Margot Johnson's "Thomas Cranmer: Essays--Commemoration of 500th Anniver...
The first several pages give a lovely summary of Cranmer from 1489-1529, just as his career shifts from Cambridge to Durham House, London in late 1529.
We would add this: while Dr. Cranmer may well have been asserting the supremacy of Scripture in the matrimonial decision, a crucial point, it is noted by us that Bishop Fisher had the exegetical upper-hand. It's never discussed--why didn't Cranmer admit the force of the Bishop's exegesis? Was Dr. Cranmer exegeting Scripture by the "hermeneutic of Henry VIII" or the "hermeneutic of Moses," the author of Leviticus and Deuteronomy? Why no comments on this in the biographies? And what did Dr. Cranmer do his for his DD? One inquiring is asking.
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