登陆注册
15484900000022

第22章 CHAPTER IV.(2)

Their whole policy appeared to be dictated by a passionate spirit of reaction. . . The oppressors of the parson had been the oppressors of the squire. The sequestrator who had driven the one from his parsonage had driven the other from his manor-house. Both had been branded with the same charge of malignity. Both had suffered together, and the new Parliament was resolved that both should triumph together."The feeling thus eloquently expressed goes far to explain the harshness which Bunyan experienced at the hands of the administrators of justice at the crisis of his life at which we have now arrived. Those before whom he was successively arraigned belonged to this very class, which, having suffered most severely during the Puritan usurpation, was least likely to show consideration to a leading teacher of the Puritan body. Nor were reasons wanting to justify their severity. The circumstances of the times were critical. The public mind was still in an excitable state, agitated by the wild schemes of political and religious enthusiasts plotting to destroy the whole existing framework both of Church and State, and set up their own chimerical fabric. We cannot be surprised that, as Southey has said, after all the nation had suffered from fanatical zeal, "The government, rendered suspicious by the constant sense of danger, was led as much by fear as by resentment to seventies which are explained by the necessities of self-defence," and which the nervous apprehensions of the nation not only condoned, but incited. Already Churchmen in Wales had been taking the law into their own hands, and manifesting their orthodoxy by harrying Quakers and Nonconformists. In the May and June of this year, we hear of sectaries being taken from their beds and haled to prison, and brought manacled to the Quarter Sessions and committed to loathsome dungeons. Matters had advanced since then. The Church had returned in its full power and privileges together with the monarchy, and everything went back into its old groove. Every Act passed for the disestablishment and disendowment of the Church was declared a dead letter. Those of the ejected incumbents who remained alive entered again into their parsonages, and occupied their pulpits as of old; the surviving bishops returned to their sees; and the whole existing statute law regarding the Church revived from its suspended animation. No new enactment was required to punish Nonconformists and to silence their ministers; though, to the disgrace of the nation and its parliament, many new ones were subsequently passed, with ever-increasing disabilities. The various Acts of Elizabeth supplied all that was needed. Under these Acts all who refused to attend public worship in their parish churches were subject to fines;while those who resorted to conventicles were to be imprisoned till they made their submissions; if at the end of three months they refused to submit they were to be banished the realm, and if they returned from banishment, without permission of the Crown, they were liable to execution as felons. This long-disused sword was now drawn from its rusty sheath to strike terror into the hearts of Nonconformists. It did not prove very effectual. All the true-hearted men preferred to suffer rather than yield in so sacred a cause. Bunyan was one of the earliest of these, as he proved one of the staunchest.

Early in October, 1660, the country magistrates meeting in Bedford issued an order for the public reading of the Liturgy of the Church of England. Such an order Bunyan would not regard as concerning him. Anyhow he would not give obeying it a thought. One of the things we least like in Bunyan is the feeling he exhibits towards the Book of Common Prayer. To him it was an accursed thing, the badge and token of a persecuting party, a relic of popery which he exhorted his adherents to "take heed that they touched not" if they would be "steadfast in the faith of Jesus Christ." Nothing could be further from his thoughts than to give any heed to the magistrates' order to go to church and pray "after the form of men's inventions."The time for testing Bunyan's resolution was now near at hand.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 北极光

    北极光

    林澈从小就喜欢和爷爷玩耍,可是后来爷爷的身体越来越严重,连一向吵架的爸爸妈妈也开始和睦起来了,可是真的有那么平静吗,爷爷去世后,林澈终于知道了,爸爸妈妈和好是假,为了爷爷的产业才是真,爸爸妈妈在打闹之中失去了生命,林澈也进入了孤儿院,直到十三岁才去了舅舅家,林澈按照遗嘱背负了许多人都眼红的财产,阴谋越来越多,林澈遇到了一个叫韩子澈的人,还有林书翰,在无数的分分合合后,林澈身穿白色婚纱出现在了众人面前。
  • 英灵系统

    英灵系统

    瓦洛兰大陆遭受毁灭,一百一十九个英雄壮烈牺牲,但英雄虽死,英灵不灭。瓦洛兰大陆的神秘之宝,瓦洛兰之心携带一百一十九个英雄的英灵进入了时空之中,化为了英雄英灵系统。······二十一世纪标准宅男,在排位十连跪之时,意外的被瓦洛兰之心吸收,穿越到了一个术师的世界。而觉醒了英灵系统的宅男,发现自己居然能够使用一百一十九个英雄的技能。(新人新书,求收藏和推荐票~~)
  • 娇妻腹黑:老公请甜严蜜语

    娇妻腹黑:老公请甜严蜜语

    “老公,我肚子饿了。”某男很积极的去做饭。“老公,我好累。”某男献殷勤的去按摩。“老公,我困了。”某男拥佳人入怀,低声安抚。面对极其腹黑的小娇妻,霸道总裁不得不屈身只为她一人服务。一日终获取顽妻芳心,从此宠爱有加,细心呵护着。“老公,有人向你抛媚眼,我给了她几个恐龙。”某男轻笑不语。“老公,有人想要把你抢走,我把她丢到太平洋了。”某男还是轻笑不语。“老公,今天有人向我求婚,我答应了,所以我出轨了。”她玩着求婚戒指,戏谑道。某男哦了一声,这才发现不对,一拍桌子,激动的低吼:“什么?你敢!”在她面前,他只有臣服的命,她勾着手指道,“老公,快到碗里来。”【追妻三部曲系列文之忆南思言】
  • 梦幻紫水晶之恋

    梦幻紫水晶之恋

    分别10年从小青梅竹马长大的人在次相遇,韩天宇带着一颗幸福的心从法国回来完成和小罗菲小时候的约定.罗菲因为失忆,忘记了天宇.半路又杀出了一个李哲莠.....
  • 草莓黄瓜边伯贤

    草莓黄瓜边伯贤

    小说剧情勿当真!!!勿当真!!!纯属娱乐。禁抄袭。本文如果有对xxx不利的一面,请勿对号入座。谢谢。
  • 上古卷轴之龙裔

    上古卷轴之龙裔

    我是一个龙裔,他们口中的英雄,同样我也是多重身份,谁说英雄就必须是为了正义和荣耀为主,我只是一个为自己而活的龙裔,这个时代,谁不是多重身份呢?
  • 惊魂山村

    惊魂山村

    我希望大家能够喜欢这个故事第二天早上,王兵从模模糊糊中醒来,这一夜他也不知道是什么时候睡着的,确切地说,他的大脑一刻也那样让这个年轻人休息过。过去所有的往事都在大脑里重复地闪过。他有时梦到他们一家又坐在一起;有时又梦到
  • 异星王子

    异星王子

    一只猫在多年前修炼成人,与人类赵晓雅和道士王浩宇之间发生的种种……
  • 圣者游戏

    圣者游戏

    一场星系探索,未知的星球被发现,原居民的强大视地球生物为猪狗,一场基因研究给绝境的人类再次带来希望。一场以基因强化为目的研究开始,这到底是游戏还是人类的自我进化。人类是否能在绝境中崛起,征战是否能完成他最终的希望。
  • 复活密码

    复活密码

    京城内发生诡异的六芒星连环杀人案,一个疯狂的神秘组织逐渐浮出水面。杨小麦的男友王昊离奇死亡,现场留下的古怪密码,居然成为打开嘉庆年间一段不为人知的惊天秘密的唯一钥匙。紫禁城内,软弱的嘉庆皇帝为何急于怒杀和珅?公主坟里,嘉庆两个月内相继死亡的女儿到底隐瞒了什么秘密?神秘教会天理教在嘉庆年间的那次起义究竟为了什么?这惊天的秘密背后又隐藏着什么真相?杨小麦的妹妹杨小文和卧底警探师洋一起阴错阳差地踏上了调查和破译密码的惊险刺激的神秘旅程。隐秘的公主墓,墨脱密境,泸沽湖……当他们沿着王昊留下的扑朔迷离的密码进行逐一破解,一段华丽而令人叹为观止的历史揭开了神秘的面纱…….尊敬的书友,本书选载最精华部分供您阅读。留足悬念,同样精彩!