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Today's
Question
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A short history of the Hootenanny Mass & other absurdities
Part 7 -
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Sunday
December 26,
2010 |
Dear Rev. Know-It-All,
Part 7.....
Letter to Harold “Hoot” and Annie Gibson
..... continued
(click here for Part 1)
(click here for Part 2)
(click here for Part 3)
(click here for Part 4)
(click here for Part 5)
(click here for Part 6)

HENRY VIII
THE INVENTOR OF THE NO FAULT, NO HEAD DIVORCE
or
HENRY VIII
A MONARCH WHO KNEW HOW TO TURN HEADS
Henry VIII
(1491-1547), King of England from 1509. Remember Luther? He tacked up his 95
Theses and started the whole ball rolling around 1517. Henry was staunchly
Catholic, but un-staunched as the Reformation unfolded. (Staunch: firm and
steadfast; true. One often hears of staunch Republicans, though I have never
heard of a staunch Democrat but there must be some. Where was I? Oh yes... the
Reformation) He was so staunch that he wrote a book in 1521 called “The Defense
of the Seven Sacraments” for which Pope Leo X (not very staunch) rewarded Henry
the title “Defender of the Faith.”
Henry’s life was charmed. He was
young, handsome, both scholarly and athletic. His father Henry VII, had been so
tight that he squeaked and thus left Henry with a full treasury. He had a lovely Spanish wife,
the aunt of Emperor
Charles V, the most powerful man on earth, (very, very staunch). She adored
him. He was the very model of the Renaissance prince and was loved by all,
except for the people whose heads he lopped off, beginning early in his reign
with his miserly father’s finance ministers. Having taken care of the treasury
department, he promptly started to spend all that money on his two favorite
hobbies: building palaces and invading France.
Did I mention he was
loved by all? Especially the Boleyn girls. There was a rumor that young prince
Henry had been a very close friend of Lady
Elizabeth Boleyn. Just scurrilous court gossip probably, but he was
definitely a special friend of her daughter, Mary Boleyn by whom he may
have had one or perhaps two children, and her little sister, Ann. All three of the Boleyn
girls, mother and both daughters, were ladies in waiting at the Tudor court. One
wonders just what they were waiting for. Well, with Ann it became pretty clear.
She was waiting for a wedding ring and the crown of England. Meanwhile, Henry’s
Spanish wife had managed to produce one measly daughter and Henry wanted a son
and heir a Henry IX, if you will.
He decided that he had sinned by
marrying Queen Catherine who had been his brother’s wife. His brother had died
and the king, Henry VII, (the miser), had not wanted to return Catherine’s dowry
to her Spanish relatives, so he asked the pope for permission to marry his
second son off to the first son’s widow. No problem. It seems that Prince Arthur
and Princess Catherine had never managed to complete the nuptials (remember this
is a family column), so what was the issue? A dead prince who had never really
been a husband?
Well, much later, Henry decided that he was living in
sin with a Spanish princess who had been his brother’s true wife. His conscience
was sore grieved. It wasn’t sore grieved by the fact that he was catting about
with any lady in waiting who didn’t have the good sense to wait somewhere else,
including a couple of sisters who were young enough to have been his daughters,
one of whom may well have been, (though modern scholars dispute this. I still
can’t help mentioning it. It makes for fun reading.) Ann had more sense than
most of them. She refused the king which drove him wild with etc., etc. So he
decide to dump his Spanish wife, who had let herself go a little bit anyway, and
petitioned the pope for an annulment.
The pope had problems with the
annulment. Queen Catherine’s nephew, (remember him? the most powerful man in the
world who had an army that had just sacked Rome). There was the little matter
that the woman Henry wanted to marry was the sister of Henry’s former girlfriend
and he was probably the father of two children to whom he would soon be uncle by
marriage and heaven knows what else, and had a legitimate daughter, Mary, by his
first wife, who was supposed to inherit the crown. All this would make birthdays
and Christmas a little confusing, to say the least. What to do, being a staunch
Catholic and all? Ann was a clever girl and gave the king a book called “The
Obedience of the Christian Man” which essentially said that there are kings in
the Bible, but no popes, and that the king should run the Church in his own
country. Wycliff had said as much a long time ago. So to get on with the
story.
Henry declared himself head of the Church in England, gave
himself an annulment, married Ann, crowned her queen and then chopped her head
off. Really. She was only queen for three years, but oh, what eventful years
they were! She convinced Henry to appoint one of her family friends, Thomas Cranmer, as the
Archbishop of Canterbury, who in turn sponsored Thomas
Cromwell for the job of Chancellor. They were both convinced Protestants and
helped Ann bring the Calvinist version of the Reformation to England. Cranmer
was useful theologically and Cromwell politically.
All those palaces and
invasions of France were expensive, so Cromwell got the idea that if they closed
down the monasteries, and confiscated their lands and the incomes, all would be
well. Slight problem: the monasteries maintained the schools, orphanages,
hospitals, soup kitchens, homes for poor and aged and rented the land at low
rates to the rural poor.
Suddenly all the monks and nuns and the people
they had served were homeless and wandered the countryside begging. Toward the
end of Henry’s life, Cromwell tried to solve the problem by declaring vagrancy a
crime punishable by enslavement and worse. That must have helped. The estimates
vary, but usually hover around 70,000 dead in Henry’s reform of the Church in
England.
As I mentioned, Ann got her crown but didn’t long have a head on
which to wear it. She was accused of incest, adultery and a host of other
things, having also produced one measly girl, Elizabeth. More about her later.
Henry managed to carry on somehow. He managed to carry on with another lady in
waiting. One day after Anne's execution, Henry got engaged to Jane Seymour, with whom he
had recently been keeping company. They were married 10 days later.
She
died in 1537 from complications of childbirth, but she had produced a male heir,
Edward (more later). Henry went on to wed Anne of Cleves, a German
Protestant princess whose Teutonic charms did not appeal to Henry. He annulled
the marriage and moved on to Catherine Howard, you
guessed it, another lady in waiting whom he eventually beheaded, and finally Catherine Parr, who
managed to out-live the old goat.
And so Henry died in 1547, he started out a
young, athletic Catholic with a happy marriage. He died obese, crippled, and
heretical, the husband of six wives and numerous mistresses. England was in
turmoil and tens of thousands dead and many more homeless, but Henry did manage
to produce three children and the Church of England.
Rev.
Know-It-All

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A short history of the Hootenanny Mass & other absurdities
Part 7 |
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