from Christ! Lucian’s Alexander Simon Magus,
whose statue was to be seen and adored in Rome, saith
Justin Martyr,
Simoni deo sancto, &c., after
his decease. [6431]Apollonius Tianeus, Cynops, Eumo,
who by counterfeiting some new ceremonies and juggling
tricks of that Dea Syria, by spitting fire, and the
like, got an army together of 40,000 men, and did
much harm: with
Eudo de stellis, of whom
Nubrigensis speaks,
lib. 1. cap. 19. that in
King Stephen’s days imitated most of Christ’s
miracles, fed I know not how many people in the wilderness,
and built castles in the air, &c., to the seducing
of multitudes of poor souls. In Franconia, 1476,
a base illiterate fellow took upon him to be a prophet,
and preach, John Beheim by name, a neatherd at Nicholhausen,
he seduced 30,000 persons, and was taken by the commonalty
to be a most holy man, come from heaven. [6432] “Tradesmen
left their shops, women their distaffs, servants ran
from their masters, children from their parents, scholars
left their tutors, all to hear him, some for novelty,
some for zeal. He was burnt at last by the Bishop
of Wartzburg, and so he and his heresy vanished together.”
How many such impostors, false prophets, have lived
in every king’s reign? what chronicles will
not afford such examples? that as so many
ignes
fatui, have led men out of the way, terrified
some, deluded others, that are apt to be carried about
by the blast of every wind, a rude inconstant multitude,
a silly company of poor souls, that follow all, and
are cluttered together like so many pebbles in a tide.
What prodigious follies, madness, vexations, persecutions,
absurdities, impossibilities, these impostors, heretics,
&c., have thrust upon the world, what strange effects
shall be shown in the symptoms.
Now the means by which, or advantages the devil and
his infernal ministers take, so to delude and disquiet
the world with such idle ceremonies, false doctrines,
superstitious fopperies, are from themselves, innate
fear, ignorance, simplicity, hope and fear, those
two battering cannons and principal engines, with
their objects, reward and punishment, purgatory, Limbus
Patrum, &c. which now more than ever tyrannise;
[6433]"for what province is free from atheism, superstition,
idolatry, schism, heresy, impiety, their factors and
followers?” thence they proceed, and from that
same decayed image of God, which is yet remaining in
us.
[6434] “Os homini sublime dedit, coelumque tueri
Jussit.”------
Our own conscience doth dictate so much unto us, we
know there is a God and nature doth inform us; Nulla
gens tam barbara (saith Tully) cui non insideat
haec persuasio Deum esse; sed nec Scytha, nec Groecus,
nec Persa, nec Hyperboreus dissentiet (as Maximus
Tyrius the Platonist ser. 1. farther adds)
nec continentis nec insularum habitator, let
him dwell where he will, in what coast soever, there
is no nation so barbarous that is not persuaded there