<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text><body><div type="edition" n="urn:cts:engLit:james1.apology.perseus-eng1" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="6"><head>TO THE VERY REVEREND <hi rend="smallcap">Mr.</hi> GEORGE BLACKWELL, ARCH-PRIEST OF THE ENGLISH: ROBERT BELLARMINE CARDINALL OF THE
                           HOLY CHURCH OF ROME, GREETING.</head><p><hi rend="smallcap">Reuerend Sir</hi>, <hi rend="italic">and brother in</hi><hi rend="smallcap">Christ</hi>; <hi rend="italic">It is almost fourtie yeeres since we did see
one the other: but yet I haue bene vnmindfull of our ancient acquaintance, neither haue
I ceased seeing I could doe you no other good, to commend your labouring most pain-
fully in the Lords Vineyard, in my prayers to God. And I doubt not, but that I haue
liued all this while in your memory, and haue had some place in your prayers at the
Lords Altar. So therefore euen vnto this time we haue abidden, as</hi> S. Iohn <hi rend="italic">speaketh,
in the mutall loue one of the other, not by word or letter, but in deed and trewth. But
a late message which was brought vnto vs within these few dayes, of your bonds and
imprisonment, hath inforced mee to breake off this silence; which message, although
it seemed heauie in regard of the losse which that Church hath receiued, by their being
thus depriued of the comfort of your pastorall function amongst them, yet withall it
seemed ioyous, because you drew neere vnto the glory of</hi> Martyrdome, <hi rend="italic">then the which
gift of God there is none more happy; That you, who haue fedde your flocke so many
yeeres with the word and doctrine, should now feed it more gloriously by the example
of your patience. But another heauie tidings did not a little disquiet and almost take
away this ioy, which immediatly followed, of the aduersaries assault, and per aduen-
ture of the slip and fall of your constancie in refusing an vnlawfull Oath. Neither
trewly (most deare brother) could that Oath therefore bee lawfull, because it was offered
in sort tempered and modified: for you know that those kinde of modifications are
nothing else, but sleights and subtilties of Satan, that the Catholique faith touching the
Primacie of the Sea Apostolike, might either secretly or openly be shot at; for the
which faith so many worthy Martyrs euen in that very</hi> England <hi rend="italic">it selfe, haue resisted
vnto blood. For most certaine it is, that in whatsoeuer words the Oath is conceiued by,
the aduersaries of the faith in that Kingdome, it tends to this end, that the Authoritie</hi>

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 <hi rend="italic">of the head of the Church in</hi> England, <hi rend="italic">may bee transferred from the successour of</hi>
 S. Peter, <hi rend="italic">to the successour of King</hi> Henry the eight: <hi rend="italic">For that which is pretended of
 the danger of the Kings life, if the high Priest should haue the same power in</hi> England,
 <hi rend="italic">which hee hath in all other Christian Kingdomes, it is altogether idle, as all that haue
 any vnderstanding, may easily perceiue. For it was neuer heard of from the Churches
 infancie vntill this day, that euer any</hi> Pope <hi rend="italic">did command, that any Prince, though an
 Heretike, though an Ethnike, though a persecutour, should be murdered; or did
 approue of the fact, when it was done by any other. And why, I pray you, doeth onely
 the King of Englandfeare that, which none of all other the Princes in Christendome
 either doeth feare, or euer did feare ?</hi>
</p><p><hi rend="italic">But, as I said, these vaine pretexts are but the traps and stratagemes of Satan:
 Of which kinde I could produce not a fewe out of ancient Stories, if I went about to
 write a Booke and not an Epistle. One onely for example sake, I will call to your
 memory</hi>. S. Gregorius Nazianzenus <hi rend="italic">in his first Oration against</hi> Iulian <hi rend="italic">the Em-
 perour, reporteth, That hee, the more easily to beguile the simple Christians, did insert
 the Images of the false gods into the pictures of the Emperour, which the Romanes did
 vse to bow downe vnto with a ciuill kinde of reuerence: so that no man could doe
 reuerence to the Emperours picture, but withall hee must adore the Images of the false
 gods; whereupon it came to passe that many were deceiued. And if there were any
 that found out the Emperours craft, and refused to worship his picture, those were most
 grieuously punished, as men that had contemned the Emperour in his Image. Some
 such like thing, me thinkes, I see in the Oath that is offered to you; which is so craftily
 composed, that no man can detest Treason against the King, and make profession of
 his Ciuill subiection, but he must bee constrained perfidiously to denie the Primacie
 of the Apostolicke Sea. But the seruants of Christ, and especially the chiefe Priests
 of the Lord, ought to bee so farre from taking an vnlawfull Oath, where they may
 indamage the Faith, that they ought to beware that they giue not the least suspicion of
 dissimulation that they haue taken it, least they might seeme to haue left any example
 of preuarication tofaithfull people. Which thing that worthy</hi> Eleazar <hi rend="italic">did most notably
 performe, who would neither eate swines flesh, nor so much as faine to haue eaten it,
 although hee sawe the great torments that did hang ouer his head; least, as himselfe
 speaketh in the second Booke of the</hi> Machabees, <hi rend="italic">many young men might bee brought
 through that simulation, to preuaricate with the Lawe. Neither did</hi> Basil <hi rend="italic">the Great
 by his example, which is more fit for our purpose, cary himselfe lesse worthily toward</hi>
 Valens <hi rend="italic">the Emperour. For as</hi> Theodoret <hi rend="italic">writeth in his Historie, when the Deputy of
 that heretical Emperour did perswade Saint</hi> Basil, <hi rend="italic">that hee would not resist the
 Emperour for a little subtiltie of afew points of doctrine; that most holy and prudent
 man made answere</hi>, That it was not to be indured, that the least syllable of Gods
 word should be corrupted, but rather all kind of torment was to be embraced,
 for the maintenance of the Trewth thereof. <hi rend="italic">Now I suppose, that there wants not
 amongst you, who say that they are but subtilties of Opinions that are contained in the
Oath that is offered to the Catholikes, and that you are not to striue against the Kings</hi>

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<hi rend="italic">Authoritie for such a little matter. But there are not wanting also amongst you holy
men like vnto</hi> Basil <hi rend="italic">the Great, which will openly auow, that the very least syllable of
Gods diuine Trewth is not to bee corrupted, though many torments were to bee en-
dured, and death it selfe set before you: Amongst whom it is meete, that you should bee
one, or rather the Standard-bearer, and Generall to the rest. And whatsoeuer hath
beene the cause, that your Constancie hath quailed, whether it bee the suddaineness of
your apprehension, or the bitternesse of your persecution, or the imbecilitie of your old
age: yet wee trust in the goodnesse of God, and in your owne long continued vertue,
that it will come to passe, that as you seeme in some part to haue imitated the fall of</hi>
Peter <hi rend="italic">and</hi> Marcellinus, <hi rend="italic">so you shall happily imitate their valour in recouering your
strength, and maintaining the Trewth: For if you will diligently weigh the whole
matter with your selfe, trewly you shall see, it is no small matter that is called in ques-
tion by this Oath, but one of the principall heads of our Faith, and foundations of
Catholique Religion. For heare what your Apostle</hi> Saint Gregorie <hi rend="italic">the Great hath
written in his 24. Epistle of his II. Booke</hi>. Let not the reuerence due to the Apos-
tolique Sea, be troubled by any mans presumption; for then the state of the
members doeth remaine entire, when the Head of the Faith is not bruised by any
iniurie: <hi rend="italic">Therefore by</hi> Saint Gregories <hi rend="italic">testimonie, when they are busie about disturbing
or diminishing, or taking away of the Primacie of the Apostolique Sea; then are they
busie about cutting of the very head of the faith, and dissoluing of the state of the whole
body, and of all the members. Which selfe same thing</hi> S. Leo <hi rend="italic">doth confirme in his
third Sermon of his Assumption to the Popedom, when he saith</hi>, Our Lord had a
special care of <hi rend="italic">Peter</hi>, &amp; praied properly for <hi rend="italic">Peters</hi> faith, as though the state of
others were more stable, when their Princes mind was not to be ouercome. <hi rend="italic">Where-
upon himselfe in his Epistle to the bishops of the prouince of Vienna, doth not doubt
to affirme</hi>, that he is not partaker of the diuine Mysterie, that dare depart from the
solidity of <hi rend="italic">Peter, who also saith</hi>, That who thinketh the Primacy to be denied to
that Sea, he can in no sort lessen the authority of it; but by being puft vp with
the spirit of his owne pride, doth cast himselfe headlong into hel. <hi rend="italic">These and many
many other of this kind, I am very sure are most familiar to you: who besides many
other books, haue diligently read ouer the visible Monarchy of your owne</hi> Sanders, <hi rend="italic">a
most diligent writer, and one who hath worthily deserued of the Church of</hi> England
<hi rend="italic">Neither can you be ignorant, that these most holy and learned men</hi>, Iohn <hi rend="italic">bishop of</hi>
Rochester, <hi rend="italic">and</hi> Tho. Moore, <hi rend="italic">within our memory, for this one most weighty head of
doctrine, led the way to</hi> Martyrdome <hi rend="italic">to many others, to the exceeding glory of the
English nation. But I would put you in remembrance that you should take heart,
and considering the weightines of the cause, not to trust too much to your owne
iudgement, neither be wise aboue that is meet to be wise: and if peraduenture your
fall haue proceeded not vpon want of consideration, but through humane infirmity, &amp;
for feare of punishment and imprisonment, yet do not preferre a temporall liberty to
the liberty of the glory of the Sonnes of God: neither for escaping a light &amp; momentarie
tribulation, lose an eternal weight of glory, which tribulation it selfe doeth worke in you.</hi>



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 <hi rend="italic"> You haue fought a good fight a long time, you haue wel-neere finished your course; so
 many yeeres haue you kept the faith: do not therefore lose the reward of such labors
 do not depriue your selfe of that crowne of righteousnes, which so long agone is pre-
 pared for you; Do not make the faces of so many yours both brethren and children
 ashamed. Vpon you at this time are fixed the eyes of all the Churches: yea also, you
 are made a spectacle to the world, to Angels, to men; Do not so carry your selfe in this
 your last act, that you leaue nothing but laments to your friends, and ioy to your
 enemies. But rather on the contrary, which we assuredly hope, and for which we
 continually powre forth prayers to God, display gloriously the banner of faith, and
 make to reioyce the Church, which you haue made heauy; so shall you not onely
 merite pardon at Gods hands, but a Crowne. Farewell. Quite you like a man, and
 let your heart be strengthened. From Rome the 28. day of September 1607.</hi>
 </p><ab type="closer"><seg type="salute">Your very Reuerendships brother and seruant in Christ,</seg><seg type="signed"><hi rend="italic">Robert Bellarmine</hi> Cardinall.</seg></ab></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="7"><head>THE ANSWERE TO THE CARDINALS LETTER.</head><p>AND now that I am to enter into the field against him by refuting his Letter, I
must first vse this protestation; That no desire of vaine-glory by matching with
so learned a man, maketh me to vndertake this taske; but onely the care and
conscience I haue, that such smooth <hi rend="italic">Circes</hi> charmes and guilded pilles, as full of
exterior eloquence, as of inward vntrewths, may not haue that publike passage
through the world without an answere: whereby my reputation might vniustly
be darkened, by such cloudie and foggie mists of vntrewths and false imputations,
the hearts of vnstayed and simple men be misse-led, and the trewth it selfe
smothered.
</p><p>But before I come to the particular answere of this Letter, I must here desire
the world to wonder with me, at the committing of so grosse an errour by so
learned a man: as that he should haue pained himselfe to haue set downe so
elaborate a Letter, for the refutation of a quite mistaken question: For it ap-
peareth, that our English Fugitiues, of whose inward societie with him he so
greatly vaunteth, haue so fast hammered in his head the Oath of Supremacie,
which hath euer bene so great a scarre vnto them, as he thinking by his Letter to
haue refuted the last Oath, hath in place thereof onely paied the Oath of Supre-
macie, which was most in his head; as a man that being earnestly caried in his
thoughts vpon another matter, then he is presently in doing, will often name the
matter or person he is thinking of, in place of the other thing he hath at that time
in hand.
</p><p>For as the Oath of Supremacie was deuised for putting a difference betweene
Papists, and them of our profession: so was this Oath, which hee would seeme to
impugne, ordained for making difference betweene the ciuilly obedient Papists,
and the peruerse disciples of the Powder-Treason. Yet doeth all his Letter runne

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vpon an Inuectiue against the compulsion of Catholiques to deny the authoritie
of <hi rend="italic">S. Peters</hi> successors, and in place thereof to acknowledge the Successors of
King <hi rend="italic">Henry the eight</hi>: For in K. <hi rend="italic">Henry the eights</hi> time, was the Oath of Supremacie
first made: By him were <hi rend="italic">Thomas Moore</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Roffensis</hi> put to death, partly for
refusing of it: From his time till now, haue all the Princes of this land professing
this Religion, successiuely in effect maintained the same: and in that Oath onely
is contained the Kings absolute power, to be Iudge ouer all persons, aswell Ciuill
as Ecclesiastical, excluding al forraigne powers and Potentates to be Iudges
within his dominions; whereas this last made Oath containeth no such matter,
onely medling with the ciuill obedience of Subiects to their Soueraigne, in meere
temporall causes.
</p><p>And that it may the better appeare, that whereas by name hee seemeth to
condemne the last Oath; yet indeed his whole Letter runneth vpon nothing, but
vpon the condemnation of the Oath of Supremacie: I haue here thought good to
set downe the said Oath, leauing it then to the discretion of euery indifferent
reader to iudge, whether he doth not in substance onely answere to the Oath of
Supremacie, but that hee giues the child a wrong name.

<quote><p>I A.B. <hi rend="italic">doe vtterly testifie and declare in my conscience, that the Kings Highnesse is the
onely Supreame Gouernour of this Realme, and all other his Highnesse Dominions
and Countries, aswell in all Spirituall, or Ecclesiasticall things or causes, as Tem-
porall: And that no forraine Prince, Person, Prelate, State or Potentate, hath or
ought to haue any Iurisdiction, Power, Superioritie, Preeminence or Authoritie
Ecclesasticall or Spirituall within this Realme. And therefore I doe vtterly renounce
and forsake all forraine Iurisdictions, Powers, Superiorities and Authorities; and
doe promise thatfrom hencefoorth I shall beare faith and trew Allegiance to the Kings
Highnesse, his Heires and lawfull Successours: and to my power shall assist and
defend all Iurisdictions, Priuiledges, Preeminences and Authorities granted or
belonging to the Kings Highnesse, his Heires and Successours, or vnited and annexed
to the Imperiall Crowne of the Realme: So helpe me God; and by the Contents of this
booke.</hi></p></quote>
</p><p>And that the iniustice, as well as the error of his grosse mistaking in this point,
may yet be more clearely discouered; I haue also thought good to insert here
immediatly after the Oath of Supremacie, the contrary conclusions to all the
points and Articles, whereof this other late Oath doeth consist: whereby it may
appeare, what vnreasonable and rebellious points hee would driue my Subiects
vnto, by refusing the whole body of that Oath, as it is concei ed: For he that
shall refuse to take this Oath, must of necessitie hold all, or some of these pro-
positions following.
<list type="simple"><item>     1. That I King <hi rend="smallcap">Iames</hi>, am not the lawfull King of this Kingdome, and of all
other my Dominions.</item><item>    2. That the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> by his owne authoritie may depose me: If not by his owne
authoritie, yet by some other authoritie of the Church, or of the Sea of <hi rend="italic">Rome:</hi>

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If not by some other authoritie of the Church and Sea of <hi rend="italic">Rome</hi>, yet by other
meanes with others helpe, he may depose me.</item><item>     3. That the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> may dispose of my Kingdomes and Dominions.</item><item>     4. That the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> may giue authoritie to some forreine Prince to inuade my
Dominions.</item><item>     5. That the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> may discharge my Subiects of their Allegiance and Obe-
dience to me.</item><item>     6. That the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> may giue licence to one, or more of my Subiects to beare
armes against me.</item><item>     7. That the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> may giue leaue to my Subiects to offer violence to my
Person, or to my gouernement, or to some of my Subiects.</item><item>     8. That if the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> shall by Sentence excommunicate or depose mee, my
Subiects are not to beare Faith and Allegiance to me.</item><item>     9. If the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> shall by Sentence excommunicate or depose me, my Subiects
are not bound to defend with all their power my Person and Crowne.</item><item>   10. If the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> shall giue out any Sentence of Excommunication or Depri-
uation against me, my Subiects by reason of that Sentence, are not bound to
reueale all Conspiracies and Treasons against mee, which shall come to their
hearing and knowledge.</item><item>     11. That it is not hereticall and detestable to hold, that Princes being excom-
municated by the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi>, may be either deposed or killed by their Subiects, or any
other.</item><item>     12. That the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> hath power to absolue my Subiects from this Oath, or
from some part thereof.</item><item>     13. That this Oath is not administred to my Subiects, by a full and lawfull
authoritie.</item><item>     14. That this Oath is to be taken with Equiuocation, mentall euasion, or
secret reseruation; and not with the heart and good will, sincerely in the trew
faith of a Christian man.</item></list></p><p>These are the trew and naturall branches of the body of this Oath. The
affirmatiue of all which negatiues, doe neither concerne in any case the <hi rend="italic">Popes</hi>
Supremacie in Spirituall causes: nor yet were euer concluded, and defined by any
complete generall Councell<note anchored="true" place="foot">Touching the pretended Councell of Lateran. See Plat. In vita Innocen. III.</note> to belong to the <hi rend="italic">Popes</hi> authoritie; and their owne
schoole Doctors are at irreconciliable oddes and iarres about them.
</p><p>And that the world may yet farther see ours and the whole States setting
downe of this Oath, did not proceed from any new inuention of our owne, but as
it is warranted by the word of <hi rend="smallcap">God</hi>: so doeth it take the example from an Oath
of Allegiance decreed a thousand yeeres agone, which a famous Councell then,
together with diuers other Councels, were so farre from condemning (as the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi>
now hath done this Oath) as I haue thought good to set downe their owne wordes
here in that purpose: whereby it may appear that I craue nothing now of my
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Subiects in this Oath, which was not expresly and carefully commaunded then,
by the Councels to be obeyed without exception of persons. Nay not in the very
particular point of <hi rend="italic">Equiuocation</hi>, which I in this Oath was so carefull to haue
eschewed: but you shall here see the said Councels in their Decrees, as carefull
to prouide for the eschewing of the same; so as almost euery point of that action,
&amp; this of ours shalbe found to haue relation &amp; agreeance one with the other, saue
onely in this, that those old Councels were careful and strait in commanding the
taking of the same: whereas by the contrary, he that now vanteth himselfe to be
head of al Councels, is as careful &amp; strait in the prohibition of all men from the
taking of this Oath of Allegiance.
</p><p>                                  The words of the Councell be these:

<quote><p><hi rend="italic">Heare our sentence.</hi></p><p><hi rend="italic">Whosoeuer of vs, or of all the people thorowout all</hi> Spaine, <hi rend="italic">shall goe about by any
meanes of conspiracie or practise, to violate the Oath of his fidelitie, which he hath
taken for the preseruation of his Countrey, or of the Kings life; or who shall attempt
to put violent handes vpon the King; or to depriue him of his kingly power; or that
by tyrannicall presumption would vsurpe the Soueraigntie of the Kingdome: Let him
bee accursed in the sight of God the Father, and of his Angels; and let him bee made
and declared a stranger from the Catholique Church, which hee hath prophaned by his
periurie; and an aliant from the companies of all Christian people, together with all
the complices of his impietie; because it behooueth all those that bee guiltie of the like
offence, to vnder-lie the like-punishment.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Concil. Tolet. 4 can. 47. Anno 633.</note>   Which sentence is three seuerall times
together, and almost in the same wordes, repeated in the same Canon. After
this, <hi rend="italic">the Synode desired, That this Sentence of theirs now this third time rehearsed,
might bee confirmed by the voyce and consent of all that were present. Then the whole
Clergie and people answered, Whosoeuer shall cary himselfe presumptuously against
this your definitiue sentence, let them be Anathema maranatha, that is, let them bee
vtterly destroyed at the Lords comming, and let them and their complices haue their
portion with Iudas Iscarioth. Amen.</hi></p></quote>
</p><p>And in the fifth Councell,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Concil. Tolet. 5. Can. 7. anno 636.</note> there it is decreed, That this Acte touching the
Oath of Allegiance, shall bee repeated in euery Councell of the Bishops of <hi rend="italic">Spaine.</hi>
The Decree is in these wordes: <quote><hi rend="italic">In consideration that the mindes of men are easily
inclined to euill and forgetfulnesse, therefore this most holy Synode hath ordained;
and doeth enact, That in euery Councell of the Bishops of</hi> Spaine, <hi rend="italic">the Decree of the
generall Councell <note anchored="true" place="foot">Synod. Tolet. 4. vniuersalis, &amp; magna Synodus dicta, Synod. Tolet. 5. cap. 2.</note> which was made for the safetie of our Princes, shall bee with an
audible voyce proclaimed and pronounced, after the conclusion of all other things in
the Synode: That so it being often sounded into their eares, at least by continuall
remembrance, the mindes of wicked men beeing terrified, might bee reformed, which by
obliuion and facilitie [to euill] are brought to preuaricate.</hi></quote>


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</p><p>And in the sixt Councell,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Concil. Tolet. 6. Can. 18. Anno 638.</note><quote><hi rend="italic">Wee doe protest before God, and all the orders of
 Angels, in the presence of the Prophets and Apostles, and all the companie of Martyrs,
 and before all the Catholique Church, and assemblies of the Christians; That no man
 shall goe about to seeke the destruction of the King: No man shall touch the life of the
 Prince: No man shall depriue him of the Kingdome: No man by any tyrannical pre-
 sumption shall vsurpe to himselfe the Soueraigntie of the Kingdome: No man by any
 Machination shall in his aduersitie associate to himselfe any packe of Conspirators
 against him: And that if any of vs shall be presumptuous by rashnesse in any of these
 cases, let him be stricken with the anatheme of God, and reputed as condemned in
 eternall iudgement without any hope of recouery.</hi></quote>
</p><p>And in the tenth Councell<note anchored="true" place="foot">Concil. Tolet. 10. Can. 2. AEra 694.</note> (to omit diuers others held also at <hi rend="italic">Toledo</hi>) it is
 said: <quote><hi rend="italic">That if any religious man, euen from the Bishop to the lowest Order of the
 Church-men or Monkes, shall bee found to haue violated the generall Oathes made for
 the preseruation of the Kinges Person, or of the Nation and Countrey with a prophane
 minde; foorthwith let him bee depriued of all dignitie, and excludedfrom all place and
 Honour</hi>.</quote> The occasion of the Decrees made for this Oath, was, That the Chris-
 tians were suspected for want of fidelitie to their Kings; and did either equiuocate
 in taking their Oath, or make no conscience to keepe it, when they had giuen it;
 as may appeare by sundry speeches in the Councell,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Concil. Tolet. 4. cap. 74.</note> saying, <quote><hi rend="italic">There is a generall
 report, that there is that perfidiousnesse in the mindes of many people of diuers
 Nations, that they make no conscience to keepe the Oath and fidelitie that they haue
 sworne vnto their Kings: but doe dissemble a profession of fidelitie in their mouthes,
 when they hold an impious perfidiousnesse in their mindes</hi>.</quote> And againe, <quote><hi rend="italic">They
 sweare to their Kings, and yet doe they preuaricate in the fidelitie which they haue
 promised: Neither doe they feare the Volume of Gods iudgement, by the which the
 curse of God is brought vpon them, with great threatening of punishments, which doe
 sweare lyingly in the Name of God</hi>.</quote><note anchored="true" place="foot">Concil. Tolet. 4. cap. 74.</note> To the like effect spake they in the Councill
 of <hi rend="italic">Aquisgran:</hi> <quote><hi rend="italic">If any of the Bishops, or other Church-man of inferiour degree,
 hereafter thorow feare or couetousnesse, or any other perswasion, shall make defection
from our Lord the Orthodoxe Emperour</hi> Lodowicke, <hi rend="italic">or shall violate the Oath of
fidelitie made vnto him, or shall with their peruerse intention adhere to his enemies;
let him by this Canonicall and Synodall sentence bee depriued of whatsoeuer place hee
is possessed of.</hi></quote><note anchored="true" place="foot">Concil. Aquis. gran. sub Ludo Pio, &amp; Greg.; 4. Can. 12. anno 836.</note>
</p><p>And now to come to a particular answere of his Letter. First, as concerning
 the sweet memory hee hath of his old acquaintance with the Arch-priest; it may
 indeed be pleasing for him to recount: but sure I am, his acquaintance with him
 and the rest of his societie, our Fugitiues (whereof he also vanteth himselfe in his
 Preface to the Reader in his Booke of Controuersies) hath prooued sowre to vs


<pb n="90"/>
and our State: For some of such Priests <note anchored="true" place="foot">Campian and Hart. See the conference in the Tower.</note> and Iesuits, as were the greatest Traitors
and fomenters of the greatest conspiracies against the late Queene, gaue vp
Father <hi rend="italic">Rob: Bellarmine</hi> for one of their greatest authorities and oracles: And
therefore I do not enuy the great honour he can winne, by his vaunt of his inward
familiarity with an other Princes traitors &amp; fugitiues; whom vnto if he teach
no better maners then hitherto he hath done, I thinke his fellowship are litle
beholding vnto him.
</p><p>And for desiring him to remember him in his prayers at the Altar of the Lord:
if the Arch-Priests prayers prooue no more profitable to his soule, then <hi rend="italic">Bellar-
mines</hi> counsell is like to proue profitable, both to the soule and bodie of <hi rend="italic">Blackwell</hi>
(if he would follow it) the authour of this Letter might very well be without his
prayers.
</p><p>Now the first messenger that I can finde which brought ioyfull newes of the
Arch-Priest to <hi rend="italic">Bellarmine</hi>, was hee that brought the newes of the Arch-Priests
taking, and first appearance of Martyrdome. A great signe surely of the Cardi-
nals mortification, that hee was so reioyced to heare of the apprehension, im-
prisonment and appearance of putting to death of so old and deare a friend of his.
But yet apparantly he should first haue beene sure, that hee was onely to bee
punished for cause of Religion, before hee had so triumphed vpon the expectation
of his Martyrdome. For first, by what rule of charitie was it lawfull for him to
iudge mee a persecutour, before proofe had beene made of it by the said Arch-
Priests condemnation and death ? What could hee know, that the said Arch-
Priest was not taken vpon suspicion of his guiltinesse in the Powder-Treason ?
What certaine information had hee then receiued vpon the particulars, whereupon
hee was to bee accused ? And last of all, by what inspiration could he foretell
whereupon hee was to bee accused ? For at that time there was yet nothing
layed to his charge. And if charitie should not bee suspicious, what warrant had
hee absolutely to condemne mee of vsing persecution and tyrannie, which could
not bee but implyed vpon mee, if <hi rend="italic">Blackwel</hi> was to bee a Martyr ? But surely it
may iustly be sayd of <hi rend="italic">Bellarmine</hi> in this case, that our Sauiour CHRIST saith of all
worldly and carnall men, who thinke it enough to loue their friends,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Mat. 5. 43.</note> and hate
their enemies; the limits of the Cardinals charitie extending no farther, then to
them of his owne profession. For what euer hee added in superfluous charitie to
<hi rend="italic">Blackwel</hi>, in reioycing in the speculation of his future Martyrdome; hee detracted
as much vniustly and vncharitably from me, in accounting of me thereby as of a
bloody Persecutour. And whereas this ioy of his was interrupted by the next
messenger, that brought the newes of the saide Arch-Priest his failing in his
constancie, by taking of this Oath; he needed neuer to haue beene troubled, either
with his former ioy or his second sorrow, both beeing alike falsly grounded. For
as it was neuer my intention to lay any thing vnto the said Arch-Priests charge,
as I haue neuer done to any for cause of conscience, so was <hi rend="italic">Blackwels</hi> constancie

<pb n="91"/>
 neuer brangled by taking of this Oath; It beeing a thing which he euer thought
 lawfull before his apprehension, and whereunto hee perswaded all Catholiques to
 giue obedience; like as after his apprehension, hee neuer made doubt or stop in it;
 but at the first offering it vnto him, did freely take it, as a thing most lawfull;
 neither meanes of threatening, or flatterie being euer vsed vnto him, as himselfe
 can yet beare witnesse.
</p><p>And as for the temperature and modification of this Oath, except that a rea-
 sonable and lawfull matter is there set downe in reasonable and temperate wordes,
 agreeing thereunto; I know not what he can meane, by quarelling it for that fault:
 For no temperatenesse nor modifications in words therein, can iustly be called the
 Deuils craft; when the thing it selfe is so plaine, and so plainely interpreted to all
 them that take it; as the onely troublesome thing in it all, bee the wordes vsed
 in the end thereof, for eschewing AEquiuocation and <hi rend="italic">Mentall reseruation</hi>. Which
 new Catholike doctrine, may farre iustlier bee called the Deuils craft, then any
 plaine and temperate wordes, in so plaine and cleare a matter. But what shall we
 say of these strange countrey clownes, whom of with the <hi rend="italic">Satyre</hi> we may iustly
 complaine, that they blow both hote &amp; cold out of one mouth ? For <hi rend="italic">Luther</hi> and
 all our bold and free-speaking Writers are mightily railed vpon by them, as hote-
 brained fellowes, and speakers by the Deuils instinct: and now if we speake
 moderately and temperately of them, it must be tearmed the Deuils craft: And
 therefore wee may iustly complaine with <hi rend="smallcap">Christ</hi>, that when we mourne, they
 wil not lament: and when we pipe, they wil not dance.<note anchored="true" place="foot">Mat. 11. 17.
</note> But neither <hi rend="italic">Iohn Baptist</hi>
 his seueritie, nor <hi rend="smallcap">Christ</hi> his meekenesse and lenitie can please them, who build
 but to their owne Monarchie vpon the ground of their owne Traditions; and not
 to <hi rend="smallcap">Christ</hi> vpon the ground of his word and infallible trewth.
</p><p>But what can bee meant by alleadging, that the craft of the Deuill herein, is
onely vsed for subuersion of the Catholique Faith, and euersion of Saint <hi rend="italic">Peters</hi>
Primacie; had neede bee commented anew by <hi rend="italic">Bellarmine</hi> himselfe: For in all this
Letter of his, neuer one word is vsed, to prooue that by any part of this Oath the
Primacie of Saint <hi rend="italic">Peter</hi> is any way medled with, except Master <hi rend="italic">Bellarmine</hi> his
bare alleadging; which without proouing it by more cleare demonstration, can
neuer satisfie the conscience of any reasonable man. For (for ought that I know)
heauen and earth are no farther asunder, then the profession of a temporall
obedience to a temporall King, is different from any thing belonging to the
Catholique Faith, or Supremacie of Saint <hi rend="italic">Peter</hi>: For as for the Catholique Faith;
can there be one word found in all that Oath, tending or sounding to matter of
Religion ? Doeth he that taketh it, promise there to beleeue, or not to beleeue
any article of Religion ? Or doeth hee so much as name a trew or false Church
there ? And as for Saint <hi rend="italic">Peters</hi> Primacie; I know no Apostles name that it therein
named, except the name of <hi rend="smallcap">Iames</hi>, it being my Christen name: though it please
him not to deigne to name me in all the Letter; albeit, the contents thereof con-

<pb n="92"/>
cerne mee in the highest degree. Neither is there any mention at all made therein,
either <hi rend="italic">disertis verbis</hi>, or by any other indirect meanes, either of the Hierarchie of
the Church, of Saint <hi rend="italic">Peters</hi> succession, of the Sea Apostolike, or of any such mat-
ter: but that the Author of our Letter doeth brauely make mention of Saint
<hi rend="italic">Peters</hi> succession, bringing it in comparison with the succession of <hi rend="italic">Henry</hi> the
eight. Of which vnapt and vnmannerly similitude, I wonder he should not be
much ashamed: For as to King <hi rend="italic">Henries</hi> Successour (which hee meaneth by mee)
as I, I say, neuer did, nor will persume to create any Article of Faith, or to bee
Iudge thereof; but to submit my exemplarie obedience vnto them, in as great
humilitie as the meanest of the land: so if the Pope could bee as well able to
prooue his either Personall or Doctrinall Succession from Saint <hi rend="italic">Peter</hi>, as I am able
to prooue my lineall descent from the Kings of <hi rend="italic">England</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Scotland</hi>; there had
neuer beene so long adoe, nor so much sturre kept about this question in Christen-
dome; neither had Master <hi rend="italic">Bellarmine</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de Rom. Pont. li. 4. cap. 6. Ibid. 1. 2. ca. 12.</note>  himselfe needed to haue bestowed so
many sheetes of paper <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">De summo Pontifice</foreign></hi>, in his great bookes of Controuersies:
And when all is done, to conclude with a morall certitude, and a <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">piè credendum</foreign>;</hi>
bringing in the Popes,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Idem ibid. lib. 2. cap. 14.</note> that are parties in this cause, to be his witnesses: and
yet their historicall narration must bee no article of Faith. And I am without
vanterie sure, that I doe farre more neerely imitate the worthie actions of my
Predecessours, then the <hi rend="italic">Popes</hi> in our aage can be well proued to be <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">similes Petro</foreign>,</hi>
especially in cursing of Kings, and setting free their Subiects from their Allegiance
vnto them.
</p><p>But now wee come to his strongest argument, which is, That he would alledge
 vpon mee a Panicke terrour, as if I were possessed with a needlesse feare: <hi rend="italic">For,</hi>
 saith the Cardinall, <hi rend="italic">from the beginning of the Churches first infancie, euen to this
 day, where was it euer heard, that euer a</hi> Pope <hi rend="italic">either commaunded to bee killed, or
 allowed the slaughter of any Prince whatsoeuer, whether hee were an Hereticke, an
 Ethnicke, or Persecutour</hi> ? But first, wherefore doeth he here wilfully, and of
 purpose omit the rest of the points mentioned in that Oath, for deposing, degrad-
 ing, stirring vp of armes, or rebelling against them, which are as well mentioned
 in that Oath, as the killing of them ? as beeing all of one consequence against a
 King, no Subiect beeing so scrupulous, as that hee will attempt the one, and leaue
 the other vnperformed if hee can. And yet surely I cannot blame him for passing
 it ouer, since he could not otherwise haue eschewed the direct belying of himselfe
 in tearmes, which hee now doeth but in substance and effect: For as for the
 <hi rend="italic">Popes</hi> deposing and degrading of Kings, hee maketh so braue vaunts and bragges
 of it in his former bookes, as he could neuer with, ciuill honestie haue denied it here.<note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellarm. de Rom. Pont. lib. 5. cap. 8. et lib. 3. cap. 16.
</note>
</p><p>But to returne to the <hi rend="italic">Popes</hi> allowing of killing of Kinges, I know not with
what face hee can set so stout a deniall vpon it against his owne knowledge. How
many Emperours did the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> raise warre against in their owne bowels ? Who


<pb n="93"/>
 as they were ouercome in battaile, were subiect to haue beene killed therein,
 which I hope the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> could not but haue allowed, when he was so farre inraged
 at <hi rend="italic">Henry</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Gotfrid. Viterb. Helmod. Cuspinian.</note> the fifth for gluing buriall to his fathers dead corpes, after the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> <note anchored="true" place="foot">Paschal. 2.</note>
 had stirred him vp to rebell against his father, and procured his ruine. But
 leauing these olde Histories to <hi rend="italic">Bellarmines</hi> owne bookes, that doe most authen-
 tically cite them, as I haue already said, let vs turne our eyes vpon our owne time,
 and therein remember what a Panegyricke<note anchored="true" place="foot">See the Oration of Sixtus Quintus, made in the Consistory vpon the death of Henry the 3.</note> Oration was made by the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi>, in
 praise and approbation of the Frier and his fact, that murthered king <hi rend="italic">Henry</hi> the
 third of <hi rend="italic">France</hi>, who was so farre from either being Hereticke, Ethnicke, or Per-
 secutor in their account, that the said <hi rend="italic">Popes</hi> owne wordes in that Oration are,
 <hi rend="italic">That a trew Friar hath killed a counterfeit Frier</hi>. And besides that vehement
 Oration and congratulation for that fact, how neere it scaped, that the said Frier
 was not canonized for that glorious act, is better knowen to <hi rend="italic">Bellarmine</hi> and his
 followers, then to vs here.
</p><p>But sure I am, if some Cardinals had not beene more wise and circumspect in
that errand, then the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> himselfe was, the <hi rend="italic">Popes</hi> owne Kalender of his Saints
would haue sufficiently proued <hi rend="italic">Bellarmin</hi> a lier in this case. And to draw yet
neerer vnto our selues; how many practises and attempts were made against the
late Queenes life, which were directly enioyned to those Traitours by their Con-
fessors, and plainly authorized by the <hi rend="italic">Popes</hi> allowance ? For verification whereof,
there needs no more proofe, then that neuer <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> either then or since, called any
Church-man in question for medling in any those treasonable conspiracies; nay,
the Cardinals owne S. <hi rend="italic">Sanderus</hi> mentioned in his Letter, could well verifie this
trewth if, hee were aliue; and who will looke his bookes, will find them filled with
no other doctrine then this. And what difference there is betweene the killing,
or allowing the slaughter of Kings, and the stirring vp and approbation of prac-
tises to kill them; I remit to <hi rend="italic">Bellarmines</hi> owne iudgement. It may then very
clearely appeare, how strangely this Authors passion hath made him forget him-
selfe, by implicating himselfe in so strong a contradiction against his owne knowl-
edge and conscience, against the witnesse of his former bookes, and against the
practise of our owne times. But who can wonder at this contradiction of himselfe
in this point, when his owne great Volumes are so filled with contradictions ?
which when either he, or any other shall euer bee able to reconcile, I will then
beleeue that hee may easily reconcile this impudent strong deniall of his in his
Letter, of any <hi rend="italic">Popes</hi> medling against Kings, with his owne former bookes, as I
haue already said.
</p><p>And that I may not seeme to imitate him in affirming boldly that which I no
wayes prooue; I will therefore send the Reader to looke for witnesses of his con-
tradictions, in such places here mentioned in his owne booke. In his bookes of
Iustification,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de Iustif. lib. 5. cap. 7.</note>4 there he affirmeth, <hi rend="italic">That for the vncertaintie of our owne proper</hi>

<pb n="94"/>

<hi rend="italic">righteousness, and for auoiding of vaine-glory, it is most sure and safe, to repose our
whole confidence in the alone mercy and goodnesse of God</hi>; Which proposition of
his, is directly contrary to the discourse, and current of all his flue bookes <hi rend="italic">de
Iustificatione,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Contrary to all his fiue bookes de Iustificatione.</note></hi> wherein the same is contained.</p><p><hi rend="italic">God doeth not encline a man to euill, either naturally or morally.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de amis gra. &amp; stat. pecca.li. 2.c. 13.</note></p><p>Presently after, hee affirmeth the contrary, <hi rend="italic">That God doeth not encline to euill
 naturally, but morally.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Ibidem paulo post.</note></p><p>All the Fathers teach constantly, <hi rend="italic">That Bishops doe succeed the Apostles, and
 Priests the seuentie disciples.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de clericis, lib. i. c. 14.</note></p><p>Elsewhere he affirmeth the contrary, That <hi rend="italic">Bishops doe not properly succeede
 the Apostles.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de Pont. 1. 4. c. 25.</note></p><p><hi rend="italic">That Iudas did not beleeue.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de Pont. lib. 1. c. 12.  </note></p><p>Contrary, <hi rend="italic">That Iudas was iust and certainly good.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de Iustif. lib. 3. c. 14. </note></p><p><hi rend="italic">The keeping of the Law according to the substance of the worke, doeth require
 that the Commandement be so kept, that sinne be not committed, and the man be not
 guiltie for hauing not kept the Commandement.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de gra. &amp; lib. arbit. lib. 5. cap. 5. </note></p><p>Contrary, <hi rend="italic">It is to be knowen that it is not all one, to doe a good morall worke,
 and to keepe the Commandement according to the substance of the worke: For the
 Commandement may be kept according to the substance of the worke, euen with sinne;
 as if one should restore to his friend the thing committed to him of trust, to the end
 that theeues might afterward take it from him.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Eodem lib. cap. 9.</note></p><p>Peter <hi rend="italic">did not loose that faith, whereby the heart beleeueth vnto iustification.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de Pont. lib. 4. c. 3.</note></p><p>Contrary, Peters <hi rend="italic">sinne was deadly.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Bell. de Iust. lib. 3. cap. 14.</note></p><p><hi rend="italic">Antichrist shall be a Magician, and after the maner of other Magicians shall se-
cretly worship the diuel.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Bell. de Rom. Pontif. lib. 3. cap. 14.</note></p><p>Contrary, <hi rend="italic">He shall not admit of idolatrie: he shall hate idoles, and reedifie the
 Temple.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Ibid. ex sentent. Hypol. &amp; Cyril. &amp; ,cap. 12.eiusdem lib i.</note></p><p><hi rend="italic">By the wordes of Consecration the trew and solemne oblation is made.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Bell. lib. I de missa cap. 17.</note></p><p>Contrary, <hi rend="italic">The sacrifice doeth not consist in the words: but in the oblation of the
thing it selfe.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de miss. lib. 2. cap. 12.</note></p><p><hi rend="italic">That the end of the world cannot be knowne.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de anim. Christ. lib. 4. cap. 5.</note></p><p>Contrary, <hi rend="italic">After the death of</hi> Antichrist, <hi rend="italic">there shall bee but fiue and fourtie dayes
till the end of the world.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de Pont. lib. 3. cap. 17.</note>
</p><p><hi rend="italic">That the tenne Kings shall burne the scarlet Whore, that is</hi>, Rome.<note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de Pont. lib. 3. cap. 13.</note><pb n="95"/></p><p>Contrary, Antichrist <hi rend="italic">shall hate</hi> Rome, <hi rend="italic">and fight against it, and burne it.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. ibid.   </note>
</p><p><hi rend="italic">The name of vniuersall Bishop may be understood two wayes; one way, that he
which is said to be vniuersall Bishop, may bee thought to be the onely Bishop of all
Christian Cities; so that all others are not indeed Bishops, but onely Vicars to him,
who is called vniuersall Bishop: in which sense, the</hi> Pope <hi rend="italic">is not vniuersall Bishop.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de Pont. lib. 2. cap. 31. </note>
</p><p>Contrary, <hi rend="italic">All ordinary iurisdiction of Bishops doeth descend immediatly from
the Pope; and is in him, and from him is deriued to others</hi>.<note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de Pont. lib. 2. cap. 24. </note> Which few places I
haue onely selected amongst many the like, that the discreet and iudicious
Reader may discerne <hi rend="italic">ex vngue Leonem</hi>: For when euer he is pressed with a
weighty obiection, hee neuer careth, nor remembreth how his solution and
answere to that, may make him gainesay his owne doctrine in some other places,
so it serue him for a shift to put off the present storme withall.
</p><p>But now to returne to our matter againe: <hi rend="italic">Since Popes</hi>, sayeth hee, <hi rend="italic">haue neuer.
at any time medled against Kings, wherefore, I pray you, should onely the King of</hi>
<hi rend="smallcap">England</hi> <hi rend="italic">be afraid of that, whereof neuer Christian King is, or was afraid</hi> ? Was
neuer Christian Emperour or King afraid of the <hi rend="italic">Popes</hi> ? How then were these
miserable Emperours tost and turmoiled, and in the end vtterly ruined by the
<hi rend="italic">Popes</hi>: for proofe whereof I haue already cited <hi rend="italic">Bellarmines</hi> owne bookes ? Was
not the Emperour <note anchored="true" place="foot">Henry 4.</note> afraid, who waited barefooted in the frost and snow three
dayes at the <hi rend="italic">Popes</hi> gate, before he could get entrie? <note anchored="true" place="foot">Abbas Vrspergen. Lamb. Scaff. Anno 1077. Plat. in vit. Greg. 7.  </note> Was not the Emperour<note anchored="true" place="foot">Frederick Barbarossa </note>
also afraid, who was driuen to lie agroofe on his belly, and suffer another <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> to
tread vpon his neck ? <note anchored="true" place="foot">Naucler. gener, 40. Iacob. Bergom. in Sup. plem. chron. Alfons. Clacon. in vit. Alex. 3.</note> And was not another Emperour <note anchored="true" place="foot">Henry 6.</note> afraid, who was con-
strained in like maner to endure a third <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> to beat off from his head the Im-
periall Crowne with his foot ? <note anchored="true" place="foot">R. Houeden in Rich. i; Ranulph. in Polycronico. lib. 7.</note> Was not <hi rend="italic">Philip</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Abbas Vrsper. ad Ann. 1191.</note> afraid, being made Emperour
against <hi rend="italic">Pope Innocentius</hi> the thirds good liking, when he brake out into these
words, <hi rend="italic">Either the Pope shall take the Crowne from</hi> Philip, <hi rend="italic">or</hi> Philip <hi rend="italic">shall take the
Miter from the Pope ? </hi><note anchored="true" place="foot"> Nauc. gen. 40. Cuspin. in Philippo.</note> whereupon the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> stirred vp <hi rend="italic">Ottho</hi> against him, who
caused him to be slaine; and presently went to <hi rend="italic">Rome</hi>, and was crowned Em-
perour by the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi>, though afterward the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot"> Abbas Vrsper.</note> deposed him too. Was not the
Emperour <hi rend="italic">Fredericke</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Math. Paris. in Henr. 3; Petr. de Vineis, Epist. li. I. &amp; 2; Cuspin in Freder. 2.</note> afraid, when <hi rend="italic">Innocentius</hi> the fourth excommunicated him,
depriued him of his crowne, absolued Princes of their Oath of fidelitie to him, and
in <hi rend="italic">Apulia</hi> corrupted one to giue him poison ? whereof the Emperour recouering,
hee hired his bastard sonne <hi rend="italic">Manfredus</hi> to poison him; whereof he died. What
did <hi rend="italic">Alexander</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Vita Frederici Germanice conscripta.</note> the third write to the <hi rend="italic">Soldan</hi>?   That if he would liue quietly, hee
should by some slight murther the Emperour;<note anchored="true" place="foot">Fredericke Barbarossa.</note> and to that end sent him the Em-

<pb n="96"/>

perours picture. And did not <hi rend="italic">Alexander</hi> <note anchored="true" place="foot">Paul. Iouius, Hist. lib. 2; Cuspinian. in Baiazet. II; Guicciard. lib. 2.</note> the sixt take of the Turke <hi rend="italic">Baiazetes</hi>
two hundred thousand crownes to kill his brother <hi rend="italic">Gemen</hi>; or as some call him,
<hi rend="italic">Sisimus</hi>, whom he helde captiue at <hi rend="italic">Rome</hi> ? Did hee not accept of the conditions
to poyson the man, and had his pay ? Was not our <hi rend="italic">Henry </hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Houeden, pag. 308; Matth. Paris. in Henric 2; Walsinga. in Hypodig. Neustriae. Ioan. Capgraue.</note>the second afraid
after the slaughter of <hi rend="italic">Thomas Becket</hi>; that besides his going bare-footed in
Pilgrimage, was whipped vp and down the Chapter-house like a schoole-boy, and
glad to escape so to ? Had not this French King his great grandfather King <hi rend="italic">Iohn</hi>
reason to be afraid, when the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> <note anchored="true" place="foot">Gomecius de rebus gest. Fran. Ximenij Archiepis. Tolet.lib. 5.</note> gaue away his kingdome of <hi rend="italic">Nauarre</hi> to the
King of <hi rend="italic">Spaine</hi>, whereof he yet possesseth the best halfe ? Had not this King,
his Successour reason to be afraid, when he was forced to begge so submissiuely
the relaxation of his Excommunication, as he was content likewise to suffer his
Ambassadour to be whipped at <hi rend="italic">Rome</hi> for penance ? And had not the late Queene
reason to looke to her selfe, when she was excommunicated by <hi rend="italic">Pius Quintus</hi>, her
Subiects loosed from their fidelitie and Allegiance toward her, her Kingdome of
<hi rend="italic">Ireland</hi> giuen to the King of <hi rend="italic">Spaine</hi>, and that famous fugitiue diuine, honoured
with the like degree of a redde Hat as <hi rend="italic">Bellarmine</hi> is, was not ashamed to publish
in Print an Apologie<note anchored="true" place="foot">Card. Aliens Answere to Stan. letter, Anno 1587.</note> for <hi rend="italic">Stanleys</hi> treason, maintaining, that by reason of her
excommunication and heresie, it was not onely lawfull for any of of her Subiects,
but euen they were bound in conscience to depriue her of any strength, which lay
in their power to doe ? And whether it were armies, townes, or fortresses of hers
which they had in their hands, they were obliged to put them in the King of
<hi rend="italic">Spaine</hi> her enemies hands, shee no more being the right owner of anything ? But
albeit it be trew, that wise men are mooued by the examples of others dangers to
vse prouidence and caution, according to the olde Prouerbe, <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Tum tua res agitur</foreign>,
paries cum proximus ardet</hi>: yet was I much neerlier summoned to vse this caution,
by the practise of it in mine owne person.
</p><p>First, by the sending foorth of these Bulles whereof I made mention already,
 for debarring me from entrie vnto this Crowne, and Kingdome. And next after
 my entrie, and full possession thereof, by the horrible Powder-treason, which
 should haue bereft both me and mine, both of crowne and life. And howsoeuer
 the Pope will seeme to cleare himselfe of any allowance of the said Powder-trea-
 son; yet can it not be denied, that his principall ministers here, and his chiefe
 <hi rend="italic">Mancipia</hi> the Iesuites, were the plaine practisers thereof: for which the principall
of them hath died confessing it, and other haue fled the Countrey for the crime;
yea, some of them gone into <hi rend="italic">Italy</hi>: and yet neither these that fled out of this
Countrey for it, nor yet <hi rend="italic">Baldwine</hi>, who though he then remained in the Low-
countreys, was of counsell in it, were euer called to account for it by the Pope;
much lesse punished for medling in so' scandalous and enormous businesse. And


<pb n="97"/>

 now what needs so great wonder and exclamation, that <hi rend="italic">the onely King of</hi> England
<hi rend="italic">feareth</hi>: And <hi rend="italic">what other Christian King doeth, or euer did feare but hee</hi> ? As if
by the force of his rhetoricke he could make me and my good Subiects to mistrust
our senses, deny the Sunne to shine at midday, and not with the serpent to stop
our eares to his charming, but to the plaine and visible veritie it selfe. And yet
for all this wonder, he can neuer prooue mee to be troubled with such a Panicke
terrour. Haue I euer importuned the Pope with any request for my securitie ?
Or haue I either troubled other Christian Princes my friends and allies, to intreat
for me at the Popes hand ? Or yet haue I begged from them any aide or assist-
ance for my farther securitie ? No. All this wondred-at feare of mine, stretcheth
no further, then wisely to make distinction betweene the sheepe and goats in my
owne pasture. For since, what euer the Popes part hath beene in the Powder-
treason; yet certaine it is, that all these caitife monsters did to their death main-
taine, that onely zeale of Religion mooued them to that horrible attempt: yea,
some of them at their death, would not craue pardon at God or King for their
offence; exhorting other of their followers to the like constancie. Had not wee
then, and our Parliament great reason, by this Oath to set a marke of distinction
betweene good Subiects, and bad ? Yea, betweene Papists, though peraduenture
zealous in their religion, yet otherwise ciuilly honest and good Subiects, and such
terrible firebrands of hell, as would maintaine the like maximes, which these
Powder-men did ? Nay, could there be a more gracious part in a King, suppose I
say it, towards Subiects of a contrary Religion, then by making them to take this
Oath, to publish their honest fidelitie in temporal things to me their Soueraigne,
and thereby to wipe off that imputation and great slander which was laide
vpon the whole professours of that Religion, by the furious enterprise of these
Powder-men ?
</p><p>And whereas for illustration of this strong argument of his, hee hath brought
 in for a similitude the historie of <hi rend="italic">Iulian </hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Nazianzen. in Iulian. <foreign xml:lang="lat">inuectiuâ primâ.</foreign>
</note> the <hi rend="italic">Apostata</hi> his dealing with the Chris-
 tians, when as he straited them either to commit idolatrie, or to come within the
 compasse of treason: I would wish the authour to remember, that although a
 similitude may be permitted <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">claudicare vno pede</foreign></hi>; yet this was a very ill chosen
 similitude, which is lame both of feete and hands, and euery member of the body:
 For I shall in fewe wordes prooue, that it agreeth in no one point saue one, with
 our purpose, which is, that <hi rend="italic">Iulian</hi> was an Emperour, and I a King. First, <hi rend="italic">Iulian</hi>
 was an <hi rend="italic">Apostata</hi>, one that had renounced the whole Christian faith, which he had
 once professed, and became an Ethnike againe, or rather an Atheist: whereas I
 am a Christian, who neuer changed that Religion, that I dranke in with my
 milke: nor euer, I thanke GOD, was ashamed of my profession. <hi rend="italic">Iulian</hi> dealt
 against Christians onely for the profession of <hi rend="smallcap">Christes</hi> cause: I deale in this
 cause with my Subiects, onely to make a distinction betweene trew Subiects, an
 false-hearted traitours. <hi rend="italic">Iulians</hi> end was the ouerthrow of the Christians: my

<pb n="98"/>
onely end is, to maintaine Christianitie in a peaceable gouernement. <hi rend="italic">Iulians</hi>
drift was to make them commit Idolatrie: my purpose is, to cause my Subiects
to make open profession of their naturall Allegiance, and ciuill Obedience. <hi rend="italic">Iulians</hi>
meanes whereby he went about it, was by craft, and insnaring them before they
were aware: my course in this is plaine, cleare, and voyd of all obscuritie; neuer
refusing leaue to any that are required to take this Oath, to study it at leisure, and
giuing them all the interpretation of it they can craue. But the greatest dissimili-
tude of all, is in this: that <hi rend="italic">Iulian</hi> pressed them to commit idolatrie to Idoles and
Images: but as well I, as all the Subiects of my profession are so farre from guilt
in this point, as wee are counted heretiques by you, because we will not commit
idolatrie. So as in the maine point of all, is the greatest contrarietie. For, <hi rend="italic">Iulian</hi>
persecuted the Christians because they would not commit idolatrie; and ye count
me a persecutour, because I will not admit idolatrie. So as to conclude this point,
this old sentence may well be applied to <hi rend="italic">Bellarmine</hi>, in vsing so vnapt a similitude,
                                <hi rend="blockquote"><hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Perdere quos vult Iupiter, hos dementat.</foreign></hi></hi>
</p><p>And therefore his vncharitable conclusion doeth not rightly follow: <hi rend="italic">That it
seemeth vnto him, that some such thing should be subtilly or fraudulently included in
this Oath</hi>; as if no man can detest Treason against the King, or professe ciuill
subiection, except hee renounce the Primacie of the Apostolique Sea. But how
he hath suckt this apprehension out at his fingers ends, I cannot imagine: for
sure I am, as I haue oft said, hee neuer goeth about to prooue it: and to answere
an improbable imagination, is to fight against a vanishing shadow. It cannot be
denied indeed, that many seruants of CHRIST, as well Priests, as others, haue
endured constantly all sorts of torments, and death, for the profession of CHRIST:
and therefore to all such his examples, as hee bringeth in for verifying the same, I
need not to giue him any other answere, saue onely to remember him, that he
playeth the part of a sophister in all these his examples of the constancie of
Martyrs; euer taking <hi rend="italic">Controuersum pro confesso</hi>, as if this our case were of the
same nature.
</p><p>But yet that the Reader may the better discouer, not onely how vnaptly his
similitudes are applied, but likewise how dishonestly hee vseth himselfe in all his
citations: I haue thought good to set downe the very places themselues cited by
him, together with a short deduction of the trew state of those particular cases:
whereby, how little these examples can touch our case; nay, by the contrary,
how rightly their trew sense may bee vsed, as our owne weapons to be throwen
backe vpon him that alledgeth them, shall easily appeare. And first, for <hi rend="italic">Eleazar</hi>: <note anchored="true" place="foot">2. Maccab. chap. 6. ver.18.</note>
If the Arch-priest his ground of refusing the Oath, were as good as <hi rend="italic">Eleazars</hi> was,
to forbeare to eate the swines flesh, it might not vnfitly be applied by the Cardinal
to this purpose: For as <hi rend="italic">Eleazar</hi> was a principall Scribe, so is he a principall Priest:
As <hi rend="italic">Eleazars</hi> example had a great force in it, to animate the yonger Scribes to


<pb n="99"/>

keepe the Lawe, or in his colourable eating it, to haue taught them to dissemble:
so hath the Arch-priests, either to make the inferiour Priests to take the Oath,
or to refuse it: but the ground failing, the building cannot stand: For what
example is there in all the Scripture, in which disobedience to the Oath of the
King, or want of Allegiance is allowed ? If the Cardinall would remember, that
when the Church maketh a Lawe (suppose to forbid flesh on certaine dayes) he
that refuseth to obey it, incurreth the iust censure of the Church: If a man then
ought to die rather than to breake the least of Gods Ceremoniall Lawes, and to
pine and starue his body, rather then to violate the Church his positiue Law: will
he not giue leaue to a man to redeeme his soule from sinne, and to keepe his body
from punishment, by keeping a Kings politike Law, and by giuing good example
in his Person, raise vp a good opinion in me of like Allegiance in the inferiour of
his order ? This application, as I take it, would haue better fitted this example.
</p><p>But let mee remember the Cardinall of another Oath <note anchored="true" place="foot">I. Sam. 14. 25.</note> inioyned by a King to
his people, whereby he indangered his owne life, and hazarded the safetie of the
whole armie, when hee made the people sweare in the morning, not to taste of any
meate vntill night: which Oath he exacted so strictly, that his eldest sonne, and
heire apparant, <hi rend="italic">Ionathan</hi>, for breaking of it, by tasting a little hony of the top of
his rodde, though he heard not when the King gaue that Oath, had well-nigh
died for it. And shall an Oath giuen vpon so vrgent an occasion as this was, for
the apparant safetie of me and my posteritie, forbidding my people to drinke so
deeply in the bitter cup of Antichristian fornications, but that they may keepe so
much hony in their hearts, as may argue them still espoused to me their Sou-
eraigne in the maine knot of trew Allegiance; shall this Law, I say, by him bee
condemned to hell for a <hi rend="italic">stratageme of Sathan</hi> ? I say no more, but Gods lot in the
Oath of <hi rend="italic">Sauls</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Bellarmines</hi> verdict vpon this Oath of ours, seeme not to be
cast out of one lap.
</p><p>Now to this example of <hi rend="italic">Basill</hi>,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Theodoret. lib. 4. cap. 19.</note> which is (as he sayth) so fit for his purpose:
First, I must obserue, that if the Cardinall would leaue a common and ordinarie
tricke of his in all his Citations, which is to take what makes for him, and leaue
out what makes against him; and cite the Authours sense, as well as his Sen-
tence, we should not be so much troubled with answering the Ancients which he
alledgeth. To instance it in this very place: if he had continued his allegation
one line further, hee should haue found this place out of <hi rend="italic">Theodoret</hi>, of more force
to haue mooued <hi rend="italic">Blackwell</hi> to take the Oath, then to haue disswaded him from it:
For in the very next words it followeth, <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Imperatoris quidem amicitiam magni se
pendere, cum pietate; quâ remotâ, perniciosam esse dicere</foreign></hi>. But that it may
appeare, whether of vs haue greatest right to this place, I will in few words shew
the Authours drift.
</p><p>The Emperour <hi rend="italic">Valens</hi> being an Arrian, at the perswasion of his wife, when he
had depriued all the Churches of their Pastours, came to <hi rend="italic">Caesarea</hi>, where <hi rend="italic">S. Basil </hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Theodoret. lib. 4. cap. 19.
</note>

<pb n="100"/>

was then Bishop, who, as the historie reporteth, was accounted the <hi rend="italic">Light of the
world</hi>. Before hee came, hee sent his deputie <note anchored="true" place="foot">Modestus as Nazianzen vpon the death of Basill calleth him in his oration.</note> to worke it, that <hi rend="italic">S. Basil</hi> should
hold fellowship with <hi rend="italic">Eudoxius</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Looke cap. 12. eiusdem libri. </note> (which <hi rend="italic">Eudoxius 2 </hi>was bishop of <hi rend="italic">Constantinople,</hi>
and the principall of the Arrian faction) or if he would not, that hee should put
him to banishment. Now when the Emperours Deputie came to <hi rend="italic">Caesarea</hi>, he
sent for <hi rend="italic">Basil</hi>, intreated him honourably, spake pleasingly vnto him, desired he
would giue way to the time, neither that he would hazard the good of so many
Churches <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">tenui exquisitione dogmatis</foreign></hi>: promised him the Emperours fauour, and
himselfe to be mediatour for his good. But <hi rend="italic">S. Basill</hi> answered, <hi rend="italic">These intising
speeches were to fit to bee vsed to children, that vse to gape after such things: but for
them that were throughly instructed in Gods word, they could neuer suffer any syl-
lable thereof to be corrupted: Nay, if need required, they would for the maintenance
thereof refuse no kind of death. Indeed the loue of the Emperour ought to bee greatly
esteemed with pietie; but pietie taken away, it was pernicious.</hi>
</p><p>This is the trewth of the historie. Now compare the case of <hi rend="italic">Basill</hi> with the
 Arch-priests: <hi rend="italic">Basill</hi> was sollicited to become an Arrian: the Arch-priest not once
 touched for any article of faith. <hi rend="italic">Basill</hi> would haue obeyed the Emperour, but
 that the word of GOD forbade him: this man is willed to obey, because the word
 of GOD commandeth him. <hi rend="italic">Basill</hi> highly esteemed the Emperours fauour, if it
 might haue stood with pietie: the Archi-priest is exhorted to reiect it, though it
 stand with trew godlinesse in deed, to embrace it. But that he may lay load
 vpon the Arch-priest, it is not sufficient to exhort him to courage and constancie
 by <hi rend="italic">Eleazarus</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Basils</hi> examples; but he must be vtterly cast downe with the
 comparing his fall to <hi rend="italic">S. Peter</hi>, and <hi rend="italic">Marcellinus</hi>: which two mens cases were the
 most fearefull, considering their persons and places, that are to be found, or read
 of, either in all the bookes of diuine Scripture, or the volumes of Ecclesiasticall
 histories; the one denying the onely trew GOD, the other our Lord and Sauiour
 IESVS CHRIST; the one sacrificing to Idoles, with the prophane heathen: the
 other forswearing his Lord and Master, with the hard-hearted Iewes. Vnlesse the
 Cardinall would driue the Arch-priest to some horrour of conscience, and pit of
 despaire, I know not what he can meane by this comparison: For sure I am, all
 that are not intoxicated with their cup, cannot but wonder to heare of an Oath of
 Allegiance to a naturall Soueraigne, to be likened to an <hi rend="italic">Apostats</hi> denying of God,
 and forswearing of his Sauiour.
</p><p>But to let passe the <hi rend="italic">Disdiapason</hi> of the cases (as his ill-fauoured coupling
<hi rend="italic">S. Peter</hi> the head of their Church, with an apostate Pope) I marueile hee would
remember this example of <hi rend="italic">Marcellinus</hi>,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Looke Platina in vita Marcellini.</note> since his brother Cardinall <hi rend="italic">Baronius</hi>, and
the late Edition of the Councels by <hi rend="italic">Binnius</hi> <note anchored="true" place="foot">Concil. Tom. i. pag. 222. Looke Baronius, Ann. 302. num. 96.</note> seeme to call the credit of the whole
historie into question, saying, <hi rend="italic">That it might plainely be refuted, and that it is prob-
</hi>

<pb n="101"/>

 <hi rend="italic">ably to be shewed, that the story is but obreptious</hi>, but that he would not swarue from
 the common receiued opinion.
</p><p>And if a man might haue leaue to coniecture; so would his Cardinalship too,
 if it were not for one or two sentences in that Councell <note anchored="true" place="foot">See Tom. i. Concil. in Act. Concil. Sinuess.</note> of <hi rend="italic">Sinuessa</hi>, which serued
 for his purpose; namely, that <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Prima sedes à nemine iudicatur</foreign></hi>: And,
 <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Iudica causam tuam: nostrâ sententiâ non condemnaberis</foreign></hi>. But to what purpose a great
 Councell (as he termes it) of three hundred Bishops and others, should meete
 together, who before they met, knew they could doe nothing: when they were
 there, did nothing, but like Cuckowes, sing ouer and ouer the same song: that,
 <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Prima sedes à nemine iudicatur</foreign></hi>; and so after three dayes sitting (a long time in-
 deed for a great and graue Councell) brake so bluntly vp: and yet, that there
 should be seuentie two witnesses brought against him, and that they should
 subscribe his excommunication, and that at his owne mouth hee tooke the
 <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Anathema maranatha</foreign></hi>: how these vntoward contradictions shall be made to agree,
 I must send the Cardinall to <hi rend="italic">Venice</hi>, to <hi rend="italic">Padre Paulo</hi>, who in his Apologie <note anchored="true" place="foot">Apol. Pat. Paul. aduersus opposit. Card. Bellar.</note> against
 the Cardinals oppositions, hath handled them very learnedly.
</p><p>But from one Pope, let vs passe to another: (for, what a principall article of
 Faith and Religion this Oath is, I haue alreadie sufficiently proued.) Why hee
 called S. <hi rend="italic">Gregory</hi> <note anchored="true" place="foot">Greg. lib. II . cap. 42.</note> our Apostle, I know not, vnlesse perhaps it be, for that hee
 sent <hi rend="italic">Augustine</hi> <note anchored="true" place="foot">Beda Ecclesi. Hist. gen.Ang. lib. i. cap. 25.</note> the Monke and other with him into England, to conuert vs to
 the faith of Christ, wherein I with the <hi rend="italic">Popes</hi> his successours would follow his
 patterne: For albeit hee sent them by diuine reuelation (as hee said) into England
 vnto King <hi rend="italic">Ethelbert</hi>; yet when they came, they exercised no part of their func-
 tion, but by the Kings leaue and permission. So did King <hi rend="italic">Lucius</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Beda Ecclesi. Hist. gen. Ang. lib. I. cap. 4.</note> send to
 <hi rend="italic">Eleutherius</hi> his predecessour, and hee sent him diuers Bishops, who were all
 placed by the Kings authoritie. These conuerted men to the faith, and taught
 them to obey the King. And if the <hi rend="italic">Popes</hi> in these dayes would but insist in these
 steppes of their fore-fathers; then would they not entertaine Princes fugitiues
 abroad, nor send them home, not onely without my leaue, but directly against the
 Lawes, with plots of treason and doctrine of rebellion, to draw Subiects from their
 obedience to me their naturall King: nor be so cruell to their owne <hi rend="italic">Mancipia</hi>, as
 returning them with these wares, put either a State in iealousie of them; or them
 in hazard of their owne liues. Now to our Apostle (since the Cardinall will haue
 him so called) I perswade my selfe I should doe a good seruice to the Church in
 this my labour, if I could but reape this one fruit of it, to moue the Cardinall to
 deale faithfully with the Fathers, &amp; neuer to alledge their opinions against their
 own purpose: For, this letter of <hi rend="italic">Gregorius</hi> <note anchored="true" place="foot">Greg. lib. II. cap. 42.</note> was written to <hi rend="italic">Iohn</hi> Bishop of <hi rend="italic">Palermo</hi>
in <hi rend="italic">Sicily</hi>, to whom he granted <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">vsum pallij</foreign></hi>, to be worne in such times, and in such

<pb n="102"/>

  order as the Priests in the Ile of <hi rend="italic">Sicily</hi>, and his predecessors were wont to vse: and
  withall giueth him a caueat, <hi rend="italic">That the reuerence to the Apostolike Sea, be not dis-
  turbed by the presumption of any: for then the state of the members doeth remaine
  sound, when the head of the Faith is not bruised by any iniury, and the authoritie of
  the Canons alwayes remaine safe and sound.</hi>
</p><p>Now let vs examine the words. The Epistle was written to a Bishop, especially
  to grant him the vse of the Pall; a ceremonie and matter indifferent. As it
  appeareth, the Bishop of <hi rend="italic">Rome</hi> tooke it well at his hands, that he would not per-
  sume to take it vpon him without leaue from the Apostolike Sea, giuing him that
  admonition which followeth in the wordes alledged out of him: which doctrine
  we are so farre from impugning, that we altogether approoue and allow of the
  same, that whatsoeuer ceremony for order is thought meet by the Christian
  Magistrate, and the Church, the same ought inuiolably be to kept: and where
  the head and gouernour in matters of that nature are not obeyed, the members of
  that Church must needs run to hellish confusion: But that <hi rend="italic">Gregory</hi> by that terme,
  <hi rend="italic">caputfidei</hi>, held himselfe the head of our faith, and the head of all religion, cannot
  stand with the course of his doctrine and writings: For first, when an other
  would haue had this stile to be called <hi rend="italic">Vniuersalis Episcopus</hi>,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Iohn of Constantinople. See Greg. lib. 4. Epist. 32.</note> hee said, <hi rend="italic">I doe
  confidently auouch, that whosoeuer called himselfe, or desireth to be called Vniuersall
  Bishop, in this aduancing of himselfe, is the fore-runner of the Antichrist</hi>: <note anchored="true" place="foot">Lib. 6. Epist. 30.  </note> which
  notwithstanding was a stile farre inferiour to that of <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Caput fidei</foreign></hi>. And when it
  was offered to himselfe the wordes of S. <hi rend="italic">Gregory</hi> <note anchored="true" place="foot">Greg. lib. 4. epist. 32. &amp; 36.</note> be these, refusing that Title:
  <hi rend="italic">None of my predecessours</hi> [Bishops of Rome,] <hi rend="italic">euer consented to vse this prophane
  name</hi> [of vniuerfall Bishop.] <hi rend="italic">None of my predecessours euer tooke vpon him this
  name of singulartie, neither consented to vse it, Wee the Bishops of</hi> Rome <hi rend="italic">doe not
  seeke, nor yet accept this glorious title, being offered vnto vs</hi>. And now, I pray you,
  would he that refused to be called Vniuersall Bishop, be stiled <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Caput fidei</foreign></hi>, vnlesse
  it were in that sense, as I haue expressed ? which sense if he will not admit, giue
  me leaue to say that of <hi rend="italic">Gregorie</hi>, which himselfe sayeth of <hi rend="italic">Lyra,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de Rom. Pont. lib. 2. cap. 10.</note> <foreign xml:lang="lat">Minus cautè
  locutus est</foreign></hi>: or which he elsewhere sayth of <hi rend="italic">Chrysostome,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Idem. lib. 2. de Missa, cap. 10.</note> <foreign xml:lang="lat">Locutus est per excessum</foreign>.</hi>
  To redeeme therefore our Apostle out of his hands, and to let him remaine ours,
  and not his in this case; it is very trew that he sayth in that sense he spake it.
  When yee goe about to disturbe, diminish, or take away the authoritie or suprem-
  acie of the Church, which resteth on the head of the King, within his dominions,
ye cut off the head and chiefe gouernour thereof, and disturbe the state and mem-
bers of the whole body. And for a conclusion of this point, I pray him to think,
that we are so well perswaded of the good minde of our Apostle S. <hi rend="italic">Gregory</hi> to vs,
that wee desire no other thing to be suggested to the Pope and his Cardinals, then
our Apostle S. <hi rend="italic">Gregory</hi> <note anchored="true" place="foot">Greg. lib. 7. Epist. I.</note> desired <hi rend="italic">Sabinian</hi> to suggest vnto the Emperour and the

<pb n="103"/>

State in his time. His words be these: <hi rend="italic">One thing there is, of which I would haue
you shortly to suggest to your most noble Lord and Master: That if I his seruant
would haue had my hand in slaying of the Lombards, at this day the Nation of the
Lombards had neither had King, nor Dukes, nor Earles, and had beene diuided
asunder in vtter confusion: but because I feare God, I dread to haue my hand in the
blood of any man.</hi>
</p><p>And thus hauing answered to S. <hi rend="italic">Gregory</hi>, I come to another Pope, his Apostle,
<hi rend="italic">S. Leo</hi>. And that hee may see, I haue not in the former citations, quarelled him
like a Sophister for contention sake, but for finding out of the trewth, I doe grant,
that the authorities out of <hi rend="italic">Leo,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Leo primus in die assump. suae ad Pont. serm. 3; Leo Epist. 89. ad Episc. Vien. Idem ibid. ca. 2.</note></hi> are rightly alledged all three, the wordes trewly
set downe, together with his trew intent and purpose: but withall, let me tell
him, and I appeale vnto his owne conscience, whether I speake not trewly, that
what <hi rend="italic">Tullie</hi> said to <hi rend="italic">Hortensius</hi>,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Cic. in Hort.</note> when he did immoderately praise eloquence, that
hee would haue lift her vp to Heauen, that himselfe might haue gone vp with her;
So his S. <hi rend="italic">Leo</hi> lift vp S. <hi rend="italic">Peter</hi> with praises to the skie, that he being his heire, might
haue gone vp with him: <note anchored="true" place="foot">For so hee calleth himselfe in serm. I. in die assum.</note>    For his S. <hi rend="italic">Leo</hi> was a great Oratour, who by the power
of his eloquence redeemed <hi rend="italic">Rome</hi> from fire, when both <hi rend="italic">Attilas</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Gensericus</hi>
would haue burnt it.<note anchored="true" place="foot">Ex breuiario Romano. </note>
</p><p>Some fruites of this rhetoricke hee bestowed vpon S. <hi rend="italic">Peter</hi>, saying, <hi rend="italic">The Lord</hi> <note anchored="true" place="foot">Epist. 89.</note>
 <hi rend="italic">did take Peter into the fellowship of the indiuisible vnitie</hi>: which wordes being
 coupled to the sentence alledged by the Cardinall <hi rend="italic">(that he hath no part in the
 diuine Mysterie, that dare depart from the soliditie of Peter</hi>) should haue giuen him,
 I thinke, such a skarre, as hee should neuer haue dared to haue taken any ad-
 uantage by the wordes immediatly preceding, for the benefite of the Church of
 <hi rend="italic">Rome</hi>, and the head thereof; since those which immediatly follow, are so much
 derogatorie to the diuine Maiestie. And againe, <hi rend="italic">My writings <note anchored="true" place="foot">Epist. 52.</note> be strengthened by
 the authoritie and merit of my Lord, most blessed</hi> S. Peter. <hi rend="italic">We beseech<note anchored="true" place="foot">Epist. 89.</note> you to keepe
 the things decreed by vs through the inspiration of God, and the Apostle most blessed</hi>
 S. Peter. <hi rend="italic">If anything <note anchored="true" place="foot">In serm. 2 in die anniuer. assum. sum.</note> be well done, or decreed by vs; If anything be obtained of Gods
 mercy by daily prayers, it is to be ascribed to</hi> S. Peters <hi rend="italic">workes and merits, whose
 power doeth liue, and authoritie excell in his owne Sea. Hee was so plentifully <note anchored="true" place="foot">Serm. 3. in die anniuer. assump. sure.</note>
 watered of the very fountaine of all graces, that whereas he receiued many things alone,
 yet nothing passeth ouer to any other, but hee was partaker of it</hi>. And in a word, hee
 was so desirous to extoll Saint Peter, that a messenger from him was <hi rend="italic">an embas-
 sage<note anchored="true" place="foot">Epist. 24.</note> from</hi> Saint Peter: <hi rend="italic">any thing done in his presence,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Epist. 4.</note> was in</hi> S. Peters <hi rend="italic">presence.</hi>
 Neither did he vse all this Rhetoricke without purpose: for at that time the
 Patriarch of <hi rend="italic">Constantinople</hi> contended with him for Primacie. And in the Coun-

<pb n="104"/>

   cell of <hi rend="italic">Chalcedon,</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Concil. Chalcedon. Act. 16. &amp; Can. 28.</note> the Bishops, sixe hundred and more, gaue equall authoritie to
   the Patriarch of that Sea, and would not admit any Priuiledge to the Sea of
   <hi rend="italic">Rome</hi> aboue him; but went against him. And yet he that gaue so much to <hi rend="italic">Peter,</hi>
   tooke nothing from <hi rend="italic">Caesar</hi>; but gaue him both his Titles and due, giuing the
   power of calling a Councell to the Emperour; as it may appeare by these one or
   two places following of many. <hi rend="italic">If it may please your godlinesse to vouchsafe at our
   supplication to condiscend, that you will command a Councell of Bishops to be holden
   within Italy</hi>.<note anchored="true" place="foot">Epist. 9. Theodosio.</note> And writing vnto the Bishop of Constantinople: <hi rend="italic">Because the most
   clement Emperour,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Epist. 16. Flau.</note> carefull of the peace of the Church, will haue a Councell to be
   holden; albeit it euidently appeare, the matter to be handled doeth in no case stand in
   neede of a Councell</hi>. And againe, <hi rend="italic">Albeit my occasions will not permit me to be
   present vpon the day of the Councell of Bishops, which your godlinesse hath appointed.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Epist. 17. Theodosio.</note>
   So as by this it may well appeare, that hee that gaue so much to <hi rend="italic">Peter</hi>, gaue also
   to <hi rend="italic">Caesar</hi> his due and prerogatiue. But yet he playeth not faire play in this, that
   euen in all these his wrong applied arguments and examples, hee produceth no
   other witnesses, but the parties themselues; bringing euer the <hi rend="italic">Popes</hi> sentences for
   approbation of their owne authoritie.
</p><p>Now indeed for one word of his in the middest of his examples, I cannot but
  greatly commend him; that is, that Martyrs ought to endure all sorts of tortures
  and death, before they suffer one syllable to be corrupted of the Law of God.
  Which lesson, if hee and all the rest of his owne profession would apply to them-
  selues, then would not the Sacrament be administred <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">sub vnâ specie</foreign></hi>, directly con-
  trary to Christs institution, the practise of the Apostles and of the whole Primitive
  Church for many hundred yeeres: then would not the priuate Masses be in place
  of the Lordes Supper: then would not the words of the Canon <note anchored="true" place="foot">Bellar. de sacra Eucharist. lib. 4. cap. 14.</note> of the Masse be
  opposed to the words of S. <hi rend="italic">Paul</hi> and S. <hi rend="italic">Luke</hi>, as our Aduersarie himselfe con-
  fesseth, and cannot reconcile them: nor then would not so many hundredths other
  traditions of men be set vp in their Church, not onely as equall, but euen preferred
  to the word of God. But sure in this point I feare I haue mistaken him: for I
  thinke hee doeth not meane by his <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Diuina Dogmata</foreign></hi>, the word of the God of
  heauen, but onely the Canons and Lawes of his <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Dominus Deus Papa</foreign></hi>: otherwise
all his Primacie of the Apostolike Sea would not be so much sticken vpon, hauing
so slender ground in the word of God.
</p><p>And for the great feare he hath, that the suddennes of the apprehension, the
bitternesse of the persecution, the weaknesse of his aage, and other such in-
firmities might haue been the cause of the Arch-priests fall; in this, I haue
already sufficiently answered him; hauing declared, as the trewth is, and as the
said <hi rend="italic">Blackwell</hi> himselfe will yet testifie, that he tooke this Oath freely of himselfe,
without any inducement thereunto, either <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Precibus</foreign></hi> or <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Minis</foreign>.</hi>

<pb n="105"/>
</p><p>But amongst all his citations, hee must not forget holy <hi rend="italic">Sanderus</hi> and his
 <hi rend="italic">visibilis Monarchia</hi>, whose person and actions I did alreadie a little touch. And
 surely who will with vnpartiall eyes reade his bookes, they may well thinke, that
 hee hath deserued well of his English Romane-Church; but they can neuer
 thinke, but that hee deserued very ill of his English Soueraigne and State: Wit-
 nesse his owne books; whereout I haue made choice to set downe heere these
 fewe sentences following, as flowers pickt out of so worthy a garland. <hi rend="italic">Elizabeth<note anchored="true" place="foot">Sand. de visib. Monar. lib. 6. cap. 4.</note>
 Queene of</hi> ENGLAND, <hi rend="italic">doeth exercise the Priestly acte of teaching and preaching the
 Gospel in</hi> ENGLAND, <hi rend="italic">with no lesse authority than Christ himselfe, or</hi> Moses <hi rend="italic">euer did.
 The supremacie of a woman<note anchored="true" place="foot">Sand. de clau. Dauid. li. 6. c. i. </note> in Churchmatters is from no other, then from the Deuil.</hi>
 And of all things in generall thus he speaketh, <hi rend="italic">The King<note anchored="true" place="foot">Sand. de visib. Monar. lib. 2 cap. 4.</note> that will not inthrall
 himselfe to the Popes authoritie, he ought not to be tolerated; but his Subiects ought to
 giue all diligence, that another may be chosen in his place assoone as may be. A King
 that is an Heretike,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Ibidem.</note> ought to be remooued from the Kingdome that hee holdeth ouer
 Christians; and the Bishops ought to endeauour to set vp another, assoone as possibly
 they can. Wee doe constantly affirme,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Ibidem.</note> that all Christian Kings are so farre vnder
 Bishops and Priests in all matters appertaining to faith, that if they shall continue in a
 fault against Christian Religion, after one or two admonitions, obstinately, for that
 cause they may and ought to be deposed by the Bishops from their temporall au-
 thoritie they holde ouer Christians. Bishops <note anchored="true" place="foot">Ibidem.</note> are set ouer temporall kingdomes, if
 those kingdomes doe submit themselues to the faith of Christ. We doe iustly affirme,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Sand. de clau. Dauid. li. 5. c. 2.</note>
 that all Secular power, whether Regall, or any other, is of men. The anoynting<note anchored="true" place="foot">Ibidem.</note>
 which is powred vpon the head of the King by the Priests, doeth declare that hee is in-
feriour to the Priest. It is altogether against the will of Christ,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Sand. de clau. Dauid. li. 5. c. 4.</note> that Christian kings
should haue supremacie in the Church.</hi>
</p><p>And whereas for the crowne and conclusion of all his examples, he reckoneth
 his two English Martyrs, <hi rend="italic">Moore</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Roffensis</hi>, who died for that one most
 weightie head of doctrine, as he alledgeth, refusing the Oath of Supremacie; I
 must tell him, that he hath not been well informed in some materiall points, which
 doe very neerely concerne his two said Martyrs: For it is cleare and apparantly
 to be prooued by diuers Records, that they were both of them committed to the
 Tower about a yeere before either of them was called in question vpon their liues,
 for the <hi rend="italic">Popes</hi> Supremacie; And that partly for their backwardnesse in the point
 of the establishment of the Kings succession, whereunto the whole Realme had
 subscribed, and partly for that one of them, to wit, <hi rend="italic">Fisher</hi>, had had his hand in the
 matter of the holy maide of <hi rend="italic">Kent;</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Called Elizabeth Barton. See the Act of Parliament.</note> hee being for his concealement of that false
 prophets abuse, found guiltie of misprision of Treason. And as these were the
 principall causes of their imprisonment (the King resting secure of his Suprem-

<pb n="106"/>

  acie, as the Realme stood then affected, but especially troubled for setling the
  Crowne vpon the issue of his second mariage) so was it easily to be conceiued, that
  being thereupon discontented, their humours were thereby made apt to draw
  them by degrees, to further opposition against the King and his authoritie, as
  indeede it fell out: For in the time of their being in prison, the Kings lawfull
  authoritie in cases Ecclesiasticall being published and promulged, as well by a
  generall decree of the Clergie in their Synode, as by an Acte of Parliament made
  thereupon; they behaued themselues so peeuishly therein, as the olde coales of
  the Kings anger being thereby raked vp of new, they were againe brought in
  question; as well for this one most weighty head of doctrine of the <hi rend="italic">Pope</hi> his
  supremacy, as for the matter of the Kings mariage and succession, as by the con-
  fession of one of themselues, euen <hi rend="italic">Thomas Moore</hi>, is euident: For being con-
  demned, he vsed these words at the barre before the Lords, <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Non ignoro cur me
  morti adiudicaueritis; videlicet ob id, quòd nunquam voluerim assentiri in negotio
  matrimonii Regis.</foreign></hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Histor. aliquot Martyrum nostri seculi, Anno 1550.</note> That is, <hi rend="italic">I am not ignorant why you haue adiudged mee to death:
  to wit, for that I would neuer consent in the business of the new mariage of the King.</hi>
  By which his owne confession it is plaine, that this great martyr himselfe tooke
  the cause of his owne death, to be onely for his being refractary to the King in
  this said matter of Marriage and Succession; which is but a very fleshly cause of
  Martyrdome, as I conceiue.
</p><p>And as for <hi rend="italic">Roffensis</hi> his fellow Martyr (who could haue bene content to haue
 taken the Oath of the Kings Supremacie, with a certaine modification, which
 <hi rend="italic">Moore</hi> refused) as his imprisonment was neither onely, nor principally for the
 cause of Supremacie, so died hee but a halting and a singular Martyr or witnesse
 for that most weighty head of doctrine; the whole Church of <hi rend="italic">England</hi> going at
 that time, in one current and streame as it were against him in that Argument,
 diuers of them being of farre greater reputation for learning and sound iudge-
 ment, then euer he was. So as in this point we may well arme our selues with the
 Cardinals owne reason, where he giueth amongst other notes of the trew Church,
 <hi rend="italic">Vniuersalitie</hi> for one, wee hauing the generall and Catholique conclusion of the
 whole Church of <hi rend="italic">England</hi>, on our side in this case, as appeareth by their booke set
 out by the whole Conuocation of <hi rend="italic">England</hi>, called, <hi rend="italic">The Institution of a Christian
 man</hi>; the same matter being likewise very learnedly handled by diuers particular
 learned men of our Church, as by <hi rend="italic">Steuen Gardiner</hi> in his booke <hi rend="italic">De vera obedientia,</hi>
 with a Preface of Bishop <hi rend="italic">Boners</hi> adioyning to it, <hi rend="italic">De summo &amp; absoluto Regis
 Imperio</hi>, published by M. <hi rend="italic">Bekinsaw, De vera differentia Regiae Potestatis &amp;
 Ecclesiasticae</hi>, Bishop  <hi rend="italic">Tonstals</hi> Sermon, Bishop <hi rend="italic">Longlands</hi> Sermon, the letter of
 <hi rend="italic">Tonstall</hi> to Cardinall <hi rend="italic">Poole</hi>, and diuers other both in English and Latine. And
 if the bitternesse of <hi rend="italic">Fishers</hi> discontentment had not bene fed with his dayly am-
 bitious expectation of the Cardinals hat, which came so neere as <hi rend="italic">Calis</hi> before he
lost his head to fill it with, I haue great reason to doubt, if he would haue con-


<pb n="107"/>

stanly perseuered in induring his Martyrdome for that one most waighty head of
doctrine.
</p><p>And surely these two Captaines and ringleaders to Martyrdome were but ill
followed by the rest of their countreymen: for I can neuer reade of any after
them, being of any great accompt, and that not many, that euer sealed that
weighty head of doctrine with their blood in <hi rend="italic">England</hi>. So as the trew causes of
their first falling in trouble (whereof I haue already made mention) being rightly
considered vpon the one part, and vpon the other the scant number of witnesses,
that with their blood sealed it (a point so greatly accompted of by our Cardinal)
there can but smal glory redound thereby to our English nation, these onely two
<hi rend="italic">Enoch</hi> and <hi rend="italic">Elias</hi>, seruing for witnesses against our Antichristian doctrine.
</p><p>And I am sure the Supremacie of Kings may, &amp; wil euer be better maintained
by the word of God (which must euer be the trew rule to discerne all waighty
heads of doctrine by) to be the trew and proper office of Christian Kings in their
owne dominions, then he will be euer able to maintaine his annihilating Kings,
and their authorities, together with his base and vnreuerend speaches of them,
wherewith both his former great Volumes, and his late Bookes against <hi rend="italic">Venice</hi>
are filled. In the old Testament, Kings were directly<note anchored="true" place="foot">2. Chron. 19. 4.</note> Gouernours over the
Church within their Dominions,<note anchored="true" place="foot">2. Sam. 5. 6.</note> purged their corruptions; reformed their abuses,
brought the Arke<note anchored="true" place="foot">1. Chron. 13. 12. </note> to her resting place, the King<note anchored="true" place="foot">2. Sam. 6. 16.</note> dancing before it; <note anchored="true" place="foot">1. Chron. 28. 6. </note> built the
Temple; <note anchored="true" place="foot">2. Chron. 6.</note> dedicated the same, assisting in their owne persons to the sanctification
thereof; made the Booke of the Law <note anchored="true" place="foot">2. King. 22. 1.</note> new-found, to bee read to the people; <note anchored="true" place="foot">Nehe. 9.38.Dauid. Salomon.</note>
renewed the Couenant between God and his people; <note anchored="true" place="foot">2. King. 18. 4. </note> bruised the brasen serpent
in pieces, which was set vp by the expresse commandement of God, and was a
figure of Christ; destroyed all Idoles,<note anchored="true" place="foot">I.King. 15.12; 2.King. 13.4.</note> and false gods; made a publike reforma-
tion,<note anchored="true" place="foot">2. Chron. 17. 8.</note> by a Commission of Secular men and Priests mixed for that purpose; de-
posed the high Priest,<note anchored="true" place="foot">1. King. 2. 27.</note> and set vp another in his place: and generally, ordered
euery thing belonging to the Church-gouernment, their Titles and Prerogatiues
giuen them by God, agreeing to these their actions. They are called <hi rend="italic">the Sonnes<note anchored="true" place="foot">2. Sam. 7. 14.</note>
of the most High</hi>, nay, <hi rend="italic">Gods<note anchored="true" place="foot">Psal. 82. 6. &amp; exod. 22. 8.</note> themselues; The Lords<note anchored="true" place="foot">I. Sam. 24. II.</note> anoynted, Sitting in Gods<note anchored="true" place="foot">I. Chro. 9. 8.</note>
throne; His seruants;<note anchored="true" place="foot">2. Chro. 6. 15.</note> The Angels<note anchored="true" place="foot">2. Sam. 14. 20.</note> of God; According to his hearts desire;<note anchored="true" place="foot">I. Sam. 13. 14.</note> The
light of Israel;<note anchored="true" place="foot">2. Sam. 21. 17.</note> The nursing fathers of the Church</hi>,<note anchored="true" place="foot">Isa. 49. 23.</note> with innumerable such stiles of
honour, wherwith the old Testament is filled; whereof our aduersary can pretend
no ignorance. And as to the new Testament, <hi rend="italic">Euery soule</hi> is commanded <hi rend="italic">to be
subiect vnto them, euen for conscience sake</hi>.<note anchored="true" place="foot">Rom. 13. 5.</note> All men<note anchored="true" place="foot">I. Tim. 2. 2.</note> must be prayed for; <hi rend="italic">but
especially Kings, and those that are in Authoritie, that vnder them we may leade a
godly, peaceable and an honest life.</hi>

<pb n="108"/>

      <hi rend="italic">The Magistrate <note anchored="true" place="foot">Rom. 13. 4.</note> is the minister of God, to doe vengeance on him that doeth euill,
 and reward him that doeth well. Ye must obey all higher powers, but especially
 Princes,<note anchored="true" place="foot">1. Pet. 2. 13.</note> and those that are supereminent. Glue euery man his due, feare <note anchored="true" place="foot">Rom. 13. 7.</note> to whom
feare belongeth, and honour to whome honour. Giue vnto Caesar <note anchored="true" place="foot">Mat. 22. 21.</note> what is Caesars,
and to God what is Gods.<note anchored="true" place="foot">Iohn 18. 36.</note> <foreign xml:lang="lat">Regnum meum non est huius mundi.</foreign><note anchored="true" place="foot">Luk. 12. 14.</note> <foreign xml:lang="lat">Quis me constituit
Iudicem super vos ?</foreign> <note anchored="true" place="foot">Luk. 22. 25.</note> <foreign xml:lang="lat">Reges gentium dominantur eorum, vos autem non sic. </foreign></hi>If
these examples, sentences, titles, and prerogatiues, and innumerable other in the
Old and New Testament doe not warrant Christian Kings, within their owne
dominions, to gouerne their Church, as well as the rest of their people, in being
<hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Custodes vtriusque Tabulae</foreign></hi>, not by making new Articles of Faith, (which is the
Popes office, as I said before) but by commanding obedience to be giuen to the
word of God, by reforming the religion according to his prescribed will, by
assisting the spirituall power with the temporall sword, by reforming of corrup-
tions, by procuring due obedience to the Church, by iudging, and cutting off all
friuolous questions and schismes, as <hi rend="italic">Constantine</hi> <note anchored="true" place="foot">Euseb. lib. 3. de vita Constantini.</note> did; and finally, by making
<hi rend="italic">decorum</hi> to be obserued in euery thing, and establishing orders to bee obserued in
all indifferent things for that purpose, which is the onely intent of our Oath of Su-
premacie: If this Office of a King, I say, doe not agree with the power giuen him
by Gods word, let any indifferent man voyd of passion, iudge. But how these
honourable offices, styles, and prerogatiues giuen by God to Kings in the Old and
New Testament, as I haue now cited, can agree with the braue styles and titles
that <hi rend="italic">Bellarmine</hi> giueth them, I can hardly conceiue.</p><p>That <hi rend="italic">Kings are rather slaues then Lords.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">De laicis cap. 7. </note></p><p>That <hi rend="italic">they are not onely subiects to Popes, to Bishops, to Priests, but euen to
Deacons.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">De Pont. li. i. cap. 7. </note></p><p>That <hi rend="italic">an Emperour must content himselfe to drinke, not onely after a Bishop, but
after a Bishops Chaplen.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Ibidem.</note></p><p>That <hi rend="italic">Kings haue not their Authoritie nor Office immediatly from God, nor his
Law, but onely from the Laws of Nations.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Ibid. &amp; de Cler. cap. 28. </note></p><p>That <hi rend="italic">Popes haue degraded many Emperours, but neuer Emperour degraded the
Pope; nay, euen Bishops</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">De Rom. Pontif. lib. 5. cap. 8.</note> that are but the Popes vassals, <hi rend="italic">may depose Kings, and
abrogate their lawes.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">De Pont. lib. 3. cap. 6.</note></p><p>That <hi rend="italic">Church-men are so farre aboue Kings, as the soule is aboue the body.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">De laicis cap. 8.</note></p><p>That <hi rend="italic">Kings may be deposed by their people, for diuers respects.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">De Pont. li. 5. cap. 18.</note></p><p>But <hi rend="italic">Popes can by no meanes be deposed: for no flesh hath power to iudge of them.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">De Pon. lib. 2. cap. 26.</note></p><p>That <hi rend="italic">obedience due to the Pope, is for conscience sake.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">De Pont. lib. 4. cap. 15.</note></p><p>But <hi rend="italic">the obedience due to Kings, is onely for certaine respects of order and policie.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">De Clericis, cap. 28.</note>

<pb n="109"/>
</p><p>That <hi rend="italic">these very Church-men that are borne, and inhabite in Soueraigne Princes
  countreys, are notwithstanding not their Subiects, and cannot bee iudged by them,
  although they may iudge them.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Ibidem. </note>
</p><p>And, that <hi rend="italic">the obedience that Church-men glue to Princes, euen in the meanest
  and meere temporall things, is not by way of any necessarie subiection, but onely out of
  discretion, and for obseruation of good order and custome.</hi><note anchored="true" place="foot">Ibidem.</note>
</p><p>These contrarieties betweene the Booke of God, and <hi rend="italic">Bellarmines</hi> bookes,
 haue I heere set in opposition each to other, <hi rend="italic">Vt ex contrariis iuxta se positis,
 veritas magis elucescere possit</hi>. And thus farre I dare boldly affirme, that who-
 soeuer will indifferently weigh these irreconciliable contraditions here set downe,
 will easily confesse, that CHRIST is no more contrarie to Belial, light to darknesse,
 and heauen to hell, then <hi rend="italic">Bellarmines</hi> estimation of Kings, is to Gods.
</p><p>Now as to the conclusion of his letter, which is onely filled with strong and
 pithie exhortations, to perswade and confirme <hi rend="italic">Blackwell</hi> to the patient and con-
 stant induring of martyrdome, I haue nothing to answere, saue by way of regrate;
 that so many good sentences drawen out of the Scripture, so well and so hand-
 somely packed vp together, should be so ill and vntrewly applied: But an euill
 cause is neuer the better for so good a cloake; and an ill matter neuer amended by
 good wordes: And therefore I may iustly turne ouer that craft of the diuell vpon
 himselfe, in vsing so holy-like an exhortation to so euill a purpose. Onely I could
 haue wished him, that hee had a little better obserued his <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">decorum</foreign></hi> herein, in not
 letting slippe two or three prophane words amongst so many godly mortified
 Scripture sentences. For in all the Scripture, especially in the New Testament, I
 neuer read of <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Pontifex Maximus</foreign></hi>. And the Pope must be content in that style to
 succeed according to the Law and institution of <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Numa Pompilius</foreign></hi>, and not to
 <hi rend="italic">S. Peter</hi>, who neuer heard not dreamed of such an Office.
</p><p>And for his <hi rend="italic"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Caput fidei</foreign></hi>, which I remembred before, the Apostles (I am sure)
 neuer gaue that style to any, but to CHRIST: So as these styles, whereof some were
 neuer found in Scripture, and some were neuer applyed but to CHRIST in that
 sense, as hee applieth it, had beene better to haue beene left out of so holy and
 mortified a letter.
</p><p>To conclude then this present Discourse, I heartily with all indifferent readers
of the <hi rend="italic">Breues</hi> and Letter, not to iudge by the speciousnesse of the wordes, but by
the weight of the matter; not looking to that which is strongly alledged, but
iudiciously to consider what is iustly prooued: And for all my owne good and
naturall Subiects, that their hearts may remaine established in the trewth; that
these forraine inticements may not seduce them from their natall and naturall
duetie; and that all aswell strangers, as naturall subiects, to whose eyes this Dis-
course shall come, may wisely and vnpartially iudge of the Veritie, as it is nakedly
here set downe, for clearing these mists and cloudes of calumnies, which were
iniustly heaped vpon me; for which end onely I heartily pray the courteous
Reader to be perswaded, that I tooke occasion to publish this Discourse.

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