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JOHN WYCLIFFE
Medieval "protestant"
"Trust wholly in Christ; rely
altogether on his sufferings; beware of seeking to be justified
in any other way than by his righteousness."
John Wycliffe left quite
an impression on the church: 43 years after his death, officials
dug up his body, burned his remains, and threw the ashes into
the river Swift. Still, they couldn't get rid of him. Wycliffe's
teachings, though suppressed, continued to spread. As a later
chronicler observed, "Thus the brook hath conveyed his ashes
into Avon; Avon into Severn; Severn into the narrow seas; and
they into the main ocean. And thus the ashes of Wycliffe are the
emblem of his doctrine which now is dispersed the world over."
"Master of errors"
Wycliffe had been born in the hinterlands, on a sheep farm 200
miles from London. He left for Oxford University in 1346, but
because of periodic eruptions of the Black Death, he was not able
to earn his doctorate until 1372. Nonetheless, by then he was
already considered Oxford's leading philosopher and theologian.
In 1374 he became rector of the parish in Lutterworth, but a year
later he was disappointed to learn he was not granted a position
at Lincoln nor the bishopric of Worcester-setbacks that some have
seized upon as motives for his subsequent attacks on the papacy.
In the meantime, Rome had demanded financial support from England,
a nation struggling to raise money to resist a possible French
attack. Wycliffe advised his local lord, John of Gaunt, to tell
Parliament not to comply. He argued that the church was already
too wealthy and that Christ called his disciples to poverty, not
wealth. If anyone should keep such taxes, it should be local English
authorities.
Such opinions got Wycliffe into trouble, and he was brought to
London to answer charges of heresy. The hearing had hardly gotten
underway when recriminations on both sides filled the air. Soon
they erupted into an open brawl, ending the meeting. Three months
later, Pope Gregory XI issued five bulls (church edicts) against
Wycliffe, in which Wycliffe was accused on 18 counts and was called
"the master of errors."
At a subsequent hearing before the archbishop at Lambeth Palace,
Wycliffe replied, "I am ready to defend my convictions even
unto death
. I have followed the Sacred Scriptures and the
holy doctors." He went on to say that the pope and the church
were second in authority to Scripture.
This didn't sit well with Rome, but because of Wycliffe's popularity
in England and a subsequent split in the papacy (the Great Schism
of 1378, when rival popes were elected), Wycliffe was put under
"house arrest" and left to pastor his Lutterworth parish.
Disputing the church
He deepened his study of Scripture and wrote more about his conflicts
with official church teaching. He wrote against the doctrine of
transubstantiation: "The bread while becoming by virtue of
Christ's words the body of Christ does not cease to be bread."
He challenged indulgences: "It is plain to me that our prelates
in granting indulgences do commonly blaspheme the wisdom of God."
He repudiated the confessional: "Private confession
was not ordered by Christ and was not used by the apostles."
He reiterated the biblical teaching on faith: "Trust wholly
in Christ; rely altogether on his sufferings; beware of seeking
to be justified in any other way than by his righteousness."
Believing that every Christian should have access to Scripture
(only Latin translations were available at the time), he began
translating the Bible into English, with the help of his good
friend John Purvey.
The church bitterly opposed it: "By this translation, the
Scriptures have become vulgar, and they are more available to
lay, and even to women who can read, than they were to learned
scholars, who have a high intelligence. So the pearl of the gospel
is scattered and trodden underfoot by swine."
Wycliffe replied, "Englishmen learn Christ's law best in
English. Moses heard God's law in his own tongue; so did Christ's
apostles."
Wycliffe died before the translation was complete (and before
authorities could convict him of heresy); his friend Purvey is
considered responsible for the version of the "Wycliffe"
Bible we have today. Though Wycliffe's followers (who came to
be called "Lollards"-referring to the region of their
original strength) were driven underground, they remained a persistent
irritant to English Catholic authorities until the English Reformation
made their views the norm.
Mark Gall
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