HISTORY of the CHRISTIAN CHURCH*
CHAPTER V.
REFORMERS BEFORE THE
REFORMATION.
§ 38. Sources and Literature.
For § 39. Church and Society in England, etc._Thomas Walsingham: Hist. Anglicana,
ed. by Riley, Rolls Ser., London,
1869._Walter de Heimburgh: Chronicon,
ed. by Hamilton, 2 vols., 1848
sq._Adam Merimuth: Chronicon,
and Robt. de Avesbury: De
gestis mirabilibus Edwardi III., ed. by Thompson
with Introd., Rolls Ser., 1889._Chron. Angliae (1326-1388), ed.
by Thompson, Rolls Ser., 1874._Henry Knighton: Chronicon, ed.
by Lumby, Rolls Ser., 2 vols.,
1895._Ranulph Higden, d. bef.
1400: Polychronicon, with trans. by Trevisa,
Rolls Ser., 9 vols., 1865-1886._Thos.
Rymer, d. 1713: Foedera, Conventiones et Litera, London,
1704-1715._Wilkins: Concilia._W. C. Bliss: Calendar of Entries in
the Papal Registers relating to G. Britain and Ireland, vols. II.-IV.,
London, 1897-1902. Vol. II. extends from 1305-1342; vol. III., 1342-1362; vol.
IV., 1362-1404. A work of great value._Gee
and Hardy: Documents,
etc._Haddan and Stubbs: Councils and Eccles. Doc’ts._Stubbs: Constit. Hist. of Engl.,
III. 294-387._The Histt. of Engl., by Lingard,
bks. III., IV., and Green, bk.
IV._Capes: The Engl. Ch. in
the 14th and 15th Centt., London, 1900._Haller:
Papsttum und Kirchenreform, pp. 375-465._Jessopp: The Coming of the Friars._Creighton: Hist. of Epidemics in England._Gasquet: The Great Pestilence,
1893._Rashdall and others: Histt.
of Oxford and Cambridge._The Dict. of Nat. Biog._Also Thos. Fuller’s Hist. of Gr. Brit.,
for its general judgments and quaint statements._Loserth: Studien zur Kirchenpolitik Englands
im 14 Jahrh. in
Sitzungsberichte d. kaiserl. Akademie d. Wissenschaften
in Wien,
Vienna, 1897._G. Kriehn: Studies
in the Sources of the Social Revol. of 1381, Am. Hist. Rev., Jan.-Oct.,
1902._C. Oman: The Great
Revolt in 1381, Oxford, 1906._Traill:
Social Engl., vol. II., London, 1894._Rogers:
Six Centt. of Work and Wages._Cunningham:
Growth of Engl. Industry.
For §§ 40-42. John Wyclif._I. The publication of
Wyclif’s works belongs almost wholly to the last twenty-five years, and began
with the creation of the Wyclif Society, 1882, which was due to a summons from
German scholars. In 1858, Shirley, Fasc., p. xlvi, could write, "Of
Wyc’s Engl. writings nothing but two short tracts have seen the light,"
and in 1883, Loserth spoke of his tractates "mouldering in the
dust." The MSS. are found for the
most part in the libraries of Oxford, Prag and Vienna. The Trialogus was
publ. Basel, 1525, and Wycliffe’s Wycket, in Engl., Nürnberg, 1546.
Reprinted at Oxford, 1828._Latin Works, ed. by the Wyclif Soc., organized,
1882, in answer to Buddensieg’s appeal in the Academy, Sept. 17, 1881, 31
vols., London, 1884-1907._De officia pastorli, ed. by Lechler, Leipzig, 1863._Trialogus,
ed. by Lechler, Oxford, 1869._De veritate sac. Scripturae, ed. by Rudolf Buddensieg, 3 vols., Leipzig, 1904._De potestate
papae, ed. by Loserth, London,
1907._Engl. Works: Three Treatises, by J. Wyclffe, ed. by J. H. Todd,
Dublin, 1851._*Select Engl. Works, ed. by Thos. Arnold, 3 vols., Oxford, 1869-1871._*Engl. Works
Hitherto Unprinted, ed. by F. D. Matthew,
London, 1880, with valuable Introd._*Wyclif’s
trans. of the Bible, ed. by Forshall
and Madden, 4 vols.,
Oxford, 1850._His New Test. with Introd. and Glossary, by W. W. Skeat, Cambridge, 1879._The trans. of
Job, Pss., Prov., Eccles. and Canticles, Cambridge, 1881._For list of Wyclif’s
works, see Canon W. W. Shirley: Cat.
of the Works of J. W., Oxford, 1865. He lists 96 Latin and 65 Engl.
writings._Also Lechler in his Life
of Wiclif, II. 559-573, Engl. trans., pp. 483-498._Also Rashdall’s list in Dict.
of Nat. Biog._II. Biographical._Thomas
Netter of Walden, a Carmelite, d. 1430: Fasciculi zizaniorum Magistri
Joh. Wyclif cum tritico (Bundles of tares of J. Wyc. with the wheat), a
collection of indispensable documents and narrations, ed. by Shirley, with valuable Introd., Rolls
Ser., London, 1858._Also Doctrinale fidei christianae Adv.
Wicleffitas et Hussitas in his Opera, Paris, 1532, best ed., 3 vols., Venice, 1757. Walden
could discern no defects in the friars, and represented the opposite extreme
from Wyclif. He sat in the Council of Pisa, was provincial of his order in
England, and confessor to Henry V._The contemporary works given above, Chron.
Angliae, Walsingham, Knighton, etc._England in the Time of Wycliffe in
trans. and reprints, Dept. of Hist. Univ. of Pa., 1895._John Foxe: Book of Martyrs, London, 1632, etc._ John Lewis: Hist. of the Life and
Sufferings of J. W., Oxford, 1720, etc., and 1820._R. Vaughan: Life and Opinions of J. de Wycliffe, 2
vols., London, 1828, 2d ed., 1831._V. Lechler:
J. von Wiclif und die Vorgesch. der Reformation, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1873._*Engl.
trans., J. W. and his Engl. Precursors, with valuable Notes by Peter Lorimer, 2 vols., London, 1878,
new edd., 1 vol., 1881, 1884._*R.
Buddensieg: J. Wiclif und seine Zeit, Gotha, 1883. Also J. W. as
Patriot and Reformer, London, 1884._E. S. Holt:
J. de W., the First Reformer, and what he did for England, London,
1884._V. Vattier: J.
W., sa vie, ses oeuvres et sa doctrine, Paris, 1886._*J. Loserth:
Hus und Wiclif, Prag and Leipzig, 1883, Engl. trans., London, 1884.
Also W.’s Lehre v. wahrem u. falschem Papsttum, in Hist.
Zeitschrift,
1907, p. 237 sqq._L. Sergeant: John
Wyclif, New York, 1893._H. B. Workman:
The Age of Wyclif, London, 1901._Geo.
S. Innes: J. W., Cin’ti._J. C. Carrick:
Wyc. and the Lollards, London, 1908._C. Bigg, in Wayside Sketches in Eccles. Hist., London,
1906._For other Biogg., see Shirley:
Fasciculus, p. 531 sqq._III. J. L. Poole:
W. and Movements for Reform, London, 1889, and W.’s Doctr. of
Lordship in Illustr. of Med. Thought,
1884._Wiegand: De Eccles. notione quid Wiclif
docuerit,
Leipzig, 1891._*G. M. Trevelyan: Engl.
In The Age Of W., London, 2d ed., 1899._Powell
and Trevelyan: The
Peasants’ Rising and the Lollards, London, 1899._H. Fürstenau: J. von W.’s Lehren v. d. Stellung
d. weltl. Gewalt,
Berlin, 1900._Haddan and Stubbs: Councils and Eccles. Docts._Gee and Hardy._Stubbs: Constit.
Hist., III. 314-374._The Histt. of Capes,
Green and Lingard, vol. IV._The Histt. of the Engl. Bible, by Eadie, Westcott, Moulton,
Stoughton, Mombert, etc._Matthew: Authorship of the Wycliffite Bible, Engl.
Hist. Rev., January, 1895._Gasquet:
The Eve of the Reformation, new ed., London, 1905; The Old Engl.
Bible and Other Essays, London, 1908._R. S. Storrs: J. Wyc. and the First Engl. Bible in Sermons
and Addresses, Boston, 1902. An eloquent address delivered in New York on
the 500th anniversary of the appearance of Wyclif’s New Test._Rashdall in Dict. of Natl. Biog.,
LXIII. 202-223._G. S. Innis: Wycliffe
Cinti.
For § 43. Lollards._The works noted above of Knighton, Walsingham, Rymer’s Foedera,
the Chron. Angliae, Walden’s Fasc.
ziz., Foxe’s Book of
Martyrs. Also Adam Usk: Chronicle._Thos. Wright: Polit. Poems and Songs,
Rolls Ser., 2 vols., London, 1859._Fredericq:
Corp. inquis. Neerl., vols. I.-III._Reginald
Pecock: The Repressor of overmuch Blaming of the Clergy, ed. by Babington, Rolls Ser., 2 vols., London,
1860._The Histt. of Engl. and the Church of Engl._A. M. Brown: Leaders of the Lollards,
London, 1848._W. H. Summers: Our
Lollard Ancestors, London, 1904._*James
Gairdner: Lollardy and the Reform. in Engl., 2 vols., London,
1908._E. P. Cheyney: The
Recantations of the Early Lollards, Am. Hist. Rev., April, 1899._H. S. Cronin: The Twelve Conclusions of
the Lollards, Engl. Hist. Rev., April, 1907._Art. Lollarden, by Buddensieg in Herzog, XI. 615-626._The works of Trevelyan and Forshall
and Madden, cited above,
and Oldcastle, vol. XLII. 86-93, and other artt. in Dict. of Nat.
Biog.
For §§ 44-46. John Huss. _ Hist. et monumenta J. Hus atque
Hieronymi Pragensis, confessorum Christi, 2 vols., NĂĽrnberg, 1558, Frankfurt, 1715. I have used
the Frankfurt ed._W. Flajshans: Mag. J. Hus Expositio Decalogi, Prag, 1903; De corpore Christi: De sanguine
Christi, Prag,
1904; Sermones
de sanctis,
Prag, 1908; Super
quatuor sententiarum, etc._*Francis Palacky: Documenta Mag. J. Hus, vitam,
doctrinam, causam in Constantiensi actam consilio illustrantia, 1403-1418, pp. 768,
Prag, 1869. Largely from unpublished sources. Contains the account of Peter of
Mladenowitz, who was with Huss at Constance._K. J. Erben (archivarius of Prag): Mistra Jana Husi sebrané
spisy Czeske. A collection of Huss’ Bohemian writings, 3 vols., Prag,
1865-1868._Trans. of Huss’ Letters, first by Luther, Wittenberg, 1536 (four of them, together with an
account by Luther of Huss’ trial and death), republ. by C. von Kügelgen, Leipzig, 1902._Mackenzie: Huss’ Letters, Edinburgh, 1846._*H. B. Workman and B. M. Pope: Letters of J. Hus with Notes._For
works on the Council of Constance, see Mansi,
vol. XXVIII., Van der Hardt, Finke,
Richental etc., see § 12._C. von
Höfler: Geschichtsschreiber der hussitischen Bewegung, 3 vols., Vienna, 1856-1866.
Contains Mladenowitz and other contemporary documents._*Palacky, a descendant of the Bohemian Brethren, d. 1876:
Geschichte von Böhmen, Prag, 1836 sqq., 3d ed., 5 vols., 1864 sqq. Vol. III. of the first ed.
was mutilated at Vienna by the censor of the press (the office not being
abolished till 1848), on account of the true light in which Huss was placed.
Nevertheless, it made such an impression that Baron Helfert was commissioned to
write a reply, which appeared, Prag, 1867, pp. 287. In 1870, Palacky publ. a
second ed. of vol. III., containing all the excerpted parts._Palacky: Die
Vorlaeufer des Hussitenthums in Böhmen, Prag, 1869._L. Köhler:
J. Hus u. s. Zeit, 3 vols., Leipzig, 1846._E. H. Gillett, Prof. in New York Univ., d. New
York, 1876: Life and Times of J. Huss, 2 vols., Boston, 1863, 3d ed.,
1871._W. Berger: J.
Hus u. König Sigismund, Augsburg, 1871._Bonnechose:
J. Hus u. das Concil zu Kostnitz, Germ. trans., 3d ed., Leipzig,
1870._F. v. Bezold: Zur
Gesch. d. Husitenthums, Munich, 1874._E. Denis: Huss
et la guerre des Hussites, Paris, l878._A. H. Wratislaw:
J. Hus, London, 1882._*J. Loserth:
Wiclif and Hus, also Beiträge zur Gesch. der Hussit. Bewegung, 5 small
vols., 1877-1895, reprinted from magazines. Also Introd. to his ed. of Wiclif’s
De ecclesia. Also art. J. Huss in Herzog, Encyc., VIII. 473-489._Lechler: J. Hus, Leipzig,
1890._*J. H. Wylie: The Counc.
of Constance to the Death of J. Hus, London, 1900._*H. B. Workman: The Dawn of the
Reformation, The Age of Hus, London, 1902._Lea: Hist. of the Inquis., II. 431-566._Hefele, vol.
VII._*J. B. Schwab: J. Gerson,
pp. 527-609._Tschackert: Von
Ailli, pp. 218-235._W. Faber and
J. Kurth: Wie
sah Hus aus? Berlin, 1907._Also J. Huss by LĂĽtzow, N. Y., 1909, and Kuhr, Cinti.
For § 47. The Hussites._Mansi, XXVII, XXIX._Haller:
Concil. Basiliense._Bezold:
König Sigismund und d. Reichskriege gegen d. Husiten, 3 vols., Munich, 1872-1877._*Jaroslav Goll: Quellen und
Untersuchungen zur Gesch. der Böhmischen Brüder, 2 vols., Prag, 1878-1882._*L. Keller: Die
Reformation und die aelteren Reformparteien, Leipzig, 1885._W. Preger: Ueber das Verhältniss der Taboriten
zu den Waldesiern des 14ten Jahrh., 1887._Haupt:
Waldenserthum und Inquisition im südöstlichen,
Deutschland,
Freiburg i. Br., 1890._H. Herre: Die
Husitenverhandlungen, 1429, in Quellen u. Forschungen d. Hist. Inst. von Rom, 1899._*E. Müller: Böhm. Brüder, Herzog, III. 445-467._E. De Schweinitz: The Hist. of the
Church known as the Unitas Fratrum, Bethlehem, 1885._Also Hergenröther-Kirsch: Kirchengesch., II. 886-903.
§ 39. The Church in England in the Fourteenth Century.
The 14th century witnessed
greater social changes in England than any other century except the 19th. These
changes were in large part a result of the hundred years’ war with France,
which began in 1337, and the terrible ravages of the Black Death. The century
was marked by the legal adoption of the English tongue as the language of the
country and the increased respect for parliament, in whose counsels the rich burgher
class demanded a voice, and its definite division into two houses, 1341. The
social unrest of the land found expression in popular harangues, poems, and
tracts, affirming the rights of the villein and serf class, and in the uprising
known as the Peasants’ Revolt.
The distinctly religious life of
England, in this period, was marked by obstinate resistance to the papal claims
of jurisdiction, culminating in the Acts of Provisors, and by the appearance of
John Wyclif, one of the most original and vigorous personalities the English
Church has produced.
An industrial revolution was
precipitated on the island by the Great Pestilence of 1348. The necessities of
life rose enormously in value. Large tracts of land passed back from the
smaller tenants into the hands of the landowners of the gentry class. The sheep
and the cattle, as a contemporary wrote, "strayed through the fields and
grain, and there was no one who could drive them." The serfs and villeins found in the disorder
of society an opportunity to escape from the yoke of servitude, and discovered
in roving or in independent engagements the joys of a new-found freedom. These
unsettled conditions called forth the famous statutes of Edward III.’s reign,
1327-1377, regulating wages and the prices of commodities.
The popular discontent arising
from these regulations, and from the increased taxation necessitated by the
wars with France, took the form of organized rebellion. The age of feudalism
was coming to an end. The old ideas of labor and the tiller of the soil were
beginning to give way before more just modes of thought. Among the agitators
were John Ball, whom Froissart, with characteristic aristocratic indifference,
called "the mad priest of Kent," the poet Longland and the insurgent
leader, Watt Tyler. In his harangues, Ball fired popular feeling by appeals to
the original rights of man. By what right, he exclaimed, "they, who are
called lords, greater folk than we? On
what grounds do they hold us in vassalage?
Do not we all come from the same father and mother, Adam and
Eve?" The spirit of individual
freedom breathed itself out in the effective rhyme, which ran like wildfire, _
When Adam delved and Eve span
Who was then the gentleman?
The rhymes, which Will Longland
sent forth in his Complaint of Piers Ploughman, ventilated the
sufferings and demands of the day laborer and called for fair treatment such as
brother has a right to expect from brother. Gentleman and villein faced the
same eternal destinies. "Though he be thine underling," the poet
wrote, "mayhap in heaven, he will be worthier set and with more bliss than
thou." The rising sense of
national importance and individual dignity was fed by the victory of Crécy,
1346, where the little iron balls, used for the first time, frightened the
horses; by the battle of Poictiers ten years later; by the treaty of Brétigny,
1360, whereby Edward was confirmed in the possession of large portions of
France, and by the exploits of the Black Prince. The spectacle of the French
king, John, a captive on the streets of London, made a deep impression. These
events and the legalization of the English tongue, 1362,535 contributed to develop a
national and patriotic sentiment before unknown in England.
The uprising, which broke out in
1381, was a vigorous assertion of the popular demand for a redress of the
social inequalities between classes in England. The insurgent bands, which
marched to London, were pacified by the fair promises of Richard II., but the
Kentish band led by Watt Tyler, before dispersing, took the Tower and put the
primate, Sudbury, to death. He had refused to favor the repeal of the hated
decapitation tax. The abbeys of St. Albans and Edmondsbury were plundered and
the monks ill treated, but these acts of violence were a small affair compared
with the perpetual import of the uprising for the social and industrial
well-being of the English people. The demands of the insurgents, as they bore
on the clergy, insisted that Church lands and goods, after sufficient allowance
had been made for the reasonable wants of the clergy, should be distributed
among the parishioners, and that there should be a single bishop for England.
This involved a rupture with Rome.536
It was inevitable that the
Church should feel the effects of these changes. Its wealth, which is computed
to have covered one-third of the landed property of the realm, and the idleness
and mendicancy of the friars, awakened widespread murmur and discontent. The
ravages made among the clergy by the Black Death rendered necessary
extraordinary measures to recruit its ranks. The bishop of Norwich was authorized
to replace the dead by ordaining 60 young men before the canonical age. With
the rise of the staples of living, the stipends of the vast body of the
priestly class was rendered still more inadequate. Archbishop Islip of
Canterbury and other prelates, while recognizing in their pastorals the
prevalent unrest, instead of showing proper sympathy, condemned the
covetousness of the clergy. On the other hand, Longland wrote of the shifts to
which they were put to eke out a living by accepting secular and often menial
employment in the royal palace and the halls of the gentry class.
Parson and parish priest pleyned
to the bishop,
That their parishes were pore
sith the pestilence tym,
To have a license and a leve at
London to dwelle
And syngen there for symonye,
for silver is swete.
There was a movement from within
the English people to limit the power of the bishops and to call forth
spirituality and efficiency in the clergy. The bishops, powerful as they
remained, were divested of some of their prestige by the parliamentary decision
of 1370, restricting high offices of state to laymen. The first lay chancellor
was appointed in 1340. The bishop, however, was a great personage, and woe to
the parish that did not make fitting preparations for his entertainment and
have the bells rung on his arrival. Archbishop Arundel, Foxe quaintly says,
"took great snuff and did suspend all such as did not receive him with the
noise of bells." Each diocese had
its own prison, into which the bishop thrust refractory clerics for penance or
severer punishment.
The mass of the clergy had
little learning. The stalls and canonries, with attractive incomes, where they
did not go to foreigners, were regarded as the proper prizes of the younger
sons of noblemen. On the other hand, the prelates lived in abundance. The
famous bishop of Winchester, William of Wykeham, counted fifty manors of his
own. In the larger ones, official residences were maintained, including hall
and chapel. This prelate travelled from one to the other, taking reckonings of
his stewards, receiving applications for the tonsure and ordination and
attending to other official business. Many of the lower clergy were taken from
the villein class, whose sons required special exemption to attend school. The
day they received orders they were manumitted.
The benefit of clergy, so
called, continued to be a source of injustice to the people at large. By the
middle of the 13th century, the Church’s claim to tithes was extended not only
to the products of the field, but the poultry of the yard and the cattle of the
stall, to the catch of fish and the game of the forests. Wills almost
invariably gave to the priest "the best animal" or the "best
quick good." The Church received
and gave not back, and, in spite of the statute of Mortmain, bequests continued
to be made to her. It came, however, to be regarded as a settled principle that
the property of Church and clergy was amenable to civil taxation, and bishops,
willingly or by compulsion, loaned money to the king. The demands of the French
campaigns made such taxation imperative.
Indulgences were freely
announced to procure aid for the building of churches, as in the case of York
Cathedral, 1396, the erection of bridges, the filling up of muddy roads and for
other public improvements. The clergy, though denied the right of participating
in bowling and even in the pastime of checkers, took part in village
festivities such as the Church-ale, a sort of mediaeval donation party, in
which there was general merrymaking, ale was brewed, and the people drank
freely to the health of the priest and for the benefit of the Church. As for
the morals of the clergy, care must always be had not to base sweeping
statements upon delinquencies which are apt to be emphasized out of proportion
to their extent. It is certain, however, that celibacy was by no means
universally enforced, and frequent notices occur of dispensations given to
clergymen of illegitimate birth. Bishop Quevil of Exeter complained that
priests with families invested their savings for the benefit of their marital
partners and their children. In the next period, in 1452, De la Bere, bishop of
St. David’s, by his own statement, drew 400 marks yearly from priests for the
privilege of having concubines, a noble, equal in value to a mark, from each
one.537 Glower,
in his Vox
clamantis, gave
a dark picture of clerical habits, and charges the clergy with coarse vices
such as now are scarcely dreamed of. The Church historian, Capes, concludes
that "immorality and negligence were widely spread among the clergy."538 The decline of discipline among the friars, and their rude
manners, a prominent feature of the times, came in for the strictures of
Fitzralph of Armagh, severe condemnation at the hands of Wyclif and playful
sarcasm from the pen of Chaucer. The zeal for learning which had characterized
them on their first arrival in England, early in the 13th century, had given
way to self-satisfied idleness. Fitzralph, who was fellow of Balliol, and
probably chancellor of the University of Oxford, before being raised to the
episcopate, incurred the hostility of the friars by a series of sermons against
the Franciscan theory of evangelical poverty. He claimed it was not scriptural
nor derived from the customs of the primitive Church. For his temerity he was
compelled to answer at Avignon, where he seems to have died about the year
1360.539 Of the
four orders of mendicants, the Franciscans, Dominicans, Carmelites and
Augustinians, Longland sang that they
Preached the people for profit
and themselve
Glosed the Gospel as them good
lyked,
For covetis of copis construed
it as they would.
Of the ecclesiastics of the
century, if we except Wyclif, probably the most noted are Thomas Bradwardine
and William of Wykeham, the one the representative of scholarly study, the
other of ecclesiastical power. Bradwardine, theologian, phiIosopher,
mathematician and astronomer, was a student at Merton College, Oxford, 1325. At
Avignon, whither he went to receive consecration to the see of Canterbury,
1349, he had a strange experience. During the banquet given by Clement VI. the
doors were thrown open and a clown entered, seated on a jackass, and humbly
petitioned the pontiff to be made archbishop of Canterbury. This insult, gotten
up by Clement’s nephew Hugo, cardinal of Tudela, and other members of the
sacred college, was in allusion to the remark made by the pope that, if the
king of England would ask him to appoint a jackass to a bishopric, he would not
dare to refuse. The sport throws an unpleasant light upon the ideals of the
curia, but at the same time bears witness to the attempt which was being made
in England to control the appointment of ecclesiastics. Bradwardine enjoyed such
an enviable reputation that Wyclif and other English contemporaries gave him
the title, the Profound Doctor_doctor profundus.540 In his
chief work on grace and freewill, delivered as a series of lectures at Merton,
he declared that the Church was running after Pelagius.541 In the philosophical schools he had rarely heard anything about
grace, but all day long the assertions that we are masters of our own wills.
He was a determinist. All things, he affirmed, which occur, occur by the
necessity of the first cause. In his Nun’s Tale, speaking of God’s
predestination, Chaucer says:_
But he cannot boult it to the
bren
As can the holie doctour, S.
Austin,
Or Boece (Boethius), or the
Bishop Bradwardine.
Wykeham, 1324-1404, the pattern
of a worldly and aristocratic prelate, was an unblushing pluralist, and his see
of Winchester is said to have brought him in Ł60,000 of our money annually. In
1361 alone, he received prebends in St. Paul’s, Hereford, Salisbury, St.
David’s, Beverley, Bromyard, Wherwell Abergwili, and Llanddewi Brewi, and in
the following year Lincoln, York, Wells and Hastings. He occupied for a time
the chief office of chancellor, but fell into disrepute. His memory is
preserved in Winchester School and in New College, Oxford, which he founded.
The princely endowment of New College, the first stones of which were laid in
1387, embraced 100 scholarships. These gifts place Wykeham in the first rank of
English patrons of learning at the side of Cardinal Wolsey. He also has a place
in the manuals of the courtesies of life by his famous words, "Manners
makyth man."542
The struggles of previous
centuries against the encroachment of Rome upon the temporalities of the
English Church was maintained in this period. The complaint made by Matthew
Paris543 that the English Church was kept between two
millstones, the king and the pope, remained true, with this difference,
however, the king’s influence came to preponderate. Acts of parliament emphasized
his right to dictate or veto ecclesiastical appointments and recognized his
sovereign prerogative to tax Church property. The evident support which the
pope gave to France in her wars with England and the scandals of the Avignon
residence were favorable to the crown’s assertion of authority in these
respects. Wyclif frequently complained that the pope and cardinals were
"in league with the enemies of the English kingdom"544 and the papal registers of the
Avignon period, which record the appeals sent to the English king to conclude
peace with France, almost always mention terms that would have made France the
gainer. At the outbreak of the war, 1339, Edward III. proudly complained that
it broke his heart to see that the French troops were paid in part with papal
funds.545
The three most important
religious acts of England between John’s surrender of his crown to Innocent
III. and the Act of Supremacy, 1534, were the parliamentary statutes of
Mortmain, 1279, of Provisors, 1351, and for the burning of heretics, 1401. The
statute of Mortmain or Dead-hand forbade the alienation of lands so as to
remove them from the obligation of service or taxation to the secular power.
The statute of Provisors, renewed and enlarged in the acts of Praemunire, 1353,
1390 and 1393, concerned the subject of the papal rights over appointments and
the temporalities of the English Church. This old bone of contention was taken
up early in the 14th century in the statute of Carlyle, 1307,546 which forbade aliens, appointed
to visit religious houses in England, taking moneys with them out of the land
and also the payment of tallages and impositions laid upon religious
establishments from abroad. In 1343, parliament called upon the pope to recall
all "reservations, provisions and collations" which, as it affirmed,
checked Church improvements and the flow of alms. It further protested against
the appointment of aliens to English livings, "some of them our enemies
who know not our language."
Clement VI., replying to the briefs of the king and parliament, declared
that, when he made provisions and reservations, it was for the good of the
Church, and exhorted Edward to act as a Catholic prince should and to permit
nothing to be done in his realm inimical to the Roman Church and ecclesiastical
liberty. Such liberty the pope said he would "defend as having to give
account at the last judgment."
Liberty in this case meant the free and unhampered exercise of the
lordly claims made by his predecessors from Hildebrand down.547 Thomas Fuller was close to the truth, when, defining papal
provisions and reservations, he wrote, "When any bishopric, abbot’s place,
dignity or good living (aquila non capit muscas _ the eagle does not take note of flies) was like to be
void, the pope, by a profitable prolepsis to himself, predisposed such places
to such successors as he pleased. By this device he defeated, when he so
pleased, the legal election of all convents and rightful presentation of all
patrons."
The memorable statute of
Provisors forbade all papal provisions and reservations and all taxation of
Church property contrary to the customs of England. The act of 1353 sought more
effectually to clip the pope’s power by forbidding the carrying of any suit
against an English patron before a foreign tribunal.548
To these laws the pope paid only
so much heed as expediency required. This claim, made by one of his
predecessors in the bull Cupientes,
to the right to fill all the benefices of Christendom, he had no idea of
abandoning, and, whenever it was possible, he provided for his hungry family of
cardinals and other ecclesiastics out of the proverbially fat appointments of
England. Indeed, the cases of such appointments given by Merimuth, and
especially in the papal books as printed by Bliss, are so recurrent that one
might easily get the impression that the pontiff’s only concern for the English
Church was to see that its livings were put into the hands of foreigners. I
have counted the numbers in several places as given by Bliss. On one page, 4
out of 9 entries were papal appointments. A section of 2˝ pages announces
"provisions of a canonry, with expectation of a prebend" in the
following churches: 7 in Lincoln, 5 in Salisbury, 2 in Chichester, and 1 each
in Wells, York, Exeter, St. Patrick’s, Dublin, Moray, Southwell, Howden, Ross,
Aberdeen, Wilton.549 From
1342-1385 the deanery of York was held successively by three Roman cardinals.
In 1374, the incomes of the treasurer, dean and two archdeaneries of Salisbury
went the same way. At the close of Edward III.’s reign, foreign cardinals held
the deaneries of York, Salisbury and Lichfield, the archdeanery of Canterbury,
reputed to be the richest of English preferments, and innumerable prebends.
Bishops and abbots-elect had to travel to Avignon and often spend months and
much money in securing confirmation to their appointments, and, in cases, the
prelate-elect was set aside on the ground that provision had already been made
for his office. As for sees reserved by the pope, Stubbs gives the following
list, extending over a brief term of years: Worcester, Hereford, Durham and
Rochester, 1317; Lincoln and Winchester, 1320; Lichfield, 1322; Winchester,
1328; Carlisle and Norwich, 1825; Worcester, Exeter and Hereford, 1827; Bath,
1829; Durham, Canterbury, Winchester and Worcester, 1334. Provisions were made
in full recognition of the plural system. Thus, Walter of London, the king’s
confessor, was appointed by the pope to the deanery of Wells, though, as stated
in the papal brief, he already held a considerable list of "canonries and
prebends," Lincoln, Salisbury, St. Paul, St. Martin Le Grand, London,
Bridgenorth, Hastings and Hareswell in the diocese of Salisbury.550 By the practice of promoting bishops from one see to another, the
pope accomplished for his favorites what he could not have done in any other
way. Thus, by the promotion of Sudbury in 1874 to Canterbury, the pope was able
to translate Courtenay from Hereford to London, and Gilbert from Bangor to
Hereford, and thus by a single stroke he was enriched by the first-fruits of
four sees.
In spite of legislation, the
papal collectors continued to ply their trade in England, but less publicly and
confidently than in the two preceding centuries. In 1879, Urban VI. sent
Cosmatus Gentilis as his nuncio and collector-in-chief, with instructions that
he and his subcollectors make speedy returns to Rome, especially of Peter’s
pence.551 In 1375,
Gregory XI. had called upon the archbishops of Canterbury and York to collect a
tax of 60,000 florins for the defence of the lands of the Apostolic see, the
English benefices, however, held by cardinals being exempted. The chronicler Merimuth,
in a noteworthy paragraph summing up the curial practice of foraging upon the
English sees and churches, emphasizes the persistence and shrewdness with which
the Apostolic chair from the time of Clement V. had extorted gold and riches as
though the English might be treated as barbarians. John XXII. he represents as
having reserved all the good livings of England. Under Benedict XII., things
were not so bad. Benedict’s successor, Clement VI., was of all the offenders
the most unscrupulous, reserving for himself or distributing to members of the
curia the fattest places in England. England’s very enemies, as Merimuth
continues, were thus put into possession of English revenues, and the proverb
became current at Avignon that the English were like docile asses bearing all
the burdens heaped upon them.552 This prodigal Frenchman threatened Edward III. with
excommunication and the land with interdict, if resistance to his appointments
did not cease and if their revenues continued to be withheld. The pope died in
1353, before the date set for the execution of his wrathful threat. While
France was being made English by English arms, the Italian and French
ecclesiastics were making conquest of England’s resources.
The great name of Wyclif, which
appears distinctly in 1366, represents the patriotic element in all its
strength. In his discussions of lordship, presented in two extensive treatises,
he set forth the theory of the headship of the sovereign over the temporal
affairs of the Church in his own dominions, even to the seizure of its
temporalities. In him, the Church witnessed an ecclesiastic of equal metal with
Thomas Ă Becket, a man, however, who did not stoop, in his love for his order,
to humiliate the state under the hand of the Church. He represented the popular
will, the common sense of mankind in regard to the province of the Church, the
New Testament theory of the spiritual sphere. Had he not been practically
alone, he would have anticipated by more than two centuries the limitation of
the pope’s power in England.
§ 40. John Wyclif.
"A good man was
there of religioun
That was a pore
Persone of a town;
But rich he was of
holy thought and werk;
He was also a lerned
man, a clerk,
That Christes gospel
trewly wolde preche.
* * *
* * * *
This noble ensample
to his shepe he gaf,
That first he
wrought and after that he taught.
* * *
* * * *
A better priest I
trow that nowhere non is,
He waited after no
pompe ne reverence;
Ne maked him no
spiced conscience,
But Christes lore
and his apostles twelve
He taught, but first
he folwed it himselve."553
Chaucer.
The title, Reformers before the
Reformation, has been aptly given to a group of men of the 14th and 15th
centuries who anticipated many of the teachings of Luther and the Protestant
Reformers. They stand, each by himself, in solitary prominence, Wyclif in
England, John Huss in Bohemia, Savonarola in Florence, and Wessel, Goch and
Wesel in Northern Germany. To these men the sculptor has given a place on the
pedestal of his famous group at Worms representing the Reformation of the 16th
century. They differ, if we except the moral reformer, Savonarola, from the
group of the German mystics, who sought a purification of life in quiet ways,
in having expressed open dissent from the Church’s ritual and doctrinal
teachings. They also differ from the group of ecclesiastical reformers,
D’Ailly, Gerson, Nicolas of Clamanges, who concerned themselves with the fabric
of the canon law and did not go beyond the correction of abuses in the
administration and morals of the Church. Wyclif and his successors were
doctrinal reformers. In some views they had been anticipated by Marsiglius of
Padua and the other assailants of the papacy of the early half of the 14th
century.
John Wyclif, called the Morning
Star of the Reformation, and, at the time of his death, in England and in
Bohemia the Evangelical doctor,554 was born about 1324 near the
village of Wyclif, Yorkshire, in the diocese of Durham.555 His own writings give scarcely a clew to the events of his career,
and little can be gathered from his immediate contemporaries. He was of Saxon
blood. His studies were pursued at Oxford, which had six colleges. He was a
student at Balliol and master of that hall in 1361. He was also connected with
Merton and Queen’s, and was probably master of Canterbury Hall, founded by
Archbishop Islip.556 He was
appointed in succession to the livings of Fillingham, 1363, Ludgershall, 1368,
and by the king’s appointment, to Lutterworth, 1374. The living of Lutterworth
was valued at Ł26 a year.
Wyclif occupies a distinguished
place as an Oxford schoolman, a patriot, a champion of theological and
practical reforms and the translator of the Scriptures into English. The papal
schism, occurring in the midst of his public career, had an important bearing
on his views of papal authority.
So far as is known, he confined
himself, until 1366, to his duties in Oxford and his parish work. In that year
he appears as one of the king’s chaplains and as opposed to the papal supremacy
in the ecclesiastial affairs of the realm. The parliament of the same year
refused Urban V.’s demand for the payment of the tribute, promised by King
John, which was back 33 years. John, it declared, had no right to obligate the
kingdom to a foreign ruler without the nation’s consent. Wyclif, if not a
member of this body, was certainly an adviser to it.557
In the summer of 1374, Wyclif
went to Bruges as a member of the commission appointed by the king to negotiate
peace with France and to treat with the pope’s agents on the filling of
ecclesiastical appointments in England. His name was second in the list of
commissioners following the name of the bishop of Bangor. At Bruges we find him
for the first time in close association with John of Gaunt, Edward’s favorite
son, an association which continued for several years, and for a time inured to
his protection from ecclesiastical violence.558
On his return to England, he
began to speak as a religious reformer. He preached in Oxford and London
against the pope’s secular sovereignty, running about, as the old chronicler
has it, from place to place, and barking against the Church.559 It was soon after this that, in one of his tracts, he styled the
bishop of Rome "the anti-Christ, the proud, worldly priest of Rome, and
the most cursed of clippers and cut-purses." He maintained that-he "has no more power in binding and
loosing than any priest, and that the temporal lords may seize the possessions
of the clergy if pressed by necessity."
The duke of Lancaster, the clergy’s open foe, headed a movement to
confiscate ecclesiastical property. Piers Ploughman had an extensive public
opinion behind him when he exclaimed, "Take her lands, ye Lords, and let
her live by dimes (tithes)." The
Good Parliament of 1376, to whose deliberation Wyclif contributed by voice and
pen, gave emphatic expression to the public complaints against the hierarchy.
The Oxford professor’s attitude
had become too flagrant to be suffered to go unrebuked. In 1377, he was summoned
before the tribunal of William Courtenay, bishop of London, at St. Paul’s,
where the proceedings opened with a violent altercation between the bishop and
the duke. The question was as to whether Wyclif should take a seat or continue
standing in the court. Percy, lord marshal of England, ordered him to sit down,
a proposal the bishop pronounced an unheard-of indignity to the court. At this,
Lancaster, who was present, swore he would bring down Courtenay’s pride and the
pride of all the prelates in England. "Do your best, Sir," was the
spirited retort of the bishop, who was a son of the duke of Devonshire. A
popular tumult ensued, Wyclif being protected by Lancaster.
Pope Gregory XI. himself now
took notice of the offender in a document condemning 19 sentences from his
writings as erroneous and dangerous to Church and state. In fact, he issued a
batch of at least five bulls, addressed to the archbishop of Canterbury, the
bishop of London, the University of Oxford and the king, Edward III. The
communication to Archbishop Sudbury opened with an unctuous panegyric of
England’s past most glorious piety and the renown of its Church leaders,
champions of the orthodox faith and instructors not only of their own but of
other peoples in the path of the Lord’s commandments. But it had come to his
ears that the Lutterworth rector had broken forth into such detestable madness
as not to shrink from publicly proclaiming false propositions which threatened
the stability of the entire Church. His Holiness, therefore, called upon the
archbishop to have John sent to prison and kept in bonds till final sentence
should be passed by the papal court.560 It seems that the vice-chancellor of Oxford at least made a show
of complying with the pope’s command and remanded the heretical doctor to Black
Hall, but the imprisonment was only nominal.
Fortunately, the pope might send
forth his fulminations to bind and imprison but it was not wholly in his power
to hold the truth in bonds and to check the progress of thought. In his letter
to the chancellor of Oxford, Gregory alleged that Wyclif was vomiting out of
the filthy dungeon of his heart most wicked and damnable heresies, whereby he
hoped to pollute the faithful and bring them to the precipice of perdition,
overthrow the Church and subvert the secular estate. The disturber was put into
the same category with those princes among errorists, Marsiglius of Padua and
John of Jandun.561
The archbishop’s court at
Lambeth, before which the offender was now cited, was met by a message from the
widow of the Black Prince to stay the proceedings, and the sitting was
effectually broken up by London citizens who burst into the hall. At Oxford,
the masters of theology pronounced the nineteen condemned propositions true,
though they sounded badly to the ear. A few weeks later, March, 1878, Gregory
died, and the papal schism broke out. No further notice was taken of Gregory’s
ferocious bulls. Among other things, the nineteen propositions affirmed that
Christ’s followers have no right to exact temporal goods by ecclesiastical
censures, that the excommunications of pope and priest are of no avail if not
according to the law of Christ, that for adequate reasons the king may strip
the Church of temporalities and that even a pope may be lawfully impeached by
laymen.
With the year 1378 Wyclif’s
distinctive career as a doctrinal reformer opens. He had defended English
rights against foreign encroachment. He now assailed, at a number of points,
the theological structure the Schoolmen and mediaeval popes had laboriously
reared, and the abuses that had crept into the Church. The spectacle of
Christendom divided by two papal courts, each fulminating anathemas against the
other, was enough to shake confidence in the divine origin of the papacy. In
sermons, tracts and larger writings, Wyclif brought Scripture and common sense
to bear. His pen was as keen as a Damascus blade. Irony and invective, of which
he was the master, he did not hesitate to use. The directness and pertinency of
his appeals brought them easily within the comprehension of the popular mind.
He wrote not only in Latin but in English. His conviction was as deep and his
passion as fiery as Luther’s, but on the one hand, Wyclif’s style betrays less
of the vivid illustrative power of the great German and little of his
sympathetic warmth, while on the other, less of his unfortunate coarseness. As
Luther is the most vigorous tract writer that Germany has produced, so Wyclif
is the foremost religious pamphleteer that has arisen in England; and the
impression made by his clear and stinging thrusts may be contrasted in contents
and audience with the scholarly and finished tracts of the Oxford movement led
by Pusey, Keble and Newman, the one reaching the conscience, the other
appealing to the aesthetic tastes; the one adapted to break down priestly
pretension, the other to foster it.
But the Reformer of the 14th
century was more than a scholar and publicist. Like John Wesley, he had a
practical bent of mind, and like him he attempted to provide England with a new
proclamation of the pure Gospel. To counteract the influence of the friars,
whom he had begun to attack after his return from Bruges, he conceived the idea
of developing and sending forth a body of itinerant evangelists. These
"pore priests," as they were called, were taken from the list of
Oxford graduates, and seem also to have included laymen. Of their number and
the rules governing them, we are in the dark. The movement was begun about 1380,
and on the one side it associates Wyclif with Gerrit de Groote, and on the
other with Wesley and with his more recent fellow-countryman, General Booth, of
the Salvation Army.
Although this evangelistic idea
took not the form of a permanent organization, the appearance of the pore
preachers made a sensation. According to the old chronicler, the disciples who
gathered around him in Oxford were many and, clad in long russet gowns of one
pattern, they went on foot, ventilating their master’s errors among the people
and publicly setting them forth in sermons.562 They had the distinction of being arraigned by no less a personage
than Bishop Courtenay "as itinerant, unauthorized preachers who teach
erroneous, yea, heretical assertions publicly, not only in churches but also in
public squares and other profane places, and who do this under the guise of
great holiness, but without having obtained any episcopal or papal
authorization."
It was in 1381, the year before
Courtenay said his memorable words, that Walden reports that Wyclif "began
to determine matters upon the sacrament of the altar."563 To attempt an innovation at this crucial point required courage of
the highest order. In 12 theses he declared the Church’s doctrine unscriptural
and misleading. For the first time since the promulgation of the dogma of
transubstantiation by the Fourth Lateran was it seriously called in question by
a theological expert. It was a case of Athanasius standing alone. The
mendicants waxed violent. Oxford authorities, at the instance of the archbishop
and bishops, instituted a trial, the court consisting of Chancellor Berton and
12 doctors. Without mentioning Wyclif by name, the judges condemned as
pestiferous the assertions that the bread and wine remain after consecration,
and that Christ’s body is present only figuratively or tropically in the
eucharist. Declaring that the judges had not been able to break down his
arguments, Wyclif went on preaching and lecturing at the university. But in the
king’s council, to which he made appeal, the duke of Lancaster took sides
against him and forbade him to speak any more on the subject at Oxford. This
prohibition Wyclif met with a still more positive avowal of his views in his Confession,
which closes with the noble words, "I believe that in the end the truth
will conquer."
The same year, the Peasants’
Revolt broke out, but there is no evidence that Wyclif had any more sympathy
with the movement than Luther had with the Peasants’ Rising of 1525. After the
revolt was over, he proposed that Church property be given to the upper
classes, not to the poor.564 The
principles, however, which he enunciated were germs which might easily spring
up into open rebellion against oppression. Had he not written, "There is
no moral obligation to pay tax or tithe to bad rulers either in Church or
state. It is permitted to punish or depose them and to reclaim the wealth which
the clergy have diverted from the poor?"
One hundred and fifty years after this time, Tyndale said, "They
said it in Wyclif’s day, and the hypocrites say now, that God’s Word arouseth
insurrection."565
Courtenay’s elevation to the see
of Canterbury boded no good to the Reformer. In 1382, he convoked the synod
which is known in English history as the Earthquake synod, from the shock felt
during its meetings. The primate was supported by 9 bishops, and when the earth
began to tremble, he showed admirable courage by interpreting it as a favorable
omen. The earth, in trying to rid itself of its winds and humors, was
manifesting its sympathy with the body ecclesiastic.566 Wyclif, who was not present, made another use of the occurrence,
and declared that the Lord sent the earthquake "because the friars had put
heresy upon Christ in the matter of the sacrament, and the earth trembled as it
did when Christ was damned to bodily death."567
The council condemned 24
articles, ascribed to the Reformer, 10 of which were pronounced heretical, and
the remainder to be against the decisions of the Church.568 The 4 main subjects condemned as heresy were that Christ is not
corporally present in the sacrament, that oral confession is not necessary for
a soul prepared to die, that after Urban VI.’s death the English Church should
acknowledge no pope but, like the Greeks, govern itself, and that it is
contrary to Scripture for ecclesiastics to hold temporal possessions. Courtenay
followed up the synod’s decisions by summoning Rygge, then chancellor of Oxford,
to suppress the heretical teachings and teachers. Ignoring the summons, Rygge
appointed Repyngdon, another of Wyclif’s supporters, to preach, and when Peter
Stokys, "a professor of the sacred page," armed with a letter from
the archbishop, attempted to silence him, the students and tutors at Oxford
threatened the Carmelite with their drawn swords.
But Courtenay would permit no
trifling and, summoning Rygge and the proctors to Lambeth, made them promise on
their knees to take the action indicated. Parliament supported the primate. The
new preaching was suppressed, but Wyclif stood undaunted. He sent a Complaint
of 4 articles to the king and parliament, in which he pleaded for the supremacy
of English law in matters of ecclesiastical property, for the liberty for the
friars to abandon the rules of their orders and follow the rule of Christ, and
for the view that on the Lord’s table the real bread and wine are present, and
not merely the accidents.569
The court was no longer ready to
support the Reformer, and Richard II. sent peremptory orders to Rygge to
suppress the new teachings. Courtenay himself went to Oxford, and there is some
authority for the view that Wyclif again met the prelate face to face at St.
Frideswides. Rigid inquisition was made for copies of the condemned teacher’s
writings and those of Hereford. Wyclif was inhibited from preaching, and
retired to his rectory at Lutterworth. Hereford, Repyngdon, Aston and Bedeman,
his supporters, recanted. The whole party received a staggering blow and with
it liberty of teaching at Oxford.570
Confined to Lutterworth, Wyclif
continued his labors on the translation of the Bible, and sent forth polemic
tracts, including the Cruciata,571 a vigorous condemnation of the
crusade which the bishop of Norwich, Henry de Spenser, was preparing in support
of Urban VI. against the Avignon pope, Clement VII. The warlike prelate had
already shown his military gifts during the Peasants’ Uprising. Urban had
promised plenary indulgence for a year to all joining the army. Mass was said
and sermons preached in the churches of England, and large sums collected for
the enterprise. The indulgence extended to the dead as well as to the living.
Wyclif declared the crusade an expedition for worldly mastery, and pronounced
the indulgence "an abomination of desolation in the holy place." Spenser’s army reached the Continent, but
the expedition was a failure. The most important of Wyclif’s theological
treatises, the Trialogus, was written in this period. It lays down the
principle that, where the Bible and the Church do not agree, we must obey the
Bible, and, where conscience and human authority are in conflict, we must
follow conscience.572
Two years before his death,
Wyclif received a paralytic stroke which maimed but did not completely disable
him. It is possible that he received a citation to appear before the pope. With
unabated rigor of conviction, he replied to the supreme pontiff that of all men
he was most under obligation to obey the law of Christ, that Christ was of all
men the most poor, and subject to mundane authority. No Christian man has a
right to follow Peter, Paul or any of the saints except as they imitated
Christ. The pope should renounce all worldly authority and compel his clergy to
do the same. He then asserted that, if in these views he was found to err, he
was willing to be corrected, even by death. If it were in his power to do
anything to advance these views by his presence in Rome, he would willingly go
thither. But God had put an obstacle in his way, and had taught him to obey Him
rather than man. He closed with the prayer that God might incline Urban to
imitate Christ in his life and teach his clergy to do the same.
While saying mass in his church,
he was struck again with paralysis, and passed away two or three days after,
Dec. 29, 1384, "having lit a fire which shall never be put out."573 Fuller, writing of his death, exclaims, "Admirable that a
hare, so often hunted with so many packs of dogs, should die quietly sitting in
his form."
Wyclif was spare, and probably
never of robust health, but he was not an ascetic. He was fond of a good meal.
In temper he was quick, in mind clear, in moral character unblemished. Towards
his enemies he was sharp, but never coarse or ribald. William Thorpe, a young
contemporary standing in the court of Archbishop Arundel, bore testimony that
"he was emaciated in body and well-nigh destitute of strength, and in
conduct most innocent. Very many of the chief men of England conferred with
him, loved him dearly, wrote down his sayings and followed his manner of
life."574
The prevailing sentiment of the
hierarchy was given by Walsingham, chronicler of St. Albans, who characterized
the Reformer in these words: "On the feast of the passion of St. Thomas of
Canterbury, John de Wyclif, that instrument of the devil, that enemy of the
Church, that author of confusion to the common people, that image of
hypocrites, that idol of heretics, that author of schism, that sower of hatred,
that coiner of lies, being struck with the horrible judgment of God, was
smitten with palsy and continued to live till St. Sylvester’s Day, on which he
breathed out his malicious spirit into the abodes of darkness."
The dead was not left in peace.
By the decree of Arundel, Wyclif’s writings were suppressed, and it was so
effective that Caxton and the first English printers issued no one of them from
the press. The Lateran decree of February, 1413, ordered his books burnt, and
the Council of Constance, from whose members, such as Gerson and D’Ailly, we
might have expected tolerant treatment, formally condemned his memory and
ordered his bones exhumed from their resting-place and "cast at a distance
from the sepulchre of the church."
The holy synod, so ran the decree, "declares said John Wyclif to
have been a notorious heretic, and excommunicates him and condemns his memory
as one who died an obstinate heretic."575 In 1429, at the summons of Martin IV., the decree was carried out
by Flemmyng, bishop of Lincoln.
The words of Fuller, describing
the execution of the decree of Constance, have engraven themselves on the page
of English history. "They burnt his bones to ashes and cast them into
Swift, a neighboring brook running hardby. Thus this brook hath conveyed his
ashes into Avon, Avon into Severn, Severn into the narrow seas, they into the
main ocean. And thus the ashes of Wicliffe are the emblem of his doctrine,
which now is dispersed the world over."
In the popular judgment of the
English people, John Wyclif, in company with John Latimer and John Wesley,
probably represents more fully than any other English religious leader,
independence of thought, devotion to conscience, solid religious common sense,
and the sound exposition of the Gospel. In the history of the intellectual and
moral progress of his people, he was the leading Englishman of the Middle Ages.576
§ 41. Wyclif’s Teachings.
Wyclif’s teachings lie plainly
upon the surface of his many writings. In each one of the eminent rĂ´les he
played, as schoolman, political reformer, preacher, innovator in theology and
translator of the Bible, he wrote extensively. His views show progress in the
direction of opposition to the mediaeval errors and abuses. Driven by attacks,
he detected errors which, at the outset, he did not clearly discern. But, above
all, his, study of the Scriptures forced upon him a system which was in
contradiction to the distinctively mediaeval system of theology. His language
in controversy was so vigorous that it requires an unusual effort to suppress
the impulse to quote at great length.
Clear as Wyclif’s statements
always are, some of his works are drawn out by much repetition. Nor does he
always move in a straight line, but digresses to this side and to that, taking
occasion to discuss at length subjects cognate to the main matter he has in
hand. This habit often makes the reading of his larger works a wearisome task.
Nevertheless, the author always brings the reader back from his digression or,
to use a modern expression, never leaves him sidetracked.
I. As a Schoolman._Wyclif was beyond dispute the most eminent
scholar who taught for any length of time at Oxford since Grosseteste, whom he
often quotes.577 He was
read in Chrysostom, Augustine, Jerome and other Latin Fathers, as well as in
the mediaeval theologians from Anselm to Duns Scotus, Bradwardine, Fitzralph
and Henry of Ghent. His quotations are many, but with increasing emphasis, as
the years went on, he made his final appeal to the Scriptures. He was a
moderate realist and ascribed to nominalism all theological error. He seems to
have endeavored to shun the determinism of Bradwardine, and declared that the
doctrine of necessity does not do away with the freedom of the will, which is
so free that it cannot be compelled. Necessity compels the creature to will,
that is, to exercise his freedom, but at that point he is left free to choose.578
II. As a Patriot._In this role the Oxford teacher took an
attitude the very reverse of the attitude assumed by Anselm and Thomas Ă
Becket, who made the English Church a servant to the pope’s will in all things.
For loyalty to the Hildebrandian theocracy, Anselm was willing to suffer
banishment and Ă Becket suffered death. In Wyclif, the mutterings of the
nation, which had been heard against the foreign regime from the days of
William the Conqueror, and especially since King John’s reign, found a stanch
and uncompromising mouthpiece. Against the whole system of foreign jurisdiction
he raised his voice, as also against the Church’s claim to hold lands, except
as it acknowledged the rights of the state. He also opposed the tenure of
secular offices by the clergy and, when Archbisbop Sudbury was murdered, declared
that he died in sin because he was holding the office of chancellor.
Wyclif’s views on government in
Church and state are chiefly set forth in the works on Civil and Divine
Lordship_De
dominio divino,
and De dominio
civili _ and in
his Dialogus.579 The Divine
Lordship discusses the title by which men hold property and exercise
government, and sets forth the distinction between sovereignty and stewardship.
Lordship is not properly proprietary. It is stewardship. Christ did not desire
to rule as a tenant with absolute rights, but in the way of communicating to
others.580 As to his
manhood, he was the most perfect of servants.
The Civil Lordship opens
by declaring that no one in mortal sin has a right to lordship, and that every
one in the state of grace has a real lordship over the whole universe. All
Christians are reciprocally lords and servants. The pope, or an ecclesiastical
body abusing the property committed to them, may be deprived of it by the
state. Proprietary right is limited by proper use. Tithes are an expedient to
enable the priesthood to perform its mission. The New Testament does not make
them a rule.
From the last portion of the
first book of the Civil Lordship, Gregory XI. drew most of the articles
for which Wyclif had to stand trial. Here is found the basis for the charge
ascribing to him the famous statement that God ought to obey the devil. By this
was meant nothing more than that the jurisdiction of every lawful proprietor
should be recognized.
III. As a Preacher._Whether we regard Wyclif’s constant activity
in the pulpit, or the impression his sermons made, he must be pronounced by far
the most notable of English preachers prior to the Reformation.581 294 of his English sermons and 224 of his Latin sermons have been
preserved. To these discourses must be added his English expositions of the
Lord’s prayer, the songs of the Bible, the seven deadly sins and other
subjects. With rare exceptions, the sermons are based upon passages of the New
Testament.
The style of the English
discourses is simple and direct. No more plainly did Luther preach against
ecclesiastical abuses than did the English Reformer. On every page are joined
with practical religious exposition stirring passages rebuking the pope and
worldly prelates. They are denounced as anti-christ and the servants of the
devil_the fiend_as they turn away from the true work of pasturing Christ’s
flock for worldly gain and enjoyment. The preacher condemns the false teachings
which are nowhere taught in the Scriptures, such as pilgrimages and indulgences.
Sometimes Wyclif seems to be inconsistent with himself, now making light of
fasting, now asserting that the Apostles commended it; now disparaging prayers
for the dead, now affirming purgatory. With special severity do his sermons
strike at the friars who preach out of avarice and neglect to expose the sins
of their hearers. No one is more idle than the rich friars, who have nothing
but contempt for the poor. Again and again in these sermons, as in his other
works, he urges that the goods of the friars be seized and given to the needy
classes. Wyclif, the preacher, was always the bold champion of the layman’s
rights.
His work, The Pastoral Office,
which is devoted to the duties of the faithful minister, and his sermons lay
stress upon preaching as the minister’s proper duty. Preaching he declared the
"highest service," even as Christ occupied himself most in that work.
And if bishops, on whom the obligation to preach more especially rests, preach
not, but are content to have true priests preach in their stead, they are as
those that murder Jesus. The same authority which gave to priests the privilege
of celebrating the sacrament of the altar binds them to preach. Yea, the
preaching of the Word is a more precious occupation than the ministration of
the sacraments.582
When the Gospel was preached, as
in Apostolic times, the Church grew. Above all things, close attention should
be given to Christ’s words, whose authority is superior to all the rites and
commandments of pope and friars. Again and again Wyclif sets forth the ideal
minister, as in the following description:_
"A priest should live
holily, in prayer, in desires and thought, in godly conversation and honest
teaching, having God’s commandments and His Gospel ever on his lips. And let
his deeds be so righteous that no man may be able with cause to find fault with
them, and so open his acts that he may be a true book to all sinful and wicked
men to serve God. For the example of a good life stirreth men more than true preaching
with only the naked word."
The priest’s chief work is to
render a substitute for Christ’s miracles by converting himself and his
neighbor to God’s law.583 The
Sermon on the Mount, Wyclif pronounced sufficient for the guidance of human
life apart from any of the requirements and traditions of men.
IV. As a Doctrinal Reformer._Wyclif’s later writings teem with
denials of the doctrinal tenets of his age and indictments against
ecclesiastical abuses. There could be no doubt of his meaning. Beginning with
the 19 errors Gregory XI. was able to discern, the list grew as the years went
on. The Council of Constance gave 45, Netter of Walden, fourscore, and the
Bohemian John LĂĽcke, an Oxford doctor of divinity, 266. Cochlaeus, in writing
against the Hussites, went beyond all former computations and ascribed to
Wyclif the plump sum of 303 heresies, surely enough to have forever covered the
Reformer’s memory with obloquy. Fuller suggests as the reason for these
variations that some lists included only the Reformer’s primitive tenets or
breeders, and others reckoned all the younger fry of consequence derived from
them.
The first three articles adduced
by the Council of Constance584 had respect to the Lord’s
Supper, and charged Wyclif with holding that the substance of the bread remains
unchanged after the consecration, that Christ is not in the sacrament of the
altar in a real sense, and the accidents of a thing cannot remain after its
substance is changed. The 4th article accuses him with declaring that the acts
of bishop or priest in baptizing, ordaining and consecrating are void if the
celebrant be in a state of mortal sin. Then follow charges of other alleged
heresies, such as that after Urban VI. the papacy should be abolished, the
clergy should hold no temporal possessions, the friars should gain their living
by manual toil and not by begging, Sylvester and Constantine erred in endowing
the Church, the papal elections by the cardinals were an invention of the
devil, it is not necessary to salvation that one believe the Roman church to be
supreme amongst the churches and that all the religious orders were introduced
by the devil.
The most of the 45 propositions
represent Wyclif’s views with precision. They lie on the surface of his later
writings, but they do not exhaust his dissent from the teachings and practice
of his time. His assault may be summarized under five heads: the nature of the
Church, the papacy, the priesthood, the doctrine of transubstantiation and the
use of the Scriptures.
The Church was defined in the Civil
Lordship to be the body of the elect,_living, dead and not yet born,_whose
head is Christ. Scarcely a writing has come down to us from Wyclif’s pen in
which he does not treat the subject, and in his special treatise on the Church,
written probably in 1378, it is defined more briefly as the body of all the elect_congregatio omnium
predestinatorum.
Of this body, Christ alone is the head. The pope is the head of a local church.
Stress is laid upon the divine decree as determining who are the predestinate
and who the reprobate.585
Some persons, he said, in
speaking of "Holy Church, understand thereby prelates and priests, monks
and canons and friars and all that have the tonsure,_alle men that han
crownes,_though they live ever so accursedly in defiance of God’s
law." But so far from this being
true, all popes cardinals and priests are not among the saved. On the contrary,
not even a pope can tell assuredly that he is predestinate. This knows no one
on earth. The pope may be a prescitus,
a reprobate. Such popes there have been, and it is blasphemy for cardinals and
pontiffs to think that their election to office of itself constitutes a title
to the primacy of the Church. The curia is a nest of heretics if its members do
not follow Christ, a fountain of poison, the abomination of desolation spoken
of in the sacred page. Gregory XI. Wyclif called a terrible devil_horrendus diabolus. God in His mercy had put him
to death and dispersed his confederates, whose crimes Urban VI. had revealed.586
Though the English Reformer
never used the terms visible and invisible Church, he made the distinction. The
Church militant, he said, commenting on John 10:26, is a mixed body. The
Apostles took two kinds of fishes, some of which remained in the net and some
broke away. So in the Church some are ordained to bliss and some to pain, even
though they live godly for a while.587 It is significant that in his English writings Wyclif uses the
term Christen men_Christian men_instead of the term the faithful.
As for the papacy, no one has
used more stinging words against individual popes as well as against the papacy
as an institution than did Wyclif. In the treatises of his last years and in
his sermons, the pope is stigmatized as anti-Christ. His very last work, on
which he was engaged when death overtook him, bore the title, Anti-christ,
meaning the pope. He went so far as to call him the head-vicar of the fiend.588 He saw in the papacy the revelation of the man of sin. The office
is wholly poisonous_totum papale officium venenosum. He heaped ridicule upon the address "most holie
fadir." The pope is neither
necessary to the Church nor is he infallible. If both popes and all their
cardinals were cast into hell, believers could be saved as well without them.
They were created not by Christ but by the devil. The pope has no exclusive
right to declare what the Scriptures teach, or proclaim what is the supreme
law. His absolutions are of no avail unless Christ has absolved before. Popes
have no more right to excommunicate than devils have to curse. Many of them are
damned_multi
papae sunt dampnati. Strong as such assertions are, it is probable that Wyclif did not mean
to cast aside the papacy altogether. But again and again the principle is
stated that the Apostolic see is to be obeyed only so far as it follows
Christ’s law.589
As for the interpretation of
Matthew 16:18, Wyclif took the view that "the rock" stands for Peter
and every true Christian. The keys of the kingdom of heaven are not metal keys,
as popularly supposed, but spiritual power, and they were committed not only to
Peter, but to all the saints, "for alle men that comen to hevene have
these keies of God."590 Towards the pope’s pretension to political
functions, Wyclif was, if possible, more unsparing. Christ paid tribute to
Caesar. So should the pope. His deposition of kings is the tyranny of the
devil. By disregarding Peter’s injunction not to lord it over God’s heritage,
but to feed the flock, he and all his sect_tota secta _ prove themselves hardened heretics.
Constantine’s donation, the
Reformer pronounced the beginning of all evils in the Church. The emperor was
put up to it by the devil. It was his new trick to have the Church endowed.591 Chapter after chapter of the treatise on the Church calls upon the
pope, prelates and priests to return to the exercise of spiritual functions.
They had become the prelates and priests of Caesar. As the Church left Christ
to follow Caesar, so now it should abandon Caesar for Christ. As for kissing
the pope’s toe, there it; no foundation for it in Scripture or reason.
The pope’s practice of getting
money by tribute and taxation calls forth biting invective. It was the custom,
Wyclif said, to solemnly curse in the parish churches all who clipped the
king’s coins and cut men’s purses. From this it would seem, he continued, that
the proud and worldly priest of Rome and all his advisers were the most cursed
of clippers and out-purses,_cursed of clipperis and purse-kerveris,_for they
drew out of England poor men’s livelihoods and many thousands of marks of the
king’s money, and this they did for spiritual favors. If the realm had a huge
hill of gold, it would soon all be spent by this proud and worldly
priest-collector. Of all men, Christ was the most poor, both in spirit and in
goods and put from him all manner of worldly lordship. The pope should leave
his authority to worldly lords, and speedily advise his clergy to do the same.
I take it, as a matter of faith, that no man should follow the pope, nor even
any of the saints in heaven, except as they follow Christ.592
The priests and friars formed
another subject of Wyclif’s vigorous attack. Clerics who follow Christ are true
priests and none other. The efficacy of their acts of absolution of sins
depends upon their own previous absolution by Christ. The priest’s function is
to show forgiveness, already pronounced by God, not to impart it. It was, he
affirmed, a strange and marvellous thing that prelates and curates should
"curse so faste," when Christ said we should bless rather than reprove.
A sentence of excommunication is worse than murder.
The rule of auricular confession
Wyclif also disparaged. True contrition of heart is sufficient for the removal
of sins. In Christ’s time confession of man to man was not required. In his own
day, he said, "shrift to God is put behind; but privy (private) shrift, a
new-found thing, is authorized as needful for the soul’s health." He set forth the dangers of the
confessional, such as the unchastity of priests. He also spoke of the evils of
pilgrimages when women and men going together promiscuously were in temptation
of great "lecherie."593 Clerical celibacy, a subject the Reformer seldom touched upon, he
declared, when enforced, is against Scripture, and as under the old law priests
were allowed to marry, so under the new the practice is never forbidden, but
rather approved.
Straight truth-telling never had
a warmer champion than Wyclif. Addressing the clergy, he devotes nearly a
hundred pages of his Truth of Scripture to an elaboration of this
principle. Not even the most trifling sin is permissible as a means of averting
a greater evil, either for oneself or one’s neighbor. Under no circumstances
does a good intention justify a falsehood. The pope himself has no right to
tolerate or practice misrepresentation to advance a good cause. To accomplish a
good end, the priest dare not even make a false appeal to fear. All lying is of
itself sin, and no dispensation can change its character.594
The friars called forth the
Reformer’s keenest thrusts, and these increased in sharpness as he neared the
end of his life. Quotations, bearing on their vices, would fill a large volume.
Entire treatises against their heresies and practices issued from his pen. They
were slavish agents of the pope’s will; they spread false views of the
eucharist; they made merchandise of indulgences and letters of fraternity which
pretended to give the purchasers a share in their own good deeds here and at
the final accounting. Their lips were full of lies and their hands of blood.
They entered houses and led women astray; they lived in idleness; they devoured
England.595
The Reformer had also a strong
word to say on the delusion of the contemplative life as usually practised. It
was the guile of Satan that led men to imagine their fancies and dreamings were
religious contemplation and to make them an excuse for sloth. John the Baptist and
Christ both left the desert to live among men. He also went so far as to demand
that monks be granted the privilege of renouncing the monkish rule for some
other condition where they might be useful.596
The four mendicant orders, the
Carmelites, Augustinians, Jacobites or Dominicans, and Minorites or Franciscans
gave their first letters to the word Caim, showing their descent from the first
murderer. Their convents, Wyclif called Cain’s castles. His relentless
indignation denounced them as the tail of the dragon, ravening wolves, the sons
of Satan, the emissaries of anti-christ and Luciferians and pronounced them
worse than Herod, Saul and Judas. The friars repeat that Christ begged water at
the well. It were to their praise if they begged water and nothing else.597
With the lighter hand of
ridicule, Chaucer also held up the mendicants for indictment. In the Prologue
to his Canterbury Tales he represents the friar as an_
... easy man to yeve penaunce,
Ther as he wiste to
have a good pitaunce
For unto a powre
order for to give
Is signe that a man
is well y-shrive.
* * *
* * * *
His wallet lay
biforn him in his lappe
Bretful of pardoun
come from Rome all hoot,
A voys he hadde as
smal as hath a goot
Ne was ther swich
another pardonour
For in his male he
hadde a pilwe-beer [pillow]
Which that, he
seyde, was our Lady’s veyl:
And in a glas he
hadde a pigges bones.
Skeat’s ed., 4:7, 21.
If it required boldness to
attack the powerful body of the monks, it required equal boldness to attack the
mediaeval dogma of transubstantiation. Wyclif himself called it a doctrine of
the moderns and of the recent Church_novella ecclesia. In his treatise on the eucharist, he praised God that
he had been delivered from its laughable and scandalous errors.598 The dogma of the transmutation of the elements he pronounced
idolatry, a lying fable. His own view is that of the spiritual presence.
Christ’s body, so far as its dimensions are concerned, is in heaven. It is
efficaciously or virtually in the host as in a symbol.599 This symbol "represents"_vicarius est_the body.
Neither by way of impanation nor
of identification, much less by way of transmutation, is the body in the host.
Christ is in the bread as a king is in all parts of his dominions and as the
soul is in the body. In the breaking of the bread, the body is no more broken
than the sunbeam is broken when a piece of glass is shattered: Christ is there
sacramentally, spiritually, efficiently_sacramentaliter, spiritualiter et virtualiter. Transubstantiation is the
greatest of all heresies and subversive of logic, grammar and all natural
science.600
The famous controversy as to whether
a mouse, partaking of the sacramental elements, really partakes of Christ’s
body is discussed in the first pages of the treatise on the eucharist. Wyclif
pronounces the primary assumption false, for Christ is not there in a corporal
manner. An animal, in eating a man, does not eat his soul. The opinion that the
priest actually breaks Christ’s body and so breaks his neck, arms and other
members, is a shocking error. What could be more shocking,_horribilius,_he says, than that the priest
should daily make and consecrate the Lord’s body, and what more shocking than
to be obliged to eat Christ’s very flesh and drink his very blood. Yea, what
could be thought of more shocking than that Christ’s body may be burned or
eructated, or that the priest carries God in bodily form on the tips of his
fingers. The words of institution are to be taken in a figurative sense. In a
similar manner, the Lord spoke of himself as the seed and of the world as the
field, and called John, Elijah, not meaning that the two were one person. In
saying, I am the vine, he meant that the vine is a symbol of himself.
The impossibility of the miracle
of elemental transmutation, Wyclif based on the philosophical principle that
the substance of a thing cannot be separated from its accidents. If accidents
can exist by themselves, then it is impossible to tell what a thing is or
whether it exists at all. Transubstantiation would logically demand
transaccidentation, an expression the English Reformer used before Luther. The
theory that the accidents remain while the substance is changed, he pronounced
"grounded neither in holy writt ne reson ne wit but only taughte by newe
hypocritis and cursed heretikis that magnyfyen there own fantasies and
dremes."601
Another proof of Wyclif’s freedom of mind was his assertion that
the Roman Church, in celebrating the sacrament, has no right to make a precise
form of words obligatory, as the words of institution differ in the different
accounts of the New Testament. As for the profitable partaking of the elements,
he declared that the physical eating profits nothing except the soul be fed
with love. Announcing it as his expectation that he would be set upon for his
views, he closed his notable treatise on the eucharist with the words, The
truth of reason will prevail over all things.
Super
omnia vincit veritas rationis.
In these denials of the erroneous system of the
mediaeval Church at its vital points, Wyclif was far in advance of his own age
and anticipated the views of the Protestant Reformers.
§ 42. Wyclif and the Scriptures.
Wyclif’s chief service for his
people, next to the legacy of his own personality, was his assertion of the
supreme authority of the Bible for clergy and laymen alike and his gift to them
of the Bible in their own tongue. His statements, setting forth the Scriptures
as the clear and sufficient manual of salvation and insisting that the literal
sense gives their plain meaning, were as positive and unmistakable as any made
by Luther. In his treatise on the value and authority of the Scriptures, with
1000 printed pages,602 more is
said about the Bible as the Church’s appointed guide-book than was said by all
the mediaeval theologians together. And none of the Schoolmen, from Anselm and
Abaelard to Thomas Aquinas and Duns Scotus, exalted it to such a position of
preëminence as did he. With one accord they limited its authority by
coördinating with its contents tradition, that is, the teachings of the Church.
This man, with unexcelled precision and cogency, affirmed its final
jurisdiction, as the law of God, above all authorities, papal, decretist or
patristic. What Wyclif asserts in this special treatise, he said over again in
almost every one of his works, English and Latin. If possible, he grew more
emphatic as his last years went on, and his Opus evangelicum, probably his very last
writing, abounds in the most positive statements language is capable of.
To give the briefest outline of
the Truth of Scripture will be to state in advance the positions of the
Protestant Reformers in regard to the Bible as the rule of faith and morals. To
Wyclif the Scriptures are the authority for every Catholic tenet. They are the
Law of Christ, the Law of God, the Word of God, the Book of Life_liber vitae. They are the immaculate law of
the Lord, most true, most complete and most wholesome.603 All things necessary to belief for salvation are found in them.
They are the Catholic faith, the Christian faith,_fides christiana,_the primal rule of human
perfection, the primal foundation of the Christian proclamation.
This book is the whole truth
which every Christian should study.604 It is the measure and standard of all logic. Logic, as in Oxford,
changes very frequently, yea, every twenty years, but the Scriptures are yea,
yea and nay, nay. They never change. They stand to eternity.605 All logic, all law, all philosophy and all ethic are in them. As
for the philosophy of the pagan world, whatever it offers that is in accord
with the Scriptures is true. The religious philosophy which the Christian
learns from Aristotle he learns because it was taught by the authors of
Scripture.606 The Greek
thinker made mistakes, as when he asserted that creation is eternal. In several
places Wyclif confesses that he himself had at one time been led astray by
logic and the desire to win fame, but was thankful to God that he had been converted
to the full acceptance of the Scriptures as they are and to find in them all
logic.
All through this treatise, and
in other works, Wyclif contends against those who pronounced the sacred
writings irrational or blasphemous or abounding in errors and plain falsehoods.
Such detractors he labelled modern or recent doctors_moderni novelli doctores. Charges such as these would
seem well-nigh incredible, if Wyclif did not repeat them over and over again.
They remind us of the words of the priest who told Tyndale, 150 years later,
"It were better to be without God’s laws than to be without the
pope’s." What could be more
shocking,_horribilius,_exclaimed Wyclif, than to
assert that God’s words are false.607
The supreme authority of the
Scriptures appears from their contents, the beneficent aim they have in view,
and from the witness borne to them by Christ. God speaks in all the books. They
are one great Word of God. Every syllable of the two Testaments is true, and
the authors were nothing more than scribes or heralds.608 If any error seem to be found in them, the error is due to human
ignorance and perverseness. Nothing is to be believed that is not founded upon
this book, and to its teachings nothing is to be added.609
Wyclif devotes much time to the
principles of biblical exposition and brushes away the false principles of the
Fath-ers and Schoolmen by pronouncing the "literal verbal sense" the
true one. On occasion, in his sermons, he himself used the other senses, but
his sound judgment led him again and again to lay emphasis upon the
etymological meaning of words as final. The tropological, anagogical and
allegorical meanings, if drawn at all, must be based upon the literal meaning.
Wyclif confessed his former mistake of striving to distinguish them with strict
precision. There is, in fact, only one sense of Scripture, the one God himself has
placed in it as the book of life for the wayfaring man.610 Heresy is the contradiction of Scripture. As for himself, Wyclif
said, he was ready to follow its teachings, even unto martyrdom, if necessary.611
For hundreds of years no eminent
teacher had emphasized the right of the laity to the Word of God. It was
regarded as a book for the clergy, and the interpretation of its meaning was
assumed to rest largely with the decretists and the pope. The Council of
Toulouse, 1229, had forbidden the use of the Bible to laymen. The condemned
sects of the 12th and 13th centuries, especially the Waldenses, had adopted
another rule, but their assailants, such as Alanus ab Insulis, had shown how
dangerous their principle was. Wyclif stood forth as the champion of an open
Bible. It was a book to be studied by all Christians, for "it is the whole
truth." Because it was given to
the Church, its teachings are free to every one, even as is Christ himself.612
To withhold the Scriptures from
the laity is a fundamental sin. To make them known in the mother-tongue is the
first duty of the priest. For this reason priests ought always to be familiar
with the language of the people. Wyclif held up the friars for declaring it
heresy to translate God’s law into English and make it known to laymen. He
argued against their position by referring to the gift of tongues at Pentecost
and to Jerome’s translation, to the practice of Christ and the Apostles who
taught peoples in their native languages and to the existence in his own day of
a French translation made in spite of all hindrances. Why, he exclaims,
"should not Englishmen do the same, for as the lords of England have the Bible
in French, it would not be against reason if they had the same material in
English." Through an English Bible
Englishmen would be enabled best "to follow Christ and come to
heaven."613 What
could be more positive than the following words?
Christen men and women, olde and
young, shulden study fast in the New Testament, and no simple man of wit shulde
be aferde unmeasurably to study in the text of holy Writ. Pride and covetise of
clerks is cause of their blyndness and heresie and priveth them fro verie
understonding of holy Writ. The New Testament is of ful autorite and open to
understonding of simple men, as to the pynts that ben most needful to
salvation.
Wyclif was the first to give the
Bible to his people in their own tongue. He knew no Hebrew and probably no
Greek. His version, which was made from the Latin Vulgate, was the outgrowth of
his burning desire to make his English countrymen more religious and more
Christian. The paraphrastic translation of books which proceeded from the pen
of Richard Rolle and perhaps a verse of the New Testament of Kentish origin and
apparently made for a nunnery,614 must be considered as in no wise
in conflict with the claim of priority made for the English Reformer. In his
task he had the aid of Nicolas Hereford, who translated the Old Testament and
the Apocryphal books as far as Baruch 3:20. A revision was made of Wyclif’s
Bible soon after his death, by Purvey. In his prologue, Purvey makes
express mention of the "English Bible late translated," and affirms
that the Latin copies had more need of being corrected than it. One hundred and
seventy copies of these two English bibles are extant, and it seems strange
that, until the edition issued by Forshall and Madden in 1850, they remained
unprinted.