FOX'S BOOK OF MARTYRS
CHAPTER VII
An Account of the Life and Persecutions of John Wickliffe
It will not be inappropriate to devote a
few pages of this work to a brief detail of the lives
of some of those men who first stepped forward, regardless
of the bigoted power which opposed all reformation, to
stem the time of papal corruption, and to seal the pure
doctrines of the Gospel with their blood.
Among these, Great Britain has the honor
of taking the lead, and first maintaining that freedom
in religious controversy which astonished Europe, and
demonstrated that political and religious liberty are
equally the growth of that favored island. Among the earliest
of these eminent persons was
John Wickliffe
This celebrated reformer, denominated the
"Morning Star of the Reformation," was born about the
year 1324, in the reign of Edward II. Of his extraction
we have no certain account. His parents designing him
for the Church, sent him to Queen's College, Oxford, about
that period founded by Robert Eaglesfield, confessor to
Queen Philippi. But not meeting with the advantages for
study in that newly established house which he expected,
he removed to Merton College, which was then esteemed
one of the most learned societies in Europe.
The first thing which drew him into public
notice, was his defence of the university against the
begging friars, who about this time, from their settlement
in Oxford in 1230, had been troublesome neighbors to the
university. Feuds were continually fomented; the friars
appealing to the pope, the scholars to the civil power;
and sometimes one party, and sometimes, the other, prevailed.
The friars became very fond of a notion that Christ was
a common beggar; that his disciples were beggars also;
and that begging was of Gospel institution. This doctrine
they urged from the pulpit and wherever they had access.
Wickliffe had long held these religious
friars in contempt for the laziness of their lives, and
had now a fair opportunity of exposing them. He published
a treatise against able beggary, in which he lashed the
friars, and proved that they were not only a reproach
to religion, but also to human society. The university
began to consider him one of their first champions, and
he was soon promoted to the mastership of Baliol College.
About this time, Archbishop Islip founded
Canterbury Hall, in Oxford, where he established a warden
and eleven scholars. To this wardenship Wickliffe was
elected by the archbishop, but upon his demise, he was
displaced by his successor, Stephen Langham, bishop of
Ely. As there was a degree of flagrant injustice in the
affair, Wickliffe appealed to the pope, who subsequently
gave it against him from the following cause: Edward III,
then king of England, had withdrawn the tribune, which
from the time of King John had been paid to the pope.
The pope menaced; Edward called a parliament. The parliament
resolved that King John had done an illegal thing, and
given up the rights of the nation, and advised the king
not to submit, whatever consequences might follow.
The clergy now began to write in favor of
the pope, and a learned monk published a spirited and
plausible treatise, which had many advocates. Wickliffe,
irritated at seeing so bad a cause so well defended, opposed
the monk, and did it in so masterly a way that he was
considered no longer as unanswerable. His suit at Rome
was immediately determined against him; and nobody doubted
but his opposition to the pope, at so critical a period,
was the true cause of his being non-suited at Rome.
Wickliffe was afterward elected to the chair
of the divinity professor:
and now fully convinced of the errors of
the Romish Church, and the vileness of its monastic agents,
he determined to expose them. In public lectures he lashed
their vices and opposed their follies. He unfolded a variety
of abuses covered by the darkness of superstition. At
first he began to loosen the prejudices of the vulgar,
and proceeded by slow advances; with the metaphysical
disquisitions of the age, he mingled opinions in divinity
apparently novel. The usurpations of the court of Rome
was a favorite topic. On these he expatiated with all
the keenness of argument, joined to logical reasoning.
This soon procured him the clamor of the clergy, who,
with the archbishop of Canterbury, deprived him of his
office.
At this time the administration of affairs
was in the hands of the duke of Lancaster, well known
by the name of John of Gaunt. This prince had very free
notions of religion, and was at enmity with the clergy.
The exactions of the court of Rome having become very
burdensome, he determined to send the bishop of Bangor
and Wickliffe to remonstrate against these abuses, and
it was agreed that the pope should no longer dispose of
any benefices belonging to the Church of England. In this
embassy, Wickliffe's observant mind penetrated into the
constitution and policy of Rome, and he returned more
strongly than ever determined to expose its avarice and
ambition.
Having recovered his former situation, he
inveighed, in his lectures, against the pope-his usurpation-his
infallibility-his pride-his avarice- and his tyranny.
He was the first who termed the pope Antichrist. From
the pope, he would turn to the pomp, the luxury, and trappings
of the bishops, and compared them with the simplicity
of primitive bishops. Their superstitions and deceptions
were topics that he urged with energy of mind and logical
precision.
From the patronage of the duke of Lancaster,
Wickliffe received a good benefice; but he was no sooner
settled in his parish, than his enemies and the bishops
began to persecute him with renewed vigor. The duke of
Lancaster was his friend in this persecution, and by his
presence and that of Lord Percy, earl marshal of England,
he so overawed the trial, that the whole ended in disorder.
After the death of Edward III his grandson
Richard II succeeded, in the eleventh year of his age.
The duke of Lancaster not obtaining to be the sole regent,
as he expected, his power began to decline, and the enemies
of Wickliffe, taking advantage of the circumstance, renewed
their articles of accusation against him. Five bulls were
despatched in consequence by the pope to the king and
certain bishops, but the regency and the people manifested
a spirit of contempt at the haughty proceedings of the
pontiff, and the former at that time wanting money to
oppose an expected invasion of the French, proposed to
apply a large sum, collected for the use of the pope,
to that purpose. The question was submitted to the decision
of Wickliffe. The bishops, however, supported by the papal
authority, insisted upon bringing Wickliffe to trial,
and he was actually undergoing examination at Lambeth,
when, from the riotous behavior of the populace without,
and awed by the command of Sir Lewis Clifford, a gentleman
of the court, that they should not proceed to any definitive
sentence, they terminated the whole affair in a prohibition
to Wickliffe, not to preach those doctrines which were
obnoxious to the pope; but this was laughed at by our
reformer, who, going about barefoot, and in a long frieze
gown, preached more vehemently than before.
In the year 1378, a contest arose between
two popes, Urban VI and Clement VII which was the lawful
pope, and true vicegerent of God. This was a favorable
period for the exertion of Wicliffe's talents: he soon
produced a tract against popery, which was eagerly read
by all sorts of people.
About the end of the year, Wickliffe was
seized with a violent disorder, which it was feared might
prove fatal. The begging friars, accompanied by four of
the most eminent citizens of Oxford, gained admittance
to his bed chamber, and begged of him to retract, for
his soul's sake, the unjust things he had asserted of
their order. Wickliffe, surprised at the solemn message,
raised himself in his bed, and with a stern countenance
replied, "I shall not die, but live to declare the evil
deeds of the friars."
When Wickliffe recovered, he set about a
most important work, the translation of the Bible into
English. Before this work appeared, he published a tract,
wherein he showed the necessity of it. The zeal of the
bishops to suppress the Scriptures greatly promoted its
sale, and they who were not able to purchase copies, procured
transcripts of particular Gospels or Epistles. Afterward,
when Lollardy increased, and the flames kindled, it was
a common practice to fasten about the neck of the condemned
heretic such of these scraps of Scripture as were found
in his possession, which generally shared his fate.
Immediately after this transaction, Wickliffe
ventured a step further, and affected the doctrine of
transubstantiation. This strange opinion was invented
by Paschade Radbert, and asserted with amazing boldness.
Wickliffe, in his lecture before the University of Oxford,
1381, attacked this doctrine, and published a treatise
on the subject. Dr. Barton, at this time vice-chancellor
of Oxford, calling together the heads of the university,
condemned Wickliffe's doctrines as heretical, and threatened
their author with excommunication. Wickliffe could now
derive no support from the duke of Lancaster, and being
cited to appear before his former adversary, William Courteney,
now made archbishop of Canterbury, he sheltered himself
under the plea, that, as a member of the university, he
was exempt from episcopal jurisdiction. This plea was
admitted, as the university were determined to support
their member.
The court met at the appointed time, determined,
at least to sit in judgment upon his opinions, and some
they condemned as erroneous, others as heretical. The
publication on this subject was immediately answered by
Wickliffe, who had become a subject of the archbishop's
determined malice. The king, solicited by the archbishop,
granted a license to imprison the teacher of heresy, but
the commons made the king revoke this act as illegal.
The primate, however, obtained letters from the king,
directing the head of the University of Oxford to search
for all heresies and books published by Wickliffe; in
consequence of which order, the university became a scene
of tumult. Wickliffe is supposed to have retired from
the storm, into an obscure part of the kingdom. The seeds,
however, were scattered, and Wickliffe's opinions were
so prevalent that it was said if you met two persons upon
the road, you might be sure that one was a Lollard. At
this period, the disputes between the two popes continued.
Urban published a bull, in which he earnestly called upon
all who had any regard for religion, to exert themselves
in its cause; and to take up arms against Clement and
his adherents in defence of the holy see.
A war, in which the name of religion was
so vilely prostituted, roused Wickliffe's inclination,
even in his declining years. He took up his pen once more,
and wrote against it with the greatest acrimony. He expostulated
with the pope in a very free manner, and asks him boldly:
'How he durst make the token of Christ on the cross (which
is the token of peace, mercy and charity) a banner to
lead us to slay Christian men, for the love of two false
priests, and to oppress Christiandom worse than Christ
and his apostles were oppressed by the Jews? 'When,' said
he, 'will the proud priest of Rome grant indulgences to
mankind to live in peace and charity, as he now does to
fight and slay one another?'
This severe piece drew upon him the resentment
of Urban, and was likely to have involved him in greater
troubles than he had before experienced, but providentially
he was delivered out of their hands. He was struck with
the palsy, and though he lived some time, yet it was in
such a way that his enemies considered him as a person
below their resentment.
Wickliffe returning within short space,
either from his banishment, or from some other place where
he was secretly kept, repaired to his parish of Lutterworth,
where he was parson; and there, quietly departing this
mortal life, slept in peace in the Lord, in the end of
the year 1384, upon Silvester's day. It appeared that
he was well aged before he departed, "and that the same
thing pleased him in his old age, which did please him
being young."
Wickliffe had some cause to give them thanks,
that they would at least spare him until he was dead,
and also give him so long respite after his death, forty-one
years to rest in his sepulchre before they ungraved him,
and turned him from earth to ashes; which ashes they also
took and threw into the river. And so was he resolved
into three elements, earth, fire, and water, thinking
thereby utterly to extinguish and abolish both the name
and doctrine of Wickliffe forever. Not much unlike the
example of the old Pharisees and sepulchre knights, who,
when they had brought the Lord unto the grave, thought
to make him sure never to rise again. But these and all
others must know that, as there is no counsel against
the Lord, so there is no keeping down of verity, but it
will spring up and come out of dust and ashes, as appeared
right well in this man; for though they dug up his body,
burned his bones, and drowned his ashes, yet the Word
of God and the truth of his doctrine, with the fruit and
success thereof, they could not burn.
Chapter VIII
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