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Troubled Consciences: New Understandings and Performances of Penance Among Catholics in Protestant England
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 February 2013
Abstract
Prior to Protestant reforms of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, Catholic clerics frequently preached about the necessity of confessing one's sins to a priest through the sacrament of penance. After the passage of laws in the 1570s making it a criminal offense to be a Catholic priest in England, Catholics residing in Protestant England possessed limited opportunities to make confession to a priest. Many laypersons feared for their souls. This article examines literature written by English Catholic clerics to comfort such laypersons. These authors re-interpreted traditional Catholic understandings of how sacramental penance delivers grace to allow English Catholics to confess when priests were not present. These authors—clerics themselves—used the printed word to stand in for the usual parish priest to whom a Catholic would confess. They legitimized their efforts by appealing to the church's modus operandi of allowing alternative means to receive grace in cases of extreme emergency. Although suggestions to confess without a priest's mediation sound similar to Protestant views on penitence, these authors' prescriptions differ from Lutheran, Calvinist, Anglican, and post-Tridentine Catholic positions on penance in the Reformation era. Diverse understandings of penitence lay at the heart of confessional divisions, and this article sheds new light on heretofore unexamined English Catholic contributions to these debates, broadening scholars' conceptions of what it meant to be Catholic in Reformation England and Europe.
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References
1 British Library (hereafter BL), Sloane MS 4035, f. 12.
2 1 Eliz I, c. 2. This law sought to reverse the impacts of attempts to reestablish the institutional and sacramental teachings and structures of the Roman Church along the Tridentine model under Mary I. See Duffy, Eamon, Fires of Faith (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009)Google Scholar.
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12 Duffy, Stripping, 60. England's experience appears to run counter to Myers's interpretations of evidence from German areas of the Holy Roman Empire discussed in Poor Sinning Folk.
13 Thayer, Penitence, 5, 17, 24, 31, 36–37, 43–44, 54, 69–70, 115–17, 120, 185. According to Thayer, preaching served as the “mass media” of the medieval era. Throughout the year, priests encouraged the laity to engage in the penitential process because their eternal souls were at stake, and the laity listened. See also MacCulloch, Diarmid, The Reformation: A History (New York: Penguin, 2005), 14–15Google Scholar.
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17 Horae Eboracenses, 34–36.
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19 The Church of England continued the act of confession but in a non-sacramental form as will be discussed below. An English Catholic with a troubled conscience could not simply go into a Protestant Church, confess to a Protestant priest, and get the same result as with the Catholic rite performed by an ordained Roman Catholic cleric. To the Catholic mind, there was no salvific grace accrued with the Protestant ritual.
20 As part of what was known as the English Mission, Englishmen studied at seminaries on the Continent and returned to England as missionaries to replace the dwindling numbers of Marian priests. The mission began after William Allen, a Lancashire priest and emigrant, founded an English College attached to the University of Douai in the Spanish Netherlands in 1568.
21 Public Record Office, Kew, State Papers Domestic Series (hereinafter as SP Dom), 12/244/5.
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51 Printed in Challoner, Memoirs (1924 ed.), 133, quoted in McGrath, Patrick, “Apostate Priests and Naughty Priests in England under Elizabeth I,” in Opening the Scrolls, Essays in Honor of Godfrey Anstruther, ed. Bellenger, Dominic Aidan (Bath: Downside Abbey Trustees, 1987), 69Google Scholar.
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56 Stanney, A treatise, 55–57. Stanney made clear, as mentioned above, that he was referring to self-imposed penance.
57 A convenient application of ex opere operato to meet the needs of English Catholics. Thomas Tentler and, more recently, Anne Thayer delve deeply into doctrinal debates surrounding confession and penance in the medieval and Reformation periods. Interestingly, these English Catholic authors do not make significant mention of the theological debates over sacramental penance engaged in by prominent medieval theologians such as Peter Lombard, Thomas Aquinas, and Duns Scotus discussed by Tentler and Thayer. Tentler, Sin and Confession; Thayer, Penitence, esp. chapter 4.
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64 Stanney, A treatise, 7; For further example, see Wright, Passions, 319–20, who instructed readers to crucify their sins so that they might follow the path of virtue.
65 Wright, Passions, 91–92.
66 Wright, Passions, 153.
67 For examples, see BL, Lansdowne MS 153, ff. 67, 70; SP Dom 12/154/75, 14/7/89; Public Record Office, Kew, State Papers Scotland 52/49/31a.
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80 Tentler, Sin and Confession, 369. See also Thayer, Penitence, 142–43, who contends that all major Protestant reformers abhorred sacramental penance, seeking not to reform abuses but to challenge the very understanding of the rituals and benefits associated with confession and penance.
81 Protestant reformers devalued penance as a sacrament, alleging it did not pass the test of sola scriptura. Protestants did not agree, however, on what should replace sacramental penance to console and discipline Christians. See Tentler, Sin and Confession, 349–50.
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83 The Council made this commandment to help Christians avoid receiving absolution from an incomplete confession (that is, holding back information on sins committed), which was considered sacrilege.
84 Crowther and Vincent, Dayly Exercise, 40, quoting session 14, chapter 5 of the Decrees of the Council of Trent.
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92 Tentler, Sin and Confession, 349–62; Thayer, Penitence, 143.
93 Luther's Small Catechism, The Augsburg Confession, and Philip Melanchthon's Loci Communes all continue to allow private auricular confession, however in non-mandatory, non-sacramental form. See The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Reformation, 1:401–2. See Thayer's excellent description of Luther's views on confession and penance in Penitence, chapter 5, and Tentler, Sin and Confession, 50.
94 Henry VIII's Ten Articles (1536) and Six Articles (1539) had both endorsed private auricular confession, but the prayer books adopted by Edward VI and Elizabeth I only allowed it. The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Reformation, 1:402.
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97 See form of absolution in Wigan, Liturgy, 7.
98 A majority of reformers valued penance but not as a sacrament and not to achieve forgiveness of sin. Instead, they understood it in light of being truly repentant or contrite for one's misdoings. True guilt and contrition were seen as evidence of God's saving grace rather than as a means to that grace. Once the believer's heart buckled under his guilt and remorse, Protestant clerics consoled him that this was proof of his complete and wholly unmerited forgiveness from Christ. Moreover, Protestant reformers decried the asceticism and self-mortification of many Catholic penitents. Rather than viewing self-denial as holy, Protestants believed that financial security and honor inclined the believer to do even more good in the world and was evidence of God's special favor. Hunt, William, The Puritan Moment: The Coming of Revolution in an English County (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1983), 120–21, 126Google Scholar.
99 See Martin Luther, Three Treatises, 294, 308. John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, book 3, chapters 3–10, suggests that properly performed penance consists of changes in lifestyle, revitalization of the spirit, and even mortification of the flesh, so long as such mortification is done prudently and not misguidedly or zealously. In general, however, reformers encouraged internal versus external acts of penance. Both in The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Reformation, 3:243.
100 See Bozeman, The Precisianist Strain, chapters 1, 4, and 5.
101 BL, Sloane MS 4035, f. 12.
102 This runs directly counter to the Council of Trent's attempt to enforce lay Catholic loyalty to one priest and one parish, thereby limiting a layperson's exposure to a multiplicity of religious influences.
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