28
January 1560 A.D. John
Laski Dies—Polish Reformer
If you were asked to name the countries of the
world that are most strongly identified with the Roman Church, Poland would
surely be one that came to mind. Pope John Paul II is a notable representative
of Polish faith. Yet there was a time when it seemed Poland would follow other
northern European nations into Protestant reformation. Why didn't it?
Reform ideas first came to Poland in the
fifteenth century through Bohemian followers of John Hus. Then, after the
Lutheran reformation began in the sixteenth century, exiles from European
countries took refuge in Poland and made converts. Lutheranism itself never
became popular, however. Calvinism appealed more to the Polish nobles and
commoners because it was more democratic in form. Several nobles and even King
Sigismund II favored Calvinism.
One of the noblemen who favored
Calvinism was John Laski. His uncle was a powerful archbishop. Like the uncle,
the nephew trained for the church. He traveled to France to further his
education, but turned in disgust from the scholasticism of Louvain and came to
Zurich. Zwingli encouraged him to study the Bible direct, which Laski did.
Hitting it off with Erasmus in Basle, he spent a year with the brilliant
educator and made friends with a number of reformers who crossed his path.
Uncle Laski did not like this at
all. He ordered John home and demanded that he recant his "heretical"
beliefs. John obeyed and was made an archdeacon. His duties brought him into
contact with the Roman Church and papacy and he witnessed deep corruption at
first hand, becoming convinced that the church must reform. At this juncture he
was offered a bishop's mitre. Not only did he refuse it, but he openly declared
for the Reformation.
He had to flee from Poland, and
wandered across Europe. Invited to direct the churches of Friesland, he applied
Calvin's methods to the job and reformed the church. In England, he hit it off
famously with Cranmer, and influenced the Book of Common Prayer. When he finally
returned to Poland, he brought Calvinistic reforms and translated the Bible
into his native tongue.
Many Poles turned from the Roman
Church, winning a measure of religious freedom. Some church buildings were put
to Protestant use. Laws forbade the execution of Roman Church decrees by the
government or the collection of Peter's pence (a Vatican tax). But when John
Laski died on this day, January
28, 1560, Protestantism was no nearer dominating Poland. The
Protestants were too divided. Lutherans, Unitarians, Hussites, Anabaptists, and
Calvinists could not agree on common policy. The Roman Church remained the
single largest Christian bloc and Roman clergy retained special rights in
teaching religious doctrines. In the seventeenth century, religious toleration
virtually ceased when the Roman Church reasserted its supremacy.
Bibliography:
Dalton, H. "Lasco, Johannes A. (Jan
Laski)." New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge. Grand
Rapids: Baker Book House, 1954.
"John Laski."
(http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/L/Laski-Jo.html).
Ott, Michael. "John Laski." The Catholic
Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton, 1914.
Various encyclopedia and internet articles.
Last updated May,
2007.
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