The Great Lord Burghley: A Study in Elizabethan Statecraft

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book The Great Lord Burghley: A Study in Elizabethan Statecraft by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Martin Andrew Sharp Hume ISBN: 9781465618436
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Martin Andrew Sharp Hume
ISBN: 9781465618436
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English

It may be stated as an historical truism that great organic changes in the relationship of human beings towards each other are usually preceded by periods of quiescence and apparent stability, during which unsuspected forces of preparation are at work. When the moment of crisis comes, the unthinking marvel that men are ready, as if by magic, to accept, and, if need be, to fight and die for, the new order of ideas. Although the outward manifestation of it may be unexpected, yet, in reality, no vast, far-reaching revolution in human institutions is sudden: only that the short-sightedness of all but the very wisest fails to see the signs until the forces are openly arrayed and the battle set. The period of the struggle for religious reform in Europe was preceded by such a process of unconscious preparation as this. Over a century elapsed from the martyrdom of John Huss before the bold professor of Wittemberg dared to denounce the Pope’s indulgences. It is true that during that century, and before, satirists and moralists had often pointed the finger of contumely at the corruption of the clergy and the lax discipline of the Church, but no word had been raised against her doctrines. In the meanwhile, the subterranean process which was sapping the foundations of the meek submission of old, was progressing apace with the spread of printed books and the revival of the study of Greek and Hebrew. By the time that Luther first made his daring stand, the learning of cultivated laymen, thanks to Erasmus and others, had far outstripped the cramped erudition of the friars; and when at last a churchman thundered from the Saxon pulpit his startling doctrine of papal fallibility, there were thousands of men throughout Europe who were able to do without monkish commentators, and could read the Scriptures in the original tongues, forming their own judgment of right and wrong by the unobscured light of the inspired Word itself. Thus it happened that the cry for radical religious reform in 1517 found a world waiting for it, and in an incredibly few years the champions of the old and the new had taken sides ready for the struggle which was to decide the fate of civilisation for centuries to come. By an apparently providential concurrence of circumstances, the personal characters and national ambitions of rulers at the same period were such as to enlist the hardiest and most tenacious of the European peoples on the side of freedom from spiritual and intellectual trammels; and eventually to ally the idea of political emancipation and personal liberty with that of religious reform, to the immense strengthening of both. The fight was to be a long and varied one; it can hardly, indeed, be looked upon as ended even now. Many of the combatants have fainted by the way, and both sides have belied their principles again and again; but looking back over the field, we can see the ground that has been won, and are assured that in the long-run the powers of progress must prevail, as we hope and believe, to the greater glory of God and the greater happiness of men.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

It may be stated as an historical truism that great organic changes in the relationship of human beings towards each other are usually preceded by periods of quiescence and apparent stability, during which unsuspected forces of preparation are at work. When the moment of crisis comes, the unthinking marvel that men are ready, as if by magic, to accept, and, if need be, to fight and die for, the new order of ideas. Although the outward manifestation of it may be unexpected, yet, in reality, no vast, far-reaching revolution in human institutions is sudden: only that the short-sightedness of all but the very wisest fails to see the signs until the forces are openly arrayed and the battle set. The period of the struggle for religious reform in Europe was preceded by such a process of unconscious preparation as this. Over a century elapsed from the martyrdom of John Huss before the bold professor of Wittemberg dared to denounce the Pope’s indulgences. It is true that during that century, and before, satirists and moralists had often pointed the finger of contumely at the corruption of the clergy and the lax discipline of the Church, but no word had been raised against her doctrines. In the meanwhile, the subterranean process which was sapping the foundations of the meek submission of old, was progressing apace with the spread of printed books and the revival of the study of Greek and Hebrew. By the time that Luther first made his daring stand, the learning of cultivated laymen, thanks to Erasmus and others, had far outstripped the cramped erudition of the friars; and when at last a churchman thundered from the Saxon pulpit his startling doctrine of papal fallibility, there were thousands of men throughout Europe who were able to do without monkish commentators, and could read the Scriptures in the original tongues, forming their own judgment of right and wrong by the unobscured light of the inspired Word itself. Thus it happened that the cry for radical religious reform in 1517 found a world waiting for it, and in an incredibly few years the champions of the old and the new had taken sides ready for the struggle which was to decide the fate of civilisation for centuries to come. By an apparently providential concurrence of circumstances, the personal characters and national ambitions of rulers at the same period were such as to enlist the hardiest and most tenacious of the European peoples on the side of freedom from spiritual and intellectual trammels; and eventually to ally the idea of political emancipation and personal liberty with that of religious reform, to the immense strengthening of both. The fight was to be a long and varied one; it can hardly, indeed, be looked upon as ended even now. Many of the combatants have fainted by the way, and both sides have belied their principles again and again; but looking back over the field, we can see the ground that has been won, and are assured that in the long-run the powers of progress must prevail, as we hope and believe, to the greater glory of God and the greater happiness of men.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book My Mother's Rival by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume
Cover of the book With The World's Great Travellers, Volume II by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume
Cover of the book The Englishwoman in America by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume
Cover of the book The History of the Reformation of Religion in Scotland with which are Included Knox's Confession and the Book of Discipline by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume
Cover of the book The Hell of the Good: A Theological Epic in Six Books by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume
Cover of the book A Righte Merrie Christmasse: The Story of Christ-Tide by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume
Cover of the book Morte de Yaginadatta: Episodio do poema epico - O Ramayana by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume
Cover of the book The Broncho Rider Boys with Funston at Vera Cruz: Upholding the Honor of the Stars and Stripes by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume
Cover of the book El Maestrante by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume
Cover of the book Adonijah: A Tale of the Jewish Dispersion by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume
Cover of the book Lives of The Poets, Volume 1 by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume
Cover of the book The Eyes of the Woods: A Story of the Ancient Wilderness by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume
Cover of the book Our Little Hindu Cousin by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume
Cover of the book Stones of The Temple: Lessons from The Fabric and Furniture of The Church by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume
Cover of the book Memoirs of the Marchioness of Pompadour (Complete) by Martin Andrew Sharp Hume
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy