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services, 336, and character, 435: his account of Cologne,
364 assists the Archbishop of Cologne in his proposed
reformation, 367: his account of the Archbishop, 367-8:
Pontanus's testimony concerning him, 432: his association
with Luther, 498-500: his oration on the death of Luther,
480, 503: his estimate of Luther, 525: his statement of four
changes of doctrine, 529, 530: letter ascribed to him, 538:
Beausobre and Mr. C. Butler's representations of him, 539-
544: Mosheim's account of him, 544.

Mentz, Albert, Archbishop of, 6: Luther's Letter to him, 64:
his permission of reformation at Magdeburg, &c. 257, 266:
particulars concerning his appointment, 353: at first favour-
able, afterwards hostile to the reformation, 398.

Merit, the term admitted in the Confession of Augsburg, and
by Luther, in a qualified sense, 44-5, 160.

Mersburg, Adolphus, bishop of, 392: Augustus of Saxony,
Bishop of, 399: Heldingus, Bishop of, 400-1. See Anhalt,
George of.

Metz, attempted reformation of, 310: calamitous issue of the
attempt, 311.

Meyer, Nicholas, chancellor of Munster, 383.

Minden, city of, outlawed by the Imperial Chamber, 203.
Ministers, how far they should be stationary, 147: what spoils
them, 147 on their authority, 155-6: Luther on the title
of reverend, given to them, 232: Ecolampadius's address to,

122.

Misnia, persecution there, 169: the bishop of, opposes reforma-
tion in ducal Saxony, 253.

More, Sir T. on the death of Zuinglius and Ecolampadius, 124.
Mosheim, his account of the effects produced by the public
reading of the Confession of Augsburg, 24: his character
of Melancthon, 544.

Mourning for the dead, Luther on, 519.

Munster, Anabaptists of, 183-4: bishop of, his attempts for
reformation, 380-384: he loses his bishopric, 384.

Musculus, on the self-confidence of the reformed, 119-20: on
Erasmus's Treatise on Concord, 165: would not join the
Lutherans on the sacrament, 216.

Myconius, Frederic, pastor of Gotha, assists in the reformation
of ducal Saxony, 255-6: his illness, and Luther's letter to
him, 335 a letter written by him in his last illness, 484-486.

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Naumburg, reformation of 306: Amsdorf made bishop of
Navius, Caspar, 304.

Nordlingen, reformation of, 179.

Maimbourg, his imputation on the protestants at Augsburg, 5,
6 his account of the Emperor's entry at Augsburg, 8; and
of the procession of the host, 11: his remark on the Elector
of Saxony's attending the Emperor at mass, 13: his testi-
mony to the submissiveness of Luther and Melancthon to civil
authority, 15: his indignation at a paper of Luther's, 62:
his misrepresentation respecting ducal Saxony, 252; and
Brandenburg, 265: his sentiment concerning bishops, 362:
his eulogy of Gropper, 376: his account of Luther's death,
470-1.

Major, George, a divine of Wittemberg, 435-6.

Malvenda, the Roman Catholic leader at Ratisbon, (1546,)421:
his doctrine of justification, 436-7: his intercourse with
Diazius, 458-460.

Malvina, 461.

Man, his sinfulness and misery, 236.

Mansfeld, the counts of, 7, 471-2.

Mantua, duke of, objects to a council in that city, 193.

Mary, Virgin, Luther's testimony to the impious and idola-
trous regard paid to her, 59, 507: her freedom from original
sin, 443.

Mass, the Elector of Saxony required to attend the Emperor at,
12: Ecolampadius on its abominations, 144-5: Luther on,
220, 231, 546.

Massacre of the Waldenses, 443-449.

Maurel, a Waldensian minister, his address to Ecolampadius,
135.

Maurice, of Saxony, See Saxony.

"Mecklenburg, duke of, 63: reformation of, 177.

Medler, Nicholas, superintendant of Nuremberg, 306.
Meinier, president of the parliament of Aix, 444, &c.
Melancthon, at the diet of Augsburg, 7: Maimbourg's testimony
to his subordination, 15: composes the Confession of Augs-
burg, 20: his concessions, 55-6: contrasted with Luther,
64: his anxieties at Augsburg, 68-74: his Defence of the
Confession, 80: invited to England by Henry VIII, 185: his
letter on the Law of the Six Articles, 186-7: invited to Paris,
by Francis I, 188, 191-2: his tract on the power of Bishops,
218 made some unauthorized changes in the Confession,
226. on objections to the doctrine of the Trinity, 235: his
dispute with Eckius at Worms, 267: appointed by the Em-
peror a collocutor at Ratisbon, 268: his situation and conduct
there, 277-279, 283-285: his painful accident, with the
interpretation he put upon it, 285: his account of Eckius,
285 his severe illness at Weimar, 295: his will, 296-299:
his real sentiments towards Luther, 298-9: Luther's com-
mendation of his works, 319, 523; and testimony to his

services, 336, and character, 435: his account of Cologne,
assists the Archbishop of Cologne in his proposed
reformation, 367: his account of the Archbishop, 367-8:
Pontanus's testimony concerning him, 432: his association
with Luther, 498-500: his oration on the death of Luther,
480, 503 his estimate of Luther, 525: his statement of four
changes of doctrine, 529, 530: letter ascribed to him, 538:
Beausobre and Mr. C. Butler's representations of him, 539—
544 Mosheim's account of him, 544.

Mentz, Albert, Archbishop of, 6: Luther's Letter to him, 64:
his permission of reformation at Magdeburg, &c. 257, 266:
particulars concerning his appointment, 353: at first favour-
able, afterwards hostile to the reformation, 398.

Merit, the term admitted in the Confession of Augsburg, and
by Luther, in a qualified sense, 44-5, 160.

Mersburg, Adolphus, bishop of, 392: Augustus of Saxony,
Bishop of, 399: Heldingus, Bishop of, 400-1. See Anhalt,
George of.

Metz, attempted reformation of, 310: calamitous issue of the
attempt, 311.

Meyer, Nicholas, chancellor of Munster, 383.

Minden, city of, outlawed by the Imperial Chamber, 203.
Ministers, how far they should be stationary, 147: what spoils
them, 147: on their authority, 155-6: Luther on the title
of reverend, given to them, 232: Ecolampadius's address to,
122.

Misnia, persecution there, 169: the bishop of, opposes reforma-
tion in ducal Saxony, 253.

More, Sir T. on the death of Zuinglius and Ecolampadius, 124.
Mosheim, his account of the effects produced by the public
reading of the Confession of Augsburg, 24: his character
of Melancthon, 544.

Mourning for the dead, Luther on, 519.

Munster, Anabaptists of, 183-4: bishop of, his attempts for
reformation, 380-384: he loses his bishopric, 384.

Musculus, on the self-confidence of the reformed, 119-20: on
Erasmus's Treatise on Concord, 165: would not join the
Lutherans on the sacrament, 216.

Myconius, Frederic, pastor of Gotha, assists in the reformation
of ducal Saxony, 255-6: his illness, and Luther's letter to
him, 335 a letter written by him in his last illness, 484-486.

N

Naumburg, reformation of 306: Amsdorf made bishop of, 307.
Navius, Caspar, 304.

Nordlingen, reformation of, 179.

Novelties, in the Roman Catholic church, numberless, 59.
Nuremberg, pacification of, 111: its favourable effects on the
reformation, 170: reformed state of the place, 179: diet of,
(1543,) 344.

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Ecolampadius, on Zuinglius's accompanying the army to battle,
118: his answer to the address of the Waldenses, 143-150:
the chief instrument of the reformation of Basle, 121: his
address to his brother ministers, 122: account of his death,
121-124.

Ordination, not confined by Luther to bishops, 231. See Bishops.
Osiander, of Nuremberg, 305: his objection to a form of abso-
lution used there, 324: his character and peculiar dogma,
324.

Otto Henry, prince palatine, promotes reformation in his terri-
tory, 304, 451: his edict, 305.

Pacification of Nuremberg, 111.

P

Paderborn, Lutherans expelled from, 361.

Palatinate of Bavaria, or Upper, reformation of, 304-306: of
the Rhine, or Lower, reformation of, 450.

Palatine, Elector, Lewis, 450: Frederic, 63, 450.

Pallavicini, Cardinal, his testimony to the unalterable character
of popery, 229: his intolerance, 438: on Faber and Eckius,
542-3: his history, xvi.

Palls, consecrated, account of, 353.

Papists, pretending that they had always taught important
protestant doctrines, 322: on attempts at accommodation
with them, 323.

Pastoral authority, Luther on, 155-6.

Paul, Father, on the Elector's attending the Emperor at Mass,
13: his account of Pimpinello's Address, 13, 14; of the
proceedings of the Imperial chamber against the Protestants,
113; of the Pope's disgust at the conduct of Charles V, 114,
115: his free observation on the assumptions of Rome, 116:
on the joy of the Roman Catholics for the death of Zuinglius,
124: his account of Luther's interview with Vergerio, 210—
214: account of him, xv.

-III, Pope, succeeds Clement VII, 157: his policy respect-
ing a council, 157, 193-4: his commission for reformation,
194-200: his remonstrance against the Emperor's indulgence
to the Protestants, 358: his violence against them, 425.
Pellican, Conrad, 168.

Persecution, when it may be resisted, when not, 105: in France,
130, 189 of the Waldenses, 140, 150, 443-449: by George

of Saxony, 168, 169: how far common to the papal church
with other bodies, 228-9.

Perseverance, Final, seems not to be admitted by the Confes-
sion of Augsburg, 44: Arminius found difficulty in rejecting
it, 44: Luther and others upon it, 241.
Pfeffinger, John, pastor of Leipsic, 350.

Pfenningius, D. preacher at Naumburg, 306.

Pflug, Julius, 253, 256: a R. C. collocutor at Ratisbon, 268:
elected bishop of Naumburg, but not admitted, 307: put in
possession, 308: one of the Authors of the Interim, 400.
Philip, Landgrave: see Hesse.

duke of Pomerania, 178, 406.

Pimpinello, a papal nuncio, 7: his address at Augsburg, 13, 14.
Pistorius, pastor of Nidda, a collocutor at Ratisbon, 268, 284:
assisted in the reformation attempted at Cologne, 367.
Planitz, John, a minister of the elector of Saxony, 173.
Pomerania, the duke of, 63: George suceeeded by Barnimus
and Philip, 171: reformation of, 177-8: the dukes fined by
the Imperial Chamber, 203: differences respecting ap-
pointing a bishop of Camin, 406.

Pomeranus, see Bugenhagius.

Pontanus, Gregory, chancellor of Saxony, 5: perhaps the author
of a MS. account of the diet of Augsburg, preserved at Wei-
mar, 17: letter of Luther's to him, 76: his reply to the
Elector of Brandenburg's harsh speech, 82: his judgment on
two schemes of reformation submitted to him, 431-2: his ob-
servations on Luther and Melancthon, 432-3: some account
of his life, 533-537.

Pope, the, charges of the Protestant's against, 202-3: disgusted
by the proceedings in Germany, 114, 273, 358: his remon-
strance with the emperor, 358.

Popery, its character and effects, 228: danger of losing a just
sense of its enormity, 228: its unalterable character, 229:
idolatry of its worship, 297-8, 507: state of things under its
reign, 326, 464.

Possession, demoniacal, Luther's conduct in cases of, 468–470.
Prayers, Luther's, 77, 474, 476, 503: should not be merely
ejaculatory, 503: popish to the saints, 297-8, 507.

Preaching, of the Protestant divines at Augsburg, 14—16: of
the Roman Catholics improved by that of the Protestants,
58 Luther and Bucer on, 216, 558.

Predestination, no article on, in the Confession of Augsburg,
43: difficulties of the Waldenses concerning, 141: their
article corresponds with that of the Synod of Dort, 141-2:
Ecolampadius's reply to them cn, 148-9: Luther, on 241,

333-4.

Prejudice, instance of the length to which it may go, 125.

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