images (which at the first, as I think, were set up,
only to represent things absent) not only ought to
be covered with gold, but also ought of all faithful
and christian people (yea, in this scarceness and
penury of all things), to be clad with silk garments,
and those also laden with precious gems and jewels;
and that beside all this, they are to be lighted with
wax candles, both within the church and without the
church, yea, and at noon days; as who should say, here
no cost can be too great; whereas in the mean time
we see Christ’s faithful and lively images,
bought with no less price than with his most precious
blood (alas, alas!) to be an hungred, a-thirst, a-cold,
and to lie in darkness, wrapped in all wretchedness,
yea, to lie there till death take away their miseries:
while they preached these will-works, that come but
of our own devotion, although they be not so necessary
as the works of mercy, and the precepts of God, yet
they said, and in the pulpit, that will-works were
more principal, more excellent, and (plainly to utter
what they mean) more acceptable to God than works of
mercy; as though now man’s inventions and fancies
could please God better than God’s precepts,
or strange things better than his own: while they
thus preached that more fruit, more devotion cometh
of the beholding of an image, though it be but a Pater-noster
while, than is gotten by reading and contemplation
in scripture, though ye read and contemplate therein
seven years’ space: finally, while they
preached thus, souls tormented in purgatory to have
most need of our help, and that they can have no aid,
but of us in this world: of the which two, if
the one be not false, yet at the least it is ambiguous,
uncertain, doubtful, and therefore rashly and arrogantly
with such boldness affirmed in the audience of the
people; the other, by all men’s opinions, is
manifestly false: I let pass to speak of much
other such like counterfeit doctrine, which hath been
blasted and blown out by some for the space of three
hours together. Be these the Christian and divine
mysteries, and not rather the dreams of men?
Be these the faithful dispensers of God’s mysteries,
and not rather false dissipators of them? whom God
never put in office, but rather the devil set them
over a miserable family, over an house miserably ordered
and entreated. Happy were the people if such
preached seldom.
And yet it is a wonder to see these, in their generation, to be much more prudent and politic than the faithful ministers are in their generation; while they go about more prudently to stablish men’s dreams, than these do to hold up God’s commandments.