There were many reformers throughout the history of the Christian church and all of the great ones that we will look at in the next several issues came from within the Roman Catholic heritage. They did not set out to form new denominations nor did they seek to break from the Church. Rather, they passionately desired that the Church reform from within and correct abuses that had crept in over many generations.
In the sixteenth century the need for drastic reform and correction of religious abuses burst forth in full force with leaders, such as Luther, Calvin, and Zwingli. (We will look at them in future issues in this cycle.) But a necessary groundwork had been laid long before them through the work, vision, and sacrifice of others like Hus (next issue) and John Wycliffe.
John Wycliffe, heralded as the "Morning star of the Reformation" was the leading philosopher of the 14th century and an English priest.
Pressures like ours
If you had lived in Wycliffe's time, you would have found many of the
same uncertainties and pressures that are common to our own age. Seismic
shifts dislocated the settled patterns of life. The "Black Plague"
swept across England and Europe and in some places wiped out one-third
of the population. What was known as the "100 Years War" between
England and France sapped energy and resources. Wage controls locked the
poor into a marginal existence and led to the violent Peasant's Revolt
in England in 1381.
Both behavior and belief corrupted
Wycliffe cared deeply for the poor and common folk and railed against
the abuses of the Church. The Church owned over one-third of the land
in England. Clergy were often illiterate and immoral. High offices in
the church were bought or given out as political plums. But the problems
went even deeper. Wycliffe, a devoted student of the Bible, saw that some
of the doctrines of the church had departed from biblical moorings. Based
on his study of the Scripture, he wrote and preached against the teachings
about purgatory, the sale of indulgences, and the doctrine of transubstantiation.
Recovery from rejection
This was too much. Even his highly placed political friends deserted him.
Church authorities had him banished from his university teaching post
at Oxford. But his exile turned into a kind of liberation. Some of his
students joined him at the parish church in Lutterworth. There they undertook
the monumental task of translating all the Scriptures into English, working
from a handwritten Latin translation that was over 1000 years old. And
they continued Wycliffe's practice of training "poor preachers,"
known as Lollards, who took the Word out to the common people across the
land.
Think for a moment what it would mean to you if you could not own a Bible or if the Bible was not even available in your language. What if you were taught that the Bible was only for church officials to study and interpret? That was the exactly the case in Wycliffe's England.
Seed which overpowers . . . softens
So, nothing was more important to him than getting the Bible and its message
into the language and hearts of the people. He knew the Scriptures would
change lives. As he put it: God's words will give men new life more than
the other words that are for pleasure. O marvelous power of the Divine
Seed which overpowers strong men in arms, softens hard hearts, and renews
and changes into divine men, those men who had been brutalized by sins,
and departed infinitely far from God. Obviously such miraculous power
could never be worked by the work of a priest, if the Spirit of Life and
the Eternal Word did not, above all things else, work with it.
A buried threat
Wycliffe was condemned by the church and died of a stroke on New Year's
Eve in 1384. But his memory and influence continued so strong that he
was formally condemned again thirty years later at the Council of Constance.
Orders were given for his writings to be destroyed, his bones exhumed
and burned, and the ashes to be thrown into the nearby river. Somehow
the Church authorities thought that by burning his remains they might
erase his memory.
But even such bizarre and extreme actions could not could stop the hunger for God's Word and truth that Wycliffe had uncompromisingly advocated. The chronicler Fuller put it this way:
They burnt his bones to ashes and cast them into the Swift, a neighboring brook running hard by. Thus the brook hath conveyed his ashes into Avon, Avon into Severn; Severn into the narrow seas; and they into the main ocean. And thus the ashes of Wycliffe are the emblem of his doctrine which now is dispersed the world over.
Wycliffe's work goes on today |