18
April 1587 A.D. Author
of Acts and Monuments (=Book of
Martyrs) John Foxe Passes.
Varied Authors. “John Foxe.” Encyclopedia Britannica. Nov. 7,
2014. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/215429/John-Foxe.
Accessed Apr 18, 2014.
Figure 3 - Woodcut from Acts and Monuments
After studying at the University of Oxford and holding a fellowship for
seven years, Foxe fell under suspicion of harbouring Protestant views more
extreme than the authorities of his college would allow. He resigned and in
1547 moved to London, 
where
he became tutor to the grandchildren of the duke of Norfolk. He was ordained a
deacon of the Church
of England. Foxe worked for the Reformation,
writing several tracts. He also began his account of martyrs but had carried it
no further than 1500 when the accession of the Roman Catholic queen Mary I in
1553 forced him to flee overseas. In Strasbourg,
France, he published his partly completed martyrology in Latin as Commentarii
rerum in ecclesia gestarum (1554; “Commentaries on
Affairs Within the Church”). He then went to Frankfurt, where he lent a
moderating support to the Calvinistic party of John
Knox, and thence to Basel,
Switz., where he wrote a burning appeal to the English nobility to restrain the
queen from persecuting Protestants: Ad inclytos ac
praepotentes Angliae proceres (“To the Renowned and Powerful Nobles of England,”
1557). With the aid of manuscripts sent to him from England, he carried his
account of the martyrs up to 1556 and had it printed in 1559, the year
following the accession to the throne of the Protestant queen, Elizabeth
I.
Foxe was ordained an Anglican priest in 1560, but having Puritan scruples
he refused all offices, obtaining two church stipends that required no duties.
He often preached, however, and a sermon delivered at Paul’s Cross (A
Sermon, Of Christ Crucified [1570]) had a wide sale.
In the plague of 1563 he ministered to the victims and wrote a moving tract of
consolation. When Anabaptists in 1575 and Jesuits in 1581 were condemned to
death, Foxe wrote vehement letters to Queen Elizabeth and her councilors,
begging reprieves.
Foxe’s monument is his book. It has been criticized as prolix, carelessly
edited, one-sided, sometimes credulous, but it is factually detailed and
preserves much firsthand material on the English Reformation unobtainable
elsewhere.
We would add to the article from EB, this photo-chastisement of Osteen.
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