Memoirs of the Puritans
Christopher Goodman
The life and death of Mr.
Christopher Goodman.
CHRISTOPHER GOODMAN, B. D.
Mr. Goodman was born in the city of Chester about 1519, and had his
education at Brazennose college, Oxford. After taking his degrees in
arts, he was constituted one of the senior students of Christchurch,
then newly founded by Henry VIII, Towards the end of the reign of king
Edward, he was admitted to the reading of sentences, and chosen divinity
lecturer in the university. Upon the reestablishment of popery under
queen Mary, owing to the bloody persecution that ensued, Goodman retired
from the storm, and took refuge at Frankfort, where he was soon involved
in the troubles which the officious interference of Dr. Cox and his
party occasioned amongst the English refugees in that place. Here, when
it was proposed to make choice of office bearers for the church, Mr.
Goodman moved, that they should first condescend upon some specific
order of church regulations, and submit the same to the judgment of the
congregation, whereby it might appear that they respected the opinions
of their brethren, and then proceed to the election, which, he
conceived, ought to be determined by a majority of the whole church; but
Goodman's motions were all overruled by Cox and his party, who declared
that there should be no other regulations than the book of common
prayer. In the meantime, Cox had the ministers assembled at his
lodgings, to choose a bishop and other officers agreeable to the English
establishment under Edward. The consequence of these jarring opinions
was the breaking up of the congregation. Accordingly, Goodman set out
for Geneva, accompanied by a number of his associates. Here Mr. Goodman
and Mr. John Knox, the famous Scotch reformer, were chosen pastors of
the English congregation, and so continued till the death of queen Mary,
While at Geneva, Goodman assisted John Knox in composing the Book of
Common Order, which was to be used as a directory of worship in the
protestant congregations.
On receiving the news of the queen's death, Goodman wrote, a most,
affectionate and healing' letter to their fellowexiles at Frankfort,
which, together with the answer, is still preserved. During his exile,
and a short time before the death of the queen, a report had reached
Geneva that she was dead; upon which Mr. Goodman wrote to Mr. Bartlet
Green, a lawyer, a pious professor, and his old acquaintance at Oxford,
inquiring whether the report was true. His friend, in reply, said, “The
queen is not yet dead.” This letter was intercepted, and the writer
apprehended, committed to the tower, and after a long imprisonment,
tried, condemned, and committed to the flames by the bloodthirsty
Bonner.
During his residence in Geneva, Mr. Goodman took an active part in the
translation and publication of the Geneva bible. Having finished the
translation some short time after the accession of Elizabeth, Goodman
returned from exile, but not to England in the first instance. He went
into Scotland to his friend Mr. Knox, and was for several years actively
employed in preaching, and otherwise prompting the reformation in that
country. In 1560, having preached for some time at Ayr, the committee of
parliament, who nominated the ministers for the principal towns in
Scotland, appointed him for St. Andrew's, where it was considered
necessary that the officiating minister should be a man of established
reputation. About this time a public disputation was held at Edinburgh
between the protestant and papists, when Dr. Anderson, Dr. Leslie, Mr.
Mirton, and Mr. Straehan, supported the doctrines of the popish church
against Mr. Knox, Mr. Wilwick, and Mr. Goodman. The points in dispute
were, the holy eucharist and the sacrifice of the altar. The papists
gave out that they had so completely foiled their antagonists, that they
would never again encounter them. The nobility, however, who attended
the dispute, were of a different opinion. In 1560, Mr. Goodman attended
the general assembly as minister of St. Andrew's, together with David
Spence and Robert Kynpont, his assistant elders. In 1562 he was
appointed, together with Mr. John Row, minister of Perth, as assistants,
to John Erskine of Dun, in the visitation of Aberdeen and Banflshire.
And in 1563 he argued, in opposition to Mr. Secretary Lethington, that
the tithes ought to be appropriated to the clergy. Lethington being hard
pressed by the arguments of his antagonist, dropt some ungenerous hints,
that strangers took too much upon themselves who intermeddled with the
affairs of a foreign commonwealth. To which Mr. Greenwood modestly, but
firmly replied, “My lord secretary though I am a stranger to your state
policy, and conduct myself as such, yet in the kirk of God, the concerns
of which are now under our serious consideration, I am no stranger here
more than if I were in the metropolis of England.”
In 1564 he was appointed to preach at Edinburgh, during the absence of
Mr. John Craig, one of the ministers of the city, what had been
appointed to visit some of the southern departments of the kingdom. The
assembly that met, June 25th, 1565, marked him out for numerous
appointments, some of which he bad no opportunity of fulfilling,
inasmuch as he had returned to England before the meeting of the
assembly, on the 25th of December, the same year; which is noticed in
the church register, that “Commissioners from St. Andrew's appeared,
requesting that Mr. John Knox might be transplanted to St. Andrews.
The assembly refused their request, and desired them to choose a
minister, in place of Mr. Christopher Goodman lately departed to
England, out of their own university.”
In 1568 Mr. Goodman became chaplain to Sir Henry Sidney, in his
expedition to Ireland against the rebels, where he evinced the greatest
diligence and integrity in that service. In 1571 he w/as cited before
archbishop Parker, and others of the high commission, at Lambeth. Mr.
Goodman, while in exile, had written a book with the following title:
“How superior powers ought to be obeyed by their subjects, and wherein,
according to God's word, they may be lawfully disobeyed and resisted;
wherein also is declared the cause of all the present misery in England,
and by what means the same may be remedied.” In this work Mr. Goodman
spoke with considerable freedom against the government of women, but
especially against the bloody proceedings of queen Mary. From this book,
however, after the lapse of so many years, the archbishop selected
certain passages, which he charged against him as dangerous and
seditious, and which he required Mr. Goodman to revoke. This, for some
time, he refused; but before be could procure his liberty, he was
obliged to subscribe the following recantation: “Forasmuch as the
extremity of the times, in which I wrote my book, overturned the true
worship of God, by setting up idolatry, banishing good men, murdering
the saints, and violating all promises made to the professors of the
true religion. Moved by grief and indignation at such cruelty and
tyrannical exertions of power, I did write many things, which may be,
and are offensively taken; which, under less galling circumstances, I
would not, and now wish I had not, written. But notwithstanding of these
offensive sentiments contained in the book aforesaid, I hereby confess
and protest, thatgood and godly women may lawfully govern whole realms
and nations; and with my whole heart allow, that the government of her
majesty, queen Elizabeth, is most lawful, and pray for the long
continuance of the same. Neither did I ever mean to affirm that any
person, or persons, by their own authority, ought, or might have
lawfully punished even the cruel queen Mary with death. Nor yet that the
people, by their own authority, may lawfully punish their magistrates
for transgressing against the precepts'“ of God. Nor that God ordinarily
puts the sword of justice into the hands of the people, even though they
seek after the right execution of the, laws. Wherefore, as many of these
assertions as may be fairly collected from my said book, 'them I do
utterly renounce, and revoke, as none of mine; promising never to write,
teach, or preach, any such offensive doctrine; but shall, by God's
grace, endeavor to promote the true service of God, and obedience to her
majesty.—CHRISTOPHER GOODMAN.”
Mr. Goodman's recantation is conceived with considerable heart, the
tenor of which is, That the eligibility of female government consists in
their goodness and holiness: That the power of punishing criminal
magistrates, if it does not rest with' individuals, exists at least in
parliaments or councils; and that, as a last, though no ordinary
alternative, the people themselves possess this power. In the year 1584
Mr. Goodman was living in or near the city of Chester, where he seems to
have been silenced; and archbishop Whitegift having, about this time,
pressed the subscription of his three articles on the godly ministers in
those parts, Mr. Goodman informed the earl of Leicester, how the papists
in Cheshire, and other places, were exulting at the severities and cruel
proceedings of the archbishop Whitegift, however, denied the fact, and
charged Goodman with perverseness in refusing conformity to the
established order.
We have not been able to procure any farther, account of this godly man
till he was on his deathbed. At. this time Mr. James Usher, afterward
the celebrated bishop of Armagh, came over to England to purchase books
for the college library at Dublin, and paid him a visit; when Usher was
so deeplylmpressed with the holy conversation of this venerable man,
that when he himself became old, he often repeated the wise and grave
speeches of his long departed friend. Mr. Goodman died in 1602, aged
eighty-three years, and his remains were interred in St. Werburg's
church, in the city of Chester. Fuller designates him a leader of
the fierce nonconformists. Wood says he was a most violent
nonconformist, more rigid in his opinions than even his friend Calvin.
Mr. Leigh calls him a learned, good, and holy divine.
Mr. Goodman published the two following articles:, 1st, How superior
powers ought to be obeyed by their subjects, and wherein they may be
lawfully disobeyed and resisted, 1548.— 2d, A Commentary on the Book of
Amos. “Wood ascribes the first blast of the trumpet, against the
monstrous regiment of women, to Mr. Goodman;” but this is wrong, he only
wrote the preface to that work. It is well known that the book itself
was written by John Knox.
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