30 March 1533 A.D. Cranmer Appointed to Canterbury, But Didn’t Want It; Consecrated 30 Mar 1533
30 March 1533 A.D. Cranmer Appointed to Canterbury, But Didn’t
Want It; Consecrated 30 Mar 1533
Graves, Dan. “Cranmer Got
the Top Job but Didn’t Want it!” Christianity.com.
May 2007. http://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/1501-1600/cranmer-got-the-top-job-but-didnt-want-it-11629953.html. Accessed 27 Mar 2015.
When Thomas Cranmer learned he had been named Archbishop of Canterbury
by King Henry VIII, he balked. Visiting Germany at the time to promote the
King's interest in a divorce, he dawdled seven weeks getting back to England. Although
the King's word was law, Cranmer hesitated to accept the position.
The English church was in a turmoil over the question of Henry's desired
divorce from Catherine. Having presented him with no male heir, the queen, once
so charming to Henry, was now repugnant. Yet he could not get the Pope to agree
to an annulment.
Cranmer had come to the King's attention when, in conversation with two
of Henry's men, he had suggested that the universities could just as well
settle the question as the Pope. Henry swore Cranmer had "the right sow by
the ear." He earmarked the priest to become Archbishop of Canterbury,
England's highest religious post. Cranmer was consecrated on this date, March
30, 1533.
Believing himself subject to the King, Cranmer promptly granted Henry
the annulment. Throughout his tenure as archbishop, he would do pretty much
whatever the King commanded. Henry's continual shifts of policy often made
Cranmer appear wishy-washy. For example, he ruled Henry's marriage to Anne of
Cleve lawful and six months later annulled it as unlawful.
Already leaning toward Protestantism, Cranmer became the chief architect
of the English Reformation. He urged the King to place Bibles in England's
churches and it was done. He wrote the first Book of Common Prayer. In only a few
things did he resist Henry. At some jeopardy to himself, he pleaded for the
lives of Thomas More and Bishop Fisher and testified for three days against
Henry's Six Articles which went back to Roman Catholic forms.
However, he sat with the persecutors of John Frith and Joan of Kent, both of
whom were executed by fire.
By his twisting and turning, Cranmer escaped execution under Henry.
Henry trusted him above all his other prelates and on his deathbed clung to
Cranmer's hand. Under Edward, Cranmer advanced Protestantism, helping draft
doctrines which became the basis for the Church of England's Thirty Nine
Articles.
Under pressure, Cranmer supported Lady Jane Gray to succeed Edward. It
was not to be. Mary took the throne and charged him with treason and heresy. In
face of death he recanted his Protestant opinions. When he learned he was to
die anyway, he publicly renounced his recantation. "As for the pope, I
refuse him, as Christ's enemy and Antichrist, with all his false
doctrine." When the fire was lit, he held the hand that had signed the
recantation into the flame, burning it off before the fire touched his body,
saying, "This unworthy right hand." As death approached he repeated
several times, "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit."
Bibliography:
"Cranmer, Thomas." The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church.
Edited by F. L. Cross and E. A. Livingstone. Oxford, 1997.
Foxe, John. Book of Martyrs.
Hook, Walter Farquhar, 1798-1875. Lives of the Archbishops of Canterbury.
London, R. Bentley, 1865-1884.
McKilliam, Annie E. A Chronicle of the Archbishops of Canterbury.
London: J. Clarke, 1913.
Pollard, Albert Frederick. Thomas Cranmer and the English Reformation.
London: Putnam's, 1905.
"Thomas Cranmer and the English Reformation." Christian
History & Biography # 48.
Last updated May, 2007.
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