29 February 1528 A.D. Scotland’s 1st Protestant Martyr at the Hands of Scots-Roman policies
29 February 1528 A.D. Scotland’s 1st
Protestant Martyr at the Hands of Scots-Roman policies.
Footnotes:
Mr. (Dr.) Rusten reports the
following story, pp. 121-122. Rusten, E.
Michael and Rusten, Sharon. The One Year
Christian History. Carol Stream, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, 2003. http://www.amazon.com/The-Year-Christian-History-Books/dp/0842355073/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1393302630&sr=8-1&keywords=rusten+church+history.
We have added other details to the story.
Patrick Hamilton was burned at
the stake on 29 Feb 1528.
Mr. Hamilton was born of a noble
family in Scotland and was a distant relative of a Stuart king, James V. He
graduated from the University of Paris in 1520.
He began digesting the Lutheran documents. He returned to Scotland in 1523. He was unhappy with the Scots-Italian
church. He went to Leonard’s College,
St. Andrews University, to study theology.
But, Scotland’s Parliament banned
Luther’s book in 1525 (like Anglo-Italian bishops in Canterbury and
London). In 1526, Hamilton declared in
favor of Luther. By 1527, he received 3 summons by Mr. (Abp.) Beaton to appear
on heresy charges.
(Meanwhile, Mr. Thomas Cranmer is
attempting to figure things out at Cambridge while others, like Hamilton up
north, were declaring in favor of Luther.)
Hamilton runs abroad and lands in
Wittenberg. He met Luther, Melancthon,
and the English hero, William Tyndale, himself a fugitive from Anglo-Italians
in England. Hamilton wrote his Common
Places, affirming justification by faith alone.
Hamilton returned to Scotland and
began preaching.
In Jan 1528, Mr. (Abp) Beaton and
other Scots-Italianll bishops meet at St. Andrews University, summoning
Hamilton again and preferring 13 charges of heresy against him.
He was tried and was burned the
same day on 29 February 1528. It would only spark further discussion of
Reformation theology in Scotland.
A few questions:
·
If a
Roman Catholic, what say you of this and the decrees of the Council of Trent
that anathematized then—and as reaffirmed recently—against the doctrine of
justification by faith alone?
·
Why has
Mr. (Bp) Robert Duncan, ACNA, never appeared to articulate, assert and defend
this doctrine? In Article XI of the
Thirty-nine Articles? Would a discussion
here relate to other Reformed doctrines?
·
What do
Misters (Bps) Jack Iker, Keith Ackerman and others say of Articles IX-XI? What really are “their” views here?
·
Do these
matters get discussed in modern centers of advertisement? TBN? Daystar Television? Word Television?
Rick Warren? Or others? If so, does Paul’s Epistle
to the Romans feature in their ministries?
·
Have
worldwide Lutherans betrayed the Reformation understanding of justification by
faith alone? See: http://reformationanglicanism.blogspot.com/2009/09/cyberbrethren-betraying-reformation-sad.html
·
Has Mr.
(Bp.) N.T. Wright erred here?
·
What is
one to say of the Federal Visionists and Mr. Norm Shepherd at Westminster
Theological Seminary?
·
If you
are a secularist, what do you say of justification by faith alone?
·
Does
modern TV, internet and other forms of media serve to obscure this doctrine?
·
What’s
the health and status of this doctrine?
Aside from the catechetical memory work as lads, do you hear this
clearly enunciated?
Romans 11:6
1599 Geneva Bible (GNV)
6 [a]And if it
be of grace, it is [b]no more
of works: or else were grace no more grace: but if it be of works, it is no
more grace: or else were work no more work.
Footnotes:
a. Romans
11:6
Although that all be not elect and chosen, yet let them that are elected,
remember that they are freely chosen, and let them that stubbornly refuse the
grace and free mercy of God, impute it unto themselves.
b.
Romans
11:6
This saying beateth down flat to the ground all the doctrine of all kinds and
manner of works, whereby our justifiers of themselves do teach, that works are
either wholly or partly the cause of our justification.
Dr. Rusten cites the following sources:
Douglas, J. D. “Hamilton, Patrick.” NIDCC. 449.
Hillyer, N. “Hamilton, Patrick.” WWCH. 301.
Torrence, I. R. “Hamilton, Patrick.” DSCHT.
390-1.
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