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When Henry the Eighth of England died, he left three heirs: his son Edward
and his two daughters, Mary and Elizabeth. Edward succeeded to the throne
and was a staunch Protestant (or at least his advisors were). Under his
rule, the church services, previously in Latin, were translated into
English, and other changes were made. When Edward died, the throne passed to
his sister Mary, who was firmly Roman Catholic in her beliefs. She
determined to return England to union with the Pope. With more diplomacy,
she might have succeeded. But she was headstrong and would take no advice.
Her mother had been Spanish, and she determined to marry the heir to the
throne of Spain, not realizing how much her people (of all religious
persuasions) feared that this would make England a province of the Spanish
Empire. She insisted that the best way to deal with heresy was to burn as
many heretics as possible. (It is worth noting that her husband was opposed
to this.) In the course of a five-year reign, she lost all the English
holdings on the continent of Europe, she lost the affection of her people,
and she lost any chance of a peaceful religious settlement in England. Of
the nearly three hundred persons burned by her orders, the most famous are
the Oxford Martyrs, commemorated today.
Hugh Latimer (left) was
famous as a preacher. He was Bishop of Worcester (pronounced WOOS-ter) in
the time of King Henry, but resigned in protest against the King's refusal
to allow the Protestant reforms that Latimer desired. Latimer's sermons
speak little of doctrine; he preferred to urge men to upright living and
devoutness in prayer. But when Mary came to the throne, he was arrested,
tried for heresy, and burned together with his friend Nicholas Ridley. His
last words at the stake are well known: "Be of good cheer, Master Ridley,
and play the man, for we shall this day light such a candle in England as I
trust by God's grace shall never be put out."
Nicholas Ridley
(right)
became an adherent of the Protestant cause while a student at Cambridge. He
was a friend of Archbishop Cranmer and became private chaplain first to
Cranmer and then to King Henry. Under the reign of Edward, he became bishop
of Rochester, and was part of the committee that drew up the first English
Book of Common Prayer. When Mary came to the throne, he was arrested, tried,
and burned with Latimer at Oxford on 16 October 1555.
Thomas Cranmer
(left) was
Archbishop of Canterbury in the days of Henry, and defended the position
that Henry's marriage to Katharine of Aragon (Spain) was null and void. When
Edward came to the throne, Cranmer was foremost in translating the worship
of the Church into English (his friends and enemies agree that he was an
extraordinarily gifted translator) and securing the use of the new forms of
worship. When Mary came to the throne, Cranmer was in a quandary. He had
believed, with a fervor that many people today will find hard to understand,
that it is the duty of every Christian to obey the monarch, and that "the
powers that be are ordained of God" (Romans 13). As long as the monarch was
ordering things that Cranmer thought good, it was easy for Cranmer to
believe that the king was sent by God's providence to guide the people in
the path of true religion, and that disobedience to the king was
disobedience to God. Now Mary was Queen, and commanding him to return to the
Roman obedience. Cranmer five times wrote a letter of submission to the Pope
and to Roman Catholic doctrines, and four times he tore it up. In the end,
he submitted. However, Mary was unwilling to believe that the submission was
sincere, and he was ordered to be burned at Oxford on 21 March 1556. At the
very end, he repudiated his final letter of submission, and announced that
he died a Protestant. He said, "I have sinned, in that I signed with my hand
what I did not believe with my heart. When the flames are lit, this hand
shall be the first to burn." And when the fire was lit around his feet, he
leaned forward and held his right hand in the fire until it was charred to a
stump. Aside from this, he did not speak or move, except that once he raised
his left hand to wipe the sweat from his forehead.
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