.
My lord, if you speak to me of St. Paul, then speak English, for I understand you not.
I dare swear that thou dost not.
My lord, St. Paul saith, that five words spoken in a language that may be understood, are better than many in a strange tongue.
Swear before us, whether thou be a man or a woman.
If you will not believe me, then send for women into a secret place, and I will be searched.
Thou art an ill-favoured whore.
How believest thou in the sacrament of the altar?
If it will please you that I shall declare my faith, I will, and if it be not good, teach me a better, and I will believe it,
That is well said, declare thy faith.
I believe in God the Father Almighty, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, three persons and one God▪ I believe all the articles of my creed: I believe all things written in the scripture, and all things agreeable to the scripture, given by the Holy Ghost to the church of Christ, set forth and taught by the church of Christ. I believe that Jesus Christ, the only Son of God, that immaculate Lamb, came into the world [...]o save sinners; and that in him, by him, and through him I am made clean from my sins, and without him I could not. I believe that in the holy sacrament of Christ's body and blood, which he did institute and ordain, and left among his disciples the night before he was betrayed; when I do receive this sacrament in faith and spirit, I do receive Christ.
No more, I warrant you, but the sacrament of Christ's body and blood, received but in spirit and faith, with those heretics.
Ah, whore, spirit and faith, whore!
This sacrament man never could, nor did make, but only he, that did what no man could do.
Then thou must allow that grass is a sacrament; for who could make grass but he only?
Sir, he hath suffered, and made a sufficient sacrifice once for all, and so hath he made his sacrament sufficient once for all: for there was never man that could say, "Take, eat, this is my body, that is broken for you," but only Jesus Christ, who had his body broken for the sins of the world: which sacrament he hath left here amongst us for a testimonial of his death, even to the world's end.
Who taught thee this doctrine? Did Scory?
Yea, bishop Scory, and others that I have heard.
Why, is Scory bishop now?
If that offend you, call him Dr. Scory if you will.
I knew him when he was but a poor doctor.
What do you call Scory?
Our superintendant.
Lo! their superintendant.
And what are ye called?
Christ's congregation.
Lo! Christ's congregation, I warrant you.
What living hath Scory?
As far as I do know, he liveth by his own, for I know no man that giveth him ought.
Yes, I warrant you, he hath enough sent him out of England.
Sir, I know no such thing.
Hark, whore, hark; hark how I do believe.
My lord, I have told you my belief.
Hark, thou ill-favoured whore, how I do believe. When the priest hath spoken the words of consecration, I do believe that there remaineth the very body that was born of the virgin Mary, was hanged on the cross, was dead and buried, and descended into hell, and rose again the third day, and ascended into heaven, and sitteth [...] the right hand of God. The same body when the priest hath spoken the words, cometh down, and when the priest lifteth up his body on this wise
there it is.
I have told you also how I do believe.
Away with her.
Ah, ill-favoured whore! Nothing but spirit and faith, whore!
Away with her, we have more to talk withal.
THEN she was carried into the Coal-house, and searched for books, and then put into the stock-house, and her knife, girdle, and apron taken from her.
The Fifth Examination of Elizabeth Young, before the Bishop of London's Chancellor.
WHAT age are you of?
Forty years and upwards.
Why, thou art a woman of fair years; why shouldst thou meddle with the scriptures? It is necessary for thee to believe, and that is enough. It is more fit for thee to meddle with thy dist [...]ff, than to meddle with the scriptures. What is thy [Page 573] belief? I would hear it; for it cannot be good, in that thou art brought to prison.
Sir, if it will please you to hear, I will declare it unto you. But I pray you that you will take your pen and write it, and them examine it; and if you find any thing therein that is not fit for a christian woman, then teach me better, and I will learn it.
Well said. But who shall judge between thee and me?
The scripture.
Wilt thou stand by that?
Yea, sir.
Well, go thy way out at the door a little while, for I am busy, and I will call for thee anon again.
THEN he called me again and said, Now, woman, the time is too long to write. Say thy mind, and I [...] bear it in my head.
THEN Elizabeth began, and declared her faith to him as she had done before to the bishop.
Woman, spirit and faith I do allow, but dost not thou believe that thou dost receive the body of Christ, really, corporally, and substantially.
The words, really and corporally, I understand not; as for substantially, I take it, you mean I should believe that I should receive his human body (which is upon the right hand of God, and can occupy no more places at once), and that I believe not.
Thou must believe this, or else thou art damned.
Sir, can you give me belief?
No, God must give it thee.
God hath given me no such faith or belief.
THE chancellor then declared a text of St. Paul in Latin, and then in English, saying, I could make thee believe, but that thou hast a cankered heart, and wilt not believe. Who then can make thee to believe?
You said even now, that faith or belief cometh of God, and so I believe, and then may not I believe an untruth to be true.
Dost thou not believe that Christ's flesh is flesh in thy flesh?
No, sir, I believe not that▪ for my flesh will putrify and rot.
Christ said, My flesh is flesh in flesh.
Whoso receiveth him fleshly, shall have a fleshly resurrection.
Christ saith in St. John, chap. vi. "My flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed."
Christ preached to the Capernaites, saying, "Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink his blood, ye shall not have life in you:" and the Capernaites murmured as it. And his disciples also murmured, saying among themselves, "This is an hard saying, and who can abide it?" Christ understood their meaning, and said▪ "Are ye also offended? Will ye also go away? What and if ye shall see the Son of man ascend up to heaven, from whence he came? Will that offend you? It is the Spirit that quickeneth, the flesh profiteth nothing." I pray you, sir, what meaneth Christ by that?
O God forbid. Would you have me to interpret the scriptures? We must leave that for our old ancient fathers, which have studied the scriptures a long time, and have the Holy Ghost given unto them.
Why, sir, have you not the Holy Ghost given and revealed unto you?
No, God forbid that I should so believe; but I hope, I hope: but you say, you are of the Spirit. Will you say that you have no profit in Christ's flesh?
Sir, we have our profit in Christ's flesh, but not as the Capernaites did understand it; for they understood that they must eat his flesh as they did eat ox flesh and others, and drink his blood, as we drink wine or beer out of a bowl. But so we must not receive it: but our prof [...] that we have by Christ, is to believe that his body was broken upon the cross, and his blood shed for our sins; that is the very meaning of Christ, and so we should eat his flesh, and drink his blood, when he said, "My flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed."
How doth thy body live, if Christ's flesh is not flesh in thy flesh?
Sir, I was a body before I had a soul; which body God had created, and yet it could not live, till God had breathed life into me, and by that life doth my body live. And when it shall please God to dissolve my life, my flesh will offer itself unto the place from whence it came, and through the merits of Christ my soul will offer itself to the place from whence it came.
Yea, but if thou do not believe that Christ [...]s flesh is flesh in thy flesh, thou canst not be saved.
Sir, I do not believe that.
Why, doth not Christ say, "My flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed?" Canst thou deny that?
I deny not that; for Christ's flesh and blood is meat and drink for my soul, the food of my soul. For whosoever believeth that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, hath died and shed his blood for his sins, his soul feedeth thereon for ever.
When thou receivest the sacrament of the altar, dost thou not believe that thou dost receive Christ's body?
Sir, as often as I receive the sacrament, I believe, that spiritually and by faith I receive Christ. And of this sacrament, I know Christ himself to be the author, and none but he. And this same sacrament is an establishment to my conscience, and an augmenting to my faith.
Why, did not Christ take bread, and gave thanks, and break it, and gave it to his disciples, saying, "Take, eat, this is my body that is given for you?" Did he give them his body, or no?
He also took the cup, and gave thanks to his Father, and gave it to his disciples, saying▪ "Drink ye all hereof: for this is the cup of the New Testament in my blood, which shall be [...] for many." Now, I pray you, sir, let me ask [...] one question: Did he give th [...] cup the name of his blood, or the wine that was in the cup?
THEN he was very angry, and said, Dost [...] think that thou hast an hedge-priest in hand?
No, sir, I take you not to be an hedge-priest; I take you for a doctor.
So me thinketh. Thou wilt take upon thee to teach me.
No, sir, but I let you know what I know; and by argument one shall know [...]. Christ said, "As oft as you do this do it in remembrance of me; but a remembrance is not of a thing present, but absent. Likewise St. Paul saith, "So oft as ye shall eat of this bread, and drink of this cup, ye shall shew forth the Lord's death till he come:" then we must not look for him here, un [...]il his coming again at the latter day. Again, is not this article of our belief t [...]ue, "He sitteth at the right hand of God the Father Almighty; from thence he shall come to judge both the quick and the dead?" But if he come not before he c [...]me to judgment, how then is he present in your sacrament of the altar? Wherefo [...]e I believe that the human body of Christ occupieth no more than one place at once; for when he was here, he was not there.
The Sixth Examination of Mrs. Young before the Chancellor.
WOMAN, the last time that thou wast before me, our talk was concerning the sacrament.
Sir, true it is, and I trust that I said nothing that you can deny by the scriptures.
Yes, thou wilt not believe that Christ's flesh is flesh in thy flesh.
No, sir, God hath given me no such belief; for it cannot be found by the scriptures.
Wilt thou believe nothing but what is in the scripture? Why, how many sacraments dost thou find in the scripture?
The church of Christ doth set down two.
I will as well find seven by the scripture, as thou shalt find two.
Sir, I talk not to you thereof, but I say that the church of Christ setteth out two, and I have been taught no more.
What are those two?
The sacrament of Christ's body and blood, and the sacrament of baptism.
What sayest thou by the sacrament of wedlock?
I have not heard it called a sacrament, but the holy estate of matrimony, which ought to be kept of all men that take it upon them.
How sayest thou by priests? Is it good that they should marry? Is it to be kept of them?
I come not hither to reason any such matter, for I am no divine, and also it is no part of my faith.
Can you not tell? You shall tell before ever you go.
Then you must keep me a good while; for I have not studied the scriptures for it.
No? Why, you will not be ashamed to flee unto the highest mystery, even to the sacrament at the first dash, and you are not afraid to argue with the best doctor in the land.
God's mysteries I will not meddle with, but all things that are written, are written for our edification.
What say you by prayers for the dead? Is it not meet that if a man's friend be dead, his friend commend his soul unto God?
There is no christian man that will commend his friend or his foe unto the devil. And whether it be good for him when he is dead or no, sure I am that it is good when he is alive.
Then thou allowest not prayer to be good for them when they be dead, and lying in purpatory. Is it not meet that prayer be made unto God for them?
Sir, I never heard in the scriptures of purgatory, but in the scripture I have heard of [...] and hell.
Why, you have nothing but the skimming of the scriptures. Our ancient fathers could find out in the bottom of the scriptures that there is a purgatory. Yea, they could find it in the New Testament, that a priest shall take the sacrament, and go to the altar, and make an oblation, and offer it up every day.
Sir, that could never be found in the Bible nor New Testament, as far as ever I could hear.
Whom dost thou hear read either the Bible or New Testament, but a sort of schismatics, bawdy bishops, and hedge-priests (which have brought into the church a stinking communion, which was never heard of in any place in the world, but here in England), which have deceived the king and all the nobility, and all the whole realm.
Sir, it is a vile name that you give them all.
Where are all the hedge-knaves now, that they come not to their answer?
Answer, sir? Why, they have answered both with the scriptures, and also with their blood; and then where were you that you came not forth to your answer in their times? I never knew any of you that were troubled, but two, and that was not for God's word, it was for their disobedience.
No, I pray you? Did you not know that we were killed, hanged, burned, and beheaded?
Sir, I never knew that any of you ever was either hanged, killed, burned, or beheaded.
No? Did you never hear that the bishop of Rochester lost his head for the supremacy of the bishop of Rome?
Then he died not for God's word.
Well, thou wilt believe nothing but that which is written in God's word Where canst thou find the sabbath written in the scripture, by the name of the sabbath? For the right sabbath day will I prove to be Saturday. Or, where canst thou find the articles of the creed in the scripture by the name of articles? or where canst thou find in the scripture that Christ went down into hell?
What place or part in the scripture can you find to disprove any of these things?
What priest hast thou lain withal that thou hast so much scripture? Thou art some priest's woman, I think, for thou wilt take upon thee to reason, and teach the [...]est doctor in all the land.
I was never yet priest's wife, nor yet priest's woman.
Have I touched your conscience?
No, sir, you have not touched my conscience, but beware you hurt not your own.
Thou hast read a little in the Bible▪ [...] Testament, and thou thinkest that thou art able [...] reason with a doctor, that hath gone to school thirty years; and, before God, I think if I had talked th [...] much with a Jew as I have done with thee▪ he would have turned ere this time. But I may say by you as Christ said by Jerusalem, saying, "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, how oft would I have gathered thee together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens, but thou would not." And so would [...] gather you together in one faith, and you will not: and therefore your own blood be upon your own head: for I can do no more but teach you. Th [...] art one of the rankest heretics that ever I heard; for thou believest nothing but what is in the scripture; and therefore thou art damned.
I do believe all things written in the scripture, and all things agreeable to the scripture, given by the Holy Ghost to the church of Christ, set forth and taught by the church of Christ, and shall I be damned because I will not believe [...] untruth?
THEN the chancellor called the keeper, saying▪ Cluny, take her away, thou knowest what thou hast to do with her. And so she departed, and was brought again to the stock-house, and there she [...]ay certain days, and both her hands manacled in one iron; and afterwards she was removed into the Lollards' Tower, and there she remained with both her feet in the stocks and irons till the next time of examination.
The Seventh Examination of Mrs. Young before the Chancellor and the Bishop's Scribe.
WOMAN, thou hast been twice before me, but we could not agree, and here be certain articles that my lord the bishop of London would that thou shouldst make [...]nswer unto, which are these: First, how many sacraments dost thou allow.
Sir, as many as Christ's church doth allow, and that is two.
[Page 577]THEN said the scribe, Thou wast taught seven before king Edward's days.
Which two sacraments be those that thou dost allow?
The sacrament of the body and blood of Jesus Christ, and the sacrament of baptism.
Dost thou not believe that the pope of Rome is the supreme head of the church, [...]mmediately under God in earth?
No, sir, no man can be the head of Christ's church: for Christ himself is the head, and his word is the governor of all that [...]e of that church, wheresoever they be scattered abroad.
Dost thou not believe that the bishop of Rome can forgive thee all thy sins heretical, detestable and damnable, that thou hast done from thine infancy unto this day?
Sir, the bishop of Rome is a sinner as I am, and no man can forgive me my sins, but he only that is without sin, and that is Jesus Christ, who died for my sins.
Dost thou not know that the pope sent over his jubilees, that all that ever would fast and pray, and go to the church, should have their sins forgiven them?
Sir, I think that she was not in the realm then.
Hast thou not desired God to defend thee from the tyranny of the bishop of Rome, and all his detestable enormities?
Yes, that I have.
And art thou not sorry for it?
No, sir, not a whit.
Hast thou not said, that the mass was wicked, and the sacrament of the altar most abominable?
Yes, that I have.
And art thou not sorry for it?
No, sir, not a whit.
Art thou not content to go to the church, and hear mass?
I will not go to the church, either to mass or mattins, till I may hear it in a tongue that I can understand: for I will be fed no longer in a strange Language. And always the scribe did [...] every one of these articles, as they were demanded and answered unto.
THEN the scribe asked her from whence she came.
THE chancellor said, This is she that brought over all these books of heresy and treason.
THEN the scribe said to her, Woman, where had [...]t thou all these books?
I bought them in Amsterdam, and brought them over to [...]ell, thinking to gain thereby.
What is the name of the book?
I cannot tell.
Why shouldst thou buy books, and know not their names?
THEN said Cluny, the keeper, Sir, my lord bishop did send for her by name that she should come to mass, but she would not.
Yea, did my lord send for her by name, and would she not go to mass?
No, sir, I will never go to mass, till I do understand it, by the leave of God.
Understand it! why, who the devil can make thee understand Latin, thou being so old?
[Page 578]THEN the scribe commanded her to set her hand to all these things.
THEN said she, Let me hear them read first.
Master Chancellor, shall she hear it read?
Ay, ay, let the heretic hear it read.
THEN she heard it read, and so signed it.
The Eighth Examination of Elizabeth Young before the Bishop.
IS this the woman that hath three children?
Yea, my lord.
Woman, here is a supplication put into my hands for thee. In like case there was another supplication put up to me for thee before this, in which thou madest as though I should keep thy children.
My lord, I did not know of this supplication, nor yet of the other.
Mr. Dean, is this the woman you have sued so earnestly for?
Yea, my lord.
Woman, what remaineth in the sacrament of the altar, when and after that the priest hath spoken the words of consecration?
A piece of bread. But the sacrament of Christ's body and blood, which he did institute and leave among his disciples the night before he was betrayed, ministered according to his word, that sacrament I do believe.
How dost thou believe concerning the body of Christ? where is his body, and how many bodies hath he?
Sir, in heaven he sitteth on the right hand of God.
From whence came his human body?
He took it of the virgin Mary.
That is flesh, blood, and bones, as mine is. But what shape hath his spiritual body? Hath it face, hands, and feet?
I know no other body that he hath, [...] that body whereof he meant when he said, " [...] is my body, which is given for you: and this [...] blood which shall be shed for you." Whereby [...] plainly meaneth that body and no other, which [...] [...]ook of the virgin Mary, having the perfect [...] and proportion of a human body.
Thou hast a wise body: for thou [...] go to the stake.
Art thou content to believe in the [...] of Christ's church? But to ask of thee what Chri [...] church is, or where it is, I let it pass.
Sir, to that church I have joined [...] faith, and from it I purpose never to turn, by Go [...] help.
Wouldst thou not be at home with [...]y children with a good will?
Sir, if it please God to give me leave▪
Art thou willing to confess thyself to be a foolish woman, and to believe as our holy father the pope of Rome doth, and as the lord cardi [...] doth, and as my lord the bishop of London thi [...] ordinary doth, and as the king and queen, and all the nobility in England do; yea, and the emperor▪ and all the noble persons of Christendom?
Sir, I was never wise, but in few word [...] I shall make you a brief answer how I do believe all things that are written in the scriptures, given by the Holy Ghost unto the church of Christ, set for [...] and taught by the church of Christ. Hereon I ground my faith, and not on man.
THEN said Story, And who shall be judge?
Sir, the scripture.
And who shall read it.
He unto whom God hath given the understanding.
Woman, be reformable▪ for I would thou wert gone, and master dean here hath earnestly sued for thee.
Woman, I have sued for thee indeed, and I promise thee, if thou wilt be reformable, my lord will be good unto thee.
I have been before my lord bishop, and before master chancellor three times, and have declared my faith.
And yet I know that master chancellor will say, that thou art a general heretic.
Away with her.
Master dean, you know that I may not [...]arry, nor you neither. Let her keeper bring her home to your own chamber at four o'clock in the afternoon, and if that we find her reasonable, then let her go, for I would that she were gone.
THEN said the dean, With a good will my lord; and so she was sent unto the place from whence she came, until it was four o'clock in the afternoon.
The Ninth Examination of Mrs. Young, before the Dean, after which she was delivered.
ART thou a fool now, as thou wert to day?
Sir, I have learnt [...]ut small wisdom since.
Dost thou think that I am better learned than thou?
Yes, sir, that I do.
Thinkest thou that, can do thee good?
Yea, sir, and if it please God, that you will.
Then I will do thee good indeed. What dost thou receive when thou receivest the sacrament which Christ left among his disciples the night before he was betrayed?
Sir, that which his disciples did receive.
What did they receive?
Sir, that which Christ gave them, they received.
What answer is this? was Christ there present?
Sir, he was there present; for he instituted his own sacrament.
He took bread, and he brake it, and he gave it to his disciples, and said, "Take, eat, this is my body which shall be broken for you." When thou receivest it, dost thou believe that thou receivest his body?
Sir, when I receive, I believe that thro [...] faith I do receive Christ.
Dost thou believe that Christ is there?
Sir, I believe that he is there to me, and by faith I do receive him.
He also took the cup and gave thanks, and gave it to his disciples, and said, "Drink ye all thereof: this is the cup of the New Testament in my blood, which is shed for many for the remission of sins." When thou dost receive it after the institution that Christ ordained among his disciples, the night before he was betrayed, dost thou believe that Christ is there?
Sir, by faith I believe that he is there, and by faith I do believe that I do receive him.
Now thou hast answered me, remember what thou sayest, that when thou dost receive according to the institution of Christ, thou dost receive Christ.
Sir, I believe Christ not to be absent from his own sacrament.
How long wilt thou continue in that belief?
Sir, as long as I do live, by the help of God, for it is and hath been my belief.
Wilt thou say this before my lord?
Yea, sir.
Then I dare deliver thee. Why, thou calf, why wouldst thou not say so to-day.
Sir, you asked me no such question.
Then you would stand in disputation how many bodies Christ had.
Sir, indeed that question you did ask me.
Who shall be the sureties that thou wilt appear before my lord of London and me upon Friday next?
Sir, I have no sureties, nor know I where to have any.
THEN spake the dean unto two women that stood there, who had earnestly sued for her, saying, "Women, will ye be her sureties, that she shall appear before my lord of London and me, upon Friday next?
Yea, sir, and it please you.
Take heed that I find you no more a babbler in the scripture.
Sir, I am no babbler in the scripture, nor yet can any man burden me therewith.
Yes, I have heard of you well enough what you a [...]e.
THEN said he to the two women, What if a man should touch your conscience, do ye not smell a little of heresy also?
No, sir.
Yes, a little of the frying-pan, or else wherefore have ye two so earnestly sued for her?
THE one woman answered, because that her children were like to perish, and therefore God put [...] in mind to sue for her.
THEN said the other woman, And I provided her child a nurs [...], and I am threatened to stand for the keeping of her child: and therefore it stande [...] me in hand to sue to have her out.
Woman, give thanks unto these [...] women, who have so earnestly sued for thee, and I promise thee so have I. These great heretics [...] receive nothing but in spirit and faith; and so [...] rose and departed.
Sir, God be praised, and I thank [...] for your goodness and their's also, and so he we [...] away; and upon the Friday next, because she was accused, her two sureties went thither, and [...] discharged.
The Persecution of ELIZABETH LAWSON.
IN the town of Bedfield, in the county of Suffolk, dwelt an ancient godly matron, named Elizabeth Lawson, about the age of sixty years▪ who was apprehended as an heretic by the constables of the same town, named Robert Kitrich, and Thomas [...]las, in the year 1556, because she would not go to church to hear mass, and receive the sament, and believe in it.
FIRST, they laid her in a dungeon, and after that she was ca [...]ried unto Norwich, and from thence to Bury g [...]al, where at last she was condemned to be [...]. In the mean time sir John [...]i [...]ard [...]ad her home unto his house, he being high sheriff that year, where she was hardly kept, and wrapped in [Page 581] irons, till at length, when they could by no means move her to recant, she was sent to prison again with shameful revilings.
THUS she continued in prison the space of two years and three quarters. In the mean time there were burnt her son and many more, whereby she would often say, "Good Lord, what is the cause that I may not yet come to thee with thy children? Well, good Lord, thy blessed will be done, and not mine."
NOT long after this (most happily) followed the death of queen Mary. At which time this Elizabeth Lawson remained yet still in Bury prison, till at last she was [...]ailed upon sureties, or else she could not be delivered. For she being a condemned person, neither the temporality, nor yet spiritual authority would discharge her without sureties. Now she being abroad, and her sureties made afraid by wicked men, said, they would cast her again in prison, except she would see them discharged.
THEN she got a supplication to go unto the queen's majesty, and came to a friend of her's to have his counsel therein; who willed her to stay a while, because she was old, the days short, and the expences great, and weather [...]oul ( [...]or it was a little before Christmas), and to tarry until summer. In the mean time God broke the bond, and shortened her journey▪ for he took her home to himself out of this life in peace.
THIS good old woman, long before she went to prison, had the falling sickness, and told a friend of her's, one Simon Harlston, after she was apprehended, that she never had it more, but lived in good health and joy of heart, through our Lord Christ.
SHE had a very unkind husband, who while she was in prison, sold her raiment, and would not help her; and after she was out of prison, she returned home unto him▪ yet would he shew her no kindness, nor help her neither▪ and yet the house and land that he dwelt in he had by her; wherefore as long as she lived she was maintained by the congregation.
THE said Elizabeth Lawson also had a sister, wife [...] one Robert Hollon, in Mickfield, in the same county of Suffolk, who likewise was persecuted and driven out from house to house, and a young man her son with her, because they would not go to the church to hear mass, and receive the sacrament of the altar.
An Account of the Persecution of THOMAS CHRISTENMASS and WILLIAM WATS.
IN this perilous rage of queen Mary's reign were two men persecuted, one called Thomas Christenmass, the other William Wats, of Tunbridge, in Kent. As these two men travelled from place to place, not resting two night [...] together in one place, they happened to go to Rochester in Kent, where they at the town's end met with a damsel of eight years of age, [...]ut [...] she went, they knew not. It was then night, and they being weary, were willing to lie in the same town, but could not tell where, they feared so the bloody catholics. At last they devised to ask the damsel whether there were any heretics in the town, or no? and she said, Yea. They asked her where. She answered them, At such an [...] ▪ telling them the name, and where the [...] wa [...]. Shortly after, as they were gone from her, they bethought themselves better, and God so moving their hearts, they went to the child again, and asked her how she knew that the inn-keeper (of whom she spake before) was an heretic. Marry, quoth she, well enough, and his wife also. How knowest thou, pre [...]ty mai [...]e [...], said they? I pray thee tell us. How know I, said she? Marry, because they go to the church▪ and those that will not hold up their hands there, they will present them, and [...] himself goes from house to house, to compel them to come to church. When these two men heard this, they gave God praise, and avoided that house, taking the warning of that maid (of good bringing up, as it should seem) to be God's marvellous providence towards them.
IN the last year▪ but one of queen Mary's reign, William Wats lived at Seal [...], in Kent▪ where being apprehended and brought by the constables before the bishop and justices at Tunbridge, who endeavoured [Page 582] to persuade him to turn from the truth, but all in vain, though they spent much time, and used many flattering words.
AT dinner-time the constables took Wats to a victualing-house, where after they had well [...]lled themselves, they fell asleep, supposing their prisoner had been sure enough under their hands. Wat's wife being in the house with her husband, and very careful for his well-doing, seeing them all fast asleep, desired her husband to go away, as God had given him an opportunity; but he refusing so long that at last a stranger hearing something of the dis [...]ute, asked what the matter was, and why she was so earnest with her husband: the wife told him▪ Then said the stranger to Wats, Father, go thy ways in God's name, and tarry no longer: the Lord hath opened the way unto thee. Upon which words he went his way, and his wife departed from him, and went home to her house at Seale▪ thinking her husband had gone another way. Now as she was going in at her door, telling her friends of his deliverance, immediately came in the said Wat's also, and they all being amazed thereat, willed him in all haste to get him away; for they thought there would be search for him immediately.
THEN Wats said, he would eat meat first, and also pray; which he did, and afterwards departed thence. As soon as he was out of doors, and had hid himself in an holly-bush, immediately came the said constables with thirty persons into the said house to search for him, where they pierced the feather-beds, broke open his chests, and made great havock; and as they were searching▪ the constable cried, I will have Wats, I will have Wats, I tell thee, I will have Wats; but God [...]e thanked Wats could not be found. And when they saw it needless to search for him, in the end they [...] his wife, and set her in a pair of stocks, where she remained two days, and she was very bold in the truth, and at last delivered through the providence of God; whose name be glorified in all his works, Amen.
Mr. DABNEY.
THERE was at London a certain godly person, a painter, named Dabney, whom John Avales i [...] the time of queen Mary had brought before Bonner to be examined for his faith. It happened the same time, when the said Dabney was there, that the bishop was occupied with the examination [...] of others, so that he was bid to stand by, and to wait the bishop's leisure. Upon the same, or not long after, suddenly came word to the bishop to prepare him with all speed▪ the general procession tarried for him. The bishop hearing that, setting all business apart, bustleth himself with all possible speed▪ [...] the church, there to furnish procession. By reason whereof Dabney, who newly came to the house▪ was there left alone, while every man else was busied in pr [...]p [...]ing and setting themselves forward according as the case required.
TO be short, as the time called on, Bonner [...] his houshold makes all possible haste to the procession. Dabney being left alone, came down [...] the outward court next the gate, there walk [...] heavily by himself, looking for nothing less than to escape that danger. The porter, who was [...] left at home, seeing the man walk alone, supposing he hast been some citizen left there behind▪ [...] waiting for opening the gate, went and opened [...] wicket, asking if he would go out. Yea, said he▪ with a good will, [...]f you will let me out. With [...] my heart, quoth the porter, and I pray you so do.
AND thus the said Dabney taking the opportunity offered of God, being let out by the porter, escaped out of the wolf's mouth. The procession being done, when the bishop returned home, Dabney was gone, and could not be found. Whereupon search was made, but especially John Avales laid wait for him: who, after long searching, when he could not get him, at length received fifteen crowns of his wife to let him alone when he should see him, and so that good man escaped.
ALEXANDER WIMHURST, Priest.
ALIKE example of God Almighty's goodness towards his afflicted servants in that dangerous time of persecution, may also appear evidently in one Alexander Wimhurst, a priest, some time of Magdalen college, in Oxford, and then a papist, but since an earnest enemy to Antichrist, and a man better instructed in the true fear of God. It [Page 583] happened that one had recommended him to bishop Bonner for religion, upon what occasion I do not understand. According to the old manner in such cases provided, he sent forth Robin Caly, otherwise called Robin Papist▪ one of his whelps, to bring in the game, and to cause this silly poor man to appear before him Little Robin, like a proper man, bestirreth him in his business, and smelleth him out, and when he had taken him, bringeth him along by Cheapside, not suffering him to talk with any of his acquaintance by the way, though they were some of his old friends of Oxford that offered to speak unto him.
WHEN they came into St. Paul's he espied Dr. Chedsey there walking up and down, and, because he was able in such a case to do pleasure, and for that he had been of his old acquaintance in Oxford, he was very desirous to speak to him ere he went through. Chedsey, perceiving that Robin Caly did attend upon him, said, that he durst not meddle in the matter. Yes, (said little Robin) you may talk with him if it please you, master Doctor. To be short, Alexander opened his case, and in the end desired, for old acquaintance sake, that he would find means he might be brought before Dr. Martin to be examined, rather than any other. Nay, said he, (alledging the words of Christ unto Peter in the last chapter of St. John) you remember, brother, what is written in the gospel; "When thou wast young, thou dist gird thyself, and wentest whither thou wouldst: but being aged, other men shall gird thee, and lead thee whither thou wouldst not." Thus abusing the scripture to his private meaning, whereas notwithstanding he might easily have accomplished so small a request, if he had liked it.
THENCE he was carried to Story and Cook, commissioners, there to learn what should become of him. Before them he behaved himself boldly and stoutly, as they on the other side did urge him with captious questions very cruelly. When they had baited the poor man their fill, they asked him where his whore was. She is not my whore (said he), but my lawful wife. She is thy whore, said they. She is not my whore (said he again), I tell you. So when they perceived that he would not give place unto them, nor attributed to them so much as they looked for at his hand, according to the ordinary manner, they commanded him to prison. And now mark well the providence of God in his preservation.
HE was brought into C [...]ny's house, in Paternoster-row, from thence to be carried to Lollards'-Tower▪ out of hand, but that Cluny, (as it happened) his wife and his maid, were so earnestly occupied about present business, that they had not leisure then to lock up their prisoner. In the hall where Alexander sat was a strange woman, whose husband was then presently in trouble for religion, which perceived by some occasion or other, that this man was brought in for the like cause. Alack, good man, saith she, if you will you may escape the cruel hands of your enemies, forasmuch as they be all away that should look unto you. God hath opened the way unto you for a deliverance, and therefore lose not the opportunity thereof, if you be wise. Being persuaded with th [...]se and such like words, he went out of the doors, and escaped their hands.
BOSOM'S Wife.
THIS good woman being at Richmond with her mother, was greatly urged to go to church. At length, through great importunity, she came; being in the church, and sitting with her mother in the p [...]w, contrary in all things to the doings of the papists, she behaved herself so, that when they kneeled she stood, when they turned forward, she turned backward, &c.
THIS being notorious in the church, the constable and church-warden attached her in the queen's name, charging her and her mother to appear the next day at Kingston, which accordingly they did, and happening to meet the officers crossing the river, saluted them by their names, but at that time the officers had no power to speak to them, though afterwards they stampt and stared, and were mad with themselves for letting them pass, as was declared by the waterman in the bo [...]t. Whereupon the good woman taking her journey to London, escaped their cruelty.
JOHN DAVIS, under Twelve Years of Age.
IN the year 1546, and the last year of king Henry the Eighth, John Davis, a child of twelve years and under, who dwelling in the house of Mr. Johnson, apothecary, in the town of Worcester, his uncle, using sometimes to read in the Testament and other English books, was complained of by his mistress, who was an obstinate person, and consulted with one Thomas Parton, and Alice Brook, wife to Nicholas Brook, organ maker, with certain of the canons, and Mr. Johnson, chancellor to Dr. Heath, their bishop. The means whereby he was intrapped, was wrought by the aforesaid Alice Brook, who procured her son Oliver, school-fellow with the said John Davis, to feign friendship with him, and under pretence to be instructed, to see his English books, and especially to get something of his writing against the six articles: which being had, was soon brought to the canons of the church and the chancellor. Whereupon Thomas Parton came to apprehend him, and his uncle was forced against his will to bind the poor boy's arms behind him; and so he was brought to the officers of the town, where he lay from the 14th of August till the last of September. Then was he commanded to the Freeman's prison, where one Richard Howborough, coming to persuade him from burning, willed him to prove first with a candle: who then holding his finger, and the other a candle under it a good space, yet (as the party himself assured me) he felt no burning thereof, neither would the other that held the candle believe him a great while, till he had looked, and saw no scorching of the candle at all appeared.
THE child was removed from thence to an inner prison, ca [...]led Peephol, where the low bailiff, named Robert Yould, laid upon him a pair of bolts, so that he could not lift up his little legs, but leaning on a staff, slipt them forward upon the ground: with these bolts his lying was upon the cold ground, having not one lo [...]k of straw nor cloth to cover him, save only two sheep skins, neither durst father or mother, or any of his friends come to him. Besides this, and many great threats of the papists, there was a mad-m [...]n put to him in the prison, with a knife about him, wherewith in his frantic rage he often threatened to stab him.
AFTER this came to him one Joyliff and Yaw [...] two canons, who had his writings against the [...] articles, and his ballad, called, "Come down for all your shaven crown," to see whether he would stand to that he had written. Which done, with many great raging words, not long after [...]at M [...]. Johnson, the chancellor, in the Guildhall, upon the poor lad. Where first were b [...]ought in his accusers, and sworn, then were sworn also twenty four m [...]n which went on his quest, and found him guilty, but he never came before the chancellor. Upon [...] he was sent to the common go [...]l among thieves and murderers there to tarry the coming of the judg [...] ▪ and so to be had strait to execution. But the mighty mercy of the Lord, who helpeth the desolate and miserable, when all other help is past, so provided for this innocent lad, that the purpose of all his hard hearted enemies was disappointed: for [...]fore the judges came, God took away Henry the Eighth out of this life. By reason whereof [...] force of the law was th [...] stayed: however, he [...] nevertheless arraigned, bring held up in a [...] arms at the bar before the judges, who were [...] man and Marven▪ who when they perceived that they could not burn him, would have him presently whipped. But Mr. Bourne declared to the judg [...] how he had whipping enough. After that he [...] lain a week more in prison, he had him home [...] his house, his wife ano [...]nted his legs herself with ointment, which then were stiff and numbed with irons, till at length when Mr. Bourne and his wife saw they could not win him to the belief of their sacrament, they put him away, lest he should infect their son Anthony, as they thought, with heresy.
THUS John Davis was mercifully preserved, after he had suffered imprisonment from the 14th day of August till within seven days of Easter, who is yet alive▪ and a profitable minister this day in the church of England: blessed be the Lord.
Mrs. ROBERTS.
MISTRESS ROBERTS, a gentlewoman, living (as I understand) in the town of Hawkhurst, in Sussex, being earnestly addicted to the truth of the gospel, and no less constant in that which she had learned therein, so kept herself during [Page 585] all the brunt of queen Mary's time, that she never came to their popish service, nor polluted her conscience with their idolatrous mass. There dwelt at the same time not far off a justice, called sir John Gilford, who being as fervent on the contrary side to set forward the proceedings of queen Mary, thought to prove masteries with this gentlewoman, in forcing her into the church. And first sending his wife, he attempted her by fair words and gentle persuasions to conform herself to the prince's laws, and to come, as other christian people did, to the church. Notwithstanding, she constantly persisting in the sincerity of the tru [...]h, would by no persuasions be won to do therein against her conscience; and so kept at home a certain time till again Mr Gilford thinking not to give her over so, sent his officers and servants to her, by force and power to haul her out of her house to the church, and so did. Where, by the way, she for grief of conscience swooned, and so of necessity was brought home again, and falling into an ague, was for that time dispensed with. When she had recovered her health again, he came in person to compel her to come to church whether she would or no. But (as the proverb goeth) who can prevent that which God would have done? For when Mr. Gilford had purposed as pleased him, the Lord so disposed for this good woman, that as he was coming up stairs towards her chamber, suddenly his old disease the gout seized him, and so [...]erribly tormented him, that he could go no further: and so he, that purposed to carry her to the church against her will, was forced himself to be carried home to his house on account of his pain, protesting and swearing that he would nev [...]r from henceforth trouble that gentlewoman more, and no more he did.
Mrs. ANNE LACY.
MISTRESS ANNE LACY, widow, in Nottinghamshire, was in great danger in queen Mary's time, insomuch that the process was out against her, and she ready to have been apprehended, being so nearly pursued, that she was driven to hide her bible and other books in a dunghill. Mr. Lacy, her brother, was then justice of peace; but to whom (as I have heard) she was but very little beholden. Nevertheless, where kindred faileth, yet God's grace never faileth such as stick to him; for in this mean time, as the process came out against her, queen Mary died, and so she escaped.
CROSSMAN'S Wife.
SHE lived at Tibnam Longrow, in Norfolk, and for not going to church, was sought for at her house by the constable of the hundred, who when he came to her house, she being at home with a child sucking in her arms, stept into a corner on the one side of the chimney, and they seeking about the chambers, the child never cried (although before they came it did) as long as they were there, and so by this means the Lord preserved her.
The Congregation at Stoke in Suffolk.
THERE were some likewise that avoided the violent rage of the adversaries by means only of their number, and mutual according in godliness, wherein they did so hold together, that without much ado none well could be troubled: whereof we have an example in a certain town in Suffolk, called Stoke. After the three sharp years of queen Mary's persecution being past, yet notwithstanding the inhabitants of the town aforesaid, especially the women, came not to their church to receive▪ after the popish manner, the sacrament; who, if they had been but few, they could by no means have escaped imprisonment. But because there were so many, the papists thought it best not to lay hands upon them. Only they appointed them sixteen days respite after Easter, wherein as many as would, should receive the sacrament: those that would not▪ should stand to the peril that would follow. Of this company, which were many, giving their hands together, the chief were these:
EVE, an old woman of sixty years of age. Alice Coker, her daughter▪ Elizabeth Foxe. Agnes Cutting. Alice Spencer. Henry Canker. Joan Fouke. Agnes Spau [...]ding. John Steyre, and his brother. John Foxe.
THESE, after the order was taken for their not coming to the church, took counsel among themselves [Page 586] what was best to be done, and at length concluded by promise one to another, that they should not receive at all. Yet some of them afterwards, being persuaded with fair promises that the communion should be ministered unto them according to king Edward's book, went to the parish priest (whose name was Cotes), and asked him after which sort he would administer the sacrament. He answered to such as he favoured, that he would give it after the right sort; the rest should have it after the popish manner.
TO be short, none did communicate so, but only John Steyre and John Foxe; of which the one gave his wife leave to do as she thought best. The other went about with threats to compel his wife, saying, that otherwise he would divorce himself from her. As for the rest, they withdrew themselves from church, resorting to their wonted company, only Foxe's wife tarried still at home, in heaviness, whose husband practised with the curate in the mean time, that the next day after he should give her the sacrament, which was the seventeenth day after Easter. But the very same day, unknowing to her husband, she went secretly to her company, and with tears declared how violently her husband had dealt with her. The other women bade her notwithstanding to be of good cheer, and said, that they would make their most earnest prayers to God both for her and her husband; and indeed when they had so done, the matter took very good success. For the next day after, Goodman Foxe came of his own accord unto them, a far other man than he was before, and bewailed his own rashness, praying them that they would forgive him, promising ever after to be more strong in faith, to the great rejoicing both of them and his wife.
ABOUT half a year after this, the bishop of Norwich sent forth certain of his officers or apparators thither, which gave them warning every one to come to th [...] church the next Sunday following. If they would not come, they should appear before the commissary out of hand, to render account of their abs [...]nce. But the women having secret knowledge of this before, kept themselves out of the way on purpose, to avoid the summons or warning. Therefore when they were not at the church on the day appointed, the commissary did first suspend them, according to the bishop of Rome's law, and within three weeks after did excommunicate them. Therefore when they perceived that an officer of the town was set to take some of them, they conveening themselves privily out of the town, escaped all danger.
The Congregation in London.
NO less wonderful was the preservation of the congregation in London, which from the first beginning of queen Mary, to the l [...]tter end thereof, continued, notwithstanding [...]hatsoever the malice, device, searching, and inquisition of men, or strictness of laws could work to the contrary. Such was the merciful hand of the Lord according to his accustomed goodness, ever working with his people. Of this bou [...]tiful goodness of the Lord, man) and great examples appeared in the congregation which I now speak of. How often, and in what great danger did he deliver them!
FIRST, In Black-friars, when they should have resorted to sir Thomas Carden's house, private watch was laid for them, but yet through God's providence the mischief was prevented, and they delivered.
AGAIN; they narrowly escaped about Aldgate, where spies were laid for them: and had not Thomas Simpson, the deacon, espied them, and bid them disperse themselves away, they had been taken. For within two hours, the constables coming to the house after they were gone, demanded of the wife what company had been there. To whom she, to excuse the matter, made answer again, saying▪ that half a dozen good fellows had been there at breakfast as they went a maying.
ANOTHER time also about the Great Conduit, they passing there through a very narrow alley▪ into a clothworker's lo [...]t, were espied, and the sheriffs sent for: but before they came, they having privy knowledge thereof, immediately shifted away out of the alley, John Avales standing alone in the mercers chapel, staring at them.
[Page 587]ANOTHER like escape they made in a ship at Billingsgate, belonging to a certain good man of Leigh, where in the open sight of the people they were assembled together, and yet through God's mighty power escaped.
BETWIXT Ra [...]cliff and Redriff, in a ship called Jesus ship, twi [...]e or thrice they assembled, having there closely, after their accustomed manner, both sermon, prayer, and communion, and yet through the protection of the Lord they returned, although not unespied, yet untaken.
MOREOVER, in a cooper's house in Pudding Lane, so n [...]ar th [...]y were to perils and dangers, that John Avales coming into the house where they were, talked with the man of the house and after he had asked a question or two, departed; God so working, that either he had no knowledge of them, or no power to [...]ke them.
BUT they never escaped more hardly, than once in Thames-street in the night-time, where the house being bese [...] with enemies, they were delivered by the means of a mariner, who being at that present in the same company, and seeing no other way to avoid, pluckt off his slops and swam to he next boat, and so rowed the company over, using his shoes instead of [...]ars; and so the jeopardy was dispatched.
WHAT should I speak of the extreme danger which that goodly company was in at the taking of Mr. Rough, their minister, and Cutbert Simpson their deacon, had no God's providence given knowledge before to Mr. R [...]u [...]h in his sleep, that Cutbert Simpson shou [...]d leave behind him at home the book of all their names, which he was wont to c [...]rry about with him; whereof mention is made before.
IN this church or congregation there were sometimes forty, sometimes an hundred sometimes two hundred, sometimes more, sometimes less. About the latter time of queen Mary it greatly increased. From the beginning▪ which was about the first entry of queen Mary's reign, they had divers ministers; first, Mr. Scamier, then Tho. Foule, after him Mr. Rough, then Mr. Augustine Bernher, and lastly, Mr. Bentham; concerning the deliverance of which Mr. Bentham (being now bishop of Coventry and Litchfi [...]ld), God's mighty providence most notably is to be considered. The story is thus:
ON a time when seven martyrs were burnt in Smithfield, a proclamation was issued out, strictly forbidding all persons whatsoever either to salute, or pray for, the prisoners as they came to the stake: the godly people hearing this, great numbers of them assembled together, resolving to comfort and encourage them by their prayers: and when they came towards the stake, well guarded by officers armed with bills and glieves as usual, the whole [...]ongregation ran in upon them, kissing and emb [...]acing them, (not minding the officers and their weapons) and carried them to the stake, and might as well have carried them off, for ought the officers could do to prevent it.
THIS done, and the people giving place to the officers, the proclamations was read with a loud voice to the people in the names of the king and queen, That no man should pray for them, or once speak a word unto them. Mr. Bentham, then minister of the congregarion, seeing the fire set to the martyrs, turned his eyes to his people and said, We know they are the people of God, and therefore we cannot chuse but say, God strengthen them: and then he boldly said, Almighty God, for Christ's sake strengthen them. With that all the people with one consent, and one voice, said, Amen, Amen. The noise whereof was so great, that the officers could not tell what to say, or whom to accuse. And thus much concerning the congregation [...]f the faithful assembling together at London in the time of queen Mary.
ANOTHER time, as Mr. Bentham was going through St. Catherine's, intending to take a walk in the air, he was forced by two or three m [...]n to go along with them. Mr. Bentham being amazed at the suddenness of the matter, required what their purpose was, or whither they would have him go. They answered, that by the occasion of a man there found drowned, the coroner's inquest was called and charged to sit upon him, of which inquest he must of necessity be one, &c. He endeavoured to excuse himself, alledging that he had no skill, and [Page 588] less experience in such matters; and if it would please them to let him go, they would meet with another more sit for their purpose. But when with this they would not be satisfied, he further urged, that he was a scholar in the university of Oxford, and thereby was privileged from being of any inquest. The coronor demanded the sight of his privilege. He said, if he would give him leave, he would fetch it. Then said the coron [...]r, The queen must be served without delay; and so constrained him to be at the hearing of the matter. Then a book was offered him to swear upon; upon his opening it, he found it to be a popish primmer, and refused to swear thereon, and declared moreover what superstition in the book was contained. What, said the coroner, I think we shall have an heretic among us. And upon that, after much reasoning, he was committed to the custody of an officer till further examinations: by occasion whereof he hardly could have escaped, had not the Lord helped where man was not able. What followed? As they were thus contending about matters of heresy, suddenly cometh the coroner of the admiralty, disannulling and repealing the order and calling of that inquest, for that it was (as he said) pertaining to his office; and therefore the other coroner and his company in that place had nothing to do. And so the first coroner was discharged and displaced: By reason whereof Mr. Bentham escaped their hands.
EDWARD BENNET.
ABOUT the second year of queen Mary, Edward Bennet, then dwelling at Queenhithe, was desired by Mr. Tingle, then prisoner in Newgate, to bring him a New Testament. He procuring one of Mr. Coverdale's translation, wrapt it in a handkerchief, saying to George the keeper, who asked him what he had, that it was a piece of powdered beef. Let me see it, said he. Perceiving what it was, he brought him to sir Roger Cholmley, who examined him why he did so, saying that book was not lawful, and so committed him to Woodstreet Compter, where he continued twenty five weeks.
DR. Story coming to the prison to examine other prisoners, this Bennet looking out at the grate, spake to him, desiring him to be good unto him, and to help in out, for he had long lain in prison. To whom Dr. Story answered, Wast thou not before me in Christ's church? Yes, forsooth, said Bennet, Ah, said Story, thou dost not believe in the sacrament of the altar? Marry, I will help thee out: come, said he to the keeper, turn him out. I will help him; and so took Bennet with him, and brought him to Cl [...]ny, in Paternoster-row, and bade him bring him to the Coal-house, and there he was in the stocks a week.
THEN the bishop sent for him to talk with him, and first asked him if he were confessed? No, said Bennet. He asked him if he would be confessed? No, said he. Then he asked him if the priest could take away his sins. No, said Bennet, I do not so believe.
THEN he and Harpsfield laughed at him, and mocked him, asking him if he did not believe that whatsoever the priest here bound in earth, should be bound in heaven, and whatsoever he looseth in earth, should be loosed in heaven. No, said Bennet; but I believe that the minister of God, preaching God's word truly, and administering the sacraments according to the same, whatsoever he bindeth on earth, should be bound in heaven, and whatso [...]ver he looseth, &c. Then the bishop putting him aside, said he should go to Fulham and be whipped.
MR. Buswell, a priest, then came to him lying in the Coal house, in the stocks, and brought Cranmer's r [...]cantation, saying, that he had recanted. My faith, said the other, lieth in no man's book, but in him that hath redeemed me. The next Saturday, Bennet with five others were called for to come to mass in the chapel. The mass being done, and they coming out, five of them went to prison, and were afterwards burned. Bennet being behind, and coming toward the gate, the port [...]r opening to a company going out, asked if there were no prisoners there. No, said they. Bennet standing in open sight before him, with other serving men who were there by reason that Bonner made many priests that day, when the gates were opened, went amongst them and so esc [...]ped.
[Page 589]AGAIN, in the last year of queen Mary, the same Bennet being taken again with the twenty [...]four beyond Islington, and brought to sir Roger Cholmley's, the people coming very thick, did cut off some of them, to the number of eight, which were behind, among whom was Bennet. Then he knocked at the gate to come in, the porter said, that he was none of the company. He said, Yes, and knocked again. Then there stood by one of the congregation, named Johnson, who said, Edward, thou hast done well, do not tempt God: go thy way. And so he taking the warning as sent of God, with a quiet conscience escaped burning.
JEFFERY HURST, Brother-in-law to George Marsh, Martyr.
IN the town of Shakerley, in Lancashire, dwelt one Jeffery Hurst, the son of an honest yeoman, who had besides him eleven children, the said Jeffery being at the first and eldest: and their father being willing to bring them up, so that they should be able another day to help themselves, he did bind this Jeffery apprentice unto the craft of nailing, to make all kind of nails, which occupation he learned, and served out the time of seven years, which being expired he gave himself at times to learn of his other brethren which went to school; and as he was very willing to the same, so God sent him knowledge; wherein he persevered and went forwards in such sort, that he could write and read indifferently, and in longer continuance came by more knowledge; and so having the Bible and divers other books in his house, did come to knowledge in the scripture. After this he took to wife the sister of Mr. George Marsh, of whose martyrdom mention is made before, and being very familiar with him, did greatly amend his knowledge. Now when queen Mary was entered the first year of her reign, he kept himself away from their doings and came not to church: whereupon he was laid i [...] wait for and called heretic, and Lollard, and so for fear of further danger he was compelled to leave his wife and child, and fly into Yorkshire, and there being not known, did lead his life, returning sometimes by night to comfort his wife, and bringing with him some preacher or other, who used to preach unto them so long as the time would serve, and so departed by night again. The names of the preachers were, Mr. Reneses, Mr. Best, Mr. Brodbank [...], Mr. Russel, and every time they came thither they were about twenty or twenty-four sometimes, but sixteen at least, who had there also a communion. And thus in much fear did he with others lead his life, till the last year of the reign of queen Mary. Then it chanced that the said Jeffery Hurst, after the death of his father, came home and kept close for seven or eight weeks.
THERE dwelt not far off, at Morless, a certain justice of the peace, and of the quorum, named Thomas Lelond, who hearing of him, appointed a time to come to his father's house where he then dwelt, to rifle the house for books, and to search for him also, and so he did. Jeffery and his company having knowledge of their coming, took the books which were in the house, as the Bible, the communion book, and the New Testament of Tindal's translation, and divers others, and threw them all underneath a [...]ub or fat, conveying also the said Jeffery under the same, with a great deal of straw underneath him; for as it chanced they had the more time, because when the justice came almost to the door, he stayed and would not enter the house till he had sent for Hurst's mother's landlady, Mrs. Shakerley; and then with her consent intended to go forwards. In the mean time, Jeffery by such as were with him, was willed to lay in his window the Testament of Tindal's translation, and a little book containing the third part of the Bible, with the book of Ecclesiasticus, to try what they would say unto them.
THIS done, Mrs. Shakerley came. Unto whom the justice immediately declared the cause of his coming, and how he was sorry to attempt any such thing against any of her tenants for her sake, but notwithstanding he must needs execute his office. And again you must (said he) note this, that a scabbed sheep is able to infect a great number; and especially having, as he hath, so many brethren and sisters, he is able to ma [...]r them all, if he be not looked to in time. And thus concluding, Mr. Lel [...]nd entered into the house, and being come in, set himself in a chair in the middle of the house; and sending sir Ralph Parkinson, his priest, and one of his men, and one of Mrs. Shakerley's men, [Page 590] about the house, to search and rifle the chests (who did so), in the mean time he talked with Hurst's mother, almost sixty years of age; and chiding with her that she would suffer her son so to order and behave himself like an heretic, said. Thou old fool. I know myself that this new learning shall come again; but for how long? even for three or four months, and no longer. But I will lay thee, old fool, in Lancaster dungeon for this, and well worthy.
NOW as concerning the searchers, they found nothing but Latin books, as a grammar, and such like. These be not what we look for (said they)▪ we must see farther, and so looked into Hurst's chamber, where they found the foresaid books. Then sir Ralph taking up the Testament, looked on it, and smiled. His master seeing that, said, Now, sir Ralph, what have we hear? Forsooth, saith he, a Testament of Tindal's translation, plain heresy, and none worse than it. Then said he, all their goods are lost to the queen, and their bodies to prison, and was wonderfully hasty; notwithstanding, through the means of Mrs. Shakerley, he was content to stay a little.
THEN the priest looked on the other book.— What say you to that, sir Ralph? is that as bad as the other? No, said he, but it is not good that they should have such English books to look on, for this and such others may do much harm. Then he asked his mother where her eldest son was, and her daughter Alice. She answered, she could not tell; they had not been with her along time. And he swore by God's body, he would make her tell wh [...]e they were or he would lay her in Lancaster dungeon; and yet he would have them notwithstandin [...] t [...]o. To be short, for fear, he had his brothe [...] J. Hurst and his mother bound in an hundred pounds to bring the parties before him in fourteen days time, and so he departed, and the priest put both the books in his bosom, and carried them away with him. Then John Hurst went after them▪ desiring that he might have the book w [...]ich the priest found no fault with; but he said, they should answer to them both, and which soever was the better, neither was good.
AS this passed on, when the time was come that Jeffery Hurst and his sister should be examined, the justice sent for them betimes in the morning, and had prepared a mass to begin withal, asking Jeffery Hurst if he would first go and see his Maker, and then he would talk further with him. To whom Jeffery answered and said, Sir, my Maker is in heaven, and I am assured in going to your mass I shall find no edification thereby; and therefore I pray you hold me excused.
WELL, well, said he, I perceive I shall find you an heretic, by God; but I will go to mass, and I will not lose it for all your p [...]attling. Then he went into his chapel, and when mass was done he sent for them, and caused his pr [...]est to read a scroll unto them concerning the seven sacraments; and ever as he spake of the body and blood of Christ, he put off his cap, and said, Lo, you may see, you will deny these things, and care not for your prince; but you shall feel it before I have done with you, and all the faculty of you, with other talk more between them, I know not what; but in the end they were licensed to depart under sureties to appear again before him within three weeks, and the [...] to go to Lancaster. However, in the mean time it so pleased God, that within four days of the day appointed, it was noised that the queen was dead, and within fourteen days after the said Jeffery Hurst had his two books sent home, and nothing was said unto him.
IT followed after this that God's word began to take place, and the queen's visitors came down into that country, who chose four men in the parish, to wit, Simon Smith, Jeffery Hurst, Henry Brown, George Eccersley, which four were protestants, to see the queen's proceedings take place; who according to their power did so, notwithstanding it little prevailed; and therefore the said Jeffery being so [...] grieved with the office, fell sick, in which sickness it pleased God to call him, making a very godly end, God have the praise for it.
NOW to return to the aforesaid Thomas Lelond again, he continuing still in office, did very seldom come to the church, but said he was aged, and might not labour, and there kept with him sir Ralph Parkinson, his priest, who could (as it was sa [...]d) administer the communion unto the people, and [Page 591] sing mass unto his master: yes, and (as the same reported) [...] a prettier feat than all that, for he begat two children by a servant in his house, his master knowing it, and saying nothing, for that he would lose his good mass-priest.
FURTHERMORE, this was noted in the same justice Lelond's behaviour at church time, that he had a little dog which he would play with all service time, and the same dog had a collar full of bells, so that the noise of them molested and troubled others as well as himself from hearing the service. Also it was observed in the same justice, that as he sat in his chapel at service time, his manner was on a willow ba [...]k to knit knots, for that he could not be suffered to have his beads, and to put the same upon a string also. Witness hereof Edward Hurst, with others.
FURTHERMORE, as concerning Henry Brown, one of the four chosen men before-mentioned, this is also to be noted, that the said Henry Brown, dwelling in the town of Pinnington, in the same parish, 1564, had a little boy, who as he was playing in the town, one Glave's wife gave unto the boy a pair of beads made of wood for him to play withal. The boy, being glad thereof to have such a fine thing, went home and shewed them to his father. His father seeing the beads, took them and burnt them, and when he had so done, went forth and asked who had given unto his little boy that pair of beads.
THAT I did, said Glave's wife.
WELL, said he, I have burnt them.
HAST thou so? said she, and thrust him from her. They shall be the dearest beads that ever thou sawest, and immediately went and complained unto the justice, how Brown had burned her beads.
AT this the justice was very angry, and directed his [...] unto the constables of the same town, by his own hand subscribed.
This done, the constables according to their charge brought him before the justice at the time appointed; and when the justice came to talk with him, he was in such a heat, that he called him thief, and said that he had robbed his neighbour in burning of her beads, and that there were rings and other jewels on them, and that he might as well have picked her purse; wherefore (said he) I will lay thee in Lancaster dungeon for this trick.
WHILST they were thus talking, there came all his servants about them from their work, saying, Is this master doctor Brown, that will burn beads? I pray you, sir, let us have him here and preach: I will give you a quarter's wages, saith one; and I will give money, saith another, and he shall be master doctor, with much derision and scoffing at this poor man.
HE hearing this, spake again boldly, and said, Did you send for me to make a laughing-stock of me? You be in office, and ought rather to come to the church, and see such papistry abolished yourself, than thus to trouble me for doing my duty: but I tell you plainly, that you do not come to church as you ought to do, and therefore with more things that I have to charge you withal, I say you do not well. When all this misdemeanour by the justice laid to his charge would not prev [...]il, and also a witness came in of the papist who knew the beads, and testified that they were plain, and cost but a half-penny, he then went into his parlour in a passion, and one master Exburston, a papist, with [...]im; which Exburston turned back, and said, Is it you, Henry Brown, that maketh this stir? You are [...] of them that pulled down crosses in the church, and pull [...]d down the rood-sollor, and all the saints; you were best now to go paint a black devil, and set him up and worship him, for that will serve well for your religion. And thus, under suretyship, he departed till July following, and then he should go to Lancaster prison, and so he came away.
THE time drew on that he should appear, but God stayed the matter, and in July as the aforesaid Thomas Lelond sat in his chair talking with his friends, he fell down suddenly dead, not much moving any joint: and thus was his end; from such God defend us.
WILLIAM WOOD, of Kent.
WILLIAM WOOD, baker, dwelling in the county of Kent, was examined before Dr. Ken [...]ll, chancellor of the diocese of Rochester▪ Dr. Chedsey, the mayor of Rochester, and Mr. Robinson, the scribe, on the 19th day of October, and in the second year of queen Mary, in St. Nicholas church in Rochester.
William Wood, you are presented because you will no [...] come to the church, nor receive the blessed sacrament of the altar. How say you? Have you received, or have you not?
I have not received it, nor dare I receive it, as you minister it.
Thou heretic, what is the cause that thou hast not received the blessed sacrament of the altar? And at this word they all put off their caps, and made low obeisance.
There are three causes that make my conscience afraid that I dare not receive it. The first, Christ did deliver it to his twelve apostles and said, Take, eat and drink ye all of this, &c. and ye eat and drink up all alone. The second cause is; you hold it to be worshipped, contrary to God's commandment, Thou shalt not bow down nor worship. The third cause is; you administer it in a strange tongue, contrary to St. Paul's doctrine, I would rather have five words with understanding, than ten thousand with tongues: by reason whereof the people be ignorant of the death of Christ.
Thou heretic, wilt thou have any plainer words than these, "Take, eat, this is my body?" Wilt thou deny the scriptures?
I will not deny the holy scriptures, God forbid, but with my heart I do faithfully believe them. St. Paul saith, "God calleth those things that are not, as though they were:" and Christ saith, "I am a vine: I am a door." St. Paul saith, "The rock is Christ:" All which are figurative speeches, wherein one thing is spoken, and another thing is understood.
You make a very long talk of this matter: learn, Wood, learn.
Nay, these heretics will not learn: look how this heretic glorieth in himself: thou fool, art thou wiser than the queen and her council, and all the learned men of this realm?
And please you, Mr. Chancellor, I think you would be loth to have such glory, to have your life and goods taken away, and to be thus called upon, as you rail upon me. But the se [...]vant is not greater than his master. And where you do mock me, and say that I am wiser than the [...] and her council, St. Paul saith, "The wisdom [...] wise of this world is foolishness before God, and [...]e that will be wise in this world, shall be accounted but a fool."
Dost [...]ot thou believe that after these words spoken by a priest, Hoc est corpus meum, "this is my body;" there remaineth no more bread and wine, but the very flesh and blood of Christ, as he was born of the virgin Mary, really and substantially, in quantity and quality, as he did hang upon the cross?
I pray you, Mr. Chancellor, give me leave, for my learning, to ask you one question, and I will answer you after.
It is some wise question, I warrant you.
God spake to the prophet Ezekiel, saying, "Thou son of man, take a razor, and shave off the hair of thy head, and take one part and cast it into the air, take the second part and put it into thy coat lap; and take the third part, and cast it into the fire: and this is Jerusalem." I pray you, Mr. Chancellor, was this hair [...]hat the prophet did cast into the fire, or was it Jerusalem?
It did signify Jerusalem.
Even so this word of Christ, "This is my body," is not to be understood, that Christ's carnal, natural and real body is in the same, in quantity and quality as it was born of the virgin Mary, and as he was crucified on the cross, is present [Page 593] or inclosed in the sacrament: but it doth signify Christ's [...]ody, as St. Paul saith, "So oft as ye eat of this bread, and drink of this cup, you shall shew forth the Lord's death till he come." What should the apostle mean by this word, "Till he come," if he were here carnally, naturally, corporally, and really, in the same quantity and quality as he was born of the virgin Mary, and as he did hang on the cross, as you [...] St. Paul saith, "You shall [...] the Lord's death till he come." This doth argue, that he is not here as you would have us to believe.
I will prove that Christ is here present under the form of bread, but not in quantity and quality.
Yes, he is here present in quantity and quality.
He is her [...] present under a form, and not in quantity and quality.
Y [...]s said Kenall.
No, said Chedsey.
I will prove him here in quantity and quality, said Kenall.
I will prove the contrary, said Chedsey.
AND these two doctors were so earnest in this matter, the one to affirm, the other to deny, contending so fiercely one with the other, that they foamed at the mouth, and one was ready to spit in another's face, so that in great fury and rage the two doctors rose up from the judgment seat, and Dr. Kenall departed out of the church in great rage and fury immediately.
Behold, good people, they would have us to believe, that Christ is naturally, really, in quantity and quality, present in the sacrament, and yet they cannot tell themselves, nor agree within themselves how he is there.
AT these words the people made a great shout, and the mayor stood up and commanded the people to be quiet, and to ke [...]p silence. And the God that did deliver St. Paul out of the hands of the high priests, by the contention that was between the pharisees and sadducees, did even so deliver me at that time out of the mouths of the bloody papists, by means of the contention of these two doctors. Blessed be the name of the Lord, who hath promised to lay no more upon his people than he will enable them to bear, and in the midst of temptation can make a way for them (how, and when it pleaseth him) to escape out of all dangers.
MANY other like examples of God's helping hand have been declared upon his elect saints and children, a remarkable instance of which may be seen in Simon Grinaeus, mentioned in the commentary of Melancthon, in his own words as followeth.
The History of SIMON GRINAEUS, collected out of Melancthon's Commentaries upon the tenth Chapter of Daniel.
WHEN I was (saith he) at the assembly holden at Spire, in the year of our Lord 1539, by chance Simon Grinaeus came thither unto me from the university of Heidelberg, where he heard Faber, the bishop of Vienna, in a sermon, defend and maintain many testable errors. When the sermon was done, he followed Faber out of the church, and saluted him reverently, telling him that he had something to say to him: the bishop was willing to talk with him.
THEN Grinaeus said unto him, that he was very sorry that a man of such learning and authority should openly maintain such errors as were both contumelious against God, and also might be refuted by the manifest testimonies of the scriptures. Ireneus writeth, (saith he) that Polycarpus was wont to stop his ears whensoever he heard any erroneous and wicked doctrine. With what mind then (think you) would Polycarpus have heard you argue and reason what it is that the mouse eateth, when he gnaweth the consecrated host? Who would not bewail such ignorance and blindness of the church? With this the bishop brokeoff [Page 594] his talk, and asked his name. This man, dissembling nothing, gently told him that his name was Grinaeus.
THIS bishop, as many well know, was also timorous and fearful in the company of learned men. Wherefore he fearing the learning, eloquence, and fervent zeal of Grinaeus, especially in such a matter as this was, fained as though he had been sent for by the king, and that he had no leisure now to reason upon this matter. He pretended that he was very desirous of acquaintance and longer talk with Grinaeus, intreating him, that, both for his own private cause, and also for the common-wealth, he would come again the next day unto him, and so shewed him his lodging, and appointed him an hour when he should come. Grinaeus, thinking that he had spoken unfeignedly, promised so to do
WHEN he was departed from the bishop, he immediately came to us, and was scarcely sat at the table (for it was supper-time) reciting part of the talk he had with the bishop unto me and others there present, when, sitting with my company, I was suddenly called out of the parlour by a certain ancient fatherly man, who shewing a singular gravity in his countenance, words, and behaviour, spake unto me, and said, that the serjeants would by and by come unto our lodging, being sent by the king's command, to carry Grinaeus to prison, whom the bishop had accused to the king; commanding that Grinaeus should immediately depart out of the town; and exhorted me, that we should in no case delay the time: and so bidding me farewel, departed. But what old man this was, I neither kn [...]w then, nor ever after could understand. I returning again to my company, bade them arise, and told them what the old man had said unto me.
BY and by, we taking Grinaeus in the midst of us, carried him through the street to the River Rhine; and after we had stayed upon the hither bank awhile, until Grinaeus with his companion were carried over in a small boat, returning again to our lodging, we understood that the serjeants had been there, when we were but a little way gone out of the house. Now in what danger Grinaeus would have been, if he had been carried to prison by this cruelty of the bishop, every man easily may conjecture: wherefore we judged that that most cruel intent and purpose of his was disappointed by God's merciful providence. And as I cannot say what old man it was that gave me that warning, even so likewise the serjeants made such quick speed, that, except Grinaeus had been covered and defended by the angels, through the marvellous providence of God, he could never have escaped.
CONCERNING the truth of this matter, there are many good men yet alive who know the same, and also were present when this circumstance happened. Therefore let us give thanks unto God, who hath given us his angels to be our keepers and defenders, whereby with more quiet minds we may fulfil and do the office of our vocation.
WITH such like examples of God's mighty and merciful custody, the church of Christ in all ages abounds, as by manifold experience appears, as well among the Germans, as in other places and ages: but in no place more, nor at any time more plentiful, than in the persecuting time of queen Mary, in this realm of England, as partly hath been already shewn, and will hereunto be added.
The Lady Catherine, Duchess of Suffolk.
STEPHEN GARDINER, bishop of Winchester, surmissing the lady Catherine▪ baroness of Willoughby and Eresby, and duchess dowager of Suffolk, to be one of his ancient enemies, because he knew he had deserved no better of her, devised, in the holy time of the first Lent in queen Mary's reign, a holy practice of revenge, first, by touching her in the person of her husband, Richard Berty, esquire, for whom he sent an attachment (having the great seal at his devotion) to the sheriff of Lincolnshire, with a special letter, commanding most strictly the same sheriff to attach the said Richard immediately, and without bail to bring [Page 595] him up to London to his Lordship. Mr. Berty being clear in conscience, and free from offence toward the queen, could not conjecture any cause of this strange process, unless it were some quarrel for religion, which he thought could not be so sore as the process pretended.
THE sheriff, notwithstanding the commandment, adventured only to take a bond of Mr. Berty, with two sureties, in a thousand pounds for his appearance before the bishop on Good Friday following; at which day Mr. Berty appeared, the bishop then being at his house by St. Mary Overy's. Of whose presenc [...], when the bishop understood by a gentleman of his chamber, he c [...]me out of his gallery into his dining-chamber in a great rage, where he found a crowd of suitors, saying he would not that day hear any, but came forth only to know of Mr. Berty, how he, being a subject, durst so arrogantly set at light two former processes of the queen.
MR. BERTY answered, that notwithstanding my lord's words might seem to the rest somewhat sharp towards him, yet he conceived great comfort of them. For whereas he before thought it extremely hard to be attached, having used no obstinacy or contumacy, now he gathered of those words, that my lord meant not otherwise but to have used some ordinary process: none, however, came to his hands.
YEA, marry, said the bishop, I have sent you two subpoenas to appear immediately, and I am sure you received them, for I committed the trust of them to no worse a man than Mr. Solicitor; and I shall make you an example to all Lincolnshire for your obstinacy.
MR BERTY denying the receipt of any subpoena, humbly prayed his lordship to suspend his displeasure and the punishment till he had good trial thereof, and th [...]n, if it please him, to double the pain for the fault, if any were.
WELL, said the bishop, I have appointed myself this day (according to the holiness of the same) for devotion, and I will not further trouble myself with you; but I injoin you in a thousand pounds not to depart without leave, and to be here again to-morrow at seven of the clock. Mr. Berty came at the time appointed, at which time the bishop had with him Mr. Serjeant Stampford, to whom he moved certain questions of the said Mr. Berty, because Mr. Serjeant was towards the lord Wriothesley, late earl of Southampton▪ and chancellor of England, with whom the said Mr. Berty was brought up. Mr. Serjeant gave a very friendly account of Mr. Berty, of his own knowledge, for the time of their conversation together. Whereupon the bishop caused Mr. Berty to be brought in, and first making a false train (as God would, without fire) before he would descend to the quarrel of religion, he assualted him in this manner.
The queen's p [...]easure is, that you shall make present payment of 4000 pounds, due to her father by duke Charles, late husband to the duchess your wife, whose executor she was.
Pleaseth it your lordship, that debt is installed, and is, according to that instalment, truly answered.
Tush, the queen will not be bound to instalments in the time of Kett's government: for so I esteem the late government.
The instalment was appointed by king Henry the Eighth: besides, the same was, by special commissioners, confirmed in king Edward's time; and the lord treasurer being an executor also to the duke Charles, solely and wholly, took upon him, before the said commissioners, to discharge the same.
If it be true that you say, I will shew you savour. But of another thing, Mr. Berty, I will admonish you, as meaning you well. I hear evil of your religion, yet I can hardly think evil of you, whose mother I know to be as godly a catholic as any within this land; yourself brought up with a master, whose education, if I should disallow, I might be charged as author of his error. Besides, partly I know you myself, and understand of my friends enough to make me your friend: wherefore I will not doubt of you; but I pray you, if I may [Page 596] ask the question of my lady your wife, is she now as ready to set up the mass, as she was lately to pull it down, when she caused, in her progress▪ a dog to be carried in a rochet, and called by my name? or doth she think her lambs now safe enough, who said to me, when I vailed my bonnet to her [...]ut of my chamber window in the Tower▪ That it was merry with the lambs, now the wolf was shut up? Another time, my lord, her husband, having invited me and divers ladies to dinner, desired every lady to chuse him whom she loved best, and so place themselves: my lady your wife, taking me by the hand, for my lord would not have her to take himself, said, That, forasmuch as she could not sit down with my lord, whom she loved best, she had chosen him whom she loved worst.
OF the device of the dog, quoth Mr. Berty, she was neither the author nor the allower. The words, though in that season they sounded bitter to your lordship, yet if it would please you, without offence, to know the cause, I am sure the one [...]ill clear the other. As touching setting up of mass, which she learned, not only by strong persuasions of divers excellent learned men, but by universal consent and order▪ these six years past, inwardly to abhor, if she should outwardly allow, she should both to Christ shew herself a false christian, and to her prince a masquing subject. You know, my lord, one by judgment reformed, is more worth than a thousand transformed temporisers. To force a confession of religion by mouth, contrary to that in the heart, worketh damnation where salvation is pretended.
YEA, marry, quoth the bishop, that deliberation would do well, if she were required to come from an old religion to a new: but now she is to return from a new to an ancient religion, wherein, when she made me her gossip, she was as earnest as any.
FOR that, my lord, (said Mr. Berty) not long since she answered a friend of [...], using your lordship's speech, That [...] not by age▪ but by truth: and therefore she was to be turned by persuasion, and not by commandment.
I pray you, ( [...] the bishop) th [...]k you [...] to [...] her?
YEA verily (said Mr. Berty) with the truth: for she is reasonable enough.
THE bishop, in reply to this, said, It will be a marvellous grief to the prince of Spain, and to all the nobility that shall come with him, when they shall find but two noble personages of the Spanish race within this land, the queen and my lady your wife, and one of them gone from the faith.
MR. Berty answered, that he trusted they should find no fruits of infidelity in her.
THE bishop then persuaded Mr. Berty to labo [...] earnestly for the reformation of her opinion, and offering large friendship, released him of his bond from further appearance.
THE dutchess and her husband, from the daily accounts which they received from their friends, understanding that the bishop meant to call her to an account of her faith, whereby extremity might follow, devised how they might pass the seas by the queen's licence. Mr. Berty had a ready means; for there remained great sums of money due to the old duke of Suffolk (one of whose executors the dutchess was) beyond the seas, the emperor himself being one of those debtors.
MR. Berty communicated this his purposed suit for licence to pass the seas, and the cause, to the bishop, adding, that he took this to be the most proper time to deal with the emperor, by reason of likelihood of marriage between the queen and his son.
I like your device well, said the bishop, but I think it better that you tarry the prince's [...], and I will procure you his letters also to his fath [...]r.
NAY, said Mr. Berty, under your lordship's cor [...]ction, and pardon for so liberal speech, I suppose the [...]me will then [...] less convenient; for when the [...], the emperor hath [...], but till then he will refuse nothing to win [...] with us.
[...] said the [...]shop, sm [...]ng, you guess [...] to the queen, [...].
[Page 597]MR. Berty found so good success, that he obtained the queen's licence, not only to pass the seas, but to pass and repass them as often as he should think proper, till he had finished his business beyond the seas. He accordingly emba [...]ked at Dover, about the beginning of June, in the first year of her reign, leaving the duchess behind, who, by agreement with her husband, followed, taking barge at Lion-key, very early in the morning of the first of January ensuing, not without some danger.
NONE of the persons who accompanied her, except Mr. Robert-Cranwell, an old gentleman, whom Mr. Betty had provided for that purpose, were made priv [...]y to her departure till the instant. She took her daughter with her, an infant of one year old, and the meanest of her servants, for she imagined the best would not adventure that fortune with her. They were in number four men, one a Greek born, who was a rider of horses, another a [...]iner, the third a brewer, the fourth a fool, a kitchen-maid, a gentlewomen, and a laundress.
AS she departed her house called the Barbican, between four and five o'clock in the morning, with [...] company and baggage, one Atkenson, a herald, keeper of her house, hearing a noise, rose and came out with a torch in his hand, as she was going out of the gate; wherewith being amazed, she was forced to leave a mail with necessaries for her young daughter, and a milk-pot with milk, in the same gate-house, commanding all her servants to hasten forward to Lion-key: and taking with her only the two women and her child, as soon as she was clear of her own house, perceiving the herald to [...]ol [...]ow, she stept into the charter-house just by. The herald coming out of the duches [...]'s house, and seeing nobody stirring, nor assured (though by the mail suspecting) that she was departed, returned in; and while he was searching the parcels left in the mail, the dutchess issued into the streets, and proceeded on her [...]ourney, she knowing the place only by name where she should take her boat, but not the way thither, nor any that was with her. Likewise her servants having divided themselves, none but one knew the way to the said Lion key.
SO she appeared like a mean merchant's wife, and the rest like mean servants, walking in the streets unknown, she took the way that leads to Finsbury field, and the others walked the city streets as they lay open before them, till by chance, more than discretion, they met all suddenly together a little within Moregate, from whence they passed directly to Lion-key, and there took barge in a morning so misty, that the steer's man was loth to launch out, but that they urged him. So soon as the day permitted, the council was informed of her departure, and some of them came forthwith to her house to inquire of the manner thereof, and took an inventory of her goods, besides further order devised for search and watch to apprehend and stay her.
THE fame of her departure reached Leigh, a town at the Land's End, before her approaching thither. By Leigh dwelt one Gosling, a merchant of London, an old acquaintance of Cranwell's, whither the said Cranwell brought the dutchess, naming her Mrs. White, the daughter of Mr. Gosling, for such a daughter he had who never was in that country. She there reposed herself, and made new garments for her daughter, having lost her own in the mail at Barbican.
WHEN the time came that she should take ship, being constrained that night to lie at an inn in Leigh, (where she was again almost betrayed) yet notwithstanding by God's good working she escaped that hazard; at length, as the tide and wind served, they went on board, and carried twice into the seas, almost into the coast of Zealand, by contrary wind were driven to the place from whence they came; and at the last recoil, certain persons came to the shore, suspecting she was within that ship; yet having examined one of her company that was on shore for f [...]esh provision, and finding by the simpl [...]city of his tale only the appearance of a mean merchant's wise to be on ship-board, he ceased to search any further.
TO be short, so soon as the dutchess had landed in Brabant, she and her women were apparelled like the women of the Netherlands with hooks; and so she and her husband took their journey towards Cleveland, and being arrived at a town called Santon, took a house there, until they might [Page 598] further devise of some sure place where to settle themselves.
ABOUT five miles from Santon, is a free town called [...], under the said Duke of Cleve's dominion, and one of the Hans-towns, privileged with the company of the Steel-yard in London, whither div [...]s Walloons were [...] for religion, and had for [...] minister one Francis Perusell, then called Francis de Rivers, who hast received some courtesy in England at the duchess's hands. Mr. Berty being yet at Santon, practised wi [...]h him to obtain a p [...]otection from the magistrates for his, and his wife's abode at Wesell; which was the sooner procured, because the state of the duchess was not discovered, but only to the chief magistrate, earnestly bent to shew them pleasure, while this protection was in seeking.
IN the mean while at the town of Santon was a muttering, that that the duchess and her husband were greater personages than they gave themselves forth: and the magistrates not very well inclined to religion, the bishop of Arras also being dean of the great minster, orders were taken that the duchess and her husband should he examined of th [...]ir condition and religion upon a sudd [...]n. Which being biscovered by a gentleman of that country to Mr. Berty, he without delay taking no more than the duchess, her daughter, and two others with them, as though he meant no more than to t [...]ke the air, about three o'clock in the afternoon in February on foot, without hiring either horse or waggon, for fear of disclosing his purpose, meant privily that night to get to Wesell, leaving the rest of his family at Santon.
AFTER they had travelled one English mile from the towm, th [...]re fell a mighty rain of continuance, whereby a long frost and ice before congealed, was thawed, which doubled more the weariness of those new lacquies. But being now on the way, and overtaken with the night, they sent their two servants (which only went with them) to a vill [...]ge as they passed, to hire a carr for their [...]ase, but none could be hired. In the mean time Mr. Berty was forced to carry the child, and the duchess h [...]s cloak and [...]apie [...]. At last, between [...] ▪ and seven o'clock of a dark night, they came to Wesell, and repairing to the inns for lodging, and some repose after such a painful journey, found hard entertainment; for going from inn to inn, offering [...] of money for a small lodging, they were refused by all the inn holders, suspecting Mr. Berty to be a launce-knight, and the duchess to be his woman. The child for cold and sustenance cried pitifully, the mother wept as fast, and the heavens rained as fast as the clouds could pour.
MR. Berty, destitute of all other succour of hospitality, res [...]lved to bring the duchess to the porch of the great church in the town, and so to buy coals, victuals, and straw for their miserabl [...] repose there that night, or at least till by God's help he might provide her b [...]tter lodging. Mr. Berty at that time understood not much Du [...]ch, and by reason of bad weather and [...] season of the night, he could not happen upon any that could speak English, French, Italian, or Latin, till at last going tow [...]rds the church-porch, he heard two striplings talking Latin, to whom he approached, and offered them two stivers to bring him to some Walloon's house.
BY these boys, and God's good conduct, he chanced at the first upon the house where Mr. Perusell supped that night, who had procured them the protection of the magistrates of that town. At the first knock, the good man of the house himself came to the door, and opening it▪ asked Mr. Berty what he was. Mr. Berty said, an Englishman, that sought for one Mr. Perusell's house. The Walloon desired Mr. Berty to stay a while, who went back, and told Mr. Perusell, that the same English Gentleman, of whom they talked at supper-time, had sen [...] by likelihood his servant to speak with him. Whereupon Mr. Perusell came to the door, and beholding Mr. Berty, the duchess, and their child, their f [...]ces, app [...]rel [...] and bodies so far from their old form, deformed with dirt, weather, and heaviness, could not speak to them, nor they to him for tears. At [...] recovering themselves, they s [...]luted on [...] another, and so together entered the house, [...] Mr. Berty changing his apparel with the [...] the [Page 599] duchess with the good wife, and their child with the child of the house.
WITHIN a few days after, by Mr. Perusell's means, they hired a very fair house in the town, and did not delay to shew themselves what they were, in such good sort as their present condition permitted. It was by this time through the whole town, what discourtesy the innholders had shewed unto them at their entry, insomuch that on the Sunday following a preacher in the pulpit openly in sharp terms rebuked that great incivility towards strangers, by allegation of sundry places out of the holy scriptures, discoursing how not only princes somtimes are received in the image of private persons, but angels in the shape of men, and that God of his justice would make them strangers one day in another land, to have more sense of the afflicted heart of a stranger.
THE time thus passing forth, as they thought themselves thus happily settled, suddenly a watchword came from sir John Mason, then queen Mary's ambassador in the Netherlands, that my lord Paget had feigned an errand to the baths that way: and whereas the duke of Brunswick was shortly with ten ensigns to pass by Wesell for the service of the house of Austria against the French king, the said duchess and her husband should be with the same company intercepted.
WHEREFORE to prevent the cruelty of these enemies, Mr. Berty with his wife and child departed to a place called Wincheim, under the Palsgrave's dominion; where under his protection they continued till their necessaries began to fail them, and they, almost fainting under so heavy a burden, began to fail of hope.
AT which time, in the midst of their dispair, there came suddenly to them, letters from the Palatine of Vilva, that the king of Poland was informed of their ha [...]d estate by a baron, named Joannes Alasco, that was sometime in England, offering them great courtesy. This provision unlooked for, greatly revived their heavy spi [...]ts. Yet considering they should remove from many of their countrymen and acquaintance, to a place so far distant, a country not frequented by the English, and perhaps upon their arrival not finding what they looked for, the end of their journey should be worse than the begining, they advised thereupon with one Mr. Carloe, late bishop of Chichester, that if he would vouchsafe to take some pains therein, they would make him a fellow of that journey. So finding him agreeable they sent with him letters of great thanks to the king and Palatine, and also a few principal jewels (which only they had left of many), to solicit for them, that the king would vouchsafe under his seal, to assure them of the thing which he so honorably by letters had offered.
THAT favour, by the forwardness of the Palatine, was as soon granted as uttered. Upon which assurance the said duchess and her husband, with their family, began their journey in April, 1557, from the castle of Wineheim, where they before lay, towards Frankfort. In which their journey, it were too long here to discribe what dangers fell by the way, upon them and their whole company, by reason of the Landgrave's captain, who, under a quarrel, pretended for a spaniel of Mr. Berty's, set upon them in the highway with his horsemen, thrusting their boar-spears through the waggon where the women and children were, Master Berty having but four horsemen along with him. In which scuffle it happened that the captain's horse was slain under him.
WHEREUPON a rumour was spread immediately through the towns and villages, about, that the Landgrave's captain should be slain by certain Walloons, which exasperated the countrymen the more fiercely against Mr. Berty, as afterward it proved. For as he was motioned by his wife to save himself by the swiftness of his horse, and to recover some town thereby for his rescue, he so doing, was in worse case than before: for the townsmen and the captain's brother; supposing no less but that the captain had been slain, pressed so eagerly upon him, that he had been there taken and murdered among them, had not he (as God would have it) espied a ladder leaning to a window, by which he got into the house, and went up into the garret, where, with his dagger and rapier defended himself for a time: but at length the burgh-master coming thither with another magistrate, who could [Page 600] speak Latin, he was advised to submit himself to the order of the law. Mr. Berty knowing himself to be clear, and the captain to be alive, was the more bold to submit himself to the judgment of the law, upon condition that the magistrate would receive him under safe conduct, and defend him from the rage of the multitude. Which being promised, he willingly delivered up the weapons, and peaceably surrendered himself into the hands of the magistrates, and so was committed to safe custody till the truth of his cause could be tried.
THEN Mr. Berty wrote a letter to the Land grave, and another to the earl of Erbagh, dwelling about eight miles off, who came early in the morning to the town, where the duchess was brought with her waggon, Mr. Berty also being in the same town under custody.
THE earl, who had some intelligence before of the duchess, after he was come and had shewed her such courtesy as he thought belonged to her estate and dignity, the townsmen perceiving the earl behave himself so humble to her, began to consider more of the matter, and further understanding the captain to be alive, both they and the authors of this stir, drew in their horns, shrunk away, and made all the friends they could to Mr. Berty and his lady, beseeching them not to report their doings after the worst manner.
AND thus Mr. Berty and his wife, escaping that danger, proceeded in their journey toward Poland, where in conclusion they were quietly entertained by the king, and placed honourably in the earldom of the said king of the Poles, in Sanogelia, called Crozan, where Mr. Berty with the duchsss, having the king's absolute power of government over the said earldom, continued in honour, peace and plenty, till the death of queen Mary.
THOMAS HORTON, Minister.
THOMAS HORTON used oftentimes to travel between Germany and England, for the benefit and s [...]tenance of the poor English exiles there: so he journeying on a time between Maestricht and Cologn, chanced t [...] be taken by certain rovers, and so being led by them away, was in no little danger: and yet this danger of his was not so great, but the present help of the Lord was greater to aid and deliver him out of the same.
THOMAS SPRAT, of Kent, Tanner.
HE had been some time a servant to one justice Brent, a heavy persecutor, and therefore forsaking his master for religion's sake, he went to Calais, (accompanied by one William Porrege, who was afterwards a minister) from whence they used often for their necessary affairs to have recourse to England.
IN the fourth year of queen Mary they landed at Dover, and taking their journey together toward Sandwich, suddenly upon the way, three miles from Dover, they happened to meet justice Brent, the two Blachendens, and other gentlemen with their servants, to the number of ten or twelve horses. One of the Blachendens happened to know William Porrege, the other had only heard of his name.
SPRAT first espying his master Brent, was much surprised, saying to his companion, yonder is Mr. Brent, God have mercy upon us. Well, quoth Porrege, seeing now there is no remedy, let us go on our way. And so thinking to pass by them, they kept themselves at a distance, Sprat also shadowing his face with his cloak.
ONE of Mr. Brent's servants knowing Sprat, called out to his master, saying, yonder is Thomas Sprat; at which words they all stopt their horses, and called for Thomas Sprat to come to them. They call you, said William Porrege; now there is no remedy, but we are taken: and so would have persuaded him to go to them being called, for that there was no escaping from so many horsemen in those plains and downs, where was no wood near them by a mile, and but one hedge about a [...]one's throw off. All this notwithstanding, S [...]rat st [...]d, and would not go. Then they called again, s [...]tting still on horseback. Ah, sirrah, quoth the justice, why come you not hither? And still his companion moved him to go, seeing there was no hope of getting away. Nay, said Sprat, I will not go to them; and therewith took to his legs, running to the hedge that was next him. They seeing that, [...] [Page 601] their horses, thinking it impossible for him to escape their hands. When he got to the hedge, scrambling through the bushes, they were at his heels, and struck at him with their swords, one of the Blachendens (both of them haters of God's word) cruelly crying, Cut one of his legs off.
HE had no sooner got through the hedge, but one of justice Brent's servant's (a fellow that had some time been his fellow-servant) followed him on foot: the rest rode up the other side of the hedge to meet him at the end.
WHILE they were following Sprat, only one remained with William Porrege (which was one of the Blachendens, but not he that knew him), who began to question him, not asking what was his name (as God would have it) for then he had been known and taken: but from whence he came, and how he got into Sprat's company, and whither he was going; he answered, that he came from Calais, and Sprat came over with him in the passage-boat, and they were both going to Sandwich: and so without any more questions he let him depart. But to return.
AS Sprat was pursued on the one side of the hedge by his old fellow-servant in his boots, and on the other side by horsemen, his fellow servant cried out, You had as good tarry: for we will have you, we will have you: yet notwithstanding he still kept his course till he came to a steep down-hill at the end of the hedge, down which he ran from them, for the horsemen could not follow him without fetching a great compass about. After he had ran almost a mile he got to a wood, but by that time they were just behind him: but night coming on, and it begining to rain, they pursued him no further. And thus by the Providence of God they both got clear.
NOT long after this, one of the two cruel Blachendens was cruelly murdered by his own servant.
JOHN CORNET.
THIS young man was apprentice to a musician at Colchester, and being sent by his master [...] a wedding (in the second year of queen Mary), in a town hard by, called Rough-hedge, was requested by a company there of good men (the constables being present), to sing some songs of the scripture: he happened to sing a song, called, News out of London, which tended against the mass, and against the queen's misproceedings.
WHEREUPON the next day he was accused by the parson of Rough-hedge, called Yacksley, and so committed first to the constable, where his master gave him over, and his mother forsook and cursed him. From thence he was sent to justice Cannall, and then to the earl of Oxford, where he was first put in irons and chains, and after that so manacled, that the blood spirted out of his fingers ends, because he would not confess the names of those who allured him to sing. After that, he was again sent to Rough-hedge, and there whipped till the blood followed, and banished the town forever.
THOMAS BRYCE.
HE being in the house of John Seal, in the parish of Horting, the bailiff and other neighbours were sent by Sir John Baker, to search for, and apprehend him, and though they perfectly knew his stature and the colour of his garments, yet then they had no power to know him, though he stood before their faces. So miraculously did the Almighty dazzle their eyes, that they asked for him and looked on him, yet notwithstanding he quietly took his bag of books, and departed out of the house without any hand laid upon him.
ALSO another time, about the second year of queen Mary, the said Thomas Bryce, with John Bryce, his elder brother, coming then from Wesell, meeting together at their father's house, as they travelled towards London, to give warning to one Springfield there, which else was like to be taken unawares by his enemies waiting for him upon Gad's hill, fell into company with a promoter, who d [...]gged and followed them again to Gravesend, into the town, and laid the house for them where they were, all the ways as they should go to the water's side, so that it had not been possible for them to have avoided the present danger of those persecutors, had not God's provident care otherwise disposed [Page 602] for his servants, through the ostler of the inn, who conveyed them under cover by a secret passage; whereby they took barge a mile out of town, and so in the end both the lives of them, and also Springfield, were preserved, through God's gracious protection.
GERTRUDE CROKHAY.
GERTRUDE CROKHAY, dwelling in St. Catherine's, by the Tower of London, and being then in her husband's house, it happened in the year 1556, that the Pope's childish Saint Nicholas went about the parish. Which she understanding, shut her door against him, not suffering him to enter into her house.
THEN doctor Mallet hearing thereof, and being then master of the said St. Catherine's, the next day came to her with twenty at his tail, thinking belike to affright her, and asked why she would not the night before let in St. Nicholas, and receive his blessing, &c. To whom she answered thus: Sir, I know not that St. Nicholas came hither. Yes, quoth Mallet, here was one that represented St. Nicholas.
INDEED sir, (said she) here was one that was my neighbour's child, but not St. Nicholas: for St. Nicholas is in heaven. I was afraid of them that came with him, to have had my purse cut by them: for I have heard of men robbed by St. Nicholas's clerks, &c. So Mallet perceiving that nothing could be gotten at her hands, went his way as he came, and she for that time escaped.
THEN in the year 1557, a little before Whitsuntide, it happened that the said Gertrude answered for a child that was baptized of one Thomas Saunders, which child was christened secretly in a house after the order of the service-book in king Edward's time; and that being soon known to her enemies, she was sought for; who understanding nothing thereof, went beyond the sea into Guelderland, to see certain lands that should come to her children in the right of her first husband, who was a stranger born: and there about a quarter of a year, at length coming home by A [...]twerp, she chanced to meet with one John Johnson, a Dutchman, alias John de Villa, of Antwerp, shipper, who seeing her there, went out of malice to the Margrave, and accused her to be an anabaptist, whereby she was taken and carried to prison. The cause why he did thus, was because he claimed of Mr, Crokhay, her husband, a piece of money which was not his due, for a ship that Mr. Crokhay bought of him, and because he could not get it, he wrought this displeasure. Well, she being in prison, lay there a fortnight. In which time she saw some that were prisoners there, who privately were drowned in Rhenish wine-fats, and after secretly put in sacks and cast into the river. Now she, good woman, expecting to be so served, took thereby such fear, that it brought the beginn [...]g of her sickness, of which at length she died.
THEN at last was she called before the Margrave, and charged with anabaptistry: which she there utterly denied, and detested the error, declaring before him in Dutch her faith boldly, without any fear. So the Margrave hearing the same, in the end being well pleased with the profession, at the suit of some of her friends delivered her out of prison, but took away her book, and so she came over into England again.
THOMAS ROSE, a PREACHER.
HE was a Devonshire man, born in Ermouth, and being made priest in that country, was brought out of it by one Mr. Fabian, to Polsted, in Suffolk, where the said Mr. Fabian was parson, and in a short time after by his means was placed in the town of Hadley, where he first coming to some knowledge of the gospel, began there to treat upon the creed, and thereupon took occasion to inveigh against purgatory, praying to saints and images, about the time that Mr, Latimer began to preach at Cambridge, in the time of Bilney and Arthur; insomuch that many embracing the truth of Christ's gospel, against the said purgatory and other points, and the number of them daily encreasing, the adversaries began to stir against him, insomuch that Mr. B [...]te (who afterwards became a godly zealous man), was then brought to preach against the said Thomas Rose; notwithstanding this, he continued still very vehemently against images, and the Lord so blessed his labours, that many began to contrive how they might deface and destroy them, and especially [Page 603] four men, whose names were, Ring, Debnam, Marsh and Gard, who usually resorted to his sermons, by which they were so inflamed, that soon after they ventured to destroy the rood of the court of Dover, which cost three of them their lives, and were hanged in chains, because they would not accuse Thomas Rose as their counsellor. The said Rose had the coat of the rood brought to him afterwards who burnt it. The rood was said to have done many and great miracles, yet being in the fire, could not help himself, but burned like a block, as indeed it was.
AT this time there were two sore enemies in Hadley, Walter Clerk and John Clerk, two brothers: these complained to the council, that an hundred men were not able to fetch Thomas Rose out of Hadley, who then was upon examination of his doctrine committed to the commissaries keeping. And indeed such was the zeal of a number towards the truth then in that town, that they were much offended that their minister was so taken from them, and had therefore by force brought him from the commissary, if certain wise men had not otherwise persuaded them, who at length also with more quiet placed him in his office again: which so enraged the two brothers, Walter Clerk and John Clerk, that thay complained to the council▪ as aforesaid; whereupon a serjeant at arms was s [...]nt from the council to arrest Thomas Rose and bring him before them. Then his adversaries l [...]d to his charge, that he was privy to the burning of the r [...]d at Dover court, and upon this he was committed to prison in the bishop of Lincoln's h [...]use, in Holborn, where he remained from Shrovetide to Whitsuntide, and great part of the time in the sto [...]ks.
THE stocks was very high and large, so that day and night he lay with his back on the ground, upon a little straw, with his heels so high, that the blood was fallen from his se [...]t which were so benumbed that he could hardly f [...]el the [...] for a long time. By this treatment he fell sick, and the keeper often hearing him cry and g [...]oan through extremity of pain, was moved with pity, and went to the bishop and told him, that he would not keep him to die under his hand, and upon this h [...] had some more [...]ase and liberty. Now at this time his mother was come from Hadley to see him, but she was not suffered to speak with him (such was their cruelty) but the bishop flattered her▪ and gave her a pair of pardon-heads▪ and bade her go home and pray, for she might not see him; which thing pierc [...]d the hearts both of the mother and the son. At this time also certain men of Hadley, v [...]ry desirous to see him, endeavoured to speak with him, but might not be suffered, [...]till at length they gave the keeper four shillings, and yet then might not speak to him, or see him, otherwise than through a grate. And thus continued he till Mid-summer in prison. Then he was removed to Lambeth, in the first year of Dr. Cranmer's consecration, who used him much more courteously than ever the bishop of Lincoln did, and at length wrought his deliverance, and set him at liberty: but yet so, that he was bound not to come within twenty miles of Hadley. After this he came to London, and there preached the gospel half a year, till Hadley men hearing thereof, laboured to have him to Hadley again, and indeed by means of sir John Rainford, knight, obtained at the archbishop's house to have him thither: however, by means one was placed in the cure at Hadley, he could not enjoy his office again there, but went to Stratford three miles off▪ and there continued in preaching the word three years, till at length the adversaries procured an inhibition from the bishop of Norwich, to put him to silence. But a great number laboured to have him continue in preaching, and subscribed a supplication to the archbishop, with one hundred and twenty hands, who under their seals also testified of his honest demeanour, so that the adversaries this way not prevailing, they indicted him at Bury, in Suffolk, so that he was constrained to flee to London, and to use the aid of the lord Audly, then lord chancellor, who removed the matter from them, and called it before him, and after examination of the matter, set him free, and sent him by a token to the lord Cromwell, then lord priv [...] seal, for a licence from the king to preach: which being obtained by the lord Cromwell's means (who hereupon also had admitted the said Thomas Rose his chaplain), forthwith he was sent into Lincolnshire and to York. In the mean time such complaint was made to the duke of Norfolk, for that he preached against auricular confession, transubstantiation, and such other [Page 604] points contained in the six articles (which then to have done, by law was death), that the duke in his own person not only sought him at Norwich, but also beset all the ports for him, from Yarmouth to London; and being lieutenant, commanded that whosoever could take the said Thomas Rose, should hang him on the next tree. However, the said Thomas Rose at his coming home, having warning thereof by certain godly persons, was conveyed away, and passed over to Flanders, and so to Zurich in Switzerland, where a time he remained with Mr. Bullinger, and afterwards went to Basil, and there hosted with master Grinaeus, till letters came that Master doctor Barns should be bishop of Norwich, and things should be reformed and restored. But when he came into England again, it was not so, and therefore forthwith fled again beyond the seas, being so beset, as if the mighty providence of God had not sent him in readiness to receive him the self same man, boat, and boy, that before carried him over, it had been impossible for him to have escaped. But such was the goodness of God towards him, that he safely was conveyed, and lived at Barrow the space of three years, till at length purposing to come over into England, about business that he had, he, his wife, and their child, being but a year and three quarters old, upon the sea, the ship being in great danger, wherein they sailed (for the mast being cut away in that peril, they were carried whithersoever the waves tossed them), they with divers others expected nothing but death. However, at length they were taken prisoners, and carried into Dieppe in France, having all their stuff taken from them, and forty pounds in money. There they remained prisoners from Michaelmas till Allhallow-tide, in great heaviness, not knowing what would become of them, but depending only upon God's providence. It pleased God at the same time, that one Mr. Young, of the town of Rye, (who had heard him preach before), came thither for the redeeming of certain Englishmen there taken prisoners. This Mr. Young moved to see them in this case, much pitied them, and comforted them, and told them he would pay their ransom, and so he did, had them away, and brought them to Rye, and from thence by stealth they came to London. At length the honourable earl of Sussex, hearing of the said Thomas Rose, sent for him, his wife, and his child, and had them to his house at Attleborough, where they continued, till at length it was blazoned abroad, that the earl was a maintainer of such a man to read in his house, as had preached against the catholic faith (as they term it)▪ the earl being a [...] the parliament and hearing thereof, wrote a letter to warn him to make shift for himself, and to escape. So that from thence he passed to London, making hard shift for a year there and somewhat more, till the death of King Henry. After the king's death he and others, who in the king's general pardon were excepted (and therefore dead men if they had been taken whilst king Henry lived), by certain of the council were set at liberty, and at length after king Edward was crowned, were licensed to preach again by the king, who gave unto the said Thomas Rose the benefice of West-Ham, by London. But at the death of that virtuous and noble prince, he was deprived of all, and so should also have been of his life, had not God appointed him friends, who received him in London secretly, as their teacher in the congregation, among whom for the poor prisoners at their assemblies forty one in a night oftentimes were gathered. And thus he continued amongst them, and with the lady Vane almost a year in the reign of queen Mary. But although he oftentimes escaped secretly whilst he read to the godly in sundry places of London, yet at length through a Judas that betrayed them, he with 35 more were taken in Bow▪church yard, at a [...]heerman's house on New-year's day at night. The rest being committed to prison, the said Thomas Rose was had to Stephen Gardiner, the bishop of Winchester, who would not speak with him that night, but committed him to the Clink, till the Tuesday after.
The First Examination of THOMAS ROSE, at St. MARY OVERY'S, before the Bishop of Winchester.
I Wonder, my lord, that I should be thus troubled for that which by the word of God hath been established, and by the laws of this realm hath been allowed, and by your own writing so notably in your books De vera obedientia, confirmed.
Ah sirrah, hast thou gotten that?
Yea, my lord, I thank God, and do confess myself much thereby confirmed. For as touching the doctrine of supremacy, against the bishop of Rome's authority, no man hath said further. And as I remember, you confess it, that when this truth was revealed unto you, you thought the scales to fall from your eyes.
Thou liest like a varlet, there is no such thing in my book: but I shall handle thee, and such as thou art, well enough. I have long looked for thee, and at length have caught thee. I will know who are thy maintainers, or else I will make thee a foot longer.
My lord, you shall do as much as pleaseth God, and no more, yet the law is in your hand; but I have God for my maintainer, and none other. At these words one of his servants stepped forth, and said, My lord, I heard this man preach by Norwich, in sir John Robster's house, and in his prayer he desired God to turn queen Mary's heart, or else to take her out of the world: and this was in king Edward's time.
My lord, I made no such prayer, but next after the king, I mentioned her in this manner, saying, Ye shall pray for my lady Mary's grace, that God will vouchsafe to endue her with his Spirit, that she graciously may perceive the mysteries contained within his holy laws, and so render unto him her heart purified with true faith, and true and loyal obedience to her sovereign lord and king, to the good example of the inferior subjects. And this, my lord, is already answered in mine own hand-writing to the council.
UNTO this he said little, but turning his face to some that were by him, This is he said the bishop, that my lord of Norwich told me had gotten his maid with child.
This is no heresy, my lord▪ although it be a lie. Indeed certain wicked persons raised this report of me▪ for the hatred they bare to the doctrine which I preached: but for purgation of myself herein I had no less than six of the council's hands, that there might be due and diligent examination of this matter in the country, by men of worship appointed for that purpose, who can all testify, I thank God, that I am most clear from such wickedness, and indeed they have cleared me from it; and therefore I doubt not but all good men will see the mischievous device of mine adversaries, who, when other means failed, by such sinister means, went about to draw me into discredit and hatred: but God, who is the helper of the innocent, and searcher of men's hearts, hath and doth defend me, and hath laid open things that were hid, to their shame. One of the chief reporters of this, that I should so abuse myself, was one Mr. Clark, servant and in some estimation with the old lord treasurer of England, reputed and taken for a conjurer, who afterwards hanged himself in the Tower. Then the bishop commanded that I should be carried to the Tower, and kept safely; where I lay till the week before Whitsuntide. After which time I was twice called when the bishop came to the Tower about other prisoners. Notwithstanding, the bishop had no great talk with me, but spake friendly. One, sir Richard Southwell, knight, however, still accused me for my prayer, and said I did put a difference betwixt lady Mary and lady Elizabeth, for that I prayed in king Edward's faith, and prayed that he would confirm lady Elizabeth in that which was well begun upon her. Unto this the bishop said little. But in the week before Pentecost, I was conveyed from the Tower to Norwich, there to be examined by the bishop and his clergy, as concerning my faith, the manner whereof here followeth.
The second Examination of THOMAS ROSE, before Dr. HOPKINS, Bishop of Norwich, in the presence of Sir W. WOODHOUSE. Mr. STEWARD the Chancellor, Dr. BARRET, with divers others, Anno 1553.
AFTER I was presented by my keeper, the bishop immediately asked me what I was. I told him I had been a minister.
What is this to the pu [...]pose? Were you a friar or a priest?
Friar was I never, but a priest have I been and beneficed by the king's majesty.
Where were you made priest?
In Exeter, in the county where I was born. Then the bishop required of me my letters [Page 606] of orders. I told him I kn [...] [...] where they were, for they were things of me not greatly regarded.
W [...]ll, [...] yourself to the order of the [...] England?
My [...], I trust I am not out of the order of [...] I know myself [...].
What? ye [...], you have h [...]e preach [...]d most damnable and dev [...]lish doctrine.
Not so, my lord. The doctrine by me [...] true, sincere, and holy But [...] that i [...] now [...] forth in most wicked and damnable, yea, and that both against God [...] ▪ But as for the doctrine by m [...] preached, it [...] grounded upon the word of God s [...]t out also by the authority of two most mighty kings, with the consent of all the nobility and clergy o [...] the same: so that I preached noth [...]ng but their lawful proceedings, having [...]heir lawful authority under their broad seal for confirmation of the same, for which my doing you cannot justly charge me. And since the law ceased, I have kept silence; so that the council which sent me unto you, have not charged me [...]erewith. Wherefore you do me ope [...] wrong to burden me with that wherein I am free.
What, sir? you are very captious; answereth thou my lord after such a sort?
Sir, I answer for myself, and according to the truth; wherewith ye ought not to be offended, if ye be of God
Thou art an evil man. Wast thou not a [...]jured before now?
No you untruly report me, and are in no wise able to pr [...]ve that which you have spoken: so that your w [...]ds appear to proceed altogether of malice, which I have not deserved at your hands. But [...]n this I will perceive you are made [...] to utter other men's malice conceive [...] o [...] old.
What sayest thou to the real presence in the sacrament?
I know right well you are made an instrument to [...] innocent blood: well, you may have it, if God permit, it is present at hand, for I am not come hither to lye▪ but to die (if God see it good) in defence of that which I have said. Wherefore you may begin when you shall think good, for I have said nothing but the truth, and t [...]at which in those days, was by all men allowed for truth, and [...] which you at that time du [...]st no [...] once whisper, although you now brag ov [...]r so much.
Well, father Rose, whatsoever hath been done in times past, shall no [...] now be called in question, so that you now submit yourself: for not only you, but all the whole realm, hath been out of the right way, both high and low, spiritual and tempo [...]a [...]; but all notwithstanding have submitted themselves and acknowledged their faith. Wherefore if you will be accounted for an Englishman, you must likewise submit yourself.
My lord▪ I am an Englishman born, and do must humbly requi [...]e of the christian congregation of England, to be counted as a particular member of the same, and with all due reverence submit myself as in the form and manner following: That whatsoever law or laws shall be set forth in the same for the esta [...]lishment of Christ's true religion▪ and that, according to the faith and doctrine of the holy patriarc [...]s and prophets, Jesus Christ and his holy apostles, with the faithful fathers of Christ's primitive church, I do not only hold it, and believe [...]t, but also most reverently obey it. At which my assertion▪ the bishop seemed to be greatly rejoiced, and said, Well, then we shall soon be at a point: but you shall take this for no day of examination, but rather of communication▪ so that you shall now depart, and consi [...]er with yourself untill we call for you again: and so ended our first meeting.
The Third Examination of THOMAS ROSE.
ON Friday following, I was called again into Christ's church within their lady's chapel, as they [...] a great part of the whole city of [...], and after I was presented by my keeper▪ the bishop beg [...]n with a great protestation, and after many w [...]ds, demanded of [Page 607] me, whether, according to my former promise, I would submit myself or no [...] I answered as before I had done, that according to my former protestation, I would most gladly obey. Then said the chancellor, (to utter his gentleness) I think you do but feign.
The fault then, said I, shall be in yourself, and not in me: for if you burden me with nothing but scriptures, and the fathers of Christ's primitive church, then as I said before, so I say again, I shall most gladly obey.
Well then, seeing you challenge to be member of the church of England, your mother here, for a trial of obedience, provoketh you, as mothers are wont to allure you, to receive this little gift at her hand.
Forsooth, said I, if she offer it me, as received of God my father, I shall gladly receive it, as from the hand of my very true and spiritual mother.
What say you to ear-confession? Is it not a law ecclesiastical and necessary for the church of England?
Some ways it might be permitted, and some ways not, and that because it had not it's original of God and his blessed word; and yet I deny not, but that a man, being troubled in his conscience, and resorting to a discreet, sober, and christian learned man, for the quieting of his mind, might well be permitted: but to bind a man, under pain of damnation, once every year, to number his sins into the ears of a filthy, [...] priest, is not of God, neither can be proved by his word.
Ah, s [...]rrah, you will admit nothing but scripture, I see well.
No truly, my lord, I admit nothing but scripture for the [...]ule of the soul: for why? faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God; and where the word of God is not, there ought no belief to be given: for whatsoever is not of faith is sin. And here they left off speaking any more of that matter.
Mr. Chancellor then began to wh [...]t his [...]eeth [...]t me, saying▪ Yea, but you have preached, that the real, natural, and substantial presence of Christ is not in the sacrament. What say you to that?
Verily, I say that you are a bloody man, and s [...]k to quench your thirst in the blood of an innocent, and therefore, to satisfy you in that behalf, I say verily unto you, that so I have here preached: although, contrary to law you challenge me with the same, yet will I in no wise deny it, though justly I might do it, but stand thereunto, even to seal it with my blood, desiring all that are here present to testify the same, and believe it as the only truth,
I charge you all to believe it not.
Yea, but my lord, if you will needs have credence given you, you must bring God's word to maintain your sayings.
Why doth not Christ say. This is my body? And can there be any plainer words spoken?
It is true, my lord, the words are as plain as can be; and even so are these, where it is said, I am a door, a vine, and Christ called a stone, a lion and yet is he naturally none of these: for they are all figurative speeches, as both the scriptures and fathers do sufficiently prove.
AT which saying, the bishop would have had me stay, saying I [...] have another day wherein I might take better advice.
Not so, my lord, for I am at a full point with myself in that matter, and am right woll able to prove both your transubstantiation, with the real presence, to be against the scriptures and the ancient father [...] of the primitive church: for Justin, who is one of the most ancient w [...]ters that ever wrote upon the sacrament, writeth in his second apology, that the bread, water, and wine, in the sacrament, are not to be taken as other meats and drinks, but are meats purposedly obtained to give thanks unto God, and therefore are called Eucharistia, and also have the names of the body and blood of Christ; and that it is not lawful for any man to eat or drink of them, but such as profess the religion of Christ, and live also accord [...]ng to their profession: and yet, saith he, the same bread and drink is changed into our flesh and blood, and nourisheth our bodies. [Page 608] By which saying, it is evident, that Justin meant, that the bread and wine remain still, or else they could not have turned into our flesh and blood, and nourish our bodies.
AT which my saving they were greatly troubled, but inforced themselves to have denied the doctor, and would suffer me to speak no more, but straightway was I carried away unto my lodging: and so ended the second day of mine appearance, which was the Friday in Whitsun week, and then was I appointed to appear again on the Monday following. However, upon what occasion I know not, it was deferred unto the Wednesday, which was Corpus Christi eve.
IN the mean time, the bishop sent two of his chaplains to me, with whom I had communication about the real presence. After long reasoning concerning this point, at length I drove them to this issue▪ whether they did confess that Christ in the self same body which was conceived of the virgin Mary, and wherein he suffered and rose again, do in the self-same body naturally, substantially▪ and really sit at the right hand of God the Father, without return from thence, untill the day of the general judgment, or not? Whereunto they answered, Yes, truly, we confess it, hold it, and believe it. Then I again demanded of them, whether they did affirm, after the words pronounced by the minister, there to remain flesh, blood, bones, hairo, nails, as is wont most grossly to be preached, or not? And they with great deliberation answered, that they did not only abhor the teaching of such gross doctrine, but also would d [...]test themselves, if they should so think.
AT which two principal points, wherein they fully confirmed my doctrine which I ever taught, I was not a little comforted and rejoiced, but marvel [...]ously encouraged. Whereupon I demanded of them again, what manner of body they then affirmed it to be in the sacrament? Forsooth, said they, not a visible, palpable, or circumscriptable body, for that is always at the Father's right hand; but in the sacrament it is invisible, and can neither be fel [...], seen, nor occupy any place, but is there by the omnipotency of God's holy word, they know not how.
AND for this they brought in St Augustine, [...] though by them not truly understood, yet they would admit no other sense than their own, but would tak [...] upon them to confirm it with Martin▪ Luther, Melancthon, Bucer, and Calvin: so that I, perceiving their obstinacy in that behalf, gave them over for that time, and afterwards talked with Dr. Barret, whom I also found of the same opinion. For, said he, if you would dissent from the fathers of the primitive church, of which St. Augustine is one, you shall be contented to die out of the favour of God. Well, I gave them all over, being obstin [...] in their errors; however, to bring them to confess that openly which they had granted privately, [...] I granted them according to the scriptures, and [...] former protestation, a presence, although not as they supposed.
AFTER all this, the honourable earl of [...] came to me, and that gentle knight Sir William Woodhouse, with great persuasions: to whom after long talk, I said, That I would do all that I might, saving my conscience, which I would in no [...] pollute: and neither have I, as knoweth God, by whom all men must be judged.
The Last Examination of THOMAS ROSE before the Bishop.
NOW to come to my last appearance, the bishop forthwith demanded of [...], whether I were resolved as he had heard say. To whom I answered, that as I always had said before, even so I was now. Then, by low bowing my knee, I gave him my due reverence, and the rather for that the honourable earl of Sussex was there. At this some who would be counted great gospellers, were (contrary to all christianity) so [...]e [...]ff [...]nd [...]d. I then said, that whatsoever laws were set forth for the establishment of Christ's true religion, and that according to the doctrine of Christ's holy apostles, and the faithful fathers of the primitive church, I did not only obey them, but most earnestly embrace and believe them. Yea, and yet [...]o the further blinding of their eyes, I said, that if any thing could justly be proved [Page 609] by God's holy word, by me heretofore preached or taught untruly, either for lack of learning, unwarily, or ignorance, yet by better knowledge, when it shall justly be tried and examined by the same, I shall not refuse (the thing perfectly proved) to revoke the same; provided always the word of God herein be my judge.
ALL this spake I (as God knoweth) to keep them from suspecting that which I went about, and that they should have no occasion to judge me of obstinacy. Then said I, moreover, all you must of force confess, that the doctrine by me heretofore preached, had, besides the authority of God's eternal verity, the authority of two most noble and mighty princes, with the advice and counsel of all the nobility and clergy of the land, and that with great deliberation from time to time, with open disputations in both the universities, enacted also by parliament with the consent of the whole body and commons of the same, and that without any resistance or gainsaying established, as a religion most pure and perfect, most earnestly and sincerely preached by the principal bishops and doctors, and that before the king's majesty's person; and I, as one who was called to that office, did the like with all the rest, and in the zeal of God, and with a pure conscience, did set forth the same, as the only and absolute truth of God, and the just and most true proceedings of my sovereign lord and king: and I had then my head where it now standeth, betwixt mine ears, altogether applying the same, to apprehend with all diligence that which then was established and taught, as the only and absolute truth, and a thing unto me most desirable, and well willing without any desire to hear the contrary, till now, through this my captivity, I am compelled to hear the contrary part speak, who are even here present, and whom my lord sent unto me.
AFTER several long private disputations had happened betwixt us, at length I have heard of them a contrary doctrine, which I never before had heard, and therefore must confess mine own ignorance in the same: for, quoth I, after I had inforced these men here present (meaning the bishop's two chaplains) to confess Jesus Christ's natural body, with his full complete members, in due order and proportion of a perfect man's body, to be present at the right hand of God the Father, and that without return from thence, until the last judgment, and also that after the words pronounced by the priest, there remaineth no such gross presence of flesh, blood, bones, hair, and nails, as was wont to be preached; but that after I had demanded of them what manner of body they affirmed to be present, they said, a body invisible by the omnipotency of God's word, which neither can be felt or seen, no [...] that hath any distinction of members, but such a body as occupieth no place, but is there they know not how: necessity compelled me to confess mine ignorance in that behalf, although in very deed they perceived not my meaning therein, neither was it in my thought they should so do: for by this their confession, and my silence afterward, I perceived their horrid blasphemies.
AND methought in this I had well discharged [...] that [...] my conscience, in causing them, in open audience, to confess the same, and so I granted a presence, but not as they supposed: for I ea [...]ly said, that Christ, after the words pronounced, i [...] present in the lawful use and right distribution of his holy supper▪ which thing I never denied, or any godly man that ever I heared of, for, said I, Eusebius Emissenus, a man of singlar fame and learning, about three hundred years after Christ's ascension, saith, that the conversion of the visible creatures of bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ, is like unto our conversion in baptism, where nothing is outwardly changed, but all the change is inwardly, by the mighty working of the Holy Ghost, which fashioneth and frameth Christ in the heart and mind of man, as by the example of Peter preaching to the people, Acts ii. by which he so pierced their conscience, that they openly, with most earnest repentacce confessed their sins▪ saying "Men and brethren, what shall we do? Repen [...], and be baptized every one of you," said Peter, "in the name of Jesus Christ; so that at this sermon there were turned unto Christ three thousand persons; in whom Christ was so fashioned and formed, as that he dwelt in every one of them, and they in him; and after the like manner, said I, is Christ present in the lawful use and right distribution of his holy supper, and not otherwise, for although I said according to the truth, that Christ dwelt in [Page 610] every one of those persons rehearsed, yet meant I nothing less than that he in them should have a gros [...], carnal, [...]fleshly dwelling.
AND no more meant I (as God knoweth) him carnally or grossly to be in the sacrament, but according to the scriptures▪ and my former protest [...] tion, that is▪ to the spiritual nourishment of all such as worthily come unto that holy supper▪ receiving it according to his holy institution.
AND thus I ended; which the papists most maliciously and slanderous [...]y named a recantation; which I never meant nor thought, as God knoweth.
NOW after I had thus concluded my speech, the bishop, taking me by the hand, said, Father Rose, you may be a worthy instrument in God's church, and we will see to you [...] coming home ( [...] he [...] to [...]ake his Journey in visitation of his [...]), and they feared much at this very time, le [...]t queen Mary should have miscarried in her child tra [...]ail, which [...] a [...]ked for, being then accounted very great with child, so that they were not so fierce as they had been, and [...] apprehensive of some [...], [...]f I should have suffered▪ and therefore were glad [...]o be rid of me▪ [...] by any colourable means for their own discharge it might be; and the night following I was only committed to mine own lodging.
ON the morrow, when the bishop was ready to [...]ide forth in visitation, he called me before him▪ [...]nd perceiving that Sir William Woodhouse did bear me great favour, said, he was sorry for me and my expences, and therefore wished that I was somewhere where I might spend no more money till his return. Why, my lord, said sir William Woodhouse, he shall have meat and drink, and lodging with me, till you return again, seeing you now break up house; and hereupon I went home with sir William, that good night, who most gen [...]e [...]lly entertained me, and I had great liberty. Upon this the popish priests of the college of Christ's church in Norwich, because they saw me at liberty in sir William's absence, who had been from home a fortnight, blazed it abro [...]d that sir William was bound for me in body and lands. At his coming home, therefore, I asked sir William if he were [...] bound for me, and he denied it. Then, said I, [...] but for the reverence I bear to you, I might have been an hundred miles from you before this. I no [...] trust, sir, as you are not [...]ound for me▪ I may go and visit my friends. Go where you will, said [...] William; for I told the bishop I would not be your ga [...]ler, but pro [...]sed only [...] ▪ drink, and lodging for you. Shortly after, by the advice of some friends, I was secretly conveyed to a friend's house▪ where I was closely kept for near [...] month, until rumours were over: for▪ at the bishop's ret [...]rn▪ search was made for me in all houses where it was known I had been acquainted, and in the ships [...] Yarmouth.
AT length the bishop sent to a conjuror, to [...] of him which way I was gone; and he answered [...] I was gone over water, and in the keeping of [...] man. And in very deed I was pas [...]ed ov [...]r a [...] water, and was hid by a blessed woman, who [...] in a small cott [...]ge, the space of three weeks, [...]till the inquiries had nearly subsided.
I was then conveyed to London, and from then [...]e passed over the seas, where I lived▪ till the [...] queen Mary, and till it pleased God, for the [...] of his church, and restoring of all poor exiles and prisoners, for his name's sake, to bless this realm with the government of our noble queen, wh [...] God, to the glory of his own name, and the [...] of his church, according to his good will and pleasure, long preserve and continue over us.
A brief Discourse concerning the Troubles and happy Deliverance of Dr. SANDS, first▪ Bishop of Worcester, next of London, afterwards Archbishop of York.
AT king Edward's death, the duke of Northumberland came down to Cambridge with an army of men, having commission to proclaim▪ lady Jane queen, and by power to suppress lady Mary, who took upon her that dignity, and was proclaimed queen in Norfolk. The duke sent for Dr. Sands [Page 611] the vice-chancellor, Dr. Parker, Dr. Bill, and Mr. Leaver, to sup with him. Amongst other speeches, he said to them, Masters, pray for us, that we speed well: if not, you shall be made bishops, and we deacons. And even so it came to pass: Dr. Parker and Dr. Sands were made bishops, and he and sir John Gates, who was then at the table, were made deacons not long after, on Tower hill. Dr. Sands being vice-chancellor▪ was required to preach on the morrow. The warning was short for such an auditory, and to speak of such a matter; yet he refused not the thing, but went into his chamber, and so to bed. He rose a [...] three o'clock in the morning, took his bible in his hand, and after he had prayed a considerable time, he shut his eyes, and holding his bible before him▪ earnestly prayed to God that it might fall open where a most fit text should be for him to treat of. The Bible, as God would have it, fe [...]l open upon the first chapter of Joshua, the three last verses, where he found so convenient a place of scripture for that time, that the like he could not find in the whole Bible. His [...]ext was thus: "And they answered Joshua, saying, All that thou commandest us we will do, and whithersoever thou sendest us, we will go. According as we hearkened unto Moses in all things, so will we hearken unto thee: only the Lord thy God be with thee, as he was with Moses. Whosoever he be that doth rebel against thy commandment, and will not hearken unto thy words, in all that thou commandest him, he shall be put to death: only be strong, and of a good courage."
WHOEVER shall consider what was concluded by such as called themselves the state, and likewise the auditory, the time, and other circumstances, may easily see that this text most fitly served for the purpose. And as God gave the text, so gave he such order and utterance, as drew many tears out of the eyes of the greatest of them.
IN the time of his sermon, one of the guard lifted a mass-book and a grail up to him in the pulpit, which sir George Haward, with certain of the guard had taken that night in Mr. Hurlestone's house, where lady Mary had been a little before, and there had mass. The duke, with the rest of the nobility, required Dr. Sands to put his sermon in writing, and appointed Mr. Leaver to go to London with it, and to put it in print. Dr. Sands required one day and a half for writing of it. At the time appointed he had made it ready, and Mr. Leaver was ready booted to receive it at his hands, and carry it to London. As he was delivering of it, one of the beadles, named Adams, came weeping to him, and prayed him to shift for himself, for the duke was retired, and queen Mary proclaimed.
DR. SANDS was not troubled thereat; but gave the sermon written to Mr. Layfield. Mr. Leaver departed home, and he went to dinner to one Mr. More's, a beadle, his great friend. At the dinner, Mrs. More seeing him merry and pleasant (for he had ever a man's courage, and could not be terrified), drank unto him, saying, Master, Vice-chancellor, I drink unto you, for this is the last time that I shall see you. And so it was; for she was dead before Dr. Sands returned out of Germany. The duke that night retired to Cambridge, and sent for Dr. Sands to go with him to the market-place to proclaim queen Mary. The duke cast up his cap with others; but the tears ran down his cheeks for grief. He told Dr. Sands▪ that queen Mary was a merciful woman, and that he doubted not thereof; declaring that he had sent unto her to know her pleasure, and looked for [...] general pardon. Dr. Sands answered, My life is not dear unto me, neither have I done or said any thing that urgeth my conscience. For that which I spake of the sta [...]e, I have instructions warranted by the subscription of sixteen counsellors, neither can speech be treason; neither yet have I spoken further than the word of God▪ and the laws of the realm do warrant me, come of me what God will. But be you assured, you shall never escape death, for if she should save you, those that now shall [...] will kill you.
THAT night the guard apprehended the duke; and certain grooms of the stable were as b [...]sy with Dr. Sands, as if they would take a prisoner. But sir John Gates, who lay then in Dr. Sand's house, sharply rebuked them, and drove them away. Dr. Sands, by the advice of Sir John Gates, walked in the fields. In the mean time, the university, contrary to all order, had met together in consultation, and ordered that Dr. Mouse and Dr. Hatcher should repair to Dr. Sand's lodging, and bring [Page 612] [...] the statute [...]book of the university, the keys, [...] other things as were in his keeping; and so they did: for Dr. Mouse being an earnest protestan [...] the day before, and whom Dr. Sands had done much for, was now become a papist, and his great enemy. Certain of the university had appointed a congregation at afternoon. As the bell rang to it, Dr. Sands came out of the fields, and sending for the beadles, asked what the matter meant, and required them to wait upon him to the schools, according to their duty. So they did. And as soon as Dr. Sands, the beadles going before him, came into the regent house and took his chair, one Mr. Mitch, with a rabble of unlearned papists, went into a bye-school, and conspired together to pull him out of his chair, and to use violence unto him. Dr. Sands began his oration, expostulating with the university, charging them with great ingratitude, declaring, that he had said nothing in his sermon but what he was ready to justify, and their case was all one with him: for they had not only concealed, but consented to that which he had spoken.
AND thus while he remembered them how beneficial he had been to the university, and their unthankfulness to him again, in came Mr. Mitch with his conspirators, about twenty in number. One laid hands on the chair to pull it from him; another told him, that that was not his place, and another called him traitor. Whereat he perceiving how they used violence, and being of great courage, groped to his dagger, and had dispatched some of them as God's enemies, if Dr. Bill and Dr. Blith had not fallen upon him, and prayed for God's sake to hold his hands and be quiet, and patiently to bear that great offered wrong. He was persuaded by them, and after that tumult was ceased, he ended his oration; and having some money of the university's in his hands, he there delivered the same every farthing. He gave up the books, reckonings and keys pertaining to the university, and withal yielded up his office, praying God to give the university a better officer, and to give them better and more thankful hearts, and so repaired home to his own college.
ON the morrow after there came unto him one Mr. Gerningham, and Mr. Thomas Mildmay. Gerningham told him, that it was the queen's pleasure, that two of the guard should attend upon him, and that he must be carried prisoner to the Tower of London, with the duke. Mr. Mildmay said, he marvelled that a learned man would speak so unadvisedly against so good a prince▪ and wilfully run into such danger. Dr. Sands answered, I shall not be ashamed of bonds, but if I could do as Mr. Mildmay can, I needed not to fear bonds: for he came down in payment against queen Mary, and armed in the field, and now he returned i [...] payment for queen Mary; before a traitor, and now a great friend; I cannot with one mouth blow hot and cold after the manner.
UPON this his stable was robbed of four very good geldings, the best of them Mr Huddle [...] took for his own saddle, and rode on him to London in his sight. An inventory was taken of all his goods by Mr. More, beadle for the university▪ He was set upon a lame horse that halted to the ground; which thing a friend of his perceiving prayed that he might lend him a nag. The ye [...] man of the guard were contented. As he depar [...] forth at the town's end, some papists resorted thither to jeer at him, and some of his friends to mourn for him. He came in the rank to London, the people being full of out-cries. And as [...] came in at Bishopsgate, one like a milk woman hurled a stone at him, and hit him on the breast, with such a blow, that he was like to fall off his horse. To whom he mildly said, Woman, God forgive it thee. Truth is, that that journey and evil intreating so mortified him, that he was more ready to die than to live.
AS he came through Tower-hill-street, one woman standing at her door, cried, Fie on thee, thou knave, thou knave▪ thou traitor, thou heretic. Whereat he smiled. Look, the desperate heretic, said she, laughing at this jeer. A woman on the other side of the street answered, saying, Fie on thee, neighbour, thou art not worthy to be called a woman, railing upon this gentleman whom thou knowest not, nor the cause why he is thus treated. Then she said, Good gentleman, God be thy comfort, and give thee strength to stand in God's cause, even to the end. And thus he passed through rough and smooth to the Tower, the first prisoner that entered in that day, which was St. Jame's [Page 613] day. The yeoman of the guard took from him his borrowed nag, and what else soever he had. His man one Q [...]inting Suainton, brought after him a Bible, and some shirts, and such like things. The Bible was sent in to him, but the shirts and such like served the yeoman of the guard.
AFTER he had been in the Tower three weeks in a bad prison, he was brought up into Nun's-Bower, a better prison, where was put along with him Mr. John Bradford.
AT the day of queen Mary's coronation their prison door was set open, ever shut before. One Mr. Mitchell, his old acquaintance, who had been prisoner before in the same place, came in to him, and said, Master Sands, there is such a stir in the Tower, that neither gates, doors, nor prisoners are looked to this day. Take my cloak, my hat, and my rapier, and get you gone, you may go out of the gates without questioning, save yourself, and let me do as well as I can. A rare friendship; but he refused the offer, saying, I know no cause why I should be in prison. And to do thus were to make myself guilty. I will expect God's good will, yet must I think myself much obliged to you: and so Mr. Mitchell departed.
WHILE Dr. Sands and Mr. Bradford were thus in close prison twenty nine weeks, one John Bowler was their keeper, a very perverse papist, yet by often persuading of him, for he would give ear, and by gentle using of him, at length he began to mislike popery, and to favour the gospel, and was so persuaded in true religion, that on a Sunday when they had mass in the chapel, he brought up a service book, a manchet, and a glass of wine, and there Dr. Sands ministered the communion to Bradford and to Bowler. Thus Bowler was their son begotten in bonds. When Wyat was in arms, and the old duke of Norfolk sent forth with a number of men to apprehend him; that room might be made in the Tower for him and other his accomplices, Dr. Cranmer, Dr. Ridley, and Mr. Bradford, were cast into one prison, and Dr. Sands with nine other preachers were sent unto the Marshalsea.
THE keeper of the Marshalsea appointed to every preacher a man to lead him in the street; he caused them to go far before, and he and Dr. Sands came behind, whom he would not lead, but walked familiarly with him. Yet Dr. Sands was known, and the people every where prayed to God to comfort him, and to strengthen him in the truth. By that time the people's minds were altered, popery began to be unsavory. After they passed the bridge, the keeper said to Dr. Sands, I perceive the vain people would set you forward to the fire. You are as vain as they, if you being a young man will stand in your own conceit, and prefer your own judgment before that of so many worthy prelates, ancient, learned, and grave men as be in this realm. If you so do, you shall find me a severe keeper, as one that utterly disliketh your religion. Dr. Sands answered, I know my years to be young, and my learning but small, it is enough to know Christ crucified, and he hath learned nothing who seeth not the great blasphemy that is in popery. I will yield unto God, and not unto man: I have read in the scriptures of many godly and courteous keepers: God may make you one; if not; I trust he will give me strength and patience to bear your hard usage. Then said the keeper, Are you resolved to stand to your religion? Yes, quoth the doctor, by God's grace. Truly, said the keeper, I love you the better for it; I did but tempt you, what favour I can shew you, you shall [...]e sure of and I shall think myself happy if I might die at the stake with you. He was as good as his word, for he trusted the doctor to walk in the fields alone, where he met with Mr. Bradford, who was also a prisoner in the King's-Bench, and had found the same favour from his keeper: he laid him in the best chamber in the house; he would not suffer the knight-marshal's men to lay fetters on him, as others had. And, at his request, he put Mr. Sanders in along with him, to be his bed fellow, and sundry times after he suffered his wife, who was Mr. Sand's daughter of Essex, a gentlewoman beautiful both in body and soul, to resort to him. There was great resort to Dr. Sands, and Mr. Sanders; they had much money offered them, but they would receive none. They had the communion there three or four times, and a great many communicants. Dr. Sands gave such exhortation to the people, (for at that time being young, he was thought very eloquent) that he moved many [Page 614] tears, and made the people abhor the mass, and defy all popery.
WHEN Wyat with his army came into Southwark, he sent two gentlemen into the Marshalsea, to Dr. Sands, saying, that Mr. Wyat would be glad of his company and advice, and that the gates should be set open for all the prisoners. He answered, Tell Mr. Wyat, if this his rising be of God, it will take place; if not, it will fall. For my part, I was committed here by order, I will be discharged by like order, or I will never depart hence. So answered Mr. Sanders, and the rest of the preachers, being there prisoners.
AFTER that Dr. Sands had been nine weeks prisoner in the Marshalsea, by the mediation of sir Thomas Holcroft, knight marshal, he was set at liberty; sir Thomas sued earnestly to the bishop of Winchester, Dr. Gardiner, for his deliverance after many repulses: but he could not prevail except Dr. Sands would be one of their sect, and then he could want nothing. He wrong out of him at last, that if the queen would grant him his deliverance, he would not be against it: for that was sir Thomas's last request. In the mean time he had procured two ladies of the privy chamber to move the queen in it; who was contented if the bishop of Winchester would like it. The next time that the bishop went into the privy chamber to speak with the queen, Mr. Holcroft so lowed, and had his warrant for Dr. Sands's remission ready, and prayed the two ladies, when the bishop should take his leave, to put the queen in mind of Dr. Sands. So they did, and the queen said, Winchester, what think you of Dr. Sands, is he not sufficiently punished? As it please your majesty, saith Winchester. That he spake, remembering his former promise to Mr. Holcroft, that he would not be against Dr. Sands, if the queen should like to discharge him. Saith the queen, The truly, we would that he were set at liberty. Immediately Mr. Holcroft offered the queen the warrant, who subscribed the same, and called Winchester to put to his hand, and so he did. The warrant was given to the knight marshal again, sir Thomas Holcroft. As the bishop went forth of the privy chamber door, he called Mr. Holcroft to him, commanding him not to set Dr. Sands at liberty, until he had taken sureties of two gentleman of this country with him▪ each one bound in 5001. that Dr. Sands should not depart out of the realm without licence. Mr. Holcroft immediately after met with two gentlemen of the North, friends and cousins to Dr. Sand [...] ▪ who offered to be bound in body, goods, and lands for him. After dinner, the same day, Mr. Holcroft sent for Dr. Sands to his lodging at Westminster, requiring the keeper to accompany him. He came accordingly, finding Mr. Holcroft alon [...] imparted his long suit, with the whole proceeding, and what effect it had taken, to Dr. Sands; much rejoicing that it was his good hap to do him good, and to procure his liberty, and that nothing remained, but that he would enter into bonds with [...] two sureties, for not departing out of the [...] ▪ Dr. Sands answered, I give God thinks, who hath moved your heart to mind me so well, and I [...] myself most bound unto you. God shall requite▪ and I shall never be found unthankful. But as you have dealt friendly with me, I will also deal plai [...] with you. I came a freeman into prison; I [...] not go forth a bondman. As I cannot benefit [...] friends, so will I not hurt them. And if I be set [...] liberty, I will not tarry six days in this realm, i [...] I may get out. If therefore I may not get free fort [...] ▪ send me to the Marshalsea again, and there you shall be sure of me.
THIS answer Mr. Holcroft much misliked who told Dr. Sands that the time would not l [...]ong continue, a change would shortly come, the state [...] but a cloud, and would soon shake away. And that his cousin sir Edward Bray would gladly receive him and his wife into his house, where he should never need go to church, and the lady Bray was a zealous gentlewoman, who hated popery. Adding that he would not so deal with him to lose all hi [...] labour. When Dr. Sands could not be removed from his former saying, Mr. Holcroft said, Seeing you cannot be altered, I will charge my purpose and yield unto you. Come of it what will, I will set you at liberty: and seeing you have a mind to go over sea, g [...]t you gone as quick as you can. One thing I require of you, that while you are there, you write nothing to me hi [...]her, for so you may undo me. He friendly kissed Dr. Sands, bade him farewel, [Page 615] and commanded the keeper to take no foes of him, saying, Bet me answer Winchester as I may. Dr. Sands returning with the keeper to the Marshalsea, tarried all night, and on the morrow he gave a [...] to all the prisoners, to which he invited his bedfellow and sworn stake-fellow, if it had so pleased God. When he took his leave, he said, Mr. Sanders, farewel, with many tears and kisses, the one falling on the other's neck, and so departed, clearly delivered without examination or bond. From thence he went to the king's-bench, and there talked with Mr. Bradford, and Dr. Farrer, bishop of St. David's, then prisoner's. Then he comforted them, and they praised God for his happy deliverence. He went by Winchester's house, and there took boat, and came to a friend's house in London, called William Banks, and tarried there one night. The next night he shifted to another friend's house and then he heard that search was made for him.
DR. WATSON and Mr. Christopherson coming to the bishop of Winchester, told him, that he had set the greatest heretic in England at liberty, and one that had of all others most corrupted the university of Cambridge, namely, Dr. Sands. Whereupon the bishop, being chancellor of England, sent for all the constables of London, commanding them to watch for Dr. Sands, who was then within the city, and to apprehend him, and whosoever of them should take him and bring him to him, he should have pounds for his labour. Dr. Sands suspecting the matter, conveyed himself by night to one Mr. [...]rty's house, a stranger who was in the Marshalsea prisoner with him a while; he was a good protestant, and dwelt in Mark-lane. There he was six days, and had one or two of his friends that repaired to him. Then he removed to one of his acquaintance in Cornhill▪ he caused his man Quinting to provide two geldings for him, minding on the morrow to ride into Essex, to Mr. Sands his father-in-law, where his wife was.
DR. SANDS pulled on his boots, and taking leave of his friend Benjamin, a constable who favoured his escape, with tears they kissed each other: he put his hand in his purse, and would have given Benjamin a great part of that little he had, but Benjamin would take none. Yet since that, Dr. Sands remembered him thankfully. He rode out night to his father-in-law Mr. Sands, where his wife was: he had not been there two hours, but it was told Mr. Sands, that there were two of the guard which would that night apprehend Dr. Sands, and so they were appointed.
THAT night Dr. Sands was guided to an honest farmer near the sea, where he tarried two days and two nights in a chamber without company. After that he shifted to one James Mower, a shipmaster, who dwelt at Milton Shore, where he expected wind for the English [...] ready into Plander▪ While he was there, James Mower brought to him forty or fifty mariners, to whom he gave an exhortation; they liked him so well, that they promised to die for it, before that he should be apprehended.
THE sixth of May, being Sunday, the wind served. He took his leave of his host and hostess, and went towards the ship. In talking his leave of his hostess who was [...]arren, and had been married eight years, he gave her a fine handkerchief and an old ryal of gold in it, thanking her much, and said, Be of good comfort, before that one whole year be past, God shall give you a child; a boy. And it came to pass, that fir [...]t day twelve month lacking one day, God gave her a fair son.
AT the shore Dr. Sands met with Mr. Isaac, of Kent, who had his eldest son there, who upon the liking he had to Dr. Sands, sent his son with him, who afterwards died in his father's house in Frankfort. Dr. Sands and Dr. Coxe were both in one ship, being one Cockrel's ship, and were within the kenning, when two of the guard came thither to apprehend Dr. Sands. They arrived at Antwerp, being bid to dinner by Mr. Locke And at dinner time one George Gilpin, being secretary to the English house, and kinsman to Dr. Sands, c [...]me to him, and rounded him in his ear, and said, king Philip hath sent to make search for you, and to apprehend you. Hereupon they rose from their dinner in great haste, and went out of the gate leading toward Cleveland. They found a waggon, and hasted away, and came safe to Augsburgh, in Cleveland, where Dr. Sands tarried fourteen days, and then travelled towards Strasburgh, where after he had lived one year, his wife came to him. He fell sick of a ssux, which kept him nine months, [Page 616] and brought him to death's door. He had [...]hild which died of the plague. His wife at length fell into consumption, and died in his arms; no man had more godly woman to his wife.
AFTER this, Mr. Sampson went away to Emanuel, a man skilful in Hebrew. Mr. Grindall went into the country to learn the Dutch tongue. Dr. Sands still remained in Strasburgh, whose support was chiefly from one Mr. Isaac, who loved him most dearly, and was ever more ready to give than to receive. He gave him in that space above an hundred marks, which sum the said Dr. Sands paid him again, and by his other gifts and friendship, shewed himself to be a thankful man. When his wife was dead, he went to Zurich, and there was in Peter Martyr's house for the space of five weeks. Being there as they sat at dinner, word suddenly came that queen Mary was dead, and Dr Sands was sent for by his friends at Stratsburgh. That news made Mr. Martyr, and Mr. Jarret then there, very joyful; but Dr. Sands could not rejoice, it smote into his heart that he should be called to misery.
Mr, BULLINGER and the ministers feasted him, and he took his leave and returned to Strasburgh, where he preached; and so Mr. Grindall and he came over to England, and arrived in London, the same day that queen Elizabeth was crowned.
The severe Punishment of God upon the Persecutors of his People and Enemies to his Word, with such also as have been Blasphemers, Contemners and Mockers.
QUEEN MARY being dead and gone, we will now leave her, and treat of those under her who were the chief instruments in this persecution, the bishops and clergy, to whom she, as a true catholic, gave all the execution of her power, as did queen Alexandria to the Pharisees after the time of the Maccabees; of whom Josephus thus writeth: She only retained to herself the name and title of the kingdom, but all her power she gave to the pharisees to possess, &c. Touching which prelates and priests, here is to be noted in like manner the wonderful and miraculous providence of Almighty God, which as he shortened the reign of their queen so he suffered them not to escape unvisited: first beginning with Stephen Gardiner, the arch-persecutor of Christ's church, whom he took away about the midst of the queen's reign; of whose poisoned life and stinking end, for so much as sufficient hath been touched before, I need not here make rehearsal thereof.
AFTER him dropped away others also, some before the death of queen Mary, and some after, as Morgan, bishop of St. David's who sitting upon the condemnation of bishop Farrer, and unjustly usurping his room, not long after was struck by God's hand in such a strange manner that his me [...]t would not go down, but rise and puke up again, sometimes at his mouth, sometimes blown out at his nose, most nauseous to behold, and so he continued till his death.
WHERE note moreover, that when Mr. Leyson, being then sheriff at bishop Farrer's burning, had brought away the cattle of the said bishop, from his servant's house, named Matthew Harbott [...]l, into his own custody, the cattle coming into the sheriff's ground, divers of them would never eat mea [...], but lay bellowing and roaring, and so died.
WHAT a stroke of God's hand was brought upon the cruel persecuter of the holy saint's of God, bishop Thornton, suffragan of Dover, who after he had exercised his cruel tyranny upon so many pious men at Canterbury, at length coming upon a Saturday from the chapter-house at Canterbury to Borne and there upon Sunday following looked upon his men playing at bowls, sell suddenly in a palsy, and so had to bed, was willed to remember God: Yea, so I do, said he, and my lord cardinal too, &c.
AFTER him succeeded another bishop or suffragan ordained by the aforesaid cardinal. It is reported that he had been suffragan before to Bonner, who not long after being made bishop or suffragan of Dover, broke his neck falling down a pair of staire in the cardinal's chamber at Greenwich, as he had received the cardinal's blessing.
JOHN COOPER, of the age of 44 years, dw [...]lling [Page 617] at Watsam, in the county of Suffolk, a carpenter by trade, a man of a very honest report, and a good house keeper, a harbourer of strangers that travelled for conscience, and one that favoured religion, and those that were religious.
THIS man being at home, there came unto him one William Fenning, a serving man, dwelling in the said town of Watsam, and understanding that the said Cooper had a couple of fat bullocks, and did desire to buy them of him, because he had brought them up for his own use, and if he should [...]ell them, he then must be compelled to buy others, and that he would not do.
WHEN Fenning saw he could not get them (for he had often tried), he said, he would sit as much in his light, and so departed, and went and accused him of high treason. The words he was charged with were these, How he should [...]ray, if God would not take away queen Mary, that then the devil would take her away. Of these words did this Fenning charge him before Sir Henry Doiel, knight (unto whom he was carried by Mr. Timperley, of Hinclesam, in Suffolk, and one Grimwood, of Lowshaw, constable) which words Cooper flatly denied; and said he never spoke them; but that did not avail.
NOTWITHSTANDING that, he was arraigned at Bury, before sir Clement Higham, at a Lent assize, and there this Fenning brought two vile men, that witnessed to the speaking of the aforesaid words, whose names were Richard White, of Watsam, and Grimwood, of Hitcham, in the said county of Suffolk. Whose testimonies were received as truth, although this good man, John Cooper, had said what he could to declare himself innocent therein, but to no purpose, God knows. For his life was determined, as in the end appeared by sir Clement High [...]m's words, who said he should not escape, for an example to all heretics, as indeed he thoroughly performed: for immediately he was sentenced to be hanged, drawn, and quartered, which was accordingly performed soon after, to the great grief of many a good heart. Here good Cooper is bereft of his life, and leaves behind him a wife and nine children, with goods and cattle to the value of 300 marks, all which substance was taken away by the said sir [...]enry Doiel, sheriff, but his wife and poor children were left to the wide world in their clothes and suffered not to enjoy one penny of that they had sore laboured for, unless they made friends to buy it with money of the said sheriff, so cruel and greedy was he and his officers upon such things as were there left.
NOW, this innocent man being dead, his goods spoiled, his wife and children left desolate and comfortless, and all things hushed, and nothing [...]eared of any part: yet the Lord, who surely doth revenge the guiltless blood, would not still so suf [...]er it, but at length began to punish it himself. For in the harvest following, as the said Grimwood, of Hitcham, one of the witnesses before mentioned, was at his labour stacking up a goff of corn, being in health, and fearing no danger, suddenly his bowels fell out of his body, and thus most miserably he died: such was the terrible judgment of God, to shew his displeasure against his bloody act, and to warn the rest, by these his judgments, to repentance. The Lord grant us to honour the same, for his mercy's sake. Amen.
IN the story of Mr. Bradford mention was made before of Mr. Woodroffe, who being the sheriff, used much to rejoice at the death of the poor saints of Christ, and so hard was he in his office, that when Mr. Rogers was in the cart going towards Smithfield, in the way his children were brought unto him, the people making a lane for them to come; Mr. Woodroffe had the carman's head broken, because of his stopping his cart. But what happened? He was not come out of his office the space of a week, but he was stricken suddenly by the hand of God, the one half of his body was in such a condition, that he lay benumbed and bedridden, not able to move himself, but as he was lifted by others; and so he continued in that infirmity the space of seven or eight years, till his dying day.
LIKEWISE touching Ralph Lardin, the betrayer of George Eagles, it is thought by some, that the said Ralph was afterward attached himself, arraigned, and hanged.
WHO, being at the bar, before the judges, and a [Page 618] great number of people, spake these words: This is most justly fallen upon me, for that I have betrayed the innocent blood of that good and just man George Eagles, who was here condemned in the time of queen Mary through my procurement, when I sold his blood for a little money.
AMONG other persecutors, there came also to our hands the cruelty of one Mr. Swing [...]ield, an alderman's deputy about Thames-street, who hearing one Angel's wife, a midwife, that kept herself from their popish church, to be at the labour of one Mrs. Walter, at Crooked-lane end, took with him three more, and beset the house about, and took her and carried her to Bonner's officers, big with child, twenty-eight weeks gone, who laid her in Lollards' Tower; where, the same day she came in, through fear, and a fall at her taking, she was delivered of a male child, and could have no woman to assist her in that needful time. Lying there five weeks, she was delivered under sureties by friendship; and Dr. Story hearing thereof, charged her with felony, and so sent her to Newgate. The cause was, because that she having a woman at her house that died in labour, and the child also, and so charged her with both their deaths.
BUT when sir Roger Cholmley heard her tell her tale, he delivered her; and not much more than ten weeks after, if it were so long, died the said Mr. Swingfield, and the other three that came to take her.
BECAUSE some there be, and not a few, who have such great devotion in setting up the popish mass, I would desire them to mark well the following story. There was a certain bailiff, of Crowland, in Lincolnshire, named Burton, who pretending an earnest friendship to the gospel in king Edward's days, at least in outward shew (although inwardly he was a papist or atheist, and well known to be a man of a wicked and adulterous life), set forth the king's proceedings lustily, till the time that king Edward was dead, and queen Mary placed quietly in her estate.
THEN perceiving by the first proclamation concerning religion, how the world was like to turn, the bailiff turned his religion likewise; and so he moved the parish to shew themselves the queen's friends, and so set up the mass speedily. Nevertheless the most substantial of the parish marvelling much at the bailiff's inconstancy, considering also his abominable life, and having no great devotion unto his request, knowing moreover that their duty and friendship to the queen stood not in setting up the mass, spared to provide for it, as long as they might, but the bailiff called on them still in the queen's name.
AT last, when he saw his words were not regarded, and purposing to win his [...] by playing the man in the mass's behalf and the queen's, he got him to church upon a Sunday morning, when the curate was beginning the English service, according to the statute set forth by king Edward the sixth; the bailiff cometh in a great rage to the curate, and saith, Sirrah, will you not say mass? Buckle yourself to mass, you knave, or by God's blood I shall sheath my dagger in your shoulder. The poor curate for fear settled himself to the mass.
NOT long after this, the bailiff rode from home upon certain business, accompanied by one of his neighbours, and as they came riding together upon the Fennebank homeward again, a crow sitting in a willow tree took her flight over his head, singing after her wonted note, knave, knave, and withal let fall upon hi [...] face, so that her excrements ran from the top of his nose down to his beard.
THE poisened scent and favour whereof so annoyed his stomach, that he never ceased vomiting untill he came home, wherewith his heart was so sore, and his body so distempered, that through extreme sickness he got him to bed, and so lying, he was not able for the stink in his stomach and painful vomiting, to receive any relief of meat or drink, but cried out still, sorrowfully complaining of that stink, and with no small oaths cursed the crow that prisoned him. To make short, he continued but a few days, but with extreme pain of vomiting and crying, he desperately died, without any token of repentance of his former life.
Reported and testified for a c [...]rtainty, by divers of his neighbours, both honest and credible persons.
[Page 619]AS James Abbes was led by the sheriff towards his martyrdom, divers poor people stood in the way and asked their alms. He then having no money to give them, and desirous yet to distribute something amongst them, did pull off his apparel, saving his shirt, and gave the same unto them, to some one thing, to some another, in the giving whereof he exhorted them to be strong in the Lord, and as faithful followers of Christ, to stand stedfast unto the truth of the gospel, which he (through God's help) would then in their sight seal and confirm wi [...]h his blood. While he was thus charitably occupied, and zealously instructing the people a servant of the sheriff's going by and hearing him, cried out aloud unto them, and blasphemously said, Believe him not, good people, he is an heretic and a mad man, out of his wits; believe him not, for it is heresy that he saith. And as the other continued in his godly admonitions, so did this wicked wretch still blow forth his blasphemous exclamations, until they came unto the stake where he should suffer. Unto which this constant martyr was tied, and in the end cruelly burned, as in his story more fully is already declared.
BUT immediately after the fire was put unto him (such was the fearful stroke of God's justice upon this blasphemous railer), that he as there presently in the sight of all the people, stricken with a frenzy wherewith he had before most railingly charged that good martyr of God, who in this furious rage and madness casting of his shoes with all the rest of his clothes, cried out unto the people and said, Thus did James Abbes the true servant of God, who is saved but I am damned. And thus ran he round about the town of Bury, still crying out, that James Abbes was a good man and saved, but he was damned.
THE sheriff then being amazed, caused him to be taken and tied in a dark house, and by force compelled him again to put on his clothes, thinking thereby within a while to bring him to some quietness. But (all that notwithstanding) as soon as they were gone, he continued his former raging, and casting off his clothes, cried as he did before, James Abbes is the servant of God, and is saved, but I am damned.
AT length [...]e was tied at a cart, and brought home to his master's house, and within half a year or thereabouts, he being at the point of death, the priest of the parish was sent for: who coming unto him, brought with him the crucifix and their houseling host of the altar. Which gear when the poor wretch saw, he cried out to the priest, and defied all that baggage, saying, that the priest, with such others as he was, was the cause of his damnation, and that James Abbes was a good man and saved. And so shortly after died.
CLARK, an open enemy to the gospel and all godly preachers, in king Edward's days hanged himself in the Tower of London.
THE great and notable papist, called Troling Smith, of late fell down suddenly in the street and died.
DALE, the promoter, was eaten into his body with lice, and so died, as it is well known of many, and confessed also by his fellow John Avales, before credible witness.
ALEXANDER, the keeper of Newgate, a cruel enemy to those that lay there for religion, died very miserably, being so swollen, that he was more like a monster than a man, and so rotten within, that no man could abide the smell of him. This cruel wretch, to hasten the poor lambs to the slaughter, would go to Bonner, Story, Cholmley, and others, crying out, Rid my prison, rid my prison. I am too much pestered with these heretics.
THE son of the said Alexander, called James, having left unto him by his father great substance, within three years wasted all to nought: and when some marvelled how he spent thess goods so fast: O, said he, evil gotten, evil spent; and shortly after as he went in Newgate-market, he fell down suddenly, and there wretchedly died.
JOHN PETER, son-in-law to this Alexander, and an horrible blasphemer of God, and no less cruel to the said prisoners, rotted away, and so most miserably died. Who commonly, when he would affirm [Page 620] any thing, were it true or false, used to say. If it be not true, I pray God I [...]ot ere I die▪ Witness the printer hereof, with divers others.
AND what a [...]otable spectacle of God's revenging judgment have we to consider in sir Ralph Ellerker, who as he was desirous to see the heart taken out of Adam Damlip, whom they most wrongfully put to death: so shortly after the said Sir Ralph Ellerker, being slain of the French, they fell to mangling him, and after they had cut off his privy members, would not so leave him before they might see his heart cut out of his body.
STEPHEN GARDINER, hearing of the pitiful end of judge Hales, after he had drowned himself, taking occasion thereby, called the following and profession of the gospel, a doctrine of desperation. But as judge Hales never fell into that inconvenience before he had consented to papistry; so whoso well considereth the end of doctor Pendleton, (which at his death full sore repented that ever he had yielded to the doctrine of the papists as he did) and likewise the miserable end of the most part of the papists besides, and especially of Stephen Gardiner himself who after so long professing the doctrine of papistry, when there came a bishop to him on his death bed, and put him in remembrance or Peter denying his master; he answering again, said, that he had denied with Peter, but never repented with Peter, and so both stinkingly and unrepentedly died, will say, as Stephen Gardiner also himself gave an evident example of the same to all men, to understand that popery rather is a doctrine of desperation, procuring the vengeance of Almighty God to them that wilfu [...]ly do cleave unto it.
AND thus much concerning those persecutors.
THE persecuting clergy who died in the time of persecution, we shall take no notice of▪ but those who remained after the death of queen Mary were deprived, and committed to several prisons.
IN THE TOWER.
- Nicholas Heath, archbishop of York, and lord chancellor.
- Thomas Thirlby, bishop of Ely.
- Thomas Watson, bishop of Lincoln.
- Gilbert Bourne, bishop of Bath and Wells.
- Richard Pates, bishop of Worcester.
- Troublefield, bishop of Exeter.
- John Fecknam, abbot of Westminster.
- John Borall, dean of Windsor and Peterborough.
OF David Pool, bishop of Peterborough, it is not known whether he was in the Tower, or in some other prison.
GOLDWEL, bishop of St. Asaph, and Maurice, elect of Bangor, ran away.
EDMUND BONNER, bishop of London, in the Marshalsea.
THOMAS WOOD, bishop elect, in the Marshalsea.
CUTHBERT SCOT, bishop of Chester, was in the Fleet, from whence he escaped to Louvain, and there died.
IN THE FLEET.
- Henry Cole, dean of St. Paul's.
- John Harpsfield, archdeacon of London, and dean of Norwich.
- Nicholas Harpsfield, archdeacon of Canterbury.
- Anthony Draycot, archdeacon of Huntingdon.
- William Chedsey, archdeacon of Middlesex.
CONCERNING which doctor Chedsey here is to be noted, that in the beginning of king Edward's reign he recanted and subscribed to thirty-four articles, wherein he then fully consented and agreed with his own hand-writing to the whole form of doctrine approved and allowed then in the church, as well concerning justification by faith only, as also the doctrine of the two sacraments then received, denying as well the pope's supremacy, transubstantiation, purgatory, invocation of saints, elevation and adoration of the sacrament, the sacrifice, and veneration of the mass, as also all other like excrements of popish superstition, according to the king's book then set forth.
WHEREFORE the more marvellous it is, that he, [Page 621] being counted so famous and learned a clerk, would shew himself so fickle and unstable in his assertions, so double in his doing, to altar his religion according to time, and to maintain for truth, not what he thought best, but what he might most safely defend. So long as the state of the lord protector and of his brother stood upright, what was then the conformity of this doctor Chedsey, his own articles in Latin, written and subscribed with his own hand, do declare, what I have to shew, if he will deny them. But after the decay of the king's uncles, the fortune of them turned not so fast, but his religion turned withal, and he took upon him to dispute with Peter Martyr, in upholding transubstantiation at Oxford, which a little before with his own hand-writing he had overthrown.
AFTER this ensued the time of queen Mary, wherein doctor Chedsey, to shew his double diligence, was so eager in his commission to sit in judgment, and to bring poor men to their death, that in the last year of queen Mary, when the lord chancellor, sir Thomas Cornwallis, lord Clinton and divers others of the council had sent for him by a special letter to repair to London out of Essex, he writing again to the bishop of London sought means not to come at the desire of the council, but to continue still in his persecuting progress. The copy of whose letter I have also in my hands (if need were) to bring forth.
IT happened in the first year of queen Elizabeth, that one William Mauldon was bound servant to one Mr. Hugh Aparry, then a wheat-taker for the queen, dwelling at Greenwich; who being newly come to him, and having no book there to look upon. being desirous to occupy himself virtuously, looked about the house, and found a primmer in English, wherein he read on a winter's evening. While he was reading, there sat one John Apowel, that had been a serving man, about thirty years of age, born in Wales, whom the said Mr. Hugh gave meat and drink unto, till such time as he could get a service. And as William Mauldon read in the book the said John Apowel mocked after every word, with contrary and flouting words irreverently, insomuch that he could no longer abide him for grief of heart, but turned to him and said, John, take heed what thou dost; thou dost not mock me, but thou mockest God: for in mocking of his word, thou mockest him; and this is the word of God, though I be simple that read it: and therefore beware what thou dost.
THEN Mauldon fell to reading again, and still he proceeded in his mocking; and when Mauldon had read certain English prayers, in the end he read, Lord have mercy upon us Christ have mercy upon us, &c.
AND as Mouldon was reciting these words, the other with a start suddenly said. Lord have mercy upon me.
WITH that Mouldon said, What ailest thou, John?
He said, I was afraid.
WHEREOF wast thou afraid? said Mauldon.
NOTHING now, said the other: and so he would not tell him. After this when Mauldon and he went to bed, Mauldon asked him what he was afraid of.
HE said, when you read, Lord have mercy upon us, &c. me thought the hair of my head stood upright, with a great fear which came upon me.
THEN said Mauldon, John, thou mayest see, the evil spirit could not abide that Christ should have mercy upon us. Well, John, said Mauldon, repent and amend thy life, for God will not be mocked. If we mock and jest at his word, he will punish us.
ALSO you use ribaldry words, and swearing very much: therefore, for God's sake, John, amend thy life. So I will (said he) by the grace of God; I pray God I may. Amen, said the other, with other words, and so went to bed.
ON the morrow, about eight o'clock in the morning, John came running down out of his chamber in his shirt into the hall, and wrestled with his mistress as if he would have thrown her down. Whereat she shrieked out, and called her servants [Page 622] to help her, and took by strength and carried him up into his bed, and there bound him; for they perceived plainly that he was out of his right mind.
AFTER that, as he lay, almost a day and a night, his tongue never ceased, but he cried out of the devil of hell, and his words were ever still, O the devil of hell; now the devil of hell, I would see the devil of hell, there he is, there he goeth, &c.
THUS he lay without amendment about six days, that his master and all the family being weary of the noise, agreed with the keepers of Bedlam, and gave a piece of money, and sent him thither.
THIS is a terrible example to you that be mockers of God: thefore repent and amend, lest the vengeance of God fall upon you in like manner. Witness hereof, William Mauldon, of Newington.
THE same William Mauldon chanced afterwards to dwell at a town six miles from London, called Walthamstow, where his wife taught young children to read, which was about the year of our Lord, 1563, and the fourth year of queen Elizabeth's reign. Unto this school, amongst other children, came one Benfield's daughter, named Dennis, about the age of twelve years.
AS these children were talking together, they happened among other talk (as the nature of children is to be busy with many things) to fall into communication of God, and to reason among themselves, after their childish discretion, what he should be. Some answered one thing, some another. Among whom, when one of the children had said, He was a good old Father, Dennis Benfield said, He is an old doating fool.
WHAT wretched and blasphemous words were those you heard? Now mark what followed.
WHEN Mauldon heard of these abominable words of the girl, he desired his wife to correct her for the same; which was appointed to be done the next day; but when the morrow came, her mother would needs send her to London market: the girl greatly intreated her mother that she might not go; however, through her mother's compulsion, she was forced to go. And what happened? Her business being done at London, as she was returning again homeward, a little beyond Hackney, she was suddenly struck on one side, which turned black, and she speechless. Whereupon she was carried back to Hackney, and there died the same night. Witness of the same, William Mauldon and his wife, also Benfield her father, and mother.
A dreadful example, no doubt, both to old and young, what it is for children to blaspheme the Lord their God, and what it is for parents to suffer their young ones to grow up in such blasphemous blindness, and not to nurture them betimes in the rudiments of the christian catechsm, to know first their creation, and then their redemption in Christ our Saviour, to fear the name of God, and to reverence his Majesty. For what else do they deserve but to be taken away by death, who contemptuously despise him they derive the benefit of life from?
THEREFORE let all young maids, boys, and young men, take example by this wretched creature, not only to avoid blaspheming the sacred Majesty of the omnipotent God their creator, but also not once to take his name in vain, as they are taught in his commandments.
SECONDLY, let all fathers, godfathers, and godmothers, take this for a warning, to see to the instruction and catechising of their children, for whom they have bound themselves in promise both to God and to his church: for if the father and godfather, the mother and godmothers, had done their duty by this young girl, this destruction might not have fallen upon her.
THIRDLY, let all blind atheists, epicures, mammonists, belly-gods of this world, and sons of Belial, hypocrites, infidels, and mockers of religion, who say in their hearts, there is no God, learn also hereby not only what God is, and what he is able to do, but also in this miserable creature here punished in this world, behold what shall likewise fall on them in the world to come, unless they will be warned betimes by such examples as the Lord doth give them.
FOURTHLY and lastly, here may also be a spectacle [Page 623] for all those who are blasphemers and abominable swearers, or rather tearers of God, abusing his glorious name in such a contemptuous and despiteful manner as they frequently do: whom if neither the command of God, nor the calling of the preacher, nor remorse of conscience, nor rule of reason, nor their withering age, nor hoary hairs, will admonish, yet let these terrible examples of God's strict judgment somewhat move them to take heed [...]o themselves. For if this young maiden, who was not full twelve years old, for her irreverent speaking of God (and that but at one time) did not escape the stroke of God's terrible hand, what then have they to look for, who being men grown in years, and often warned by the preacher, yet cease not continually with their blasphemous oaths, not only to abuse his name, but also most contumeliously to tear him (as it were) and all his parts to pieces?
DID not Thomas Arundel, archbishop of Canterbury, give sentence against the lord Cobham, and died himself before him, being so mortified in his tongue, that he could neither swallow nor speak for some time before his death?
WILLIAM SWALLOW, the cruel tormentor of George Eagles, was shortly after so plagued of God, that all the hair of his head, and nails of his fingers and toes, went off, his eyes almost closed up, that he could scarce see.
I trust, however, the gospel of Christ being now received in the queen's cou [...]t amongst the courtiers and servants of her guard, hath framed their lives and manners in the due fear of God, and temperance of life, with all sobriety, and merciful compassion towards their own christians, that they need not greatly any other instructions to be given them in this story: yet forasmuch as examples frequently operate more effectually on the minds and memories of men; and also partly considering with myself how these, above all other sorts of men in the whole realm, in time past ever had most need of such wholesome lessons and admonitions, to leave their inordinate [...]ot of drunkenness, and their heathenish prophaneness of life, I thought it may not be improper here to set before their eyes a terrible example, not of a strange and foreign person, but of one of their own coat, a y [...]oman of the guards, not feigned by me, but brought to me by God's providence, for a warning to all courtiers, and of very truth no longer ago than in the year of our Lord 1568: and as the story is true, so i [...] the name of the party not unknown, being called Christopher Landesdale, living in Hackney, in Middlesex: the order of whose life, and manner of his death, being worthy to be noted, is as follows.
THIS Landesdale, who was married to an old woman of considerable property, lived notwithstanding in a state of whoredom with a younger woman, by whom he had two children, a son and a daughter, whom he kept in his own house till his decease. It was customary for him, when he should have been serving God on the sabbath-day, to be riding or walking about his fields, neither he nor any of his house coming to church after the English service was again received. Besides this, he was a great swearer, and a great drunkard, and also took great delight in making other men drunk, whom, when he had made drunkards, he would have to call him father, and he would call them his sons; and of these sors, by report, he had above forty. If he saw a man that would drink freely, he would take great notice of him, and spend his money chearfully with him in ale or wine, but mostly in wine, to make him the sooner drunk. These blessed sons of his would have great cheer oftentimes, both at his own house and at taverns: and not long before his death, he was so very much disguised with liquor, at a tavern opposite his own house, that he fell down in a state of insensibility; nor could he arise till helped up, and carried home.
THIS father of drunkards, as he was a great feaster of the rich and wealthy of Hackney, and others, so his poor neighbours and tenants fared little the better for him, except it were with some broken meat, which, after his feasts his wife would send unto them, or some alms given at his door.
BESIDES all this, he did much injury to his poor neighbours, in turning his cattle on the adjoining commons, which eat up all from the poor without pity or mercy.
ABOUT two years before he died, a poor man, [Page 624] who was ill of a flux, happened, through weakness, to lie down in a ditch of the said La [...]desdale's, a small distance from his house, where he had a little straw brought him. Notwithstanding the said Landesdale had out-houses and barns enough to have laid him in, but would not shew him so much pity. In that situation the poor man lay night and day about six weeks before he died.
CERTAIN good neighbours hearing of this, procured things necessary for his relief, but he was so far spent that he could not be recovered; lying in the hot sun, hath a horrible smell, most pitiful to behold.
A little before this poor man died, he desired to be moved to another ditch more shady. Whereupon one of the neighbours coming to Landesdale's wife for a bundle of straw for him to sit upon, she required to have him removed to Newington side, because, she said, if he should die, it would be very far to carry him to the church.
BESIDES this, there was a marriage in Landesdale's house, and the guests that came to the marriage gave the poor man money as they passed and repassed him, but Landesdale disdained to contribute any thing to his relief, notwithstanding that he had promised to Mr. Searles, one of the queen's guard, who had more pity on him, to minister to him things necessary.
TO be short, the next day poor Lazarus departed this life, and was buried in Hackney churchyard; upon whom Landesdale did not so much as bestow a winding-sheet towards his burial. And thus much concerning the end of poor Lazarus. Now let us hear what became of the rich glutton.
ABOUT two years after, the said Landesdale being full of liquor (as his custom was), came riding in great haste from London on St. Andrew's day, 1568, and, as was reported by those who saw him, reeling to and fro, with his hat in his hand, and coming by a ditch, tumbled headlong into it. Some say that the horse fell upon him, but that is improbable. True it is however, that the horse, more sober than his master, came home, leaving him behind. Whether he broke his neck with the f [...]ll, or was drowned, (though the water was scarce a foot deep) is uncertain; but certain it is, he was there found dead. Being thus found dead in the [...], the coroner (as is the custom) sat upon him: and how the matter was managed to save his goods, the Lord knoweth; but the goods were saved, and the poor horse indicted for his master's death.
THE neighbours hearing of this man's death, and considering the manner thereof, said it was [...] fallen upon him, that, as he suffered the poor man to lie and die in a ditch near his own house, so his end was to die in a ditch likewise. And th [...], christian reader, in this story have I set before your eyes the true image of a rich glutton and poo [...] Lazarus; by which we may discover what happ [...]eth in the end to such voluptuous epicures and [...], who being void of all sense of religion, and [...] of God, yield themselves up to all profaneness of [...], neither regarding honesty at home, nor shewing [...] to their neighbours abroad.
CHRIST our Saviour saith, Mat. v. "Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy:" but judgment without mercy shall be executed on [...] which have shewed no mercy, &c. and St. John saith, 1 John iv. "He that seeth his brother [...] need and shutteth up his compassion from him, how dwelleth the love of God in him," &c. Again Isaiah crieth out against such profane drunkards, "Woe be unto them that rise up early to follow drunkenness, and to them that continue so until night till they be set on fire with wine. In those companies are harps and [...]utes, tabrets and pipes, and wine: but they regard not the works of the Lord, and consider not the operation of his hands," &c. Woe be unto them that are strong to spue out wi [...]e and expert to set up drunkenness.
THE punishments of such as are dead, are wholesome documents to such as are alive. Therefore, as the story above exempli [...]ed may serve to warn all cour [...]iers and y [...]omen of the guard; so by what followeth, I would admonish all gentlemen to take [Page 625] heed in time, and forsake their outrageous swearing and blaspheming of the Lord their God.
IN the reign of king Edward, there was in Cornwall a certain lusty young gentleman, who rode in company with other gentlemen and their servants, to the number of about forty horsemen. This youngster entering into conversation with some of them, began to swear most horribly, blaspheming the name of God, with other ribaldry words besides. One of the company, not able to abide the hearing of such blasphemous abomination, told him in gentle words, that he should give answer and account for every idle word.
THE gentleman, offended thereat, said, Why takest thou thought for me? take thought for thy winding-sheet. Well, said the other, amend, for death giveth no warning; for as soon cometh a lamb's skin to the market as an old sheep's. God's wounds, saith he, care not thou for me; raging still after this manner worse and worse in words, till at length, on their journey, they came riding over a large bridge, standing over a piece of an arm of the sea. Upon which bridge this gentleman swearer spurred his horse in such a manner, that he sprang clean over with him on his back; who, as he was going, exclaimed, Horse and man, and all to the devil. This terrible story happened at a town in Cornwal, I would have been afraid to have related here, but for the testimony of Mr. Heyns, a minister, who was both the reprehender of his swearing, and witness of his death. Ridley, then bishop of London, also preached and declared the same fact and example at Paul's Cross. The name of the gentleman I could by no means obtain of the party and witness aforesaid, for dread of those (as he said) of his kindred who yet remained in the said county.
HAVING now sufficiently admonished, first the courtiers, then the gentlemen, now thirdly, for a brief admonition to the lawyers, we will here insert the strange end and death of one Henry Smith, a student of the law.
HENRY SMITH, having a godly gentleman for his father▪ and an ancient protestant, living at Camden, in Gloucesters [...]ire, was virtuously brought up by him in the knowledge of God's word and sincere religion; wherein he shewed himself in the beginning such an earnest professor, that he was called by the papists prattling Smith. After these good beginnings, he went to be a student of the law in the Middle Temple, London, where by ill company, he began to be perverted to popery, and afterwards going to Louvain, was more deeply grounded in the same. Insomuch that, returning from thence, he brought with him pardons, a crucifix, with an Agnus Dei, which he used commonly to wear about his neck, and had in his chamber images, before which he was wont to pray; besides divers other popish trash, which he brought with him from Louvain. Now what end followed this I should be unwilling to declare, but that the notoriety of the fact was such, as amazed almost the whole city of London. The end was this.
A short time after his return, this Henry Smith became a foul jeerer, and a scornful scoffer of that religion which he once professed. In his bed-chamber, in St. Clement's parish without Temple-bar, as he was going to bed in the evening, having stripped himself naked, he tied his shirt (which he had torn for that purpose) about his privities, and with his girdle or garter strangled himself; having his Agnus Dei in a silver table, with his other idolatrous trash, in a window by him. And thus being dead, and not thought worthy to be interred in the church yard, he was buried in a lane called Foskew lane.
FOREIGN EXAMPLES.
HOIMEISTER, the great arch-papist, and chief master-pillar of the pope's falling church, as he was on his journey towards the council of Ratisbon, to dispute against the defenders of Christ's gospel, suddenly in his journey, not far from Ulmes, was prevented by the stroke of God's hand and there miserably died, with horrible roaring and crying out.
ANOTHER example we have of one Arnoldus Bomelius, a young man of the university of Louvain, well commended for his flourishing wit and ripeness of learning, who, whil [...] he favoured the cause of the gospel, and took part with the same against the enemies of the truth, prospered and went [Page 626] well forward; but after he drew to the company of Tyleman, master of the pope's college in Louvain, and framed himself after the rule of his unsavoury doctrine, that is, to stand in fear and doubt of his justification, and to work his salvation by merits and deeds of the law, he began more and more to grow in doubtful despair and discomfort of mind; as the nature of that doctrine is, utterly to pluck away a man's mind from all certainty and true liberty of spirit, to a servile doubtfulness, full of discomfort and bondage of soul.
THUS the young man, seduced and perverted through this blind doctrine of ignorance and dubitation, fell into a great agony of mind, wandering and wrestling in himself a long time, till at length being overcome with despair, and not having in the popish doctrine wherewith to raise up his soul, he went out of the city on a time to walk, accompanied by three other students of the same university, his special familiars. As they returned home again, Arnoldus, through fatigue, as it seemed, sat down by a spring side to rest himself: the others thinking no ill, went forwards, and in the mean time Arnoldus suddenly took out his dagger, and struck himself into the body.
HIS fellows seeing him shrinking down, and the fountain to be coloured with the blood that issued out of the wound, came running to him, took him up, and brought him into an house near at hand, and there exhorted him, as well as they could, to repent his fact; who then by outward gesture seemed to give some sign of repentance. Notwithstanding, he espying one of his friends there busy about him, to have a knife hanging at his girdle, violently plucked out the knife, and with main force stabbed himself to the heart.
JOHANNES SLEIDANUS, in his 23d book, giveth a rela [...]ion Cardinal Cresentius, the chief president and mo [...]ator of the council of Trent, Anno 1552. The story of [...]hom is [...]ertain, the thing that happe [...]d to him was strange and notable, the example of [...] may be pro [...]it [...]ble to others, such as have grace to be warned by other men's evils.
THE twenty-fifth day of March in the year afore [...]said, Cresentious, the pope's legate, and vicegerent in the council of Trent, was sitting all day long until dark night, in writing letters to the Pope. After his labour, when night was come, thinking to refresh himself, he began to [...]; behold there appeared to him a mighty black dog, of a huge bigness, his eyes shining with fire, and his ears hanging down well near to the ground, and strait began to come towards him, and couched under the table. The cardinal, not a little surprised at the fight thereof, som [...]what recovering himself, called to his servants, who were in the outward chamber next by, to bring in a candle, and to seek for the dog. But when the dog could not be found, neither there, nor in any other chamber about, the cardinal thereupon struck with a sudden conceit of mind, immediately fell into such a sickness, that his physicians, which he had about him, with all their art and industry could not cure him. And so in the town of Verona died this popish cardinal, the pope's holy legate, and president of this council, wherein his purpose was (as Sleidan saith) to recover and heal again the whole authority and doctrine of the Romish see, and to set it up for ever.
THERE were in this council of Trent, besides the pope's legates and cardinals, 24 bishops, doctors of divinity 62. And thus was the end of this popish council, by the provident hand of the Almighty, dispatched and brought to nought.
THE council of Trent, being then dissolved by the death of this cardidal, was afterward notwithstanding collected again about the year of our Lord 1562, against the erroneous proceedings of which council other writers there be that say enough. So much as pertaineth only my story, I thought proper hereunto to add an account of two adulterous filthy bishops belonging to the said council, one of whom resorting to an honest wife, was slain by the just stroke of God with a boar-spear. The other bishop, who used to creep through a window, in the same window was sub [...]illy taken and hanged in a gin laid for him on purpose▪ and so contrived, that in the morning he was seen openly in the street hanging out of the window, to the wonder of all that passed by.
[Page 627]IN the city of Antwerp lived one, named John Vander Warse, of good estimation amongst the chief of that place. Who, as he was of a cruel na [...]ture, so he was of a perverse and corrupt judgment, and a sore persecutor of Christ's flock, with greediness seeking and shedding innocent blood, and had drowned divers good men and women in the water, for which he was much commended by the bloody generation. By some he was called a blood hound, or bloody dog. By others he was called a shilpad, that is to say, sheltoad, for he being a short grundy, and of little stature, did ride commonly with a great broad hat, as a country churl.
THIS man being weary of his office, (wherein he had continued above twenty years) he gave it over; and because he was now grown rich and wealthy, he intended to pass the residue of his life in ease and pleasure.
ABOUT the second year after, he came to Antwerp, to the feast called our lady's Oumegang, to make merry; which feast is usually kept on the Sunday following the assumption of our lady. The same day about four o'clock in the afternoon, he being well loaden with wine, rode homewards in his waggon, with his wife and a gentlewoman waiting on her, and his fool. As soon as the waggon was come without the gates of the city, upon the wooden bridge being at that time made for a shift, with rails or barriers on each side for the safety of the passengers (about half the heighth of a man), the horses stood still, and would by no means go forward, whatsoever the driver of the waggon, could do.
THEN he cried out to him that guided the waggon, saying, Ride on, in the name of a thousand devile ride on. The poor man answered, that he could not make the horses go forward. By and by while they were yet talking, suddenly arose, as it were, a mighty whirlwind, with a terrible noise (the weather being very fair, and no wind stirring before) and tost the waggon into the town ditch, the ropes that tied the horses being broke asunder, in such a manner as if they had been cut with a sharp knife, the waggon being also cast upside down, by the fall whereof he had his neck broke, and was swallowed up in the mire. His wife was taken up alive, but died in three days after. But the gentlewoman and the fool, by God's providence were preserved from harm. The fool hearing the people say his master was dead, said, And was not I dead, was not I dead too? This happened in the year 1553. Witness hereof not only the printer of the same story in dutch, dwelling then in Antwerp, whose name was Francis Fraet, a good man, and afterwards through hatred was put to death by the papists, but also divers Dutchmen here in England, and a great number of English merchants who were at that time in Antwerp.
IN the year 1565, there was in the town of Gaunt in Flanders, one William de Wever, accused and imprisoned by the provost of St. Peter's, in Gaunt (who had in his cloister a prison and place of execution) and the day the said William was called to the place of judgment, the provost sent for Mr. Giles Brackleman, principal advocate of the council of Flanders, and bur [...]h-master and judge of St. Peter's, in Gaunt, with other rulers of the town, to sit in judgment upon him; and as they sat in judgment, Mr. Giles Brackleman reasoned with the said William de Wever upon divers articles of his faith. One whereof was,
WHY he denied that it was lawful to pray to saints; and he answered, For three causes, the one was, That they were but creatures, and not the Creator. The second was,
THAT if he should call upon them, the Lord did both see it and hear it; and therefore he durst give the glory to none other but God. The third and chief cause was,
THAT the Creator had commanded in his holy word to call upon him in trouble, unto which commandment he durst neither add nor take from.
HE also demanded, whether he did not believe that there was a purgatory which he should go into after this life, where every one should be purified and cleansed.
HE answered, That he had read over the whole [Page 628] bible, and could find no such place, but the death of Christ was his purgatory: with many other questions, proceeding after their order, till he came to pronounce his condemnation. But before it was read, he was struck with a palsy, that his mouth was almost drawn up to his ear, and so he fell down the rest of the lords standing before him, that the people might not see him: and the people were desired to depart. Then they took him up and carried him to his house, where he died the very next day. Yet notwithstanding all this, they burnt William de Wever within three hours after.
The Story and End of the French King.
WHOSOEVER was the author or authors of this letter above prefixed, herein tho [...] seen (good reader) good counsel given to the king; if he had had the grace to receive and follow the [...]ame, no doubt but God's blessing working with him, he had not only set the realm in a blessed state from much disturbance, but also had continued himself in all flourishing felicity of princely honour and dignity. But instead of that, he was so outrageous against the protestants, that he threatened Anne du Bourg, one of the high court of Parliament in Paris, that he would see him burn with his own eyes. But how he came short of his purpose, the sequel of the story will make it appear, in the following manner.
KING HENRY being in the parliament house, which was kept at the Friar Augustine's at Paris, because the palace was in preparing against the marriage of his daughter, and his sister, and having heard the opinion in religion of Anne du Bourg, counsellor in the law, a man eloquent and learned, he caused the said Anne du Bourg, and Loys du Faux, counsellors, to be taken prisoners by the constable of France, who apprehended them, and delivered them into the hands of count Montgomery, who carried them to prison. Against whom the king being full of wrath and anger, among other things, said to the said Anne du Bourg, These eyes of mine shall see thee burnt: and so on the 19th of June, commission was given to judges [...]o make their process.
IN the meanwhile, great feasts and banquets were preparing at court, for joy and gladness of the marriage that should be of the king's daughter and sister▪ against the last day of June save one. When the time was come, the king employed all the morning in examining the presidents and counsellors of the said parliament against these prisoners, and other of their companions that were charged with the same doctrine; which being done, they went to dinner.
THE king, after he had dined, for that he was one of the defendants at the tourney, which was solemnly made in St. Anthony's-street, near to the prison where the aforesaid prisoners were committed, entered into the li [...]t [...]; and therein engaging, as the manner is, had broken many slaves very valiantly, running as well against the count of Montgomery, as divers others. Whereupon he was highly commended by the spectators. And because he was thought to have done enough, they desired him to leave off with praise: but he being the more inflamed with the hearing of his praise, would needs run another course with Montgomery: who then refusing to run against the king, and kneeling on his knees for pardon not to run; the king being eagerly set, commanded him on his allegiance to run, and (as some affirm) he also put the staff in his hand, unto whose hand he had committed the aforesaid prisoners a little before. Montgomery being thus enforced, whether he would or no, to run against the king, prepared himself after the best manner to obey the king's commandment. Whereupon he and the king met together so fiercely, that in breaking their spears the king was struck with the counter blow, so right in one of his eyes, by reason that the visor of his helmet suddenly fell down at the same instant, that the splinters entered into his head; so that the brains were touched, and thereupon so festered, that no remedy could be found, although physicians and surgeons were sent from all parts of the realm, and also from Brabant, from king Philip, but nothing availed, so that the 11th day after, that is, the 10th of July, 1559, he miserably ended his [Page 629] life, having reigned 1 [...] years, 3 months, and 10 days.
The lamentable History of JOHN WHITMAN, Shoemaker, who suffered most cruel Torments at Ostend, in Flanders, Anno, 1572.
JOHN WHITMAN, Shoemaker, about the age of 49 years, born in Tinen, a town in Brabant, after his coming over into England, dwelt in Rye, in the county of Sussex, being married 23 years; always a professor of the gospel, as well in the time of freedom, as in the time of persecution. About Candlemas, in the year 1572, unknown to his friends in Rye, understanding of shipping in Rye, which was ready bound for Ostend in Flanders, he went on board the Saturday morning, and arrived at Ostend that night, where he lodged with one of his kinsmen dwelling the [...]e. The next day being Sund [...], in the morning, he, accompanied with his said kinsman, took his journey, as it were to have passed into the higher country.
WHEN they were about three miles on their journey out of the town, Whitman immediately returned back to Ostend, whither so soon as he was come, he immediately went to church, and at the time of the heave offering, stept to the sacrificer, and took from his head the idol, saving these words in the Dutch tongue, Is this your God? And so breaking it, cast it down under his feet. The people laid hold on him, and he was carried immediately to prison. The next day the judges and other counsellors being assembled, he was brought forth into the common hall, and examined of this fact, the intent, the counsel, and abettors thereof, and also of his faith; where he very constantly in defence of his christian faith, and great detestation of idolatry, behaved himself in such a manner, that he wrung tears from the eyes of several, both of the chief, and others present. So he was committed again to prison. The next day being Tuesday, he was brought out again before the judges into the same place, and b [...]ing examined as before, he no whit abated, but increased in his constancy. Whereupon sentence was given upon him to have his hand cut off, and his body scorched to death, and after to be hanged up. So the day following, being Wednesday, he was brought out of prison to the town-hall, standing in the market-place, all things being prepared there for the ex [...]cution. The hangman went into the hall, and with a cord tied his hands, and came out leading him thereby. As soon as Whitman was out of the house, he made such haste, and as it were ran to the place of execution, so that he drew the hangman after him. There was a post let up with spars from the top thereof, a slope, down to the ground, in the manner of a tent, to the intent that he should be only scorched to death, and not burned. When he was come to the place, the hangman commanded him to lay down his right hand upon a block, which he immediately with a hatchet smote off: the good man still continuing constant, the hangman stept behind him, and bid him put out his tongue, through which he thrust a long instrument like a packing-needle, and so let it stick. Then the judges, standing by in the common-hall, read again his crime and sentence. Whereunto he could make no answer, his tongue hanging out of his head: then he was stripped to his waistcoat, and put within his tent, and made fast with two chains, and fire was put round about, which broiled and scorched his body most miserably, till he was quite black, he not being seen, but heard to make a noise within the tent. When he was dead, he was carried out to be hanged upon a gibbet near the town.
The Oration of JOHN HALES to her Majesty Queen ELIZABETH, on her Accession to the Throne.
ALTHOUGH there be innumerable gifts and benefits of Almighty God, whereof every one would wonderfully comfort any person, on whom it should please his goodness to bestow it; yet is none of them either separated by itself, or joined with any other, or yet all mingled together, to be companied to this one, That it hath pleased God of his mercy to deliver this realm, our country, from the tyranny of malicious Mary, and to commit it to the government of virtuous Elizabeth. For if a man had all the treasure of Solomon, and mght [Page 630] not be suffered to have the use thereof, in what better case was he than miserable Tantalus, over whose head the apples continually hung, yet being starved with hunger, he could never touch them? If a man had as strong a body as Sampson had, and besides, were as whole as a fish, as the proverb is, yet if he were kept in [...]ands, what should it avail him? Yea, rather, if it be well considered, it is a hurt to him, if continuance of torment and pains may be a hurt.
IF a man had as many children as Gideon the judge had, and might not be so suffered to bring them up in the fear of God, and good manners and knowledge, had he not been more happy without them, than to have them? If a man had as much knowledge of God as St. Paul had, and durst not profess it openly with his mouth, as he is commanded, but for fear of death should declare the contrary, slander the word of God, and deny Christ, which is forbidden, should it not rather be a furtherance to his damnation than otherwise?
AND to be short, if any man had all these gifts together, or generally all the gifts of fortune, the body, the mind, and of grace, yet if he might not have the use of them, what should they profit him? Verily nothing at all. For felicity is not in having, but in using; not in possessing, but in occupying; not in knowledge, but in doing.
BUT alas, our natural mother England, which hath been counted the surest, the richest, and of late the most godly nation of the earth, hath been these whole five years most violently by [...]yr [...]ts forced to want the use of all the gifts and benefits wherewith God and nature hath indued her. Her natural and loving children would not be suffered to enjoy their right inheritance, whereby they might relieve and succour her or themselves; but whatsoever they had, was either by open, or by crafty dealing pulled from them. And surely this had been tolerable, if none other mischief had been therewith intended.
HE is a gentle thief (if thieves may be counted gentle) that only robbeth a man of his goods▪ and refraineth violent hands from his person. For such loss, with labour and diligence, may be recovered. He may be called a merciful murderer, that only killeth the aged parents, and useth [...] force on the children.
NATURE hath made all men mortal, and that is like space; and to kill the parents, is as it were a prevention of a short time, if it were to the uttermost enjoyed. But these tyrants were more ungentle than common thieves, more devoid of mercy than common murderers. For they were contented not only to have the goods of the people, but they would have it delivered to them by the owners' own hands, that it might be said to the world they gave with their heart; and they were not therewith pleased, but they would have their lives, that they should not betray them; and yet herewith they were not satisfied, but they meant to root out the whole progeny and nation of Englishmen, that none should be left to revenge and cry out on their extremities, and to bring our country into the Spaniards' dominion.
IT is an horrible cruelty for one brother to kill another, much more horrible for children to lay violent and murdering hands on their parents, but most horrible of all to murder the children in the sight of their parents, or the parents in the sight of their children, as these most cruel tormentors have done.
BUT what do I stand in these things which have some defence, because the Turks perchance used so to do, and heathens kill one another, to make sacrifice of men to their fantastical gods?
IT was not enough for these unnatural English tormentors, tyrants, and false christians, to be the lords of the goods, possessions, and bodies of their brethren and countrymen; but being very Antichrists, and enemies of Christ's cross, they would be gods, and reign in the consciences and souls of men. Every man, woman, and child, must deny Christ in word openly; abhor Christ in their deeds; slander his gospel with word and deed; worship and honour false gods, as they would have them, and themselves did; and so give body and soul to the devil their master; or secretly fly; or after inward torments be burned openly. O cruelty! cruelty! far exceeding all cruelties committed by those [Page 631] ancient and famous tyrants and cruel murderers, Pharaoh, Herod, Caligula, Nero, Domitian, Maximine, Dioclesian, and Decius, whose names, for their cruel persecution of the people of God, and their own tyranny practised on the people, have been, are, and ever shall be, in perpetual hatred, and their souls in continual torment in hell. If any man would take upon him to set forth particularly all the acts that have been done these full five years, by this unnatural woman, (no, no woman, but a monster, and the devil of hell, covered with the shape of a woman) as it is most n [...]cessary, for the glory of God, and the profit of his church and this realm, it should be done; he shall find it a matter sufficient for a perfect great history, and not to be contained in an oration, to be uttered at one time by the voice of one man; but to comprehend the sum of all their wickedness in few words, behold, whatsoever malice in mischief, covetousness in spoil, cruelty in punishing, tyranny in destruction, could do, that all this poor English nation this full five years suffered already, or should have suffered, had not the great mercy of God prevented it.
AND albeit there have been many that have hazarded and lost their lives to shake off this most rough brake, (wherewith this viragin, rather than virgin as she would be called and taken, boasted herself to be sent of God, to ride and tame the people of England) albeit there have been many that have gone about to loose their brethren out of the yoke of this most miserable captivity, and albeit some have proved to [...] the bands of this most cruel tyranny, yet could they never bring to pass that which they so earnestly laboured, and so manifestly attempted.
AND it is not to be wondered, let the papists boast thereof what it pleaseth them. For almighty God being a most righteous governor punishing evil, and rewarding good, could not of his justice suffer his scourge so soon to be taken from this our land, if he meant the salvation of the people, as most manifestly it appeareth he did. For having once given to this realm the greatest jew [...]l that might be, that is, the free use of his lovely word (which if they had embraced and follow [...] [...] w [...]uld have reformed all disorders and sins for which his wrath was kindled and provoked) the [...] either utterly contemned it, or abused it; and many made it a cloak and colour to cover their mischief. So that if he should suddenly have withdrawn this plague, (as tyrants and evil governors be the plague of God) they would never have passed on his justice, nor yet should they have felt the sweetness of his mercy. For commonly the people regard but things present, and neither remember things past, nor yet pass an things to come, unless they be warned by exceeding extremities.
BESIDES this, it is most evident, that he had determined to make this noble conquest alone with his own hand and mighty power, and would not that it should be done by man, lest man should impute any part of the glory of this victory to his own strength, or to his own policy, or that fortune should seem to bear any stroke in so glorious a conquest, and so be partaker, in men's opinions, of the triumph so worthy.
NEITHER did this almighty power work this when man would have it dispatched, that is, as soon as the enemy began to gather their force; for it is not so great a victory to discomfit a few dispersed people, as it is to destroy a perfectly united army; but he suffered them to make their force as great as was possible, to work whatsoever mischiefs by smile, banishment, prisonment, hanging, heading, burning, or otherwise could be immagined.
NEITHER would this most provident wisdom do it out of season: but as the good husbandman doth not crop his tree, till he hath rendered his fruit; so would he not root out these pestilent tyrants, till the most profit might be taken thereof.
WHEN he had given sufficient leisure to all kind of men to declare themselves who were crocodiles, sometime lying in water, sometime on land, that is, both gospellers and papists; who were spunges, suspected whether they had life or not life, whether they were christians or epicures; who were camelions, that could turn themselves into all colours, with protestants, protestants; with papists, papists; with Spaniards, Spaniards; with Englishmen, Englishmen; who were Gna [...]hos, that could apply themselves to every man's [...] [Page 632] mad affections; who were weather-cocks, that did turn with every wind; who were mastives, that could bite and bark not; who were cur [...], ever barking; who were foxes that would promise much, and perform nothing; who could bind themselves with many oaths, and do clean contrary; who were Cain [...], that sought the innocent Abels' deaths; who were the wolves that worried the lambs; and finally, when he had suffered the spiritual shavelings to spue out their venom, and every man plainly to declare outwardly what he was inwardly; then doth he work this most victorious conquest. And with his works he seemeth plainly to say thus unto us: Ye see, my people, what I have done for you, not for your sakes, which nothing regarded the benefits that I most plen [...]eously poured on you, and have deserved most grievous punishment for your unthankfulness; but of mine infinite mercy, and for my glory's sake, which I will have opened to all the world in these latter days, to the fear of evil doers, and to the comfort of the well doers. Provoke no more my wrath: ye see what will follow it: be hereafter more prudent and wise than ye were before: ye may, if ye will, be more circumspect in time to come, than ye have been in the time past: ye may, if ye list, put me to less trouble, and keep yourselves in more safety. I have not only discovered mine, your's, and my land of England's enemies, and all the crafts, subtilties, and policies that have been, or may be used by them, or any like hereafter, but I have also taken away their head and captain, and destroyed a great number of them, that ye should not be troubled with them, and some of them have I left, that ye may make them spectacles and examples, to the terror and fear of their posterity. Love me, and I will love you: se [...]k my honour and glory, and I will work your commodity and safety: walk in my ways and commandments, and I will be with you for ever. Surely, if we consider the wonderful mercy that it hath pleased God to use towards us, in the delivering of the realm and us his people, out of the hands of those most cruel tyrants, as we cannot but do, unless we wi [...]l declare ourselves to be the most untha [...]kful people that ever lived, we must needs judge it not only worthy to be compared, but also f [...]r to exceed the deliverance of the children of Israel out of Egypt from the tyranny of Pharaoh, and from the powers of Holosernes and Senacherib. For it is not read that either Pharaoh or the other two sought any other thing, than to be the lords of the goods and bodies of the Israelites; they forced them not to commit adultery, and to serve false gods, as these English tyrants did.
BUT, besides, if we will note the wonderful works of God in handling this matter, we shall well perceive, that far much more is wrought to his glory, and to the profit of his church and people, than perchance all men at the first do see. For he hath not only dispatched the realm of the chief personages and head of these tyrants, but also as it were, declareth, that he minded not that either they or their doings should continue. For albeit that all acts, done by tyrants tyranously, be by all laws, reason and equity, of no force; yet because no disputation should follow on this, what is tyranously done, and what is not tyrannously done, he hath provided that this question needeth not to come in question. For he utterly blinded their eyes, and suffered them to build on false grounds, which can no longer stand than they are propped up with rope, sword, and faggot. For her first parliament▪ wherein they meant to overthrow whatsoever king Edward had for the advancement of God's glory brought to pass, was of no force or authority. For she perceiving that her enemies' stomach could not be emptied, nor her malice spued on the people by any good order, she committeth a great disorder. She by force and violence taketh from the common [...] their liberty, that, according to the ancient laws and customs of the realm, they could not have their free election of nights and burgesses for the parliament. For she well knew, that if either christian men, or true English men, should be elected, it was not possible for that to succeed which she intended. And, therefore, in many places divers were chosen by force of her threats, meet to serve her malicious affections. Wherefore that parliament was no parliament, but may be justly called a conspiracy of tyrants and traitors: for the greater part, by whose authority and voices things proceeded in that court, by their acts most manifestly declared themselves so: the rest, both christians and true Englishmen, although they had good wills, yet were not able to resist or prevail against the multitude [Page 633] of voices and suffrages or so many evil, false to God, and enemies to their country. Also dive [...]s burgesses being orderly chosen, and lawfully returned, (as in some places the people did what they could to resist her purposes) were disorderly and unlawfully put out, and others without any order of law put in their places. Doctor Taylor, bishop of Lincoln, a christian bishop and a true Englishman, being lawfully and orderly called to the parliament, and placed in the lords' house in his degree, was in his robes by violence thrust out of the house. Alexander Nowell, with two others, all three being burgesses for divers shires, and christian men and true Englishmen, and lawfully chosen, returned and admitted, were by force put out of the house of commons: for which cause, the said parliament is also void, as by a president of the parliament holden at Coventry in the 38th year of king Henry the sixth, it most manifestly appeareth. And the third parliament, called in the name of her husband, and of her evil grace, wherein they would have undone what her noble father and the realm had brought to pass for the restitution of the liberty of the realm and for extinguishment of the usurped authority of the bishop of Rome, is also void, and of none authority. For that the title and stile of the supreme head of the church of England, which by a statute made in the 35th year of the reign of the said king Henry, was ordained, that it should be united and annexed for ever to the imperial crown of this realm was omitted in the writs of summoning. Wherefore as a woman can bring forth no child without a man, so cannot those writs bring forth good and sure fruit, because this part of the title, which was ordained by the parliament for the form to be always used in the king's stile, was left out. For greater error is in lack of form, than in lack of matter. And where the foundation is [...]ad, there can nothing built thereon be good. There is no law, spiritual or temporal, (as they term them) nor any good reason, but allow these rules for infallible principles. And if any man will say, that it was not in the free choice, liberty, and pleasure of the king of this realm, and the queen, whether they would express the said title in their stile or not, as that subtle serpent, Gardiner, being chancellor of the realm, and traiterously sending out the writs of parliament without the same stile, perceiving he had oversho [...] himself in calling the parliament, and having committed many horrible murders and most mischievous acts, would have excused it, as appears by a piece of a statute made in the same parliament in the eighth chapter, and two-and twentieth leaf, it may be justly and truly answered, that they could not so do. For although every person may by law renounce his own private right, yet may he not renounce his right in that which toucheth the commonwealth, or a third person.
AND this title and stile more touched the commonwealth of England, than the king. For, as I said before, it was ordained for the conservation of the liberty of the whole realm, and to exclude the usurped authority of the bishop of Rome. And therefore no king nor queen alone could renounce such title: but it ought (if they would have it taken away) to be taken away orderly and formerly by act of parliament, sufficiently called and summoned. For the natural and right way to loose and undo things, is to dissolve them by that means they were ordained. And so it most manifestly appeareth, that all their doings, from the beginning to the end, were and be of a one effect, or authority: but all that they have done, hath been mere tyranny. O most marvellous providence of Almighty God, that always, and in all things, doth what is best for the wealth of his people! O most mighty power, that so suddenly overwhelmeth the counsels of the wicked, and bringeth their devices to naught! O infinite Mercy, that so gently dealeth with his people, that he saveth them whom he might most justly destroy! O most joyful, most glorious, and never-to-be-forgotten Hope Wednesday, in which it hath pleased thee, O God, to deliver thy church, this realm, and thy people from so horrible a tyranny! No tongue can express, no pen can indite, no eloquence can worthily set out, much less exhornate these thy marvellous doings. No, no heart is able to render unto thy goodness sufficient thanks for the benefits we have received. Who could ever have hoped for this most joyful time? Yea, who did not look rather for thy most sharp visitation, and utter destruction of this realm, as of Sodom, Gomorrah, and Jerusalem.
BUT we see and feel, good Lord, that thy mercy [Page 634] is greater than all men's sins, and far above all thy works. And albeit, there is no christian, and natural Englishman, woman or child, either present or that shall succeed us, who is not, or shall not be partaker of this most exceeding mercy and wonderful benefit of Almighty God; and therefore is bound continually to praise and thank him: yet, there is not one creature that is more bound so to do, than you, noble queen Elizabeth. For in this horrible tyranny, and most cruel persecution, your grace hath been more hunted for, than any other. Divers times they have taken you; sometimes they have had you in strong hold, secluded from all liberty; sometimes at liberty, but not out of the custody of cruel gaol [...]rs; and many times they determined, that without justice ye should be privily murdered. They thought, if your grace had been suppressed, they should have fully prevailed: if you had been destroyed, their doings forever should be established: if you had been taken out of the way, there were none left that would or could undo what they had ordained. But he that sitteth on high, and laughed at their madness, would not suffer that the malicious purposes, and most cruel devised injustice should have success. He took upon him the protection of you. He only hath been our Jeoseba, that preserved you from this wicked Athalia. He only hath made you queen of this realm, instead of this mischievous Marana. No earthly creature therefore, can claim the smallest merit: no man's force, no man's counsel, no man's aid, hath been the cause thereof. Therefore, the greater his benefits have been toward you, the more are you bound to seek his glory, and to set forth his honour. You see his power, what he is able to do; he alone can save, and he can destroy; he can pull down, and he can set up. If you fear him, and seek to do h [...]s will, then will he favour you, and preserve you to the end from all enemies, as he did king David. If you now fall from him, or juggle with him, look for no more favour than Saul hath shewed to him. But I have a good hope, that both his justice and benefits be so printed in your heart, that you will never forget them, but seek by all means to have the one, and to fear to fall into the other. I trust also, your wisdom will not only consider the causes of this late most sharp visitation, but also to your uttermost power endeavour to out root them.
AND forasmuch as besides this infinite mercy poured on your grace, it hath pleased his divine providence to constitute your highness to be our Deborah, to be the governess and head of the body of this realm, to have the charge and cure thereof, it is requisite above all things, as well for his glory and honour, as for your discharge, quietness and safety, to labour that the same body now at the first be cleansed, made whole, and then kept in good order. For, if the body of man be corrupted and diseased, he is not able to manage his things at home, much less to do any thing abroad: so if the body of the realm be corrupt and out of order, it shall neither be able to do any thing abroad, if necessity should require, nor yet prosper in itself. But this may not be done with piecing and patching cobling and botching, as was used in time [...], whilst your most noble father and brother reigned. For, if a man cut off one head of the serpent Hydra, and destroy not the whole body, many will grow instead of that one: and as in a corrupt [...] that hath many diseases, if the physician should labour to heal one part, and not the whole, it will in short time break out afresh: so unless the body of a realm, or commonwealth, be clean purged from corruption, all the particular laws and statu [...] that can be divised shall not profit it.
WE need no foreign examples to prove it: look upon this realm itself, it will plainly declare it. And as it is not enough to cleanse the body from it's corruption, but there must be also preservatives ministered to keep it from putrefaction; for naturally of itself it is disposed to putrify: so, after the body of a realm is purged, unless there be godly ordinances for the preservation thereof ordained, and duly ministered, it will return to the old state. For this body, which is the people, is universally naturally disposed to evil; and without compulsion, will hardly do what is their duty.
THUS must your grace do, if you mind the advancement of God's glory, your own quietness and safety, and the wealth of this your politic body. And they be not hard to bring to pas [...], where goodwill will vouchsafe to take to her a little pain. The realm will soon be purged, if vice and self-love be utterly condemned. It will be in good state preserved, [Page 635] if these three things—God's word truly taught and preached, youth well brought up in godly and honest exercises, and justice rightly ministred, may be perfectly constituted. And without this foundation, let men imagine what it pleaseth them, the spiritual house of God shall never be well framed or builded, nor the public state of your realm well ordered. For in what body God's word lacketh, the unity and charity that ought to be among the members thereof, and which knitteth them together, is soon extinguished. Where the youth is neglected, there can no good success be hoped; no more than the husbandman can look for a good crop where he sowed no seed. And where justice is not truly and rightly ministered, there the more laws and statutes he heaped together, the more they be contemned. And surely, if this thing could not without exceeding charges be compassed, (and God forbid that charges should be weighed, be they ever so great, where God's glory and the wealth of the realm may be furthered) yet ought it not to be neglected. What charges did David and Solomon his son, employ to build the stony house of God? How much more charges should a christian prince employ to build and set up the lively house of God? But verily, I am fully persuaded that it shall not be chargeable to do this. No, a great deal of superfluous charges, which otherwise your grace shall be forced to sustain, shall thus be clean cut away, and so your revenues, by means most profitable, and to no good person hurtful, increased.
THEREFORE, for God's sake, noble queen, let not the opportunity, now by God offered, be by your grace omitted. A physician can in nothing so much declare his good will and cunning, nor purchase himself so great estimation, as when he findeth his patient thoroughly sick and weakened, and doth restore him to his perfect health and perfection. Likewise, if a prince should desire of God, a thing whereby he might declare the zeal that he beareth to God, or whereby he might win fame and glory, he could desire nothing so much, as to come into a state corrupted, as this realm of England at present is, not to destroy it, as did Caesar, but to make it, as did Romulus.
IF your grace can bring this to pass, (and I am out of all doubt you may quickly) you shall do more than any of your progenitors did before you. Al men shall confess, that you are not only for proximity of blood preferred, but rather of God specially sent and ordained. And as the queen of Sheba came from far off to see the glory of king Solomon a woman to a man, even so shall the princes of our time come, men to a woman, and kings marvel at the virtue of queen Elizabeth. Thus shall we, your subjects, be most bound to praise God, and to think ourselves most happy, that coming so suddenly from the worse, be forthwith preferred to the best, rid from extremest calamity, and brought to the greatest felicity; and it shall be, besides, an example for all evil princes, to leave their persecution of Christ and his members, to cease from their tyranny, wherewith they continually oppress their poor subjects. And so all people, not only we of this your realm, but of all other nations, shall have just cause to pray for your grace's health, and increase of honour.
The Life and Death of Dr. STORY, a cruel Persecutor of Christ in his Members.
THIS Dr. Story, being an Englishman by birth, and from his infancy not only nursed in papistry, but also even as it were by nature earnestly affected to the same, and growing somewhat in riper years, in the days of queen Mary became a bloody tyrant, and cruel persecutor of Christ in his members (as all the histories in this book almost do declare). Thus he raging all the reign of the aforesaid queen Mary against the infallible truth of Christ's gospel, and the true professors thereof, never ceasing till he had consumed to ashes two or three hundred blessed martyrs, who willingly gave their lives for the testimony of his truth; and thinking their punishment in the fire not cruel enough, he went about to invent new torments for the holy martyrs of Christ, such was his hatred to the truth of Christ's gospel, but in the end the Lord God looking upon the afflictions and cruel blood-shedding of his servants, took away queen Mary, the great pillar of papistry. After whom succeeded lady Elizabeth, now queen of England, who staying the bloody sword of persecution from [Page 636] raging any further, caused the same Dr. Story to be apprehended, and committed to ward, with many other his accomplices, sworn enemies to Christ's glorious gospel. The said Story having been a while detained in prison, at last, by what means I know not, got out and conveyed himself over the seas, where he continued a most bloody persecutor, still raging against God's saints with fire and sword Insomuch as he growing to be familiar and right dear to the duke of Alva, in Antwerp, received special commission from him to search the ships for goods forfeited, and for English books, and such like.
AND in this favour and authority he continued there for a time, by which means he did much hurt, brought many a good man and woman into trouble and extreme peril of life through his blood-thristy cruelty: but at last the Lord (when the [...]easure of his iniquity was full) proceeded in judgment against him, and cut him off from the face of the earth, according to the prayers of many a good man; which came to pass in order as followeth. It being certainly known (for the report thereof was gone forth into all lands) that he not only intended the subversion and overthrow of his native country of England, by bringing in foreign hostility, if by any means he might encompass it; but also daily and hourly murdered God's people, there was this platform laid (by God's providence no doubt) that one Mr. Parker, a merchant, should sail unto Antwerp, and by some means convey Story into England.
THIS Parker arriving at Antwerp, suborned certain men to repair to Dr. Story, and to signify unto him, that there was an English ship come, loaded with merchandize, and that if he would make search thereof himself, he should find store of English books, and orher things for his purpose. Story hearing this, and suspecting nothing, made haste towards the ship, thinking to make the same his prey; and coming on board, searched for English heretical books (as he called them); and going down under the hatches, because he would be sure to have their blood if he co [...]ld, they clapped down the hatches, hoisted up their sail, having (at God would) a good gale, and sailed away unto England. Where they arriving, presented this bloody butcher, and traitorous rebel, Story, to the no little rejoicing of many an English heart. He being now committed to prison, continued there a good space: during all which time he was importuned and solicited daily by wise and learned fathers to recant his devilish and erroneous opinions, to conform himself to the truth, and to acknowledge the queen's supremacy. All which he utterly denied to the death, saying, that he was a sworn subject to the king of Spain, and was no subject to the queen of England, nor she his sovereign queen; and therefore (as he well deserved) he was condemned (as a traitor to God, the queen's majesty, and the realm) to be drawn, hanged, and quartered; which was performed accordingly, he being laid upon a hurdle, and drawn from the Tower along the streets to Tyburn, where he being hanged till he was half dead, was cut down and stripped; and (which is not to be forgot) when the executioner had cut off his privy members, he rushing up upon a sudden, gave him a blow upon the ear, to the great wonder of all that stood by: and thus ended this bloody Nimrod's wretched life, whose judgment I leave to the Lord.
CHAP. III. Containing an Historical Account of the PERSECUTIONS, SUFFERINGS, and cruel DEATHS of PROTESTANT MARTYRS in FOREIGN COUNTRIES.
A brief Relation of the horrible Massacre in France, Anno 1572.
AND first for brevity's sake to overpass the bloody butchery of the Roman catholics in Orange against the protestants, most fiercely and unawares breaking into their houses, and there, without mercy, killing man, woman, and child; of whom some being spoiled and naked, they threw out of their lofts in [...]o the streets; some they smothered in their houses with smoke, with sword and weapon sparing none, the carcases of some they threw to dogs, which was in the year 1570, in the reign of Charles IX. Likewise to pass over the cruel slaughter at Rhone, where the protestants being at a sermon without the city walls, upon the king's edict, the papists in fury ran upon them coming home, and slew of them above 40 at least, many more they wounded. This example at Rhone, stirred up the papists at Dieppe, to practise the like rage against the christians there, returning from a sermon likewise; whose slaughter had been the greater, had they not more wisely before been provided with weapons for their own defence if needed. All which happened about the same year aforesaid, viz. 1570. But these with such like I briefly overslip, to enter now into the matter above promised, that is, briefly to treat of the horrible and most barbarous massacre committed in Paris, such as I suppose was never heard of before in any civil dissention amongst the very heathens. In a few words, to touch the substance of the matter:
AFTER long troubles in France, the papists foreseeing no good to be done against the protestants by open force, began to devise how by crafty means to entrap them, and that by two manner of ways: the one by pretending a power to be sent into the lower country, whereof the admiral to be the captain; not that the king so meant indeed, but only to understand thereby what power and force the admiral had under him, who they were, and what were their names. The second was by a certain marriage suborned between the prince of Navarre, and the king's sister. To this pretended marriage, it was advised, that all the chief protestants of France should be invited, and meet in Paris. Among whom first they began with the queen of Navarre, mother to the prince that was to marry the king's sister, attempting by all means possible to gain her consent thereunto. She being then at Rochelle, and allured by many fair words to repair unto the king, consented at length to come, and was received at Paris; where she, after much ado, was at length won over to the king's mind, and providing for the marriage, shortly upon the same fell sick, and within five days departed, not without suspicion, as some said, of poison. But her body being opened, no sign of poison could there be found, save only that a certain apothecary made his boast, that he had killed the queen by certain venemous odours and smells by him confected.
AFTER this, notwithstanding the marriage still going forward, the admiral, prince of Navarre and Conde, with divers other chief states of the protestants, induced by the king's letters and many fair promises, at last were brought to Paris, where with great solemnity they were received, but especially the admiral. To make the matter short, the day of the marriage came, which was the eighteenth of of August, 1572. Which marriage being solemnized by the cardinal of Borbonne, upon an high stage set up on purpose without the church walls, the prince of Navarre and Conde came down, waiting for the king's sister, she being then at mass. This done, they resorted all together to the bishop's palace to dinner. In the evening they were had to a palace in the middle of Paris to supper. Not long after this, being the 22d of August, the admiral coming from the council table, by the way was shot at with a pistol, charged with three bullets, in both his arms. He being thus wounded, and yet still remaining in Paris, although the Vidam [Page 638] gave him council to flee away, it so fell out that certain soldiers were appointed in divers places of the city to be ready at a wat [...]h-word at the command of the prince, upon which watch-word given, they burst out to the slaughter of the protestants, first beginning with the admiral himself, who being wounded with many sore wounds, was cast out of the window into the street, where his head being first struck off, and embalmed with spices to be sent to the pope, the savage people raging him, cut off his arms and privy members, and so drawing him three days through the streets of Paris, they dragged him to the place of execution, out of the city, and there hanged him up by the heels to the greater shew and scorn of him.
AFTER the martyrdom of this good man, the armed soldiers with rage and violence ran upon all the others of the same profession, slaying and killing all the protestants they knew, or could find within the city gates inclosed. This bloody slaughter continued the space of many days, but especially the greatest slaughter was in the three first days, in which were numbered to be slain, as the story writeth, above 10,000 men and women, old and young, of all sorts and conditions. The bodies of the dead were carried in carts to be thrown in the river: so that not only the river was all stained therewith, but also whole streams in certain places of the city did run with the blood of the slain bodies. So great was the outrage of that hellish persecution, that not only the protestants, but also certain whom they thought indifferent papists, they put to the sword instead of protestants. In the number of them that were slain of the more learned sort, was Petrus Ramus, also Lambinus, another notorious learned man; Planteanus, Lomenius, Chapesius, with others.
AND not only within the walls of Paris this uproar was contained, but it extended further into other cities and quarters of the realm, especially Lyons, Orleans, Tholouse, and Rouen. In these cities it is almost incredible, and scarce ever heard of in any nation, what cruelty was shewed, what numbers of good men were destroyed; insomuch, that within the space of one month, thirty thousand at least of religious protestants are numbered to be slain, as is credibly reported in the commentaries of them who testify purposely of the matter.
FURTHERMORE there is to be noted, that when the pope first heard of this bloody stir, he with his cardinals, made such joy at Rome with the procession, with their gun-shot, and singing of Te Deum, that in honour of that festival act, a jubilee was commanded by the pope, with great indulgence, and much solemnity. Whereby thou hast here to discern and judge, with what spirit and charity these papists are moved to maintain their religion, which otherwise would fall to the ground without all hope of recovery. Likewise in France no less rejoicing there was upon the 28th day of the month, the king commanding public processions through the whole city to be made, with bonfires, ringing, and singing; where the king himself, with the queen his mother, and his whole court resorting together to the church, gave thanks and praise to God, for that so worthy victory atchieved upon St. Bartholomew's day against the protestants, whom they thought to be utterly overthrown and vanquished in all the realm for ever.
AND, indeed, to man's thinking, it might appear no less, after such a great destruction of the protestants, having lost so many worthy and noble captains as then were cut off, whereupon many, for fear revoking their religion, returned to the pope; divers fled out of the realm, such as would not turn, keeping themselvs secret, durst not be known nor seen, so that it was past all hope of man, that the gospel should ever have any more place in France: but such is the admirable working of God, where man's help and hope most faileth, there he most sheweth his strength, and helpeth, as here is to be seen. For whereas the little remnant of the gospel side, being no [...] brought to utter desperation, were now ready to give over unto the king, and many were gone already against conscience, yielding to time; yet, the Lord of his goodness so wrought, that many were stayed and reclaimed again through the occasion first of them in Rochelle: who, hearing of the cruel massacre in Pa [...]is, and slaughter at Tholouse, most constantly, with valiant [Page 639] hearts, (the Lord so working) thought to stand to their defence against the king's power, by whose example certain other cities, hearing thereof, took▪ no little courage to do the like; namely, Montal [...]bane, the city called [...], Sanser in Occitamia, Millialdum, Mire [...]ellum, Fuduzia, with other towns and cities more: who, being confederate together, exhorted one another to be circumspect, and take good heed of the false dissembling practices not to be trusted of the merciless papists, intending nothing but blood and destruction.
THESE things thus passing at Rochelle, the king hearing thereof giveth in commandment to captains Strozziu [...] and Guardius to see to Rochelle. After this, he sendeth a nobleman, one Bironius, requiring of the Rochelle men to receive him for their governor, under the king. A great consultation being held, at length the Rochelle men began to condescend, upon certain conditions; which being not easily consented to, and especially they hearing in the mean time what was done to others of their fellows, who had submitted themselves, thought it better to stand to the defence of their lives and consciences, and to hazard the worst. Whereupon began great siege and battery to be laid against Rochelle, both by land and sea, which was in the year 1572, about the fourth day of December. It would require another volume to describe all things during the time of this siege, that passed on either side, between the king's part and the town of Rochelle Briefly to run over some parts of the matter: In the beginning of the year following, which was 1573, in the month of January, commandment was given out by the king, to all and sundry nobles and peers of France, upon great punishment, to address themselves in a most forcible manner to the assaulting of Rochelle. Whereupon a great concourse of all the nobility, with the whole power of France, was there assembled; amongst whom was also the prince of Anjou, the king's brother, (who, there, not long af [...]er, was proclaimed king of Poland) accompanied by his other brother, duke Alanson, Navarr [...], Conde, and a great number of states besides. Thus the whole power of France being gathered against one poor town, had not the mighty [...] of God been on their side, it had been impossible for them to escape. During the time of this siege, which lasted seven months, what skirmishes and conflicts were on both sides, it were endless to recite. To make short, seven principal assaults were given to the poor town of Rochelle, with all the power that France could make. In all which assaults the pope's catholic side had the worst. Concerning the first assault, thus I find written—that within the space of 26 days were charged against the walls and houses of Rochelle, to the number of thirty thousand shot of iron bullets and globes, whereby a great breach was made for the adversary to invade the city: but such was the courage of them within, (not men only, but women, matrons, and maidens, with spits, fire, and such other weaps as came to hand) that the adversary was driven back, with no small slaughter of their soldiers: only of the inhabitants were slain and wounded to the number of sixty persons. Likewise, in the second assault, 2000 great field-pieces were laid against the town; whereupon the adversary attempted the next day to invade the town, but through the industry of the soldiers and citizens, and also of the women and maids, the invaders were forced at length to fly faster than they came. No better success had all the assaults that followed: whereby, consider (gentle reader) with thyself, in what great distress these good people were, not of Rochelle only, but of other cities also, during these seven months above-mentioned, had not the powerful hand of the Lord Almighty sustained them. Concerning whose wonderous operation for his servants in these distresses, three memorable things I find in history to be noted.
THE one concerning the siege of Sanser; which city being terribly battered and razed with the shot of great cannons and field-pieces, having at one siege no less than three thousand bullets and gun-stones flying upon them, wherewith the crests of their helmets were pierced; their sleeves, their hose, their hats pierced; their weapons in their hands broken, their walls shaken, their houses rent down; yet not one person slain nor wounded with all this, save only at the first a certain maiden, with the blast of the shot flying by her, was struck down, and died.
[Page 640]THE second thing to be noted is, that in the same city, during all the time of the siege, which lasted seven months and a half, notwithstanding all the ordnance and battering-pieces discharged against them, which are numbered to six thousand, not so much as 25 persons in all were slain.
THE third example, no less memorable, was at Rochelle: whereas the poorer sort began to lack corn and victuals, there was sent to them every day in the river, (by the hand of the Lord no doubt) a great multitude of fish, called surdenes, which the poorer people used instead of bread. Which fish, the same day the siege broke up, departed and came no more. Testified by them who were present in Rochelle all the time.
WHAT number was lost on both sides during all this seven months war, is not certainly known. The number of captains slain of the kings camp, however, leaves room for conjecture; which was no less than [...]32, of whom the chief was duke Damoule.
TO close up this tragical story, respecting the breaking up of this seven months siege: Thus it fell out, that shortly after the seventh assault given against Rochelle, which was in the year 1573, about the month of June, word came to the camp, that duke Anjou, the king's brother, was proclaimed king of Poland; at which great joy was in the camp. By occasion whereof, the new king, more willing to have peace, entered into talk with them of Rochelle: who, as he shewed himself to them not ungentle, so found he them again to him not unconformable. Whereupon; a certain agreement pacificatory was concluded between them, upon conditions. Which agreement, the new king of Poland s [...]on preferred to the French king his brother▪ not without some suit and intercession to have it ratified. The king also himself, partly being weary of th [...]se chargeable wars, was the more willing to assent thereunto. And thus, at length, through the Lord's great work, the king's royal consent, under form of an edict, was set down in writing, and confirmed by the king, containing 25 articles. In which also were included certain other cities of the protestants, granting to them the benefit of peace, and liberty of religion. This ed [...]ct, or mandate sent down from the king by his her [...]d at arms, Bironius, in the king's name, caused to be solemnly proclaimed at Rochelle, in the year 1573, the tenth day of June.
THE year following, which was 1574, for two things seemeth fatal and famous; first, for the death of Charles the Ninth, the French king; also, most of all, for the death of Charles, cardinal of Loraine, brother to Guise. Of the manner of the cardinal's death, I find little mention in stories. Touching the king's death, although Ric. Dinothus saith nothing, likely from fear, because he being a Frenchman, his name is expressed and known; but another story, (whom the said Dinothus doth follow) bearing no name, saith thus: that he died the 25th day of May, upon Whitsun-eve, being aged 25 years: and addeth more, Certain it is, that his sickness came of bleeding. And saith further: the constant report so goeth, that his blood gushing out of divers parts of his body, he tossing in his bed, and uttering many horrible blasphemies, laid upon pillows, with his heels upward and head downward voided so much blood at his mouth, that in a few hours he expired. Which story, if it be true, as is recorded and testified, may be a spectacle and example to all persecuting kings and princes, polluted with the blood of christian martyrs. And thus much briefly touching the terrible persecution in France.
To the CHRISTIAN READER.
WHEREAS that excellant man, both for learning and godliness, Mr. John Fox, of blessed memory, ended this worthy work with this short declaration of that horrible massacre and murder of God's saints and servants in France, we have thought good to set down the same more particularly and largely, and afterward to add thereunto a declaration of other outragious cruelties, committed in France by the favourers and followers of the church of Rome upon faithful christians, both before and after the said massacre: all faithfully collected and taken out of the history of that honorable man, James August Thuanu [...], president of the parliament of Paris, and counsellor of state to the late French king, Henry the Fourth. And thus we have done, that we [Page 641] may thereby be the more moved to hate and abhor that bloody Babylon of Rome, and to take better heed, that by our sins and contempt of God's holy word, by his great mercy committed unto us, we do not again fall into the cruel claws thereof, and into the bloody hands of her followers; as most certainly we had done, if God in his great mercy had not prevented that savage barbarous, and most monstrous Powder-Treason; of which great and merciful deliverance, God make us mindful and truly thankful in glorifying his name, and serving him in true holiness and righteousness all the days of our life, Amen.
A brief Relation of the Massacre at Vassy, in the Country of Champaigne in France.
THE duke of Guise being arrived at Joinville, asked some that he was familiar with, whether those of Vassy used to have sermons preached constantly by their minister. It was answered they had, and that they increased daily more and more. At the hearing of which report, he fell into a grievous passion; and upon Saturday, the last day of February, 1562, that he might the more covertly execute his conceived wrath against the religious fort at Vassy, he departed from Joinville, accompanied with the cardinal of Guise, his brother, and those of their train, and lodged in the village of Dammartin the Free, which is distant from Joinville about two French miles and an half.
THE next day being Sunday, after he had heard mass very early in the morning, being attended with about two hundred men armed with harquebusses, pistols, and cu [...]lasses, he lest Dammarti [...] passed along to Vassy. As he went by the village of Bronzeval, which is distant from Vassy a short quarter of a mile, the bell (after the usual manner) rang for sermon. The duke hearing it, asked those he met, why the bell rang so loud at Vassy; they t [...]ld him it was to [...]ive the people warning of the se [...]mon th [...]t was to be preached there. Then one called La M [...]tague, said, It is for the a [...]mbling of the [...]; adding moreover, [...] there were many in the said Bronzeval, who frequented the sermons preached at Vassy; and, therefore, that the duke would do well to begin there, and offer them violence. But the duke answered, March on, march on, we shall take them amongst the rest of the assembly. Many who followed the duke, namely, pages and footmen, rejoiced not a little concerning this bloody enterprise, not sticking to say, that the booty and pillage would fall to their shares; swearing by blood and wounds, that there would be good store of Hugonots there.
NOW, there were certain soldiers and archers accompanying the duke, who compassed about Vassy, for having been mustered at Monthierender, instead of returning home, as they were wont to do after the muster was ended, they took their way thence to Vassy, most of them being lodged in the houses of papists. The Saturday before the slaughter they were seen to make ready their weapons, harquebusses, and pistols; but the faithful not dreaming of such a conspiracy, thought the duke would offer them no hard measure, being the king's subjects; also, that not above two months before, the duke and his brethren passing by [...] unto the said Vassy, gave no sign of their displeasure.
THE duke of Guise being arrived at Vassy, with all his troops, a young man, a shoemaker, stepped out of his house, not far from the door where the assembly was, Montague, pointing to him with his finger, said he was one of the ministers. Whereupon the duke called this shoemaker to him, and asked him, whether he was a minister, and of what university he was. He answered, that he was not of that calling, neither was he a scholar. Notwithstanding, he hardly escaped from this troop, which had environed him round about: only one of the company told him, that if he had been a minister, he had taken upon him a very base calling.
FROM thence, the duke La Brosse, and La Montague, passed on in the said city with their soldiers, as if they intended to take their way towards the village of Esclairon, where it was given out they meant to dine. But passing by the market-house of Vassy, which is near the monastery, in the way leading to Esclairon, he turned and went directly towards the common hall, or market-house, and [Page 642] then entered into the monastery; where having called to him one Dessales, the prior of Vassy, and another whose name was Claud le Sain, being provost of the said Vassy, he talked a while with them, and issuing hastily out of the monastery, was attended by many of his followers. Then command was given to such as were papists, to retire into the monastery, and not be seen in the streets, unless they would venture the loss of their lives. The duke perceiving others of his retinue to [...] walking to and fro under the town-hall, and about the church-yard, commanded them to march on towards the place where the sermon was, being in a barn, about an hundred paces distant from the monastery, quite opposite to that way which the duke should have taken to Esclairon. This command was by and by put in execution by such of the company as went on foot going directly thither. He that marched foremost of this rabble, was La Brosse and on the side of these marched the horsemen, after whom followed the duke with another company of his own followers, likewise, those of the cardinal of Guise, his brother.
BY this time, Mr. Leonard Morel, the minister, after the first prayer ended, and having begun his sermon before his auditors, which might amount to about 1200 persons, consisting of men, women, and children; the horsemen first approaching to the barn within about twenty-five paces, shot off two harquebusses right upon those who were placed in the galleries joining to the windows. The people within perceiving that, endeavoured to shut the door, but were prevented by the ruffians rushing in upon them, who drawing their swords, furiously cried out, Death of God, kill, kill these Hugonots.
THE first they seized on was a poor crier of wine that stood next the door, asking him if he were not a Hugonot; and in whom he believed. Having answered, that he believed in Jesus Christ, they smote him twice with a sword, which felled him to the ground. Having got up again, thinking to recover himself, they struck him the third time; whereby, being overcharged with wounds, he fell down, and died instantly. Two other men, at the same time, were slain at the entry of the said door, as they were pr [...]ssing out to escape.
THEN did the duke of Guise, with his company, violently entering in among them, striking the poor people down with their swords, daggers, and cutlasses, not sparing any age or sex: besides, they within were so astonished, that they [...] not which way to turn them, but running [...] and thither, fell one upon another, flying as poor sheep before a company of ravening wolves entering in among the flock.
SOME of the murderers shot off their pieces against them that were in the galleries; others cut in pieces such as they lighted upon; some had their heads cleft in twain, their arms and hands cut off; so that many of them gave up the ghost even in the place. The walls and galleries of the said place were dyed with the blood of those who were every where murdered: yea so great was the fury of the murderers, that part of the people within were forced to break open the roof of the house, in hopes they might save themselves upon the top thereof.
BEING got thither, and then fearing to fall again into the hands of these cruel tygers, some of them leaped over the walls of the city, which were very high, flying into the woods and amongst the vines▪ which with most expedition they could soonest attain unto; some hurt in their arms, others in their heads, and other parts of their bodies. The duke presented himself in the house with his sword drawn in his hand, charging his men to kill especially the young men. Only, in the end, women with child were spared. And pursuing those who went upon the house tops, they cried, Come down, ye dogs, come down, using many cruel threatening speeches to them.
THE cause why women with child escaped, was, as the report went, for the dutchess's sake, his wife, who, passing along by the walls of the city, and hearing so hideous outcries amongst these poor creatures with the noise of the pieces and pis [...]ols continually discharging, sent in all haste to the duke her husband with much intreaties to cease his persecution, for frighting women with child.
DURING this slaughter, the cardinal of Guise remained [Page]
[Page 643] before the church of the said city of Vassy, leaning upon the walls of the church-yard, looking towards the place where his followers were busied in killing and slaying whom they could. Many of this assembly being thus hotly pursued, did in the first brunt save themselves upon the roof of the house, not being discerned by those who stood without: but at length, some of this bloody crew espying where they lay hid, shot at them with long pieces, wherewith many of them were hurt and slain, The household servants of Dessalles, prior of Vassy, shooting at the people on the roof, caused them to fall down like pigeons: one of that wretched company was not ashamed to boast, after the massacre was ended, that he for his part had caused six at least to tumble down in that pitiful plight, saying, that if others had done the like, not many of them could possibly have escaped.
THE minister, in the beginning of the massacre, ceased not to preach, till one discharged his piece against the pulpit where he stood, after which, falling down upon his knees, he entreated the Lord not only to have mercy upon himself, but also upon his poor persecuted flock. Having ended his prayer, he left his gown behind him, thinking thereby to keep himself unknown: but whilst he approached towards the door, in his fear he stumbled upon a dead body, where he received a blow with a sword upon his right shoulder. Getting up again, and then thinking to get forth, he was immediately laid hold of, and grievously hurt on the head with a sword, whereupon being felled to the ground, and feeling himself mortally wounded, he cried, Lord, into thy hands I commend my spirit, for thou hast redeemed me, thou God of truth.
WHILE he thus prayed, one of this bloody crew ran upon him, with an intent to have ham-stringed him; but it pleased God his sword broke in the hilt. Now, to let you understand by what means he was delivered from so terrible a death: two gentlemen taking knowledge of him, said, He is the minister, let him be conveyed to my lord duke. These leading him away by both the arms, brought him before the gate of the monastery, from whence the duke, and the cardinal his brother, coming forth, said, [...] hither; and asked him, saying, Art thou the minister of this place? Who made thee so bold to seduce this people thus? Sir, said the minister, I am no seducer, for I have preached to them the gospel of Jesus Christ. The duke perceiving that this answer condemned his cruel outrages, began to curse and swear, saying▪ Death of God, doth the gospel preach sedition? Provost, go and let a gibbet be set up, and hang this fellow.
AT which words the minister was delivered into the hands, of two pages, who misused him vile [...]y▪ The women of the city, being ignorant papists, caught up dirt to throw in his face, and with extended outcries, said, kill him, kill this varlet, who hath been the cause of the death of so many. Much ado there was to hold off the women from being revenged upon the poor minister.
WHILST the pages had him thus in their handling, the duke went into the barn, to whom they presented a great bible, which they used for the service of God. The duke taking it into his hands, calling his brother the cardinal, said Lo, here the title of the Hugonot books. The cardinal viewing it, said, There is nothing but good in this book, for it is the Bible, to wit, to wit the holy scriptures. The duke being offended, that his brother suited not to his humour, grew into a greater rage than before, saying, Blood of God, how now? What! the holy scripture. It is one thousand five hundred years ago, since Jesus Christ suffered his death and passion, and it is but a year since these books were imprinted, how then say you that this is the gospel? By the death of God, you say you know not what. This unbridled fury of the duke displeased the cardinal, so that he was heard secretly to mutter, An unworthy brother.
THIS massacre continued a full hour, the duke's trumpeters sounding the while two several times. When any of these desired to have mercy shewed them, for the love of Jesus Christ, the murderers in scorn would say unto them, You use the name of Christ, but where is your Christ now? And when they said, Lord God, they blasphemously would say Lord devil.
THERE died in this massacre, within a few days, [Page 644] fifty or three score persons; besides these, there were about two hundred and fifty, as well men as women, that were▪ wounded and spoiled, whereof some died, one losing a leg, another an arm, another his fingers. The poor's box, which was fastened to the door of the church with two [...]ron hooks, was wrested thence, with twelve pounds therein, and never restored again. Nothing was to be seen in the streets but women with their hair hanging about their ears, faces besmeared with blood, being wounded in many places with swords and daggers, with weeping and lamentations. Barbers and surgeons were set on work, that he that had least had three score under his hand to be dressed, and many perished for want thereof.
THE minister was kept close prisoner, so that for four and twenty hours none were permitted to supply him with necessaries at all, nor any suffered to see him or speak with him, and was often threatened by his keepers to be sewed up in a sack and drowned. Fain would they have drawn him to have kept his Easter after the popish manner, under fair promises of his enlargement; but he would by no means consent thereto. Thus he continued a prisoner until the 8th day of May, 1563, at which time he was set free at the suit of the most illustrious prince of Portien.
WHILST the duke was at Es [...]lairon, the lackeys and others of his servants put to sale, unto such as would give most, cloaks, hats, girdles, coifs, handkerchiefs, with other things which they had robbed the massacred of; crying them with a loud voice, as if a common crier had cried household goods to be sold.
Of the coming of JANE, Queen of Navarre, to the City of Paris, in France, with the Manner of her Sickness and Death there.
THIS good queen, before she could be drawn to come to Paris to solemnize the marriage of her son, the prince of Navarre, with the sister of Charles the Ninth, then king of France, received letters [...]pon letter [...] from the said king, to accompany the prince her son in that solemnity: now, whereas she had some doubts concerning her son's marriage with one of another religion, the king assured her that all things should be so wrought, as should give her good satisfaction and content; promising that he would get a dispensation from the pope to that end. But when the queen understood that the king was minded to have this marriage solemnized at Paris, she would by no means hear of it: For I will not, said she, put any confidence in so mutinous a people, being the sworn enemies both of my self and mine.
STILL the king persisted in his suit for the obtaining of the same at her hands. Also having intelligence by some of his agents, that the queen of Navarre began a little to waver, [...]he solicited her yet once again to come, assuring her that all things should be carried in such a peaceable manner, that she should have no cause to complain. At length the queen came from Rochelle to Blois, in the month of March, 1572, with great attendance, where it is incredible to think what a welcome she received on all sides, especially from the king and his brothers, &c. who yet, when all was done, could say to his mother, Now, madam, have I not acquitted myself well? Let me alone, and I will bring them all into the net.
IN April following the articles were concluded concerning the marriage of the prince of Navarre with the king's sister. In the beginning of May, the king solicits the queen of Navarre, again to come to Paris, for preparing of things sitting for this marriage; which she accordingly yielded unto, and parting from Blois on the sixth of the said month, came to Paris on the fifteenth of the same.
THE queen [...]mother could by no means abide this good queen; and therofore not finding with what colour she could dispatch her with the rest, and yet fearing the height of her spirit if she should survive, as also that she could not then so work upon the flexibility of the prince, her son, as she intended, she consulted with one Rene, an apothecary, who [...]e practice it was to impoison things; who by such means ventured to poison the prince of Conde by the scent of a poisoned apple, which upon some suspicion [Page 645] was tried upon a dog; and it had almost cost the prince's surgeon his life, by smelling too nigh hereunto. This Rene, selling to the queen of Navare his perfumed drugs, found the way how to poison her therewith, although others thought the contrary. But the said Rene was heard afterwards to make his brags, that he had the like in store for two or three more, who suspected no such matter,
ON Wednesday, June the 4th, the queen fell sick of a continual fever, and kept her bed; which proceeded, as it was given out, from her incessant grief which by long continuance brought on an impost [...]ume, she being also distempered with the heat of the season and her extraordinary long journies. This burning fever grew so strong upon her, that within five days after she died, to the great grief of the better sort, but the joy of the secret council.
THE malady indeed was in her brain, which was not searched: in which the queen-mother had an hand, though she seemed much to mourn for the affliction of her good friend. Now forasmuch as in the time of her sickness, she manifested with what spirit she was guided, we will here set down the true narration of her behaviour, both in her sickness, and at her death.
PERCEIVING that she could not long continue, she made herself ready to receive from the hand of God that which he had appointed concerning her: and to that end requested she might have such about her, as might comfort her in this case out of the word of God, as also to pray with her and for her, according to that which St. James saith, Is any sick among you, let him call for the elders of the church, and let them pray over such a one, knowing that the servant prayer of a righteous man availeth [...] with God.
THUS, according to her desire▪ a minister resorting unto her▪ [...]hewed out of the scriptures, That christians ought in all things to submit themselves to the will of God as to the Father of spirits, that they might live. And although the rigour of his chastisements doth sometimes seem [...]o ou [...] flesh, as if they were sent for no other end but their ruin and destruction yet ought we to consider, that because he is just, he can do nothing unjustly; and being a Father, he cannot but therein seek the welfare of his afflicted children.
TO which she replied, I take all this as sent from the hand of God, my most merciful Father▪ nor have I, during this extremity, feared to die, much less to have murmured against him for inflicting the same upon me; knowing, that whatsoever he doth, he doth the same so, as all in the end shall turn to my everlasting good.
THE minister continuing in his speech, added▪ That the cause of sickness and diseases must be sought beyond the course of physic, which always looks to the corruption of the humours, or to the more noble parts of the body any way distempered: for howsoever it was not amiss to have respect to these things, as to second causes, yet ought we to ascend higher, namely, to the first, even to God himself, who disposeth of all his creatures as it pleaseth him. He it is that makes the wound and heals, that kills and makes alive. And therefore to him we ought to direct our prayers for comfort in all our griefs and sufferings, and in the end for full deliverance; seeing it is no hard matter with him to restore health unto us, if his good pleasure be such.
TO this she answered, That she depended wholly upon God's providence, knowing that all things are wisely disposed by him, and therefore besought him to furnish her with all such graces as he saw to be necessary for her salvation. As for this life, said she, I am in a manner weaned from the love of it, in regard to the afflictions which have followed me from my youth hitherto, but especially because I cannot live without daily offending my good God, with whom I desire to be, with all my heart.
THE minister told her, that long life, how full of trouble soever it were, was notwithstanding to be esteemed among the blessings of God, seeing his promis [...] implies so much; and not only so, but because our life may many ways serve to his glory, and [Page 646] is both an honour and a pledge of his favour, even as it is to him whom his prince employs long in his service, having had experience of his fidelity for many years together. In which respect she was earnestly requested to pray, That if it were the will of God to employ her yet longer in his service, for the further enlargement of his gospel, that he would grant unto her such recovery of health, and good disposition of body, that with renewed strength she might be encouraged to finish her course much more nobly than heretofore.
WHEREUPON she protested, that in regard of her own particular, her life was not dear unto her, seeing so long as she lived in this frail flesh, she was still prone and apt to sin against God: only her care was somewhat for her children (which God had given her) in respect they should so soon be deprived of her now in their young years; yet not doubting (though it shall please God to take me from them) but that God himself will be a father and protector over them, as he hath been to me in my greatest afflictions; and therefore I commit them wholly to his government and fatherly care. These were her very words.
THE minister blessed God to find her majesty in this assurance of faith; advising her to make choice of such, who for their sincerity both in life and doctrine, might continue to water in these young princely plants the seeds of piety, which had been sown in them by her indefatigable care and industry; telling her, that it was to be hoped, that the example of her faith and constancy in the service of God, which she had set before them, would serve as a perpetual inducement to imitate her so noble virtues.
SHE again declared, That death was not terrible unto her, because it was the way by which we pass hence to our eternal rest: upon this expression the minister told her, That christians had little cause to fear death, in regard they should not die at all, according to Christ's words in the gospel of St. John, "He that liveth and believeth in me, shall never die." For death (to speak properly) is no death to them, but a sleep, being often so called in the scriptures; and therefore Christ for their sakes had overcome and triumphed over it in his own person▪ so as now we may cry out with St. Paul▪ " [...] death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is [...] victory?"
SHE was often admonished by him to make confession of her sins before God, shewing, That [...] diseases tended to the dissolution of nature, [...] that death was the wages of sin; declaring moreover, that by this her chastisement she might disce [...] what she had deserved, if God should now enter [...] judgment with her, not only in regard of the f [...]ll of our first parents, in which guilt she was enr [...]pp [...], as well as others, but also by her own personal [...], seeing the best of men or women in the world [...] in themselves but poor, miserable, wretched offenders; yea, if the Lord should punish us according to our demerits, we could expect nothing at [...] hands but eternal death and condemnation.
AT these words she began, with her hands and eyes lifted up to heaven, to acknowledge that her sins which she had committed against the Lord were innumerable; but yet she hoped that God for Christ's sake, in whom she put her whole trust, would be merciful unto her.
THE minister, fearing his long discourse might be too tedious for her (and especially because the physicians thought it might be hurtful), held his peace; but her majesty earnestly requested him not to forbear speaking to her about these matters of life and eternal salvation; adding that she now felt the want of it in regard that since her coming to Paris, she had been somewhat remiss in hearing such exhortations out of the word of God: and therefore I am now the more glad (said she) to receive comfort out of it, in this my so great extremity.
THE minister then endeavoured to set before her the happiness of heaven, and what those joys are which the faithful there possess in the presence of God; which when the scriptures intend to discover unto us, they only tell us, that "The eye hath not seen, nor hath the ear heard, neither hath it entered into the heart of man, [...]o conceive what those [Page 647] things are, which God hath prepared for them that love him." To which purpose he used this similitude, That if a king, intending greatly to honour some noble personage, should bring him to his court, and there shew him his state and attendance, his treasures, with all his most precious jewels: even so, said he, will the Lord one day reveal to all his elect and faithful people, his magnificence and glory, with all the treasures of his kingdom, after he hath gathered them home to himself, decking and adorning them with light, incorruption, and immortality.
THIS happiness, therefore, being so great, her highness he said, ought to be the less careful about the leaving of this transitory life, seeing that for an earthly kingdom, which she was now to forego, she should inherit an heavenly; and for temporal good things, which vanish and come to nothing in the using, she should forever enjoy those that were eternal and everlasting: for her faith being now firmly settled upon our Lord Jesus Christ, she might be suffered to obtain everlasting salvation by him. On which words he took occasion to direct his speech more particularly unto her, saying:
MADAM, do you veri [...]y believe that Jesus Christ came into the world to save you? And do you expect the full forgiveness of all your sins, by the shedding of his blood for you?
TO which she readily answered, she did; believing that he was her only Saviour and Mediator, looking for salvation from none other, knowing that he hath abundantly satisfied for the sins of the whole world, and therefore was assured that God, for his sake, according to his gracious promises in him, would have mercy upon her.
THUS you have in part the Godly speeches which passed from this religious lady in the beginning of her sickness; all which was within the space of three or four days.
IN the end, feeling her strength to decay more and more, she gave order to have her last will and testament made, wherein she above all wished, that her children might have but the grace to honour and fear the Lord, exhorting them constantly to continue in the profession of the gospel, in which they had been trained up from their youth; ordained especially that her daughter, the princess, should be educated and instructed therein, by the four ladies which she had appointed, and brought with her out of Berne for that end and purpose. And being oome to age, her desire was that she might be joined in marriage to some prince of the same religion, by the counsel and advice of the cardinal of Bourbon and Gasper, count of Colligny, admiral of France, whom she made executors and overseers of her said testament.
THIS good queen departed this life, to take possession of a far better, June 9, 1572, sweetly yielding up her spirit into the hands of God, the [...] day after she fell sick, and in the 44th year of her age.
AFTER the death of the queen, certain princes were solicited by the king to give their attendance at Paris for the solemnizing the marriage of the prince of Navarre (now made king by the death of his mother) according to the ceremonies which were thereunto appertaining. Among the rest, letters were directed to the admiral by the king him self, to come to this marriage; wherein the king assured him he would not tarry long after him; willing him not to be afraid of the fury of the Parisians, nor of their threats, which they had formerly uttered against him: for he was not ignorant of the deadly hatred they bore him, and therefore wrote unto the mayor of the city, to look unto it at his peril, that the admiral had no wrong offered him by the citizens, either at his entrance, or continuance in the city.
THE queen mother and the duke of Anjou wrote unto the mayor also, and likewise to the rest of the magistrates, to the same effect, but especially to their servants, some whereof had a little light given them touching that device. To be short they endeavoured to take all impediments out of his way, that he might with the less mistrust fall into the same.
[Page 648]THE admiral not fearing any perils, resolved to take his journey to Paris. Although he lacked not sundry advertisements from his own followers, and others his well-wishers in the kingdom, who honoured him much, desiring him, that howsoever he had no sinister opinion of the king, of his mother, or any of their's, yet at the least he was to take into his consideration the place whither he went, and amongst what enemies he was now to venture himself. But he always leaning upon the testimony of a good conscience, and being confident in God's providence, not moved by these advertisements, took his journey to Paris with very few attendants. Being come thither, he was honourably received by the king and his brethren, and by the queen-mother with others also.
THE marriage of the king of Navarre with the king's sister, being solemnized on the 17th and 18th of August 1572, and all the triumphs and feastings accompanying the same being finished, the admiral determining to take his leave at court, and so to return homewards, the deputies of the reformed churches brought him their requests on a sudden, to present the same to the king, in regard of many wrongs the said churches had sustained; and therefore they instantly besought him, that he would not leave the court till some order might be taken for redress thereof.
THIS, with other impediments, were the occasion of detaining him still there.
MAURAVELL, coming to Paris whilst these feasts lasted, having presented his service first to the king and his mother, the duke of Anjou, and the duke of Guise; after some speech had with the king and queen-mother, one named Chaill, had a command to direct him to the house whence the blow should be given; who left him with a woman in the house, which woman was forbidden not only to ask his name, but also so much as to inquire for what cause he was lodged there.
ON Friday the 22d of August, in the morning he trimmed up his harquebusse, watched secretly the admiral's coming
THE admiral at his going forth out of the Louvre, meeting the king coming out of a chapel which is before the same, passing thence to play at tennis, he scarcely had gone a hundred paces from the place but as he returned to his lodging on foot to di [...] there, attended by twelve or fifteen gentlemen, reading a petition; out of the window of a lodging (where Villemur, tutor to the duke of Gui [...]e, usually lay) he was shot with an harqueb [...]sse, charged with three brass bullets, one of which took off the fore-finger on his right hand, and he was hurt with another in his left arm. Feeling himself thus wounded, he asked some of his followers to enter that house, and to inquire who it was that had done that, or who set him on work to do it: and then to inform the king thereof, giving him to understand how well his commandment was observed.
NOW whilst they were busy to force open the door, the murderer fled out by a back way, escaping thence out of the gate of St. Anthony; where one attended him, holding a Spanish gennet, brought out of the duke of Guise's stable; wherein he galloped away, yet not without some difficulty; for flying thus in some fear, he fell off his horse twice or thrice.
A gentleman seeing the admiral hurt, came to support his left arm, binding up the hurt thereon with his handkerchief. And thus was he conducted to his lodging, which was distant from thence about twenty paces. In his passing a gentleman said, It was to be feared the bullets were poisened: to which the admiral replied, All must be as it pleaseth God.
THE king hearing of the admiral's hurt, left his game, where he was playing till then with the duke of Guise, and throwing away his racket as it seemed in an anger, with a sad and heavy countenance withdrew himself into his chamber: the duke of Guise followed him within a little while after.
THE king of Navarre, the prince of Conde, with many other of their religion, having notice of the admiral's hurt, complained to the king of th [...] untimely accident; intreating they might have [...] [Page 649] to depart out of the city, seeing they could expect little safety there. The king made great lamentations to them of the mischance that had happened, swearing and protesting that he would execute such impartial justice upon the offender, and on all the complotters, as should give the admiral and all his friends content; only he willed them to stay, promising them ere long to provide for there security.
THE surgeons and physicians were presently sent for, amongst whom was Ambrose [...]a [...]e, the king's surgeon, a man very expert. He began first with the admiral's finger, which put him to much pain, because the scissors were not sharp enough to cut it off at once; besides he was obliged to stop and open the wound thrice; then he began on the left arm, making incisions in two places into which the bullet had pierced. The admiral endured all this with an undaunted countenance, and wonderful patience; whilst those which stood by and saw him so mangled, could not refrain from tears. Captain Monins held him with both his arms about the middle, and Cornaton held his hands. He seeing them astonished, My friends, said he, why weep you? I think myself happy to be thus handled in the cause of God. And now casting his eyes upon a minister, called Merlin, he said, Here you see, my friend, God's blessings. I am hurt indeed; but I know it is come to pass by the will of my heavenly Father, humbly thanking his Majesty in that he is pleased to honour me so far, as to suffer any thing for his holy name. Let us pray unto him, that he would grant unto me the gift of perseverance.
THEN looking upon the said mi [...]ister, who wept over him; Oh, m [...]ster Mer [...]in, said he, what, will you not comfort me? Yes sir said he, for wherein may you take greater c [...]m [...]o [...]t, than in [...]lling to mind how greatly God hath always honoured you, in est [...]eming you worthy to suffer [...] [...]each for his name's sake, and true religion? The admiral repli [...]d. Al [...]s, if God should dea [...] with me according to my deserts, he might h [...]ve put me to [...] torments than th [...]se. But blessed be his holy name, in that he is pleased to take [...] unworthy servant. Be of good [...] then, [...], said another unto him; for seeing God hath spared your more nob [...]e parts, you have cause therein to magnify his goodness. In these wounds you have received from God a testimony of his love, rather than of his displeasure, seeing he hath preserved your head and understanding safe.
THEN said Merlin, Sir, you do well in turning your thoughts away from him who hath committed this outrage upon you, in looking only unto God; for no doubt it is his hand that hath smitten you; therefore for the present, cease to think on the malefactor. I assure you, said the admiral, I do freely forgive him, from the bottom of my heart and those also that are his abettors; being fully persuaded that none of them all could have done me the least hurt, no, though with violent hands they had put me to death. For what is death itself to God's children, but an assured passage to an eternal rest and life.
THE king of Navarre and the prince of Conde having bitterly bewailed this outrage committed upon the admiral (as you heard before), about two o'clock in the afternoon, the king, accompanied with the queen-mother, his brother, and other of the lords, went to visit the admiral.
THE king with tears seemed to be exceeding sorry for that which was to come to pass, promising him, with one blasphemous oath upon another, to revenge the fact, no less than if it had been committed upon his own person: praying him to come and take up his lodging with him, in the Louvre, for his greater security and safety. Whereupon the admiral, after some di [...]course made to the king in secret, gave him most humble thanks for so great a savour, as to visit him in his own person.
UPON the motion made by the king, Mazilles, his chief physician, was called, demanding of him, whether the admiral might safely be removed thence into the L [...]uvre, or no? His answer to the king was. That it could not be done without danger. Some of the admiral's friends thought it fitting to request a guard of soldiers to be assigned by the king u [...]to h [...]m for his better security. The king answered, he liked well that advice, being determined [Page 650] to provide for the admiral's safety as his own, and would preserve him no less than the apple of his eye. After the king called for the bullet of brass, wherewith the admiral was hurt, that he might see i [...], asking whether he was not put to great pain when his finder was cut off, as likewise touching the dressing of his arm; now as Cornaton shewed the bullet, having his sleeve all bloody (because he was appointed to hold the admiral's arm, while it was in dressing), the king asked if that were of the admirals blood? And whether so much blood issued out of his wounds? Adding (after Cornaton's answer) he never saw man in his life shew greater constancy and magnanimity of spirit than the admiral did.
THEN was the queen-mother desirous to see the bullet, saying, I am glad the bullet is taken out. For I remember when the duke of Guise was killed before Orleans, the physician told me, that if the bullet was gotten out, there was no danger of death, though it were poisoned.
THEN Cornaton answered, We have foreseen that, madam; for being careful to prevent that danger, the admiral had a medicine given him to expel the poison, if peradventure any such thing should be.
THE Saturday before the admiral was slain, he began to be somewhat cheered, so that the surgeons and physicians gave out, they would warrant the admiral's life: because his arm, having lost but little of it's strength, would soon be healed. This news was brought to the king, who seemed to entertain the same joyfully. The new-married wife came also to visit the admiral. But all this was but a lightning before death. For that night then was heard a great clattering of armour in the city, and many torches lighted every where, borne by many of the people. Some gentlemen, whose lodgings were nigh to the admiral's, rose, and went out, asking some of their acquaintance the reason why there were so many up in arms at that hour of the night: they answered, that the king much desired to see a castle assailed and defended, devised only in sport to give him content. They passing yet further, came to the Louvre, where they likewise saw many torches lighted, and troops of armed men.
THE guard there could no longer contain themselves, but began to pick a quarrel wi [...]h them; and as one of the said gentlemen was about to speak, a Gascoine soldier struck him with a partizan, and then they fell upon the rest. The noise hereof spreading, the queen-mother said, Seeing it is not possible to retain the fury of the soldiers any longer from breaking out, let the bell of the church of St. Germain be tolled; which was the signal to begin the massacre.
THE admiral coming to the knowledge of this uproar (though he had but few of his followers about him) was not much moved thereat; trusting (as he often used to say) upon the king's favour, whereof he had large experience. Also he knew that when the Parisians should understand how much the king disliked their folly, though they had an intention of doing him some mischief, yet would they be quieted as soon as they saw Cosseins and his guard.
THIS Cosseins was appointed by the duke of Anjou to defend the admiral's lodging wherein the old proverb was verified, That the wolf was set to keep the sheep.
ABOUT break of day, August the 24th, 1572, being St. Bartholemew's-day, they began to knock at the door where the admiral lay. La Bonne, who lay not far from him, having the keys, perceiving there were some who came on a message from the king to the admiral, came down quickly and opened the door; presently Cosseins fell upon him and stabbed him with his dagger, so that he died. Then with his harquebusses rushing into the house, killing such as they met, others fled. Cornaton awaking with the noise that he heard at the door (for he lay in the next chamber), ran thither, causing the Switzers and other officers to fortify it. Cosseins hearing that cried to him to open it in the king's name, and he so handled the matter, that with the help he had, he forced the door open, and [Page 651] after gained the stairs. The admiral and those that were with him, taking notice how they shot off pistols and guns, finding themselves inclosed in their enemy's hands, fell to prayer, begging pardon of God for their sins.
THE admiral rising out of his bed, and putting on his night-gown, commanded Merlin, the minister to make the prayer. He also, earnestly calling upon Jesus Christ his God and Saviour, commended his spirit into his hands. He that testified these things and made report thereof, coming into the chamber, and being asked by the admiral what that tumult meant; Sir, saith he, God is now summoning us to look to our end. The admiral seeing what would be the issue, answered, I have long since expected death: save yourselves if it be possible, for you cannot secure me; I commend my soul into the hands of the merciful God. Those who were present and escaped, have affirmed, that the admiral was no more affrighted at death, which he saw present before his eyes, than if there had been no likelihood thereof at all.
FORTHWITH every one in the chamber getting up to the top of the house, and ha [...]ing found a window near the roof, saved themselves there; but the greater part, who were beneath in the next room to the admiral, were slain, others miraculously escaped. In the meanwhile Cosseins having made his way, caused certain Switzers of the duke of Anjou's guard to enter into the house.
BESINE, Cosseins, and Sarlabour, with their targets in one hand, and their naked swords in the other, broke open the admiral's chamber-door, and Besine (who was afterwards slain himself by one Bertoville upon the way, after he had escaped out of prison) coming towards the admiral, holding the point of his sword to his breast, said thus, Art not thou the admiral? I am the man, said he, with undaunted courage, as the murderers afterwards confessed. Then beholding the naked sword, Young man, said the admiral, thou oughtest somewhat to respect my years, and my infirmity of body, but it is not thou that canst shorten my days. Besine desperately thrust the admiral into the body with his sword, and then smote him therewith on the head; the rest had every one a blow at him; so that he presently fell down wounded to death.
WHILST this mischief was acting, the duke of Guise being below in the base court, with other Romish Catholic lords, cried to the murderer above, Besine, hast thou done? It is done, saith he Then the duke replied, Monsieur, our knight (meaning king Henry's bastard) will not believe unless he see it with his eyes; throw him down-out of the window.
THEN Besine and Sarlabour, lifting up the body of the admiral, cast him down unto them, where he lay naked on the ground, exposed to all sort of scorn and mocks of the multitude, some trampling on him with their feet. Now because the blow which Besine had given the admiral on his head, had so covered his face with blood issuing thence, that his visage could not be discerned, the duke of Guise stooping down took his handkerchief, and wiping his face therewith, said, It is he, I know him well enough; and giving this poor dead body a spurn on the head with his foot (whom all the murderers in France feared whilst he lived) he passed thence, encouraging his soldiers, saying, We have made a good beginning; now let us go on to the rest, for the king hath so commanded, the king hath so commanded, repeating it twice over.
AN [...]talian of the duke of Nevers' guard cut off the admiral's head, and brought it to the king and queen-mother: which being embalmed, was sent to Rome to the Pope, and to the cardinal of Lorrain, being there at that time. The common people on the next day cut off his hands and privy members, and then in this woful plight being dragged up and down three days in the channels throughout the streets, he was at last carried out of the city to a gibbet in Mount Faucon, where they hanged him by the Feet; from whence some that were well disposed, going together in the night to this gibbet, took down the body of the admiral; which they interred in so secret a manner, that the papists could never find it out, and it remains buried still, so that they were obliged to make a body of straw, and hung that up instead of the body itself, rather than none at all.
[Page 652]THE following is the sentence which the court of parliament in Paris denounced against Gasper Coligni, admiral of France, after he was massacred.
1. First, That for his conspiracy against the king and state, in the year 1572, the said court hath condemned him for high treason.
2. THAT his memory shall be utterly razed out.
3. IF his body, or any figure thereof, shall be taken, that the same shall be first drawn upon a hurdle to the place called Le Grene, and there hanged on a gibbet.
4. AFTER which a gibbet shall be set upon Mount-Faucon, and he there to be hanged in the most eminent place.
5. HIS arms and armour to be drawn at a horse's tail through the streets of the said city, and other cities where they shall be found, and there to be broken in pieces, as a sign of his perpetual ignominy.
6 ALL his goods and possessions to be forfeited to the king's use.
7 ALL his children to be pronounced ignoble; as also held unworthy of any honour or dignity whatsoever.
8. HIS house and castle of Chastillon, upon the Loin, the Base Court, and all appurtenances thereunto appertaining, to be defaced and demolished to the ground.
9. THEN in the said place this sentence shall be set up engraven in brass.
10. Lastly, That on the 24th of August, 1572, general processions be made through the city of Paris, by way of thanksgiving to God for this punishment inflicted upon the conspirator.
AT Rome solemn masses were sung, and thanks rendered unto God for the good success which the Roman catholics had obtained in massacring the Hugonots. At night, in token of joy and gladness, were made many great bonfires in sundry places: and, as the report went, the cardinal of Lorrain gave a thousand crowns to the person that brought him this welcome news.
THE same day the admiral was hurt, the king advised the king of Nav [...]rre, his brother-in-law, to lodge in his chamber, with ten or twelve of his trustiest servants, to protect him from the designs of the duke of Guise, whom he called an unhappy boy.
THE admiral before his death made his will, in which he gave the king counsel, that he should not give his brethren over-great portions. The queen-mother hearing this, and reading the same to the duke of Alenson the king's brother; now you see, saith she, the heart of your friend the admiral, whom you so much loved and respected.
THE duke answered, I know not how much he loved me, but I well perceive by this how much he loved the king.
THE English ambassador made almost the like answer when the said queen told him, how the admiral had advised the king not to trust the English too far.
INDEED, madam, saith he, hereby it appeared that though he bare but little good-will to the English, yet he manifested himself a loyal servant to the crown of France.
THE Sieur de Brion, governor of the young marquiss Conde, son to the late prince of Conde, hearing these stirs, taking his little master even in his shirt, thinking to convey him somewhere out of the way, met these murderers, who plucking from him the young prince, massacred the old man in his presence, whilst the prince with tears i [...] treated them to spare his governor. But they dyed his white hairs in his own blood, and then barbarously dragged him through the mire.
IT was credibly reported, that the number of the [Page 653] slain that Sunday morning, and two other days following, in the city of Paris, and in the suburbs, did amount to above ten thousand, counting lords, gentlemen, presidents, counsellors, advocates, lawyers, scholars, physicians, merchants, tradesmen, women, maids, and children. The streets were covered with dead bodies, the river was dyed with blood, the gates and entrance into the king's palace painted with the same colour: but the blood-thirsty were not yet satisfied; for they still continued to go from house to house with their associates, where they thought to find any Hugonots, they broke open the doors, then cruelly murdered whosoever they met, sparing neither sex nor age. Carts were laden with dead bodies of young maidens, women, men, and children, which were discharged into the river, it being covered in a manner all over with the slain, and dyed with their blood, which also streamed down the streets from sundry parts thereof, whereat the courtezans laughed their fill, saying, that the wars were now ended, and that hereafter they should live in peace, &c.
An Account of Monsieur PIERRE DE LA PLACE.
MONSIEUR Pierre de la Place was president of the court of requests, whose story we will relate somewhat at large, because his singular piety requires it. On Sunday morning, about six o'clock, one captain Michael, harquebusser to the king, came into his lodging, into which he had easy access, for divers private reasons.
THE captain being armed, presented himself before the said De la Place: the first words he said were, that the duke of Guise had slain the admiral by the king's appointment, with many Hugonots besides: and because the rest of them, of what quality soever, were destined to death, he was come to his lodging to exempt him from the common destruction: only he desired to have a sight of what gold and silver was in the house. The lord De la Place, somewhat amazed at his audacity, who, in the midst of ten or twelve persons who were present in the room, durst presume to utter such language, asked him if he knew where he was, or whether he thought there was a king or no?
TO this the captain, blaspheming, answered, that he willed him to go with him to know the king's pleasure. The lord De la Place [...]earing this, fearing also some danger towards himself by sedition in the city, slipped forth at a back door behind his lodging, proposing to get into a neighbour's house. In the mean while, most of his servants vanished out of sight; and this captain, having stored himself with a thousand crowns, was intreated by the lady Marets, daughter to the said lord, to convey her father, with the lord Marets, her husband, into the house of some Roman catholic; which he consented to do, and also performed it.
AFTER this, De la Place, being refused [...]t three several houses, was constrained to retire back again into his own, where he found his wife very pensive, and grieved beyond measure, fearing lest this captain in the end should cast her son-in-law and daughter into the river, and also for the imminent danger wherein her dear husband and all his family were.
BUT the lord De la Place, being strengthened by the Spirit of God, with incredible constancy sharply rebuked her; and afterwards mildly demonstrated unto her, that we must receive these and the like afflictions from the hand of God; and so having discoursed a while on the promises of God, comforted her.
THEN he commanded all his servants that were in the house to be called together; who being come into his chamber, according to his custom on the Lord's days, he made a form of exhortation to his family: then went to prayer, and began to read a chapter out of the book of Job, with the exposition, or sermon▪ of Mr. John Calvin upon it. So having spoken somewhat of God's mercy and justice, (which he▪ as a good and wise father, useth to exercise his elect with sundry chastisements, lest they should be intangled here below wi [...]h the things of this world) he shewed how needful afflictions were for christians▪ and that it was beyond the power of Satan, or men, to hurt or wrong them, unless the Lord of his good pleasure gave them leave. What need have we then▪ said he, to dread their authority, which at the most can but prevail over our bodies? [Page 654] Then he went to prayer again, preparing himself and his whole family rather to endure all sorts of torments, yea, death itself, than to speak or do any thing that might tend to the dishonour of God.
HAVING finished his prayer, word was brought him, that Seneca, the provost marshal, with many archers, were at the door of his lodgings, commanding the same to be opened in the king's name, saying, that he came to secure the person of the lord de la Place, and to preserve his house from being pillaged by the common rabble. The lord de la Place having intelligence of this speech, commanded the door to be opened to him, who entering in, declared the great slaughter that was made upon the Hugonots every where in the city by the king's command; adding this withal in Latin, that he would not suffer one to live, Qui mingat ad Parietem. Yet have I express charge from his majesty, saith he, to see that you shall sustain no wrong, but only conduct you to the Louvre, because the king is desirous to be informed touching many things about the affairs of those of the religion, which he hath now in hand, and therefore willed him to make himself ready to go to his majesty. The lord de la Place answered, that it had always been his greatest wish, and nothing could render him more perfectly happy, than to gain any opportunity by which he might give an account to his majesty of his behaviour and actions.
BUT in regard that such horrible massacres were every where committed, it was impossible for him to pass to the Louvre, without the certain danger of his person; but prayed him to assure his majesty of his willingness to come, meanwhile leaving in his lodgings as many archers as he thought fitting, until the fury of the people was somewhat pacified. The provost agreed to this request, and left with him one of his lieutenants, called Toute Voye, with four of his archers.
NOT long after, came into his lodging, president Charron, then provost of the merchants, with whom conferring a little in secret, going his way, he left with the four archers who were there before, four more of the city archer [...] ▪ The whole night following was spent in the stopping up, fortifying of all passages from entering the house; with logs and flint stones stopping up the windows; so that it seemed by this so exact and diligent a defence, that the archers were left in the house to free the said de la Place, and all his family, from the common calamity; till Seneca returning the next day, after two o'clock in the afternoon, declared that he had express charge from the king to bring him to his majesty without delay. He replied as before, that it was dangerous as yet to pass through the city, in regard that even the same morning there was an house pillaged next to his.
SENECA on the contrary insisted, saying, It was the common speech of these Hugonots, to protest that they were the king's most loyal and obedient subjects and servants: but when they were to manifest their obedience to his commands, then they came off but slowly, seeming rather to abhor and detest it. And whereas he pretended danger, Seneca answered, that he should have a captain of Paris, sirnamed Pazon, a principal actor in this sedition, entered the chamber of the said lord of Place, offering his service to conduct him through the city to the king; which De la Place would by no means yield to, telling Seneca, that he was one of the most cruel and bloody-minded men in all the city; and therefore, seeing that he must needs go to the king, he intreated that the said Seneca would be his guard. To which Seneca answered, that having now other affairs to look unto, he could not conduct him above fifty paces.
THEN his wife, (though otherwise a very gracious and good lady) out of that intire love which she bore to her husband, prostrated herself at the feet of the said Seneca, beseeching and intreating him to accompany her husband to the king; but the said De la Place, who never shewed any sign of a dejected spirit, came to his wife, took her up from the ground, rebuked her, and told her, that it was not an arm of flesh that we must stoop to, but unto God only. Then turning himself about, he perceived in his son's hat a white cross, which through infirmity he had placed there, thinking thereby to save himself, for which his father sharply chid him, commanding him to pluck that mark of sedition thence; telling him, that they must now submit [Page 655] themselves to bear the true cross of Christ, namely, those afflictions and tribulations which it shall please our good God to lay upon us, as sure pledges of that eternal happiness, which he hath treasured up for all his elect servants. Thus seeing himself pressed by the said Seneca, to go with him to the king, resolving upon death, which he saw he could not avoid, he took his cloak, embracing his wife, earnestly wishing her above all things to have the fear of God, and his honour, in precious esteem; and then boldly went on his way. Coming into the street where the glass house stood, certain murderers, who attended for his coming, with their daggers in readiness, killed him, about three o'clock in the afternoon, as an innocent lamb, in the midst of ten or twelve of Seneca's archers who led him into that butchery: and then pillaged and imbezled away what they found in his lodging, for the space of five or six days together. The body (his soul was now received into heaven) being carried into a stable, they covered his face over with dung and the next day threw him into the river.
PETER RAMUS, the king's professor in logic, a man renowned among the learned, was not forgotten. He had many enemies, particularly one James Carpenter who sent the murderers to the college of priests, where the said Ramus was hidden. But being discovered, he offered a good sum of money to save his life; yet he was massacred, and cast down from an high chamber window upon the ground, so that his bowels issued out on the stones, and were aftewards trailed through the streets; the carcase was whipped by certain scholars, being set on by their tutors, to the great disgrace of good literature, of which Ramus was an eminent professor.
A young man, who preferred his mother's safety in these broils to his own, about the age of thirty-two years, a sincere christian of excellent learning, going abroad early on this dreadful sunday morning upon some extraordinary occasion, and hearing the rumour about the death of the admiral throughout the city of Paris▪ he, out of his singular affection to his mother, hastened home with all possible speed, informing her what had happened, and without delay, not regarding his own safety, secured her in a place fit for the purpose. After which he went to prayers in his study, as his custom was, where being found, the furious massacrers asked him, if he would obey the king; he answered, Yes, but I must also obey God. Then immediately they began with battle-axes and staves to load him with blows on the head, that he received his own blood into his hands; and then making an end of him, they threw him into the river.
NOTE, It could not be found that above two ministers were slain in this bloody massacre.
PHILIP LE DOUX, a great jeweller, at hi [...] return home from Guybray fair, being gone to bed, his wife at that time had the midwife attending upon her, being ready to be delivered; she hearing these furies below bouncing at the door, commanding it to be opened to them in the king's name; ill as she was, she ventured down, and opened the door to these tygers, who presently stabbed her husband in his bed. The midwife seeing them bent to murder the woman also, how ready to be delivered, intreated them to stay, at least till the infant (which would be the twentieth child that God had had given her) was born. Having contested some time with them, they took this poor woman, half dead with fear, and thrust into her fundament a dagger to the very hilt. She finding herself mortally wounded, and yet desirous to bring forth her fruit ran into a corn [...]loft, whether they pursued her, stabbing her likewise in the belly, and then threw her out of a window into the street: upon which fall the child came from her, head foremost, gaping and yawning, to the great astonishment and confusion of the papists, who were constrained often with detestation to acknowledge and confess the cruelties of their butchers.
ONE of the massacrers having snatched up a little child in his arms, the poor innocent babe began to play with his beard, and to smile upon him; but instead of being moved to compassion therewith, this barbarous wretch wounded it with his dagger, and threw it all in gore into the river.
AT the massacre at Meaux in Brie, one Quintin [Page 656] Croyer, an elder of the reformed church, seeing many of his companions massacred before his eyes, kneeled down, praying unto God to pardon the [...]e murderers; at which prayer they fell a laughing, and not being able with their daggers to pierce a jerkin of double buff which he wore, and w [...]men they were loth to spoil, (for it was a good booty) they cut asunder the points, and then g [...]ve him five or six st [...]bs with a d [...]gger into his b [...]y; and so this good man, wounded to death, calling upon God, rendered up his spiri [...] into the hands of man that gave it.
FARON HAREN, at the same time, a man zealously affected to re [...]igion, who had [...] therof of the city in the first troubles, having by his ende [...]vours chaced the mass out of Meaux▪ for a time was mortally hated of these seditious papists; and therefore they were not contented simply to kill him, but first cutting off his nose, ears, and secret parts, then giving him many small thrusts in divers parts o [...] his body, they constrained him to and fro among them, as if he had gone through the pikes But being weakened, and not able any longer to hold out, in consequence of the blood that issued from all parts of his body, calling upon the name of the Lord, he fell with his face to the ground, receiving infinite gashes and wounds after he was dead.
Persecution of the Faithful at Trois, in Champaigne.
NEWS coming to Trois of the massacre executed at Paris, the greater part of the judges and officers of the king were sent to the bailiff of Trois, with commandment diligently to make search for all those of the religion, from house to house, and to imprison as many as they could meet with.
IN this city, there was a merchant, called Peter Belin, a man of a turbulent nature. This Belin was at the massacre in Paris, on St. Bartholomew's day; from whence he was sent with letters from the king, dated the eight-and-twentieth day of August, to the mayor and sheriffs of Trois, to cause all these persecutions to cease, and the prisoners to be set at [...]berty. On the third of September, he c [...]e to Trois with these two letters (which had been first published in Paris) with commandment to deliver them to the foresaid magistrates to be proclaimed there also.
BUT at the first entrance into the city, he began to inquire, that all might hear him, whether they had not executed the Hugonots there as they had done in Paris; which was his language through the streets till he came home. But even some of the papists, who were not so cruelly minded, demanded of Belin the contents of the king's letters, whereof they had some inkling before. But he, like a Bedlam, swelling with choler, swore, that whosoever said they contained any thing tending to pacification, lied. Hastening, therefore, to the bailiff's house at Trois, after he had delivered him the packet, and buzzed somewhat in his ear, he put him on to see this execution done. Now, that the same might pass the better for current, the help of the executioner of Trois was requested whose name was Charles.
YET, he shewed himself more just and humane than the rest, peremptorily refused to have his hand in an act of so great cruelty; answering that it was contrary to his office to execute any man before sentence of death had first been pronounced by the magistrates. If they had such sentence to shew against any of the prisoners, he would do his office; otherwise, he wou [...]d not presume, without a warrant, to bereave any man of his life: and so with these words he returned home to his home.
NOW albeit this answer, proceeding from such a kind of person, whose [...] was to shed blood, might somewhat have a [...] [...]ged and taken off the edge of the most barbarous [...] in the world; yet the bailiff, [...]lighting it, was the further enraged. Upon this, he sent for one o [...] the jailors of the prison, who kept those o [...] the religion; but he being [...] of a Ter [...]ian [...]gue, Martin de Bu [...]es was sent to know his pleasure.
THE bailiff telling him at large, what Berlin had signified to him in private; [...], that on a sudden [Page 657] all the prisoners of the religion must be put to death that the place might be purged of them: this he said, you must not fail to do.
BUT this De Bures made no haste to perform his charge, acquainting no man with aught that passed between the bailiff and him; no, not Perrenet the keeper, who then lay sick in his bed.
THE next day the bailiff came into the prison, about seven o'clock, and calling for Perennet, asked of him, with a smile, Perennet, is it done? Perennet, knowing nothing more or less, asked of him, what? Then said the bailiff, Why, are not the prisoners dispatched? and thereupon was ready with his dagger to have stabbed him. But coming a little better to himself, he told Perennet what his purpose was, and how he was to behave himself concerning the execution thereof. At which words Perennet standing amazed, (though otherwise he was a fellow forward enough of himself to commit any outrages against the protestants) certified to the bailiff, that such an inhuman act could not be committed over to him, fearing lest in time to come justice might be followed against him by the parents or allies of the prisoners. No, no, said the bailiff, fear not, I will stand between you and all harms. Others of the justices have consented thereunto besides myself, and would you have better security than that?
WITHIN a short time after, the jailor coming into the court of the prison, where the prisoners were abroad recreating themselves, cau [...]ed every one to resort to his cabbin, because, said he, the bailiff will come by and by, to see whether the keepers have done as he commanded them: which they did. Then began these poor sheep to fear they were destined to the slaughter, and therefore went presently to prayers. Perennet instantly called his companions about him, reporting to them what the bailiff had given him in charge. Then they all took an oath to execute the same; but approaching near to the prisoners, they were so surprised with fear, and their hearts so failed them, that they stood gazing one upon another, having no courage to act such a barbarous cruelty, and so returned to the jailor's lodge, whence they came, without doing any thing.
BUT instead of laying this to heart, [...] a warning sent them from above; as if purposely they meant to resist against the checks of their own consceinces, they sent to the tavern for sixteen pints of the best wine, and intoxicating their brains, they drew a list of all the prisoners; which they delivered to one who was to call them forth in order; and as they came they massacred them.
ONE Meurs was no sooner in their sight, but one of them let drive at him with the point of his halbert, redoubling the same often with intent to kill him, yet could not. The poor man took hold of the point of the halbert, and pointing, himself, to the seat of the heart, cried to the murderer with a steadfast voice, Here, soldier, here, right at the heart, right at the heart; and so finished this life.
THE massacre, saith my author, being ended, the murderers made a great pit on the back side of the chapel of the prison, whereinto they cast the bodies one upon another, some of them yet breathing. One called Maufere, lying in the midst of them, being observed to raise up himself above his fellow martyrs in this pit, they forthwith poured earth upon him, until they had stifled him. The blood ran in such abundance out at the prison door, and thence through a channel into a river, that it was turned into the colour of blood.
THE day after, this worshipful bailiff of Trois, that he might apply the plaister when the parties were dead, caused the king's letters, which he had received before, to be published in all the corners of the city with sound of trumpet. The bailiff was present in person at the p [...]blication; and as the notary read the contents thereof to him, he pronounced the same jeeringly, and not with a full and audible voice, as matters of such consequence ought to be read.
ONE Dechampeaux, lord of Bonilli, a worthy counsellor in the city of Orleans, was murdered in the following manner: One called Texier came with a small troop to his house, bidding himself and his company to supper with him. Dechampeaux bid them all kindly welcome, making them good cheer, being ignorant of that which had happened [Page 658] at Paris. But supper being ended, Texier [...]ad him de [...]ver his purse. Dechampeaux laughing [...]hereat, thinking he had been but in jest, this cru [...]l and unthankful guest, with blasphemous oaths, told him in few words what had happened in the city of Paris, and what preparation there was among the Roman catholics of Orleans, to cut off and root out the protestants there. Dechampeaux, seeing there was no time now to contest with him, gave money to this thief: who, to requite this courtesy and good entertainment he had received, embrued his hands in the blood of his honest neighbour, a man of as good and upright a carriag [...] as was in all the city; and afterwards himself, with his troop, pillaged the whole house.
THE twenty-sixth day of August following, the massacrers began the execution about the ramparts in a violent manner; in these quarters there inhabited many of the religion. All the night long was heard nothing but shooting off of guns and pistols, forcing open of doors and windows, fearful outcries of the massacred, both of men, women, and little children, trampling of horses, and rumbling of [...]arts, hurrying off dead bodies to and fro; the street resounding with unwonted exclamations of those of the common sort, with horrible blasphemies of the murderers, laughing their fill at their barbarous exploits: some crying, Kill them all, and then take the spoil; others, Spoil not, but kill all.
ON Wednesday the massacre began more sincerely, and so continued to the end of the week, not sparing to break these and the like jests upon the poor massacred: Where is now your God? What is become of all your prayers and psalms now? Let your God, whom you called upon, save you if he can. Yea, some of them, who in times past had been professors of the same religion, whilst they were massacring the poor innocents, durst sing unto them, in scorn, the beginning of the three-and-fortieth psalm: which runs, Judge me, O God, and plead my cause. Others, striking them, said, Sing now, Have mercy on me, O God: such treatment received these poor people in Paris, and elsewhere. But these execrable outrages by no means daunted the courage of the faithful, who died stedfast in the faith.
TOUCHING the multitude of the slain, the murderers did not stick to vaunt, that in this city they caused eighteen thousand men to perish; also an hundred and fifty women, with a great number of children of nine years old and upwards. The manner of their death was, first to shoot them with pistols, then to strip them of their clothes; and either sink their bodies in the river, or bury them in pits.
ON Tuesday, at night, certain of this bloody crew came and knocked at the door of one that was a doctor of the civil law, called Taillebous; who opening a casement, and understanding that they had somewhat to say to him, came down immediately, and opened the door to them. At the first greeting they told him he must die. Whereupon he fell to prayer, and that with such constancy and affection, that the massacrers being astonished, and by a secret celestial power restrained, contented themselves only with taking his purse, in which there were fifteen crowns, and so left him, offering him no more violence.
THE day following, certain scholars resorting to his lodging, requested of him that they might see his library, into which having brought them, one asked this book of him another that, which he gave them. At length they told him they were not as yet satisfied, their purpose being to kill him. He prostrating himself upon the ground, and having ended his prayer, willed them to kill him there, but they forced him out of his own house, from one place to another, and at length knocked him down.
A rich burgess of the city, called Nicholas Bougars Sieur de Nove, a man of singular worth, and highly esteemed of all, was at that time deadly sick. Some of the murderers came into his chamber, with a purpose to kill him: but seeing him in that case, spared him: yet, finding there Noel Chaperon apothecary, who brought him physic, they cut off one of his arms, then drew him into the open market-place, where they made an end of him.
[Page 659]THE next day, there came one to the lodging of him that was sick, who was wont heretofore to visit him: as he was entering in, he met the mother of the sick party at the door going unto mass, and coming up into the chamber, he stabbed the sick man with a dagger in many places, and so killed a dying man. Then, with all silence, as if he had done no such act, wiping his dagger, he went down stairs again, and meeting one at the door who came to visit him that was sick, this fellow saluting him, passed along by him, without any change either in his behaviour or countenance.
FRANCIS STAMPLE, a rich merchant, was threatened to have his throat cut presently, if he gave not the murderers money: but having got none about him, he wrote a letter to his wife, to send him his ransom: he had no sooner sealed the letter but the murderers deprived him thereof, and his life also, laughing at what they had done. And though they got from his widow a considerable sum of money, yet could she not obtain from them the body of her dead husband. And these are the fruits of popery.
AMONG those that confessed the name of Jesus Christ, Francis le Bossu, a merchant, with his two sons, well deserve our notice; for whilst he trampled in the blood of his brethren, being besmeared therewith and spurting as it were in his face, he encouraged his children to take their death willingly and patiently, using this speech: ‘Children, we are not to learn now that it hath always been the portion of believers, to be hated, cruelly used, and devoured by unbelievers: as Christ's silly sheep of ravening wolves: if we suffer with Christ, we shall also reign with him. Let not these drawn swords terrify us; which only serve to cut that thread which ties us to a miserable life, and let loose the soul into endless felicity. We have resided long enough among the wicked, let us now go and live with our God; let us joyfully march after this great company which is here gone before us, and let us make way for them that shall follow after.’
WHEN he saw the murderers come, he clasped his arms about his two sons, and they likewise embraced their father; as if their father meant to be a buckler to his children, and the children, as if, by the bond of nature, (which binds them to defend his life from whence they received their's) they meant to ward off the blows which were coming towards their father, though with their own lives; who, when the massacre was ended, were all three found dead, thus embracing one another.
NOW, at the conclusion of this furious assault, these barbarous monsters went up and down the city, displaying their white doublets, all besprinkled with blood; boasting, that some killed an hundred, some more, some less.
AS the multitude were dragging the dead bodies to the river, an apothecary came and informed them that money might be made of the grease that was taken out of their bodies. Then were the most curpulent bodies presently sought for, which when they had ripped up, a great quantity of that commodity being gotten thence, was sold by these merchants for three shillings the pound.
THOSE of Dauphine, of Languedoe, and Provence, were amazed to see so many bodies floating upon the water, some dismembered, others fastened together with long poles, others lying on the shore, some having their eyes put out, others their nose, ears, and hands cut off, stabbed with daggers in every part of their body, so as some among them had no human shape remaining. Yea, so great a number of these mangled corpses presented themselves on the port of Tournon, that the men and women of the place began to make an outcry, as if their enemies had been at the gates.
NOT many months after, when all these bloody tragedies were ended, the pope sent cardinal Ursin, as legate to the king, who was received with great solemnity at Lyons. Now having heard mass at St. John's church, and returning by the same door which he went in at, the greatest number or the massacrers attended his coming there, and all kneeled down for his absolution. But the legate not knowing the reason of it, one of the principal agents told him, that they were those who had been the actors in the massacre. When the legate perceiving that, he absolved them all with making the sign of the cross.
[Page 660]AS soon as the massacre was begun at Paris, a gentleman named Monsoreau, obtained a passport with letters to massacre those of the protestant religion at Angiers. Who [...] disappointed of his prey in one place, came to the lodging of a reverend and learned minister, called Mr. John Mason, sirnamed de Launa, sieur of Riviere. Meeting his wife at the entrance into the house, he saluted her and kist her, as it is the manner in France, especially among the cour [...]iers, and asked her where her husband was? She answered him, That he was walking in his garden; [...] then directed him the way unto him.
MONSOREAU having lovingly embraced la Riviere, said unto him, Do you know wherefore I am come? The king hath commanded me to kill you forthwith, and hath given me express charge to do it, as you shall see by his letters. After which words he shewed him a pistol ready charged. Riviere replied, that he knew not wherein he had offended the king; but seeing, saith he, you seek my life, give me a little time to cry to God for mercy, and to recommend my spirit into his hands.
HAVING made a short prayer, he willingly presented his body to the murderer, who shot him with his pistol, and he died immediately.
THE minister's wife was soon after drowned with nine others.
SIX thousand were murdered at Roan in much the same manner.
NOW touching the prince of Conde, the king proposed three things to him; either to go to mass to die, or else perpetual imprisonment; and therefore to weigh well with himself, which of the three he liked best. The prince answered, That by God's grace he would never chose the first; as for the two latter, he referred himself to the king's pleasure.
ABOUT three hundred were barbarously murdered at Thoulouse, and after taking all their goods, they stripped them naked, and exposed them to public view for two days, and then they threw them in heaps into great pits. There were certain counsellors, who, after they were massacred, were hung up in their long gowns, upon a great elm which was in the court of the palace.
THE massacre at Bourdeaux was begun and carried on much in the same manner of those beforementioned. But their ministers found means to escape, hiding themselves in the rocks and marshes, till they had an opportunity to take shipping for England.
ONE thing here may be noted; the house of a counsellor in parliament was forced open, pillaged and spoiled, and himself cruelly murdered. His clerk seeing his master about to suffer a cruel death, embraced and comforted him: and being asked whether he were of the same religion, he answered, yea, and would die with his master for the same. And they were slain in one another's arms.
A deacon of the reformed church, named D [...] Tour, an old man, who in the days of his ignorance had been a priest in the popish church, being sick in his bed, was hauled forth into the open street; of whom it being demanded, whether he would go to mass, and thereby save his life; he freely answered, no, especially now drawing so near his end both in regard of his years and grievous sickness: I hope, saith he, I shall not so far forget the eternal salvation of my soul, as for fear of death to prolong this life for a few days; for so I should buy a short term of life at too dear a rate. They hearing him say so, murdered him instantly.
IT was lamentable to see the poor protestants wandering up and down, not knowing where to save their lives: some were rejected of their own parents and relations, who shut their doors against them pretending as if they knew them not; others were betrayed and delivered up by those, to whose trust they had committed themselves; many were saved even by priests and others, from whom a man would have expected no such security. Some were saved by their very enemies, whose hearts abhorred such detestable outrages.
[Page 661]ALL the city was full of terror and horrible threats against those of this religion, saying, that the king's commandment was▪ that he would not have so much as one of them left in his kingdom; and if any refused to go to mass▪ that a hole should be digged for him in the earth, in which he should be buried without any more ado.
THE judgment of God fell not long after upon one of these inhuman murderers, called Vincent; he fell dangerously sick, but in the end recovering again, and as he thought being in good health, told some of his friends that he felt his arms strong enough to handle his cutlass as well as ever he had done. But within a while after he was overtaken by the hand of God, with such a flux of bleeding at his nose, as could not be restrained nor diverted by any of the remedies that were then used. It was an hideous sight to see him still bowing his head over a bason full of blood, which without ceasing, issued out of his nose and mouth, even untill his last gasp.
ANOTHER was taken with such a swelling in all the parts of his body, that there was scarcely to be discerned in him the form of a man, and so continued swelling till at length he burst asunder.
THUS we have taken a view of the extreme afflictions of the reformed churches in many parts of France, wherein within a few weeks nigh 30,000 were put to death.
IN the year 1573, the place where the faithful fled for refuge, was assailed by open war; namely Sancerre, the history whereof you have here in a short view.
SANCERRE, being encompassed about with irreconcileable enemies, from about the beginning of April, the want of victuals having caused them to gather together all the asses and mules they had in the city, they were eaten up in less than a month.
THEN they came to horses, cats, rats, moles, mice, and dogs. After these were spent, they fell to eat ox and cow hides, sheep-skins, and parchment, old shoes, bullocks, and horse-hoofs, horns, and lanthorns, ropes, and horse-harness, leather girdles, &c.
IN the end of June, the third part of the besieged had not bread to eat. Such as could get hempseed, ground it, or stamped it in mortars, and made bread of it: the like they did with all sorts of herbs, mingling the same with bran if they had it. There they eat meal of chaff, nut shells, and of slate, excrements of horses, and men, yea, the offal which lay in the streets was not spared.
THE 29th of July, a poor man and his wife were executed for having eaten the head, brains, and entrails of a young child, about three years old, which died of hunger; having made ready the other parts to eat at another meal. An old woman who lodged in their house, eating a part of this mournful diet, died in prison, within a few hours after her imprisonment.
THEY were found guilty of other offences; but this aggravated the same the more. All chrildren under twelve years of age died. It was lamentable to hear the pitiful lamentations uttered by poor parents, for the misery wherein their eyes beheld their languishing and dying infants.
TO which purpose you may take notice here of a memorable accident. A boy of ten years old, being ready to yield up the ghost, seeing his father and mother weeping over him (whose arms and legs, when handled, felt as if they had been dried sticks) said unto them, Wherefore weep ye thus, in seeing me famished to death? Mother, said he, I ask you no bread, I know you have none: but seeing it is God's will I must die this death, let us be thankful for it. Did not the holy man, Lazarus, die of famine? have I not read it in my bible? In uttering these, with the like speeches, he yielded up the ghost, the 30th of July.
THAT all the people died not of famine in the end of this month, it was by reason of certain horses which were reserved for service, if need should be, and six cows which were left to give milk for the sustenance of young infants. These beasts were killed, and their flesh sold for the relief of such as [Page 662] were living with a little corn, which by [...]ealth some brought into the city; so that a pound of wheat was sold for half a crown.
THERE died by fight in Sancerre but eighty-four persons, but of the famine more than five hundred. Many soldiers getting forth as they could out of the city, flying from the famine, chose rather to die by the sword of the enemy; whereof some were slain, others imprisoned, and the rest put to death by the executioner.
BUT when all help of man failed, the king having sworn that he would make them eat up one another, the King of kings delivered them by his wonderful providence. For at this instant the ambassadors from Poland came into France to accept the duke of Anjou for their king, at whose intreaty (which could not well be denied) poor Sancerre, more than half famished, was now set at liberty by raising the siege, who otherwise were determined to leave their bones there, rather than to yield themselves into their enemy's hands, in regard they had often threatened them with a general massacre. Whereas now by the king's appointment they were permitted to pass out of the city armed; if any would tarry, that they should not be molested: having liberty granted them to dispose of their affairs, as they pleased, with promise of preserving the honour and chastities as well of virgins, as wom [...]n, &c.
THERE also died in the siege of Rochelle, October 20, 1628, sixteen thousand persons, the rest enduring a world of miseries; most of their food being hides, leather, and old gloves: other provisions being very scarce, were at an excessive rate, viz.
A bushel of wheat, 20l. a pound of bread 20s. a quarter of mutton, 6l. odd money; a pound of butter, 30s. an egg, 8s. an ounce of sugar, 2s. 6d. a dried fish, 20s. a pint of wine, 20s. a pound of grapes, 3s. a pint of milk, 30.
IT is also reported, that through the famine, young maids of 14 or 16 years of age, did look like women of an hundred years old. The famine was such, that the poor people would cut off the buttocks of the dead as they lay in the churchyard unburied. All the English that came out looked like anatomies. They lived two months with nothing but cow-hides and goat-skins boiled; the dogs, cats, mice, and frogs, being all spent.
The Martyrdom of Lady LISLE.
HAD those persons who suffered about Monmouth's business, fell only into the hands of Cannibals, some of them, at least, had escaped better than they did from Jeffreys. Those more tame and civil creatures would have spared the old and withered, though they had devoured the young and tender. But no age, no sex made any difference here; and as those who were just come into the world, children and girls often or a dozen years old were refused pardon; so those who were half out of it, would not be su [...]ered to tumble into the grave entire, though, as Juvenal says of Priam, they had scarce blood enough left to singe the knife of the sacrifices. An instance of this was my lady Lisle, of such an age, that she almost slept on her very trial, condemned for as small a matter as has been known, by one of those dormant laws, made only in terrorem, but hardly ever executed only for corresponding with Nelthrop, an out-lawed person, and, as was pretended, giving him shelter at her house, and Hicks, who brought him thither. For Hicks, he was not then convicted, nor in any proclamation, and so it is a question whether she could, even in riguor of law, deserve death on his account. For Nelthrop, he himself says in his last speech, that he was wholly a stranger to that worthy lady; neither did she as he verily believes, know who he was, or his name, till he was taken▪ for this she was found guilty, and lost her head at Winchester. Her case was thought so hard, that the honourable house of parliament afterwards reversed her judgment.
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An Account of the Friends, commonly called Quakers. THE EPISTLE FROM THE YEARLY-MEETING IN LONDON, Held by Adjournments, from the 24th of the Fifth Month 1779, to the 29th of the same, inclusive. To the Quarterly and Monthly Meetings of Friends in GREAT-BRITAIN, IRELAND, and elsewhere.
IN the love of God, and the fellowship of the gospel, which we have, with deep thankfulness of the heart, in a good degree experienced to attend us, both in our meetings for worship, and those for transacting the affairs of the church, we affectionately salute you; with fervent desires that brotherly-love, peace, and concord, may continue and increase amongst us, and that a tender and christian concern may come upon all, in their respective stations, for the maintenance of good order, and the promotion of truth and righteousness upon earth.
BY accounts received from the several quarterly meetings in England, and by epistles from Wales, North-Britain, Ireland, Holland, New-England, Mew-York, Pennsylvania, New-Jersy, Maryland, North and South Carolina, and Georgia, we are informed that love and unity are generally preserved in the churches, to many of which divers have been joined through convincement; and that a considerable number of well-disposed youth appears in various parts.
THE sufferings of our brethren in America have been great in many places, especially in Pennsylvania, the Jerseys, Long-Island, Rhode-Island, and Nantucket. These sufferrings have principally arisen from that confusion and distress which are inseparable from war, from the laws enacted for promoting military services, and from acts inforcing declarations of allegiance to those in power,
THE friends who were banished from Philadelphia have been permitted to return to their habitations, excepting two, who died in exile; and some of those who were imprisoned have been set at liberty.
IT is with satisfaction we understand, that their meetings for worship and discipline are duly kept up, and that notwithstanding the difficulties and dangers that surround them, friends attend them with diligence, and many from remote places, their minds are often tendered therein, and united in love one to another, and in deep sympathy with the sufferers amongst them. And it evidently appears, that the turning of the mighty hand of the Lord upon them hath not been in vain; but that, having learned by the things they have suffered, and from the apprehension of future probations, they are engaged to wait for that Divine help, protection, and support, which alone can enable them to endure with patience and holy resignation the trials [...]at are permitted to attend them.
OUR brethren in those parts gratefully acknowledge the kindness and regard of friends in England and Ireland, in so early and liberally contributing to the relief of their distresses. Many from easy circumstances, have been reduced to great hardships and necessities, but have been measurably kept in a state of contentment: these have shared the benevolence of those who have been preserved from the [Page 664] like sufferings. It appears, that their afflictions, though grievious in divers places, have tended to awaken many to a proper sense of their conditions, and to increase a watchfulness and care, that they may walk answerable to the mercies received, and faithful in the testimonies committed to their charge, against wars and other an-ti-christian practices.
MAY a deep sympathy with our afflicted brethren affect every mind; and may we all watch unto prayer, that it may please the Divine Majesty to shorten the day of their distress.
THE sufferings of friends brought in this year from England and Wales, being chiefly for tithes, and those called church-rates, amount to 3763l. and those from Ireland to 1254l.
INASMUCH as we have sufficient ground to believe that the true gospel-ministry is freely received from the Holy Head and unchangeable High-Priest of the christian church, and by him commanded to be freely given; we cannot esteem the laws of men, made in the apostatized state of the professing churches, as of any force to supersede his divine law, or to warrant us to act in violation thereof; we therefore exhort you, brethren, to be true and stedfast in the faith once delivered to the saints, and deeply suffered for by divers of the protestant martyrs, as well as by our own faithful predecessors. However any amongst us, to whom blindness in part hath happ [...]ned, may sw [...]ve from the law, and from the testimony, suffer it not to fall as in the streets, through your weakness, or the want of your example; l [...]t for your denial of Christ before men, he deny you before his Father, and the holy angels.
LET us also remind such as may be remiss in attention to the teachings of the grace of God in their own he [...]rts, that the kingdom of Christ is a peacea [...]ble kingdom; and though his serv [...]nts walk in the flesh, they do not war after the flesh. He commands them to love their enemies: and many who have f [...]ll [...]wed him in the regeneration, and abode under his government, have found themselves restrained from all wars and fightings; which are not of the spirit of the Saviour, but that of the destroyer of mankind. Believing this, we cannot consistently take any part therein; nor be concerned as owners of a [...]med vessels, in letters of marque, or as purchasers of prize goods; neither can we assist in the sale of them: for whoever amongst us so confederate with the captors, afford evident tokens that they either prefer the gain of a corrupt interest to the convictions of divine light in their own consciences, or that they are become insensible of them; both which must tend to their condemnation.
NOW, dear friends, seeing our time is ever silently upon the wing, and the opportunity afforded us for the important work of preparation daily shortening; knowing also, that the solemn period advances, wherein every individual, however occupied in this transient mode of being▪ must soon be called hence, and may, in a moment unexpected, be broken off from every temporal connection, by that aweful command, "Give an account of thy stewardship; for thou mayest be no longer steward:" let us be vigilant, and in earnest so to improve the precious time allotted us, that when his awakening call approaches, our consciences may not accuse us; but our faith may be firm, and an admittance granted us into that city which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God!
"SEE that ye walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise, redeeming the time, because the days are evil. Peace be to the brethren, and love with faith from God the Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ▪ Grace be to all them that love our Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity."
BEFORE we conclude the account of these people, it may be necessary to observe, that as the Friends, commonly called Quakers, will not take an oath in a court of justice, so their affirmation is permitted in all civil affairs; but they cannot prosecute a criminal, because, in our courts of justice, all evidence must be upon oath.
An Account of the direct Persecution of the Right Hon. Lord GEORGE GORDON, President of the Protestant Association, and of the indirect Stigma thrown on that Body in General, through the Artifices of Romish Emissaries.
IN order to trace this nefarious business to it's original, it will be necessary to observe, that in the year 1778 a bill was brought into the House of Commons by sir George Savile, and afterwards passed into an act, for the repeal of certain provisions and penal laws, affecting the Roman catholics in this country; which said provisions and penal laws were contained in an act of parliament passed in the 11th and 12th years of the reign of king William the Third. This obnoxious act being now set aside by the late repeal, every popish priest is consequently permitted to exercise any part of his function in this kingdom; papists are allowed to keep schools, and to take upon them the education, government or boarding of youth, to purchase estates, with other indulgences and immunities.
WE must further observe, that it being proposed, the following winter, to bring a si [...]ilar bill into parliament, to take off some penalties which were inflicted by the laws of Scotland upon the Roman catholics of that country; this measure was so resented by the Scots, that on the 2d of February an insurrection happened in the city of Edinburgh; in consequence whereof, two popish chapels were attacked and set on fire; the houses of the Roman catholics in different parts of the town were ransacked and demolished; and the tumult rose to such a heighth, that the utmost exertions of the civil magistrate, assisted by some of the sencibles, were not able to suppress it, till the provost of the city gave assurances, in the most public manner, that the scheme was dropped, and no act of parliament would be applied for, respecting the Roman catholicks of Scotland. Such was the effectual opposition the pr [...]ceedings of the then violent British minister and parliament met with in the North, on the very first appearance of countenancing the papists there.
IN England, things remained quiet for some time; but a [...] length the fears and jealousies of the people were [...], from a belief (too justly sounded) that the late repeal of the statute of king William would be attended with immediate danger to the state, and to the protestant religion; whereupon an association, called THE PROTESTANT ASSOCIATION, was formed; whose main object was, to defend the protestant religion, as by law established, against the incroachments of popery; and also to prepare and present a petition to parliament, for a repeal of the late act in favour of the Roman catholics. The right honourable lord George Gordon was president of this association; and many respectable and pious ministers, with a great number of worthy private christians, composed a considerable part of the society.
IN consequence of previous notice given in the public prints, upwards of 40,000 persons, with the members of the protestant Association of London, Westminster, Southwark, &c. assembled in St. George's Fields, on Friday the 2d of June, 1780, in the morning from whence they proceeded peaceably, and in regular order, to the House of Commons with their petition, which was carried by Mr. Hodgkinson. They consisted of four divisions; namely, the London, the Scotch, the Westminster, and the Southwark. When they arrived at the Parliament-house, their petition, praying for a repeal of the acts lately passed in favour of the Roman catholics, was presented by lord George Gordon, the president; and, being received, the subject matter of it was referred to the consideration of the House▪
BUT on this, as on other occasions of the like nature, where a mixed multitude is collected together, many evil-minded persons, unknown to the association, began to be very riotous, and committed awful outrages, by attacking and setting fire to Newgate and other prisons, releasing the persons confined in them, and demolished the houses and destroyed the goods of several Roman catholics, and others, on pretence of a zeal for the protestant religion, but in fact for the sole purpose of indulging themselves in rioting, excess, and robbery. These lawless miscreants continued their enormities till Tuesday evening; when a tremendous scene opened, and the whole city of London was thrown into the utmost consternation, on account of the many gaols and houses that were burning at one and the [Page 666] same time; and had not his majesty collected together a military force on the next day to protect the city, it was apprehended that the conflagration would have been universal.
WHILE these horrid acts were perpetrating by an abandoned rabble, lord George Gordon, accompanied by one of the sheriffs, went in person to several places, where the tumults were subsisting, to harangue the outrageous banditti, and exhort them to a peaceable deportment; but all without effect. Such, however, was the malice of his enemies, who were bent on his destruction, that notwithstanding he employed every effort in his power to suppress the rage, and prevent the mischievous designs of the rioters, they did not scruple to accuse him their ringleader and principal abettor.
IN consequence of this unjust accusation, his lordship was apprehended on Friday the 9th of June, 1780, by a warrant under the hand of one of his majesty's principal secretaries of state, and was the same day committed a close prisoner to the Tower, where he was debarred the use of pen, ink, and paper, and no person of his acquaintance was suffered to enter the room, or to speak to him; and a keeper was appointed to watch him night and day, to carry the above rigorous order into strict execution.
IN this severe manner was his lordship treated and confined till Michaelmas term of the said year; on the first day of which he applied to the court of King's bench, by petition founded upon the Habeas Corpus act, to be either tried or set at liberty; a few days after which, in the same term, an indictment for high treason was framed against him, and presented to the gentlemen grand jurors for the county of Middlesex, who returned in into the court of King's-bench A TRUE BILL.
IN order to shew the unreasonableness, not to say injustice and cruelty, of these proceedings against his lordship, who was desirous, throughout the whole affair, of preserving the utmost order and decorum, we shall here insert some of the resolutions of the Protestant Association, issued for that purpose, previous to the setting out of the procession.
"RESOLVED, for the sake of good order and regularity, that this Association, in coming to the ground, do separate themselves into four distinct divisions, viz. the London division, the Westminster division, the Southwark division, and the Scotch division.
"RESOLVED, that the London division do take place upon the right of the ground towards Southwark, the Westminster division second, the Southwark division third, and the Scotch division upon the left, all wearing blue cockades, to distinguish themselves from the papists, and those who approve of the late act in favour of popery.
"RESOLVED, that the magistrates of London, Westminster and Southwark, be requested to attend, that their presence may over-awe and controul my riotous or evil-minded persons, who may wish to disturb the legal and peaceable deportment of his Majesty's Protestant subjects.
"BY order of the Association, signed G. Gordon, President. Dated, London, May 29."
TO this we have authority to add, that on his lordship's arrival at St. George's Fields, the people there assembled formed a ring round him; in which situation, he made a short speech to them, strongly recommending a peaceable deportment and behaviour, and that in this disposition they would proceed to the house with their petition. A hand-bill was likewise distributed▪ inculcating the same pacific temper and conduct
AND further to make it evident, that neither lord Gordon, nor any of his friends, could with any degree justice of or propriety be charged as the promoters or encouragers of the horrid enormities afterwards committed by a lawless and abandoned rabble (which atrocious practices they utterly abhorred); the Protestant Association thought fit to publish the following advertisement by order of the committee, and signed by Mr. Fisher, their secretary:
"THE Protestant Association think it their duty, as loyal subjects and members of civil society, in the most public manner to disavow any connection with those lawless rioters, who have for several [Page 667] days past, under pretence of opposing popery, and promoting the success of the protestant petitions, committed the most flagrant and dreadful depredations in and about the metropolis. They cannot but feel the deepest concern for the distress that has been brought on many individuals by such unprecedented and illegal proceedings, and hereby publicly declare their abhorrence of such atrocious conduct."
WE humbly trust, that this full and clear vindication of his lordship and his protestant adherents, will, to every unprejudiced mind, prove a sufficient testimony of their christian moderation, and united desire to maintain the public tranquility by every possible expedient.
BUT the persecuting rage exerted against lord George Gordon, the iniquity of which was manifested in his imprisonment and trial, will appear the more glaring, when we consider the characters of the evidence upon which the indictment was found. They are thus described, and their accounts represented as follows:
1. MR. Chamberlayne, solicitor to the treasury, produced a paper, signed "G. Gordon," which had been given to a man by way of certificate, of his being a protestant, to prevent his house from being destroyed by the rioters. He swore that he had seen lord George Gordon's writing, and did believe that this letter was written by him.
2. A shabby looking man (name unknown) swore that he heard lord George Gordon say publickly, at a meeting at Coachmakers'-hall that the king had forfeited his crown, and therefore they had a right to take up arms to recover their religious liberties.
3. MR. Bowen, a clergyman, swore, that he heard lord George Gordon (out of the house) say to the people. They must be firm▪ [...]ad stand by him, for that the Scotch did not obtain their religious liberty till they had pulled down the mass houses; and that he came a second time, and declared to the people, that alderman Bull and alderman Sawbridge were violent against their petition.
4. RAY, or M'Ray (an Irish chairman) swore, that he heard lord George Gordon say, the petition should be granted, or else —. On being asked, What else? He answered, Else! else!—He was dismissed.
5. MR. Justice Wright swore, that his house was destroyed by the rioters, but could not say whether at the instigation of lord George Gordon, or not.
6. JEALOUS, Parrat, and M'Manus (three of Sir John Fielding's runners), swore, that they saw lord George Gordon in St. George's Fields, with a great number of people round him, and that he remained there some time, but they could not say how long.
HIS lordship's trial (founded up [...] this and such like respectable evidence) came on in the court of King's-bench, on Monday the 6th of February, 1781. The council for the crown were, Mr. Attorney General, Mr. Solicitor General, Mr. Bearcroft, Mr. Lee, Mr. Howarth, Mr. Dunning, Mr. Norton. The council for the prisoner were Mr. Kenyon and Mr· Erskine.
THE futility and contradictory nature of many of the evidence, collected together to procure the conviction and death of lord Gordon, for a crime of which he had always retained an utter detestation; together with the very able and clear justification or his conduct by his learned council, set his innocence in so conspicuous a point of view, that he was honourably acquitted by the jury, to the confusion of his enemies, and the entire satisfaction of all real friends to civil and religious liberty, and the protestant cause; and we have the pleasure to observe, that the very just and sensible description of the Protestant Association given by the Rev. Mr. Middleton, a member thereof, on his examination, did not a little contribute to bring about this happy event.
AS there never was a single person either convicted, tried, or even apprehended, on suspicion of being accessary to, or any ways promoting the riots, who was a member of that respectable body, the Protestant Association, this circumstance must [Page 668] therefore afford a satisfactory proof that the persecution of lord George Gordon was set on foot and carried on by unprincipled protestants, and avowed papists, in order to take away the life of this truly honourable man, who had always approved himself a hearty and zealous friend to his king and country, a warm defender of its civil and religious liberties, and a strenuous opposer and detester of the tenets and practices of the Roman catholics, as inimical to the best and dearest interests of mankind in general.
NOW such being the amiable disposition of mind possessed by his lordship, and so pure and well-directed were his views and intention respecting the important cause in which he engaged, that it is matter of astonishment such a spirit of persecution, nearly allied to that of a popish inquisition, should go forth against him, were we not assured, from the sacred records, that the seed of the serpent will never cease to persecute and harass the seed of the woman. But as truth and innocence always have, and ever will, prove victorious over error and malevolence, so it happened in this instance; for amongst the variety of evidence (such as it was) which came before the court, to fix the heavy charge alledged in the indictment against this respectable personage, his adversaries were not able to tax him, to conviction, with any misdemeanor repugnant to the sound principles of loyalty and religion; in consequence of which, his lordship was honourably acquitted and discharged, to the great joy of a vast concourse of people of every rank assembled on the occasion, as well as of all zealous advocates for the prosperity and advancement of the protestant interest.
AS a farther exculpation of his lordship, and the members of the Protestant Association, it may be necessary to observe, in general, that there was not one man of character or condition, of any description, who abetted the rioters in the commission of such dreadful enormities and excesses; nor was there any man among the Association who was either, tried, or taken up on suspicion, except his lordship, whose too forward zeal might perhaps precipitate him into measures which he was far from imagining would be productive of those dreadful consequences by which the whole metropolis, and its environs, were thrown into a state of convulsion unparalleled in the annals of history. The horrid outrages committed by those abandoned wretches, the rioters, were so numerous and terrifying, and the further mischiefs dreaded from their menaces were so tremendous, that (as was remarked of one of the cruel Roman emperors) one would almost think the Divine Being had suffered those miscreants to run such shocking lengths, to shew what horrid excesses the human mind is capable of, when left without restraint to its own evil bias. But the punishment due to such heinous crimes soon overtook many of them, though it is to be feared not all of the most guilty; since several imprudent and over curious persons, by mixing with the principal actors had involved themselves in the same punishment. But, however, the sufferings of some of the most notorious offenders, at the same time that it may serve as an example of terror to evil doers, sufficiently proves, that how daringly soever wickedness may triumph for a season, it will draw after it the punishment justly due to the transgression of human laws, and, without repentance, an obnoxiousness to the vengeance of the Almighty.
WE shall conclude with a few remarks on persecution among christians.
PERSECUTIONS of every kind, particularly those on the score of religion, are in themselves diabolical, and therefore diametrically opposite to the benign spirit of the gospel of Jesus Christ, who, when he was reviled and maltreated, returned not evil for evil, but contrariwise blessing. In these enlightened days, persecution is considered as an obominable and detestable crime: its first principal was, to increase morality, by enforcing one opinion, and exterminating all others; but, like madness, its characteristic was, acting consistently upon wrong principles; it went on this grand error, that a man could judge of the opinion of another, better than he who entertained it: it might naturally have been imagined, that the philanthropic doctrines of christianity would have proved a remedy for this error; but, through the depravity of the human heart, the reverse had turned out to be the fact, and torture and death had been introduced, to force men from their religious opinions into such as those in power entertained.
PERSECUTION (if in the milder sense it may be so called) went originally upon a principal of kindness: [Page]
[Page]
[Page]
[Page]
[Page]
ARTHUR EA [...] of ESS [...] Murdered [...].
S [...]EDMUND BURY GOD [...]LY [...].
M r. W m. JENKINS Executed at T [...]nton [...]
ALLERMAN CORNISH. [...] Gu [...]d [...]li. 16 [...] ▪
[Page]
The DUKE of ARGYLE [...] Edinburgh June 3 [...] th 1685.
James DUKE of MONMOUTH suffered on Tower Hill 1685
Col▪ ALCERNON SYDNEY Beheaded by order of Charles [...] ▪ 1683
W m LORD RUSSELL Beheaded July 21 1683
[Page]
M r. W m. NEWLING executed at Lym [...] Sep 12, 1685
M r BENJAMIN NEWLING executed at Ta [...]ton Sep 30, 1685
LADY ALICE LISLE B [...]eaded at Winchester 1685
M rs. ELIZ GAUNT Burnt Oct 23, 1685
[Page 669] its primary intention was, to promote unity of opinion with regard to the truth as handed down to us by Christ and his apostles, and the extinction of those opinions which were conceived to be erroneous: but in process of time, persecution became a most cruel and insupportable tyrant, the very reverse of toleration, which is founded, and that successfully, on philosophy and reason. The language of persecution is arrogant, contracted, and haughty: it says, "I know the consequences of your opinions better than you know them yourself." The mild language of toleration is far different: that may indeed express a dislike of a certain opinion, but says, "Since you profess such and such an opinion, I will not believe that you think such dangerous inferences may be drawn from it, as I do." The latter mode of judging is less liable to error than the former, and far more adapted to promote the happiness and peace of the community. It is right to judge, from the fruit of the tree, from the effect of the cause: other modes of judging are liable to continual error; inasmuch as men must judge of acts, and not merely of opinions.
FROM the above reflections we may safely infer, that a persecuting christian is a contradiction in terms; for the weapons of Christ's soldiers are not carnal, much less diabolical and infernal; such being injurious to a good cause, and scandalous to true religion. The word and Spirit of God are the most proper instruments for propagating and impressing the truth as it is in Jesus, who, being himself meek and lowly in heart, requires all that bear his name to be like-minded—not only to commit no evil themselves, but to bear it patiently from others, who will, by observing such a suitable conduct in real christians, be convinced that they are governed by the dictates of scripture, right reason, good sense, and sound policy; thus rendering christianity so amiable-in the eyes even of its opposers and persecutors, that its enemies may be constrained to throw down their arms, & enlist under its banner.
The Frontispiece to face the Title page | |||
Moses and Aaron expostulating with Pharaoh to face | |||
Page | 5 | ||
Cain slaying his brother Abel | do. | do. | |
St. Lawrence burnt on a Gridiron | do. | do. | 33 |
Two Primitive Martyrs put in a copper of boiling oil | do. | ||
Cruelties inflicted on the Primitive Christians | do. | 53 | |
Flaying Primitive Christians alive | do. | 55 | |
Marcus, Bishop of Arethusa rubbed with honey | do. | 69 | |
Fourscore christian Ministers burnt | do. | 71 | |
A Bookseller burnt at Avignon in France | do. | 105 | |
Rocus a Carver of St. Lucar in Spain burnt | do. | 137 | |
Various methods of Massacreing the Protestants | do. | 177 | |
The bones of the Rev. John Wickliff burnt | do. | 221 | |
A representation of the Irish Massacre | do. | 251 | |
Queen Mary 1st. | do. | 257 | |
Cruel manner in which the Protestants were dragged through Bogs in Ireland | do. | 261 | |
The beheading of Henry Duke of Suffolk | do. | 297 | |
The execution of Sir Thomas Wyatt. | do. | 387 |
King Henry the 8th trampling on the Pope, to face the Title page of Vol. 2 | 2 | ||
John Philpot Burnt | do. | do. | 99 |
A View of the inside of Lollards' Tower | do. | 153 | |
Archbishop Cranmer pulled down from the Stage and led to the Stake | do. | 218 | |
Manner of Burning of Cranmer | do. | 219 | |
The Burning of Julia Palmer, &c. | do. | 324 | |
Martyrdom of Cathrine Cawches and her two Daughters | do. | 332 | |
Scourging of Thomas Hendshaw | do. | 525 | |
Rose Allens's hand Burnt | do | ||
Method of Torturing Nicholas Burton, &c. | do. | 549 | |
The Protestants Massacred in a Barn by order of the Duke of Guise | do. | 643 | |
Head of Doctor Fothergill. | do. | 663 | |
Those Plates that have no Direction, must be placed at the end of Vol. 2. |
Subscribers Names to the Book of Martyrs.
- ABIJAH Abbot
- Francis Arder
- Enos Ahey
- Nicholas Andariese
- John Andariese
- Burnet Andariese
- John Agnew
- George Potter
- John M'Gill
- Albert Albertson
- Abraham T. Adriance
- Stephen Allen
- Andrew Anderson
- Thomas Arnold
- John Arial
- Wm. Abunathy
- Annanias Archer
- John Austin
- Henry Aubick
- Wm. Anderson
- John Ashfield
- James Anderson
- Silas Asterline
- James Abbot
- Moses Archer
- John Alsop jun.
- Stephen Allen
- Stephen Arrance
- Thomas Brinckly
- John Blanchard
- Joseph Brower
- K. Boutillier
- Samuel Biker
- Thomas Brewen
- Francis Blank
- Isabella Bowler
- C [...]rles Bird
- Abraham Brower
- John Banekin
- Stephen Baker
- Leopold Brok
- Hannah Brewerton
- John Bruce
- Pe [...]r Bogart
- John Banker
- Ann Cathrine Brower
- Henry Billings
- Stephen Benford
- Gilbert Bowne
- Wm. Barton
- Charles B [...]rrow
- Uriah Butage
- Thos▪ Botton
- Lancaster Burling jun.
- Thomas Burling
- Evert Bush
- Aaron Burk
- Alexander Brown
- Joh C. Brush
- Jacob Brown
- Robert Bryson
- Sebestian Bauman
- Leonard Bleecker
- Mr. Barnet
- Elias Browne
- Garret Benson
- James L. Bogert
- Evert Bancker
- Wm. Buchanan
- John Brown
- Samuel Burroeve
- John Benson
- Matthew Barr
- John Borris
- John Campbell
- Matthew Cannon
- Peter Cole
- Clarkson Crolius
- Corn. Cooper
- Thomas Callard
- Nicholas Cox
- John Cornelison
- John Cumberland
- Daniel Co [...]nock
- John A. Chapman
- Thomas Clark
- Joseph Craft
- William Cogswell
- Ezra Cornell
- Allen Cameron
- Richard Cunninghan
- Mr. Corder
- John Cozine
- Seabury Champlin
- Albert Smith
- John Crolius
- Mr. Carmar
- Mr. Connery
- John Callesou
- Frederick Carmer
- Garret Centes
- Peter Condut
- Jacob Clinch
- Jonathan Cowdry
- James C [...]r
- John Coddington
- Eliza Cothal
- James Culbertson
- John Clet [...]
- Mr. Campbell
- Su [...]anna Clark
- Thomas Cox
- John Chandler
- Michael Corry
- Moses Carmichal
- John Dunn
- Israel Disorway
- Amos Doolittle
- David Demarest
- James Duffie
- John Durell
- John Duryee
- Gershem Dunn
- George Dally
- John Decker
- Jean Deacon
- Daniel Dyke
- Peter Dumont
- James Daniel
- John N. Depeyster
- John Degrushe
- Isaac Doty
- William Dixon
- Francis Dominick
- James Douglass
- James Donaldson
- Andrew Durham
- Cary Dunn
- Daniel Kemper
- Wm. Dugal
- James Devonel
- Abraham Delamate
- John Daniel
- John Dusenbury
- Abraham Devoe
- Lewis De Flinn
- Peter E. Embury
- Thomas Eddy
- Benjamin Egbert
- Andrew Elston
- John Emes
- Peter Irvin
- Abraham G Tothes
- George Fox
- Thomas Franklin jun.
- Caleb Frost
- Benjamin Foster
- Church New-York
- Thomas Foot
- Eliakan Ford
- John F [...]ll
- [Page]Thomas Fardon
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- John Knox
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- William Young.
The true Copy of Dr. RICHARD SMITH'S LETTER, declaring his A [...]tion to the setting forth of GOD'S SINCERE WORD.
"MOST honourable, I commend me unto your lordship, doing the same to understand that I wrote letters to your grace in January last, and the 10th day of February, declaring the causes of my sudden and unadvised departing from your grace over sea; and desiring your lordship of your charity towards them that repent of their ill acts, to forgive me yourself all the wrong I did towards [...] grace, and to obtain in writing the king's [...] pardon for me in all points concerning his laws: upon the receipt whereof I would return again home, and within half a year (at the uttermost) afterwards write De Sacerdotum Connubiis, &c. a Latin book that should be a just satisfaction for any thing that I have written against the same. Reliquaq: omnia dogmata vestra tum demum libent [...]r amplexurum, ubi Deus mentem meam, ut ea citra conscientia [...]esionem agnoscam, doceamque. I wrote not this that I want any good living here, but because mine absence out of the realm, and because I must needs (if I tarry here a quarter of a year longer) write an answer to your grace's book of the sacrament, and also a book of common places, against all the doctrine set forth by the king's majesty, which I cannot do with a good conscience. Wherefore I beseech your grace help me home, as soon as you may conveniently, for God's sake, and you shall never, I trust in God, repent that fact.
BESIDES this Dr. Smith, who was appointed to answer Dr. Ridley, in the divinity school, there disputed with him Dr. Weston, Dr. Tresham, Dr. Oglethorp, Dr. Glin, Dr. Seaton, Dr. Cole, Dr. Watson, Mr. Ward, Mr. Harpsfield, Mr. Pye, Mr. Harding, Mr. Curton, and Mr. Fecknam: to all of whom Dr. Ridley answered very learnedly. He began with a preface to the questions, but they would not let him proceed with the same. Some said it was blasphemy▪ and others, that he prolonged the time in ambiguous matters. In the course of the debate, Dr. Smith could gain no advantage over him; even others were obliged to take up and prosecute his arguments. In short, Dr. Ridley shewed himself in every respect a learned divine, and his opponents could bring nothing that he did not know as well as they.