Martyrs (2.0)

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AMERICAN PUBLIC UNIVERSITY SYSTEM Charles Town, West Virginia MARTYRS OF THE REFORMATION by: Francine T. Price A Thesis prepared for the Faculty of the American Public University History Department in partial Fulfilment for the Degree of Masters of History. __________ Prepared on January 21, 2016 The author hereby grants the American Public University System the right to display these contents for educational purposes. The

Transcript of Martyrs (2.0)

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AMERICAN PUBLIC UNIVERSITY SYSTEM Charles Town, West Virginia

MARTYRS OF THE REFORMATION

by:

Francine T. Price

A Thesis prepared for the Faculty of the American Public University

History Department in partial Fulfilment for the Degree of Masters of History.

__________

Prepared on January 21, 2016

The author hereby grants the American Public University System the right to display these contents for educational purposes. The author also accepts responsibility in accordance with the United States Copyright Law for the inclusion of material that are not the author’s creation or in the public domain.

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Copyright: © 2016 Francine T. Price

All Rights Reserved

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In Loving Memory of: Jerome J. Mahoney Sr. (May 24, 1913 – June 18, 1996)

and James A. Anoia

(November 5, 1948 – April 12, 1996)

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Acknowledgements:

I wish to thank my family for their patience this year while I pursued this thesis paper and

my degree the past three years. I would like to thank my professors for their advice. I,

especially, would like to thank my mother, Anne Anoia, and my children for their understanding.

Writing this paper was an act of interest on my part to better understand my Catholic roots.

Thank you mom and Faith, my youngest daughter, for your sage advice.

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ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS

MARTYRS OF THE REFORMATION

by:

FRANCINE T. PRICE

AMERICAN PUBLIC UNVERSITY SYSTEM

AMERICAN MILITARY UNIVERSITY

HIST699: THESIS SEMINAR: DR. ANNE VENZON PROFESSOR AND ADVISOR

This thesis, entitled Martyrs of the Reformation, covers the ideas of three men, Martin

Luther, William Tyndale, and John Wycliffe, and their determination to bring the scriptures to

the people of their countries vernacular editions of the Holy Bible in a way in which it could be

read. These men understood that reform movements were needed whenever a system or

institution that previously worked becomes too powerful, too corrupt, or too concerned with

themselves that they no longer provide the structure a society needs. These three men

recognized that the popes and Roman Catholic Church fit all three of those criteria. With the

ending of the Medieval Period and the rise of the printing press Tyndale and Luther would be

handing an essential tool in the purpose of reform and spreading their reformation ideas and

translations of the Bible.

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Chapter Page

CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION………………………………………………………7

A. Background………………………………………………………………………….....7

B. Religious Movements…………………………………………………………………. 9

C. Reason for this Topic………………………………………………………………….12

CHAPTER TWO: LITERATURE REVIEW…………………………………………….. 13

CHAPTER THREE: THE LATE MEDIEVAL CHURCH………………………………. 19

A. Background……………………………………………………………………………19

B Fourth Lateran Council-1215………………………………………………………… 24

C. Heresy and the Inquisitions………………….……………………………...................25

CHAPTER FOUR: JOHN WYCLIFFE …………………………………………………...35

A. Background ……………………………………………………………………………35

B. Oxford University ……………………………………………......................................37

C. Political Associations………..…………………………………………………………41

D. Further Problems for Wycliffe…………………………………………………………43

E. Retirement…………..………………………………………………………………….48

F. Council of Constance (1414-1418)……………………………………………………..49

CHAPTER FIVE: GUTENBERG PRINTING PRESS……………………………………51

A. Ancient Origins in Paper and Print…………………………………………………….52

B. Gutenberg’s Printing Press…………………………………………………………….53

C. Gutenberg Bible………………………………………………………………………..56

D. The Renaissance and the Printing Press……………………………………………….57

CHAPTER SIX: MARTIN LUTHER….…………………………………………………..59

A. Luther before Wittenberg………………………………………………………………60

B. The Reformation Begins………………………………………………………………..62

C. Luther’s Death………………………………………………………………………….64

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CHAPTER SEVEN: WILLIAM TYNDALE……………………………………………….65

A. Tyndale in Exile………………………………………………………………………....67

B. Betrayal and Death………………………………………………………………………68

C. Legacy……………………………………………………………………………………68

CHAPTER EIGHT: CONCLUSION…………………………………………………………69

APPENDIX A. CHARTS/GRAPHS………………………………………………………….70

BIBLIOGRAPHY……………………………………………………………………………..73

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CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION

Background

There are almost two billion adherents that worship some form of Christianity in the

world today. It is the largest religion in the world today. Like Islam and Judaism it has its

foundation in religious movements and has Abrahamic roots. The number of different denomin-

ations within Protestantism numbers over a hundred (see Figure 2.1 in Appendix A). The

Bible remains the bestselling book in the world with many different versions available either in

print, audio, or e-reader form. How did the translation of the Scriptures threaten the power of the

Roman Catholic Church? This one book is possibly the most blood-stained book in history.

Reform movements are needed whenever a system that previously provided stability to a

society becomes too powerful and too corrupt and too concerned with itself that it no longer

provides the stability it once had. The Roman Catholic Church and the papacy over nearly a

millennium is one such organization. The Catholic Church regarded itself as all-powerful,

almost God-like, and forgot that the popes were merely fallible mortals and not gods themselves.

Several men would come forward between the fourteenth and sixteenth centuries to protest the

abuses of the Catholic Church and attempt to reform Her teachings by providing the Holy Bible

in vernacular form to the people of England and Germany. These men were John Wycliffe,

Martin Luther, and William Tyndale. There were others as well, but these are the men to be

studied to understand why they became martyrs to their beliefs. Additionally, the idea of heresy,

the Inquisitions, and the printing press will be discussed in order to understand their struggles.

This thesis will be called “Martyrs of the Reformation” and will highlight why religious

movements were needed and the why the theologians and nobles who fought the Catholic

Church for the right to translate the Scriptures into the vernacular languages of their countries

and not use Latin, which few folk of the laity understood, were threatened with excommuni-

cation. The story of how the common people received a translation they could read goes back

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into the Late Medieval period. It is a time when the Hundred Years’ War was at its height and

just after the disastrous Black Plague. This story is filled with politics, death, and war. John

Wycliffe wrote his Summa de Ente, Opus Evangelicum, or Triagolus during the Hundred Years’

War. His most famous work is the Wycliffe Bible. The intention of this thesis paper is to

concentrate on the five men mentioned and how they advanced the idea of a vernacular

translation of the Holy Bible. The idea involved bringing the Holy Bible to the common man so

that he could read the Word of God for themselves and not rely on clergy to tell them truth of

God’s Word. This is a tumultuous era with much change and dovetailing of other important

historic events such as the Age of Discovery and the Renaissance eras in Italy, Europe, and

England.

There was more than one Reformation. Posterity remembers only Martin Luther and the

German Reformation as the true start of the Reformation. In this thesis the discussion will focus

on how the Inquisitions affected the work of the reformers mentioned, and will focus on the

reasons why the Catholic Church worked hard through her bishops and nobility to quash the

growing support for vernacular editions of the Bible and the Scriptures.

The Medieval Inquisitions introduced by Innocent III set the stage for the inquisitions

that would follow with the exception of the Great Witch Craze, which was set in motion by Pope

Innocent VIII (1484-1492). Chapter three will focus on how the Late Medieval Church from the

time of Innocent III until the time of John Wycliffe and continue until the end of the Council of

Constance in chapter four. Chapter five will be about the Gutenberg Printing Press and how it

helped the Renaissance, and briefly Erasmus and the ushering in of the Reformation. Chapter six

is about Martin Luther and how with the aid of the printing press, the prince of heresiarchs,

changed the idea of the Bible and religion in Europe forever. Finally, chapter seven will be on

William Tyndale and the early stages of the English Reformation. The paper ends with the death

of Martin Luther in 1546. Laced throughout will be the accompanying history of the steps taken

by both rulers and the papacy to stop the spread of the Reformation and the spread of

information that will have people start reading and asking questions.

Throughout these chapters questions will be asked to back the reasons for religious

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reform movements. For instance, was John Wycliffe that important a reformer or was he

merely a cog in the wheel of progress? Should he even be considered a reformer? Who or whom

did he influence? Even though the term was not coined until the nineteenth century, how can

Martin Luther, William Tyndale, and John Wycliffe be considered fundamentalists? Were they

forerunners of modern-day Christian fundamentalism? Why or why not? Finally, how did the

printing press help usher in a new era of thought among people in various countries?

How did the Black Plague and Hundred Years’ War help change people views on the

feudalism? The fall of Constantinople in 1453 re-introduced ancient texts and literature from

Greece to European culture thereby causing a great awakening in the form of Renaissance

culture. Printing would become the dominant form of spreading information with former scribes

and other artisans entering the industry. Amidst all this would be a continual religious

reformation movement even if it was underground. Art and culture would flourish in the form of

humanism. Petrarch and Erasmus would be the two most famous humanists with Erasmus

influencing Tyndale and Luther more than Petrarch. The medieval feudal civilizations with rule

by ecclesiastical hierarchies and the nobility was coming to an end. The old agrarian civilization

was giving way to national monarchies and urbanized, industrialized societies.1 The Renaissance

helped issue in a thirst for knowledge just as John Wycliffe in the 14th century would issue a

thirst for to read the Scriptures.

The actual Reformation began on October 31, 1517, when Martin Luther took his 95

Theses against the Catholic Church and nailed them to the Wittenberg Church doors. This

signaled a revolutionary change in how religion would change in Germany and eventually the

rest of the world. The final blow to temporal Catholic Church authority in Europe would not be

decided until the conclusion of the Thirty Years’ War in 1648. By then the power of the

Catholic Church is significantly weakened.

Religious Movements

1 Wallace K. Ferguson, “The Church in a Changing World: A Contribution to the Interpretation of the Renaissance,” The American Historical Review 59, no.1 (Oct. 1953): 2.

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Why call the Reformation a religious movement? How did it change the thinking of men

and women in Europe? Why was the Catholic Church afraid of change? In many ways the

Reformation represented a desperately needed change in theological change as feudalism trans-

itioned into the early modern period. Society was changing in a way the Catholic Church had

neither anticipated nor welcomed. With that change their power weakened, and with the shift to

better education they would not get it back. Enter the religious reformers that have been ment-

ioned and people began to clamor for becoming smaller with new waves of expansion occurring

over the globe. As the people of Europe met native peoples, savages, in the New World, they

would want to convert the natives from their cultural religions into Christianity.

The definition of a religious movement is any or “deliberate change in religious beliefs

and practices.”2 Religious movements also have several characteristics. The first characteristic is

that religious movements occasionally occur within the broader contexts of contact, change, and

conflict. Of course, how rapid these three items occur is unspecified nor do these three items

always produce religious movements.3 Included in these characteristics are the more important

items of a founder/prophet and may die out after many years or be absorbed into a broader

context of a newer movement. Most religious movements are named after their founders.

Examples include Jesus Christ and Christianity; John Wycliffe and Wycliffism; Lao Tzu and

Taoism (a Southeast Asian religion).4

The Reformation was a religious movement because it had several charismatic leaders.

The religious movement had a characteristic that included a known identity of a person or group

of people who changed and adapted Christianity into what would become Lutheranism.

Lutheranism would be the first, but there would be many more as well. The second movement

would be Anglicanism under Henry VIII. Luther’s 95 Theses were embraced by German princes

and Henry VIII accomplished cultural transformation when he broke from the Roman Catholic

Church to form the Anglican Church or Church of England. Henry VIII did this in order to

2 Robert L. Winzeler, “Chapter 10: Religious Movements and the Origins of Religions,” in Anthropology and Religion: What We Know, Think, and Question 2nd ed., (Lanham: AltaMira Press, 2012): 197.3

Ibid.; pg. 197. 4

Ibid.; pg. 198.

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divorce Catherine of Aragon to marry the much younger Anne Boleyn and try to secure an heir.

What was the final step in the ‘religious revival’ of the Bible? Why did it take so many

martyrs for the Bible to finally be established for the people? How did the inquisitions of the past

centuries and the ongoing century allow the people to react to being presented with a new way of

thinking? If there were no printing press could the Reformation have succeeded? It is assumed

the Reformation would failed without Gutenberg’s invention of movable type. Until the

invention of the printing press by Gutenberg books were hand copied. Sacred texts were written

only by monks or scribes for the clergy. Handwritten copies took months to produce instead of

a mere few days.

Religious movements like Wycliffism and Lutheranism include many examples of

oppression, suppression, and repression when trying to bring the Holy Bible to the people in their

vulgar tongue. The context, change, and conflict will include examples like century involved,

social changes like the Black Plague and the end of feudalism. Conflict will involve the Hundred

Years’ War with France and England or the Schmalkdic League in the case of Martin Luther.

For William Tyndale the conflict will be with the Catholic Church in England and with Henry

VIII (reigned 1509-1547).

Reasons for this Topic

The idea of “Martyrs of the Reformation,” was decided upon for several reasons. The

first reason was the Age of Exploration or Discovery. Europeans who came into contact with

Native Americans would have considered their ideas of sun worship pagan and evil. Catholic

Spain and Catholic Portugal would have wanted the people they subjugated to worship their

God. While the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisitions are not addressed in this paper, having the

ability to preach the gospels without being clergy was a plus during this era. Also, many of the

discoverers were of common stock.

The Catholic Church’s ancient sway crumpled in the onslaught of education, the printing

press, and its rapid dissemination of vernacular editions of the Holy Bible. Knowledge is power.

Keeping knowledge for themselves and out of the illiterate hands of the laity was the main way

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the Church controlled the common folk. The Counter-Reformation would the Catholic Church’s

attempt to roll back the hands of time. Because men such as Wycliffe, Tyndale, Luther, and their

followers struggled to bring the Bible to the common folk and changed the mind of the laity their

efforts would be rewarded with mankind’s open wonder of the world and our ability to learn to

control the world or to destroy it as we do now.

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CHAPTER TWO: LITERATURE REVIEW

What is Religion?

Religion is a man-made construct that developed before the end of the last major glacial

period developed by ancient peoples to explain what happens when we die and where we go after

we die. There is some basis in the age old argument between religions and the survival of the

soul, and that basis is one of the reasons men and women were persecuted by the Catholic

Church. Religion, therefore, exist while mankind exists because when humans go extinct so will

religion. The animals of this world will not care if there is a god or not. We are the only species

on Earth that are self-aware. No other species are as self-aware as we are and none are as

advanced as we are either.

Many religions are dualistic. Dualism is a concept used in Zoroastrianism,5 Waldensian

and Cathari beliefs, but not in Judaism, Catholicism, and Islam. Dualism is the belief that there

are two gods. One is either male or female or another form is a good god and an evil god. It is

second type that part of this paper focuses on especially when discussing the idea of heresy.

Martyrs of the Reformation

I have chosen to call this graduate thesis Martyrs of the Reformation because several men

saw through the Catholic Church’s use of supernatural phenomena in their doctrines. The men

studied are John Wycliffe, Martin Luther, and William Tyndale. Each of these men would work

to bring a vernacular version of the Holy Bible to the common folk of England and Germany.

They also railed against the abuse of selling indulgences to the ignorant people who believed in

the purchasing of indulgences to save their souls rather than adhering to the pure Word of God in

the Bible.

Heresy and the Inquisitions

The crime of heresy was imposed on anyone who was not a monarch or clergy for

reading the scriptures in the vernacular tongue. Heresy was considered a death sentence with

5 John Wright Buckham, “Dualism or Duality?” The Harvard Theological Review 6, no. 1 (Apr. 1913): 156.

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burning at the stake the punishment. The holy scriptures of the Vulgate Bible were to be written

only in Latin. The literature on this subject is expansive. Among the most informative is the

three book series on the History of the Inquisition by Charles Henry Lea. His work is exhaustive

and is still referred to in the twenty-first century even though it was published in the late

nineteenth century. Mostly Lea covers the history of the Inquisitions from the beginning of the

second millennium through to the beginnings of the Reformation in the early sixteenth century.

The last occurs at the end of volume 3 of the History of the Inquisition.

In contrast to Lea’s impeccable amount of scholarly study is the work of Philip Schaff’s

History of the Catholic Church (The Complete Eight Volumes in One). To say that this

monumental work was the work of a lifetime would be an understatement. Dr. Philip Schaff

began it around 1852 and would not live to see its completion.6 His son, David, would see the

completion of the final three volumes. Like Lea’s work on the Inquisitions, this work is

exhaustive and informative. The chapters most useful to this thesis that regard the idea of heresy

and the inquisitions in chapter three are those of volumes four, five, and six.

The third book that is used contrasts useful with the aforementioned scholarly works is

that of Edward Peters. His book, Heresy and Authority in Medieval Europe, is useful as a

sourcebook. Its use is primarily in the selected primary works of great theologians from the

beginnings of the Catholic Church in the fourth century straight through until the execution of

John Huss. As a work on heresy it is invaluable for helping the student understand the thinking

of the Catholic Church’s views on how heresy came to be known as the evil it was and gives a

better explanation to understanding the older works mentioned throughout the first part of this

paper. Unfortunately, after 1415, it is of not much use. After 1415 any discussion on heresy and

the inquisitions must be addressed in regards to the beginnings of the Witchcraft Hysteria and the

Reformation. This is where Lea’s third volume of the History of the Inquisitions become

necessary.

6 Philip Schaff, “Chapter V: The Middle Ages from Gregory VII, 1049, to Boniface VIII, 1249), in History of the Catholic Church (The Complete Eight Volumes in One), (Hendrickson Publishing, Inc., 3rd ed., July 2006). The Kindle Edition of this book was published by Amazon Digital. To provide legitimacy of the source it was felt proper to use the publisher of the eight volume set in hardcover. Book V of the History of the Catholic Church was written by his son, David Schaff, however the volume is included in the overall work being utilized. Philip Schaff passed away on October 20, 1893 after completing the first half of this seminal work on the Catholic Church.

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As far as primary sources are concerned with regards to heresy and the inquisitions, it is

best to look at Norman P. Tanners Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils. This is one of the best

sources for the writings of the popes on the internet. It lists almost every pope from Saint Peter

down to Pope Francis. Readily available are papal bulls and the full minutes of the ecumenical

councils. One caveat is necessary, however, and that is not every papal bull written by the

various popes are available.

John Wycliffe and the Council of Constance (1414-1418)

The Reformation usually called the pre-Reformation started with John Wycliffe or

Wyclif in the fourteenth century and became the formal Reformation in the sixteenth century.

The distinction is important for several reasons. First, the pre-Reformation began in the

fourteenth century with John Wycliffe and his revolutionary idea of remanence.7 Wycliffe’s

disciples, known as Lollards, helped spread his teachings into Bohemia. There are several works

that could be used as both primary and secondary sources. Wycliffe’s works were extensive and

many still survive today. Academically speaking, however, the best works include Stephen E.

Lahey’s John Wyclif, which is part of the Great Medieval Thinkers series. Wycliffe is portrayed

as an early ecclesiastical theorist in this work. What makes this biography so interesting is that

Dr. Lahey not only describes the life and work of John Wycliffe, but also describes the people he

viewed as his mentors and enemies along with their philosophical and theological works.

Another book that is a biography on John Wycliffe is G.R. Evans book entitled John

Wyclif. Dr. Evans book is more a true biography than Dr. Lahey’s book is. Her book focuses

on John Wycliffe. She describes Oxford as it was back in the fourteenth century as being a great

deal different than we know it today and how the townspeople seemed to dislike the students.

That seems to be a general feeling that is almost universal in college towns. The townspeople

don’t like the students but know the students’ presences helps their area economically.

The last two works are both either written by John Wycliffe or about John Wycliffe by

7 William R. Cook, “John Wyclif and Hussite Theology 1415-1436,” Church History 42, no. 3 (Sep. 1973): 336. For the purposes of this literature review and formal thesis this is how John Wycliffe’s name will be spelled unless otherwise noted.

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Dr. Johann Loserth. This last work is very old, but it is very informative commentary on the

Antichristo and Opus Evangelicum. The Antichristo attacks the papacy and no doubt was in

response the frustration and bitterness Wycliffe felt in response to the attacks on his character

and orthodoxy by rivals and Pope Gregory XI. He always considered himself orthodox, but it

should also be remembered that free thinkers like Wycliffe were inherently discouraged by the

medieval Church and any criticism of said Roman Church was considered heretical.

Finally, Father Norman P. Tanner book on the Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils is

invaluable in discussing how thinkers like Wycliffe, Huss, and Luther were dealt with by the

councils listed. Wycliffe had not only forty-five direct condemnations placed against him, but

also two-hundred and sixty indirect decrees placed against him. Not all were discussed in one

session. For brevity’s sake it should be stated here that this work is a major source for this thesis,

and thus should be considered for the whole of the paper since this thesis focuses on the

treatment of the Catholic Church’s views to heresy and personal attacks. It underpins most of the

papal bulls and ecumenical councils that occurred in the nearly one-hundred seventy-five years

after John Wycliffe’s death in 1384.

The Printing Press

The printing press, which was invented around 1451, proved invaluable to the success of

the Reformation. It is generally believed the Reformation would have failed without it. The

main fight that was waged during the sixteenth century was whether or not laymen should be

able to read the Scriptures. Going back to John Wycliffe for a moment, it can be said that he was

of similar opinion.8 According to a paper by Lawrence G. Duggan entitled “The Unresponsive-

ness of the Late Medieval Church: A Reconsideration, “ at least twenty-nine vernacular editions

of the Bible had appeared in Europe by 1500, and that they were already disseminated to the

common people and that the ecclesiastical authorities let it slide. This is point number one.9

8 Georgi Vasilev, “Chapter 4: The Specific New Testament Vocabulary of Wycliffite Translations,” in Heresy and the English Reformation (Jefferson: McFarland and Co., 2008): loc. no. 842. Kindle.9

Lawrence G. Duggan, “The Unresponsiveness of the Late Medieval Church: A Reconsideration,” The Sixteenth Century Journal 9, no. 1 (Apr. 1978): 15.

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Point number two mentioned by Duggan is that the clergy had understandable reservations about

letting the uneducated populace read the Good Book without guidance by the clergy.10

Understandable, of course. The Bible is a complex work and the salvific nature of the text is oft-

times in need of different interpretations if current events and the cherry-picking that goes on

now is any indication. An educated populace could also learn how to read and if the educated

populace could read, then ipso facto, they could also think and question.

Dr. Elizabeth L. Eisenstein, professor Emerita of History at the University of Michigan,

is considered an expert on the history of the Reformation and the history of printing. .

Eisenstein’s first book, The Printing Revolution in Early Modern Europe, Second Edition, and

Divine Art, Infernal Machine: The Reception of Printing in the West from First Impressions to

the Sense of an Ending, which is her second book, each focus not only on how the printing

revolution started, but also how it was received. Not everyone was enamored of the new printing

press.

William Tyndale and Sir Thomas More

This precipitated much back and forth between William Tyndale, who was living in exile

in Belgium, and Sir Thomas More, one of King Henry VIII’s friends and trusted advisor.

Thomas More’s book Utopia, while a work of fiction, does enlighten the reader about the morals

of the day and age and the religious norms of the time as well as attacking the politics of his

time. A better source of what More and Tyndale argued about is better highlighted in their

individual back and forth over the nature of religion. Thomas More died before Tyndale in 1535

and Tyndale was burned at the stake in Belgium near Brussels in 1536.

There is a plethora of information that has been written on the times of the Reformation,

particularly the English Reformation. It should be understood, however; that the names so far

covered were each martyrs in their own way. Even Saint Sir Thomas More lost his head to King

Henry VIII’s executioner. By far the most important event in the whole of the Reformation era

was the printing press because it enabled information to be disseminated faster rather than have

10

Ibid., pg. 15.

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each book hand copied. The Tyndale Bible was printed in the hundreds by a Belgian printer and

smuggled into England. It is unknown who betrayed Tyndale, but he was eventually caught,

tried for heresy, and burned at the stake. David Daniell’s biography, William Tyndale: A

Biography, is an intimate look and the life and work of the renowned linguist and theologian. It

is well documented and written. William Tyndale’s most famous quote before he was garroted

set aflame at the stake was “Lord, open the king of England’s eyes.” He would have his prayer

answered in 1535 when King Henry VIII divorced Catherine of Aragon and married the younger

Anne Boleyn in his quest to have a male heir.

The primary source included in this reading is Mr. William Roper’s A Life of Sir Thomas

More. William Roper was the son-in-law of St. Sir Thomas More and a lawyer like Sir Thomas

More himself. More would debate with William Tyndale over his translation of the Bible and

accuse him of improper translation because of words like ‘congregation’ for ‘church’ or the use

of ‘elder’ for ‘priest.’11 As will be seen, Tyndale will be remembered as a lamp in the dark.

Martin Luther and the Reformation

There are so many primary sources for Martin Luther that choosing the most important

one was actually difficult since they are all important. This German doctor and theologian was a

prolific author and reformer who posterity would come to call the “Charioteer of Israel,”12 and

the “Prince of Heresiarchs.”13 Martin Luther would stand up to the Roman Church that sought

his recantation.14 He would refuse to give it, as will be seen in chapter seven, because he stood

on his principles and the lies he was uncovering about the papacy and the papists in Rome.

Oberman calls Luther’s refusal to recant a German event. Luther’s refusal to recant was the first

time anyone priest or friar had refused to be cowed by the threat of death and excommunication.

Luther’s refusal to recant would firmly usher in the Reformation. Others would take courage

11 David Daniell, William Tyndale: A Biography, (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2004): 17.12

Heiko A. Oberman, Luther: Man between God and the Devil, (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2006): 3.13

Ibid.; pg. 14

Ibid.; pg. 39.

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from his example and stand up to the injustice of the Catholic Church.15

Martin Luther left many extant writings to be read, but he would have liked his works

burned because he felt that they distracted from the reading of the scriptures.16 This is a two-

volume work that was translated by C.M. Jacobs. It is entitled Works of Martin Luther with

Introduction and Notes volume I.

CHAPTER THREE: THE LATE MEDIEVAL CHURCH

Background

What was the medieval Church like at the turn of the thirteenth century or 1200 C.E?

15 For the purpose of this paper I shall be using Catholic Church to mean the Roman Catholic Church. The Russian Orthodox and Eastern Orthodox Catholic Churches are not part of this paper unless otherwise noted.16

Martin Luther, Works of Martin Luther with Introductions and Notes, vol. 1. trans., C.M. Jacobs (Philadelphia, A.J. Holman Co., 1915): loc. 74. While Luther does not say burned, he does say destroyed.

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Before answering this question perhaps it would be better to ask what medieval life was like in

Europe and England before the year 1200 C.E? How did one act on the other? Life was violent,

unpredictable, and short at the start of the thirteenth century. Peasant farmers, mostly serfs,

worked for a manor and were virtual slaves to the land manorial lord. Free holders, peasants that

owned their own land, often worked from sun-up to sun down. The Medieval Warm Period kept

the summers pleasant and winters relatively mild. Because of this life would have generally

better with increased birth rates.17 If we refer back to chapter one of this thesis it will be seen that

a revitalization movement’s first step is a culture’s relative stability or satisfaction.

Europe and England were still agrarian societies with most of the crops going to the

manors and the lords and ladies or the king and surplus being given to the farmer. Overall,

though, everyone was subject to the Catholic Church. All parishioners, regardless of whether

they were nobility, royalty, or peasants were expected to tithe the church 10% of their income.

By year 1200 C.E. there had been two ecumenical councils and the Third Crusade had ended in

1193 and Richard the Lionheart had died in 1199. After the end of the Third Crusade Europe and

England started questioning the idea of the crusades. Europe and England had entered a period

of rejuvenation, but did this rejuvenation come at a cost? A period of stability is needed for the

first in a revitalization movement. People had to be comfortable with their environment and

culture.

The late medieval period is traditionally dated from 1300 until 1500, however for the

purpose of this thesis it is necessary to date the period under discussion from 1200 to 1450. The

choice of the year 1200 C.E. is important because this was the beginning of an era that would see

many advances globally, socially, and scientifically. The years 1200-1450 paved the way for the

early modern period. This is done in order to begin with the papacy of Innocent III (1198-1216

C.E).

Pope Innocent III came to power after the death of his predecessor Celestine III.

Celestine III had been ninety-three years old at the time of his death. Innocent III, whose birth

name was Lothar. Innocent was only thirty-seven at the time of his ordination to the highest seat

17 Brian Fagan, The Great Warming: Climate Change and the Rise and Fall of Civilizations (Bloomsbury Press: New York, 2008): 2. Dr. Fagan is emeritus Professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

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of Christendom and was the ancient pope’s preferred choice. Here was the problem: Lothar was

declared a priest, then bishop, and finally a pope all within a few days of each. Most histories

acknowledge that the reason for his sudden rise to the heights of Christendom at the age of

thirty-seven has much to do with his influential and wealthy Roman family.18

The eighteen years of Pope Innocent III’s pontificate are considered the golden age of the

Catholic Church during the High Medieval Period. Innocent III and his beliefs in the absolute

power of the papacy over the Church’s adherents. The years of Pope Innocent III’s reign would

accomplish some good, but would also institute what would become a heinous search for alleged

heretics as well as the flowering of several mendicant orders. These orders would be the

Franciscans (1209) and the Dominicans (1216). The third order, the Benedictines, were already

established in 529 C.E. These three orders took vows of poverty and disavowed worldly

possessions. This idea of poverty and the clergy was one of John Wycliffe’s central issues as

will be seen in chapter four. For now, let us concentrate on the Dominicans and the Franciscans

and their place in thirteenth century Church politics.

In order to move forward with the discussion it is important to understand the politics of

Popes Innocent III and late Pope Boniface VIII in regard to heresy are essential to understanding

the pre-Reformation and later the Reformation as what they cause to happen will be important to

the future of the Protestant movement and the idea of bringing the Bible to the masses. Innocent

III would advance many of the Church’s views on absolutism and idea of theocracy in the lives

of her adherents, especially in the lives of the royalty of the kingdoms of Europe. “Princes,” John

Salisbury said, “were servants of the priesthood and derived their power or right to rule from the

Church.”19

Innocent III went so far as to say that the Church was as superior to the secular as the

soul is to the body. He literally believed he was Christ’s Vicar or the God of Pharaoh and could

be judged by none. It could be said he believed himself God on Earth.20 Any action he took

could be considered divinely sanctioned or at least that is what he believed to be the truth. But

18 Schaff, loc. 48948 on Kindle. 19

Lea, loc. 425.20 Ibid.; Loc. 430

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this position of divine and temporal power was fraught with its own problems. It sacrificed

humility, poverty, and self-abnegation in its quest for power and so would be corrupted by the

delusional belief of its absolute importance. As soon as he was crowned Innocent III began to

institute changes.

Among some of the changes Innocent III tried to make while pope the most important

was his belief that the papacy should be the sole leader of the Crusades. Calling for a Fourth

Crusade to regain the holy city of Jerusalem became one of his great obsessions. However,

things did not go quite as planned. There were many reasons for this. In his naïve belief that only

the papacy should head the Crusades as well as bankroll them he seemed to have not been able to

understand that the three great powers in Europe (France, England, and the Holy Roman Empire)

were the ones who bankrolled most of the Crusades. England, France, and the Holy Roman

Empire also were the chief suppliers of arms, men, and foodstuffs. With the dawn of the

thirteenth century these nations were embroiled in their own political problems. Thus, they could

be bothered with the expenses of a fourth expedition to the Holy Land.

Another reason the papacy failed to kick start a new Crusade was that the donation chests

placed in every church remained empty. Innocent III, in an attempt to bankroll his Crusade, had

wanted to levy taxes on the clergy at one-fortieth percent and for a period of one year place an

additional tax on all ecclesiastical property. Also, papal revenue was to have a ten percent levy

on it. Naturally, all laity, except children, were expected to place their alms in donation chests.21

The next setback for Innocent III’s dream of Crusade was the failure of people to enlist

in the Crusade. While the poor flocked to the banners, the wealthy landholders did not. France’s

Philip Augustus was fighting with England over ancestral lands of the Angevin dynasty. This

was a difficult situation as the queen mother, Eleanor of Aquitaine, was also the duchess of

Aquitaine in her own right. John was also the grandson of Empress Matilda of the Holy Roman

Empire through her marriage to the dukes of Anjou. John was the youngest son of Henry II.

When Henry II died and Richard I’s coronation Prince John became his brother’s heir. John

became king in 1199 and is remembered as one England’s cruelest kings.

21

Asbridge, pg. 524.

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Innocent III now had to deal with a man as powerful and as iron-fisted as himself.

Innocent III sought to have power over all the kingdoms of Europe and make these kingdoms

feudal fiefs of the Vatican. Two events would determine Innocent III’s and John of England’s

enmity toward each other. The first event was John’s absolute refusal to leave Europe while the

question of the question of the Angevin inheritance was determined. He was battling for his

mother and father’s realm. Because Eleanor of Aquitaine had given her first husband, Louis VII,

two daughters. Philip II Augustus also agreed that he would not leave France until he also had an

answer to the Angevin question of inheritance.

The second event that would incense Innocent III was his disagreement with King John

over the question of who should be the archbishop of Canterbury. Innocent III’s chosen

archbishop was Stephen Langton, cardinal of Chrysogonus.22 King John’s choice was John de

Grey, Bishop on Norwich.23 Langton, like Grey, was English-born, and well educated. Grey was

also well educated. Because the papacy asserted their right to be the only ones to give the scepter

to archbishops Langton was duly anointed Archbishop of Canterbury on June 17, 1207. A

position he would hold until his death in 1228.24 Infuriated John moved to seize all Canterbury

property and banished the friars as traitors. This will be important as precedent come the time of

Henry VIII. While Innocent III believed in the divine right of the papacy, John was of the

opposite mind. He seemed to believe in the divine rights of kings. Innocent III threatened to

excommunicate the people of England and John threatened to massacre the Italian clergy if the

censure was obeyed. This fight was brutal and nasty and John, with stubborn pride, let the

excommunication stand until 1213.

John did not shy from persecuting the servants of Rome. John’s defiance could be seen

as a precursor to England’s continued fight with Rome over the next few decades. John

eventually bowed to the papacy and gave up his kingdom as fiefdom to Rome in 1213 to the

Pope Innocent III’s emissary Pandulf.25 This act would also be important in the time of Edward

22 Schaff, loc. 49132.23

Ibid.; loc. 49132.24

Ibid.; loc. 49140.

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III. The next kingdom had its own problems that set back the timeline for Innocent III’s crusade.

That was the Hohenstaufen dynastic crisis.

Frederick of Barbarossa had died while traveling to the Holy Land during the Third

Crusade in 1190. Barbarossa’s heir was his son, Henry VI (r. 1190-1197). Before Barbarossa

died in 1190 he had already assured his son’s succession by arranging Henry’s marriage to the

young princess of Sicily, Constance. With this royal alliance the Holy Roman Empire would

stretch from Germany to Sicily. Constance was the sole heir to the Norman kingdom of Sicily.

With Henry’s and Constance’s marriage the Holy Roman Empire would surround the papacy.

This was a situation that the Vatican did not like to contemplate. There are several reasons for

this dislike of such an extensive Holy Roman Empire. The first is that Constance’s kingdom

fattened the coffers of the Henry VI’s empire, and such and extensive empire would be very

powerful in Europe. If rebellions broke out then they would be hard to quell.

But both Henry VI and Empress Constance would be dead by 1198 leaving only their

three-year old child, Frederick II (r.1215-1250) as the heir to a vast empire. Children could not

reign in their own right, a regent would either had to be proclaimed or a new emperor chosen.

Because of his age the Vatican would now have a say who held the power in the Holy Roman

Empire until Frederick II reached his majority. His regent would be his uncle, Philip, Duke of

Swabia, Frederick II’s father’s brother.26

The Fourth Crusade would eventually be fought, but with the help of the Venetians and

the laity instead of the royalty. The Fourth Crusade would not reach the Holy Land, instead

Constantinople would be sacked so thoroughly that it would never be able to rise to its former

glory. The Fourth Crusade started in 1203 and would end in 1204. The leader of the Crusade,

Boniface of Montferrat, did not take the papal legate with him, and openly defied the injunctions

25 Ibid.; loc. 49164. The rest of the history of John’s rule along with his legacy is a paper in itself and won’t be discussed here.26

Judith M. Bennett and C. Warren Hollister, “Chapter 10: Worlds in Collision, c. 1125-1300,” in Medieval Europe: A Short History, 10th ed. (Boston: McGraw Hill, 2006): 258. Like John of England, the dynastic crisis in the Hohenstaufen Dynasty would and could be a thesis in its own right and to abbreviate the subject would do it an injustice. For now understanding the reason why the Holy Roman Empire could not join the Fourth Crusade is enough.

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of Innocent III.27

Fourth Lateran Council-1215 C.E.

The Fourth Lateran Council was summoned on April 19, 1213, and would sit in

November 1215, in the Lateran basilica.28 This particular council is considered one of the

greater councils of the Late Medieval Period. It had several aims including declaring a

moratorium on the creation of new religious orders (constitution number 13),29 new profession of

faith (constitution number one),30 heretics (constitution number 3),31 and corrections of offenses

and morals of clergy (constitution numbers 7,32 14-18,33 and the Crusade to recover the holy

Land, which was constitution number 71).34

During the Council in question Innocent III moved to forbid the ecclesiastical authorities

from making people go through the various ordeals (tortures) and passed that responsibility to

the hands of the secular authorities. Secular authorities included people such as Countess

Yolande and Count Robert, cousin of King Philip Augustus in France. Both members of the

nobility could judge heresy cases.35

Innocent III died in 1216 and did not see the end of the Fourth Lateran Council. His 27 H.W.C Davis, M.A., Medieval Europe, (London, Williams and Norgate, 1911): 202.28

Norman P. Tanner, S.J., “Fourth Lateran Council: 1215” in Decrees of the Ecumenical Council. (Georgetown University Press, June 1, 1990) http://www.papalencyclicals.net/Councils/ecum12-2.htm [accessed November 3, 2015]. This past November marked the 800th anniversary of this particular council.29

Ibid,; pg. 7. The following pages are taken from a printout of the above reference on the Fourth Lateran Council. They are for ease of use when trying to reference where in the computerized version of the record of the Fourth Lateran Council. 30

Ibid,; pg. 2 31

Ibid.; pg. 3 Established the Inquisitions and gave credence to the persecution of heretics during the Albigensian Crusades which lasted from 1209-1229. Posterity seems to argue that this was an unjust persecution of different Catholic sects.32

Ibid.; pg. 433

Ibid.; pg. 734

Ibid.; pg. 17. Innocent III would not see the Fifth Crusade to fruition. He died in 2016. His successor was Honorius III (1216-1227).35 Lea, loc. 4994 in the History of the Inquisitions, vol. 1.

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successor was Honorius III (r. 1216-1227). Honorius was not as strong as his predecessor, but

would have more to do with ensuring the decisions of the Fourth Lateran Council. Of the

seventy-one constitutions in this conference, the ones this paper will be concerned with

Constitution number three. Constitution number three of the Fourth Lateran Council is about

heresy. The following section will describe what heresy was and how the Medieval Inquisition

operated. There were five Inquisitions with the persecutions of the Waldensians and Cathars

being the first.

Heresy and the Medieval Inquisitions

There are many symbols and words that did not carry negative connotations until some-

one used them in such a way that those symbols, the swastika, for example, now carry nothing

but evil reminders of times in history that humanity would like to forget, but cannot and should

not forget. In the history of the Catholic Church there are several periods that should never be

forgotten lest they be utilized again. The period looked at here will be the Inquisitions, but not

the Great Witch Craze. This last was a phenomenon that is deserving of its own treatment.

What is heresy? Heresy is a word that did not have a negative connotation until after

Constantine the Great declared Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire after the

victory at Milvian Bridge in 314 C.E. But heresy goes further back than the fourth century; it

goes back to the second century. The word heretic is taken from the Greek word hairesein.36

Hairesein originally meant “to take,”37 and hairesis,38 the singular form, was some who made a

choice or chose to take different view of scripture, while the plural form hairesein designated a

sect or a group of people who chose to take a different view of scripture.39 Hairesein would fall

into disuse while its singular form would eventually acquire its familiar meaning of countering a

36

Peters, pg. 1.37 Ibid.; pg. 14. 38

Ibid.; pg. 14. One such example of a “hairesis” would be Bogomil and another would be Valdes. The first man, Bogomil, founded the Bogomils in Bulgaria. The Bogomils would be an Eastern European sect that believed in dualism. Valdes, founded the Waldensians, and inter-married with the Cathars. 39

Ibid.; see note above.

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Catholic truth.40 Heretics were Christians. They could not be Islamic or Jewish. Heretics were

people who chose to believe a certain belief that was not orthodox. But at the beginning of

Christianity people were still trying to figure out how Christ the Man fit in with God the Father

and the Holy Spirit. They were trying to figure if Christ and God were the same or if all three

were the same. In the first to fourth centuries of Christianity many different belief systems like

Arianism sprang up. It was not until the first ecumenical council at Nicaea in 325 C.E. that some

of the Church Fathers would settle on a belief system and begin what we know as Catholicism

today.

Tertullian, who was a Montanist, said the following:41

“It is a fundamental human right, a privilege of nature that every man should worship

according to his own convictions. It is assuredly no part of religion to compel religion. It must be

embraced freely and not forced.”

Taking this philosophical argument further we see that as time went on how the Catholic

Church abandoned this idea and persecuted heretics like Arians who did not believe in a

Trinitarian form of Catholicism. There was another Church father, Origen (c.184 – c. 254 C.E.),

who believed Christians should not follow the Law of Moses which entreated that apostates be

stoned. Rather, Origen believed apostates should not be put to death by either burning or

stoning.42 In addition to the terms heresy and inquisition, there are four other terms that should

be understood when discussing the Inquisitions and how they were used to prosecute crimes of

“supposed” heresy. They are as follows:

Orthodoxy conforms to an established doctrine, e.g., the Trinitarian Doctrine as set

forth by the Council of Nicaea I in 325 C.E.

Heterodoxy means that something is different than established form, religious doctrine,

or an acknowledged standard. One example would be the idea of dualism or one good God and

40

Ibid.; pg. 17.41

E. (Elphege) Vacanard, The Inquisition: A Critical and Historical Study of the Coercive Power of the Church, (New York: Longmans, Green, & Co., 1915): Loc. 97 on Kindle.

42 Ibid.; loc. 107.

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one evil God. This idea will be discussed in further detail in a moment.

Doxa is a Greek word meaning common belief or popular opinion and finally the last

word is doxology.

Doxology is usually a liturgical expression or praise of God.

These four words are important in the discussion of this paper because until the 1830s the

Catholic Church continued to prosecute heretics. They will also be important when discussing

the great reformers Wycliffe, Tyndale, Luther, and finally Cranmer. In terms of how they were

used during the religious revivals in reference to the paradigm of revitalization movements set

forth in the introduction it is hoped they will help clarify some points made. Heresy is defined in

relation to orthodoxy. According to Malcom Lambert it takes two to create a heresy.43 One, is the

heretic with his dissident beliefs, and the second was Catholic Church with condemnation and

orthodoxy.44 An example of this statement can be seen many times over the next several hundred

years in both religious and scientific circles.

One of the most important treatises on the idea of heresy was the Passau Anonymous.

The Passau Anonymous maybe Rainier Sacconi’s own text.45 Rainier Sacconi was one of the

chief Inquisitors against the Waldensians. Reading through Edward Peters’ excellent text on

Heresy and Authority in Medieval Europe it could be said that the papacy and ecclesiastical

hierarchy of the middle ages were selfishly holding all knowledge and the scriptures close to

themselves.

The Passau Anonymous is a long treatise that lists six forms of heresy with the first

heresy being vainglory.46 According to the Passau the Waldensians were jealous of the honored

elite and those who were educated and coveted that same honor. The second heresy was that men

and women did not quit teaching and that they even taught at night. Again, if anyone but the

clergy were educated or the people educated were not royalty or nobility, then they were 43

Jacques Berlinerblau, “Toward a Sociology of Heresy, Orthodoxy, and Doxa,” History of Religions, 40, no. 4 (May 2001): 331.44

Ibid.; 331. 45

Peters, pg. 14246 Ibid.; pg. 150.

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declared heretics. After all, why should women be educated or teach? Weren’t women chattel

back then? The third and fourth heresies included the crimes of translating the Holy Bible into

the vulgar tongue of the laity and then the illiterate and rustic learn them by rote and teach

others. The fourth heresy could be said to be judgment against supposed bad peoples and the fact

that they use the Apostles as examples of a Christ-like life.47 The fifth heresy has to do with the

Waldensians saying that what the Doctors of the Church cannot give proven evidence for in the

New Testament, then those items that cannot be proven are complete fables.48Finally, the sixth

heresy the Passau lists it has irreverence. Thus, if someone took the Lord’s name in vain or

irreverence toward the sacraments (not baptizing infants), then these were sure signs of

irreverence towards the Catholic Church and Her doctrines.

The year 1209 began the Albigensian Crusade and the attempt to actually stamp out the

Cathars, Albigenses, Bogomils, and Waldensians. The Catholic Church was waging religious

warfare against a different Christian sect. It was an attempt to stamp out heresy. These four

sects doxa were dualistic. They believed in a dualistic nature of Creationism. On one hand they

had a God that was all loving and good and He created angels and the heavens, but on the other

hand there was an evil God, and he created the earth and the different devils and demons of the

lower regions that inspired all the wickedness on earth. This Creation story was at odds from the

officially sanctioned story of the Holy Bible in Genesis. Innocent III was also an advocate of

Church reform. Interestingly enough the Crusade against the Waldensians and Albigenses would

with their anti-sacerdotalism precipitate the rise of the Cistercian and Carthusian orders.49

During the Fourth Lateran Council of 1215 one of the key issues that Innocent III

denounced and anathematized the idea of heresy and also condemned the ideas of preaching the

Scriptures without the consent of the Catholic Church. The following is clearly directed toward 47

Ibid.; pg. 151.48

Ibid.; pg.152. An excellent example of unproven evidence are the supposed relics of the Holy Family. Mary’s breastmilk was one such relic. Since it is said that Mary was carried bodily to heaven, then where did breastmilk from the Holy Virgin come from? This particular [fifth] heresy echoes in our own time as modern thinkers and students of history, theology, and politics, and non-religious people ask the same question about the provability of Scripture. How much is truth and how much is complete myth?49 Charles Edward Smith, “Clerical Violence in the Pontificate of Innocent III,” The Journal of Religion 24, no. 1 (Jan. 1944): 37.

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the Waldensians. This “heretical” sect allowed women to preach the Scriptures as well as men.50

“There are some who holding to the form of religion but denying its power…claim for

themselves the authority to preach…and dare publicly or privately to usurp the office of

preaching without having received the authority of the apostolic see or Catholic bishop,”51 This

quote referred to the aforementioned sect. At the same time he called for a Crusade to stamp out

heresy in all forms in Europe, thus causing a massive bloodletting of Christian against Christian.

This persecution of different Christian sects like the Cathars and Waldensians requires an

explanation of how they were tried and found guilty.

Innocent III instituted the Inquisitions against the Cathars and all heretics who dared

challenge the doxology and orthodoxy of the Catholic Church, but he did not make it

permanent. The permanency of the Inquisitions would not be established until Pope Gregory IX

(r.1227-1241) issued his papal decretal, Excommunicamus,52 and called for a permanent tribunal

head by the Dominican order. To assign this order to the right to oversee trials concerning

heretics Gregory IX would issue his Ille humani generis.53 This heinous piece of Vatican

legislation would be responsible for the deaths of thousands of men, women, and children over

the next several centuries. The Ille humani generis promulgated in 1231 authorized the

Dominicans to “exercise their office given them freely…paying close attention to those who

seemingly revert to orthodoxy” but are secretly heretical in their beliefs.54 This was the Vatican’s

answer to the politics and procedures for trying heretics, which had become unwieldy. Therefore

the Malleus Maleficarum, this will not be examined. Nor will the inquisitorial processes for the

50

Edward Peters, Heresy and Authority in Medieval Europe, (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1980): 144. On page 144 is the twenty-third tract of Heresy and Authority. It is a letter written by Etienne de Bourbon entitled Waldensians and Vernacular Scripture. It was already considered a heresy if women preached the Scriptures since the Catholic Church considered that apostolic authority belonged solely to men because Jesus’ apostles were mostly men. Conveniently, it seems, they also forgot about his female followers like Mary Magdalene and Mary, the sister of Lazarus.51

Tanner: page 4 of print-out on the Fourth Lateran Council—1215, Constitution number 3.52 Peters, pg. 190. 53

Ibid., pg. 191. 54

Ibid., pg. 197.

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Portuguese and Spanish Inquisitions. Several of the Inquisitor manuals were written before the

fifteenth century.

In order to understand the inquisitorial process it is necessary to examine three Medieval

inquisitorial manuals. Because the inquisition of witches during the Great Witch Hysteria or

Witch Craze has its own iniquitous manual, the Malleus Maleficarum. The Spanish Inquisition

goes well into the Enlightenment Era (1700-1799) and part of the Early and Middle Romantic

Era (1800-1819; and 1820-1839) before it is relinquished around 1830.55 Because of the

extensiveness of the Spanish Inquisition (1498-c.1830) no more will be said. Thus, the following

inquisitorial manuals will be studied. They include: the Manual for Inquisitors at Carcassonne

(1248-1249)56 and the Inquisition Record of Jacques Fournier (1312-1325).57

The Inquisitor’s Manual at Carcassonne was commissioned on October 21, 1244 so that

friars Peter Durand and William Raymond, of the Order of Preachers,58 could have a method

relating to how they should look for and prosecute religious dissidents and heretics. This manual

appears to only relate to the province of Narbonne in France. There were eight steps to the

procedure on how to deal with so-called heretics, their defenders, the defamed and their favorers

and concealers.

The first step was the establishment of procedure. First, a proper place would be sought

to hold the inquisition and then the people and clergy would be called together to witness it, then

a method of citation would be read where upon the alleged heretic would be told why he or she

or they were being charged with heresy. The next step is a declaration of abjuration of heresy

and the oath is similar to that which people take before taking the stand in a modern-day trial.

They swear to tell the whole truth. During the abjuration oath the plaintiff promises not to harbor

other heretics or Waldensians. Third, during the course of the questioning they are asked several

55

The dates listed correspond with the dates the Great Composers of the era flourished. These composers included Ludwig von Beethoven, Niccolo Paganini, and Franz Schubert to name only a few.56

Ibid., pg. 200.57

Ibid., pg. 58 Ibid.; pg. 200. The Order of Preachers were Dominicans. This would be one of the group of begging friars John Wycliffe would rail against around the mid-1360s.

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questions about whether or not they knew of any Waldensians, where they were or if they had

any business.59 This was not always a peaceful questioning. It was often quite stressful and often

meant testifying against neighbors or even loved ones. Sometimes the person questioned was

tortured to get answers. The reality was not as straight forward as Peters would make it in his

book Heresy and Authority in Medieval Europe.

There are five other steps in the Inquisitor’s Manual for Carcassonne. Those six steps are

the summoning of individuals, which involves a form letter to the priest chosen to try the heresy

cases as inquisitor before turning over those guilty to the secular authorities. The fifth and sixth

steps include more oaths and affirmations regarding methods of reconciling and punishing

heretics who either return to the fold or excommunicating those that abjure their oaths to the

Catholic Church.60 The penance, as outlined in step six of the Inquisitor’s Manual for

Carcassonne outlines the performance of the penance involve. Two crosses, yellow, were to be

worn about the penitent’s neck and shoulders, while attending mass and vespers on Sunday and

traveling to various shrines throughout the year. They were required to do this for an unknown

number of years. Unlike the sixth step the seventh part of the manual arranged for the

determination of punishment by the secular arm of the Inquisition tribunal. Only the secular

authorities could pass punishment as the clergy did not want to sully their hands by punishing

people. This step involved another letter that states the reasons for whomever is judged a heretic

and the reasons they are being excommunicated or sentenced to death. The death sentence was

usually given to recalcitrant and unrepentant. Additionally, anyone who harbored a heretic or

defended him could themselves be charged with heresy and excommunicated.

Finally, the last step in the Inquisitor’s Manual of Carcassonne is how those who died as

heretics were to be treated. If the decease were adjudged heretics then their bones, if

distinguishable from others, were to be exhumed and roasted.61 When this occurred the deceased

one’s memory was also condemned. This step also involves more writs and ordinances

59

Ibid.; pg. 201.60

Ibid.; 204.61 Ibid.; pg. 206.

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condemning those who died as heretics. As will be seen this type of punishment will be applied

to John Wycliffe.

The next manual to be examined will be Jacques Fournier’s Inquisition Record. Jacques

Fournier was Bishop of Pamiers from 1312-1325. Given the last section discussed the eight

steps of the inquisitorial process in Carcassonne, a Cathari city in Southern France, it is reason-

able to discuss not only Nancy P. Stork’s translation of Jacques Fournier’s Inquisition record but

how it relates to the discussion in Edward Peter’s Heresy and Authority in Medieval Europe.

Reading through the first section of the Inquisition Records of Jacque Fournier in the Peter’s

book, the modern student in history or theology gets a sense of the argument between those

accused of heretical notions of whether or not the soul survives and how people thought during

the fourteenth century. The idea and argument of whether or not the soul survives or is similar to

what a person looks like is one that still rages in modern-day theological circles. This is not

unusual since no one knows where the soul goes. The Catholic Church of the Medieval Period

argues that the soul can travel to one of three places after birth: heaven, purgatory, or hell. In the

case of unbaptized infants there was the idea of limbo. This last was dissolved after Vatican II in

the twentieth century. The people who had been Cathari or Waldensians did not believe in

indulgences or that buying them could save a soul.62 This idea of indulgences would be denied

by Martin Luther as well. More will be said on this shortly.

62 Ibid; pg. 261.

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CHAPTER FOUR: JOHN WYCLIFFE

Background

The century John Wycliffe was born into experienced a scale of social and political

change that would not be rivaled again until the nineteenth change. One of the major changes

was climate change. The social changes that occurred were the results of the Black Plague, the

ongoing wars with France, which posterity would remember as the Hundred Years’ War, and

ultimately changing social structures. The beginning of university systems where scholars and

clergy could share their knowledge and teach also created an intellectual atmosphere.

Scholasticism was at its height, but was going into a slow decline. This chapter focuses on one

such thinker, John Wycliffe, and some of the men who influenced him while also focusing on his

writings, controversies, and political associations. His death would have what many modern

students would call a bizarre coda.

Who was John Wycliffe and what were his writings like while he was at Oxford, working

for the Crown, and while in retirement? Why did he object to certain Catholic Church practices?

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Did he begin any religious reforms that were noteworthy? Finally, in terms of religious reforms,

as they pertain to a revitalization movement, how important were he and his followers, the

Lollards?

There is a dearth of information available to researchers regarding John Wycliffe’s first

forty years of life. What we do know is so much supposition because no one fully agrees on the

date of his birth. Was he born in 1324 or 1328? He could not have been born after 1330 only

because it would not fit the time frame of later events in his life. What historians do agree on is

the year of his parents’ wed. Roger and Catherine Wycliffe, were likely minor nobility and were

married in 1319.63 John Wycliffe was born around 1328 near Hipswell, England, or Wycliffe-on-

Tees, England, near Richmond. Another date given was 1330,64 however 1328 is the accepted

date. The convention of the day was to use the place you were born as a surname. So it is likely

that he was near Wycliffe-on-Tees. Wycliffe was born in an area that was familiar with Scottish

raiders and the Battle of Bannockburn (1314).65 Also, if his parents were married in 1319, then it

seems likely Roger and Catherine Wycliffe would have had several children before 1328. Of

course, this does not mean that John Wycliffe had a brother. He may still have had only sisters

or have been an only child. We simply do not know.

One reason for this is that Roger would have needed an heir and two and the high level of

infant mortality would have made it necessary for a line of succession to be created which would

ensure the survival of the family name. It seems likely that John Wycliffe was a younger son.

Younger sons were known to seek inclusion in the clergy or military service because of the loss

of primogeniture to an older sibling. One person mentioned by Stephen Lahey is Bernard of

Clairvaux,66 He would have likely have learned to read and write, do mathematics, and it seems

rhetoric before attending Oxford University when was sixteen in about 1340. His education and

life at Oxford will be expounded on in a moment.

63 G.R. Evans, John Wyclif: Myth & Reality (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 2005): 15.64

Peters, pg. 265. 65 Stephen E. Lahey, John Wyclif, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009): 4. Wycliffe-on-Tees was a tiny village near the Richmond castle. It would have been a rather remote, frontier-like area in the 14th century.66

Ibid.; pg. 4.

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His theological and political careers are the areas for which we have the most

information. John Wycliffe was a prolific writer, especially toward the end of his life, and his

criticisms of the Catholic Church, its friars, and the idea of transubstantiation were extensive.

John Wycliffe drew on the teachings of several former Oxford theologians including William

Ockham (1287-1347) and was a proponent of St. Augustine. He was influenced by several other

theologians and writers including Robert Grosseteste (1170-1273), Walter Burley (c. 1275-

1344/45), Richard FitzRalph (c. 1300-December 16, 1360), and Thomas Bradwardine (c.1290-

August 26, 1349). John Wycliffe has been called both the evening star of scholasticism and the

Morning Star of the Reformation. John Bale was the first to apply this epithet to the medieval

Reformer in 1548.67 But was he really? Logic and realism were part of Wycliffe’s irascible

character make-up, as will be seen, but he was also a man devoted to the truth of scripture and

disliked the mendicancy of the friars and the corruption of the Roman Catholic Church. What his

education like at Oxford University and what was Oxford University like in 1340?

Who were John Wycliffe’s enemies? Why were they so adamant in their attempts to

destroy John Wycliffe’s legacy as an ecclesiastical scholar? Politics are often vicious and they

were no less vicious in ecclesiastical circles in the fourteenth century than they are today. John

Wycliffe also wrote during the time of the Papal Schism (1378-1417). Finally, it is not possible

to cover all of John Wycliffe’s works or those of his predecessors and those theologians who

influenced his writings. For that purpose, it is practical to stick to the most important issues.

The following works would be used against him at the Council of Constance in 1415. They were

his issues with the friars and his treatises on the Eucharist. He also wrote dominium and

Triagolus. These works would also be used against him at the Council of Constance. Along with

those works are the Wycliffe Bible, his Postilla and his Confessio. The last was a response to the

bishops and Archbishop Sudbury, before his death, on charges of heresy. His final work was the

Opus Evangelicum and the Antichristo. He would die before completing this work.

Oxford University

67

Ibid.; pg. 135

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Oxford University was less than three-hundred years old when John Wycliffe joined the

university first as a student and later as a member of the faculty. The word “universitas” once

meant gild. The Oxford University John Wycliffe attended does not resemble what we know of

how a university looks in the twenty-first century.68 The original university was different than

what we know today. It did not have the look it does today, instead it was made up of a

community known as a corporation.69 When Wycliffe attended Oxford he probably spent his first

night in an inn with the term beginning on the Feast of St. Denys.

The Faculty of the Arts ruled the university’s curriculum. The Arts could be found in

four distinct colleges. They were the Merton College (1264), Queen’s College (1341), Balliol

College (1263) and Hertford College (1283). The Faculty of the Arts had a strong Scholastic

tradition built on the teachings of the Greek philosopher Aristotle. Before Wycliffe could go on

to study theology or the law he had to master the first seven approved courses. They were

grammar, rhetoric, logic, arithmetic, astronomy, music, and geometry.70 He would likely have

studied these subjects in Queen’s College. This is because Merton’s College was reserved for

higher learning.

John Wycliffe studied theology at Merton College among the calculators and his forte

was natural philosophy. One of the men who made an influence on John Wycliffe would have

been the late-Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Bradwardine (1300-1349). Like Wycliffe,

Bradwardine was a Mertonian who became archbishop after the death of John Ufford and

succumbed to the Black Plague after only thirty-eight days.71 Wycliffe graduated from Queen’s

College in 1356, but before he graduated he had already been “ordained a subdeacon in March of

1351. A month later in April he was ordained a deacon and in September received the Sacrament

of Holy Orders and ordained a priest by the Archbishop of York, William de la Zouche at York

68 Evans, pg. 21.69

Ibid.; pg. 18.70 John de Wycliffe. Tracts and Treatises of John de Wycliffe, D.D. (1845). (Glasgow: Oxford University Press, 1976): loc. 342. Kindle Book. This book was made available through the Gutenberg Project and through the Liberty Fund, Inc. The Liberty Fund’s address and phone number is listed in the copyright and fair use section of the downloaded book.71

Lahey, pg. 39.

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Minster.”72 In 1356, he entered Merton College as a probationary fellow. Upon receiving his

Master’s Degree he became the parish priest of Fillingham, Lincolnshire, in May of 1361 and

later the parish priest of Bristol of Aust at Westbury. His request for a canonry seems to have

been ignored. A few years later in 1363 Wycliffe requested to return to Oxford, which was

granted in August of 1363. He would begin his work to receive a doctorate in theology in the

autumn of that year.73

Wycliffe would receive his doctorate in theology once he had completed the required

regimen. The first was four years of lectures and formal disputations while caring for his parish

in Fillingham and his prebend in Aust. He also had to complete his commentary on Peter

Lombard’s Sentences. Once all this was completed he would receive his doctorate. Wycliffe

completed his Sentences and received his doctorate in late 1372. During his tenure at Oxford

John Wycliffe would become Master of Balliol College, but would once again invite

controversy. He had many character traits that would land him in trouble, but two of the most

distinct included his being an anti-fideist and a realist. Philosophy would lead to the latter trait

and his realism would have him questioning the ideas of predestination and the idea of transub-

stantiation.

Why would these two ideas land the Oxford don in such trouble? Why did the friars

dislike him? John Wycliffe was no mere cog in the wheel of progress, he was an original thinker

and an intellectualist. The next section is about his religious controversies and then his political

intrigues. While at Oxford John Wycliffe would be characterized by another name. It was doctor

evangelicus, of course, the “damn heresiarch” floated around too.74 He gained this first nom de

plume of doctor evangelicus because of his instance that scripture was central to all learning and

to all life. He only ever saw himself as an orthodox priest. Unfortunately, as will be seen, his

enemies like Simon Sudbury and William Courtenay would not feel the same about him.

John Wycliffe’s writings are marked by controversies. His views on the friars, the

72

Ibid.; pg. 573

Ibid.; pg. 6.74 Ibid.; pg. 135. Only doctors of theology at Oxford were allowed a second name.

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Sacraments of the Eucharist and Confession would later be declared heretical and unorthodox

in the eyes of the pope and later the Council of Constance. But he did not start his religious

controversies after leaving Oxford, rather they began while he was at Oxford. Wycliffe was the

type of man who did not shy away from creating controversy. In fact, he seemed to embrace it.

Why? Perhaps, he felt it made people actually stop and think. But the Catholic Church had a

cognitive control policy. And the cognitive control policy dictated that the “faithful,” were only

supposed to think what the Catholic Church in Rome dictated and to contradict the dogma of the

Holy Church was anathema. Nor were the “faithful” allow to ask questions or to even question

the right or wrong of Catholic teachings. Those who did question and criticize the Roman

Catholic Church were declared heretics as mentioned in chapter three. John Wycliffe was the

rare exception to the rule in the Medieval Period. Not only did he question, but he openly

criticized and questioned. This was an unforgivable offense.

His first encounter to land him at loggerheads with the Catholic Church was over the

issue of friars and monks and their mendicancy. Before that, in 1365, Wycliffe became warden

of Canterbury Hall by the late-Archbishop of Canterbury Simon Islip. After Islip died, the new

Archbishop of Canterbury, John Langham, a Benedictine monk.75 John Wycliffe shows his

tenacity and early anger at the monks by appealing to Pope Urban V in Avignon. While Pope

Urban V (1362 to 1370) did not like Langham primarily because the latter refused to help him

exact tribute from England for Rome, Urban V would rule in Langham’s favor five years later.

How did this help fuel Wycliffe’s resentment for the friars in later years?

John Wycliffe held most friars and mendicants in utter contempt. There are times he can

be seen to work them, but after 1381 he was done with them and with Oxford University. He had

enough of both. In the Tracts and Treatises of John Wycliffe, D.D. (1845), Wycliffe says that

friars who leave their bishoprics or priesthoods are heretics equal to those who start a new

religion and do not live Christ’s religion.76 He railed against their mendicancy most of his life

and felt that friars should earn their lodging, clothes, and food through honest labor rather than

75 Ibid.; pg. 6. 76

Wycliffe, loc. 6225.

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begging.77 Wycliffe felt that the interference of the friars towards how priests would preach the

gospel to their parishioners was heretical and hypocritical. He said in his Tracks and Treatises

that friars believed it apostasy and heresy when a priest lived as Christ ordained them too.78

Wycliffe even went so far in part three entitled A Treatise on John Wycliffe against the Order of

the Friars to call the pope the Antichrist. Even though the friars thought begging was lawful,

Wycliffe maintains the Scriptures by citing that Solomon was taught by the Holy Spirit not to

give into “begging or beggingness,”79 instead that Solomon should have vanity and leasing.

Another reason Wycliffe could not abide the friars is that they perceived a mere beggar, when

Christ was believed to be more than that.

John Wycliffe gained a following of men once derisively known as Lollards, which

meant mutterers, who helped to spread his teachings. They could be found in Oxford as teachers

and students, and out of Oxford by men who took his teachings to heart. Wycliffe’s writings

were popular among younger secular scholars who were called Lollards. These Lollards were

devoted to spreading the idea of Wycliffism to the poorer class of people. These Lollards would

bring the Wycliffe Bible to the classes that could not read Latin and they would learn the

Wycliffe Bible in its vernacular form. Wycliffe believed that God’s word was meant for all men

not just the clergy and its hierarchy and the noble class. This was a heresy in the eyes of the

Roman Catholic Church and heresy was considered a burnable offense.

Political Associations

By the year 1372 John Wycliffe had finished his Summa de Ente and entered the service

of John of Gaunt, the third living son of King Edward III Plantagenet, duke of Lancaster.

Wycliffe seemed to be out of his league in the realm of politics. In addition to his duties with his

parishes and benefice he also had to act as an emissary for his Grace, the duke of Lancaster. 77

Tanner, Council of Constance 1414-18, pg. 4 of printed webpage. This idea about begging and manual work was condemnation number 24 in Session 8 of the Council of Constance. This session occurred on May 4, 1415. That would be over five-hundred years ago this past May.78

Wycliffe, loc. 6228.79

Ibid.; loc. 6282.

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Wycliffe was use to arguing in philosophical circles at Oxford University. How did John

Wycliffe come to be associated with the royal family and why was the association both helpful

and disastrous?

After the death of Edward III, in 1377, John of Gaunt became one of the young king’s,

Richard II (1367 to 1400), regents but without the ability to gain the throne. John of Gaunt was

the overseer for the land the Wycliffe family held in the north near Richmond. As the duke of

Lancaster John would have been familiar with the family, and he would have known that at least

one son of that minor noble family was in the clergy. John of Gaunt held anti-papal feelings and

did not approve of the Roman Catholic Church trying to exact tribute from the English king. In

his dealings with the friars he had already said the Antichrist ruled them, but it would be a

further eight years until he referred to the whole papal system as being run by the Antichrist in

the guise of the pope. John of Gaunt was a man who was ambitious, but also highly disliked. He

saw Wycliffe as a tool because of his high placement in theological circles.

Two important events happened in 1374 that would affect John Wycliffe. The first is that

he was presented with the rectory of Lutterworth in Leicestershire by the Crown and then in that

same year was chosen for a delegation to the French town of Bruges to treat with the papal

representatives on the subject of “provisions.”80 What were the provisions? The provisions that

that the pope provided to the Roman Catholic Church in England were that the pope was spiritual

head of England and thus was allowed to tax England as provided in the provisions allowed by

King John. This was not necessarily true as it was determined, by Parliament, under King

Edward III, that King John had betrayed England by making her a papal fief in exchange for

freeing the kingdom from interdict.81 Later, in that same year John Wycliffe returned to England

and his parish at Lutterworth. The diplomatic venture at Bruges was not going well and it was

determined he was not needed.

While King Richard II was in his minority the administration of the Crown was in the

80 Lahey, pg. 16. 81

John Foxe, Fox’s Book of Martyrs or a History of the Lives, Sufferings, and Triumphant Deaths of the Primitive Protestant Martyrs, (Chicago: The John C. Winston, Co., n.d.): loc. 9931. This book was released digitally on May 11, 2012, by Amazon Digital, Inc.

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hands of his uncle, John of Gaunt (6 March 1340 – 03 February 1399), after 1376. His father,

when the Black Prince, Edward, Prince of Wales died. John of Gaunt was not sole regent so his

power waned albeit not considerably but it would be enough for Wycliffe’s enemies to attack the

ecclesiastical theorist. John would support Wycliffe many times during the near decade long

association but over time it would soon sour as Wycliffe was too hot-headed and refused to heed

good advice. From 1377 until his retirement in 1381 John Wycliffe would be involved in both

national and ecclesiastical politics. Some of the time spent in ecclesiastical politics would swirl

around accusations of heresy and his heretical writings.

Wycliffe had several enemies in the Roman Catholic Church in England. Among them

were the Archbishop of Canterbury Simon Sudbury (c.1316 to 14 June 1381) and his successor

the then Bishop William Courtenay. When did Gregory XI send his letters to England and when

was John Wycliffe told he had to appear at Lambeth Palace on February 19, 1377, to answer for

charges of heresy? How did John Gaunt help him? What effect did these charges have on

Wycliffe’s career at Oxford?

First, John of Gaunt was a wily politician who, as mentioned earlier, had anti-papal

pretensions. On February 19, 1377, Wycliffe was commanded to appear at St. Paul’s in London,

by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Simon Sudbury, to answer questions regarding his teachings.

He had royal protection in the form of John of Gaunt and Sir Henry Percy and four friars. The

hearing started off interesting. Sir Henry Percy directed Wycliffe to sit, but the Archbishop took

umbrage at this and said it was proper for Wycliffe to stand while being questioned. Sir Henry

Percy was the Lord Marshall at the time, and he had gone to St. Paul’s in the duke’s company,

and Wycliffe’s. The Archbishop had not expected the Duke of Lancaster to appear, but had he

known would have taken steps to make sure he had not appeared. Meanwhile, Wycliffe waited

patiently for the charges to be laid so he could answer them. The day turned into a debacle when

the people outside St. Paul’s began to riot and Wycliffe never answered any questions. It has

been speculated that Wycliffe was a pawn for John of Gaunt; that he was an unwitting, naïve tool

in the duke’s pursuit of power and the throne.82 But this is rumor and cannot be proven.

82 Joseph H. Dahmus, “John Wyclif and the English Government,” Speculum 35, no. 1 (Jan. 1960): pg . 54.

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Further Problems for Wycliffe

May 22, 1377, was the day that Pope Gregory XI issued five papal bulls against John

Wycliffe. In these bulls Gregory demanded that Sudbury and Courtenay have Wycliffe arrested

so that they could extract a confession from him. These bulls were issued in response to his

tracts on dominium. What was dominium? Dominium is Latin for dominion. Wycliffe wrote two

tracts on this subject. One was De Dominio Divinio or On Divine Dominion (1373 to 1374) and

the other was De Civili Dominio or On Civil Dominion (1375 to 1376).83 He had begun to

contemplate and research both after his return to Bruges. His tracts were completed before the

death of King Richard III and in time for the pope to charge him with heretical writings. The

above two works make up a portion of Wycliffe’s Summa Theologica. There were other works,

of course, but these are the two that will be focused on.

Why did these writings alarm both Pope Gregory XI and the English bishops? How did

these affect his final years in Oxford? The De Dominio Divinio was one the first book in the

Summa Theologica and it advocated reform and that the clergy should not be subjected to

“covetous and worldly passions.”84 He taught in the Divine Dominion that the idea of the

Catholic Church should have better stewardship over the earth and that clergy should not be

exempt from the authority of the civil magistrates. He felt that if the clergy committed civil

offenses, then they should be subjected to the same laws and that the laity had as much fitness as

that of the Church. Naturally, the pope, who believed himself God on Earth, would not have

agreed and that the clergy should answer only to itself.

De Civili Dominio or On Civil Dominion was John Wycliffe’s second book on the idea of

dominion. Civil Dominion states that “civil justice presupposes divine justice”85 and that the civil

lord should be obligated to control the Church. After all, the divine nature of man is already in

full swing in terms of spiritual, natural, and civil. In his On Civil Dominion John Wycliffe also

83

Evans, pg. 151.84 Loserth, loc. 3073.85

Lahey, pg. 210.

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argued for the total royal divestment of Augustinian ecclesiastical property. This idea of civil

dominion is important to understand. Wycliffe’s teachings here will be seen again when talking

about how German princes such as the Elector, Frederick the Wise (January 17, 1463—May 5,

1525), would defend the Great Reformer from Roman punishment.86 This treatise was a

described civil lordship and how the state should have some ecclesiastical authority over its

priests and bishops, including taxation of ecclesiastical property. In that same year, in December

of 1377, Gregory XI issued another papal bull that he sent to the chancellors of Oxford. Oxford

was authorized to act and try to obey the pope’s demands. Knowing they have to act, the

chancellors attempt to issue a house arrest of John Wycliffe.

John Wycliffe’s ideas would once again be put on trial in 1378 as the Catholic Church in

Rome tried again to have him arrested and held for heretical beliefs. This time he would be tried

at Lambeth Palace in March of 137887 and he would receive no help from John of Gaunt. Even

though, the duke was not present at this trial it appears someone intervened on his behalf for the

trial did not commence because the charges could not be read. Perhaps it was the queen mother,

Joan, who had intervened on his behalf by sending Sir Lewis Clifford. Either way, Wycliffe had

once again escaped judgement. An important note to be made is that in 1378, during the time

Wycliffe was preparing for his trial at Lambeth, Pope Gregory XI had died. With the election of

Pope Urban VI at Avignon, Clement VII had set up a rival curia also in Avignon. This Papal

Schism would last from 1378 until 1417 when Martin V was declared the legitimate pontiff.

In 1379, John Wycliffe began work on his De Eucharistia. The idea of transubstantiation

was a subject he should have steered cleared of because it would accelerate his further fall from

grace with the Chancellors at Oxford University. The ideas he formulated would also top the list

of forty-five direct condemnations in his posthumous heresy trial at the Council of Constance on

May 4, 1415. Throughout 1379 Wycliffe would lecture, dispute and work on his Postilla, which

was an early translation of some of the Scriptures in the Bible.

The idea of how Christ was present in the Mass was an issue of theological debate that

86

Oberman, pg.22.87 Dahmus, pg. 55.

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went back into the ninth century. Before the idea of transubstantiation was coined in 1079 there

was the other idea of consubstantiation. What is the difference? Transubstantiation is the theo-

logical belief that during the Sacrament of Communion the bread and wine are changed into the

body and blood of Jesus Christ. Consubstantiation is a theological doctrine that attempts to

describe the nature of the Christian Eucharist. In consubstantiation the idea is that the body and

wind do not change but the “spiritual substance” of Christ is present. The Roman Catholic

Church would codify the idea of transubstantiation during the Lateran IV ecumenical council

while Innocent III was alive.

John Wycliffe, when he wrote his De Eucharistia, would have done to leave the subject

alone. However, his investigations on the idea of transubstantiation led him down a disastrous

path that would eventually ruin him. For his exegetical analysis in Matthew 26: 26-29, Wycliffe

draws on such theological philosophers like Robert Holcott, William Ockham, and Walter

Crathorn, and St. Thomas Aquinas.

He also believed that if a clergyman (a bishop, priest, cardinal, etc.) was in mortal sin

they could not conduct Mass nor could they perform any sacrament authorized by the Roman

Catholic Church.88 The idea of whether or not the bread and wine become the true body and

blood of Christ will be a subject that will be returned to with Martin Luther who also rejected the

idea of transubstantiation.

On a final note for this discussion on the Eucharist it should be noted that John Huss (c.

1369 to July 6, 1415) rejected the idea of Christ not being present during the Mass and

celebration of the Eucharistic sacrifice. In rejecting the idea of transubstantiation Wycliffe went

not only Church dogma but he also viewed the idea of annihilation of the bread and wine as

apostasy. After if the bread and wine were annihilated, then how can the body and blood of

Christ be present? Wycliffe would address the idea of transubstantiation in his De Eucharista in

1380 and later in the Trialogus, and a section of the Opus Evangelicum entitled De Antichristo.89

The De Antichristo attacks the pope and calls him the Antichrist. This idea will be addressed last

88 Tanner, Council of Constance, pg. 5 of printout from website.89

Lahey, pg. 134.

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in this chapter as the Opus Evangelicum was not completed because Wycliffe died before he

could complete it in 1384.

In 1380, shortly after he released his Eucahrista, his teachings were condemned. He

was present when the judgment was cast by twelve of his fellow theologians. John Wycliffe had

no idea that he was about to be vilified for his beliefs and when he heard them in late 1380 was

astounded. He would issue his Confessio before retiring from academic life, and he would lose

all support with the Crown after Wat Tyler’s rebellion during the Peasant’s Revolt of 1381. It

was during this revolt that Archbishop Simon Sudbury was murdered by the people as they

rioted.

His Confessio is a precis for his De Eucharista. In it he explains that the body of Christ

is substantially, corporeally, and dimensionally the same. Christ is spiritually present in the host

during Mass. He goes onto say, sardonically, that if Christ really were present he would be

seven-feet high.90 Now, it should be remembered that the idea of transubstantiation was codified

only during the time of Innocent III and that for all intents and purposes the Jesus that is

purported to exist may never had ever said that “this is my body,” nor “this is my blood,” at the

Last Supper. There was no one around to record what he actually said. So how can the Catholic

Church judge what is true and what is not? The Confessio goes into detail on the Euchrista,

which was a series of books written by John Wycliffe, and then taken very literally. Even at the

start of the Confessio Wycliffe takes pains to paraphrase parts of the Nicene Creed or the

Apostle’s Creed. The pseudo-Reformer also mentions that the sacrament on the altar is bread

and wine in nature, and body and bread during the sacrament.91 His Confessio seems orthodox,

and it also seems that the enemies he had made saw heretical thinking. They wanted someone

who would tout the company line and not question the Holy Catholic Church. Later, after he died

in 1384, his followers would spread his teachings.

The Peasants’ Revolt, under the leadership Wat Tyler, was supposedly tied to Wycliffe’s

teachings. But was the Revolt really tied to Wycliffe’s teachings or could there have been

90 Ibid.; 228.91

Ibid.; 232.

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another reason the Morningstar of the Reformation was blamed? His followers were called

Lollards and his teachings probably would not have had a chance to reach a larger extent of his

countrymen. Such teachings would have needed to have been taught and assimilated by the

poorer populace.92 There was simply not enough time for that to be the case. Instead, his critics

scapegoated him for the rebellion. Still, with the help of his Lollard followers, his denial of

celibacy, critique of transubstantiation, and his advocacy for an English Bible that the people

could read in their vernacular language stayed alive and well.93 The Reformation of the sixteenth

century would see his ideas come to the fore again. John of Gaunt no longer supported him and

the Crown under Richard II (1367 to 1400) distanced themselves from him after the Peasants’

Revolt. He retired to his parish of Lutterworth, England, where he remained for the last three

years of his life. While in retirement he was not idle. Besides saying his Masses for the faithful

he continued to write. His most important writings from this time frame include his Triagolus,

Confessio, and Opus Evangelicum.

Retirement

Work began on his English Bible in 1382, and though he would do a great deal of

translating would not finish it. That task would be for his followers to complete. While in

retirement he remained active preaching at his Lutterworth diocese and editing his vast body of

work. Lollardly had been cast out of Oxford by 1380.

John Wycliffe’s Triagolus, written in 1383, concerns a discussion between three

imaginary people. They are Alithia (Wycliffe’s version of pure philosophy), Phronesis

(Wycliffe’s hero), and Pseustis (the Infidel).94 In the Triagolus Wycliffe talks about the Trinity.

He uses his three main characters to do the talking. Phronesis, for example, argues about the

truth of God’s existence being the must be acknowledged first before any other truth of

something existing can be validated and that it is a contradiction to hold that something exists

92

Oberman, pg. 46.93

Ibid.; pg. 46.94 Ibid.; pg. 28.

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without first for the aforementioned existence of the Heavenly Father.95 However, given that

Wycliffe lived in the fourteenth century, it would have been impossible for him to have foreseen

the beginnings of Darwinian thought and the ideas of evolution, which weakened the Catholic

Church’s position on the omniscience of a divine being.

The Opus Evangelicum was the last book Wycliffe wrote, but as mentioned is

incomplete. It contains contradictions to the Holy Bible especially Mt 5:42.96 This chapter and

verse enjoins the reader to give to the one who begs off the faithful for food or money or drink.

Wycliffe rails against the friars begging, yet the Bible specifically says to help them. If the Holy

Bible’s Scriptures are central to the life of the faithful, then why would they need to be contra-

dicted? How significant are these writings and whom or who did they influence? The Opus

Evangelicum was Wycliffe at his most personal. It was his final writing and his final attempt at

clearing his name. Contained within it is the AntiChristo. It is a condemnation of the pope and

Wycliffe’s belief that the Holy Office was corrupt and needed reform. All his work was found

to be heretical an ordered to be burned. Thankfully for humanity that it was not and instead was

preserved for future generations. Unfortunately, Wycliffe died in 1384 before finishing his last

seminal work. In 1428, on a decree from the Council of Constance, his bones would be dug up

and burned and his ashes scattered.

Council of Constance (1414-1418)

The Council of Constance was summoned on November 5, 1414, in Constance, in what

we know today as Switzerland. Votes would be cast by nations instead of being cast

individually. They had much work to do. In the introduction it had been stated that no more

would be said about John Huss, however; to adequately do justice to this section, it is a necessary

obligation to mention the Bohemian (Czech) priest and reformer. He was a professor at Prague

much as Wycliffe had been at Oxford. John Huss had been influenced by Lollard teachings by

another Czech named Jerome of Prague. The only reason that either of these men had heard of

95

Ibid.; pg. 62.96

Matthew is abbreviated Mt. The number 5 represents the chapter and the number 42.

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Wycliffe lies in the fact that King Charles IV’s (r. 1346 to 1378) daughter, Princess Anne,

married King Richard II of England and her courtiers followed her to England. This is

background information, but it was the backbone of the Hussite religious movement. It would

have succeeded but for the lack of an effective way to distribute information. More will be said

on this idea in chapter seven while discussing Martin Luther and the beginnings of Lutheranism

and the Protestant Reformation.

The Council of Constance had been summoned to deal with several issues. They

included ending the Papal Schism that had divided the Roman Catholic Church for nearly forty

years, the next issue was excommunicating heretics like Jerome of Prague, John Huss, and post-

humously excommunicating the heresiarch John Wycliffe. The latter’s punishment was to have

his bones dug up and roasted and tossed into the river Severn. This is sinful in its own right. To

disturb the finally resting place is sinful and desecrating burial sites is an abomination and sinful

act. It seemed almost hypocritical of the Catholic Church to pass judgement on a “sinner,” while

sinning themselves.

Last year marked the sexacentennial of the death of John Huss. He was burned at the

stake as a heretic on July 6, 1415. His death would inflame Bohemia with a war called the

Hussite Wars. The followers of John Huss would spread his teachings. He is reported to have

said, “Today you roast a goose, but a swan will come who you will not silence.” This might be

apocryphal. Historians do not know. However, the goose is the symbol for Huss and the swan is

on the family crest of Luther.97

97 Ibid.; pg. 55.

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CHAPTER FIVE: GUTENBERG PRINTING PRESS

There are few inventions in history that can be considered watershed moments. These

inventions change the way life is affected for centuries or millennia. One such invention was the

movable type printing press. The printing press was the great hinge on which the future swung.

The story of the printing press is an interesting one, especially because of the rate at which it

caught on and spread. It was almost as if the people of Europe were hungry for the written word.

Such was the affect and the effect of the Renaissance. New ideas were forming and the long

dormant search for information was finally about to be satisfied.

The written word is one of mankind’s finest achievements and has propelled our world

to the pinnacles of greatness. Yet, it was the era of scrolls and illuminated manuscripts that

propelled civilization out of the medieval world and into the early modern period. That

achievement was movable type. Once writing could be printed and disseminated to the masses

people learned to read and when people learned to read they learned to think an ask questions.

This chapter is tied to the next three and thus to advance the narrative should be told from the

perspective of the final two reformers: Martin Luther and William Tyndale. For now, however,

a history of how the printing press was important to the beginning of the early modern period

should be discussed as it affects everything from here on out.

Religious movements succeed best when there is a successful form of communication.

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The Reformation is said to have succeeded only because of the printing press. For centuries the

only way to write a book was by hand on papyrus and later on parchment. Book binding had not

been invented yet so books and important government documents were kept in scroll form. The

Romans used both papyrus and parchment. Parchment was used for wills and laws, but until the

4th century C.E. papyrus was considered a more refined writing instrument.98 Parchment grew in

favor because unlike papyrus which is made with reeds stuck together ink could be scraped

(erased) and the parchment re-used. Re-used parchment is called palimpsest. Parchment could

also be written on both sides. Parchment also lasted longer. Paper would challenge parchment for

the role of better writing material. Parchment could have its words scraped clean making it

palimpsest, but paper would be the writing material when printing was invented in China.

Christianity was a revitalization movement in its own right and by the time of Justinian

was the dominant religion in the late-Roman and Byzantine worlds. In this chapter the history of

printing from a short discussion on ancient origins to how the Renaissance Era encouraged the

use of the Gutenberg Printing Press, and then led to the advent of the Reformation. The

Reformation would succeed only because of the printing press. Had it not been invented or if it

had never been invented we may be still be creating hand-written manuscripts to this day. It

changed world history for the better, yet Elizabeth L. Eisenstein states in her book, Divine Art,

Infernal Machine: The Reception of Printing in the West from First Impressions to the Sense of

an Ending, that opponents to printing have always been officials in high office who opposed it.99

So, how and why did printing first start and why did it become popular at such an exponential

rate? Why oppose something that makes life better and easier?

Ancient Origins in Paper and Print

Papermaking and printing began in China. Papermaking first started in the Later Han

Dynasty (25 C.E to 250 C.E.).100 Ts’ai Hun or Cai Lun, as his name is also spelled, is said to be

98 Harry Ransom Center, “Early Writing,” Books Before and After the Gutenberg Bible. (University of Texas at Austin, n.d.) http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/educator/modules/gutenberg/books/ [accessed October 23, 2015]. 99 Elizabeth L. Eisenstein, Divine Art, Infernal Machine: The Reception of Printing in the West from First Impressions to the Sense of Ending, (Philadelphia: University of Philadelphia Press, 2011): xi. This is located with the preface of the book.100

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the man who invented paper. Cai Lun was a court official and a eunuch in the Later Han

Dynasty. Even though papermaking had been around for hundreds of years, Cai Lun was the

man credited with making needed improvements to the process of papermaking. Water is

important to the process of papermaking is to form felted fibers into a thin sheet or mat.101

Certain grasses and vegetable fibers are better suited for making paper. Cotton has the highest

and purest cellulose fiber content with a lower binding substance. All of which must be

eliminated through the process of maceration. Maceration is the noun form of the verb macerate

and means to cause to become softer or separated in constituent elements or to cause to waste

away by or as if by excessive fasting. Hemp paper was popular because it was tough, waterproof,

and fine. It was a popular medium on which calligraphy and printing could be accomplished.

While the Chinese were using paper to record official documents as late as the T’ang Dynasty

(618-904 C.E.).102 Europe would not start using paper until about the twelfth century after the

First Crusade in the Holy Lands.

After paper came the invention of printing. Once again, the first use of printing would

begin in China when a sixth century emperor commanded that Confucian texts along with

Buddhist texts be written down. To do this a system of writing the text on paper and then

smoothing the paper and gluing face down onto a woodblock. The letters were carved out to

make an early printing plate with every woodblock representing a new printing plate. This

technique represented the first printing press, but did not have movable type. The invention of

printing would spread slowly into Western Civilization. Romans around the fourth or fifth

century pasted strips of papyrus into books bound with wooden covers to create a codex. This

gave mankind a form of written works similar to what we have. Codices replaced scrolls and

were easier to flip through for information and were easier to hold.

The printing press was invented before the fall of Constantinople in 1453. The start of

the Renaissance is 1450. Printing would play a pivotal role in how it succeeded. The ancient

Tsuen-Hsuin Tsien, “Raw Materials for Old Papermaking in China,” Journal of the American Oriental Society 93, no. 4 (Oct.—Dec. 1973): 511.101

Ibid.; pg. 510.102 Ibid.; pg. 512.

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origins of paper and print would be improved on in that year by Johann Gutenberg and his

assistant Johann Fust. Who were they and what were the consequences of printing? How did it

give rise to the start of the early period of Western Civilization? Why is the advent of a movable

type printing press comparable to the internet in the twenty-first century? Undoubtedly, the

fifteenth century is one of the most dynamic centuries of the second millennium.

Gutenberg’s Printing Press

Before Johann Gutenberg’s Printing Press books were produced by scribes and hand

copying texts in a diligent, time consuming manner. For hundreds of years the job of copying

texts fell to either priests or scribes. They would use perfectly written letters in fine calligraphy

on parchment. Paper did not arrive in Europe until the twelfth century. Like the DVDs that

replaced VCR tapes, the printing of books would eventually cause the decline and elimination of

handwritten manuscripts. Before printed books were created on the printing press, books were

written by hand by monks and scribes who worked diligently for weeks and months to carefully

create a product pleasing to the eye. Each letter was meticulously written so that they were well

proportioned and then illustrated. They worked in scriptoriums and scriptoria.103

What were the differences between a scriptoria and the printing press. According to the

Harry Ransom Center located at the University of Texas, Austin, the difference is that monks

worked in scriptoria, and only the largest monasteries had scriptoria. Scriptoria is the plural of

scriptorium. As most monks were scribes they could either work in the scriptoria of monasteries

or alongside other scribes who were not clergy. While working in the scriptoria there was

complete silence. For some scribes who were not of the clergy this was there means of living.

So it is understandable if they felt their livelihoods threatened with the coming of the printing

press. A more modern example can be derived from the nineteenth century. Pony express riders

were also threatened with the coming of the telegraph. Technological change is often viewed in

some fearful and unfavorable light until the new technologies are adapted and accepted by the

103 Harry Ransom Center, “Books before Gutenberg,” Books Before and After the Gutenberg Bible. (University of Texas at Austin, n.d.) http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/educator/modules/gutenberg/books/ [accessed January 13, 2016].

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general public. Such was the view of the printing press at first and it still had its critics in the

seventeenth century.

Johann Gutenberg is credited with being the inventor of movable type. His assistant’s

name was Johann Fust. His invaluable genius in creating the printing press would revolutionize

how books were created and also how the printing industry lasted until the internet age and is

still going strong. But why and how did he do it? This invention would cause the decline of

handwritten manuscripts, but those same artisans who assisted in the creation of illuminated

manuscripts would lend their crafts into creating quality books. How did his printing press work

and why did it spread like wildfire all over Europe in a short fifty year time span?

Not much is known about Johann Gutenberg, the inventor of the printing press, except

that he remains a bit of an enigma. It is known that he was born at Mainz in Germany. Mainz is

located in the German state of the Rhineland-Palatinate which is not far from Worms, Germany.

Mainz is located down river from Worms. Most sources agree that Johannes Gutenberg was born

around 1398 or 1400. What his actual birthdate was is unknown. Not much is known about his

childhood except that he lived in Mainz and likely apprenticed there before becoming a master in

his various professions. Gutenberg, in addition to being a printer and a publisher, was also a

goldsmith and a blacksmith. These skilled professions would have been necessary to invent the

printing press. Why?

To create the interchangeable letters for the print fell to the goldsmiths and blacksmiths

to forge the characters which would be then set so that text could be printed. Blacksmiths were

needed to make the gears and metal spring coils for the early printing presses. Goldsmiths were

needed to make the lettering. Early printing presses like Gutenberg’s, it was believed, used the

punch matrix system. The punch matrix system involved using a punch, a matrix, and mold as in

figure one pictured here (Fig. 1).

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Fig. 1. A punch, matrix and mold.104

This system could be labor intensive because first the letter would have to be created then

punched into a piece of metal and then set backwards into the mold. Once the piece of type was

set into the mold hot, liquid metal would be poured into the mold. The punch and matrix were

resuable, the mold was not, and each letter would look the same giving the print a balanced,

aesthetically pleasing look. The matrix could be used to make as many set of letters as was

needed. The punch matrix system made creating books faster to produce. What would

ordinarily take monks months or years to create one manuscript made producing a book at least

weeks to a month or two after 1450. But it was not only books that could use this system. Other

pieces of literature like pamphlets or incunabula.

Having now covered the punch matrix system of printing, it is time to turn to another

system of printing called xylographics or xylography. Xylographics involved woodcuts at first

before turning to copper engravings for illustrating books and other literature. How did xylo-

graphy work? To create illustrations the process first woodcuts. This process was already

hundreds of years old before the invention of the printing press. Illustrators would be needed to

decorate the printing with color if needed or to create pictures.

Woodcuts would be used to create the first illustrations. The process involved carving

whatever picture was needed into a block of wood. The uncarved area was not inked. The

carved area was inked and a piece of paper was laid over the inked area and pressed into the

prepared carving. It made illustrating faster and eliminated the need for hand painting. The type 104 Harry Ransom Center. “Gutenberg’s Print Shop,” The Invention (University of Texas, Austin, n.d.) (University of Texas at Austin, n.d.) http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/educator/modules/gutenberg/books/ [accessed January 19, 2016].

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of ink Gutenberg used was not water-based, they were oil-based and it made printing characters

more permanent. With this knowledge in mind we can now discuss his most famous printing—

the Gutenberg Bible.

The Gutenberg Bible

The first book Johannes Gutenberg and his assistant, Johann Fust, printed was the

Bible, which has become known to history as the Gutenberg Bible. Johann Fust was a lawyer

and goldsmith, who literature has mythologized as Dr. Johannes Faust. The Gutenberg Bible

was completed around 1455, but why did Gutenberg choose to write it? What was his

inspiration? There was only one inspiration for the Gutenberg Bible and that was Gutenberg’s

desire to produce books more quickly. He needed Fust’s help. Fust had the money Gutenberg

needed to continue his work. Gutenberg worked as quickly as he could, but that was not fast

enough for Fust. Fust brought suit against the inventor and one. Johannes Gutenberg lost all he

owned to Fust. Around 1455, the first Bible was completed. The Gutenberg Bible was printed

in Latin. The importance of this work could not be underestimated. It was the first printed book

in existence. Some scholars consider the Gutenberg Bible the dawn of modern civilization.

Interestingly enough, Johannes Gutenberg never made any money off his invention and

he died in poverty in Mainz in 1468. The legacy the German printer left the world was the gift

of printing was that books could now be mass produced. As soon as word spread about the

printing press other countries would follow suit and create their own after his design. His

printing press would have world-changing consequences that the Catholic Church would not

like. It would become the engine and hinge of the Reformation.

How did Gutenberg’s printing press influence the Renaissance and why was it important

to the Renaissance? How did the Catholic Church view the invention? These questions will be

answered as succinctly as possible in the next section.

The Renaissance and the Printing Press

The Italian Renaissance started around 1400 and lasted until 1550 C.E. when the English

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Renaissance was said to have begun. Intertwined in this period is the dawn of the printing press,

as mentioned, and the beginnings of the Reformation among other events. Besides the return of

ancient knowledge from the Greek and Roman cultures, that were carefully stored by the

Byzantines, the most important feature of the Renaissance in Europe was humanism. Humanism

was the study of classical antiquity. After the fall of Constantinople in 1453 Europe experienced

a re-flowering of ancient knowledge. With the advent of the Renaissance and humanism literacy

began to grow. Humanism began to reawaken people to the study of ancient philosophy, science,

and literature.

During the Renaissance the printing press helped to create an industry where people had

more access to written material. In contrast, a handwritten book could take a monk or a scribe

months if not years to create. Some scribes belonged to guilds and had a better wage. The

printing press could create a book in a few weeks compared to the handwritten manuscript of the

medieval period. During the Renaissance books from the ancients like Cicero, Sallust, and

Caesar would be printed and made easier to be obtained by the wealthy class to begin with and

later by commoners. Other types of literature would also become more common during the

Renaissance thanks to the importance of the printing press. These included such items as pattern

books, mathematic books, primers for children with woodcut illustrations. In a sense the Renais-

sance would create a permanent Renaissance.

One of the most important men from the Renaissance to take advantage of the printing

press was an Italian monk named Erasmus. He would translate the Bible from Greek into Latin

and he was also a humanist. Erasmus will be important to both the Reformation and his opinions

on the spread of Protestantism will be explored in both chapters six and seven.

Finally, saying that there was only one “Reformation” is a way of generalizing an entire

religious movement. Before the advent of the printing press, discussed in this chapter, there was

already at least two or more “Reformations,” but had failed because there method of

dissemination of method of communication could be considered unreliable since it resembles the

old game of telephone that children play in kindergarten and pre-school. By the time

information had spread from its original source it was invariably skewed. This is still a major

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problem in the dissemination of important information even now. Handwritten pamphlets and

handwritten Bibles and treatises were time intensive. Wycliffe Bibles could take as long as six

months to write. Communication at the beginning of the Reformation was important. Printed

communication via the printing press was even more important and it is widely assumed the

Reformation could not have succeeded without it as will be seen. For that matter neither the

Renaissance nor the Age of Discovery and Exploration could not have succeeded without it

either.

CHAPTER SIX: MARTIN LUTHER

Martin Luther, the great Reformer of Christianity, was many things. Besides being the

man who would finally bring change to the Roman Catholic Church, he was also an Augustia-

nian friar, a writer, and later a husband and father. Additionally, he was an anti-Zionist, but not

anti-semitic. Martin Luther is one of the most important men in history. Five hundred years ago

this October 31, 2017, Lutherans will celebrate the anniversary of a German monk nailing his 95

Theses to the Wittenberg Church doors. Martin Luther was born the day before St. Martin’s feast

day on November 10, 1483, to Hans Luder and Margaret (Hanna) nee Lindemann in the county

of Mansfield, in the town of Eisleben.105

Because of the invention of the printing press Martin Luther would become that “savior”

that a religious movement needed. He utilized the printing press as the propaganda machine it

could become and had the help of many printers, artisans, and book binders to help him. He

would also become a heretic being formally condemned by a papal bull known as Exsurge

Domine, which was issued on June 15, 1520.106 On January 3, 1521, Martin Luther was formally

105 Oberman; pg. 83.106

Norman P. Tanner, “Condemning the Errors of Martin Luther,” in Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils. Georgetown University Press, June 1, 1990. http://www.papalencyclicals.net/Leo10/l10exdom.htm [accessed October 23, 2015].

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excommunicated by the Decet Romanum Pontificem.107 While he cannot necessarily be

considered a martyr, Martin Luther can be the Father of Protestantism.

A brief examination of his early life from his education at the age of twelve until he

started to teaching at Wittenberg is necessary to understand how this man was made. Heretics

and reformers do not just happen. They are created and greatness is either discovered or you are

born with it. What made this man great? Why were his teachings important? Why can he be

considered a martyr of the Reformation era? How did the printing press aid his Reformation and

why was it so vital to the success of the Reformation? This question will be asked again while

covering William Tyndale’s success in spreading a vernacular edition of the Bible in early

modern English.

Luther before Wittenberg

Martin Luther grew up in Mansfeld, Germany. The Luder family had moved there when

Luther was a toddler after the birth of a second child. Luther was the son of a man who was a

miner in Mansfeld and may have had as many as eight siblings. The real amount is not fully

known. What historians do know is that his brother Jacob and three sisters reached adulthood.108

By 1501, he was able to attend the University of Erfurt. There is a story that on July 2, 1505,

Luther got caught in a violent thunderstorm, and being so terrified cried out, “Help me St. Anne.

I’ll become a monk.”109 The law student of Erfurt University had entered the Augustinian

monastery. By 1507, he was an ordained priest, and celebrated his first Mass. Martin Luther

received two bachelor degrees. The first degree was in 1508 and his second degree was received

in 1509 after writing his own Sentences based off Peter Lombard’s Sentences.

The year 1512 would see him receiving his Doctor in Theology and on October 21,

1512, being received into the faculty at the University of Wittenberg. Wittenberg would be the

hinge on which the history of Christianity would change. Why? Before Luther’s criticisms about

107

Ibid., “Decet Romanum Pontificem,” in Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils. Georgetown University Press, June 1, 1990. http://www.papalencyclicals.net/Leo10/l10decet.htm [accessed October 23, 2015].108 Oberman, pg. 85.109

Ibid, pg. 92.

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how the Scriptures were being taught and his brouhaha with the Catholic Church over

indulgences, he had been a loyal papist. Luther had been at Wittenberg for several years when a

series of events triggered a change in his thinking about the pope in Rome and the Catholic

Church in particular. What were these events and why did Luther choose to step away from the

Roman Catholic Church after they occurred? How did his writings help change centuries of

dogmatic thinking?

One of these incidents occurred in 1512, before Luther received his doctorate, and was

transferred to Wittenberg. He had been chosen to go to Rome to deal with the conflicts between

the vicar-general and seven of the Augustinian convents. While on his trip he noticed many

scandals in process. The first scandal was the richness of the Benedictines’ convents. The

convent resemble a palace. Luther was indignant. The Benedictines were supposed to be a

mendicant order and thus support pious poverty. Upon leaving the convent Luther is recorded as

saying, “The Church and the pope forbid such things.”110 Those things included the rich marble,

tapestries, rugs and tables groaning under the weight of food. The second scandal was while at

the papal court. The priests and other dignitaries attacked Christianity and spouted heretical

opinions and another he found them mocking the Sacrament of Communion. Thus offended, he

felt that they should have been better given their holy roles.

Rome seems to have greatly disappointed the pious monk who had dreamed of a holy

city, but only found the most profane of Christians. This event would help propel him into

writing his Ninety-Five Theses and would help bring about him calling the pope the anti-Christ.

His motto was “the just shall live by Faith,”111 and this would strengthen his belief in the

Scriptures and his belief in the Devil and End Times. The fact that the Roman Catholic Church

and Rome had caused him much disgust began to strengthen his belief that the Church needed to

be reformed. Granted, he did not believe that the German people should split off completely for

the Church of Rome, rather it needed to return to its base roots—the Scriptures. An important

fact should perhaps be mentioned here. Luther believed in nominalism and the nominalist view

110 J.H. Merle D’Aubigne, History of the Reformation in the Sixteenth Century, vol.1 (London, R. Groombridge and Sons, 1845): loc. 2673 on Kindle.111

Ibid.; loc. 2782.

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in natural sciences and theology.

The final indignation Luther would find in regards to the Catholic Church he faithfully

served would come in the year 1514 when he first denounced indulgences. He felt that

redemption should be earned by living a just and holy life. He felt that selling forgiveness went

against the Scriptures. It would be in the spring of 1517 that the indulgence preacher Johannes

Tetzel (d. 1519) appeared in Brandenburg preaching about the sale of indulgences. Tetzel was a

Dominican monk, who obeying the Archbishop of Mainz, Cardinal Albrecht, preached about

indulgences. Cardinal Albrecht was spreading the news of Pope Leo X news about the sale of

indulgences to rebuild St. Peters in Rome. This angered Martin Luther and placed the noble

house of Hohenzollern in a political dilemma.112 What angered Martin Luther is that there while

a prohibition against receiving money for the benefices, the curia allowed the archbishop was

allowed to keep half of what he collected. It was on October 31, 1517, All Hallow’s Eve, that

Luther formally nailed his Ninety-Five Thesis to the Wittenberg Castle Church doors. This one

simple act would ultimately transform the world of Christianity.

The Reformation Begins

The response to his simple act of posting his challenge to debate on the Ninety-five

Theses. It must have struck Leo X like a bolt of lightning to have this relatively obscure monk

challenge the institutions of the Catholic Church and indeed he did. The Reformation had begun

accidentally. One of the main sources besides Martin Luther’s force of character would be the

printing press. This would be one of the main engines of the Reformation. Indeed, the

Reformation would never have succeeded without it.

These Ninety-Five Theses would be considered heretical as would be Luther’s books.

The Roman Catholic Church was an organization infected with malignant narcissists. It hated

criticism and would destroy any who stood in Her way. Such was the organization that Luther

would butt heads with and win. How did he win? Martin Luther would win this fight because he

had a powerful new weapon, the printing press. The printing press would be used for the first

112 Oberman, pg. 189.

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time as the propaganda machine it could become. He used it to rail against the Catholic Church

and her criticisms of him and his writings.

He gained support from the princes of Germany and the newly elected Holy Roman

Empire, Charles V (r. 1518- who was not in any fashion German. Martin Luther was formally

declared a heretic in 1520, and on his way to the Diet in Worms, he had the support of his

students and many of the people in Germany. For too long the people of Germany had chaffed at

the hands of the Roman pope. At Worms, instead of seeking the truth, the authorities at the Diet

of Worms ordered him to recant. Luther considered for the night and then, the next day,

famously said, “I cannot and will not recant for to go against my own conscious would be neither

safe nor sound.”113

With this declaration he had declared war on the papists in Rome. With these words

Luther had ushered in religious movement that would become the first steps in the Reformation

Europe so sorely needed. With those words and with the use of the printing press, the Catholic

Church would be hard pressed to stop the wheels of change and their attendant gears. Luther was

officially excommunicated on June 15, 1520, through a papal bull call Exsurge Domine. Instead,

of feeling scared that he would burn at the stake, Luther instead burned the bull and called the

pope the anti-Christ. On his way back to Wittenburg, Frederick the Wise snatched him and hid

him away in a castle called Wartburg. While he hid in exile he wrote his most famous work, the

Lutheran Bible.

Even as he was hidden away, Luther kept abreast of the events in the outer world. The

printing press kept the Reformation alive and in addition, so did humanism through the work of

the German humanists and Erasmus. Luther’s colleagues were hard at work while he was hidden

away. Philip Melancthon, a good friend of Luther’s, would teach courses at Wittenberg, while

observing that a new radical wing had risen up in support of his Reformation. These radicals

were called fanatics by Martin Luther. Among these fanatics included Anabaptists. This last

group questioned infant baptism. Curiously, while Luther may have supported infant baptism,

the Anabaptists were right. Nowhere in the entire Holy Bible is there mention of infants being

113 Ibid.; pg. 39.

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baptized. In order to accept the Sacrament of Baptism one must understand the difference

between right and wrong in order to purge oneself of sin.

The other movement that goes hand-in-hand with the Reformation is Humanism.

Humanist reformers like Erasmus would help spread the new Protestant movement and give it a

learned disposition. Erasmus has said the best of Christianity is a life lived in Christ.114 Erasmus

did his best to disentangle the Reformation from the humanism movement. He believed that the

Reformation would threaten the advances of the humanism movement. After all, “what business

did faith have in the business of the humanities?”115 What Erasmus does not understand and

modern anthropologists do understand is that theology is one of the cultural movements that

make up humanity and thus is a humanity in and of itself.

Luther’s Death

Martin Luther died on February 18, 1546, in Eisleben, Germany. He had spent two

weeks in the town he was born in knowing that he probably would not leave it alive. Those final

two weeks were spent arbitrating a dispute between two brothers. One was named Gebhard and

the other Albert. The details of these two counts feud is moot, but Martin Luther had gone to his

bed knowing he may not rise from it. Did he have sudden cardiac arrest or a stroke? The answer

is unknown. All that is known is that he died not with his family near him, but with men who

wanted to know if died believing in Christ. His legacy is that according to the 2010 census, the

religion that “the Prince of Heresiarchs,” would have a total of 25 thousands adherents in the

United States.

At his deathbed was Justus Jonas and others recorded his final moment of life before

writing of his passing not to his widow, but to the authorities. When Philip Melanchthon had

heard of Luther’s passing he said, “the charioteer of Israel has Fallen.”116

Luther’s Bible translation would be compared with William Tyndale’s own translation

114

Johann Huizinga, Erasmus and the Age of Reformation, (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1924): 106.115 Erika Rummel, “Chapter One: Humanities and Reformers as Allies: A Constructive Misunderstanding?” in Confessionalization of Humanism in Reformation Germany, (Cary: Oxford University Press, 2000): 22.116

Ibid., 3.

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of his Pentateuch and Old Testament. It accepted that Luther knew some Hebrew, but Tyndale’s

syntax and grasp of the language was better. Luther’s works continue to exist into the 21st

century. Martin Luther’s stance against the Catholic Church in Rome and his bravery in

upholding his principles continues to inspire into the third millennium. The Catholic Church

never understood this saintly man’s character.

CHAPTER SEVEN: WILLIAM TYNDALE

William Tyndale’s (1494-1536) place of birth is unknown. What historians do know is

that his family lived in the west and worked in the cloth-making industry and traded wool

overseas. Historians also know that he was born during the reign of Henry VII (1485-1509).

With Tyndale, the early beginnings of the English Reformation can be seen developing not only

among the laity, but also among the nobility albeit with several exceptions. The first exception

would be Sir Thomas More, whose greatest biographer would be his son-in-law, William Roper.

More is immortalized in Roper’s book entitled The Life of Sir Thomas More. Interestingly, both

Tyndale and More would meet their deaths at the hands of the executioner. More was beheaded

and Tyndale burned as a heretic. As will be seen both men argued vigorously for their positions.

The people who supported William Tyndale most likely lived in those areas where

remnants of Lollardy remained.117 The areas where Lollardly remained included such areas as

Essex and the western sections of England like Gloucester. Western England was also a

wealthy area for cloth merchants and the Tyndale family was considered one of the wealthier

families in the area near the Severn River and Cotswold Mountains. It was not unusual for a

man whose family sold wool cloth would also likely use these sources to smuggle in his pocket

Bibles, which were taboo in England. He was also supported by the mill workers in Gloucester

and areas near the Cotswald Mountains and the Severn River.118 These mill workers would be

instrumental in helping Tyndale smuggle his Pentateuch translation and hand held Bibles into

117 Daniell, pg. 16.118

Ibid.; pg. 16.

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England. The Bibles were available only on the black market. What was it that allowed William

Tyndale to become a man who would one day be considered an “arch heresiarch” an martyr to

much needed religious reform in England, thus becoming a martyr to the Reformation? How did

he ultimately awaken the eyes and minds of men?

While Tyndale’s story is covered in several academic papers and books. He is rarely

mentioned in Reformation history because the bulk of Reformation history goes to Martin Luther

while other reformers, like Tyndale, are either footnotes or ignored altogether. Why? Is it

because no one remembers him or is it because Luther was the first theologian and Augustinian

friar who did not cave to the Roman pope? Tyndale’s and Martin Luther’s story dovetail in their

own remarkable ways. They operated roughly at the same time and in the same country. This is

an attempt to portray William Tyndale as a major leader in the religious reform movement that

swept through Europe in the fifteenth and fourteenth centuries. Martin Luther’s and Tyndale’s

life stories do have very different endings as will be seen. Before embarking on who William

Tyndale was and learning about his Pentateuch and his New Testament translations perhaps it

would be prudent to find out why he decided to translate the Old and New Testaments into

English. There were reasons a vernacular language Bible was needed:

First, as mentioned earlier, John Wycliffe’s translation of the Latin Vulgate into English

vernacular between 1383 and 1396 proved to be popular with the laity. However, by 1409, Bible

translations were officially outlawed by the English Church.119 During the time period allowed,

Lollards memorized huge tracts of the Bible because the translations were actively hunted out

and burned. It would take one-hundred and ten years before reform would come again to

England. Part of the reason for outlawing translations have to do with the King of England.

Kings in the medieval period were said to hold their thrones through divine right and as such

criticizing religion was also criticizing the king of England or the Holy Roman emperor.

Second, most Bible translations were not in the people’s vernacular tongue. By the

sixteenth century most people spoke early modern English. England had started to make the

transition from Chaucer’s Middle English to early modern English around the end of the fifteenth

119 Marvin W. Anderson, “William Tyndale (d. 1536): A Martyr for All Seasons,” The Sixteenth Century Journal 17, no. 3 (Autumn 1986): 331.

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century. Most of the Wycliffe Bibles were written in Middle English.

Finally, the third reason is with the advent of the Reformation and news of the King of

England was hard pressed to keep rebellion to the Catholic Church from growing. Henry VIII’s

wife, Catherine of Aragon, was a devout Catholic from the Kingdom of Spain. His cardinal,

Thomas Wolsey would eventually stand in condemnation of him.

William Tyndale had been writing his books in English. It was considered unorthodox.

Scholars in the sixteenth century usually wrote in Latin. To write in English was almost

condemned. There was one issue with this idea. Tyndale had been writing in English all his life

and not in Latin. In the 1520s in England books by Martin Luther were selling well. David

Daniell’s says that Luther’s thirty publications sold well over 300 thousand copies.120 In English

parishes the Our Father was already being taught in English, but the people did not have an

English Bible. The vernacular or vulgar Bible was not allowed. They were anathema to the

English Crown and the Roman Catholic Church. William Tyndale tried for several years to find

a sponsor for a printing of his Pentateuch, but could find none. England did not have that many

printers to begin with. Before he left for Germany Tyndale is quoted as saying that if God

spared his life for many years, he would cause a boy who drives the plough to know more of the

Scriptures than you do.”121

Tyndale in Exile

William Tyndale left for his exile in Europe in 1523. He made his way first to Cologne

and then to Worms. He would start translating the Bible from its Greek and Hebrew roots into

the English tongue. While his translation is compared to Luther’s, William Tyndale translated

words differently. For instance, he translated Elder for presbuteros,122 which is a Greek word.

Elder had been his final choice. This would rub Sir Thomas More the wrong way. Tyndale’s

translations would be grounded in common English words that were earthy and used by the

120 Daniells, pg. 101.

121 Ibid.; pg. 1.122

Ibid.; pg. 17.

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common people of England. He did this so that the people he grew up with could read it and so

could others who did not speak Latin or Greek. In this way literacy would increase and the king

of England and the Catholic Church would have a difficult time suppressing it. To their credit,

they did try, and it cost people their lives. But some considered it worthwhile to stand up for their

principles.

William Tyndale did not work alone. He had a partner who helped him with his work

and that man’s name was William Roye. Roye’s help was offered freely. There was one

problem with Roye. Neither he nor Tyndale got along well. Tyndale considered his character

unstable and his intellect specious. Work was progressing and they had reached Matthew 22 (Mt.

22) when the Cologne authorities bore down on them. Taking their work with them, both

Tyndale and Roye escaped to Worms where about four years before Luther had made his famous

stand against the Roman Catholic Church and defied the pope by refusing to recant.

While in Worms Tyndale would engage in a pamphlet war with Sir Thomas More over

the use of certain words in his Pentateuch. William Tyndale could not have realized but his

books that were smuggled in were being burned and the holders arrested and declared heretics.

Betrayal and Death

Who betrayed William Tyndale? Many historians of the Renaissance and the

Reformation have asked this question. Some historians believe that Sir Thomas More had

something to do with it. But that would be doubtful considering that Sir Thomas More may have

already been imprisoned in the Tower of London awaiting execution for not supporting King

Henry VIII’s need for a divorce from Catherine so he the king could marry Anne Boleyn. The

question of who betrayed William Tyndale has an answer. The chief betrayer who sent a spy to

sound Tyndale out was likely Archbishop of London, John Stokesley. Once Tyndale was

arrested he spent fifteen months in prison before being tried and executed at Vilvoorde near

Brussels. His betrayers name was Philip Henry. It is likely that had William Tyndale been

arrested in England he would have been executed in the same manner. He was seen as a threat to

the throne of England.

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Legacy

William Tyndale’s ultimate legacy would be that his English Bible would be accepted

years after his death and to comprise with the English clergy would be used as the basis for the

King James Bible in the seventeenth century. Tyndale’s Bible would create most of the beloved

phrases that the people of the world use now. They include “salt of the earth,” “Judge not lest ye

be judged,” and many more. Tyndale would be a true martyr. He died for his beliefs and after

the death of Queen Mary I (r. 1553-1558) and the many deaths her reign wrought, his Bible

would also be the basis for the Queen Elizabeth I’s reign (r. 1558-1603). William Tyndale has

also been lauded as the Captain of English Heretics. He went to the stake thoroughly convinced

about the rightness of his actions. Before he was garroted and set aflame it is recorded that he

cried out for the king of England’s eyes to be open. He would get his wish later that year.

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CHAPTER EIGHT: CONCLUSIONS

Victor Hugo once said that there is nothing as powerful as an idea whose time has come.

In this thesis the ideas of religious reformation have been explored. The Roman Catholic Church

did their absolute best to try and stop that idea from flowering and flourishing. But the spark of

religious freedom, free of the dogmatism of the past, had been started in the time of John

Wycliffe. It had caught fire with John Huss, who is briefly explained in relation to the Council

of Constance of 1414-18 and influenced Martin Luther. With Martin Luther and William

Tyndale the idea of religious freedom to be able to read the Scriptures in one’s own tongue

became a bonfire.

Perhaps the most important chapter in this thesis is chapter four. John Wycliffe is the

first theologian who seriously questioned the dogmatic thinking of the Catholic Church. That

one man had the intelligence and wherewithal to challenge the hierarchy of the Roman pope. His

innovative thinking and want of Bible for the people must have sent a stake of fear through the

Roman Catholic Church. It was evident even more so when Bohemia accepted his teachings and

tried to spread them to their own people. Martyrs are made by men who are tyrannical and

censorious. Martyrs cannot be silenced; their voices resound for centuries. The teachings of the

Lollard movement might have quieted down, but they could still be heard when Luther and

Tyndale took up their own fights to bring the Holy Bible to the people in their respective

languages.

William Tyndale was silenced because of his beliefs and his principles. The Roman

Catholic Church had gone into crisis mode and was trying to regain the high ground with the

reign of Queen Mary Tudor being the high water mark. It was important to show how these men

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and their followers suffered and fought to have a Bible of their own in their own tongues. The

Roman Catholic Church was fighting history. History turns on a dime. If Luther had never gone

to Rome, then he would never have seen the utter corruption that had claimed the Roman

Catholic Church and the Eternal City. Instead, he did see it, and he was infuriated. Tyndale

would see with his own eyes how corrupted the system was in England. The laws were

repressive. Oxford feared another Wycliffe, and the Roman Catholic Church did not want an

English Luther. Because of both Martin Luther, his followers, and William Tyndale and his

followers the world of religion would change. In the introduction I mentioned the Age of

Exploration and Discovery, and said that the spread of the gospel could not have spread to the

New World without the religious movement of these two men. That is a truism. It was not the

nobility that would spread the Word of God overseas. It would be missionaries and commoners.

Thus this is why these men are important and can be considered Martyrs of the Reformation.

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APPENDIX A: CHARTS AND GRAPHS

Fig. 2.1 Religions in America (2010)

http://rcms2010.org/images/002.jpg

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United States Religion Census 2010.

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