THE Moral Practice OF THE Jesuits; Demonstrated by many remarkable Histories of their Actions in all parts of the World. COLLECTED, Either from Books of the greatest Authority, or most certain and unquestionable RECORDS and MEMORIALS. By the Doctors of the Sorbonne: Faithfully rendered into English. LONDON, Printed for Simon Miller, at the Star at the West-end of St, Paul's, 1670. THE PREFACE Of the Design of this BOOK. THere's no doubt but all who love the purity of the Moral Doctrine of Christ, are very sensible of the Corruption the Jesuits labour to introduce thereinto by the Opinions they have invented: But it may be said, That nothing is more dreadful in the Conduct of these Fathers than to see them pursue those corrupt maxims in their Practice, and that of the many things they allow in others contrary to the Law of God, and the principles of the Gospel, there is not any they commit not themselves, to satisfy their Avarice, or to promote the Grandeur and Glory of their Society. To prove this, is the business of the present Collection of those Learned and Pious Doctors of the Sorbonne to inspire the World, and the Jesuits themselves with horror at their detestable Morality, there being no better way to demonstrate the danger of the looseness they authorise, that latitude and remissness whereof they are Patrons, than by discovery of that abyss of Injustice, Avarice, Lust, and Other Vices wherein they have plunged them. Let none imagine we were moved to gather the different pieces that make up this Collection, with design to decry or prejudice the Society. God is our witness, we have undertaken it out of the Charity we have for them, and the grief we are sincerely affected with to see them so unhappily engaged. We sigh to ●ind them the causes of the loss of so many souls they seduce, and draw with themselves into the precipices of Error and Vice. We deplore their obstinacy in shutting their eyes against the Light held forth by the Pastors of the Church, to guide them out of their wander into the right ways of Piety and Truth; and tremble when we consider, that every day they literally fulfil the Prophecies delivered of them in the infancy of their Society. For is it not a terrible judgement of God, not only on the Jesuits, but the whole Church, that almost in all parts of the world providence hath raised persons wise, illuminated, and full of the Divine Service, who from the first establishment of this Company have foreseen all those mischiefs it hath wrought in the Church, its turning topsie turvy the Ecclesiastical Discipline, its troubling and disordering all Estates and Conditions, and that in the mean time the same Company hath been permitted to mount to that degree of Power and Authority, that they have laid at their feet almost all that is Great in the World, that those of their Orders are Masters of almost all the Consciences of Christendom, that they resist all Bishops, and very often attempt against their Sovereigns. Melchior Canus▪ Bishop of the Canaries, that Great Luminary of the Church of Spain in these last ages, no sooner discovered their appearance in that Kingdom, but he believed the end of the world drew nigh, and that Antichrist would forthwith appear, for that the Forerunners and Emissaries (the Titles they confess he calls them by) began to walk abroad: He published everywhere, not only in particular discourses, and private Conferences, but in his Sermons and public Lectures, that he discovered in them all the marks which the Apostle declared should be seen in the followers of Antichrist. And when Turrien one of his Friends who wa● turned Jesuit, desired him to forbear persecuting his Order, and alleged on that occasion the approbation given him by the Holy See, he made him no other Answer, but that he held himself obliged in Conscience to advertise the people as he did, that they might not permit themselves to be seduced by the Jesuits. D. Jerome Baptista de Lanuza Bishop of Albarazin and Balbastro; a person admirable for Holiness and Piety, and particularly endowed with the gifts of Prophecy, of Wisdom and Understanding, composed an express work to make it appear that the prophecy of St. Hildegard ought to be understood of the Jesuits, and that it was easy to discern all the lineaments of the Society in the pourtraite she had made. Tarvisius Patriarch of Venice confirmed by an Oath upon the Holy Evangelists his prediction, that they should one day be expelled that City for their Factions and Politic Genius, which happened accordingly five hundred years after, for their having raised strange factions and seditions in the bosom of that Republic. All the Catholic Universities, particularly those of Cracovie, Louvain, and Milan, those of Spain and France; the Bishops, the Clergy, all the Orders of Religion, and the Courts of Parliament, almost every where opposed their establishment, as contrary to the good of the Church, and the security of States. And in particular, The faculty of Theology at Paris in their Famous Decree which we cannot too much Commend, Declared Unanimously, THAT THIS SOCIETY APPEARED DANGEROUS AS TO THE FAITH, APT TO TROUBLE THE PEACE OF THE CHURCH, TENDING TO THE OVERTHROW OF THE MONASTIQUE ORDERS OF RELIGION, AND MADE MORE FOR DESTRUCTION THAN FOR EDIFICATION. GOD hath not only permitted that all those Great Men of Spain, Italy, Almaigne, Flanders, Poland, and France, should predict the mischiefs this Society would do in the Church, but hath raised many of the Society itself, even Generals of their Order, to represent and set forth with that Energy, and Liberty, wherewith Charity and Truth do inspire men, the corruptions crept in amongst them, and by their means spread through the whole body of the Church. The learned Mariana hath made an express Treatise Of the Defaults he had observed in their Government, and makes it appear, That at the time he writ, their Society was so much disfigured, That had St. Ignatius their Founder come again into the world, he would not have known it: Mutius Vitteleschi their sixth General, reflecting upon that criminal facility wherewith those of his Congregation embraced All the New Opinions that ●ended (as his phrase is) to corrupt and ruin the Piety of the Faithful, says in a Letter addressed to the Superiors of all their houses, That there was reason to fear, the latitude and liberty of Opinion of some of the Society, especially in the matter of manners, would not only utterly ruin the Company, but cause very great mischiefs in the whole Church of God. So many Voices and Oracle's ought certainly at least to have inclined the Jesuits to examine themselves and reform in their Doctrine and Conduct, what so many Great Men judged capable to destroy their Society, and annoy the whole Church: But by a just judgement of God, what St. Paul the Apostle declares to be the condition of every one, Who doth not embrace the Holy Instructions of Christ, and the Doctrine which is according to Godliness, is happened to them; for, saith the Apostle, He is proud, knowing nothing, but doting about questions and strifes of words, from whence cometh, envy, strife, evil surmisings, perverse dispute of men of corrupt minds, who have not the knowledge of the Truth, supposing that gain is Godliness, 1 Tim. ●. 3. The design of this Collection is to make appear, that God by a secret order of his Providence hath abandoned the Jesuits to these unhappy Attendants of insincerity in Religion, and to demonstrate particularly in this, That he hath given them up to the two most pernicious enormities, which according to the Apostle, are the effects of men's infidelity and unwillingness to embrace the instructions of Jesus Christ, which are, To be puffed up with pride, and to imagine that godliness is to be used as a means to enrich themselves. For by the extracts we have reported out of the Image of their First Age, will appear on the one side The pride of their hearts, and to what a pitch of extravagance their self-conceitedness hath carried them, as that there is not any artifice, injustice or violence they employ not to enrich themselves, by the spoils of all sorts of persons Secular and Religious, Sovereign and private. They have no cause of complaint, that we attribute these disorders to the Society, for that though they were only the faults of those particular persons who committed them, they might nevertheless be justly imputed to the Society, as authorising them all by the doctrine she defends, and the impunity the offenders find in her bosom. For where are the punishments she inflicted on them who acted such violences and inhumanities' against the Nuns of Voltigerode? What course hath she taken to repair the damages sustained by so many desolate families ruined by the bankrupt of the College at Sevil. Let any one, saith Mariana, Chap. 14. have but boldness enough, what faults soever he be guilty of, he remains in the Society, if he have but the wit to frame an excuse, or any pretence for what he hath committed. I pass by gross crimes, a great number whereof is winked at under colour of want of sufficient proof, or fear to have them noised and so become public, ●or our Government seems to aim at nothing else but covering of faults, like them who rake the ashe● uppermost, as if the fire that lies under would not sooner or later send forth some smoke. No rigour is exercised but upon those poor wretches who have neither power nor protection, whereof there are instances enough; others shall commit the greatest mischiefs imaginable, and yet no man touch one hair of their head: A Provincial or Rector shall turn all upside down, violate the Rules and Constitutions of the Order, squander away the Estate belonging to their Houses, or give them to his Kindred, without any punishment after several years' miscarriage, but the rendering of his condition better than ever, by discharging him of his Office. Does any man know a Superior chastised for such excesses as these? And afterwards having wished, that there were in the Society Rewards provided for the good, and Punishments for the vicious, he adds, 'Tis a lamentable thing, and permitted by God for our sins, that oftentimes we practise the contrary, for among us the Good are afflicted, yea put to death without cause, or for very light reasons, because we are assured to find no contradiction nor resistance from them, whereof we could produce many deplorable examples; and the wicked are upheld; because they are feared. A conduct capable to provoke God to precipitate the Society into the Abyss of Destruction. See how this▪ Author, who was a member of the Soiety, deplores ●her policy that engages her unhappily to con●ive at the greatest enormities of the persons of whom she consists! And how far she is answerable for their greatest extravagancies by cherishing and maintaining them, and making it her Choice to tolerate in them all sorts of Corruptions, rather than discover to the World any thing that may induce the people to believe, the Society is composed of any but Saints. It were easy to prove, that the Greatest part of the Maxims of their Morals are grounded on nothing else but the libertinage of the members, whose justification the Society undertakes: When one of the Company had seduced his Penitent, and made use of pretended Revelations to cover under the name of marriage his impurities and sacrilege: Another of the Society to justify the Crime, fails not to teach, That a Friar professed may marry upon a probable Revelation. If one publish Calumnies against the most innocent persons, because he imagines they did the Society prejudice; Another will teach, That a Friar may not only destroy the reputation, but slay the person of any he foresees may annoy the Glory of his Order: Lastly, if some be so wicked, as to inspire the Subjects of best Princes with designs against their Lives, and the quiet of their Estates; Others will compose entire Volumes to justify those Assassins and Murderers, and the Society will Canonize them for Saints, and Register them in the Catalogue of Martyrs, especially if they be of her Children. May it not be truly said then, that the Members of the Society commit not any disorder that may not justly be imputed to the Society itself? But 'tis not our purpose in this Collection; where we shall report nothing but what hath been done by whole Houses, and entire Provinces, and the Society itself appeared highly in defence of. So that we shall omit a great number of stories, whereof we have most ample and Authentic Memoirs in our hands, with the Names and Surnames of the Persons, the Houses, the Provinces, and the Circumstances of their Crimes specified so particularly, that there cannot remain the least doubt of the truth of the facts alleged; which yet shall one day see light, if these Father's force us to publish, there is not any enormity in the Catalogue of Vices which is not practised amongst them; that they abuse their Missions into strange Countries, to lay snares for the Chastity of the Inhabitants, their Conversation, the Word of God and surintendence of Monasteries to corrupt Virgins consecrate to God, men's Daughters and Wives, the Sacrament of Penance to pervert men's Consciences; and pollute their Colleges and Congregations, by Enormities not to be named. There is evidence sufficient for this in the book F. Jarrige the Jesuit of Rochel published against them, wherein the matters of fact are set forth with all their particular circumstances, that not to believe them were to offer violence to our senses: 'Tis true the Book was published during his Apostasy, but 'tis as remarkable, that after his return to the Church of Rome, and his publishing at Antwerp in the Jesuits College, the causes of his return, and discoursing at large of that Book, he charges himself with too much heat in the writing, but doth not particularly disavow any one of those scandalous stories he reported therein: This is an indubitable proof of their truth, it being impossible that the Jesuits would have absolved him, having published against them so many Calumnies without obliging him to a public acknowledgement, that they were false, if the facts he had reported had not been true. But we were willing to pass by these and many other enormities, as well to avoid offence to the Reader, by writing things which cannot with modesty be made public, as for that what openly appears in the visible conduct of the Society affords too clear proofs of the perfect Conformity between their Practices and their Maxims: And that having abandoned the Rules of the Gospel, to follow their vain Ratiocinations, God hath delivered them up to the wander and errors of a depraved and corrupt spirit, which hath engaged them in Actions unworthy not only of Priests, and of Friars, but of Virtuous Pagans. The benefit we propose in publishing this Collection, is to confirm the faithful in the abhorrency they ought to have of the Morals of the Jesuits, which as a poisoned spring convey venom into the hearts of all that approach them, and to persuade the people to avoid their detestable Maxims, which having corrupted the understanding, engage the will in dissoluteness and debauchery; and to incline the Jesuits to give better attention to the judgement passed of them by so many great persons, particularly those of the Faculty of Theology at Paris, in 1554. the accomplishment of whose sentence is cleared by the Historical Relations reported in this Collection. 'Tis our hearty desire the Jesuits may reap the benefit of our Labour, for, (whatever they say) we love them, and have for them all the Charity we ought: But we dare not hope they will profit by what we have done, for that these Fathers never return from the Abyss they are plunged in; but as they are invincibly obstinate in the defence of their greatest enormities, we are to resolve upon an inflexible firmitude, and indefatigable constancy to reproach them therewith, and press them to amend, with incessant sighs for their errors and miscarriages, and prayers to God to mollify the hardness of their hearts. Qui enim ista non dolent, non est in eyes charitas Christi; qui autem etiam de talibus gaudent, abundat in eyes malignitas Diaboli. St. August. Epist. 137. Of the Pieces contained in this First Part. ALl the Pieces, whereof this Collection is composed are reduced to two things we have undertaken to justify, that is, That the Jesuits are animated with a spirit of Pride and of Avarice. The first is made appear by the Extracts we report from a Book Entitled The Image of the first Age of the Society of Jesus, which the Jesuits caused to be printed in Flanders in 1640. The reason of the Title was their design, to represent in that Book all the different Events happened to their Society since their establishment in 1540: which they have pursued with so much affectation, & executed in a manner so full of vanity and pride, that we cannot open the Book without abhorring the impudence of these fathers, in turning all things to their advantage, and labouring to draw Glory from that which ought rather to humble and confound them. It might have been necessary to have translated the whole Book to make known their folly at large, and to discover their extravagancies in their perfect dimensions; but we have been content to make only some Extracts, to which a person of Piety hath added reflections, no less solid than ingenious, the Light whereof renders their Vanity more ridiculous. We doubt not but the Readers will judge, that we ought to have refuted them thus, since, as Tertullian says, there's nothing more due to the vanity of men than to be railed at. We hope that these Extracts will servs to demonstrate the utility and necessity of the present Collection, for that this Society having affected to give the world such false Ideas of themselves, and representations quite different from what they really are, it was but just to present men with the true pictures of these Friars, and give them the occasion To know them by their Fruits, Mat. 7. 16. The other pieces of this Collection serve to prove, they employ all sorts of means to enrich themselves, and that nothing escapes the claws of their avarice The first stories we report, are taken out of works so authentic, that to name them will be sufficient to exempt their credit from question, as being Extracts out of a Memorial presented to His Majesty's Council by the Vicar-General of the Order of Clunie in Almaigne, others out of a book of a famous Benedictine Friar in Almaigne, and others from an arrest of the Parliament of Metz. The residue are Extracts of a Spanish Book, Entitled, The Theatre of Jesuitism, or the Jesuitique Theatre; being an Apology for other Orders of Religion against the Jesuits addressed to Pope Innocent the 10 th', and Printed at Conimbre in 1654., But because this book is not well known to the world, and men may possibly scruple to give it the credit it deserves without a more particular knowledge of the Author, and occasion that moved him to write, we shall endeavour in few words to satis●ie their doubts: To begin with the Occasion that gave birth to the Theatre of Jesuitism; we are to observe that the licentiate Esclapes, having made a Book Entitled, A manifest addressed to all the Faithful in Jesus Christ; of the wicked maxims taught, maintained and practised by the Jesuits: Another Author under the name of Doctor Aquila answered it by a Book which appeared with this Title, Ladreme el Perro y no me muerda: Let the Cur bark at me but not bite me. This pretended Doctor undertook in this work to justify all that Esclapes had reproved, and to show ●e understood not the matter he Treated of, when he affirmed the Jesuits to have been sole Authors of those Maxims, whereas they had only followed the Authors who preceded them, and especially the Dominicans, in whose Books they had learned them. The Author of the Theatre of the Jesuitism undertakes by that Book, the refutation of Aquila, and the defence of all the Authors he had attaqued. The Book is divided into two parts: The first comprehends the refutation of Aquila upon the Maxims reported by Esclapes: We have taken nothing out of this; The Moral Doctrine of the Jesuits, not long since published, containing large Entracts made of that part: We have confined ourselves principally to the second, as conducing most to the design of this Collection, which is to demonstrate the practice of that doctrine in the Conduct of the Jesuits. We shall observe here only two things: 1. That this passed in Spain the same time when the pernicious Morals of the Jesuits were attaqued with such zeal and success in France. 2. That the Author says, he affirms not any story in his Book, but what concerns the Society entire, or some particular person, whose protection and defence the Community undertook, and for whom by consequence they are responsible. To which he adds, that 'tis visible, that among the Jesuits, 'tis not so much the particular persons that offend, as in other Orders of Religion, who correct and expel them that are guilty, but that a general dissoluteness hath seized the whole body; which he justifies by the words of Azeuredo, and Villa Sante Jesuits of Spain, who renewed the Sect of the Illuminated Heretics, and having been imprisoned and interrogated upon their abominable Tenets, answered the Magistrates, That if they were imprisoned for them, they might have as well imprisoned the Society. As for the Author of the Theatre of Jesuitism, the name of La Pieta●, which he assigned was not his tru● Name: He was a Natural Son of the deceased King of Spain, and hath been always reputed very considerable in the Court at Madrid: Nor was it his intention by that assumed name to conceal his composure of that work, which he hath always publicly owned as the true Author thereof; and had it been feasible to have confined the Book to the Kingdom of Spain, he had prefixed his Name, since none in that Realm but knew it his work; but his modesty and humility inclined him to hide his name from those of foreign Countries who were ignorant of it. He was a Dominican when he composed the Book; his name is Ildefonso de S. Thomas a Sancto Thoma: And though his Book by the Credit of the Jesuits hath been condemned and put into the Index Expurgatorius, it hindered him not from being named successor to John de Pallafox in the Bishopric of Osme, and presently after in that of Placentia worth fifty thousand Crowns annual rent; and lastly, in that of Malaga, which he is new possessed of, having preferred it before that of Placentia, though it be worth but twenty thousand Crowns, which is thirty thousand Crowns less than the other, to justify this choice, he said, that the Monastery where he made his profession was in the City of Malaga; though the more probable cause may be, that being a person of most accomplished piety, having past all the Offices and Dignities of his Order, he gladly embraced the occasion by his disinteresment on this occurrence to edify the Church, and lessen his account to be rendered to God, which would have been increased, had he continued in charge with a Bishopric so considerable as that of Placentia, being one of the richest of Spain after Toledo. The King of Spain hath acknowledged him his Son, and he was made Bishop in the Life of the King. The three Bishoprics mentioned, were all void in less than three months; so that he hath stood charged with no other Church but only that of Malaga, and is highly esteemed in his Diocese; He is reputed one of the greatest and most zealous preachers this day in Spain, and applies himself much to Confession, and the direction of Souls committed to his care. His Mother was Maid of Honour to Isabel of France, late Queen of Spain, and was Sister to the marquis Mortara Governor of Milan; but being with Child, the King to save his Honour married her to the Marquis Quintana, one of the greatest and richest Lords of his Court. The Marquis had that passionate love for this Lady, and gave her those Evidences of real affection, that she held herself obliged to testify her acknowledgements, by revealing the secret of her being with Child by the King before her Espousals with the Marquis her Husband: But all the Protestations she could make of inviolable sidelity to him could not save the poor marquis from receiving in this news his mortal wound, for though he gave his Wife no testimony of it, he was seized with such grief upon the report, that it brought him to his end within two months after. The marquis having lain in retired into a Monastery, whence she took great care of her Son's education, and afterwards became a Nun and died there: But having before told her Son who he was, he took a resolution to take the habit of St. Dominique in the City of Malaga, about which is situate the Estate he quitted to become a Friar of that Order, wherein he lived ever since, and continues at present with the dignity of Episcopacy, and a high reputation of singular piety. The Merit and Piety of the Author of the THEATRE of JESUITISM takes away all doubts of the truth of the facts he reports. What remains, but to add, a word of those pieces that immediately follow this PREFACE, and to observe that they are common to all parts of the Collection, being Prophecies, whose accomplishment is seen in all the Stories whereof the work is composed, which are but effectual Comments and Explications of what hath been predicted. It is not our purpose in this Treatise, or others, to heap all the examples that might be brought on the Subject, which might require an infinite number of Volumes, but to pick out the most Authentic, and proper to justify that we undertake to prove. Mar. 31. 1670. Licenced, and Entered according to Order. THE Moral Practice OF THE JESVITES. The words of St. Paul, taken out of the third Chapter of the second Epistle to Timothy. Interpreted of the Jesuits by the Pious and Learned Bishop of the Canaries, Melchier Canus, the Famous Divine of the Order of St. Dominique. Acknowledged accordingly by O●landin the I●suite, in the History of the Society. 1. KNow then that in the latter days perilous times shall come. 2. For there shall be men wh● shall be lovers of themselves, covetous, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unboly. 3. Without natural affection, truce-breakers, false-accusers, incontinent, fierce, despisers of those that are good. 4. Traitors, heady, highminded, lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God. 5. Having a form of Godliness, but denying the power thereof, from such turn away. 6. For of this sort are they that creep into houses, and lead cap●i●e silly women laden with sins, led away with divers lusts. 7. Ever learning, and never able to come to the knowledge of the Truth. 8. Now as James and Jambres withstood Moses, so do these also resist the truth; men of corrupt minds, reprobate concerning the Faith. 9 But they shall proceed no further, for their ●olly shall be made manifest to all men, as theirs also was. 12. Yea, and all that will live Godly in Christ jesus, shall suffer persecution. 13. But the evil men and seducers shall wax worse and worse, deceiving, and being deceived. The Prophecy of St. Hildegard. ADVERTISEMENT. THe Prophecy of St. Hildegard hath been applied to the Jesuits by many persons, and among others, by D. Jerome Baptista de la Nuza of the Order of St. Dominique, afterwards Bishop of Albarazin and Balbastro, whose Elegy may be seen in the Acts of the Chap. General of that Order Celebrated at Rome in 1629. 'Tis said of him, that all his life he observed exactly the rules of his Order, even in the smallest matters, and added thereto in his practice frequent Fasts, and instead of cords made use of chains of iron in acts of Penance and Mortification; his constant exercises were Prayer and Reading of Godly Books; he had the gift of Prophecy, was of great Wisdom, and excellent Understanding, whereof his Master St. Lewis Beltram and his Books give ample testimony and a clear evidence: He spent fifty years in the Ministry of the Word, and when he preached his face was often seen to shine with extraordinary lustre; his Charity, when Bishop, made him very poor, for he gave all his Goods, even the Bed he lay on, in Alms; his Confessor assures us he never sinned mortally, and in the seventieth year of his Age died at Albarazin reputed a Saint. The Holy Woman speaks of a sort of men to come in the last Ages: And 'tis observed in the Life of St. Engelbert the Martyr, Archbishop of Cologne, written by an Author his Contemporary, That in the life of that Prelate, when the Domi●i●ans and Franciscans came to Cologne to Found for themselves Houses of Religion, the ecclesiastics murmured, and endeavoured to persuade the Archbishop to expel them; alleging for reason, their fear that these were the men of whom St. Hildegard had Prophesied; to which the Prelate made answer, that there was no cause of complaint against those Orders, for that till than they had not given other than good Examples; but the time would come, when the Prophecy should be fulfilled; which in the Margin of this Prophecy in the Annals of Baronius is observed to be these latter days. I shall relate the Prophecy as I find it recited in Bzovius a famous Author; for though the Copy, the Bishop of Albarazin followed in his Commentary, differ somewhat from that Bzovius made use of, yet both agree exactly in sense. The Marvellous Prophecy of the Abbess Hildegard, Reported by Bzovius in the 15th Tome of his Ecclesiastical Annals, Anno Dom. 1415. Q. 39 under Pope John 23. THere will arise men without a Chief, who shall feed and grow fat upon the sins of the people, but profess themselves of the number of Beggars; shameless in their behaviour; studious to invent new ways to do mischief; a pernicious Order odious to all wise men, and those that are faithful to Jesus Christ, healthy and strong, but lazy and idle, that they never work, pretending beggary, busy antagonists against the Teachers of the Truth; by their Credit with Great Ones opposing the Innocent; having four principal Vices rooted in their hearts by the Devil; Flattery, to gain gifts from the World; Envy, to make them impatient to see good done to others, and not to them; Hypocrisy, to please by dissimulation; and Detraction to render themselves commendable by dispraising others; Preaching incessantly to Secular Princes to procure themselves applause from the people, and to seduce the simple, but without Devotion or Example of true Martyrdom, robbing true Pastors of their Rights to administer the Sacraments, and depriving the Poor, the miserable and the sick of their Alms, cajoleing the populace, and courting their favour, familiar with Ladies, and other women, and ●eaching them to cheat their husbands, and give away their goods to them in private; receivers of ill gotten goods, saying, give them to us and we will pray for you, and obtain pardon for all your sins; making these they Confess to forget their kindred; receiving goods from ●obbers on the highway, extortioners, sacrilegious persons, usurers, fornicators, adulterers, heretics, schismatics, apostates, lewd women, perjured tradesmen, corrupt Judges, cashiered soldiers, tyrants, and all other miscreants led by the Devil; living deliciously, passing this transitory life in society, and at last falling together into damnation, having the world at will; but the people will by degrees grow cold towards them, and having by experience found them seducers, cheats and impostors, will hold their hands from further gifts; then will they run about their houses like famished or mad dogs, with their eyes to the ground, shrinking their necks like 〈◊〉, seeking bread to satis●●e their hunger; but the people will cry out, Woe be to you, ye children of desolation, the world hath deceived you, the devil is seized of your hearts and mouths, your minds are gone astray in vain speculations, your eyes were delighted with beholding vanities, your delicate palates have searched out the most pleasant wines; your feet were swift in running to mischief, and you may remember you never did good; you were the fortunate malignants, pretending poverty, but very rich, and under colour of simplicity, of great power; devout flatterers, hypocritical saints, proud beggars, offering petitioners, wavering and unstable teachers, delicate martyrs, hired confessors, proudly humble, piously hardhearted in the necessities of others, sugared slanderers, peaceable persecutors, lovers of the world, sellers of indulgencies, disposing all things for your convenience, admirers of luxury, ambitious of honour, purchasers of houses, sowers of discord, building still higher and higher, but not able to attain a height equal to your desires; and now ye are fallen as Simon the Magician, whose bones were bruised, and his body struck by God with a mortal plague upon the Apostles prayer; so shall your Order be destroyed by reason of your impostures and iniquities: Go then you teachers of sin, the Doctors of disorder, Fathers of corruption, Children of wickedness, we'll no longer follow you for Guides, nor give ear to your doctrine. An Expository Comment upon this prophecy by the Right Reverend Don Jerome Baptista de La Nuza, Lord Bishop of Albarazin, and afterwards of Balbastro; whereby it appears that 'tis ●o be applied to those who call themselves the Society of Jesus, though their actions and opinions bespeak them his enemies, being contradictory to His, which they profess with their month, but deny in their works: Reported by the Author of Theatrum Iesul●i●um, pag. 183. as a true Copy of the Original under the Prelate's hand, remaining in the Convent of Dominicans at Saragosa. 1. There will arise men without a Chief, who shall feed and grow far upon the sins of the people, but profess themselves of the number of Beggars. FIrst, It appears this is spoken of Ecclesiasctical persons, for of them the Prophet said, That they did eat the sins of the people, which is the same with the Holy woman's expression in the Prophecy. Secondly, They must be of a begging Order, which she confirms on another occasion by express words to that purpose: (Assumentes potins exemplum mendicandi) And though the Jesuits are not comprehended in any of the four Orders of Friars Mendicant, yet have they Brieves like theirs, whereof they glory in their Books, and make use upon occasion. Thirdly, That they shall be an Order which shall not bear the name of their Founder or chief, which is the meaning of those words, Sans Chef, and denotes what is afterwards intimated in the name La Company, which Hildegard uses, where she saith, That they shall live deli●iously in the Company or S●ciety; a name not newly assumed, but from the time of their foundation, as appears by their Constitutions and Histories; you anger them as nicknamed if you call them Ynnigistes or L●yolistes, from Ynnigo de Loyola their Founder, and though they new Christened him Ignacius, yet will not they be content to be called Ignacius, but diligent only in that of the Society, as most honourable; though other Orders, as the Friars, Predicants and Minors, who pass usually under those Appellations, think it no affront to be called Dominicans or Franciscans, from the names of their Founders. The Abbot I●achim near contemporary with St. Hildegard, whose prophecies the Jesuits say are to be understood of them, is of the same opinion with her, calling that sort of men he speaks of Turbs Ass ciata, a Multitude living in Society. What Solomon says of the Locusts, that they have no King, yet go forth by bands, may be applied here as agreeable to the Jesuits, who in their Constitutions assume the title of Vni●●●sa S●●ietas, The whole Society without a head. 2. Shameless in their behaviour. The whole world with an unanimous Vote still censure them impudent in all their actions; when they undertake any thing, happen what will, say what you please, it never troubles them; there's not a sort of men under heaven that care so little what becomes of the most important concerns, provided they may obtain their desires; we have instances of their impudence against the Cardinal of Toledo, D. Gasparde Quiroga, who had been their great friend, and D. Jerome Manrique, whom King Bhilip the second had given them for visitor. 'Tis a maxim amongst them, that to promote self-interest is the only wisdom, for what men say for the present is soon forgot: The Prophecy in Latin declares them sine rubore, so shameless they cannot blush, but like Libertines, nor fear nor care for any thing. 3. Studious to invent new ways to do mischief. Who invented and practised Confession by Letter? Who would have obliged ●enitents to discover their complices against their wills? Who have said that a Friar may marry upon a Revelation he shall imagine certain or probable, and not only marry but refuse to obey his Superior in any matter whatever, or the Laws. which oblige all other men; that he need not go to Confession who hath a Revelation, he is in the state of Grace? Hence it comes that men of Religion traffic and deal in merchandise, and a hundred other things full of impurity, usury and simony. 'Tis matter of astonishment how they all defend whatever any of their Society hath said, though nerver so new, never so scandalous. To verify this Prophecy they have filled the world with new tricks and devices, and from the magazine of their invention furnished impostors. with subtle artifices and cheats in all matters of consequence, whether great or small. 4. A pernicious Order odious to all wise men, and those that are faithful to jesus Christ. 'Tis to be admired there's not a person but complains of them, and the manner of their acting; the world observes they love to intermeddle in all sorts of affairs, to tamper: with inheritances and successions, to give frequent visits to Ladies, that they are fine hypocrites, flatterer's; of Princes, enemies to men of Religion, full of artifice in their proceedings, presumptuous, main sticklers for credit from knowledge and virtue, practising respect of persons as a piece of their decalogue, and a thousand things more of the like nature; and yet they have advocates who plead, while all the world murmurs against them, that all the world esteems and honours them; that is, as one expounds it, Men abhor them in their hearts, but must praise ●hem with their lips. 5. Healthy and strong, but lazy and idle, etc. This needs no Comment, every hours expe●ience expounds it. 6. Pretending beggary. They appear Beggars, but are not so, for in ●ruth 'tis but for a colour of mortification that they sometimes send of their young men to beg; and if the old ones do it, they eat not the hread that's gathered, but either sell or give it away: Valentia knows so much, that we need not add more to disabuse the world in this particular. 7. Strong Antagonists against the Teachers of the Truth. So 〈◊〉 of the jesnites, that one would think they had made it their task to contradict the Fathers, and if they Comment on St. Thom●s, 'tis that they may the better oppose his judgement, as appears by their books. To prove this, see how Molina handles St. Augustin upon the Efficacy of Grace, he calls him cruel, and adds other very strange epithets, because the Father a●tributes not to freewill all that this jesuit allows it. 8. By their Credit with Great ones, oppressing the innocent. The F. Provincial of the Dominions of Arragon, in his Memorial presented to King Philip the second, in Answer to the Calumnies of the Jesuits against that Order, affirms it a matter of certain truth, that these Fathers maintain one of their Society constantly at Court, on no other employment but to make continual complaints to the King and the Nuncio against the Dominicans, which they do upon the least occasion offered from any matter that occurs in the Dominicans writings. The same Provincial proves that the Jesuits do this in things absolutely false, to incense the King, and exasperate the Nuncio against the Dominicans. I pass over a thousand fabulous stories they have composed which they would make Authentic by the amity of Princes, and their credit with Great Men, to disparage and destroy the reputation of other Orders of Religion, as they possess men of power in private addresses with ill opinions of those who are not their friends, and bespeak their protection against all such as bear ill will to their Order. 9 Having four principal Vices rooted in their bearts by the Devil, flattery to gain gifts from the world. Judge now, whether the Jesuits be not guilty of this Vice, and those others of envy, hypocrisy and detraction wherewith they are charged by the Prophecy; see whether they are any veil to cover them, or practise them openly in the face of the Sun, especially their flattery. There's not a Race of men in the world, that flatter and sanctify their Proselytes as these men do. To be of their Congregation, and to be a Saint, are in their dialect terms equivalent, though the person be a public usurer; as he that is not their friend cannot (in their language) be of the Communion of Saints. Their Envy and Hypocrisic are so palpable, that the Text needs no interpreter, but their practice to make it intelligible. 10. Detraction to render themselves commendable by defaming others. They never scruple at slanders, if they may serve for their honour or the credit of their friends, raising themselves on the ruins of others. When Seneca advised to be moderate in Commendations, and sparing in Dispraises, lest by excess in the one men incur suspicion of flattery, and in the other be liable to the censure of malignity; we may think he had these Fathers in prospect, and provided a remedy for their disease who are fallen into extremes on both sides, directly opposite to the duty he commends, for they speak too ill of good, and too well of bad men, and slander both the doctrines and the persons of the Saints, that they may bring the one and the other out of credit, and exalt themselves above both, in letting us see they have greater authority, and have learned things the Saints never knew: This produced that expression in their Public Act, We are to give Molina thanks for inventing that which St. Augustin could never have found. 'Tis their common discourse, that other Orders of Religion are but dregs or trees past bearing, that they are sprung up in their place full of that quick spirit and vigour which at their first institution flourished in other Orders now in decay. They stick not to say, that the Orders of St. Dominique, St. Francis, and others are but a trouble to them, a surcharge to the body politic, and superfluous members of the Ecclesiastical, the Rector of their College at Majorca a few years since had the impudence to write to the Provincial of the Dominicans at Arragon. 11. Preaching incess antly to secular Princes, to procure themselves applause from the people, and seduce the simple, but without devotion or example of true martyrdom. 'Tis a common saying that the Jesuits keep themselves to be Confessors, having no inclination for martyrs, whose Catalogue among them is so short, that you may count them all on your fingers of one hand: This was the ordinary discourse at Rome when Venice published Edicts against the Apostolic See. All Catholics under the Pope's Obedience were in danger of that Conjuncture, but the Jesuits went fairly off of themselves for fear of those Prisons, Banishments, and greater punishments, which Religious persons of other Orders underwent and endured; fear had a stronger influence, and more powerful operation on the spirits of the Jesuits, than the love of the truth which kept up those of other Orders from retiring voluntarily or by force: But the Jesuits were safe enough, having a cloak for their knavery, in pretending they were expelled, whereas they withdrew of themselves, and claiming merit for choosing to run away, which they would make the world believe they were forced to by violence. Thus the Prophecy describes accurately their manner of preaching, and maintaining the Faith among the Great Ones without hazard of life. The Apostles and Preachers of the Gospel went among infidels, like Sheep among Wolves, exposing themselves to Martyrdom for the propagating of the Faith; and the Dominicans and Franciscans treading their steps, have since the beginning of their establishment swollen the Catalogue of their Martyrs to a volume: But the Jesuits being to preach at japan, and seeing their persons in danger by the displeasure of the Emperor there, addressed themselves to King Philip for a guard of Soldiers, that they might preach in safety; which was so scandalous to all that knew it, that D. Michael de Bonavides Bishop of the Philippines held himself obliged to write thereof to the King; and though they were the first Preachers in most parts of japan and the Indies, they can hardly name a martyr of the Society; which appears strange where the cruelty of the people, and averseness from the Gospel, might have made many. 12. Robbing true Pastors of their Rights to administer the Sacraments. When I consider what happened in the time of Gregory 13 th', I think it easy to demonstrate how properly this may be applied to the Jesuits: As soon as they entered japan, they persuaded the Emperor of the Country and the Pope, that it was not expedient to admit any persons to come thither who differed from them in Habits, Customs, or Ceremonies; giving for reason, that the new Converts would be scandalised at the diversity. As if the Church were not like a Monarchy, composed of different estates, and compared in Scripture to a Queen attired in divers colours, but were wholly Jesuitical in habit and all other things. This reason was sufficient to surprise the Pope, and procure them his Grant, that none but they should enter japan; so that had there been a Bishop for the Country, he was excluded his Diocese: A thing never heard of, to shut the door of the fold against the true shepherds, and hinder them to administer the Sacraments; which hath been the Cause that many have renouneed the faith for want of Confirmation: But such is the consequence of the Jesuits Doctrine, that Confirmation and Orders by Bishops are not necessary. And that this is their tenet, the occurrences of japan, the passages between the Jesuits, and the Papers sent to the Pope by the Bishop of the Philippines, and the Jesuits actions in England and elsewhere, do clearly prove. 13. Depriving the poor, the miserable, and the sick, of their Alms. This needs no explication, every poor man knows it. 14. Cajoleing the Populace, and Courting their favour. 'Tis certain, they labour nothing more than for the favour of the people, and gain the multitude to their party, by publishing Letters, which are often counterfeit; pretending success in their affairs, and feigning miscarriages in their adversaries, and ludeing their misfortunes when their interest requires it: They tell stories of japan, Poland, Almain and Rome, and if it may serve their Turns they will forge news upon the places they live in, though they are sure the next day to be convicted of lying; but they care not what happens if they attain their ends in cheating the people to think favourably of them: Wherein they are so confident, that they boldly told Pope Clement the 8th, that if he decreed any thing against them in the matter of aids, the whole Church should smart for it. 15. Familiar with Ladies and other women, teaching them to cheat their husbands, and give away their Goods to them in private. The Prophecy is so clear in this particular, that who knows the Jesuits, knows the meaning of it without an Expositor. 16. Receivers of ill gotten Goods. I know not to whom the words may be better applied. 'Tis not long since their establishment, yet are they more rich than all the Mendicants and other orders of Religion, but 'tis no wonder, if you Audit their Accounts and examine their ways to get money expressed in this Prophecy: for they take it from all the world, Robbers, Usurers, Merchants, corrupt Judges, debauched Youths, Apostates, Sodomites, Whores, and generally from all those who live contrary to the Evangelical Law: And when I see how close they stick to such sort of people, and make use of them in their affairs, I know not whether they have not some secret surreptitious privileges, to compound with these sinners for some Alms they receive, or for promoting some other Concerns of the Society: I can produce some instances, and have read in their Constitutions, that their General ought always to labour the obtaining new privileges, exemptions and favours for the Society. 17. Saying, Give them us, and we will pray for you, and obtain pardon for all your sins. The years now last passed have discovered their practice towards persons of whom they have most need in their affairs: They tell them the Society is charged with their sins, and will repent for them, so that the sinners need take no care, but repose in security, bearing them in hand that they shall be sanctified though they do nothing in order to it; and instead of instructing them in the fear of God, leading them through vain hopes into the paradise of fools. 18. Making those they confess to forget their Kindred. There are so many examples of the Jesuits extraordinary avarice in engaging their Disciples to give them their Estates, to the prejudice of their Kindred whom they leave in poverty, that the tenth part of what we know is sufficient to verify the prophesy. 19 Receiving Goods from Robbers on the Highways, Extortioners, sacrilegious persons, etc. See the Commentary, Num. 16. 20. Living Deliciously. The whole world can witness of the Jesuits, that self-denial is no part of their practice; none wear ●iner Linen, none lie on softer beds. And they that would excuse them for not using woollen about their persons, nor in their beds, tell us, the seams of the finest Linens are troublesome to them. They never rise before day to say Matins; they know no Vigils, nor Fasts, but what Seculars who live most at ease, do observe. They make excellent cheer, drink the best wines, and are stored with all sorts of the most delicate Liquors: for Furniture and householdstuff they exceed the Grandees of the world, with this advantage, that the Jesuits are at no pains, and as little Cost to get them. And though they fare so well, and admit of no extraordinary Fast, yet have they procured Brieves of Dispensation for Lent, and such other Fasts as their Superiors may impose. 21. Passing this tranfitory life in Society, and at last falling together into Damnation. The word Society is so proper to the Jesuits, as we observed before, that it serves for an Argument, the prophecy aims at them. 22. Having the World at will. More may be said of this than my brevity will allow; it shall suffice that they dispose all things before hand to bring more Grist to their Mill, and in all their affairs propose no other end but their advantage and particular interest. 23. But the people will by degrees grow cold towards them, and having by experience found them seducers, cheats and impostors, will hold their hands from further Gifts; then will they run about their houses like famished or mad Dogs, etc. But the people will cry out, etc. Remember you never did good. I see not the Prophecy altogether fulfilled in this point, yet true it is the world begins to know the Jesuits better than formerly; and there be many that say of them the same things that St. Hildegard doth, having discovered at length that all is not Gold that glisters in them. 24. You were the Fortunate Malignants. Consider well all the following Epistles, and you shall see that the eloquence of Demosthenes could not have invented more proper or elegant to declare the thoughts lay concealed in the hearts of the people: They call them first, The fortunate Malignants, who under colour of sanctity pretend great trouble and care for the credit and reputation of other orders of Religion, as if they came with that heat and fervency that is necessary to repair that vigour and strength they have lost by age. Their envy appears in telling their friends tales to the disadvantage of other Orders, publishing the Crimes of some Friars, and feigning stories of their condemnation, which they deliver in a compassionate Accent, full of tenderness and sympathy, casting words by the by of the dangers they are in, for no other end but to persuade the hearers into fear for them, and a solicitous care for their safety, though in truth they do it only out of envy against other orders, whose Grandeur is their trouble, whose growth and increase, they esteem their wane and decay. 25. Pretending poverty, but very rich. This is the character St. Bernard gives of such Friars, who being Votaries of poverty labour for riches, and to live in plenty of all things: Examine whether this agrees not with the Jesuits, who call themselves poor, and would be thought so, but in the mean time receive more yearly than all other Orders of Religion together. 26. And under colour of simplicity, of great power. They do what they please, while they pretend to the innocence of Doves, and compass all their designs by holding their peace, and catch the bird while others make a noise in beating the bush. 27. Devout Flatterers. To say, such a one is of our Congregation is sufficient with them to make him pass for a Saint. 28. Hypocritical Saints, Proud Beggars. Experience in these particulars surpasses expression. 29. Offering Petitioners. 'Tis their custom to beg and petition for favours from others by offering them theirs, their intercession, their cares, their good offices; and to give them their due, there's none better able to perform what they offer their Devotees, for they accommodate all sorts of people; they find Clients for Lawyers, Servants for Masters, Scholars for Professors, Tutors for Children, Brides for Young men, and Bridegrooms for Ladies, Offices and employment for other persons, in Cities and Families of Princes; though now they are very cautious what Domestiques they commend to Lords and Ladies, because they have been formerly unlucky in some, who chose rather to be faithful to their Masters than Spies for the Society, who placed them there on no other design but to know by them all that passed in the Family. 30. Wavering and unstable Teachers. Their Books show how little solidity there is in their doctrine, and on how weak foundations and false grounds they rely for advancing conceits and new-fangled opinions opposite to those of the Fathers and Ancient Doctors, received and approved by the Church, whom they would abase to exalt themselves in their place, and so become the Rabbins of Chri●tendome. 31. Delicate Martyrs. The state of Religion is a kind of Martyrdom, but that of the Jesuits so full of delicacies and pleasures, that it may be thought a Regal condition. They have no woollen to their skin, no abstinence, no Fasts, no Vigils, no Cloister, no other thing to afflict the body, but are like those delicate Soldiers St. jerom speaks of, fitter to spin with Penelope, and live in dalliance with Paris, than fight with Hector, or watch with Ulysses. 32. Hired Confessors. Reflect well on this Epithet, and you shall perceive what profit they have made, and still ●o make every day by Confessions. Have you ●ver known a person who confesses to them, ●ho left them not at his death his whole ●state, or at least a Legacy very considerable? ●esides what they hook in by a thousand Articles in the life-time. 33. Proudly humble. Humble in appearance, but really proud, abasing themselves outwardly, while their thoughts are employed to exalt themselves above all the world. 34. Piously hardhearted in the necessities of others. This we see in their dealings with the Children and Kindred of some persons who have left their Estates in their hands, in confidence of a compassionate and pious regard from them to the necessities of the Orphans, but they have deceived the hopes of the Parents, and miserably frustrated the expectations of the Children. The poor receive alms from the Superiors of other Orders so often that they are ashamed to beg of them; but who ever saw the Jesuits give away a penny they could make use of? In short, they are better Preachers than practisers of that Precept in the Gospel, Give Alms, for they get every day more and more wealth, retain tenaciously what they have gotten, and hardly part with other men's Estates in their hands, on what Account soever they are possessed of them, but though they see the owner perish for want, they'll not spare him a farthing: The world is full of instances of this kind. 35. Sugared Slanderers. With what sweetness do they express all the evil they please of other men? and to show their compassion for the misfortunes of other Orders, they will recount the fall of some Friar, and covering their malignity with some specious pretence will write things to the disparagement of Religion and its professors, or any other persons who are not in their books. Ribadeneira their founder's Companion, in the book he writ of Tribulation, produces the Example of Savanarola, only that he might say he was a Dominican, to cast odium on the Order by the miscarriages of a particular person. 36. Peaceable Persecutors. They persecute so gently, that they seem not to touch men, and in the mean time make so cruel a war against those they love not, that no secret poison kills more infallibly. It is their Maxim, Never to forgive, but to dissemble a while to gain opportunity of a severer revenge. 37. Lovers of the World. The truth of this Prophecy is demonstrated by the Jesuits care to root themselves in the world, to settle themselves in the Palaces of Kings and Princes, Ecclesiastical and Secular, exalting themselves by degrees of favour, till they render themselves Masters of all, and how hardly they are gotten out of a Palace where they have once put their foot in, though but a moment. We see the same in their buildings, their Churches, and the Artifices they use to draw into their houses the most considerable persons of the places they live in, their Balconies, their Galleries, their half-Paces, their Foot-cloths, their Canopies, their Foot-stools, and other things never used by other Orders who studied more to undeceive then to deceive the world: consider further, how they have undertaken the instruction of youth, how they prefer in their Classes the Sons of Gentlemen and rich Tradesmen, ●carrying them in triumph to be Emperors and Captains of their Schools, though not perfect in the Alphabet, not regarding the poor who are excellent Scholars, and deserve the honour bestowed on the illiterate. Their principal intention is not the instruction of youth, but to gain by any means the amity of the rich, and favour of the powerful, to exalt themselves, and become Masters of the World, which they entirely love, and at the same time most slavishly serve. 38. Sellers of Indulgences. The Prophesy speaks not of the favours and indulgences of the Popes, which their Order hath not as the Mendicants, but is to be understood of their facility in granting large permissions to sinners by their loose opinions, whereof their books are fu●l; which never fail to sell well, as being a Mine of convenienceys for wicked men, and a magazine of means to accommodate sinners; some to keep in their possession the Estates of other men, other to break the fasts, and ●light the abstinences, and other laws of the Church, and others for matters of greater infamy. 39 Disposing all things for your convenience. The whole world may learn of them the course they are to take for profit and convenience; they think of all things, foresee all things, provide and dispose all things at a thousand leagues distance, that nothing may scape them; and though this appear impossible, 'tis said of them, that they reason of things impossible to render them possible. This may be well understood in another manner, for whereas the devout Founders of Religious Orders, employed all their care to root out thence all sensual delights and pleasures of life, as the principal enemies of a Religious Estate, and of the Cross of Christ, the Jesuits seem to bend all their thoughts for good accommodations, good Linen, good Stuffs, good Beds, good Chambers, good Horses, and good Provisions for their Voyages, good Victuals, besides extraordinaries which they want not; the best Fruits, the whitest Bread, and the best baked, and old Wine; of all which they have in their Constitutions, a Law which they observe punctually, and peradventure more than the Law of God, so that you may strictly call them with St. Hildegard, Ordinatores Commodi, a name most proper for them, for they have reduced carnal worldly enjoyments under rules, and recalled them into Monasteries, whence the Saints had carefully banished them. 40. Admirers of Luxury, Which denotes their inclinations to sensuality, and the pleasures of the palate, and other irregular passions. 41. Ambitious of Honour. We may fill a volumn on this Articles; for they pretend to a Supremacy in Knowledge, in Virtue, in Sanctity, etc. In the time of Gregory the 13 th'. they attempted to take from the Order of St. Dominique, the Mastership of the sacred Palace, and were so importunate with that Pope, that they engaged him to propose it in Consistory, and had obtained their desires, had not the Cardinals represented the great services done the Church by the Dominicans. Ribadeneira the jesuit, in the last Book he writ, giving an account of the Customs of his Order, saith, that though they have neither Quires, nor Fasts, nor Discipline, nor Penance, etc. yet they deserve higher esteem than all other Orders, whereupon he tells us admirable stories: For instance, when he gives the reason why the Jesuits assist not at Procession, he saith, It is because they ought to have a 〈◊〉 Honourable Rank than any other Order and out of humility absent themselves. To back this strong reason, he invents a Fable, which I understand not how other Orders can endure, That it was declared in the Council of Trent, That the General of the Jesuits ought to have a place more Honourable than the Generals of other Orders: 〈◊〉 impudent lie they publish not to the world, but disperse in private among their Confidents the Book that contains it, till the lie gather force, and then the Book shall be public; in the mean time 'tis every day printed, and will in time work out the effect they proposed to themselves. Such are their Artifices to fill the world with falsities for their credit and advantage. 42. Purchasers of Huses. They that are acquainted with the mysteries of their Trade, know that where houses are Let at dear rates, the I●suites have the best part of them, especially at Court. In matters of merchandise and traffic, there is no trader so dexterous as they; the Genoese are dunces when compared to them in matters of Exchanges, wherein their gains are excessive, for their consciences are large, and their Trade universal, in small as well as great Commodities, in Puppets, and Babies, and other Trinkets and Baubles for Children to play with, and every thing else that brings in profit, be it never so vile, never so contemptible; nor is their trade limited to particular places, but is driven in all parts of the world, by Land and by Sea, by Corresponds, and Factories. 43. Sowers of Discord. There is not a City or kingdom where they are established, wherein they have not caused dangerous Commotions, so considerable in some parts, that they have troubled the Church; as at Venice, at Paris and in other places: the worst is, the Divisions they have sown, have taken such root that 'tis probable they will continue to the end of the world. 44. Building still higher, but not able to attack a height equal to your desires. Were this understood of the buildings of the I●suites it were literally true their edific●s being always the highest, and a league before you come to a Town, the first thing in view, are the towers of their Chapels, the galleries on their Houses, and the walls of their Churches, but yet they arrive not at the height they pretend to, for God resisteth the proud, and gives not Grace but to the lowly. 45. But now you are fallen as Simon Magus, etc. Here ends the Prophecy of St. Hildegard, which shows the fall and destruction of the Order the speak of, which we judge to be the society of the Jesuits by all these marks, which by this comment appear so proper to them. These are the words of that Pious Bishop. There is none but will acknowledge, that if we would search further into the interessed and ambitious conduc● of this Society since his time, in excusing the grossest sins; seizing other men's goods, turning away the people from their true Pastors, oppressing honest men, and for destruction of Bishops, we might give you a more ample explication of the Prophecy, it being easy to prove, that this Society is estranged from God proportionably to its prodigious growth, and the grandeur whereof they are so jealous, hath served only to verify that remarkable expression of the Royal Prophet; The presumption of them that hate thee, increaseth ever more and more. The Conclusion of the Divine Professors at Paris in their ordinary Convocation, held Decemb. 1. 1554. THe first day of December, Anno Dom. 1554. The sacred faculty of Theology at Paris, having heard the Mass of the Holy Ghost solemnly sung in the Chapel of the College of Sorbon, was then the fourth time assembled by oath, to determine of two Bulls, said to have been granted by two Popes, Paul 3. and julius the 3. unto those who affect the name of the Society of jesus, which Bulls, the Parliament of Paris by their Usher sent on purpose, committed to the view and examination of the said faculty, the tenor whereof followeth: And first of the Bull of Paul 3. Then of the Bull of jul. 3. But before this Faculty would begin to treat of a matter of so great weight, all, and singular the Masters thereof made open & public profession that they would not think, much less, decree or attempt any thing against the Authority and Power of the Pope; but as they and every of them, as obedient Children have always acknowledged and confessed, so they now do sincerely, faithfully and willingly acknowledge and confess the Bishop of Rome Sovereign Vicar of Jesus Christ, and Universal Pastor of the Church, to whom Christ gave the fullness of Power, whom all persons of either Sex are bound to obey, to reverence his Decrees, and every one in his place ought to defend and observe: But forasmuch as all men, especially Divines aught to be ready to give satisfaction to every one that demands it in matters relating to the Faith, manners and edifying of the Church, the said faculty held themselves obliged to satisfy the demand, command and request of the said Court. Therefore, all the Articles of both Bulls having been often read, repeated and understood, and according to the greatness of the subject, many months, days and hours, solemnly and most diligently discussed and examined, the said faculty, with unanimous consent, but deepest reverence and humility leaving the whole matter to the correction of the Apostolic See, then at length past this judgement. This new Society claiming peculiarly to itself an unusual appellation of the Name of jesus, so licentiously and promiscuously admitting any persons though wicked, lawless and infamous, differing nothing from secular persons in outward habit, in censure, in saying privately, or singing publicly in the Church the Canonical hours, in Cloisters and Silence, in choice of meats and of days, in Fasts and other various Laws and Ceremonies, whereby the States of Religion are distinguished and preserved; having so many and various privileges, indulgences, and liberties granted it, especially in the administration of the Sacrament, of Penance and the Eucharist, and that without difference of places or persons, and also in the office of preaching, reading and teaching, in prejudice of the Ordinaries and Hierarchical Order, and in prejudice of other▪ Orders of Religion, yea of Princes and Temporal Lords against the privileges of Universities; Lastly, to the great grievance of the People, seems to violate the honour of Monastic Religion, enervates the studious, pious, and most necessary exercise of virtues, abstinences, ceremonies and austerities, and gives occasion to Apostatise freely from other Religious Orders, withdraws the obedience and subjection due to the Ordinaries, unjustly deprives Lords Spiritual and Temporal of their Rights, induceth disturbance in Civil and Ecclesiastical Policy, many quarrels among the people, many suits, differences, contentious aemulations, and various schisms; All these things therefore, and others, having been diligently examined, and throughly weighed, This Society seems in the matter of Faith dangerous and to tend to the disturbance of the Peace of the Church, to the subversion of Monastic Religion, and more for destruction then for aedification. Remonstrances of the Court of Parliament of Paris to King Henry the 4th, upon the Re-establishment of the Jesuits, made by the Prime Precedent M. de H●rlay, in 1604. SIR, YOur Court of Parliament having deliberately considered of your Letters-Patents for Re-establishing within some places of their jurisdiction the Priests and Scholars of the College of Clermont, assuming the Name of Jesuits, hath ordained that humble remonstrance be made to your Majesty, and charged me to represent some particulars, importing▪ in our judgement the good of your affairs, and the public safety (which depends on the preservation of your person) as the considerations which have stayed, us from proceeding to the verification; and before I descend to the particular points, I am to render your Majesty their humblest thanks for the Honour you have been pleased to do them, in that you have vouchsafed these Remonstrances should be made by word of mou●h, whereby your indulgence and goodness to us appears so much the more worthy of praise, as it differs from the austerity of the first Emperors of Rome, who gave not their subject's access to their persons, but ordered all demands and petitions to be presented writing. The establishment of those of this Order, who call themselves Jesuits, in this Kingdom, hath been judged so pernicious to this Estate, that all the Orders Ecclesiastical opposed their reception; and the S●●bon declared that this Society was introduced for destruction, not for edification; and afterwards in the assembly of the Clergy in Septemb. 1561. where the Archbishops and Bishops were present, and the Cardinal of Tournon Precedent, this Society was approved of, but with so many clauses and restrictions, that had they been pressed to observe them, 'tis probable they had soon changed their abode. They were received but upon Provisa, and by arrest of the year 1564. were prohibited to take the name of Jesuits, or Society of jesus; notwithstanding this, they have not forborn to take that illegal Name, and exempt themselves from all powers Ecclesiastical and Secular: To re-establish them would increase their authority, and render their condition better than ever. This judgement was so much more worthy of your Court of Parliament, in that all your people and Religious Orders held it necessary to retain them with caution, to put a stop to the licentiousness of their actions then too great, which they foresaw would increase to the prejudice of the public, and produce greater mischiefs than could then be discovered. And as they vow universal obedience to the Pope, so the propositions in their doctrine are uniform, that they acknowledge no Superior but the Pope, to whom they swear fealty and obedience in all things, and hold it an undoubted maxim, That he hath power to Excommunicate Kings, and that a King excommunicate is but a Tyrant, that his people may Rise against him, that all the inhabitants of his Realm, who are in any the meanest Ecclesiastical Orders, what crime soever they commit cannot be judged traitors, for that they are not his subjects, nor under his jurisdiction; so that all ecclesiastics are exempt from the secular power, and without fear of punishment may lay bloody hands on sacred persons. This they write, and impugn the opinion of those who hold the contrary propositions. Two Spanish Doctors of Law, having written that Clerks were subject to the Power of Kings and Princes, one of the prime men of the Society writ against them, alleging, that as the Levites under the Old Testament were exempt from all secular powers, so are Clerks by the New. Your Majesty will not approve of these Maxims, they are too false and erroneous: Therefore they that hold them and will abide in your Realm, must publicly abjure them in their Colleges; if they do it not, will you permit them to stay? they will subvert the foundations of your Power and Authority-Royall: if they do it, will you believe that by shifting places, they can lay down and take up again a Doctrine which is part of their Religion, good for Rome, and good for Spain, but quite contrary for France, which rejecteth that the others receive? if they say they can do it by secret dispensation, what assurance can you have of men nourished in a profession which by change and diversity of place becomes good and bad? This Doctrine is common to them all, wherever they are, and make such progress in your Kingdom, that it will at last slip into the most reserved Societies. At their establishment they had no greater adversary than the Sorbonne, which at present favours them, by reason of that multitude of young Divines, who have studied in their Colleges. Other Scholars will do the like; and will in time be advanced, and may be admitted into the chief Offices in your Parliaments, holding the same Doctrine, withdrawing themselves from your obedience, permitting the loss of all the Rights of your Crown, and Liberties of the Church of France, and judging Treason committed by a Churchman not punishable by your Laws. We have been so unhappy as to have seen in our days the effects of their instructions upon your sacred person; Barriere (I tremble Sir when I pronounce that word) was instructed by Varade the jesuit, and confessedly had taken the Sacrament, upon the Oath he had administered him for murdering you. Having failed in his enterprise, others raised the courage of that little Serpent, who performed in part what was conspired. Gingnard the jesuit wrote books to justify the Parricide of the late King, and confirm the Proposition condemned in the Council of Constance. Why should not we fear when we think upon these mischievous Acts of disloyalty, that they may be too easily renewed? If we must pass our days in continual fear to see your life in danger, what repose can we find in our own? Were it not impious to foresee the danger and mischief, yet draw it so near you? were not this to plunge ourselves into the depth of misery, and not to desire to survive the ruin of the State which as we told you already is at no greater distance than of the length of your life. Thanks be to God, Sir, for the mutual Amity between you and the Pope; God preserve you long in your Throne, and him in his Charge. But if age or infirmity shorten his days, and his Successor ill affected to your Crown, should insheath against you his spiritual Sword, as his Predecessors have done against other Kings of France and N●varre, what regret would it be to your Subjects to see in the midst of us so many enemies of your Estate, and Conspirators against your Majesty, as against that of the late King of blessed memory? how dreadful would it be to behold them in the bowels of the Realm, who have been the Authors and principal Ministers of the Rebellion in his Reign, and not guiltless of his murder? They say, they ought to be no more charged with past faults than other Orders and Companies which have failed no less than they. But it may be said to their prejudice, that though fault may be found in other Orders and Societies, yet it hath not been universal. The companies were divided, and all the members did not withdraw themselves from the obedience due to your Majesty, but those of their Society have continued united and close-linked in their rebellions, insomuch that not only not one of them stood on your part, but were all most partial for the ancient enemies of your Crown, used the advantage of being in your Country to act more maliciously against your interest: Otho one of their Society being chosen for chief by the 16 Conspirators. And if I may be allowed to interweave among our own a passage taken from foreign affairs, it shall be that lamentable one in the History of Portugal. When the King of Spain attempted the usurpation of that Kingdom, all the Orders of Religion stood firm in the obedience due to their King, the Jesuits only deserted him to advance the Dominion of Spain, and caused the death of two thousand Friars, and other ecclesiastics, for which they had a Bull of absolution. Their Doctrine and Deportment in time passed caused that when De Chastel rose against you, there followed an Arrest as well against him as against those of their Society condemned by your mouth. An Arrest which we have consecrated to the memory of the happiest miracle of our time; judging from thence, that if they continued to bring up Youth in that mischievous Doctrine, and Damnable instruction, your life could not be in safety, which made us pass over those formalities which oblige us to judge of Causes in our Conusance by regular instances, which we postposed to the safety of the public, by sentencing them who being peculiarly subject to the Jurisdiction of your other Courts, might in ordinary cases have claimed exemption from ours, But We had not any malice, envy or ill will against them in general or particular; if we had, God had punished us for being their Judges, though the atrocity of the Crime, and the affection we had for your Majesty's preservation for the future, invited us to give this Arrest, though executed within the Jurisdiction of the Parliament of Roven and Dijon, by your commandment, and met with no resistance from any but them, who were not well settled in their obedience to your Majesty, and could not but with difficulty part with their ill will and disaffection to your Government. They complain by their writings that the whole Society ought not to be charged with the faults of three or four: But their enormities are such, that had they been reduced to the condition of those, called the Humble Friars, they had not had just occasion to complain: one Friar of that Order had plotted only the Assassinate of Cardinal Borrom●o about thirty years since, and the whole Order was suppressed, and for ever abolished by Pope Pius the fifth, pursuant to a resolution of the College of Cardinals, notwithstanding all the instance of the King of Spain to the contrary: our judgement is not so severe, if they say there is no comparison between their Order, and that of the Humbled Friar's theirs being far greater, we shall tell them that there is less comparison between a Cardinal and the greatest King of the world, exalted far higher above a Cardinal than their Order above the meanest that may be: That the Humbled Friars were in less fault than they, for one only of them was author of the Assassinate of the Cardinal, but they all are guilty of your parricide by means of their instruction. We do therefore most humbly beseech you, that as you approved of the arrest so justly given, and then necessary to deter so many traitors from conspiring against you, so it may please you to maintain it, and cast your eye back on the danger we then were in to see the life of our Common Father taken away, which is dearer to us than our own, and we could not but expect the shameful reproach of disloyalty and ingratitude; did we not keep in perpetual memory the danger you were in, since 'tis you have restored us our lives, our peace, and our estates. T●e remembrance of the past aught to serve us for precaution to take such Order that we be not for want of foresight buried in the abyss of a second shipwreck. I cannot omit a particular petition on the behalf of the university that you would have pity and compassion for it, which cannot but dread the consequences that may ensue upon the admission of so pernicious an Order as those we have spoken of. These are in short our humble Remonstrances and Reasons that have stayed us from causing your letters to be published, fearing lest we might be justly reproached to have proceeded with too much facility to the verification. Extracts out of the Book entitled, An Image of the first age of the Society of the Jesuits; wherein is seen that spirit of pride and self-esteem that reigns in this Society, even to extravagance. THere need not any great researches to evidence that the Jesuits practise those maxims of pride they teach other men. That one book they composed to give the world an image and representation of their Society, is sufficient to demonstrate that ambition, vanity and presumption, inspire men, with nothing which these fathers believe not allowable, and that the desire of Honour and Glory they take for the object of their conduct in all things, hath transported them even to the utmost extravagances. The Society is the fiery chariot of Israel, a troop of burning and shining Angels. The Society, say they, is that fiery chariot of Israel, which sometimes made Elisha weep over that in which he ascended, and that now by the particular favour of God, this and the other world rejoice to see it brought back in the necessities of the Church; wherein if you inquire for Armies and Soldiers which every day multiply by new victories their triumphs of the militant Church, you will find them in this society, being a choice Troop of Angels, who in Animal forms execute in this warfare the desires of their Sovereign head, Lib. 3. Orat. 1. Pag. 401. As the Angels illustrated with the brightness of the Divinity shine as streams of light and perfection; so the Companions of jesus imitating the purity of Angels are closely united to their Origin, that is, to God, from whom they derive those quick and ardent motions, those clear and bright rays of virtue, losing all impurity of pleasures in that furnace of Sovereign and most chaste love that consumes them, and attaining such degrees of clarity and perfection, that they have sufficient, not only to trim their own lamps, but to communicate to others a light mingled with heat, being no less illustrious by the splendour of their virtues than divinely inflamed by the ardour of charity, ibid. They are all eminent in learning and wisdom, 'tis the Society of the Perfect. They are Angels like St. Michael in their combats against heretics, like Gabriel in the conversion of infidels, like Raphael in the consolation of Souls, and conversion of sinners by their Sermons and Confessions▪ they all express as much promptitude and fervency to confess and catechise the poor and the ignorant as to govern the consciences of great Men and of Princes, and are all no less famous for their learning and wisdom, than those who direct and govern those Princes; So that we may say of the Society, what Seneca said in his 33. Ep. that there is inequality when eminent things are rare and remarkable, but that a tree is not admired where all others of the forest are of equal height. And here cast your eyes which way you please you shall not discern any thing which would not be eminent above others, were it not placed among such as are of equal height, Lib. 3. Orat. 1. Pag. 402. We cannot doubt now, but it was in their favour, as themselves assure us, that the Abbot joachim prophesied, That at the end of the world there should be a Religious Order composed of Perfect men, who should imitate the life of Christ and his Apostles. These good Fathers are doubtless the same, for they are almost all perfect, and all so eminent in the Art of governing consciences, as they call it, that what is rare elsewhere is so common amongst them, that excellence loses its lustre, because it is common, and that miracles are not admired, because ordinary with them. Sure Avila and St. Francis de Sales ne'er thought of this Society, when they said, that we may be to seek a good Director of conscience among a thousand, since there is so great a number in this Order, that even those who confess the people are as learned, and as wise as those that confess Princes, that whereas else where we may be to seek one good Director among ten thousand, we shall hardly find one bad among ten thousand of these Fathers, being all good and excellent, and numerous beyond imagination, and all as able as the Confessors of the great men of the world. O multitude of Sages! which is the health of the Universe? they are all as ready and servant to confess a poor man, or instruct an insant, as to govern the consciences of Princes. O multitude of Saints! O disinteressed charity! O seraphic zeal, the Glory of Christianity! They are all Lions, Eagles, Heroes, choice men, thunderbolts of war, born with helmets on their heads, every one worth an Army. Admire you the courage of undertaking in one of these Fathers? They are all masculine persons, or rather generous, Lions, not dismayed at any danger, slighting with constancy all misadventures: Paleness and fear prevail not upon them; you shall see these Heroes receive with undaunted force of spirit, for the cause of God and Religion, all the tempests and storms of heaven, in the midst of fire, thunders and lightnings. After the example of the Apostles, whose lives and travels they strive to imitate and represent; they share among themselves the whole earth, and distribute the spoils and victories between them. The spirit of the Lord animates these new Samsons— They are of the Spirits of Eagles, seizing with a marvellous swiftness, like those birds on the prey at greatest distance, Lib. 3. Orat. 2. Pag. 402. & seq. All they of the Society are born, as 'tis said of some children, with Helmets on their heads, because they are to be exposed to the point of the sword, to the buffets of Fortune, and all the injuries of their enemies. Prol. Heros. Societ. Immortal God what choice men, what thunderbolts of war, what a flower of Chivalry, what pillars, what tu●ilar Angels and protectors of the Church are they? I dare affirm every one of them capable of the greatest matters, and worth an Army; for maugre the rage of the Enemy, by the favour of heaven, and with the applause of all the world, one of this Society carries the victory against so many Enemies, that you would swear, a complete Army not capable easily to overcome. judge from hence 〈◊〉 at the Society joining their Forces in an entire body can do. This Society, (shall I say of men or Angels) what ruins, what massacres, of errors and vices will it not procure? what succours will it not afford the Church when attacked? But why say I, shall afford? We may rather say, what hath she not afforded? As we may believe foretold by the Oracle of the Royal Prophet, Psal. 67. since the Hebrew interpreters, Arias montanus Pagninus, and Genebrard, instead of Your living creatures render it your Society, your Congregation, your Elect, your Troop shall inhabit the La●d; and the Chaldee Paraphrase bathe expressed it, You have prepared an army of your Angelical troops, To do good to the poor of God. I take this passage as if the Prophet inspired by God had had a near view of the Society of jesus in his visions, Pag. 410. These Fathers are so prophetical, that they are not content to speak magnificently of their Society by studied discourses in prose and verse, but in imitation of the Prophets of the Old Testament they express themselves by actions and representations that are obvious to the sight, and dazzle our eyes. This was seen in the City of Goa, when to celebrate their Secular year, they caused a triumphant Chariot to be drawn, wherein the Society was represented with all the pomp and splendour they could devise: 'Tis true, this Chariot was not lift up in the air as that 〈◊〉 Elias, but in recompense of that defect it was viewed and admired by a great number of persons, and trilled through the town with the acclamations of the beholders. They went not to heaven to seek Angels to guide it, that had been too troublesome, they chose them among their Scholars, who became Angels by changing their habits: these young Angels provided of white robes and wings of all colours were employed to draw some of these good Fathers in the chariot for a spectacle to the whole City. This triumph was accompanied with delicate music, which ceased not till silenced by a more masculine, composed of the sounds of Drums and Trumpets, which sounded an Alarm and Charge when they came to any narrow lane; for there they must engage the Devils, who placed there of purpose pretended to stop the chariot, and hinder the triumphant Society to finish their carreire: But as the Society is ever victorious, so these combats ended always to their advantage; and the Devils being chosen, as well as the Angels, out of their Scholars, were of intelligence with them, not to make long or eager resistance. While they thought nothing, but the pleasure of their divertisement, an accident which all their prophetic prudence could not foresee, marred all their mirth, and was an ill omen to their proceedings: One of the wheels of the Chariot fastened in a hole whence all the virtue of these Elias' who were in it, and the strength of the Angels that drew it could not get it out, though the poor Angels strained hard to sair it, but in vain; then, as their custom is in extremities, to make use of any thing to serve their turn, they were necessitated to invoke the aid of of their Devils to pull out their Chariot, which they did, but not without the laughter of the spectators, and scandal to many who begun to say publicly, That the devils had at least as great a share in the triumph of the Jesuits as the Angels. He that is really virtuous, however things happen, continueth so still: But when one is not in reality an Elias or a Saint, but goes to heaven only by emblem, and in a machine all is in disorder when the machine fails: This may be confirmed by another accident at the same time, and in the same City. One of these Fathers praising the Society in his Sermon, compared it to a clock which is under Regulation, and regulates all other things; but as he enlarged magnificently upon the subject, the Clock of their house by misfortune struck above a hundred, and by the irregularity caused such disorder in the auditory, that they could not forbear mocking the Preacher and the Society, which they publicly said was as just and regular as their Clock. The Society is a great miracle like the world, and therefore needs not do miracles. The principal and greatest miracle of the Society, is, the Society itself; There is not in the world a m●racle greater than the world: The same may be said of the Society, as being a little world of is self; This great body of the Society moves and turns by the will of one man; to move it is easy, but to trouble it difficult: He that sees a multitude of men flourishing in age, excellent in parts, and eminent for their vigour and vivacity of spirit, conducted and governed so long in the Career of Virtue, and learning for the service and advantages of others without any interruption in their course, and upon examination d●●h not judge it the principal and greatest miracle, let him not expect another from the Society. 'Tis my opinion, that as in the world there is no greater or other miracle than the world itself, so there cannot be found in the Society a greater miracle than the Society. Think it not strange then if the Jesuits do not any particular miracles as other Orders of Religion in the first age of their institution have done, and expect not the same from Ignatius their Founder, who did no miracle at the foundation of the Order, as Ribadeneiro in the first edition of his life assures, whereas other Founders have done so many, since the Society is a public and perpetual miracle, as the Creation and preservation of the world. I know it may be said nevertheless, that the Foundation, Propagation, and subsistence of the Church over all the Earth in the time of Paganism was much more miraculous in the first ages, than the foundation and extent of the Society of Jesuits among Christians, and that the Church did millions of miracles by the Saints and Bishops who succeeded the Apostles, which by consequence were so much more desirable in the Society of Jesuits, as it is an Apostolical Order, (if they interpret of it the Prophecy of Abbot joachim) destined for conversion of Heretics, insidels, and ill Christians, to which miracles would be very subservient: But we must believe that though no miracles are to be found amongst them, as they say here, were not to esteem them less Apostolical or less Holy, for these sixty or eighty years' last passed since the death of their first Fathers, because their Society is a miracle of miracles, and that though the Orders of St. Benedict, St. Dominick, and St. Francis did so many miracles in the first age of their institution, it proceeded not from their sanctity alone, as if it were greater than that of the Jesuits, who are (as they say) A Society of Angels, of new Apostles, new Samsons, full of the Spirit of the Lord, and the most perfect of all Orders; but because God would supply the defects of those Societies in general by the particular miracles of their individuals, whereas the default of particular Jesuits who work not miracles is recompensed & made up by the general miracle of the Society itself, and the imperfection of all the members in particular by the universal perfection of the whole body. That the Society is the Oracle on the breast of the High Priest who decides infallibly thereby. When I consider the square form of the Oracle, I discover the Society figured thereby as spread into the four parts of the world: And when I behold the three rows of four precious stones to a row, whereof it consisted; (These good Fathers are deceived, for according to the Text they ought to have said four rows of three precious stones to each row) it represents to me the divers works of several of this Society which transoend Nature, but are confirmed by the Doctrine of Truth: When I call to mind that this Ornament was carried on the breast of the High Priest of the jews, methinks I behold this little Society wrought in as it were on the breast of a more holy Pontife: The Church will now be offended with these expressions, because she loves the Society, not only more than she ought, but more than indeed the Society deserves. N●● will other Orders of Religion wonder as it, since this binder's not but that they continue as always in the Church, what the Table, the Manna, and the Rod, those three Oracles of the Ancient Religion, and instruments of so many prodigious miracles were in the Ark of the Covenant, Lib. 5. c. 5. p. 622. This sublime Elegy of this admirable Society obliges us to render it extraordinary honours, for can men say more, than that it is the Oracle of the Doctrine of Truth, which the High Priest of Jesus Christ carries on his breast, and on his heart, as the Scripture saith in Exodus? It was called The Oracle of judgement, because as Vatablus and other Interpreters say, The High Priest never gave judgement in matters of importance, but he had this Ornament on his stomach; and as others say, Because it contained the judgement and Decree of God, that the High Priest should be odorned with a sovereign doctrine, and most perfect accomplished purity of manners. So it may be believed with reason, that the Society of Jesuits so straight united to the Pope, is the Oracle of his judgement, being as eminent in Knowledge as Sanctity; Nor may men admire any more that they maintain the Pope infallible, provided he first consult the Divines and Scholastical Doctors, among whom they esteem themselves with good right to hold the first rank, as master● of the world, the most knowing of mortals, the teachers of all Nations, the Apollons, the Alexanders of divinity, and the Prophets come down from heaven, who deliver Oracles in ecumenical Counsels; and so sharing infallibly with the Pope, on whose heart (they tell us here) their Society rests as the Oracle of Doctrine and Truth, which he ought to consult in affairs of moment, as the High Priest of the jews never consulted the Deity, but clothed with this Ornament; so that we are to conclude, that there is just cause to believe the Pope infallible, when he takes advice of this famous Oracle of Truth, or doth any thing in favour of the Jesuits, as in the name of the Company of jesus granted them by Paul the 3d. at their desire, with many extraordinary and unheard of privileges, as they themselves testify, when they say, That the Pope's having said in their Bulls, That this Society hath been raised by the Providence of God; their judgements in these things are not subject to error, because it seems God gives his Oracles by him: But the Pope's infallibility is subject to contest when he censures the Books of three famous Jesuits, Poza, B●uny, and Cellot, with such brands of errors and heresies condemned, that he makes their Books of the number of prohibited ones, so dangerous and pernicious, that they ought not to be read or imprinted; and then when he darts the entire thunderbolt of Anathema against the Book of Rabardean the jesuit, saying, That the Sa●●ed Congregation having maturely examined the propositions contained in his Book, hath judged that there are many rash, scandalous, offensive to devout ears, seditious, impious, entirely destructive to the Papal Power, contrary to the immunities and liberties of the Church, approaching very near the heresies of the Innovators, erroneous in the Faith, and manifestly heretical. For there is cause to believe, that the Pope consults not his Oracle, when he acteth against it, and attributes to the famous Authors of this August Society, falsities, impieties, and heresies approaching near those of the Innovators: And why should not the Disciples of the Jesuits, piously believe, that it were easy for this High Priest on these occasions to have seen false visions, than that these Oracles of Doctrine and Truth should become liars. Now me thinks these good Fathers ought to reserve their humility, and modesty for some occasion, and not call her the Little Society, when they tell us, their Society is the Oracle of the Sovereign Pontife, and spread through the four parts of the world, Eulogies that denote her of the greatest grandeur, excellence and extent of all Societies in the Universe: But it may be, that when they say, This Society fastened on the breast of the Pope, they would qualify her with the title of Little, lest men should think she might lie heavy on his stomach, and be a burden to him because of her greatness. As for what they add, that the Church loves their Society more than she ought, or the Society deserves; 'tis a modesty not to be approved, for that in Truth the Church ought entirely to love those who are not only the Restorers of the Life of Christ and the Apostles among men, A Society of Angels and Heroes, but are besides the Oracle of Doctrine and Truth, which he who represents her Head and her Spouse carries on his breast; the owes them not love only, but respect, Truth being venerable of itself, and the Oracles of Truth deserving a double Reverence. As to that they insinuate of purpose to sweeten the Envy of other Orders against their Society, That other Orders of Religion are in the Church, what the Manna, the Tables, and Aaron's Rod were in the Ark of the Covenant; and that they call these three things, the three Oracles of the Ancient Religion, to make the Title they assume of the Oracle of Doctrine and Truth more passable and currant; I fear the able persons of other Orders will believe those good Fathers do but jeer them, making them believe that these three things were sometimes Oracles, which they never were but continued shut up in the ark without use in the external pa●● of religious Worship, whereas this Oracle of Judgement, Doctrine and Truth was the most august and necessary Ornament of the High Priest, without which he could not execute any function of Priest and Supreme Judicature: It seems by this, that the Jesuits would reduce other Orders of Religion, to continue locked up in their Monasteries, as relics in their Chests, and as the Manna, Tables and Rod were in the Ark, and keep for themselves all the honourable employments of the Church which can have no favourable construction among other Orders; most men, even those who make profession of piety, not loving to be mocked with false titles of honour pretended to be given them by those who assume the true and most illustrious to themselves: But though the patience and charity of good men of other Orders were sufficient to bear this mockery with simplicity, it would not excuse the malignity of the Jesuits in offering the indignity. The Example of Bishops who preferred that of the Society to their Character and Titles of Honour. A Bishop in 1602. Declared publicly, That he gloried more in the title of a brother of our Society, than in that of a Bishop, and esteemed it a greater Ornament than his Cross and his Mitre, lib. 3. c. 7. pag. 363. Not long since a Bishop of the Realm of Naples, who in his life-time had more love for his Mitre than for the Society, said at his Death, O holy Society, which I have not sufficiently known until now, nor deserved to know thee, thou surpassest the Pastoral Crosier, the Mitres, the Purple of Cardinals, the Sceptres, the Empires and Crowns of the world. Lib. 5. c. 10. p. 667. An excellent Document for our Lords the Bishops, Archbishops and Cardinals, if they love their Churches and Dignities more than the company of Jesuits, that is, if they are more BishopS, Archbishops and Cardinals than Jesuits. When they appear before God▪ Christ will not ask them whether they have loved their sheep, whether they have fed and guided them aright, and laboured, for the good of the Church, but whether they have loved his Companions the Jesuits, upheld the interest, and favoured the erterprises of this Little Society, of these Little and Beloved Benjamins. A Bishop of France, who knew the Jesuits better than this Prelate of Italy, and was endued with a more Episcopal science, told these Fathers, That there was great difference between the Order of Bishops and theirs, for that there is no doubt that the former was of an holy institution, and its Authority necessary for the preservation of the Church, though all were not Saints who were invested with the dignity; but as for the Jesuits, without examining particulars, the whole body was of no value, it being more than probable th●● the spirit of the world and politic respects had contributed more to their establishment, than the Spirit of Christ; and that the Good Ignatius brought into it, was presently destroyed by the interessed Ambition of his Successors. Three great Archbishops of Malines, who possessed that dignity immediately one after the other, and died reputed Saints, had thoughts very different from those of the Italian Bishop: For the ancientest of the three speaking of the Jesuits, said, These men shall flourish at first, but afterwards become a Curse to all People; his Successor added, These men shall trouble the Church: The last Propheeyed of them in these words, These men shall become as the dung of the Earth. To conclude, the last Bishop of Cahors lately deceased, whose piety was famous throughout the world, declared what value he had for the Jesuits, having desired the Abbot of Terrier, Grand Vicar of Alby, present at a fit of sickness which brought this Prelate almost to his end, being about four months before his death to give some advice on this subjects to the Bishops his friends, whereof the Abbot acquitted himself, having written to M. de Pannez, in these words, Aug. 22. 1659. My Lord of Cahors is of opinion that the Jesuits are a Flail, and ruin to the Church, so that he believed, that neither your Lordship nor any other Bishop faithful to God ought to employ them; and hath charged me to tell you and others who tender the safety and advantage of their Dioceses, that you ●ught not to admit them into your houses, for that gives them credit, and gains them Authority with the people. The admirable Conformity of the Society of Jesuits with the Church. IN that proud Portraiture on the frontispiece of this book, the Society is represented as a young Virgin with three Angels ove● her head, Crowning her with the three Crowns of Virginity, Learning and Martyrdom: On her right side she hath an Angel sounding a Trumpet, and saying, Ignatius hath accomplished 100 years: On the left side another Angel sounding also a Trumpet, and saying, Let him fill the whole world, Totum impleat Orbem. She hath the name of jesus on her breast, and saith, Not unto us Lord, not unto us give the Praise; Non nobis, Domine, non nobis: In her right hand she hath a Pen, in her left a flaming Cross, at her right foot Time, and at (I say not under) her left foot a Mitre and a Cardinals Cap. On the brimms of the Picture are six Emblems answerable to the six books of this work, whereof the five first representing the Society in General, show her resemblance with the Church. The first Emblem, is The Name of jesus with the Sun and Moon Crescent under it, with this Inscription above, The Society Derived of jesus; and below this, She hath all that the Sun hath. The second Emblem is a Globe of Light with this Inscription above, The Society spread over all the World; and below this, She shines in all the World. The third Emblem is a Moon in the middle of the Night with this device above, The Society doing good to all the World; and below this, She preserves all things in the midst of night. The fourth Emblem is a Moon Eclipsed by the interposition of the Earth between it and the Sun with these words above, The Society suffering evil from the World, and below this Eclipsed by the opposition of the Earth. The fifth Emblem is a Sun, Moon, and shadow of the Earth with these words above, The Society more glorious by persecution, and below these, Fairer for the shadow. These five Emblems are common to the Church with the Jesuits. The sixth regards the Province of Flanders in particular, being The Lion in the Zodiac, with these words, And this the Belgic Lion Goes about. At the basis of one of the Columns is a Palm, to show she shall flourish as that Tree, and on the other side, a Phoenix to show she shall flourish like it; according to Tertullia's interpretation, who renders the Greek Septuagint, She shall flourish as a Phoenix, But 'tis a mistake from the equivocal term Phoenix, which in Greek signifies a Phoenix and Palmtree, though the Hebrew word signifies only a Palm, and all other interpreters have rendered it accordingly. 'Tis to be observed, that they cite Ulysses Aldronandus a famous Author, who hath treated of Birds, because he saith there are many Phoenixes, quoting his words to that effect, that their Society may be taken for a Company of Phoenixes. At the foot of the Picture are two little Angels, one holding a Glass with these words▪ Without spot; which may be also said of th● Church, being termed to be without spot o● wrinkle; the other carrying these words written, Without Money: The one denoting their Chastity, the other their Poverty. At the end of the abridgement of this Volumn, they have painted the Image of a little Jesus, framing a Ring on an Anvil, which he gives in Affiance of his marriage to the Society (which he espouses) as a pledge of its eternal duration, with these words, To give the Ring of Eternity for a Covenant of an everlasting Marriage. In the first book they represent their Order ●s a new foundation of the Church, St. Peter ●nd Ignatius were at Rome, St. Paul and Xave●u● among the Nations. Twelve Apostles, ten Jesuits, 72 Disciples, 〈◊〉 Jesuits by the first Bull of Paul 3. lib. 2. ●p. 2. As the virtue of the Holy Ghost was shed on the ●ostles, so was it on St. Ignatius newly reckoned with God after his conversion, with as great Earthquake, and equal fame, lib. 5. c. 5. P. 5. It is allowable therefore, if I mistake not, to ●ibu●e without Arrogance to the Society of ●s that Oracle which the Royal Prophet pub●●d in Zion the Church of jesus Christ. Very excellent things are spoken of thee, thou City God, the most High hath established thee, made thee immovable against all advers: ibid. It cannot be doubted but that the Society is exactly like the Church, if you consider further t●● persecutions she endures; and that we may say 〈◊〉 her, what St. Hillary said of the Church, th● it is her property to conquer when m●st beset wi●● Enemies, to clear her innocence best when accuse with most malignity, and to conquer when forsake by the World, lib. 5. cap. 1. p. 582. St. Jerome says of the Church, that it 〈◊〉 cress' by Persecutions, and is crowned by Ma● tyrdome; we may say the same of the Society, a● ask with Horace, What part of the World but ●et with our blood. Lib. 5. c. 4. ●. 619, 620. When I consider the great favours and bene● done by Kings and Popes to our Society, it appe● credible, that the Prophecy of Isaiah, which 〈◊〉 rejoice to see accomplished in the Christian Chur● belongs in some sense to the Society of Ies●● Kings shall be your Nursing Fathers, 〈◊〉 Queens your Nursing Mothers; ye shall 〈◊〉 the milk of Nations, and the Breasts of Kin● the Lord shall be your everlasting light, 〈◊〉 your God, your Glory; the days of my peony shall be as the days of a Tree, and the wo●● of their hands shall continue many Ages. ●●mit me to believe, that in this Prophecy Isaiah not only cast his thoughts on the Church and ●●ple of God, but upon Ignatius and his Fa●● the brethren of the Society, and their exce● works, lib. 5. Ora. 1. p. 686. jesus is to the Iesui●es what he is to ●h● Church, and fights for them as for Christianity▪ lib. 1. c. 4. p. 70. To prove the tru●h of this, they cite these words of St. Jerome on the 70th Psalm, Let us give thanks to Jesus our Chief, for he is our Captain who fighteth for us, and gains us the victory. I will endeavour to make it appear, that Iesu● hath showed to the World that foundation and propagation ●f the Society, is like an illustrious monument, to make his Name admirable, and rem●in to perpetuity for the declaration of his Glory. As Christ said to his disciples, that they should be hated of all men for his Names sake which is the Name of Christians, the whole Earth being then Pagan and Idolatrous, so they pretend they are hated and persecuted only for the name of Jesuits they bear, though all Europe be Christian and adores jesus Christ: And as jesus Christ is in the Vessel of the Church, they pretend he is also in the Vessel of their Society, being as they call it an Epitome of the Church within the Church: Lib. 4. c. 1. Our Fathers had recourse to God in tempests, being seized with the like fear as the Apostles when they ran to Christ asleep in the ship: But jesus is so in the Vessel of the Society, that as it was the Mariner's safety to have in his B●at Caesar and his fortune, so the name of jesus we bear is our assurance, though it be also the cause of our perils▪ he shall command the winds and the sea, and there shall be a calm: Lib. 4. p. 483. All these passages cited by these Fathers in their favour, are no solid proof that the Authors of holy Scripture and the Prophets spoke of them, but show their presumption and self-love in entertaining themselves with the thoughts of their excellencies, whereof they are so full that they see them in every thing: This is the cause they have so little respect for Holy Scripture, that they fear not to make it serve the desires of their heart, and to substitute themselves in the place of jesus Christ and the Church. They have reason to fear, lest by abusing the Word of God with so much indignity and insolence, they make themselves of the number of those of whom St. Paul in his 3d chap. of the 2d to Timothy saith, that having a form of godliness they deny the power thereof. The pre-eminence of Ignatius above Moses, the Apostles, and Founders of Religious Orders. One of the three Sermons made by the Dominicans at the Canonization of Ignatius, which the Jesuits have made theirs by translating it out of Spanish into French, by their F. Sollier, and have been censured by the Sorbonn, hath these expressions: We know that Moses with his Rod in his hand did great Miracles, in the Air, the Earth, Water, Rocks, and in all he thought good, to the drowning of Pharaoh and his who'e Army in the Red Sea. But it was the in●ffable Name of God, which Learned Tostatus Bishop of Aula says was graven in the Rod that wrought the Miracles: I was no great wonder then, that the Creatures seeing the Ordinances of God their Sovereign Lord and King, subscribed with his Name rendered him obedience: Nor is it to be marvelled, that the Apostles did s● m●ny Miracles, for that they wr●ught all in the Name of God, by the virtue and power he had given them, se●ling it with the Inscription, In my Name they shall cast out Devils, speak with new Tongues, etc. But that Ignatius with his Name in Paper, should work Miracles greater than Moses, and equal to the Apostles, that his Seal had so much authority, that the Crea●ures ●ave it quick and sudden obedience; 'tis this that makes him the subject of our greatest admiration. Upon which Article, the Sorbonn in their Censure printed in 1611. saith, that this manner of speech whereby the name of the Cr●atures seems equalled to that of Almighty God; and where Miracles are lessened and extenuated for having been wrought in the Name of God; lastly, where uncertain Miracles are preferred to those which ought to be held for Articles of Faith, is scandalous, erroneous, blasphemous and impious. And in the 91 page of the same Sermon: While Ignatius lived, his life and manners were so grave, so holy, and so elevated even in the opinion of Heaven, that none but Popes as St. Peter, Empresses as the Mother of God, some Sovereign Monarch as God the Father and the Son, had the happiness to enjoy a full Vision of it. Whereupon the Sorbon also hath declared, That this Assertion suggesting that God receives benefit by the Vision of a creature, is scandalous, and contains manifest heresy. In the third and fourth page of the 2d Sermon: Doubtless the Founders of other Religious Orders were sent in favour of the Church; But since these last day's God hath spoken to us by his Son Ignatius whom he hath established heir of all. Whereupon the Sorbon hath further declared, that the application of the Text of St. Paul, In these last days, literally to any other but Christ, is scandalous, erroneous, and ●avours of blasphemy and impiety. Proud Comparisons of the Founder's and General's of the Society with Emperors, Conquerors▪ and Great Princes of the World. They make an Apostrophe to Mutius Vit●●l●schi their General, and say, All Posterity shall know that you have been the first General in the end of the first Age, as Rome called their Emperors by the name of Augustus from the end of his time. Lib. 1. Dissert. 5. p. 17. They compare the union of the Jesuits to that of two Roman Emperors, and to that effect tell us of the Emperor Aurelian, where two Emperors are graven with the Sun above them, giving them both equal irradiation, with this Inscription, The agreement of the Caesars, comparing the concord of the Jesuits to that of Heath Princes. When Alexander had tamed the Horse called Bucepbalus, Philip his Father told him, that he must entertain thoughts worthy the Generosity of his heart, and by the power of Arms seek a Kingdom equal to his invincible courage, Macedon being too little for him. When Ignatius had so valiantly subdued the unruly passions of corrupt Nature, we have reason to believe that Christ stirred him up to undertake the greatest matters in the world; using the like expressions, and saying, Rome and Italy are too narrow for thy courage, Europe is not large enough, seek out new Realms, and new Worlds wherein to plant the Trophies of thy Religion. Lib. 1. c. 10. O●. 3. p. 118. The Mission which Christ gave his Apostles to subdue all the Earth was somewhat more effectual, but not expressed in such terms of Pride. But these Fathers are not ashamed to make the Saviour of the World, and great pattern of humility, to speak in Language suitable to their Arrogance and Presumption. They say further, That Ignatius had no need to imitate the Captain of the Hebrews, in commanding the Sun to stand still, that he might have time to complete his Victory, for he in the perpetual course of his illustrious and most glorious Victories, hath followed the Sun from East to West almost throughout the World; And having conquered himself, he had cause to hope to conquer the Universe. What could be said more of Christ? who saith in the Gospel, that he hath overcome the world; of whom the Church sings, that he hath subdued all the Earth, not by the edge of the sword, but the wood of the Cross, whom David compares in the 18 Psal▪ to the Sun, who sets out from one end of the Heavens, and continues his course to the end of it again, nothing being hid from the heat thereof. Were Ignatius at this day raised from the dead, his humility would be offended with words so full of vanity and pride. The Epitaph of Ignatius. You th●t by the felicity of wit, and excellence of conceit can represent in your fancies the images of Pompey the Great, Caesar or Alexander ●open your eyes t● truth, and you shall read on this M●●ble, that Ignatius was greater than all these Conquerors. Lib. 2. p. 180. The Epitaph of Xavier. Stay a while you Heroes, Great spirits, and Lovers. of virtue. You are not to do; or undertake any thing more, since Xavier is buried under this tomb: But I am deceived. There's nothing in a manner here of that Great Apostle of the East, courageous beyond nature, illustrious beyond imitation, admirable beyond envy, the companion of Jesus, the Son of Ignatius that immortal Angel in a mortal body. There's nothing here, I s●y, of him that could be corrupted, since he had not any thing subject to corruption, who subdued more people to the Church than the Romans and Greeks did to their Empires in several Ages. We may with good reason say to the Jesui●es in the words of Christ, 〈…〉 woe be to you Lawyers and Pharisees hypocrites▪ who build the tombs of the Prophets, and garnish ●he Sepulchers of he righteous. For methinks, they mock these Saints, when on the one hand they praise them to excess, to draw thence glory for themselves, and on the other hand follow another spirit and contrary Maxims: To show the difference between the conduct of the Jesuits and that of Xavier, it will be sufficient to report what themselves say of this Saint, that though he was Nuntio from the Pope, yet when he arrived at Goa, he went to prostrate himself at the feet of the Bishop, to inform him for what end the Pope and the King of Portugal had sent him into that Country; he presented to him, and left in his hands the Pope's Brieves, promising never to make use of his Authority as the Apostolical Nuntio, further than it should please the Bishop to allow, To which the Author of the history adds, that he always kept inviolable his custom of submitting to the Prelates of the Church, of what degree soever: These are the words of F. Daniel Bartoli, lib. 1. dell● 1. part. dell. 〈◊〉, della Comp. de jesus ●ell Asia. But the Jesuits, no otherwise qualified than as brethren of the Society, do every day exalt themselves against the power of Bishops, and pretend to preach and administer the Sacraments in spite of them, which hath obliged a great number of the best Bishops of France to interdict them. Vain and false Elegies of other Authors. Lessius, say they, hath gotten eternal reputation, not only by the works of his wit, but the renown of his Virtues, and was consulted as an Oracle from all parts of the world, Lib. 1. Dissert. 5. pag. 17. When Laine's spoke in the Council of Trent, for the Conception of the Virgin without Original Sin, the whole Council gave ear to him, not as a man speaking out of a Chair, but as a Prophet descended from heaven, for pronouncing of Oracles, declaring of mysteries, and publishing of secrets: And he by his eloquence preserved the Virgin from receiving a spot in the purity of her conception, and fetched but that stain she had received before by the opinion of many (he means the Dominicans) lib. 1. Or. 5. p. 139. 'Tis principally from Spain those great men issued, who by the excellence of their parts, and depth of their learning have extended the limits of Sacred knowledge, have been the Ornament of our age, and will be the admiration of posterity, lib. 11. c. 4. p. 211. He means Suarez, Vasquez, Molina, and others, to whom they may now add Escobar, Guimenius, etc. infamous for errors and ignorance, as the others celebrated for learning and knowledge. What shall I say of those Ramparts of sacred learning, Suarez and Vasquez? Who in the great heap of difficulties opposed to their scrutiny, and the vigour of their wit, believed, and with reason, that they could penetrate through all, and that nothing could be inaccessible to them? What vast thoughts had Cornelius de la Pierre who hath comprehended in his Commentaries all the Holy Scripture? What shall I say of Sanchez and Lessius, those men ●f knowledge, so pure and so perfect? they should have added Virginal and Maidenly, for Alegamb gives their knowledge that title of honour, lib. 5. c. 6. p. 644. S●arez whom the most knowing persons have not doubted to call the Universal M●ster of this Age, p. 438. It must be confessed, that there are in the Society of the Jesuits some knowing persons, but when they take occasion from thence to extol themselves above all the world, they give just cause of complaint, that the knowledge of those few serves only to blow up the rest with pride and vanity, even to the meanest conductors and ministerial officers, they all have great opinions of themselves, though no right to the praises of the Society; so that when they hear the magnificent Encomiums they give Vasquez, Suarez, and some others, they easily persuade themselves, that they are considerable members of so illustrious a body, and that one day they shall have their badge of dignity, and a more honourable place in the Records of the Society. Thei● vain and pr●●ended Conformity with jesus Christ. 'Tis not enough for the ambition of the Iesu●tes to compare their Society with the Church, the spouse of Christ, and to represent him working on an anvil, a ring to be given them in token of an indissoluble marriage with the Society; but all the great volumn of the Image of their first age, consists only of comparisons of themselves with Christ, making the resemblance to lie in Five points, which are the subjects of the five Books of that work, which they have abridged and placed in the beginning of their first Book, as followeth: 1. jesus Christ made himself of no reputation. Igna●ius descended of an Illustrious Family, was reduced to beg his bread. Hence sprang this little Society (so they call it here:) They persevered well in the humility of their Founder, when in China they quitted their ordinary habit and went as Gallants, to prevent, as they affirm, the contempt that attends a poor appearance. 2. jesus Christ increased in wisdom, in age, and in grace in the sight of God and of m●n. This is the Image of the Society Cr●scent; 'tis strange, that notwithstanding the knowledge men have of the irregularities of the Jesuits, they have vanity enough to think to persuade the world, that they exceed in virtue all their Predecessors; but whatever they say they cannot be believed without new Ideas of their first Fathers. 3. jesus Christ began to do and teach. This is the Image of the Society acting; and when they write of their continual labours; they write, In this thou approachest nearer to Christ, O Glorious Society, which hast produced works of such Grandeur: But what could be so horrible as the Idea we should have of this Society, if we were persuaded she hath acted and ordered her conduct according to those maxims which her Casuists have written and taught? 4. jesus suffered a shameful death. This is the image of the Society suffering, but he endured a little more, but boasted much less than these men do. 5. jesus Christ through suffering is passed into Glory. This is the image of the Society triumphant: It might be wished, these Fathers would not so much seek their Glory of men, that they might have a greater share in that of Christ, who in the Gospel hath forbidden us to seek our own Glory. When the Jesuits compare their Hero's▪ to alexander's, Hercules, Po●●ies and Caesars, the style is tolerable, though very ridiculous. 'Tis not very rare for men, even writers, to want judgement and common sense; but whatever these good Fathers say, they are too well known to be taken for Angels. Yet since they lift up their voice to heaven, and affect altogether to compare their Society to the Church, and themselves to the Apostles, and to Jesus Christ whom they look upon as their companion, it may do well to advertise the world how dangerous and irregular their passion is, which makes them use such extravagant expressions. They ought to remember that we cannot draw near to God but by humility, and that the way entirely to de●ace the small remainder we have of resemblance with him, is, not to acknowledge our distance from his Grandeur, his Holiness and his Goodness, and not to lay sufficiently to heart that we are really mere nothings as he is the Sovereign Omnipotent Essence. Pride being the first crime that corrupted Angels and Men, is also the most deeply rooted in our nature; so that there always remains in us an inclination to desire with our first Parents to be like the most High, and to make ourselves and the things we affect, Idols to be set up in the place of God. 'Tis true, that since the light of the Gospel, there have not appeared where Christ is adored, any persons so impudent to cause themselves to be worshipped as Gods, or that durst attribute that honour to any other man: But we see a shadow of this disorder in Christendom itself; for as soon as it falls out that we have a virtuous friend, because we dare not make him a God; yet this doth not restrain us from making him a Saint, and if we may be believed, the greatest in Paradise; and if it lie in our power, we extol him so high, that none but Christ shall be fit to compare with him: But this passion more easily spreads in communities and succeeds more happily; they cover it with the presence of the Glory of God, promoted by publishing holiness, which is no where so resplendent as in the Saints: They make it their devotion, and subject of their zeal to commend the members of the Society. One jesuit thinks he merits by praising another, and as that other is of his coat, so he agrees in the practice as well as profession of the same rule, and is his companion, his brother and other-self, obliged to barter Elegies, and make suitable returns for the commendations received: But it might have been affirmed, that the ambition of these Fathers had proceeded ●urther than themselves could have imagined, had they not taken such care to make it appear with a witness in the proud representation they have made of their company: Because there are amongst them some persons reputed holy and learned, they would impose on the world to have no other Idea of their Society, but that it is composed only of persons no less chaste and bright than the Angels, and have not a body but to ●ight and to suffer for jesus Christ. There is nothing on Earth, as they say, wherewith to compare this Holy Society, but the Church of Christ, with this difference, that the Church is obliged to continual mourning for the rareness of Virtue among the members thereof, and because the wheat is almost all covered with chaff, whereas in the Society there is only wheat without any chaff. The Church hath this advantage, that none can be saved but in her bosom; but though all that live there are called to salvation, yet few are saved, and chosen for heaven. And those few who are happy enough to be saved, and persevere to the end, must do it with much labour, and continual combats against their infirmities and imperfections the whole time of their life. They confess with St. Paul, they see no good thing in themselves, that the law of sin from which they are not entirely exempt, causes them often to do the ill they would not, as the weight of their corruption hinders them to do the good that they would; they acknowledge, that tho●gh they are enlightened with the Faith, their light is but small, and would be wholly extinct, did they not constantly pray to God to increase it; that they find themselves often involved in such darkness, that they know not what they ought, or ought not to do, to perform the repentance they owe unto God, and the charity they are obliged to pay unto their neighbour. Lo here, what men the Saints of the Church of Christ are! they always walk in humility, in fear and in self-denial, knowing they must fall when they quit this path; but the Church of the Jesuits is all perfect, and composed entirely of persons that are perfect, there are no children nor imperfect ones amongst them; they are all born with helmets on their heads, they are all Phoenixes, Heroes, and men at arms, they have all strength sufficient to conquer, and more wisdom is necessary to govern the world. Moreover they are all Saints, and shall be all saved; they have express Revelations which put it out of doubt▪ that for three hundred years, and to the end of the world, not one of them shall die in the h●bit of a jesuit who shall not have the gift of perseverance: They are no sooner dead, but according to their prophecies jesus Christ com●s to meet them, for to conduct them to heaven, and make them reign there above all other Religious Orders, whereof the most perfect are but as silver, whereas by another 〈◊〉 they know that they are the most precious gold. Lastly, having exhausted all sort of praises, and compared themselves to Angels, to Prophets, to the Apostles, the twenty four Elders in the Apocalypse, the Pharisees and Emperors, having applied to themselves all they could find in Scripture, which might make for their Glory, to end all, they compare this great body to Christ jesus himself, as if all other perfections, but that of God-man were unworthy of them: They are strongly possessed with a fancy, that their Company is like unto Christ, and that as there is nothing in Christ but what is Holy, it follows in their imagination, that all is holy among them too: There is nothing so corrupt in their manners, so extravagant in their devotion, so false in their Theology, which they maintain not as the Sentiments of the Church. Many of their Divines invent fanatic opinions, and the Universities have been often obliged to censure their Authors. But these Fathers persist in their principles, and thinking it necessary to maintain themselves to be infallible as the Church, they never recant, and have all in their hearts what one of them sometime stuck not to pronounce, That the opinion of a jesuit is always Catholic, dogma Catholicum & jesuiticum convertuntu●. And thus supposing always this Society to be, all holy, all luminous, all perfect, without spot, without infirmity, without malady, they believe it impossible to praise it excessively, as a work of God beyond all praise; and that these holy companions of jesus Christ are so united to him, that all that may be said to their advantage, returns unto God. In so great a measure doth he partake of all that concerns them. But while they admire themselves in this manner, they perceive not the misery of the condition they are fallen into; which we cannot better express, than to say, that the extreme desire they have had to pass for the wisest and most illuminated in the world, hath rendered them foolish and senseless, that they have lost themselves in their vain Ratiocinations; that their minds and their hearts having been covered with darkness, they have transferred the honour due only to the incorruptible God, unto their Society full of corruption and misery and as the Pagans, having chosen for Gods, men subject to all sorts of passions and vices, were in pursuance of that folly obliged to sanctify those disorders; so the Jesuits always supposing themselves Saints, take no care to purify themselves from those faults which are common to them with other men, but labour to sanctify those faults, in giving the greatest vices of a I●suite the golden titles of virtue and goodness; so that though they are ambitious, covetous, inter●ssed, revengeful, as other men, they are still innocent, for considering themselves under no other notion than that of one of the most excellent works of God, they fancy that in praising themselves they but praise God, that in exalting themselves above the world, they do but establish the Empire and Authority of Christ, that in heaping up riches and scraping wealth together all the ways they can devise, they serve not their interest, but jesus Christ; for as for them, though they lodge in magnificent houses, and amass all the estate they possibly can; by testaments and donations, by traffic; by borrowing money, and then proving bankrupts; they pretend to be poor and always without money, because they have nothing whereof they divest not themselves speculatively into the hands of jesus Christ. As they pretend they have no enemies, but those of God, they think it permitted them to oppress them as they please; and as if their power, were as Gods, inseparable from Justice, they never show the least scruple or repentance for any evil they do them who oppose their most wicked designs. Lastly, though their Authors are guilty of almost infinite errors, and fill their books with detestable maxims, they forbear not to regard them with such respect and submission, as if they alone were the Rule of the Truth, and as if every opinion written in their books must of necessity be holy and good. St. Augustine teaches us, that God serves himself sometimes of the most shameful miscarriages of proud men to make them see their corruption, to humble them, and oblige them to have recourse to repentance; but it seems this remedy is of no use for the Jesuits, those remarkable and most shameful falls so frequent in their Society, having not been yet able to open their eyes, nor to persuade them that they are not impeccable. So great is their passion to make their Society pass for a Virgin without blemish, that they have entirely abolished repentance amongst them, and all the marks of it as a superfluous thing. I cannot but report on this occasion the complaint made to me by one of their brethren, for some few there are who mourn for these horrible disorders, and begin to open their eyes: He told me, that as soon as any of them is Priest, if he be unhappy enough to fall secretly into a mortal sin, he must of necessity die in impenitence; for they are indispensably obliged to say Mass every day which supposeth them all saints, or that a simple confession can in a moment re-establish them in the sanctity they had lost, and restore them to the dispositions necessary in them who approach the Altar, what crime soever they have committed. I enter not the secrets of the heart, and of the consciences of particular men, but if we may be allowed to guests in general at their weakness and infirmities, by those of many who publicly fall into infamous Actions, I think it may be said, without passing rash Judgement, that 'tis very possible that some of them fall into sins that oblige them to repentance; and that it is so much the more possible, that they are of a very great number, that they live without any Austerity, and great liberty of converse with all sort of people, besides that their ordinary employments, their Preaching, Confession, and Classes are oftentimes near dangerous occasions of falling into sin; so that it being very probable that some fall into those precipices which all are so near, 'tis strange, that the passion they have for their Glory, should so harden them in their Crimes, that it hath never been seen, that any of them that have fallen, came out of that state by a true and complete repentance. This love of Glory is so great amongst them, that it hath not only made them abolish repentance, for fear of giving any colour to think they need it, but hath carried them sometimes to the doing of extreme violences, and great injustice, for covering those faults whereby they might receive any dishonour; and the better to conceal them, they labour with all Artifice to justify the persons who have committed them. We have an instance of this Excess in the Theatre of the Jesuits, p. 396. so horrible that the Author durst not report it: But the world knows it by other means, and Mariana acknowledges, that it is their custom, when they fear the fault of any Father not yet discovered may come to light, to transport him presently into another Province. And when some disorder appears in a Superior, whose reputation they would maintain in the world, whom notwithstanding they dare not trust any further, they suggest to him that he may desire leave to go to the New World, to which he hath no sooner consented, but they make this forced desire pass for an extraordinary ●eal for the Faith, and a necessary banishment for an Apostolical mission: And for one that undertakes these Voyages sincerely, and with good intentions, there are twenty which go not but upon carnal considerations, and become worse after than they were before. Lastly, as they make use of every thing for their Glory, they are not ashamed to count those of their▪ Society Martyrs, who died for their Crimes, and to make them companions of Christ crucified, who justly▪ suffer as capital offenders, they make it their merit to have been driven out of England and France, though they drew on themselves that just punishment for their crimes; for having taught men to kill Kings, and confessed or instructed three Assassinators of the Monarches of France: Barriere confessed by Varada, john Chastell instructed by Guignard, and Ravaillac confessed by F. D'Aubigny, as all the World may read in history; insomuch that Guignard was hanged and strangled for having inspired Chastell his Scholar in Philosophy with the Parricide, and having taught it in his writings. In England, Gardner and other Jesuits were executed for having been Complices in the Powder-treason, where they would have blown up in a moment the King, Queen and all the great men of England, by a piety worthy the moderation of these new Apostles, as they call themselves, and justly, as not led by the spirit of the old. They have been also expelled from Venice, for raising factions, according to the Prophecy of the Venetian Patriarch Farnisius, who apprehending their factious and politic Genius, foretold 50 years before, swearing on the Evangelists as themselves confess in this book, p. 494. that they should be one day driven out of Venice. To conclude, though in▪ other Provinces and Cities of Europe, and other parts of the World they have been often ill treated for their Plots and Cabals, they forbear not to say by a horrible blasphemy that these persecutions are the Crowns of their piety, humility and innocence, as they were in the Sacred Person of Jesus Christ. Privileges and Extraordinary Advantages of the Society above other Orders. I. Privilege. That the Society is a Virgin. THis we have seen in the proud Image on the frontispiece of this book, where the Society is represented as a young Virgin, though Ignatius their founder had lived in the disorder of a man of War, before his Conversion, as Ribadeneira testifies in his life; and was a slave to the vanities of the world, and those unruly passions of corrupt nature, as they express it in this image of their first Age, and at last of a dissolute Soldier became a Saint of Penitence. Whereas other Religious Societies in a Christian humility confess their weakness, acknowledge their imperfections, and dare not speak of their virtue, though most of their Founders were really Virgins, as we learn by their Lives, and were Saints rather of innocence than Penitence. On the other side these Fathers consider not that when they boast their Society a Virgin with so much earnestness, they give occasion to say, that they ought to be ashamed that their Casuists make this Virgin speak with so much impudence, words so little becoming a Virgin, and capable to corrupt the Masters that teach, and the Scholars that shall be sufficiently unhappy to follow them. II. Privilege. That it is the Company of jesus: And that the use and Office of his Name particularly belong to them. THe name of the company of jesus and of jesuit is the most August upon Earth; not Granted them by Popes of mere motion, but desired and demanded by their first Fathers according to the express terms of the first Bull of their Institution. And yet if you will believe them, 'twas God himself gave it them, as they say expressly in these terms, Et nobis Divinitus concessum est, lib. I. or. 4. p. 127. St. Thomas in his Sum of the body of Divinity demands why Christians have taken their name from Christ, and not from jesus; and are called Christians and not Jesuits? and answers, it is because they partake of the holy Unction, denoted by the name Christ, by receiving it in the Sacraments; so that they may be called the Christ's, and Anointed of God▪ whereas they have no part in the signification of the sacred name jesus, which signifies Saviour, they being The saved, and he alone the Saviour: Whence it is that this name is not the surname, but the proper name of jesus Christ, which was given him by God, by the ministry of the Angel, because he was to save his people, in delivering them from the sins which held them captive: And that at this Adorable name every Knee should bow in Heaven; in Earth, and under the Earth. Hence it is also that the whole Sorbonne, in the year 1554. with unanimous consent, (and not, as they pretend, some Doctors of the Sorbonne) having been consulted by the Parliament of Paris, found this name of jesuit extraordinary, and in their famous Censure, give it a mark, calling the jesuits The New Society, which particularly attributes to itself the unusual title of the name of jesus. And M. Eustache de Bellay the illustrious Bishop of Paris, who also was consulted by the Parliament of Paris, having given his advice in Writing, proposed in the Assembly of the Church of France held at Poissy, by the command of the King, in 1561. that if they should be received, it should be only as a Society and Company, and not as a new Order of Religion, and that they should be obliged to take another name than that of the company of jesus, or Jesuits: This was held so reasonable by the whole Assembly General of the Gallican Church, that she received them not but with express Charge, that they should be obliged to take another title than that of the Society of jesus, or Jesuits, and under many other conditions, to which they then submitted out of politic prudence, but performed them not, having then no other end but to establish themselves in France, and knowing according to one of their Emblems, that as soon as their Society should put in a foot, it would move the whole Land, p. 321. by tumults and popular seditions, before they could be removed out of their places. But because they have taken this Glorious Name, and preserved it by the favour of a Pope who not being able to resist their importunities, gave them as many Bulls as they thought fit to desire as themselves have observed, they say, That the use and office of this Name which consists in fight for the Church seems to belong to their Fathers by the particular privilege received by the Pope's Bulls, since none can, be ignorant that we can prove to our glory by every day's experience, that no man almost hath declared war against the Faith and Religion in these evil times, who thought it not his duty to swear an immortal enmity against our Fathers: So that the passage in Scripture may be as properly applied to our Society as it was to St. Paul, I will show him how much he must suffer for my Name, p. 123. Why should I trouble myself further to consider the boldness of these new Apostles who pretend to make as many Articles of Faith as they please, to find new senses of Scripture, in corrupting it, and turning the passages from the true sense to apply them to themselves; for if you believe them, 'twas not so much of St. Paul, as of their Society that Christ spoke when he said, I will show him how much he must suffer for my Name: They who have any love for their salvation, are much concerned that the faith be not corrupted by these new additions, and those who receive easily these Articles of Faith of the jesuitick Church, aught to fear lest they forget those which Christ hath taught his Church; what they add in the same behalf is an imagination without ground, pretending the heretics (as they call them) make war particularly against them, by reason of the Name of jesus, which they bear; to show it is not for the Name of Catholics which they have common with the Bishops, the Popes, and an infinite number of Doctors, Ecclesiastical persons and Friars, but because by particular privilege they bear the Name of jesus in bearing that of Jesuits. As if the heretics believed not in jesus Christ, and held not the Name of jesus Sacred and adorable as we, and as if it were not known that Calvin hath put the Name of jesus at the top of every page of his Institution, to endeavour to sanctify his books by that Holy Name, as the Jesuits make use of it to hollow their unholy actions and opinions. In another place with a pride proper to them, and on design to draw glory to themselves from the hatred of heretics towards them, say they, all the enemies of the faith, fling their darts at us, as if the maintenance of holiness, and the Catholic Religion depended on the subsistence of our Society alone, being persuaded, that if this pillar of public safety were pulled down and ruined, there could be nothing easier than entirely to destroy the faith, with the piety, the ceremonies and worship of the Church: As this thought is suitable to the good opinion the Jesuits have of themselves, I believe them at least as capable of it, and all other thoughts of self-conceit, and vain glory, as the worst of those Heretics. But as to the particular animosity between the Lutherans and Calvanists, and these fathers, all the learned know, that it proceeds not from an opinion that they are better able to re●ute their errors, than the Doctors of Universities, the Bishops and Cardinals; it being notorious to the world that the books of Ruard Tapper the famous Doctor of Loven, of Drued, of Augustin, S●ucchius Eugabinus a Bishop in Italy, and many other excellent persons of the faculty of divinity, and other eminent Prelates are stronger against the Lutherans than those of the Jesuits, and that when compared with Saintez upon the Eucharist, or Cardinal Perron against the Lutherans, the books of the Jesuits look like those of Students or Schoolboys: besides it comes not to pass, because they of the Reformed Churches think them more holy than other Orders of Religion (though they publish themselves altogether perfect and Ramparts of the Doctrine of Faith) for they know as well as the Roman Catholics that their spirit is less humble, their life less austere, their knowledge less Ecclesiastical, their charity less patient and meek, their piety less disinteressed, than those of other Orders; but 'tis because the Jesuits preach no other thing in their books against heretics, but that they ought to be exterminated and burnt: And that those Heretics who have not zeal enough to seek the Glory of false martyrdom, love more the charity and gentleness of Catholic Doctors and Bishops, who desire not the death of a sinner but that they may be converted and live, than the irregular zeal of those who labour not so much to convince men by Truth, and overcome them by Charity, as to destroy them by injuries, and ruin them by violent counsels, which they inspire into Kings and Rulers against them. Another Reason that the Heretics are more inclined to engage with them than other Catholic Doctors, is, that those Fathers fill their books with new Opinions, fantastic tenets, and corrupt maxims which give the heretic's great advantage against them, this medley of ill things making it more facile for them to descend themselves against their writings, and to answer their Reasons: Other Orders are said to come of the Saints who have founded them, as the Benedictins from St. Benedict, the Dominicans from St. Dominique, and so of the rest, which is the reason they are called the Orders of St. Benedict, St. Dominique, etc. But the Jesuits have this advantage above all other Orders, That their Company is the Company of jesus himself, the Society of the Son of God, the Order whereof he is the true Author, and that b●a●s his Name, That Christ is their first F●u●der, the Virgin the second, and St. Ignatius only the third, lib. 1. c. 6. St. Ignatius was so humble, that he thought himself unworthy to give the Name of Ignatians to his Companions, after the custom of other Founders, wherein he seems willing to have imitated the Apostles, whose humility St. Augustine praises, in that they gave not the Names of Paulians and Petrians, but Christians to the faithful; but if we will judge ●right of things, we may say, the Society hath taken the Name of their Author: for Ignatius attributing all unto God in the founding of his Society, and nothing to himself, and declaring that Christ was the first and principal Author thereof, he did it with great reason, that according to the custom among the Philosophers in the Christian Religion, and the Orders thereof, the Society should bear the Name of their Author without mention of Ignatius, who desired to be concealed, p. 68 Wherein he pretends that the Divine Excellence which is found in the foundation of the Church, in that it hath jesus Christ for its first and true chief and founder, and in that he hath given it the surname of Christian, from his name Christ, appears in the foundation of this Society, whereof they say Christ is the true and first Author, and gave it his Name incomparably more August than his Surname, as if he had waved his general Society of the Church, that he might reserve this highest honour for the particular Society of Jesuits, That Virgin, knowing, and Martyr, Society, as another calls it: and if you take their word you may believe Ignatius had the place of St. Peter, Xavier of St. Paul, their ten first Fathers, that of the twelve Apostles, and the sixty first jesuits' established by the first Bull of Paul the 3 d. that of the seventy Disciples of our Lord. Ignatius, say they, was first inclined to take the name of the Company of Jesus in 1538. after a vision in a desert Church on his way to Rome, where God the Father appeared to him, recommending Ignatius and his two Companions, Peter le Teure, and james Laines to his Son jesus Christ bearing his Cross, who turning to them said, I will be favourable to you at R●me. This vision, says Maffens the Jesuit, was the principal ground of the Name of the Society of jesus. But 'tis a strained conclusion, and will hardly pass for a good inference in any but jesuitical logic, that because Christ promised to favour them at Rome; it was his intention that a particular Order should assume his Name, which the Church in reverence durst not take for the reason before given out of St. Thomas. Besides we have equal evidence of Christ's appearing and promising his assistance to several founders of other Orders, who never thought it a commission to call themselves Jesuits, which is not common to all Christians, as they tell us, lib. 1. c. 4. p. 69 the name of Christian which is the Surname of jesus, being the Name common to the whole Church, which hath expressed that respect to the August Name of the Saviour of the world, which the Popes have to that of St. Peter which they never assume, though his successors in the Chief Chair of Christianity. III. Privilege. That they are the freemen and companions of jesus Christ; a vision wherein they are preferred before the Capucins and Chartreus Monks. 'TIs for this reason, that whereas the Apostles styled themselves the servants of jesus Christ, the Jesuits have the Pri●iledge to call themselves his Freemen, and his Companions, pag. 24. And that in a vision at Paris, St. John the Evangelist having appeared to a young lad, and asked him whether he would be a Capucian or a Chartreus, the B●y answering, what God pleased, St. John left him a paper, and told him, see there three Orders, cho●se which you will, the paper containing the names of the Capucins and Chartreus in silver, but of the Jesuits in Golden Letters; which they attribute to the Sacred Name of jesus they bear, and visibly insinuate, that as Gold is the most precious of metals, so their Order is the most venerable and divine of all the Orders of Religion. They that flatter the ambition and pride of the Grandees of the world, exalt them in titles, and magnify their dignities which often serve to make them more vicious: But 'tis strange, these Fathers who are All Perfect, should boast so much of their Name, as if to call one jesuit were to Canonize him a Saint. But let them take heed left for their unworthiness of the Name it rise in judgement against them to their condemnation: great titles are common to good and bad men, but as ambition is the ordinary purchaser, so they fall commonly into the possession of wicked persons, it being generally observed, that none are more worthy contempt, than those who by their titles claim preferance to other men; the Bishop in the Apocalypse, said he, was rich, and wanted nothing as the Jesuits pretend themselves the Companions of Christ, and exalted above other men, as the Name Jesus is of a superlative dignity, but they, like that Prelate, know not that they are poor, naked and blind, said to live but really dead, Rev. c. 1. IV. Privilege. All those who die in the Society, though never so young, have accomplished an Age before their decease. THough Old Age be rare in the Society, where Study consumes men in the flower of Youth, yet no man dies in the S●ciety but he hath lived a full Age; laugh not at the Expression, 'tis not extraordinary but demonstratively true: Virtuous Actions extend Life, and lengthen our days. jesus was old at his birth, Solomon at twelve years of age, Daniel and Joseph when very young, and so were Francis Strada, Gonzaga, Stanislaus, Ubaldin, Cajetan, Berchman and others. Studious men repair the brevity of life by reading of histories, and the capacities which of themselves are long a ripening, by the help of that Divine Wisdom, and Heavenly light conspicuous in our constitutions quickly attain complete maturity, which makes the least Apprentices of our Company as men of one hundred years old in Knowledge, and ripe in the Sciences before the flower of their Age. The whole world admits them to be such, for as soon as initiated in the Society they are presently Presbyters, (which signifies old) and called Fathers, though in their Childhood, and by the Privileges of the Society may preach though they be not in Orders, and are all guided by a Divine Wisdom of greater assurance than the most approved Philosophy, and longest Experience. And being called by jesus the Eternal Wisdom of his Father to partake of his care and share in his labours, and assisting the world with Paternal affection, there is not one among them to whom the Glory of Age is not due, none who hath not accomplished his days, and lived an Age though he die a youth. This concludes not the Jesuits wise, but in their own eyes, which is the worst of follies▪ but the Author had good reason to tell us, that Old Age is rare in the Society, not but that many of them live very long, but that few attain a maturity in wisdom. V. Privilege. They are more prudent and politic than the Ministers of Spain. WE read this brave Privilege in one of the Sermons preached at the beatification of Ignatius, translated into French by F. Sollier the jesuit, and printed by him at Poitiers in 1611. under the title of Three Excellent Sermons, which he dedicated to Madam Frances de Foix, Abbess of Nostre Dame de Xaintes, and writ an Apology in defence thereof against the censure of the Sorbonne, who had declared several propositions therein to be scandalous, erroneous, manifestly heretical, blasphemous and impious. The Order is divided into thirty three f●ir and large Provinces (now above thirty six) inhabits three hundred and six Houses and Colleges (since increased to above eight hundred) and con●●●ts of above one thousand five hundred and fourscore Brethren of the Order, so Prudent in Government▪ that there are among their Lay-brothers, persons who may read Lessons in the Politics to the Chancellors of Granada at Valladoldo, and instruct the Council of State of our King, pag. 172. 'Tis no wonder that men who have so good opinion of their Wisdom and Charity for mankind should intermeddle so much in the affairs of Government: 'Tis a Privilege they have beyond the Apostles prohibited by Christ to touch that secular Dominion that belongs to Kings and great men of the Earth; The Kings of the Gentiles excercise Authority over them, but it shall not be so among you. But since the Jesuits so willingly undergo the toilsome burden of th' administration of Kingdoms as we see at this day in Spain, and do nothing but to promote the Glory of God; we must not question but they have an express command from Christ to war●ant their Actions: Besides, it were an unpardonable injury to look on their General as those of the jacobins or Augustine Friars who govern only men of Religion; but if you will frame your Idea suitable to the Grandeur of the Subject, you must conceive him a Sovereign no less Secular than Ecclefiastick, that affects the Government of the world no less than that of the Church. 'Tis not long since that a French Lord had this confirmed from their General's mouth, telling him, That from his Chamber he Governed not Paris only, but China; not China ●●ly, but the whole world, yet no man knew how. VI Privilege. That Christ comes to meet every Jesuit at his death to receive him to Glory. 'TIs one of the Privileges of the Society of jesus, That upon the death of each jesuit he advances to meet and conduct him to bliss: Happy Souls, assured to pass from the prison of mortality into the immortal bosom of our Lord jesus, the verity of this proposition depends not on my authority, but of the Oracle that delivered it; F. Crifoel the jesuit tells us, that in 1616 in the vision of Saint Therese a soul on her way to Glory in company of many more told this Saint, A Brother of the Society of jesus is our Guide: how happy are we in such a Chief, to whose virtue and prayers we owe our deliverance this day out of the pains of purgatory. Wonder not that the Almighty comes to meet us, 'tis no new thing, the brethren of the Society of jesus have this Privilege, that when one of them dies jesus comes to meet and receive him to Glory, lib. 5. c. 8. p. 648. These Visions may be proper entertainments for the vanity of these Fathers who may need humility and repentance to bring them to Heaven. As for the Vision it might appear in the fancy of a Jesuit, but never to St. Therese who never related it, and was so far from regarding such Apocryphal Revelations, that she gave small encouragement to rely on any at all now adays. VII. Privilege. That no Jesuit shall be damned, that the Society hath no cause to fear corruption. ALphonso Rodrigues had it revealed by Vision, that not only his Companions then living, but those that succeeded many years after should live with him eternally in Celestial bliss. These are great favours, but lo here a greater! Francis Borgia told Mark his Companion with tears of joy, Know Brother Mark that God hath extreme love for our Society, and granted it the Privilege formerly given the Order of St. Benedict, that for the first three hundred years no person that perseveres to the end in the Society shall be damned. See the express terms, as here rendered, pag. 649. I heartily desire the salvation of these Fathers, but must advertise them that nothing exposes them more to damnation then this false confidence that they cannot be damned. Let them remember their Emblem, Time ne tumeas, fear the judgement of God, and damnation of Hell, lest the pride of our heart link us into it. Where presumption hath banished fear from the Soul, it becomes more bold to commit all manner of wickedness, but where a servile fear ends in a filial, this will make way for Charity to enter, which when perfected will expel all fear. A Friar of another Order (but Anonymus) at the point of death sent for F. Matres the Jesuit, Confessor to the Viceroy of Barcelona, to tell him these words, Happy are you, O Father, to be of an Order wherein whoever dies enjoys eternal felicity▪ God hath revealed it, and commanded me to publish it to the world. The Jesuit confounded with admiration and modesty, and ask him whether all of his own Order should not be likewise saved, the dying man answered him with a groan, That many should, but not all, but that all of the Society of Jesus without exception of any who persevered therein to the end should be crowned with eternal beatitude, ibid. How great, how divine was the wisdom of Ignatius, who hath so armed the Society against the injuries of time, and built on supporters of such strength that 'tis an instance to the world to prove, that all things are not the supplies of time! But that Virtue and Religion may be so guarded, that the course of Ages cannot corrupt them; and what brings other things a decrepit age, or certain death, promises the Society ● perpetual youth, so verdant and flourishing, that she shall feel the revolution of ages without these effects of decay and ruin that usually attend it, pag. 104. Thus their Society shall be more privileged than the Church, and other Orders of Religion, which being like theirs mingled with the world are not exempt from its corruption; but this Privilege of incorruption is proper to these extraordinary Saints, who are all Phoenixes and birds of Paradise. Since then all the brethren of this Holy and ever flourishing Society shall be saved without exception, according to the vision of that Anonymous Friar they quote, the first purity of this Society must endure to the end, and surpass the Sanctity of that Friar's Order, who though he observed a severe and most pure Discipline, as they tell us, lib. 5. c. 8. assures us that all of his Order could not be saved. Thus pag. 147. they tell us, the Society hath no cause to fear corruption, though they confess the spirit of Ambition, the greatest of corruptions seized them so soon, that immediately after the death of Ignatius in 1565. being only twenty five years after their Institution; Rashness and Ambition animated Nicolas Bobadille, two of their first ten Brethren, and four more of the profession, against two of their first Fathers, and the rest of the Society, they Solicited Cardinals, rose eagerly against Laines than Vicar-General, and afterwards General, and violently questioned the Constitutions of the Order. This they call, The fate of Kingdoms and Republics, which erected with great pains turn their Forces and their Power against themselves; the Dispute was for the Generalship, which Laines by subtlety carried from the rest. If you read Mariana, of the Defects of the Society, you may judge with what appearance of Truth they tell us their Society needs fear no corruption: Let them beware that for want of judging and condemning themselves they be not at last condemned of God. VIII. Privilege. That the Blessed Virgin is entirely theirs. THe Mother of God hath declared, not only that the whole Society is hers, but that she is wholly the Societies. Platus a Brother of the Order, Reports a Vision, wherein the Virgin appeared with the Society under her Mantle— The Society covered with this Mantle of the Virgin, shall abide firm against all the furies of Hell, the menaces of Tyran●s, and the attaques of her Enemies, as the immovable stone of the Capit●l. For as God said to the Sea, hitherto shalt thou come; so the Virgin seems to have said to the Enemies of the Society, hitherto shall ye ●●me, unto my Mantle, that is, to the Society, but no further, for this is the Asylum where I protect my Devotees. What shall I say more? We have obtained such power by the protection of the Virgin alone, that we generously surmount, or happily end all evils that befall us, pag. 140, 141. The Fathers may do well not to trust much to these Revelations, for fear they prove pure delusions: If the worst of their affairs have happy issues answerable to their desires, 'tis the effect of their cunning and subtlety not of Devotion. Varenna their Partisan, who was in credit with them for the Reasons every man knows contributed more than any for their return into France; it may be questioned whether the Virgin made use of such a minister for the re-establishment of these Fathers, who was so corrupt, that though he loved them well, could love them no otherwise than as Patrons of vice, or companions in lewdness. IX Privilege. That they may without vanity attribute to themselves, and admit from others hyperbolical praises. LEt none suspect or fear that we have undertaken this work out of vanity, as if we aimed at no other end but self-commendation; the Society is the work of God alone and not of men, we celebrate this work. And hath not he commanded us often to praise his works, and highly ox●oll the operations of his hands? pag. 3. Thus the Jesuits being a company of Angels and Apostles, do but praise God in praiseing themselves, and are not subject to the vanity of other simple men: You may hold them impeccable, as the Angels and Saints in Heaven, for, you see, they are exempt from the most subtle and most spiritual sin, which destroyed the Chief Order of Angels in Heaven, and might have kept Paul from ever coming thither, had not God sent him the Messenger of Satan to buffet him, lest through the multitude of Revelations he should have been exalted above measure, which these new Apostles declare they have no need of, having attained a Purity transcendent to St. Paul's. This justifies the famous saying of F. Noijet in his Sermon in St. Lewis Church, against the book of frequent Communion, where mentioning the great Eulogies given Xavier by Arnauld, he adds, This man would impute vanity to us, as if we were capable thereof. 'Tis the privilege of these Examples of humility above other men, that they can without danger of spiritual pride reflect on their humility, and fear to lose it should they once dare to boast that they have it; the Jesuits not only see humility in their hearts, but with rare modesty assure all men, they are not capable of pride, nor subject to vanity. Those pious but simple persons who could not comprehend how the Jesuits acted still, as they pretended, for the Glory of God, though interest and ambition, Pride and Avarice set them a work, may be resolved their doubt; for they teach us here, that the greatest Glory of the Society is the same thing with the greatest Glory of God, that being the work of God alone, as they do but praise God when they praise themselves, so they act for God when they act for themselves, and love God in loving themselves: And that we can no more accuse them with any unjust passion in their Actions of greatest profaneness, than we can suspect them guilty of vanity on these extravagant expressions of pride and vainglory. It is the will of jesus Christ, that the Society be covered with branches of Palms, and crowne● with Chaplets of flowers, in this Festival Triumph for the Glory of his Name, that it may be celebrated from Age to age by Secular Poems, in memo●● of the accomplishment of every age they have passed. This is the reason we er●ct this monument to b● Glory, which shall endure longer than statues o● Brass, and be more famous than the Royal Pyramids of Egypt. p. 2. The end of this 5th book entitled, The Society honoured, is to collect the modest honours of the Society, or rather the Glory due to our jesus, pa. 583. It may be doubted, whether the Son of God who was not pleased with the Sacrifices of the jews, though ordained by the Law, but seeks Worshippers in spirit and in truth, can be delighted like a worldly Prince in these secular days and profane feasts, which please the vanity of the weak spirits of men by pomps and magnificence like those of the Heathens in their superstitious solemnities by Machine's, Obelisques, Guildings and Emblems; And whether those proud though empty preparations may be Acceptable to God, which appear ridiculous Pastimes to Serious men. That the Society hath Reform the Church, and altered the face of Christianity, ruined the Devil, and Recalled Virtue. 'TIs the Common voice of almost all Europe, and the general sentiment of men, that the Society hath demolished in Europe the fortresses of the Devil, drawn the M●nsters of vice out of their holes and their dens, called home Virtue from Exile, raised the Muses from their Graves, and reestablished Learning in the Schools, and the use of the Sacraments in the primitive vigour and frequency, pag. 27. Thus the false opinion of having reform the World, hath filled their spirit with a real corruption of pride. That the Jesuits are Mystical and Spiritual Physicians above all other ecclesiastics. 'Tis for this the Society was form on the day of St. Cosmus, and St. Damien, who were Physicians, and that the science of Physic seems to have passed as by Emanation into all the members of this Society, who like sons of Aesculapius labour with equal care and good fortune to preserve the health, and cure the maladies of souls. The whole Society being as a Sovereign medicine, or a shop of spiritual and mystical Physic. Heros. Societ. pag. 31. If the Physic of a Christian consist in repentance, the jesuit cannot be his Physician, for 'tis no ingredient in the Medicines he gives. Had they written themselves Physicians of the body, we had had more cause to believe them, from their Bulls of permission to practise that Art, their Shops at Rome, at Lions and elsewhere, furnished with Drugs from their Warehouses in the Indies, where they buy for little▪ that they may vent them at dear rates, which gave them good reason in one of their Emblems, p. 464. to represent the Society by an Apothecary's Shop furnished with all sorts of Drugs, especially Treacle. We see, say they, that by their Precepts and care the coldest hatred is warmed by the heat of Charity, and the Ardour of impurity cooled by the refreshment of Chastity, the intemperance of the palate digested and purged by the Fasts they ordain, the sharpness of choler tempered by the sweetness of moderation, hearts contracted with Grief are dilated by peace of Conscience, the Remissness of Negligence locked up by the severity of Discipline, the harshness of tempers mollifyed into Gentility of manners, and the whole Army of Moral maladies defeated by the contrary force of their Remedies. The Morals of the Jesuits shortly to be published, will be such a proof of the severity of Discipline as the Pharisees Phylacteries were of their strict observance of the Law: But hear what they say further. Those that enter into this Society are Sons of the Physicians, and exercise the Art of Curing transmitted from Heaven by Cosmus and Damien, whom they imitate in bounty and Goodness as well as in vigilance and care. Ibid. When first the Society began to appear, the Pastors of Souls and other ecclesiastics, who had strangely neglected their own, and the people's salvation, suddenly looked about them, and as newly awakened from a deep sleep, laboured to be such in Virtue and Goodness as they ought to have been by their Office and Dignity, p. 53. We have often heard old men say, that wherever the Society was established, immediately all things put on a new face, Christianity flourished, purity of Religion and Manners succeeded, where impiety, ignorance, and luxury had reigned, nor could they refrain from tears of joy, that they had lived to see a time, wherein decayed piety recovered strength, and Virtue was restored to her throne which Vice had usurped. pag. 54. It was the pleasure of God to cure by the Society that part of the Church which ought to have preserved the rest in health, that by a happy change the people might receive Benefit from them from whom they had before contracted impurity and contagion. Ibid. The Jesuits think they have reestablished the spirit of Christianity in primitive perfection, when they see their Churches full of Communicants, which gains them reputation in the sight of men. But they that love truly the interest of the Church, sigh to see so many crowd and throng Jesus Christ, but so few touch him to the cure of their maladies, and reformation of their Lives, so few that examine themselves before they approach those dreadful mysteries, and so many that receive them to condemnation: But if the persons seduced do miserably perish, how much more guilty are those negligent Guides, and complaisant Directors, who fear not to cast the children's Bread to Dogs, and force in a manner the Dogs and the Swine to eat that which is holy? The Great, though Doubtful fruits of their Sermons. We have seen three thousand persons so moved by one exhortation that they went all presently to Confession: We have seen inveterate hatred defaced, peace restored to a divided City, Luxury in Apparel banished from Towns, places of public debauchery deserted, and Monasteries filled, lib. 3. c. 2. The Scene of these Actions was the Enchanted Island, or the Cities of Utopia. Flanders can witness by the Experience of our Churches in Lent, what powerful influence the preaching of Christ crucified hath on the spirits of men, especially when animated by a holily inflamed eloquence, and attended with outward and visible helps, and Corporeal representations of the subject of the discourse, which are the inventions and A●tifices proper to our Society, whereby she kindles, inflames and maintains the piety and devotion of the people. John Ramire the jesuit, by one Sermon converted from their Lewdness to an honest life 22 Courtesans at Valence, p. 335. 'Tis true, there are many Converts in appearance, and from the teeth outwards, that is, that come to Confession, which satisfies these Fathers to cry them up for Proselytes of Heaven. But permanent conversions are rare, those attended with relapses into sin are frequent and ordinary. I will give you an instance of the singular address of these Fathers, for converting the most hardened sinners, being a story from the mouth of one of them, in a conference had with the Nuns at the Visitation of St. Anthony's street in Paris: There was, said he, a person of quality, who having lived very dissolutely at Court, and in the Army, was dangerously sick, and would by no means hear of going to Confession, it being so long since he had performed any duty in that kind, that he could not remember he had ever done it. Those about him used their best endeavours to persuade him to send for a Confessor, but in vain; the multitude of his Crimes making him ashamed to declare them. But being willing to receive the other Sacraments; a jesuit was made choice of to administer to him. The sick person had no sooner discerned him, but he cried out, he might have saved his●pains in coming, for he was resolved not to confess. The jesuit promised him not to mention Confession, but believed him willing to exercise Acts of Faith, Contrition and others necessary to prepare him for death; and told him he came to direct him therein: The sick man consented, and after instruction given in the other particulars, the jesuit asked him whether he would exchange his sins for his good works: Which the sick man willingly agreed to; the jesuit thereupon assured him, he would take upon him all his sins, and from thenceforth esteem them his own, and transferr to the sick person the merit of all his good works: This done, he pronounced his absolution, and retired. But being gone to the Gate, he returned to tell the sick, he had forgotten to ask him what those sins were wherewith he had charged himself, so that he could not make confession of them as his sins, which he desired to do, to prevent damnation: The sick man without any difficulty or shame recounted those crimes which he believed not his own. The jesuit presently brought him the Eucharist, and the sick man soon after died, and at night appeared to the Jesuit, to give him thanks for the gift of his merit, for which God had received him to Glory, though he had deserved the torments of Hell; and to assure him that his charity in charging himself with his sins, was so acceptable with God, that he would not impute them to the Jesuit, but pardoned him freely. This Jesuit, in relating the story considered not, that nothing doth so quench the spirit of repentance in men of Religion, as to bear them in hand, that the most hardened sinners may enter Paradise without being obliged to repentance or confession of their sins with the humility necessary in actions of that moment: The Examples are every where obvious of persons propense not to fear any sin, which they think may be easily remitted. This induced the ancient Fathers of the Church to believe and teach, that Deathbed repentance is very dangerous; and though they refused not to absolve such as humbly and earnestly desired reconciliation with God, yet it is true, that admitting their repentance, they did not assure them of salvation. But the Jesuits are far bolder, and more illuminated; they absolve sinners who will not vouchsafe to confess their sins, or if they confess them, they do it historically by way of relation, without any compunction or contrition for committing them. And lest the validity of the Absolution should come into question, they are furnished with revelations to confirm them. But he that hath care of the health of his Soul, will not rely on these broken reeds of pretended miracles, which serve only to beget a false confidence in sinners. And the charity of these Fathers, who charge themselves so freely with the most horrible crimes committed by others, may assure us they have artifices to exempt themselves from repentance, as they have devices to excuse others from it. The great advantages of their Congregations in Christendom. The Distinction between their Nobles and others: The happiness of Kings, Princes and Bishops which are in their lists. THe honour of the Son, and Reverence due to the Mother were neglected and laid aside in most Provinces of Christendom. Who then presented Offerings in the Temples of the Virgin? who gave her their hearts and affections, which she hath ever loved above all offerings in the world? When Gregory the 13 th' had confirmed them, the same ardour of piety inflamed the Universe. Lib. 3. c. 7. We mingle not Noblemen and persons of quality, with Tradesmen and Mechanics; it being impossible, equally to procure the salvation of Souls without this inequality in our Assemblies, pa. 361. In the Church of Christ the rich and poor are mingled together, or rather in Christ there remains no distinction of Rich men and poor, being all one body, and one Spirit in him: But the Church of the Jesuits hath another custom, these Fathers separate, and treat them with very great difference; they flatter the one, and domineer over the other, and deal equally with them in nothing but this, that they endeavour to make their advantage equally of both. They give extrordinary praises to Ferdinand the 2d, and Ferdinand the 3d, because their names are Registered in their Congregations: Posterity, say they, shall see in these Registers the piety of Ferdinand marked with those Letters that compose his Name, engraven in characters drawn by the hand that holds the Sceptre of the Empire, whereof every one stands for an evidence of his veneration and respect to his spiritual Soldiers of the Society of jesus. To this they add the magnificent Inscription in their Register, where they put into the mouth of Ferdinand the 3d, the Expressions they thought fittest for extolling their Order, by commending his Devotion. They are ravished at the recital of the names of Sigismond the 3d, King of Poland, the late Cardinal Infant, the late Duke of Savoy, the Mother of the Emperor Rud●lphus, and the Wife of Charles the 9th of France, registered in their books. 'Tis hard to determine, whether the brethren of the Society rejoice more for being members of this body, whereof those August persons, the prime Agents and Intelligents in the Spheres of Christendom are their fellow-members; or those Kings and Queens for being enrolled in their Registers: They esteem their other titles, titles of Dignity, but this they reckon the title of their Happiness, which gives them clearer right to the supreme dignity of being a Christian: This is so true, that a Bishop publicly declared, he gloryed more in that he was one of the Brethren of the Society, than in the title of Bishop, and accounted it a greater Ornament than his Cross and his Mitre. Pa. 363. These Fathers should have suppressed the Book of Father Bary, called Paradise opened by the hundred Prayers and some others of Rinet and Posa, before they had ●oasted their Devotion for the Virgin; the books being as full of impertinencies and impious questions on that subject, as the practices of their Worship are vain and ridiculous. The good effects public and private of their Congregations. All Christendom hath received benefit from these fraternities, as having suppressed the licentiousness of Vice, and brought to light examples of eminent virtue; the Officers of Justice have declared in several towns, that the boldness of offenders hath been more restrained by these Societies than by fear of punishment, and that after the introduction of those exercises of Religious Devotion to the Virgin into Cities, they have found few criminals on whom to execute the severity of the Laws, which upon accurate and exact observation they have solemnly declared, and among other praises of these assemblies asfirmed their establishment a public good. Ibid. The jesuitical Casuists pretend that they, and not the Congregations have banished Sin from the World: But 'tis as credible of the one as the other; for the truth is, neither have done it. A man above seventy years old, yet more wise than aged, complained he had lived only two years being those elapsed since his Name had been entered in the Roll of our Congregation. Ibid. The Duke de Popolo sick of a mortal distemper, having sent ●or one of our Fathers told him, he died cheerfully, and full of hope, but that the confidence he had, he owed entirely to the Congregation; and the same time commanded his Son to give them his Name and his affection, prote●ting he could not leave him a nobler Title, or Richer inheritance than his succession in the good opinion of the Society: And what could have been bequeathed him by his Father of more advantage than the favou● of the Virgin, a sure pledge of Eternal Salvation. Ibid. It is impossible the Society should think on those multitudes of Souls saved by these fraternities (which have preserved so many from burning in hell as victims of Divine Vengeance) and not at the same time to find such satisfaction and pleasure in so good a work, as serves for a sharp spur to quicken her in her course, for propagating and encouraging those fraternities; that the saving Standards of jesus Christ and the Virgin, the Mother as well as the Son may be set up in all parts of the Earth, and that they who justly fear the rigour of a severe Judge may be invited by the amiable indulgence of the Virgin. Ibid. You hear their Rodomantades, but the use they make of their Congregations is to draw the people to them from their lawful pastors, to bring into contempt the parochial mass, to make themselves masters of men's spirits and consciences, and in a word, to serve their interest. That the frequent use of Confession and Communion grown obsolete is reestablished wonderfully by the Society. What an excellent privilege, and beyond all hope and expectation of mankind, is it that God hath established man in his place, not only to remit their crimes who are guilty of treason against Heaven, but to restore them to their first dignity and familiarity with him, and in a moment by one words speaking to make them of guilty men favourites of God, of Enemies, Friends, and of condemned Traitors, heirs of a Kingdom: That Criminals obtain pardon as often as they offend, and receive remission by the absolution of man though the sins they commit merit the ange● of heaven, and just punishment from God, lib 3. c. 8. It appears this Author was of the spirit of the Society, to believe, that Confessors are sovereign masters of the interests of God, and hav● full power to absolve the most enormous offend dors according to their fancy, without obliging them to repentance, or requiring an● fruits of it: But this is in truth a horrible abuse of the power as well as the mercy of jesus Christ, but acted by them to procure themselves Glory from men, and to fill their Churches with such Proselytes as being sure of their pardon, will never fear to sin. When the Society was first established, people communicated but once a year, and they who communicated twice or thrice, passed among some for persons of rare sanctity, and among others for men who affected a Name of Devotion, and to exalt themselves above other men by a vain show and ostentation of piety. Others pretended that the reverence of the mysteries of that Sacrament kept them from the Eucharist, and so covered their disgust and neglect thereof with the Name of respect. Thus the frequent use of communion, that assured aid of salvation seemed laid by on all sides, and (which is most heinous) principally by them whose duty it was to have commended and pressed its continual use. Ibid. This is meant of the Pastors of the Church. It is in truth a new kind of piety, and new aid of salvation reserved for the Society of the Jesuits not to exclude any from frequent approach to the Eucharist, to admit thither the Goats with the Sheep, to mingle Sacrilege and Impiety with Holy Actions, and to make no difference between the worthy and unworthy, as if St. Paul and the Church understood not what they said, or were deceived in their Doctrines, when they tell us, The wicked Communicate t● their damnation. There was at Valentia a great stir kept against the Society for frequent Communion. The Archbishop spoke in their favour, and having assembled many Doctors, Ordered, that all the people should be at Liberty to Communicate every day in the week. Ibid. They are not only at Liberty to do it, but to be commended for it, though they be never so wicked, provided they seriously repent and reform their lives. The Society then finding the times so contrary and averse to virtue, and men's manners universally corrupted, was animated the more to endeavour a reformation. She hoped that the use of the Sacraments would weaken men's Vices, and the vigour of the one become the ruin of the other. This engaged her from the beginning to employ all her strength to inflame the whole earth with the love of these saving aides; but with what wonderful success? a success great beyond the hopes of the Society! What concourse from all parts? how the assiduity of the Confessors was overcharged by the multitudes of them that came to Confession? insomuch, that the continual throng laid siege, as it were, to several Churches of the Society. Crimes are n●w expiated with much more alacrity and ardour than they were heretofore committed. Nothing is more ordinary now than monthly, yea, than weekly Confession; and many are no sooner stained with sin, but they cleanse themselves by confessing their faults. The Fathers in answer to the Novatians who reproached the Church for the Authority she took to absolve great offenders, as encouraging impenitence, told those Heretics, They had been in the right, if the Church had promised pardon to sinners without engaging them first to repent: But had the practice of the Church been conformable to the Jesuits, she had been to seek an Answer to the Objection of the Novatians. And St. Augustine assures us, That if great sinners could as easily wash off, as contract the guilt of their transgressions, or if sighs, watchings and prayers were not necessary for regaining the favour of God, they would make it their sport to commit the grossest enormities: but now the time is come, since these complaisant Directors have taught men, that it is as eas●e to expiate as to commit sin; that they scruple not to transgress when it is so easy to gain remission. Before the founding of the S●ciety, the Curates confessed not their Parishioners but at Easter; And, if I may be allowed to declare it, some of them were more willing to be eased of the labour, than to quiet men's consciences, and took more care to dispatch than amend the Penitents. But now in divers Cities their Successors every Sunday and Holiday are almost oppressed with the number of other Penitents, as well as men professing Religion in the Orders of the Church. Ibid. These Fathers by a lamentable abuse do visibly place the salvation of sinners in the bare outward acts of Confession and Communion, which are but acts of Sacrilege without sincere repentance and resolutions of amendment. Friar Jerome a Roman tells us, that upon the founding of the Society, all Rome was changed in a moment, and that then the Ancient Devotion of the Primitive Church in frequenting Confession and the Eucharist began to revive. A Burgess of Bolduc says the same of that Town, there is not a Town upon Earth where the Society hath been established which thinks not the same, and openly declares it. But since all this change is only superficial, and that the Conduct as well as Morality of the Jesuits rather covers and daubs than roots out m●ns vices, the praise they deserve is, that they have filled the world and their Churches with an infinite number of hypocrites, which to their other crimes add profanation of Sacraments, and a false and vain affectation of piety. Before the times of the Society the people scarce knew the name of General Confession, though nothing be more ordinary now, above ten thousand General Confessions having been made in the Province of japan. So that 'tis credible the whole Society established in thirty six Provinces purifies yearly above a hundred thousand Consciences by these General Confessions: How immense is the benefit? How worthy their pains, by this sole invention to draw yearly out of the slavery of vice, and the Devil a hundred thousand Souls, and set them at liberty in the state of the Children of God: should the Society reckon how many she purifies otherwise yearly, how many thousands would be added to the number? But were they to be numbered she would esteem them too few, and not answerable to the greatness of her zeal for souls. Ibid. pag. 374. 'Tis true, General Confessions were not so frequent heretofore, nor the progress of Religion accounted to depend on them; but the Priests were employed to prepare Penitents so well, and confirm them so solidly in the hatred of ●in, and the love of obedience to the will of God, that they were not subject to relapse into former miscarriages, and the disorders committed appeared like monsters rarely seen; but since these Fathers by acquaintance with these monsters have rendered them ordinary and familiar, that their Penitents have so often need of General Confessions: 'Tis a clear evidence they confess not as they ought, but spend their time, and bestow their pains to no purpose. I could wish they would learn, that the end of Confession is to convert men at once, that they commit not the same offences again. That there is no commerce between frequent Communion and Vice. To frequent the Sacraments is highly useful for all duties of Christianity: And you shall hardly find them defective in any part of Christian Righteousness, who often approach these fountains of virtue and salvation, or any public licentiousness in a town where the frequent use of these mysteries hath been confirmed by a laudable custom: For what Commerce can there be between the Author of holiness and corruption of manners? What place is therefore the darkness of hell in those hearts that are irradiated by the eternal light? Therefore the Society having proposed for the end of her labours, to establish virtue, declare war against vice, and to serve the public, 'tis no marvel she commends to our greatest veneration the frequent use of the Eucharist, as the Arsenal of the Christian Militia, the Sovereign Remedy against all maladies, and infallible comfort in the worst of miseries. You have heard already, and shall hear further in its proper place how the Jesuits to promote their interest, and carry on their carnal designs, admit all persons without examination to the participation of the body of jesus Christ. Artifices of Devotion invented by the Society to draw the people on the three gaudy days, and the first days of the month to the Communion. I shall produce here one only example of the Roman magnificence in the present year 1640. for we have certain news that the brethren of our Congregation laid out nine thousand Florins on the solemnity of these three days to draw the minds of the people from profane licentiousness to the love of piety. They 〈…〉 a great Machine in our Church of Farnese at Rome in honour of the Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist, the height was one hundred and twenty spans, the breadth was eighty; tightly embellished with curious Statues, Images, Histories and Emblems to the ravishment of the Spectators, the Church shining with extraordinary lustre, by the light of four thousand Flambeaus. The service was celebrated with so much pomp, and so delicious a consort of the Pope's music, that there wanted only the presence of the Pope, to make it the most Majestic sight on Earth. Alphonso Gonsague Archbishop of Rhodes said Mass, seventeen Cardinals, and almost all the Prelates of the Court of Rome were present; five Cardinals more came in afterwards, all the Ambassadors of Kings and Princes, several Religious Orders, and all the Arch-Fryaries of Rome. Lastly, during the three days such throngs of people flocked to the Communion, that instead of profane Bacchanals they really kept a feast of Paradise. Another Artifice of the Society for more frequent Communion was the invention of Communicating the first day of the month, which pleased Pope Paul the fifth so well, that he granted indulgencies thereupon, and by that bait of public de●●tion drew ● great concourse of people to the Holy Table. The Society rejoicing at the success, took the boldness to invite Cardinals to administer. 〈◊〉 Sacrament, whereby the number of Communicants 〈◊〉 greatly augmented, the people being ravished to receive at the hands of so Illustrious Pers●ns the pledge of their Salvation: Five Cardinals did it, and at Rome at one day, and in one Church they counted sometimes sixteen thousand, sometimes twenty, and sometimes thirty thousand Communicants; and from thence this pi●us custom overspread the whole Earth. So that at Lisbon in the Church belonging to the house of our Profession the Sacrament 〈◊〉 administered to twenty five th●usand in one day, 〈◊〉 six or seven in Brussels, and as many at Antwerp in one of those days, and bad our Churches been capable of more persons, the number of Communicants would have been greater. General Reflections on all the extracts out of the Image of the first age. THe Jesuits never spoke truer of themselves than when they assumed the title of The Pharisees of the New Law. And though they have been so vain as to attribute to themselves undue praises, they have this once declared so great a truth, that we may take them at their word. 'Tis the Spirit of Pharisaisme hath caused them to write those great Volumes stuffed only with their praises, and to prove they are not as other men. Christ blamed the Pharisees of his time for affecting the chief places in Assemblies, and to be honoured as the principal Doctors and Guides of the people; The Jesuits extol themselves above all Orders of Religion, march still in the first rank, and call themselves masters of the world. The ancient Pharisees took upon them to dispense with the principal Commandments of the Law, but are clearly outdone by their successors, the Pharisees of our time, for what have they left undone, to show We are not obliged to Love God nor to give alms? And they that find most subtleties to dispense with good works, are in most esteem among them, and to this Banius Tambenius, ●scobar and others owe their reputation. Those holy men that went before them had no other secret for the conversion of men, than to preach Christ crucified, and to take off th● scandal of the Cross by the practice of humility▪ But the prudence of these new Apostles consists in hiding from the people, they pretend to convert the folly of the Cross as may be one day proved more clearly than they are awar● of. The first word of St. john Baptist, of Chri●● and his Apostles address to Sinners, was, Repen●● But the Jesuits willing to spare all that is troublesome, and professing themselves complaisant, civil and gentle directors have foun● out a way to remit sins without obliging 〈◊〉 a rude and harsh Repentance, and to make Confession so easy and pleasant, that the most criminal will not decline it, but run to't as willingly as they did to Sin, as themselves assure us When Confessors believed it a matter of difficulty to leave ill habits, and that we 〈◊〉 strive to enter in at the straight gate of Heave● they were not satisfied with words, without seeing the fruits of a solid Repentance; so th●● those who were inclined not to reform the●● lives, nor to make restitution of ill gotten good● nor quit ill company, durst not present themselves before the tribunal of the Church, whose severity they feared, which made true penitence rare even in the primitive times; a thing not easily performed, but difficult and toilsome. The same Fathers who taught us, That the life of Grace was freely received by us in Baptism, instructed us also, That a Soul dead in sin is not easily revived, and that when we have made ourselves slaves to the Devil▪ it is very hard to break his chains; when we have blinded ourselves in following our lusts, we cannot without miracle come out of darkness, and return into the way of jesus Christ. Lastly, St. Paul is bolder than we durst have been, when to show how difficult it is for Sinners to return to God after their fall, he uses these terms in the Epistle to the Hebrews, Chap. 6. It is impossible for those who have been once enlightened, and tasted the good word of God, and the gift of the Holy Ghost, and the power of the life to come, if they fall away, to renew them again to repentance, seeing they crucify the Son of God afresh. And Ch. 10. of the same Ep. v. 26. For if we sin wilfully after we have received the knowledge of the Truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sin, etc. The reason why the Apostle made use of those vehement expressions, was his belief that he could not implant in Christians too great an Opinion of the difficulty to repent after falling into sin. But since it appears, that it is the great secret of the Jesuits policy, and the design of their Casuists and Confessors to persuade men that there is nothing easier than for the most hardened sinners to re-enter into Grace; I assure myself, that these modern directors of Conscience who guide men by new lights, never read those words of St. Paul, which condemn their practices, but they say with their Father Adam, That this Apostle suffered himself to be transported by the heat of his Nature into strange expressions: And if they durst use language suitable to their practices, they would accuse all the ancient Fathers as too hard and morose, and applaud themselves for enlarging and making plain the ways of Heaven, which from jesus Christ to their time continued narrow and rugged; in a word, whereas heretofore it was a rare thing to see a sinner Converted, you may now see thousands in their Churches. Where there needs not such formality▪ so many tears, such sighs and groans, and so much humiliations as in the Primitive Church. The danger is only that God changes not according to their fancies, but is as just, and as severe as ever: But this matters not with them whose design is to make good compositions with sinners, and ●ell the blood of jesus Chri●● cheap, that their market may be quicker, and yield large returns of profit and advantage by the multitude of their customers. The Sinn●● needs no more than tell his Confessor the story of his disorders, and he is presently capable of the greatest favours of the Church, and cleared of his sins without fear of an after clap. When Bishops and Priests were not without difficulty induced to proceed to the reconciliation of Penitents to God, for fear of binding themselves in those sins, whereof they pretended to lose others, whom it may be, the Sovereign Judge had not absolved, sinners though reconciled, continued in fear and humiliation, having their sins ever before them, and after the practising of all sorts of good works, and submission to the rigour of Ecclesiastical Discipline, they were still afraid they had not satisfied the justice of God. And that their sins were not so mortified, but that they might recover the dominion of their hearts to their eternal destruction, and ceased not to charge themselves with sins of ignorance and infirmity, with omissions and neglects. But now as if the most heinous crimes were as inconsiderable as the lightest faults, and as easily pardoned as the smallest miscarriages, as if the maladies of the Soul were not difficult to cure, and as if God had for the future for ever remitted the severity of his judgement against sinners from the time they follow the advice of the Jesuits; the most wicked of men, the most dissolute wretches are no sooner absolved by these complaisant directors, but their Consciences are in peace for all their past sins, though they are resolved to commit them again: These are the persons that make up these vast numbers which fill the Churches of the Jesuits, and swell the list of their Confessions. They are directors of all those Consciences which love not to hear any but pleasing Doctrines, who pretend condescension to men's weaknesses and infirmity, and never employ the Knife and the Lance in the cure of their wounds. This makes all those who cannot endure sound doctrine, but have itching desires to be flattered in their ways, to have recourse to these Prophets of the last times, and having shut their ears against the truth, are by the just judgement of God given up to be seduced by fables, which serve only for their greater seducement and Depravation. It may be said to the glory of the Society that they are Guides to an infinite number of persons, and with this advantage, that whereas St. Paul says, That not many wise men after the f●esh, not many mighty, not many Noble were called; these good Fathers have in their Churches so many persons of greatest quality, so many rich, so many wise men after the flesh, that they have no room for the Common people, and ordinary men: And have made the ways of repentance so smooth and easy, that the most tender and delicate sinners run thither with as much ardour and facility as they could possibly have done to their sins and disorders. If you consider these Fathers as to worldly enjoyments, and weigh their condition in the balance of humane opinion, they have cause to be entirely satisfied with their Estate in the places where they reign, as having all the Grandeur of the World prostrate at their feet; but if you view them by the light of Faith, nothing will appear so miserable as these blind Guides, who lead the blind, and together with them fall into the ditch, and abyss of darkness. They have reason to fear, that God may require at their hands the blood of an infinite number of Souls, who for want of repentance die in their sins, whom they abused by hasty absolution, and covered their faults instead of curing them. 'Tis lamentable to observe, how sinners are daily confessed by these Ghostly Fathers, but never converted to newness of life, repenting every moment, but never truly, drawing nigh to God with their lips, but denying him in their hearts; becoming Proselytes to these new Pharisees, and thereby more the children of Hell than before. 'tis true, they practise not these things alone, but this augments rather than excuses their condemnation; as having drawn others to follow their courses, being tempted to like Actions, in hopes of equal success, and as many disciples as the Jesuits had gained by their easy devotion; so that now there are Jesuits every where, and in all habits, and though they claim the honour of being the first Authors of Morals which have quite overthrown those of the Church, there want not others who have imitated them in deceiving the world. I remember, that on a Holiday, in a Church in Flanders, I saw a vast multitude of people thronging to Confession and the Sacrament: And soon after in discourse with one of these Fathers, I told him I was much edified at the Devotion of the people, and asked him whether it was always equal to what it appeared on the last Holiday: The Father assured me I had seen only what was usual and ordinary, that the people were very devout, and failed not to frequent the Sacrament often. But Sir, said I, to complete my joy, give me leave to ask you whether all these persons that communicate so often, do it with that piety and holiness the Greatness of these mysteries requires, whether they examine themselves seriously before they approach the Holy Table, for fear of coming thither to condemnation, and eating there their eternal ruin: To speak plainly, is it probable, that all those who I see communicate every day in the week, do all lead an holy and innocent life, exempt from relapse into mortal sins, after their repentance, and in a word, are so holy as they ought to be who so often partake of those holy things? I perceived I spoke to this good Father in a Language he was not accustomed to hear; for being by this time sufficiently astonished, he told me I demanded too much, and what I required was the highest perfection; that it was a rare thing to see men who fell not into mortal sins; but that those Communicants took care to confess without fail, as often as they fell: What Sir, said I, those persons that fill your Churches are the same that after dinner people Taverns and tippling-houses, Bowling-greens and Theatres, and other places of divertisement? Contrary to the Gospel, they serve two Masters, in the Morning Christ, and the rest of the day the Devil; if so, their Confession may in appearance bind the strong man of sin armed in their hearts, but do not you know, that when the House of our Soul hath been swept only by a servile and fruitless Confession, and not filled after with sincere compunction, and garnished with good works, that strong man armed whom they fancied bound and cast out, returns thither with seven other spirits more wicked than himself, and the last state of that man is worse than the first? The Good Father had not the patience to hear what I would have said, but speaking out of the abundance of his heart, Sir, said he, must we not save all the world? and if we cannot send sinners strait into Paradise, 'tis good to send them at least into Purgatory. The frailty and weakness of men is so great in these times, that to require great matters from them in duties of Religion, is to make them quit all; therefore as often as they fall into sin, we must not neglect to grant them absolution whenas they demand it, for as in their demand there is an appearance of their fear of damnation, that fear with Confession, are sufficient Grounds to give them absolution, nor can it be denied them, according to the common opinion of the Casuists. This Father could not have been more surprised at my Answer than I was at his reply, Repenting in a manner that I had engaged with a person of Principles so different from mine, that I foresaw it was impossible for us to agree; however I resolved to make good my ground, and one affault more to bring him to reason. Father, said I, I am amazed at your expressions; what agreement can there be between your practice, and the Doctrine of the Fathers? They teach us, that to persist in the Commission of sin, for which we pretend to have repent, is not true repentance, but a mocking of God, that the Vicissitude and Revolution of sins, and Confessions succe●ding one another, is to turn and return in the ways of the wicked, which certainly end in everlasting perdition. I know, 'tis not strange, that men who sin naturally, should be capable of falling into all kinds of disorders; but 'tis insupportable, to see them from whom ●inne●s aught to receive light and instruction, to serve for nothing but to blind them the more, and to put them out of that just fear they ought to have to approach Jesus Christ, without reforming their Lives. It was St. Augustine's direction, that he only should partake of the body and blood of the Saviour of the world, who is already a part of his body by the union of Charity. St. Basil would have Communicants able to say with St. Paul, that it is not they that live, but Christ that lives in them. St. Francis de Sales, in this last Age advises none to a daily Communion, but such who not only never relapse into mortal sins, but have no affection for the most Venial. But by your practice, Father, these rules are exploded, for with you they are worthy to be Communicants as often as they confess, and to receive the bread of life, though their crimes live, and flourish in their hearts and their Actions. Thus Confession alone is sufficient to make them pass for Devout, and a life better regulated is an extraordinary sanctity, not proportioned to the frailty and infirmities of persons of this Age. The Father impatient to give me the hearing, could not refrain from intterrupting me, to tell me, that they did no more than what Christ had allowed in the Gospel, for in St. Matthew, when Peter asked Christ how often he should forgive the sins of his Brother, the Saviour of the World made answer, Not seven times, but seventy times seven. I was so moved at his producing so strange a proof, and vouching a Text so improper to confirm the Maxim he maintained, that I gave him not leisure to add any more, but told him: Have you read that passage in the Gospel? I doubt not but you have, but your de●ire to make it subservient to your purposes, and to apply it so as it may countenance your practices, hath made you forget part of it which renders it wholly useless for your designs. Permit me then to put you in mind, that there are in that passage these very words, Lord, how often shall my Brother sin against me, and I forgive him? Observe those words, Against me, which show, that he treated only of particular offences which our Brethren may have given us, but not of Crimes they commit against God. And the question is not touching the use of the Keys which Christ hath committed to the Pastors of the Church, but of that patience, that meekness and charity every particular person ought to have towards them that offend him. The Priests ought not to remit sins committed against God, but according to the Rules prescribed by God in the Sacred Canons, nor have any power, according to the Fathers, to unbind Lazarus, who is the type and figure of a Sinner, but after he hath been raised by jesus Christ to new life: But as to offences which concern us particularly, Charity hath no bounds, but an indispensable command to love even our enemies, and what ill soever is done us we are obliged to overcome by pardon and forgiveness; not seven times only, but as often as the offence is reiterated: This is the meaning of the place, as all Commentators unanimously agree in the explication, not one pretending that those words favour the facility of some Confessors in pronouncing absolution to Sinners as often as they please to demand it. I thought sufficient had been said to convince and gain this good Father, but was deceived, and saw by experience, that he had a Spirit that was Reason-proof. And to be rid of me, he told me plainly, he little valued all the proofs I could bring, and that he would proceed as he was accustomed; this being a common practice, authorized by good Casuists, and should they attempt to do otherwise, Repentance would become an intolerable yoke, Confession forsaken, all the world forced away from the Altar, and Sinners despair; he should have added, that it would ruin many Sacred Communities which had no better means of subsistence than this easy absolution, and truly by the genius and countenance of the Father, I discovered that this last was the most prevalent argument with him, and therefore resolved to hold my peace; for 'tis to no purpose to bring the most demonstrative evidences to undeceive a man whose persuasions are grounded in reasons of interest, unless you first cure the coverousness of his heart. We have no more to do upon these occasions, but to sigh, and pray God that he would effect what to us is entirely impossible. To return to the Jesuits, it must be confessed that they have been very prudent in the choice of proper and successful means to compass their design of drawing after them a great number of people; they easily perceived, that had they exacted from Sinners the fruits of a solid repentance, entire self-denial, reformation of life, serious mortification of Vice, they could not have easily attained their ends, and that if they treated the Sinner that should come to them, according to the Rules of the Church, their Churches should never have been filled, nor their Confessors much employed: But judging very wisely, that though they obliged not Sinners to put off the old man, they would be content to put on the new, if they promised men Heaven for some petty works of no weight or difficulty; there could be no Sinner so hardened who would not be their proselyte on so good terms, and pay them to boot for the pains they should take to send him to Hell: This is the reason that moved them to pitch on these works of ostentation, and exhort all the people to communicate every day in the week, and to authorise their practice, pretend it was approved by an Archbishop of Valentia, in an Assembly of Doctors, and that he Ordained It should be free for all the people to Communicate every day in the year, to see the vanity of their pretence of being authorized by this Archbishop; Observe, that it hath been ever allowed for persons truly virtuous to Communicate every day: But these are not the persons they understand in the Ordinance for being few in number, they could not be expressed by the term of All the People: So that All the People, who, the Jesuits say have permission to Communicate every day in the week, are all kinds of persons, and the common sort of men who live in such a manner, that they are not worthy to Communicate once in their age, and never approach the Altar, but they abuse the facility of their Confessors, and make themselves guilty of a new crime. But let the Jesuits say what they please it cannot be denied, but the face of affairs is the same it was before they appeared in the world, no less Simony and Usury, Injustice and Iniquity, Impurity and Violence committed now than before: Tradesmen cheat as they were wont, Judges take bribes, Soldiers blaspheme and ●ob as much as ever; that which the Jesuits have done, is, that men commit wickedness with ease, without fear or remorse, they make it a sport upon the credit of these Fathers, affirming it easy to get pardon, and when they have chosen one of them for their Confessor, they find him so apt to condescend, so full of good words, and of so pleasing an h●mour, that, as themselves say, Sinners expiate their crimes with as much cheerfulness and ardency, as they committed them; and in a moment become Saints worthy to receive the body of Christ as often as they please; but the mischief is, that their sanctity having cost little, it is but short lived, and their passions not mortified, presently produce the same disorders again: But these Fathers care not though the multitudes of people about their Altar's dishonour Christ in profaning his body, provided they serve to promote the Glory of the Society. We read in Scripture, that though the manners of the jews were extremely corrupt, they ceased not to offer to God abundance of Sacrifices, and were persuaded to it by the Priests, who valued not the loss of men's souls if they could but profit by the multitude of Oblations brought to the Temple: But these profane Sacrifices instead of appeasing provoked the wrath of God, which makes him complain in the first Chapter of Isaiah, He was weary of their Offerings, and despised their Sacrifices, and that the blood of Bulls and of Goats c●uld not expiate the sins in which they persisted, that the Oblations of the carnal people were vain, that he could not away with their Ceremonies and Festival Days, that he hated their Assemblies, and would n●t hearken to their prayers who had wickedness in their hearts. If God thus used the jews who were subject to the Law of Moses, what 〈◊〉 justice may we expect if we honour him only with our lips, and instead of a real and cordial Conversions content ourselves with an imaginary and superficial. I know the jews Sacrifices were but gross shadows of the Sacrifice now in the Church; but if our hands and our hearts are no less defiled than the jews, we are so much more worthy condemnation, as the sanctity of our Sacrifice is greater than theirs; for God respects not the Sacrifice only, but the person that offers it; nor can we present him an Oblation so Holy that can appease his anger, while he sees abominations in our hearts, and crimes in our hands, and our souls unfit to be a sacrifice to him▪ he seeks Servants to worship him in Spirit and in Truth, not such as say only Lord, Lord, but such as do the will of his Heavenly Father. I know there's nothing so Holy as the Sacraments, and that the Primitive Christians derived all their strength and their comfort from the continual use of the Eucharist; but we are not to think that we are therefore arrived to the perfection of those Primitive Christians, because we imitate them in this particular; but that there is nothing will sooner draw upon us the anger of God, than to presume to feed on the bread of Angels, when we deserve not to gather the crumbs. This makes it appear strange, that these Fathers fear not to affirm, That they are seldom defective in any part of Christian Righteousness, who approach to the Sacraments, the fountains of virtue and salvation, that you cannot find any public licentiousness in a Town where the frequent use of these mysteries hath been confirmed by a laudable custom, because the Author of Salvation can have no commerce with vice, nor the darkness of Hell find any room in hearts so often irradiated by the Eternal Light. 'Tis strange, I say, that these Fathers who pretend to be the Masters of Theology speak so ignorantly of the most Comm●n T●u hes of the Faith, and are so blind as to take the Sacraments for virtues which cannot be abused. Is it possible that they know not what the world is assured of, that there is an infinite number of Priests, Friars and Persons of all sorts who are the more wicked the oftener they Communicate, and serve themselves of that which is most Sacred in Religion, to cloak their Abominations from the sight of the world? Can they be ignorant of this, that the reception of Christ in the Eucharist, though he be the true light doth only increase the blindness of those wretches, and render them more wicked and corrupt who presume to receive the fountain of purity without repenting for their sins? And that the Devil ceases not to continue master of their hearts who would seem to divide them between God and the Prince of Darkness. It may be admired, that they are so hot and intent upon the praise of their Society in the Image of their first Age, as not to remember what they chant every day of the Holy Communion in their Churches; Mors est malis, vita bonis, vide paris sump●ionis qu●m sit dispar exitus. 'Tis true, Christ is Life, but in the Eucharist he is not life to them who were not alive before, but a severe judge of them who being dead in sin, presume to approach the Fountain of Life: So that there is great cause to bewail that all the reformation made by the Jesuits in the Church amounts only to the commission of an infinite number of sacrilegious Communions, filling their Churches with innumerable multitudes of persons who never part with their Confessors without absolution, what crimes soever they are guilty of, and as soon as confessed, are held fit for the Altar. I cannot forbear the relation of a story on this occasion, often told by a jesuit with very great delight: This good Father acknowledged he had been much hindered from admitting to Communion, a person so Choleric and subject to blaspheme, that he could not go from the place of Confession to the Altar without falling into the same crimes, losing in a moment all the fruit of his Confession, and wholly indisposing himself to receive the Eucharist: The Father according to the custom of the Society, being more solicitous to make this man Communicate, than to cure him of so dangerous a malady, resolved to confess him at the foot of the Altar, and to administer the Sacrament to him immediately after absolution. This rare expedient he afterwards mentioned as a most refined invention and quintessence of spirituality which he had brought into practice by the happiness of his conceit without a precedent. How extravagant soever this conduct may be, 'tis certainly very proper for persons who serve their interest, and despise that of Christ. The more corrupt men are, the more they love to be flattered, and desire to be rid of that trouble and fear that are the natural companions of crimes: And if they find such directors of Conscience as will assure them they are in the way to eternal beatitude, there's not a person amongst them so senseless as not to hold himself indebted to so obliging Divinity, and to impart their temporal goods unto them who are so liberal of those of God; and as the Casuists resolve, that the Fathers are not bound in duty to give, but may sell these things to their Devotees; so these cannot but make good payment for their gentleness, their condescendence, their lies and their cheats. Nor can it be doubted, but that the confessionals they multiply so carefully in their Temples are so many little mines of Silver and Gold, for as they procure all conveniencies for their penitents, it cannot be supposed they forget themselves. And while others who have not the excellent address of these Fathers take great pains by serious examination to dispose penitents to a sincere repentance, and a newness of life, these good Fathers are so dexterous and nimble, that they dispatch in a short time the most detestable and inveterate sinners. The most corrupt consciences which appear to others as an impenetrable abyss, never stop their Career, who Can confess the Devil himself in less than a quarter of an 〈◊〉, saith F. Grisiel. If you examine their other practices of Devotion, you will find no less disorder than in their administration of the Sacraments of Penance and the Eucharist; for proof whereof you need only consider their Relations of the pomps and shows they fill their Churches withal, they make it their Glory to draw the people thither, by erecting machine's which may render their industry admirable, and surprise the eyes of spectators. But in the mean time neglect their cures, and the Churches of other benefices they have usurped, though they forget nothing to satisfy the most curious; their Altars are adorned with the most exquisite picture and delicate sculptures, nothing appears but rich and magnificent, and all animated by Consorts of Music that ravish the sense: So that the house of Prayer and Penitence, is converted into a place of pleasure and divertisement; and oftentimes they act their Tragedies and Comedies, and pass several days in most profane manner, though it must be confessed they forget not for all that to say Mass. The world knows how they profane the Chapel of the College of Marmonsteir, which they had united to their College at Paris. The Rector of the University was obliged to exhibit an information against them upon his own view of the disorder, having found in one part of the Chapel a Haberdasher's shop, and the rest full of hay for the horses of a person of quality their Pensioner. Since that time I have seen men at work there to dress up a Theatre, and prepare Machine's for a Ballad which we must have learned in the Chapel, or gone all day in search of the Dancing Master who practised there only, and was not permitted to come into their College for fear of disturbing their repose and troubling their exercises. I know not whether they find these means very proper to incline men to prayer, and inspire them with compunction for their sins; But to me who have not studied Divinity in their School, nothing appears so opposite to the Spirit of Christ, and the instructions he left us for prayer. For our Divine Master in the sixth of St. Matthew commands us when we would pray, to enter a private place and shut to the door, that we may be separated from the world, and appear only to God; which rule ought to be observed, as far as possibly it may in public prayers, as we see many Religious Communities pray with the same sed●te and composed tranquillity of mind in their Quires as they would in their private Chambers and Oratories, as being together but one body and one spirit: They chant so together that th●y make but one voice, and and hear not one another, but when it is necessary to continue the Chaunt, and to render their prayers more efficacious by joining with their brethren in supplication: Besides when they Chant, all their words are intelligible, that their thoughts may be employed and taken up in attending the sense, and filled with the affections of David in the composure of the Psalms: Thus the Chartreus and other Orders of Religion retaining their primitive purity and simplicity of spirit, have nothing in their Churches to scatter and dissipate their thoughts and meditations, nothing to ravish their eyes and their ears, and to draw away their hearts from minding their devotions, to gaze on fine fights, and wander in vanities. The like may be observed in such of our Cathedrals, wherein according to the ancient simplicity, as there is nothing wanting that may be necessary for the decent performance of the external worship of God, so we find not there such numbers of superfluous Ornaments that serve only to amuse grossie and carnal spirits and earthly dispositions. Such simplicity and modesty please not the Jesuits, they must have something to quicken the senses; and whereas Christ Commands us to offer our Prayers in the most private retirements of our houses, & from the bottom of our hearts to prevent the distractions of our straying and wanton senses; these Fathers invite us to enter their Churches, to see and hear thing to ravish our eyes and tickle our ears, but to empty our hearts of all affections of devotion, and render us incapable to pray with Reverence and Attention. In the mean time they glory in their shame, and triumph in that which ought to be their confusion; they rejoice in these practices for which they should mourn, and prove by experience that men are so wretched, that there's nothing so ridiculous, nothing so contemptible but may serve to flatter the vanity of their humours, and raise up in their fancies mountains of pride. Had we leisure to examine that entire Volume composed by Alegambe, of the names of their Authors, it would be a fresh instance of their vanity and pride. Can any thing be more ridiculous than to amass an infinite number of names of pitiful Books, and more pitiful Authors, to make the world believe their Society is full of extraordinary men? What Glory was it for the company to have produced those innumerable Casuists, who have corrupted all Christian Morality, and turned topsie turvy the Maxims of the Gospel, as Sam●ies, Tambou●in, Escobar, Castro Palao, Banny, Guimenius, & c? What glory to have produced Divines who have extolled themselves above the Fathers, and their Authority, to bring their own profane and ridiculous Novelties in Credit, as Molina, Poza, Garasse, etc. have done. Is it not a shame, that they have permitted those scosting Companions, those ill-made Spirits of their Fathers, Binet, Monk, and Barry; to write Books so entirely ridiculous? Are they not struck with prodigious, and irrecoverable blindness, to boast of those works they have composed against the sacred persons of Kings and of Bishops, and to own those mischievous Books, which were published under feigned names, and deserved censure as soon as they came forth, as those of Seribanius, Smith, and Mariana? Lastly, What reason have they to insert in the Catalogue of their Works those books they have stolen from others, whereof their Father Abbot and others have been often convicted? But though this be common among these good Fathers, and every day's practice, I will content myself at present with one example, by which it will appear, they spare not their best friends; but are ever ready to do them any injury which may afford them the least hope of Glory. 'Tis notorious to the world, that in the process they maintained against the University of Paris, M. De Monthelon, whose name is famcus in the Parliament of Paris, defended their Cause against M. De la Martiliere; and that this later having published his Argument in Print, M. De Monthelon published his also. There's no man but thinks it the misfortune, so good an Advocate to have undertaken so bad a Cause; but the misfortune was greater to have Clients so ingrate as the Jesuits proved to him. For is it not strange, these Fathers should envy their Advocate the glory of having defended them, and attribute the Argument he published, to their F. Cotton? and should have the boldness to do it in the life-time of M. de Monthelon, their Advocate's Nephew, who can, when he pleases, convince them of falsehood, by producing the Original of the Printed Argument, all of his deceased Uncle's hand-writing: That I may not be thought to impose on these Fathers, hear the very words of Alegambe the jesuit, in his Bibliotheque of the Writers of their Society, pag. 379. col. 2. Where speaking of F. Cotton, he saith, Edidit Apologiam pro Societate contra Martellerum sub nomine Montolo●ii. He published an Apology for the Society, against Martellier, under the name of Monthelon: Certainly the Pharisees of the Old Law never did the like, nor were guilty of a vanity so malignant and Ridiculous. Artifices and Violences of the Jesuits of Almaign to take from Religious Orders several considerable Abbeys and Priories. Stories on this subject taken out of the Memorial of F. Paul William, Vicar General of the Order of Clunie: Presented to the FRENCH Council in 1654. Against the Rector of the three Colleges of Jesuits at Selestat, En●isheim, and Fribourg in Brisgau. OF The Three Priories in Alsatia, usurped by the Jesuits from the Order of St. Benedict. And First, Of the Priory of St. Valentine of Ruffach, taken away violently by virtue of Bulls against Bulls. THe three Priories Conventuals of St. Valentine, St. james, and St. Morand, are of ancient foundation, between five and six hundred years standing, belonging to the Order of St. Benedict, and holding of France, though all three situate in Alsatia, and in the Diocese of Basil. The first stands in the Town of Ruffach, parcel of the temporalties of the Bishop of Strasbourg: the second in the Village of Veldbach, and the third near the town of Altkirk in the Country, reunited to France by the Treaty of the peace of Allemaigne. The first depends on the Abbey of Chesy, and the two last on that of Clunie, the full right of collating being in the Abbots, and preserved without interruption, and the priories always possessed by Benedictines of the Nation of France. The Priory of St. Valentine was founded about the eleventh Century, by two Monks of the Abbey of Chesy, in the Diocese of Soissons, assisted by the Offerings and Liberalities of the people, upon the occasion of the Great Miracles wrought by the Martyr Bishop of Soissons, when those Monks in their return from Pilgrimage to Rome arrived at Ruffach, enriched with his Relics by hte Gift of the Abbot of St. Potentience of the same Order in the City of Rome, so that in a short time they built that Priory which continued always in the possession of the Monks and Abbot of Chesy, though the Jesuits have not omitted any artifice from the beginning of their institution, to make themselves masters thereof, contrary to the Bulls of the Popes, Lucius and Alexander 3 d, who excommunicated all those that should attempt any thing concerning the said Priory, in prejudice to the rights of the said Abbot and Monks: For after the year 1578. they procured and obtained from time to time Bulls upon Bulls, but so void and null they durst not produce them: And in 1618. they huddled up all the nullities and obreptions of the precedent Bulls into one, suggested by them to have been obtained for the benefit of the College of Selestat▪ founded some 3024. years before, wher●in▪ they set forth contrary to the truth that it was a simple Priory without a Convent, and aliened long since from the said Order with the usual formalities, and consent of all parties interessed. In pursuance of this Bull, these Father's having by strange precipitation and extraordinary haste outed the Prior Nicolas Verdot Monk of Chesy, with unheard of vexations possessed themselves timely of the said Priory in 1618. without any form of Justice, and▪ 18 years before the time prescribed by the pretended Bull, that is, before it became void by the death or session of the said Prior, who was Canonically possessed of it ever since 1610. and never juridically deprived thereof. Letters gained by surprise from the King, a●d ● Mandamus from the Bishop of Strasbourg: The dependence of the three Priories. This violent intrusion, notwithstanding the Oppositions, complaints, Protestations and pursuits of the said Prior, with the interposition of the Authority of the Crown of France, endured till God himself brought the remedy by a change of the State in 1634. when the jesuits upon the arrival of the French Armies having quitted the Priory, the said Prior was reestablished by his Majesty's Authority, and died in peaceable possession thereof in 1636. whereupon james Boescot of the Order of St. Dennis, succeeded him, and possessed it till 1644. though the Jesuits in 1638. had obtained Letters Patents from the said King, in Confirmation of their right if any they had, which they got by surprise, upon false suggestions that the said Priory ever since 1578. had been Canonically united to the College of Selestat, which had not been founded before 1615, and that the said Verdot of Chesy, whom death had deprived of power to defend his Cause, had been an usurper, Intruder, and illegally possessed of the said Priory, as if he had been a Lutheran, seized of it by main force. But the Letters Patents were of no use to the Jesuits; for Boescot seeing that the continuance of the War in Germany, made the place not habitable, in the year 1644 resigned the said Priory into the hands of the Abbot of Chesy, who bestowed it on Paul William, a Friar of the strict Observance of the Congregation on of S. Van, who by the King's Order took possession thereof, and peaceably enjoyed it with those of his Order till the 2d, of june, 1651. on which day, in pursuance of a Mandamus issued from Archduke Leopold, Bishop and Lord of Strasbourg, under pretence of executing some Articles of the Treaty of peace, but really in breach thereof, the Archduke's Officers reestablished there some Jesuits strangers, and by force and violence outed the said Prior and his Friars of the reformed Order of St. Francis, notwithstanding all their oppositions, Appeals and Protestations of force, which the said Officers refused to enter of Record among the Acts of their Courts, though it was afterwards granted them upon renewing their suit at Brisac. Now these three Priories depending as to their spiritualty and right of Collation upon the Abbeys of Chesy and Clunie have ever been subject and answerable for their temporaltyes to the Archdukes Chamber of justice of Ensi●heim, belonging to the house of Austria, though this of St. Valentine be situate in the Territories of the Bishop of Strasbourg; and that by the Treaty of Munster, in 1648. all the rights of the House of Austria, in the higher and lower Alsatia were granted in Sovereignty to the Crown of France, and consequently the said Priory being at present under the Jurisdiction of the most Christian King, and his Justice, to whom alone belongs the cognizance thereof, and the maintenance of the said Prior in his possession, it follows that the intrusion of the said Jesuits strangers into the place of the said Prior, outed without cause or lawful Authority in 1651. is an unjust attempt against the tenor of the said Treaty of peace. Nor is the King's interest less engaged for keeping the two other Priories of St. james, and St. Morand, which the Jesuits would have taken away from the Order of Clunie, and consequently from France, to alien them to perpetuity, and unite them to the Colleges of strangers, to the great prejudice of his Majesty's Subjects, and the order of St. Benedict. False suggestions to pope Gregory XIII. to obtain a Bull of Union of the said Priory: False Charge of Crimes on the Prior. That it may the better appear, what artific●s the said Fathers make use of, for want of right, to usurp the said Priories; observe that in 1578. john Sancey being Prior of that of St. Valentin, they obtained from Popoe Gregory xiii. by the procurement and Authority of john Bishop of Strasbourg, a Bull of Union of the said Priory, for founding a College in the Town of Molsheim, and that they should enjoy it upon the first vacancy; upon the false suggestion that it was a Priory only without a Convent, without declaring that it depended on France, and the Abbey of Chesy, without an information Super commodo & incommodo, of the convenience and inconvenience, which according to Custom ought regularly to have been first exhibited, without the consent of the Prior or his Convent, the Abbot of Chesy, the Bishop of the Diocese, or of the King, though all interessed parties. These Jesuits being otherwise sufficiently founded at Molsh●im, not knowing how to betake themselves to execute their Bull, so full of nullities, and void Clauses, left it dormant without the least mention 31 years, in which time two vacancies incurred, by the decease of Sancey in 1589. and of Adrian Verd●t his Successor in 1598. which they let pass without stirring at all, or giving the least notice or hint of their pretensions. So that the said Bullby this means lay superannuate and useless. At last in 1609. they pitched on an expedient very disagreeable to the Charity of Christians, which was, to charge with Crimes and infamous Calumnies Nicholas Terrastre, Successor to Adrian, that they might deprive him of his Benefice, and make use of this third vacancy for Entry. They managed this business so dexterously, that by false reports spread against Terrastre, the Matter was brought to that pass as to oblige the Officers of the Archdukes Chamber of Ens●sheim, to write about it, not to the Bishop of Strasbourg, nor the Diocesan, but to the Abbot of Chesy as the lawful Collator, praying him to call back Terrastre, and provide another of his Monks to succeed in the Priory, for prevention of scandal: To give more credit to the Letter, they persuaded Nicholas Verdot one of the Monks of the said Abbey, then resident in the Priory, to carry it, who inflamed with Ambition to succeed Terrastre, conveyed the Accusation against his Superior, who without other information was recalled, and Verd●t sent back Prior in his place: This serves to clear what we affirmed before, that this Priory is Conventual, and that neither the Bishop of Strasbourg, nor his Officers had ever Authority over it, or took cognizance of any cause that concerned it, But that the Abbot hath the Jurisdiction in the Spiritualty, and right of Collation, and disposing of the Friars▪ as the Chamber of Ensisheim hath in the Temporalties. Other Calumnies of the Jesuits. A feigned Seminary, false suggestions to Pope Paul the fifth, their Artifices, Avarice and Violences. But providence permitted not their designs to have the desired success, for Verdot succeeding in the said Priory of St. Valentine filled the vacancy; but could not escape drinking deep in the bitter cup of their calumnies, more black and infamous than those he carried against his Superior, whose innocence being at last cleared and acknowledged, he was honoured with the dignity of Prior in the same Abbey on which the Priory depends, where he died in peace eighty three years old: As for Verd●t he was hampered by the Jesuits as you shall hear hereafter. The Fathers of Molsheim, having in vain solicited the Prior to a Session with offers of a considerable Pension, persuaded Archduke Leopold as Bishop of S●rasbourg, to demand the said Priory from the Pope, upon pretence he would bestow it ●or endowment of a Seminary, (which was but imaginary) in the City of Strasbourg for reducing the Heretics there to the Catholic Faith, which was granted accordingly on this false suggestion, together with this also, that the Bull of union for the College of Molsheim was still in force, for that there had happened no overture for the execution thereof, Neither Session nor decease, notwithstanding the three vacancies aforesaid, and that the Rector of the said College consented to the disunion for so pious a work as the erecting of a Seminary. Thus was Pope Paul the fifth surprised, who thought the said Rector the only party concerned. This Bull was not more null and abusive than the execution wrongful and injurious, for the Jesuits, concealing from the Archduke their principal design to get the said Priory out of the hands of the Prior, to be applied to another College of theirs newly erected in a Priory of the same Order, called St. Faiths of ten thousand Livers rend in the Town of Selestat, and besieging him daily with constant importunities persuaded him at last to molest poor Verdot as a criminal. A French man by birth, and consequently a stranger in that Country, to force him to resign and quit the said Priory for a Pension, with threats, if he disputed it, to take it absolutely from him without any allowance to be made him: But Verdot unwilling to be a Traitor to his Abbot, and his Country by quitting his right notwithstanding the tempest raised against him by the Jesuits to serve their designs by a multitude of crimes, whereof they accused him, resolved to prevent shipwreck by a prudent retreat, in hopes that time might produce a calm. Their Executing a Sentence never given, informing of Crimes invented by themselves; procuring a gift to Archduke Leopold of what belonged not to him. A new Bull. But the Archduke took the advantage by this occasion to seize the Priory without any process upon pretence of bestowing it on the feigned Seminary, and after endeavoured to obtain a sentence by the Authority of the Nun●io of Lucerne against the said Verdot; but the Nuncio having caused an information to be drawn up against Verdot for those crimes invented by the Jesuits, could not find any ground for sentence of condemnation against him; so that he continued still titulary Prior, though outed unjustly. His Adversaries afterwards acknowledged him the Legal Prior (and not an usurper as the Jesuits had injuriously calumniated in the let●ers-patents surreptitiously obtained in 1638.) the Archduke ordering them to pay him an annual pension of one hundred and sixty Florins, which amount to about three hundred Leures, though he refused to accept it as a thing that might be prejudicial to his right, and involve him also in the guilt of Simony. The Jesuits se●ing the affair pretty well disposed in order to the attaining of their design by the retreat of Verdot, threw off the vizard of their former pretences, and plainly discovering themselves to the Archduke persuaded him to apply the said Priory to their College of Selestat, for its better endowment, as if he had been absolute Master thereof; and Letters-Patents were passed to that effect 27 of Aug. 1616. without any mention made of the Prior, or the said Seminary which was merely imaginary, and never had a being but in the projects of the I●sui●es, who knowing the nullity of this donation made against Law, and the right of several persons, endeavoured to cover and supply its defects, and to make sure their title by a new Bull in 1618., setting forth in their petition on to the Pope, that the Rector of their Chimerical Seminary freely yielded his consent to this donation or endowment, whereupon they obtained the Bull under the conditions and refervation following; Dummodo tempore datae praesentium non sit in 〈◊〉 ali●ni jus spe●i●li●er quaesitum: i. e. Provided that at the time of the date of these presents, no person have any right thereto especially purchased, as Verdot had ever since 1610; and that only with this reservation annexed, s● tunc, vel cum primum 〈◊〉 per cessum vel per d●c●ssum, i. e. in case it be then vacant, or as soon as the same shall be void by Session or by decease, without any mention of the pretended donation from the Archduke. And though this Bull was absolutely void by reason of the false suggestions on which it was obtained yet by colour hereof the Jesuits hastily took possession of the said Priory without any formality of law, eighteen years before the vacancy incurred by the death of Verdot in 1636. These are the artifices, such are the titles the Jesuits make use of to rob France, the Order of St. Benedict, and the Abbey of Ch●s●y of the Priory of St. Valentin: But 'tis no wonder the Jesuits have surprised the Holy See by these tricks, which are ordinary with them, since they have endeavoured after that to circumvent the Emperor in a business of like nature, but far greater importance, as will appear by the story. A notable fiction and imposture of the Jesuits, to take from the Order of the Cisteaux Monks, the Abbey called Aula Regia. During the last wars of Germany about 1644. the Jesuits of the College of Prague remonstrated to his Imperial Majesty, that they wanted a house of Recreation to refresh their spirits in their vacations from public employments; and that there was a little Abbey called Aula Regia belonging to the Order of the Cisteaux about a league from the City very convenient for that purpose, possessed by six Monks only, and they very ill livers, dissolute, and scandalous, neglecting Divine Service, and minding nothing but their divertisement in hunting, and other pastimes: Whereupon the Emperor was so far persuaded, that at last he deputed a Commissary to put them into possession of the said Abbey without requiring any further information. But the Commissary being arrived upon the place was not a little astonished to find there a good Abbot with threescore and one professed Monks, and thirteen Novices newly initiated and entered in the Abbey, living regularly and constant at Divine Service, at which he was present, as also at the Common Table of their Refectory, though the two Jesuits sen with him to take the possession would have persuaded him, that they were but Country men in Monk's habit▪ and straggling persons whom the Abbot had sent for, after he had an inkling of what should happen. But the Abbot having justified the contrary by Authentic Acts of all their professions, the Commissary brought him to the Emperor, who upon his report sent back this worthy Abbot with honour into his Abbey, whence the two Jesuits prudently retained there to attend the resolution of the Emperor were dismissed with shame and confusion. Of the Priory of St. James of Veldbach, whereof the Jesuits became under-farmers to make themselves Masters. The Priory of St. james founded in 1144. at the Village of Veldbach by Frederick Count Fer●ette for the Order of St. Benedict, under the institution of the Congregation of Clunie which flourished then, hath been always possessed without interruption, and now is possessed by the reformed Friars of the said Order, the collation and provision reserved by express terms to the Abbot-General of the Order of Clunie: The last Prior john Nie●lin deceased in 1637. succeeded in 1602. Claudius' Dorez▪ Bishop of Lauzane, who had been possessed of the said Priory ever since 1567. But Nicolin by dispensation in that behalf kept his residence in another Priory he had in Burg●gue, having Leased that of St. james to the Abbot, and Convent of Lucell● of the Order of the Cisteaux, near the said Priory of St. james, for the term of his life from 1628. on the same conditions he had granted it them for years in 1621. particularly that they should maintain the Friars to celebrate Divine Service according to the obligation of the foundation and their profession, and should pay yearly to the said Prior six hundred Florins, and several other reservations specified in an instrument apart from the Grant; Whereupon the Records and Evidences of the Priory, the Church Ornaments, Plate, and other moveables of the house were consigned by inventory into the hands of the said Abbot and Convent who acquitted themselves of their Charge with great satisfaction to all, and performed their Conditions to the edifying of the Church. The Jesuits were established at Ensisheim fifteen or sixteen years since by Archduke Leopold, who had assigned them for their foundation three thousand Florins Annual Rent to be paid out of the Receipt of his Archiducal Chamber, over and above the Salaries of the ancient regents secular, upon condition that they should maintain in their College twenty two Jesuits; but they not content with this allowance, though more than sufficient, bethink themselves of an expedient to better their condition, but fatal to the Order of St. Benedict, and such as gave occasion to say of them what St. Paul said of himself, though in a different sense, I am made all things to all men, that I might gain the more; so they thrust themselves into all sorts of affairs, intermeddle and undertake all manner of businesses, and act any part attended with profit. Who would have believed that these Fathers would have reduced themselves to the quality of under-farmers to get footing in Monasteries, and render themselves Masters thereof? Yet this was the practice of F. Anthony Weinhard Rector of the said College of Ensisheim since 1628.; this was the course he took to rob the Order of Clunie of the said Priory of St. james, and some others of the same Order situate thereabouts, though it be a thing so contrary to the statutes of their Society, that it would appear a fable; but that the instrument under the signature of the Rector, the seal of the College, and confirmation of the Archduke put it out of question. This good Steward of the Society knowing that the Priory of St. james was set at a low rate, being really worth above three thousand Florins, by the Authority of Archduke Leopold forced the said Abbot, and Convent of Lucelle without the knowledge of the absent Prior to assign and make over the said Lease to him as Rector of the College of the Jesuits, which was accordingly done with the same clauses and condi●ions that they enjoyed it; not for the better Celebration of Divine Service, which is no part of their profession; nor for adorning the Church, or maintaining the house in repair, for they have left both to decay and come to ruin; but on design to make themselves Masters of the said Priory, and insensibly to deface all memory thereof as appears by their proceedings; for as soon as the Jesuits had go● footing there, and constrained the poor Prior (by ways so strange, that I dare not express them) to consent to the assignment after three years contest, the Rector to prevent a Revocation of this extorted consent obtained the confirmation of the Archduke upon a fraudulent request, setting forth quite contrary to the Truth, that the confirmation was desired for the Prior's security, and to take away all umbrage and apprehension he might have of damage or inconvenience to ensue upon the assignment to the prejudice of the Prior. They expel the Friars thence, pursue the Union at Rome of that and several other Benefices under the Name of the Archduke whom they interessed therein. Their subtleties and violences. Having fastened a hook in the jaws of the Prior, that he could not hinder them from enjoying the benefit of the assignment, the Rector turns out all the Friars of the Priory, the Prior not daring to resist or contradict him; so that the Priory stood abandoned, and the Divine Service suppressed, as generally it is in all the Benefices wherein the Jesuits are installed. Pursuant to this they wrought the Archduke so fit for their designs, that he was persuaded for colouring their usurpation to write to Rome to obtain an Union for them, not only of the Priory of St. james, but of the Abbey of Val-Dieu, the Priories of Froid●fontaine and St. Nicolas of the same Order, and the Commandery of St. Anthony of Isenheim without the consent or knowledge of the parties concerned, the Titulars or Collators of the said Benefices, and without showing the estate or nature thereof, which they ought to have done before the passing of the Grant: In the mean time they entertain the good Prior Nic●lin, with Letters of compliment and counterfeit amity which may be produced. The better to induce the Archduke to interpose and prosecute the business in their behalf, they propose an agreement somewhat extraordinary, That every of the said five Benefices being respectively worth between two and three thousand Florins should yield the Archduke five hundred Florins apiece, in deduction of so much of the three thousand Florins assigned them for their foundation. This was easily agreed to by the Archduke (though he had no power to do it) and decreed they should enjoy them in Commendam during the dependence of the matter of the Union with charge to satisfy the obligations of the foundations, which was impossible for them by reason of the inconsistence and repugnancy of their institution and Rules with those of the foundations: By this means the Divine Service and communities of five good Monasteries were suppressed ●o ●ound a College almost useless, as being environed on all sides with other Colleges more considerable, at Potentrut, Frib●urg, Selestat, M●lsheim and Haguen●u; so that they have in the said College but forty or fifty Scholars in six Classes under three Regent's. But this design was not approved of by the Holy See, which refused the union, as appears by another letter of the Archduke of Insp●uch, written to Rome Decemb. 9 1651. on the same subject, and to as little purpose as the former; nevertheless these good sub-farmers, who fancied that the Archduke's Authority would never fail them, and that the Scripture meant them, where 'tis said to the Jesuits, Every place you set your foot on shall be ●o●rs, disposed of the Priory as their own. In the mean time the Abbot of Clunie advertised of the death of Nicolin, bestowed the Priory of St. james on a ●ryar called Guill●t, who having taken possession by Attorney; designed to go in person to establish good Orders there, but both he and they who assisted in taking the possession were so frighted by the threats of the Jesuits, and all the Peasants of the village so deeply fined by the Sir Derlach at their instigation for having suffered an entry to be made, that the Prior menaced with imprisonment durst not go further, but returned into France; So the Jesuits continued as farmers to usurp the mean profits, in hopes the Archduke recovering his Estates by a treaty of peace, would maintain them by absolute Authority. But F. William established by the Prince of Conty, Vl●ar General of the Order of Clunie in Almaigne, being provided of the said Priory 15 july, 1651. by the single device of Guillott, and authorized by the King's Letters addressed to the Governor of the Country, went upon the place, took possession thereof according to Custom, the 7 of September the same year, and established there a community of Reformed Friars, having found the Priory abandoned, and almost all ruined, without a Curate, without Priest, without Friar, as it had continued ever since the usurpation of the Jesuits, though the Church thereof was Parochial; All which he caused to be presented by Information at Law: An Abbey of St. Benedict coveted, and almost taken away by the Jesuits. This Artifice of F. Weinhard hath no small relation and resemblance to another feat which one of his Brethren (whose name for some reasons shall be concealed) made use soon after against a good Abbot of the Order of St. Benedict, in Alm●igne, after the death of the Emperor Ferdinand the 2d. This Father went to the new Emperor, and informed him of a design he had to write the Life of the deceased Emperor Ferdinand the 2d his Father; but it was his desire to compose a piece worthy the subject, and for that purpose to retire into some pleasant place, where he might have good Air and refreshment, and named a fair Abbey of the Order of St. Benedict, excellently seated, as a place fit for his designs. Which the Emperor approving of, gave him Letters of recommendation to the Abbot, who made him all the welcome and good entertainment imaginable while he sojourned there. The jesuit was so taken with the pleasantness of the place, that he was enamoured of it, and resolved to beg it of the Emperor: To compass this design, he made it his business, not only to watch narrowly, and accurately observe but amplify the smallest defects and imperfections of the Friars, and having finished his double work, took his leave with all the marks of greatest satisfaction from the Abbot and Friars, who believed their Guest would serve them for the future as a powerful Advocate with the Emperor upon occasion: The jesuit Arrived at Court, and having presented his Majesty the Book he had composed of the life of Ferdinand the 2d, told him with unparallelled ingratitude, that he had been much deceived in the choice he had made of the place to write in, for whereas he thought it a House of Religion, he found it a House of scandal and debauchery, and had seen examples of a most dissolute life amongst men professing Religion, but having nothing of it but the habit. That his Majesty was obliged in Conscience to remedy it speedily. The good Emperor answering, that disorders must be reform: The jesuit replied, that these disorders were arrived at such excess, that he saw no other remedy but a total expulsion of those debauched Monks; and that if his Majesty pleased to give the Society the management of it, such good Order should be taken that the Change would quickly appear. The Emperor taking this for a fit means to gratify and reward the work of this Author, granted his request: And it was resolved in Council that all those Monks and their Abbot should avoid the place within eight days, and leave it to the Jesuits. Another Abbot of the Order who by good Fortune was by the Council immediately dispatched an express to the poor Abbot, to advertise him of the Resolution taken against him, The affair being communicated in the Chapter (as usual) it was concluded that the Abbot accompanied with one of the ablest of his Monks should go to Court, to seek a remedy for this misfortune, and to prevent their total ruin. When they presented themselves to the Emperor, they found him so prepossessed, that he presently rejected them, telling them his word was engaged, and he could not revoke it: The Abbot bethought himself of this Expedient; he besought his Majesty to be graciously pleased, that he might at least defend his Cause by a public dispute; which was granted him, and the dispute continued three days successively. The jesuit, who maintained the part of the Society, and flattered the Emperor by attributing to him a power he had not, to dispose at his pleasure of the Benefices of Ancient Orders, and change their Foundations, thinking he had born away the Bell the two first days, grown insolent upon his pretended victory, the third day insulted over the Monk who accompanied the Abbot, slighting him as a cipher, and one that came thither only to fill up a room, or make up a number: The young Monk more able, as well as more modest than the jesuit, having on his Knees desired the Abbot's blessing before he made his Defence, and received it, made it appear, that there is a time to be silent as well as to speak, and that as he knew the former, he was not ignorant of the later: He began to repeat from one end to the other all that had been said, objected, answered and replied, on the one side and the other the two first days; and after that so refuted the seeming reasons of the jesuit, that he taught him to hold his peace, having put him to the nonplus, and left him nothing to answer, and maintained the right of the Abbey, with arguments so convincing, that the Abbot and he were by the Emperor sent back into their Abbey, with the applause of the whole Assembly. The Priory of St. Morand, and two others usurped by a show of piety and surreptitious Bulls. If the Rector of Ensisheim played his part well in gaining entry into the Priory of St. james of Veldbach, the Jesuits of Fribourg in Bresga● used no less artifice to seize that of St. Morand, while Alsatia was yet under the house of Austria; for though two only of the Society were by the favour of the Archduke introduced there about 1623. under pretence of Catechising and hearing the confessions of the neighbourhood and Pilgrims frequent in that place, as if the Benedictines who then were there, whose names and surnames remain recorded in the information made thereupon had not been able to have performed it; yet these Jesuits did so ply the Officers at Rome, that they obtained secretly a Bull of Union in 1626. without the knowledge of the Benedictines▪ which they have not dared hitherto to produce, as being full of suggestions notoriously false, as That the said Priory was several years (they say eighty) forsaken and abandoned by the Prior and Monks, and without any Convent: That the buildings were all gone to ruin; that the Revenue of the Benefice was very small, and that the Collation belonged to the Arcb-Duke, which in every particular are publicly known to be false; Besides, the pretended Bull hath an express Reservation, sine praejudicio alicujus; that the grant shall not operate to the prejudice of any, yet they forthwith expelled Peter Gaspard, and Peter Michael then Monks there, who retired into the Abbey of St. Peter of the same Order in the black forest. It appears clearly not only by the said information, but by the confession of the Jesuits in their memorial (though in other things injurious and defamatory) that the said Priory of St. Morand is by foundation of the Order of Clunie and conventual, and that the collation thereof belongs to the General of the Order, as of all others that depend thereon; that it hath continued always conventual, and was actually possessed and served by the Benedictine Friars without any reproach until the intrusion of the Jesuits who expelled them: That the revenue they set forth at one hundred Ducats, exceeds eight hundred; that the buildings of the Priory, and particularly the Cloister were entire and in good repair; and that these Father's enemies to monastic regularity, to deface their power, all the marks thereof have on purpose pulled down the Cloister, since their entry, and caused the materials to be carried to St. Vlrich, another Priory of the said Order about two leagues from thence, to repair it, and not far from a very rich Priory of St. Augustine called Ellenberg; which two last Priories situate in the Territories of France, the said Jesuits strangers of Fribourg are in possession of at this day with as little right as that of St. Morand; the last having been given them in reward for a Tragedy acted by them for that purpose before the Archduke, wherein St. Augustine is introduced, complaining of the idleness and dissoluteness of those of his Order, and offering the said Priory of Ignatius, whom they bring on the stage to accept it, after a thousand praises of their Society. A deed of gift without right in favour of the Jesuits, who not able to keep the Priory carry away the moveables, evidences and ornaments. Four years after they had surreptitiously obtained this Bull, and without consent of the parties concerned, and particularly of the General of Clunie, to whom alone the collation did of full right belong, these Father's finding their Bull was no assurance of itself, resolved to help it out by propping it with a deed of gift, which they easily procured from the Archduke, though he had no right to make it other than usurped authority guided by their advice to dispose of the concerns of France; But being their opinion, no person could be so hardy as to adventure the questioning of the palpable nullities of their Bull, when protected and supported by a Sovereign Authority. And the Tragedy having been acted about the beginning of the German Wars, the Jesuits had a fair opportunity to keep the Priory in their hands during the troubles; but the Treaty of Peace being published in 1648. and the Countries of A●s●●tia, and Sundriga● reunited to France; the Prince of Conty holding himself obliged to Retake into his hands the Estates and Possessions usurped from his Order, and depending on his Abbey of Clunie, and having received advice of the vacance of the said Priory at the Re-commendation of M. de la Barde the King's Ambassador to the Swisses bestowed it in August, 1651. on Benedict, Schwaller a Friar of the Order, and Doctor of the University of Paris; In pursuance whereof Schwaller by his Majesty's Order took possession in the usual form, and Re-established there a Community of Friars of his Order, according to the tenor of the said Treaty of Peace, ordaining, That Monasteries usurped from the Catholics, whether by other Catholics or by heretics, should be restored to those Orders from whom they were originally founded, and not to any other. This hindered not the Jesuits to prevaricate, and by shifts and dodging tricks to keep the Prior four days in play, and in that time by night and by day to convey away all the Grain, Writings, Evidences, Church-Ornaments, and other moveables of the Priory, leaving nothing behind that could be carried away, though it was never theirs; after which to get some pretence for complaint, and to give out (as they have done) that they were driven away by force, they prevailed with the Sieur Beta Lord of Altkirk to send thither for Soldiers who arrived upon the place, and the Jesuits having made them drink after the German mode retired to Ellenberg. Of the Abbey of Nostre Dame des Ermites' in Suisserland, and the Jesuits entry thereby notorious falsi●ies. Though the means used by the Jesuits to usurp the Priory of St. Morand were unworthy of men of Religion and of Christians, yet those whereby they insinuated themselves into the Abbey of Nostre Dame des Ermi●tes in Swizz●rland are more base and villainous: The story is so common in that Country, that every one knows it. This Monastery is a stately Abbey of the Order of St. Benedict, very famous, the best regulated, most reformed, and populous of all Germany, having ordinarily forty or fifty Monks all employed and well skilled in the Sciences of Philosophy, Theology, and Cases of Conscience, of good abilities of Preaching, Catechising and Confession, which they exercise constantly, and the Di●ine Service performed to a perfection proportionable to the wishes of the most Devout: The Jesuits nevertheless took the same pretence of Preaching and Confession to get in thither as at St. M●rands, with this difference, that at St. M●rands they made use of the secular Authority of the Archduke only, but for this Abbey they had recourse to the Holy See, and surprised the Pope, informing him most falsely, that the Church of the said Abbey, which is renowned for miracles and multitudes of Pilgrims, resorting thither from all parts to pay their vows to the Blessed Virgin was very ill served, the Pilgrims ill instructed, and little satisfied, and that it would be very expedient to settle there some persons capable to exercise this Holy Ministry, being almost incompatible with a monastic profession; and offering to sacrifice their persons to that Labour if his Holiness thought fit to employ them. The Pope who discerned not the hook hid under this fair pretence, dispatched a Brieve to the Abbot, commanding him to receive into his house fix Fathers of the Jesuits capable and appointed to assist and ease the Friars of his Order in that Holy Exercise, with Order to entertain them in all things according to their profession. Though the Abbot received and made them welcome, yet he mistrusted them, and apprehended the danger he saw himself suddenly and unexpectedly fallen into: This made him Assemble from all the neighbouring places such persons both Religious and Secular, whom he accounted most Judicious, To consult with them how to secure himself against these dangerous spies; The Resolution was, That an ample information should be drawn up in good form of the state of the Abbey, the employment of the Monks, and Celebration of Divine Service, and that it should be sent to the Pope, to dis-abuse and undeceive him, which was accordingly done: And the Pope thereupon immediately sent a second Brieve, in revocation of the former, commanding the Iesui●es to retire to their Colleges, and leave the Benedictines to continue their spiritual harvest in the fields of the Church. Corruption of judges by presents. The Rector of the Jesuits of Fribourg resolved to retain if possible the said Priory of St. Morand, bethought himself beforehand of means most unworthy a man of Religion, and a Christian, to secure what he had unjustly obtained: To this purpose he was fully determined at what price soever to gain the Auditor-General being Sovereign judge at B●isach, to their side, and to corrupt him by bribery from doing Justice to the adverse party, engaging him to his power to favour the usurpation of the Jesuits, never minding the scandal would be given this heretic, (being one of the subtlest amongst them) and to other men of Religion when it should appear, that a Rector of the Jesuits who would be thought the flower and cream of Christi●nity was guilty of an iniquity so h●mous, as to endeavour by presents to shake the constancy of a judge, and sway him from his duty who ought to be inflexible: But the Rector who valued not such considerations, made the judge a present of a Crystal Vessel to oblige him to maintain them in their usurpation of St. Morand: This is clear by a letter in Latin, the Original whereof was shortly after found in the said Monastery, signed by the jesuit Gebhardus Deminger, and addressed to F. Gaspard Schiez, Rector of the Society of jesus at St. Morand, dated july 27. 1651. containing among others these express terms, as may appear by the whole letter entirely recited in the said memorial of Paul William, Viz. Heri & hodie rationes congessi, easque cras 〈◊〉 Brisacum ipse feram. Et ut D. Aud●torem nobis faventem efficiam crystallinum mecum feram poculum decem ducatorum, affabre hic elaboratum, ad eundem nobis devinciendum, i. e. Yesterday and this day I have collected reasons, (for the strengthening of our Cause) which God willing to morrow I will carry to Brisach; and that we may have the Auditor our friend and oblige him to us, I shall present him a vessel of Crystal of ten Ducats value, and curiously wrought. In a word, this Lutheran Auditor to the utmost of his Power, favoured the Jesuits in th●ir usurpation; but the King's Orders, and the Justice of the Benedictins Cause prevailed and obliged the Governor to perfer the interesses of the Crown of France to the pretensions of the Jesuits, and not permit the alienation of Monasteries to the profit of strangers; so that they were forced to restore them to the ancient and legal possessors. Complaints grounded on lies; corrupting of witnesses; surprising the King. The Fathers were no sooner outed, but they repented their quitting their prey so easily, they made a great bustle, and spread their complaints every were, that they were expelled the Priory of St. james, and St. Morand by violence, and ●orce of arms; they conveyed these complaints to the ears of the Emperor, and the Archduke, and by their Pens to Cardinal Colonna Protector at Rome of the nation of Almaigne, having a fit opportunity to send the letters by their Provincial Fr. Schorrer who was deputed to assist at the Election of their new General. At the same time they held an Assembly of several Rectors with their Secular Council at the village of Hirsingen, a league from St. james, and St. Morands, and having invited the Dean of the place to dinner, they presented him for the first course an Act to sign, dressed after their manner, to testify that they had been expelled the said Priory of St. Morand injuriously and by violence: But the Dean being a man of honour, and resolute, answered, He could not testify a matter whereof he had no knowledge, and that the report was on the contrary, that they had desired the Soldiers to come, and made them drink deep to have some colour of saying, That the Soldiers had forced them away, though no violence had been used. Whereupon the Assembly resolved to make their address to the Apostolical Nuncio at Lucerne, to desire him to inform himself of the pretended violences, fancying that upon the rumours they had spread they should ●ind persons enough to depose the fact they alleged, and that in the mean time their F. Grandm●nt Rector of Fribourg in Swizzerland should carry their complaints to the Court of France. The information taken by the new Nuncio discovered nothing more than the fictions, the ar●i●ices and malignity of the Jesuits: But the voyage of F. Grandmont to Paris took effect, for having by the mediation of F. Paulin then confessor to the King, represented to his Majesty all the falsi●ies of advantage to their Cause, as that the Jesuits were expelled the said Priories unjustly and by force, contrary to the tenor of the Treaty of Peace, and in prejudice of the Canonical Union of the said Priories to their Colleges, they obtained Orders by surprise for their re-establishment without hearing the other side, in confidence to have them executed blindfold, and that if they were once established by the Authority of the King no man durst molest them for these two Priories, or that of St. Valentin, to which they would with equal boldness and falsehood aver, that they had been restored in pursuance and execution of the Treaty of Peace. The Jesuits 〈◊〉 to the Pope, and Estates of the Empire to surprise them. As soon as F. Grandmont had the King's Letters, one for M. de la Barde Ambassador in Swizzerland, and the other for M. de Charlevois Commander at Bris●ch, he sent to F. Schorrer the Provincial to supersede his demands from the Emperor, and Archduke to the Pope, for that he had obtained letters from the King for their re-establishment in the Priories in question: This appears by Cardinal Colonnas Answer of the 5 th' March 1652. to the Letters of the Emperor and the Archduke: But the Father, though he thought the Orders would be executed without taking any cognizance of the Cause was deceived in his account; for neither the Governor nor the Ambassador judged it in their power to obey them for many reasons both of State and of Law; declaring frankly to the Jesuits that they were willing to serve them; and that the Letters were very good, but their Cause worth nothing. This obliged the three Rectors to reassume their first course, and continue their pursuit in the Court of Rome by the favour of the Emperor, to procure from the Pope a confirmation of the Union of these three benefices artificially suggested in all their addresses: But the success here proved worse than in France: For the Pope judiciously refused it, telling them, that if they had such an Union as they pretended, they needed no confirmation, and to grant one were to derogate from the Authority of the Holy See. To omit nothing that artifice or ambition could suggest, they had recourse at last to the Imperial Di●t at Ra●isbonne, where they made a great noise, complaining loudly, but galilee, that they were outed of the Priories of St. Mor●nd, and St. james against Right, and were troubled and disturbed in their possession of St. Valentine's in prejudice of the Treaty of Peace, and the Canonical Union obtained from the Holy See. Endeavouring thus to engage the States of the Empire to re-establish them, or to break with France. But M. de Vautorce his Christian Majesties Ambassador in that Assembly, being well informed of the Truth, and of the Justice of the Benedictines Cause, inseparable from that of the Abbeys of Clunie and Chesy, and the inter●sses of France, rendered these new attempts of the Jesuits ineffectual and vain. Their recourse to Heretical Officers of War and of justice; their Calumnies and recommendations to promote their injustice. They were not daunted for all this, but though their Cause was so unjust, that they failed of their hopes in Germany, and in Italy, from the Emperor, the Apostolical Nuncio, and the Archduke of Inspruch, they resolved to try the French King once more, and solicited new Orders from him on the same suppositions they had procured the former: and because they could not incline the Si●urs De la Bard, and de Charl●vois to favour their injustice, they laboured with all their might to have these second Orders dispatched and directed to Major General Rose their particular friend, though an Heretic, judging him proper for the execution they needed, having disposed him before by the great treats they had made him in their College of Ensish●im, where they had lodged and entertained him with all Almaign Civilities in the beginning of the year 1652. the ●●rrain Troops being then in their winter quarters in A●s●●ia: But they could never obtain at Paris the Orders they desired; this made them play other pranks to compass their designs. They slandered F. Paul William the Benedictine for defending himself against their unjust usurpations as a villain, a cheat and notorious impostor: These are the very terms in the Latin Letter from the Rector of Fribourg to the Warden of the Capucines of Brisach dated july 25. 1652. and inserted at large in the memorial abovementioned; By the same letter it appears, that they procured from several persons of Quality their friends at Paris Letters of Recommendation to Madam the Countess of H●rc●ur, to M. the Count of Serny, and to the Baron de meal at Brisach to desire their favour for the Jesuits: But their Cause was generally judged so bad upon the place, that no person would be persuaded to undertake their d●●●nce except the Audit●r General, who not able to maintain them in possession of the Priories of St. james, and St. M●rand, granted them a sequestration in August 1652. without taking any cognizance of the Cause, without hearing or summoning the defendants, to the prejudice of the Suitors, and against the prohibitions of the Privy Council, who had retained to themselves the whole cognizance of this affair. Their Rapine and Dilapidation of Benefices. By the favour of this Judge, and several artifices, the Jesuits turned the deaf ear to the frequent demands made for restitution of the Deeds, Evidences, Relics, Plate and Ornaments they had carried away from the said Priories, though obliged to restore them not only in Conscience, but by an express Article of the treaty of Peace pag. 82. importing, That all Records and Wri●ings whatsoever, and other moveables found in the said place at the time of the possession taken, should be restored; so that their refusal obliged the Benedictines to commence new Suits, and obtain judgements against them for recovery of their goods. That which is most lamentable, is, that while they were in possession of the three Priories of St. james, St. Morand, and St. Valentin they left nothing entire but what respect hindered them to demolish, or interest obliged them to preserve. And they who so often pretend (to the injury of others) that the Divine Service is ill managed or neglected, and object against the● great imperfections and disorders in their manners, as grounds for their usurpation, and account them Canonical Titles for intruding into the Rights of other men ought to have been confounded for these real enormities, which though committed by them, they have the impudence to own in the face of the world to the scandal of Christianity. You have heard before, that upon their entering St. Morand they demolished the Cloister, and caused the materials to be conveyed to St. Vlrich. At St. Valentine's, every one knows that they changed into a hey-house and stable for the Archduke's horses, a fair and large Hospital magnificently built, and with extraordinary charge by D. john Sancey the Benedictine Prior at the gate of the Monastery for receiving and lodging poor Pilgrims; and that they dissipated and embezzled the Relics, and a quantity of Plate and Ornaments which the Priors had provided by their frugality. But the Priory of St. james of Veldbach, though let them in good condition, and at a great undervalue in the Rent, fared worst of all, and was used with least respect as situate in a village where they held themselves at liberty to act those abuses which in Cities and great Towns they durst not attempt, for they not only permitted the Dormitory of the Friars adjoining to the Church, and the Founder's Chapel, beside the High Altar, to decay and run to ruin, but pulled down the Steeple, and threw great pieces of timber on the Founder's Tombs, which were in the middle of the Choir, and by this Barbarism broke all to pieces: Thus they demolished part, and spoilt the residue of this poor Church, that there was not left one ornament for saying Mass, of twelve they found there, which they carried into Swizzerland, with all the Plate of the Priory: And 'tis probable they had not spared the rest of the Church from utter destruction, but that it was Parochial, which notwithstanding they le●t in extreme disorder. Of the Priory of Maizere, of the Order of St. Benedict, changed into a Farm by the Jesuits. What you have heard is no more than what their brethren of the College of Porentr●t (who pretend no less Veneration for sacred places than the rest of the company) had given sufficient cause of credit and belief to, having three years before ruined the Church of another Priory of the same Order, called Maizere (formerly famous for Pilgrimage in the Country) to the great scandal of the Heretics, who carefully maintain and preserve their Churches, and to the great regret of the Country adjacent, who deplored the profanation, to see the materials of the House of God employed to repair the houses, Barns and Stables of a Farmer, so that there remained no sign of a Priory, nor any thing else but a plain Farm. Such is the condition to which the Jesuits reduce the benefices they usurp, whereof they consider nothing but the revenue, beginning always as soon as they enter them to abolish the Divine Service, and all those marks which might make it appear, they once belonged to the ancient Orders of Religion, without any regard to the intention of the Founders, nor the Charges they imposed, which is the jesuitical way to promote the glory of God. Their taking away Evidences and Registers. Another Detriment and injury done by the Jesuits to these three Priories, for which the Priories were obliged to seek their remedy in the Great Council, was their taking away the Evidences and Registers concerning the Rights and Revenues of these Monasteries, which the Jesuits could make no other use of, but to accommodate themselves in case of a reentry there, which nothing but an unjust Ambition could give them any hopes of; or to deprive the right owners of the enjoyment of them, to which nothing but an extreme malignity could incline them; or lastly, to conceal and suppress some debts to which their Goods might be liable, which though it denotes a malicious avarice, yet is not strange in the J●suites practice. For the Jesuits of the Colleges of Novices at Nancy have 40 years since used the like practice against the Friars of Senon, of the Order of St. Benedict in Lorraine, when the Abbot of St. Van of Verdun having given them the Lordship of Barbonville, being a dependant on his Abbey, charged with the ancient rent of 22 quarters of Corn to the Abbey of Senon, they craftily embezzled all the Evidences th●y could light on, that made mention of that duty; And when the Friars of Senon sent to demand the Rent as accustomed, the Jesuits who thought all the Evidences that concerned that duty were safe in their hands, pretended ignorance, and refused payment, telling the demanders, th●y thought nothing due. A suit was thereupon commenced in the Council of Lorraine, and the Friars for want of their Evidences to make out their title, were cast. But some years after the reformation of the said Abbey, the reformed Friars made so diligent search, that they found three Registers wherein the said duty was charged, in pursuance whereof they brought a new Action, which the Jesuits stiffly defended but the Registers being produced, they submitted to pay what they could no longer dispute. The Jesuits proceeding in three several Tribunals, and three Distinct Countries at the same time, for the same Priories, and other petty foggeries. We have cause to believe, that on the same design the Rectors of the three Colleges of Selestat, Enssheim, and Fribourg, carried away the Deeds and Evidences of the three Priories abovementioned; And when the Priors of the Benedictines sought restitution by Law, it is incredible how many artifices and petty foggeryes they used to detain them. To give an instance, when they saw themselves pressed by the Benedictines to restore them, they procured a prohibition from the Privy council, to prevent proceedings in the inferior Courts, interdicting the ordinary Judges the cognizance of the Cause: The Council being thus entirely possessed of the Cause, at the instance of the Jesuits, the Prince of Conty, and the Abbot of Nesmond interposed in behalf of the Benedictines, the former as General of the Order of Clunie, the later as Abbot of Chesy and Collators of the Priories: The Jesuits hereupon fearing their success in the Council, while the matter depended there, prosecuted the Benedictine Priors at the same time both at Rome and Brisach; and obtained of the Auditor General at Brisach, whom we spoke of before, a sequestration of the Priories of St. james and St. Morand, without any form of Justice, and without hearing or summoning the Defendants. And at Rome they procured a Monition to cite the Benedictines thither, with an Excommunication against all that should oppose the execution of their Bull, which they durst never produce. And caused the Monition to be printed throughout: And the Benedictines of St. Morand to be cited by the Bishop of Basle, for which, as an injury and abuse, the Friars were forced to make an Appeal. In pursuance of this, they used all the tricks the spirit of Wrangling could invent in the most shifting pettifoggers, by delays, by reiterated defaults, new Assignations, contesting about the qualities of the parties, producing ridiculous, impertinent and insignificant matters; falsities and manifest untruths; defamatory Libels; forged Letters; informations without date or subscription, and a thousand other devices, to be seen at large in the Memorial abovementioned, which is therefore the more credible, for that upon the whole matter a notable Arrest was given in favour of the Benedictines, you shall see hereafter. Bulls without precedent, and contrary to the Canons and Counsels of the Church. An Arrest in favour of the Benedictines against the Jesuits. We must not forget some remarkable things to be observed in the Bulls the Jesuits obtained for the three Priories spoken of before: for besides the false suggestions, nullities and obr●ptions whereof they were full, which inclined the Benedictines to procure and produce Duplicates thereof against the Jesuits, and besides the express provision in some of them, that they should not operate to the wrong or prejudice of any, they were most abusively and maliciously framed in two points: 1. In that contrary to all forms and precedents, they gave power to the Jesuits to take possession▪ of the said Benefices by their proper Authority, without observing the ordinary formalities requisite in such cases, and that contrary to the Canons and the Counsels of Constance, of Lateran of Chalcedon, and others, they made alienation of Estates without consent of the parties, united several Benefices situate in divers Dioceses, and suppressed Monasteries and Benefices Conventual, which ought to remain to perpetuity: 2. In that by an unparallelled and unheard of abuse, they contained a Clause ordaining, that they should not be questioned for any nullity, obreption, or subreption, whereof they were full, Decernen●es easdem praesen●es nullo unquam tempore de subreptionis vel obreptionis a●t nullitatis vi●io A●gui seu notari: which takes away all cause of wonder why the Jesuits were always loath to produce them, as knowing they could serve for nothing more than to discover their Artifices and Deceits, the clearer, though notorious enough to the world already, upon other occasions. And now, none can think it strange that after so many shifts and tricks of petty foggery, they were at last wholly defeated, and for ever debarred of their pretensions to the Priories in question, by Arrest of the King's Council, the Judicial part whereof, and the sentence is here transcribed, but the proceedings purposely omitted, for that they are herein before succinctly reported, and may be seen at large in the Printed Memorial we mentioned often. The Arrest of the Privy Council. THe King in his Council giving Judgement, and doing right in the said Cause, hath maintained and kept, and doth maintain and keep the said Friar Paul William in the possession and enjoyment of the said Priories of St. Valentine of Ruffach, and St. James of Veldbach, and the said Friar Benedict Schwaller in the possession and enjoyment of the said Priory of St. Morand: Forbidding and prohibiting the Demandants (the Jesuits) and all others to trouble or molest them in this behalf, and ordering the Sequestrators to deliver the possession into the hands of the said William. And having done right upon the demands respectively made by the said parties for restitution of the Relics, Ornaments, Evidences, Movables, and other things that were heretofore in the said Priories, hath ordained and ordains, that the parties within two months join issue in the same, and debate t●em at large, before the Sieur De Baussan Intendant in the Country of Alsatia, and that the said Sieur De Baussan shall assist and further the execution of this Arrest, which shall be executed notwithstanding any opposition or Appeals whatsoever. Yet so as the said Appeals shall not be barred or prejudiced hereby, but in the mean time the parties are to proceed to execution, which shall not be delayed by ver●ue or colour of any Appeal whatsoever. And his Majesty reserves unto himself and his Council, the cognizance and determination of any Appeal that shall or may happen to be made in this ●ause, which Appeal shall be proceeded in summarily without the ●sual formality of Suits. Examined, Signed, De Moris. Given at the King's Privy-Councel held at Paris, Aug. 4. 1654. OTHER Historical Passages AND Relations of the Artifices and Violences of the Jesuits of Almaigne in taking away several Abbeys from the Orders of St. Benedict, and the Cisteaux monks. Collected out of the Books of the Famous F. Hay, a Benedictine of Almaigne, the one called ASTRUM INEXTINCTUM, Printed in 1636. and the other HORTUS CRUSIANUS, Printed at Frankfort in 1658. and Printed also within these ten years with all their Quotations, in France in 4 to, and at Cologne in 8vo in 1659. A notable imposture of F. Lamorman the Jesuit, Confesser to the Emperor of the Usurpation of Abbeys. THE Emperor Ferdinand the second, having had great advantages over the Protestants of Germany after the rising in Bohemia, and the battle of Prague, which he won against them, by a General Edict of the 6 th' of March 1629. ordained, That all the Abbeys, and other Estates Ecclesiastical which had been usurped from the Catholics by the Protestants against the Articles of the Treaty of Passau in 1552. should be restored to those to whom they belonged according to their foundations. In pursuance of which Edict he sent Commissioners throughout the Empire to see it executed, and published other particular Edicts in favour of St. Benedict the Cisteaux, and others. As there's nothing more just than to restore every one what belongs to him, so this Edict of the Emperor was highly approved by the Pope who writ an express Brief to the Emperor, To testify his joy, and that of the whole Consistory of Cardinals for this re-establishment of the Clergy, and the Friars in their estates. The Emperor at the same time writ to his Ambassador at Rome the Prince of Savelli the 14th of April 1629. the reasons of his Edict, which were, That he was of opinion he could not have done any thing more profitable, and conducing to the good of Religion in Almaigne, then to take such course that the Religious Orders might flourish again, which had been heretofore the firm pillars thereof: that pursuant to this design he had ordered by his Authority. Imperial, that the Abbeys, and other places Consecrate to Religion, which had been profaned by the iniquity of the times, or converted to other uses should be restored every one to the Order to which they belonged, as being Consecrate thereto from their first foundation, and not to another. He sent him afterwards a more ample instruction of the 25 of Octob. the same year wherein he gives six principal reasons of his Edict. The Jesuits extremely nettled and perplexed, that they had no share in this restitution to the Ancient Orders, consulted among themselves how to enrich their Society with other men's Estates, and take from the Proprietors some of these Abbeys: To effect this, they make use, according to their custom, of the credit their Father Lancorman had in the Court of the Emperor Ferdinand the 2d, whose Confessor he was. This I●suite, animated by his Brethren, made great instance to two Abbots, the one of St. Benedict, and the other of the Cisteaux, Deputed by their Orders to hasten the Execution of the Emperor's Edict, and was very importunate with them to quit unto the Society all the Nunneries to be restored by the Protestants, and some of the less considerable Abbeys: These Abbots who had no power to consent to so unjust and extraordinary a demand against their Conscience, returned him Answer in general words of Compliment, that they were ready to serve him in any thing but what concerned the interest of their Orders: F. Lamormam seeing them leave the Court, presently suggested to his friends, and gave out in Speeches, That these two Abbots had made a voluntary Session of several Abbeys to the Society: And on this fiction, (whereof he was afterwards convicted by public and authentic Acts) he grounded a Memorial, which he presented to the Emperor, desiring that in pursuance of the voluntary Session of these two Abbots, his Imperial Majesty would send Commissioners into several Provinces of the Empire, to put the Society in possession of those Abbeys. Having by this means surprised the good Prince and his Council who took this Imposture for truth, they obtained Letters addressed to the Commissaries General of the Circles, to three Provincials of the Society, and to the Generals of the Imperial Army, the Duke of Friesland, and Count Tilly, forthwith to sequester the said Abbeys. All the world was astonished, says learned F. H, at this sudden and unjust Change of the Emperor's former Orders, not knowing what cause could possibly incline this Prince to Revoke so soon his public Edict for restitution of these Abbeys to the ancient Orders, which had been so highly commended by the Ho●y See; and to out men of Religion of their Estates, unheard▪ against the Law of Nations, and common right. But the Jesuits raised a report, that this Change proceeded from the voluntary Session the two Abbots had made of their Abbeys in the name of their Orders▪ So that the two Abbots were obliged to make a solemn protestation, against this notorious falsehood, both by Letters to the Confessor, and by public Acts, insisting that they had not so much as thought of a promise to consent to the translation of their Abbeys to the Jesuits, nor had any power so to do. And a famous Benedictine, who was of the Emperor's Council, and created at that time Bishop and Prince of Vienna, being brought in as a witness by F. Lamorm●n, declared the quite contrary to what the Jesuits alleged, as appears by a writing reported by F. Hay. The Jesuits Writings, their Intrigues at Rome, their Confidence to decry the Edict and Council of the Emperor. The common experience, that the Iesui●es once engaged in a lie, will not easily unsay it, was confrmed by an instance in the present affair; ●or all these Acts and solemn protestations could not hinder them from continuing the spreading of this Imp●sture, even by Printed books. But seeing their fictions and falsities discovered, they resolved for maintaining their unjust usurpation, openly to confront and attaque the Edict of the Emperor, and the right of the ancient Orders: This they did by two Writings, wherein the Emperor's instructions to his Ambassador at Rome, suitable to his Edict executed already in several Abbeys, whereof the Monks of the Order of St. Benedict, and others were in possession, were censured and dishonoured, as containing Things contrary to Truth, the holy Canons, and Immunityes Ecclesiastical, and the Emperor himself charged to have exceeded his power in the restitution of these Abbeys to their ancient Orders. But seeing that all the Ministers of State of the Emperor's Council had discovered the artifice of the Confessor, and opposed their unjust pretensions, they changed the Scene, and plied amain their intrigues at Rome, and besides their private solicitations published a Book entitled, remarks in the Cause of Estates Ecclesiastical, and Monasteries suppressed in Almaigne: And though F. Layman their Casuist at Dilingue justifies and highly commends this book, calling the Author, An illustrious person, and ● Divine well informed of the affairs of Almaign, though he durst not own him a jesuit; yet 'tis incredible how it slanders and vilifies the Ministers of State of the Council Imperiall, what odium it casts on them, as having attempted against the Pontifical Authority by the restitution of these Abbeys to the lawful owners: For (saith the Author) you are to observe first of all, that the design of the Council Imperial is absolutely to debarr the Pope from ●aving any part in the restitution of the Catholic Religion in Almaigne: This is evident, in that the Emperor published his Edict f●r restitution of Ecclesiastical Estates, without acquainting the Pope, or taking his advice to whom to restore them. This Council tends not only to exclude the P●pe from the Re-establishment, but to shake off the yoke of the Apostolic jurisdiction throughout the Empire: And the reason why this Council doth with so much temerity and impiety attaque the Holy See, is that there are in it some persons ill affected to the Apostolical Chair, some who as m●er Politics, to ingratiate themselves with their Prince by flattery, labour the exaltation of his Authority in all things; And some perhaps who under a Vizard of Catholic profession are Heretics in their hearts: And as for the Abbot of the Monastery of Cremounster, of the Order of St. Benedict, and of ●he said Council, he is a man full of pride: Who nevertheless for his merits and sufficiency was soon after promoted to the Dignity of Prince and Bishop of Vienna. See here, how the Council Imperial by a sudden Metamorphosis is from Catholic turned Schismatic, and an enemy to the Holy See, as soon as the Jesuits have discovered that Justice had a stronger influence over the spirits of these Ministers of State to maintain what the Emperor had so religiously ordained by his Edict than their Solicitations for accommodating themselves with other men's Estates. Two books were about the same time published in defence of the rights of the Ancient Orders; whereupon the Jesuits gave charge to their F. Laym●n, who had formerly written a book on this subject, entitled Placida Disceptatio, to employ his pen against the two Books, and handle them (which he did) as infamous Libels; Because the Author's approved not of the Jesuits intentions to take away the Abbeys from the ancient Orders, but had refuted those injurious suggestions and falsities they made use of to that purpose; and because the Jesuits would have usurped other men's Estates, without incurring the infamy inseparable from an usurpation so unjust, and so violent as theirs: The Jesuit entitles his book, The just Defence of his Holiness the Pope of Rome, His Imperial Majesty, the Cardinals of the holy Roman Church, the Bishops, Princes, and others, and also, Of the little Society of jesus: This the learned and pious Benedictine F. Hay, show▪ by an excellent book entitled, A●trum inextinctum, which he opposed to that of the Jesuit, to be the most shameful illusion and mockery that ever appeared; for that instead of defending these powers it formally questions, and opposes an Imperial Edict approved by the Pope, and College of Cardinals by an express Brief, as well as by all the Bishops, Princes of Almaigne. And that the thing he really maintained, though very weakly, was the Little Society of jesus, which he represented as so great and necessary for the Church, that he feared not to affirm, That God had not sufficiently provided for the Church, if having established all other Orders of Religion, theirs only had been wanting. 1. Imposture of the Jesuits, that these Abbeys wer● suppressed. 'Tis incredible what artifices they made use of in these Books to maintain a pretention most ●njust, and most unworthy men professing Religion. I. They would have made the Pope believe, That all those Abbeys were suppressed; and that the Estates were vacant, i. e. such as ●ad no owner. That the Emperor or Pope might dispose of them at their pleasure; Declaring, sometimes that it belonged to the Emperor to give them with the approbation of the Pope, and sometimes that it belonged only to the Pope to bestow them as devolved to him by a special and particular right, upon design, that of these two Powers that should be adjudged to have most right, which they by their▪ intriqus and insinuations should render most inclinable to give them these Abbeys. But this erroneous illusion was folidly refuted as contrary to the Laws Civil and Canon by the Benedectins, who justified by the Authority of the Ecclesiastical Laws, and by precedents both ancient and modern of above thirty famous Abbeys, as that of Mount-Cassin, S. Ma●● in Anjou, and others, that Abbeys possessed and destroyed by foreign enemies when recovered, were always restored to their proper Orders. That it was an unheard of pretence, that the sole-violence of the heretics founded only on the force of Arms should operate so as to cause these Abbeys to be adjugded suppressed; and that it would appear very unjust, if re-entering their Abbeys they might not of right say with the Maccabees; We have not possessed ourselves of a strange land, nor are we entered upon the Estates of others; but by the benefit of the Revolution of time, we resume the possession of the heritage of our Fathers, which hath for sometime been injustly ●surped by our Enemies. 2. and 3. Impostures; That it was an abuse▪ and not within their power who did it, to restore these Abbeys to the Fr●ars. Though these Abbeys had been adjudged to the Religious Orders by an arrest of the Court Imperial of Spire, and the Edict of the Emperor approved by the Pope; yet these good Fathers who stick not to exalt themselves above the Emperor and the Pope had the boldness to publish in print, That this affair was of the number of ●hose, whereof we are to say, that they pass only by way of sufferance and toleration, which if weighed in the balances of judgement are inconsistent with the Rules of justice; whereby they would impose on us a belief, that the re-establishment of the Friars in their Abbeys, that is, the plain execution of the Laws of Nations and Nature was an intolerable abuse; and that on the contrary the most unjust usurpation of other men's Estates, which the Jesuits in their hopes had already devoured was pure justice, and most unquestionable right. But there's nothing of greater wonder than the extravagant Answers they made to the invincible Arguments and Reasons of the Friars. In vain did the Benedictines object to them the express terms of the Emperor's Edict, and the Orders he had sent his Commissaries General for execution, viz. Our pleasure is, that the Abbeys possessed against the Treaty of Passau, and the Peace for regulating the state of Religion, which have been to this time unjustly detained, be surrendered and restored by virtue of this our Edict Imperial, to such persons of the Religious Orders to whom they belonged, b●fore the said unjust detention▪ for the Jesuits with an unconceivable boldness made answer, that there was not one word to be found in his Imperial Majesty's Edict, which imported th●● the Abbeys ought to be restored to the Orders for which they had been founded; and to main●●● this false and strange assertion, they 〈…〉 themselves of a gross illusion, which tends only to make the Emperor's Edict ridiculous, 〈◊〉 (say they) the pleasure of this Prince was, tha● restitution should be made of the Abbeys to the sam● individual persons to whom they belonged before the● were possessed by the Lutherans, which is in effect, That the Emperor had sent his Commissaries to make restitution of the Abbeys, to persons dead and interred forty or fifty years before, and not to the Religious Orders, which in that they never die were capable of the benefit of th● pious intentions of the Emperor. 4. and 5. Impostures; That the Jesuits were persons proper to possess the Abbeys, and comprehended under the name of Monks. In vain did the Benedictines object against them, That the Emperor had expressly Ordained by his Edict, that the foundations of Abbeys should be preserved, and the vacancies filled with persons proper according to the rules of the foundation, duly called, and fitly qualified according to law; for the Jesuits answered, That it was true, but it could not be proved, that the Fathers of the Society were not persons duly called, and legally qualified, according to the foundations of these Abbeys given them by the Pope with his Imperial Majesty's Consent; That is as F. Hay doth elegantly expound it, That these Abbeys founded for the Order of St. Benedict six or seven hundred years before there were Jesuits in the world were founded, for the F●thers of the Society of jesus. In vain did the Benedictines object, That these Abbeys had been established for M●nks and Friars, and that it was Ordained by the Canon-law, That Monasteries should continue Monasteries to perpetuity, for the Jesuits answered, That in matters of favourable construction (such as tended to the enriching themselves with the Estates of the Manasteries) the Je●uites were comprehended under the name of Monks: To which the Benedictines replied, That it was pleasant to consider, that the Jesuits who on all other occasions express so great averseness from the name of Monks, are very willing to be called Monks, when it may serve to introduce them into the inheritance of Monks. And 'tis fit to observe here, that the Jesuits brand Au●elius with error for alleging, that a Monk, and a person of a Religious Order are convertible terms, and denote the same thing: so in France, when there is nothing to be got by assuming the name of Monks, 'tis an error that deserves censure to call a jesuit Monk; but in Almaigne where there a●● Abbeys to be taken from Monks and given to Jesuits if qualified as M●nks, it is an error that deserves censure, not to take a jesuit to be a M●●k. 〈◊〉 〈…〉 6. Imposture; That the Pope hath an extraordinary power to derogate from any thing not favourable to the Jesuits. In vain did the Friars' object, That the Popes by their ●gr●ements ●ith the German Nation had obliged themselves to preserve every man in his rights and estates▪ And that Filiutius of their Society had written, That the Pope not only by his Office, but by ●on●ract employed between him and those wh● give Est●●es to the Church is obliged by the Divine and Nalu●al Law ●o preserus them for those wh● legally possess them, and that the contrary cannot 〈◊〉 done without injury to the Founders, and the successors of the Friars of the Order in causing them to lose their Estate and their Honour. For the Jesuits who never think themselves hu●t by any objection from the Law Natural or Divine, helped themselves out by this neat distinction; They confess the Power of the Pope is limited by particular Concordates and Agreements of Nations, which have the force of Bargains and Contracts; So that the Pope himself is obliged to perform them according to the Law of Nations; But they add, That this is to be understood, that the Pope cannot Ordinarily derogate from these Concordates or Agreements but may do it Extraordinarily for the public good of the Church when necessity requires it; that is, when they are employed about establishing rich Colleges for the Society; for they pretend to express terms, That nothing can conduce more for the Re-establishment of the Cat●ilick Faith, than to bestow on them the Estates and Revenues of Abbeys and Nunneries for enriching their Ancient Colleges, and for founding of New; as also for buying little Catechisms, Chaplets, and other things of that kind, that may serve at once both to instruct and delight Youth; and that the expenses these things will require, cannot be fur●ished but from the Estates of the Abbeys resumed out of the hands of the Protestants▪ To which the Friars replied, That they might for the future Found Colleges, if they pleased, without robbing the Orders of St. Benedict, the Cisteaux▪ and others of their Estates, as they had been founded heretofore without any such injury, and showed several means for that purpose: And when the Jesuits insisted, there were no other means but that all treasures were exhausted; The Friars Replied, 1. That there were some Treasures not yet exhausted, namely, theirs who had within a short time offered the Venetians five hundred thousand Crowns to be reestablished in those Colleges they had at Venice heretofore, and in other▪ Territories of that Republic, from which they were banished. 2. They made it appear, that their Colleges were not so necessary for the re-establishment of the catholic Faith as they pretended; for that they had Colleges in several Cities, where heresy was as rife as ever; And that themselves have confessed, All the upper Palatinate was converted to the Catholic Religion before ever they had one College there; so that it is clear, sdy●h F. Hay, That to make men believe▪ as the Jesuits endeavour, that Germany: cannot be converted to the Catholic Faith, without turning the Abbeys of religious Orders into Colleges of Iesui●e●, is to contradicta manifest experience, and make all the world confess themselves blind▪ 3. That the first Friars of the Order of St. Benedict had Converted almost all Germany▪ and at this day, the Benedicti●es labour with success equal to the Jesuits in the Conversion of Heretics, though they are not so much addicted to ostentation, as they who send Catalogues to Rome of the least things they do▪ who compute how many they confess by the year, their Masses, their Prayers, their Visits to the sick, and other things both great and small. 4. They remonstrated, that the multitude of Colleges they so earnestly pressed for, savored not of the first spirit of the Society, and was diametrically opposite to an express Article of their second Congregation General in these words: We are to Act for the 〈◊〉 with 〈◊〉 moderation▪ And 〈◊〉 stay our hands from multiplying Colleges▪ And the Congregation make 〈…〉 request to the Father-General, and recommend it to his serious observation, to apply himself ●at●er ●o the compledting and perfecting of the Colleges already established▪ 〈…〉 5. As to the little 〈◊〉 and Chaplu●s which th● Iesu●●●● would buy ●or their Scholars with the Estates and Revenues of Abbeys; They answered, That it was somewhat strange, the Jesuits would r●i●e foundations, v●ol●te agreements, hinder men of Religious Orders ●o renew their solemn prayers, and ce●eb●●te Divine Service in their▪ Abbeys▪ that she 〈◊〉 might have wherewith to buy baubles for children; which must be extreme dear, if there be not sufficient to purchase them▪ without employing to such uses the estates designed by the founders to maintain the holy exercises of a Religious life in these Monasteries. 7. Imposture▪ That by reason of the Charges of the War, the Emperor was Founder and Master of these Abbeys. In vain did the Benedictines object, That the Emperor was obliged by the Oath he had taken when he came to the Empire; and as the Supreme Protector and Defender of Churches, to preserve the Ancient Orders in their Rights and Estates; and that the Emp●rour had declared and confirmed it anew by his particular Edict in favour of the Benedictines, March 28. 1629. The Jesuits confessed all this to be true, but scrupled not to elude it by this shameful evasion, whereby they would Authorise th● Perjury of a Great Prince; That the Charges and Expenses the Emperor laid out in the W●r for recovery of these Churches and Abbeys, were ●o great, that they exceeded all the Estates of Consecrated places; and therefore he ought to be acknowledged, not only as a new Founde●, Endower and Patron of these Religious Houses, but the Purchaser; and that the Religious Orders ought in acknowledgement there of, to leave them freely and wholly to his Disposal, and not pretend any interest therein, for fear of making themselves guilty of ingratitude against his Imperial Majesty; But the Religious Orders Answered, That the Emperor by his Edict had declared, He never desired from them an acknowledgement which could not be made him, without forcing tears from the Ancient Orders of Religion; that he liked not a gratitude, which allowed them no recompense for so many Millions furnished by them for the War, and other Faithful Services done him and the Empire, but the destruction of their Rights and Suppression of their Abbeys; and that his Majesty ought to account them ingrate who had invented such gratitude. 8. Imposture; That they may change their Opinions when their interest requires it. In vain did the Benedictines object, That three Principal Jesuits (whereof F. Lam●rma● the Emperor's Confessor was one) being consulted with about an Abbey, which having been long in the possession of Lutherans, and Secular Persons, the Cardinal Archbishop of Prague would have procured for himself by gift from the Emperor, had delivered their opinion in writing, That it could not be done with a safe Conscience, and that the Abbey being Benedictine ought to be restored to the Order of St. Benedict; and that the Emperor in giving it to the Cardinal had committed the same injustice, as if after winning the battle of Prague, he had given away the land of some Catholic Lord recovered from the enemy to another Catholic Lord having no right thereto; the Jesuits not able to deny this opinion, delivered at large in writing, agreed that the Jesuits were then of that judgement; bu● answered, that since they had changed their Opinion; This rare privilege have these excellent Casuists, to alter their sentiments and their conscience upon any occasion when it may be for their profit to change: So when the question was about giving an Arch-Bishop●a Benedictine Abbey, their judgement was, the Emperor was in justice obliged to restore it to the Order of St. Benedict▪ but when▪ there is hopes they may procure them for themselves by their shifts and artifices▪ they presently maintain, that the Abbeys of St. Benedict are Abbeys suppressed▪ and the Estates that belong to them at th● disposal of the Emperor's and the Pope, who may give them whom they please without any injustice to the Friars of the Order, who are the lawful proprietors, when an Archbishop desires to have one; but have no Title at all, when the Jesuits would have many of the same Abbeys for the use of their Society. 9 Imposture: That F. Lamorman in cheating the Emperor did well, i. e. according to the rules of the Society. In vain did the Benedictines reproach them, that all the trouble had been raised for taking from them these Abbeys against the Edict of the Emperor, proceeded only from their F. L●●●man, who had the boldness to write to his Imperial Majesty, that his Edict and Instructions given his Ambassador, contained things not agreeing with the Principles of the Catholic Faith; And that it were fit his Majesty should name some person to examine the whole business a●ew with him his Confessor. To this the good Fath●●s made answer in these express words: The prudent, sage and devo●t Reader, having well considered of all things, will doubtless observe▪ that the Confessor engaged not hastily in an affair of such moment, but after long deliberation how to remedy this evil (which was the restitution of the Abbeys to their several Orders▪ without allowing the I●suites to alienate any from the Lawful Proprietors) and that it must be avowed, the Father had done well, and ought not to have done otherwise, and that if he had not advertised his Imperial Majesty thereof▪ he had deserved th● blame of not dischargeing the duty of a Good Confessor▪ according to the light of Natural reason, and the rules of our Society: to which the Friars of St. Benedict, with good reason replied, That from hence we are to conclude, that the hindrance of justice is the duty of a good Confessor: That we are required by the light of N●●●ral Reason, to allow that for Just, which is really against the known rules of justice, and that the Rules of the Society Ordained, that such of their Fathers as are Confessors to Princes, must earnestly endeavour, that the Abbeys which those Princes have Ordered to be restored to their Orders may fall into the hands of the Society against the Authority of the most legal Edicts. 10. Imposture; That these Abbeys belongeth not 〈◊〉 any; and that they de●●red them not of the Princes, but Princes demanded them for the Society. In vain did the Friar's object the Commandment of God, Not to 〈◊〉 other men's goods; for the Iesui●es answered, That they coveted not other men's goods in coveting these Abbeys which belonged not to any; and than it was not they demanded these Abbeys, but the Princes of the Empire demanded th●m for the Society; that as they could not have demanded these Estates without envy, so they could not refuse them without injury to the honour of God▪ when the Powers thought fit to bestow them on their Company for promoting the Glory of God, and the salvation of the people of Almaigne; So that the Society desired not these Abbeys, but only submitted to the pleasures and dispositions of the Sovereign Powers of Christendom: Adding with equal sincerity in the same Book, That when they built themselves, they built not so sumptuously; but that Princes against the will of the Society built for them great Colleges, and magnificent Church's. To the first point, where the good Fathers suggest, that the Friars had not title to the Abbeys; They Answer, That the Jesuits denying that the Abbeys did belong to the Ancient Orders of Religion, did not cover their injustice, but render it more visible; and that they did as a Robber, who taking another man's purse should tell him, Friend, I do you no wrong, I desire not your goods; this purse belongs not to you. And as to the second point of their pretended moderation, and their perfect disinteresment, The Friars answered with astonishment, That having written so many Books, and published such Volumes to destroy the Edicts of the Emperor, having sent so many Letters to the great Lords of Almaigne, to engage them to solicit from his Majesty Imperial a gift of these Abbeys to the Society of jesus, they feared not to say, That the Sovereign Powers of Christendom constrained them by force to accept of these Abbeys, and that they were not ashamed to call themselves Children of Obedience, who could not resist the Sovereign Pastor of the Church, whom they were obliged to obey by a quadruple vow. In the mean time, to inform the world with what Faith these Fathers proceed in their Actions, the Benedictines produced a letter of the late Cardinal Riche●ieu to the Congregation of Cardinals in 1630, wherein as the Abbot of Clunie he complains, That the Emperor having Ordained, That all the Monasteries which had been possessed by the Protestants should be restored to the same regular Orders on which they depended before the usurpation; It was informed nevertheless, That the Provost-ship of Colmar being a dependant on the Abbey of Clunie, to which his Prodecessor had presented an Abbot, was claimed by the Jesuits, who disputed his Orders, and desired to possess themselves of it on pretence to found a Seminary there. But because these solemn testimonies, and their violent actions publicly done in the face of the Sun, made it visible to all, that they had a passionate desire to take away these Abbeys from the owners, they thought fit to confess their desire, but with this trim and pleasant distinction; That the Fathers of the Society coveted the Estates of these Abbeys, not for the Estates, but for the conveniency of entertaining a greater number of persons to labour the propagation of the Catholic Faith in Almai●n. Whereupon the Benedictines no less wisely than truly; Observe that the Jesuits did not so eagerly covet the Abbeys, in order to a Religious end for the maintaining Divine Service, and constant Prayers according to the Rules of their Foundations (which they pretend not to observe) but desired only to finger the money, and receive the Revenues. The Jesuits endeavour to take away an Abbey of the Cisteaux, and another of St. Clare: A handsome Letter of a German Lord against their Covetousness. The observation of the Benedictines is clearly proved by the courses taken by the same Jesuits of Almaign to take away two Nunneries, one of the Order of Cisteaux, and the other of St. Clare, and to unite them to their College of Mayence; for Father john Theodore Lenn●p having by Order of his Rector and Provincial addressed a Letter to that Effect to the Baron of Questemberg his Cousin, and of the Emperor's Council, desiring him to procure a Grant thereof from his Majesty Imperial unto their College, without once mentioning the Pope, concludes with an earnest entreaty for speedy execution: And the principal motive he alleges for their desiring these Abbeys, particularly that of St. Clare, called Clarental, is, that it would be of great use to their College of Mayence, especially in the multitude of Pastures and Meadows belonging thereto; on which F. Hay hath this remark, That the good Father had greater care of the Soil than the Soul, to accommodate Beasts, than to guide men to Salvation. The Almaign Lord, in answer to his Cousin the jesuit having expressed a particular affection and kindness for the Society, and promised his assistance in any thing he could think reasonable, frankly declares in an Excellent Letter Printed at large in F. Hayes Book, That he held himself obliged to caution, lest by favouring one party he might prejudice another, and lest whilst he thinks to comfort himself in the acknowledgements and joys of the one he be not oppressed with affliction for the groans and tears of the other, that he was afraid to appear against St. Benedict, St. Clare, St. Francis, and St. Bernard those great Lights of the Church Triumphant and Militant, and could not believe it allowable in Conscience to trouble and molest their Holy Orders, and tread underfoot their ancient and commendable foundations: That he was not acquainted with the secrets of Theology, but to speak according to his sense, he could give this enterprise no other name than that of Robbery and Rapine: I have often admired, (says he) that they who profess a contempt of the good things of the world, and to reject all hope and desires to possess them, but to imitate nearly the nakedness and simplicity and purity of Christ, should so vehemently labour and employ with such earnestness the best part of their lives to augment the Estates and Possessions of their Orders: And now men of Religion are clearly discovered, notwithstanding all their disguises to run the same course with the Secular, with this advantage, that their sin is the greater, who act unjustly under false appearances of piety and vain pretences of spiritual good: Why should I think myself a Criminal, or the Preachers presently brand me for an offender, if I endeavour by usury, by fraud or other unlawful means to take away and usurp my neighbour's Estate, if you who are the peculiar servants of Christ may without crime or offence appropriate to yourselves the Estate of another Religious Order who oppose it, protest against your violence, and Cite you to Answer at the Tribunal of God? I could enlarge on this subject, Dear Cousin, but my employments take me of, and I fear the little I have said will displease you, though you know better than I, that the faithful wounds of a friend are of more value, and deserve greater esteem than the deceitful kisses of an enemy: Nor had I touched on this matter, but that the frequent (not to say continual) complaints and reproaches of many persons against the insatiable avarice, (as they call it) of your laudable Society had not in a manner forced me to give you this hint; there being nothing but this covetousness the most pious find fault with in the Fathers of the Company. This pious and Christian Letter which ought at least to have cooled the heat of the Jesuits inflamed it; for they made the same jesuit his Cousin by a second Letter of jan. 15. 1630. to write back to this Lord, That he committed a great sin before God in not advising the Emperor to join these Nunneries to their College of Mayeme, that this omission tended to the defrauding of the Church of necessary labourers in the Vineyard of her Lord, to the retarding the gain of Souls, to the favouring of Heresy, and opposing the Holy Erterprises of their Society; that he knew the Society had many that envied her prosperity, and very powerful adversaries, but presaged that they and their posterities should one day acknowledge under the sense of the Chastisements of the Divine vengeance; That they had hurt the apple of God's eye: That other Orders of Religion were either unwilling to employ themselves in the Conversion of Heretics, or unable to perform with that dexterity and success which was visible in the actions of the Society: That all they desired from him, was, to have procured a Grant from the Emperor to the Society of the annual revenues of one or two Nunneries that were wholly vacant (taking no notice that the violence of the Heretics was the sole cause they were not then full.) That he had not attempted to justify the many sorts of translations and unions of Abbeys made in favour of others; but as a Divine of the Society laboured only for that which might be profitable for the company, and was fully assured a good Counsellor of State might in good conscience, in prudence and piety have advised the Emperor accordingly, and that he who opposed it, not only committed a great fault, but made himself guilty not of one but many very heinous offences: That it was true, men made it their custom to reproach their Society with imputations of Avarice, of Rapine, and unjust coveting others Estates; but that it was a stale heretical objection, and had been learnedly refuted● by their Father Gretser. That they accommodate their Kitchens not the Monasteries. Four Abbies● alienated for an addition to one of their Colleges. To their pretence of dexterity and success in converting Pagans and Heretics to the Catholic Faith; The Benedictines replied, That almost all the North had been converted by the ancient Orders of Religion; and 'twas strange these good Fathers would persuade us, That there is no other way, no better means to propagate the faith of Christ in Almaigne than by multiplying Jesuitical preachers; that there were multitudes of other pious men of Religion ready to take pains in converting the Heretics; that the Iesui●es did them wrong to say, they were unwilling or unable to do it with the dexterity and success of their Society; that it was a piece of injustice and falsehood to say they would not, and of arrogance to affirm they could not perform as well as others; That if the Jesuits were as necessary to the Church as they would be taken to be, God had provided other means for their subsistence than to uncover one Altar to cover another, to rob the ancient foundations for enriching new comers. That it would be hard to prove, that the change they desired was for the bettering and improvement of the ancient Abbeys: That when jacob saw the Ladder, he built an Altar of stone, and poured oil upon it; but these good Fathers keep for themselves the profits of the oil, reduce Monasteries into bare heaps of stones, and Abbeys into Country-houses; so that in truth, the change they make for the better is not in the Monasteries, but in the Ministeries of their Kitchens. This War of the Jesuits of Almaign against the ancient Orders of Religion for taking away their Monasteries endured above ten years: At last the insatiable Avarice of these Fathers was stopped by the opposition of the Ecclesiastical Electors, and other Catholic Princes of the Empire, who addressed themselves in writing to Pope Vrban the 8th, about this matter by their Deputies in the Assembly General at Ratisbone in 1641. And so says F. Hay, the Jesuits heat for invading Monasteries, was a little cooled, not out of any virtuous disposition, but disability to attain their unjust desires: And though they appropriated by their shifting devices four of the said Abbeys unto one of their Colleges in 1659., the strong opposition they ●ound in other Provinces of Germany caused that the same Abbeys became Sepulchers to bury rather than encouragements to cherish the Acts of their Covetousness. The Lies and Impostures of the Jesuits to possess themselves of an Abbey of the Nuns of the Order of St. Bernard in Saxony. The History of the life of the Emperor Ferdinand the 2d, informs us, that having resolved to take from the Protestants all the Abbeys they possessed themselves of since the treaty of Passa● in 1552. he ordained by a public Edict of Mar. 6. 1629. that they should be restored to those orders for whom they were founded: The Abbot of the Monastery of Caesarea of the Order of the Cisteaux, being deputed by his General, to put this Edict in execution sent the Abbot of Valenciennes, to put four Nuns professed of the Order of St. Bernard with two Novices, and one converted Sister into possession of the Abbey of Voltigerode in the Lower Saxony: And the Bishop of Osnabrug, one of the Commissioners Imperial having established them there by one of his Officers, they continued there several months performing Divine Service, and all other exercises of a Religious life. The Jesuits having a design to possess themselves of this, as of all other Nunneries the Protestants were to restore, made use of the credit of their Father Lamorman with the Emperor to effect it: The Father served himself of two notable lies to procure a Grant from the Emperor: the first, That the Abbot's deputed by the Orders of St. Benedict, and the Cisteaux had made unto the Jesuits a voluntary session of all Nunneries, and some other of the less considerable Monasteries of their Orders. The other, that the Abbey of Voltigerode near the Imperial Town of Ges●ar was desert and vacant, and that no person demanded or claimed it, and that it would be very convenient for the Society for a Nursery of Novices in that Town where they had a College already: All this appears in express terms in the Commission they obtained, though the one and the other were notoriously false, the said Nuns of the Order of the Cisteaux, having been in possession of the said Abbey many months before. 'Tis the saying of a Pious Doctor, that the Devil's prophecy what they will do; so these Fathers bestirred themselves with all expedition to make that appear true in Act and execution which was absolutely false in allegation: The first Cheat they applied themselves to was this: Having persuaded these Nuns, that they were not secure in this Abbey, as situate in the Country, and exposed to the incursions of Soldiers and violences of War; they proposed as an expedient that they should for a while quit the Abbey and retire to Goslar, where it should be their care to procure them reception, which was accordingly done in the Monastery of Franquemberg in March 1631. But though the Nuns, frighted by this artifice departed the Abbey, their Movables, their Servants, their cattle, and Householdstuff, were left at Voltigerode. The Jesuits having sped so well in this piece of craft, soon made it appear, that the Nuns had no reason to fear any incursion of Soldiers, or violence but theirs. For presently after, viz. 29 of the same month of March, Herman Gauvinz, Provincial of the Company, took possession of the Abbey, and left some Jesuits in it, and forced the Nun's Servants to swear fealty to them, without any signification to the Superiors of the Order of the Cisteaux, or to the Abbot of Caesarea, Guardian of the Monastery. Their unparallelled cruelty in driving away these Nuns, and their Confessors out of this Abbey. The Nuns seeing themselves so maliciously cheated, found means secretly to re-enter the Abbey, and having placed themselves in the Choir at the upper end of the Church, continued there night and day, performing Divine Service, the Jesuits being in possession of the Lodgings. This return of the Nuns angered the Good Fathers, who left no stone unturned to persuade them, by entreaties and by threats, to be gone, and had certainly starved them, had they not been relieved with Victuals by some heretic women of the Country thereabouts. The Jesuits seeing them, maugre all this hard usage, to continue unmoved, resolved to expel them by violence. And the ●2 of April being Palm-Sunday Eve▪ assisted with Sergeants and Soldiers sent for of purpose, one of their Novices being principal Actor in this irreligious Tragedy; with a temerity and cruelty unheard of among persons of Religion, they dragged by force out of the body of the Church these Virgins Consecrate to God, who groaning and shrieking, were violently haled away at so Holy a time to the scandal of the whole Province, the Novice handling them so barbarously, that some of them who felt his fury most lay sick of their hurts a long time after. The matter of this story is so extraordinary and surprising that it were easily credible; ●. H●y who reports it, had used some exaggeration, but that his relation delivers it more favourably than the heinousness of the fact proved by Authentic Acts of Justice, inserted at large both in Dutch and Latin, in his work, deserves, as may partly appear to the Reader, by the Copy of the Process Verbal, or complaint of the said Nuns, exhibited in Du●ch to the Official of Osnabrugg, as followeth. It is not in our power, (poor abandoned Orphans that we are) not to lift up our voice to complain of the miserable condition, the strange and cruel proceedings exercised against us by the Fathers Jesuits on Saturday being Palm-Sunday Eve, on the Evening, have reduced us unto: For being come with the Lord Widelag, and two Sergeants, who are the ordinary Ministers made use of by the Magistrates to take Robbers and other Malefactors, into our Abbey of Voltigerode, wherein we had been established by our spiritual Father the Abbot of Walhenriedh Commissioner Sub-delegate, in pursuance of his Imperial Majesty's Edict of restitution, they entered between six and seven of the Clock. And finding us in the Choir of the Church, where we said our Prayers, the said Lord and the Jesuits spoke to us fiercely, and preffed us to be gone. But we continued on our Knees, in our ●eats, and answered, that we were under the obedience of our holy Order: And had no allowance or permission to depart out of our house without the command of our Superiors: Afterwards I Mary Kogel Nun Professed laying hold on my seat with both my hands hung thereupon with all my forc●: But the two Sergeants and the Jesuit Novice violently pulling away my hands from the Seat, took me off, and the Jesuit h●ld me by the middle fast locked in his Arms, and so carried me some part, and dragged me the rest of the way from my Seat to the end of the Choir: And as I cried out, Violence jesus, violence, I believe you will kill me, (for I was quite out of breath) th●y drew me out of the Choir: Whereupon our Confessor arrived, and found me laid along on the ground, crying out against the violence they had done me. But having lift me up, by force they put me in a Chair to carry me away, which they did, forcing me clear round the Abbey, and having cast me out of the Cloister, they made me march between the two Sergeants in the midst of a field, led by the Arms like a thief. Meeting a Chariot by the way, I catched at the wheel, but was forced off by them with such violence, that on the morrow I found myself so maimed in the Arms, and had such pain in my breast (to omit the fright and emotion caused by this violence) that I know not whether ever I shall recover it. After me followed the Noble Virgin Anne Lucy De Dernbach, near kinswoman to his Imperial Majesty's Vicechancellor, whom they carried away in like manner, and with like violence, in presence of our Confessor, who reproached the Father Rector of the Jesuits, for acting such a tragedy in so holy a time; and represented to the Sergeants, that they ought to remember, she whom they used so, was near Kinswoman to M. de Stralendorf, Vicechancellor of the Empire; but our Confessor prevailed not by his Remonstrances, for they took her away, as they had done Me. The third was sister to the last mentioned, her name Anna Sidonia de Dernbach, whose hands they forced from off the Seats of the Choir, with like violence: And the jesuit Novice holding her fast by the middle, dragged her forth, and put her in a Chair to carry her away, who in the mean time cried out to the jesuit, Whether this were their acknowledgement of the great good Offices her Kinsman had done for their College at Fulde; and that this injury was done to the Vicechancellor of the Empire in the person▪ of his Cousin. But they were deaf to all reason, and used two Nuns more in the sane barbarous manner. And this we can assure before God and the whole Court of Heaven, that all we allege is clear truth. Who can hear so lamentable a story, and not be equally moved with compassion towards the Nuns, Votaries of piety, and nobly descended, thus cruelly handled in their proper Monastery, and with indignation against the Authors of such barbarous violence, which yet will appear more shameful by the addition of some circumstances faithfully reported by the famous Benedictine F. Hay, in these words. Heretofore, under the Old Law, Criminals who fled into the Temple, purified only by the blood of Goats and of Calves were safe in that Asylum, if once they laid hold on the horns of the Altar: But now under the New Law, the Fathers of the Society make no conscience of using Sergeants, and the servants of Hangmen, to put themselves by their insolence, into the possession of Temples dedicated to the living God, consecrated by the dreadful and adorable Mysteries of jesus Christ. And to drag away innocent Nuns from thence by force and violence: O shame! O infamy! The reverend F. David, Prior of the Dominicans of Alberstad, and a converted brother named Angel happened to be present at this sad and unparallelled spectacle, and did so zealously and fervently reproach the Jesuits with the enormity of the Action, that the Convert could hardly abstain from Actual resistance: But the Jesuits not satisfied with the violence done to the Nuns, thought it necessary to expel from the Abbey their Superior and Confessor, a Friar of the Abbey of Caesarea, called F. Michael Go●z; who being returned from Brunswick, where he had been in search of the Chalices belonging to this Nunnery, came timely enough to be not only a spectator of the Tragedy, but to bear a part in it. For having reproached the Rector of the Jesuits to his face, for the indignity of the outrage committed against these holy Virgins, for not obeying the commands of the Jesuits to depart the Abbey; and having retired into the Churchyard, as in search of security from their violence among the dead interred there, they ordered two Soldiers, who were very averse from laying hands on the Priest, to throw the dice who should drive him out. This done, one of them took him and violently thrust him out of the gate of the Monastery; which gave a Protestant Soldier of Meclenbourg,) moved at t●is lamentable spectacle) occasion to say, with indignation against the Jesuits, We suffer not Ministers to be thus used in our Country: Behold the end of the Canonical Establishment (as Crusius t●e jesuit entitles it) of the Fathers of the Society in the Abbey of Voltigerode. An Abbot of the Order of Cisteaux turns out the Jesuits with shame, and re-establishes the Nuns. The Abbot of Caesarea Guardian of this Monastery, who by the Emperor's Authority had established there these Nuns according to the Edict, having received advice of this horrible proceeding, writ of F. Lamorman the jesuit, Confessor to the same Prince, as followeth; I am informed of matters of great grief and trouble to me: The event will show in time whether they may conduce to their good, who regard only their private interest and advantage: You have played, my Fathers, a very strange part, whereof I send you the Relation, which being acted in the time of the passion of ●ur Saviour, hath unhappily represented to us its image and form. But there are in it two astonishing differences: The one, that Females represented the person of Christ; the other, that they who assume the Name of Jesus, accompanied with their Guard of Soldiers acted not his part, but that of the jews, 〈◊〉 persecuted and abused him: O Society of Jesus! Is this the Society you have with Jesus? I conjure your paternal Reverence by the ●owels of our Redeemers Mercies, to cause restitution to be made of the Abbeys, which the Society have possessed themselves of, under ●olou● of a pretended Session, for fear these Angels of Peace, according to Scripture phrase, be obliged to continue their sighs and their tears; if voluntary restitution be not speedily made, we shall not fail of means to cause it to be done. Caesarea May 30. 1631. To conclude, notwithstanding the great power this jesuit had over the Emperor's spirit; The Order of Cisteaux up in their prosecution of re-establishment from his Imperial Majesty obtained a solemn arrest in their favour for restoring these Nuns to their Abbey; whence the Jesuits were obliged to dislodge with shame, as they had entered by a violent intrusion, contrary to the Civil and Canon Law, for which by the Canons they deserved exemplary punishment: For the ancient Orders of St. Benedict, St. Bernard, and others needed only the Emperor's authority for their re-establishment in their proper Abbeys, as Estates. violently u●●●ped from them by the Lutherans, to which the said Orders had a continual and most unquestionable right of reentry: But besides, that the gift of this Abbey which the Jesuits pretended to have had from the Emperor was Null in itself, as contrary to the Edict, and had not been obtained but by manifest surprise, as was observed, before the Jesuits themselves acknowledged by their Books, that the Pope only could make such translation of Abbeys from the Ancient Orders to their Society; and when in the mean time they were pressed to show, that the Pope had given them this by some Rescript or Bull, they had none to produce, but made an illusory answer worthy of themselves: That the Pope had given it them by the Emperor, as if, says F. Hay, the Pope ●ad accustomed to grant such extraordinary favours by Secular Commissions of Emperors or Kings, and not by Bulls or Apostolic Brieves. The Jesuits forbore not afterwards to attempt the possession of several Abbeys under the specious pretence of the greater Glory of God; insomuch that the Catholic Noblesse of the Rhine in Weteravia held themselves obliged to make public Complaints against their Avarice to Pope Vrban the 8th, in these words; We see, Holy Father, to our very great astonishment, that the Fathers of the Society of jesus by divers persecutions and flatteries they use to the Sovereign, Chief, and Princes of the Empire, over and above the vast riches they have gained, labour to possess themselves of Abbeys, Foundations, and Monasteries, principally those of Noble and Illustrious Virgins under divers pretexts of propagating the Faith, and advancing the salvation of Souls. They represent to him further, That in such holy places as the Jesuits were possessed of, presently all marks of the ancient duties of the foundations vanished upon their entry, all works of Mercy and Charity in practice there before did immediately disappear. That the Monasteries being abandoned, did sensibly decay, and would by degrees moulder to nothing, contrary to the pious intentions of the founders their Ancestors; that the buildings were ruined and fallen to the ground: and that nothing remained but the Estates and Revenues to enrich the Colleges of the Jesuits by the spoils of the ancient Orders of Religion. So that notwithstanding the great pride and vanity of these self-conceited Fathers, and their contempt of the Nunneries, saying, That the virginity of females consecrated to Christ is a solitary recluse and lazy virginity, which works out only their particular salvation, whereas theirs of the Society is public, active, employed in preaching, and fervent with zeal for the happiness and beatitude of the souls of all; Their Covetousness and Avarice appeared the more odious by their insolent brags, and provoked every person to indignation against them, for having such presumptuous thoughts of their Company, as to dare to pretend that Religion was in danger of ruin, and a total destruction, unless change were made of the Holy Habitations of Religious Virgins, whose prayers are so useful to the States Ecclesiastical and Civil, into Farms for their Colleges, whose disorders and irregularities are so notorious to the world, and pernicious to mankind. The Famous Story Of the Enormous Cheat upon the Nuns of the Order of St. Ursula, by the Rector of the Jesuits of Metz, in the sale of a house for their new establishment in that City: Confirmed by an arrest of the Parliament of Metz in 1661. a Copy whereof is here inserted. Whereby appear the equivocations, lies, deceits, and cheating impostures practised by the said Rector against the said Nuns, though he was their director Spiritual and Temporal. Extracted and faithfully transcribed out of the Registers of Parliament. BEtween the Nuns professed and Convent of the Ursulines of this City of Metz, authorized by the Court to prosecute their rights appellantes for the Seizures made of the goods and revenues of the said Monastery the 24th and 27th Nou. and 19th jan. last, demandants in conversion of appeal into opposition, and upon letters of form of Rescision and Restitution by them obtained in Chancery 29 Dec. last, against a certain contract of Sale of Sept. 7. 1649, that of ratification of Decem. 13. in the said year, and all other acts ensued thereon of the one part, And the Rector of the College of the jesuits of the said City summoned and defendant of the ●ther part. And also between August de Montigny Burgess of Metz and his Consorts, next kinsmen to the Appellants, Demandants by request to obtain intervention of one part. And the said Rector defendant of the other part. As also between Thomas le Blane Provincial of the Jesuits, partly by intervention of one part. And the said Nuns defendants of the other part. † A law term. Without that the qualities shall hurt or prejudice the parties. COURCOL for the Appellantes and Demandantes sets forth, That the Suit was of a Contract of Sale of a house situate in this City of Metz passed by F. Forget then Rector of the Jesuits of the said City for the use of the Vrsuline Nuns of Mascon, stipulating for a new establishment of the Nuns of the same order to be made at Metz aforesaid. That the qualities of the parties would decide the cause, it being certain that the Nun● come from Mascon, for the new establishment of this Monastery, were not of the Community or Nuns of this Monastery; for that according to the constitutions of the Order, such Nuns as had not made profession in the new Monastery remained still professed Nuns of the Monastery whence they came out, and whither they might return or be recalled; and the Nuns of the new Monastery were not obliged to retain them: so that neither this Monastery of St. Ursula of Metz, nor the Community thereof had a beginning but from the day when the first of the Appellantes made profession there, and the Community was not accomplished until there were three Nuns professed; that two infallible and decisive consequences arose from hence; the one, that the Appellantes who made up the true Monastery, having not been privy to the Contract nor ratified it, the Defendant had no Action against them, nor mortgage on their dowers; the other, That they could not be otherwise answered than as Minors, who are always relieveable in these things, they may have done to their prejudice; That judgement had been given in the like case for the Jesuits of Authun and Bourg in Bresse, as may appear by an Arrest of the Parliament of Dijon in 1632. and by a judgement of the Presidial of Bourg in Bresse, whereby the Jesuits relieved for purchases they had made to their prejudice, being damnified a third part thereby in the price paid above the value of the things purchased. That there is damage sustained of above two thirds; for in 1627. this house with another adjoining called Duponce was bought at twenty seven thousand Francs Messines. In 1642. the Jesuits upon an exchange valued it but at thirty thousand Francs with all the improvement and buildings they had erected, after the demolishing of others very considerable. In 1646. it was farmed at four hundred and fifty Francs M●ssines per Ann. In 1649. they offered it to Nuns, and a person of quality at twenty seven thousand Francs of the same money, but they refused it as not worth so much: Yet the same year 1649. F. Forget the Rector, having been in several Cities of the Kingdom, and afterwards addressing himself to the Ursulines of Mascon surprised them by several untrue suggestions, and sold them this house at thirty thousand livres Tourtois currant money of France, which make fourscore thousand Francs Messines; so that the Nuns are damnified above two thirds; that besides the consideration of damage, the frauds, artifices, cheats, and false suggestions on which the contract was grounded, make it void and null. This will appear by a writing of F. Forgets entitled Important Avisoes wherein he hath described this house, but with many fictions and disguisements of the Truth, both as to its situation, and the consistence of the buildings, and promised several advantages which had never been, nor ever will be; and to gain the better credit, he writ, and caused to be written a great number of Letters to the said Ursulines, and the late Lord Bishop of Mascon; and not content with this, he sold the house according to a platform, and model both of the body of the lodgings, and the frontispiece signed with his hand, but found false upon view, and comparison made of the house with the model; That he had sold it as in good condition according to the view taken, and by him reported at Mascon, which was also false. That he sold it, as all regularly built and fit for Nuns, so that there was not, said he, any thing unfinished but the grates and windows, whereas in truth there was not one regular place, save the Dormitory, which was not habitable by reason of the stink and infection of the River Seille, and the public Sewers; that there was no Church, no burying place, no Cloister; that he suggested, other Nuns would have bought it, which was not true; that the Nuns of Mascon who were sent to instruct the Virgins of this new Monastery in the rules of Religion, and their Order being accompanied with two persons of Quality bound for Metz to see whether they had been cheated in the buying of this house: when they came to Chaumont, F. Forget made them believe that they could not pass further without danger of their lives, which caused their return to Mascon, as may appear by a letter of F. Forgets; yet the morrow after F. Forget writ another letter quite contrary to the former. Lastly, that there was so much deceit and fraud in the business, that it was evident F. Forget to make the Nuns of Miscon believe that this house cost the Jesuits more than he sold it for, suggested to them that the decree of adjudication was made to them for twenty two thousand and three hundred livres, without adding Messines, and afterwards in his suggestions of the workmen's accounts and acquittances, he made them also believe that there were improvements and buildings of above fifteen thousand livres Tourtois value, which was not so, in regard that allowance being made for the buildings they had demolished, all the improvements were not worth two thousand five hundred livres Tour●ois. Further, F. Forget fearing lest the Nuns upon the place might have discovered the trick of livres Messines, dexterously stipulated by the bargain of Sale, that the Evidences of their purchase of this house were not to be put into the hands of the buyers till after full payment of the whole price. That the lapse of ten years could not be objected against the Appellantes, because their Community had its beginning between five and six years since: That by Evidence communicated by the Defendant himself, it appeared that the Nuns of Mascon who remained there, had made continual complaint against the Rector of the Jesuits for the cheat he had put upon them. That this was carefully concealed from these in this Monastery, that the Rector of the Jesuits did plot and contrive by intelligence and correspondence with others to deceive the Nuns that were to make profession in this Monastery, by keeping the contract from their knowledge; That the pretended ratification of Decemb. 13. 1649. made by the Nuns of Mascon sent hither, could not hurt or prejudice the Appellants, who never appeared nor intermeddled therein, nor had ever agreed or ratified it: That the pretended ratification had been contrived and extorted by F. Forget, who was Director Spiritual and Temporal to the Nuns who came from Mascon, that by the reading it was evident he had digested and compiled it as he pleased. That it was visibly false in all its propositions, and could not give validity to a contract in itself fraudulent and null. That the Contract of Sale could not oblige the Appellants who were not privy to it, since it is not permitted for any to stipulate for a third person. That the Letters of restitution were not necessary for the Appellants but for a surabundance of good right they had taken them, to the end no act they could have done might be objected against them; That the Defendant having already received eighteen thousand Livres Tournois, it was much more than the house was worth; therefore he concluded, that in regard of the said Letters, and in allowance thereof the parties ought to be remitted into the same estate they had before the Contracts of Septemb. 16. and Decemb. 13. 1649, and the Defendant condemned to restore the eighteen thousand Livres by him received upon the Appellants offer to abandon the said house: And in the Suit by conversion of Appeal into opposition, that the Seizures made at the Defendants request be declared null, injurious, and wrongful; and an Ousterlemain granted thereon with costs, damages and interest. DE CLOS for the party's intervenant being the Fathers, Mothers, and next Kin of the Nuns, said, It may not be thought strange these parties intervene in the cause, as being of no less concern than the destruction of a Monastery, and tending to the famishing of their Children the Nuns. That the Defendant, or F. F●rrest his Predecessor in the Office, having by a fraududent Contract surprised the Nuns of St. Ursula of Mascon, had the dexterity to conceal this Contract ten or twelve years till he had apprehension of the letters of Rescision; that to secure his debt by sufficient mortgages of the Dowers, which from time to time should be brought by new Nuns into this Monastery, having published abroad that this house had been given the eight Nuns come from Mascon to establish the Monastery for their Dowries; he proceeded at last to the Seizure of all the Revenues of these Nuns, and had caused the Rents and Pensions of the Nuns and Pensioners to be seized to draw from them the payment of the sum of twelve thousand Livres pretended residue of the price of the house in question, and nine years' arrearages: That this unexpected rigour reduced the Nuns to the necessity of begging, contrary to the rules of their Order, and the tenor of the permission of their establishment at Metz, or falling again into the hands of their kindred; That the Dowries of Nuns were sacred, and not subject to Commerce: That the Church tolerated no other use of them, than only for the Alimony of Nuns: That they could not be diverted to the payment of debts, much less of debts liable to question, secret and fraudulent as this; yet it appeared, that by the Contract of Sale of the said house F. Forget had the boldness to stipulate a particular mortgage to secure his debt upon the Nun's Dowries, who should make profession in this Monastery; and so the Dowries of these Nuns should be aliened along time before their profession, which cannot be judged to be other than Simony; that the moneys of these Dowries having been stipulated for Alimony, could not be seized for the Defendants debt. That the new Nuns, who alone made up the Monastery, had never signed any of the Contracts made use of by the defendant against them which were always kept secret; so that they were at their full liberty to accept them or not. That the Nuns of Mascon had been so grossly surprised in this, that they were excessively damnified. That these parties had a notable interest, and were concerned to take care that their Daughters the Nuns should not long continue in an unhealthy and infected place; therefore he concluded, That having regard to their intervention, it would please the Court to grant the Appellants and Demandants their Fines and Cenclusions. LE FEURE for the Rector of the Jesuits, said, That he could not admit the App●llants to be parties; that they were not qualified to sue; that being Nuns professed of the Monastery of St. Ursula of Metz aforesaid, they were incapable to proceed at Law without their Superior; the particulars which compose the body, having no power without their head: That all the Convent ought to have been parties, or audience denied to the particular Nuns, whose proceeding was so unjust, that they were forsaken by their Superior; that though the Contract had been passed by the Ursulines of Mascon, who were not professed of the Monastery of Metz: it was good notwithstanding, for that it was passed for, and to the profit of the Monastery to be established at Metz: That new establishments were made no other way; that if such Contracts should not oblige houses newly established, and the Nuns that should make profession there, the Sellers should be always cheated; that they should give away their estates without any assurance to receive the price for them. That the Committee of the Monastery of Metz begun on the day when the first Nuns sent from Mascon were encloystered and continued, and was increased by the profession of such as were newly received; that though the Nuns newly professed were not named in the Contract, nor had ratified it, yet they were obliged by it, as the new Monks of a Monastery are bound to pay the debts of their predecessors in the same house. That the Dowers of the new Nuns coming by acquisition to the Convent, were from thenceforth subject to the discharge of privileged debts, as the price of the said house, which was their habitation and part of their Alimony: That the juniority they alleged could stand them in no stead, because the purchase was made with all formalities requisite, and by the Authority and Counsel of their Superiors who had contracted; and therefore the Contract must stand, otherwise no person will Contract for like establishments, nor with Nuns. That the desire of an object came as well by the ears as the eyes▪ so that it was not necessary the buyer should see the thing he would buy, but it sufficed if he knew its condition and value by the report of another: That there had not been any deceit, fraud, surprise, or trapan on F. Forgets part, who in his Important Avisoes delivered nothing but what was true concerning the description of this house: That the platforms and models of that house which he gave them, were true, if the places were measured by the foot of Metz according to the custom of the Country where they were drawn: That the Nuns had the liberty to cause it to be viewed before they took possession; that they had perused it six weeks, ratified the Contract, and declared it agreeable to the model received of F. Forget in the City of Mascon, and that they had found it fair and more convenient for regularity, and the functions of their institution, than they conceived or imagined at the time of the purchase; that if F. Forget had been their Director Spiritual and Temporal, it was an extraordinary favour received of him who deserved other acknowledgements than those they made, and that for this reason they could not annul the ratification, for otherwise they who intermeddled with their direction, and should take care of their temporalities and affairs could make no Contract with them; that the intervention of their Parents and Kindred was precarious and useless: Therefore he concluded, that without regard to their Letters of Rescision and restitution, or to their opposition, the App●llants and Opposants should lose the benefit thereof, and pay costs to the Defendant. jolly was heard for the King's Attorney General, and said, That the business depending was of great importance, as well in respect of the parties contesting, as the Grounds of the Suit: That the Court was possessed of the Cause by an Appeal put in by the new professed Ursulines of Metz, for seizures made at the request of the Jesuits on the Goods given them by their kindred for their Dowers and alimony: And that the cause of the seizure was a contract made in 1649. with the Ursulines of M●scon, whereof till then they had no knowledge, and were thereupon obliged to obtain Letters of Rescision against this Contract, to declare it null, by reason of their being damnified above a moiety of the just price, the personal deceit on Father Forgets part; who had made the sale, and the juniority on the Grandees part: That whereas question was made in the Cause, touching the quality of the Demandants, as not parties capable to plead, without the assistance of their Superior, the establishment of the quality was a thing previous to the Suit, and that he was of opinion, that this objection was not considerable, because the Appellants only were concerned in the differences now in Judgement, as well because that if the Jesuits pretensions took place they should be reduced to beggary, and see themselves deprived of things given for their Dowers and Aliment, without having contracted with or known these suits to have been their Creditors, as also for that the Superior and other Nuns remaining of the 8 come from Mascon, to make this new establishment, should be received at any time to return into the Convent, whereof they were always deemed to be part, according to the rules and constitutions of their Order. That which removes all obstacles in this point, is that in all Communities Secular and Regular, when any thing hath passed prejudicial or contrary to the Canons, Ordinances and Arrests, there is not one particular member in the body, who hath not good ground of Appeal as for wrong; and that in such case the assistance of the head was needless, for that it falls out often in such occasions, that the head is the party to be complained of. Having established the quality of the parties Appellants, with a brief summary explication of the fact, the parties reasons for maintaining their pretensions, he said, It might have been wished that an affair of this nature had not appeared in public: And that the parties had not of themselves been inclined to have agreed among themselves and done one another Justice. That it was horrid to see persons who made profession of a life more perfect than other men, disposed to break the sacred tye of that holy union, which we ought to find among the most Lukewarm Christians▪ that we must endeavour by exact examination to stop the further oppression of Justice and Equity, and to preserve them from incertitude in their stations. To effect this, we must inquire whether the damages sustained exceed the moiety of the Just price, whether there were any deceit or surprise, whether the Appellants were Minors, and lastly how considerable the Contract in question might be: To settle the damage he said, That the house had been bought by the Jesuits by Decree for 22 thousand 300 Livres Messines, every Livre twenty Groats value, which makes 12 Sols six Deniers Tournois, and amounted in all to 13 thousand 935 Livres, ten Sols Tournois. That the Jesuits had assured the Ursulines as well by Letters as by their Avisoes, entitled Important, that the house with the improvements would come to 30 thousand Livres, not adding Messines: That as to the reparations and improvements, they produced no Account or acquittance of the workmen who had laboured there; so that it might be truly said that they had none, or that they were so inconsiderable, they durst not show the just sum they amounted to. That it was true the Jesuits agreed not to the value of Liures Messines, as before reduced to Liures Tournois, but would by this means have obscured the business, and prevent Judgement at the hearing; but at last upon the Defendants Calculation by Letters, the 22 thousand 300 Livres Messines were valued at no more than 16 thousand Livres Tournois; so that the damage remained still most enormous, a●d approached very near the moiety of the just price. As to the fraud and deceit, it was visible by them that F. Forget had great power over the Ursulines, who placed an entire confidence in his words and writings; so that it was no wonder that they gave so easily 30 thousand Livres Tournois for a house which he assured them to be worth so much; which he offered to justify, laying a Paper on the Table to declare the particulars, but never spoke to them of Liures Messines which was the equivocation that drew the Ursulines into the snare. That instead of showing the Contracts and Acquittances, he stipulated that after payment of the purchase-money for the house, he would deliver into the Nuns' hands Extracts of all the Contracts and Evidences concerning the said ●ouse: Further, that neither the Nuns, nor any person on their behalf had seen the house, ●nd that there was presented them a model which was not agreeable to the house, but represented the house fairer and more convenient for Lodgings, and of greater extent than in truth it was, being 16 fathoms, two feet and three inches more than the house did effectually contain, as appeared by the last process verbal of the view taken by Order of this Court. The truth is, the Jesuits, to defend themselves against this objection which annulled the Contract, for that it was an error in the substance and matter of the Contract, would have denied the model as a counterfeit thing, and not delivered by them, had it not been signed in two places by Fa. Forget; so that they bethought themselves of the shift to say, that the Staircases were added in the model which are usually left out of designs of Architecture, and confined themselves at last to the sole defence of saying, that the measure of the Stairs was not taken by the King's fathom, as in truth it was, but by the fathom of that Country; which caused a greater Error, for that the fathom of Metz is almost two foot and a half greater than the Kings. That true it was, by the foot it was less than that of France, but it was as true, that it contained ten feet, and▪ that of France but six: As to their minority, there was no difficulty in the case, since it was insisted, that the Nuns newly pro●est were Minors not only in respect of their Age, but of their quality of Nuns, and as members of a Community which is always considered in minority: But▪ against all those reasons, the Jesuits opposed the prescription of 12 years, and that it was never heard of, that a purchaser should be received to propose damnification, thereby to procure▪ restitution of the purchase-money paid, or part thereof. As to the prescription, it could not be pleaded against the Nuns newly professed; for that they could not be esteemed a Community till they were of the number of three, according to the Law, Ne'er atius at D. de verb. signif. Besides, it may be said, the Community hath not yet commenced, for that they have not any administration of the affairs of the house, as appeared by a Letter produced by the Jesuits, written by their Superior to F. Forget, wherein she told him she took excessive pains, to conceal from the new Nuns the state of the House, and feared their care in the inquiry would quench in them the spirit of their vocation. As to the restitution, there were some difficulty in it in the state of his Majority, but in a Minors Case damnification is a sufficient cause of Restitution: That the Jesuits themselves had been relieved in a purchase they made as was observed by the Demandants advocate, though they were damnified but a third part: That in the last place it was opposed on the Jesuits part, that the Contract was ratified five or six days after the cloisture of the Nuns. But this Act was of no force, for that it was signed at the Grate, and by Duresie▪ That the terms it contained made it suspicious, for instead of a pure and simple ratification they made an Elegy of this House to the Nun●, who upon a visible induction were to say, that they found it much fairer and more convenient than they had imagined it to have been▪ though in truth it be less commodious and spacious than by the model it ought to have been. But though this Act had been drawn in the best form, it might be said it could not any ways oblige the new Nuns, for that when the Act was past, not one of them was then received into the Monastery, and that since their Entry they had not ratified any Act: That the last observation to be made, was to consider the validity of the Contract, which may be said to be absolutely null, for that no person is thereby obliged: Not the Nuns of Mascon who passed it, for that by an express Clause they had stipulated, that they were not in any wi●e to be bound in, or liable unto the payment of the Principal and Interest of such sums as might become due in pursuance of the said Contract. Not the Nuns newly professed, who were never privy to the Contract, nor ratified it afterwards, so that they were in Sta●●●●ntegro; that they were neither bound personally nor by real security: That if it were objected, that the Nuns of Mascon had obliged the dowers of the new professed Nuns, it were vain, since it would prove to be Res inter alios acta quae tertio noc●re non debet. So that we may observe an enormous damnification in this Contract, a considerable surprise, a constant minority, against which they could not prescribe; and three nullities, whereof two might be drawn from the disagreement of the house with the model: The first, by reason of the error that occurred in the substance of the thing sold, the other drawn from the defect of capacity and ability to contract, for that the permission and Authorization of the Lord Bishop of Mascon, was grounded on the Conformity of the model with the house. And for the third nullity it might be taken from the Contract which was null in itself, as not effectually obliging any person to the execution. Therefore he was of opinion, that there was sufficient reason to receive the Kindred intervenant in the Cause, and to do them right upon their intervention, together with the Letters of rescision, and allowing them to declare the contract in suit null and of none effect, and consequently to remit the parties into such estate as they had before the Contract of 1649. to convert the Appeal into opposition, and having done right thereon, to grant an Ousterlemain to the Demandants for the things seized▪ Co●rcol was afterwards heard for the Nuns, Demanding Dismission in the Cause against the Provincial of the Jesuits, and that as to the profits, the Arrest to be Given to bind the Provincial. The Court having regard to the Lett●rs, and allowing the same, hath remitted, a●d remitts the parties into the same Estate they were in before the Contract in question, unless the Jesuits had rather rest satisfied with 18 thousand Livres in full payment for the house; and declare their option within a month: H●th Received and receives the parties intervenant; the Nun's Kindred in respect of their intervention to Convert the Appeal into opposition, and having done them right therein▪ to grant the Demandants an 〈◊〉 for the things seized, without 〈◊〉. Hath granted a Dismission in the Cause of the Provincial of the jesuits, and for the profits▪ hath declared, that h● shal● be bound by the present Arrest. Signed, Bouchard, Given at 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉, Tuesday; May 10. 166●. THE Famous Bankrupt OF THE Jesuits of Sevil; For above four hundred and fifty thousand Ducats, to the ruin of a multitude of persons and whole families; As appears by the Relation inserted in the Spanish Book, Entitled the Theatre of Jesuitism, pag. 378. And by the MEMORIAL presented to the King of Spain in person by the Creditors of the College of the Jesuits of Sevil concerning this Bankrupt: Faithfully rendered out of a Spanish Copy under the hand of john Vn●●fre Salazar; whereby is discovered that spirit of Ambition, Avarice, and Iniquity that reigns in the Jesuits. See the words of the Memorial. SIR, JOhn Onufre de Salazar in his Name, and the Names of other your Majesty's Subjects creditor's of the College of Jesuits of Sevil, commonly called St. Hermenigildes, come to prostrate themselves once more at your feet, to represent to your Clemency the lamentable effects of a bankrupt of the said College for above four hundred and fifty thousand Ducats, and to desire justice against the most pernicious cheat that ever was heard of, and whereof no precedent was ever seen in these Kingdoms since the establishment of this Monarchy, they shall not be declared at large. SIR, With tears, and other lamentable agitations of grief and affliction, which have been the only payment, made so many poor Widows, so many Orphans, so many Wives separated from their Husbands, so many Nuns without a Monastery, so many ruined Gentlemen, and generally so many persons of several sorts, who trusted this Religious House, being in greatest credit among all those in this City, with their only stock, for subsistence, their Dowers, the patrimony of their, Children, who now sustain greater Losses▪ Imp●stures and malice, from this House of Religion, than ever they imagined to avoid by qu●●●ing commerce with secular men. But they will con●ent themselves to represent to your Majesty with all possible brevity the state of this affair, omitting of purpose many things that appear by the Process at Law, and reporting nothing disagreeing from it, but closing in few words what ought to be ocreated at large. ●riar Andrew De Villar, being the Procurator of the College, employed his thoughts to improve and increase their estate, and to this effect borrowed at interest, upon ●ents and other securities above 450 thousand Ducats, whereof he made use to trade in Sevil. He embarked for the Indies several sorts of Merchandises, Linens, Iron, Saffron and Cinnamon; he built Houses and Mills, bought Lands▪ Gardens and many other things. This Money he borrowed of persons best affected to their College, and depending most upon it, and of some others: The most grave Fathers of the Company assisted him in this affair of borrowing, which he compassed to his and their satisfaction by his address, and his good managery; being Authorized by powers received of his Superiors, which is justified by several Accounts seized in his Custody, and by several Memorials and Registers, wherein he made mention of all. ●. Peter de Aviles Provincial of Andaluzia, and Rector of the College, considering the condition of their estate, and desirous to maintain this house in its Grandeur, and wealth, the holy zeal they have for their Greatness put them upon the search of all means imaginable for success in their designs: They found none so ready as to dispose their affairs, so that their Creditors might lose a moiety of their debt, and made use of one of their Confidents to make the proposal. They debated it together, Whether it might be for their purpose to send out process to their Creditors, and all the reasons Father Villar represented to them in a Memorial produced in the suit depending in Your Majesty's Council, Piece 3. fol. 144. could not divert them from the resolution they had taken already, never troubling themselves for the loss of their credit. This appears by the Original Letter of F. de Aviles▪ produced also in the said suit, piece 3. fol. 136. See here the express terms of the Letter of this Provincial to the said Procurator. I have received the Memorial, wherein you set forth reasons to diver● 〈◊〉 from sending Process to our Creditors, I have considered of them seriously, 〈…〉, that by prudent management of 〈◊〉 affair, which is 〈◊〉 our power and ordering, we shall remove most ●f the inconveniencies that may arise from it. The less of our credit doth not much trouble us, for that as the Proverb says, What can you have more of the Cat than her skin, or the Crow than her Feathers? above fifty or at least forty thousand Ducats 〈◊〉 not the last year to stop the mouths ●f our Creditors, much less will so much be sufficient at present. We have no more left that we can tell. And there is no other way to avo●d these Losses than to reduce the Interests to the Rents▪ and think ●f no other payment than what we are obliged to by our real securities: I have sent you the Ratification: The Lord preserve you, etc. Peter de Aviles▪ At Quadix, Oct. 12. 1644. The 8. of March, 1645. being the day appointed for execution of what they had long before designed, the first thing they did was the Arresting of Villar the Procurator of the College, under pretence of an Assembly and Consultation they intended to hold, and took from him all his books of Accounts, Papers and Registers he had in his Chamber. The day following being March 9 the Provincial and Rector assembled all their Creditors in their house of profession, and in presence of the most considerable persons, and of best quality in the City, who came to this Assembly, the Provincial declared the desire they had to give satisfaction to all the world, endeavouring nevertheless at the same time to persuade them to lose the moiety of what was their due. And though they had caused a Notary to come, that they who could be made consent to so impious a resolution should sign it before him, there was not one person would do it: The small hopes they saw of success in their design, gave them cause the next day being the tenth of the same month, by means of their Rector to suborn a Creditor, who having accepted the Proposal made by the Provincial should call upon the rest of the Creditors to accept as he had done, and join all together to receive payment accordingly: Upon this demand a Judge Conservator named by the College, proceeds to the sequestration of the Estate of the College, but acted with so much partiality, and other defaults in the procedure, that he gave the Rector of the Jesuits way to pay them who would receive Money, six millions of Maravediss, and the Conservator himself paid above fourteen thousand Ducats, and in all these payments made by the Rector and Conservator, they followed the Orders given by the F. F. Jesuits, and executed to their power the Provincials design, changing personal debts into real securities, and treating with every one how much he would lose. The procuring of a Conservator wholly at their devotion was of so much advantage to the Jesuits, that by assuring him or recompense of a pension of one thousand Ducats per annum; they made him their Protector, who ought to have been the avenger of such cheats, and criminal impostures. The noise of this Bankrupt was so great, and so scandalous, that all the world was amazed and scandalised at it, and especially the Creditors who saw no remedy for their misery, nor comfort for their affliction; for they who had treated with these Fathers saw themselves involved in great inconveniencies for what they had quitted to them, and almost hopeless of receiving any part of the residue which the Jesuits were resolved to reserve to maintain the splendour of their College, and to keep it up in that height of riches and lustre, wherein their other houses in Sevil to the number of six do flourish (viz. The Colleges of St. Herminigilde, the Noviciate, St. Gregory, the English College, the Irish College, the house of profession, the College de las Vacas.) john Onufre de Salazar, in his name, and the name of all others the Creditors had recourse to the only Sanctuary that remained, being your Majesty's Council-Royal, whom he petitioned to apply a● remedy to so great a wound, and to stop the effusion of so many of your poor subjects blood, by obliging them who had given the wound to cure it. The request he presented was so full of strong and moving Reasons, that they wrought compassion in the Council; so that they ordered the audience of Sevil to take cognizance of the affair, and make their report to the Council which was accordingly done, with an addition of several learned considerations in augmentation and confirmation of Salazars' relation: Upon the report the Council gave a special Commission to the Li●entiat D. john de Santelices' Counsellor in the same Councils, and then Precedent of the Audience of Sevil, to proceed to the sequestration of all the estate of the College, until the Creditors were fully paid, and to make inquiry and search for their goods, papers and books of account they had hid and put out of the way; a few days after, by virtue of this Commission he ordered the Procurator of the College to make ready his accounts: But the Conservator refusing notwithstanding to quit the cognizance of the affair, the Procurator Fiscal of the Audience of Sevil intervened in behalf, and for defence of the jurisdiction-royal, and required the Conservator to decline the business, for that he was prohibited to take cognizance of it, and the cause to be remitted to the Judge delegated by the Council; whereupon several writings passed on the one side, and the other, which coming to the knowledge of the Procurator-General of your Majesty's Council, he desired, that for stopping this Conservator, who was so obstinately humoursome in his endeavours to intrude into, and retain to himself the judgement of this affair, That it might be declared by arrest, that the Estate of the College of Jesuits was a lay estate; which was done accordingly by an arrest of the Council of Feb. 5. 1647. By virtue of which arrest your Majesty's first and second Letters of provision were dispatched, prohibiting the Conservator to intermeddle in the affair, and ordering him to transmit all the evidences and process he had into the hands of the Judge appointed by the Council: The Conservator had notice of these Letters, but was so far from obeying them, tha● before the third Letter could be issued out by ordinary course, he declared by sentence given at the pursuit of the Jesuits, that all the Estate of the College was Ecclesiastical, except only thirty thousand Ducats: This engaged the Creditors to prove the ●alsi●y of this judgement, which they did in a year and a halfs time to their great costs and charges▪ and at last justified all the estate of the College to be secular, except only that of the foundation which amounted to no more than eight hundred Ducats rend. The Jesuits having failed of their design in this article, invented another which was to cause persons to intervene in the suit, who should pretend themselves Creditors, and set forth false promises, and produce forged obliga●●ons. This may easily be made out, in that most of the promises are promises of the Religious brethren of the company under the names of S●●ulars, and others in favour of the Procurator of the College under the names of S●culars, but supposititious and feigned, as was verified by the information exhibited by the audience of Sevil by order of the Council, and produced in the first●piece of the pro●●ss, Fol. 42. They made them sign a Compromise, but that they acted this by indirect means, appears 〈◊〉 that seventy six p●rsons who sig●ed it were poor Widows and Maidens without any support, and the rest are Jesuits of the same College: But this was done ●n design only to immortalize the Suit in this affair, to retard the payment, and that in the mean time they might continue Masters of the whole, and thereby prevent your Majesty's Council from relieving the grievances of your poor subjects or healing the wound the Jesuits had given them in causing them to lose all their estates. They had also a design by this dissimulation and cheat to give their Bankrupt some colour of honesty, and cover their Knavery with a plausible pretence, as if they who are cited to appear at Law became Bankrupt after the Suit commenced: These Creditors by the Compromise consented to lose proportionably so much of their respective debts, as five of them to be deputed to that purpose should judge meet, which five are the most addicted to the Jesuits▪ and most nearly concerned with them. And 'tis remarkable that one of them is F. Andrew de Villar whom they caused to leave the College for that purpose, and at present he solicits subscriptions to the Compromise and process in this Court in a Secular habit: These Creditors have also agreed, that until they have assigned a provision sufficient for maintaining the Fathers, the Rector of the College shall have one of the two keys of the chest wherein they have put all the money both of the Stock and Rents of the Creditors, and that the Jesuits shall keep this this key till the deputies have assigned them three thousand five hundred Ducats rend to be enjoyed by them, and received out of the clearest and best estate of the College now all sequestered. Besides this they enjoy above sixteen hundred Ducats, which they have taken away from Don Roderigo Barba Cabeca de Vaca inhabitant of Sevil who is also their Creditor, for they have usurped from him for thirty nine years, three thousand three hundred Ducats Rend left him by john de M●nsalvo his Uncle one of the 24 of Sevil, who trusted and left them by way of Depos●um in hands of a jesuit of this College his Confessor; the Father's being content to give the said D. Roderigo three hundred Ducats per annum as alms from them, because he was a poor Gentleman. This is justified by a Book which the Licentiat D. john de Santelices' found among other papers of the College, which was entitled, The Book of Secret Works of Piety, wherein there was a note of instruction given by the Superiors in these terms: We must temporize with De Roderick Barba. Cabeca de Vaca till the death of the Beneficiary D. Segner de Velasco, and afterwards let the gate be shut against Roderick as a person with whom we have nothing to do: Under which there follows this further instruction, no person, save the Procurators of the College, the Rector, the Provincial and Consultors of the Province ought to have cognizance of this Book, and the goods whereof it speaks: This we learn in the three and four pieces of second process. By means of these sixteen hundred of D. Rodericks, and the three thousand five hundred annual provision assigned them by the said Deputies by their own Authority, without speaking of other Rents, these Fathers are more at ease, and better accommodated than ever they were before the Bankrupt, and the process of the Creditors; and if they gain what they pretend to, in obtaining a confirmation of this new Compromise sorting so well to their advantage; their College shall possess their estate after the Bankrupt with more assurance than before, unless, as the common saying is, We stop the pipes that carry water to their mill. This ought not to be suffered, chiefly because the Council on the positive demand of the Creditors was possessed of the cause, and interposed their puissant & sovereign authority for recovery of all this estate, and payment of all the Creditors; This the Judge executes who was named by the Council. And as the Jesuits know well enough, that all their subtleties will be discovered if they come to be examined by the Creditors proofs, who make it appear that all the Estate of these Fathers is temporal, since the Revenues of benefices which are spiritual are an estate temporal, they are afraid the Council may judge accordingly; and this hath obliged them to make the deputation to the five Creditors their Confident, to try, if by colour of their not being Authors of this cheat, whereof in truth they are guilty, they may exempt themselves from the jurisdiction of your Council, where their public commerce, their illegal traffic, and damnable negotiations for aggrandizing their estate hath been already so clearly proved. All this, Sir, hath need of a speedy and exemplary remedy, and the Creditors hope from your Majesty's Piety and Justice, that they shall owe you, Sir, those lives which the Jesuits have rendered so troublesome by the miseries and necessities they see themselves reduced to, that they esteem it greater happiness to lose them, than to be obliged to live without ability to maintain themselves in that port and rank they formerly flourished in respectively▪ 'Tis possible they may breathe again if the Judge of the Council causes payment to be made them, and these men of Religion learn at the same time, that they ought not under pretence of their privileges, and of their profession to ruin their best friends, but content themselves with what the Laws allow them to possess: By stopping the course of so dangerous a precedent, the I●sui●es of other Colleges and Provinces will see, it concerns them more to accustom themselves to traffic in prayers and supplications, to pass with safety the Sea of the miseries and travels of this world, where so many are shipwracked, than to apply themselves to trade for the Indies, to send merchandizes thither, and to maintain Commerce, and get Gain prohibited by Law. 'Tis, Sir, very remarkable, and merits a particular attention, that the other Colleges of the Jesuits of the Province of Andaluzia, owe great sums of money to many private persons which are no less considerable than those of the house of Sevil; and they attend with impatience the resolution of your Council, that they may do as their brethren of Sevil have done, if they come off well in this affair; for their thirst to amass money, Sir, is so insatiable, that it is believed, their houses in both Castilles owe two millions of money for things deposited with them in confidence of fair dealing, for moneys they have borrowed, and for debts they have contracted on divers pretences. 'Tis worthy observation of how great sums they defraud the Church and your Patrimony Royal, in that neither this College, nor any house of theirs in the Kingdom pay any tithes▪ Imposts, or part of the Contributions which are levied for your Majesty on Ecclesiastical Estates; so that it would be more profitable for the Church and your Majesty, that these Estates were possessed by Secular persons. You cannot too much consider and reflect upon these sins, and those crimes which the ruin and poverty of so many Widows, Maidens, and women of quality have caused; and what strangers not well grounded in our Faith and Religion may say, to see an affair of this Nature pass before the eyes of a King so Catholic and Just, and of his Council-Royal, consisting of persons so eminently Christian; besides what may be apprehended from the desperate resolutions of so many considerable persons who find themselves ruined in honour, and their Estates, which they see in the hands of their Enemies. These poor Creditors, SIR, most humbly beseech your Majesty with tears in their eyes, that you would protect them in a Cause so worthy of your Majesty's Care, and Christian Charity, since the Justice thereof doth so clearly appear to you; And that you will be Graciously pleased to order your Council, that in regard of the evident malice of the Iesui●●s they would not give place for further delays, nor permit any new incidents to be foisted into the Cause now depending, but think it sufficient that the Jesuits have already had eight years' time to plead, and not allow th●m to make the Process immortal, as they vaunt they will do by their great credit: These miserable Creditors shall spend their lives, and consume these poor remains of their Estate (which these Fathers have not taken away) to prosecute this Suit, and solicit the payment of their debt, if the Judge appointed by the Council to take cognizance of this Bankrupt, and the Plaint of the Creditors will not cause payment to be made them, by dispatching the third provision, and an Act to declare, that the Estate of the Jesuits is not Ecclesiastical, to the end the Conservator named by the College intermeddle not any further in the business, nor take any cognizance thereof, and that in the same time he vacate and annul this new and artificial deputation. YOUR MAJESTY, SIR, shall in this do a piece of service very acceptable to God, and by this means your poor subjects the Creditors shall recover their Estates, and shall every one live in the Rank, Honour, and Reputation suitable to their quality, which this Bankrupt hath caused▪ them to lose. Signed, john Onufre de Salazar. THE History of this FAMOUS BANQVERUPT is reported by the Author of the JESVITICK THE ATRE, pag. 378. Where the Relation agrees exactly with this Memorial, with this addition only, that the Council prohibited the Conservator the cognizance of the affair, and ordered him to transmit all the papers to D. john de Sante●ices. By this means de Villar was set at liberty from the Jesuits prison, and secured upon bail in t●e Convent of Saint Francis, where he made it appear to the world, that he had done nothing in all this but by order of his Superiors, whose original Letters he produced to stop the mouths of these Fathers, and silence their Calumnies, which Letters are inserted in the proceedings at Law, and Copies of them dispersed in several places: Villar was afraid, that if aft●r this he entered again among the Jesuits, they might practise on him the Doctrine of their Father Amy, who allows a man of Religion to kill him who publishes things scandalous of his Order, as they had practised on several occasions, and particularly on the person of Doctor john D' Espino whom they poisoned three times; which is so notorious, that there is not a person in Spain or the Indies, who fears not their poisons and violences: This obliged Villar to quit the Jesuits habit, and take his cloak and his sword, and to marry in the peace and face of the Church, having first obtained a dispensation of the vows ●e had made four or five times, but they were vows for the profession of jesuitism, to which nothing can oblige a man. Now the Jesuits give out, that the Cause of the Bankrupt was the Knavery of Villar who reigns in his roguery, and triumphs, and feasts himself with the spoils of other men. He answers, they lie, and refers himself to what appears in writing, and tells them, men's tongues should be silent when prayers and such evidences speak, which is expressed in the Spanish Proverb; Hablen Cartasy call barbas. The same Author recounts afterwards a story to which this Proverb hath some relation, which we have rendered verbatim out of another Spanish Impression which seems more exact, and contains the matter we come next to declare. Other Marks of the Avarice, Injustice and Cheats of the Jesuits in the following Story, reported by the Author of the jesuitique Theatre, pag. 381. and another Printed Book in Spanish, ENTITLED, A Relation of the Passages in the strange Discovery made by D' John De Santelices Guevara, Councillor in the Council Royal, of the Fraud and Cheat whereby the Jesuits of the College of St. Hermenigilde of Sevil, concealed and detained for above 39▪ Years, from D. Rod●rick Barba Cabera de Vaca, Inhabitant of the said City, Three thousand three hundred Ducats Rend, left him by John de Monsalve his Uncle, one of the 24 † The Common-council of the City. of Sevil, which all that time they enjoyed to th●ir own use and behoof, giving him only 300 Ducats yearly by way of Alms. THE Council Royal of Castille, having granted a Commission to the Si●ur D. john De Santelices' Councillor in the said Council, and Precedent of the Audience Royal of Sevil, for taking cognizance of the Process and causes of the Assembly of the Creditors of the Jesuits of the College of St. H●rmenigilde of the said City, to seize all the Goods and Rents of the said Jesuits, to search for such Goods as they had concealed and laid out of the way, and to recover them, and to give entire satisfaction to the said Creditors by payment, the said Sieur D. john caused all the books of Accounts, of the store and Chest of the said College to be brought before him, for the better execution of what was enjoined him. Among others he found a book entitled, A Book of secret works of piety: Reading it leaf by leaf he saw the manner how the Accounts were to be kept, of the employ and distribution of the said secret works of piety, so called because the Fathers were Masters thereof; as also the Accounts given by the Provincials, at their Visitations by the Stewards or Procurators of the College, all signed with the hands of the Provincials: There he finds written these very words: We must temporize with Don Roderick Barba Cabeca de Vaca, till the death of the Beneficiary John Segner de Velasco, and when he is dead shut the door against Roderick Barba, as a person we have nothing to do with. And a little lower another advertisement, importing, That no person ought to have Cognizance of this Book, n●r of the Estate and Revenues of the College, but only the Procurators, the Rector, the Provincial and Consultors of the Province. The said Sieur D. john having taken great notice of this Title, and the two advertisements, and Articles of the Book cited before him the said De Villar, formerly Procurator of the College, but then in the Convent of St. Francis, D. Rodrick Barba, and the Beneficiary john Segner de Velasco: And having given them their Oaths, and demanded what they could say to these Articles, and what this pious work was, they declared as followeth, and confirmed it by Oath. Nine and thirty years ago, a Gentleman, one of the 24 of Sevil, called john De Monsalve, returned very rich from the Indies: He was not married, nor had any Child, but a woman sued him who pretended to be his Daughter, and that he had not only begotten her before marriage, but that afterwards he privately married her mother, so that she was his daughter, and could not be debarred from inheriting his Estate. john de Monsalve falling sick of the sickness, whereof he died, while this suit depended, for clearing his Conscience sent for a jesuit of the College of St. Hermenigilde, with whom he settled what concerned his Conscience and Testament, and told him the Action this woman had brought against him was altogether unjust, and the matter of fact she had alleged utterly false, and that he was obliged to dispose of his Testament so, as this woman might not know after his death what he should leave behind him, in Money and Movables. Whereupon this Father ordered his Testament as followeth. john De Monsalve hath disposed of his Immovables (which could not be concealed▪ nor conveyed out of the way) by right of eldership Heritable, and made D. Roderick Barba Cabeta de Vaca his Nephew heir thereof; and as to his Movables and Money, which amounted to eighty five thousand Ducats, he made a Writing signed by himself and the said F. Jesuit his Confessor, whereby he declared he would leave the said sum by way of Dep●situm in the hands of the said Father, that in case after his death judgement were given for him in the suit, or that on any occasion this woman would desist from her pretensions, all the Estate he left in the Jesuits hands should descend by right of Eldership, excepting only 800 Ducats per Ann. which he reserved out of this Revenue, to be employed in the marriage of a certain number of Maidens, in the redemption of such a number of Captives, and to buy provision o● Victuals for the Prisons for certain days. Ordaining further, that if any of those to whom this right of Eldership should descend; had Children, those works of piety should cease, but so as provision should be first made for giving and founding an endowment for portions, suitable to the Condition and quality of a number of maidens to be married, and the heirs by right of eldership to be Patrons and Administrators of this work of piety: Pursuant to this disposal, the said sum of 85 thousand ducats, and the writing were put into the hands of the F. jesuit, who assured Monsalve they should be used according to the declarations abovementioned. john De Monsalve being dead▪ his Heirs and Executors of his will, soon after agreed with the woman, who for ten thousand Ducats of Billon or black Money, (a sort of Base Coin cried down) surceased her proceedings, and quitted her pretensions. And the Woman within a short time after died without Heirs, which had been sufficient alone to end the suit; so that the jesuit was obliged as the case stood, to ha●e published the writing, and have paid the money to Monsalve's heirs: But all this was too little to incline the Jesuits to discover the Money and Writing, either in the life-time of this Confessor, or after his death. And thus they detained for above 39 years this sum, out of which they raised a Rent of three thousand three hundred Ducats per ann. which they have enjoyed to this present, when Providence hath so ordered the matter, that the scandalous and lamentable Bankrupt of their College hath caused the discovery of this particular Business. The Sieur john De Santelices forthwith caused a Copy to be made of Monsalve's Testament, and annexing it to the other Papers, Declarations and Verifications, transmitted them to his Majesty and his Council Royal of Castille, where the suit of the Creditors of the Bankrupt College depends; See the Process No. 3. and 60. The Council having seen all these pieces of Obedience, ordered they should be communicated to the Attorney General, who gave his opinion thereof: On the other side D. Roderick Cabeca sent a procuration to demand from the Council a Councillor, to be named Commissioner, for determining this Process. The Council thereupon sent a special Commission to the Sieur D. I●hn de Santelices, to take cognizance of this affair, and put the said Roderick in possession of this Estate, causing the Jesuits to make restitution of the Principal Money with all the mean profits made by the use thereof. D. john de Santelices began to cause this to be executed, and his successors in that Charge continue the execution to this day. As to these words of the book of Pious works, We must temporize with D. Roderick Barba Cabeca de Vaca, till the death of the Beneficiary John Segner de Velasco his Uncle, and when he is dead, shut the door against Roderick as a person we have nothing to do with. They were inserted because the Jesuits gave him yearly three or four hundred Ducats, telling him that a Kinsman of his having left them the disposal of a pious work, they were very glad of the occasion to employ it for his relief as a poor Gentleman. And their design was, as appears by the book, to continue this Gift no longer than till the death of john Seg●er de Velasco, who was the only person privy to the whole affair, being Cousin to john de Monsalvo, whose life they hoped could not be long, being above fourscore years old. 'Tis to be observed as a truth made out by this secret book, that for several years they had converted these charitable works of marrying Maidens, redeeming Captives and others, into Alms bestowed on the Fathers Of their po●r little professed house of Sevil as they call it. A jesuit of Madrid engages a Woman to give all her Estate to the Society by will, another Jesuit persuades her to give it her Heirs, and is expelled the Society for doing so. They destroy the life of another for the same Cause. PAge 248. the Jesuits are of opinion, that no persons deserve Legacies better than they, which is founded on the detestable maxim in the last Paragraph of their secret advice, that all the Church militant together doth not so much good by all other Orders of Religion jointly, as they alone do. This sets them a-work to procure Gifts, and severely chastise such as promote not that design, as destroyers of the Society; whereof you have a fresh instance in the following story at Madrid. A rich Woman, who had much Kindred in that City, fell sick: She had for her Confessor a jesuit, who attended her in her weakness, and as a faithful servant of the Company disposed her to make her will in favour of the Jesuits, and leave them all her Estate, without the least thought or remembrance of persons whom Nature did strictly oblige to take care of, being her Nephews: The Confessor returned home overjoyed with his success, and in sport demanded the reward due to them that bring good news, as thinking he had done an heroic Action, having gained the company so considerable an Inheritance: It so fell out that one of these Fathers illustriously descended, and as Noble in Disposition as blood, was moved at this impudence, and desiring to undo what the other had done, went to the sick woman's house at a time when the Confessor was absent, his habit procured him entrance, which had been denied to one of another Order▪ for 'tis a Maxim of the jesuit not to admit any of another Religious Order to the sick they visit, for fear they should reverse what they have contrived. This good jesuit brought a Notary with him, and represented to this woman, that in the condition she was in, she was more obliged to satisfy the duties of Nature than devotion, and so engaged her to revoke her Testament, and all the Legacies she had given the Society, and to leave her estate to her lawful heirs: The woman died, and the Confessor made himself master of the house, and all the keys; he caused the Testament to be opened, whereby it appeared that she made the Jesuits sole heirs of all her estate: But as the jesuit pleased himself in being Master of this inheritance, and having compassed his designs, and behaved himself with great haughtiness towards the Nephews of the woman, thinking to make them dance attendance in waiting his leisure for an inconsiderable Legacy their Aunt had left them, the Chief of the Nephews presented them the Codicil, took from the Jesuits the keys of the house, and drove them all out. The Jesuits made narrow search for the Author of this treason, and having found him to be the Father of whom we have spoken, the morrow after they put a billet under his napkin, commanding him to retire, for that the Company had no more need of hi●● he went to prostrate himself at the feet of his Catholic Majesty, to whom he related the story, and was received into his protection, where he was safe from the fury of the Jesuits. There is another Domestic example of this kind in the person of Father Ximenes, whose life the Jesuits of the profest●house of Madrid destroyed in 1633. for that being Confessor to a widow he had not advised her to give them her estate. The Jesuits of Madrid Expel a Smith's S●n from their Society, but retain his money, which the Smith dexterously recovers. P. 66. A Smith at Madrid placed his Son among the Jesuits, and had him admitted for two thousand Ducats, though the Jesuits habit commonly costs more; but after a short time they judged this young man not proper for them, as wanting the address and fineness necessary for their profession▪ and stripped him of his habit▪ he returns home to his Father, who went presently to the Jesuits and summoned them to perform the Contract he had made with them, for the reception of his Son; but when they refused to give ear to him, he sued them at law for his two thousand Ducats which they were obliged to restore, as having not satisfied t●● conditions on which they received them: They had credit enough to obtain sentence against the Smith, who seeing himself deprived of the money his Son's Habit had cost him, resolved to make that whereby he had lost his money to regain it, and that the Iesuite● Habit which had cost h●m so much should be worth him something: So t●e next day he habited his Son like a jesuit, and made him work and beat the Anvil that day, and after in the Robe and Hood of a jesuit; this gave the people notice of the Jesuits cheat, who being mocked publicly for what they had done to the poor man and his Son, were at last ashamed of it, and restored him his money, which made him strip his Son of their Habit. A Jesuit of Granada gives two contrary advices, but would not sign the one of them by reason of a Maxim of the Society to the contrary. P. 121. Don Lewis Lasso de Vega being Steward of Granada, the King demanded a Contribution from the City; an Assembly was called and divided in Opinion, and every one consulted persons of learning, and fearing God, who might give them advice most profitable in their judgement for the good of the City: Some of either part went to advise with F. Marmol the jesuit, than Divinity-professor at Granada, and afterwards Rector of the College of St. Hermenigilde at Sevil, in whose time, and by whose Council they made that memorable Bankrupt. The Answers this Father gave we●e suited to the desires of those who consulted him, whether to grant or refuse the Contribution, equally telling the one and the other that it would be a mortal sin for the one to grant, and the others to refuse it: Those who were for granting it, demanded of Father Marmol● his Opinion in writing to show it to the Assembly that the Concession was Just, which the jesuit fraudly gave them and signed it: Those who were against the King's demand, seeing F. Marmol so strongly of their Opinion, demanded also his sentiment under his hand, to l●t the Assembly see they had advised with him to purpose. But he made them answer, it was not the custom of the Society to sign Advices that were not pleasing to Kings and Princes: This I know by the relation of one of them who consulted him: The Jesuits driven out of Malta for their insatiable Avarice, and an abominable Crime. P. 250. 'Tis certain, that 'tis not ordinary to expel whole Communities for the fault of one particular, and that persons of wisdom and judgement, as those who govern Kingdoms and Republics punish not a whole Order of Religion for the miscarriage of one Friar. This may assure us, that the Jesuits having been driven away from several parts, it was not for the fault of some particular person, but for that of the whole body, and the chiefs who govern it. In 1643 or 1644. they were expelled Malta on this occasion. They entered this Island with intention to make themselves Masters of the whole Order of St. john Resident there; To gain credit with the Knights, they thought it their duty to charge themselves with the instruction and education of the young Knights brought up there. The Grand Master of the Order gave them a House, and Revenue sufficient to entertain them with honour. The Isle of Malta is of a rocky soil and barren throughout, insomuch, that an inhabitant of the City cannot have a Garden without fetching earth from Sicily in the Galleys. All the victuals they have comes by Sea; and Corn, (whereof the Merchants make commonly great gains) is very dear there. The Jesuits carried by their natutural inclination to traffic, entered into this Commerce to the great prejudice of the Island▪ they caused a great quantity of Corn to be imported from Sicily; which they locked up till they saw the people threatened with Famine▪ and in very great want, intending to sell it then at excessive rates. The Isle was in time sore pressed with Famine, and little corn remaining in the Public Granaries, or in those of private men; the Galleys of Biserte, and other Vessels of Turkey blocked up their harbours, were Lords of the Sea, and took all the Merchant's Vessels that sailed, so that there was no hope of relief from Sicily: The Jesuits seeing this extremity, were careful no● to declare that they had in their Granary about five thousand bushels of Corn to be sold, fearing, that if the Grand Master came to know it, he would oblige them to part with it at cheap rates without any profit. This made them think it fitter for their purpose to dissemble and make themselves of the number of those who were in want▪ They went to the Great Master, and told him they were in extreme necessity, and had passed the day before without a bit of bread, having none of their own, nor knowing where to buy any: The Grand Master who pitied and loved them, ordered some bushels to be given them of that little quantity of Cor● that remained. Some of the most considerable Knights would have stopped his Liberality, and prevented the Gift, telling him they were informed by persons who knew it very well, that the Jesuits had Corn sufficient to nourish the whole Island for several months; but the Grand Master regarded them not, but believed it the discourse of passionate persons ill affected to the Jesuits. There happened at the same time a thing which the Author describes at large, but so horrible in all its circumstances, that I thought fit to pass it over in silence, and content myself with saying, that it was a crime so abominable, that it provoked all the Knights to punish F. Cassiaita the jesuit who was Author of it, in a manner proportioned to his fault, and afterwards clapped him on board a Feluca with all his Companions, and sent them for Sicily. The College was presently searched, and a Granary found, containing Corn sufficient to maintain the whole City a long time. The Grand Master having heard the disorder committed by the Knights in a place he looked upon as a Sanctuary, came to the remedy when it was too late; they showed him Granaries full of wheat, and disabused him in letting him see the truth of what they had affirmed awhile before. He approved of what they had done, and made use of the Corn they found to relieve the present necessity. I will not at present insist on the story of Cassiaita, but observe that the avarice of the Jesuits was the cause of their expulsion, for they kept their Corn when the people were in want, and had no compassion for the public necessity, but preferred their interest b●fore the good of the Island. The Book of Parsons the Jesuit to make himself Master of all the Ecclesiastical Estates of England. P. 242. Parsons the jesuit published heretofore in England, a Book Entitled, The Reformation of England, wherein having observed several faults and defects in the Council of Trent, he concludes with this saying, that if England ever returned to the Romish Religion, it must be reduced to the form of the Primitive Church, by putting all Ecclesiastical Estates in ●ommon, and that the care of that Church ●ust be given to seven discreet persons of the Society to distribute the said Estates as they shall think fit: And for a mark of the Jesuits blinded self-love, he says, that no Friar of of any other order must be permitted to pass into England, and adds, that for five years at least the Pope must not present to any benefice, but refer himself wholly in that particular to those seven Sages of the Company. Thus they make nothing of ruining the Church, provided it may conduce to make them Masters of all. The Jesuits in preaching the Gospel at Japan so●● Seditions, and dispose the people to War, and are persecuted and chased away as Cheats and Impostors. Pag. 310. Their cares are confined to their interesses; and to promote them, they raise troubles and War, as Father Diego Collado the Domini●an hath well observed in a Memorial he presented to the Council Royal of the Indies, Decemb. 17. 1633. where in the third Paragraph he hath these expressions: The japanois were persuaded ever since 1565. that wherever the Preachers of the Gospel should come, they would ruin all by Wars and Seditions. But we are to take notice, that to that time and afterwards till 1593. they saw no other Preachers but Jesuits. This Friar speaks not this of himself, but hath taken the words out of the General History of japan printed at Alcala in 1601. which the Author Lewis Gusman the jesuit, says, He had gathered out of Relations of certain truth, or ocular testimonies: The same Author, Cap. 3. Lib. 2. reports the persecution raised against them by the Emperor of japan, and the cause alleged by the Emperor to have been, that the Jesuits were Cheats and Impostures who made pretence of preaching salvation, came to raise the people, and plot some treason against him, and the Kings of japan; and that had he not taken heed of them, they had long since deceived him as they had done many other Kings and Princes; so that in six years they had discovered the end they had in preaching the Gospel, and made it appear to have been the destruction of Princes. It cannot be said the Emperor did this out of hatred to the Christian Faith, who gave permission in writing in 1593. to the Order of St. Francis to enter his Empire, to found there Churches, Hospitals and Convents, and appear publicly in their poor habit: All which notwithstanding the persecution continued against the Society, who had but one Church left at Nangazaqui a Port town, and a place of great Commerce. This Church the Emperor permitted to stand, because of some Jesuits Inhabitants there who took care of merchandizes, one of whom named john Roderick was the Emperor's Interpreter: This shows how f●r the Jesuits were engaged in trade, that some of them were necessary to be left to uphold it when the rest were expelled; and that they were not chased away for their Faith, since the the Order of St. Francis, who laboured more effectually the Conversion of Infidels, were admitted the same time; but for the horror and detestation of the japanois conceived against them for their double dealing and falsehood. The Avarice and Ambition of the Jesuits cause the destruction of two Christian Kings of Japan: Their Treason against the King of Omura, makes the Ministers of the Gospel to be accounted Trayt●rs. P. 311. I could not in silence pass by two cruel Treasons which the Ambition of the Jesuits produced in these Countries by policies most repugnant to the maxims of Christianity. The King of Omura received the Christian Faith with very great devotion, and for that reason, and because he reputed the Jesuits Ministers of the Gospel favoured and protected them in his Realm. Nangazaqui is one of th● principal Cities there, and capable to enrich all the Country, being a Port well frequented, as we hinted before. The Jesuits thought to draw more advantages to themselv●s from another person whom they designed to make Master of a Port so considerable, though not without the br●ach of all the Laws of Fidelity due to a Catholic King their friend. They went to the Emperor, and represented to him the conveniencies of the Port, the various Merchandizes brought thither, the commodiousness of its situation for security of his Vessels, and at last assured him, that as a Sovereign Lord he might take it away from the King of Omura, giving him something else equivalent to it. The Emperor followed their advice, and took away the Port from the King of Omura, but as soon as he had done it he banished the Jesuits from all parts of that Kingdom, saying, with much wisdom, That having betrayed their Benefactor, they would with more reason betray him, the Emperor who had far less obliged them than the King of Omura. Thus they lost the amity of the King, and gained not that of the Emperor they affected, but left the Ministers of the Gospel the reputation of being Traitors. This hath been assured upon the oaths of above fifty Christian villages in a Memorial presented originally to his Catholic Majesty in his Council of the Indies, and to the Pope in the Congregation de Propaganda ●ide. A Mischievous Counsel given the King of Arima, which cost him his life, and ●aused a bloody persecution against the Christians. P. 312. There happened another thing equally strange to the King of Arima a Christian and great Benefactor to the Jesuits, whose Seminaries and Colleges flourished in his Realm. They put a chimaera into the head of this Prince, and persuaded him to demand of the Emperor the restitution of some Lands which his Predecessors had lost by war. The I●suites designs in this was to enlarge their Power by extending the Dominions of the King of Arima their friend beyond the ordinary limits; to attain their desires, they made use of a man who was entirely at their devotion; his name Dayfaqui a Secretary to one of the Emperor's Ministers; but though they gained him to their side, he forbore not to discover the whole intrigue which cost the lives of the one and the other; for the Emperor caused the King to be beheaded, and Dayfaqui burnt, and Morejon the jesuit escaped but narrowly the same flames. This King is charged with the kill of a Son he had by a former wife, to make way for the succession of one by a second wife, as a person from whom the Jesuits hoped more favour in his Reign than they could expect from the other. The Emperor hereupon conceived a very ill opinion of our Religion, and its Ministers, for that all who acted in this Tragedy were Friars or Christians; and this moved him to the second persecution, which was much more bloody than the former. He chased away all Friars from his Empire, so that the Conversion of this people was extremely obstructed by the ill Counsels and Flatteries of the Jesuits. Is not the Ambition of the Jesuits very strange, and their flattery a horrible thing, who to extend their Dominion, and please the King of Arima, though they were settled in very good condition proposed to him the design of re-entering these Lands his Predecessors had possessed, though then in the hands of another Master? In a Contribution made by all the Religious Orders of Spain the Jesuits give three advices instead of money. P. 392. The King of Spain wanting moneys at the beginning of the War with France, demanded of all the Orders of Religion a succour by way of Contribution; The Collector applied themselves presently to the Jesuits, not doubting but they who were Labourers, Burghers, Usurers, Bankers, Merchants, Mint-men, Exchangers, Victuallers, Intelligencers, Emissaries into China, Legatees and executors of Testaments throughout the world, would on this occasion make appear to the world their affection for the public good, and their Power, and would give the King a considerable sum to help him out of the great straits he was in. The Fathers answered them who made the proposal, that when they had demanded the Contributions of other Religious Orders the S●cie●y would give as much as they who gave most, yea as much as they all should give together: The Commissioners made use of this answer of the Jesuits to make the greater instance to other Orders, and persuaded some to contribute beyond their ability. After this they returned to the Jesuits, and required them to perform their promise, the I●suites answered they would give his Majesty three Advices, by means whereof his Majesty might gather above twelve millions of money. This made the Conde D' Olivarez look about him, who thought he had already sufficient to remedy the pressing necessities of the State, and was very inquisitive for the Counsels of the Jesuits which they gave him. The first was, That if the King would give them all the Chairs of Professors in the Universities of the Kingdom, they would not desire any Salary for their Lectures; but his Majesty might impropriate or sell the Salaries of the Professors which amount yearly to above four hundred thousand Ducats, and were worth to be sold above eight Millions. The second, That the King should prevail with the Pope to reduce the breviary to a third part of what it is; when this should be obtained, they would print Breviaries and Diurnals of the new model to be used; but that they who would make use of them should pay in acknowledgement of the pleasure they had done them in abridging their Office ten Ducats for every Breviary, and five for every Diurnal, as every Clergyman pays yearly four Rials for his Bull of permission to eat white meat in Lent: By the calculation they made, the profits of this exceeded the former. The third, That whereas they were not permitted by the rules of their Order to receive money for their Masses, his Majesty should take all the money of the Ecclesiastical Fraternities of Spain and the Indies, and oblige them to say Mass Gratis as the Jesuits. 'Tis evident by these three Advices that the Jesuits aimed only at their convenience and interest, and to express their hatred against other Religious Orders under pretence of doing the King service. The execution of the first Advice was attempted, but the Universities made a generous opposition, and F. Bas●le Ponce de Leon Professor of the evening Lecture in the University of Salamanca composed a learned Memoire which I have seen in the hands of Doctor D. Michael john de Vimbodi Secretary to his Eminence the Cardinal Spinola then Archbishop of Granada; wherein he convinced the Jesuits of all manner of Heresies, and concluded that it was their intention to possess themselves of all the Chairs of Professors, that they might discard all men of Religion, and afterwards establish their pernicious maxims without contradiction. The Pope would not enter upon the second and third expedient, but said, that the iniquity of our times should incline us rather to augment than diminish our prayers. And as for the Alms for Masses they would be of use to maintain poor Priests and poor Friars. But the Jesuits gave the King nothing. The Jesuits of the Indies always for the Governors against the Bishops: they persecute the Archbishop of St. Foy: Absolve those he had excommunicated, and teach there are two Gods. P. 260. Don Ber●ardin de Almansa a very holy man, being chosen Archbishop of St. Foy of Bogera in 1633. went thither to take possession of the Dignity. D. Sancho Giron Precedent of the Audience, and Captain General of the new Kingdom, sent him two Jesuits, john Baptista Coluchini, and Sebastian Morillo as Ambassadors: The design of the Embassy was to persuade the good Bishop to make submissions to the Governor, utterly unworthy of the Character he bore. The Prelate would not consent, but having taken possession of his See, did vigorously defend the rights of the Bishopric against the encroachments of the insulting Governor, whom he excommunicated, and his Officers, for having Arrested those workmen who were guilty of no crime, but labouring in the Church, and preaching the Gospel: The Governor and his Officers being declared excommunicate by Papers publicly affixed, the Jesuit Sebastian Morello, whom we mentioned before, had the insolence to tell the Governor, He ought not to be troubled for these Excommunications from which he would forthwith absolve him on the place, saying, the Society had the privilege to do so. This was the occasion of very great scandal, and induced the Governor by advice of the Jesuits, to name a Judge Conservator against the Archbishop: And these Fathers in the mean time lodged secure and Regaled in their College: The Dean of the Church of St. Foy, found means to take away this Judge Conservator, and put him in Prison in the Archbishops house. But the Jesuits came in Arms to the Prison, broke down the walls, and took out the Judge, and led him back to their College. To recount all the passages in this rencontre, would swell up the story to a very great length. But they are set forth at large with all the insolences of the Jesuits, in the 4th Chapter, and so to the 11th of the life of this Archbishop, written by the Bachelor D. Pedro de ●olis, and Valencenela, where is also described the miserable end of some Jesuits who did more signally abuse the holy man: his words are these. Though the Fathers of the Society, who assisted the Governor against the Archbishop, changed their habitation in going to Quito, yet they could not escape the chastisement of God, for one was killed by a Mule, on which they carried him into the Town, between two sacks of Cha●●e; another died at Tunia, a third of the Plague in the Port of Onda, and was buried in a deep pit with his Books and his baggage, and a fourth became distracted at Popayan. Father D. Burno de Valenevela a Chartreus, known to me at Paular, is Brother to this Pedro De Solis, and hath in his custody a Manuscript of the life of this holy Archbishop: But when he speaks of the difference between this Prelate and the Jesuits, he relates matters of so much amazement, that they would be incredible, but that the sanctity and virtue of the Author, who was an ocular witness of them, doth warrant the truth thereof, and render it unquestionable: Among other things he tells us, the Jesuits taught the Indians, That there were two Gods, one of the Poor, and another of the Rich; that this was far more powerful than the other; that the ArchBishop served the former, and the Governor the latter. He reports other like things taught by a whole College, which being established for the instruction of Youth, shows by these pernicious maxims, that the Society aims at nothing but to uphold itself by credit with men of power, and affects a strict alliance and union with them, so that it appears an extraordinary thing to see a Viceroy or Governor in the Indieses not engaged in their Interests, which is the cause of their chase Bishops from their Sees, and dragging them before all the Secular Tribunals. Don Mattheo De Castro Bishop in the East-Indies ill used, and slighted by the Jesuits, who made him go three times to Rome, and jeered at the B●lls and Censures be brought thence. Pag. 281. they declared a contempt parallel to the former, though not in their Actions yet in their intentions and writings against D. Ma●thew De Castro Bishop in the East-Indies, who being a Braman by Nation, was consecrated by Pope Vrban 8th, and sent to make missions into the Kingdom of Idabria. This good Prelate did that which neither the Archbishop of Goa, nor all the Orders of Religion were able to effect, either by Entreaties or Gifts, in 140 years, which was to obtain leave from the Moorish King to build Houses and Churches throughout all his Kingdom: But the Jesuits so misused this poor Bishop, that they forced him to break the course of his mission, and to make three journeys with very great difficulties to Rome, where Fa. john Baptista de Morales of the Order of St. Dominique, and Missionary of China, left him in 1645. labouring against his Enemies who hated and treated him with great slights and Contempt: This F. M●●rales hath a Letter written by a Jesuit to his Provincial, wherein are these words: There is come hither a pitiful Negro for Bishop, but is gone among the Moors, because he loves not to live among the Portuguese: ' 'tis a shame for the Nation, that such a man should become a Bishop: The Friar adds, he found this poor Bishop on his bed ●ick, for the contempts and ill usage of the Jesuits; that he stayed with him a month to comfort him, that he solicited his business at the Congregation De propaganda fide, and having obtained all necessary dispatches, he went in person to see them executed: But the Jesuits mocked at all that was done, and would not alter their conduct for any Bulls or Censures. This story may inform how sincere and candid they are in their expressions: for speaking of a Bishop, they say, He is gone among the Moors; that is in their Language, turned Infidel again, whereas he went thither for Conversion of Souls. And this may serve for an instance of their zeal, who use in this manner those who employ themselves to propagate the faith, and in their writings to their superiors, make it their business to slander the Bishops. The Ambition and Tyranny of the Jesuits in the foundation and administration of the Irish Colleges in Spain. P. 294. The Jesuits express zeal for the faith when they persuaded the King of Spain, and several Lords to contribute to the foundation of Colleges for the Irish, for education of their Youth, who came into Spain, and to render them capable at their return to do their Country men service; but this was the Cloak only to their intentions and designs, to make themselves more powerful, in being Masters of those Colleges and their Revenues. The Receipt doth always much exceed the expense, yet they complain still, and treat those poor Scholars so ill, and with such scorn, though some of them be Priests, that they seem to be their And when they demand necessaries, the Jesuits retrench their Pensions, and sometimes the Rectors and Coadjutors beat them and misuse them, that they are obliged to make defence. They serve themselves of them as their Grounds, and while they fare daintily upon Estates, whereof they have only the administration by right, they give to the owners but a poor piece of Beef as the most splendid entertainment: These poor strangers have presented to his Majesty a Memorial containing five Articles, wherein they represent the ill usage of these tyrants, the domination they exercise over them, and how they do publicly risle their Estates. A succinct Abridgement of the Relation of the persecution raised by the Jesuits, against Don Tray Hernando Guerrero Archbishop of Manille in the Philippines, written in Spanish by a Nephew of the Archbishops. Don Hernando Guerrero Archbishop of Manille in the Philippine Islands, having called an Assembly of the Superiors of Religious Houses, and other learned persons of greatest repute in his Archiepiscopal City, to consult them about a scruple of Conscience, which was that the Fathers of the Company of jesus in that Country, preached and heard Confessions without permission from the Ordinary, the resolution of the Assembly after several meetings was, That it was the Archbishop's duty to demand of the said Fathers, what permission they had to exercise those Functions which he did, but had no other Answer, but that they had Privileges: The Archbishop not satisfied with this, endeavoured by way of right and legal pursuit to oblige them to show by what power they exercised this jurisdiction, by Declaring the permissions or privileges they pretended to: But they were so far from giving him satisfaction, that they named a Canon which had a Dignity in the Church of Manille, but the Archbishop's enemy, to be their Conservator. This Conservator proceeded against the Archbishop, encouraged by the favourable occasion he had from the spleen of the Governor Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corynera against the Archbishop, for having refused to give the Jesuits a House and Garden of pleasure belonging to the Archbishopric, and of the Gift of the Augustine Friars, who bestowed it for a place of retreat and repose for the Archbishops: And because this House was very convenient for the Fathers of the Society, and that the Governor was their particular friend, as his Confessors and Councillors, they assembled together, and resolved to chase away the Archbishop. The Governor willing to execute this resolution, sat Precedent of the Audience, without the assistance of any but a single Councillor, who was found dead on the morrow without Confession. The Archbishop demanded leave to make his defence, but the Governor instead of hearing him, being animated by the Jesuits, resolved by their advice to execute upon the place the banishment of the Archbishop: All the Religious Communities having been informed, that the Ministers of Justice were gone to the Archbishopric, resorted to their Prelate, and with their Tapers in their hands advised the Archbishop to put on his Pontifical habit, to stay in the Chapel, and hold the Eucharist in his hand, to serve him as a Buckler against the Governors' tyranny, and the violence of the Jesuits: The Governor having intelligence of what passed, commanded Soldiers forthwith to march away with Matches lighted, and their Muskets cocked, to cause all the Friars to depart the Chapel, and leave the Archbishop there alone. And when the Provincials, the Commissaries, the Priors and Wardens, had answered the Soldiers, that they were there to pay their respects to the holy Sacrament, the Governor gave the Soldier's new Orders, on pain of death, to execute his Commands, and drag them by force out of the Chapel: The Soldiers obeyed him, driving out and draging away all the Friars thence; and though some of the most ancient and venerable amongst them, in hope to preserve themselves from their violence, covered themselves with the Archbishop's Pontifical habit; the Soldiers had no respect for those Ornaments, but furiously laying hold on them who had wrapped themselves therein, they dragged away the Archbishop, who holding the holy Pix in his hands fell in the crowd, and wounded himself in the face. So the Prelate remained alone, but having five hundred Soldiers left about him to seize his person as soon as he should quit the H. Sacrament. In the mean time one of the Soldiers considering the violence used to make them keep him there, and that they must on pain of death execute the Governors' Orders, drew his sword, and falling upon it, said, He had rather die by his own hands, than see such enormities among Christians. The Archbishop having continued so long in his pontifical habit, found himself so weakened by reason of his great age, and that he had taken no food that yielding at last to weariness and necessity, and in compliance with the Advice of the wisest of the Friars, who signified to him that if he died in that manner his Conscience would charge him with it as an offence; he laid by the Holy Sacrament, and was presently carried away out of the City in a Coach by the Sergeant Major and Soldiers, and put into a little pitiful bark unprovided of all things, without permitting any Christian to give him any nourishment, or any of his domestics to accompany him, but was conducted by five Soldiers whom they gave him for his Guard into a poor desert Island where he had not as much as a Cabin for shelter. And when in all this time Divine Service was not said in any part of the City, by reason of a solemn interdict, which all the Friars observed with the respect and sentiments they were obliged to express, the Jesuits only kept their Churches open, preached, confessed and said Mass there, and went to say Mass in the Governors' house, to whom they administered the Sacraments. They took from the Archbishop the Government of the Diocese, and gave it another by order of the Judge Conservator and the Jesuits, till the Archbishop was reestablished, which happened after they had seized all his Goods, and sold them by Outcry even to his Cross to satisfy several fines, and pecuniary pains, to which they had condemned him. The people having with great instance demanded his restoration, had it granted, but not before the Fathers of the Company had fulfilled their desires by means of the Governor. The Archbishop sent two Friars, the one to Rome, and the other to Madrid, to inform the Pope and his Catholic Majesty of the Enormities committed against him, and the excess of his sufferings: They arrived accordingly having passed the straits of Magellan in a vessel of the Heretics, but hired and equipped by the Merchants of Manille out of love to their Pastor. Not long after these passages the Sergeant Major, who had taken the Archbishop being carried in a chair, for that he was very old, the people fell upon him in the place, and so buffeted him with their fists, that he died without Confession upon the place. An Extract of a Letter from Madrid of July 8. 1653. whereby is seen the punishment of this Governor who misused the Archbishop. It happened soon after that his Catholic Majesty having received secret Advice of fourteen Chests from the Indies, had in a private Chamber of the Jesuits of Burgos, sent secret Orders to the Seneschal of that City to take them out thence: He executed his Commission so well, that he went directly where they were, and having broke open a lock found all the fourteen Chests; he demanded of the Fathers an inventory of the Contents, who answered, That they belonged to Don Sebastian de Corquera Seneschal of Cordona who had been Governor of the Philippines: The Seneschal of Burgos drew out the Chests from the places they were in, and having opened them found a quantity of stones of very great value. This Gentleman had been reputed a Saint, but a Jesuitical Saint, because he loved them passionately. This discovery made way for some others, whereby it appeared he had brought great riches from the Indies, and occasion was given to call him to an exact account of his administration. ADVERTISEMENT. The Story of this persecution is related by the Author of the JESVITICAL THEATRE p. 230. where he gives another cause of the Governors' Animosity against the Archbishop, whereof the Jesuits were Authors: For they persuaded the Governor to send to hang a man in the Churchyard of the Augustine's: The Archbishop not able to endure such profanation to punish the Governor made use of the Arms of the Church, and fulminated censures against him; but the Governor also made use of the Arms of his Office, as appears by the precedent relation. It is easy to Judge, says the Author of The jesuitique Theatre, that the Jesuits moved the Governor to execute this violence against the Archbishop, because the Governor who did nothing in Secular Affairs without the Jesuits Advice and Consent, in all probability consulted them in this which concerned Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction, which as a Secular Person he was ignorant of. 2. Because the Jesuits had on several occasions had very great differences with this Prelate as they have had with the greatest part of the Bishops of the Indies, and finding a fair opportunity by the Governors being wholly theirs, thought it not fit to let it slip, but with their own hands avenged themselves. 3. Because all the Superiors, and a multitude of Friars attended the Archbishop, and left him not till forced off by violence, but there was not one Jesuit with him. add hereto the Common Sentiment of all the people in the Philippines. The Avarice of the Jesuits in the Pearl-fishing at Cochin, for which they are diven away, and a curse denounced against the Lake and the Pearls. We are now to declare how they were expelled Cochin in the East-Indies; this City, though the Territory be poor and sterile, is an Episcopal See, and the Inhabitants, and all these of the Diocese live on fishing for Pearls which they find in a Lake, whereby God in his providence hath given them subsistence. The Jesuits heard of this Lake, and thought it for their advantage to make themselves Masters thereof, to the end, they might draw to themselves the whole profit. To effect this, two of their Fathers came from Goa to Cochin to visit the Bishop, an Apostolical man, and formerly a barefoot Friar of the Order of St. Francis: They told him they were moved with compassion to see him alone without any assistant for conversion of Infidels, that they were come to bear part of his sufferings, and help him to cultivate the souls of those of his Diocese. They offered to found a College there, provided the Bishop would give them aid, and a house ready built with revenues to maintain five or six Jesuits: The Bishopric is very poor, as the place of its residence; the Bishop having nothing but what is strictly necessary to maintain him with honour. The good Prelate hearing this proposal o● the Jesuits, thought he saw the heavens opened and Angels descended, believing they mad● it out of zeal to save souls, and to propagate the faith; he made them great welcome, considering them as a powerful succour God had sent him for the good of those of his Diocese; he told them he had not an estate sufficient to assure them a revenue, but would propose to the inhabitants of the City to give them whereby to subsist, and that in the mean time they should lodge at his house, and make use of what he had or should have for the future. The Jesuits were satisfied with these offers which the Bishop performed. For the first two years these Fathers laboured to good purpose, in Preaching, in Catechising, in pleasing all the people, in composing differences, in winning the Indians, by presents, ●sing them with great gentleness, and testimonies of affection; and thus became Masters of the hearts of the people. When they saw themselves so established, they thought it high time to labour the execution of the design on which they first came into that Country. To compass it, they persuaded the Indians by good usage and caresses to sell them the pearls they drew out of the Lake, it being but just, that they who were their preachers and instructors should be preferred before the Portuguez Merchants, who came from a Country remote, and at a certain time of the year to make gain thereof by carrying them into divers places: The simple Indians discovered not what lay hid under this malicious proposal, but easily granted what the subtle Jesuits demanded; so that every week they brought the Pearls they had taken and sold them the Jesuits (whom they looked on as their Masters & benefactors) for the same price they were accustomed to sell them to the Portugueze; and having received their money and other things they gave them, returned to their houses very well satisfied. The Portugueze Vessels coming at their usual time, there was not an Indian now would sell them any Pearls, so that they returned without trading, and lost very much by the merchandizes they had brought to give in exchange. And the year following running the like fortune, they resolved to come thither no more, being otherwise informed that the Jesuits had made themselves Masters of the Trade. The Father's seeing they had removed the Portugueze, and made them abandon this Commerce as unprofitable to them, so that they of Cochin knew not whom to sell their Pearls to, made the inhabitants become suitors to them of the Society to buy them, and told them they would not without great abatement of the price; that the Portugueze had forsaken the trade, only because they made no benefit by it, nor could sell the Pearls at a higher price than they cost them. Under these and the like pretences they reduced these poor Indians to extreme misery, and constrained them at last to yield to their desires, and when they could not do otherwise to sell the Pearls at a very low rate: they passed about two years in this manner, exercising violences over the people; and the most considerable persons of the City murmured against the Jesuits, yet some did defend them, whose interests were joined with these of the Jesuits. The Bishop knew the rise of the disorder but durst not intermeddle for applying the remedies necessary, because the Governor of the City was a Creature of the Jesuits, and it may be, went snips in the profits; so much will they do for those that protect them. This time elapsed, they resolved to change their battery, and gain greater advantages in the Commerce, telling the Indians they would not buy the pearls any more at the ordinary price, because their gain thereby was not considerable: but they offered them a condition, as if they would have dealt with them to their greater advantage, though it was in effect to make them their slaves, which was, that the Indians should work by the day in the Lake; and what they took in fishing should be for the Jesuits: The poor Indians rather than famish accepted of the condition. The pay was very short, and the labour excessive, for they made them begin at break of day, and suffered them not to come out of the water till noon, and ●hen allowed them an hour for repast and rest, ●ut forthwith after sent them to the water where they were forced to continue till night. Many died in the water, because the fathers would not permit them to come to land when they had need, which obliged the poor people to complain to the Bishop; he would have remedied it but could not, for that the Jesuits seeing themselves upheld by the Governor and others of their Cabal, made nothing of the good Prelate. And to deliver themselves of all fear took a resolution so haughty, which no boldness but theirs could have ever produced. They built a Castle on a little Island in the middle of the Lake, they planted artillery there sufficient for their defence in case of necessity, and so became masters of the Lake, and would not permit a person to fish there any more, saying, The Lake was theirs, and that they had purchased it by the right their preaching had gi●●● them: The Bishop knowing they had built this Castle, commanded them on pain of Ecclesiastical Censures to disarm and demolish it; b●● they laughed at his Orders, telling him the● were exempt from his jurisdiction: The goo● Prelate seeing their insolence, exhibited a process against them before the Pope and the Kin● of Spain, who ordained the one by his Bulls and the other by his Arrests, that they shoul● do as the Bishop required, but the Governor hindered it; the Jesuits defended themselv●● both at Rome and at Madrid by accusing the Bishop of several crimes, but all false. There came new Bulls, but to no purpose, for the Jesuits persisted in their rebellion. At last the Bishop seeing no way left to reduce them, assembled some Spaniards and many Indians together, and carrying the Cross of Christ in his Standard with the Arms of the Pope, and of the King of Spain on the sides, marched towards the Lake where the Jesuits attended him with an Army more numerous than his with the name of JESUS in their flags. The Bishop gave them battle, defeated them, demolished the Castle, and found they had nailed up all their Canons when they perceived themselves unable to resist: they continued nevertheless in the Island in hopes after the death of the Bishop to renew their tyranny. But the Prelate inspired by God put on his pontifical habit, and coming to the Lake side spoke in this manner; Though I be the least and unworthiest of all the Ministers of God, yet I command thee in his Divine Majesty's Name, and by his Authority, not to form or give any pearls till the Jesuits be departed this Country; and if thou continue to produce them, I pray God to give thee his Curse as I give thee mine: The Bishop had scarce finished these words, but the waters retired and returned to their centre to the astonishment of the spectators: The Pearls disappeared, and the Jesuits seeing themselves deprived of the profit they drew from this Commerce and abhorred by the people quitted their College at Cochin, and returned to Goa with their mouths full of insolent expressions against the Bishop: When they were gone, the Lake filled again as before, and produced Pearls in abundance to the Indians, and the Portugueze informed of it returned to their ancient traffic. This story was told me at Granada by F. Diego Collado of the Order of St. Dominick an illustrious person, an Apostolical preacher, and the most considerable Missionary that yet went to China. The Jesuits Merchants, Bankers and Carrier's a● Carthagene in the Indies with ill success. P. 383. Behold an example of the horrible Avarice of the Jesuits at Carthagene in the Indies; they designed to make themselves masters of all the Carriages necessary for transporting merchandizes from Carthagene to the Province of Quito, and had they compassed it they had become masters of all the Country thereabouts: The Merchants of Quito; and of the new Kingdom came to Carthagene to buy merchandizes to be carried in the Galleons of Spain, though they arrived there in Canoes by the great River of Madeleine. The Jesuits who have a public bank at Carthagene and at Quito, thinking that if they had some Canoes and beasts for carriage, they might become masters of all that Territory, settled themselves on the banks of the great River, under pretence of confessing and saying Mass to those who inhabited the Magazines and Warehouses, where merchandizes were locked up till they were fetched away on Mules to be carried further into the Country; they found means by good words and fair carriage to introduce themselves into the Ports of Onda and Mompoz where they built Houses and Chapels on the pretences aforesaid; soon after they built Warehouses, and from Quito solicited the Merchants to disembark their Merchandises there upon colour that they would give them money at Carthagene by exchange to be paid at Quito, whereby they obtained their desires: The profit they made of this sharpened their appetite to gain more by greater matters; they bought a quantity of Mules for carriage of Merchandizes to the port of Barranco, where they were embarked on Canoes; those who were accustomed to have the benefit of these carriages began to perceive the prejudice the Jesuits did them, but not having credit enough to oppose so powerful enemies, gave them no disturbance, though the Masters of the Warehouses and Carriages did every day lose more and more their usual gains. The Jesuits rested not there, but would undertake further to take away all the profit from the traders. To effect this, they built sixty Canoes for the great River, and a vessel at Carthagene which they sent into Spain, defraying the charge of the equipage by the profit they received from the merchandizes they embarked. They Ordered those in the Vessel, when they returned from Spain to pass to Angola and take in Negroes to row in their Canoes; they prospered in their design, and in less than a year the vessel returned to Carthagene laden with above six hundred slaves, of whom they sold some, and employed the rest in their Canoes. By the pleasure they did the merchants in lending them money, they engaged them to make use of their Canoes and Mules; so that the Jesuits were entirely satisfied to see nothing escape them by land or by water: But the Masters of the Canoes and Carriages were so far dissatisfied that they complained to the Council of the Indies, and while they expected judgement found means to burn all the Canoes of the Jesuits, and, which is worse, the Council prohibited the Jesuits to have any Canoes or Warehouses for the future, punishing them both in their Credit and Estates, whereof they are most sensible. They surprise the King of Spain to give them a Marsh of great value for nothing. P. 385. There was in the same City of Carthagene a Marsh, which being in the Iesuites ●ye they begged of the King as a thing of small importance. His Majesty granted it, either because he was not well informed of the value of the thing, or because the Jesuits by their flatteries and presents, had gained some person to facilitate the donation: The City being informed of what past, advertised the King, that the Marsh was worth ten thousand Patacons per annum; which obliged his Majesty to command, it should be taken from the Jesuits, which was executed accordingly. These were not the faults of particular persons, but of the Society who shared in them, the General having approved and favoured those who gave him the advice. Their strange exactions for very questionable duties, in the Meads of Granada. Ibid. There are Meadows near the hill called Montague des Neges by Granada, where the King hath certain duties, but not levied for several years, as being of small consequence, difficult to be collected, and it may be not due in conscience and equity; but nothing escapes the piercing eyes of the Jesuits, they had notice of these duties, and in the time of the Earl of Olivarez represented to the King their great poverty, and begged of him by way of Alms these duties which he did not receive; that time was so favourable to them that nothing was denied them, and they had their desire: They went to Granada, and demanded of all persons concerned an exact account of the arrears of what had not been paid for above sixty years past: They began to turn over papers, to seize men's goods and the lands of several deceased long before, and demanded from their heirs the payment of the whole debt. Granada was upon the point to stone the Jesuits, and the Jesuits upon the point to put Granada into a combustion; the City undertook the defence of those people, and set forth that since the King in several occasions wherein he was in great necessity of money had nevertheless left so many years pass without receiving these duties, it was a strong argument he doubted the right by which they were redemanded, they went to the Council who applied the remedies necessary: This is the recompense Granada received for all the Services done the Jesuits, no City in Spain having equally benefited them. They go to Law with the Chartreus of Evora, for a Rent upon Granada. P. 388. Let's hear another story before we leave Granada. The Chartreuse Abbey of Evora hath a considerable Rent in Granada, but though the Chartreus had no hand in the rebellion of Portugal, whereof the Jesuits were Authors, the Jesuits forbore not to beg that Rent of the King, to repair their Damages by many considerable losses sustained in Portugal by reason of the Warr. The King not knowing the truth, granted their desire: The Chartreus of Granada bring their Action against the Jesuits, but in vain, at least to my knowledge, who could not learn that they obtained any thing since 1649. when I left them at Madrid soliciting this affair. Certain it is, that the Jesuits were strangely insolent, who having caused the Revolt of Portugal, would have taken other men's Estates who had no share in the Gild of that Rebellion. They turn a Water from its Channel, and build ● Mill thereupon in one night. P. 388. I am so troubled with these things, that I would quit Granada very willingly, but am stopped by the way, by the memorable story of the Mill which the Jesuits of the College of Granada caused to be built at St. Foy, two leagues from the City. The better to comprehend what I am to say, we must look back to the time of King Ferdinand and Q. Isabelle: These pious Princes Graciously granted the first Inhabitants of St. Foy, for them and their Successors, permission to draw a Channel from the River Genil, to flood their Grounds by a Watercourse, with condition that none should make use thereof without their consent: The Jesuits had several years longed for the possession of this Channel, and had used a thousand artifices and addresses to that purpose, but in vain, by reason of the constant opposition of the Inhabitants of the Town, who had always made a vigorous resistance: The Jesuits were loath to entreat persons so inexorable, and took a resolution worthy the Society, in confidence of protection in this as in other affairs, from the Chancery of Granada, the rather because they had already possessed with the business, and made sure to their side, almost all the Judges of the Chamber, who were to take cognizance of the cause. They bought a pitiful piece of Ground contiguous to the Territory of St. Foy, and not far from the Channel whereof they designed to make themselves so absolute Masters, that the Inhabitants of the Town should not take of the waters without their permission. F. Fonseea then Rector of the College had a Lay-brother a Great Architect, whom he commanded to make a Mill of wood, and dispose of all the Carpenters work, so as in an hour to be erected and made fit to grind, which was accordingly done; and the Timber, Millstones, and other things necessary carried in Carts to the piece of ground abovementioned. In the evening they sent thither several servants of their house, and the Farms they have in those quarters: These workmen instructed by the jesuit, made a watercourse on that side where the Mill was to be built, and laboured with such diligence in the trench, and the jesuit plied his part in erecting the mill so nimbly, that at Eleven a Clock in the Evening it turned, and ground as if it had stood there several years. The Jesuits brought with them a Notary whom they paid well, and he in acknowledgement gave them an act importing he had seen the Mill grind in their Land without contradiction, and took the depositions of above twenty witnesses, who said the same thing. The Father's thought, that being thus in possession and otherwise assured of the Judges, no man in the world could out them from thence: 'Twas hardly light the next day but the Inhabitants of St. Foy understood all that past. The sight of their walls built by K. Ferdinand and Q. Isabel their Founders in a night, prevented their Astonishment at the nimble erecting of the Mill: They called an Assembly, and by the command of one of their Civil Officers, a man of spirit and courage, now a Priest called Thomas Muros, they went to the Mill, razed it to the ground, and filling the new trench with rubbish turned back the water into the Ancient Channel: The Jesuits seeing their Mill destroyed, made their Complaints in the Chancery of Granada, treated the Inhabitants of St. Foy with great insolence, and in pursuance of the instructions received of their Advocates and procurators, exhibited an information which they had caused to be drawn, of the peaceable possession of their Mill. The Audience of Granada caused the Inhabitants of St. Foy to be cited, and some to be arrested: They spent much money in the suit, and scaped but narrowly from being condemned by the Judges to rebuild the Mill at their own charges: But D. Paul Vasquez de Aguilar, one of the Judges showed himself so Generous in defence of the Inhabitants, that the rest seeing they had not reason on their side, durst not contradict him, and in conclusion gave the Jesuits a Reprimande (at least checked their Proctors) condemned them to pay costs, enlarged the prisoners, and approved of all that had been done. They coin many millions of Money for one. P. 389. When I was at Malaga, says the Author, they kept such a noise with their hammers, and so unseasonably, that I could not sleep: From thence I went to Salamanca; where I understood that the Jesuits coined Money by permission of King Philip the 3d, for one million, to serve for the building of their magnificent College in that City: They were not content with one million, but coined above three, but the pieces of four Maravediss were so small, that they were commonly called the Jesuits Money. The pleasantness of it is, that if the King upon information of their insolence had not prohibited them, they had continued their work, and would have been coining of this million till Doomsday: Hence came that abundance of their Money in Spain, whereof the King was obliged again and again to lessen the value, to the great damage of the Kingdom, for which they are in some measure beholding to the Jesuits. A Jesuit makes his Penitent relapse into his Crime, by presenting him with the picture of a Lady he had loved, and forgot. P. 244. There is a Maxim among their secret advices, for proof whereof the Author reports this story: The Maxim is, That in the Guidance of the Consciences of Great ones, they are to follow the losest opinions: By this they introduce and preserve themselves in favour, and render themselves acceptable by their complaisance. A very rich Gentleman falling sick confessed to a jesuit, and among other sins accused himself of the love he bore to a Lady whose picture he had for a pledge of Affection, which expecting to die he bestowed on his Confessor. The Gentleman recovered and repent of his fault so sincerely, that he entirely forgot the person who had caused it, and thought no more of the jesuit. But the Father de●irous to renew his acquaintance, went to see him when recovered, and discoursing of his sickness, spoke to him of the Lady mentioned in his Confession, and returned him her picture: This putting the Gentleman in mind of the Lady whom he had quite defaced out of his memory, he returned to his vomit, and persisted in it long. What shall we say of these Maxims, and practices of the Jesuits, but that they will destroy the Church, Religion and the Sacraments; if it may serve their interest: And that the least temporal advantage shall prevail more over their spirit than all the Laws of God. The Jesuits stir not abroad by night for the Poor, but do it for the Rich: A merry prank played them by the Governor of Evora in his particular. P. 394. What passed at Evora is very pleasant: A Governor of that City some years before the revolt of Portugal, knew the Jesuits well, and that they run upon wheels when their interest calls them, but have Led in their heels when there's nothing to be got, though the business concern the good of their neighbour and the service of God: He was informed, that a poor man being sick to death, they went at midnight to the Jesuits College (because this man lodged near them) to desire one of them to come and confess him. The Porter answered, that the Fathers never stirred out of the College by night, and so the poor man died without being confessed: The Governor took this occasion to make others know the Jesuits as well as he knew them, and to undeceive such as had a good opinion of them, he sent his servant one night to desire a Confessor from the Jesuits for a woman that lay a dying, but instructed him well, and forbade him to tell whence he came: The servant went to the College, and having called and knocked a long time, the Porter came to the Gate, cursing him to the Devil that knocked, but took the Message, and went to deliver it to the F. Rector: The servant waited for an Answer, which after a long attendance was brought him to this purpose, that the F. Rector advised him to go seek out the Curate of the Parish, for that they of this holy House stirred not abroad by night: Some days after the Governor sent them a message from him, that after supper he had been suddenly taken with an Apoplexy, whose consequence might be dangerous, and to prevent the ill that might otherwise ensue, he desired that he might have a jesuit to confess him. As soon as the servant had delivered his message, two Jesuits came forth warmly clad, for it was Winter, and went beside the Governors' house, who attended them by the way with the Officers of Justice: When he saw them, he asked who they were, and whither they went: They answered they were Jesuits, and went to confess the Governor who lay a dying. This is all false, replies he, for I am the Governor, and very well in health, and you are not Jesuits but Robbers; and so sent them to prison, where they continued all night: The Rector having heard of this Accident in the Morning, went in search of those of his Order, found them in prison, and complained to the Archbishop who proceeded against the Governor: But the Governor would not let them go till they had made an Authentic information, and proved by the depositions of several witnesses, that they were men of a Religious Order, and that they were acknowledged, and commonly reputed such: This took up a day's time, and the Rector and other Jesuits bestirred themselves to purpose, and would have given money to clear themselves of the mischance, and thought themselves kindly used that the Governor insisted on no more satisfaction for delivery of the Prisoners: The Governor excused himself for what past, because he knew on one side that the Jesuits stirred not abroad by night, no not to confess persons that lay a dying, and that on the other side finding at midnight two persons in the streets in Jesuits habit, it gave him just cause to suspect that they were Robbers who made use of that disguise. This story was told me by a Lay-brother a jesuit named Pantaleon d' Almeyda, who was at Granada not many years since, whom his Superiors have since sent into New Spain. The corrupt Manners of their Scholars and Priests in three Great Provinces: How they keep their Vow of Obedience to the Pope, and endeavour to cheat Princes. P. 410. The Jesuits make a particular vow of obedience to the Holy See, though sufficiently obliged without it, and as if all Catholics were not of their opinion in the point, but 'tis easy to discover by what follows, how ill they perform it. 'Tis known, these Fathers take on themselves the instruction of youth in all parts of the world, to infuse into them the Principles of Learning and Good manners. They managed it so well in the Provinces of Stiria, Carinthia, and Carniola, that the ecclesiastics who had studied under them, led so infamous lives, and gave such ill examples, that Pope Paul 5. held himself obliged by the duty of his Office to take order for their reformation: For this purpose in 1619. he appointed the Bishop of Serzane his Nuntio in the Empire, to be Visitor, that he might correct and punish the debauchery of their manners so dishonourable to the Church, The Jesuits who loved these wretched Priests and Students, as their true disciples, to discharge their vow of obedience to the Holy See left no stone unturned to hinder the Visitation: But seeing the Nuntio far advanced in the chastisement and reformation of these corrupt Churchmen, they found a rare expedient to hinder the effect of the punishments given them, and to procure them impunity in their loose courses of life. F. Bartholome● Villers a jesuit was then Confessor to the Archduke, and had the privilege to give his advice first in all sorts of Affairs. He represented to this Prince, that the Pope's design in this Visitation was to know and procure a Memoire of all the forces and fortifications of all his Estate, for some purposes unknown, but such as there was just cause to suspect; That the Nuntio being an Italian would take with him some persons of the same Nation to assist in the Visitation, that it was not fit to give strangers liberty to enter the State, to penetrate its secrets, and reduce them into Memoirs: Had this Prince been less pious, he had not needed greater motives to cross the good intentions of the Pope. But having discovered these of the Jesuits, and the weakness of their reasons, he seconded the designs of the Pope, and the Visitation was held throughout these three Great Provinces, wherein there were found only fix Priests who used not Concubines, and were otherwise guilty of scandalous living. What shall we now say of the Jesuits, who would have persuaded this Prince to hinder the execution of the Ordinances of the Pope▪ And is not this a good obedience to the Sovereign Pontife? I have often heard it said, The Robber and Receiver merit the same punishment. Another Author who relates this story, says that these debauched Priests, had not only studied under the Jesuits, but made it their custom to give the Father's several Presents, and that this engaged these Masters to favour their Scholars, and take them into protection though public and scandalous sinners; Plerique enim provinciarum illarum Sacerdotes ex jesuitarum scholis profecti munusculd illis frequenter missitabant, adeoque duplici nomine quamvis palam essent improbi, Magistrorum patr●cinium gratiamque meceri videbantur. Alphons. de Vargas Relat. de stratag. Jesuitarum. cap. 20. They make themselves Masters of the University of Prague against the Rights of the Archbishop, by attributing Rights not due to the Emperor. P. 411. What passed at Prague is fresher in memory, the judgement of the difference having been referred by the Cardinal d' Arach Archbishop of Prague to the Pope and Cardinals of the Congregation of the Inquisition. The fact is as followeth. Pope Clement the 6th, at the desire of the Emperor Charles the 4th, erected in 1348. an University at Prague, whereof the then Archbishop was made Chancellor, and his successors for the time being to have that dignity annexed to their Archbishopric; the power given him was not only to bestow the degrees of Master, Doctor and others, but to exercise all other things belonging to the Jurisdiction of an ordinary by the Canons which have been expounded by the Council of Trent, and extend even to the inferior Schools. From hence it appears, that Secular Princes have no jurisdiction in this University, and that by consequence, he that takes this right from the Bishop incurs the sentence of excommunication pronounced by the Bull in Coena Domini against those that usurp Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction that belongs not unto them. The Jesuits who have the pride of the Devil, and an extravagant ambition to command; thought it a good way to please their itch of Superiority, by bringing under their power the people, and ecclesiastics of Prague, and making themselves Masters of the University, and all the Schools there; to effect this, they were to establish him for Chancellor, Rector and Governor of all the Schools, who should be Rector of their College, though not feasible without interessing the conscience of the Emperor, which they made no difficulty of; they persuaded the Emperor as they pleased and executed their desires accordingly trampling under foot the Laws Divine, and all humane respects, the Emperor reposing entire confidence in them, and leaving them to effect their design, as themselves should think fit. They drew up an Ordinance which the Archbishop presented in his complaints to the Pope: Some passages whereof are here inserted out of the clauses pertinent to the matter in hand. By our Authority Royal and Imperial we unite by full right and to perpetuity th' Caroline University (so called from the founder Charles the 4 th') to Ferdinand's College of the Society of jesus established in our City of Prague, without that any privilege of the Caroline University shall prejudice this Union. What's this in plain terms, but that though the Apostolic See, and the Council of Trent would have the University of Prague submit to the Jurisdiction of the Archbishop as their Sovereign Chief in matters Ecclesiastical, notwithstanding we will take away this Right from the Archbishop, and maugre the Authority of the Holy See and the Council, make the whole University subject to the Rector of the College of Jesuits? The Emperor proceeds: Whereas we can abolish as faulty, and do hereby effectually abolish all that may be contrary to the union we make: Therefore we will, that to perpetuity, the Rector of our College Imperial of the Society of jesus established according to custom by the Superiors of the said Society shall be Rector of the whole University, and we make void by these presents, and annual the right which any others might pretend thereto (and by consequence that of the Archbishopric;) And we do hereby submit unto the said Rector all the Masters, as well of inferior Schools, as others of the City of Prague, who shall be obliged to obey the Orders of the said Rector or his Deputy for making visitations, or establishing any reglement. No person shall have power to establish any new School in any faculty whatsoever without permission in writing from the said Rector, to whom we submit also all the Colleges and petty Schools of all the Kingdom (of Bohemia) as well those now established, as such as are to be established hereafter: and by the same Secular Authority they give the Rector of the Jesuits all rights of inquisition and correction of heretics, and the censure of all Books to be printed or sold. The Emperor gave all this Authority (which he had not himself) to the Jesuits, who had given him the occasion of committing this Sacrilege for them, for it cannot be said the Emp●rour did it of his own accord, since it was by their procurement by giving him the means by a comparison as unjust as the example they produced for a precedent: See here the ground. They said, that the Ancient Orders of Religion had lost all their right to their foundation, and rents, ever since the heretics became Masters of their Monasteries; and that the Emperor having recovered them by Conquest through the force of his Arms had acquired a right in domain to them, and was become absolute Master thereof, the Patron having lost all his right. From hence they inferred, that the Emperor having delivered the University of Prague from the tyranny of the heretics who had been Masters thereof for two hundred years, was of a Protector become Master thereof by his Arms, and therefore might give it to whom he pleased: They framed an Imperial Constitution on this ground. Who ever heard of a villainy like this? they would despoil the ancient Orders of Religion, and an Archbishop of their unquestionable rights, and to compass their ends, trample under foot the Pope's Bulls, mock at his Authority, persuade the Emperor to do that, whereby he incurs the penalties declared by the Bull in Coena Domini, and all this to make the Rector of the College of the company, governor of the University of Prague. They make their F. Cyprian, who was a cheat, and aspy, to pass for a Saint and a Prophet. P. 402. I have long desired to know the truth of a story I have been often told, and learned it at last of F. Morales as followeth. In 1638. a jesuit called Francis Matthew Cyprian came from the East-Indies to Macao. He had scarce set foot on land, but the Bells of the College rung out so loudly, that they shook the whole town, and gave the inhabitants reason to inquire the cause: but they were soon satisfied by the Jesuits running all about and saying; F. Cyprian is come at last. He lived as those whom the Jesuits call Saints, and the people in compliance with them published him for such; but that you may the better judge of the person they so unanimously canonised, I shall relate in few words, not his whole life, which is too long to be written, but what he did this time at Macao, whereof all the people have been witnesses, and at the same time Heralds to proclaim his impostures. Cyprian one day after long entreaty by the Jesuits went up into the pulpit in the Church of the Society, but what is usually said of impudent Musicians, who must be more entreated to hold their peace than they were to sing, was true of him, for he preached three hours by the clock, and notwithstanding all the diligence used, and signs made to stop his impertinent prattling, nothing could stay the course of his fopperies for three hours together. The subject of his Sermon was, that of his folly, That St. Francis Xavier had sent him to preach at japan, and in the familiar discourses often held with him had given him that order. To authorise what he said, he took to witness the holy images, the walls and pillars of that Church, and to persuade his Auditors to believe the certainty of his Revelations and ravishments, he told them, that if they of the City opposed his passage from the territories, they could not hinder it, for he would make use of his mantle for a bark, his staff for a mast, and would so pass over with more security than in a vessel well equipped: These and other expressions in his Sermon gave the people much trouble, because, if all things fell out as he said, it would break the Commerce between Portugal and japan to the ruin of the people. All the ecclesiastics and learned persons assembled together, to consider what might have inclined the jesuit to talk at that rate, and what remedy to apply. The most judicious were of opinion, that he was a fool, but that at that time he practised dissimulation more than folly; which opinion had sufficient grounds, for that it was propable he hid under these appearances of dotage, the design he had to favour the interest of the Hollanders, who made use of him as an instrument proper to ruin the City. When Cyprian knew what passed in this assembly by the information of those co●fidents of the Jesuits whom fear or interest engages to give them advice of all that is transacted; this impostor writ in a paper all that past in the Assembly, and put it into the hand of a statue of St. Francis Xavier which stood in the Cell of the Visitor Manuel Diaz the Jesuit. One of the Assembly came to see the Visitor, and Cyprian having notice of it went to his Chamber, and having whispered him in the ear in the presence of the Secular person, who came to the Visitor went his way: When he was gone, the Visitor forthwith says to the townsman; SIR Know you what F. Cyprian saish? See what that paper is in the hand of St. Francis Xavier. The townsman took the paper, wherein he found the names of all who had been in the Assembly written with F. Cyprians hand, and that within two months they should all die, for having given so disadvantageous a judgement of the jesuit: The Visitor with great exclamations conjures the townsman to publish the paper, that they who were to die might prepare themselves for it ● but the event was quite contrary, for some of those men who were before Crazy, had their health very well for these two months and a long time after: Perhaps because their distemper forbore to afflict them out of respect to F. Cyprian, who peradventure had given them some of his relics, as his grey hairs, his old shirts, or other like things, which he distributed very liberally. The common people had a great esteem of him, and would have torn in pieces his robe to serve them for relics, but it was new and of very fine cloth which made F. Cyprian willing to preserve it, telling the people that the habit he wore abroad was not a relic considerable enough, but if they came to his lodging he would give them excellent new cloth of his old torn shirts. A Pagan Indian trimmed him for nothing, which Cyprian said was an action sufficient to convert him; but the truth is, he made great gains every time that he shaved him by selling every hair of his beard for a relic, and when Cyprian knew it, he said, The man must be allowed to advance devotion. They were at last confirmed in the opinion they had of him, as being a spy, or what fell out afterwards. A jesuit, simple and devout, (for such also there uses to be among them) and to F. john Baptist Morales, and told him in private: Within two months the Emperor of Japan shall send in search of us, and twelve of the College, whereof I will be one, will go where required, and the first five years we shall suffer three sorts of punishments, the Sword, the Fire, and the Cross; and we have seen great miracles done by F. Cyprian in confirmation of this truth. There passed not only two months but two years, and a thousand may pass before any come in search of them, or they go to japan. It is true nevertheless that F. Cyprian had taken his measures to go to japan within two months, and had for that purpose sent two Jesuits into a D●sart Island to build a vessel for his passage; the City was advertised of it, and sent to destroy it: But F. Cyprian warned them who had commission to do it, not to put it in execution, foretelling them that there would fall fire from heaven on them who would adventure to touch it: He said truth in some measure, but not altogether, for fire there was, but not from heaven, and that burned not men, but men burned the barque. By this they discovered his design, and gave account to the inquisition of his Revelations, his Prophecies and Impostures he made use of for cheating the world, and the inquisitors having found the truth of the information, ordered he should be sent back to the Indies, and charged Anthony Cardin the jesuit to bring him thither; but as one who had sucked the same milk, and learned the same doctrine, he permitted him to flee among the Moors where he ended his life with as much sanctity as he began, and led it to that time. And I doubt not but Poza the jesuit hath put him in his Martyrology. They seek in the Indies the means to enrich themselves, not the salvation of souls: And dishonour Religion by their Concubinages and impostures. P. 407. The story of what passed among the Indians Chiriguanaes' is worth the reporting: I heard it, says the Author, at Madrid of a person of honour, a Friend and Correspondent of D. john D' Elizarazo his Majesty's Commissioner in the City of Plat● in Peru. The Indians Chiriguanaes' live beyond the Mountains of Peru, and are a Nation very docil and susceptible of the doctrine of the Gospel, but Enemies to those labours and pains the Indians now suffer. The Jesuits undertook their Conversion, and in a short time laboured to good effect; these Infidels receiving the Gospel with very great devotion; when the Fathers saw them almost all Converted and Baptised, and that they were dexterous and tractable, they resolved to propose to them the end of their preaching, which was not, as it appeared, the Conversion of the souls of these Infidels, but to make advantage by their estates. They told them, that being their preachers they desired to live amongst them, but wanted lands and hereditaments for maintenance, and desired their Aid for planting some Sugarcanes, whereby they might be enabled to live with Credit. The Indians perceived the Avarice of the Jesuits, and were confirmed in their opinion, wherein all they of Peru concur, that these people are not Ministers of the Gospel, but under pretence of preaching the faith of Christ, labour only to establish their tyranny, and deprive the Indians of their Liberty: So that they resolved to set upon them by night, and to chastise them so as to make them an example to others. Though the Jesuits had not been long in that place, they had contracted great familiarity with the Indian women, who had such affection for them, that they made it appear to the prejudice of that they ought to have expressed to their Husbands and Kindred; for they gave them notice of the resolution taken to kill them, and furnished them with means to flee away. Six of them escaped, and came to the City of Plata, where they blazed it abroad, that the Indians out of unwillingness to receive the Gospel had driven them away; And that their Companion F. Mendiola had renounced the faith, and married after the manner and Ceremonies of the Indians. That this obliged them to give Account of what past, that he might be ●etched out thence by force of Arms, it being otherwise impossible the Infidels should be converted: 1. Because Mendiola cherished them in their blindness, for fear of being punished for his faults: 2. Because they would be confirmed in their Error by the ill example of a Priest and Minister of the Gospel, who had embraced their Religion, this made them desire forces of D. john D'ilisaraze for the enterprise, and for an evidence of the truth of their allegations, they had taken from Mendi●la the jesuits' habit, as having apostatised from the Faith. The King's Minister Judged this an affair of too Great consequence to be hastily engaged in, and took better advice which was to send an express to Mendiola, to assure him of his protection and assistance to obtain absolution from his Crime. This Father was extremely surprised at the news, as having never thought of Renouncing the Faith, or quitting the Jesuits habit. This made him resolve to be gone forthwith and inform himself of all that concerned him on this occasion: He presented himself in this condition to the Jesuits, and by his presence convinced them of the falseness of their allegations against him. Declaring that all this was grounded on their weakness and wretchedness, which had precipitated them into Concubinage: And that these Jesuits to cover their fault had attributed his to Idolatry. And that it was strange, that the fault being common to all, he alone who was the least guilty should bear the shame: This obliged him to quit the Society, and take the habit of a Secular Priest, with the hatred we may easily imagine he conceived against them who had raised such an infamous slander against him, with design to destroy him among the Indians, left he should discover their villainies, abhorring that Order, who on such occasions, and to cover such wickedness will strip their Friars of the habit they wear. A Jesuit stabbed by the Husband of a Woman he loved, the Jesuits suborn Witnesses to save their Credit. P. 398. The College of Jesuits of Granada hath an Estate in a place called Caparacena two Leagues from Granada, the administration whereof they gave to Balthasar des Rois one of the Society: he had such affection for a married woman of that place, that it was publicly known, though the Husband was the last who had notice of it: for the jesuit having employed him to work in the Grounds, to make him more tractable, had doubled his wages. At last the poor Cuckold provoked by the injury done him, studied a fit occasion of revenge. The Jesuit doubting nothing, came one day from Granada to the Farm, and went directly to the Woman's house, not knowing the husband was there. But the man having hid himself to see what should pass between his Wife and the jesuit, when he found them both at their Ease stabbed the jesuit, and left him dead on the place, having thrown his Bonnet aloft, and said, Away Horns. An Information was exhibited of what happened, and it was constantly affirmed the jesuit was an Adulterer, that the Husband had often warned him from seeing his Wife, and had been blamed by his Neighbours, as having consented to his own infamy: The Rector of the College of Granada hearing this, exhibited a Plaint Criminal against the Murderer, and designed to make a new Information quite different from that which had been exhibited, and took with him a Notary of Granada to effect it: He endeavoured both by promises and presents to persuade the witnesses examined in the first information to contradict themselves, or at least to use ambiguous expressions in some matters: And 'twill be worth the observation how he managed the business. He that had deposed in the first information, that as soon as the Husband had killed or wounded the jesuit, he threw the Bonnett aloft, and said Away Horns, upon the second Deposition said, He remembered not that he had mentioned that circumstance, but that if it was inserted in the Process, the Clerk had put it in of himself: Another desirous to justify the jesuit, to show that the woman was not liable to suspicion, by an Equivocation said, She was a Woman of Age, that is, as he would have it, Very old, though I can affirm on my own knowledge she was but 28. Most of the witnesses used like Equivocations, but agreed all in this, That the jesuit was a Saint, and that they had often seen him with his Chapelet in his hand: The Jesuits having gotten this information, vigorously prosecuted the murderer, and caused him to be condemned (by contumacy for not appearing) to be hanged, and when the sentence had been pronounced, they printed the whole Process and Information verbatim, with the Definitive sentence, and distributed it throughout the City, to those who had known the story. I have a Copy of it by me. I consider not so much the fault of this Friar, as a thing to which others may be subject, but that the Action must be holy, just, and canonised, because done by a jesuit; and that it is better cause a man to be hanged, than acknowledge that the Society consists of men, and of sinners. Thus their Apologies prove more scandalous than their Crimes. The horrible corruption of a holy Sister by Mena the Jesuit, her Confessor, who was saved by the Jesuits from the Inquisition, married, and taught Judaisme. P. 25. Mena was a Jesuit in appearance, of very great abilities, he was lean, pale, and his eyes sunk in his head, wore always a great head, and a great Chapelet, but it was the better to cover his greater hypocrisy: when I was a Student at Salamanca, being very young, I heard sometimes his discourses and exhortations, which he made with such force, that his Auditors trembled, and so he gained the respect and esteem of a Saint; but it was observed, he made his Sermons before the exercise of the Discipline of Penance, practised by many in that College, for which this good Father seemed to have no great affection or Devotion, though none needed it more. Among many others who confessed to him, there was a devout woman who was very simple, to whom he said that God by Revelation had signified to him that it was his will he should marry her, and that they should live together as married persons, but it must be kept secret, and no person to know it. The woman would not be persuaded without seeing the opinions of some learned persons in approbation of Mena's assertions. And as one Crime easily draws on another, the jesuit used this Artifice to make the poor woman believe that several persons of Learning agreed with him in opinion; he spoke with the ablest Doctors of the University, and told them he confessed a person very spiritual and pious, but withal very scrupulous, and to that degree, that she Rested not assured in following the directions he gave her, without confirmation from other Learned men; therefore he entreated them, that if they had a good opinion of him, and his long experience in the conduct of Souls, they would appease this unquiet spirit by assuring her she might safely follow what F. Mena advised her: The Doctors who had always observed the modesty of this man's behaviour, had often heard him preach, and knew his discourses were powerful, that he spoke of nothing but eternity, that he repeated almost every day, that judas fried in Hell above 1600 years for one mortal sin, and should burn there for ever, with a thousand other expressions of like nature, granted his request. The I●suite having their testimony, went to his holy Sister, and having made use thereof to deceive the poor wretch, who thought the Doctors had approved the pretended Revelation of her Confessor, she consented to marry him▪ (the circumstances of this infamous marriage▪ reported by the Author are so abominable, that we thought fit to omit them.) The jesuit continued a long time the commission of his Villainies before and after Mass, and forbore not at the same time to continue his discourses of piety in the College, but leaving us to perform the Discipline of Penance we used in the Church, he retired to his pleasures with his holy sister in an Ermitage where he kept her. The Inquisition was advertised of all this, and caused Mena to be imprisoned at Valladobid: The taking of him made as much noise as his pretended virtue had gained him reputation: The Society undertook his defence, and by their credit and Certificates that F. Mena was sick, and by extenuating his Crime, they obtained leave to take him into their College, where he might be in custody of the Officers of the Inquisition: But they were so desirous to set him at liberty, that while the Officers of the Inquisition, who were ordered to attend the sick man, went to dinner, the Jesuits sent to tolle the Bell, and gave it out that Mena was dead. And to cover this Lie, they made a face and hands of pasteboard, and having fagotted up a kind of body of Sticks and old Clouts, they put this wooden Mena on a Bier, and in the mean time mounted the true Mena on a good Mule, which rested not till he came to Genes, where he hath within these twenty years, publicly read the Law of Moses to the jaws. He married there, and had Children, and a friend of mine told me he had spoken with them at Genes, and asked them news of their Father, who was not long before dead: And those he had by his holy Sister I have seen Students in the Jesuits College of Salamanca, and very well used: As for the she-Saint▪ she appeared no more. That a Friar professed may marry upon a probable Re●elation. It was upon the occasion of F. Mena, that the jesuit Salas, lib. 2. tract. 8 Disp. unicâ Sect. 5. Nunt. 51. teaches, That a Friar pro●est, of an Order approved, who shall have a probability of a Divine Revelation, that God dispenses with his Vow to enable him to marry, may marry, and make use of this probable, though doubtful dispensation: I know very well that Doctor Aquila answers, that Salas changed his opinion before they had printed the Leaf that contains this proposition. But if that be true, why did he not tear off those that were printed already: But it is a known and ordinary Artifice of the Jesuits, for evading the reproaches justly due to them for any proposition cited out of their Books, to produce a corrected Copy, where it hath been expunged: But 'tis not so here, for there are several Copies of Salas in print, which are not corrected; and Salas who should have corrected the Proposition, hath maintained it; and three of the gravest Fathers according to the practice of the Society have approved, and three thousand had done it, had the book been read by so many. A Thes●s of the Jesuits: That they are not obliged to say the Breviary: And that it is but ● Customary Error. P. 43. I have seen, says the Author, when I was at Ocagna in 1636. a Thesis maintained by the Jesuits, wherein they affirmed, that the Ecclesiastiques Secular and Regular, were not obliged neither on pain of sin mortal nor venial, to say the Breviary: That there was no Law in the Church to command it, but that it was a Custom derived from common Error: I assisted in person at these Theses, upon this token, that three days after the Jesuit was cited by the Inquisition, but what became of the business, I know not. The extravagancy of the Jesuits in the matter of Revelations, and self-conceit; falsifying Books. Valentia confounded on this occasion before Pipe Clement the 8th and died. Pag. 43. In the first Edition of the Spiritual Exercises of the Jesuits, there is this proposition p●g. 31 and 32 of the Impression at Burg●s, 1574. It is the great perfection of a Christian to keep himself indifferent to do what God shall reveal to him, and not to determine himself to do what he hath already revealed and taught in the Gospel. This is the source of many other maxims of theirs, and particularly of that affirmed by a I●suite named Eusebius in a Book Entitled, Of the Love of jesus and Mary, that St. Ignati●s had more wisdom, and spiritual prudence than St. Paul, and that if the Apostles were now in the world they would regulate their lives according to th●se of the Jesuits. He that answers for the Jesuits, says this is not true, and that these words are not in the Book which the Authors of the Extracts quotes, and that he understood not Latin. The Author of the Reply doubts not but the words of Eusebius are to be found in the first Edition of his Book; as having been read there by persons of good credit, who assured him thereof, but told him at the same time, that the Jesuits had quickly suppressed it, and dextrously substituted another very like it. As to the Apologists reproaching the Author of the Extract, that he understood not Latin, the Author of the Reply makes this reparty, That perhaps he had studied Grammar in the Schools of the Jesuits. This, says he, was the answer of a Divinity Professor of a Religious Order, who pressing a jesuit extremely in dispute, and in the heat of his Argument slipped into a Solecis●, the Jesuit who was in perplexity how to extricate himself from the ill consequences of his opinion, which the professor urged very much, would have diverted the dispute by reproaching him with having committed a fault against Grammar; I confess it▪ says the Professor, but not against Divinity; and the reason is clear, for I have studied Divinity in my Order, but Grammar in your College. But, our Author adds, The Spiritual Exercises, I have in Latin and Spanish differ as much the one from the other, as Yea and No, and 'tis not extraordinary with the Jesuits to make entire impressions of Books to take away those words which make against them. Thus they did in the time of the Congregation de Auxiliis, making an express impression of St. Augustine, and cutting of what was contrary to their assertions, that Valentia might maintain their sentiments by the words of that Holy Doctor, by taking from him his own, and putting into his writings words purely Pelagian. They were convicted of this before Pope Clement the 8 th'. For Lemos the Dominican having quoted St. Augustine in defence of a position which he maintained against the Jesuits, Valentia denied there was any such expression as Lemos cited in the works of St. Augustine; Lemos desired the Books might be brought, the jesuit had in readiness those he had printed and falsifyed, and read the quite contrary to what Lemos affirmed; But the Dominican desired they would fetch the works of St. Augustine out of the Pope's Library, and the Pope himself read there the passage as Lemos had cited it, and having thereby discovered the cheats of the Jesuits he said to Valentia: Is it thus, you pretend to deceive the Church of God? These words were like a thunderbolt to strike down Valen●ia, and made him fall in a swoone before the Pope, and die two days after. By this it appears that they had made an entire Edition of the works of St. Augustine only to leave out the words cited by Lemos. Their interessed and extravagant devotion under pretence of honouring the Virgin. P. 7. What passed at Alcala whereof Doctor Aquila speaks makes it appear, that the Devotion of the Jesuits to the immaculate conception of the Virgin is proportioned to their interests, and increases according to the account of the profits they draw from it in pleasing Princes, or gathering money from the people to keep the feast. They have at Alcala, as in their other houses, Congregations for their Scholars, and other persons who frequent their Colleges. They assembled on a Saturday to make a vow to defend the purity of Mary in her Conception; after which they told them, now you cannot be Dominioans, for they make a vow quite contrary, which is quite false; this done, they gathered money from all them that were to make the vow (which was the principal part of the Ceremony) under pretence of the Charges they were to be at, and made some artificial fires which were like to burn an Image of the Conception, which served as a Crown to the Machine. When the Congregationists had supped, the Jesuits gave them in their hands a standard of our Lady, and having many in company very far on their way, the squadron arrived between ten and eleven a clock in the evening at the College of St. Thomas D' Alcala with fearful cries, and a horrible bustle mixed with scurrilous, foul, and unhandsome expressions, calling the Dominicans Jews, Heretics, and enemies of the Virgin; they threw stones, and discharged pistols against the gates and the windows, broke down the glass, and wearied at last, and hoarse with crying, they went with their standard (which they let fall more than once) to the Convents of St. Catharine, and the mother of God, where they played the like pranks. F. Oquete the jesuit preached the next day, and persuaded them to defend the Conception of the Virgin with the sword, with the poinard, with their blood, and with fire, and that if any opposed them St. jago etc. which is a Spanish Oath by St. james, or a menace. He forgot only (which some say was done of malice) to call those of old Castille to the Assembly, who provoked by the neglect went the night following to throw stones at F. Oquetes' Chamber, exalting the Virgin, St. Thomas and his Doctrine: From hence proceeded the challenge between the Captains of the Castellines, and the Navarr●is, who carried the Standard the night of the Congregationists triumph, of which Captains the one was killed, and died without confession. F. Oquete said in this Sermon, that the Virgin had rather be eternally in Hell deprived of the vision of her Son, to see Devils there, than to have been conceived in original sin. P. 114. 'Tis not out of Piety, but hatred to the Dominicans, and to render them odious to the people, that they teach the immaculate conception of the Virgin: The Cardinal of Lugo a jesuit in a letter to one of their Fathers at Madrid writes: Your Reverence may do well to order things, so that those of the Society apply themselves diligently in your quarters to revive the Devotion of the Conception, to which they are well affected in Spain, to see if by this means we may divert the Dominicans, who press us here in the defence of St. Augustine: And I believe they will surmount us in the principal points De Auxiliis, if we oblige them not to employ their force another way. Their Artifices towards vain w●men. P. 247. The Jesuits make use of several Artifices to surprise them with whom they have to do, and especially women. They speak of nothing but magnificence and liberality to those who are vain, telling them that by these virtues they establish reputation, and cite examples to that purpose; and having puffed up their hearers with such vain conceits, they represent their necessities, that they have no Ornaments in their Vestries, and some of the Fathers want shirts to shift them. Their Artifices towards women having Children under their care. Ibid. There are other women well affected to the Jesuits, but obliged to take care of the children they have. To these they represent the sanctity of a Religious Estate, or the advantages that attend the service of the King, and so engage the children in Arms or Monasteries, and so render themselves Masters of the Family. Their Artifices to procure gifts from simple people: a cruel example of this kind. Ibid. Some people are melancholic and scrupulous, and to these the Fathers do effectually represent, that all they have of good must be applied to their salvation, and to set their Conscience at rest they must make their Wills, wherein they provide always a good Legacy for themselves, and if it be possible, persuade them to make a deed of gift to the Jesuits instead of a Testament: As it happened at M●laga in 1643. where a poor man resolved to retire from all secular affairs, put entire confidence in a jesuit for drawing his Will, and signed it as presented without reading or hearing it read: But was strangely surprised, when by the end of four days he was turned out of his house by the Jesuits; for thinking he subscribed a will to take effect after his death, he had signed a deed of Gift, whereby he passed all his Estate to the Jesuits in his life time. The man sued them at law, but where judgement is given on what is produced in writing, tears could not prevail, and the Jesuits continued in possession of the Estate, and he the right owner reduced to beggary. Purgatory according to the Jesuits like Mahomet's Paradisefull of all sorts of sensual pleasures. P. 22. Esclapes the Licentiat who made an Extract of the wicked maxims of the Jesuits in his 8 th' proposition reproaches them with an affirmation, that it is probable, that besides the Purgatory generally believed, there is another very pleasant, full of flowers and sweet scents, where the souls that are purified endure no pain of sense, nor are afflicted that their entry into bliss is deferred; so that this place is to them as a noble and honourable prison. Bellarmine the jesuit lib. 2. de Purge cap. 7. refuted by Malvenda the Dominican in his Book of Paradise, cap. 92. Observe if there be any difference between this Purgatory and Mahomet's Paradise. Doctor Aquila who undertakes the defence of these maxims of the Jesuits, answers, That this Opinion is a revelation which venerable Bede delivers as true, and approves, lib. 5. Hist Cap. 13. and that there are many other revelations to confirm it reported by St. Gregory, Lib. 4. Dial. Cap. 36. Bellarmine relying on his Authority, says, 'Tis not improbable these Revelations are true, and that by consequence there is such a place as they report where souls are purified; Vbi licet nulla poena sensus sit, tame● poena damni. If the Jesuits reviled him who said a Revelation delivered as true by St. Thomas was not improbable, we have as much reason to pay them in their own coin on this occasion. Let the wise judge now whether the I●suites are wronged, when we say they assert the Paradise of Ma●omet. The Author of the jesuitique Theatre on these words of Aquila, says, it must be supposed the Paradise of Mahomet was a place feigned by that wretch, wherein were all pleasures that men may enjoy without desiring Divine, because by his tenets beatitude consists in eating and drinking, and other pleasures of sense. Let the wise judge whether he who dares affirm that there is a purgatory where men desire not the vision of God, where there is not any grief or pain, but sweet scents, pleasant and flourishing fields, makes any difference between this Purgatory and Mahomet's Paradise. It is cause of astonishment that these Authors would corrupt the sense of the Saints to Authorise their perverse Opinions, for there is a vast difference between their Revelations, and the Error which Dr. Aquila would introduce and defend under the title of an Opinion. The Saints said no more, but that in their prayers they smelled sweet savours, and saw pleasant fields, wherein were men's souls; which denotes the comforts they received from the prayers of the faithful: When parables are used to express any matter, we must not stick at the shell but enucleate the meaning; as when our Saviour compares the Kingdom of Heaven to a grain of mustardseed, it is not to be literally understood, for he speaks by a Metaphor. My judgement of this opinion is agreeable to that of Suarez concerning it, whom the Jesuits so often call The thrice Sage Suarez, who says, Tom. 4. 3. Part. dis. 46. Sect. 1. n. 13. that this Opinion is contrary to the sense of all Divines, the Truth, and the Holy Fathers. F. Gabriel de Henao the jesuit differs little from this Opinion, when he says in his Empirology, that there shall be music in Heaven with material instruments as upon Earth: Nor is F. Lewis Henriques far from their sentiments, having made a Book Entitled, The business of the Saints in Heaven, which is not a Book secret and unlicensed, but Authorized with the approbation of F. Francis de Prado then Provincial of Castille Dat. at Salamanca Apr. 28. 1631▪ He proves in the 22 Chap. that every Saint shall have his particular house in Heaven, and Christ a Magnificent Palace: That there shal● be large streets and great piazza's strong house and walls to environ and defend them. He says in the 24 th' Ch. That there shall be a Sovereign pleasure in kissing and embracing the bodies of the blessed, that they shall bathe themselves in one another's sight, that there shall be pleasant baths for that purpose, that they shall swim like fishes, and sing as melodiously as Nightingales. He affirms in the 58 th' Ch. that the Angels shall put on women's habits, and appear to the Saints in the dress of Ladies, with curls and locks, with wastecoats and farthingales, and the richest linens. He says in the 47 th' Ch. That the men and women shall delight themselves in muscarades, feasts and ballads. In the 27 th' Ch. That the streets of Paradise shall be adorned with Tapestry, and all the Histories of the world engraven in the walls by excellent sculptors. He tells us in the 60 th' Ch. The Angels shall not have particular houses, but that it is better for them to go from one quarrer to another for diversity. Ch. 65. That women shall sing more pleasantly than men, that the delight may be greater. Ch. 68 That wom●n shall rise again with very long hair, and shall appear with ribbons and laces as they do upon earth. In the 73 th' Ch. that married people shall, as in this life, kiss one another, and the pretty mignons their children, which will be very pleasant. See what he says of the general judgement, n. 50. where you will find the origin of all this, and how the whole Society had then approved it, and the Provincial having afterwards allowed of it by order of the General Mutius Vitteleschi, 'tis no wonder D. Aquila appears in its defence. In the Indies and at China they carry on their breasts the marks of Idolatrous Sectaries, publishing falsely that the Pope had declared it allowable. P. 401. Behold another story I heard of F. john Baptista de Morales the Dominican my friend, Missionary to China, which passed at Macao. The Jesuits in the Indies serve a Nation called Bramins, who being of a different Sect from other Idolaters, do for distinction carry on their breasts little cords interlaced as a chain, as the particular mark of their profession: The Jesuits who serve this people, and are willing to please them (which concludes them Rich) wear these cords as the Idolaters, as at China they go in the habit of Bonzes, and canonize in their persons the idolatry of their parishioners. The other orders of Religion were astonished at the sight, and consulted the H●ly See what they were to do on this occasion, as not being able to persuade the Jesuits out of this habit: But much about the time they expected an answer. Rubinos the visitor of the Jesuits published in Micao, that his holiness had declared, that it was allowable to wear the habit of those Indians. F. Morales being shortly after at Rome remembered this passage, and inquired of the Commissioner of the Holy Office what judgement had been given in that point; the Father ●hewed him the sentence pronounced, whereby it appeared that that sort of Ornament or mark of distinction was prohibited as heretical, directly contrary to what the Visitor had published. A strange vow of a Jesuit of quality, whom the Fathers dismissed their College for receiving an inheritance he had renounced, obliging him by vow to re-enter the Society when master of the Estate. Charles Zany Son of Count john Zany of Bologne in Italy entered into the Society of the Jesuits in the year 1627. and before his entrance made an ample renunciation to all the Estate that might at any time belong to him in what manner soever it should be, specifying expressly, that neither he nor the Society should be able▪ to make any pretence thereto. When he had continued amongst them eleven years, his Father and Count Angelo his Brother dying in that time, the Fathers of the Society persuaded him to quit the College for receiving the inheritance, and when he had done it to return thither again. To this purpose they desired of the F. General Vitteleschi the letters of dismission necessary for the occasion which were sent to F. Menochins the Provincial, but before they were given to F. Charles Zany, they made him vow to return into the Society with all the estate that should belong to him, as F. Bargellin should think fit; the form of the Vow signed by F. Charles was as followeth: I Charles Zany being ready to receive my letters of dismission from the Society of jesus which I have desired, before they are delivered me by the Right Reverend F. Provincial Stephen Menochius do in his presence voluntarily make this vow to God, whereby I oblige myself in conscience to his Divine Majesty as strictly as is possible, that having received my said Letters of dismission, I shall again desire with all instance the Superiors for that time being, that I may re-enter the said Society as soon as I have ordered my affairs, for which I have desired and received the said Letters, intending and obliging myself to make such instance, and desire of re-entering the Society, and to take such time as shall be judged most convenient by the Reverend F. Vincent Marry Bargellin, as he shall think my affairs are sufficiently regulated; holding myself obliged in this to follow his pious judgement and his will, to exempt myself from all scruples, and to know more assuredly the time and term of accomplishing my vow to the good pleasure of God. He quitted the habit of Religion Novemb. 27. 1639. in his Country, as he hath testified by writing, signed with his hand; Having afterwards taken possession of his Estate he changed his resolution and came to Rome to procure a Dispensation of his vow, but could not obtain it of Pope Innocent the 10 th', fell sick of a fever, and made his Will in favour of the College of Jesuits of Boulogne by the persuasion of these Fathers who attended him day and night, and shortly after he died. The Jesuits forth with seized the Estate: but the vow of F. Charles being unhappily thwarted by a contrary settlement made by the Lords of Zany, a Suit was commenced at the Ruota at Rome. The Jesuits fearing jest in the prosecution and judgement of the cause, the strange vow of Charles Zany might be published, and their insatiable Avarice and new Artifices to invade inheritances discovered, obtained of Pope Alexander the 7 th'; a signature of Grace, whereby he commanded the Auditors of the Ruota to determine the business by way of accord. This was accordingly done by dividing the Estate in question into twelve parts, five whereof were assigned to the Jesuits, and the remaining seven to the Lords of Zany, who got not the possession but through infinite difficulties and hindrances interposed by these fathers, to the total dissipation of almost all the inheritance. ALETTER OF MONSIEUR***** to one of his Friends at Paris: Wherein is seen the base Complaysance of the Jesuits towards opulent and puissant persons, and their strange conduct concerning a Regular Abbot, whom they feared not to absolve on his deathbed, without obliging him to make restitution of his Robberies, nor reparation for his horrible scandals, but took care to inter him in their Church at Lions, and to extols him for his piety, by public Monuments. Written from Grenoble, 28, Octob, 1661. SIR, YOu desire an Account of our journey: And 'tis fit I perform that little you desire, to give this testimony at least of my readiness to obey you in the most important occasions. We had good Wether every day since we parted from Paris, as if Winter had put off her coming, to afford us the leisure to return home with convenience. I need not tell you, we passed by Clairvaux, Auberine, Cisteaux, la Ferte, and Clugny, those great and vast Houses, which stand famous Monuments of our Ancestors piety. But 'tis matter of Lamentation, that the spirit of those Saints who founded them▪ being expired almost as soon as their persons, they have left us nothing but so many heaps of stones; and that after they were sanctified by poverty and penitence, their reputation hath gotten their Successors riches, which serve only to maintain in idleness and sloth those that enjoy them. But because these evils are without remedy, I shall not insist longer on them, but make a step as far as Lions, to tell you the story of a little Conference I had there with a Jesuit. Monsieur de M. one of their good Friends, upon our arrival brought us to see their House of Belle-Cour: Having prayed a while in their Church, I stayed to look on an Epitaph I had heard of, and hardly then finished; but it being late, and my sight short, I could scarce read any more than these two words, Piè obiit. When I was come forth, I was glad to understand from the Father who accompanied us, that it was the Elegy of Monsieur the Abbot of St. Sulpice, and as I had known something of the life of that miserable Abbot, I endeavoured to learn some particularities concerning his death. I told this Father, it would be much to my comfort, if it were true, that this Abbott died piously, as I had read in his Epitaph, but I should be more joyful to hear some particulars of his repentance. He answered me very simply, there was no doubt but he died in a very good condition, for that he had been assisted by their Fathers, in his last sickness. Father, said I, pray tell me how he came into this good condition? if after he had scandalised all the world by his Debaucheries, infamous Avarice and Impieties, he edified the Church by some marks of repentance, what penance did he? hath he at least restored the vast sums whereof he rob his Monastery and the poor? For you know without doubt that he enjoyed above twenty years two Benefices whereof he never gave Alms. And that to gain the greater Revenue, he let almost all his Monks die without receiving any: He spent no more in repairs than in Alms, so that all the Regular places of his Monastery are run to ruin; particularly there is neither Dormitory, Infirmiry, nor Refectory; lastly, not satisfied with all the money he heaped up by such extraordinary niggardliness, he hath cut down the best part of the Woods of his Monastery, and converted them to his use. The Good Father assured me, the Fathers took no cognizance of all this; that his Estate passed to Monsieur his Brother, a person of Credit, and prime man of a City. I was impatient, and cried out, Father, What Conduct, what Aveings are here? what, did they not represent to this Abbot, that a man of Religion cannot amass Money, without amassing for himself a treasure of wrath against the last day? Did they not tell him, the fire must devour th●ir souls, who have been so unhappy as to hide the Gold and Silver which they had to be employed for relieving the necessities of the members of Christ? Did they not threaten him with the dreadful Judgements of God, who hath no compassion for Robbers and Sacrilegious persons, who die in their sins. Father, I know they had leisure enough to declare to him what he was obliged to do, for that he was above six months sick, and your Fathers visited him during all that time: If it be true, that they did not forget to oblige him to make restitution of his Rapines, that he might thereby at least satisfy one part of his sins, but that he notwithstanding continued obdurate. How could your Fathers give absolution to a sinner, who had given no signs of repentance, but persisted wilfully in his Crimes, in keeping to the last vast sums of money in his hands, to which he had no right? St. Peter hath taught us, with what severity they are to be judged, who divert and retain for themselves any part of things consecrate to God. This Crime was punished by sudden death in the person of Ananias; and it was the Prince of the Apostles who pronounced that terrible Judgement: If your Fathers have given any hope of salvation to a person more criminal than Ananias, what was it but to abuse the power of Christ, in declaring that a living soul which was really dead? I confess, Father, that what opinion soever I conceived of your speculative Morality, I see now you surpass it in your practical. They who write books, and expose their thought to the eyes of the world, have commonly some Reserves, and dare not express their wicked opinions barefaced and naked, but cloth them with some specious probabilities of truth; which conceals at least from the eyes of the people some part of their lies. But I perceive by this instance you trouble not yourselves to disguise your detestable Maxims; that you easily dispense with the most indispensable Laws, and will do any thing to please men: By the ancient custom of Monasteries, every Friar with whom they found money after his death, was held unworthy of Christian Burial, and his body exposed to be devoured by Birds and by Beasts: But you, my Fathers, you have fine subtleties and devices to save all the world, especially those who have money: The vast sums found with the Abbot of St. Sulpice, prevailed not with you to think him unworthy absolution; and though he died without giving any thing to the poor, which is a sensible mark of his Reprobation, you were not afraid to inter his miserable Relics in your Church, and adorn him with public Monuments of piety. I beg your pardon, Father, for the liberty I take to tell you my thoughts: I shall add one thing more, which doubtless all persons of a mean understanding, that shall here speak of this story, will presently infer: The world does you the right to take you for persons of prudence and wisdom, and wanting no address or dexterity when your interest is concerned. This well-grounded persuasion will naturally incline them to believe, that when you give absolution to sinners, who have done nothing to merit it, you are well paid for it, as a thing of your gift, which you owe not in justice: And that you take to yourselves at lest a great part of the Estates of those wicked rich men, to whom you promise Paradise, without regard to God's Word, who excludes them from thence who never repent. And certainly M. the Abbot of St. Sulpice made ill acknowledgement of the goodness you expressed towards him, if he gave you not part of those Rapines he could not carry with him to the other world, and were no longer of any use to him: 'Twere well then, Father, that men knew your behaviour in this affair: They may possibly find some reasons to excuse you, and justify the memory of your penitent. 'Tis possible, he hath made some restitution which turned to your advantage, and was applied to your use, and may advance his salvation as much as if it had been made to them to whom of right it belonged: In a word, it is probable there may be reason sufficient to prefer you before a Rabble of poor Folks and Monks, that are of no use to the World, who had right to the Money he bestowed on you. This Father being none of the ablest, appeared sufficiently perplexed at this discourse, but at last being obliged to say something in Justification of the Company, he assured me this Abbot had given them nothing, and that for the Enterrement and Epitaph, whereof they took care, they had received only Sixty Lonyses, which was little more than what it had cost them: All this was so simply related by the poor Father, that certainly he knew no more, so that I said no more to him, but that I blamed them very much for doing so wicked a work at so cheap a rate. From Lions we went to St. Sulpice, where I was an Eye-witness of the disorder wherein this wretched Abbot le●t the Monastery, both in its spiritual and temporal Concerns, and understood he committed enormities which sufficiently demonstrated he had neither Honour nor Religion: A Friar he was, but seldom or never wore the habit of his Order: A Priest he was but never said Mass, unless when he was obliged to receive some Nuns to profession in the Houses, that depended of him, over whom he had Jurisdiction in quality of Vicar General of the Order in Savoy and Press, but before he went from their houses he chaffered what they were to give him, and was so punctual and exact in making them pay, that one of the Nuns being unable to make up the sum they had agreed upon, he put off his Priestly Ornaments, and deferred the Mass and Ceremony to another time: Not to stay any longer in giving you a Catalogue of all his Disorders, it may be said in a word, that he wanted nothing to make him a completely wicked man. I was told upon the place, he had carried to Lion's part of the most precious things in his possession, having left almost all the rest in a Castle called Machura: That in his sickness his Brother had sent Horsemen thither, who by force took away all from the House; and came after to the Abbey to do the like, but that the resistance the Friars made obliged them to return without their Errand. The report of the Country is, that the Inheritance his Brother is seized of amounts to above a hundred thousand Livres, which may be easily believed, for what cannot that man amass who enjoyed two such fat Benefices, and was at no charge? He had scarce any Friars, and those few he had he gave not any thing to; no servants, no retinue, yet had he industry and care sufficient to Revel good cheap, and pay little for the most scandalous Debaucheries. From St. Sulpice we went by the Grand Chartreuse to Grenoble. But two days ago Monsieur De M. went to the Brother and heir of the Abbot, to demand Justice, and represent to him, that it was not allowable for him to possess himself of, and retain by force an Estate that belonged to other men: But we had no satisfaction from this great Magistrate, he expressed no repentance for the Robbery committed, but hath form his Conscience so in this matter, that 'twill be no easy thing to persuade him to let go such a prey: He told us in few words, but gravely, that he had done nothing but what had been approved by twenty good Casuists, whereof above half were very able Jesuits: And that is Decisme. Before I conclude my Letter, I will propose a question wherein I should be very glad to receive your advice. It cannot be unknown, what the conduct of the Jesuits hath been in regard of this Abbot; to what degree of condescendence they are fallen, and how apt they are to flatter sinners in the desires of their hearts: But the difficulty is to find out that which hath particularly obliged them to this behaviour, on the present occasion. Is it because these complay sans Directors have got such a habit of loose complying with all the wills of their Penitents, that it is not in their power to contradict them, and are as it were forced in spite of themselves to do yet more than their Maxims permit: Is it because they observe no rule in their practice, but to do what they list? Do they believe in good earnest that sinners they guide in this manner, or rather permit to walk in the broad way to destruction, may be saved? and that men need not any more seek the narrow Path? Have they not had greater regard to the Authority of the Living, than the Salvation of the Dead Brother? And since they have been capable of approving the unjust Usurpation he made of the Estate left by his Brother, is it not probable they are capable of demanding his favour to serve their turn on very ill Accounts? When we meet at Paris, we may discourse of this Affair more at large, and then if you be not satisfied with my word, I shall produce you unquestionable witnesses. M. the present Abbot of St. Sulpice is fully informed of all I have told you: M. his Uncle will confirm the same, and also his Father, whom the RR. FF. cannot suspect of partiality against them, for that he is their particular Friend. FINIS. Books Printed for, or Sold by Simon Miller at the Star at the west end of St. Paul's. Quarto. PHysical Experiments; being a plain description of the causes, signs and cures of most Diseases incident to the body of man; with a discourse of Witchcrast: By William Deage, Practitioner of Physic at Hitchin in Harifordshire. Bishop White upon the Sabbath. The Artificial Changeling. The Life of Tamerlane the Great. The Pragmatical Jesuit, a Play, by Richard Carpenter. Large Octavo. Master Shepard on the Sabbath. The Rights of the Crown of England, as it is Established by Law; by E. Bagshaw of the Inner Temple. An Enchiridion of Fortification. The life, and adventures of Buscon, the witty Spaniard. Epicurus M●rals. Small Octav●. Daphnis and Chloe, a Romance. Merry Drollery. Butler of War. Ramsey of Poisons. Record of Urines. Large Twelves. Artimedorus of Dreams. Oxford Jests. Doctor Smith's practice of Physic. The third part of the Bible and New Testament. The duty of every one that will be saved; being Rules, Precepts, Promises and Examples, directing all persons of what degree soever, how to govern their passions, and to live virtuously and soberly in the world. Doctor Spurstow's Meditations. Small Twelves. The Understanding christian's Duty. A help to Prayer. A new method of preserving and restoring health, by the virtue of Coral and Steel. David's Sling.