Submission of the Clergy
Encyclopedia : S : SU : SUB : Submission of the Clergy
The Submission of the Clergy was a process by which the Church of England gave up their power to formulate church laws without the King's licence and assent. It was first passed by the Convocation of Canterbury in 1532 and then by the Reformation Parliament in 1534. Along with other Acts passed by the Parliament it further separated the Church from Rome.
Convocation
The Convocation of Canterbury met on the 12th April 1532 after its last session ended in March. On the 10th May Edward Fox, the Bishop of Hereford, presented the Convocation with a schedule of three articles which King Henry VIII had sent to the Convocation for ratification. These articles said:
- the Church of England was to renounce its authority to make church law (canons) without royal licence;
- the Convocation was to submit all existing canons to the scrutiny of a committee, which would be appointed by the King. Half of the members would be from Parliament (eight from the Commons and eight from the Upper House) and half from the clergy. This committee would proclaim void all canons it found offensive;
- the Convocation was to retain the remaining canons with the King's consent.
The Convocation was to meet again but the King, accompanied by his councillors in Parliament, made a speech attacking the clergy on the 11th May. The chronicler Edward Hall recorded the King's speech:
- "Welbeloved subjects, we thought that the clergy of our realm had been our subjects wholly, but now we have well perceived that they be but half our subjects, yea, and scarce our subjects; for all the prelates at their consecration make an oath to the Pope, clean contrary to the oath that they make to us, so that they seem to be his subjects, and not ours. The copy of both oaths I deliver here to you, requiring you to invent some order, that we be not thus deluded of our spirital subjects"
The King abruptly decreed that Warham should end the session and when the prelates met for the last time on the 15th May Warham informed them of the King's decision and prorogued the Convocation until the 4th November. Some of the King's most prominent councillors then arrived to demand that the clergy should agree to the articles without amendment. The councillors were the Duke of Norfolk, the Marquess of Exeter, the Earl of Oxford, the Earl of Wiltshire and William Sandys. After this confrontation, which lasted about an hour, the nobles left and the inferior clergy went to vote on the King's three articles. Eighteen of them voted 'no' to renouncing legislative authority, nineteen voted 'no' to the canons committee and to the third article. On receiving news of this rejection Warham then advised the inferior clergy to retire because he thought the councillors might return at any moment. The Duke of Norfolk and a few others did return a few hours later but left after talking with Warham.
The Upper House of the Convocation voted on the articles with John Longland, the Bishop of Lincoln, Dr. Henry Standish, the Bishop of St. Asaph and John Stokesley, the Bishop of London speaking in favour of the articles but with some reservation. John Clerk, the Bishop of Bath and Wells was strongly opposed. A majority voted for the articles and then the Convocation was prorogued.
On the 16th May the Submission of the Clergy, as the three articles became to be known as, was officially signed by representatives of the clergy and the bishops. The historian Michael Kelly, noting the scarce attendance of the vote, has written that the Submission was enacted by a 'rump Convocation'.
Parliament
In 1534 the Submission of the Clergy was confirmed by Parliament in the Act for the Submission of the Clergy and Restraint of Appeals. The historian Stanford Lehmberg argues that the possible need for parliamentary legislation for this came from a proposal from the Commons, rather than Thomas Cromwell. The parliamentary procedure for this Act resulted in a conference between the King and Parliament in which the Speaker addressed the King. In 1536 Parliament was asked again to re-enact the Submission of the Clergy, although the reasoning behind this decision is not known since the 1534 Act did not include an expiry date.
References
- The Reformation Parliament, 1529 - 1536 (Cambridge University Press, 1970) by Stanford E. Lehmberg
External links
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
