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HOW
THE REFORMATION CHANGED THE CHURCH
In
the book of Judges we read about another generation which
arose, which knew neither the Lord nor what He had done
(Judges 2:10). Today, it appears that a generation has arisen,
which like Israel under the Judges, knows little of either
the Lord nor of what He did during the time of the Protestant
exodus and the struggles in the wilderness, which followed
in the 16th and 17th century. Sometimes this is from a cowardly
dislike of controversy and confrontation. But few people
seem to understand either the evils from which the Reformation
delivered us or the blessings which the Reformation won
for us.
The Reformation delivered the Church from gross ignorance
and spiritual darkness
The church, before the Reformation, was a church without
the Bible. And a church without a Bible is as useless as
a lighthouse without light, a candlestick without a candle,
or a motor vehicle without an engine. The priests and people
knew scarcely anything about Gods Word or the way
of salvation in Christ.
Bishop J.C. Ryle described the situation: The immense
majority of the clergy did little more than say masses and
offer up pretended sacrifices, repeat Latin prayers and
chant Latin hymns (which of course most of the people could
not understand), hear confessions, grant absolutions, give
extreme unction, and take money to get dead people out of
purgatory.
Bishop Latimer observed: When the devil gets influence
in a church, up go candles and down goes preaching.
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Quarterly sermons (that is, once every three months) were
prescribed to the clergy, but not insisted upon. Latimer
noted that while the mass was never left unsaid for a single
Sunday, sermons might be omitted for 20 Sundays in succession.
Indeed, to preach much was to incur the suspicion of being
a heretic.
Bishop
Hooper, who along with Bishop Latimer was burned alive at
the stake under Queen Mary, did a survey in 1551 and found
that out of 311 clergy in his Diocese, 168 were unable to
repeat the Ten Commandments, 31 of those 168 could not even
say in which part of the Scripture the Ten Commandments
were to be found, 40 could not tell where the Lords
Prayer was written, and 31 of the 40 did not even know who
the author of the Lords Prayer was!
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Bishop
Ryle summarised the situation: Before the Reformation
was a religion without knowledge, without faith and without
lively hope a religion without justification, regeneration
and sanctification a religion without any clear views
of Christ and the Holy Ghost. Except in rare instances,
it was little better than an organised system of Mary worship,
saint worship, image worship, relic worship, pilgrimages,
alms giving, formalism, ceremonialism, processions, penances,
absolutions, masses and blind obedience to the priests.
It was a huge higgledy-piggledy of ignorance and idolatry,
and serving an unknown God by deputy. The only practical
result was that the priests took the peoples money
and undertook to secure their salvation. And the people
flattered themselves that the more they gave to the priests,
the more sure they were to go to Heaven!
The
Reformation delivered the church from childish superstitions
The Roman Catholic church, before the Reformation, taught
its members to seek spiritual benefit from so-called relics
of dead saints and to treat them with divine honour. Calvins
Inventory of Relics and Hobart Seymours
Pilgrimage to Rome catalogue some of the ludicrous
swindles which were perpetrated by the church of Rome. This
included pieces of wood of the true cross enough
to load a large ship, thorns professing to be part of the
Saviours crown of thorns, enough to make a huge faggot,
at least 14 nails said to have been used at the Crucifixion,
four spearheads each perporting to be the one which
pierced our Lords side, at least three seamless coats
of Christ, for which the soldiers cast lots, Saint Jamess
hand, bones of Mary Magdalene, toenails from Saint Edmund,
some bread, purported to have been used by Christ at the
Last Supper, a girdle of the Virgin Mary and milk from the
Virgin Mary! The Royal Commissioners of Henry VIII examined
a vial at the Abbey in Gloucestershire, which was said to
contain the blood of Christ! The Commissioners found that
it contained the blood of a duck.
There were literally thousands of profane and vile inventions,
fabrications and deceptions, which Roman priests imposed
on the people before the Reformation. They must have known
that they were deceiving the people, yet they persisted
in presenting these lies and requiring that the ignorant
laity believe them. Sometimes the priests induced dying
sinners to give vast tracts of lands to abbeys and monasteries,
in order to atone for their bad lives. In one way or another,
they were continually separating sinners from their money
and accumulating property and wealth in the hands of the
Roman church.
The power of the priests was practically despotic and was
used for every purpose except the advancement of the Christian
faith. It seemed that their primary object was power. To
them confession had to be made. Without their absolution
and extreme unction no professing Christian could be saved.
Without their masses no soul could be redeemed from purgatory.
In short, they were, to all intents and purposes, the mediators
between Christ and man. To please and honour the Roman church
was a devout Christians first duty. To injure them
was the greatest of sins. One of the indulgences issued
in 1498, with the authority of the Pope, claimed: To
absolve people from usury, theft, manslaughter, fornication
and all crime whatsoever, except smiting the clergy and
conspiring against the Pope!
A starving man in a famine may be reduced to eating rats
and rubbish, rather than die of hunger. Similarly, a conscience-stricken
soul, deprived of Gods Word, should not be judged
too harshly by us, if they struggled to find comfort in
the most debassing superstition. However, we must never
forget that it was from such superstitions which the Reformation
delivered us.
The Reformation delivered the church from blatant immorality
Before the Reformation, the lives of the clergy were simply
scandalous. There were brothels in the Vatican. The Popes,
Cardinals and Bishops openly consorted with prostitutes
and engaged in the most debauched orgies. The local priests
became notorious for gluttony, drunkenness and gambling.
As Bishop Ryle pointed out: To expect the huge roots
of ignorance and superstition, which filled our land, to
bear any but corrupt fruit, would be unreasonable and absurd.
Contemporary art depicted frairs as foxes preaching with
the neck of a stolen goose peeping out of the hood behind;
as wolves giving absolution, with the sheep partly concealed
under their cloaks; or as apes sitting on a sick mans
bed with a crucifix in one hand and with the other hand
in the suffering persons pocket! Such public contempt
in art reflects the scorn with which the clergy were held
at the time.
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Bishop
Ryle pointed out: But the blackest spot on the character
of our pre-Reformation clergy in England is one of which
it is painful to speak
their horrible contempt of
the 7th Commandment
the consequences of shutting
up herds of men and women in the prime of life, in monasteries
and nunneries, were such that I will not defile my paper
by dwelling upon them
if ever there was a plausible
theory weighed in the balance and found utterly wanting,
it is the favourite theory that celibacy and monasticism
promote holiness
monasteries and nunneries were frequently
sinks of iniquity.
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The
report of the Royal Commissioners, under Henry VIII, declared:
That manifest sin, vicious, carnal and abominable
living, is daily used and committed in abbeys, priories,
and other religious houses of monks, cannons and nuns, and
that albeit many continual visitations have been had, by
the space of 200 years or more, for an honest and charitable
reformation of such unthrifty, carnal and abominable living,
yet that nevertheless, little or none amendment was hitherto
had, but that their vicious living shamefully increased
and augmented.
It
was observed that: There is no surer recipe for promoting
immorality than fullness of bread and abundance of idleness.
(Ezekiel 16:49)
It is from such superstition, corruption, immorality, ignorance
and idolatry that the Reformation freed the church.
The Reformation gave the church back the Bible
In 1519, six men and a woman were burned at Coventry for
teaching their children the Ten Commandments, the Lords
Prayer and the Apostles Creed in English. Nothing
seems to have alarmed and enraged the Roman priesthood as
much as the spread of Bibles in the local language. It was
for the crime of translating the Bible into English that
the Reformer, William Tyndale, was burned at the stake.
Of all the aspects which combined to make up the Reformation,
no other aspect received such bitter opposition as the translation
and circulation of the Scriptures. The translation of the
Bible struck a blow at the root of the whole Roman Catholic
system. The Bible, as the only rule of faith and conduct,
freely available in the local languages, was a threat to
all the superstitions and abuses of the medieval Roman popery.
With the Bible in every parish church, every thoughtful
man soon saw that the religion of the priests had no basis
in Holy Scripture.
The Reformation opened the road to the throne of Grace
The way of salvation had become blocked up and made impassible
by heaps of superstitious rubble. He who desired to
obtain forgiveness had to seek it through a jungle of priests,
saints, Mary worship, masses, penances, confession, absolution
and the like, so that there might as well have been no throne
of Grace at all. J.C. Ryle
The Reformers hacked their way through this huge jungle
of papal obstruction and cleared the way for every heavy-laden
sinner to go straight to the Lord Jesus Christ for remission
of sins.
The Reformation restored Biblical simplicity to worship
Before the Reformation, the laity were only present at church
services as passive, ignorant spectators. The elaborate,
theatrical presentations of the sacraments were a solemn
farce because the ceremonies and prayers were in Latin.
The laity could bring their bodies to the services, but
their minds, understanding, reason and spirit could take
no part at all. For this reason, the 24th Article of the
Church of England declared: It is a thing totally
repugnant to the Word of God and the custom of the primitive
church to have public prayer in the church or to minister
the sacraments in a tongue not understood of the people.
The
Reformation gave a Biblical understanding of the office
of a minister
Before the Reformation, the concept of the Christian ministry
was sacerdotal. That is it was understood that every
clergyman was a sacrificing priest. The clergy were understood
to hold the keys of Heaven and to be practically the mediators
between God and man.
The Reformers brought the office of the clergy down to its
Scriptural level. They stripped it entirely of any sacerdotal
character. They cast out the words sacrifice
and altar. They taught that the clergy were
pastors, ambassadors, messangers, witnesses, evangelists,
teachers and ministers of the Word and sacraments. The Reformers
taught that the chief business of every Christian minister
is to preach the Word and to be diligent in prayer and the
reading of the Scriptures. The Reformers taught the immense
superiority of the pulpit to the confessional. For this
reason, where the altar used to be, the Lords table
was placed with an open Bible, or a pulpit, showing the
centrality of Gods Word in the worship of Protestant
churches.
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The
Reformation restored a Biblical understanding of holiness
Before the Reformation, it was believed that a monastic
life and vows of celibacy were the only ways to escape sin
and to attain sanctification. Multitudes of men and women
poured into the monasteries and convents under the vain
idea that this would please God and ensure their eternal
salvation.
The Reformers struck at the root of this fallacy by establishing
the great Scriptural principle that true religion was not
to be found in retiring into convents and monastries and
fleeing from the difficulties of daily life, but in manfully
facing up to our difficulties and doing our duty diligently
- in every position to which God calls us. It is not by
running away from the world, that we fulfil Gods call,
but by courageously resisting the devil, the flesh and the
world and overcoming them in daily life. That is how true
holiness is to be exhibited. For this reason, the Reformers
dissolved the monasteries and convents in their areas and
freed the inmates to be reintegrated into normal life.
The Reformers also ordered that the Ten Commandments be
set up in every parish church and taught to every child,
and that our duty towards God and our neighbour be set forth
in the Catechism. They insisted that you cannot become saints
by shirking your duties in society.
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A
Heritage of Faith and Freedom
We must continually thank God for the Reformation. It
lit the flames of knowledge and freedom which we must
ensure are never allowed to be extinguished or to grow
dim. We need to continually remember that the Reformation
was won for us by the blood of many tens of thousands
of martyrs. It was not only by their preaching and praying,
and writing and legislation, but by their sacrifices that
our religious liberty, freedom of conscience and Christian
heritage was won.
The Reformation found church members steeped in ignorance
and left them in possession of knowledge. It found them
without Bibles and left them with the Bible in every parish.
It found them in darkness and left them in light. It found
them bound in fear and left them enjoying the liberty
and peace which only Christ can give. It found them strangers
to the blood of Christs atonement, to faith, grace
and holiness and left them with the key of all those blessings
in their hands. It found them blind and left them with
spiritual eyes to see. It found them slaves to superstition
and set them free to serve Christ.
As Bishop Ryle declared: Are we to return to a church
which boasts that she is infallible and never changes
to a church which has never repented her pre-Reformation
superstitions and abominations to a church which
has never confessed and abjured her countless corruptions?
Are we to go back to gross ignorance of true religion?
Shame on us, I say, if we entertain the idea for a moment!
Let the Israelite return to Egypt, if he will. Let the
prodigal go back to his husks among the swine. Let the
dog return to his vomit. But let no Englishman with brains
in his head, ever listen to the idea of exchanging Protestantism
for Popery, or returning to the bondage of the church
of Rome. No, indeed!
God forbid! The man who counsels
such base apostasy and suicidal folly, must be judicially
blind. The iron collar has been broken; let us not put
it on again. The prison has been thrown open; let us not
resume the yoke and return to our chains
Let us
not go back to ignorance, superstition, priestcraft and
immorality.
If you have a Bible in your own language, and enjoy to
read and study Gods Word, never forget that you
owe that Bible to the Reformation. Brave men and women
died that you could have the freedom to delight in Gods
Word.
If you know the joy of sins forgiven and new life in Christ,
if you are walking by faith and enjoying peace with God,
never forget that you owe this priceless privilege to
the Reformation.
If you enjoy Church services, Scripture choruses, Hymns,
prayers and sermons in your own language, remember that
for this you are also indebted to the Reformation.
If you appreciate the Biblical and practical sermons of
your pastor, and his counsel, never forget that for this
you are indebted to the Reformation.
The Reformation is the source of many blessings. We need
to ask if we are on the side of the Reformers, or of those
who burned them and the Bible.
Contend earnestly for the Faith which was
once for all delivered to the saints. Jude 3
Dr.
Peter Hammond
Frontline
Fellowship, PO Box 74, Newlands 7725, Cape Town, South
Africa.
Tel: (021) 689 4480. Fax: (021) 685-5884. E-mail: admin@frontline.org.za
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