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(3) Ill moral quality and influence both of clergy and church
Infamous lives of the priests, etc.

Fundamental errors of the current theology

Demoralizing tendency of the rites which carried out the theology
Certeyns, Diriges, Trentals, Obiits, etc..

Indulgences with a copy of one actual in England.
Friars absolving from murder, perjury, etc.

Demoralization involved in the doctrine of "sanctuary

Four or five hundred let off thus in one small town

Romanism at the end of its victim's life

The performances around the dying bed
In extremis.

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The mother dying thus in presence of the Protestant son, and outbreak

His arrest and excommunication

(4) The intolerable tyranny of the Romish Church over the mind

Articles of Inquiry, and their force

Summary of the condition to which all this had brought the England of A

I 500

Dawn-streaks

Congregationalists before Congregationalism

Harbingers - Grossteste, Wyclif, Colet, Erasmus, Latimer and Ridley, T
dale and More

Luther nearly rediscovered original Congregationalism, and why he did not
Calvin, on the contrary, an aristocrat .

How Calvin's aristocracy of Presbyterianism found its way into England
Cartwright the leader of English Puritanism

Some confusion in the Presbyterian idea then existent

Three grand objections to the Presbyterian way for England:

(1) It was to come from the State .

(2) It was to be left under the control of the State.

(3) It was as ill suited to reform as that church which it would displace included all the baptized, and it waited for all to move before a could move.

Three great things needed, then :

(1) That some better philosophy of reform be pointed out

(2) That the spell of conservatism be shattered so that motion could beg (3) That heroism be stimulated, until men be ready to risk even life for Lord

LECTURE II.

ROBERT BROWNE and his Co-workers

Robert Browne an elaborately slandered man

Difficulty of studying him on account of the scarcity of his books

Born at Tolethorpe, Rutlandshire

Born a gentleman. His ancestors, etc.

Went to Corpus Christi, Cambridge, in 1570

Domestic Chaplain to the Duke of Norfolk

Cited before Ecclesiastical Commissioners, and discharged

Teaching for three years (most likely) at Southwark .

Lecturing in an Islington gravel-pit; going home on account of the plague
Back to Cambridge, and a student with R. Greenham

Who encourages him to preach .

He becomes popular, even in Benet Church, Cambridge

Pressed to take a Cambridge pulpit, and labored there for six months

Sent back their money, and departed, dissatisfied with Bishop's authorizing
Formally refused the Bishop's license

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Soon returned to Norwich, whither Browne followed, and boarded with him and his wife .

Here Browne thinks out his new (old) polity

Imprisoned for preaching his new way at Bury St. Edmonds

His kinsman, Lord Burghley, befriends him
Browne forms a little church at Norwich

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To escape persecution they émigrate in a body to Middelberg
Browne writes three treatises in two years there
Harrison seems to have paid for the printing
Trouble at Middelberg, and how it arose

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Browne with four or five families, left for Scotland
Cited before the session of the Kirk of Edinburgh
Discouraged, Browne returns to England

Sick, persecuted, and sent home to his father

No better; gets to Stamford

Seems to have preached Brownism again at Northampton

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Cited before Bishop Linsell; refused to appear; excommunicated

Master of St. Olave's, Southwark, on six astonishing conditions

Reconciled and readmitted to Church of England

Writes a crazy letter to Lord Burghley

Burghley gives him a living at Achurch

Here he lives more than forty years, and dies at last in Northampton jail

His co-workers-Harrison .

And Glover.

What kind of a man was Robert Browne?

Usually supposed to have been a bigot and a sneak

Hard words said about him by various Church and Dissenting writers
Was he honest in becoming a Separatist? .

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Who was Richard Greenham ?

Good sign that Browne should have been drawn to such a man
Good sign that such a man thought so well of young Browne
Argument from R. B.'s Trve Declaration to show that he was genuine and hon-
est in his early Christian experience

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Can be no reasonable doubt that it was as a man who walked with God, that
Browne started out as a reformer

His eight books .

What his Brownism really was

(1) Its exact point of departure from Presbyterian Puritanism, the duty to attain the highest attainable purity of spiritual life

(2) The Church of England so corrupt as to make Separation a duty
(3) No hope of reform from the State, and no obligation to wait for any
Browne the first writer clearly to state and defend the true doctrine of
toleration

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(4) No reasonable hope of a true reform from the Presbyterian plan
(5) Then it must be every true Christian's duty to separate
(6) Any company of sincere believers, separating thus and rightly associat-
ing, becomes a true church.

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(8) Church authority resides in the lordship of Christ over these local affiliations of believers

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(9) The officers-pastor, teacher, etc.

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(10) The sacraments as seals

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(11) Duty of church members to keep guard over each other

(12) Fraternity between such churches - the other focus of the Congrega tional ellipse-fully taught by Browne

This a logical and remarkable system to have been elaborated, from the Bible alone, in the 16th century, by a young man of nine and twenty

Some qualities of the system

Some excellences of it

Causes of the Middelberg shipwreck

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The Congregationalism of the Independents of England, and of the Congreg tionalists of America, to-day essentially Brownism

Its essence will leaven all the polities of the future

What, on the whole, must we think of this man?
Clearly two sides to his story

Fuller's mean portrait false

Sir Geo. Paule's testimony in his favor

Browne had no wife, in Fuller's young manhood, to be separated from
He kept his parish records faithfully, as the records witness to-day.
Browne's love of music

Three hypotheses exhaust his case

(1) But he was not always, and in all, bad

(2) Nor did he relapse, after an honest beginning, into scandalous sin

(3) Real key to his strange career, that the larger portion of his life was one of mental disorder, sometimes almost, or quite, deepening into absolute insanity

Considerations in proof of this:

(a) His natural constitution nervous, fitful, fiery and easily gliding into mental disease

(b) His physical constitution a feeble one

(c) He underwent great sufferings

(d) Insane peculiarities about him

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His letter to Burghley about the Latin "tables," etc. His disappearance for more than eight years. His strange entries on the parish records

His insane conduct at St. Olave's

Stephen Bredwell's testimony

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Bredwell, a physician, calls Browne "madde

He was sane therefore, and insane. A like case

We need not then blush for him, nor seek to dislodge him from his natural primacy among the great thinkers of Liberalism, and modern Congregation

alism

A fit epitaph

LECTURE III. THE MARTIN MAR-PRELATE CONTROVERSY

Mr. Punch supposed to discomfit the old master in presence of the boys

Martin Mar-prelate bounces similarly in upon the Bishops

Ecclesiastical satire as yet unknown in the English tongue

Erasmus and his Moria Encomium, etc.

Luther's Colloquium inter Lutherum et Diabolum, etc.

Beza's Epistola M. B. Passauantij, etc.

Walter Map's Apocalypsis Golia Episc., etc.
Langland's Vision of Piers Plowman, etc.
Sir David Lindsay and Geo. Buchanan

A Commission sente to the Pope, etc.
The State of the Church of England, etc.
Bishop Aylmer's Harborovve, etc.

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How this tract went everywhere - Earl of Essex; Cambridge and Oxford students, etc.

Four assaulted Bishops organize for reply

Proclamation against Martin

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Main object of it to criticise the Dean of Sarum

The Bishops' answer - An Admonition, etc., by the hands of T. C..
Conferred great respectability upon Martin

Third Martin- Certaine Minerall and Metaphisicall School Points, etc.
Fourth Martin-Hay any Worke for Cooper, etc.
Severe on T. C. and his wife, etc.

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Now comes forward Antimartinvs, etc., heavy with good advice
The effort to counteract Martin by comedies

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Plaine Percevall the Peace-maker of England, etc.

The First parte of Pasquils Apologie, etc.

Some serious answers to Martin: R. Harvey's Theological discourse, etc. L.
Wright's A Friendly Admonition to Martin, etc., and T. Turswell's A
Mirror for Martinists, etc.

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Misapprehensions as to these Martins

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Puritans nothing to do with Martin, but repudiated him

Martin not the work of the Jesuits!

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These Martins not "foul-mouthed," "obscene" and "shameless," etc., neither

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It is a pity as much can not be said of the tracts gotten up by the Bishops to answer them.

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Udall thought no minister wrote them; there seems to be colorable internal evidence that some lawyer wrote them

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And Martin, when speaking in all seriousness, declares himself to have neither wife nor child

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Henry Barrowe was a bachelor barrister, who, in point of sentiment, could have written them

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Similarities between Barrowe's acknowledged books and the Martins-in

epithets .

And in severe invective

Barrowe's books were widely criticised at the time for the very qualities which distinguish Martin

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Further, (1) Martin and Barrowe were always asking for a public conference
(2) Both talk identically about Cartwright and the principal Puritans .
(3) Barrowe refers incidentally to Martin, but never with dislike, or so as to
damage this hypothesis, while, in a Petition, he defends him.

(4) Martin almost anticipated Barrowe's language in accepting martyrdom
(5) Martin himself declares that he is a temporall man [i.e., no minister] and
that he is in easy private circumstances — both of which were exactly
true of Barrowe

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(6) There was special security in Barrowe's being Martin, who had already
been for years in the Fleet-where nobody would think of looking
for Martin

If Barrowe were Martin, since he and Penry took the close secret to Heaven
with them in 1593, it is small wonder it has been so well kept since.
At all events, this controversy had marvelous influence in disenthralling
England from its ancient intellectual servitude to the hierarchy.

LECTURE IV. THE MARTYRS OF CONGREGATIONALISM

Without shedding of blood is no remission

20

Browne had outlined a polity, and Martin damaged the spell of the Bishops'
power; now heroes were needed to put all in motion.

Aside from many who were worn out in prison, there were six Congregational
Martyrs: Dennis, Copping, Thacker, Barrowe, Greenwood and Penry
Little known of Dennis

Copping and Thacker imprisoned

Tried and executed.

John Greenwood and his arrest

Henry Barrowe goes to see him, and is himself arrested without warrant .

The two examined at Lambeth

Again examined four months later

Barrowe examined further. The scene, from Barrowe's own pen

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Barrowe and Greenwood address Mr. Cartwright, Mr. Travers, and other Puritans

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Fifty-two Separatist prisoners parcelled out, for personal labor, among fortythree clergymen

The "Briefe" furnished in aid of these conferences

The prisoners manage to get a little printing done in Dort

Some interviews.

The insufferable meanness of Mr. Andrews

Barrowe's reasons, in brief, for refusing to conform

More conferences, in 1590.

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Some mitigation in 1592 of the closeness of imprisonment, and Greenwood out
on bail ..
Opportunity taken to have a Barrowist church formed, out of Separatists who
had long met in secret places

The hearing of this alarms the Bishops, who hurry Greenwood back to jail,
and F. Johnson with him

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Prison pen-work- The True Description, etc., A Collection of certaine Sclanderovs Articles, etc.

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In 1591 another quarto, as to which something curious happened

Barrowism and how it differed from Brownism on one hand, and Genevan

Puritanism on the other

Barrowe and Greenwood indicted for felony

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