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John Knox 500: Reformer, Pastor, Critic of Political / Religious Tyranny
The Aquilla Report ^ | December 14, 2014 | Don Sweeting

Posted on 12/15/2014 5:35:36 AM PST by Gamecock

Knox was the leader of the Scottish reformation and the founder of the Scottish Presbyterian church.

John Knox had a passion for God’s Word and a passion for Scotland. He was known for his stance against both political and religious tyranny. He did not want to see Scotland come under the dominion of the Roman Catholic Church or a French monarch. Instead, he wanted to see it under the dominion of Christ and his Word. His famous prayer was, echoing Hanna’s prayer in the Old Testament, “Oh God, give me Scotland or I die!”

Knox distrusted and worked against absolute monarchs. He did so for theological reasons: God alone is sovereign. “Kings have not an absolute power,” he said, “but their power is limited by God’s Word.” They are subject to laws.

The Scottish reformer also rejected any religion not based exclusively on the Bible. He wanted to move the whole basis of salvation from the church back to Christ and see his country turn to the pure gospel and scriptural truth.

John Knox is not popular in a politically correct age like ours. But we must see him as a Jeremiah-like reformer.

He had the stamp of a prophet about him. He has been called “a tough man for a tough age.” Like Jeremiah, his mission was to “throw down and build up.” This was not a job for a man of mild spirits and genteel manners, (and as we know, Knox was not known for his diplomacy or tact). It required reproving public sin and contending for public godliness.

Knox was not afraid to denounce a monarch. He boldly criticized Emperor Charles V, Queen Mary of England, and Mary Queen of Scots. Nor was he afraid to stand against the errors and idolatry of the church.

We first learn of John Knox as a Catholic priest who was attracted to the teachings of Luther and the preaching of Protestant George Wishart. Wishart, suspected of heresy because he read the Greek New Testament and talked about being saved by grace alone, was burned at the stake in 1546. This deeply impacted Knox.

Knox came to believe that the Church of Rome had greatly degenerated from apostolic times. Its priesthood was ignorant and corrupt. Its services in Latin were foreign to the people. Knox came to criticize what he called an “idolatrous mass” because it was presented as a repetition of the once for all sacrifice of Christ. So by 1546, Knox was firmly committed to the Protestant cause.

Shortly thereafter he was captured by the French and made a galley slave on a ship.

This became a watershed event in his life and only confirmed him in his new convictions. When he was released 19 months later, Knox fled to England where he joined the Reformed forces and worked with Thomas Cranmer. For two years Knox served as an itinerant evangelist. When Catholic Mary Tudor, known as Bloody Mary, came to the throne in 1553, there was a systematic and ruthless persecution of Protestants. Knox fled to Frankfurt and then Geneva where he came under the influence of John Calvin.

During his exile, Knox pastored British refugees in the first English congregation in Geneva. This church became the cradle of Puritanism. While there, Knox was involved in the production of a new translation of the Bible, completed in 1560, known as the Geneva Bible. It became the first English Bible to be published in Scotland.

When Knox returned to Scotland in 1559, he brought all this experience with him. Knox worked for doctrinal and church reforms. His efforts turned millions to a renewed awareness of God’s sovereignty, the authority of Scripture and justification by grace alone.

At the time, Mary Queen of Scots wanted to make Scotland subject to France, to restore the Church of Rome, and to crush Protestantism.

In response, Knox’s voice thundered from Scottish pulpits, and he propagated a theory of godly revolution which taught that there is a case for rebellion against a monarch who becomes idolatrous and imposes her rule on the people.

It was said that Mary feared Knox preaching more than the armies of England!

Eventually, Scottish leaders rebelled against Queen Mary and called on Elizabeth I, the Protestant queen of England, to help. So this was not simply a civil war, it was a war of Scotland and England against France, and a war of Catholic powers against Protestant powers.

The war lasted until 1560 when the people of Scotland made a covenant for the reformation of religion according to God’s Word.

With the Treaty of Edinburgh, all French troops withdrew and Protestantism triumphed. Knox helped draft the Scottish Confession of Faith and Book of Discipline for the church that he believed reflected the New Testament church. But these documents were also a kind of manifesto for a Christian commonwealth. They led to the founding of both a self-governing church and the single most democratic system of government in Europe.

The Reformation in Scotland also promoted schools for teaching Scripture and a Reformed catechism.

This became the beginning of a national system of education with a school in every parish. It eventually led to Scotland having the highest literacy rate in the world.

After the treaty, Queen Mary abdicated and the Reformed Protestant Church of Scotland was official. Knox’s dreams for the independence of his church and country were finally realized.

He then returned to what he considered his primary duty—preaching and pastoring at St. Giles, the High Kirk (church) in Edinburgh.

His dying prayer was that the Lord would raise up faithful pastors who would take charge of the church.

Little did he know that many Scots would immigrate to the American colonies, bringing with them both a distrust of the absolute powers of monarchs, and a commitment to a Reformation faith.

Which is why his 500TH birthday, in an era of theological confusion and imperial presidents, still matters.


TOPICS: History
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 12/15/2014 5:35:36 AM PST by Gamecock
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To: drstevej; OrthodoxPresbyterian; CCWoody; Wrigley; Gamecock; Jean Chauvin; jboot; AZhardliner; ...
GRPL Ping


2 posted on 12/15/2014 5:37:29 AM PST by Gamecock (Joel Osteen is a preacher of the Gospel like Colonel Sanders is an Army officer.)
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To: Gamecock
in an era of theological confusion and imperial presidents

Absolutely true. If Knox were here, in America today, he would ask why we want Despots to be Kings through Executive Orders instead of laws through our representatives. He would ask why we wanted to give up our Freedoms under God Almighty and return to slavery under Kings.

He would ask why we have allowed the Federal Government to force the States into Homosexuality without protest and offend Almighty God who calls it an Abomination. For "The land will vomit you out" (Leviticus 18:25).

3 posted on 12/15/2014 5:50:18 AM PST by sr4402
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To: Gamecock
Additional reading:

John Knox and Preaching the Gospel
Theologian claims we should celebrate Knox, not the Pope
What Happened this Day in Church History; Bishops Ridley and Latimer Burned at the Stake

4 posted on 12/15/2014 5:50:33 AM PST by Gamecock (Joel Osteen is a preacher of the Gospel like Colonel Sanders is an Army officer.)
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To: Gamecock
We first learn of John Knox as a Catholic priest who was attracted to the teachings of Luther and the preaching of Protestant George Wishart. Wishart, suspected of heresy because he read the Greek New Testament and talked about being saved by grace alone, was burned at the stake in 1546. This deeply impacted Knox.

Knox came to believe that the Church of Rome had greatly degenerated from apostolic times. Its priesthood was ignorant and corrupt. Its services in Latin were foreign to the people. Knox came to criticize what he called an “idolatrous mass” because it was presented as a repetition of the once for all sacrifice of Christ. So by 1546, Knox was firmly committed to the Protestant cause. Shortly thereafter he was captured by the French and made a galley slave on a ship.

This became a watershed event in his life and only confirmed him in his new convictions. When he was released 19 months later, Knox fled to England where he joined the Reformed forces and worked with Thomas Cranmer. For two years Knox served as an itinerant evangelist. When Catholic Mary Tudor, known as Bloody Mary, came to the throne in 1553, there was a systematic and ruthless persecution of Protestants. Knox fled to Frankfurt and then Geneva where he came under the influence of John Calvin.

During his exile, Knox pastored British refugees in the first English congregation in Geneva. This church became the cradle of Puritanism. While there, Knox was involved in the production of a new translation of the Bible, completed in 1560, known as the Geneva Bible. It became the first English Bible to be published in Scotland. When Knox returned to Scotland in 1559, he brought all this experience with him. Knox worked for doctrinal and church reforms. His efforts turned millions to a renewed awareness of God’s sovereignty, the authority of Scripture and justification by grace alone.

Thanks for the ping!

"Presbyterians often forgot that John Knox had been a Sunday bowler"
-- from the thread Revolution, devolution, evolution

5 posted on 12/15/2014 6:37:51 AM PST by Alex Murphy ("the defacto Leader of the FR Calvinist Protestant Brigades")
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To: Absolutely Nobama; Alex Murphy; alpo; Army Air Corps; azishot; B4Ranch; bigbob; B.O. Plenty; ...

Bless you for posting this.

The Geneva Bible, of course, was the Bible the Mayflower Pilgrims brought with them to America.


6 posted on 12/15/2014 7:18:31 AM PST by PieterCasparzen (We have to fix things ourselves)
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To: PieterCasparzen
Indeed it was!

Geneva Bible

7 posted on 12/15/2014 7:45:29 AM PST by Gamecock (Joel Osteen is a preacher of the Gospel like Colonel Sanders is an Army officer.)
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To: Gamecock

Ummm, wouldn’t that be 505? (1509-1564)


8 posted on 12/15/2014 10:12:36 AM PST by AnalogReigns (Real life is ANALOG...)
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To: AnalogReigns

Whoops....was thinking CALVIN. C’est la vie.

I think I’ll get another cup of coffee.


9 posted on 12/15/2014 10:13:44 AM PST by AnalogReigns (Real life is ANALOG...)
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To: Gamecock

Thanks for the great reminder. :)


10 posted on 12/16/2014 4:48:38 AM PST by lupie
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