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Henry VIII

Henry VIII HENRY VIII by Sam Fisk

Condensed from BAPTIST BULLETIN, October 1982. When the Pope visited England in 1982, the media told us the initial separation with Rome was because Henry VIII, who was pictured in a most unsavory manner, wanted to divorce his wife.

Did Protestantism in Britain spring from Henry’s lust? Cardinal Gibbon thinks so. He wrote, “The licentious monarch divorced himself from the Pope.” Alfred Young declares, “Protestantism in England was due to the taking of the law into his own hands by that adulterous and murderous monarch.”

The wife King Henry wanted to divorce was an ardent Roman Catholic, Catherine of Aragon. He wanted to marry Anne Boleyn, whose relatives belonged to the group trying to reform the papal power of the Roman Church. We are told this was the specific reason why the pope wanted to delay the matter of Henry’s divorce.

The legitimacy of Henry’s marriage was questionned from the beginning. Catherine was contracted to Henry when he was only 12 years old, so that today Henry would have had no problem getting an annulment, which was what he sought.

The Pope had granted a annulments to other monarchs, but held up the annulment requested by Henry for political reasons. Catherine was the daughter of the powerful Ferdinand of Spain, and the pope could not risk his emnity.

The big question is whether a king like Henry VIII, however strongwilled, could have swung an entire nation away from its religious commitment. The British Isles was ripe for change. Eerdman’s HANDBOOK TO THE HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY says, “As early as the 13th century a strong anti-papal and anti-clerical movement developed in Britain.” C.S. Isaacson points out, “A Reformation was inevitable. It was no sudden storm, no freak of a king; its causes lay deep down in the national life. When Henry VIII ascended the throne, reform was already in the air.”

Some of the most active in establishing the Church of England, like Cranmer, Ridley and Latimner, were strong for reform and freedom from papal domination some time before Henry asserted himself. For their pains they were burned at the stake by “Bloody Mary.” But all we hear about is Henry’s divorce. May God give us a balanced picture.