Collective Worship Resource


Thomas Cranmer

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AGE: Secondary (especially Lower Secondary)

THEME: Thomas Cranmer

RESOURCES:
Recording of the theme song from the film Tomorrow Never Dies, sung by Sheryl Crow.

DEVELOPMENT:
If you had to imagine someone who is a 'hero' how might you describe that person? In Hollywood films heroes are generally tougher than a tank, though with a sentimental side that can occasionally be glimpsed through their tough outer skin. Think of Arnold Schwarznegger in Terminator 2 - he's literally inhuman, bullets just bounce off, but there are one or two glimmers of almost human emotion through his cybernetic eyes. Or think of James Bond - the actors might change, the technology get evermore unbelievably sophisticated, but the personality remains the same: shaken but not stirred, ultra cool, impervious to hurt. In the early James Bond films the female characters were all empty-headed bimbos but now even they, like Bond, are beautiful but ultra tough. Think of the character played by Michelle Yeoh in Tomorrow Never Dies. She can karate chop her way through a bunch of snarling thugs without even a trace of sweat on her beautiful brow.

The trouble is that the world is never like the worlds which Hollywood conjures up - and neither are real people. Real people are easily hurt, both physically and emotionally, by other people. Real people, like me and you, are never truly cool; often shaken and stirred.

The person we are going to focus on today is in almost every way the complete opposite of a fantasy character like James Bond. His name is Thomas Cranmer and he was born 500 years ago. He was quiet and scholarly by nature and, after university, became a priest. Almost by chance he became a civil servant in the court of King Henry VIII. Unfortunately, while Hollywood heroes seldom resemble real human beings, Henry VIII in many ways exactly resembled one of the evil villains in a Bond film: selfish, brutal, vindictive, erratic ... he could almost be a model for megalomaniac villain, Elliot Carver in Tomorrow Never Dies. If you crossed him then you ended up very dead.

Cranmer, as Henry's servant, did his best to please his master. He was a born civil servant - efficient, quiet, never confrontational. He was so good at dealing with the unpredictable King, smoothing his ruffled feathers, that Henry promoted him to Archbishop of Canterbury. But neither was Cranmer an unthinking minion of Henry's. This was a time when there was great debate in the Church - the period when Protestant ideas came into conflict with more traditional Roman Catholic ideas. People were looking for new ways of expressing their faith. Henry wanted to break with the Church of Rome, not so much because he thought that the church's ideas were wrong, but because he wanted to get rid of his wife and marry his mistress. Cranmer, like a good civil servant, did his best to help, and yet at the same time his own ideas about religious belief were gradually changing. He came around to thinking that maybe the ideas of the great Protestant thinker Martin Luther were right after all. He did his best - unostentatiously, never making a big issue of it - to support people who wanted to change the Church.

After Henry died Cranmer became more open about his beliefs and critical of Roman Catholic teaching. He supported the translation of the Bible into English and - his most enduring work - was responsible for writing a Prayer Book for the Church. But before long the Roman Catholic Queen Mary came to the throne. Cranmer was now in serious trouble! What should he do? Should he stand up for his beliefs? Could he act like Bond - defiant, unflinching? Unfortunately, the answer was 'no'. Well, could you? After all he was only human - just like you. He was arrested, stripped of his property and offices, humiliated in mock show trials. He was forced to watch his friends being burned to death. One of them, Nicholas Ridley, had relatives who tried to throw fuel on the fire to make his death quick - but it had the opposite effect. Cranmer, who was watching, was deeply shaken. In the end he broke. There are records of him weeping in his cell. He couldn't take any more. He was weak, and so he signed a 'recantation', a statement that denied everything that he really believed in.

The authorities were really pleased. They had got what they wanted, but they still went ahead and condemned him to death. Cranmer was broken ... and yet ...and yet ... in the last few hours he managed to pull himself together and he died (almost!) like a Bond-style hero. Before he died he was meant to give a speech to the crowd accepting that he had been wrong but, to the authorities' shock, he started to shout out his real opinions. He was knocked down, tied up and dragged to the stake. There, as the fire took hold, he held out his right hand, the hand that had written his recantation, into the flames; a sign that he knew he had been weak when he signed it. Everyone was amazed that in this final moment the quiet, scholarly, civil servant could behave with such strength.

Which person do you think you most resemble? The cool, self-contained, invulnerable James Bond? Or the weak, dithering, but, in the end, just about heroic Thomas Cranmer? Would you ever have been as brave as him?

REFLECTION:
Let's be quiet for a moment. Think about what you might want to be like - tough, maybe, or attractive, or cool, or sophisticated ... perhaps all of these things?

(Pause)

Then take some time to think about what you are really like. Someone who depends on other people and is easily hurt by rejection? Someone who makes mistakes and is laughed at by others? Someone who is unsure about their own value?

Be quiet and think about where you might find strength in times when you feel absolutely weak and useless. Where did Cranmer find that strength?

(Pause)

Finally, let's think about those people we know of in today's world who are in prison, alone and suffering for their beliefs.

(Pause)

FOLLOW-UP ACTIVITIES:
  1. Cranmer is famous today for the beauty of his language. Compare the language of a prayer or other passage from Cranmer's Prayer Book with its modern equivalent. Discuss which of them is the more attractive. Why? Two equivalent prayers can be found at www.satucket.com/lectionary/Latimer_Ridley_Cranmer.htm
    This site gives lectionary readings connected with the Oxford Martyrs. Alternatively, talk about two equivalent passages from the Bible. Though the Authorized Version is, of course, considerably later than Cranmer's Prayer Book, the issues are the same.

  2. Create a Bond-style film poster for a Hollywoodesque epic on the life of Cranmer. Tomorrow Cranmer Dies! might be an appropriate title?

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Copyright © Culham Institute 2000-2012