31
July 1547 A.D. John
Knox Enslaved—“Row, Mr. Knox, Row on that French Galley Ship!”
We venture to say this.
If Mr. Knox was Reformed before and if the French thought this would
cool Mr. Knox’s heels, we would say that Mr. Knox was far worse after than before. Suffering steeled the Scots Reformer!
Were you, the reader, aware that the man of the hour in
Scotland, John Knox, once rowed a galley ship? No, it wasn’t for exercise. No,
it wasn’t for some national pride of the fastest galley ship in a sailing
contest. Simply put, John Knox was enslaved on that ship.
Earlier, Knox had entered St. Andrews Castle with three
young children in tow. Their parents had entrusted him as a tutor. When events
following the murder of a Roman Catholic cardinal went badly for anyone
suspected of being part of that deed, they urged him to flee to that Protestant
bastion for safety purposes. Know was not one of the individuals who
killed the cardinal. But he did go there for safety. While present, the
chaplain to the soldiers at the chapel was urged by the congregation to extend
a pastoral call to Knox, recognizing his spiritual gifts. At first, Knox
resisted, but finally gave in to the invitation. He began to preach boldly on
themes familiar to the Protestant reformation then beginning in the land of
Scotland.
At the end of June in 1547, the French fleet besieged St
Andrews Castle. On this day, July 31, 1547, victory was gained over the
defenders inside its walls. Surrendering were every one in the castle,
with promises of lives spared, transportation to France, the opportunity to
enter the service of the French king, but if not, then to be conveyed to any
country they wished, provided it not be Scotland again. Upon arrival in
France, immediately the terms of surrender were annulled, and they became
prisoners of war. John Knox became a galley slave for nineteen months.
While there were months in which the slave ship did not
sail due to weather and cold conditions, in warmer months Knox labored under
cruel conditions, of which he writes in many a book and sermon afterwards. He
was loaded with chains. He spoke of the sobs of his heart during the
imprisonment. It was in anguish of mind and vehement affliction. There were
torments sustained in the galleys.
Amidst all of the physical treatments came the attacks
upon their faith. Daily, the Romanist mass was offered, with expected reverence
by the prisoners. As soon as it began however, the galley slaves would
cover their heads so they wouldn’t hear the words of the service. Daily,
there were efforts to get the prisoners to confess the Romanist faith. Once, a
figure representing the Virgin Mary, was pressed between the chained hands of a
slave, with a command to kiss the figure. The slave, who many believer to be
John Knox himself, threw the figure overboard into the sea, loudly proclaiming
the Virgin to save herself by swimming! After this, there were no more attempts
to convert the prisoners.
John Knox gradually wore down physically from this
experience, with a fever near the end of it. Rowing close to the Scottish
coast, they raised the feverish Reformer up when the spires of St. Andrews came
into view, asking him if he recognized it. He answered, “I know it well; for I
see the steeple of that place where God first opened my mouth in public
to his glory; and I am fully persuaded, now weak I now appear, that I shall
not depart this life, til my tongue shall glorify His godly name in that same
place.”
Whatever means was used (and even Thomas M’Crie was not
sure what it was), after 19 months in harsh conditions, John Knox was
freed to continue his ministry in England and Scotland.
Words to Live By: It wasn’t God’s will that Knox should be kept forever as
a galley slave. It was God’s will to free him so as to allow him to continue
his ministry in the Reformation. All of us ever live within the scope of God’s
will all of our lives. Let us submit to that will, in large areas as well as
small areas.
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