Page:Letters of John Huss Written During His Exile and Imprisonment.djvu/195

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JOHN CARDINAL TO JOHN HUSS.
161

opprobrium. Therefore, since I have appealed to Jesus Christ, to the Judge sovereignly just and powerful, confiding to him my cause, I am resolved to adhere to his decision, and to his holy and sacred sentence, knowing that he will judge all men, not according to false witnesses, or to the errors of councils, but according to the truth, and their own merits.


LETTER XLII.[1]

John Cardinal to John Huss.

[The Father insists on the counsel which he has given: “whoever thou mayest be who readest these pages, see how the false title of the Church deceives the excellent Cardinal.”[2]]

In the first place, my well-beloved brother, do not let yourself be troubled by the fear of condemning truths; for it is not you who will condemn these, but those who are your superiors and ours. Meditate on these words, “Rely not on your own prudence.” There are many wise and conscientious men in the Council: “My son, listen to thy mother’s law.” This is my point.

  1. Hist. et Monum. Johann. Huss, Epist. xl.
  2. Luther falls again into the same error; see note 2 of page 159.