[214] Strype, Eccl. Mem. (ed. 1822), I. i. p. 254.
[215] This book was apparently condemned for reflecting on the king’s divorce rather than for its Lutheran tendencies. “The Soul’s Garden,” as Bishop Tunstall calls it, was printed abroad, and “very many lately brought into the realm, chiefly into London and into other haven towns.” The objectionable portion was contained in “a declaration made in the kalendar of the said book, about the end of the month of August, upon the day of the decollation of St. John Baptist, to show the cause of why he was beheaded.” (Strype, ut supra, ii. p. 274.)
[216] Wilkins, Concilia, iii. p. 737.
[217] Ibid., 720.
[218] Wilkins, Concilia, iii. p. 727.
[219] Richard Smythe, D.D., The assertion and defence of the Sacrament of the Altar, 1546, f. 3.
[220] English Works, p. 940.
[221] English Works, p. 921.
[222] English Works, pp. 341-344.
[223] Ibid., p. 346.