登陆注册
14718400000158

第158章

The most striking figure in it was doubtless Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury, although he does not represent the English Reformation in all its phases. He was neither so prominent nor so great a man as Luther or Calvin, or even Knox. But, taking him all in all, he was the most illustrious of the English reformers; and he, more than any other man, gave direction to the spirit of reform, which had been quietly working ever since the time of Wyclif, especially among the humbler classes.

The English Reformation--the way to which had been long preparing--began in the reign of Henry VIII.; and this unscrupulous and tyrannical monarch, without being a religious man, gave the first great impulse to an outbreak the remote consequences of which he did not anticipate, and with which he had no sympathy. He rebelled against the authority of the Pope, without abjuring the Roman Catholic religion, either as to dogmas or forms. In fact, the first great step towards reform was made, not by Cranmer, but by Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex, as the prime minister of Henry VIII.,--a man of whom we really know the least of all the very great statesmen of English history. It was he who demolished the monasteries, and made war on the whole monastic system, and undermined the papal power in England, and swept away many of the most glaring of those abuses which disgraced the Papal Empire.

Armed with the powers which Wolsey had wielded, he directed them into a totally different channel; so far as the religious welfare of the nation is considered, although in his principles of government he was as absolute as Richelieu. Like the great French statesman, he exalted the throne; but, unlike him, he promoted the personal reign of the sovereign he served with remarkable ability and devotion.

Thomas Cromwell, the prime minister of Henry VIII., after the fall of Wolsey, was born in humble ranks, and was in early life a common soldier in the wars of Italy, then a clerk in a mercantile house in Antwerp, then a wool merchant in Middleborough, then a member of Parliament, and was employed by Wolsey in suppressing some of the smaller monasteries. His fidelity to his patron Wolsey, at the time of that great cardinal's fall, attracted the special notice of the King, who made him royal secretary in the House of Commons. He made his fortune by advising Henry to declare himself Head of the English Church, when he was entangled in the difficulties growing out of the divorce of Catharine. This advice was given with the patriotic view of making the royal authority superior to that of the Pope in Church patronage, and of making England independent of Rome.

The great scandal of the times was the immoral lives of the clergy, especially of the monks, and the immunities they enjoyed. They were a hindrance to the royal authority, and weakened the resources of the country by the excessive drain of gold and silver sent to Rome to replenish the papal treasury. Cromwell would make the clergy dependent on the King and not on the Pope for their investitures and promotions; and he abominated the idle and vagabond lives of the monks, who had degenerated in England, perhaps more than in any other country in Europe, in consequence of the great wealth of their monasteries. He was able to render his master and the kingdom a great service, from the powers lavished upon him. He presided at convocations as the King's vicegerent;controlled the House of Commons, and was inquisitor-general of the monasteries; he was foreign and home secretary, vicar-general and president of the star-chamber or privy-council. The proud Nevilles, the powerful Percies, and the noble Courtenays all bowed before this plebeian son of a mechanic, who had arisen by force of genius and lucky accidents,--too wise to build a palace like Hampton Court, but not ecclesiastical enough in his sympathies to found a college like Christ's Church as Wolsey did. He was a man simple in his tastes, and hard-working like Colbert,--the great finance minister of France under Louis XIV., whom he resembled in his habits and policy.

His great task, as well as his great public service, was the visitation and suppression of monasteries. He perceived that they had fulfilled their mission; that they were no longer needed; that they had become corrupt, and too corrupt to be reformed; that they were no longer abodes of piety, or beehives of industry, or nurseries of art, or retreats of learning; that their wealth was squandered; that they upheld the arm of a foreign power; that they shielded offenders against the laws; that they encouraged vagrancy and extortion; that, in short, they were dangerous to the realm.

The monks and friars opposed the new learning now extending from Italy to France, to Germany, and to England. Colet came back from Italy, not to teach Platonic mysticism, but to unlock the Scriptures in the original,--the centre of a group of scholars at Oxford, of whom Erasmus and Thomas More stood in the foremost rank.

Before the close of the fifteenth century, it is said that ten thousand editions of various books had been printed in different parts of Europe. All the Latin authors, and some of the Greek, were accessible to students. Tunstall and Latimer were sent to Padua to complete their studies. Fox, bishop of Winchester, established a Greek professorship at Oxford. It was an age of enthusiasm for reviving literature,--which, however, received in Germany, through the influence chiefly of Luther, a different direction from what it received in Italy, and which extended from Germany to England. But to this awakened spirit the monks presented obstacles and discouragements. They had no sympathy with progress; they belonged to the Dark Ages; they were hostile to the circulation of the Scriptures; they were pedlers of indulgences and relics; impostors, frauds, vagabonds, gluttons, worldly, sensual, and avaricious.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 纪异者

    纪异者

    中世纪时期,黑武党家族林立,而其中有十个家族被十大神器选中,悠久传承至今……五年前,十大黑武党家族之一的卡斯罗尔家族发生巨大变故——当任族长在一次族间争斗中不幸坠崖而亡,其妻与其子怀元澈被迫迁居于广城这个平凡的城市,不久之后怀母又悄然出走,只留下年仅十二岁的少年孤身面对着陌生的一切……五年过去了,心灵上的旧伤也该被如水般的岁月抚平,岂料青梅竹马又被一群神秘黑衣人带走。这一次,失去重要之人的痛意终于激起了怀元澈男儿的血性,从此他毅然踏上了成为传奇异者的荆棘之路!为夺回挚友,怀元澈携伙伴闯难关;年轻人们儿女情长,却又各自背负着家族的宿命。然而在一切看似尘埃已定之时,这个世界的秘辛才开始浮出水面……
  • 口袋妖怪之晨夕

    口袋妖怪之晨夕

    宠物小精灵之晨夕就是宠物小精灵的故事。主角名叫盖伦。可是德玛西亚之力!吓到了没有?他的故事才开始了!
  • 至尊世子妃

    至尊世子妃

    魔女历劫归来成至尊王妃,一心与夫携手,安享富贵,奈何在那之前只能拼命的游弋在各种的阴谋阳某,为那一方乐土,拼尽一切!景之言儿甜蜜篇“言儿,过来到我这边!”慕雅言回头一看来人,立刻扔了手里正在拉的绳子,转身就跑,留下叶欣儿一个人因为突然少了慕雅言里的力,而重心不稳的晃了晃身子:“慕雅言,你这个重色轻友的东西,你要摔死我啊!”慕雅言闻言停下身子,仔细看了看叶欣儿和地面的距离:“你放心吧,我看过了,你不会被摔死,顶多残疾!”“景之,我很听话吧!”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 只因曾经相爱过

    只因曾经相爱过

    曾记否,那年的花季,花一般的少女,像一道绚丽彩虹闯进了顾言卿的心里,她说:她喜欢晴天,喜欢画美丽的风景,喜欢自己的生活。那时,顾言卿只是抚摸她那飘逸的长发,静静地听着她的诉说,比起她喜欢的,他更喜欢她,他是他生命中的彩虹花,胜过一切,即使过了10年,每当他睡梦中,总会梦见她眨着大大的眼睛,红扑扑的小脸蛋,穿着碎花裙子在向着他微笑招手,可惜,每当他想抱住她,她却消失了,而自己的泪水已浸湿了枕头,曾嘉言,你为何在带走我的心以后,自己却还能走的那么洒脱
  • 绝佳风代

    绝佳风代

    看他怎么表白:我爱你,所以你必须当我女朋友。你是我的一辈子,所以你也要爱我一辈子。众花痴:“哇!王子殿下好浪漫,好酷哦!”花痴中的一员:“诶,不对呀!王子殿下跟别人表白了,那我们怎么办,不就没人要了!”众花痴:“对喔!呜呜呜,王子殿下你怎么可以这么狠心?!”两位主角“……”他略带沙哑而富有磁性的声音在她耳边响起:“依依宝贝,我爱你。”她羞涩地回应着“唔……皇……我也爱你~”
  • 中层管理者培训读本

    中层管理者培训读本

    中层管理者在企业中也叫中层领导、中层干部、中层管理人员、部门主管、部门经理、项目经理,有的企业称之为部长、处长、科长、主任等。中层管理者作为企业的中坚和脊梁,其重要性是不容质疑的。企业要想切实发挥中层管理者在企业管理工作中的作用,就应该不断加强中层管理者的管理技能培训,使他们能够切实承担起企业战略执行者的职责。
  • 启迪青少年卓越人生的智慧故事

    启迪青少年卓越人生的智慧故事

    本丛书精选了适合中小学生阅读的经典故事,这些故事意蕴深妙,语言简练,深入浅出地阐发了丰富的人生哲理,其中的智慧可以帮助中学生理解学习和生活的意义,有助于他们更好地贴近生活,融入社会。
  • 查理九世亚特兰蒂斯之心2

    查理九世亚特兰蒂斯之心2

    【(可单独食用哦)安非特利特通过海神之泪联系亚瑟,找到亚特兰蒂斯之心并且携手另外二人复兴故乡,本作剧情基于《查理九世亚特兰蒂斯之心》“九九归一”后开始】你回到最古老的文明深处也无可挽回,很快你就会明白,你以故乡和信仰为由的寻找之物或许根本就不属于你。时光辗转,我们每一次都以不同的身份相见,我要助你一臂之力,还要将你推向无尽的深渊。人的寿命是短暂的,很久以前的事,就留给后人去评说吧。你或许还没有看透这复杂可笑的牵绊,当光从千万镜面上反射汇聚,你将明白,你将要做的事,你早就成功过。当你在时光的长河中一次一次逝去,我再不相信永恒。
  • 穿越时空寻真爱

    穿越时空寻真爱

    玉雪是非专业的!但是希望大家能多支持!有什么意见尽管提,玉雪会尽力让大家满意!千万不要批评的太狠啊!玉雪可是个爱面子的小女人!哈哈!玉雪在此先谢过啦!建了个群喜欢玉雪或有意见想提的都可以加36663479。
  • 新世神迹

    新世神迹

    一场突如其来的灾难,让整个世界发生了翻天覆地的变化,艾凡一个普普通通的高中生,看他如何破解这从远古到现在一直所被隐藏的秘密~天有多高,手有多骚。大家好,我是一个新的写手,我最大的希望就是希望大家能喜欢我写的文章,如果您对我写的不好的地方有意见或者建议,欢迎留下你的评论,我会一一改正的,谢谢,谢谢,万分感谢!