but imperfect, the bishop of Salisbury, who supplied us with some memoirs, and promising us many more, dying while this work was in hand; but if any one can give us any farther notices of any thing that relates to him, we shall hereafter insert them with all due acknowledgment and gratitude.
ABJURATION, for heresy, i. 225, n. Wick- liffe; 345, 6, Thorpe; 389, n. Cobham; 392, 3, do.; nature and meaning of, 424, Supplementary Extracts; Bilney's, ii. 23, Bilney, and n.; his repentance for, 29- 32, Bilney.
Absolution, by a priest, i. 339-41, Thorpe; received by Hooker, iii. 523; by Sander- son, iv. 465, 6.
Accidents without subject, in the Eucharist,
i. 186, Wickliffe, and n.; 299, 300, Thorpe.
Acta Sanctorum, account of; See Bol- landus.
Admonition, mutual duty of, iv. 358, Hammond.
Adrian, Pope, his ambitious designs, i. 29, 30, Inett.
Albigenses, the, i. 183-6, Inett.
Alesius, Alexander, ii. 247-58, Cromwell; 604, Latimer.
Alexander III. pope; his election; schism thence occasioned; i. 28, 9, Inett; his treatment of the emperor Frederic, 47, 8, Inett; 70-3, do.
Alms, gathering of, by condemned persons, going to execution, ii. 48, Bilney, and n. free; See Eleemosynam. Altar, and Lord's table, ii. 347, n. Rogers; Williams and 603, Latimer; 652, do.; Laud, iv. 249, n. Ferrar. Altars, portable, ii. 225, Cromwell, and n. Anabaptists, the; Ridley opposed them, ii.
627, Latimer; their excesses, iv. 496, 7, Baxter; disturb the Church service, 532, Hale.
Anglican Church; See Church, Anglican. Angling, love of, iv. 93, Wotton, and n. Anne of Bohemia, wife of K. Richard II. i. 255, 6, Wickliffe.
Antichrist, whether the Pope is, i. 407, Supplem. Extracts.
Antiquity, value of in religion, iii. 16, Rid- ley. See also, Fathers.
Appeals to Rome, controversy respect- ing, i. 40, Inett, and n.; 54-8, do. ; 138, 9, do.; 142, do.; 365, 6, Cobham, and n.
Armada, Spanish, activity of the Puritans at that crisis; iii. 587, Whitgift. Arminius and the Arminians, incidents respecting; iv. 95-7, Wotton; Mon- tague, Overall, &c. 283, 4, Hall; altera- tion in judgment of Sanderson, Usher, Pierce, Potter, &c. 437-41, Sanderson, and n.
Arthur, Thomas, converted by Bilney, ii. 3, Bilney; examination and interrogatories, 6-14, do.
Articles of the Church of England, enco- mium on; iii. 84, Ridley; 90, do. Art. VI. Of the sufficiency of the Holy Scriptures, iii. 38, Ridley.
XIV. Of works of supererogation, ii. 28, Bilney; 519, Latimer.
XIX. Of the Church; i. 63, n. Inett; 285, n. Thorpe; ii. 601, 2, Latimer; iii. 31, n. Ridley.
XX. Of the authority of the Church, i. 270, Thorpe, and n.; 344, do. and n.; ii. 347, 8, n. Rogers; 643, 4, Latimer; iii. 35, Ridley, and n.; 38, do.
XXI. The authority of general coun- cils; iii. 37, Ridley; 40, do.
XXIII. Of ministering in the congre- gation, ii. 41, Bilney.
XXIV. Of speaking in the congrega- tion in such a tongue as the people under- standeth, i. 149, Bentley, and n. See also Service divine, in an unknown tongue.
XXV. Of the sacraments, ii. 56, Latimer.
XXVI. Of the unworthiness of minis- ters, that hinders not the effect of the sacraments, i. 215, n. Wickliffe; ii. 35, Bilney; 512, 3, Latimer.
-XXVIII. Of the Lord's Supper, ii. 561, Latimer. See also Eucharist, the.
XXXI. Of the one oblation of Christ, ii. 564, Latimer. See also Sacrifice of the
XXXII. Of the marriage of priests, ii. 315, 6, Rogers, and n. See also Mar- riages of Priests, &c.
Mass. spurious veneration for, how to be encountered, i. 1-7, Inett. Apology for the Church of England, bishop Jewel's; occasion of, iii. 313, Jewel; value of, 346-8, do.; Peter Martyr's letter respecting, 366.
XXXVII. Of the civil magistrates; royal supremacy, ii. 307, n. Rogers; lawful
to wear weapons and to serve in the wars, i. 456, 7, Colet, and n.
Art. XXXIX. Of a Christian man's oath, i. 330, Thorpe, n. See also Oaths, whether lawful, &c.
Articles of 1538, account of, ii. 258, 9, n. Cromwell. See Institution of a Christian Man.
the six, act of, account of, ii. 264, 5, Cromwell, and n.; Cranmer's opposi- tion to, in. 161-5, Cranmer; 183, do. the Lambeth, account of, iii. 590, 1, n. Whitgift.
five of Perth, account of, iv. 281, n. Hall.
objected against Wickliffe, i. 203-8, Wickliffe, and n.; 214-6, do. and n.; against Thorpe, i. 281, 2, Thorpe; against lord Cobham, i. 356, 7, Cobham; 381-7, do.; against dean Colet, i. 450-7, Colet; against Wolsey, i. 576, Wolsey; against lord Cromwell, ii. 285, Cromwell; against John Rogers, ii. 326, Rogers; against bishop Hooper, ii. 377, Hooper; 382, 3, n. do.; against Rowland Taylor, ii. 414—6, Taylor; 419, 20, do. ; against bishop Latimer, ii. 479, Latimer; 523, 4, do.; 550, do.; 633, 4, do.; against Cranmer, iii. 229-32; against Jewel, iii. 329, 30. Arundel, archbishop, his constitutions, i. 256, Wickliffe, and n.; 273-5, Thorpe, and n.; 283-5, do. and n.
Ashton, John, a Wickliffite, account of, i. 236, Wickliffe; 280, Thorpe. Assembly of divines at Westminster, iv.
327, Hammond; Sanderson nominated a member, does not attend, 421, Sanderson. Atheism and atheists, iii. 482, Hooker; 540-2, do.; Mr. Lilly, iv. 266, Hall; 599, Rochester; 607-11, do. Atterbury, bishop, quoted in n.; 428, Sup- plem. Extracts; character of Luther; scurrility of Sir Thomas More, ii. 74, More.
Augustin, St., archbishop of Canterbury, i. 18, 9, Inett, and n.
Authority of the Church, nature and inci-
dents of; Arundel's constitutions, i. 272-4, Thorpe; 280, 1, do. and n.; 289, 90, do. and n.; 291, 2, do. and n.; 298, do. and n.; 344, do. and n.; 371, 2, Cobham, and n.; 376, do.; 382, 3, do. ; 394, 5, do. and n.; ii. 310, 1, Rogers; 632, Latimer; 642, 3, do.; 654, 5, do. and n. iii.; 21, Ridley; 93, n. Ridley. See also, Art. XX.
Aylmer, bishop, quoted in n.; rise of Luther, i. 421, Supplem. Extracts.
BACON, Lord, quoted in n.; Gondomar, i. 303, 4, Thorpe; the Puritans despise the early Reformers, iii. 403, Gilpin ; mathematics, iv. 519, Hale; the great, strangers to themselves, 550, do. Bainham, John, Latimer's visit to, in New- gate, iii. 28-30, Ridley.
Bale, John, his character, i. 353, Cob- ham. Bancroft's, archbishop, books against the
Puritans, iii. 538, Hooker; 582, Whit- gift; 588, do. quoted in n. the Fa- thers slighted by the Puritans, iii. 403, Gilpin.
Baptism, doctrine, and incidents of; the element of Water, and the Holy Ghost, ii. 636, Latimer; 637, do.; signs exhi- bitive, n. 646, do.; in the vulgar tongue, iii. 46, 7, Ridley; Transubstantiation of the water, in, 636, Latimer, and n.; termed volowing, iii. 46, n. Ridley. Barlowe, bishop Wm., quoted in .; Re- formers' wish to have lay persons present at their examinations, i. 275, Thorpe; Master Parson, 392, Cobham; Wolsey's precedent in dissolving monasteries, ii. 229, Cromwell.
Barnes, Dr. Robert, quoted in n. God's image, i. 385, Cobham; Wolsey's three bishoprics, 478, 9, Wolsey.
Barristers, whether they may plead in what they deem unjust causes, ii. 56, 7, More, and n.; iv. 516, Hale; 562, do. and n.
Barrow, Henry, and the Barrowists, iii. 538, Hooker, and n.; 588, 9, Whitgift; 590, do.
Dr. Isaac, iv. 344, n. Hammond. quoted in n. The pope and emperor, the two great lights, i. 8, Inett.
Battle, trial by, i. 364, n., Cobham. Baxter, Richard, review of his own cha- racter, &c. iv. 475-505; Savoy Confe- rence, 456, 7, Sanderson; meetings with Tillotson, &c. for a comprehension, 662-5, Tillotson; his Saints' Rest, 481, Baxter.
Becket, Thomas, not a Becket, i. 31, n.; Becket and K. Henry II., i. 29–58,
Inett; Becket's shrine, offerings at, i. 368, n. Cobham.
Becon, Thomas, quoted in n. ; the greater and lesser curse, i. 219, Wickliffe; texts of Scripture in houses and churches, iv. 195-7, Ferrar.
Bedell, bishop, chaplain at Venice to sir H. Wotton, iv. 84, 5, Wotton; 99 102, do.
Bell, book, and candle, i. 219, n., Wick- liffe.
Bells, baptizing of, iii. 331, 2, Jewel. Benefices, patrons of; See Patrons.
reservation of, i. 135, 6, Inett, and n.; 145, 6, do. and n.; 170, Wick- liffe, and n.; 193, do. and n.; in the hands of foreigners, and non-residents, i. 135, 6, Inett, and n.; 191-4, Wickliffe, and n.; 481, Wolsey, and n.
impropriations of; See Impro-
priations. Bennett and Collett, ii. 387, Hooper, and n.
Bentley, Dr. Richard, doctrinal corruptions of popery, i. 147-63.
Berengarius, his true doctrine of the Eucharist, iii. 14, Ridley; 16, do. Bertram's book on the Eucharist, ii. 581, 2, Latimer, and n.; 586, do.; 666, do. and n.; iii. 17, Ridley, and n.
Beza, Theodore, and H. Saravia, iii. 515, 6, Hooker; Beza and Whitgift, 598, 9, Whitgift.
Bible, in English (ancient), Anne, wife of K. Richard II. i. 255, 6, Wickliffe; ii. 195, Tindal, and n.
Wickliffe's translation of, i. 256-8, Wickliffe; act against, (1414) 397, Cob- ham.
Tindall's, ii. 194-7, Tindall, and n.; 201-5, do. and n.; 297, n. Crom- well.
Coverdale's, ii. 197, n., Tindall; 295, 6, Cromwell.
Cranmer's, ii. 296, Cromwell. Matthews's, ii. 297, Cromwell. king James's, iv. 404, Sanderson. Protestant, Ward's errata of the, iii. 375, n., Gilpin.
Erasmus's translation of the New Tes- tament; See Erasmus. Bilney, Thomas, Life, ii. 1-42; Bilney and Latimer, 64, Latimer.
Bishops' book, the; See Necessary Doc- trine.
Bishops and bishoprics, appointment, pa- tronage, &c. of, i. 119-27, Inett, and n.; 133, do.; 134, 5, do.; kings do not make, but only place, i. 64, 5, Inett; 124-6, n. do.
elections of, by deans and chapters; See Capitular elections.
their investiture, i. 33-5, Inett, and n.; 134, 5, do.
their votes in parliament, bishop Hall's speech for, iv. 300-2, n. Hall.
Cranmer's, Bonner's, &c. commis- sions for, from K. Henry VIII. ii. 295, Cromwell, and n.; 377, 8, n. Hooper. Blackstone, sir Wm., quoted in n.; Pro- visors, statute of, i. 145, Inett; heresy, punishable with burning, by common law of England, 222, n. Wickliffe; heresy, what, 225, 6, n. do.; heretics, burning of, ii. 329, Rogers.
Blessing of children, by their parents, ii. 73, More, and n.; iv. 173, Ferrar; 180, 1,
Blood of Hailes; See Hailes. Blunt, Rev. I. J. his history of the Re- formation, commended, i. 34, n. Inett. Boleyn, Anne, i. 495, 6, Wolsey; Tindall's
Obedience of a Christian, lady Anne, and Mr. Zouch, ii. 197-9, Tindall, and n. Bollandus's Acta Sanctorum, account of, iv. 514, n., Hale.
Bonner, bishop; Wolsey's cross falls on his head, i. 611, Wolsey; made bishop of London, ii. 293, 4, Cromwell; Bonner's mother and Ridley, iii. 6-8, Ridley; Bonner and Cranmer, 246, 7, Cranmer; his injunctions, quoted in n. ii. 189, Tindall.
Books, dearness, scarcity, &c. of, i. 409-11, Supplementary Extracts, and n.; Refor mers', seizure, &c. of, i. 418, 19, Supple- mentary Extracts, and n.; by order of Wolsey, 637, Wolsey; Wickliffe's, 227, 8, Wickliffe, and n.; 253, n. do.; Arundel's constitution against, 256, do., and n.; 356, Cobham.
Boston, town of, their pardons, ii. 221-7, Cromwell.
Boyle, Hon. Robert, and Sanderson, iv. 453, 4, Sanderson; 471, 2, do. Bradford, John, the martyr, ii. 418, 9, Taylor; Free-will-men, Bradford, and Ridley, iii. 59-61, Ridley, and n.; his restitution, after hearing Latimer preach, ii. 541, n. Latimer.
Bristowe's motives to the Catholic faith, quoted in n.; the primitive ages much more devout than the modern, and how? i. 153, Bentley; Papists, when leave off frequenting the Protestant service, iii. 317-9, Jewel; Golden Legend, miracles, &c., 418, 9, Gilpin.
British Church; See Church, British. Broughton, Hugh, iii. 426, 7, Gilpin. Browne, Robert, and the Brownists, iii. 538-42, Hooker, and n.; 590, Whit- gift; returns to the Church of England, 591, 2, do. and n.
Bull of P. Pius V. against Q. Elizabeth, iii. 316-20, Jewel, and n.
Bull, bishop, his variations introduced in using the Liturgy, iv. 432-4, Sanderson, and n.
Burghley, lord; See Cecil.
Buridan's ass, iv. 376, 7, Hammond,
Burke, quoted in n.; investiture of bishops, i. 33, 4, Inett.
Burnet, bishop, quoted in n. More, Sir Thomas, had little learning, ii. 91, More; determined cruelties of Q. Mary's govern- ment, 416-18, Taylor; iii. 302, Moun- tain; Burnet's, &c. scheme for a new book of Homilies, iv. 447-50, San- derson.
CALVIN, John, and Calvinism; Calvin, and the Interim, iii. 26, 7, Ridley; troubles at Frankfort, 78, n. do.; vast influence of, iii. 403, n. Gilpin; iv. 544, Sanderson; God's will, antecedent and consequent, iii. 464, 5, Hooker, and n.; Calvinism, doctrinal and disciplinarian, 513, n. do.; Hooker taxed with hostility to Calvin, 512-5, n. do.; Luther and Calvin are but men, iv. 320, n. Hammond; the five points, 408, Sanderson; Hooker, Calvin, and Sanderson; sublapsarian and supra- lapsarian way, 467, do., Calvin's Insti- tutes, 416, 17, do. See also Predestina- rian Controversy.
Camden, quoted in n. Sir Thomas More, anecdotes of, ii. 111, More.
Canaanites, destruction of the, iv. 613, Ro- chester; 617, 8, do. Canon Law, general account of, i. 128–30, n. Inett; obligation of, on the realm of England, 394, Cobham; opposed to and elevated above the Scriptures, ii. 191, Tindall, and n.; and law of England, contradictory, iii. 211-9, Cranmer; 213 -5, do.
Canons, secular, i. 119, 20, n. Inett. Cap, ceremony of putting off the, on receiv- ing letters, i. 303, 4. Thorpe, and n.; at passing sentence on criminals, 387, Cob- ham, and n.; in veneration of the ele- ments in the Eucharist, ii. 319, 20, Ro- gers, and n.
Capitular elections, i. 36, Inett, and n.; 100-3, do.; 118-24, do., and n. Card Sermon, Latimer's; See Sermons. Cardinals, mischief done by, wherever they come, i. 555, Wolsey, and n. Carleton, bishop, his life of Gilpin, iii. 370
Cartwright, Thomas, and subscription to the 39 Articles, iii. 349, 50, Jewel; Cart- wright and Gilpin, 402, Gilpin; Cart- wright and Whitgift, 490-3, Hooker; general account of, 559-66, Whitgift; inclines to return to the Church of Eng- land, 589, 90, Whitgift; 591-3, ditto, and n.
Casaubon, Isaac, quoted in n., de Libertate Ecclesiastica, i. 49, Inett. Catechizing, importance, usefulness, &c. of. Usher's method, i. 438, 9, n. Colet; iii. 47, Ridley; K. James' directions for, 653, 4, Donne, and n.; iv. 37, Herbert; 39, do.; 324-6, Hammond, and n.; 329, 30, ditto; 483, 4, Baxter; neglect of, during the usurpation, iv. 326, n. Hammond.
Catechism of K. Edward VI., iii. 188, n. Cranmer.
Cranmer's Short Instruction, ii.
Hammond's Practical, iv. 329,
30, Hammond. Cecil, lord Burghley, letter of rebuke to, from Cranmer, iii. 154, n. Cranmer. Celibacy, vows of, iv. 245, Ferrar, and n. Challenges to the Papists; Jewel's, iv. 343, Jewel; Montague's, 343, 4, n. do.; Bar- low's, 344, n. do.
Chastity, vow of, iv. 245, n. Ferrar. Charles I., K., his Icon Basilikè, iv. 434, Sanderson; at Little Gidding, 1633, iv. 189, 90, Ferrar; in 1646, 193-8, do.; in 1642, 233-6, do.; K. Charles and the Ferrar Harmonies, 1631, 211–29, do.
Chaucer, Geoffrey, and John Gower, in- fluence of in the Reformation, i. 414—6, Supplementary Extracts.
quoted in n.; pilgrims to Canter- bury, i. 311, 2, Thorpe. Cheke, sir John, quoted in n.; hard case of the married clergy under Q. Mary, ii. 315, Rogers; apostasy lamentable of both
houses of parliament under Q. Mary, iii. 109, 10, n. Ridley.
Christ's real presence in the Eucharist; See Presence, real.
Christmas-day, debates respecting its ob- servance, iv. 35, 6, Herbert, and n.; its observance by Sir Matthew Hale, 552, 3, Hale. Christopherson, bishop, quoted in n.; divine service in an unknown tongue, i. 149, 50, Bentley; Thou, Lord, hast deceived us, 288, 9, Thorp; Christ's cross, 386, Cob- ham babbling sir Johns, 392, do.; The Lord, our Lord, ii. 81, 2, More; ministers, not priests, ii. 597, 8, Latimer; portraits of K. Edward VI., iii. 12, 3, Ridley; insubordination of Protestant children, servants, &c. 554, 5, Whitgift; the king's arms in churches, 226, Cran- mer; prayer in an unknown_tongue, better than in a known, 88-90, Ridley. Church, the, nature and incidents of, i. 268-71, Thorpe; militant and triumph- ant, 292, 3, do.; threefold division of, 361-3, Cobham, and n.; 377, 8, do.; marks of, iii. 31, Ridley, and n.; pros- perity, no mark of, ii. 331, 2, Rogers; 337-45, do.; visible and invisible, 269, 70, n. Thorpe; iii. 32, Ridley; visi- bility and perpetuity of; Usher, Abbot, &c. iv. 285-8, Hall, and n.; infallibility alleged, i. 155, Bentley; 269, 70, Thorpe, and n.; ii. 601, 2, Latimer; iii. 33-7, Ridley; unity of, ii. 553, Latimer. Church and state, one body, i. 244, Wick- liffe.
Churches, national, i. 59-76, Inett; 122,3, n. do.; 133, do.; 137, do. Church, a parliamentary, i. 21, Inett; iv. 678, 9, Tillotson.
to believe the, and to believe in the, i. 376, 7, Cobham, and n. Church establishments, uses, &c. of, i. 60, Inett; 62-9, do.; 122—4, n. do. Church, the, its independence, limits, &c. of, i. 64-79, Inett.
music, organs, &c., i. 313-6, Thorpe, and n.; Donne, at St. Paul's, iii. 658, Donne cathedral, &c. music, iv. 12, Herbert; 38, 9, do.
property, conditional, i. 207,8, Wick- liffe, and n. designs against; spoliation, &c. of, i. 160, 1, Bentley; 579-81, Wolsey; Ridley's resistance to, iii. 76, 7, Ridley, and n.; Cranmer's and Ridley's, n. 141, 2, Cranmer: 152-5, Cranmer, and n.; Solvat Ecclesia, 362, 3, Jewel, and n.; 381-3, Gilpin, and n.; Whitgift, E. of Leicester, and Q. Elizabeth, 385-9, Hooker, and n. See also Monasteries, dissolution of.
concealments, iv. 276,7, Hall, and n. See also Sacrilege.
restitution of, iv. 177, 8, Ferrar, and n. See also Impropriations First-
Church, the British; no dependence on
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