30 May 1416 A.D. Council of Constance: Jerome of Prague Burned
at the Stake.
The story is told by Dr.
Rusten.
Jerome
was tall, black-bearded, a bit hot-headed and well-travelled.
He was
something of an early Reformer—of sorts—in the Vatican-driven outfit in the
1390s.
Jan Huss
encouraged Jerome to visit England to study with the internationally known
figure at Oxford, John Wycliffe. Jerome
went. He immersed himself in Wycliffian
studies and teachings. We tell the Wycliffe story elsewhere, but what a
fascinating, elect and godly Churchman!
Upon
return to Prague, he brought Wycliffe’s ideas and writing back to Hus and other
scholars. But the restless Jerome continued his travels taking Wycliffite
thinking elsewhere.
Jerome
went to Jerusalem, Paris, Poland, Lithuania, Heidelberg, Cologne, Vienna,
Russia and Hungary. He was an able
scholar and good speaker. He drew university crowds. But, he always upset university masters and
ecclesiastics. He’d then leave with the
leaders cooling their heels.
His
mentor, if not master, Jan Huss was arrested and brought to Constance in
1414. Jerome promised to come and
represent Hus’ cause, but Hus waved Jerome off. Yet, secretly, Jerome entered
Constance on 4 April 1415, posting
inflammatory signs around the city. He
was demanding the right to speak before the Council in Hus’s defense. It didn’t
go too well.
Jerome
was captured and imprisoned. Hus,
meanwhile, was burned at the stake.
Jerome, facing the same, recanted and confessed loyalty to the
Vatican-controlled outfit (coming off the multiple-Pope problem and
Wycliffe-problems). The Council declared
by Huss and Wycliffe to be heretics (we would insert that Wycliffe got
disfavorable mention—a heretic—at the opening session of the Council).
But,
Jerome’s recantation wasn’t believed.
Jerome, something like Cranmer 140 years later, would “recant of his
recantation.” He languished in jail. The Council refused to hear him.
He
angrily replied,
“What iniquity is this! While I have languished for
three hundred and fifty days in the most cruel prisons, in stench, squalor,
excrements, and chains, lacking all things, you have ever heard my adversaries
and slanderers; but me you now refuse to hear even for an hour!...For you have
already in your minds condemned me as an unworthy man, before you could learn
what I really am. But you are men, not
gods, not immortals, but mortals!”
Of
course, that’s didn’t go too well for Jerome.
(Jerome hadn’t read Joel Osteen’s Your
Best Life Now.)
Jerome
was led to the same spot where Jan Huss was murdered—murdered in the first
degree, with malice aforethought, cold-bloodedness, and with the clear
formation of intent to murder along with the act.
As Jerome
was led to that fatal spot of murder 1, he sang hymns in Latin and Czech. The wood was placed around him.
The
Papists made him wear a “paper crown” as a form of mockery.
Jerome
was burned, wearing his paper crown, on 30
May 1416.
Questions
or applications:
Peter
denied our Sovereign Redeemer, yet recanted and was forgiven. Have you ever denied the Lord Jesus Christ
before a mere mortal? If so, why would
you do that? Someone’s bad opinion?
Coordinate
this with the lengthy issue of Donatism and the Imperial persecutions, that is,
those who denied Christ but recanted and desired readmission to the
Church.
Resources
Looser,
Frieda. “The Wanderer.” CH. 68: 28-29.
Parker,
G.H. The Morning Star: Wycliffe and the
Dawn of the Reformation. Vol. 3. of The
Advance of Christianity through the Centuries. Edited by F.F. Bruce. Grand
Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1965. 76-101.
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