John Foxe: "Acts and Monuments," 7: 28ff.


The History of one Rawlins White, a Welsh martyr, burned at Cardiff, Vol. 7: 28-33. This is a moving story of an ignorant, unlettered, and simple fisherman of Cardiff. His young son teaches his father to read. The fisherman-father begins a long and lengthy schedule of Bible reading to and with his son, such that he can quote leaf and reference points. As a result, he becae highly skilled in the Scriptures. The story is told of his appearance and condemnation by the Bishop of Llandaff and his chaplains, including an eye-witness report to his bearing, demeanor and witness to the Gospel, the Bible, Jesus alone as Savior and to the falsity of Ubiquitarian Bread-Worship. Bread-Worship was the key issue at bar.
Imagine, now, put this side-by-side with the Bread-worshippers and New Oxfordians of the ACNA.
One is happy that John Foxe did shoe-leather journalism.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

February 1229 A.D. Council of Toulouse--"We prohibit laymen possessing copies of the Old and New Testament

11 April 1803 A.D. France Offers to Sell Louisiana Territory to the US for $11.250 Million—Napoleon: “The sale assures forever the power of the United States…”

8 May 1559 A.D. Act of Uniformity Passed—Elizabeth 1