period of his appointed time, which shewed to him both a discharge from his sorrows and a re∣ward of his labours.
Petrus Stoinius who had been the associate of his life and labours, was also the Praiser, and in the yeer following the companion of his funeral. For as if he had already ended the appointed task of his life, he followed Socinus being hardly forty yeers old.
Having passed over the race of Socinus life, through which we have made a short cut, it re∣maineth that we stop a while in considering what he did, and performed.
No man in our memory did better deserve of all the Christian world, but chiefly of the Polo∣nian Churches. For first, by setting out so ma∣ny works, he opened the genuine meaning of the Holy Scriptures in innumerable places.
Next, he only shewed how to confirm with solid arguments, and skilfully to defend from subtill cavills and sophisms, those opinions touching the Person of God and Christ, which he found al∣ready rife in Poland. After that he happily ex∣tinguished some impious, other prophane opini∣ons, whose deadly poison did by stealth insinuate it self into the bosome of the Church. No man did more vigorously quell Judaizers: he also ex∣ploded the opinion of the Chiliasts, and many other fanatick dreams besides. As for the errors, received from the Reformed Churches, which did in a great number as yet raign in that Church, he did with a marvellous felicity root them out. Such were that of Justification, that of Appeasing the wrath of God, that of Predestination, that of the Servitude of the Will, that of Original