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John Wycliffe's Last Days
Anticipation of a Violent Death — Wonderfully Shielded by Events
— Struck with Palsy — Dies December 31st, 1384 — Estimate of his Position and Work
— Completeness of his Scheme of Reform — The Father of the Reformation — The Founder
of England's Liberties.
An Excerpt from "The
History of Protestantism" Volume 1, Book 2, Chapter 14 ---New Window
by J. A. Wylie
CHAPTER 14
WICLIFFE'S LAST DAYS
HEN Wicliffe had indited
and dispatched this letter, he had "finished his testimony." It now remained
only that he should rest a little while on earth, and then go up to his everlasting
rest. He himself expected that his death would be by violence — that the chariot
which should carry him to the skies would be a "chariot of fire." The primate,
the king, the Pope, all were working to compass his destruction; he saw the iron
circle contracting day by day around him; a few months, or a few years, and it would
close and crush him. That a man who defied the whole hierarchy, and who never gave
way by so much as a foot-breadth, but was always pressing on in the battle, should
die at last, not in a dungeon or at a stake, but in his own bed, was truly a marvel.
He stood alone; he did not consult for his safety. But his very courage, in the hand
of God, was his shield; for while meaner men were apprehended and compelled to recant,
Wicliffe, who would burn but not recant, was left at liberty. "He that loveth
his life shall lose it." The political troubles of England, the rivalry of the
two Popes, one event after another came to protect the life and prolong the labors
of the Reformer, till his work attained at last a unity, a completeness, and a grandeur,
which the more we contemplate it appears the more admirable. That it was the fixed
purpose of his enemies to destroy him cannot be doubted; they thought they saw the
opportune moment coming. But while they waited for it, and thought that now it was
near, Wicliffe had departed, and was gone whither they could not follow.
On the last Sunday of the year 1384, he was to have dispensed the Eucharist to his
beloved flock in the parish church of Lutterworth; and as he was in the act of consecrating
the bread and wine, he was struck with palsy, and fell on the pavement. This was
the third attack of the malady. He was affectionately borne to the rectory, laid
on his bed, and died on the 31st of December, his life and the year closing together.
How fitting a conclusion to his noble life! None of its years, scarcely any of its
days, were passed unprofitably on the bed of sickness. The moment his great work
was finished, that moment the Voice spake to him which said, "Come up hither."
As he stood before the earthly symbols of his Lord's passion, a cloud suddenly descended
upon him; and when its darkness had passed, and the light had returned, serener and
more bright than ever was dawn or noon of earthly day, it was no memorial or symbol
that he saw; it was his Lord Himself, in the august splendor of His glorified humanity.
Blessed transition! The earthly sanctuary, whose gates he had that morning entered,
became to him the vestibule of the Eternal Temple; and the Sabbath, whose services
he had just commenced, became the dawn of a better Sabbath, to be closed by no evening
with its shadows, and followed by no week-day with its toils.
If we can speak of one center where the light which is spreading over the earth,
and which is destined one day to illuminate it all, originally arose, that center
is England. And if to one man the honour of beginning that movement which is renewing
the world can be ascribed beyond controversy, that man is John Wicliffe. He came
out of the darkness of the Middle Ages — a sort of Melchisedek. He had no predecessor
from whom he borrowed his plan of Church reform, and he had no successor in his office
when he died; for it was not till more than 100 years that any other stood up in
England to resume the work broken off by his death. Wicliffe stands apart, distinctly
marked off from all the men in Christendom. Bursting suddenly upon a dark age, he
stands before it in a light not borrowed from the schools, nor from the doctors of
the Church, but from the Bible. He came preaching a scheme of re-institution and
reformation so comprehensive, that no Reformer since has been able to add to it any
one essential principle. On these solid grounds he is entitled to be regarded as
the Father of the Reformation. With his rise the night of Christendom came to an
end, and the day broke which has ever since continued to brighten. Wicliffe possessed
that combination of opposite qualities which marks the great man. As subtle as any
schoolman of them all, he was yet as practical as any Englishman of the nineteenth
century. With intuitive insight he penetrated to the root of all the evils that afflicted
England, and with rare practical sagacity he devised and set agoing the true remedies.
The evil he saw was ignorance, the remedy with which he sought to cure it was light.
He translated the Bible, and he organized a body of preachers — simple, pious, earnest
men — who knew the Gospel, and were willing to preach it at crossroads and in market-places,
in city and village and rural lane — everywhere, in short. Before he died he saw
that his labors had been successful to a degree he had not dared to hope. "His
doctrine spread," said Knighton, his bitter enemy, "like suckers from the
root of a tree." Wicliffe himself reckoned that a third of the priests of England
were of his sentiment on the question of the Eucharist; and among the common people
his disciples were innumerable. "You could not meet two men on the highway,"
said his enemies, "but one of them is a Wicliffite."
The political measures which Parliament adopted at Wicliffe's
advice, to guard the country against the usurpations of the Popes, show how deeply
he saw into the constitution of the Papacy, as a political and worldly confederacy,
wearing a spiritual guise only the better to conceal its true character and to gain
its real object, which was to prey on the substance and devour the liberty of nations.
Matters were rapidly tending to a sacerdotal autocracy. Christendom was growing into
a kingdom of shorn and anointed men, with laymen as hewers of wood and drawers of
water. Wicliffe said, "This shall not be;" and the best proof of his statesmanship
is the fact that since his day all the other States of Europe, one after the other,
have adopted the same measures of defense to which England had recourse in the fourteenth
century. All of them, following in our wake, have passed laws to guard their throne,
to regulate the appointment of bishops, to prevent the accumulation of property by
religious houses, to restrict the introduction of bulls and briefs. They have done,
in short, what we did, though to less advantage, because they did it later in the
day. England foresaw the evil and took precautions in time; other countries suffered
it to come, and began to protect themselves only after it had all but effected their
undoing.
It was under Wicliffe that English liberty had its beginnings. It is not the political
constitution which has come out of the Magna Charta of King John and the barons,
but the moral constitution which came out of that Divine Magna Charta, that Wicliffe
gave her in the fourteenth century, which has been the sheet-anchor of England. The
English Bible wrote, not merely upon the page of the Statute Book, but upon the hearts
of the people of England, the two great commandments: Fear God; honor the king. These
two sum up the whole duty of nations, and on these two hangs the prosperity of States.
There is no mysterious or latent virtue in our political constitution which, as some
seem to think, like a. good genius protects us, and with invisible hand guides past
our shores the tempests that cover other countries with the memorials of their devastating
fury. The real secret of England's greatness is her permeation, at the very dawn
of her history, with the principles of order and liberty by means of the English
Bible, and the capacity for freedom thereby created. This has permitted the development,
by equal stages, of our love for freedom and our submission to law; of our political
constitution and our national genius; of our power and our self-control — the two
sets of qualities fitting into one another, and growing into a well-compacted fabric
of political and moral power unexampled on earth. If nowhere else is seen a similar
structure, so stable and so lofty, it is because nowhere else has a similar basis
been found for it. It was Wicliffe who laid that basis.
But above all his other qualities — above his scholastic genius, his intuitive insight
into the working of institutions, his statesmanship — was his fearless submission
to the Bible. It was in this that the strength of Wicliffe's wisdom lay. It was this
that made him a Reformer, and that placed him in the first rank of Reformers. He
held the Bible to contain a perfect revelation of the will of God, a full, plain,
and infallible rule of both what man is to believe and what he is to do; and turning
away from all other teachers, from the precedents of the thousand years which had
gone before, from all the doctors and Councils of the Church, he placed himself before
the Word of God, and bowed to God's voice speaking in that Word, with the docility
of a child.
And the authority to which he himself so implicitly bowed, he called on all men to
submit to. His aim was to bring men back to the Bible. The Reformer restored to the
Church, first of all, the principle of authority. There must be a Divine and infallible
authority in the Church. That authority cannot be the Church herself, for the guide
and those whom he guides cannot be the same. The Divine infallible authority which
Wicliffe restored for the guidance of men was the Bible — God speaking in His Word.
And by setting up this Divine authority he displaced that human and fallible authority
which the corruption of the ages had imposed upon the Church. He turned the eyes
of men from Popes and Councils to the inspired oracles of God.
Wicliffe, by restoring authority to the Church, restored to
her liberty also. While he taught that the Bible was a sufficient and all-perfect
rule, he taught also that every man had a right to interpret the Word of God for
his own guidance, in a dependence upon the promised aid of the Holy Spirit. Thus
he taught men to cast off that blind submission to the teaching of mere human authority,
which is bondage, and to submit their understandings and consciences to God speaking
in His Word, which alone is liberty.
These are the two first necessities of the Church of God — authority and liberty;
an infallible Guide, and freedom to follow Him. These two must ever go together,
the one cannot exist without the other. Without authority there can be no liberty,
for liberty without order becomes anarchy; and without freedom there can be no Divine
authority, for if the Church is not at liberty to obey the will of her Master, authority
is overthrown. In the room of the rule of God is put the usurpation of man. Authority
and freedom, like the twins of classic story, must together flourish or together
die.
Also:
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A WStS Prologue of J.A. Wylie's "The
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