Faith On The Line - Stress, Stress Go Away Vol 19 | Page 37

They, therefore, made common cause with Anne Askew’s husband, and determined to make Anne the means of involving her royal friend and benefactress in the ruin they designed for every English Protestant. They accordingly surrounded her with spies, whose business it was to note and report every act or utterance upon which a charge of heresy could be based. One of those, a worthless wretch named Wadloe, took lodgings next door to her house, and even went so far as to enter her residence and watch her through the door of her sleeping apartment. He could discover nothing, however, and being conscience stricken went back to his employers with this confession: “She is the most devout woman I have ever known; for at midnight she begins to pray, and ceases not for many hours, when I and others are addressing ourselves to sleep and work.” The priests kept up their watch upon her, however. They wished to destroy her because of her renunciation of their creed and practices, and they also hoped to wring her from the agony of torture some confession which would be damaging to the queen. They were at length rewarded for their vigilance. She was heard to say she had rather read five lines in the Bible than hear five masses in the chapel. She also expressed her disbelief as to the efficacy of the sacrament of the Eucharist being dependent on the character or intention of the priest; and observed that whatever was the character or intention of the priest who administered to her the Eucharist, he could not prevent her from receiving spiritually the body and blood of Christ. These expressions were promptly reported to the priests, who obtained from the civil authorities a warrant for her arrest on the charge of heresy. In March, 1445, she was brought before a commission in London, and examined concerning her belief. In this, as in all her subsequent examinations, the question most strongly pressed was, what her sentiments were as to the doctrine of Transubstantiation. She refused to answer some of the questions, knowing the malice of her judges, and not wishing to incriminate herself. Others she answered with great readiness and freedom. The chief examiner was Christopher Dare, who began by asking her, “Do you believe that the sacrament upon the altar is the very body and blood of Christ?” chapter: “In the Church I had rather speak five words with my understanding, that by my voice I might teach others also, than ten thousand words in an unknown tongue.” They asked her many other questions, among others what she thought of the book the king had written against Luther, and which had won him from the Pope the title of “Defender of the Faith.” They hoped she would answer that she did not approve it, and thus make the king her enemy, for he was merciless to those who failed to praise his book; but, fortunately for her, she also was able to answer, “I can pronounce no judgment upon it, as I never saw it.” They also asked her, “Do you not think that private masses help souls depart?” “It is great idolatry,” she answered, “to believe more in these than in the death which Christ died for us.” Finding it impossible to elicit anything from her, the examination was brought to a close, and she was sent to the Lord Mayor, who undertook to question her, but with no better success. He then committed her to prison, although there was no law to justify him in his act. Her friends endeavoured to procure her release on bail, but the priests took care to prevent it, and she lay for seven days in the Compter prison, no one being allowed to speak with her during that time save a priest who was sent by the Bishop of Winchester, the infamous Gardiner, to question her. He asked her this question: “If the host should fall, and a beast should eat it, does the beast revive God or no?” “Seeing you have taken the trouble to ask this que