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Lollardy
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Image:WycliffeYeamesLollards.jpg frame|John Wyclif gives his Bible translation to Lollards
'''Lollardy''' or '''Lollardry''' was the political and religious movement of the Lollards from the late
14th century to early in the time of the
Protestant Reformation#England: Political Reformation English Reformation. Lollardy followed from the teachings of
John Wyclif, a prominent
theology theologian at the
University of Oxford beginning in the
1350s. Its demands were primarily for reform of the
Catholic Church. It taught that
piety was a requirement for a
priest to be a "true" priest or to perform the
sacrament sacraments, and that a pious layman had power to perform those same rites, believing that religious power and authority came through piety and not through the Church hierarchy. Similiarly, Lollardy also emphasized the authority of the Scriptures over the authority of priests. It taught the concept of the "Church of the Saved", meaning that Christ's true Church was the community of the faithful, which overlapped with but was not the same as the official Church of Rome. It taught a form of
predestination. It advocated apostolic poverty and taxation of Church properties. It also denied
transubstantiation in favor of
consubstantiation.
Etymology
The origin of the name "Lollard" is subject to much speculation. One theory speculates that the word is derived from the
German language German ''lollen'' (to sing), a reference to Lollards singing hymns at funerals. Some claim the name comes from the
Latin term ''lolium'' ("tares" or "weeds"). If true, this would have been a reference to the Lollard heretics springing up like weeds among the grain as in the Biblical parable. Considering the Lollards' belief in "true believers," as apart from the official Roman Church structure, the name can construe a parody of their belief. In the parable, the tares (non-believers) spring up among the wheat (believers), and they cannot be separated until the farmer comes to cut and gather the crop and separate the believers from the non-believers (God on the Day of Judgment). Since the Lollards wished to separate the "true believers" from non-believers before the day of judgment, perhaps they were perceived as the very weeds that they sought to root out. The word in the parable that refers to tares, in the Latin Vulgate version, however, is not "lolium," but "zizania." Therefore, an alternative possibility is that it derives from the
Dutch language Dutch, meaning "mumblers", in reference to their supposed prayerful mumblings.
Beliefs
Image:lollardmap.jpg thumb|Map of Lollardy's influence
Although Lollardy can be said to have originated in the writings of
John Wyclif, it is true that the Lollards had no central doctrine. Likewise, being a decentralized movement, Lollardy neither had nor proposed any singular authority. The movement associated itself with many different ideas, but individual Lollards did not necessarily have to agree with every tenet.
Fundamentally, Lollards were anticlerical. They believed the
Catholic Church to be corrupt in many ways and looked to
Scripture as the basis for their religion. To provide an authority for religion outside of the Church, Lollards began the movement towards a translation of the bible into the
vernacular; Wyclif himself in his works translated many passages.
One group of Lollards petitioned parliament with
The Twelve Conclusions of the Lollards. While by no means a central authority of the Lollards, the ''Twelve Conclusions'' reveal certain basic Lollard ideas. The Lollards stated that the Catholic Church had been corrupted by temporal matters and that its claim to be the true church was not justified by its heredity. Part of this corruption involved prayers for the dead and
Chantry chantries. These were seen as corrupt since they distracted
priests from other work and that all should be prayed for equally. Lollards also had a tendency to
iconoclasm. Lavish church fixtures were seen as an excess; they believed effort should be placed on helping the needy and preaching rather than working on lavish decoration.
Icons were also seen as dangerous since many seemed to worship the icon rather than God, leading to
idolatry.
Believing in a
Priesthood of all believers lay priesthood, the Lollards challenged the Church’s ability to invest or deny the divine authority to make a man a priest. Denying any special authority to the priesthood, Lollards thought
confession unnecessary since a priest did not have any special power to forgive
sins. Lollards challenged the practice of
clerical celibacy and believed priests should not hold political positions since temporal matters should not interfere with the priests’ spiritual mission.
Believing that more attention should be given to the message in the scriptures rather than to
ceremony and
worship, the Lollards denounced the ritualistic aspects of the Church such as
transubstantiation,
exorcism,
pilgrimages, and
blessings. These focused too much on powers the Church supposedly did not have and led to a focus on temporal ritual over God and his message.
The ''Twelve Conclusions'' also denounce
war and
violence, even
capital punishment.
Abortion is also denounced.
Outside of the ''Twelve Conclusions'', the Lollards had many beliefs and traditions. Their scriptural focus led Lollards to refuse the taking of
oaths. Lollards also had a tradition
millenarianism. Some criticized the Church for not focusing enough on
Revelations. Many Lollards believed they were near the
end of days, and several Lollard writings claim the
Pope to be the
antichrist.
History
Image:Wycliffe John Gospel.jpg thumb|Beginning of the Gospel of John from a pocket Wyclif translation that may have been used by a roving Lollard preacher (late 14th century)
Immediately upon going public, Lollardy was attacked as
heresy. At first, Wyclif and Lollardy were protected by
John of Gaunt and anti-clerical nobility, who were most likely interested in using Lollard-advocated clerical reform to create a new source of revenue from England’s
monasteries. The
University of Oxford also protected Wyclif and allowed him to hold his position at the university in spite of his views on the grounds of
academic freedom, which also gave some protection to the academics who supported it within that institution. Lollardy first faced serious persecution after the
Peasant’s Revolt in
1381. While Wyclif and other Lollards opposed the revolt, one of the peasants’ leaders,
John Ball (priest) John Ball, preached Lollardy. The
royal family royalty and
nobility then found Lollardy to be a threat not just to the Church, but to all the English social order. The Lollards' small measure of protection evaporated. This change in status was also affected by the removal of John of Gaunt from the scene, when he left England in pursuit of the throne of
Castile, which he claimed through his second wife.
Lollardy was strongly resisted by both the religious and secular authorities. Among those opposing it was
Thomas Arundel,
Archbishop of Canterbury.
Henry IV of England King Henry IV passed the ''
De heretico comburendo'' in
1401, not specifically agaist the Lollards, but prohibiting the translating or owning of the Bible and authorising the burning of heretics
Execution by burning at the stake.
Image: Oldcastleburning.jpg thumb|left|[[John Oldcastle|Sir John Oldcastle being burnt for insurrection and Lollard heresy]]
In the early
15th century, Lollardy went underground after more extreme measures were taken by the Church and State. The one of these measures was the burning at the stake of
John Badby, a layman and artisan who refused to renounce his Lollard views. His was the first
Execution (legal) execution of a layman in England for the crime of heresy. A group of Lollard knights had been a powerful force in English politics, but even these powerful noblemen did not escape this crackdown.
John Oldcastle Sir John Oldcastle, a close friend of
Henry V of England King Henry V (and the basis for
Falstaff in the
Shakespearean histories Shakespearean history ''
Henry IV, part 1 Henry IV'') was brought to trial in
1413 after evidence of his Lollard beliefs was uncovered. Oldcastle escaped from the
Tower of London and organized an insurrection, which included an attempted kidnapping of the
King of England king. The rebellion failed, and Oldcastle was executed.
Oldcastle's revolt made Lollardy seem even more threatening to the state, and the persecution of Lollards became more severe. A variety of other
martyrs for the Lollard cause were executed over the following century, including
Thomas Harding who died at White Hill,
Chesham, in
1532, one of the last Lollards to be persecuted.
Lollards were effectively absorbed into
Protestantism during the
Protestant_Reformation#English_Reformation English Reformation, in which Lollardy played a role. Since Lollardy had been underground for more than a hundred years, the extent of Lollardy and its ideas at the time of the Reformation is uncertain and a point of debate. However, many critics of the Reformation, including
Thomas More, associated Protestants with Lollards. Protestant leaders, including Archbishop
Cranmer, referred to Lollardy as well. Whether Protestants actually drew influence from Lollardy or whether they referred to it to create a sense of tradition is debated by scholars. The extent of Lollardy in the general populace at this time is also unknown, but the prevalence of Protestant
iconoclasm in England suggests Lollard ideas may still have had some popular influence if
Zwingli was not the source, as
Lutherans did not advocate iconoclasm. The similarity between Lollards and later English Protestant groups such as the
Puritans and
Religious Society of Friends Quakers also suggests some continuation of Lollard ideas through the Reformation.
External links
-
The Lollard Society - society dedicated to providing a forum for the study of the Lollards
-
The Lollards - a sympathetic view of the Lollards from an
Anabaptist perspective
-
Lollards in the Catholic Encyclopedia - Lollardy as a heresy, from the
Catholic perspective.
-
Lollards - essay on Lollards on Medieval Church website, including extensive list of secondary sources.
Category:History of Catholicism in England
Category:heresy
Category:English Reformation
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