Page:The Acts and Monuments of John Foxe Volume 3.djvu/633

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THE STORY OF THOMAS RHEDON, MARTYR.
601

Rome, touching the sacrament of the Lord's Supper, the worshipping of saints, auricular confession, with other Wickliff's opinions.[1]

The Story of Thomas Rhedon, a Frenchman and Carmelite Friar, Burnt in Italy, for the Profession of Christ.[2]

We have declared before, how this cruel storm of persecution which first began with us in England, after it had long raged here against many good and godly men, broke out and passed into Bohemia, and afterwards, within a short time, the fire of this persecution, increasing by little and httle, invaded Scotland, and from thence now with greater force and violence this furious devouring flame hath entered Italy, and suffereth not any part of the world to be free from the murder and slaughter of most good and godly men. Rhedon cometh into Italy.It happened about this time that one Thomas Rhedon, a friar of that sect, which taketh its name of the Mount Carmel, by chance came with the Venetian ambassadors into Italy. This man, although he was of that sort and sect, which instead of Christians are called Carmelites, yet was he of a far other religion, and understood the word of God, judging that God ought to be worshipped neither in that mount, nor at Jerusalem only, but in spirit and truth. This man, being a true Carmelite, and favouring with his whole heart that new sweet must,[3] of Jesus Christ, with earnest study and desire seeking after a christian integrity of life, prepared himself first to go into Italy, trusting that he should find there, or else in no place, some, by whose good life and living he might be edified and instructed. For where ought more abundance of virtue and good living to be, than in that place which is counted to be the fort and fountain of all religion? And how could it otherwise be, but that where so gi-eat holiness is professed; whereupon all men's eyes are bent as upon a stage; where St, Peter's seat is, and is thought to be the ruler and governor of all the church, all things should flourish and abound worthy of so great expectation in that place? This holy man, having these things before his eyes, and considering the same with himself, forsook his own country and city, and went unto Rome, conceiving a firm and sure hope, that by the example of so many notable and worthy men, he should greatly profit in godliness and learning; but the success of the matter did utterly frustrate his hope, for all things were clean contrary. Whatsoever he saw, was nothing else but mere dissimulation and hypocrisy. The golden city of Rome.

All things corrupt there.
Instead of gold, he found nothing but coals;[4] and, to say the truth, he found nothing else, there, but gold and silver; for instead of heavenly gifts, there reigned amongst them the pomp and pride of the world; in place of godliness, riot; instead of learning and study, slothfulness and superstition. Tyranny and haughtiness of mind had possessed the place of apostolic simplicity; so that now there remained no more any place or liberty for a man to learn that which he knew not, or to teach that which he perfectly understood. Finally, all things were turned bottom upwards; all things liappened unto him contrary to his expectation, wheresoever he went. But nothing so much offended this good man's mind, as the intolerable ambition and pompous pride in them, whom example
  1. Ex Hector. Boetio.
  2. Ex Antonino, 3 part. Hist. fol. 165.
  3. "Illud novum mustum;" sweet wine. Lat. Edition, page 73.—Ed.
  4. "Coals," discord.—Ed.