John Knox: Showdown at Holyrood

4 Min Read

JOHN AND MARY AT HOLYROOD

When John Knox found himself among the ardent Protestants who had taken up residence in the castle at St Andrew’s he embraced the work of teaching the Bible with passion and zeal. He had thought that this would be the end of his ecclesiastical pursuits; simply teaching the word of God to small groups of believers. But, as is often the case with people who like to shrink into relative obscurity, God had a completely different plan for John’s life. The group of 150 Protestants that were barricaded in with John began to urge him to take up preaching. John, who was a mature and experienced 42-year-old man shrank with horror from the thought. But the more he hesitated the more they pressed him in much the same way that Staupitz had pressed Luther and Farel had thundered at Calvin. Finally, John confined himself to his room and spent days agonizing over the call, it was not just the enormity of the responsibility but also the costs involved in discharging that responsibility thoroughly that weighed on his mind.

Finally, he accepted the call and went on to become one of the most powerful preachers the Scottish Reformation ever saw. Knox was to Scotland what Luther was to Germany and the Reformation at large. He was fearless and unflinching in the execution of his calling and was able to stand without trepidation before rulers and people alike.

One of his most explosive faceoffs was against Mary Stuart, also known as Mary, Queen of Scots, at Holyrood Palace. Mary Stuart was the daughter of James V of Scotland and Mary Guise of the House of Lorraine. The Guise family were staunch French Catholics and champions of the counter-reformation to boot, which basically meant that not only were they ardent, they were also militant. The interview between Mary and John Knox proved to be a significant milestone of the Reformation in

Scotland and was a testament to the intensity of John’s allegiance to God over and above the Queen. The Queen summoned John to Holyrood Palace after hearing about one of his sermons. The conference between them took place in the presence of her brother Lord James Stuart and two ladies in waiting and she began the conversation by referencing some of his writings before coming to the crux of her grouse with him.

The theses of Mary’s argument was simple; by leading the people to embrace a religion contrary to that of their Queen, John was leading the people to disobey their rulers and that was tantamount to treason. In addition to that because God required the people to obey their rulers John was also leading people to disobey God which was the worst kind of sin. Therefore John  Knox was not only seditious but sinful as well.

John’s rebuttal was that the only authority that could prescribe religious allegiance was God and not the Queen ergo the Queen was actually overstepping the boundaries of her authority and claiming authority that belonged to God alone. Therefore the Queen was actually blasphemous and potentially so were her religious affiliations.

Mary was clearly not happy and fumed that while Knox interpreted the Scriptures in one way the Roman Catholic teachers interpreted the Scriptures in a completely different way. “Whom shall I believe?” she demanded according to the historian Wylie “ and who shall be the judge?”

John then pointed to the supremacy of the word of God, the office of the Holy Spirit as the divine illuminator of that Word and the ability of Scripture to interpret itself independent of the interpretations imposed on it by Pope or Prince. History has it that Mary burst into tears out of sheer frustration, John Knox was apparently and unsurprisingly unmoved at the outburst and continued to press his point home.

The three most dramatic turning points of the Reformation were Luther before Charles V at WormsCalvin before the Libertines of Geneva in the Cathedral of St Pierre and Knox before Queen Mary in Holyrood Palace. Knox’s confrontation with Mary at Holyrood was really one of the keynotes of the Reformation highlighting freedom of conscience from the dictates of the church and the state.

One of the most striking things about John Knox was his faith and courage. Of him it was written “herein lies a man who never feared the face of another man” and perhaps this was because he was a man who only feared the face of God.

On the 24th of November 1572, as he lay dying, John Knox asked his wife to read to him John 17 in which are found the words that were the keynote of his life; “Sanctify them through thy truth; thy word is truth” (John 17:17).

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