Thursday, April 23, 2015

Thomas Cranmer

born July 2, 1489 in Lincolnshire
died (executed by burning) March 21, 1556 in Oxford

Ordained priest 1523
Archbishop of Canterbury, 1533-1556 under Henry VIII
Compiler of First Book of Common Prayer 1549 under Edward VI

Thomas Cranmer was the first Archbishop of Canterbury to lead the Church after its separation from Rome and the inauguration of the English Reformation.

In 1544 he completed the first vernacular service for the newly independent Church of England, The Exhortation and Litany. He proceeded from that point to develop the first Book of Common Prayer, which was authorized and published in 1549.

During Henry VIII's reign, Cranmer's reforms were mild, given Henry VIII's theological conservatism and dislike of Lutheranism. During the reign of Edward VI, Cranmer made more sweeping changes, publishing the first Book of Common Prayer. Upon Edward's death in 1553, however, Cranmer was in jeopardy as the succession to the throne was unsettled and he had been excommunicated by the Roman Church. Cranmer supported the abortive ascension of Lady Jane Grey, but she was proclaimed queen for only 9 days before the Privy Council switched loyalty and backed Mary I. After Mary I, an ardent Roman Catholic, ascended to the throne in 1553, Cranmer was arrested and executed by burning. Before his execution, he was pressured into signing a recantation. He later recanted the recantation, and when he was burned at the stake, allegedly first held into the flames the hand that had signed the recantation.

Cranmer's library at Croydon Palace held numerous text that he used in formulating the first Book of Common Prayer, but it was sold off piecemeal at his death, so we will never know exactly what it contained.

For more information, see:
The BBC biographical entry of Thomas Cranmer
My Episcopal Cafe's Speaking to the Soul meditation on Cranmer, March 21, 2015

Monday, April 20, 2015

Elizabethan Settlement

In 1559, the official policy of Elizabeth I in matters of religion was determined to be a middle way between Catholicism and Calvinism. There are two main parts of the Elizabethan Settlement: the 1559 Act of Supremacy and the 1559 Prayer Book.

For more information, see:
The Elizabethan Settlement in the glossary at The Episcopal Church's website

Book of Common Prayer

The general term for a series of collections of prayers and liturgies used by numerous churches within the Anglican Communion. The first Book of Common Prayer was created in 1549 by Archbishop Thomas Cranmer.

Evolution in England:
1549
1552
1559
1604
1662- This book is still officially in use in England and Africa.
(1928: failed to win approval)

Evolution in Scotland:
1662 English Book of Common Prayer
1674 Scottish Liturgy

Evolution in America:
1662 English Book of Common Prayer plus Holy Communion rite from the 1674 Scottish Liturgy led to
1790 Book of Common Prayer
1892
1928
1979

Evolution in New Zealand
1662 English Book of Common Prayer
1988 A New Zealand Prayer Book, He Karakia Mihinare o Aotearoa

Evolution in Canada:
English 1662
1922
1962
1967 (French translation- Le Recueil des Prières de la Communauté Chrétienne)


For more information, see:
Online 1979 Book of Common Prayer of the Episcopal Church
"Evolution of the Prayer Book" in Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 volumes, from bartleby.com
A New History of the Book of Common Prayer at justus.org
Numerous resources related to the Book of Common Prayer from Anglicans Online

Friday, April 17, 2015

Black Rubric

Inserted into the 1552 Book of Common Prayer at the insistence of Calvinists, which noted that the direction to kneel at communion was not meant to imply transubstantiation or adoration of the elements. Rubrics were normally printed in red ink; this rubric had not been approved by Parliament and was inserted as the book was going to press.

For more information, see:
"The Black Rubric" at Anglican Eucharistic Theology

Friday, April 10, 2015

Lollardy

Lollards were a heretical reform movement that arose in England in the 14th century that lingered until the English Reformation. Lollards were followers of John Wycliffe. The main tenets included:

Christianity should be based on the Bible as much as possible, therefore practices not found in scripture should be eliminated;
The laity should have access to the Bible in the vernacular;
Authority for interpretations rests in individuals, not with the Church;
A denial of the doctrine of transubstantiation;
A belief in predestination rather than justification by works, and that there was an invisible "Church of the Saved" which differed from the visible Catholic Church;
A belief in a lay priesthood and a denial of the efficacy of confession or clerical celibacy

Thursday, April 9, 2015

1534 Act of Supremacy

A law passed in 1534 with the support of Archbishop Thomas Cranmer and Thomas Cromwell that acknowledged the principle of Royal Supremacy, making Henry VIII the supreme head of the Church of England and granting him the authority to nominate all bishops and control all Church property within the boundaries of the Church of England. In effect, this declared the Ecclesia Anglicana, or English Church, to be a national church separate from the primacy of Rome. This Act is commonly dated as the beginning of the English Reformation.

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Breviary


A book that contained the daily office; its convenience made it popular for person devotion and use.