SERMONS ON THE CARD AND OTHER DISCOURSES
by Hugh Latimer
INTRODUCTION.
Hugh Latimer, a farmer's son, was born about the year 1491, at
Thurcaston, in Leicestershire. He was an only son, with six
sisters, who were all well cared for at home. He was a boy of
fourteen when sent to Clare College, Cambridge. When about twenty-
four years old, he had obtained a college fellowship, had taken the
degree of Master of Arts, and was ordained Priest of the Roman
Church at Lincoln. In 1524, at the age of about thirty, he
proceeded to the degree of B.D., and on the occasion of his doing so
he argued publicly for the Pope's authority against opinions of
Melancthon. Thomas Bilney went afterwards to Latimer's rooms, gave
him his own reasons for goodwill to the teaching of Melancthon, and
explained to him his faith as a Reformer in a way that secured
Latimer's attention. Latimer's free, vigorous mind, admitted the
new reasonings, and in his after-life he looked always upon "little
Bilney" as the man who had first opened his eyes.
With homely earnestness Latimer began soon to express his new
convictions. His zeal and purity of life had caused him to be
trusted by the University as a maintainer of old ways; he had been
appointed cross-bearer to the University, and elected one of the
twelve preachers annually appointed in obedience to a bull of Pope
Alexander VI. Now Latimer walked and worked with Bilney, visiting
the sick and the prisoners, and reasoning together of the needs of
Christendom. The Bishop of the diocese presently forbade Latimer's
preaching in any of the pulpits of the University. Robert Barnes,
prior of the Augustinian Friars at Cambridge, a man stirred to the
depths by the new movement of thought, then invited Latimer to
preach in the church of the Augustinians. Latimer was next summoned
before Wolsey, whom he satisfied so well that Wolsey overruled the
Bishop's inhibition, and Latimer again became a free preacher in
Cambridge.
The influence of Latimer's preaching became every year greater; and
in December, 1529, he gave occasion to new controversy in the
University by his two Sermons on the Card [the first and second sermons in this volume], delivered in St. Edward's
Church, on the Sunday before Christmas, 1529. Card-playing was in
those days an amusement especially favoured at Christmas time.
Latimer does not express disapproval, though the Reformers generally
were opposed to it. The early statutes of St. John's College,
Cambridge, forbade playing with dice or cards by members of the
college at any time except Christmas, but excluded undergraduates
even from the Christmas privilege. In these sermons Latimer used
the card-playing of the season for illustrations of spiritual truth
drawn from the trump card in triumph, and the rules of the game of
primero. His homely parables enforced views of religious duty more
in accordance with the mind of the Reformers than of those who held
by the old ways. The Prior of the Dominicans at Cambridge tried to
answer Latimer's sermon on the cards with an antagonistic sermon on
the dice: the orthodox Christian was to win by a throw of cinque
and quatre--the cinque, five texts to be quoted against Luther; and
the quatre the four great doctors of the Church. Latimer replied
with vigour; others ranged themselves on one side or the other, and
there was general battle in the University; but the King's Almoner
soon intervened with a letter commanding silence on both sides till
the King's pleasure was further declared. The King's good-will to
Latimer was due, as the letter indicated, to the understanding that
Latimer "favoured the King's cause" in the question of divorce from
Katherine of Arragon.
In March, 1530, Latimer was called to preach before Henry VIII., at
Windsor. The King then made Latimer his chaplain, and in the
following year gave him the rectory of West Kington, in Wiltshire.
The new rector, soon accused of heresy, was summoned before the
Bishop of London and before Convocation; was excommunicated and
imprisoned, and absolved by special request of the King. When
Cranmer became Archbishop of Canterbury, Latimer returned into royal
favour, and preached before the King on Wednesdays in Lent. In
1535, when an Italian nominee of the Pope's was deprived of the
Bishopric of Worcester, Latimer was made his successor; but resigned
in 1539, when the King, having virtually made himself Pope, dictated
to a tractable parliament enforcement of old doctrines by an Act for
Abolishing Diversity of Opinion. From that time until the death of
Henry VIII. Latimer was in disgrace.
The accession of Edward VI. brought him again to the front, and the
Sermon on the Plough, in this volume, is a famous example of his use of his power under Edward VI., as the greatest preacher of his time, in forwarding the Reformation of the Church, and of the lives of those who professed and called themselves Christians. The rest of his story will be associated in another volume of this Library with a collection of his later sermons.
H. M.
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