D
dmar198
Guest
The Council of Constance condemned all his books and forbade all Catholics from reading any of them except in order to refute them. Here is the relevant excerpt: “This holy synod, therefore, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ…repudiates and condemns for ever, by this decree…the books of John Wyclif called by him Dialogus and Trialogus, and the same author’s other books, volumes, treatises and pamphlets (no matter what name these may go under, and for which purpose this description is to be regarded as an adequate listing of them).” (Council of Constance Session 8)was his translation of the Bible condemned as such, or was it placed on the Index, or anything of that kind?
Note particularly that it condemns them “no matter what name these may go under.” That seems inclusive enough to condemn his bible too. They go on: “[This council] forbids the reading, teaching, expounding and citing of the said books or of any one of them in particular, unless it is for the purpose of refuting them. It forbids each and every Catholic henceforth, under pain of anathema…to teach, approve or hold the said books, or to refer to them in any way, unless this is done, as has been said, for the purpose of refuting them. It orders, moreover, that the aforesaid books, treatises, volumes and pamphlets are to be burnt in public, in accordance with the decree of the synod of Rome, as stated above.” (Council of Constance Session 8)
An interesting footnote regarding this prohibition is that some of Wycliffe’s bibles ended up getting approved by Catholic clergy in England, and these approved editions were often used by both the lay faithful and the clergy. Even the kings of England owned one. They don’t appear to have done this in intentional defiance of the Council of Constance, either, but thought they were legitimate Catholic bibles. It is worth remembering that vernacular Bibles were not prohibited altogether in England; only Wycliffe’s bibles were prohibited. It appears that some of the printers of the Wycliffe Bible, in order to get around this prohibition, changed the title page on his book and altered the date of publication to be before Wycliffe was born.
[cont’d next post]