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Why did the Roman Catholic Church do this to John Wycliffe?
The Roman Catholic Church declared Wycliffe (on 4 May 1415) a stiff-necked heretic and under the ban of the Roman Catholic Church.
It was decreed that his books be burned and his remains (bones) be exhumed. They were dug up, burned, and the ashes cast into the River Swift that flows through Lutterworth.
John Wycliffe translated the Scriptures from the Latin Vulgate. Why did the Roman Catholic Church considered the translation of Scripture into English a crime punishable by charges of heresy?
He just simply wanted to get the Bible into the hands of the common people.
P.S. Im Not a Protestant or a Roman Catholic.
"wolfeblayde"- they dug up his bones and burned them just because he didn't agree with Roman Catholic Doctrine?
Whatever happened to love your enemies? (Matthew 5:44)
In 1380 Wyclif took the momentous step of beginning to attack Transubstantiation.
It was at Oxford that he did so, calling the Host merely "an effectual sign".
This open denial of a doctrine which came home to every Christian, and the reaction which followed the Peasant Revolt, lost Wyclif much of his popularity.
In 1381 an Oxford council of doctors condemned his teaching on the Blessed Eucharist and a year later an ecclesiastical court at Blackfriars gave sentence against a series of twenty-four Wyclifite propositions.
The Government was now against him. Westminster and Canterbury combined to put pressure on the still reluctant university authorities.
A number of prominent Wyclifites were forced to make retractations , but nothing seems to have been demanded from the leader of the movement except a promise not to preach.
He retired to Lutterworth and, though he continued to write voluminously both in Latin and English, remained there undisturbed till his death.
He was probably cited to Rome but he was too infirm to obey.
Indeed he was probably paralyzed during the last two years of his life.
A second stroke came in 1384 while he was hearing Mass in his church, and three days later he died.
He was buried at Lutterworth, but the Council of Constance in 1415 ordered his remains to be taken up and cast out. This was done in 1428.
In the eighth session it was question of Wyclif, whose writings had already been condemned at the Council of Rome (1412-13) under John XXIII. In this session forty-five propositions of Wyclif, already condemned by the universities of Paris and Prague, were censured as heretical, and in a later session another long list of 260 errors.
All his writings were ordered to be burned and his body was condemned to be dug up and cast out of consecrated ground (this was not done until 1428 under Bishop Robert Fleming of Lincoln). In 1418 Martin V, by the aforesaid Bull "Inter Cunctas", approved the action of the council
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