On the
morning of July 15th 1555 at
9am, two men were led to their
execution at London’s Smithfield
in the reign of "bloody Queen
Mary". They were condemned to be
burnt alive as heretics. One was
a young man of 19 called John
Leaf, the other was about 45
years old and his name was John
Bradford.
Among
Bradford’s final words at the
stake were these "O England,
England, repent!" Turning to the
young man who was to suffer with
him he said, "Be of good
comfort, brother, for we shall
have a happy supper with the
Lord tonight". Then, embracing
the wood of his execution, he
repeated our Saviour’s words,
"Strait is the gate, and narrow
is the way, that leads to life
and few there be that find it".
"Thus", says Foxe in his Book of
Martyrs, "like two lambs, they
both ended their mortal lives
... being void of all fear".
So long as
Roman Catholic dogma exists,
there remains a need to contend
for the truths Bradford stood
for, and in the same godly
manner. But we live in a
different age. England is
essentially secular,
materialistic and hedonistic. As
a nation we are lovers of
pleasure rather than lovers of
God, a virtual Sodom ripening
for God’s judgment. Though the
days are different, the need of
the hour is the same as in
Bradford’s day. England must
repent and we need men of
Bradford’s calibre to say so;
men who know that the way is
narrow, not narrow-minded men -
men as holy as John Bradford!
John Bradford
has been described as one of the
holiest men since the apostles,
a wonder of his own age and
among the most spiritual of the
Reformers. When we consider how
godly the Reformers were, this
must make him a veritable giant
among giants. And in an age of
spiritual pigmies such as our
own, we have much that we can
learn from this colossal
contender for The Faith.
John Bradford
was born at Manchester about the
year 1510. He received a good
education and showed
considerable ability in Latin
and arithmetic. He put his
accounting proficiency to good
use when, later in life, he
managed the financial affairs of
a certain Sir John Harrington
before training as a law student
at the Temple in London in the
days of the Protestant king,
Edward VI. Precisely when
Bradford was converted to Christ
we do not know. But we do know
that when God touched his heart,
his former love of rings, chains
and jewellery gave place to a
fervent devotion to the Lord
Jesus Christ and His cause on
earth. The transformation was so
great that he gave up his study
of law at the Temple and went to
the University of Cambridge in
1548, to give himself entirely
to the study of the Scriptures.
Bradford took
Scripture earnestly to heart, as
may be seen from his response to
a sermon preached in London
before young king Edward by the
well-known Reformer, Hugh
Latimer. When Bradford heard
that God required the
restitution of dishonest gain,
he was profoundly troubled about
a fraud respecting money owed to
the king by Sir John Harrington
whom he had served. Bradford
hadn’t benefited from the fraud,
but he had concealed it.
Bradford’s spiritual convictions
were such that he felt compelled
to reveal the matter, and so
forced Sir John to make
restitution to the king!
Bradford is
described as a ruddy, tall and
slender man with an auburn
beard. He slept four hours in
the night, ate sparingly, and
never felt an hour well spent
unless he had done some good by
writing, study, or instructing
others. Indeed, he would reprove
sin in such a sweet way, that
those reproved knew he only did
it for their good in order to
draw them to God.
His personal
walk with Christ was of a deep
devotional nature. He was in the
habit of writing down his
faults, because he wanted to
feel a "chest-beating" regret
for sin, and to groan with true
brokenness of heart when he came
to private prayer. At the same
time he would seek a fresh
assurance of salvation in Christ
through faith. Bradford also
made a note of the virtues he
saw in others that he might
lament the lack of them in
himself. In short, his life was
one of daily repentance and
heart-felt prayer - something
very different to the "saying of
prayers" which was so common in
those days, and seems, somehow,
never to have gone out of
fashion.
The Oxford
Dictionary of Quotations tells
us that it was Bradford who
originated the saying "There but
for the grace of God go I."
Seeing a group of criminals led
out to their execution he
declared, "But for the grace of
God there goes John Bradford."
Samson, his
friend from law-student days,
adds: "They which were familiar
with him might see, how he,
being in their company, used to
fall often into sudden and deep
meditation in which he would sit
with fixed countenance and the
spirit moved, yet speaking
nothing a good space. And
sometimes in this silent
sitting, plenty of tears would
trickle down his cheeks.
Sometimes he would sit in it and
come out of it with a smiling
countenance. Oftentimes have I
sat at dinner and supper with
him when, either by occasion of
talk or of some view of God’s
benefits present, or some inward
thought of his own he has fallen
into these deep cogitations, and
he would tell me in the end such
discourses of them, that I did
perceive that sometimes a tear
trickled out of his eyes, as
well for joy as for sorrow".
While at
Cambridge, Bradford became
familiar with that other
well-known Reformer, Nicholas
Ridley. It was Ridley who
ordained Bradford in 1550 and
commended him to the young King
Edward VI, who later made him a
royal chaplain. When Bradford
preached before Edward, in the
last year of his reign, he spoke
in what was described as a
"mighty and prophetic spirit" of
the nation’s contempt for the
Gospel. He referred to the
tokens of God’s wrath that were
at hand - one of which was a dog
at Ludgate carrying a piece of a
dead child in its mouth. "I
summon you all, even every
mother’s child of you, to the
judgment of God for it is at
hand" he said. His old friend,
Samson, and no doubt others, saw
the young king’s death as a
fulfilment of this prophecy.
Perhaps
referring to this occasion, John
Knox, that boldest of bold
Reformers, says Bradford "spared
not the proudest, but boldly
declared that God’s vengeance
shortly should strike those that
then were in authority, because
they loathed and abhorred the
true Word of the everlasting
God." Knox tells us of how, in
the same sermon, Bradford
attributed the death of the Duke
of Somerset to his neglect of
the preached Word. "God punished
him," Bradford said, "and that
suddenly: and shall He spare you
that be double more wicked? No,
He shall not. Will ye, or will
ye not, ye shall drink the cup
of the Lord’s wrath. The
judgment of the Lord, the
judgment of the Lord!" he cried
with pathos and tears.
Ridley lists
Bradford, among others, as one
who preached in the strongest
possible terms to the nobility
of Edward’s court. He rebuked
them for their "insatiable
covetousness", "filthy
carnality", "intolerable
ambition and pride", as well as
their unwillingness to attend to
"poor men’s causes and to hear
God’s Word". Needless to say
Bradford was hated by many. When
the young king died, Queen Mary
came to the throne and Bradford
was immediately arrested and
tried for heresy, along with
Latimer, Ridley and Archbishop
Cranmer. In fact, for a brief
time, they shared the same cell
together in the Tower. After
many months in various prisons,
in which he did much good by his
letters and writings, Bradford
was condemned to death on
January 3lst 1555. But it wasn’t
until the afternoon of June
30th, of that year, that he knew
just when his execution would
take place, although he seems to
have had a premonition of it in
his dreams.
Foxe records
how abruptly the news was
brought to "… suddenly the
keeper’s wife came up, as one
half amazed, and seeming much
troubled being almost
breathless, said, ‘Oh Master
Bradford, I come to bring you
heavy news.’ ‘What is that’ said
he. ‘Marry’, said she, ‘tomorrow
you must be burned, and your
chain is now a buying, and soon
you must go to Newgate.’ With
that Master Bradford put off his
cap and lifting up his eyes to
heaven, said ‘I thank God for
it. I have looked for the same a
long time, and therefore it
comes not to me suddenly, but as
a thing waited for every day and
hour. The Lord make me worthy
thereof.’ And so thanking her
for her gentleness, he departed
up into his chamber, and called
his friend with him, and when he
came hither, went secretly
himself alone a long time and
prayed."
Bradford had
a great reputation as both a
preacher and an exceptionally
holy man. He was well known in
Lancashire and was much loved in
the city of London, where he had
so fervently laboured. Because
of his popularity, great
attempts were made to dissuade
him from the Protestant Faith.
Indeed we are told that his
opponents took more pains to
bring him to their way of
thinking regarding the pope’s
supremacy and the mass, than any
of the other Reformers. Being so
well known, and so appreciated
at large, it is not surprising
to find that a vast crowd came
to his execution on the morning
of July lst 1555. He was led out
by a surprisingly large number
of armed men. It was 9 am, but
many had gathered much earlier.
It was the biggest crowd ever
experienced at a public burning.
A certain Mrs Honywood, who died
in 1620 having lived to be 92,
often told of how she was
present at the time, and had her
shoes trodden off by the crowd.
When Bradford
and his fellow martyr, John
Leaf, arrived at the stake they
prostrated themselves in prayer.
Annoyed by the press of the
crowd the Sheriff ordered
Bradford to conclude his prayer.
Standing at the stake, Bradford
looked towards heaven and said
"O England, England, repent thee
of thy sins, repent thee of thy
sins. Beware of idolatry, beware
of false antichrists." With
these, and other words Bradford
preached to the crowd, and
comforted the goodly young man
who suffered with him. In the
mercy of God, both were given
strength to endure the torments
of the flame, through which they
passed to live, as they now do,
with Christ.
J.C. Ryle
says, "there seems to have been
something peculiarly beautiful
and attractive in Bradford’s
character, exceeding that of the
other Reformers". He quotes
another as saying "Indeed he was
a most holy and mortified man,
who secretly in his closet would
so weep for his sins, one would
have thought he would never have
smiled again; and then appearing
in public, he would be so
harmlessly pleasant, one would
think he had never wept before."
Bradford only bore ministerial
office for 5 years, of which two
were passed in prison. He is
said to have been neither the
least able nor the least learned
of the Reformers. Had King
Edward lived, he would
undoubtedly have become a bishop
alongside men like Latimer and
Ridley. His writings are deeply
devotional and profound. "To my
mind", says Ryle, "there is not
only Scriptural soundness in all
that Bradford writes, but a
peculiar fire, unction, warmth,
and directness, which entitle
him to a very high rank among
Christian authors."
But what kind
of impact does Bradford make on
us in this present day? I can
only speak for myself when I say
that I acquired the Parker
Society’s book of his writings
many years ago, and ever since
they have been my bedtime
reading. Not that I read them
every night, but the book
remains at my bedside as a
constant reminder of what
constitutes true apostolic
Christianity, at a time when
many versions of Christianity
are masquerading as the real
thing. When I read Bradford I
feel as though I am touching the
New Testament age. I cannot put
his works back in my bookcase
for fear of forgetting the
standard to which I aspire, or
should aspire.
Bradford, in
his final moments at the stake,
spoke of the narrowness of the
gate. He was reminding himself
and others of the cost of
following Christ. No one can
doubt that it really was narrow
for him and others in those
days. But is it any broader for
us today? Let us not make the
Christian path any wider than
Christ intended it to be.
Of these men
it may be said, "They loved not
their lives unto the death"
(Revelation 12:11). They were
the willing slaves of God to do
and to suffer according to His
will. Like Paul, they were
prepared to spend and be spent
for the One who loved them and
gave Himself for them. Today we
have made God our slave. I may
be wrong, but we seem to make
demands of God, as if He were
obliged to do what we ask. Our
prayer petitions appear like
endless shopping lists. They
speak more of what God owes us,
than of what we owe Him in
thanksgiving and selfless
service.
Finally then,
Bradford and the other Reformers
never "played at church"; they
were serious about their faith.
Adhering to biblical
Christianity cost them dear,
just as it did the Early Church.
Academic brilliance didn’t go to
their heads as it does with some
today, for their feet were kept
firmly on the ground by the
threat of death. It seems so
different with us. Our tolerant
society ensures that we can be
Reformed Christians at no
personal cost. But if we are
proud of our intellectual grasp
of doctrine, and allow ourselves
the luxury of personal conceit,
we are not walking in the
tradition of these godly and
devout men; we are not like John
Bradford, we are not truly
Reformed.
Richard A
Mayhew