登陆注册
34540800000097

第97章

"He was the scourge of imposture, the ponderous hammer which smote the brazen idolatry of his age." He labored to expose the vices that had taken shelter in the sanctuary of the Church,--a reformer of ecclesiastical abuses rather than of the lax morals of the laity, and hence did different work from that of Savonarola, whose life was spent in a crusade against sin, wherever it was to be found. His labors were great, and his attainments remarkable for his age. He is accused of being coarse in his invectives; but that charge can also be laid to Luther and other reformers in rough and outspoken times. Considering the power of the Pope in the fourteenth century, Wyclif was as bold and courageous as Luther.

The weakness of the papacy had not been exposed by the Councils of Pisa, of Constance, and of Basil; nor was popular indignation in view of the sale of indulgences as great in England as when the Dominican Tetzel peddled the papal pardons in Germany. In combating the received ideas of the age, Wyclif was even more remarkable than the Saxon reformer, who was never fully emancipated from the Mediaeval doctrine of transubstantiation; although Luther went beyond Wyclif in the completeness of his reform. Wyclif was beyond his age; Luther was the impersonation of its passions.

Wyclif represented universities and learned men; Luther was the oracle of the people. The former was the Mediaeval doctor; the latter was the popular orator and preacher. The one was mild and moderate in his spirit and manners; the other was vehement, dogmatic, and often offensive, not only from his more violent and passionate nature, but for his bitter and ironical sallies. It is the manner more than the matter which offends. Had Wyclif been as satirical and boisterous as Luther was, he would not probably have ended his days in peace, and would not have accomplished so much as a preparation for reforms.

It was the peculiarity of Wyclif to recognize the real merits in the system he denounced, even when his language was most vehement.

He admitted that confession did much good to some persons, although as a universal practice, as enjoined by Innocent III., it was an evil and harmed the Church. In regard to the worship of images, while he denounced the waste of treasure or "dead stocks," he admitted that images might be used as aids to excite devotion; but if miraculous powers were attributed to them, it was an evil rather than a good. And as to the adoration of the saints, he simply maintained that since gifts can be obtained only through the mediation of Christ, it would be better to pray to him directly rather than through the mediation of saints.

In regard to the Mendicant friars, it does not appear that his vehement opposition to them was based on their vows of poverty or on the spirit which entered into monasticism in its best ages, but because they were untrue to their rule, because they were vendors of pardons, and absolved men of sins which they were ashamed to confess to their own pastors, and especially because they encouraged the belief that a benefaction to a convent would take the place of piety in the heart. It was the abuses of the system, rather than the system itself, which made him so wrathful on the "vagrant friars preaching their catchpenny sermons." And so of other abuses of the Church: he did not defy the Pope or deny his authority until it was plain that he sought to usurp the prerogatives of kings and secular rulers, and bring both the clergy and laity under his spiritual yoke. It was not as the first and chief of bishops--the head of the visible Church--that Wyclif attacked the Pope, but as a usurper and a tyrant, grasping powers which were not conferred by the early Church, and which did not culminate until Innocent III. had instituted the Mendicant orders, and enforced persecution for religious opinions by the terrors of the Inquisition. The wealth of the Church was a sore evil in his eyes, since it diverted the clergy from their spiritual duties, and was the cause of innumerable scandals, and was closely connected with simony and the accumulation of benefices in the hands of a single priest.

So it was indignation in view of the corruptions of the Church and vehement attacks upon them which characterized Wyclif, rather than efforts to remove their causes, as was the case with Luther. He was not a radical reformer; he only prepared the way for radical reform, by his translation of the Scriptures into a language the people could read, more than by any attacks on the monks or papal usurpations or indulgences for sin. He was the type of a meditative scholar and theologian, thin and worn, without much charm of conversation except to men of rank, or great animal vivacity such as delights the people. Nor was he a religious genius, like Thomas a Kempis, Anselm, and Pascal. He had no remarkable insight into spiritual things; his intellectual and moral nature preponderated over the emotional, so that he was charged with intellectual pride and desire for distinction. Yet no one disputed the blamelessness of his life and the elevation of his character.

If Wyclif escaped the wrath and vengeance of Rome because of his high rank as a theological doctor, his connection with the University of Oxford, opposed to itinerating beggars with great pretensions and greedy ends, and his friendship and intercourse with the rulers of the land, his followers did not. They became very numerous, and were variously called Lollards, Wyclifites, and Biblemen. They kept alive evangelical religion until the time of Cranmer and Latimer, their distinguishing doctrine being that the Scriptures are the only rule of faith. There was no persecution of them of any account during the reign of Richard II.,--although he was a hateful tyrant,--probably owing to the influence of his wife, a Bohemian princess, who read Wyclif‘s Bible; but under Henry IV.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 幻想之神级巫者

    幻想之神级巫者

    东方传统神话体系网游,不同的背景,一样的精彩!
  • 互相折磨到白头悲伤坚决不放手

    互相折磨到白头悲伤坚决不放手

    不喜勿喷简介过段时间我在补,要不然一定会跑题。。。。。。
  • 腹黑总裁老婆控

    腹黑总裁老婆控

    几年前,她追他,他跟他说,他有女朋友了,他要去韩国,几年后回来。几年后,她死心了,决定不追了,但他又回来追求她。他到底想干嘛!?几年前伤害了她还不够吗?“你回来干什么?”“娶你啊!”“我不爱你了。”“我还爱你呢!”“哦,关我屁事。”“这不是屁事,我和你的事是屁事吗?”“………………”
  • 诺与谎

    诺与谎

    不要再跟我谈对与错,我根本无意跟你辩驳诸神的诺与谎。你可以随意标榜我的善恶,但命运既然对我不公,我就要将命运女神践踏,这不是亵渎,只为复仇。
  • 三国之农民崛起

    三国之农民崛起

    一个奴隶的崛起有的太多的阻碍,最大的就是士人的蔑视,世家的垄断,豪门的欺压。。。但我们有最大的劳动集体,最重的心理共鸣。。。。我们就是三国中的共产国际。。。
  • 你不过是仗着我喜欢你

    你不过是仗着我喜欢你

    王逸凡始终不明白的是,为什么当初她有男朋友,他还能不懈追求。在说好了“好好做同事”后,却又在年终晚会结束,再次招惹她。
  • 地面保护神——地空导弹

    地面保护神——地空导弹

    地空导弹是20世纪40年代,因防空作战的需要而发展成的一种新型地面防空武器,至今已发展成一个多种类、多型号的武器系列。作为一种以打击空中飞行目标为主的精确制导武器,地空导弹能够以很高的精度毁伤各种高性能飞行兵器,从而成为现代防空作战中的主战兵器。
  • 三面王妃

    三面王妃

    南羽国公主作为两国联谊的牺牲品远嫁北乔国瑄王府,等待她的将是未知的生活。她究竟有几重身份?而他是否能够发现其中的秘密?误解、毁容、分离、痛心,两人一路虐心虐身,待到黄昏之时腾然回首已亦刻骨铭心...
  • 这货不是召唤师

    这货不是召唤师

    怪异从地底爬出,强者从天而降。眼看怪异大军,即将淹没。你随手一发秘术射击,奥术跃迁躲掉背后的偷袭。左手手持大宝剑,右手法术涌动,再接一发超负荷,瞬间扫空一大片阴暗生物。没等你喘口气,邪恶的巫灵如蚀骨之蛆赶来。你赶紧捏碎一块秒表,掏出一根仙女棒。“嘿,拉克丝。”你口中不自觉的说些什么,释放了终极闪光。伴随着一声“狡诈恶徒,”正义巨像加里奥从天而降。怪异一扫而空。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!