Chapter 20 - JOHN WYCLIF (AD c1324-1384)
At this time arose a reformer of a different kind from any of those
who had gone before him. He was a Yorkshireman, named John Wyclif,
who had been educated at Oxford, and had become famous there as
a teacher of philosophy before he began to show any difference of
opinions from those which were common in the Church. Ever since
the time when King John disgusted his people by his shameful submission
to the pope (p 219), there had been a strong feeling against the
papacy in England; and it had been provoked more and more, partly
because the popes were always drawing money from this country, and
thrusting foreigners into the richer places of the English Church.
These foreigners squeezed all that they could out of their parishes
or offices in England; but they never went near them, and would
have been unable to do much good if they had gone, because they
did not understand the English language. And another complaint was,
that, while the popes lived at Avignon, they were so much in the
hands of their neighbours, the kings of France, that the English
had no chance of fair play if any question arose between the two
nations, and the pope could make himself the judge. And thus the
English had been made ready enough to give a hearing to any one
who might teach them that the popes had no right to the power which
they claimed.
There had always been a great unwillingness to pay the tribute
which King John had promised to the Roman see. If the king was weak,
he paid it; if he was strong, he was more likely to refuse it. And
thus it was that the money had been refused by Edward I, paid by
Edward II, and again refused by Edward III, whom Pope Urban V, in
1366, asked to pay up for thirty-three years at once. In this case,
Wyclif took the side of his king, and maintained that the tribute
was not rightly due to the pope. And from this he went on to attack
the corruptions of the Church in general. He set himself against
the begging friars, who had come to great power, worming themselves
in everywhere, so that they had brought most of the poorer people
to look only to them as spiritual guides, and to think nothing of
the parish clergy. In order to oppose the friars, Wyclif sent about
the country a set of men whom he called "poor priests."
These were very like the friars in their rough dress and simple
manner of living, but taught more according to a plain understanding
of the Scriptures than to the doctrines of the Roman Church. It
is said that once, when Wyclif was very ill, and was supposed to
be dying, some friars went to him in the hope of getting him to
confess that he repented of what he had spoken and written and done
against them. But Wyclif, gathering all his strength, rose up in
his bed, and said, in words which were partly taken from the 118th
Psalm, "I shall not die but live, and declare the evil deeds
of the friars." He was several times brought before assemblies
of bishops and clergy, to answer for his opinions; but he found
powerful friends to protect him, and always came off without hurt.
It was in Wyclif's time that the rebellion of Wat Tyler and Jack
Straw broke out, as we read in the history of England (AD 1381);
but, although Wyclif's enemies would have been very glad to lay
some of the blame of it at his door, it is quite certain that he
had nothing to do with it in any way.
In those days almost all books were written in Latin, so that none
but learned people could read them. But Wyclif, although he wrote
some books in Latin for the learned, took to writing other books
in good, plain English, such as every one could understand; and
thus his opinions became known to people of all classes. But the
greatest thing that he did was the translation of the Bible into
English. The Roman Church would not allow the Scriptures to be turned
into the language of the country, but wished to keep the knowledge
of it for those who could read Latin, and expected the common people
to content themselves with what the Church taught. But Wyclif, with
others who worked under him, translated the whole Bible into English,
so that all might understand it. We must remember, however, that
there was no such thing as printing in his days, so that every single
book had to be written with the pen, and of course books were still
very dear, and could not be at all common.
It is said that Pope Urban V summoned Wyclif to appear before him
at Rome; but Wyclif, who was old, and had been very ill, excused
himself from going; and soon after this he died, on the last day
of the year 1384.
Wyclif had many notions which we cannot agree with; and we have
reason to thank God's good providence that the reform of the Church
was not carried out by him, but at a later time, and in a more moderate
and sounder way than he would have chosen. But we must honour him
as one who saw the crying evils of the Roman Church and honestly
tried to cure them.
Wyclif's followers were called Lollards, I believe from their habit
of lulling or chanting to themselves. After his death they went
much farther than he had done, and some of them grew very wild in
their opinions, so that they would not only have made strange changes
in religious doctrine, but would have upset the government of kingdoms.
Against them a law was made by which persons who differed from the
doctrines of the Roman Church were sentenced to be burnt under the
name of heretics, and many Lollards suffered in consequence. The
most famous of these was Sir John Oldcastle, Lord Cobham, a brave
but rather hotheaded and violent soldier, who was suspected of meaning
to get up a rebellion. For this and his religious opinions together
he was burnt in Smithfield, which was then just outside London (AD
1417); the same place where, at a later time, many suffered for
their religion in the reigns of Henry VIII and Mary.
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