|
The History of
Protestantism |
| Chapter 1 | THE KING AND THE SCHOLARS. The Darkness Fulfils its Period — Two Currents in Christendom — Two Phases of the One Movement in England — Henry VIII — His Education — His Character — Popularity — Dean Colet — His Studies at Florence — Englishmen in Italy — Colet's Lectures at St. Paul's School — William Grocyn — Colet Founds St. Paul's School — William Lily — Linacre — Dean Colet's Sermon at St. Paul's — Fitzjames, Bishop of London — Warham, the Primate — Erasmus — Sir Thomas More — The Plough of Reform Begins again to Move. |
| Chapter 2 | CARDINAL WOLSEY AND THE NEW TESTAMENT OF
ERASMUS. Arthur, Prince of Wales, Dies – Question of Henry's Marrying his Widow – Sentiments of the Primate – Dispensation of the Pope – Henry's Coronation and Marriage – Cardinal Wolsey – His Birth – Made King's Almoner – Made Archbishop of York – Cardinal – Chancellor – Legate-a-Latere – Rules the Kingdom Ecclesiastically and Civilly – His Grandeur – The Priests knew the War against Parliament – Are Worsted – Resume their Persecution of Heretics – Story of Richard Hun – His Murder – Burning of his Bones – Martyrdom of John Brown – Erasmus Driven out of England – Prints his Greek and Latin New Testament – Its Enthusiastic Reception in England – England's Reformation eminently Biblical – England constituted the Custodian and Dispenser of the Bible. |
| Chapter 3 | WILLIAM TYNDALE AND THE ENGLISH NEW
TESTAMENT. Bilney – Reads the New Testament – Is Converted by it – Tyndale – His Conversion – Fryth – All Three Emancipated by the Bible – Foundations of England's Reformation – Tyndale at Sodbury Hall – Disputations with the Priests – Preaches at Bristol – Resolves to Translate the Scriptures – Goes to London – Applies to Tonstall – Received into Humphrey Monmouth's House – Begins his Translation of the New Testament – Escapes to Germany – Leo's Bull against Luther Published in England – Henry's Book against Luther – Wolsey Intrigues for the Popedom – His Disappointment – Tyndale in Hamburg – William Roye – Begins Printing the English New Testament in Cologne – Finishes in Worms – Sends it across the Sea to England. |
| Chapter 4 | TYNDALE'S NEW TESTAMENT ARRIVES IN
ENGLAND. Bilney's Labors at Cambridge – Hugh Latimer – His Education – Monkish Asceticism – Bilney's Device – Latimer's Conversion – Power of his Preaching – Wolsey's College – The Bishops try to Arrest the Evangelization – Prior Buckingham – Bishop of Ely and Latimer – Dr. Barnes and the Augustine Convent – Workers at Cambridge – Excitement at Cambridge and Oxford – Desire for the Word of God – Tyndale's New Testament Arrives in London – Distributed by Garret in the City – in Oxford – over the Kingdom – Its Reception by the English People. |
| Chapter 5 | THE BIBLE AND THE CELLAR AT OXFORD – ANNE
BOLEYN. Entrance of the Scriptures – Garret carries them to Oxford – Pursuit of Garret – His Apprehension – Imprisonments at Oxford – The Cellar – Clark, Fryth, etc., do Penance – Their Sufferings – Death of Clark-Other Three Die – The Rest Released – Cambridge – Dr. Barnes Apprehended – A Penitential Procession in London – Purchase and Burning of Tyndale's Testaments by the Bishop of London – New Edition – The Divorce Stirred – Anne Boleyn – Her Beauty and Virtues – Knight Sent to Rome on the Divorce – A Captive Pope – Two Kings at his Feet. |
| Chapter 6 | THE DIVORCE – THOMAS BILNEY, THE
MARTYR. The Papacy Disgraces itself – Clement gives his Promise to Both Kings – A Worthless Document sent to London – The Pope's Doublings – The Cardinal's Devices – Henry's Anger – Bilney sets out on a Preaching Tour – Discussions on Saint-Worship, etc. – Bilney Arrested – Recants – His Agony – His Second Arrest and Condemnation – His Burning – The "Lollards' Pit" – Other Martyrs – Richard Bayfield – John Tewkesbury – James Bainham – Crucifixes and Images Pulled down – Dissemination of the Scriptures – Fourth Edition of the New Testament. |
| Chapter 7 | THE DIVORCE, AND WOLSEY'S FALL. Bull for Dissolving the King's Marriage — Campeggio's Arrival — His Secret Instructions — Shows the Bull to Henry — The Commission Opened — The King and Queen Cited — Catherine's Address to Henry — Pleadings — Campeggio Adjourns the Court — Henry's Wrath — It First Strikes Wolsey — His Many Enemies — His Disgrace — The Cause Avoked to Rome — Henry's Fulminations — Inhibits the Bull — His Resolution touching the Popedom — Wolsey's Last Interview with the King — Campeggio's Departure — Bills Filed in King's Bench against Wolsey — Deprived of the Great Seal — Goes to Esher — Indictment against him in Parliament — Thrown out — The Cardinal Banished to York — His Life there — Arrested for High Treason — His Journey to Leicester — His Death — His Burial. |
| Chapter 8 | CRANMER — CROMWELL — THE PAPAL SUPREMACY
ABOLISHED. The King at; Waltham Abbey — A Supper — Fox and Gardiner Meet Cranmer — Conversation — New Light — Ask the Universities, What says the Bible? — The King and Cranmer — Cranmer Set to Work — Thomas Cromwell — advises the King to Throw off Dependence on the Pope — Henry Likes the Advice — resolves to Act upon it — takes Cromwell into his Service — The Whole Clergy held Guilty of Praemunire — Their Possessions and Benefices to be Confiscated — Alternative, Asked to Abandon the Papal Headship — Reasonings between Convocation and the King — Convocation Declares King Henry Supreme Head of the Church of England. |
| Chapter 9 | THE KING DECLARED HEAD OF THE CHURCH OF
ENGLAND. Abolition of Appeals to Rome — Payment of Annats, etc. — Bishops to be Consecrated without a License from Rome — Election to Vacant Sees — The King declared Head of the Church — Henry VIII Undoes the Work of Gregory VII — The Divorce — The Appeal to the Universities — Their Judgment — Divorce Condemned by the Reformers — Death of Warham — Cranmer made Primate — Martyrdom of Fryth — The King Marries Anne Boleyn — Her Coronation — Excommunication of Henry VIII — Birth of Elizabeth — Cambridge and Oxford on the Pope's Power in England — New Translation of the Bible — Visitation of the Monasteries — Their Suppression — Frightful Disorders. |
| Chapter 10 | SCAFFOLDS—DEATH OF HENRY
VIII Executions for Denying the King's Supremacy—Bishop FisheræSir Thomas More—Execution of Queen Anne Boleyn—Henry's Policy becomes more Popish—The Act of the Six Articles—Persecution under it—The Martyr Lambert—Act Permitting the Reading of the Bible—A Bible in Every Church—The Institution of a Christian Man—The Necessary Erudition of a Christian Man—The Primer—Trial and Martyrdom of Anne Askew—Henry VIII Dies. |
| Chapter 11 | THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND AS REFORMED BY
CRANMER Edward VI—His Training and Character—Somerset Protector— Wriothesly Deposed—Edward's Coronation—The Bible—State of England—Cranmer Resumes the Work of Reformation—Royal Visitation—Erasmus' Paraphrase—Book of Homilies—Superstitious Usages Forbidden—Communion in Both Kinds—Cranmer's Catechism—Laity and Public Worship—Communion Service-Book of Common Prayer—Pentecost of 1549—Public Psalmody Authorized— Articles of Religion—The Bible the Only Infallible Authority |
| Chapter 12 | DEATHS OF PROTECTOR SOMERSET AND EDWARD
VI Cranmer's Moderation—Its Advantages—His Great Difficulties— Proposed General Protestant Convention—The Scheme Fails— Disturbing Events in the Reign of Edward VI—Plot against Protector Somerset—His Execution—Rise of the Disputes about Vestments— Bishop Hooper—Joan of Kent—Her Opinions—Her Burning— Question of Changing the Succession—Cranmer Opposes it—He Yields—Edward VI Dies—Reflections on the Reformation under Edward VI—England Comes Late into the Field—Her Appearance Decides the Issue of the Movement. |
| Chapter 13 | RESTORATION OF THE POPE'S AUTHORITY IN
ENGLAND Execution of Lady Jane Grey, etc.—Accession of Mary—Her Character—Conceals her projected Policy—Her Message to the Pope— Unhappiness of the Times—Gardiner and Bonner—Cardinal Pole made Legate—The Pope's Letter to Mary—The Queen begins to Persecute— Cranmer Committed to the Tower—Protestant Ministers Imprisoned— Protestant Bishops and Clergy Deprived—Exodus—Coronation of the Queen—Cranmer Condemned for Treason—The Laws in favor of the Reformation Repealed—A Parliament—The Queen's Marriage with Philip of Spain—Disputation on the Mass at Oxford—Appearance of Latimer, etc.—Restoration of Popish Laws, Customs, etc.—Arrival of Cardinal Pole—Terms of England's Reconciliation to RomeæThe Legate solemnly Absolves the Parliament and Convocation—England Reconciled to the Pope |
| Chapter 14 | THE BURNINGS UNDER MARY English Protestantism Purified in the Fire—Glory from Suffering— Spies—The First Victims—Transubstantiation the Burning Article— Martyrdom of Rogers—Distribution of Stakes over England—Saunders Burned at Coventry—Hooper at Gloucester—His Protracted Sufferings—Burning of Taylor at Hadleigh—Burning of Ferrar at Carmarthen—England begins to be Roused—Alarm of Gardiner— "Bloody" BonneræExtent of the Burnings—Martyrdom of Ridley and Latimer at Oxford—A Candle Lighted in England—Cranmer—His RecantationæRevokes his Recantation—His Martyrdom—Number of Victims under Mary—Death of the Queen |
| Chapter 15 | ELIZABETH--RESTORATION OF THE PROTESTANT
CHURCH Joy at Mary's Death—A Dark Year-The Accession of Elizabeth—Instant Arrest of Persecution—Protestant Policy—Difficulties—The Litany and Gospels in English—Preaching Forbidden—Cecil and Bacon— Parliament—Restoration of the Royal Supremacy—Act of Uniformity— Alterations in the Prayer Book—The Sacrament—Disputation between Romish and Protestant Theologians—Excommunication Delayed—The Papists Frequent the Parish Churches—The Pulpit—Stone Pulpit at Paul's Cross—The Sermons—Visitation Articles—Additional Homilies—Cranmer, etc., Dead, yet Speaking—Return of the Marian Exiles—Jewell—New Bishops—Preachers sent through the Kingdom— Progress of England—The Royal Supremacy |
| Chapter 16 | EXCOMMUNICATION OF ELIZABETH, AND PLOTS OF
THE JESUITS England the Headquarters of Protestantism—Its Subjugation Resolved upon—Excommunication of Queen Elizabeth—Jesuits—Assassins— Dispensation to Jesuits to take Orders in the Church of England—The Nation Broken into Two Parties—Colleges Erected for Training Seminary Priests—Campion and Parsons—Their Plan of Acting— Campion and his Accomplices Executed—Attempts on the Life of Elizabeth—Somerville—Parry—The Babington Conspiracy—Ballard— Savage—Babington—The Plot Joined by France and Spain—Mary Stuart Accedes to it—Object of the Conspiracy—Discovery of the Plot— Execution of the Conspirators. |
| Chapter 17 | THE ARMADA--ITS BUILDING The Armada—The Year 1588æProphecies—State of Popish and Protestant Worlds previous to the Armada—Building of the Armada— Victualling, Arming, etc., of the Armada—Number of Ships—of Sailors— Galley-Slaves—Soldiers—Guns—Tonnage—Attempts to Delude England—Second Armada prepared in Flanders under Parma— Number of his Army—Deception on English Commissioners— Preparations in England—The Militia—The Navy—Distribution of the English Forces—The queen at Tilbury—Supreme Peril of England |
| Chapter 18 | THE ARMADA ARRIVES OFF ENGLAND The Armada Sails—The Admiral Dies—Medina Sidonia appointed to Command—Storm off Cape Finisterre—Second Storm—Four Galleons Lost—Armada Sighted off the Lizard—Beacon-fires—Preparations in Plymouth Harbor—First Encounter between the Armada and English Fleet—The Armada Sails up the Channel, Followed and Harassed by the English Fleet—Its LossesæSecond Battle—Third Battle off the Isle of Wight—Superiority of the English Ships—The Armada Anchors off Calais—Parma and his Army Looked for—The Decisive Blow about to be Struck |
| Chapter 19 | DESTRUCTION OF THE ARMADA The Roadstead of Calais—Vast Preparations in Flanders—The Dutch Fleet Shuts in the Army of Parma—The Duke does not Come—A Great Crisis—Danger of England—Fire-ships—Launched against the Armada—TerroræThe Spaniards Cut their Cables and Flee—Great Battle off Gravelines—Defeat of the Spaniards—Shattered State of the Galleons—Narrowly Escape Burial in the Quicksands—Retreat into the North Sea—The Armada off Norway—Driven across to Shetland— Carried round to Ireland—Dreadful Scenes on the Irish Coast— Shipwreck and Massacre—Anstruther—Interview between the Minister and a Shipwrecked Spanish Admiral—Return of a Few Ships to Spain— Grief of the Nation—The Pope Refuses to Pay his Minion of Ducats—The Effects of the Armada—The Hand of God—Medals Struck in Commemoration—Thanksgiving in England and the Protestant States |
| Chapter 20 | GREATNESS OF PROTESTANT ENGLAND The Reformation not Completed under Edward VI—Fails to Advance under Elizabeth—Religious Destitution of England—Supplication for Planting it with Ministers, etc.—Dispute respecting Vestments, etc.—The Puritans—Their Numbers—Their Aims—Elizabeth Persecutes them— Elizabeth's CharacteræTwo Types of Protestantism Combine to form One Perfect Protestantism—Outburst of Mind—Glory of England— Science—Literature—Arts—Bacon—Shakespeare—Milton, etc. |
BOOK
TWENTY-THIRD
PROTESTANTISM IN ENGLAND FROM THE TIMES OF HENRY
VIII.
CHAPTER 1 Back to
Top
THE KING AND THE
SCHOLARS.
The Darkness Fulfils its Period — Two Currents in
Christendom — Two Phases of the One Movement in England — Henry VIII — His
Education — His Character — Popularity — Dean Colet — His Studies at Florence —
Englishmen in Italy — Colet's Lectures at St. Paul's School — William Grocyn —
Colet Founds St. Paul's School — William Lily — Linacre — Dean Colet's Sermon at
St. Paul's — Fitzjames, Bishop of London — Warham, the Primate — Erasmus — Sir
Thomas More — The Plough of Reform Begins again to Move.
IT is around the person and ministry of Wicliffe that
the dawn of the new times is seen to break. Down to his day the powers of
superstition had continued to grow, and the centuries as they passed over the
world beheld the night deepening around the human soul, and the slavery in which
the nations were sunk becoming ever viler. But with the appearance of Wicliffe
the darkness fulfils its period, and the great tide of evil begins to be rolled
back. From the times of the English Reformer we are able to trace two great
currents in Christendom, which have never intermitted their flow from that day
to this. The one is seen steadily bearing down into ruin the great empire of
Roman superstition and bondage; the other is seen lifting higher and higher the
kingdom of truth and liberty.
Let us for a moment consider, first, the
line of calamities which fell on the anti-Christian interest, drying up the
sources of its power, and paving the way for its final destruction; and next,
that grand chain of beneficent dispensations, beginning with Wicliffe, which
came to revive the cause of righteousness, all but extinct.
In the days
of Wicliffe came the Papal schism, the first opening in that compact tyranny
which had so long burdened the earth and defied the heavens. Next, and as a
consequence, came the struggles of the Councils against the Papal autocracy:
these were followed by a series of terrible wars, first in France and next in
England, by which the nobles in both countries were nearly exterminated. These
wars broke the power of feudalism, and raised the kings above the Papal chair.
This was the first step in the emancipation of the nations; and by the opening
of the sixteenth century, the process was so far advanced that we find only
three great thrones in Europe, whose united power was more than a match for the
Popedom, but whose conflicting interests kept open the door for the escape of
the nations.
When we turn to the other line of events, we find it too
taking its rise at the feet, so to speak, of Wicliffe. First comes the
translation of the Bible into the vulgar tongue, with the consequent spread of
Lollardism — in other words, of Protestant doctrines in England; this was
followed by the fall of Constantinople, and the scattering of the seeds of
knowledge over the West; by the invention of the art of printing, and other
discoveries which aided the awakening of the human mind; and finally by the
diffusion of the light to Bohemia and other countries; and ultimately by the
second great opening of the day in the era of Luther and the Reformers. From the
Divine seed deposited by the hand of Wicliffe spring all the influences and
events that constitute the modern times. The reforming movements which we have
traced in both the Lutheran and the Calvinistic countries are about to culminate
in the British Reformation — the top-stone which crowns the edifice of the
sixteenth century.
The action into which the English nation had been
roused by the instrumentality of Wicliffe took a dual form. With one party it
was a struggle for religious truth, with the other it was a contest for national
independence. These were but two phases of one great movement, and both were
needed to create a perfect and powerful Protestantism. For if the corruptions of
the Papacy had rendered necessary a reformation of doctrine, not less had the
encroachments and usurpations of the Vatican necessitated a vindication of the
national liberties. The successive laws placed on the statute-book during the
reigns of Henry V and Henry VI, remain the monuments of the great struggle waged
by England to disenthrall herself from the fetters of the Papal supremacy. These
we have narrated down to the times of Henry VIII, where we now resume our
narrative.
Henry VIII ascended the throne in 1509, and thus the
commencement of his reign was contemporaneous with the birth of Calvin, of Knox,
and of others who were destined, by their genius and their virtues, to lend to
the age now opening a glory which their contemporaries, Henry and Francis and
Charles, never could have given it by their arms or their statesmanship. It was
a long while since any English king had mounted the throne with such a prospect
of a peaceful and glorious reign, as the young prince who now grasped the
scepter which had been swayed by Alfred the Great. Uniting in his person the
rival claims of York and Lancaster, he received the warm devotion of the
adherents of both houses. Of majestic port, courteous manners, and frank and
open disposition, he was the idol of the people. Destined to fill the See of
Canterbury, his naturally vigorous understanding had been improved by a
carefully conducted education, and his mental accomplishments far exceeded the
customary measure of the princes of his age. He had a taste for letters, he
delighted in the society of scholars, and lie prodigally lavished in his
patronage of literature, and the gaieties and entertainments for which he had a
fondness, those vast. treasures which the avarice and parsimony of his father,
Henry VII, had accumulated. The court paid to him by the two powerful monarchs
of France and Spain, who each strove to have Henry as his ally, also tended to
enhance his importance in the eyes of his subjects, and increase their devotion
to him. To his youth, to the grace ,of his person, to the splendor of his court,
and the wit and gaiety of his talk, there was added the prestige that comes from
success in arms, though on a small scale. The conquest of Tournay in France, and
the victory of Flodden in Scotland, were just enough to gild with a gleam of
military glory the commencement of his reign, and enhance the favorable auspices
under which it opened. But we turn from Henry to contemplate persons of lower
degree, but of more inherent grandeur, and whose lives were destined in yield
richer fruit to the realm of England. It is not at the foot of the throne of
Henry that the Reformation is seen to take its rise. The movement took root in
England a full century before he was born, or a Tudor had ascended the throne.
Henry will reappear on the stage in his own time; meanwhile we leave the palace
and enter the school.
The first; of those illustrious men with whom we
are now to be concerned is Dr. John Colet, Dean of St. Paul's. The young Colet
was a student at Oxford, but disgusted with the semi-barbarous tuition which
prevailed there, and possessed of a large fortune, he resolved to travel, if
haply he might find in foreign universities a more rational system of knowledge,
and purer models of study. He visited Italy, where he gave himself ardently in
the acquisition of the tongue of ancient Rome, in company with Linacre, Grocyn,
and William Lily, his countrymen, who had preceded him thither, drawn by their
thirst for the new learning, especially the Greek. The change which the study of
the classic writers had begun in Colet was completed by the reading of the
Scriptures; and when he returned to England in 1497, the shackles of the
schoolmen had been rent from his mind, and he was a discountenancer of the
rites, the austerities, and the image-worship of the still dominant Church.[1] To the reading of the
Scriptures he added the study of the Fathers, who furnished him with additional
proofs and arguments against the prevailing doctrines and customs of the times,
lie began a course of lectures on the Epistles of St. Paul in his cathedral
church; and deeming his own labors all too little to dispel the thick night that
brooded over the land, he summoned to his aid laborers whose minds, like his
own, had been enlarged by the new learning, and especially by that diviner
knowledge, to the fountains of which that learning had given them access. Those
who had passed their studious hours together on the banks of the Arno, and under
the delicious sky of Florence, became in London fellow-workmen in the attempt to
overthrow the monkish system of tuition which had been pursued for ages, and to
introduce their countrymen to true learning and sound knowledge. Colet employed
William Grocyn to read lectures in St. Paul's on portions of Holy Scripture; and
after Grocyn, he procured other learned men to read divinity lectures in his
cathedral.[2]
But the special
service of Colet was the founding of St. Paul's School, which he endowed out of
his ample fortune, in order that sound learning might continue to be taught in
it by duly qualified instructors. The first master of St. Paul's School was
selected from the choice band of English scholars with whom Colet had formed so
endearing a friendship in the capital of Tuscany. William Lily was appointed to
preside over the newly-founded seminary, which had the honor of being the first
public school in England, out of the universities, in which the Greek language
was taught. This eminent scholar had been initiated into the beautiful language
of ancient Greece at Rhodes, where he is said to have enjoyed for several years
the instruction of one of the illustrious refugees whom the triumph of the
Ottoman arms had chased from Constantinople. Cornelius Vitelli, an Italian, was
the first who taught Greek in the University of Oxford. From him William Grocyn
acquired the elements of that tongue, and, succeeding his master, he was the
first Englishman who taught it at Oxford. His contemporary, Thomas Linacre, was
not less distinguished as a "Grecian."
Linacre had spent some delightful
years in Italy — the friend of Lorenzo de Medici, and the pupil of Politianus
and Chalcondyles, at that time the most renowned classical teachers in Europe —
and when afterwards he returned to his native land, he became successively
physician to Arthur, Prince of Wales, and to Henry VIII. These men were scholars
rather than Reformers, but the religious movement owed them much. Having caught
on the soft of Virgil and Cicero an enthusiastic love of classic learning, they
imbibed therewith that simplicity and freedom, that vigor and independence of
thought which characterized the ancients, and they transplanted these great
qualities into the soft of England. The teaching of the monks now began to
offend the quickened intellect of the English people, and the scandalous lives
of the clergy to revolt their moral sense. Thus the way was being paved for
greater changes.
Colet, however, was more than the scholar; he attained
the stature of a Reformer, though, the time not being ripe for separation from
Rome, he lived and died within the pale of the Church. In a celebrated sermon
which he preached before Convocation on Conformation and Reformation, he
bewailed the unhappy condition of the Church as a flock deserted by its
shepherds. The clergy he described as greedy of honors and riches, as having
abandoned themselves to sensual delights, as spending their days in hunting and
hawking, and their nights in feasting and revelry. Busied they truly were, but
it was in the service of man; ambition they lacked not, but it rose no higher
than the dignities of earth; their conversation was not in heaven, nor of
heavenly things, but of the gossip of the court; and their dignity as God's
ministers, which ought to transcend in brightness that of princes and emperors,
was sorely bedimmed by the shadows of earth. And referring to the new doctrines
which were beginning to be put forth in many quarters, "We see," said the dean,
"strange and heretical opinions appearing in our days, and I wonder not; but has
not St. Bernard told us that there is no heresy more dangerous to the Church
than the vicious lives of its priests?" And coming in the close to the remedy,
"The way," said he, "by which the Church may be reformed into a better fashion
is not to make new laws — of these there are already enough — but to live new
lives. With you, O Fathers and bishops, must begin the reformation so much
needed; we, the priests, will follow when we see you going before, and then we
need not fear that the whole body of the people will come after. Your holy lives
will be as a book in which we shall read the Gospel, and be taught how to
practice it; your example will be a sermon, and its sweet eloquence will be more
effectual to draw the people into the right path than all the terror of cursings
and excommunications."[3]
The people listened
with delight to the Dean of St. Paul's; but not so the clergy. The times were
too early, and the sermon too outspoken. Among Colet's auditors was the Bishop
of London, Fitzjames. He was a man of eighty, of irritable temper, innocent of
all theology save what he had learned from Thomas Aquinas, and he clung only the
more tenaciously to the traditions of the past the older he grew. His ire being
kindled, he went with a complaint against Color to Warham of Canterbury. "What
has he said?" asked the archbishop. "Said!" exclaimed the aged and irate bishop,
"what has he not said?" He has said that it is forbidden to worship by images;
that it is lawful to say the Lord's Prayer in one's mother tongue; that the
text, 'Feed my sheep,' does not impose temporal dues on the laity to the priest;
and," added he, with some hesitation, "he has said that sermons in the pulpit
ought not be read." Warham stuffed, for he himself was wont in preaching to read
from his manuscript. To these weighty accusations, as Fitzjames doubtless
accounted them, the dean had no defense to offer; and as little had the
archbishop, an able and liberal-minded man, ecclesiastical censure to inflict.
Another indication had been given how the tide was setting; and Dean Colet,
feeling his position stronger, labored from that day more zealously than ever to
dispel the darkness around him. It was after the delivery of this famous sermon
that he resolved to devote his ample fortune to the diffusion of sound learning,
knowing that ignorance was the nurse of the numerous superstitions that deformed
his day, and the rampart around those monstrous evils he had so unsparingly
reprobated.
Erasmus, the famous scholar of Holland, and More, the nearly
as famous scholar of England, belong to the galaxy of learned men that
constituted the English Renaissance. Both contributed aid to that literary
movement which helped to fill, at this early hour, the skies of England with
light. The service rendered by Erasmus to the Reformation is worthy of eternal
remembrance. He it was who first opened to the learned men of Europe the portals
of Divine Revelation, by his edition of the Greek New Testament, accompanied by
a translation in Latin. It was published in 1516, and fracas a great epoch in
the movement. Erasmus visited England, contracted a warm friendship with Colet,
and learned from him to moderate his admiration of the great schoolman, Aquinas
He was introduced at court, was caressed by Henry, and permitted to share in the
munificence with which that monarch then patronized learned men. Erasmus could
not endure the indolence, the greed, the gluttony, the crass ignorance of the
monks, and he lashed them mercilessly with his keen wit and his pungent satire.
The two great scholars, Erasmus and More, met for the first time at the table of
the Lord Mayor of London. A short but brilliant encounter of wits revealed the
one to the other. More was the Erasmus of England; the Utopia of the former
answers to the Praise of Folly (Encomium Morice) of the latter. Possessing a
playful fancy, a vigorous understanding, and a polished sarcasm, More delighted
to assail with a delicate but effective raillery the same class of men against
whom Erasmus had leveled his keenest shafts. He united with Erasmus in calling
for a reformation of that Church of which, as says one, "he lived to be the
champion, the inquisitor, and the martyr."[4] In his Utopia he shows us
what sort of world he would fain have given us — a commonwealth in which there
should be no place for monks, in which the number of priests should not exceed
the number of churches, and in which the right of private judgment should be
accorded to every one, and if any should think wrong, he was to be, put right by
argument, and not by the rack or the faggot. Of great intellect, but not of
equally great character, the two scholars had raised their voices, as we have
said, for a reformation of abuses; but when they heard the voice of Luther
resounding through Europe, and raising the same cry, and when they saw the
reformation they had demanded at last approaching, they drew back in affright.
They had failed to take account of the strength of error, and the forces
necessary to uproot it; and when they saw altars overturned and thrones shaken —
in short, a tempest arise that threatened to shake "not the earth only, but also
heaven" — they resembled the magician who shudders at the spirit himself hath
conjured up.
Such were the men and the agencies now at work in England.
They were not the Reformation, but they were necessary preparatives of that
great and much-needed change. The spiritual principles that Wicliffe had taught
were still in the soft; but, like flowers in the time of winter, they had hidden
themselves, and waited in the darkness the coming of a more mollient time to
blossom forth. Letters might exist where they would not be suffered to live. But
meanwhile the action of these principles was by no means suspended. Wicliffe's
Bible was being disseminated among the people; the line of his disciples was
perpetuated in the poor and despised Lollards: Protestant tracts were frequently
arriving in the Thames from Germany: and here and there young priests and
scholars were reading public lectures on portions of the Scriptures. In the
political sphere, also, preparations were going forward. England had been
overturned — the old tree had been cut down to its roots, as it were, in order
that fresh and more friendly shoots might spring forth. The barons had fallen in
the wars: the Plantagenets had disappeared from the throne: a Tudor was now
swaying the scepter; inveterate customs and traditions were vanishing in the
clear though chilly dawn of letters; and the plough of Reform, which had stood
motionless in the furrow for well-nigh a century, was once more about to go
forward.
CHAPTER 2
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CARDINAL WOLSEY AND
THE NEW TESTAMENT OF ERASMUS.
Arthur, Prince of Wales, Dies –
Question of Henry's Marrying his Widow – Sentiments of the Primate –
Dispensation of the Pope – Henry's Coronation and Marriage – Cardinal Wolsey –
His Birth – Made King's Almoner – Made Archbishop of York – Cardinal –
Chancellor – Legate-a-Latere – Rules the Kingdom Ecclesiastically and Civilly –
His Grandeur – The Priests knew the War against Parliament – Are Worsted –
Resume their Persecution of Heretics – Story of Richard Hun – His Murder –
Burning of his Bones – Martyrdom of John Brown – Erasmus Driven out of England –
Prints his Greek and Latin New Testament – Its Enthusiastic Reception in England
– England's Reformation eminently Biblical – England constituted the Custodian
and Dispenser of the Bible.
HENRY VIII again appears on the stage. We find him
still the idol of the people; his court continues to be the resort of scholars;
and the enormous wealth left him by his father enables him still to extend his
munificent patronage to learning, and at the same time provide those shows,
tournaments, and banquets, which made his court one of the gayest in all Europe.
Nothing, at this hour, was less likely than that this prince should separate
himself from the communion of the Roman Church, and withdraw his kingdom from
obedience to the Pontifical jurisdiction. He had been educated for the
priesthood until the death of Prince Arthur, his elder brother; and though this
event placed a crown instead of a mitre upon his head, it left him still so much
the churchman that he plumed himself upon his theological lore, and was ever
ready to do battle for a hierarchy in whose ranks he had looked forward to being
enrolled, and at whose altars he had hoped to spend his life. A disciple of
Thomas Aquinas, the subtlest intellect of the thirteenth century, and the man
who had done more than any other doctor of the Middle Ages to fortify the basis
of the Papal supremacy, Henry was not likely to be wanting in reverence for the
See of Rome. Indeed, in one well-known instance he had shown abundance of zeal
in the Pope's behalf: we refer to his book against Luther, fro which the
conclave at Rome voted him the title of "Defender of the Faith." But the train
for the opposition he was to show, not to the doctrine of the Papacy, but to its
jurisdiction, was laid nearly twenty years before; and it is instructive to mark
that it was laid in an act of submission to that very jurisdiction, against
which Henry was fated at a future day to rebel.
Arthur, Prince of Wales,
was realized during his father's lifetime to Catherine, daughter of Ferdinand
and Isabella of Spain. The bride of the young prince, who was a year older than
her husband, was the wealthiest heiress in Europe, and her dowry had been a
prime consideration with Henry VII in promoting the match. About five months
after the marriage, Prince Arthur fell ill and died (2nd April, 1502), at the
age of sixteen. When a few months had passed, and it was seen that no issue was
to be expected from Arthur's marriage, Prince Henry was proclaimed heir to the
throne, and Catherine was about to return to Spain. But the parsimonious Henry
VII, grieved to think that her dowry of 200,000 ducats [1] should have to be sent
back with her, to become, it might be, the possession of a scion of some other
royal house, started the proposal that Henry should marry his deceased brother's
widow.
To this proposal Ferdinand of Spain gave his consent. Warham,
Archbishop of Canterbury, opposed it. "It is declared in the law of God," said
the primate, "that if a man shall take his brother's wife, it is an unclean
thing: they shall be childless."(Leviticus 20:21.) Fox, Bishop of Winchester,
hinted that the difficulty might be got over by a dispensation from the Pope.
The warlike Julius II was then reigning; he thought more of battles than of the
Mosaic code, said on being applied to, he readily granted the dispensation
sought. In December, 1503, a bull was issued, authorizing Catherine's marriage
with the brother of her first husband. This was followed by the betrothal of the
parties, but not as yet by their marriage, the Prince of Wales being then only
twelve years of age.[2]
The interval gave
the old king time for reflection. He began strongly to suspect that the proposed
marriage, the Pope's bull notwithstanding, was contrary to the law of God; and
calling Prince Henry, now fourteen years of age, to him, he caused him to sign a
protest, duly authenticated, against the consummation of the marriage.[3] And when four years
afterwards he lay on his death-bed, he again summoned the prince to his
presence, and conjured him not to marry her who had been the wife of his
brother.[4] On the 9th of May, 1509,
Henry VII was borne to the tomb; and no sooner had the coffin been lowered into
the vault, and the staves of the officers of state, who stood around the grave,
broken and cast in after it, than the heralds proclaimed, with flourish of
trumpets, King Henry VIII. Henry could now do as he liked in the matter of the
marriage. Meanwhile the amiable disposition and irreproachable virtue of
Catherine had conciliated the nation, which at first had asked, "Can the Pope
repeal the laws of God?" and when on the 24th of June Henry was crowned in
Westminster, there sat by his side Catherine, as his bride and queen. Henry thus
began his reign with an act of submission to the Papal authority; for in
accepting his brothers widow as his wife, he accepted the Pope's dispensation as
valid; and the Pontiff, on his part, rejoiced in what had taken place, as a new
pledge of obedience to the Roman See on the part of England and her sovereign,
seeing that with the validity of his bull was now clearly bound up the
legitimacy of the future princes of the realm. The two must stand or fall
together; for if his bull was naught, so too was their title to the
crown.
Years passed away without anything remarkable taking place in the
domestic life of Henry and Catherine. These years were spent in jousts and
costly entertainments; in the society of scholars and the patronage of learning;
in a military raid into France, chiefly at the instigation of Julius II, who,
himself much occupied on the battle-field, delighted to see his
brother-sovereigns similarly engaged, well knowing that their rivalries kept
them weak, and that their weakness was his strength. One thing only saddened the
king and queen: it seemed as if the woe denounced against him who marries his
brother's widow, "he shall be childless," were taking effect. Henry's male
progeny all died. Catherine bore him three sons and two daughters; but "Henry
beheld his sons just show themselves and then sink into the tomb."[5] Of all the children of
Catherine, Lady Mary alone, born in 1515, survived the period of infancy. Doubts
touching the lawfulness of his marriage began to spring up in the king's mind;
but before seeing into what these scruples ripened, it is necessary to attend to
another personage who now stepped upon the stage, and who was destined to act a
great part in the events which were about to engage the attention, not of
England only, but of Christendom.
From the lowest ranks there now sprang
up a man of vast ambition and equal talent, who speedily rose to the highest
posts in the State, and the most splendid dignities of the Church, and who, by
his grandeur and munificence, illustrated once more before the eyes of the
English people, the glory of the Church of Rome before it should finally sink
and disappear. His name was Thomas Wolsey – by far the most famous of all those
Englishmen who have borne the title of Cardinal. A few sentences will enable us
to trace the rapid rise of this man to that blaze of power in which, for a
season, he shone, only to fall as suddenly and portentously as he had risen.
Wolsey (born 1471) was the son of a butcher at Ipswich, and after studying at
Magdalen College, Oxford, he passed into the family of the Marquis of Dorset, as
tutor.[6] Fox, Bishop of Winchester,
Keeper of the Privy Seal, finding himself eclipsed by the Earl of Surrey in the
graces of Henry VII, looked about him for one to counterbalance his rival; and
deeming that he had found a suitable instrument in Wolsey, drew him from an
obscure sphere in the country, and found a place for him at court as almoner to
the king. Wolsey ingratiated himself into that monarch's favor, by executing
successfully a secret negotiation at Brussels, with such dispatch that he
returned before he had had time, as Henry thought, to set out. His advancement
from that moment would have been rapid but for the death of the king, which
happened not long afterwards. Under the young Henry, Wolsey played his part not
less adroitly. His versatility developed more freely, in the warm air of Henry
VIII's court, than it had done in the cold atmosphere of that of his
predecessor. Business or pleasure came alike to Wolsey. He could be as gay as
the gayest of the king's courtiers, and as wise and grave as the most staid of
his councilors. He could retail, for the monarch's amusement, the gossip of the
court, and the town, or edify him by quoting the sayings of some mediaeval
doctor, and especially his favorite, the angelic Aquinas. Wolsey was no ascetic;
in his presence Vice never hung her head, and he never forbade in his sovereign
those liaisons in which, unless public report hugely calumniated him, he himself
freely indulged. Royal favors fell thick and fast on the clever and most
accommodating churchman. The mitres of Tournay, Lincoln, and York were in one
year placed on his head. But Wolsey was one of those who think that nothing has
been gained unless all has been won. He refused to lower the cross of York to
the cross of Canterbury, thus claiming for himself equality with the primate;
and when this was denied him, he reached his end by another road. He solicited,
through Francis I, the Roman purple, and in this too he succeeded. In November,
1515, an envoy from Rome arrived in England, bringing to the cardinal his "red
hat" – that gift which has ever in the end wrought evil to the wearer, as well
as to the realm; converting, as it does, its owner into the satrap of a foreign
Power.
Wolsey was not yet satisfied: there was something higher still,
and he must continue to climb. The pious Warham, Archbishop of Canterbury,
wearying of contending with the butcher's son, who had clothed his person in
Roman purple, and his mind in more than Roman pride, now resigned the seals as
Chancellor of the Kingdom, and the king put them into the hands of Wolsey.[7] He was now near the
summit: one more effort and he would reach it: at last it was gained. There came
a bull appointing him the Cardinal Legate-a-Latere of "Holy Church." This placed
him a little, and only a little, below the Papal throne itself. To it Wolsey
began to lift his eyes, as the only one of earth's grandeurs now above him; but
meanwhile the pursuit of this dazzling prize was delayed, and he gave himself to
the consolidation of those manifold powers which he wielded in England. His
jurisdiction was immense. All church courts, all bishops and priests, the
primate himself, all colleges and monasteries, were under him.
All causes
in which the Church was interested, however remotely, were adjudicated by him.
He decided in all matters of conscience, in wills and testaments, in marriages
and divorces, and in those actions which, though they might not be punishable by
the law, were censurable by the Church as violations of good morals. From his
sentences there was no appeal to the king's tribunals. The throne and Parliament
must submit to have their prerogatives, laws, and jurisdiction circumscribed and
regulated by the cardinal, as the representative of God's Vicar in England.
Those causes which were excluded from his jurisdiction as Legate-a-Latere, came
under his cognizance as Chancellor of the Kingdom, so that Wolsey really
governed both Church and State. He was virtually king, and his own famous
phrase, Ego et Rex meus – "I and my king" – was not less in accordance with fact
than it was with the idiom of the language in which it was expressed.
Of
the grandeurs of his palace, the sumptuousness of his table, the number of his
daily guests, and the multitude of his servants, it is needless to speak. The
list of his domestics was upwards of 500, and some of the nobles of England did
not account it beneath them to be enrolled in the number. When he moved out of
doors he wore a dress of crimson velvet and silk; his shoes glittered with
jewels; the goodliest priests of the realm marched before him, carrying silver
crosses, while his pomp was swelled by a retinue of becoming length. When Wolsey
said mass, it was after the manner of the Pope himself; bishops and abbots aided
him in the function, and some of the first nobility gave him water and the
towel.[8]
But with his pomps,
pleasures, and hospitalities he mingled manifold labors. His capacity was great,
and seemed to enlarge with the elevation of his rank and the increase of his
offices. His two redeeming qualities were the patronage of learning and the
administration of justice. His decisions in Chancery were impartial and
equitable, and his enormous wealth, gathered from innumerable sources, enabled
him to surround himself with scholars, and to found institutions of learning,
for which lie had his reward in the praises of the former, and the posthumous
glory of the latter. Nevertheless he did not succeed in making himself popular.
His haughty deportment offended the people, who knew him to be hollow, selfish,
and vicious, despite his grand masses and his ostentatious
beneficence.
The rise at this hour of such a man, who had gathered into
his single hand all the powers of the State, seemed of evil augury for the
Reformation. Rome, in all her dominancy, was in him rising up again in England.
The priests were emboldened to declare war, first against the scholars by
sounding the alarm against Greek, which they stigmatized as a main source of
heresy, and next against Parliament by demanding back the immunities of which
they had been stripped during preceding reigns. In addition to former losses of
prerogative, the priests were threatened with a new encroachment on their
privileges. In 1513 a law was passed, ordering ecclesiastics who should commit
murder or theft to be tried in the secular courts – bishops, priests, and
deacons excepted. It was discovered that though the Pope could dispense with the
laws of God, the Parliament could not. The Abbot of Winchelcomb, preaching at
St. Paul's, gave the signal for battle, exclaiming, "'Touch not mine anointed,'
said the Lord."
Thereafter a clerical deputation, headed by Wolsey,
proceeded to the palace to demand that the impious law should be annulled.
"Sire," said the cardinal, "to try a clerk is a violation of God's laws." "By
God's will we are King of England," replied Henry, who saw that to put the
clergy above the Parliament was to put them above himself, "and the Kings in
England, in times past, had never any superior but God only. Therefore know you
well that we will maintain the right of our crown."
Baffled in their
attack on Parliament, the priests vented their fury upon others. There were
still many Lollards who, although living in the bosom of the Roman Church, gave
the priests much disquiet. One of these was Richard Hun, a tradesman in London,
who spent a portion of each day in the study of the Bible. He was summoned
before the legate's court on the charge of refusing to pay a fee imposed by a
priest, which he deemed exorbitant. Indignant at being made answerable before a
foreign court, Hun lodged an accusation against the priest under the Act
Praemunire.[9] "Such boldness must be
severely checked," said the clergy, "otherwise not a citizen but will set the
Church at defiance." Hun was accused of heresy, consigned to the Lollards' Tower
in St. Paul's, and left there in irons, chained so heavily that his fetters
hardly permitted him to drag his steps across the floor. On his trial no such
proof of heresy was produced as would suffice for his condemnation, and his
persecutors found themselves in a greater dilemma than before, for to set him at
liberty would proclaim their defeat. Three of their fanatical agents undertook
to extricate them from their difficulties. Climbing to his cell at midnight (3rd
December, 1514), and dragging Hun out of bed, they first strangled him, and then
putting his own belt round his neck, they suspended the body by an iron ring in
the wall, to make believe that he had hanged himself.[10]
A great horror
straightway fell upon two of the perpetrators of the deed, so that they fled,
and thus revealed the crime. "The priests have murdered Hun," was the cry in
London; and the fact being amply attested at the inquest, as well as by the
confession of the murderers, the priests were harder put to than ever, and had
recourse to the following notable device: – They examined the Bible which Hun
had been wont to read, and found it was Wicliffe's translation. This was enough.
Certain articles of indictment were drafted against Hun; a solemn session of
Fitzjames, Bishop of London, with certain assessors, was held, and sentence was
pronounced, finding Hun guilty and condemning his dead body to be burned as that
of a heretic. His corpse was dug up and burned in Smithfield on the 20th of
December. "The bones of Richard Hun have been burned," argued the priests,
"therefore he was a heretic; he was a heretic, therefore he committed suicide."
The Parliament, however, not seeing the force of this syllogism, found that Hun
had died by the hands of others, and ordained restitution of his goods to be
made to his family. The Bishop of London, through Wolsey, had influence enough
to prevent the punishment of the murderers.[11]
There was quite a
little cloud of sufferers and martyrs in London, from the accession of Henry
VIII to 1517, the era of Luther's appearance. Their knowledge was imperfect,
some only had courage to witness unto the death, but we behold in them proofs
that the Spirit of God was returning to the world, and that he was opening the
eyes of not a few to see in the midst of the great darkness the errors of Rome.
The doctrine about which they were generally incriminated was that of
transubstantiation. Among other tales of persecution furnished by the times,
that of John Brown, of Ashford, has been most touchingly told by the English
martyrologist. Brown happened to seat himself beside a priest in the Gravesend
barge. "After certain communication, the priest asked him," says Fox, "'Dost
thou know who I am?
Thou sittest too near me: thou sittest on my
clothes.' 'No, sir,' said Brown; 'I know not what you are.' 'I tell thee I am a
priest.' 'What, sir, are you a parson, or vicar, or a lady's chaplain?' 'No,'
quoth he again; 'I am a soul-priest, I sing for a soul,' saith he. 'Do you so,
sir?' quoth the other; 'that is well done.' 'I pray you sir,' quoth he, 'where
find you the soul when you go to mass?' 'I cannot tell thee,' said the priest.
'I pray you, where do you leave it, sir, when the mass is done ?' 'I cannot tell
thee,' said the priest. ' You can neither tell me where you find it when you go
to mass, nor where you leave it when the mass is done: how can you then have the
soul?' said he. 'Go thy ways,' said the priest; 'thou art a heretic, and I will
be even with thee.' So at the landing the priest, taking with him Walter More
and William More, two gentlemen, brethren, rode straightway to the Archbishop
Warham."
Three days thereafter, as Brown sat at dinner with some guests,
the officers entered, and dragging him from the house, they mounted him upon a
horse, and tying his feet under the animals belly, rode away. His wife and
family knew not for forty days where he was or what had been done to him. It was
the Friday before Whit-Sunday. The servant of the family, having had occasion to
go out, hastily returned, and rushed into the house exclaiming, "I have seen
him! I have seen him!" Brown had that day been taken out of prison at
Canterbury, brought back to Ashford, and placed in the stocks. His poor wife
went forth, and sat down by the side of her husband. So tightly was he bound in
the stocks, that he could hardly turn his head to speak to his wife, who sat by
him bathed in tears. He told her that he had been examined by torture, that his
feet had been placed on live coals, and burned to the bones, "to make me," said
he, "deny my Lord, which I will never do; for should I deny my Lord in this
world, he would hereafter deny me. I pray thee, therefore," said he, "good
Elizabeth, continue as thou hast begun, and bring up thy children virtuously,
and in the fear of God." On the next day, being Whir-Sunday, he was taken out of
the stocks and bound to the stake, where he was burned alive. His wife, his
daughter Alice, and his other children, with some friends, gathered round the
pile to receive his last words. He stood with invincible courage amid the
flames. He sang a hymn of his own composing; and feeling that now the fire had
nearly done its work, he breathed out the prayer offered by the great Martyr:
"Into thy hands I commend my spirit; thou hast redeemed me, O Lord of truth,"
and so he ended.[12] Shrieks of anguish rose
from his wife and daughter. The spectators, moved with compassion, regarded them
with looks of pity; but, turning to the executioners, they cast on them a scowl
of anger. "Come," said Chilton, a brutal ruffian who had presided at the
dreadful tragedy, and who rightly interpreted the feeling of the bystanders –
"Come, let us cast the children into the fire, lest they, too, one day become
heretics." So saying, he rushed towards Alice and attempted to lay hold upon
her; but the maiden started back:, and avoided the villain.[13]
Next to the
heretics, the priests dreaded the scholars. Their instincts taught them that the
new learning boded no good to their system. Of all the learned men now in
England the one whom they hated most was Erasmus, and with just reason. He stood
confessedly at the head of the scholars, whether in England or on the Continent.
He had great influence at court; he wielded a pungent wit, as they had occasion
daily to experience – in short, he must be expelled the kingdom. But Erasmus
resolved to take ample compensation from those who had driven him out. He went
straight to Basle, and establishing himself at the printing-press of Frobenius,
issued his Greek and Latin New Testament. The world now possessed for the first
time a printed copy in the original Greek of the New Testament of our Lord and
Savior Jesus Christ. It was the result of combined labor and scholarship; the
Greek was beautifully pure; the Latin had been purged from the barbarisms of the
Vulgate, and far excelled it in elegance and clearness. Copies were straightway
dispatched to London, Oxford, and Cambridge. It was Erasmus' gift to England –
to Christendom, doubtless, but especially England; and in giving the country
this gift he gave it more than if he had added the most magnificent empire to
its dominion.
The light of the English Renaissance was now succeeded by
the light of the English Reformation. The monks had thought to restore the
darkness by driving away the great scholar: his departure was the signal for the
rising on the realm of a light which made what had been before it seem but as
twilight. The New Testament of Erasmus was hailed with enthusiasm. Everywhere it
was sought after and read, by the first scholars in Greek, by the great body of
the learned in Latin. The excitement it caused in England was something like
that which Luther's appearance produced in Germany. The monk of Saxony had not
yet posted up his Theses, when the Oracles of Truth were published in England.
"The Reformation of England," says a modern historian, who of all others evinces
the deepest insight into history – "The Reformation of England, perhaps to a
greater extent than that of the Continent, was effected by the Word of God."[14]
To Germany, Luther
was sent; Geneva and France had Calvin given to them; but England received a yet
greater Reformer – the Bible. Its Reformation was more immediate and direct, no
great individuality being interposed between it and the source of Divine
knowledge. Luther had given to Germany his Theses; Calvin had given to France
the Institutes; but to England was given the Word of God. Within the sea-girt
isle, in prospect of the storms that were to devastate the outer world, was
placed this Divine Light – the World's Lamp – surely a blessed augury of what
England's function was to be in days to come. The country into whose hands was
now placed the Word of God, was by this gift publicly constituted its custodian.
Freely had she received the Scriptures, freely was she to give them to the
nations around her. She was first to make them the Instructor of her people; she
was next to enshrine them as a perpetual lamp in her Church. Having made them
the foundation-stone of her State, she was finally to put them into the hands of
all the nations of the earth, that they too might be guided to Truth, Order, and
Happiness.
CHAPTER 3
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WILLIAM TYNDALE AND
THE ENGLISH NEW TESTAMENT.
Bilney – Reads the New Testament – Is
Converted by it – Tyndale – His Conversion – Fryth – All Three Emancipated by
the Bible – Foundations of England's Reformation – Tyndale at Sodbury Hall –
Disputations with the Priests – Preaches at Bristol – Resolves to Translate the
Scriptures – Goes to London – Applies to Tonstall – Received into Humphrey
Monmouth's House – Begins his Translation of the New Testament – Escapes to
Germany – Leo's Bull against Luther Published in England – Henry's Book against
Luther – Wolsey Intrigues for the Popedom – His Disappointment – Tyndale in
Hamburg – William Roye – Begins Printing the English New Testament in Cologne –
Finishes in Worms – Sends it across the Sea to England.
ERASMUS had laid his New Testament at the feet of
England. In so doing he had sent to that country, as he believed, a message of
peace; great was his astonishment to find that he had but blown a trumpet of
war, and that the roar of battle was louder than ever. The services of the great
scholar to the Reformation were finished, and now he retired. But the Bible
remained in England, and wherever the Word of God went, there came Protestantism
also.
There was at Trinity College, Cambridge, a young student of the
canon law, Thomas Bilney by name, of small stature, delicate constitution, and
much occupied with the thoughts of eternity. He had striven to attain to the
assurance of the life eternal by a constant adherence to the path of virtue,
nevertheless his conscience, which was very tender, reproached him with
innumerable shortcomings. Vigils, penances, masses – all, in short, which the
"Church" prescribes for the relief of burdened souls, he had tried, but with no
effect save that he had wasted his body and spent nearly all his means. He heard
his friends one day speak of the New Testament of Erasmus, and he made haste to
procure a copy, moved rather by the pleasure which he anticipated from the
purity of its Greek and the elegance of its Latin, than the hope of deriving any
higher good from it. He opened the book. His eyes fell on these words: "This is
a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the
world to save sinners, of whom I am chief." "The chief of sinners," said he to
himself, musing over what he had read: "Paul the chief of sinners! and yet
Christ came to save him! then why not me?" "He had found," says Fox, "a better
teacher" than the doctors of the canon law – "the Holy Spirit of Christ."[1] That hour he quitted the
road of self-righteous performances, by which he now saw he had been travelling,
:in pain of body and sorrow of soul, and he entered into life by Him who is the
door. This was the beginning of the triumphs of the New Testament at Cambridge.
How fruitful this one victory was, we shall afterwards see.
We turn to
Oxford. There was at this university a student from the valley of the Severn, a
descendant of an ancient family, William Tyndale by name. Nowhere had Erasmus so
many friends as at Oxford, and nowhere did his New Testament receive a more
cordial welcome. Our young student, "of most virtuous disposition, and life
unspotted,"[2] was drawn to the study of
the book, fascinated by the elegance of its style and the sublimity of its
teaching. He soon came to be aware of some marvelous power in it, which lie had
found in no other book he had ever studied. Others had invigorated his
intellect, this regenerated his heart. He had discovered an inestimable
treasure, and he would not hide it. This pure youth began to give public
lectures on this pure book; but this being more than Oxford could yet bear, the
young Tyndale quitted the banks of the His, and joined Bilney at
Cambridge.
These two were joined by a third, a young man of blameless
life and elevated soul. John Fryth, the son of an inn-keeper at Sevenoaks, Kent,
was possessed of marvelously quick parts; and with a diligence and a delight in
learning equal to his genius, he would have opened for himself, says Fox, "an
easy road to honors and dignities, had he not wholly consecrated himself to the
service of the Church of Christ."[3] It was William Tyndale who
first sowed "in his heart the seed of the Gospel."[4]
These three young
students were perfectly emancipated from the yoke of the Papacy, and their
emancipation had been accomplished by the Word of God alone. No infallible
Church had interpreted that book to them. They read their Bibles with prayer to
the Spirit, and as they read the eyes of their understanding were opened, and
the wonders of God's law were revealed to them. They came to see that it was
faith that unlocked all the blessings of salvation: that it was faith, and not
the priest, that united them to Christ – Christ, whose cross, and not the
Church, was the source of forgiveness; whose Spirit, and not the Sacrament, was
the author of holiness; and whose righteousness alone, and not the merits of men
either dead or living, was the foundation of the sinner's justification. These
views they had not received from Wittemberg; for Luther was only then beginning
his career: their knowledge of Divine things they had received from the Bible,
and from the Bible alone; and they laid the foundations of the Protestant Church
of England, or rather dug down through the rubbish of ages, to the foundations
which had been laid of old time by the first missionaries to
Britain.
Henry VIII was aspiring to become emperor; Wolsey was beginning
to intrigue for the tiara; but it is the path of Tyndale that we are to follow,
more glorious than that of the other two, though it seemed not so to the world.
Having completed his studies at Cambridge, Tyndale came back to his native
Gloucestershire, and became tutor in the family of Sir John Walsh, of Sodbury
Hall. At the table of his patron he met daily the clergy of the neighborhood,
"abbots, deans, archdeacons, with divers other doctors, and great beneficed
men."[5] In the conversations that
ensued the name of Luther, who was then beginning to be heard of, was often
mentioned, and from the man the transition was easy to his opinions. The young
student from Cambridge did not conceal his sympathy with the German monk, and
kept his Greek New Testament ever beside him to support his sentiments, which
startled one half of those around the table, and scandalized the other half. The
disputants often grew warm. "That is the book that makes heretics," said the
priests, glancing at the unwelcome volume. "The source of all heresies is
pride," would the humble tutor reply to the lordly clergy of the rich valley of
the Severn. "The vulgar cannot understand the Word of God," said the priests;
"it is the Church Sat gave the Bible to men, and it is only her priests that can
interpret it." "Do you know who taught the eagles to find their prey?" asked
Tyndale; "that same God teaches his children to find their Father in his Word.
Far from having given us the Scriptures, it; is you who have hidden them from
us."
The cry of heresy was raised against the tutor; and the lower
clergy, restoring to the ale-house, harangued those whom they found assembled
there, violently declaiming against the errors of Tyndale.[6] A secret accusation was
laid against him before the bishop's chancellor, but Tyndale defended himself so
admirably that he escaped out of the hands of his enemies. He now began to
explain the Scrip-tares on Sundays to Sir John and his household and tenantry.
He next extended his labors to the neighboring villages, scattering with his
living voice that precious seed to which as yet the people had no access, in
their mother tongue, in a printed form. He extended his preaching tours to
Bristol, and its citizens assembled to hear him in St. Austin's Green.[7] But no sooner had he sowed
the seed than the priests hastened to destroy it; and when Tyndale returned he
found that his labor had been in vain: the field was ravaged. "Oh," said he, "if
the people of England had the Word of God in their own language this would not
happen. Without this it will be impossible to establish the laity in the
truth."
It was now that the sublime idea entered his mind of translating
and printing the Scriptures. The prophets spoke in the language of the men whom
they addressed; the songs of the temple were uttered in the vernacular of the
Hebrew nation; and the epistles of the New Testament were written in the tongue
of those to whom they were sent; and why, asked Tyndale, should not the people
of England have the Oracles of God in their mother tongue? "If God spare my
life," said he, "I will, before many years have passed, cause the boy that
driveth the plough to know more of the Scriptures than the priests do."[8]
But it was plain
that Tyndale could not accomplish what he now proposed should be his life's work
at Sodbury Hall: the hostility of the priests was too strongly excited to leave
him in quiet. Bidding Sir John's family adieu he repaired (1523) to the
metropolis. He had hoped to find admission into the household of Tonstall,
Bishop of London, whose learning Erasmus had lauded to the skies, and at whose
door, coming as he did on a learned and pious errand, the young scholar
persuaded himself he should find an instant and cordial welcome. A friend, to
whom he had brought letters of recommendation from Sir John, mentioned his name
to Bishop Tonstall; he even obtained an audience of the bishop, but only to have
his hopes dashed. "My house is already full," said the bishop coldly. He turned
away: there was no room for him in the Episcopal palace to translate the
Scriptures. But if the doors of the bishop's palace were closed against him, the
door of a rich London merchant was now opened for his reception, in the
following manner.
Soon after his arrival in the metropolis, Tyndale began
to preach in public: among his hearers was one Humphrey Monmouth, who had
learned to love the Gospel from listening to Dean Colet. When repulsed by
Tonstall, Tyndale told Monmouth of his disappointment. "Come and live with me,"
said the wealthy merchant, who was ever ready to show hospitality to poor
disciples for the Gospel's sake. He took up his abode in Monmouth's house; he
lived abstemiously [9] at a table loaded with
delicacies; and he studied night and day, being intent on kindling a torch that
should illuminate England. Eager to finish, he summoned Fryth to his aid; and
the two friends working together, chapter after chapter of the New Testament
passed from the Greek into the tongue of England. The two scholars had been a
full half-year engaged in their work, when the storm of persecution broke out
afresh in London. Inquisition was made for all who had any of Luther's works in
their possession, the readers of which were threatened with the fire. "If," said
Tyndale, "to possess the works of Luther exposes one to a stake, how much
greater must be the crime of translating the Scriptures!" His friends urged him
to withdraw, as the only chance left him of ever accomplishing the work to which
he had devoted himself. Tyndale had no alternative but to adopt with a heavy
heart the course his friends recommended. "I understood at the last," said he,
"not only that there was no room in my lord of London's palace to translate the
New Testament, but also that there was no place to do it in all England."[10] Stepping on board a vessel
in the Thames that was loading for Hamburg, and taking with him his Greek New
Testament, he sailed for Germany.
While Tyndale is crossing the sea, we
must give attention to other matters which meanwhile had been transpiring in
England. The writings of Luther had by this time entered the kingdom and were
being widely circulated. The eloquence of his words, fitly sustained by the
heroism of his deeds, roused t]he attention of the English people, who watched
the career of the monk with the deepest interest. His noble stand before the
Diet at Worms crowned the interest his first appearance had awakened. As when
fresh oil is poured into the dying lamp, the spirit of Lollardism revived. It
leaped up in new breadth and splendor. The bishops took the alarm, and held a
council to deliberate on the measures to be taken. The bull of Leo [11] against Luther had been
sent to England, and it was resolved to publish it. The Cardinal-legate Wolsey,
following at no humble distance Pope Leo, also issued a bull of his own against
Luther, and both were published in all the cathedral and parish churches of
England on the first Sunday of June, 1521. The bull of Wolsey was read during
high mass, and that of Leo was nailed up on the church door. The principal
result of this proceeding was to advertise the writings of Luther to the people
of England. The car of Reformation was advancing; the priests had taken counsel
to stop it, but the only effect of their interference was to make it move
onwards at an accelerated speed.
At this stage of the controversy an
altogether unexpected champion stepped into the arena to do battle with Luther.
This was no less a personage than the King of England. The zeal which animated
Henry for the Roman traditions, and the fury wit]h which he was transported
against the man who was uprooting them, may be judged of from the letter he
addressed to Louis of Bavaria. "That this fire," said he, "which has been
kindled by Luther, and fanned by the arts of the devil, should have raged for so
long a time, and be still gathering strength, has been the subject to me of
greater grief than tongue or pen can express…. For what could have happened more
calamitous to Germany than that she should have given birth to a man who has
dared to interpret the Divine law, the statutes of the Fathers, and those
decrees which have received the consent of so many ages, in a manner totally at
variance with the opinion of the learned Fathers of the Church…. We earnestly
implore and exhort you that you delay not a moment to seize and exterminate this
Luther, who is a rebel against Christ; and, unless he repents, deliver himself
and his audacious writings to the flames."[12]
This shows us the
fate that would probably have awaited Luther had he lived in England: happily
his lot had been cast under a more benignant and gracious sovereign. But Henry,
debarred in this case the use of the stake, which would speedily have consumed
the heretic, if not the heresy, made haste to unsheathe the controversial sword.
He attacked Luther's Babylonian Captivity in a work entitled A Defense of the
Seven Sacraments. The king's book discovers an intimate acquaintance with
mediaeval and scholastic inventions and decrees, but no knowledge whatever of
apostolic doctrine. Luther ascribed it to Lee, afterwards Archbishop of York;
others have thought that they could trace in it the hand of Fisher, Bishop of
Rochester. But we see no reason to ascribe it to any one save Henry himself. He
was an apt scholar of Thomas Aquinas, and here he discusses those questions only
which had come within the range of his previous studies.[13] He dedicated the work to
the Pontiff, and sent a splendidly bound copy of it to Leo. It was received at
Rome in the manner that we should expect the work of a king, written in defense
of the Papal chair, to be received by a Pope. Leo eulogized it as the crowning
one among the glories of England, and he rewarded the messenger, who had carried
it across the Alps, by giving him his toe to kiss; and recompensed Henry for the
labor he had incurred in writing it, by bestowing upon him (1521) the title of
"Defender of the Faith," which was confirmed by a bull of Clement VII in 1523.
[14]"We can do nothing against the truth, but for it,"
wrote an apostle, and his words were destined to be signally verified in the
case of the King of England. Henry set up Tradition and the Supremacy as the
main buttresses of the Papal system. The nation was wearying of both; the king's
defense but showed the Protestants where to direct their assault; and as for the
applauses from the Vatican, so agreeable to the royal ear, these were speedily
drowned ha the thunders of Luther; and most people came to see, though all did
not acknowledge it, that if Henry the king was above the monk, Henry the author
was below him.
Wolsey now turned his face toward the Popedom. If he had
succeeded in achieving this, which was the summit of his ambition, he would have
attempted to revive the glories of the era of Innocent III: its substantial
power he never could have wielded, for the wars of the fifteenth century, by
putting the kings above the Popes, had made that impossible. Still, as Pope,
Wolsey would have been a more formidable opponent of the Reformation than either
Leo or Clement. It was clear that he could reach the dignity to which he aspired
only by the help of one or other of the two great Continental sovereigns of his
time, Francis I and Charles V He was on the most friendly footing with Francis,
whereas he had contracted a strong dislike to Charles, and the emperor was well
aware that the cardinal loved him not. Still, on weighing the matter, Wolsey saw
that of the two sovereigns Charles was the abler to assist him; so breaking with
Francis, and smothering his disgust of the emperor, he solicited his interest to
secure the tiara for him when it should become vacant. That monarch, who could
dissemble as well as Wolsey, well knowing the influence of the cardinal with
Henry VIII, and his power in England, met this request with promises and
flatteries. Charles thought he was safe in Promising the tiara to one who was
some years older than its present possessor, for Leo was still in the prime of
life. The immediate result of this friendship, hollow on both sides, was a war
between Francis and the emperor. Meanwhile Leo suddenly died, and the sincerity
of Charles, sooner than he had thought, was put to the test. With no small
chagrin and mortification, which he judged it politic meanwhile to conceal,
Wolsey saw Adrian of Utrecht, the emperor's tutor, placed in the Papal chair.
But Adrian was an old man; it was not probable that he would long survive to
sway the spiritual scepter of Christendom, and Charles consoled the disappointed
cardinal by renewing his promise of support when a new election, which could not
be distant, should take place.[15] But we must leave the
cardinal, his eyes still fixed on the dazzling prize, and follow the track of
one who also was aspiring to a crown, but one more truly glorious than that of
Pope or emperor.
We have seen Tyndale set sail for Germany. Arriving at
Hamburg, he unpacked the MS. sheets which he had first begun in the valley of
the Severn, and resumed on the banks of the Elbe the prosecution of his great
design. William Rove, formerly a Franciscan friar at Greenwich, but who had
abandoned the cloister, became his assistant. The Gospels of St. Matthew and St.
Mark were translated and printed at Hamburg, and in 1524 were sent across to
Monmouth in London, as the first-fruits of his great task. The merchant sent the
translator a much-needed supply of money, which enabled Tyndale to pay a visit
to Luther in Wittemberg, whence he returned, and established himself at the
printing-house of Quentel and Byrckman ha Cologne. Resuming his great labor, he
began to print an edition of 3,000 copies of his English New Testament. Sheet
after sheet was passing through the press. Great was Tyndale's joy. He had taken
every precaution, meanwhile, against a seizure, knowing this archiepiscopal seat
to be vigorously watched by a numerous and jealous priesthood. The tenth sheet
was ha the press when Byrckman, hurrying to him, informed him that the Senate
had ordered the printing of the work to be stopped. All was discovered then!
Tyndale was stunned. Must the labor of years be lost, and the enlightenment of
England, which had seemed so near, be frustrated? His resolution was taken on
the spot. Going straight to the printing-house, he packed up the printed sheets,
and bidding Roye follow, he stepped into a boat on the Rhine and ascended the
river. It was Cochlaeus who had come upon the track of the English New
Testament, and hardly was Tyndale gone when the officers from the Senate, led by
the dean, entered the printing-house to seize the work.[16]
After some days
Tyndale arrived at Worms, that little town which Luther's visit, four years
before, had invested with a halo of historic glory. On his way thither he
thought less, doubtless, of the picturesque hills that enclose the "milk-white"
river, with the ruined castles that crown their summits, and the antique towns
that nestle at their feet, than of the precious wares embarked with him. These
to his delight he safely conveyed to the printing-house of Peter Schaefer, the
grandson of Fust, one of the inventors of the art. He instantly resumed the
printing, but to mislead the spies, who, he thought it probable, would follow
him hither, he changed the form of the work from the quarto to the octavo, which
was an advantage in the end, as it greatly facilitated the circulation.[17]
The printing of the
two editions was completed in the end of 1525, and soon thereafter 1,500 copies
were dispatched to England. "Give diligence" – so ran the solemn charge that
accompanied them, to the nation to which the waves were wafting the precious
pages – "unto the words of eternal life, by the which, if we repent and believe
them, we are born anew, created afresh, and enjoy the fruits of the blood of
Christ." Tyndale had done his great work. While Wolsey, seated in the splendid
halls of his palace at Westminster, had been intriguing for the tiara, that he
might conserve the darkness that covered England, Tyndale, in obscure lodgings
in the German and Flemish towns, had been toiling night and day, in cold and
hunger, to kindle a torch that might illuminate it.
CHAPTER 4
Back to
Top
TYNDALE'S NEW
TESTAMENT ARRIVES IN ENGLAND.
Bilney's Labors at Cambridge – Hugh
Latimer – His Education – Monkish Asceticism – Bilney's Device – Latimer's
Conversion – Power of his Preaching – Wolsey's College – The Bishops try to
Arrest the Evangelization – Prior Buckingham – Bishop of Ely and Latimer – Dr.
Barnes and the Augustine Convent – Workers at Cambridge – Excitement at
Cambridge and Oxford – Desire for the Word of God – Tyndale's New Testament
Arrives in London – Distributed by Garret in the City – in Oxford – over the
Kingdom – Its Reception by the English People.
WHILE the English New Testament was approaching the
shores of Britain, preparations, all unsuspected by :men, were being made for
its reception. The sower never goes forth till first the plough has opened the
furrow. Bilney, as we have already said, was the first convert whom the Greek
New Testament of Erasmus had drawn away from the Pope to sit at the feet of
Christ. When Tyndale was compelled to seek a foreign shore, Bilney remained
behind in England. His face was pale, for his constitution was sickly, and his
fasts were frequent; but his eye sparkled, and his conversation was full of
life, indicating, as Fox tells us, the vehement desire that burned within him to
draw others to the Gospel. Soon we find him surrounded by a little company of
converts from the students and Fellows of Cambridge. Among these was George
Stafford, professor of divinity, whose pure life and deep learning made his
conversion as great a loss to the supporters of the old religion as it was a
strength to the disciples of the Protestant faith. But the man of all this
little band destined to be hereafter the most conspicuous in the ranks of the
Reformation was Hugh Latimer.
Latimer was the son of a yeoman, and was
born at Thurcaston, in Leicestershire, about the year 1472. He entered Cambridge
the same year (1505) that Luther entered the Augustine Convent; and he became a
Fellow of Clare Hall in the year (1509) that Calvin was born. Of a serious turn
of mind from his boyhood, he gave himself ardently to the study of the
schoolmen, and he so drank in their spirit, that when he took orders he was
noted for his gloomy asceticism. The outbreak of what he deemed heresy at
Cambridge gave him intolerable pain; he railed spitefully against Stafford, who
was giving lectures on the Scriptures, and he could hardly refrain from using
violence to compel his companions to desist from reading the Greek New
Testament. The clergy were delighted to. see such zeal for the Church, and they
rewarded it by appointing him cross-bearer to the university.[1] The young priest strode on
before the doctors, bearing aloft the sacred symbol, with an air that showed how
proud he was of his office. He signalized the taking of his degree as Bachelor
of Divinity, by delivering a violent Latin discourse against Philip Melancthon
and his doctrines.
But there was one who had once been as great a zealot
as himself, who was watching his career with deep anxiety, not unmingled with
hope, and was even then searching in his quiver for the arrow that should bring
down this strong man. This was Bilney. After repeated failures he found at last
the shaft that, piercing Latimer's armor, made its way to his heart. "For the
love of God," said Bilney to him one day, "be pleased to hear my confession."[2] It was a recantation of
his Lutheranism, doubtless thought Latimer, that was to be poured into his ear.
Bilney dropped on his knees before Latimer, and beginning his confession, he
unfolded his former anguish, his long but fruitless efforts for relief, his
peace at last, not in the works prescribed by the Church, but in the Lamb of God
that taketh away the sin of the world; in short, he detailed the whole history
of his conversion. As he spoke, Latimer felt the darkness within breaking up. He
saw a new world rising around him – he felt the hardness of his heart passing
away – there came a sense of sin, and with it a feeling of horror, and anon a
burst of tears; for now the despair was gone, the flee forgiveness of the Gospel
had been suddenly revealed to him. Before rising up he had confessed, and was
absolved by One who said to him, "Son, be of good cheer, thy sins are forgiven
thee." So has Latimer himself told us in his sermons. His conversion was
instantaneous.
That ardor of temperament and energy of zeal, which
Latimer had aforetime devoted to the mass, he now transferred to the Gospel. The
black garment of asceticism he put off at once, and clothed himself with the
bright robe of evangelical joy. He grasped the great idea of the Gospel's
absolute freeness even better than Bilney, or indeed than any convert that the
Protestantism of the sixteenth century had yet made in England; and he preached
with a breadth and an eloquence which had never before been heard in an English
pulpit. He was now a true cross-bearer, and the effects that followed gave no
feeble presage of the glorious light with which the preaching of the Cross was
one day to fill the realm.
While the day was opening on Cambridge, its
sister Oxford was still sitting in the night, but now the Protestant doctrines
began to be heard in those halls around which there still lingered, like a halo,
the memories of Wicliffe. Wolsey unwittingly found entrance here for the light.
Intending to rear a monument which should perpetuate his name to after-ages, the
cardinal projected a new college at this university, and began to build in a
style of most unexampled magnificence. The work was so costly that the funds
soon fell short. Wolsey obtained a supply by the dissolution of the monastery of
St. Fridewide, which, having been surrendered to the Crown, was bestowed by
Henry on the cardinal. A Papal bull was needed, and procured, to sanction the
transfer. Wolsey, protected by this precedent, as he thought, proceeded to
confiscate a few smaller monasteries; but a clamor arose against him as
assailing the Church; he was compelled to stop, and it was said of him that he
began to build a college and ended by building a kitchen. But the more vital
part of the college went forward: six public lectureships were established – one
of theology, one of civil law, one of medicine, one of philosophy, one of
mathematics, and one of the Greek language. Soon after Wolsey added to these a
chair of humanity and rhetoric.[3] He sought all through
Europe for learned men to fill its chairs, and one of the, first to be invited
was John Clark, a Cambridge Master of Arts, learned, conscientious, and
enlightened by the Word of God; and no sooner had he taken his place at that
famous school than he began to expound the Scriptures and make converts. Are
both universities to become fountains of heresy? asked the clergy in alarm. The
bishops sent down a commission to Cambridge to make an investigation, and
apprehend such as might appear to be the leaders of this movement. The court sat
down, and the result might have been what indeed took place later, the planting
of a few stakes, had not an order suddenly arrived from Wolsey to stop
proceedings. The Papal chair had again become vacant, and Wolsey was of opinion,
perhaps, that to light martyr-fires at that moment in England would not tend to
further his election: as a consequence, the disciples had a breathing-space.
This tranquil period was diligently improved. Bilney visited the poor at their
own homes, Stafford redoubled his zeal in teaching, and Latimer waxed every day
more bold and eloquent in the pulpit. Knowing on what task Tyndale was at this
time engaged, Latimer took care to insist with special emphasis on the duty of
reading the Word of God in one's mother tongue, if one would avoid the snares of
the false teacher.
Larger congregations gathered round Latimer's pulpit
every day. The audience was not an unmixed one; all in it did not listen with
the same feelings. The majority hung upon the lips of the preacher, and drank in
his words, as men athirst do the cup of cold water; but here and there dark
faces, and eyes burning with anger, showed that all did not relish the doctrine.
The dullest among the priesthood could see that the Gospel of a free forgiveness
could establish itself not otherwise than upon the ruins of their system, and
felt the necessity of taking some remedial steps before the evil should be
consummated. For this they chose one of themselves, Prior Buckingham, a man of
slender learning, but of adventurous courage.
Latimer, passing over Popes
and Councils, had made his appeal to the Word of God; the prior was charged,
therefore, to show the people the danger of reading that book. Buckingham knew
hardly anything of the Bible, but setting to work he found, after some search, a
passage which he thought had a very decidedly dangerous tendency. Confident of
success he mounted the pulpit, and opening the New Testament he read out, with
much solemnity, "If thy right eye offend thee, pluck it out, and cast it from
thee." This, said he, is what the Bible bids us do. Alas! if we follow it,
England in a few years will be a "nation full of blind beggars." Latimer was one
of those who can answer a fool according to his folly, and he announced that
next Sunday he would reply to the Grey Friar. The church was crowded, and in the
midst of the audience, planted right before the pulpit, in the frock of St.
Francis, sat Prior Buckingham. this fancied triumph could yet be read on his
brow, for his pride was as great as his ignorance.
Latimer began; he took
up one by one the arguments of the prior, and not deeming them worthy of grave
refutation, he exposed their absurdity, and castigated their author in a fine
vein of irony and ridicule. Only children, he said, fail to distinguish between
the popular forms of speech and their deeper meanings – between the image and
the thing which the image represents. "For instance," he continued, fixing his
eye on Buckingham, "if we see a fox painted preaching in a friar's hood, nobody
imagines that a fox is meant, but that craft and hypocrisy are described, which
are so often found disguised in that garb."[4] The blush of shame had
replaced the pride on Buckingham's brow, and rising up, he hastily quitted the
church, and sought his convent, there to hide his confusion.
When the
prior retired in discomfiture, a greater functionary came forward to continue
the battle. The Bishop of Ely, as Ordinary of Cambridge, forbade Latimer to
preach either in the university or in the diocese. The work must be stopped, and
this could be done only by silencing its preacher. But if the bishop closed one
door, the providence of God opened another. Robert Barnes, an Englishman, had
just returned from Louvain, with a great reputation for learning, and was
assembling daily crowds around him by his lectures on the great writers of
antiquity, in the Augustine Convent, of which he had been appointed prior. From
the classics he passed to the New Testament, carrying with him his
audience.
In instructing his hearers he instructed himself also in the
Divine mysteries of the Pauline Epistles. About the time that the eloquent voice
of Latimer was silenced by the Bishop of Ely, Barnes had come to a fuller
knowledge of the Gospel; and, tenderly loving its great preacher, he said to
Latimer one day, "The bishop has forbidden you to preach, but my monastery is
not under his jurisdiction; come and preach in my pulpit." The brief period of
Latimer's enforced silence had but quickened the public interest in the Gospel.
He entered the pulpit of the Augustine Convent; the crowds that gathered round
him were greater than ever, and the preacher, refreshed in soul by the growing
interest that was taken in Divine things by doctors, students, and townspeople,
preached with even greater warmth and power. The kingdom of the Gospel was being
established in the hearts of men, and a constellation of lights ]had risen in
the sky of Cambridge – Bilney, the man of prayer; Barnes, the scholar; Stafford,
whose speech dropped as the dew; and Latimer, who thundered in the pulpit,
addressing the doctors in Latin, and the common people in their own mother
tongue – true yokefellows all of them; their gifts and modes of acting, which
were wonderfully varied, yet most happily harmonized, were put forth in one
blessed work, on which God the Spirit was setting his seal, in the converts
which, by their labors, were being daily added to the Gospel.
This was
not as yet the day, but it was the morning – a sweet and gracious morning, which
was long remembered, and often afterwards spoken about in terms which have found
their record in the works of one of the converts of those times -
Similar scenes, though not on a scale quite so
marked, were at this hour taking place in Oxford. Almost all the scholars whom
Wolsey had brought to fill his new chairs evinced a favor for the new opinions,
or openly ranged themselves on their side. Wolsey, in selecting the most
learned, had unwittingly selected those most friendly to Reform. Besides Clark,
whom we have already mentioned, and the new men, there was John Fryth, the
modest but stable-minded Christian, who had been Tyndale's associate in
preparing an instrumentality which was destined soon and powerfully to dispel
the darkness that still rested above England, and which was only feebly relieved
by the partial illumination that was breaking out at the two university seats of
Cambridge and Oxford.
A desire had now been awakened in the nation at
large for the Word of God, and that desire could be gratified not otherwise than
by having the Scriptures in its own tongue. The learned men of England had been
these nine years in possession of Erasmus' Greek and Latin New Testament, and in
it they had access to the fountain-heads of Divine knowledge, but the common
people must receive the Gospel at second hand, through preachers like Latimer.
This was a method of communication slow and unsatisfactory; something more
direct, full, and rapid could alone satisfy the popular desire. That wish was
about to be gratified. The fullness of the time for the Bible being given to
England in her own tongue, and through England to the world in all the tongues
of earth, had now come. He who brings forth the sun from the chambers Of the sky
at his appointed hour, now gave commandment that this greater light should come
forth from the darkness in which it had been so long hidden. William Tyndale,
the man chosen of God for this labor, had, as we have seen, finished his task.
The precious treasure he had put on board ship, and the waves of the North Sea
were at this hour bearing it to the shores of England.
Tyndale had
entrusted the copies of his New Testament, not to one, but to several merchants.
Carrying it on board, and hiding it among their merchandise, they set sail with
the precious volume from Antwerp. As they ascended the Thames they began to be
uneasy touching their venture. Cochlaeus had sent information that the Bible
translated by Tyndale was about to be sent into England, and had advised that
the ports should be watched, and all vessels coming from Germany examined; and
the merchants were likely to find, on stepping ashore, the king's guards waiting
to seize their books, and to commit themselves to prison. Their fears were
disappointed. They were allowed to unload their vessels without molestation. The
men whom the five pious merchants had imagined standing over the Word of God,
ready to destroy it the moment it was landed on English soil, had been
dispersed. The king was at Eltham keeping his Christmas; Tonstall had gone to
Spain; Cardinal Wolsey had some pressing political matters on hand; and so the
portentous arrival of which they had been advertised was overlooked. The
merchants conveyed the precious treasure they had carried across the sea to
their establishments in Thames Street. The Word of God in the mother tongue of
the people was at last in England.
But the books must be put into
circulation. The merchants knew a pious curate, timid in things of this world,
bold in matters of the faith, who they thought might be willing to undertake the
dangerous work. The person in question was Thomas Garret, of All Hallows, Honey
Lane. Garret had the books conveyed to his own house, and hid them there till he
should be able to arrange for their distribution. Having meanwhile read them,
and felt how full of light were these holy books, he but the more ardently
longed to disseminate them. He began to circulate them in London, by selling
copies to his friends. He next started off for Oxford, carrying with him a large
supply. Students, doctors, monks, townspeople began to purchase and read.[6] The English New Testament
soon found its way to Cambridge; and from the two universities it was in no long
time diffused over the whole kingdom. This was in the end of 1525, and the
beginning of 1526. The day had broken in England with the Greek and Latin New
Testament of Erasmus; now it was approaching noontide splendor with Tyndale's
English New Testament.
We in this age find it impossible to realize the
transition that was now accomplished by the people of England. To them the
publication of the Word of God in their own tongue was the lifting up of a veil
from a world of which before they had heard tell, but which now they saw. The
wonder and ravishment with which they gazed for the first time on objects so
pure, so beautiful, and so transcendently majestic, and the delight with which
they were filled, we cannot at all conceive. There were narratives and
doctrines; there were sermons and epistles; there were incidents and prayers;
there were miracles and apocalyptic visions; and in the center of all these
glories, a majestic Personage, so human and yet so Divine; not the terrible
Judge which Rome had painted him; but the Brother: very accessible to men,
"receiving sinners and eating with them." And what a burden was taken from the
conscience by the announcement that the forgiveness of the Cross was altogether
free! How different was the Gospel of the New Testament from the Gospel of Rome!
In the latter all was mystery, in the former all was plain; the one addressed
men only in the language of the schools, the other spoke to them in the terms of
every day. In the one there was a work to be done, painful, laborious; and he
that came short, though but in one iota, exposed himself to all the curses of
the law; in the other there was simply a gift to be received, for the work had
been done for the poor sinner by Another, and he found himself at the open gates
of Paradise. It needed no one but his own heart, now unburdened of a mighty
load, and filled with a joy never tasted before, to tell the man that this was
not the Gospel of the priest, but the Gospel of God; and that it had come, not
from Rome, but from Heaven.
Another advantage resulting from what Tyndale
had done was that the Scriptures had been brought greatly more within reach of
all classes than they ever were before. Wicliffe's Bible existed only in
manuscript, and its cost was so great that only noblemen or wealthy persons
could buy it. Tyndale's New Testament was not much more than a twentieth part
the cost of Wicliffe's version. A hundred years before, the price of Wicliffe's
New Testament was nearly three pounds sterling; but now the printed copies of
Tyndale's were sold for three shillings and sixpence. If we compare these prices
with the value of money and the wages of labor at the two eras, we shall find
that the cost of the one was nearly forty times greater than that of the other;
in other words, the wages of a whole year would have done little more than buy a
New Testament of Wicliffe's, whereas the wages of a fortnight would suffice for
the laborer to possess himself of a copy of Tyndale's.
CHAPTER 5
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Top
THE BIBLE AND THE CELLAR AT OXFORD – ANNE
BOLEYN.
Entrance of the Scriptures – Garret carries them to Oxford –
Pursuit of Garret – His Apprehension – Imprisonments at Oxford – The Cellar –
Clark, Fryth, etc., do Penance – Their Sufferings – Death of Clark-Other Three
Die – The Rest Released – Cambridge – Dr. Barnes Apprehended – A Penitential
Procession in London – Purchase and Burning of Tyndale's Testaments by the
Bishop of London – New Edition – The Divorce Stirred – Anne Boleyn – Her Beauty
and Virtues – Knight Sent to Rome on the Divorce – A Captive Pope – Two Kings at
his Feet.
WHEN God is to begin a work of reformation in the
world, he first sends to men the Word of Life. The winds of passion – the
intrigues of statesmen, the ambitions of monarchs, the wars of nations – next
begin to blow to clear the path of the movement. So was it in England. The Bible
had taken its place at the center of the field; and now other parties – Cardinal
Wolsey and King Henry within the country; the Pope, the Emperor, and the King of
France outside of it – hastened to act their important though subordinate parts
in that grand transformation which the Bible was to work on England. It is on
this troubled stage that we are about to set foot; but first let us follow a
little farther the immediate fortunes of the newly translated Scriptures, and
the efforts made to introduce them into England.
The cardinal and the
Bishop of London soon learned that the English New Testament had entered London,
and that the Curate of-All Hallows had received the copies, and had hidden them
in his ]muse. Search was made through all the city for Garret. He could not be
found, and they were now told that he had gone to Oxford "to make sale of his
heretical books."[1]
They immediately
dispatched officers to search for him in Oxford, and "burn all and every his
aforesaid books, and him too if they could find him."[2] On the Tuesday before
Shrove-tide, Garret was warned that the avengers of heresy were on his track,
and that if he remained in Oxford he was sure to fall into the hands of the
cardinal, and be sent to the Tower. Changing his name, he set out for
Dorsetshire, but on the road his conscience smote him; he stopped, again he went
forward, again he stopped, and finally he returned to Oxford, which he reached
late at night. Weary with his wanderings, he threw himself upon his bed, where,
soon after midnight, he was apprehended by Wolsey's agents, and given into the
safe keeping of Dr. Cottisford, commissary of the University. A second attempt
at flight was followed by arrest and imprisonment. Oxford was lost, the priests
felt, unless the most summary measures were instantly adopted. All the friends
of the Gospel at that university were apprehended, and thrown into prison. About
a score of doctors and students were arrested, besides monks and canons, so
widely had the truth spread. Of the number were Clark, one of the first to
receive the truth; Dalabar, a disciple of Clark; John Fryth, and eight others of
Wolsey's College. Corpus Christi, Magdalen, and St. Mary's Colleges also
furnished their contribution to those now in bonds for the Gospel's sake. The
fact that this outbreak of heresy, as the cardinal accounted it, had occurred
mainly at his own college, made him only the more resolute on the adoption of
measures to stop it. In patronizing literature he had been promoting heresy, and
the college which he had hoped would be the glory of Oxford, and a bulwark
around the orthodoxy of England, had become the opprobrium of the one and a
menace to the other.
The cardinal had now to provide a dungeon for the
men whom he had sought for with so much pains, through England and the
Continent, to place in his new chairs. Their prison was a damp, dark cellar
below the buildings of the college, smelling rankly of the putrid articles which
were sometimes stored up in it.[3] Here .these young doctors
and scholars were left, breathing the fetid air, and enduring great misery. On
their examination, two only were dismissed without punishment: the rest were
condemned to do public penance for their. erroneous opinions. A great fire was
kindled in the market-place: the prisoners, than whom, of all the youth at
Oxford, none had a finer genius, or were more accomplished in letters, were
marshaled in procession, and with fagot on shoulder they marched through the
streets to where the bonfire blazed, and finished their penitential performance
by throwing their heretical books into it.[4] After this, they were
again sent back to their foul dungeon.
Prayers and animated conversations
beguiled the first weeks of their doleful imprisonment. But by-and-by the chilly
damp and the corrupted air did their terrible work upon them. Their strength
ebbed away, their joints ached, their eyes grew dim, their features were
haggard, their limbs shook and trembled, and scarcely were they able to crawl
across the floor of their noisome prison. They hardly recognized one another as,
groping their way in the partial darkness and solitariness, they encountered
each other. One day, Clark lay stretched on the damp floor: his strength had
utterly failed, and he was about to be released by the hand of Death. He craved
to have the Communion given him before he should breathe his last. The request
could not be granted. Heaving a sigh of resignation, he quoted the words of the
ancient Father, "Believe, and thou hast eaten."[5]
He received by
faith the "Bread of Life," and having eaten his last meal he died. Other three
of these confessors were rapidly sinking: Death had already set his mark on
their ghastly features. These were Sumner, Bayley, and Goodman. The cardinal was
earnestly entreated to release them before death should put it out of his power
to show them pity. Wolsey yielded to this appeal; but he had let them out only
to die. The rest remained in the dungeon.
The death of these four was the
means of opening the doors of the prison to the others. Even the cardinal, in
the midst of his splendors, and occupied though he was at that moment with the
affairs of England, and other kingdoms besides, was touched by the catastrophe
that had taken place in the dungeons of his college, and sent an order for the
release of the survivors. Six months had they sustained life in this dreadful
place, the fever in the blood, and the poison in the air, consuming their
strength day by day; and when their friends received them at the door of their
living tomb, they seemed so many specters. They lived to serve the cause into
which they had received this early baptism. Some of them shone in the schools,
others in the pulpit; and others, as Fryth and Ferrar, subsequently Bishop of
St. David's, consummated at the stake, long years after, the martyrdom which
they had begun in the dungeon at Oxford.
The University of Cambridge was
the first to receive the light, but its sister of Oxford seemed to outstrip it
by being the first to be glorified by martyrdom. Cambridge, however was now
called to drink of the same cup. On the very same day (February 5th, 1526) on
which the investigation had been set on foot at Oxford, Wolsey's chaplain,
accompanied by a sergeant-at- arms, arrived at Cambridge to open there a similar
inquisition. The first act of Wolsey's agent was to arrest Barnes, the
distinguished scholar, who, as we have seen, had given the use of his pulpit in
the Augustine Convent to Latimer. He next began a search in the rooms of Bilney,
Latimer, and Stafford, for New Testaments, which he had learned from spies were
hidden in their lodgings. All the Testaments had been previously removed, and
the search resulted in the discovery of not a single copy. Without proof of
heresy the chaplain could arrest no heretics, and he returned to London with his
one prisoner. An indiscreet sermon which Barnes had preached against the
cardinal's "jeweled shoes, poleaxes, gilt pillars, golden cushions, silver
crosses, and red gloves," or, as the cardinal himself phrased it, "bloody
gloves," was the ground of his apprehension. When brought before Wolsey he
justified himself. "You must be burned," said the cardinal, and ordered him into
confinement. Before the tribunal of the bishops he repeated next day his defense
of his articles, and was sentenced to be burned alive. His worldly friends came
round him. "If you die," said they, "truth will die with you; if you save your
life, you will cause truth to triumph when better days come round." They thrust
a pen into his hand: "Haste, save yourself!" they reiterated. "Burned alive" –
the terrible words ringing in his ears, freezing his blood, and bewildering his
brain, he put forth his hand, and signed his recantation. He fell now that he
might stand afterwards.
Meanwhile a great discovery had been made at
London. The five merchants who had carried across from Germany the English New
Testaments of Tyndale, had been tracked, apprehended, and were to do public
penance at St. Paul's Cathedral on the morrow. It was resolved to consummate
Barnes' disgrace by making him take his place in the penitential procession. On
a lofty throne, at the northern gate of St. Paul's, sat the cardinal, clothed
all in red, a goodly array of bishops, abbots, and priests gathered around him.
The six penitents slowly passed before him, each bearing a faggot, which, after
encompassing the fire three times, they cast into the flames, together with some
heretical books. This solemn act of public humiliation being ended, the
penitents returned to their prison, and Wolsey, descending from his throne and
mounting his mule, rode off under a canopy of state to his palace at
Westminster.
It was but a small matter that the disciple was burning his
:fagot, or rotting in a cellar, when the Word was travelling through all the
kingdom. Night and day, whether the persecutor waked or slept, the messenger of
the Heavenly King pursued his journey, carrying the "good tidings" to the
remotest nooks of England. Depots of the Scriptures were established even in
some convents. The chagrin and irritation of the bishops were extreme. An
archiepiscopal mandate was issued in the end of 1526 against the Bible, or any
book containing so much as one quotation [6] from it. But mandate,
inquisitors, all were fruitless; as passes the cloud through the sky, depositing
its blessed drops on the earth below, and clothing hill and valley with verdure,
so passed the Bible over England, diffusing light, and kindling a secret joy in
men's hearts. At last Bishop Tonstall bethought him of the following expedient
for entirely suppressing the book. He knew a merchant, Packington by name, who
traded with Antwerp, and who he thought might be useful to him in this matter.
The bishop being in Antwerp sent for Packington, and asked him to bring to him
all the copies of Tyndale's New Testament that he could find. Packington
undertook to do so, provided the bishop should pay the price of them. This the
bishop cheerfully agreed to do. Soon thereafter Packington had an interview with
Tyndale, and told him that he had found a merchant for his New Testaments. "Who
is he?" asked Tyndale. "The Bishop of London," replied the merchant. "If the
bishop wants the New Testament," said Tyndale, "it is to burn it." "Doubtless,"
replied Packington; "but the money will enable you to print others, and
moreover, the bishop will have it." The price was paid to Tyndale, the New
Testaments were sent across to London, and soon after their' arrival were
publicly burned at St. Paul's Cross. Tyndale immediately set to work to prepare
a new and more correct edition, and, says the chronicler,[7] "they came thick and
threefold over into England." The bishop, amazed, sent for Packington to inquire
how it came to pass that the book which he had bought up and suppressed should
be more widely circulated than ever. Packington replied that though the copies
had been destroyed the types remained, and advised Tonstall to buy them also.
The bishop smiled, and beginning to see how the matter stood, dismissed the
merchant, without giving him more money to be expended in the production of more
New Testaments.
It was not Tyndale's edition only that was crossing the
sea. A Dutch house, knowing the desire for the Bible which the public
destruction of it in London had awakened