KNOX, JOHN

1514?–1572, Scottish religious reformer, founder of Scottish Presbyterianism.

Early Career as a Reformer

Little is recorded of his life before 1545. He probably attended St. Andrews Univ., where he may have become acquainted with some of the new Protestant doctrines. He entered the Roman Catholic priesthood, however, and from 1540 to 1544 was engaged as an ecclesiastical notary and as a private tutor.

By late 1545 Knox had attached himself closely to the reformer George Wishart. When, after Wishart's execution (1546), a group of Protestant conspirators took revenge by murdering Cardinal David Beaton, Knox, now definitely a Protestant, took refuge with them in St. Andrews Castle and preached in the parish church. Attacked by both Scottish and French forces, the castle was eventually surrendered (1547), and Knox served 19 months in the French galleys before his release (1549) through the efforts of the English government of Edward VI.

Knox spent the next few years in England, preaching in Berwick and Newcastle as a licensed minister of the crown and serving briefly as a royal chaplain. He helped to prepare the second Book of Common Prayer, but he declined a bishopric in the newly established Church of England.

Years in Exile

Shortly after the accession (1553) of the Catholic Mary I to the English throne, Knox went into exile on the Continent, living chiefly in Geneva and Frankfurt. In Geneva he consulted with John Calvin on questions of church doctrine and civil authority.

Meanwhile, through his frequent letters, he exerted considerable influence among Protestants in England and Scotland; in his "Faithful Admonition" pamphlet of 1554 he began to urge the duty of the righteous to overthrow "ungodly" monarchs. In 1555–56 he visited Scotland, preaching in private and counseling the Protestant congregations. After his return to Geneva, where he served (1556–58) as pastor to the English congregation, he wrote the First Blast of the Trumpet against the Monstrous Regiment [i.e., regimen] of Women. That fiery tract was directed against the Catholic Mary of Guise, regent of Scotland, and Queen Mary of England, but it also alienated the Protestant Elizabeth I, who succeeded to the English throne in 1558.

The Scottish Reformation

In 1557 the Scottish Protestant nobles signed their First Covenant, banding together to form the group known as the lords of the congregation (see Scotland, Church of). When, in 1559, Mary of Guise moved against the Protestants, the lords of the congregation took up arms and invited Knox back from Geneva to lead them. Aided by England and by the regent's death in 1560, the reformers forced the withdrawal of the French troops that had come to Mary's aid and won their freedom as well as dominance for the new religion.

Under Knox's direction, a confession of faith (basically Calvinist) was drawn up (1560) and passed by the Scottish Parliament, which also passed laws abolishing the authority of the pope and condemning all creeds and practices of the old religion. The Book of Discipline, however, which provided an organizational structure for the new church, failed to get adequate approval from the nobles in 1561.

When Mary Queen of Scots arrived from France to assume her crown in the same year, many Protestant lords deserted Knox and his cause, and some even joined the queen. From his pulpit and in personal debates with Mary on questions of theology and the loyalty owed by the subject to his monarch, Knox stubbornly defied Mary's authority and thundered against her religion. The queen's marriage to Lord Darnley, her suspected complicity in his murder, and her hasty marriage to James Hepburn, earl of Bothwell, stirred the Protestant lords to revolt. Mary was forced to abdicate (1567) in favor of her young son, James VI. All the acts of 1560 were then confirmed, thereby establishing Presbyterianism as the official religion.

Despite the ill health of his last years, Knox continued to be an outspoken preacher until his death. It has been said of Knox that "rarely has any country produced a stronger will." His single-minded zeal made him the outstanding leader of the Scottish Reformation and an important influence on the Protestant movements in England and on the Continent, but the same quality tended to close his mind to divergent views. His History of the Reformation in Scotland, finished in 1564 but published in 1584 after his death, is a striking record of that conflict, but includes a number of misstatements and omissions resulting from his strong bias.

Bibliography

The standard edition of Knox's works is that edited by D. Laing (6 vol., 1846–64, repr. 1967). See biographies by E. S. C. Percy (1937, repr. 1965), J. G. Ridley (1968), and W. S. Reid (1974); J. S. McEwen, The Faith of John Knox (1961); S. W. Reid, Trumpeter of God (1974, repr. 1982); G. B. Smith and D. Martin, John Knox: Apostle of the Scottish Reformation (1982).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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JOHN KNOX Other Books by this Author The Days of...Elizabeth I Mary I The Winter Queen JOHN KNOX Rosalind K. Marshall Birlinn First...who shared my travels in the footsteps of John Knox Contents List of Illustrations viii...
JOHN KNOX IN CONTROVERSY Other books by the same author...Recalling the Scottish Covenants JOHN KNOX IN CONTROVERSY Being the Stone Lectures...the causeway which marks the grave of John Knox. Almost immediately one of the company...
JOHN KNOX: PORTRAIT OF A CALVINIST JOHN KNOX From a posthumous portrait in Bezas Icones, 1580. Fronti piece. JOHN KNOX: PORTRAIT OF A CALVINIST BY EDWIN MUIR THE VIKING...
...EARLY KING OF NORWAY: ALSO AN ESSAY ON THE PORTRAITS OF JOHN KNOX. BY THOMAS CARLYLE, AUTHOR OF "THE HISTORY OF FRIEDRICH...166 THE PORTRAITS OF JOHN KNOX 173 EARLY KINGS OF NORWAY. THE Icelanders, in their...
...275 JOHN KNOX AND WOMEN, 307 PREFACE...Villon Society in England; and Mr. John Payne has translated him entirely into...only too uncommon in these days. Knox. -- Knox, the second in order...
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John Knox: Reformation Rhetoric and the Traditions...Daniel Fischlin Kenneth D. Farrow. John Knox: Reformation Rhetoric and the Traditions...permanently damaged his health; friend to John Calvin; prolific author of religious treatises...
Elizabeth Bowes and John Knox: A Woman and Reformation Theology Elizabeth Bowes and John Knox: A Woman and Reformation Theology...correspondent, and mother-in-law of John Knox. The course of Mrs. Bowess thought...
Elizabeth Bowes and John Knox: A Woman and Reformation Theology Elizabeth Bowes and John Knox: A Woman and Reformation Theology...correspondent, and mother-in-law of John Knox. The course of Mrs. Bowess thought...
...Foxe never goes as far in the direction of toleration as John Knox, whose praise for Edward VI of England was for his policy...Martyrdom in English Literature, 1563-1694. Cambridge. Knox, John. 1950. History of the Reformation in Scotland. 2 vols...
...3rd ed. (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2003). (5) Scriptural quotations...Eugene Boring (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2000). (15) See Martin Hengel. The...Matera (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2002) 107-22, 123-43. (33) God is...
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John Knox-Democrat by Keith M. Brown John Knox-Democrat Roderick Graham Robert Hale Ltd...of patriotic reaction against France, and John Knox was an intolerant, cowardly woman-hater...
...the Gospel of John. By Frances Taylor Gench. (Westminster John Knox, 160 pp., $16.95 paperback.) The three-year lectionary cycle devotes a year each to Matthew, Mark and Luke, leaving John as a lectionary orphan. Yet at the most significant moments...
...McNeill (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 1960), p. 35. (4.) Ibid...Revelation (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2006). p. 21. (27.) Ibid., p. 65...Supplementary Essays (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1993), pp. 39-42. (32.) Niebuhr...
...go a long way to restore respect for the church and heal the deep wounds still to be found among most lesbian and gay Catholics. McNeills most recent book is Both Feet Firmly Planted in Midair: My Spiritual Journey (Westminster John Knox Press).
...Raleghs known surviving letters. John Knox (1505-72) played a key role in the...His contribution is explored in John Knox and the British Reformations edited...over the past 160 years. Lord John Russell: A Biography by Paul Scherer...
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...man traditionally given credit for it is fiery preacher John Knox who challenged the might of queens and stoked the fires...return last year. HARD KNOX: Richard Holloway, left, on John Knox, BBC2 Scotland, 9.00 pm, and Terry Wogan and Gaby Roslin...
...Covered My Ears; Accused: Amanda Knox on Her MySpace Page Where She...Stricken: Parents Arline and John Kercher with Their Elder Daughter...heard the 21-year-old die. Amanda Knox said she heard screams coming...Patrick Diya Lumumba. American Knox, 21, said: "Patrick and Meredith...
...butglamorise him. AT THIS point, I should declare an interest. I knew John Lennon and was due tosee him the day after he was killed. The...mindset of the day. Not to prejudge the investigation, but Amanda Knox, now known universally asFoxy Knoxy, and her Italian boyfriend...
...meeting with the leader of the Scottish Kirk, the Moderator, the Right Rev John McIntyre. And beneath the statue of John Knox, the architect of the Scottish Reformation, the Holy Father warmly greeted the leader of Scots Protestants as a brother...
...stronghold of Presbyterianism, the quadrangle of the Assembly Hall in Edinburgh. Beneath the statue of the great reformer John Knox, the Moderator offered a sincere welcome to this land of ours to our brother in Christ. He told the Pope: The history...
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encyclopedia articles on: Knox John  - 35 results

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KNOX, JOHN 1514? 1572, Scottish religious reformer...Reid (1974); J. S. McEwen, The Faith of John Knox (1961); S. W. Reid, Trumpeter of God (1974, repr. 1982); G. B. Smith and D. Martin, John Knox: Apostle of the Scottish Reformation (1982...
...Taft. Continuing the policies of his predecessors, John Hay and Elihu Root, Knox sought to protect financial interests abroad, particularly...a policy that became known as "dollar diplomacy." Knox returned to the Senate in 1917 and allied himself...
POLK, JAMES KNOX pok, 1795 1849, 11th President of the United States (1845 49), b. Mecklenburg...with Mexico by negotiation. However, after the failure of the mission of John Slidell to Mexico, the President ordered the American advance to the...
...returned to Scotland, where he introduced the study of Greek in Scottish schools. He was the friend and firm supporter of John Knox and George Wishart . Erskine was a witness at the marriage (1557) of Mary Queen of Scots to Francis II of France and...
...translation of the Book of Martyrs and wrote An Harborowe for Faithfull and Trewe Subjects (1559) in answer to a tract by John Knox. Returning to England after the accession of Elizabeth I, he rose in the Church of England to be (1577) bishop of London...
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