24 April 1522 A.D. ENGLAND: Birth of John Jewel, a Scholarly “Jewel of the English Reformation”
24
April 1522 A.D. ENGLAND: Birth of John Jewel, a
Scholarly “Jewel of the English Reformation”
Editors.
“John Jewel.” Encyclopedia Britannica. 9
Dec 2014. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/303486/John-Jewel.
Accessed 23 Apr 2015.
John Jewel, (born May 24, 1522, Buden, Devon, England—died September 23, 1571, Monkton Farleigh, Wiltshire), Anglican
bishop of Salisbury and
controversialist who defended Queen Elizabeth
I’s religious policies opposing Roman Catholicism. The works Jewel produced during the 1560s defined and clarified points of
difference between the churches
of England and Rome, thus strengthening the ability of Anglicanism to survive
as a permanent institution.
During the
reign of the Protestant king Edward VI (1547–53), Jewel
was influenced by the work of the Italian scholar and Reformer Peter
Martyr Vermigli to become a leader of the Reformers in England. For
self-protection Jewel signed a set of anti-Protestant statements on the
accession of the Roman Catholic queen Mary
I (1553), who repealed laws establishing Protestantism in England.
Finding it prudent to flee the country, he traveled throughout Europe, visiting
Zürich, Padua, and Strasbourg, where he met
Vermigli.
When
Elizabeth restored the legal protection of Protestantism, Jewel
returned to England and in 1559 disputed with Catholics at the Westminster
Conference. In a sermon that same year, he challenged Catholics to produce
scriptural and other traditional sources in support of their position on
various issues dividing Anglicans and Catholics, including clerical vestments
and worship ritual. At first preferring to de-emphasize liturgical elaboration
in accord with Puritan views, he soon came to accept Elizabeth’s policy of
moderation.
Jewel became
bishop of Salisbury in 1560 and began writing a series of polemics in which he
propounded his theological views. In 1562 he published the Apologia pro ecclesia Anglicana (“Defense of the Anglican Church”), described by Mandell Creighton as “the
first methodical statement of the position of the Church of England against the Church of Rome.” After Thomas Harding,
who had been deprived of the title of prebendary (honorary canon) of Salisbury,
published his Answer to Jewel in 1564, Jewel wrote his Reply in 1565, which evoked a Confutation from Harding the next year. Jewel responded with his Defense of the Apology (1567).

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