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King Lucius. Actes and Monumentes of the Churche. |
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King Lucius. Actes and Monumentes of the Churche.
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| ✼ The second booke containyng the next. 300. yeares
followyng, with such thinges specially touched, as haue bene done in
England, from the tyme of kyng Lucius, to Gregorius, and so after to
the tyme of kyng Egebert. |
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BY these persecutions hetherto in the booke before
precedt, thou mayest vnderstand (Christian reader) how the fury of
Sathan & rage of men haue done what they could to extinguish the
name & religion of Christ. For what thyng did lack, žt either
death could doe, or tormtes could worke, or the gates of hell could
deuise: all was to the vttermost attpted. And yet all the fury
& malice of Sath, all že wisdome of the world, &
strēgth of men, doyng, deuising, practising what they could:
noywithstanding the Religi of Christ (as thou seest) hath had že vpper
hand. Which thing I wish thee greatly (gentle reader) wysely to note,
& diligently to ponder, in consideryng these former historyes. And
because thou canst not consider th, nor profit by th, vnles thou
do first read & peruse th:
A
petition to the reader, diligently to read ouer the former book of
the x. persecutions. let me craue therfore thus much at
thyne handes, to turne & read ouer že sayd historyes of those
persecutiōs aboue described: especially aboue al the other historyes of this present volume: for
thy special edification, which I trust thou shalt finde not vnworthy the readyng.
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A
petition to the reader, diligently to read ouer the former book of
the x. persecutions.
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Now because the tyeng vp of Sathan geueth to the Church some
rest, & to me some leysure to addresse my selfe, to the handlyng of other storyes: I mynde therfore
(Christ wylling) in this present booke, leauyng a while the tractacion
of these generall affayres, partainyng to the vniuersall Churche: to
prosecute such domestical historyes, as more neare concerne this our
countrey of England and Scotld, done here at home: begynnyng first with
kyng Lucius, with whom the fayth first beg here in this Realme, as the
sentence of the some writers doth hold.
The first planting of Christ fayth in
England. Question. And for somuch here may ryse, yea
and doth ryse, a great ctrouersie in these our Popish dayes,
concernyng the first origine and plantyng of the fayth in this our
Realme: it shalt not be greatly out of our purpose, somewhat to stay
and say of this question, whether the Church of England first receiued
the fayth from Rome or not. The which, although I graunt so to be, yet
beyng so graunted, it litle auayleth the purpose of them whiche would so
haue it:
Whether Christiā Religion in
this Realme came firste from Rome. for be it so, that England
first receaued the Christian fayth and
Religion from Rome, both in the tyme of Eleutherius their Byshop. Clxxx. yeares after
Christ: and also in the tyme of
Austen, whom Gregory sent hether. DC. yeares after Christ. Yet their
purpose foloweth not therby, that we must therfore fetch our Religi
fr thence still, as from the chief welhead and fountayne of all
godlynes.
Aunswere. 1. Gildas. And yet as
they are not able to proue the second, so neither haue I any cause to
graunt the first: that is, that our Christi
fayth was first deriued from Rome, which I may proue by. vj. or vij. good
coniecturall reasons. Whereof, the first I take of the testimony of
Gildas , our countreymā, who
in his history affirmeth plainely, that Britayne receaued the Gospell in
the tyme of Tiberius the Emperour, vnder whom
Christ suffered. Lib. De victoria, Aurelij Ambrosij.
And sayth moreouer, Ioseph of Arimathie
after the dispersi of the Iewes, was sent
of Philip že Apostle from Fraunce to
Britayne, about the yeare of our Lord. 63. and here remayned in this
land all hys tyme: and so with his fellowes, layd the first foundation
of Christian fayth among the Britayne people. Wherupon other preachers
& teachers commyng afterward confirmed the same, and encreased it.
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The first planting of Christ fayth in
England. Question.
Whether Christiā Religion in
this Realme came firste from Rome.
Aunswere. 1. Gildas.
Gildas
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2. Ex Tertul. contra Iudeos. 2. The secd reason is
out of Tertullian, who liuyng neare about, or rather somwhat before the
tyme of this Eleutherius, in hys booke Contra
Iudęos, manifestly importeth the same: where the sayd Tertullian
testifieng how the Gospell was dispersed abroad by the sounde of the
Apostles, & there reckenyng vp the Medes, Persians, Parthis, and
dwellers in Mesopotamia, Iewry, Cappadocia, Pontus, Asia, Phrigia,
Egypt, Pamphilia, with many moe, at length c meth to the
coastes of the Moorians, and all the borders of Spayne: with diuers
nations of Fraunce, & there amongst all other reciteth also the partes
of Britayne, whiche the Romaines could neuer attayne to, and
reporteth the same now to be subiect to Christ, as also reckeneth vp the
places of Sarmatia, of the Danes, the Germanes, the Scithians, with many
other prouinces and Iles to hym vnknowen: in all whiche places, sayth he,
raigneth the name of Christ, which now begynneth to be common. This hath
Tertulli. Note here, how among other diuers beleuyng nations, he
mentioneth also the wildest places of Britayne to be of the same number.
And these in hys tyme were Christened, who was in the same Eleutherius tyme, as is aboue sayd. Then,
was not Pope Eleutherius, the first whiche sent the Christian fayth into
this Realme, but the Gospell was here receiued before his tyme, either
by Ioseph of Arimathia, as some Chronicles recorde, or by some of the
Apostles or of their scholers, which had bene here preachyng Christ,
before Eleutherius wrote to Lucius.
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2. Ex Tertul. contra Iudeos.
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3. Ex Origene hom. 4. in Ezechi. 3. My thyrd
probation I deduct our of Origen. Home. 4. in
Ezechielem, whose wordes be these: Britanniam in
Christianam consentire religionem. Wherby it appereth that the
fayth of Christ was sparsed here in England before the dayes of Eleutherius.
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3. Ex Origene hom. 4. in Ezechi.
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4. Ex Beda. 4. For my fourth probati I take the
testimony of Bede, where he affirmeth that in hys tyme, and almost a
thousand yeare after Christ, here in Britayne: Easter was kept after že
maner of the East Church, in the full moone: what day in the Weeke
soeuer it fell on, & not on the Sonday, as we do now. Wherby it is to be
collected, that the first preachers in this land, haue come out fr
the East part of the world, where it was so vsed, rather then from Rome.
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4. Ex Beda.
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5. Ex Nicephoro. lib. 2. cap. 40. 5. Fiftly I may
alledge the wordes of Nicephorus, Lib. 2. cap. 40.
where he sayth, that Symon Zelotes dyd spread
the Gospel of Christ to the West Oceane,
& brought the same vnto the Iles of Britayne.
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5. Ex Nicephoro. lib. 2. cap. 40.
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6. Ex Pet. Cluniacensi ad Bernardum. 6. Sixtly may be
added here also the wordes of Petrus Cluniacensis,
who wryting to Bernard, affirmeth that the
Scottes in hys tyme dyd celebrate their Easter, not after the Romane
maner, but after the Greekes. &c. And as the sayd Britaynes
were not vnder the Romane order in the tyme of this Abbot of Cluniake:
so neither were they nor would be, vnder the
Romane Legate, in the tyme of Gregory: nor would admit any primacie of
the byshop of Rome, to be aboue them.
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6. Ex Pet. Cluniacensi ad Bernardum.
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7. Ex epist. Eleutherū ad Lucinum. 7. For the seuenth
argument, moreouer I may make my probation by the playne wordes of
Eleutherius, by whose Epistle written to kyng Lucius, we may
vnderstand, that Lucius had receaued the fayth
of Christ in his land, before že king sent
to Eleutherius for že Romane lawes: for so the expresse wordes of the
letter do manifestly purporte, as hereafter followeth to be seene. By
al which cōiectures, it may stand probably to be thought, that the
Britaynes, were taught first by the Grecians of the East Churche, rather
then by the Romanes.
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7. Ex epist. Eleutherū ad Lucinum.
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Peraduenture Eleutherius might helpe somethyng, either to conuert the
kyng, or els to encrease the fayth then newly sprong among the people:
but that he precisely was the first, that cannot be proued. But graunt
he were, as in deede the most part of our English storyes confesse,
neither will I greatly sticke with them therin: yet what haue they got
thereby, when they haue cast all their gayne? In few wordes to conclude
this matter, if so be that the Christian fayth and Religion was first
deriued from Rome to this our nation by Eleutherius, then let them but
graunt to vs the same fayth and Religion, which then was taught at Rome:
and from thence deriued hether by the sayd Eleutherius, and we will desire
no more. For then neither was any vniuersall Pope aboue al Churches and
Councels, whiche came not in before Pope Bonifacius tyme, whiche was 400.
yeares after: neither any name or vse of že masse, the partes wherof how
and by whom they were compiled, here after in this booke followyng
appeareth to be seene. Neither any sacrifice propiciatory for the
scouring of Purgatory was then offered vp halowed altars, but onely
the communion frequented at Christian tables: where oblatis & giftes
were offered, as wel of the people, as of the Priests to God: because
they should appeare neither empty nor vnkynde before the Lord, as we
may vnderstand by the tyme of Cyprian. Neither was then any
transubstātiation heard of, which was not brought in before a thousand
yeare after. Neither were th any images of Saintes departed, set vp in
churches, yea a great nber of the Saints worshypped in this our
tyme, were not as yet borne, nor the Churches wherin they were
worshypped, were yet set vp: but came in long after, especially in
the tyme of Irene and Con-
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