This gentleman was minister of Bradford,
Suffolk, where he industriously taught the flock committed to his charge, while
he was openly permitted to discharge his duty. He was first persecuted by Mr.
Foster, of Copdock, near Ipswich, a severe and bigoted persecutor of the
followers of Christ, according to the truth in the Gospel. Notwithstanding Mr.
Samuel was ejected from his living, he continued to exhort and instruct
privately; nor would he obey the order for putting away his wife, whom he had
married in King Edward's reign; but kept her at Ipswich, where Foster, by
warrant, surprised him by night with her. After being imprisoned in Ipswich
jail, he was taken before Dr. Hopton, bishop of Norwich, and Dr. Dunnings, his
chancellor, two of the most sanguinary among the bigots of those days. To
intimidate the worthy pastor, he was in prison chained to a post in such a
manner that the weight of his body was supported by the points of his toes:
added to this his allowance of provision was reduced to a quantity so
insufficient to sustain nature that he was almost ready to devour his own
flesh. From this dreadful extremity, there was even a degree of mercy in
ordering him to the fire. Mr. Samuel suffered August 31, 1555.
When Robert Samuel was brought forth to
be burned, certain there were that heard him declare what strange things had
happened unto him during the time of his imprisonment; to wit, that after he
had famished or pined with hunger two or three days together, he then fell into
a sleep, as it were one half in a slumber, at which time one clad all in white
seemed to stand before him, who ministered comfort unto him by these words:
"Samuel, Samuel, be of good cheer,
and take a good heart unto thee: for after this day shalt thou never be either
hungry or thirsty."
No less memorable it is, and worthy to be
noted, concerning the three ladders which he told to divers he saw in his
sleep, set up toward heaven; of the which there was one somewhat longer than
the rest, but yet at length they became one, joining (as it were) all three
together.
As this godly martyr was going to the
fire, there came a certain maid to him, which took him about the neck, and
kissed him, who, being marked by them that were present, was sought for the
next day after, to be had to prison and burned, as the very party herself
informed me: howbeit, as God of His goodness would have it, she escaped their
fiery hands, keeping herself secret in the town a good while after.
But as this maid, called Rose Nottingham,
was marvelously preserved by the providence of God, so there were other two
honest women who did fall into the rage and fury of that time. The one was a
brewer's wife, the other was a shoemaker's wife, but both together now espoused
to a new husband, Christ.
With these two was this maid aforesaid
very familiar and well acquainted, who, on a time giving counsel to the one of
them, that she should convey herself away while she had time and space, had this
answer at her hand again: "I know well," saith she, "that it is
lawful enough to fly away; which remedy you may use, if you list. But my case
standeth otherwise. I am tied to a husband, and have besides young children at
home; therefore I am minded, for the love of Christ and His truth, to stand to
the extremity of the matter."
And so the next day after Samuel
suffered, these two godly wives, the one called Anne Potten, the other called
Joan Trunchfield, the wife of Michael Trunchfield, shoemaker, of Ipswich, were
apprehended, and had both into one prison together. As they were both by sex
and nature somewhat tender, so were they at first less able to endure the
straightness of the prison; and especially the brewer's wife was cast into
marvelous great agonies and troubles of mind thereby. However, Christ,
beholding the weak infirmity of His servant, did not fail to help her when she
was in this necessity. So at the length they both suffered after Samuel, in
1556, February 19. And these, no doubt, were those two ladders, which, being
joined with the third, Samuel saw stretched up into heaven. This blessed
Samuel, the servant of Christ, suffered the thirty-first of August 1555.
The report goeth among some that were
there present, and saw him burn, that his body in burning did shine in the eyes
of them that stood by, as bright and white as new-tried silver.
When Agnes Bongeor saw herself separated from her prison-fellows, what piteous moan that good woman made, how bitterly she wept, what strange thoughts came into her mind, how naked and desolate she esteemed herself, and into what plunge of despair and care her poor soul was brought, it was piteous and wonderful to see; which all came because she went not with them to give her life in the defense of her Christ; for of all things in the world, life was least looked for at her hands.
For that morning in which she was kept
back from burning, had she put on a smock, that she had prepared only for that
purpose? And also having a child, a little young infant sucking on her, whom
she kept with her tenderly all the time that she was in prison, against that
day likewise did she send away to another nurse, and prepared herself presently
to give herself for the testimony of the glorious Gospel of Jesus Christ. So little
did she look for life, and so greatly did God's gifts work in her above nature,
that death seemed a great deal better welcome than life. After which, she began
a little to stay herself, and gave her whole exercise to reading and prayer,
wherein she found no little comfort.
In a short time came a writ from London
for the burning, which according to the effect thereof, was executed.
These reverend prelates suffered October
17, 5555, at Oxford, on the same day Wolsey and Pygot perished at Ely. Pillars
of the Church and accomplished ornaments of human nature, they were the
admiration of the realm, amiably conspicuous in their lives, and glorious in
their deaths.
Dr. Ridley was born in Northumberland,
was first taught grammar at Newcastle, and afterward removed to Cambridge,
where his aptitude in education raised him gradually until he came to be the
head of Pembroke College, where he received the title of Doctor of Divinity.
Having returned from a trip to Paris, he was appointed chaplain by Henry VIII
and bishop of Rochester, and was afterwards translated to the see of London in
the time of Edward VI.
To his sermons the people resorted,
swarming about him like bees, coveting the sweet flowers and wholesome juice of
the fruitful doctrine, which he did not only preach, but showed the same by his
life, as a glittering lantern to the eyes and senses of the blind, in such pure
order that his very enemies could not reprove him in any one jot.
His tender treatment of Dr. Heath, who
was a prisoner with him during one year, in Edward's reign, evidently proves
that he had no Catholic cruelty in his disposition. In person he was erect and
well proportioned; in temper forgiving in self-mortification severe. His first
duty in the morning was private prayer: he remained in his study until ten
o'clock, and then attended the daily prayer used in his house. Dinner being
done, he sat about an hour, conversing pleasantly, or playing at chess. His
study next engaged his attention, unless business or visits occurred; about
five o'clock prayers followed; and after he would recreate himself at chess for
about an hour, then retire to his study until eleven o'clock, and pray on his
knees as in the morning. In brief, he was a pattern of godliness and virtue,
and such he endeavored to make men wherever he came.
His attentive kindness was displayed
particularly to old Mrs. Bonner, mother of Dr. Bonner, the cruel bishop of
London. Dr. Ridley, when at his manor at Fulham, always invited her to his house,
placed her at the head of his table, and treated her like his own mother; he
did the same by Bonner's sister and other relatives; but when Dr. Ridley was
under persecution, Bonner pursued a conduct diametrically opposite, and would
have sacrificed Dr. Ridley's sister and her husband, Mr. George Shipside, had
not Providence delivered him by the means of Dr. Heath, bishop of Worcester.
Dr. Ridley was first in part converted by
reading Bertram's book on the Sacrament and by his conferences with archbishop
Cranmer and Peter Martyr.
When Edward VI was removed from the
throne, and the bloody Mary succeeded, Bishop Ridley was immediately marked as
an object of slaughter. He was first sent to the Tower, and afterward, at
Oxford, was consigned to the common prison of Bocardo, with archbishop Cranmer
and Mr. Latimer. Being separated from them, he was placed in the house of one
Irish, where he remained until the day of his martyrdom, from 1554, until
October 16, 1555.
It will easily be supposed that the conversations
of these chiefs of the martyrs were elaborate, learned, and instructive. Such
indeed they were, and equally beneficial to all their spiritual comforts.
Bishop Ridley's letters to various Christian brethren in bonds in all parts,
and his disputations with the mitered enemies of Christ, alike proved the
clearness of his head and the integrity of his heart. In a letter to Mr.
Grindal, (afterward archbishop of Canterbury,) he mentions with affection those
who had preceded him in dying for the faith, and those who were expected to
suffer; he regrets that popery is re-established in its full abomination, which
he attributes to the wrath of God, made manifest in return for the lukewarmness
of the clergy and the people in justly appreciating the blessed light of the
Reformation.
This old practiced soldier of Christ,
Master Hugh Latimer, was the son of one Hugh Latimer, of Thurkesson in the
county of Leicester, a husbandman, of a good and wealthy estimation; where also
he was born and brought up until he was four years of age, or thereabout: at
which time his parents, having him as then left for their only son, with six
daughters, seeing his ready, prompt, and sharp wit, purposed to train him up in
erudition, and knowledge of good literature; wherein he so profited in his
youth at the common schools of his own country, that at the age of fourteen
years, he was sent to the University of Cambridge; where he entered into the
study of the school divinity of that day, and was from principle a zealous
observer of the Roman superstitions of the time. In his oration when he
commenced bachelor of divinity, he inveighed against the reformer Melancthon,
and openly declaimed against good Mr. Stafford, divinity lecturer in Cambridge.
Mr. Thomas Bilney, moved by a brotherly
pity towards Mr. Latimer, begged to wait upon him in his study, and to explain
to him the groundwork of his (Mr. Bilney's) faith. This blessed interview
effected his conversion: the persecutor of Christ became his zealous advocate,
and before Dr. Stafford died, he became reconciled to him.
Once converted, he became eager for the
conversion of others, and commenced to be public preacher, and private
instructor in the university. His sermons were so pointed against the absurdity
of praying in the Latin tongue, and withholding the oracles of salvation from
the people who were to be saved by belief in them, that he drew upon himself
the pulpit animadversions of several of the resident friars and heads of
houses, whom he subsequently silenced by his severe criticisms and eloquent
arguments. This was at Christmas, 1529. At length Dr. West preached against Mr.
Latimer at Barwell Abbey, and prohibited him from preaching again in the
churches of the university, notwithstanding which, he continued during three years
to advocate openly the cause of Christ, and even his enemies confessed the
power of those talents he possessed. Mr. Bilney remained here some time with
Mr. Latimer, and thus the place where they frequently walked together obtained
the name of Heretics' Hill.
Mr. Latimer at this time traced out the
innocence of a poor woman, accused by her husband of the murder of her child.
Having preached before King Henry VIII at Windsor, he obtained the unfortunate
mother's pardon. This, with many other benevolent acts, served only to excite
the spleen of his adversaries. He was summoned before Cardinal Wolsey for
heresy, but being a strenuous supporter of the king's supremacy, in opposition
to the pope's, by favor of Lord Cromwell and Dr. Buts, (the king's physician,)
he obtained the living of West Kingston, in Wiltshire. For his sermons, here
against purgatory, the immaculacy of the Virgin, and the worship of images, he
was cited to appear before Warham, archbishop of Canterbury, and John, bishop
of London. He was required to subscribe certain articles, expressive of his
conformity to the accustomed usages; and there is reason to think, after
repeated weekly examinations, that he did subscribe, as they did not seem to
involve any important article of belief.
Guided by Providence, he escaped the
subtle nets of his persecutors, and at length, through the powerful friends
before mentioned, became bishop of Worcester, in which function he qualified or
explained away most of the papal ceremonies he was for form's sake under the
necessity of complying with. He continued in this active and dignified
employment some years.
Beginning afresh to set forth his plow he
labored in the Lord's harvest most fruitfully, discharging his talent as well
in divers places of this realm, as before the king at the court. In the same
place of the inward garden, which was before applied to lascivious and courtly
pastimes, there he dispensed the fruitful Word of the glorious Gospel of Jesus
Christ, preaching there before the king and his whole court, to the edification
of many.
He remained a prisoner in the Tower until
the coronation of Edward VI, when he was again called to the Lord's harvest in
Stamford, and many other places: he also preached at London in the convocation
house, and before the young king; indeed he lectured twice every Sunday,
regardless of his great age (then above sixty-seven years,) and his weakness
through a bruise received from the fall of a tree. Indefatigable in his private
studies, he rose to them in winter and in summer at two o'clock in the morning.
By the strength of his own mind, or of
some inward light from above, he had a prophetic view of what was to happen to
the Church in Mary's reign, asserting that he was doomed to suffer for the
truth, and that Winchester, then in the Tower, was preserved for that purpose.
Soon after Queen Mary was proclaimed, a messenger was sent to summon Mr.
Latimer to town, and there is reason to believe it was wished that he should
make his escape.
Thus Master Latimer coming up to London,
through Smithfield (where merrily he said that Smithfield had long groaned for
him), was brought before the Council, where he patiently bore all the mocks and
taunts given him by the scornful papists. He was cast into the Tower, where he,
being assisted with the heavenly grace of Christ, sustained imprisonment a long
time, notwithstanding the cruel and unmerciful handling of the lordly papists,
which thought then their kingdom would never fall; he showed himself not only
patient, but also cheerful in and above all that which they could or would work
against him. Yea, such a valiant spirit the Lord gave him, that he was able not
only to despise the terribleness of prisons and torments, but also to laugh to
scorn the doings of his enemies.
Mr. Latimer, after remaining a long time
in the Tower, was transported to Oxford, with Cranmer and Ridley, the
disputations at which place have been already mentioned in a former part of
this work. He remained imprisoned until October, and the principal objects of
all his prayers were three-that he might stand faithful to the doctrine he had
professed, that God would restore his Gospel to England once again, and
preserve the Lady Elizabeth to be queen; all of which happened. When he stood
at the stake without the Bocardo gate, Oxford, with Dr. Ridley, and fire was
putting to the pile of fagots, he raised his eyes benignantly towards heaven,
and said, "God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above
that ye are able." The fire forcibly penetrated his body, and the blood
flowed abundantly from the heart as if to verify his constant desire that his
heart's blood might be shed in defense of the Gospel. His polemical and
friendly letters are lasting monuments of his integrity and talents. It has
been before said, that public disputation took place in April 1554, and new
examinations took place in October 1555, before the degradation and
condemnation of Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer. We now draw to the conclusion of
the lives of the two last.
Dr. Ridley, the night before execution,
was very facetious, had himself shaved, and called his supper a marriage feast;
he remarked upon seeing Mrs. Irish (the keeper's wife) weep, "Though my
breakfast will be somewhat sharp, my supper will be more pleasant and
sweet."
The place of death was on the north side
of the town, opposite Baliol College. Dr. Ridley was dressed in a black gown
furred, and Mr. Latimer had a long shroud on, hanging down to his feet. Dr.
Ridley, as he passed Bocardo, looked up to see Dr. Cranmer, but the latter was
then engaged in disputation with a friar. When they came to the stake, Mr.
Ridley embraced Latimer fervently, and bid him: "Be of good heart,
brother, for God will either assuage the fury of the flame, or else strengthen
us to abide it." He then knelt by the stake, and after earnestly praying
together, they had a short private conversation. Dr. Smith then preached a
short sermon against the martyrs, who would have answered him, but were
prevented by Dr. Marshal, the vice-chancellor. Dr. Ridley then took off his
gown and tippet, and gave them to his brother-in-law, Mr. Shipside. He gave
away also many trifles to his weeping friends, and the populace was anxious to
get even a fragment of his garments. Mr. Latimer gave nothing, and from the
poverty of his garb, was soon stripped to his shroud, and stood venerable and
erect, fearless of death.
Dr. Ridley being unclothed to his shirt,
the smith placed an iron chain about their waists, and Dr. Ridley bid him
fasten it securely; his brother having tied a bag of gunpowder about his neck,
gave some also to Mr. Latimer.
Dr. Ridley then requested of Lord
Williams, of Fame, to advocate with the queen the cause of some poor men to
whom he had, when bishop, granted leases, but which the present bishop refused
to confirm. A lighted fagot was now laid at Dr. Ridley's feet, which caused Mr.
Latimer to say: "Be of good cheer, Ridley; and play the man. We shall this
day, by God's grace, light up such a candle in England, as I trust, will never
be put out."
When Dr. Ridley saw the fire flaming up
towards him, he cried with a wonderful loud voice, "Lord, Lord, receive my
spirit." Master Latimer, crying as vehemently on the other side, "O
Father of heaven, receive my soul!" received the flame as it were
embracing of it. After that he had stroked his face with his hands, and as it
were, bathed them a little in the fire, he soon died (as it appeareth) with
very little pain or none.
Well! Dead they are, and the reward of
this world they have already. What reward remaineth for them in heaven, the day
of the Lord's glory, when he cometh with His saints, shall declare.
In the following month died Stephen
Gardiner, bishop of Winchester and Lord Chancellor of England. This papistical
monster was born at Bury, in Suffolk, and partly educated at Cambridge.
Ambitious, cruel, and bigoted, he served any cause; he first espoused the
king's part in the affair of Anne Boleyn: upon the establishment of the
Reformation he declared the supremacy of the pope an execrable tenet; and when
Queen Mary came to the crown, he entered into all her papistical bigoted views,
and became a second time bishop of Winchester. It is conjectured it was his
intention to have moved the sacrifice of Lady Elizabeth, but when he arrived at
this point, it pleased God to remove him.
It was on the afternoon of the day when
those faithful soldiers of Christ, Ridley and Latimer, perished, that Gardiner
sat down with a joyful heart to dinner. Scarcely had he taken a few mouthfuls,
when he was seized with illness, and carried to his bed, where he lingered
fifteen days in great torment, unable in any wise to evacuate, and burnt with a
devouring fever, that terminated in death.
This martyr was the son of a knight, born
in Hampshire, and brought up at New College, Oxford, where for several years he
studied the civil law, and became eminent in the Hebrew tongue. He was a
scholar and a gentleman, zealous in religion, fearless in disposition, and a
detester of flattery. After visiting Italy, he returned to England, affairs in
King Edward's days wearing a more promising aspect.
During this reign, he continued to be archdeacon of Winchester
under Dr. Poinet, who succeeded Gardiner. Upon the accession of Mary, a
convocation was summoned, in which Mr. Philpot defended the Reformation against
his ordinary, Gardiner, again made bishop of Winchester, and soon was conducted
to Bonner and other commissioners for examination, October 2, 1555, after being
eighteen months' imprisoned. Upon his demanding to see the commission, Dr.
Story cruelly observed, "I will spend both my gown and my coat, but I will
burn thee! Let him be in Lollard's tower, (a wretched prison,) for I will sweep
the King’s Bench and all other prisons of these heretics!"
Upon Mr. Philpot's second examination, it
was intimated to him that Dr. Story had said that the Lord Chancellor had
commanded that he should be made away with. It is easy to foretell the result
of this inquiry. He was committed to Bonner's coal house, where he joined
company with a zealous minister of Essex, who had been induced to sign a bill
of recantation; but afterward, stung by his conscience, he asked the bishop to
let him see the instrument again, when he tore it to pieces; which induced Bonner
in a fury to strike him repeatedly, and tear away part of his beard. Mr.
Philpot had a private interview with Bonner the same night, and was then
remanded to his bed of straw like other prisoners, in the coalhouse.
After seven examinations, Bonner ordered
him to be set in the stocks, and on the following Sunday separated him from his
fellow-prisoners as a sower of heresy, and ordered him up to a room near the
battlements of St. Paul's, eight feet by thirteen, on the other side of
Lollard's tower, and which could be overlooked by any one in the bishop's outer
gallery. Here Mr. Philpot was searched, but happily, he was successful in
secreting some letters containing his examinations.
In the eleventh investigation before
various bishops, and Mr.Morgan, of Oxford, the latter was so driven into a
corner by the close pressure of Mr. Philpot's arguments, that he said to him,
"Instead of the spirit of the Gospel which you boast to possess, I think
it is the spirit of the buttery, which your fellows have had, who were drunk
before their death, and went, I believe, drunken to it." To this unfounded
and brutish remark, Mr. Philpot indignantly replied, "It appeareth by your
communication that you are better acquainted with that spirit than the Spirit
of God; wherefore I tell thee, thou painted wall and hypocrite, in the name of
the living God, whose truth I have told thee, that God shall rain fire and
brimstone upon such blasphemers as thou art!" He was then remanded by Bonner,
with an order not to allow him his Bible or candlelight.
On December 4, Mr. Philpot had his next
hearing, and this was followed by two more, making in all, fourteen
conferences, previous to the final examination in which he was condemned; such
were the perseverance and anxiety of the Catholics, aided by the argumentative
abilities of the most distinguished of the papal bishops, to bring him into the
pale of their Church. Mr. Philpot wrote down all those examinations, which were
very long and learned, and a stronger proof of the imbecility of the Catholic
doctors, cannot, to an unbiased mind, be exhibited.
On December 16, in the consistory of St.
Paul's Bishop Bonner, after laying some trifling accusations to his charge,
such as secreting powder to make ink, writing some private letters, etc.,
proceeded to pass the awful sentence upon him, after he and the other bishops
had urged him by every inducement to recant. He was afterward conducted to
Newgate, where the avaricious Catholic keeper loaded him with heavy irons,
which by the humanity of Mr. Macham were ordered to be taken off. On December
17, Mr. Philpot received intimation that he was to die next day, and the next
morning about eight o'clock, he joyfully met the sheriffs, who were to attend
him to the place of execution.
Upon entering Smithfield, the ground was
so muddy that two officers offered to carry him to the stake, but he replied:
"Would you make me a pope? I am
content to finish my journey on foot." Arriving at the stake, he said,
"Shall I disdain to suffer at the stake, when my Redeemer did not refuse
to suffer the most vile death upon the cross for me?" He then meekly
recited the One hundred and seventh and One hundred and eighth Psalms, and when
he had finished his prayers, was bound to the post, and fire applied to the
pile. On December 18, 1555, perished this illustrious martyr, reverenced by
man, and glorified in heaven!
These five martyrs suffered together,
January 31, 1556. John Lomas was a young man of Tenterden. He was cited to
appear at Catnerbury, and was examined January 17. His answers being adverse to
the idolatrous doctrine of the papacy, he was condemned on the following day,
and suffered January 31.
Agnes Snoth, widow, of Smarden Parish,
was several times summoned before the Catholic Pharisees, and rejecting
absolution, indulgences, transubstantiation, and auricular confession, she was
adjudged worthy to suffer death, and endured martyrdom, January 31, with Anne
Wright and Joan Sole, who were placed in similar circumstances, and perished at
the same time, with equal resignation. Joan Catmer, the last of this heavenly
company, of the parish Hithe, was the wife of the martyr George Catmer.
Seldom in any country, for political
controversy, have four women been led to execution, whose lives were
irreproachable, and whom the pity of savages would have spared. We cannot but
remark here that, when the Protestant power first gained the ascendancy over
the Catholic superstition, and some degree of force in the laws was necessary
to enforce uniformity, whence some bigoted people suffered privation in their
person or goods, we read of few burnings, savage cruelties, or poor women
brought to the stake, but it is the nature of error to resort to force instead
of argument, and to silence truth by taking away existence, of which the
Redeemer himself is an instance.
The above five persons were burnt at two
stakes in one fire, singing hosannas to the glorified Savior, until the breath
of life was extinct. Sir John Norton, who was present, wept bitterly at their
unmerited sufferings.
Dr. Thomas Cranmer was descended from an
ancient family, and was born at the village of Arselacton, in the county of
Northampton. After the usual school education, he was sent to Cambridge, and
was chosen fellow Jesus College. Here he married a gentleman's daughter, by
which he forfeited his fellowship, and became a reader in Buckingham College,
placing his wife at the Dolphin Inn, the landlady of which was a relation of
hers, whence arose the idle report that he was an ostler. His lady shortly
after dying in childbed; to his credit he was re-chosen a fellow of the college
before mentioned. In a few years after, he was promoted to be Divinity
Lecturer, and appointed one of the examiners over those who were ripe to become
Bachelors or Doctors in Divinity. It was his principle to judge of their
qualifications by the knowledge they possessed of the Scriptures, rather than
of the ancient fathers, and hence many popish priests were rejected, and others
rendered much improved.
He was strongly solicited by Dr. Capon to
be one of the fellows on the foundation of Cardinal Wolsey's college, Oxford,
of which he hazarded the refusal. While he continued in Cambridge, the question
of Henry VIII's divorce with Catharine was agitated. At that time, on account
of the plague, Dr. Cranmer removed to the house of a Mr. Cressy, at Waltham
Abbey, whose two sons were then educating under him. The affair of divorce,
contrary to the king's approbation, had remained undecided above two or three
years, from the intrigues of the canonists and civilians, and though the
cardinals Campeius and Wolsey were commissioned from Rome to decide the
question, they purposely protracted the sentence.
It happened that Dr. Gardiner (secretary)
and Dr. Fox, defenders of the king in the above suit, came to the house of Mr.
Cressy to lodge, while the king removed to Greenwich. At supper, a conversation
ensued with Dr. Cranmer, who suggested that the question whether a man may
marry his brother's wife or not, could be easily and speedily decided by the
Word of God, and this as well in the English courts as in those of any foreign
nation. The king, uneasy at the delay, sent for Dr. Gardiner and Dr. Fox to
consult them, regretting that a new commission must be sent to Rome, and the
suit be endlessly protracted. Upon relating to the king the conversation, which
had passed on the previous evening with Dr. Cranmer, his majesty sent for him,
and opened the tenderness of conscience upon the near affinity of the queen.
Dr. Cranmer advised that the matter should be referred to the most learned
divines of Cambridge and Oxford, as he was unwilling to meddle in an affair of
such weight; but the king enjoined him to deliver his sentiments in writing,
and to repair for that purpose to the earl of Wiltshire's, who would
accommodate him with books, and everything requisite for the occasion.
This Dr. Cranmer immediately did, and in his
declaration not only quoted the authority of the Scriptures, of general
councils, and the ancient writers, but maintained that the bishop of Rome had
no authority whatever to dispense with the Word of God. The king asked him if
he would stand by this bold declaration, to which replying in the affirmative,
he was deputed ambassador to Rome, in conjunction with the earl of Wiltshire,
Dr. Stokesley, Dr. Carne, Dr. Bennet, and others, previous to which, the
marriage was discussed in most of the universities of Christendom and at home.
When the pope presented his toe to be
kissed, as customary, the earl of Wiltshire and his party refused. Indeed, it
is affirmed that a spaniel of the earl's attracted by the littler of the pope's
toe, made a snap at it, whence his holiness drew in his sacred foot, and kicked
at the offender with the other.
Upon the pope demanding the cause of
their embassy, the earl presented Dr. Cranmer's book, declaring that his
learned friends had come to defend it. The pope treated the embassy honorably,
and appointed a day for the discussion, which he delayed, as if afraid of the
issue of the investigation. The earl returned, and Dr. Cranmer, by the king's
desire, visited the emperor, and was successful in bringing him over to his
opinion. Upon the doctor's return to England, Dr. Warham, archbishop of
Canterbury, having quitted this transitory life, Dr. Cranmer was deservedly,
and by Dr. Warham's desire, elevated to that eminent station.
In this function, it may be said that he
followed closely the charge of St. Paul. Diligent in duty, he rose at five in
the morning, and continued in study and prayer until nine: between then and
dinner, he devoted to temporal affairs. After dinner, if any suitors wanted
hearing, he would determine their business with such affability that even the
defaulters were scarcely displeased. Then he would play at chess for an hour,
or see others play, and at five o’clock, he heard the Common Prayer read, and
from this until supper he took the recreation of walking. At supper, his
conversation was lively and entertaining; again, he walked or amused himself
until nine o'clock, and then entered his study.
He ranked high in favor with King Henry,
and even had the purity and the interest of the English Church deeply at heart.
His mild and forgiving disposition is recorded in the following instance. An
ignorant priest, in the country, had called Cranmer an ostler, and spoken very
derogatory of his learning. Lord Cromwell receiving information of it, the man
was sent to the Fleet, and a Mr. Chertsey, a grocer, and a relation of the
priest’s, told his case to the archbishop. His grace, having sent for the
offender, reasoned with him, and solicited the priest to question him on any
learned subject. This the man, overcome by the bishop's good nature, and
knowing his own glaring incapacity, declined, and entreated his forgiveness,
which was immediately granted, with a charge to employ his time better when he
returned to his parish. Cromwell was much vexed at the lenity displayed, but
the bishop was ever more ready to receive injury than to retaliate in any other
manner than by good advice and good offices.
At the time that Cranmer was raised to be
archbishop, he was king's chaplain, and archdeacon of Taunton; the pope also constituted
him the penitentiary general of England. It was considered by the king that
Cranmer would be obsequious; hence, the latter married the king to Anne Boleyn,
performed her coronation, stood godfather to Elizabeth, the first child, and
divorced the king from Catharine. Though Cranmer received a confirmation of his
dignity from the pope, he always protested against acknowledging any other
authority than the king's, and he persisted in the same independent sentiments
when before Mary's commissioners in 1555.
One of the first steps after the divorce
was to prevent preaching throughout his diocese, but this narrow measure had
rather a political view than a religious one, as there were many who inveighed
against the king's conduct. In his new dignity, Cranmer agitated the question
of supremacy and by his powerful and just arguments induced the parliament to
"render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's." During Cranmer's
residence in Germany, 1531, he became acquainted with Ossiander, at Nuremberg,
and married his niece, but left her with him while on his return to England.
After a season, he sent for her privately, and she remained with him until the
year 1539, when the Six Articles compelled him to return her to her friends for
a time.
It should be remembered that Ossiander,
having obtained the approbation of his friend Cranmer, published the laborious
work of the Harmony of the Gospels in 1537. In 1534, the archbishop completed
the dearest wish of his heart, the removal of every obstacle to the perfection
of the Reformation, by the subscription of the nobles and bishops to the king's
sole supremacy. Only Bishop Fisher and Sir Thomas More made objection; and
their agreement not to oppose the succession Cranmer was willing to consider at
sufficient, but the monarch would have no other than an entire concession.
Not long after, Gardiner, in a private
interview with the king, spoke inimically of Cranmer, (whom he maliciously
hated) for assuming the title of primate of all England, as derogatory to the
supremacy of the king. This created much jealousy against Cranmer, and his
translation of the Bible was strongly opposed by Stokesley, bishop of London.
It is said, upon the demise of Queen Catharine, that her successor Anne Boleyn
rejoiced-a lesson this to show how shallow is the human judgment! Since her own
execution took place in the spring of the following year, and the king, on the
day following the beheading of this sacrificed lady, married the beautiful Jane
Seymour, a maid of honor to the late queen. Cranmer was ever the friend of Anne
Boleyn, but it was dangerous to oppose the will of the carnal tyrannical
monarch.
In 1538, the Holy Scriptures were openly
exposed to sale; and the places of worship overflowed everywhere to hear its
holy doctrines expounded. Upon the king's passing into a law the famous Six
Articles, which went nearly again to establish the essential tenets of the
Romish creed, Cranmer shone forth with all the luster of a Christian patriot,
in resisting the doctrines they contained, and in which he was supported by the
bishops of Sarum, Worcester, Ely, and Rochester, the two former of whom
resigned their bishoprics. The king, though now in opposition to Cranmer, still
revered the sincerity that marked his conduct. The death of Lord Cromwell in
the Tower, in 1540, the good friend of Cranmer, was a severe blow to the
wavering Protestant cause, but even now Cranmer, when he saw the tide directly
adverse to the truth, boldly waited on the king in person, and by his manly and
heartfelt pleading, caused the Book of Articles to be passed on his side, to
the great confusion of his enemies, who had contemplated his fall as
inevitable.
Cranmer now lived in as secluded a manner
as possible, until the rancor of Winchester preferred some articles against
him, relative to the dangerous opinion he taught in his family, joined to other
treasonable charges. These the king himself delivered to Cranmer, and believing
firmly the fidelity and assertions of innocence of the accused prelate, he
caused the matter to be deeply investigated, and Winchester and Dr. Lenden,
with Thornton and Barber, of the bishop's household, were found by the papers
to be the real conspirators. The mild, forgiving Cranmer would have interceded
for all remission of publication, had not Henry, pleased with the subsidy voted
by parliament, let them be discharged. These nefarious men, however, again
renewing their plots against Cranmer, fell victims to Henry's resentment, and
Gardiner forever lost his confidence. Sir G. Gostwick soon after laid charges
against the archbishop, which Henry quashed, and the primate was willing to
forgive.
In 1544, the archbishop's palace at
Canterbury was burnt, and his brother-in-law with others perished in it. These
various afflictions may serve to reconcile us to a humble state; for of what
happiness could this great and good man boast, since his life was constantly
harassed either by political, religious, or natural crosses? Again the
inveterate Gardfiner laid high charges against the meek archbishop and would
have sent him to the Tower; but the king was his friend, gave him his signet
that he might defend him, and in the Council not only declared the bishop one
of the best affected men in his realm, but sharply rebuked his accusers for
their calumny.
A peace having been made, Henry, and the
French king, Henry the Great, were unanimous to have the Mass abolished in
their kingdom, and Cranmer set about this great work; but the death of the
English monarch, in 1546, suspended the procedure, and King Edwarrd his
successor continued Cranmer in the same functions, upon whose coronation he
delivered a charge that will ever honor his memory, for its purity, freedom,
and truth. During this reign he prosecuted the glorious Reformation with
unabated zeal, even in the year 1552, when he was seized with a severe ague,
from which it pleased God to restore him that he might testify by his death the
truth of that seed he had diligently sown.
The death of Edward, in 1553, exposed
Cranmer to all the rage of his enemies. Though the archbishop was among those
who supported Mary's accession, he was attainted at the meeting of parliament,
and in November adjudged guilty of high treason at Guildhall, and degraded from
his dignities. He sent a humble letter to Mary, explaining the cause of his
signing the will in favor of Edward, and in 1554 he wrote to the Council, whom
he pressed to obtain a pardon from the queen, by a letter delivered to Dr.
Weston, but which the letter opened, and on seeing its contents, basely
returned.
Treason was a charge quite inapplicable
to Cranmer, who supported the queen's right; while others, who had favored Lady
Jane were dismissed upon paying a small fine. A calumny was now spread against Cranmer
that he complied with some of the popish ceremonies to ingratiate himself with
the queen, which he dared publicly to disavow, and justified his articles of
faith. The active part which the prelate had taken in the divorce of Mary's
mother had ever rankled deeply in the heart of the queen, and revenge formed a
prominent feature in the death of Cranmer.
We have in this work noticed the public
disputations at Oxford, in which the talents of Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer
shone so conspicuously, and tended to their condemnation. The first sentence
was illegal, inasmuch as the usurped power of the pope had not yet been
re-established by law.
Being kept in prison until this was
effected, a commission was dispatched from Rome, appointing Dr. Brooks to sit
as the representative of his holiness, and Drs. Story and Martin as those of
the queen. Cranmer was willing to bow to the authority of Drs. Story and
Martin, but against that of Dr. Brooks he protested. Such were the remarks and
replies of Cranmer, after a long examination, that Dr. Broks observed, "We
come to examine you, and methinks you examine us."
Being sent back to confinement, he
received a citation to appear at Rome within eighteen days, but this was
impracticable, as he was imprisoned in England; and as he stated, even had he
been at liberty, he was too poor to employ an advocate. Absurd as it must
appear, Cranmer was condemned at Rome, and on February 14, 1556, a new
commission was appointed, by which, Thirdly, bishop of Ely, and Bonner, of London,
were deputed to sit in judgment at Christ-church, Oxford. By virtue of this
instrument, Cranmer was gradually degraded, by putting mere rags on him to
represent the dress of an archbishop; then stripping him of his attire, they
took off his own gown, and put an old worn one upon him instead. This he bore
unmoved, and his enemies, finding that severity only rendered him more
determined, tried the opposite course, and placed him in the house of the dean
of Christ-church, where he was treated with every indulgence.
This presented such a contrast to the
three years' hard imprisonment he had received, that it threw him off his
guard. His open, generous nature was more easily to be seduced by a liberal
conduct than by threats and fetters. When Satan finds the Christian proof
against one mode of attack, he tries another; and what form is so seductive as
smiles, rewards, and power, after a long, painful imprisonment? Thus it was
with Cranmer: his enemies promised him his former greatness if he would but
recant, as well as the queen's favor, and this at the very time they knew that
his death was determined in council. To soften the path to apostasy, the first
paper brought for his signature was conceived in general terms; this once
signed, five others were obtained as explanatory of the first, until finally he
put his hand to the following detestable instrument:
"I, Thomas Cranmer, late archbishop
of Canterbury, do renounce, abhor, and detest all manner of heresies and errors
of Luther and Zuinglius, and all other teachings which are contrary to sound
and true doctrine. And I believe most constantly in my heart, and with my mouth
I confess one holy and Catholic Church visible, without which there is no
salvation; and therefore I acknowledge the Bishop of Rome to be supreme head on
earth, whom I acknowledge to be the highest bishop and pope, and Christ's
vicar, unto whom all Christian people ought to be subject.
"And as concerning the sacraments, I
believe and worship in the sacrament of the altar the body and blood of Christ,
being contained most truly under the forms of bread and wine; the bread,
through the mighty power of God being turned into the body of our Savior Jesus
Christ, and the wine into his blood.
"And in the other six sacraments,
also, (alike as in this) I believe and hold as the universal Church holdeth,
and the Church of Rome judgeth and determineth.
"Furthermore, I believe that there
is a place of purgatory, where souls departed be punished for a time, for whom
the Church doth godily and wholesomely pray, like as it doth honor saints and
make prayers to them.
"Finally, in all things I profess,
that I do not otherwise believe than the Catholic Church and the Church of Rome
holdeth and teacheth. I am sorry that I ever held or thought otherwise. And I
beseech Almighty God, that of His mercy He will vouchsafe to forgive me
whatsoever I have offended against God or His Church, and also I desire and
beseech all Christian people to pray for me.
"And all such as have been deceived
either by mine example or doctrine, I require them by the blood of Jesus Christ
that they will return to the unity of the Church, that we may be all of one
mind, without schism or division.
"And to conclude, as I submit myself
to the Catholic Church of Christ, and to the supreme head thereof, so I submit
myself unto the most excellent majesties of Philip and Mary, king and queen of
this realm of England, etc., and to all other their laws and ordinances, being
ready always as a faithful subject ever to obey them. And God is my witness,
that I have not done this for favor or fear of any person, but willingly and of
mine own conscience, as to the instruction of others."
"Let him that standeth take heed
lest he fall!" said the apostle, and here was a falling off indeed! The papists
now triumphed in their turn: they had acquired all they wanted short of his
life. His recantation was immediately printed and dispersed, that it might have
its due effect upon the astonished Protestants. But God counter worked all the
designs of the Catholics by the extent to which they carried the implacable
persecution of their prey. Doubtless, the love of life induced Cranmer to sign
the above declaration: yet death may be said to have been preferable to life to
him who lay under the stings of a goaded conscience and the contempt of every
Gospel Christian; this principle he strongly felt in all its force and anguish.
The queen's revenge was only to be
satiated by Cranmer's blood, and therefore she wrote an order to Dr. Pole, to
prepare a sermon to be preached March 21, directly before his martyrdom, at St.
Mary's, Oxford. Dr. Pole visited him the day previous, and was induced to
believe that he would publicly deliver his sentiments in confirmation of the
articles to which he had subscribed. About nine in the morning of the day of
sacrifice, the queen's commissioners, attended by the magistrates, conducted
the amiable unfortunate to St. Mary's Church. His torn, dirty garb, the same in
which they habited him upon his degradation, excited the commiseration of the
people. In the church he found a low mean stage, erected opposite to the
pulpit, on which being placed, he turned his face, and fervently prayed to God.
The church was crowded with persons of both
persuasions, expecting to hear the justification of the late apostasy: the
Catholics rejoicing, and the Protestants deeply wounded in spirit at the deceit
of the human heart. Dr. Pole, in his sermon, represented Cranmer as having been
guilty of the most atrocious crimes; encouraged the deluded sufferer not to
fear death, not to doubt the support of God in his torments, nor that Masses
would be said in all the churches of Oxford for the repose of his soul. The
doctor then noticed his conversion, and which he ascribed to the evident
working of Almighty power and in order that the people might be convinced of
its reality, asked the prisoner to give them a sign. This Cranmer did, and
begged the congregation to pray for him, for he had committed many and grievous
sins; but, of all, there was one which awfully lay upon his mind, of which he
would speak shortly.
During the sermon Cranmer wept bitter
tears: lifting up his hands and eyes to heaven, and letting them fall, as if
unworthy to live: his grief now found vent in words: before his confession he
fell upon his knees, and, in the following words unveiled the deep contrition
and agitation which harrowed up his soul.
"O Father of heaven! O Son of God,
Redeemer of the world! O Holy Ghost, three persons all one God! Have mercy on
me, most wretched caitiff and miserable sinner. I have offended both against
heaven and earth, more than my tongue can express. Whither then may I go, or
whither may I flee? To heaven I may be ashamed to lift up mine eyes and in earth
I find no place of refuge or succor. To Thee, therefore, O Lord, do I run; to
Thee do I humble myself, saying, O Lord, my God, my sins be great, but yet have
mercy upon me for Thy great mercy. The great mystery, that God became man, was
not wrought for little or few offences. Thou didst not give Thy Son, O Heavenly
Father, unto death for small sins only, but for all the greatest sins of the
world, so that the sinner return to Thee with his whole heart, as I do at
present. Wherefore, have mercy on me, O God, whose property is always to have
mercy, have mercy upon me, O Lord, for Thy great mercy. I crave nothing for my
own merits, but for Thy name's sake, that it may be hallowed thereby, and for
Thy dear Son, Jesus Christ's sake. And now therefore, O Father of Heaven,
hallowed be Thy name," etc.
Then rising, he said he was desirous
before his death to give them some pious exhortations by which God might be
glorified and themselves edified. He then descanted upon the danger of a love
for the world, the duty of obedience to their majesties, of love to one another
and the necessity of the rich administering to the wants of the poor. He quoted
the three verses of the fifth chapter of James, and then proceeded, "Let
them that be rich ponder well these three sentences: for if they ever had
occasion to show their charity, they have it now at this present, the poor
people being so many, and victual so dear.
"And now forasmuch as I am come to
the last end of my life, whereupon hangeth all my life past, and all my life to
come, either to live with my master Christ for ever in joy, or else to be in
pain for ever with the wicked in hell, and I see before mine eyes presently,
either heaven ready to receive me, or else hell ready to swallow me up; I shall
therefore declare unto you my very faith how I believe, without any color of
dissimulation: for now is no time to dissemble, whatsoever I have said or
written in times past.
"First, I believe in God the Father
Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth, etc. And I believe every article of the
Catholic faith, every word and sentence taught by our Savior Jesus Christ, His
apostles and prophets, in the New and Old Testament.
"And now I come to the great thing
which so much troubleth my conscience, more than any thing that ever I did or
said in my whole life, and that is the setting abroad of a writing contrary to
the truth, which now here I renounce and refuse, as things written with my hand
contrary to the truth which I thought in my heart, and written for fear of
death, and to save my life, if it might be; and that is, all such bills or
papers which I have written or signed with my hand since my degradation,
wherein I have written many things untrue. And forasmuch as my hand hath
offended, writing contrary to my heart, my hand shall first be punished; for
when I come to the fire it shall first be burned.
"And as for the pope, I refuse him
as Christ's enemy, and Antichrist, with all his false doctrine."
Upon the conclusion of this unexpected
declaration, amazement and indignation were conspicuous in every part of the
church. The Catholics were completely foiled, their object being frustrated,
Cranmer, like Samson, having completed a greater ruin upon his enemies in the
hour of death, than he did in his life.
Cranmer would have proceeded in the
exposure of the popish doctrines, but the murmurs of the idolaters drowned his
voice, and the preacher gave an order to "lead the heretic away!" The
savage command was directly obeyed, and the lamb about to suffer was torn from
his stand to the place of slaughter, insulted all the way by the reviling and
taunts of the pestilent monks and friars.
With thoughts intent upon a far higher
object than the empty threats of man, he reached the spot dyed with the blood
of Ridley and Latimer. There he knelt for a short time in earnest devotion, and
then arose, that he might undress and prepare for the fire. Two friars who had
been parties in prevailing upon him to abjure, now endeavored to draw him off
again from the truth, but he was steadfast and immovable in what he had just
professed, and publicly taught. A chain was provided to bind him to the stake,
and after it had tightly encircled him, fire was put to the fuel, and the
flames began soon to ascend.
Then were the glorious sentiments of the
martyr made manifest; then it was, that stretching out his right hand, he held
it unshrinkingly in the fire until it was burnt to a cinder, even before his
body was injured, frequently exclaiming, "This unworthy right hand."
His body did abide the burning with such
steadfastness that he seemed to have no more than the stake to which he was
bound; his eyes were lifted up to heaven, and he repeated "this unworthy
right hand," as long as his voice would suffer him; and using often the
words of Stephen, "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit," in the greatness
of the flame, he gave up the ghost.