10 April 1547 A.D. John Knox Arrives at St. Andrews Castle
The story
is told by the PCA Historians at: http://www.thisday.pcahistory.org/2014/04/april-10/
10 April,
2014
The Holy Spirit of God has
often used various circumstances to call His own into ministry. In the case of
John Knox, it was a public challenge delivered by a small congregation in a
castle in Scotland by the voice of their Protestant pastor, John Rough.
John Knox was approximately 42 years of age. We don’t
know when this future Reformer saw the light of the Reformed faith, but George
Wishart likely had something to do with it. Knox had been his body-guard as
Wishart powerfully preached the gospel throughout Scotland. When the latter was
martyred, Knox in time became a religious tutor to three children—two sons of
Hugh Douglas of Longniddry, as well as the son of John Cockburn of Ormiston. The
two fathers, Douglas and Cockburn, had embraced the truths of the Reformation,
and desired their children to be taught of Knox. So, not only in elementary
truths like grammar, but also in Scriptural readings and catechising, Knox led
his young pupils as he stayed in their homes. When it became evident that
Knox became more and more a marked man by the Roman Catholic authorities, the
parents urged Knox to take their children into St. Andrews Castle, where a
number of people had fled for their lives.
It was on April 10, 1547 that John Knox
arrived at St. Andrews Castle with his three pupils. It is recorded that he
began at the same place in their instruction that he had left off in the home
of their parents. Their names, for the record, were Francis Douglas, George
Douglas, and Alexander Cockburn. Soon that private tutoring became known to the
Protestant pastor of the congregation now gathered in the castle, the Rev. John
Rough. He came to Knox and urged him to take on what we would call today an
associate pastor’s position, as Rough was weary in the work. Knox turned him
down flat, saying that he would not do anything without a lawful calling from
God.
At this, Rough, with the
support of two or three others, decided to challenge Knox publicly. John Rough,
on the following Sunday, preached a message on the election of ministers
as his theme. At its close, he, in the name of the small castle congregation,
addressed John Knox with the following words, which we find recorded in Knox’s
book, The History of the
Reformation in Scotland, (p. 72):—
“Brother, ye shall not be offended, albeit that I speak
unto you that which I have in charge, even from all those here present: —
In the name of God, and of His Son Jesus Christ, and in the
name of these that presently call you by my mouth, I charge you, that ye refuse
not this holy vocation, but, as ye tender the Glory of God, the increase
of Christ His kingdom, the edification of your brethren, and the comfort of me,
oppressed by the multitudes of labours, that ye take upon you the public office
of preaching, even as ye look to avoid God’s heavy displeasure, and desire that
He shall multiply his graces upon you.”
The future Reformer left
the worship time in tears and spent many days and night in grief and trouble of
heart. Eventually, he came to believe that the call came from God.
His first sermon was in
the parish church of St. Andrews, where he took as his text that of Daniel 7:24, 25. Laying open the false doctrine of the Roman Catholic
Church, he compared their justification by works with the justification by
faith alone as expressed in the Word of God. The hearers said that while others
lop off the branches of Romanism, Knox had struck at the root to destroy the
whole.
The author of The History of the Church of Scotland,
W. M. Hetherington, writes on page 34 that such preaching by Knox was the real
beginning of the Reformation in Scotland. From that time forth, no appeal was
made by the Reformers to any other standard except the Word of God.
Yet before John Knox could
move on in his fledgling ministry to declare the unsearchable riches of the
gospel, the castle was attacked and captured by French naval forces, and forced
to surrender on July 31 of the same year. Knox would spend the next 19 months
as a galley-slave on a French ship, which we will consider in a future post.
Words to Live By: The inspired New Testament writer James leaves the
church a sober warning in chapter 3, verse 1 of his letter, when he wrote “Not many of you should become teachers,
my brothers, for you know that we who teach will be judged with greater
strictness.” (ESV) Whether it was this which prompted John
Knox to respond with great tears, we know not. But he obviously believed that
any call for him to minister the Word of God had to come from God’s Spirit, and
not merely by a group of men. Readers, remember the words of the unknown author
to the Hebrews, who wrote in Hebrews 13:7, “Remember
your leaders, those who spoke to you the Word of God. Consider the outcome of
their way of life, and imitate their faith.” (ESV)
Image sources: Two different conceptions of what John Knox looked like.
The first is a bit “unorthodox”—an image from a cigarette trading card,
specifically, Ogden’s “Leaders of Men” series, no. 27, issued in 1924. The
second is from a postcard bearing only the attribution “A. H., édit.” to
designate the publisher. Both cards are among a small collection preserved at
the PCA Historical Center.
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