Chapter I. -- Wicliffe: His Birth and Education.
J. A. Wylie's History of Protestantism
Book Second. -- Wicliffe and His Times, or Advent of Protestantism.
The Principle and the Rite--Rapid Growth of the One--Slow Progress and ultimate Triumph of the Other-- England--Wicliffe--His Birthplace--His Education--Goes to Oxford--Enters Merton College--Its Fame--The Evangelical Bradwardine--His Renown--Pioneers the Way for Wicliffe--The Philosophy of those Days--Wicliffe's Eminence as a Scholastic--Studies also the Canon and Civil Laws--His Conversion--Theological Studies--The Black Death--Ravages Greece, Italy, &c.--Enters England--Its awful Desolations--Its Impression on Wicliffe--Stands Face to Face with Eternal Death--Taught not to Fear the Death of the Body.
With the revolving
centuries we behold the world slowly entering into the light. The fifth
century brought with it a signal blessing to Christianity in the guise
of a disaster. Like a tree that was growing too rapidly, it was cut down
to its roots that it might escape a luxuriance which would have been its
ruin. From a Principle that has its seat in the heart, and the fruit of
which is an enlightened understanding and a holy life, Religion, under
the corrupting influences of power and riches, was being transformed into
a Rite, which, having its sphere solely in the senses, leaves the soul
in darkness and the life in bondage.
These two, the
Principle and the Rite, began so early as the fourth and fifth centuries
to draw apart, and to develop each after its own kind. The rite rapidly
progressed, and seemed far to outstrip its rival. It built for itself gorgeous
temples, it enlisted in its service a powerful hierarchy, it added year
by year to the number and magnificence of its ceremonies, it expressed
itself in canons and constitutions; and, seduced by this imposing show,
nations bowed down before it, and puissant kings lent their swords for
its defence and propagation.
Far otherwise
was it with its rival. Withdrawing into the spiritual sphere, it appeared
to have abandoned the field to its antagonist. Not so, however. If
it had hidden itself from the eyes of men, it was that it might build up
from the very foundation, piling truth upon truth, and prepare in silence
those mighty spiritual forces by which it was in due time to emancipate
the world. Its progress was consequently less marked, but was far more
real than that of its antagonist. Every error which the one pressed into
its service was a cause of weakness; every truth which the other added
to its creed was a source of strength. The uninstructed and superstitious
hordes which the one received into its communion were dangerous allies.
They might follow it in the day of its prosperity, but they would desert
it and become its foes whenever the tide of popular favour turned against
it. Not so the adherents of the other. With purified hearts and enlightened
understandings, they were prepared to follow it at all hazards. The number
of its disciples, small at first, continually multiplied. The purity of
their lives, the meekness with which they bore the injuries inflicted on
them, and the heroism with which their death was endured, augmented from
age to age the moral power and the spiritual glory of their cause. And
thus, while the one reached its fall through its very success, the other
marched on through oppression and proscription to triumph.
We have arrived
at the beginning of the fourteenth century. We have had no occasion hitherto
to speak of the British Isles, but now our attention must be turned to
them. Here a greater light is about to appear than any that had illumined
the darkness of the ages that had gone before.
In the North Riding
of Yorkshire, watered by the Tees, lies the parish of Wicliffe. In the
manor-house of this parish, in the year 1324, [1] was born a child, who
was named John. Here his ancestors had lived since the time of the Conquest,
and, according to the manner of the times, they took their surname from
the place of their residence. and the son now born to them was known as
John de Wicliffe. Of his boyhood nothing is recorded. He was destined from
an early age for the Church, which gives us ground to conclude that even
then he discovered that penetrating intelligence which marked his maturer
years, and that loving sympathy which drew him so often in after life to
the homesteads and the sick-beds of his parish of Lutterworth. Schools
for rudimental instruction were even then pretty thickly planted over England,
in connection with the cathedral towns and the religious houses; and it
is probable that the young Wicliffe received his first training at one
of these seminaries in his own neighborhood. [2]
At the age of
sixteen or thereabouts, Wicliffe was sent to Oxford. Here he became first
a scholar, and next a fellow of Merton College, the oldest foundation save
one in Oxford. [3] The youth of England, athirst for knowledge, the fountains
of which had long been sealed up, were then crowding to the universities,
and when Wicliffe entered Merton there were not fewer than 30,000 students
at Oxford. These numbers awaken surprise, but it is to be taken into account
that many of the halls were no better than upper schools. The college which
Wicliffe joined was the most distinguished at that seat of learning. The
fame, unrivalled in their own day, which two of its scholars, William Occam
and Duns Scotus, had attained, shed a lustre upon it. One of its
chairs had been filled by the celebrated Bradwardine, [4] who was closing
his career at Merton about the time that the young Wicliffe was opening
his in Oxford. Bradwardine was one of the first mathematicians and astronomers
of his day; but having been drawn to the study of the Word of God, he embraced
the doctrines of free grace, and his chair became a fountain of higher
knowledge than that of natural science. While most of his contemporaries,
by the aid of a subtle scholasticism, were endeavouring to penetrate into
the essence of things, and to explain all mysteries, Bradwardine was content
to accept what God had revealed in his Word, and this humility was rewarded
by his finding the path which others missed. Lifting the veil, he unfolded
to his students, who crowded round him with eager attention and admiring
reverence, the way of life, warning them especially against that Pelagianism
which was rapidly substituting a worship of externals for a religion of
the heart, and teaching men to trust in their power of will for a salvation
which can come only from the sovereign grace of God. Bradwardine was greater
as a theologian than he had been as a philosopher. The fame of his lectures
filled Europe, and his evangelical views, diffused by his scholars, helped
to prepare the way for Wicliffe and others who were to come after him.
It was around his chair that the new day was seen first to break.
A quick apprehension,
a penetrating intellect, and a retentive memory, enabled the young scholar
of Merton to make rapid progress in the learning of those days. Philosophy
then lay in guesses rather than in facts. Whatever could be known from
having been put before man in the facts of Nature or the doctrines of Revelation,
was deemed not worth further investigation. It was too humble an occupation
to observe and to deduce. In the pride of his genius, man turned away from
a field lying at his feet, and plunged boldly into a region where, having
no data to guide him and no ground for solid footing, he could learn really
nothing. From this region of vague speculation the explorer brought back
only the images of his own creating, and, dressing up these fancies as
facts, he passed them off as knowledge.
Such was the philosophy
that invited the study of Wicliffe. [5] There was scarce enough in it to
reward his labour, but he thirsted for knowledge, and giving himself to
it "with his might," he soon became a master in the scholastic philosophy,
and did not fear to encounter the subtlest of all the subtle disputants
in the schools of Oxford. He was "famously reputed," says Fox, "for a great
clerk, a deep schoolman, and no less expert in all kinds of philosophy."
Walden, his bitter enemy, writing to Pope Martin V. respecting him, says
that he was "wonderfully astonished" at the "vehemency and force of his
reasonings," and the "places of authority" with which they were fortified.
[6] To his knowledge of scholastics he added great proficiency in both
the canon and civil laws. This was a branch of knowledge which stood him
in more stead in after years than the other and more fashionable science.
By these studies he became versed in the constitution and laws of his native
country, and was fitted for taking an intelligent part in the battle which
soon thereafter arose between the usurpations of the Pontiff and the rights
of the crown of England. "He had an eye for the most different things,"
says Lechler, speaking of Wicliffe, "and took a lively interest in the
most multifarious questions." [7]
But the foundation
of Wicliffe's greatness was laid in a higher teaching than any that man
can give. It was the illumination of his mind and the renewal of his heart
by the instrumentality of the Bible that made him the Reformer-- certainly,
the greatest of all the Reformers who appeared before the era of Luther.
Without this, he might have been remembered as an eminent scholastic of
the fourteenth century, whose fame has been luminous enough to transmit
a few feeble rays to our own time; but he never would have been known as
the first to bear the axe into the wilderness of Papal abuses, and to strike
at the roots of that great tree of which others had been content to lop
off a few of the branches. The honour would not have been his to be the
first to raise that GREAT PROTEST, which nations will bear onwards till
it shall have made the circuit of the earth, proclaiming, "Fallen is every
idol, razed is every stronghold of darkness and tyranny, and now is come
salvation, and the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, and he shall
reign for ever."
How Wicliffe came
to the knowledge of the truth it is not difficult to guess. He was,
as D'Aubigné informs us, one of the scholars of the evangelical
Bradwardine. [8] As he heard the great master discourse day by day on the
sovereignty of grace and the freeness of salvation, a new light would begin
to break upon the mind of the young scholastic. He would turn to a diviner
page than that of Plato. But for this Wicliffe might have entered the priesthood
without ever having studied a single chapter of the Bible, for instruction
in theology formed no part of preparation for the sacred office in those
days.
No doubt theology,
after a fashion, was studied, yet not a theology whose substance was drawn
from the Bible, but a man-invented system. The Bachelors of Theology of
the lowest grade held readings in the Bible. Not so, however, the Bachelors
of the middle and highest grades: these founded their prelections upon
the Sentences of Peter Lombard. Puffed up with the conceit of their mystical
lore, they regarded it beneath their dignity to expound so elementary a
book as the Holy Scriptures. The former were named contemptuously Biblicists;
the latter were honourably designated Sententiarii, or Men of the Sentences.
[9]
"There was no
mention," says Fox, describing the early days of Wicliffe, "nor almost
any word spoken of Scripture. Instead of Peter and Paul, men occupied their
time in studying Aquinas and Scotus, and the Master of Sentences." "Scarcely
any other thing was seen in the temples or churches, or taught or spoken
of in sermons, or finally intended or gone about in their whole life, but
only heaping up of certain shadowed ceremonies upon ceremonies; neither
was there any end of their heaping. The people were taught to worship no
other thing but that which they did see, and they did see almost nothing
which they did not worship." [10]
In the midst of
these grovelling superstitions, men were startled by the approach of a
terrible visitant. The year 1348 was fatally signalised by the outbreak
of a fearful pestilence, one of the most destructive in history.
Appearing first in Asia, it took a westerly course, traversing the globe
like the pale horse and his rider in the Apocalypse, terror marching before
it, and death following in its rear. It ravaged the shores of the Levant,
it desolated Greece, and going on still toward the west, it struck Italy
with terrible severity. Florence, the lovely capital of Etruria, it turned
into a charnel-house. The genius of Boccaccio painted its horrors, and
the muse of Petrarch bewailed its desolations. The latter had cause, for
Laura was among its victims. Passing the Alps it entered Northern Europe,
leaving, say some contemporary historians, only a tenth of the human race
alive. This we know is an exaggeration; but it expresses the popular impression,
and sufficiently indicates the awful character of those ravages, in which
all men heard, as it were, the footsteps of coming death. The sea as well
as the land was marked with its devastating prints. Ships voyaging afar
on the ocean were overtaken by it, and when the winds piloted them to land,
they were found to be freighted with none but the dead.
On the 1st of
August the plague touched the shores of England. "Beginning at Dorchester,"
says Fox, "every day twenty, some days forty, some fifty, and more, dead
corpses, were brought and laid together in one deep pit." On the 1st day
of November it reached London, "where," says the same chronicler, "the
vehement rage thereof was so hot, and did increase so much, that from the
1st day of February till about the beginning of May, in a church-yard then
newly made by Smithfield [Charterhouse], about two hundred dead corpses
every day were buried, besides those which in other church-yards of the
city were laid also." [11]
"In those days,"
says another old chronicler, Caxton, "was death without sorrow, weddings
without friendship, flying without succour; scarcely were there left living
folk for to bury honestly them that were dead." Of the citizens of London
not fewer than 100,000 perished. The ravages of the plague were spread
over all England, and a full half of the nation was struck down.
From men the pestilence passed to the lower animals. Putrid carcases covered
the fields; the labours of the husbandman were suspended; the soil ceased
to be ploughed, and the harvest to be reaped; the courts of law were closed,
and Parliament did not meet; everywhere reigned terror, mourning, and death.
This dispensation
was the harbinger of a very different one. The tempest that scathed the
earth, opened the way for the shower which was to fertilise it. The
plague was not without its influence on that great movement which, beginning
with Wicliffe, was continued in a line of confessors and martyrs, till
it issued in the Reformation of Luther and Calvin. Wicliffe had been a
witness of the passage of the destroyer; he had seen the human race fading
from off the earth as if the ages had completed their cycle, and the end
of the world was at hand. He was then in his twenty-fifth year, and could
not but be deeply impressed by the awful events passing around him. "This
visitation of the Almighty," says D'Aubigné, "sounded like the trumpet
of the judgment-day in the heart of Wicliffe." [12] Bradwardine had already
brought him to the Bible, the plague brought him to it a second time; and
now, doubtless, he searched its page more earnestly than ever. He came
to it, not as the theologian, seeking in it a deeper wisdom than any mystery
which the scholastic philosophy could open to him; nor as the scholar,
to refine his taste by its pure models, and enrich his understanding by
the sublimity of its doctrines; nor even as the polemic, in search of weapons
wherewith to assail the dominant superstitions; he now came to the Bible
as a lost sinner, seeking how he might be saved. Nearer every day came
the messenger of the Almighty. The shadow that messenger cast before him
was hourly deepening; and we can hear the young student, who doubtless
in that hour felt the barrenness and insufficiency of the philosophy of
the schools, lifting up with increasing vehemency the cry, "Who shall deliver
me from the wrath to come?" It would seem to be a law that all who are
to be reformers of their age shall first undergo a conflict of soul. They
must feel in their own case the strength of error, the bitterness of the
bondage in which it holds men, and stand face to face with the Omnipotent
Judge, before they can become the deliverers of others. This only can inspire
them with pity for the wretched captives whose fetters they seek to break,
and give them courage to brave the oppressors from whose cruelty they labour
to rescue them. This agony of soul did Luther and Calvin undergo; and a
distress and torment similar in character, though perhaps not so great
in degree, did Wicliffe endure before beginning his work. His sins, doubtless,
were made a heavy burden to him--so heavy that he could not lift up his
head. Standing on the brink of the pit, he says, he felt how awful it was
to go down into the eternal night, "and inhabit everlasting burnings."
The joy of escape from a doom so terrible made him feel how small a matter
is the life of the body, and how little to be regarded are the torments
which the tyrants of earth have it in their power to inflict, compared
with the wrath of the Ever-living God. It is in these fires that the reformers
have been hardened. It is in this school that they have learned to defy
death and to sing at the stake. In this armour was Wicliffe clad before
he was sent forth into the battle.
[1] Lewis, Life of
Wiclif, p. 1; Oxford ed., 1820.
[2] Lechler thinks
that "probably it was the pastor of the same-named village who was his
first teacher." (Johann von Wiclif, und die Vorgeschichte der Reformation,
vol. i., p. 271; Leipzig, 1873.)
[3] Of the twenty
and more colleges that now constitute Oxford University, only five then
existed, viz.--Merton (1274), Balliol (1260-82), Exeter (1314), Oriel (1324),
and University College (1332). These foundations were originally intended
for the support of poor scholars, who were under the rule of a superior,
and received both board and instruction.
[4] Lewis, Life
of Wiclif, p. 2.
[5] The study of
the artes liberales, from which the Faculty of Arts takes its name were,
first, Trivium, comprehending grammar, dialectics, and rhetoric; then Quadrivium,
comprehending arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, and music. It was not uncommon
to study ten years at the university--four in the Faculty of Arts, and
seven, or at least five, in theology. If Wicliffe entered the university
in 1335, he probably ended his studies in 1345. He became successively
Bachelor of Arts, Master of Arts, and, after an interval of several years,
Bachelor of Theology, or as they then expressed it, Sacra Pagina.
[6] Fox, Acts and
Mon., vol. i., p. 554; Lond., 1641.
[7] Lechler, Johann
von Wiclif, vol. i., p. 726.
[8] D'Aubigné,
Hist. of Reform., vol. v., p. 110.
[9] Lechler, Johann
von Wiclif, und die Vorgeschichte der Reformation, vol. i., p. 284; Leipzig,
1873.
[10] Fox, Acts and
Mon., vol. i., p. 555. After the Sentences of Peter Lombard, in the study
of theology, came the patristic and scholastic divines, and especially
the Summa of Thomas Aquinas.
[11] Fox, Acts and
Mon., vol. i., p. 507.
[12] D'Aubigné,
Hist. of Reform., vol. v., p. 110.