Reginald Pecock
Template:Short description Template:Infobox Christian leader
Reginald Pecock (or Peacock; c. 1395 – c. 1461) was a Welsh prelate, scholastic, and writer.
LifeEdit
Pecock was probably born in Laugharne<ref>Lloyd, John Edward, ed. (1935), A History of Carmarthenshire, I (1st ed.), Cardiff: London Carmarthenshire Society. p 443</ref> and was educated at Oriel College, Oxford.
Having been ordained priest in 1421, Pecock secured a mastership at Whittington College, London, in 1431 where he was also parish priest of St. Michael Paternoster Royal, the adjacent parish church.Template:Citation needed On 14 June 1444 he was consecrated as Bishop of St Asaph,<ref name=Handbook296>Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 296</ref> and translated as Bishop of Chichester on 23 March 1450.<ref name=Handbook239>Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 239</ref> In 1454 he became a member of the privy council.
He wrote books of both a pedagogical and polemical nature. His pedagogical books, in which he proposes a wholly new catechism include The Donet, The Follower to the Donet, and The Rule of Christian Religion. He joined the debate on Christian doctrine in his Repressing of Over Mich Wyting [blaming] the Clergie, 1449, and Book of Faith, 1456. These were both more cogent than the Lollard tenets, and sought to stay the Lollard movement by setting aside ecclesiastical infallibility, and taking the appeal to Scripture and reason alone.<ref>Alexander Gordon Heads of English Unitarian History 1895</ref> It was principally Pecock's appeal to reason and his attack on the primacy of episcopal authority for which he was deprived in 1458.
In attacking the Lollards, Pecock put forward the following religious views: he asserted that the Scriptures were not the only standard of right and wrong; he questioned some of the articles of the creed and the infallibility of the Church; he wished "bi cleer witte drawe men into consente of trewe feith otherwise than bi fire and swerd or hangement" and in general he exalted the authority of reason. Owing to these views, the archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Bourchier, ordered his writings to be examined. This was done and he was found guilty of heresy.
Pecock was removed from the privy council and he publicly (at St Paul's Cross, 4 December 1457), renounced his opinions in accordance with his previously stated opinion about the need for obedience in all matters to the Church hierarchy. Pecock, who has been called "the most prolific English theologian of the 15th century",<ref>Reginald Pecock and Vernacular Theology in Pre-Reformation England, Jennifer Anh-Thư Tran Smith, Univ of Los Angeles 2012, p.ii</ref> was then forced to resign his bishopric in January 1459,<ref name=Handbook239/> and was removed to Thorney Abbey in Cambridgeshire, where he doubtless remainedTemplate:Citation needed until his death about 1461.<ref name=Handbook239/>
The bishop's chief work is the famous Represser of over-much weeting [blaming] of the Clergie, which was issued c. 1449–1455. In addition to its great importance in the history of the Lollard movement the Represser has an exceptional interest as a model of the English of the time, Pecock being one of the first writers to use the vernacular. In thought and style alike it is the work of a man of learning and ability.
A biography of Pecock is added to the edition of the Repressor published by Churchill Babington for the Rolls Series in 1860.
Extant worksEdit
- The Repressing of Over Mich Wyting of the Clergie (The Repressor of Over Much Blaming of the Clergy),(1449); ed.Churchill Babington; Longman, Green and Roberts, (2 vols, London, 1860).
- The Book of Faith (1456), ed. J. L. Morison, (Glasgow, 1909).
- The Donet, ed. E. V. Hitchcock, (London, 1921).
- The Follower of the Donet, ed. E. V. Hitchcock (Oxford, 1971).
- The Reule of Crysten Religioun, by Reginald Pecock ... now first edited from Pierpont Morgan Ms. 519, by William Cabell Greet; London, H. Milford, Oxford University Press, 1927; & New York, 1971); Millwood, N.Y., Kraus Reprint, 1987.
CitationsEdit
ReferencesEdit
- {{#if: |
|{{#ifeq: Pecock, Reginald | |{{#ifeq: | |public domain: }}{{#invoke:template wrapper|{{#if:|list|wrap}}|_template=cite EB1911 |_exclude=footnote, inline, noicon, no-icon, noprescript, no-prescript, _debug| }} | }} }}{{#ifeq: | |{{#ifeq: | |This article |One or more of the preceding sentences }} incorporates text from a publication now in the
| noicon=1 }}{{#ifeq: ||}}
Template:S-start Template:S-rel Template:S-bef Template:S-ttl Template:S-aft Template:S-bef Template:S-ttl Template:S-aft Template:S-end