Memoirs of the Reformers
John Frith
MEMOIR OF JOHN FRITH
THE first in England that professedly wrote against the corporeal
presence of Christ in the sacrament, was John Frith, an excellent
scholar, and an eminent divine, born at Sevenoaks, in Kent. He was
educated at king's college, Cambridge, where he took the degree of
Bachelor of Arts; but afterwards went to Oxford, where the brilliancy
and the solidity of his talents soon procured him the office of a junior
canon, in Cardinal Wolsey's new college, now called Christchurch. Some
time prior to 1525 he became acquainted with the famous William Tyndale,
who, conversing with him on the abuses of religion, was made the happy
instrument of convincing him of the fallacious ground on which men
rested their hopes of salvation, who trusted either to their own
righteousness or that of the saints. That the merits of Christ, and his
all perfect righteousness alone, could justify the sinner, and secure
him from the wrath denounced against every violation of God's holy and
perfect law; that works of supererogation only existed in the blinded
imaginations of ignorant and deluded men; that penances, pilgrimages,
and popish absolutions, had no efficacy in removing the guilt, or
cleansing the conscience of sinners, whatever they might have in
enabling a crafty priesthood to pick their pockets. Frith, pondering
these things in his mind, the more he considered, the more he was
convinced, and soon after publicly professed the reformation principles;
for which he was seized, examined by the commissary of the university,
and, along with some of his associates, imprisoned within the limits of
his own college, where some of them died in consequence of the
maltreatment they had received.
In 1528, being released from his imprisonment, he traveled through
various places on the continent, where, by visiting the reformed
churches, and conversing with their leading ministers, he returned to
England greatly confirmed in the faith; but no sooner had he reached
Reading, in Berkshire, than he was taken up for a vagabond, .and set in
the stocks; where, after sitting a long time, and almost perishing with
hunger, he requested some of the spectators to call the schoolmaster of
the town, who, at that time, was Leonard Cox, a very learned man. Cox
having discovered the eminent talents of the sufferer, by conversing
with him on the Greek and Latin classics, procured his release, and
supplied him with victuals and money. After this he went to London,
where, notwithstanding that he frequently changed his apparel and the
place of his residence, he could not long evade the inquisitive eyes of
the lord chancellor, Sir Thomas More, who had spies at every port of the
kingdom, and even along the roads, and a great reward promised to
whoever would give information against this excellent man.
It is not improbable that Sir Thomas More had some feelings of personal
animosity against Frith, from a book he had written. The matter stands
thus. A book, entitled, the Supplication of the Beggars,
published by a Mr. Fish, of Gray's inn, inveighing against the imposing
arts of the mendicants, and taxing the Roman pontiff with extortion,
cruelty, and deception, as he granted his indulgences and absolutions
from purgatory to none but such as could pay for them. This book was
received with great attention by the public, and even by Henry VIII
himself, as it favored him greatly in his then quarrel with the pope.
Sir Thomas answered this publication by another, entitled, the
Supplication of the Souls in Purgatory, wherein he strongly exhibits
their supposed misery, and the relief afforded them by" the masses that
were said in their behalf; and, in the name of these wretched beings,
implored their friends to step forward and support the religious orders,
at a time when they were surrounded and attacked on every side by their
inveterate enemies. Sir Thomas exerted all his wit and eloquence in the
composition of this publication; but whether it arose from the badness
of the cause, or the increasing information of the people, it met with
no encouragement.
Frith, however, undertook to return an answer, which ho performed with
all necessary gravity, showing that the doctrine of purgatory had not
the least foundation in scripture; that it was inconsistent with the
merits of Christ and his consequent pardon of sin; and that it stood
diametrically opposed to the whole plan of his salvation by grace. That
the fire spoken of by the apostle, as that which would devour the wood,
hay, and stubble, could only be understood as the fire of persecution,
that puts to the severest trial both the faith and fortitude of the
saints. He strenuously urged, and from the history of the primitive
church produced abundant evidence, that such a doctrine was then wholly
unknown, and that, as it could not be found in scripture, so neither did
it exist in the writings of Ambrose, Jerome, or Augustine; insisting
that it was introduced into the church by the monks, for the express
purpose of deluding the world, and enhancing the value and importance of
their craft. This spirited attack on the strong holds of the
ecclesiastic empire, enraged the clergy almost to madness; and finding
they could not withstand the arguments of Mr. Frith, they determined to
silence him by the more energetic syllogisms of fire and faggot.
Some short time after this, Mr. Frith had a conversation with a familiar
friend of his regarding the doctrines of transubstantiation, when he was
requested to commit the substance of the arguments he had used to
writing, and favor him with a copy for the help of .his memory. Frith
was rather backward to this, knowing the dangers to which he was
exposed; but yielding to the importunity of his friend, he wrote down
the following arguments:
1. That the natural body of Christ, sin only excepted, possessed similar
properties with the bodies of other men, and could not therefore occupy
two or more places at one and the same time; and that consequently the
ubiquity of Christ's natural body was an incredible absurdity.—2. That
the words of Christ, as they occur in Matt. xxvi. 26, 27, 28, were by no
means intended to be literally understood; but that their sense and
meaning are to be taken from the analogy of the scripture. —3, and
lastly, That this holy ordinance of the supper ought to be administered
and received according to the true and proper* institution of Christ,
notwithstanding that the present mode of administration, in the Romish
church, is in every respect different there from.
At this time, one William Holt, a tailor, who professed himself a warm
friend to the cause of reformation, by his hypocrisy, found an
opportunity to betray its friends and adherents. This man expressed a
strong desire to see Mr. Frith's arguments; which he no sooner received,
than he hurried away to Sir Thomas More, to whom he presented the
heretical billet with no small share of consequential importance. Sir
Thomas lost no time in apprehending the unsuspecting Frith, and lodging
him in the tower, where he had several conferences with the chancellor
and others. At length he was taken to Lambeth before the archbishop,
afterwards to Croydon before the bishop of Winchester, and at last, on
the 20th of June 1533, examined before an assembly of bishops, sitting
in St. Paul's cathedral, who, after interrogating him respecting the
sacrament and purgatory, urged him to recant. Frith confuted all their
arguments; and in place of recanting, subscribed his declaration in the
following manner:—I Frith, thus do think, and as I think and believe, as
have I said, written, taught, and published to the world.
From the tenor of Mr. Frith's open defense and unequivocating assertions,
both in his writings and before the assembly, he was deemed
incorrigible, and condemned to be burnt. Accordingly, he was, carried to
Smithfield along with a young man named Andrevv Hewet, on the 4th July
1553. When Mr. Frith was tied to the stake, he evinced amazing courage,
resignation, and self-possession. He embraced the burning faggots that
were flaming around him, as an evidence of the cheerfulness with which
he could suffer for the cause of Christ and his ever-blessed gospel. One
Dr. Cook, a priest, standing by, in an audible Voice admonished the
weeping spectators not to pray for the sufferers more than they were
dogs! Frith smiled at his impotent malice, and prayed the Lord to
forgive him. The wind carried the flames in the direction of Hewet, his
fellow martyr, by which Frith had a lingering and exceedingly painful
death; but his mind was so fixed, and his patience so invincible, that
he seemed less careful for his own, than for the sufferings of his
faithful companion. At last, committing himself into the hands of his
Father and Redeemer, he expired in the prime of his life.
When Mr. Frith, as we have seen, was to be examined at Croydon, two of
the archbishop's servants were sent to fetch him. Frith's pious and
edifying conversation, and amiable deportment by the way, made such a
favorable impression on the minds of these men, that they contrived
between themselves how they might let him escape; and having completed
their arrangements, one of them thus addressed him. “Mr. Frith, I am
extremely sorry for having undertaken this journey. I am ordered to
bring you to Croydon; and knowing the rage of your enemies, I consider
myself as bringing you like a lamb to the slaughter. This consideration
overwhelms me with sorrow, insomuch, that I disregard any hazard I may
run, so as I may but deliver you out of the lion's mouth." To this
friendly proposal Mr. Frith replied, with a smile, Do ye think I am
afraid to deliver my sentiments before the bishops of England, and these
manifestly founded on the unerring veracity of divine revelation? It
seems strange to me, said the other, that you was so willing to quit the
kingdom before your apprehension; and that now you are even unwilling to
save yourself from almost certain destruction. The matter, said Mr.
Frith, stands thus. While I was yet at liberty, I cherished it, and to
the utmost of my power, endeavored to preserve it for the benefit of the
church of Christ; but now, by the providence of God, having been
delivered into the hands of the bishops, I consider myself particularly
called upon as an evidence for Christ and the truths of his religion, as
well as bound by the ties of gratitude and love to my adorable Redeemer,
publicly to acknowledge his supreme government in the church, and
contend for the purity of that faith which in old times he committed to
the care and guardianship of the saints. If therefore I should now start
aside, and run away, I should run away from my God and the testimony of
his word, deny the Lord that bought me, and grieve the hearts of his
faithful servants. I beseech you, therefore, bring' mo to the place
appointed, otherwise I must needs travel thither by myself. In the point
instance, Mr. Frith is perhaps more to be admired than justified. The
saints are nowhere commanded to give themselves up to their persecutors,
"but to avoid them wherever this can be done with a safe conscience. The
primitive Christians, it is true, many of them rather courted them
avoided the martyr's crown; but what makes it more remarkably in Mr.
Frith, ho wan of mi eminently meek and quiet disposition, by no means of
that lionhearted temperament that distinguished Luther, Knox, and
several others of the reformers.
Frith's greatest adversaries were Fisher, bishop of
Rochester; Sir Thomas More, and his son-in-law, Rastal. These he had
refuted in his writings; and the vigor with which this was effected,
most probably subjected him to their animosity and unmanly resentment.
He was a polished scholar, says bishop Bale, as well as a master of the
learned languages; and these, and all his other qualifications, were
cheerfully devoted to the service of God and his generation. His works
are—1. Treatise of Purgatory—2. Antithesis between Christ and the Pope
—3. Letter to the faithful followers of Christ's gospel, written in the
tower 1532—4. Mirror, or Glass to know thyself, written in the tower
1532—5. Mirror, or Lookingglass, wherein you may behold the Sacrament of
Baptism—6. Articles for which he died, written in Newgate, 21st June
1533—7. Answer to Sir Thomas More's Dialogues concerning Heresies—8.
Answer to John Fisher, bishop of Rochester, &c.—All these treatises were
printed at London, in folio, 1573. |
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