Reformed Churchmen

We are Confessional Calvinists and a Prayer Book Church-people. In 2012, we remembered the 350th anniversary of the 1662 Book of Common Prayer; also, we remembered the 450th anniversary of John Jewel's sober, scholarly, and Reformed "An Apology of the Church of England." In 2013, we remembered the publication of the "Heidelberg Catechism" and the influence of Reformed theologians in England, including Heinrich Bullinger's Decades. For 2014: Tyndale's NT translation. For 2015, John Roger, Rowland Taylor and Bishop John Hooper's martyrdom, burned at the stakes. Books of the month. December 2014: Alan Jacob's "Book of Common Prayer" at: http://www.amazon.com/Book-Common-Prayer-Biography-Religious/dp/0691154813/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1417814005&sr=8-1&keywords=jacobs+book+of+common+prayer. January 2015: A.F. Pollard's "Thomas Cranmer and the English Reformation: 1489-1556" at: http://www.amazon.com/Thomas-Cranmer-English-Reformation-1489-1556/dp/1592448658/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1420055574&sr=8-1&keywords=A.F.+Pollard+Cranmer. February 2015: Jaspar Ridley's "Thomas Cranmer" at: http://www.amazon.com/Thomas-Cranmer-Jasper-Ridley/dp/0198212879/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1422892154&sr=8-1&keywords=jasper+ridley+cranmer&pebp=1422892151110&peasin=198212879

Showing posts with label Queen Mary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Queen Mary. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 4, 2015

4 February 1555 A.D. John Rogers, the first English, Protestant, Catholic, and Reformation Martyr at the hands of an Anglo-Italian-Spanish Queen, Queen Mary, in accordance with Vatican and Spanish policies


4 February 1555 A.D. John Rogers, the first English, Protestant, Catholic, and Reformation Martyr at the hands of an Anglo-Italian-Spanish Queen, Queen Mary, in accordance with Vatican and Spanish policies.


From Wiki.

Mary's first martyr, the arch-heretic of the Reformation, John Rogers. His wife and 11 children attended the burning at the stake.

John Rogers (c. 1500 – 4 February 1555) was a clergyman, Bible translator and commentator, and the first English Protestant martyr under Mary I of England.

Contents

1 Biography of John Rogers 1.1 Early life
1.2 Antwerp and the Matthew Bible
1.3 Imprisonment and martyrdom

Biography of John Roger

Early life

Rogers was born in Deritend, an area of Birmingham then within the parish of Aston. His father was also called John Rogers and was a lorimer – a maker of bits and spurs – whose family came from Aston; his mother was Margaret Wyatt, the daughter of a tanner with family in Erdington and Sutton Coldfield.[3]

Rogers was educated at the Guild School of St John the Baptist in Deritend,[4] and at Pembroke Hall, Cambridge University, where he graduated B.A. in 1526.[5] Between 1532 and 1534 he was rector of Holy Trinity the Less in the City of London.[6]

Antwerp and the Matthew Bible

In 1534, Rogers went to Antwerp as chaplain to the English merchants of the Company of the Merchant Adventurers.

Here he met William Tyndale, under whose influence he abandoned the Roman Catholic faith, and married Antwerp native Adriana de Weyden (b. 1522, anglicised to Adrana Pratt in 1552) in 1537. After Tyndale's death, Rogers pushed on with his predecessor's English version of the Old Testament, which he used as far as 2 Chronicles, employing Myles Coverdale's translation (1535) for the remainder and for the Apocrypha. Although it is claimed that Rogers was the first person to ever print a complete English Bible that was translated directly from the original Greek & Hebrew, there was also a reliance upon a Latin translation of the Hebrew Bible by Sebastian Münster and published in 1534/5.

Tyndale's New Testament had been published in 1526. The complete Bible was put out under the pseudonym of Thomas Matthew in 1537; it was printed in Paris and Antwerp by Adriana's uncle, Sir Jacobus van Meteren. Richard Grafton published the sheets and got leave to sell the edition (1500 copies) in England. At the insistence of Archbishop Cranmer, the "King's most gracious license" was granted to this translation. Previously in the same year, the 1537 reprint of the Myles Coverdale's translation had been granted such a lic.

The pseudonym "Matthew" is associated with Rogers, but it seems more probable that Matthew stands for Tyndale's own name, which, back then, was dangerous to employ. Rogers had little to do with the translation; his own share in that work was probably confined to translating the prayer of Manasses (inserted here for the first time in a printed English Bible), the general task of editing the materials at his disposal, and preparing the marginal notes collected from various sources. These are often cited as the first original English language commentary on the Bible. Rogers also contributed the Song of Manasses in the Apocrypha, which he found in a French Bible printed in 1535. His work was largely used by those who prepared the Great Bible (1539–40), and from this came the Bishops' Bible (1568) and the King James Version.

Rogers matriculated at the University of Wittenberg on 25 November 1540, where he remained for three years, becoming a close friend of Philipp Melanchthon and other leading figures of the early Protestant Reformation.[7] On leaving Wittenberg he spent four and a half years as a superintendent of a Lutheran church in Meldorf, Dithmarschen, near the mouth of the River Elbe in the north of Germany.[8]

Rogers returned to England in 1548, where he published a translation of Philipp Melanchthon's Considerations of the Augsburg Interim.

In 1550 he was presented to the crown livings of St Margaret Moses and St Sepulchre in London, and in 1551 was made a prebendary of St. Paul's, where the dean and chapter soon appointed him divinity lecturer. He courageously denounced the greed shown by certain courtiers with reference to the property of the suppressed monasteries, and defended himself before the privy council. He also declined to wear the prescribed vestments, donning instead a simple round cap. On the accession of Mary he preached at Paul's Cross commending the "true doctrine taught in King Edward's days," and warning his hearers against "pestilent Popery, idolatry and superstition."

Rogers was also against radical Protestants. After Joan of Kent was imprisoned in 1548 and convicted in April 1549, John Foxe, one of the few Protestants opposed to burnings, approached Rogers to intervene to save Joan, but he refused with the comment that burning was “sufficiently mild” for a crime as grave as heresy.

Imprisonment and martyrdom

On 16 August 1553 he was summoned before the council and bidden to keep within his own house. His emoluments were taken away and his prebend was filled in October. In January 1554, Bonner, the new Bishop of London, sent him to Newgate Prison, where he lay with John Hooper, Laurence Saunders, John Bradford and others for a year. Their petitions, whether for less rigorous treatment or for opportunity of stating their case, were disregarded. In December 1554, Parliament re-enacted the penal statutes against Lollards, and on 22 January 1555, two days after they took effect, Rogers (with ten other people) came before the council at Gardiner's house in Southwark, and defended himself in the examination that took place. On 28 and 29 January he came before the commission appointed by Cardinal Pole, and was sentenced to death by Gardiner for heretically denying the Christian character of the Church of Rome and the real presence in the sacrament. He awaited and met death cheerfully, though he was even denied a meeting with his wife. He was burned at the stake on 4 February 1555 at Smithfield. Noailles, the French ambassador, speaks of the support given to Rogers by the greatest part of the people: "even his children assisted at it, comforting him in such a manner that it seemed as if he had been led to a wedding."

John Rogers, Vicar of St. Sepulchre's, and Reader of St. Paul's, London

The quotation that follows is from Foxe's Book of Martyrs, Chapter 16. However, it is included here because of its historical significance, being the vehicle by which the story of Rev. John Rogers has been most widely disseminated.

"John Rogers was educated at Cambridge, and was afterward many years chaplain to the merchant adventurers at Antwerp in Brabant. Here he met with the celebrated martyr William Tyndale, and Miles Coverdale, both voluntary exiles from their country for their aversion to popish superstition and idolatry. They were the instruments of his conversion; and he united with them in that translation of the Bible into English, entitled "The Translation of Thomas Matthew." From the Scriptures he knew that unlawful vows may be lawfully broken; hence he married, and removed to Wittenberg in Saxony, for the improvement of learning; and he there learned the Dutch language, and received the charge of a congregation, which he faithfully executed for many years. On King Edward's accession, he left Saxony to promote the work of reformation in England; and, after some time, Nicholas Ridley, then bishop of London, gave him a prebend in St. Paul's Cathedral, and the dean and chapter appointed him reader of the divinity lesson there. Here he continued until Queen Mary's succession to the throne, when the Gospel and true religion were banished, and the Antichrist of Rome, with his superstition and idolatry, introduced.

The circumstance of Mr. Rogers having preached at Paul's cross, after Queen Mary arrived at the Tower, has been already stated. He confirmed in his sermon the true doctrine taught in King Edward's time, and exhorted the people to beware of the pestilence of popery, idolatry, and superstition. For this he was called to account, but so ably defended himself that, for that time, he was dismissed. The proclamation of the queen, however, to prohibit true preaching, gave his enemies a new handle against him. Hence he was again summoned before the council, and commanded to keep to his house. He did so, though he might have escaped; and though he perceived the state of the true religion to be desperate. He knew he could not want a living in Germany; and he could not forget a wife and ten children, and to seek means to succor them. But all these things were insufficient to induce him to depart, and, when once called to answer in Christ's cause, he stoutly defended it, and hazarded his life for that purpose.

After long imprisonment in his own house, the restless Bonner, bishop of London, caused him to be committed to Newgate, there to be lodged among thieves and murderers.

After Mr. Rogers had been long and straitly imprisoned, and lodged in Newgate among thieves, often examined, and very uncharitably entreated, and at length unjustly and most cruelly condemned by Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, the fourth day of February, in the year of our Lord 1555, being Monday in the morning, he was suddenly warned by the keeper of Newgate's wife, to prepare himself for the fire; who, being then sound asleep, could scarce be awaked. At length being raised and awaked, and bid to make haste, then said he, "If it be so, I need not tie my points." And so was had down, first to bishop Bonner to be degraded: which being done, he craved of Bonner but one petition; and Bonner asked what that should be. Mr. Rogers replied that he might speak a few words with his wife before his burning, but that could not be obtained of him.

When the time came that he should be brought out of Newgate to Smithfield, the place of his execution, Mr. Woodroofe, one of the sheriffs, first came to Mr. Rogers, and asked him if he would revoke his abominable doctrine, and the evil opinion of the Sacrament of the altar. Mr. Rogers answered, "That which I have preached I will seal with my blood." Then Mr. Woodroofe said, "Thou art an heretic." "That shall be known," quoth Mr. Rogers, "at the Day of Judgment." "Well," said Mr. Woodroofe, "I will never pray for thee." "But I will pray for you," said Mr. Rogers; and so was brought the same day, the fourth of February, by the sheriffs, towards Smithfield, saying the Psalm Miserere by the way, all the people wonderfully rejoicing at his constancy; with great praises and thanks to God for the same. And there in the presence of Mr. Rochester, comptroller of the queen's household, Sir Richard Southwell, both the sheriffs, and a great number of people, he was burnt to ashes, washing his hands in the flame as he was burning. A little before his burning, his pardon was brought, if he would have recanted; but he utterly refused it. He was the first martyr of all the blessed company that suffered in Queen Mary's time that gave the first adventure upon the fire. His wife and children, being eleven in number, ten able to go, and one sucking at her breast, met him by the way, as he went towards Smithfield. This sorrowful sight of his own flesh and blood could nothing move him, but that he constantly and cheerfully took his death with wonderful patience, in the defence and quarrel of the Gospel of Christ."

Notes

1.Jump up ^ Chester 1861, p. 1
2.Jump up ^ Daniell 2004
3.Jump up ^ Hill 1907, pp. 5–6
4.Jump up ^ Hill 1907, p. 4
5.Jump up ^ "Rogers, John". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
6.Jump up ^ Chester 1861, pp. 3–5
7.Jump up ^ Daniell 2003, p. 191
8.Jump up ^ Daniell 2003, p. 191

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Rogers (Bible editor and martyr).

Chester, Joseph Lemuel (1861), John Rogers: the Compiler of the First Authorised English Bible, London: Longman, Green, Longman, and Roberts, OCLC 257597540, retrieved 2009-02-14
Daniell, David (2003), The Bible in English, Yale University Press, ISBN 0-300-09930-4
Daniell, David (2004), "Rogers, John (c.1500–1555)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.), Oxford University Press, retrieved 2009-02-14
Hill, Joseph (1907), The book makers of old Birmingham; authors, printers, and book sellers, Birmingham: Printed at the Shakespeare Press for Cornish Bros., OCLC 3773421

Saturday, August 31, 2013

August 31, 1555: Burn That Damned, Protestant, Evangelical, Anglican Heretic!

 
August 31, 1555 A.D.

Mr. Rusten reminds us of the story. Rusten, E. Michael and Rusten, Sharon. The One Year Christian History. Carol Stream, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, 2003.

Robert Samuel loved God, his congregation and his wife. He was burned at the stake for his faith at
August 31, 1555.


 We know the back-story here in this forum. Edward VI had died after the tumultuous 6-year reign. Old Harry had made testamentary provisions for the regal sequence. Edward, Mary, Elizabeth and if no issue [royal children] from them, then the issue of his sister, Margaret. Interestingly, that exact dynastic sequence played out historically.

Queen Mary 1 ascended to the English throne. She was married to the Spanish Prince-now-turned-King of England. Spain was the most powerful and wealthy country in Europe (including cash-back for overseas ventures and revenues). Queen Mary was all about “restoring Catholicism [=Papal Roman Catholicism, Anglicanism 1.0] as the state religion” and was giving “the courts of the Roman Catholic Church the power to burn heretics” (488).

Things would go south fast. We know that story too. This was 4.0 Anglicanism, that is, a return to 1.0 Anglicanism. In other words, it was Papal and Roman Anglicanism, an un-doing of what her half-brother Edward had invoked in his 3.0 Anglican version. This was a major set-back.

There had been 35 years of Protestant principles and forces that had been reshaping the English contours of faith in high places, notably, with Mr. (Canterbury) Cranmer and many others. Even if Mr. Canterbury had been waffling around here and there, these forces had been developing at the plebiscite, pedestrian, proletarian, collegiate, academic and royal levels since 1520.  Mary's animosities and hostilities, however, would be her undoing...and the undoing of Anglicanism 1.0, 2.0 and 4.0.

Mr. (Rev.) Robert Samuel was, however, a Protestant Anglican minister in the 3.0 stream, the Edwardian version. The English Reformation had increasingly seen Reformed men not just in garden-variety pulpits with rank-and-file believers, but also in high places at Cambridge and Oxford and in high places of government.

However, the Papal Roman bishops were unleashed under the new Queen. They resisted the Protestant and Evangelical Churchmen strenuously--with Royal support and by Royal order.

Under Queen Mary, they “removed them [Protestant Anglicans] from their parishes” and they “were forbidden to preach.”

100s left England for the Continent. Misters Canterbury, Ridley, and Latimer should have fled but they didn't. Others went underground, like Mr. (Rev. Dr.) Matthew Parker (later Mr. Canterbury under Ms. Elizabeth Tudor). Other poor chaps were arrested, tried and burned at the sake (about 288 of them, including women).

Mr. (Rev.) Robert Samuel was one such minister destined for the stake. For one thing, in time, he was ordered to leave his wife. The Protestants had allowed marriages amongst them, amongst other things. Even Mr. (Canterbury) Cranmer had a wife from Germany for crying out loud; ever-the-pliable one, he conveniently tucked her away in Germany, but he too was married. But, in "Great Apostasy" (1 Tim. 4. 3), apostates like Queen Mary would teach the "doctrine of demons," forbidding "to marry." Few ever talk about the demonic in reference to the Reformation; it's impolitic; it's impolite; it's not ecumenical; it's not Western; however, the Reformers--to a man--surely did.  So does the Bible. We're not amnesiacs.

As for Mr. (Rev.) Samuel, he did not leave his wife and he did not stash her away. He believed that violated God’s law. He continued his Biblical ministry to his parishioners in secret.

The ante-was-upped when Mary ordered “all married clergymen to leave their wives and return” to celibacy. It was a pro-active, nationwide order in conformity with “strict canon law.” And Mary had that proverbial Tudor-tenacity, self-will, and certitude. “By God, the Holy Mass, and the Holy Mother Mary, these Protestant, Evangelical, Anglican heretics will conform” was the idea.

The bishops were directed to enforce this edict in 10,000 churches throughout England. If anything, Queen Mary was consistent with the canon law.  De heretico comburendo, as a state policy, was back in effect.

But never mind the irregularities of Pope Clement VII’s “two wives” or Cardinal Wolsey’s “non-canonical” relationship-slash-marriage with two children, but we digress. Never mind the Papal pornocrats or pornocracy either, another dubious and little known chapter in Papal history.

Mr. (Rev.) Robert Samuel was arrested and imprisoned. He never to saw his wife again.

The love-filled, grace-filled, charitable, God-filled, Bible-filled, justified and sanctified bishop ordered that “he [Mr. Samuel] be tortured with the cruelest techniques of the times” (489).

Although it sounds like something perfected by the Spaniards in the Spanish inquisition, the English had mastered the principles too. Islamo-fascists may have taken their cues from the Spanish play book. Think Jan Huss and Jerome of Prague, for example.

Mr. (Rev.) Robert Samuel was imprisoned and tied to a post. He was forced to support his bodily weight on his toes. He was deprived of food and drink. He was insulted, of course.

But, things would get worse.

On August 31, 1555, he was put to the stake of fire and burned to death. Anathema to the damned bastard! That damned Protestant! That damned Evanglical! Away with him! Burn, baby, burn!

(Yes, “Protestant” and “Evangelical” were the terms of art, terms of derision and the assigned identities used in the popular, proletarian, ecclesiastical and royal parlance.)

Lest we forget! 

(Below is a picture followed by our you-tube tribute to Mr. Osteen and Pentecostals.