Imagens das páginas
PDF
ePub

honoured and reverenced than the four holy Gospels. For in them (as he asserts), as on a square corner-stone, the structure of sacred faith is raised; and in them the rule of good life and manners consists. The other doctors also say with one mouth that although the sacred councils may err in matters of fact, yet they may not err in matters of faith, because in every general council, where two or three are gathered together in Christ's name, His Holy Spirit is there in the midst of them, who does not suffer them to err in faith or to depart from the way of truth. As regards the sense and understanding of Scripture, the doctor Jerome says, that whoever understands or expounds it otherwise than the meaning of the Holy Spirit requires, is an undoubted heretic. With whom agrees the Lincoln doctor (Grosteste), thus saying: Whoever excogitates any opinion contrary to Scripture, if he publicly teach it and obstinately adhere to it, is to be counted for a heretic." The archbishop having then enlarged on the necessity of removing a sickly sheep from the fold, lest the whole flock should be infected, offered Pecock his choice between making a public abjuration of his errors, and being delivered, after degradation, to the secular arm "as the food of fire and fuel for the burning." Choose one of these two" (he added), "for the alternative is immediate in the coercion of heretics."

66

He

Pecock had admitted the right of the Church to compel submission, though he thought it was the Church's duty to persuade by reason; and it was in absolute accord with his own teaching that he should now submit to the force used against himself. abjured the condemned opinions; and on the 4th of December, 1457, was brought in his robes as Bishop of Chichester to St. Paul's Cross, where he recanted publicly, in presence of twenty thousand people, and then delivered with his own hand three folios of his writing and eleven quartos to the public executioner, who cast them as publicly into a fire lighted for the purpose.

A fortnight later, the authorities of the University of Oxford went in procession to Carfax, and there burnt every copy of a book of Pecock's that could be found in the town. In March, 1459, Reginald Pecock was deprived of his bishopric, and sent by the Archbishop of Canterbury to Thorney Abbey, in Cambridgeshire, with these instructions for his safekeeping addressed to William Ryall, who was Abbot of Thorney between the years 1457 and 1464

"He shall have a secret closed chamber (having a chimney), and convenience within the abbey, where he may have sight to some altar to hear mass; and that he pass not the said chamber. To have but one person that is sad (grave) and well-disposed to make his bed, and to make him fire, as it shall need. That he have no books to look on, but only a portuous (breviary), a mass-book, a psalter, a legend, and a Bible. That he have nothing to write with; no stuff to write upon. That he have competent fuel according to his age, and as his necessity shall require. That he be served daily of meat and drink as a brother of the abbey is served when he is excused from the freytour (i.e., from dining in hall), and somewhat better after the first quarter, as his disposition and reasonable appetite shall desire, conveniently after the good discretion of the said abbot."

MSS. differ as to the amount paid to the abbey for the maintenance of Reynold (Reginald) Pecock,

-" for his finding;" one account says forty pounds, another eleven. A fuller copy of the instructions. in which the sum named is eleven pounds, adds to the clause about the prisoner's bed-maker, "that no one else shall speak to him without leave, and the presence of the abbot, unless the King or the Archbishop send to the abbey any man with writing specially in that behalf;" and another copy, whit gives forty pounds as the sum paid-and xi. seems t have been only a clerical error for xl-shows tha part of the money was to be considered by the abbey payment to itself for its trouble and responsibility for concerning "the said Reynold" there was a "Provided in all wise that all the forty poun above written be not expended about his find but a competent part thereof, as his necessity la. require; and that the remanent thereof be dispose: to the common weal of the behoof of the said place.

[graphic][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small]
[merged small][merged small][ocr errors]

Though these words were written by Saint Paul to Timothy, being a bishop, and not a lay person of the common people, yet in these words Saint Paul giveth not to Timothy instruction of any higher governance than that which also he might have given to a lay person of the common people, because that in these words Paul giveth instruction, not of correction (or of correcting by threatening and punishing), which longeth only to the overer anentis his netherer, and not to the netherer anentis his overer; but he giveth instruction of correption3 and of correpting, which not only longeth to an overer anentis his netherer, but also to a netherer anentis his overer, as it is open; 2 Thessalonians, ch. iii., and Matthew, ch. xviii., and as reason also it well confirmeth, so that it be do with honesty and reverence and with other thereto by reason due circumstances. Of which correption first opening or doing to wite, then next blaming, and afterward biseching, ben parties: and therefore these same words speaking only of correption, so by St. Paul dressed to Timothy, bishop, to whom longeth both to corrept and correct, mowe well enough be taken and dressed farther to each lay person, for to therein give to him instruction how he should rule him whenever he taketh upon him for to, in neighbourly or brotherly manner, corrept his Christian neighbour or brother, namelich, being in otherwise to him his overer. In which words (as it is open enough for to see) each man which taketh upon him the deeds of brotherly correption is informed that the parties of thilk correption (which ben undernyming, biseching and blaming) he do "in patience and in doctrine;" that is to say, over this, that for the while of his correpting he have patience, that he have also therewith such doctrine, knowing, or cunning whereby he can show and prove it to be a default for which he undernymeth and blameth, and the person so undernome and blamed to be guilty in the same default and sin.

And forasmuch as after it what is written (Romans, ch. x.) many have zeal of good will, but not after cunning, and have therewith taken upon them for to undernyme and blame openly and sharply, both in speech and in writing, the clergy of God's whole Church in earth, and for to bear an hand upon the said clergy that he is guilty in some governances as in defaults, which governances those blamers cunnen not to show, teach, and prove to be defaults and sins; and have thereby made full much indignation, disturbance, schism, and other evils for to rise and be continued in many persons by long time of many years: therefore, to each such ungrounded, and unready, and overhasty undernymer and blamer I say the before rehearsed words of St. Paul: Under

1 Undernyme (First-English "underniman," undertake), take in hand, reprehend.

2 Biseche, contend against. First-English "bisa ce," disputable, litigious.

3 Correption (Latin "correptio," a laying hold of), reproof, rebuke.

nyme thou, biseche thou, and blame thou, in al pacience and doctrine as though I should say thus: If thou canst teach, shew, and prove that the deed of which thou undernymest and blamest the person or persons is a default and a trespass, and then that he is guilty thereof, undernyme then and blame thou in thilk cunning, or doctrine, and in patience; and if thou canst not so shew, teach, and prove, thou oughtest be still, and not so undernyme and blame.

For else Saint Paul should not have said thus: Undernyme thou, blame thou, in all patience and doctrine; yea, and else thou oughtest undernyme and blame first thyself of this default that thou undernymest and blamest not, having the doctrine which thou oughtest have, ere than thou take upon thee for to undernyme and blame; and so to each such overhasty and unwise blamer might be said what is written, Luke, ch. iv., thus: O leech, heal thyself. Yea, peradventure, to some such blamers, and for somewhiles, might be said what is written, Luke, the vi. ch., thus: Hypocrite, take first the beam out of thine own eye, and then thou shalt see for to take the mote out of thin neighbour's eye. And furthermore, sithen it is so, that such unwise, undiscreet, and overhasty undernymers letten' the effect of their wise and discreet and well-avised undernymings which they in other times maken or mowe make to the clergy, and so given occasion that both they themself and their just undernymings ben despised and ben not set by, and so maken thereby themsilf to be letters of much good and causers of much evil, it is right great need that all those which taken upon them to be undernymers and blamers of the clergy keep well what is said to be the meaning of Saint Paul in the before-rehearsed words: Undernyme thou, biseche thou, blame thou, in all patience and doctrine.

Now that God, for His goodness and charity, cease the sooner in the common people such unwise, untrue, and overhasty undernyming and blaming made upon the clergy, and that for the harm and evils thereby coming now said: I shall do thereto somewhat of my part in this, that I shall justify eleven governances of the clergy, which some of the common people unwisely and untruly judgen and condemnen to be evil of which eleven governances, one is the having and using of images in churches, and another is pilgrimage in going to the memorials or the mind-places of saints, and that pilgrimages and offerings mowe be done well, not only privily, but also openly, and not only so of laymen, but rather of priests and of bishops. And this I shall do by writing of this present book in the common people's language, plainly, and openly, and shortly, and to be cleped The Repressing of ouer miche wijting the Clergie: and he shall have five principal parties. In the first of which parties shall be made in general manner the said repressing, and in general manner proof to the eleven said governances. And in the second, third, fourth, and fifth principal parties shall be made in special manner the said repressing, and in special manner the proofs to the same eleven governances; though all other governances of the clergy, for which the clergy is worthy to be blamed in brotherly or neighbourly correption, I shall not be about to excuse, neither defend; but pray, speak, and write, in all patience and doctrine, that the clergy forsake them, leave, and amend.

After this prologue, Pecock began his first part by finding the ground of much blame of the clergy by the laity in "three trowings," holdings, or opinions, of which the first was: That no governance is to be held

Letten, hinder. 5 Wijting, blaming. First-English "witan."

by Christian men as part of the service or the law of God, except that which is grounded in Holy Scripture of the New Testament, as some say, or as others say, in the New Testament and in that part of the Old Testament which the New has not revoked. They who hold this trowing, said Pecock, "if any clerk affirmeth to them any governance, being contrary to their wit or pleasance, though it lie full open and full surely in doom of reason, and therefore surely in moral law of kind, which is law of God, for to be done, yet they anon asken, Where groundest thou it in the New Testament?" or "Where groundest thou it in Holy Scripture in such place which is not by the New Testament revoked?""

[ocr errors]

The second trowing, or opinion, from which Pecock traced much undue blame of the clergy, was this: "That whatever Christian man or woman be meek in spirit and willy for to understand truly and duly Holy Scripture, shall, without fail and default, find the true understanding of Holy Scripture in whatever place he or she shall read and study, though it be in the Apocalypse or oughwhere else, and the more meek he or she be, the sooner he or she shall come into the very true and due understanding of it which in Holy Scripture he or she studieth. This second opinion they weenen to be grounded in Holy Scripture." Here Pecock quoted some of the passages on which it was based, adding that, "in other divers places of Scripture mention is made that God giveth good things to meek men more than if they were not so meek."

The third trowing, Pecock explained to be the opinion that no Christian should let reason of man overthrow the view of Scripture teaching that he or she had arrived at by such meek and faithful study. This trowing was founded upon admonitions of St. Paul, in the second chapter of the Epistle to the Colossians, and in the first chapter of the Epistle to the Corinthians. As Pecock quoted one of the warnings to the Colossians that was relied upon, the warning relied upon was, "See ye that no man beguile you by philosophy and vain falseness after the traditions of men and after the elements of the world, and not after Christ."

Against the first of these three trowings, Pecock proceeded to argue for thirteen conclusions. The first was that "It longeth not to Holy Scripture, neither it is his office into which God hath him' ordained, neither it is his part, for to ground any governance or deed or service of God, or any law of God, or any truth which man's reason by nature may find, learn and know." After setting forth six arguments to prove this conclusion he drew from it as a corollary, "that whenever and wherever in Holy Scripture or out of Holy Scripture be written any point or any governance of the said law of kind, it is more verily written in the book of man's soul than in the outward book of parchment or of vellum; and if any seeming discord be betwixt the words written in the outward book of Holy Scripture and the doom of reason

1 His and him are not of necessity masculine. They were also neuters in First English and in Pecock's time. "Hit" or "it' " was only used in the nominative and accusative, and "its" was a form not yet invented. But Pecock does make "Scripture" masculine.

written in man's soul and heart, the words so written without forth oughten to be expowned and be interpreted and brought for to accord with the doom of reason in thilk matter, and the doom of reason ought not for to be expowned, glosed, interpreted and brought for to accord with the said outward writing in Holy Scripture of the Bible or oughwhere else out of the Bible." "Pecock referred to a previous book of his own on "The just apprising of Holy Scripture" in which he had dwelt on that law of nature which it is not the work of Scripture to reveal, and he drew an illustration from the country people who came into London on Midsummer eve with carts full of branches of trees from Bishop's Wood, and flowers from the fields, for decoration of the houses of the citizens in remembrance of John the Baptist and of the prophecy that many should joy in his birth. Did they think that the branches and flowers grew from the hands of the country folk by which they were given, or from the carts in which they were brought? Though Christ himself and his Apostles were the bringers, "yet the men of London, receiving so those branches and flowers, oughten not say and feel that those branches and flowers grewen out of Christ's hands and out of the Apostles' hands. For why in this deed Christ and the Apostles diden none otherwise than as other men mighten and couthen do. But the said receivers oughten see and hold that the branches grewen out of the boughs upon which they in Bishop's Wood stooden, and those boughs grewen out of stocks or truncheons, and the truncheons or shafts grewen ont of the root, and the root out of the next earth thereto upon which and in which the root is buried, so tha: neither the cart, neither the hands of the bringers, neither those bringers, ben the grounds or fundaments of the branches; and in like manner the field is the fundament of those flowers, and not the hands of the gatherers, neither those bringers. Certes, but if each man wole thus feel in this matter, he is duller than any man ought to be." So it is, said Pecock, with whatever we find of the natural law brought to us by Scripture. It is not the purpose of Scripture to bring us those truths which we should have stiil though all the Scriptures were burned. These belong to the Law of Nature; "they ben grounded in thick forest of Law of Kind which God planteth in man's soul when he maketh him to His image and likeness.”

2 For why, because.

....

3 In the first book of Richard Hooker's "Ecclesiastical Pebity," published in 1593, is a like argument. "As the actions of men are of sundry distinct kinds, so the laws thereof must accordingly be distinguished. As that first error sheweth wherein our up posites in this cause have grounded themselves. For as they richt maintain that God must be glorified in all things, and that the actres of men cannot tend unto His glory unless they be framed after Es Law; so it is their error to think that the only Law which God hath appointed unto man in that belief is the Sacred Scripture. By that which we work naturally, as when we breathe, sleep, move, we set forth the glory of God as natural agents do, albeit we have no expresi purpose to make that our end, nor any advised determination thera to follow a law, but do that we do (for the most part) not as much as thinking thereon. In reasonable and moral actions another taketh place; law by the observation whereof we glorify God a such sort as no creature else under man is able to do; because thr creatures have not judgment to examine the quality of that whoch is done by them, and therefore in that they do they neither can aNTUR

The second of Pecock's thirteen conclusions against the first trowing of the blamers of the clergy, was that although Holy Scripture be not the ground of moral truths at which man's natural reason must arrive, “yet it may pertain well enough to Holy Scripture that he rehearse such now said governances and truths, and that he witness them as grounded somewhere else in the law of kind or doom of man's reason. And so he doth (as to each reader therein it may be open) that by thilk rehearsing and witnessing so done by Holy Scripture to men, those men shoulden be both remembered, stirred, provoked, and exhorted for to the rather perform and fulfil those same so rehearsed and witnessed governances and truths." The third principal conclusion was that "the whole office and work into which God ordained Holy Scripture, is for to ground articles of faith, and for to rehearse and witness moral truths of law of kind grounded in moral philosophy, that is to say, in doom of reason." Of the articles of faith grounded in Scripture, some-as, that in the beginning God made Heaven and Earth-are not laws; and some -as, that each man ought to be baptized in water -are laws. The next point in the argument— the fourth conclusion-was that, as it is not the part of Scripture to ground laws of nature, so it is no part of the law of nature to ground articles of faith. Nevertheless--fifth conclusion-as Scripture rehearses and enforces the moral law of nature, so treatises on natural religion may rehearse and enforce articles of faith which are not grounded in them. The whole office and work of the books of moral philosophy is to express outwardly, by pen and ink, the truth, grounded on the inward book of law of kind, buried in man's soul and heart, and to rehearse some truths and conclusions of faith, grounded in Holy Scripture, that the readers be the more and often stirred and exhorted by the recital of them. That was the sixth conclusion ; and the seventh went on to maintain that the greater part of God's whole law to man on earth is grounded outside Holy Scripture in the inward book of law of kind. Therefore Pecock's next conclusion washis eighth-that no man can know the whole law of God to which a Christian is bound, without knowledge of moral philosophy; and, ninth, no man without such knowledge could surely and sufficiently understand those parts of Holy Scripture which rehearse moral virtues not being positive law of faith. From these followed the tenth conclusion, that the learning of the said law of nature, and of the said moral philosophy, is necessary to Christian men if they will serve God aright. The articles of

nor approve themselves. Men do both, as the Apostle teacheth; yea, those men which have no written Law of God to show what is good or evil carry written in their hearts the universal law of mankind, the Law of Reason, whereby they judge as by a rule which God hath given unto all men for that purpose. The Law of Reason doth somewhat direct men how to honour God as their Creator; but how to glorify God in such sort as is required to the end he may be an everlasting Saviour, this we are taught by Divine Law, which law both ascertaineth the truth and supplieth unto us the want of that other law. So that in moral actions, Divine law helpeth exceedingly the Law of Reason to guide man's life; but in supernatural it alone guideth."

faith themselves rest upon reason as well as Scripture; and the Sacraments of the Church, Pecock urged, would not be grounded on Scripture for our governance without the help of reason, and unless the law of God in nature were joined to the law of God in Holy Writ. Pecock's eleventh conclusion was, therefore, that the laity ought to make much of clerks who had well studied that moral philosophy; and, twelfth conclusion, they should prize and study books based upon such assay and experience, which distinguished between those parts of the law of God which are and are not grounded in Scripture, and between those truths of faith which are and those which are not laws. His thirteenth and last conclusion, against the first of the three trowings of the laity, came then straight to the point that the question "Where findest thou it grounded in Scripture?" -is only applicable to those governances or truths involving articles of faith. To apply such a question to the statement of governance or truth grounded in law of nature or moral philosophy is, he said, as unreasonable as to ask Scripture authority for a truth in grammar, or to ask of a conclusion in saddlery"Where findest thou it grounded in tailor-craft?" "And," said Pecock, "if any man be feared lest he trespass to God if he make over little of Holy Scripture, which is the outward writing of the Old Testament and the New, I ask why is he not afeared lest he make over little, and apprise over little, the inward Scripture of the before-spoken law of kind, written by God Himself in man's soul, when he made man's soul to His image and likeness?”

Pecock next proceeded to the discussion of texts usually quoted in relation to his argument. He dwelt, also, on the effect produced upon those of the laity who had been enabled, by Wiclif and his fellow-workers, to read the Bible in their mother tongue. They had found it "miche delectable and sweete, and draweth the reders into a devocion and a love to God, and fro love and deinté of the world; as y have had herof experience upon such reders, and upon her1 now seid dispocioun." The delight and profit, and the lifting of their souls, led them to find all they needed in their Bibles, and to forget that there are truths of God written elsewhere, and reason given to man wherewith to find them, and apply them to his use. But reason is fallible-Scripture infallible; to those who said, for that cause, Let not reason be our guide, the next part of the argument was addressed. This led to argument on the necessity of an instructed clergy, on the errors introduced by private exposition that destroyed Church unity. Here Pecock, in a passage that I give without change of spelling, spoke thus of

DIVISIONS IN THE CHURCH.

"Certis in this wise and in this now seid maner and bi this now seid cause bifille the rewful and wepeable destruccioun of the worthi citee and vniuersite of Prage, and of the hool

1 Her, their.

2 Reference is to the taking of Prague in 1419 by Ziska, who led the Hussites after the burning of John Huss and Jerome of Prague in 1415 and 1416. In 1419, John de Troeznow, called Ziska,

rewme of Beeme, as y haue had ther of enformacioun ynou3. And now, aftir the destruccioun of the rewme, the peple ben glad for to resorte and turne azen into the catholic and general feith and loore of the chirche, and in her poueite bildith up azen what was brent and throwun doun, and noon of her holdingis can thriue. But for that Crist in his propheciyng muste needis be trewe, that ech kingdom deuidid in hem silf schal be destruyed, therfore to hem bifille the now seid wrecchid mys chaunce. God for his merci and pitee kepe Ynglond, that he come not into lijk daunce. But forto turne here fro azen vnto oure Bible men, y preie 3e scie ze to me, whanne among you is rise a strijf in holdingis and opiniouns, (bi cause that ech of you trustith to his owne studie in the Bible aloon, and wole haue alle treuthis of mennys moral conuersacioun there groundid,) what iuge mai therto be assigned in erthe, saue resoun and the bifore seid doom of resoun? For thou3 men schulden be iugis, zit so muste thei be bi vce of the seid resoun and doom of resoun; and if this be trewe, who schulde thanne better or so weel vse, demene, and execute this resoun and the seid doom, as schulde tho men whiche han spende so miche labour aboute thilk craft? Aad these ben tho now bifore said clerkis. And therfore, 3e Bible men, bi this here now seid which 3e muste needis graunte, for experience which 3e han of the disturblaunce in Beeme, and also of the disturblaunce and dyuerse feelingis had among 30u silf now in Ynglond, so that summe of 30u ben clepid Doctour-mongers, and summe ben clepid Opinioun-holders, and summe ben Neutralis, that of so presumptuose a cisme abhominacioun to othere men and schame to 3ou it is to heere; rebuke now 3ou silf, for as miche as 3e wolden not bifore this tyme allowe, that resoun and his doom schulde haue such and so greet interesse in the lawe of God and in expownyng of Holi Scripture, as y haue seid and proued hem to haue.

"And also herbi take 3e a sufficient mark, that 3e haue nede forto haue 30ure recours and conseil with suche now biforeseid clerkis, thou3 3e wolden labore, and powre, and dote alle the daies of 30ure lijf in the Bible aloon. And drede 3e of the effect which bifille to Bohemers for lijk cause, and mys gouernaunce in holding the first seid opinioun; and bi so miche the more drede 3e thilk effect, bi how miche bi Crist it is pronouncid forto falle, where euer cysme and dyvisyoun is contynued; for he seith [Matth. xij.] č., that euery kingdom or comounte dyvidid in him silf schal be destruyed. But thanne azenward 3e must be waar her of, that euen as oon sterre is different from an other sterre in cleernes,

or the one-eyed, who after the burning of uss deeply resented what he called "the bloody affront suffered by Bohemians at Constance," placed himself at the head of an armed people against the aggressions of Rome on the liberty of the Bohemian Church. King Wenzel died, and his brother, the Emperor Sigismund, who acted with the Pope, and had dishonoured his pledge of safe-conduct by which Huss had been decoyed to Constance, claimed succession in Bohemia. This threatened the Bohemians with forfeiture alike of civil and religious liberty. Ziska then raised national war against both Pope and Emperor. He became master of Prague, was victorious over Sigismund on Mount Wittkow, rudely maintained the work of Reformation sword in hand, and, when an arrow from the wall of Rubi pierced his one sound eye and left him wholly blind, talked still of joining battle. "I have yet," he said, "my blood to shed. Let me be gone." He still battled, suffering defeat once, until Sigismund submitted to the claim of the Bohemians for liberty of worship, and gave them Ziska for their governor. But Ziska died of plague while, in 1424, this treaty was in progress, and the war continued for eleven years after his death. The Bohemians buried their hero in the church at Czaslow, and wrote over his grave, "Here lies John Zisk, who having defended his country against the encroachments of Papal tyranny, rests in this hallowed place in despite of the Pope."

so oon clerk is different from an other in kunnyng. And ther fore, brother, take heede to doom of cleer resoun in this mater, which also is remembrid to vs bi the wise man, Ecclesiastici vj. č., thus: Manie be to thee pesible, but of a thousind oon be thi counseiler. And in special be waar that thou not accepte, chese, and take a clerk forto be sufficient to thee into the now seid purpos bi this aloon, that he mai were a pilioun1 on his heed; neither bi this, that he is a famose and a plesaunt precher to peple in a pulpit; neither bi this, that he is a greet and thikke rateler out of textis of Holi Scripture or of Doctouris in feestis or in othere cumpanyingis: for certis experience hath ofte tau3t and mai here teche surely ynou3, that summe werers of piliouns in scole of dyuynyte han scantli be worthi for to be in the same scole a good scoler; and ful manye of the ij. and iij. soortis appeering ful gloriose to the heering of the lay parti, and also summe of othere maner of clerkis, whanne thei schulden come forto dispute and examyne and trie and iuge in harde doutis of .Goddis lawe, were not worthi forto therto vnnethis opene her mouth. I detecte here no man in special; who euer can proue him silf to be noon such as y haue here now spoken of, he therbi schewith weel him to be noon of hem."

From what seemed to him the first mistaken trowing of those who for their devotion to the Scripture as a rule of life were called the Bible men, Pecock passed to a brief discussion of the second and third trowing, for which his reply to the first had prepared the ground. Then he went on to the eleven impugned ordinances of the Church which he had undertaken to defend, and the first of these, occupying the second part of his book, was the use of images, the going on pilgrimages, and veneration of relics.

Then came, in the third part, his vindication of wealth of the clergy. The fourth part defended the Church government by bishops, archbishops, patriarchs, and popes, and replied to the complaint of the Lollards that ecclesiastical laws, made by the high clergy, were set over divine laws. The fifth part of the "Repressor" replied to the complaints against the religious orders their existence, their dress, their stately houses, wealth in land—and ended with brief reference to the other five occasions of question namely, invocation of saints; church ornaments, as bells, banners, and relics; superstitious use of the sacraments; the use of oaths; and the approval of war by the clergy. Pecock here referred also to the places in other works of his in which he had more fully vindicated the Church usage of

his time.

The point of view in Pecock's "Repressor" was that of a busy-minded man, essentially religious, who maintained the ecclesiastical forms of his day by looking at what seemed to him to be their foundation in nature and reason. He wrote with Christian charity, desiring to abate the bitterness of strife. He endeavoured to start from first principles, and to show reason for change of opinion by that party in the Church which was intolerant of usages for which there was no direct warrant of Scripture, or which, like the custom of demanding oaths and the sanctif

1 Pilioun, the headdress of a priest or graduate. The Latin "piles" was a close-fitting felt cap like the half of an egg, worn at festivals, and given to a slave on his enfrauchisement as a sign of freedom.

« AnteriorContinuar »