78- The Long Road to Reform 03
The History of the Christian Church
sanctorum.us
4.6 • 790 Ratings
🗓️ 1 March 2015
⏱️ 12 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | Welcome to the history of the Christian Church, Season 1 with Lance Rolston. |
| 0:14.9 | This is part three of the Long Road to Reform. In our last episode, we looked at the |
| 0:20.3 | Conciliar the movement that formed to |
| 0:22.1 | end the great papal schism and that so many had looked to to be a permanent fixture for reform |
| 0:27.5 | in the church. As well-intentioned as the movement was, it ended up resurrecting the schism instead |
| 0:33.6 | of solving it. In its long battle with the papacy, conciliarism eventually lost. |
| 0:38.3 | But we turn now to look at a reformer from Bohemia named John Hus, or more properly, |
| 0:43.3 | Jan Hus, one of my personal all-time favorites from church history. |
| 0:48.3 | Bohemia was an important part of the Holy Roman Empire, a sovereign state with its capital at Prague. |
| 0:55.4 | Today, it roughly corresponds with the Czech Republic. It had a long history as a place of vibrant |
| 1:01.2 | Christianity, especially in the area of monasticism. In 1383, Bohemia and England were linked |
| 1:07.7 | by the marriage of Anna Bohemia and the English King Richard |
| 1:11.1 | the 2nd. With this union, students from both countries went back and forth between the |
| 1:15.7 | colleges of Prague and Oxford, where the pre-reformer John Wycliffe was working. |
| 1:22.3 | The revolt that Wycliffe started at Oxford expanded when he was boot, and met with greater success in Bohemia than |
| 1:29.2 | England, because unlike England, it was joined to a strong national party led by a man named |
| 1:35.0 | Jan Hus. Huss came from peasant parents in the southern Bohemian town of Housenets. He studied |
| 1:42.4 | theology at the University of Prague, earning a master of arts, |
| 1:45.7 | before teaching there, and diving into the cause of religious reform. While a student, |
| 1:51.5 | Huss was introduced to the early philosophy of Wycliffe, but it was only after his appointment |
| 1:56.7 | as the pastor of Bethlehem Chapel that he was exposed to Wycliffe's more radical views on religious reform. |
| 2:02.6 | He immediately adopted Wycliffe's views that the church was the invisible company of the elect, |
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