Showing posts with label English Reformers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label English Reformers. Show all posts

(Wikipedia): Rev. Dr. Philip Edcumbe Hughes





One of my very revered and honoured Professors who left his very personal and deep mark on this student.  He had very serious scholarly credentials.  It showed in the classroom but also "while walking in the way."  I remember, rather humorously one night following class, him saying, "Time to go home and read some Jesuit casuistry in Latin." (He had an M.A. in the classics.)  He chuckled in

(Wikipedia): Thomas Bilney, English Reformer



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Bilney

Thomas Bilney

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    



Thomas Bilney
Protestant reformer and martyr
Borncirca. 1495England
Died19 August 1531Lollards Pit, Norwich, England



Thomas Bilney (c. 1495 – 19 August 1531) was an English Christian martyr.



Prince of Translators: William Tyndale



http://www.ligonier.org/blog/prince-translators-william-tyndale/

Prince of Translators: William Tyndale

from Steven Lawson

Oct 21, 2011

 



William Tyndale (ca. 1494–1536) made an enormous contribution to the Reformation in England. Many would say that he made the contribution by translating the Bible into English and overseeing its

Update (8/12/12): Select Works of Bishop John Bale




Bishop John Bale (1495-1563)




http://books.google.com/books?id=Gh4YAAAAYAAJ&printsec=titlepage#v=onepage&q&f=false

Update:  12 Aug 2012

Select
Works of John Bale by Bishop of Ossory, Prebend of
Canterbury.  He is buried in Canterbury.

Pages 100 ff.  “The Examination of William Thorpe,”  a Wycliffite, by ABC Arundel in 1407.

Thorpe, as told by
Bishop Bale, complains about the “

Thomas Becon (1512-1567): Cambridge Don, Prebend (Canterbury) & English Reformer




http://encyclopedia.jrank.org/articles/pages/3756/Becon-Thomas-1512-1567.html


 Thomas Becon (1512–1567) - BIOGRAPHY, MAJOR WORKS AND THEMES, CRITICAL RECEPTION

Thomas Becon is one of those writers whom students of English history and literature invariably see, when they look at the writers at all, as examples of the “incipient Puritanism” of the mid-Tudor dynasty. One of the most prolific

(Updated 8/12/12) English Reformer: Thomas Becon (1511-1567)





http://books.google.com/books?id=50EYAAAAYAAJ&printsec=titlepage#v=onepage&q&f=false






A few notes on Thomas
Becon, an English Reformer.


1511-1512. Graduate of
St. John's Cambridge. Mentored by Latimer. BA, 1530. There is a “Life of Becon”
by Lupton in “History of Protestant Divines,” London, 1637. Note the use of the
term “Protestant,” as early as 1637, a term disabused by liberals,

Katherine Parr: A Protestant and Reformed Queen (1512-1548)





http://www.luminarium.org/encyclopedia/katherineparr.htm



Katherine Parr,1 the last of the six wives of Henry
VIII, was born around 1512, three years into the reign of King Henry VIII, who had
succeeded his father, King Henry VII, to the throne of
England in 1509. She was the first child of Sir Thomas Parr, of Kendal, and
Maud, daughter of Sir Thomas Green, who was then seventeen years

Theo-Libtard Watch: Parker Society Series for TEC Clerical Libtards


For Episcopal Libtard Clerics, here ya' go.  Get a' cracking, lads.  Here's 54 volumes. These are the English Reformers.

http://libguides.calvin.edu/content.php?pid=46750&sid=344869

l. Title

Bale, John. Select Works of John Bale, D.D., Bishop of Ossory (1849) PDF
Becon, Thomas. The Early Works of Thomas Becon (1843) PDF
Becon, Thomas. The Catechism of Thomas Becon (1844) PDF
Becon, Thomas

English Reformer, Hugh Latimer: Authority of Bible (Oh Not, Not That)


H/T to Steve Macias.



Hugh Latimer 15th Century Bishop and Martyr (burned at the stake for the English Reformation): "There is no king, emperor, magistrate, and ruler, of what state soever they be, but are bound to obey this God, and to give credence unto his holy word, in directing their steps ordinately according to the same word. Yea, truly, they are not only bound to obey God's book, but

450th Anniversary: Bp. John Jewel's "Apology of the Church of England"




Bishop John Jewel,
Diocese of Salisbury


An
Important 450th Anniversary in 2012


      It is the 450th anniversary of the
publication of An Apology of the Church
of England, by Bishop John Jewell (1522-1572), Bishop of Salisbury and
Anglican Reformer. This book was the first scholarly defense of the Elizabethan
settlement. Jewell's works are an excellent statement of Protestant, Reformed,

Luminarium: "Martin Bucer" (1491-1551)


http://www.luminarium.org/encyclopedia/bucer.htm





MARTIN BUCER (or Butzer), German Protestant reformer,
was born in 1491 at Schlettstadt in Alsace. In 1506 he entered the Dominican
order, and was sent to study at Heidelberg. There he became acquainted with the
works of Erasmus and Luther, and was present at a
disputation of the latter with some of the Romanist doctors. He became a

Luminarium: Anthology of English Literature


We call your attention to this exquisite source of information, entitled "Luminarium: Anthology of English Literature."  Reformed Anglicanism will be a frequent patron of this site.

http://www.luminarium.org/





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