Print witnesses include Thomas Wright and James Orchard Halliwell, eds, Reliquae Antiquae (London, 1845), Volume II, pp. 111-112; Edward Viles and F. J. Furnivall, eds, Awdeley's Fraternitye of Vacabondes, Harman's Caveat, Haben's Sermon, &c. (London, 1869; various editions and reprints). There is also a manuscript witness: British Library, Lansdowne MS 98/25.
This is a report of a sermon in praise of thieves and thieving. The title of the sermon is 'A sermon of P[ar]son Hyberdyne […] made att the com[m]andemente of certen theves aft[er] thay had robbed hym […]'. The sermon was not preached on any text in particular. Once the sermon was finished, the thieves 'gaue hy[m] his money agayne, that thay took frome hym, & iis to drynke for hys sermon' (f. 43v). The report is written in a standard sixteenth-century hand.
British Library catalogue; Thomas Wright and James Orchard Halliwell, eds, Reliquae Antiquae (London, 1845), Volume II, pp. 111-112; Hannah Yip.
This is an unusual report of a sermon delivered at the request of thieves. Another example can be found in Forced Divinity, Or Two Sermons Preached by the Compulsion of Two sorts of Sinners (London, [1650?]). There is a possibility that these sermons may be apocryphal. See British Library, General Reference Collection 12330.b.21. For more information about 'A Sermon of P[ar]son Hyberdyne', see Frank Aydelotte, Elizabethan Rogues and Vagabonds (Abingdon: Frank Cass, 1913), pp. 101-102.