[John Knox and the Reformation by Andrew Lang]@TWC D-Link book
John Knox and the Reformation

CHAPTER V: EXILE: APPEALS FOR A PHINEHAS, AND A JEHU: 1554
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No change of circumstances could be much more bitter than that which exile brought to Knox.

He had been a decently endowed official of State, engaged in bringing a reluctant country into the ecclesiastical fold which the State, for the hour, happened to prefer.

His task had been grateful, and his congregations, at least at Berwick and Newcastle, had, as a rule, been heartily with him.

Wherever he preached, affectionate women had welcomed him and hung upon his words.

The King and his ministers had hearkened unto him--young Edward with approval, Northumberland with such emotions as we may imagine--while the Primate of England had challenged him to a competitive ordeal by fire, and had been defeated, apparently without recourse to the fire-test.
But now all was changed; Knox was a lonely rover in a strange land, supported probably by collections made among his English friends, and by the hospitality of the learned.


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