Memoirs of the Reformers
Nicolas Ridley
NICHOLAS RIDLEY,
Bishop of London.
OF all our English martyrs, bishop Ridley has been esteemed by far the
most learned. He was born at Willymondswyke in Northumberland, of an
ancient and very worthy family. He took his grammatical education at
Newcastle upon Tyne, from which, about the year 1518, he was removed to
Pembrokehall in Cambridge, at the expense of his uncle Dr. Robert
Ridley. Here he soon acquired a great proficiency in the Latin and Greek
tongues, and the other learning of that period. His reputation for
learning procured him the friendship and esteem of both universities;
and in the beginning of 1524, the masters and fellows of university
college in Oxford invited him to accept of an exhibition, founded by
Walter Skyrley, bishop of Durham; which he declined. The next year he
took his degrees of master, and was appointed by the college as their
general agent.
His uncle, observing the rapid progress he was making, was now willing to
afford him the advantage of travel, and the improvement of foreign
universities; and his studies being now directed to divinity, he sent
him for some time among the doctors of the Sarbonne at Paris, which was
then the most celebrated university in Europe. After this he also
remained a short time among the professors of Lovain. Having remained
abroad during the years 1527, 1528, 1529, he returned to Cambridge,
where he pursued his theological studies, and applied himself to the
reading of the scriptures as his surest guide. There is a walk in the
orchard at Pembrokehall which has still the name of Ridley's walk. Here
he learned to repeat, without book, almost all the epistles in Greek.
His behavior was truly obliging and pious, without hypocrisy or monkish
austerity; he would sometimes shoot with the bow, play at tennis, and
mix familiarly in the harmless amusements of the place. He was senior
proctor of the university when the important question of the pope's
supremacy came before them, to be examined upon the authority of
scripture; and their resolution—That the bishop of Rome had no more
authority or jurisdiction derived from God, in this kingdom of England,
than any other foreign bishop—was signed, in name of the university, by
Simon Heynes, vice-chancellor; Nicholas Ridley, Richard Wilks, proctors.
He lost his uncle in 1536; but the education he had received, and the
proficiency he had acquired, recommended him to another and greater
patron, Cranmer, archbishop of Canterbury, who appointed him his
domestic chaplain, and collated him to the vicarage of Herne in east
Kent. Here he gave his testimony from the pulpit against the act of the
six articles, and instructed his charge in the pure doctrines of the
gospel, so far as he yet understood them. Transubstantiation was,
however, still an article of his belief. During his retirement at this
place, he read a little treatise, written seven hundred years before, by
Bertram, a monk of Cerbey. The perusal of this treatise first opened
Ridley's eyes, and determined him to search the scriptures, and examine
the doctrine of the primitive fathers respecting this article. The
result of his researches he communicated to Cranmer, and both were
convinced that the doctrine was novel and heretical.
After remaining two years at Herne, he was chosen master of Pembrokehall,
and appointed chaplain to the king. And the cathedral church of
Canterbury being made collegiate, he obtained the fifth prebendal stall.
The courage and zeal he manifested in promoting the reformation was
such, that he was considered, next to Cranmer, its greatest supporter
amongst the clergy. In the succeeding reign of Edward VI., when a royal
visitation was resolved on throughout the kingdom, he attended the
visitors of the northern circuit, as their preacher, to instruct that
part of the kingdom in the doctrines of the reformation. “His character,
at this time (says Dr. Ridley, his biographer), was that of a celebrated
disputant, a favorite preacher, undoubting in the article of
transubstantiation; a zealous scripturalist, and particularly well
acquainted with the fathers. He was made chaplain to Edward VI., and
consecrated bishop of Rochester during the year 1547. He was translated
to London on the deprivation of Bonner in 1550, and expired in the
flames at Oxford in 1555.”
The church of Rome had taught the people to believe, that the mere action
of receiving the sacrament was of itself sufficient for the
justification of the receiver, unless he himself prevented it; and this
seems to have occasioned the homilies relative to the ground of
justification before God. Concerning the real presence of Christ in the
sacrament, public disputations were held, in both universities, between
the reformers and the papists; and Ridley, with some other delegates,
were sent to Cambridge, where a disputation was held for three
successive days. The propositions to be established by the protestants,
and opposed by their antagonists, were: That transubstantiation cannot
be found in the plain and manifest words of scripture: That neither can
it be collected there from by rational inference and deduction; and
that, as the scriptures are silent on this point, so neither is it
confirmed by the consent of the primitive fathers; and that therefore
there is no other sacrifice and oblation in the Lord's supper, than a
remembrance of Christ's death and thanksgiving. The debate was summed up
with much candor and learning by bishop Ridley; but decidedly against
the corporeal presence. Ridley is allowed to have been master of that
subject more than any man of the age; for having studied Bertram's book
of the ninth century, as formerly noticed, he came to the conclusion:
That transubstantiation was not an original doctrine of the church, but
had been introduced with other errors in the latter ages. This discovery
he communicated to his friend Cranmer, and both set themselves to
examine the matter with more than common care. In order to this, they
made large collections from the ancient fathers, to prove the novelty as
well as the absurdity of the opinion. They discovered, that all the
lofty and swelling expressions to be found in Chrysostom, and other
ancient writers on this subject, were merely strains and figures of
eloquence to raise the devotion of the people, though following ages had
built their opinion on these expressions, and the more readily believed
them, as they appeared above all belief. But this opinion of the real
presence having been so generally received in England for three hundred
years, these eminent reformers went to work with great caution, and by
gradually proceeding in their public discussions, afforded time for the
people to consider the subject more leisurely, and of course more
effectually.
Ridley, with the archbishop, the bishops of Ely, Worcester, Westminster,
Chichester, and Lincoln; Sir William Petrie, Sir Thomas Smith, Dr. Cox,
Dr. May, and others, were put into commission to search after all
Anabaptists, heretics, and contemnors of the common prayer. This measure
was adopted in consequence of information, that, together with the many
protestant strangers that were come into England from Germany, several
Anabaptists had arrived, who were disseminating their errors, and making
proselytes. These men, as bishop Burnet informs us, building upon the
principle held forth by Luther, that scripture is the only rule of
faith, rejected all deductions there from, however obvious and
unavoidable the inference might be; and the baptism of infants not being
mentioned in scripture, they therefore rejected. The Anabaptists were
not all of the same opinion, but differed both in doctrine and practice;
some were moderate, others extravagant and fierce. The opinions of the
latter may be partly gathered from some tradesmen in London, who abjured
before the commission; such as, That a regenerate man could not sin; for
if the outward man commit sin, the inward man sinneth not: That there
was no trinity of persons in the godhead: That Christ was only a
prophet, and not God: That all we had from Christ was his wise teaching
and holy example; and that the baptism of infants was of no utility, as
it was performed before the subject thereof could possibly believe in
the doctrines of the religion into which he was thereby intended to be
initiated. Among the people who held these, and similar tenets, was Joan
Bocher, commonly called Joan of Kent. This woman appeared before the
commission, and behaved with unparalleled obstinacy, vindicating her
opinion with a mixture of ill nature and contempt, treating all the
means used to reclaim her with scorn. She was accordingly pronounced an
heretic, and delivered over to the secular arm. Ridley was still at
Rochester; for the archbishop, John Smith, William Cook dean of the
arches, Hugh Latimer, and Richard Lyel, were only named in the sentence.
The king could scarcely be prevailed upon to sign the warrant for her
burning; but Cranmer, among many things, represented that it would
bespeak a strange indifference toward religion, to overlook the honor of
God, by neglecting to put the laws in execution, framed for that
particular purpose; while those laws that related to the honor of the
king were executed with so much zeal and severity. However, the
archbishop was not so intent on her punishment, as he had been for
passing the sentence. He and Ridley labored a whole year to persuade her
of her errors, but to no purpose; at last she was burnt in May 1550. A
similar sentence was executed against George Van Parre, a Dutchman, for
denying the divinity of our Saviour. It is mentioned here for the sake
of connection, though it did not happen till April 1551, on the 6th of
which month, Ridley, being one of the commissioners, signed his sentence
of excommunication. Mild and gentle as he certainly was to every modest
inquirer, however much in error, he would not relax or break through the
existing laws to indulge an obstinate blasphemer.
The protestants were charged by the papists with a disregard to all
religion, and that they could endure heresies, in every sectary, with
the greatest indifference; while the most canonical truths held forth by
the Romish church they treated with derision and ridicule. During the
preceding winter, it was in~ agitation to unite the reformers, both at
home and abroad, into one great body. Bullinger and Calvin, with others,
in a letter to king Edward, proposed making him their defender,
tendering, at the same time, their services and assistance in all cases
of danger. The Roman fathers, on learning what was going forward, became
alarmed, and sent two emissaries from Amsterdam into England, with
orders to pass themselves for Anabaptists, and inculcate the belief of a
fifth monarchy. A letter, dated 1549, was also dispatched by the same
fathers, from Delf in Holland, to two English bishops; Gardiner of
Winchester was one of them, and probably Bonner might be the other. In
this letter they apprize the bishops of the approach of these
incendiaries, and request them to countenance and protect them in case
they should meet with any opposition; adding, that it was left for them,
and some others, known to be well affected to the mother church, to
assist in the present crisis. This letter was found, by Sir H. Sidney,
in queen Elizabeth's closet, among some letters of queen Mary's; and the
knowledge, or even the suspicion of these intrigues, might perhaps
occasion the severity thus exercised against these Anabaptists. It was
owing, however, as much to the ignorance as to the vice of the age, that
the reformers, who had suffered so much from the persecuting spirit of
Rome, had retained, along with much of her superstition, part also of
her persecuting policy; opposed as it evidently was, not only to the
mild economy of grace, but also to the justice necessary for promoting
the peace and happiness of society.
Some time during the summer Ridley was called to preside at a
disputation, appointed to be publicly held at Cambridge, relative to the
sacrament of the Lord's Supper. Two positions were agreed upon as the
subjects of disputation: 1st, That transubstantiation cannot be proved
by the plain and manifest words of scripture, nor fairly deduced there
from, nor yet by the consent of the ancient fathers for the last
thousand years. 2d, That in the sacrament of the supper there is nose
other oblation or sacrifice than one only remembrance of Christ's death,
and of thanksgiving.
The first disputation took place on Thursday the 21st of June—Dr. Madew
of Clarehall, respondent, maintaining the above positions: Dr. Glyn,
Messrs Langdale, Sedgwick, and Young, opponents. The second disputation
was held on Monday the 24th—Dr. Glyn, respondent, maintaining the
contrary positions: Messrs Perne, Grindal, Gest, and Pilkington,
opponents. The third was on Thursday the 27th—Mr. Perne, respondent,
maintaining the positions: Messrs Parker, Pollard, Vavasor, and Young,
opponents. Between the disputations at Oxford and those at Cambridge
there was one difference observed: Peter Martyr admitted a change in the
elements; and Langdale, one of the opponents, asked wherein this change
was effected, supposing it to be admitted, Whether was it wrought in the
substances or in the accidents, or in both, or in neither? Ridley
interposed, by saying, There is no change either of the substances or of
the accidents, notwithstanding that the sanctifying and setting apart of
the bread and wine adds te the original accidents others which they did
not formerly possess.
After the disputation was closed, the bishop determined against
transubstantiation on these five principal grounds: 1st, The authority,
majesty, and verity of holy scripture: “I will not henceforth drink of
the fruit of the vine.” St. Paul and St. Luke calls it bread after
consecration. They speak of breaking, which corresponds with bread, but
literally cannot with the body of Christ. It was to be done in
remembrance of him. “This is the bread that came down from heaven;” but
the body of Christ came not from heaven. “It is the spirit that
quickeneth, the flesh profiteth nothing.” 2d, The most certain testimony
of the ancient catholic fathers, of whom he produced Dionysius,
Ignatius, Irenseus, Tertullian, Chrysostom, Cyprian, Theodoret,
Gelasius, Austin, Cyril, Isychius, and Bertram, who call it bread after
consecration, sacramental bread, a figure of the body of Christ; and
expressly declare, that it still continues to be bread, and that both
elements continue to be. as much as ever very bread and wine. 3d, The
nature of the sacrament, in which the symbols represent the like
spiritual effects; which, in the sacrament of the supper, are unity,
nutrition, and conversion: The unity of the grains make one bread, as
the unity of the members make the one mystical body of Christ. The
substance of these grains nourish our bodies, and with great propriety
represent the nourishment of our souls. Those therefore that take away
the similitude between the bread and the body of Christ, destroy the
very nature of a sacrament, as there can remain nothing to represent our
being turned into Christ's mystical body, if the bread be not converted
into the substance of our bodies. 4th, That transubstantiation destroys
one of the natures of Christ, because they who bold to the corporeal
presence in the sacrament, destroy the reality of his human nature.
Eutychas allowed the divine nature, but denied the human nature of
Christ; and they who defend the ubiquity of Christ's human nature,
ascribe to it the attributes that alone belong to the divine. The fifth
ground is, That Christ is ascended into heaven; and although, by his
essential deity and invisible grace, he is with his people always, and
his church, to the end of the world; yet, with respect to his manhood,
he says, You shall not have me always with you.
Against the oblation of Christ in the sacrament, he produced from
scripture an overwhelming mass of evidence, together with that of a
number of the fathers of the catholic church, all which, said he, are
sufficient at this time for a scholastic determination of these matters.
Ridley assisted Cranmer in the first edition of the common prayer. He was
ranked with Cranmer, Hooper, Ferrar, and others, denominated the zealous
protestants, in opposition to Gardiner, Bonner, and Tunstal, who were
called zealous papists. Ridley had his injunctions for the visitation of
his diocese printed, which show the progress then made in the
reformation in England. They enjoin, that none should be admitted to the
communion but such as were ready to confess the articles of the creed at
the request of the curate: That the homilies should be read orderly,
without omitting any part of them: That the common prayer should be read
in every church on Wednesday's and Friday's: That none should maintain
purgatory, invocation of saints, the six articles, bead rolls,
pilgrimages, relics, rubrics, primers, the justification of man by his
own works, holy bread, psalms, ashes, candles, creeping to the cross,
hallowing of fire or altars, or such like abuses.
The king was under a visible decay, and Ridley preached before him toward
the end of his sickness; and having in one of his sermons enlarged on
the duty of charity, and its happy consequences, the king was so moved
with what he had heard, that after sermon he sent for the bishop, and
desiring him to sit down and be covered. His majesty ran over the heads
of the discourse, and said, his lordship must give him some directions
how to acquit himself of his duty. The bishop, astonished at so much
tender (sensibility in so young a prince, burst into tears; but
requested time to consider the channel in which the royal charity could
be most advantageously directed, and that he might be permitted to
consult with the lord mayor and aldermen on that subject. His majesty
accordingly wrote them by the bishop, who returned with a scheme of
three foundations: One for the sick and wounded; another for those that
were unwillingly idle, or who were mad; and a third for orphans. His
majesty therefore endowed St. Bartholomew's hospital for the first,
bride fell for the second, and Greyfriar's church for the third. King
Edward died in 1553, and was succeeded by his sister Mary, whose reign
was one continued course of tyranny, bigotry, and persecution, by which
the land was polluted with blood. She was a rigid papist, and caused
lady Jean Gray, who openly professed the protestant religion, to be
beheaded, though only about seventeen years of age, and one of the most
accomplished ladies in her time, notwithstanding that Edward had
bequeathed her the crown by his last will.
The duke of Northumberland and his son, the duke of Norfolk and his
brother, were also beheaded for attempting to put this excellent lady on
the throne. The infamous Gardiner, and the execrable Bonner, she
released from prison, and appointed them to pull down the reformation,
which her brother had brought to a considerable state of improvement.
She introduced the mass, persecuted the protestants to the death, and
reestablished the idolatrous worship of Rome, contrary to the will or
inclination of three fourths of the population of England. Gardiner was
the despicable tool in the hand of this ignorant, superstitious, and
peevish lady, to extirpate from the land the religion which she called
heresy; and his orders to purge the church of married clergymen were so
pressing, and their execution so prompt, that of sixteen thousand
inferior clergymen, twelve thousand were expelled their livings for the
crime of legitimate marriage.
In order to force the protestants within the pale of the Roman church,
Gardiner thought it best to begin with the most popular bishops and
divines, judging, by his own shifting principles, that they would become
an easy conquest, and that their example would influence the people; but
he was much mistaken in his calculation, for bishops Latimer, Hooper,
Ridley, and Ferrar, who were imprisoned, tried, and condemned, yet
offered mercy, and even preferment in the church, providing they would
recant and join the Romanists, boldly held the confession of their faith
without wavering, and ultimately sealed their faith and obedience to the
laws of Christ with their blood; which brought the Romish bishops to
shame and popular disgrace.
The convocation was adjourned and removed to Oxford, where a public
disputation was appointed between the popish and protestant adherents,
to be held before the whole university. To give a color of justice to
this conference, archbishop Cranmer, bishops Ridley and Latimer, were
sent from the tower to the prison of Oxford to support the doctrines of
the reformation, where they were ill accommodated, denied the use of
their books and papers, or the conversation of one another, and their
mutual assistance in managing the controversy, as it was so arranged
that each had his separate day. To each of these three prelates, a
committee from the convocation and the university were opposed, against
whom they had to defend their opinions single-handed. This disputation,
says Fuller, was intended for a prologue to the tragical death of these
distinguished individuals, as it were to dry their bodies for the fire,
that the flames might be the brighter.
Mary's government and clergy have been charged with the most infernal
cruelty, injustice, and public malversation. The queen was married to
Philip of Spain; and imagining herself pregnant, declared she could Hot
possibly be delivered till all the heretics, with which the goals in and
about London were filled, should be delivered to the flames. While thus
the council and clergy of England were become the willing executioners
of the vengeance meditated by this infernal fury, the nation seemed in
one general blaze of persecution, Commissions for the mock trial of
Ridley, Latimer, and Cranmer, were directed to three bishops and several
others; but the imprisoned prelates, at their different appearances,
refused to acknowledge the papal authority. Cranmer was brought forward
the first; the next was Ridley, who began with a solemn declaration,
that although his present opinions were different from what they had
once been, yet he had not changed them from any worldly consideration,
but purely from the conviction of his mind, that he had discovered the
truth; and seeing he was now called upon to maintain the cause of God,
and the verity of his word, he protested that he should be permitted to
add to, or alter, any argument as he should find it necessary; and
hoped, as he had to contend against a whole committee, that he would not
be interrupted or assailed by more than one at a time. All this was
promised, but not complied with; for he was not only assailed by the
whole committee, one after another, but sometimes by four or five of
them at once. Still he maintained his ground, till his adversaries,
having shot off their last arrows, the prolocutor put an end to the
dispute, by saying, You see the obstinate, vainglorious, crafty, and
inconstant mind of this man; but you also see the force of truth cannot
be shaken, therefore cry oil! with me, Truth has the victory!
The three bishops were adjudged to be obstinate heretics, and declared no
longer members of the church; to which they all objected. Ridley told
the commissioners, that though he was not of their company, yet he
doubted not but his name was written in a better place, whether their
sentence would afford him a more early admission than the course of
nature seemed to indicate. The prisoners were conducted to their
separate prisons, where Ridley wrote a letter to the prolocutor,
complaining of the noisy and irregular manner in which the dispute was
carried on, whereby he was prevented from making a full defense, or of
urging his arguments at length, being overpowered with clamor, and the
cowardly abuse of four or five opponents at a time. He desired, however,
to have a copy of what the notaries had set down; but the request was
not granted.
Ridley and Latimer refused to recant, or to renounce their reason on the
unintelligible jargon of a popish Eucharist, the common watchword in
those days for murder; so they were delivered over to the secular arm.
The bishops of Gloucester, Lincoln, and Bristol, were sent to Oxford to
proceed against them. When their commission was read, and it appeared
that they were to proceed in the name of the pope, Ridley put on his
cap, and refused to pay any reverence to those who acted under that
authority; Latimer also protested against the papal authority; and being
both accused of the opinions they maintained in the public schools a
year and a half before, they were allowed till next morning to consider
whether they would retract. Next morning both adhered to the answers
they had already made, and accordingly were pronounced obstinate
heretics, degraded from their orders, and consigned over to the secular
power to be punished.
Every possible method was tried upon Ridley to persuade him to receive
the queen's mercy; which he rejected, and a warrant was sent down for
the execution of him and Latimer. Accordingly, on the 16th of October
1555, they suffered in the ditch opposite to Baliol college. When they
came up to the stake, they embraced one another very affectionately; and
Ridley, with an air of peculiar satisfaction, said to Latimer, cheer up
your heart brother, God will either assuage the fury of the flames, or
afford strength to endure it. He then returned to the stake, and falling
on his knees, kissed it, and prayed fervently for a short space; after
which, preparing to speak to the multitude, some persons ran up to him
and stopped his mouth. After being stripped, he stood on a stone by the
stake, and offered up the following prayer: “O heavenly Father, I give
thee hearty thanks that thou hast called me to confess the truths of thy
holy word, and maintain the doctrines of grace even unto death. I
beseech thee, Lord God, to have mercy on this realm of England, and
deliver it from all its enemies.” A Mr. Smith had delivered a long and
very abusive sermon, to which they were not permitted to make any
answer, unless they would recant. Ridley replied to this proposal, that
he never would deny his Lord, nor the truths of which he was fully
persuaded: so let the will of God be done. He said he had received
fines, when bishop of London, for leases which were now voided, and
requested that the queen might give orders, either that the leases
might be made good, or the fines restored to the tenants out of the
effects he had left behind him, which were more than sufficient for that
purpose. After this they were ordered to fit themselves for the stake.
As the smith was knocking in the staple that held the chain, he said,
knock it hard, good man, for the flesh will have its course. Some
gunpowder was hanged to their bodies to hasten their death, and the fire
put to the wood. The powder took fire with the first flame, which put
Latimer instantly out of pain; but there was so much wood thrown where
Ridley was, that the flame could not break through, so that his legs
were almost consumed before it was observed, when a passage for the
flame was opened, which soon put an end to his life, in the fifty-fifth
year of his age.
The station which both these martyrs had held in the church, their
exemplary lives, their benevolent disposition, their age, and the
patience, meekness, and fortitude of their behavior in passing through
this fiery ordeal, raised the commiseration of the spectators, and sent
them home in silent indignation at the actors and abettors of such
inhuman cruelty. Ridley's fine parts and acquirements in all the
branches of literature, necessary for a divine, gave him the first rank
in the clerical profession; and the purity of his life corresponded with
his knowledge. He was of an. easy and obliging temper; and though he had
spirit to support his character, and do himself justice with the great
and powerful, he was always ready to forgive injuries or offences. His
zeal for religion was never manifested by promoting severities against
those who held opinions different from his own, but in diligently
explaining the matters that appeared to be misunderstood, and shewing
their foundation in scripture and antiquity. The grace of his Master was
not only shewn in the candor and charity of his sentiments, but also in
kind and beneficent offices to those who differed from him in their
opinions. He was a benefactor to the poor and the oppressed; he
maintained Heath, the deprived bishop of Worchester, for a year and a
half, in the same splendor as though Fulhamhouse had been his own; and
Bonner's mother, who merited nothing on her own account, dined always at
his table so long as her son was held prisoner in the tower. The
reformation was greatly promoted by his learning, zeal, and active
exertions while he lived, and perhaps more so by his death in its
defense. In England, as everywhere else, the ancient observation has
been verified, that the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church.
And the magnanimity evinced by these good men, during this period of
persecuting barbarity, led to consequences the very reverse of those
anticipated by their adversaries. The cruelties exercised towards these
innocent and unresisting victims, set all the powers of commiserating
sensibility in motion, which, like a stream of electricity, rushed from
bosom to bosom. The terrors of power were lost in the triumph of the
martyrs, and every attempt to put the sufferers to shame recoiled on
their disappointed persecutors. So much was this the case, that
Gardiner, the insolent and browbeating bishop of Winchester, began' to
take shame to himself for wallowing in blood to so little purpose; and
that he might screen himself from the general execration, left that
staunch bloodhound Bonner, bishop of London, to play off the most
abhorrent parts of this infernal tragedy. But even Bonner himself turned
cool; and that he might not bear alone the infamy poured upon him, not
only from every corner of England, but from most of the nations of
Europe, he brought Philip and Mary on the theatre, that as they were the
original instigators, so they might come in for their share of merited
renown; and in all probability the early death of Mary saved her from
the mortification of becoming a queen without subjects, as she exhibited
no symptoms whatever of returning moderation.
We shall conclude the life of this eminent divine, and inflexible martyr,
with a quotation from Dr. Ridley, his friend and learned biographer.
“Bishop Ridley (says he) was gentle to tender consciences; but wherever
he found that .the will was in fault from vanity, malice, or obstinacy,
he set himself with great steadfastness to reduce them to reasonable
obedience. With respect to himself, he was a man of humility, much given
to prayer and contemplation. Ever careful of the best interests of his
family, he was assiduous in their instruction; he provided every one of
them who could read with a New Testament, and even hired them to learn
select passages by heart. So soon as he arose and had dressed himself,
he retired for about half an hour to his private devotion; after which,
unless interrupted by other business, he continued at his studies till
ten, when he came to family worship, and there read a lecture, beginning
with the Acts of the Apostles, and so went regularly through Paul's
epistles. In person, he was small of stature, but great
in learning, and profoundly read in divinity. Among several things that
he wrote were these: A Treatise concerning Images not to be set up nor
worshipped in churches—A brief declaration of the Lord's Supper.—A
Treatise of the blessed Sacrament.—A piteous Lamentation over the
miserable state of” the Church of England on the introduction of
Popery.—A Comparison between the comfortable Doctrines of the Gospel and
the Traditions of the Popish Religion.—He had a hand in compiling the
Common Prayerbook, as also in several disputations and conferences about
matters of religion. |
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