Chapter 5
John Wycliffe
Before the Reformation there were at times but very
few copies of the Bible in existence, but God had not suffered His word
to be wholly destroyed. Its truths were not to be forever hidden. He
could as easily unchain the words of life as He could open prison doors
and unbolt iron gates to set His servants free. In the different
countries of Europe men were moved by the Spirit of God to search for
the truth as for hid treasures. Providentially guided to the Holy
Scriptures, they studied the sacred pages with intense interest. They
were willing to accept the light at any cost to themselves. Though they
did not see all things clearly, they were enabled to perceive many long-buried
truths. As Heaven-sent messengers they went forth, rending asunder the
chains of error and superstition, and calling upon those who had been so
long enslaved, to arise and assert their liberty.
Except among the Waldenses, the word of God had for
ages been locked up in languages known only to the learned; but the time
had come for the Scriptures to be translated and given to the people of
different lands in their native tongue. The world had passed its
midnight. The hours of darkness were wearing away, and in many lands
appeared tokens of the coming dawn.
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In the fourteenth century arose in England the
"morning star of the Reformation." John Wycliffe was the
herald of reform, not for England alone, but for all Christendom. The
great protest against Rome which it was permitted him to utter was never
to be silenced. That protest opened the struggle which was to result in
the emancipation of individuals, of churches, and of nations.
Wycliffe received a liberal education, and with him
the fear of the Lord was the beginning of wisdom. He was noted at
college for his fervent piety as well as for his remarkable talents and
sound scholarship. In his thirst for knowledge he sought to become
acquainted with every branch of learning. He was educated in the
scholastic philosophy, in the canons of the church, and in the civil
law, especially that of his own country. In his after labors the value
of this early training was apparent. A thorough acquaintance with the
speculative philosophy of his time enabled him to expose its errors; and
by his study of national and ecclesiastical law he was prepared to
engage in the great struggle for civil and religious liberty. While he
could wield the weapons drawn from the word of God, he had acquired the
intellectual discipline of the schools, and he understood the tactics of
the schoolmen. The power of his genius and the extent and thoroughness
of his knowledge commanded the respect of both friends and foes. His
adherents saw with satisfaction that their champion stood foremost among
the leading minds of the nation; and his enemies were prevented from
casting contempt upon the cause of reform by exposing the ignorance or
weakness of its supporter.
While Wycliffe was still at college, he entered upon
the study of the Scriptures. In those early times, when the Bible
existed only in the ancient languages, scholars were enabled to find
their way to the fountain of truth, which was closed to the uneducated
classes. Thus already the way had been prepared for Wycliffe's future
work as a Reformer. Men
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of learning had studied the word of God and had found
the great truth of His free grace there revealed. In their teachings
they had spread a knowledge of this truth, and had led others to turn to
the living oracles.
When Wycliffe's attention was directed to the
Scriptures, he entered upon their investigation with the same
thoroughness which had enabled him to master the learning of the
schools. Heretofore he had felt a great want, which neither his
scholastic studies nor the teaching of the church could satisfy. In the
word of God he found that which he had before sought in vain. Here he
saw the plan of salvation revealed and Christ set forth as the only
advocate for man. He gave himself to the service of Christ and
determined to proclaim the truths he had discovered.
Like after Reformers, Wycliffe did not, at the
opening of his work, foresee whither it would lead him. He did not set
himself deliberately in opposition to Rome. But devotion to truth could
not but bring him in conflict with falsehood. The more clearly he
discerned the errors of the papacy, the more earnestly he presented the
teaching of the Bible. He saw that Rome had forsaken the word of God for
human tradition; he fearlessly accused the priesthood of having banished
the Scriptures, and demanded that the Bible be restored to the people
and that its authority be again established in the church. He was an
able and earnest teacher and an eloquent preacher, and his daily life
was a demonstration of the truths he preached. His knowledge of the
Scriptures, the force of his reasoning, the purity of his life, and his
unbending courage and integrity won for him general esteem and
confidence. Many of the people had become dissatisfied with their former
faith as they saw the iniquity that prevailed in the Roman Church, and
they hailed with unconcealed joy the truths brought to view by Wycliffe;
but the papal leaders were filled with rage when they perceived that
this Reformer was gaining an influence greater than their own.
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Wycliffe was a keen detector of error, and he struck
fearlessly against many of the abuses sanctioned by the authority of
Rome. While acting as chaplain for the king, he took a bold stand
against the payment of tribute claimed by the pope from the English
monarch and showed that the papal assumption of authority over secular
rulers was contrary to both reason and revelation. The demands of the
pope had excited great indignation, and Wycliffe's teachings exerted an
influence upon the leading minds of the nation. The king and the nobles
united in denying the pontiff's claim to temporal authority and in
refusing the payment of the tribute. Thus an effectual blow was struck
against the papal supremacy in England.
Another evil against which the Reformer waged long
and resolute battle was the institution of the orders of mendicant
friars. These friars swarmed in England, casting a blight upon the
greatness and prosperity of the nation. Industry, education, morals, all
felt the withering influence. The monk's life of idleness and beggary
was not only a heavy drain upon the resources of the people, but it
brought useful labor into contempt. The youth were demoralized and
corrupted. By the influence of the friars many were induced to enter a
cloister and devote themselves to a monastic life, and this not only
without the consent of their parents, but even without their knowledge
and contrary to their commands. One of the early Fathers of the Roman
Church, urging the claims of monasticism above the obligations of filial
love and duty, had declared: "Though thy father should lie before
thy door weeping and lamenting, and thy mother should show the body that
bore thee and the breasts that nursed thee, see that thou trample them
underfoot, and go onward straightway to Christ." By this
"monstrous inhumanity," as Luther afterward styled it,
"savoring more of the wolf and the tyrant than of the Christian and
the man," were the hearts of children steeled against their
parents.--Barnas Sears, The Life of Luther, pages 70, 69. Thus did the
papal
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leaders, like the Pharisees of old, make the
commandment of God of none effect by their tradition. Thus homes were
made desolate and parents were deprived of the society of their sons and
daughters.
Even the students in the universities were deceived
by the false representations of the monks and induced to join their
orders. Many afterward repented this step, seeing that they had blighted
their own lives and had brought sorrow upon their parents; but once fast
in the snare it was impossible for them to obtain their freedom. Many
parents, fearing the influence of the monks, refused to send their sons
to the universities. There was a marked falling off in the number of
students in attendance at the great centers of learning. The schools
languished, and ignorance prevailed.
The pope had bestowed on these monks the power to
hear confessions and to grant pardon. This became a source of great
evil. Bent on enhancing their gains, the friars were so ready to grant
absolution that criminals of all descriptions resorted to them, and, as
a result, the worst vices rapidly increased. The sick and the poor were
left to suffer, while the gifts that should have relieved their wants
went to the monks, who with threats demanded the alms of the people,
denouncing the impiety of those who should withhold gifts from their
orders. Notwithstanding their profession of poverty, the wealth of the
friars was constantly increasing, and their magnificent edifices and
luxurious tables made more apparent the growing poverty of the nation.
And while spending their time in luxury and pleasure, they sent out in
their stead ignorant men, who could only recount marvelous tales,
legends, and jests to amuse the people and make them still more
completely the dupes of the monks. Yet the friars continued to maintain
their hold on the superstitious multitudes and led them to believe that
all religious duty was comprised in acknowledging the supremacy of the
pope, adoring the saints, and making gifts to the monks, and that this
was sufficient to secure them a place in heaven.
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Men of learning and piety had labored in vain to
bring about a reform in these monastic orders; but Wycliffe, with
clearer insight, struck at the root of the evil, declaring that the
system itself was false and that it should be abolished. Discussion and
inquiry were awakening. As the monks traversed the country, vending the
pope's pardons, many were led to doubt the possibility of purchasing
forgiveness with money, and they questioned whether they should not seek
pardon from God rather than from the pontiff of Rome. (See Appendix note
for page 59.) Not a few were alarmed at the rapacity of the friars,
whose greed seemed never to be satisfied. "The monks and priests of
Rome," said they, "are eating us away like a cancer. God must
deliver us, or the people will perish."--D'Aubigne, b. 17, ch. 7.
To cover their avarice, these begging monks claimed that they were
following the Saviour's example, declaring that Jesus and His disciples
had been supported by the charities of the people. This claim resulted
in injury to their cause, for it led many to the Bible to learn the
truth for themselves--a result which of all others was least desired by
Rome. The minds of men were directed to the Source of truth, which it
was her object to conceal.
Wycliffe began to write and publish tracts against
the friars, not, however, seeking so much to enter into dispute with
them as to call the minds of the people to the teachings of the Bible
and its Author. He declared that the power of pardon or of
excommunication is possessed by the pope in no greater degree than by
common priests, and that no man can be truly excommunicated unless he
has first brought upon himself the condemnation of God. In no more
effectual way could he have undertaken the overthrow of that mammoth
fabric of spiritual and temporal dominion which the pope had erected and
in which the souls and bodies of millions were held captive.
Again Wycliffe was called to defend the rights of the
English crown against the encroachments of Rome; and being appointed a
royal ambassador, he spent two years in the Netherlands, in conference
with the commissioners of the pope. Here he was brought into
communication with
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ecclesiastics from France, Italy, and Spain, and he
had an opportunity to look behind the scenes and gain a knowledge of
many things which would have remained hidden from him in England. He
learned much that was to give point to his after labors. In these
representatives from the papal court he read the true character and aims
of the hierarchy. He returned to England to repeat his former teachings
more openly and with greater zeal, declaring that covetousness, pride,
and deception were the gods of Rome.
In one of his tracts he said, speaking of the pope
and his collectors: "They draw out of our land poor men's
livelihood, and many thousand marks, by the year, of the king's money,
for sacraments and spiritual things, that is cursed heresy of simony,
and maketh all Christendom assent and maintain this heresy. And certes
though our realm had a huge hill of gold, and never other man took
thereof but only this proud worldly priest's collector, by process of
time this hill must be spended; for he taketh ever money out of our
land, and sendeth nought again but God's curse for his simony." --John
Lewis, History of the Life and Sufferings of J. Wiclif, page 37.
Soon after his return to England, Wycliffe received
from the king the appointment to the rectory of Lutterworth. This was an
assurance that the monarch at least had not been displeased by his plain
speaking. Wycliffe's influence was felt in shaping the action of the
court, as well as in molding the belief of the nation.
The papal thunders were soon hurled against him.
Three bulls were dispatched to England,--to the university, to the king,
and to the prelates,--all commanding immediate and decisive measures to
silence the teacher of heresy. (Augustus Neander, General History of the
Christian Religion and Church, period 6, sec. 2, pt. 1, par. 8. See also
Appendix.) Before the arrival of the bulls, however, the bishops, in
their zeal, had summoned Wycliffe before them for trial. But two of the
most powerful princes in the kingdom accompanied him to the tribunal;
and the people, surrounding the building and rushing in, so intimidated
the judges that the
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proceedings were for the time suspended, and he was
allowed to go his way in peace. A little later, Edward III, whom in his
old age the prelates were seeking to influence against the Reformer,
died, and Wycliffe's former protector became regent of the kingdom.
But the arrival of the papal bulls laid upon all
England a peremptory command for the arrest and imprisonment of the
heretic. These measures pointed directly to the stake. It appeared
certain that Wycliffe must soon fall a prey to the vengeance of Rome.
But He who declared to one of old, "Fear not: . . . I am thy
shield" (Genesis 15:1), again stretched out His hand to protect His
servant. Death came, not to the Reformer, but to the pontiff who had
decreed his destruction. Gregory XI died, and the ecclesiastics who had
assembled for Wycliffe's trial, dispersed.
God's providence still further overruled events to
give opportunity for the growth of the Reformation. The death of Gregory
was followed by the election of two rival popes. Two conflicting powers,
each professedly infallible, now claimed obedience. (See Appendix notes
for pages 50 and
86.) Each called upon the faithful to assist him in
making war upon the other, enforcing his demands by terrible anathemas
against his adversaries, and promises of rewards in heaven to his
supporters. This occurrence greatly weakened the power of the papacy.
The rival factions had all they could do to attack each other, and
Wycliffe for a time had rest. Anathemas and recriminations were flying
from pope to pope, and torrents of blood were poured out to support
their conflicting claims. Crimes and scandals flooded the church.
Meanwhile the Reformer, in the quiet retirement of his parish of
Lutterworth, was laboring diligently to point men from the contending
popes to Jesus, the Prince of Peace.
The schism, with all the strife and corruption which
it caused, prepared the way for the Reformation by enabling the people
to see what the papacy really was. In a tract which he published, On the
Schism of the Popes, Wycliffe called
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upon the people to consider whether these two priests
were not speaking the truth in condemning each other as the anti-christ.
"God," said he, "would no longer suffer the fiend to
reign in only one such priest, but . . . made division among two, so
that men, in Christ's name, may the more easily overcome them
both."--R. Vaughan, Life and Opinions of John de Wycliffe, vol. 2,
p. 6.
Wycliffe, like his Master, preached the gospel to the
poor. Not content with spreading the light in their humble homes in his
own parish of Lutterworth, he determined that it should be carried to
every part of England. To accomplish this he organized a body of
preachers, simple, devout men, who loved the truth and desired nothing
so much as to extend it. These men went everywhere, teaching in the
market places, in the streets of the great cities, and in the country
lanes. They sought out the aged, the sick, and the poor, and opened to
them the glad tidings of the grace of God.
As a professor of theology at Oxford, Wycliffe
preached the word of God in the halls of the university. So faithfully
did he present the truth to the students under his instruction, that he
received the title of "the gospel doctor." But the greatest
work of his life was to be the translation of the Scriptures into the
English language. In a work, On the Truth and Meaning of Scripture, he
expressed his intention to translate the Bible, so that every man in
England might read, in the language in which he was born, the wonderful
works of God.
But suddenly his labors were stopped. Though not yet
sixty years of age, unceasing toil, study, and the assaults of his
enemies had told upon his strength and made him prematurely old. He was
attacked by a dangerous illness. The tidings brought great joy to the
friars. Now they thought he would bitterly repent the evil he had done
the church, and they hurried to his chamber to listen to his confession.
Representatives from the four religious orders, with four civil
officers, gathered about the supposed dying man. "You
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have death on your lips," they said; "be
touched by your faults, and retract in our presence all that you have
said to our injury." The Reformer listened in silence; then he bade
his attendant raise him in his bed, and, gazing steadily upon them as
they stood waiting for his recantation, he said, in the firm, strong
voice which had so often caused them to tremble: "I shall not die,
but live; and again declare the evil deeds of the friars."--D'Aubigne,
b. 17, ch. 7. Astonished and abashed, the monks hurried from the room.
Wycliffe's words were fulfilled. He lived to place in
the hands of his countrymen the most powerful of all weapons against
Rome--to give them the Bible, the Heaven-appointed agent to liberate,
enlighten, and evangelize the people. There were many and great
obstacles to surmount in the accomplishment of this work. Wycliffe was
weighed down with infirmities; he knew that only a few years for labor
remained for him; he saw the opposition which he must meet; but,
encouraged by the promises of God's word, he went forward nothing
daunted. In the full vigor of his intellectual powers, rich in
experience, he had been preserved and prepared by God's special
providence for this, the greatest of his labors. While all Christendom
was filled with tumult, the Reformer in his rectory at Lutterworth,
unheeding the storm that raged without, applied himself to his chosen
task.
At last the work was completed--the first English
translation of the Bible ever made. The word of God was opened to
England. The Reformer feared not now the prison or the stake. He had
placed in the hands of the English people a light which should never be
extinguished. In giving the Bible to his countrymen, he had done more to
break the fetters of ignorance and vice, more to liberate and elevate
his country, than was ever achieved by the most brilliant victories on
fields of battle.
The art of printing being still unknown, it was only
by slow and wearisome labor that copies of the Bible could be
multiplied. So great was the interest to obtain the book, that
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many willingly engaged in the work of transcribing
it, but it was with difficulty that the copyists could supply the
demand. Some of the more wealthy purchasers desired the whole Bible.
Others bought only a portion. In many cases, several families united to
purchase a copy. Thus Wycliffe's Bible soon found its way to the homes
of the people.
The appeal to men's reason aroused them from their
passive submission to papal dogmas. Wycliffe now taught the distinctive
doctrines of Protestantism--salvation through faith in Christ, and the
sole infallibility of the Scriptures. The preachers whom he had sent out
circulated the Bible, together with the Reformer's writings, and with
such success that the new faith was accepted by nearly one half of the
people of England.
The appearance of the Scriptures brought dismay to
the authorities of the church. They had now to meet an agency more
powerful than Wycliffe--an agency against which their weapons would
avail little. There was at this time no law in England prohibiting the
Bible, for it had never before been published in the language of the
people. Such laws were afterward enacted and rigorously enforced.
Meanwhile, notwithstanding the efforts of the priests, there was for a
season opportunity for the circulation of the word of God.
Again the papal leaders plotted to silence the
Reformer's voice. Before three tribunals he was successively summoned
for trial, but without avail. First a synod of bishops declared his
writings heretical, and, winning the young king, Richard II, to their
side, they obtained a royal decree consigning to prison all who should
hold the condemned doctrines.
Wycliffe appealed from the synod to Parliament; he
fearlessly arraigned the hierarchy before the national council and
demanded a reform of the enormous abuses sanctioned by the church. With
convincing power he portrayed the usurpation and corruptions of the
papal see. His enemies were brought to confusion. The friends and
supporters of Wycliffe had been forced to yield, and it had been
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confidently expected that the Reformer himself, in
his old age, alone and friendless, would bow to the combined authority
of the crown and the miter. But instead of this the papists saw
themselves defeated. Parliament, roused by the stirring appeals of
Wycliffe, repealed the persecuting edict, and the Reformer was again at
liberty.
A third time he was brought to trial, and now before
the highest ecclesiastical tribunal in the kingdom. Here no favor would
be shown to heresy. Here at last Rome would triumph, and the Reformer's
work would be stopped. So thought the papists. If they could but
accomplish their purpose, Wycliffe would be forced to abjure his
doctrines, or would leave the court only for the flames.
But Wycliffe did not retract; he would not dissemble.
He fearlessly maintained his teachings and repelled the accusations of
his persecutors. Losing sight of himself, of his position, of the
occasion, he summoned his hearers before the divine tribunal, and
weighed their sophistries and deceptions in the balances of eternal
truth. The power of the Holy Spirit was felt in the council room. A
spell from God was upon the hearers. They seemed to have no power to
leave the place. As arrows from the Lord's quiver, the Reformer's words
pierced their hearts. The charge of heresy, which they had brought
against him, he with convincing power threw back upon themselves. Why,
he demanded, did they dare to spread their errors? For the sake of gain,
to make merchandise of the grace of God?
"With whom, think you," he finally said,
"are ye contending? with an old man on the brink of the grave? No!
with Truth--Truth which is stronger than you, and will overcome
you."--Wylie, b. 2, ch. 13. So saying, he withdrew from the
assembly, and not one of his adversaries attempted to prevent him.
Wycliffe's work was almost done; the banner of truth
which he had so long borne was soon to fall from his hand; but once more
he was to bear witness for the gospel. The
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truth was to be proclaimed from the very stronghold
of the kingdom of error. Wycliffe was summoned for trial before the
papal tribunal at Rome, which had so often shed the blood of the saints.
He was not blind to the danger that threatened him, yet he would have
obeyed the summons had not a shock of palsy made it impossible for him
to perform the journey. But though his voice was not to be heard at
Rome, he could speak by letter, and this he determined to do. From his
rectory the Reformer wrote to the pope a letter, which, while respectful
in tone and Christian in spirit, was a keen rebuke to the pomp and pride
of the papal see.
"Verily I do rejoice," he said, "to
open and declare unto every man the faith which I do hold, and
especially unto the bishop of Rome: which, forasmuch as I do suppose to
be sound and true, he will most willingly confirm my said faith, or if
it be erroneous, amend the same.
"First, I suppose that the gospel of Christ is
the whole body of God's law. . . . I do give and hold the bishop of
Rome, forasmuch as he is the vicar of Christ here on earth, to be most
bound, of all other men, unto that law of the gospel. For the greatness
among Christ's disciples did not consist in worldly dignity or honors,
but in the near and exact following of Christ in His life and
manners.... Christ, for the time of His pilgrimage here, was a most poor
man, abjecting and casting off all worldly rule and honor. . . .
"No faithful man ought to follow either the pope
himself or any of the holy men, but in such points as he hath followed
the Lord Jesus Christ; for Peter and the sons of Zebedee, by desiring
worldly honor, contrary to the following of Christ's steps, did offend,
and therefore in those errors they are not to be followed. . . .
"The pope ought to leave unto the secular power
all temporal dominion and rule, and thereunto effectually to move and
exhort his whole clergy; for so did Christ, and especially by His
apostles. Wherefore, if I have erred in any of these points, I will most
humbly submit myself unto correction,
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even by death, if necessity so require; and if I
could labor according to my will or desire in mine own person, I would
surely present myself before the bishop of Rome; but the Lord hath
otherwise visited me to the contrary, and hath taught me rather to obey
God than men."
In closing he said: "Let us pray unto our God,
that He will so stir up our Pope Urban VI, as he began, that he with his
clergy may follow the Lord Jesus Christ in life and manners; and that
they may teach the people effectually, and that they, likewise, may
faithfully follow them in the same."--John Foxe, Acts and
Monuments, vol. 3, pp. 49, 50.
Thus Wycliffe presented to the pope and his cardinals
the meekness and humility of Christ, exhibiting not only to themselves
but to all Christendom the contrast between them and the Master whose
representatives they professed to be.
Wycliffe fully expected that his life would be the
price of his fidelity. The king, the pope, and the bishops were united
to accomplish his ruin, and it seemed certain that a few months at most
would bring him to the stake. But his courage was unshaken. "Why do
you talk of seeking the crown of martyrdom afar?" he said.
"Preach the gospel of Christ to haughty prelates, and martyrdom
will not fail you. What! I should live and be silent? . . . Never! Let
the blow fall, I await its coming."--D'Aubigne, b. 17, ch. 8.
But God's providence still shielded His servant. The
man who for a whole lifetime had stood boldly in defense of the truth,
in daily peril of his life, was not to fall a victim of the hatred of
its foes. Wycliffe had never sought to shield himself, but the Lord had
been his protector; and now, when his enemies felt sure of their prey,
God's hand removed him beyond their reach. In his church at Lutterworth,
as he was about to dispense the communion, he fell, stricken with palsy,
and in a short time yielded up his life.
God had appointed to Wycliffe his work. He had put
the
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word of truth in his mouth, and He set a guard about
him that this word might come to the people. His life was protected, and
his labors were prolonged, until a foundation was laid for the great
work of the Reformation.
Wycliffe came from the obscurity of the Dark Ages.
There were none who went before him from whose work he could shape his
system of reform. Raised up like John the Baptist to accomplish a
special mission, he was the herald of a new era. Yet in the system of
truth which he presented there was a unity and completeness which
Reformers who followed him did not exceed, and which some did not reach,
even a hundred years later. So broad and deep was laid the foundation,
so firm and true was the framework, that it needed not to be
reconstructed by those who came after him.
The great movement that Wycliffe inaugurated, which
was to liberate the conscience and the intellect, and set free the
nations so long bound to the triumphal car of Rome, had its spring in
the Bible. Here was the source of that stream of blessing, which, like
the water of life, has flowed down the ages since the fourteenth
century. Wycliffe accepted the Holy Scriptures with implicit faith as
the inspired revelation of God's will, a sufficient rule of faith and
practice. He had been educated to regard the Church of Rome as the
divine, infallible authority, and to accept with unquestioning reverence
the established teachings and customs of a thousand years; but he turned
away from all these to listen to God's holy word. This was the authority
which he urged the people to acknowledge. Instead of the church speaking
through the pope, he declared the only true authority to be the voice of
God speaking through His word. And he taught not only that the Bible is
a perfect revelation of God's will, but that the Holy Spirit is its only
interpreter, and that every man is, by the study of its teachings, to
learn his duty for himself. Thus he turned the minds of men from the
pope and the Church of Rome to the word of God.
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Wycliffe was one of the greatest of the Reformers. In
breadth of intellect, in clearness of thought, in firmness to maintain
the truth, and in boldness to defend it, he was equaled by few who came
after him. Purity of life, unwearying diligence in study and in labor,
incorruptible integrity, and Christlike love and faithfulness in his
ministry, characterized the first of the Reformers. And this
notwithstanding the intellectual darkness and moral corruption of the
age from which he emerged.
The character of Wycliffe is a testimony to the
educating, transforming power of the Holy Scriptures. It was the Bible
that made him what he was. The effort to grasp the great truths of
revelation imparts freshness and vigor to all the faculties. It expands
the mind, sharpens the perceptions, and ripens the judgment. The study
of the Bible will ennoble every thought, feeling, and aspiration as no
other study can. It gives stability of purpose, patience, courage, and
fortitude; it refines the character and sanctifies the soul. An earnest,
reverent study of the Scriptures, bringing the mind of the student in
direct contact with the infinite mind, would give to the world men of
stronger and more active intellect, as well as of nobler principle, than
has ever resulted from the ablest training that human philosophy
affords. "The entrance of Thy words," says the psalmist,
"giveth light; it giveth understanding." Psalm 119:130.
The doctrines which had been taught by Wycliffe
continued for a time to spread; his followers, known as Wycliffites and
Lollards, not only traversed England, but scattered to other lands,
carrying the knowledge of the gospel. Now that their leader was removed,
the preachers labored with even greater zeal than before, and multitudes
flocked to listen to their teachings. Some of the nobility, and even the
wife of the king, were among the converts. In many places there was a
marked reform in the manners of the people, and the idolatrous symbols
of Romanism were removed from the churches. But soon the pitiless storm
of persecution burst upon those who had dared to accept the Bible as
their
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guide. The English monarchs, eager to strengthen
their power by securing the support of Rome, did not hesitate to
sacrifice the Reformers. For the first time in the history of England
the stake was decreed against the disciples of the gospel. Martyrdom
succeeded martyrdom. The advocates of truth, proscribed and tortured,
could only pour their cries into the ear of the Lord of Sabaoth. Hunted
as foes of the church and traitors to the realm, they continued to
preach in secret places, finding shelter as best they could in the
humble homes of the poor, and often hiding away even in dens and caves.
Notwithstanding the rage of persecution, a calm,
devout, earnest, patient protest against the prevailing corruption of
religious faith continued for centuries to be uttered. The Christians of
that early time had only a partial knowledge of the truth, but they had
learned to love and obey God's word, and they patiently suffered for its
sake. Like the disciples in apostolic days, many sacrificed their
worldly possessions for the cause of Christ. Those who were permitted to
dwell in their homes gladly sheltered their banished brethren, and when
they too were driven forth they cheerfully accepted the lot of the
outcast. Thousands, it is true, terrified by the fury of their
persecutors, purchased their freedom at the sacrifice of their faith,
and went out of their prisons, clothed in penitents' robes, to publish
their recantation. But the number was not small--and among them were men
of noble birth as well as the humble and lowly--who bore fearless
testimony to the truth in dungeon cells, in "Lollard towers,"
and in the midst of torture and flame, rejoicing that they were counted
worthy to know "the fellowship of His sufferings."
The papists had failed to work their will with
Wycliffe during his life, and their hatred could not be satisfied while
his body rested quietly in the grave. By the decree of the Council of
Constance, more than forty years after his death his bones were exhumed
and publicly burned, and the ashes were thrown into a neighboring brook.
"This brook," says
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an old writer, "hath conveyed his ashes into
Avon, Avon into Severn, Severn into the narrow seas, they into the main
ocean. And thus the ashes of Wycliffe are the emblem of his doctrine,
which now is dispersed all the world over."-- T. Fuller, Church
History of Britain, b. 4, sec. 2, par. 54. Little did his enemies
realize the significance of their malicious act.
It was through the writings of Wycliffe that John
Huss, of Bohemia, was led to renounce many of the errors of Romanism and
to enter upon the work of reform. Thus in these two countries, so widely
separated, the seed of truth was sown. From Bohemia the work extended to
other lands. The minds of men were directed to the long-forgotten word
of God. A divine hand was preparing the way for the Great Reformation.
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