Supplication Against the Ordinaries
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The Supplication against the Ordinaries was a petition passed by the House of Commons in 1532. It was the result of grievances against Church of England prelates and the clergy. Ordinaries in this Act means a cleric, such as the residential bishop of a diocese, with ordinary jurisdiction over a specified territory.
The contemporary chronicler Edward Hall records that criticism of the English prelates was popular in the House of Commons and he recorded that MPs 'sore complained of the cruelty of the ordinaries' in ex officio proceedings for heresy. Hall goes on to say:
"For the ordinaries would send for men and lay accusations to them of heresy, and say they were accused, and lay articles to them, but no accuser should be brought forth, which to the Commons was very dreadful and grevious: for the party so cited must either abjure or be burned, for purgation he might make none"
Hall claims that the Commons agreed that all their grievances 'should be put in writing and delivered to the King' and this was done. The Tudor historian Geoffrey Elton has written that the Supplication was put into final form by the government behind the scenes even before the issue of clerical abuses was discussed in Parliament (similar complaints had been drawn up after debate in 1529 but they were not enacted, however Thomas Cromwell had kept them). Due to the lack of firm evidence historian Stanford Lehmberg has suggested other possibilities such as Cromwell taking it upon himself to draft the Supplication or the issue had spontaneously been raised by MPs independently. What is known is that the Supplication contained a preamble and nine charges.
The preamble stated that discord and division had arisen between the clergy and the laity in England in part because of heretical books but also upon the 'uncharitable behaviour' of ordinaries. Since the division caused a 'breach of your peace within this your most catholic realm' it went on to request that the King to remedy the clerical abuses which had caused the division. The charges were then listed:
- The independent legislative power of the Convocation, which to the MPs gave the Church too much power and the apparently unjust nature of ex officio proceedings;
- The use of subtle questioning by ordinaries which often trapped ignorant men in heresy trials;
- The expensive and inconvenient nuisance caused when laymen were ordered to appear in ecclesiastical courts outside their own dioceses;
- The use of excommunication for minor causes;
- The excessive fees collected in Church courts;
- The great charges made by ordinaries for institution of clergy into their benefices;
- The conferring of ecclesiastial offices upon young persons whom the bishops called their nephews;
- The large number of holy days that were observed with little devotion;
- The secular offices held by clergymen.
- "It is not the office of a king which is a judge to be too light of credence, nor I have not, nor will not use the same: for I will hear the party that is accused speak or I give any sentence. Your book containeth divers articles of great and weighty matters, and as I perceive it is against the spiritual persons and prelates of our realm, of which thing you desire a redress and a reformation, which desire and request is mere contrary to your last petition. For you require to have the Parliament dissolved and to depart into your countrys, and yet you would have a reformation of your griefs with all diligence. Although that your pain have been great in tarrying, I assure you mine hath been no less then yours, and yet all the pain that I take for your wealth is to me a pleasure; therefore if you will have profit of your complaint, you must tarry the time, or else to be without remedy"
- "Therefore I assure you, if you will not take some reasonable end now when it is offered, I will search out the extremity of the law, and then will I not offer you so much again"
What the Convocation did immediately after this is not known to historians however Gardiner's reply to the Supplication is the only one which was written into the register of the Convocation. In this reply Gardiner maintained that the Commons was wrong to claim there was a division between clargymen and laymen and if there was any division it was down to the 'uncharitable behaviour of certain evil and seditious persons' infected with heretical opinions. Gardiner went on:
- "And albeit we perceive and know right well, that there be as well disposed and as well conscienced men of your Grace's Commons, in no small number assembled, as ever we knew in any Parliament; yet we be not so ignorant, but that we understand that sinister informations and importuante labours and persuasions of evil disposed persons, pretending themselves to be thereunto moved by the zeal of justice and reformation, may induce right wise, sad, and constant men to suppose such things to be true, as be not so indeed"
The King received this reply around the date of the 27th April. Whilst delegates from the Convocation met John Fisher at Rochester in May 1532, mainly to counsel him about the Submission of the Clergy, he corrected a proposed second reply to the Supplication which was fiercely unyielding in tone. Historians do not know if it was ever actually presented to the King, however.
References
- The Reformation Parliament, 1529 - 1536 (Cambridge University Press, 1970) by Stanford E. Lehmberg
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