“To
be useful in all I do.”
Queen
Katherine Parr
Sir Thomas Parr and his wife Maud Greene, a prominent couple from Westmoreland, welcomed their baby daughter into the world that year. Katherine, named after King Henry VIII’s first wife, Catherine of Aragon, received a fine education learning several languages fluently. But by the age of twenty-one, she had lost both parents and her first husband.
"[Catherine] lamented the fact, that she had once been an enthusiastic Papist. ‘I sought’, she confessed, ‘for such riffraff as the Bishop of Rome had planted in his tyranny and kingdom, trusting with great confidence by virtue and holiness of them to receive full remission of sins.’ … That she underwent conversion, as all the first generation of Reformers did is clear.”1Devoted wholly to Christ, Katherine’s life motto became “to be useful in all I do”, even if it meant sacrificing her own happiness.
A QUEEN
After losing a second husband, Katherine’s piety caught the attention of King Henry. Denying her heart’s desire to marry Sir Thomas Seymore, Katherine accepted the King’s marriage proposal. On July 12, 1543 the attractive 31 year old widow became the sixth and last wife of King Henry VIII. Without fanfare Katherine was proclaimed Queen at Hampton Court Palace. Her affection for Henry was sincere, although the prospect of marrying a man who had sent two of his wives to the scaffold must have been terrifying! Just months before the marriage, a plot to execute Reformers in Henry’s household had been underway at the behest of Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester.
Henry remained Catholic after breaking from Rome to form the
Church of England when the Pope refused to grant him an
annulment from his first wife. Desiring a wife who could
produce a male heir to the throne the King set his sights on the captivating
young Evangelical, Anne Boleyn.
“Anne understood her providential mission to be this: to bring the Reformation to England and to employ every single instance of patronage and influence to that end. … In fact it was through Anne that the New Religion entered England.”2Anne Boleyn, the most controversial of Henry’s wives, was beheaded on trumped up charges of adultery, incest, and treason, leaving behind her little daughter Elizabeth.
But Katherine would not allow herself to be caught off guard by Henry’s affections as he was a fickle man, sending both Catholics and Protestants alike to the Tower for execution—Catholics for treason and Protestants for heresy.“besides the virtues of the mind, she was endowed with very rare gifts of nature, as singular beauty, favor and comely personage, being things wherein the king was greatly delighted.”3
While Henry turned a blind eye, his wife hosted Bible studies and prayer meetings at court. Katherine’s guests included influential preachers and numerous high ranking women including Anne Askew and the young Lady Jane Grey.
A CLOSE CALL
In an attempt to destroy the Queen, Katherine’s Catholic enemies had Anne
Askew arrested and tortured. Their
attempts to get her to implicate the
Queen for heresy failed and Anne was burned at the stake for denying the literal
presence of Christ’s body in the Mass.
Stephen Gardiner's evil
intentions were not about to thwarted. As Henry’s health declined his legs
became severely ulcerated and Katherine would minister to him in his
chambers. She used these opportunities to bring up spiritual
matters and on one occasion when Gardiner was present Henry
became angry.
“A good hearing it is when women become such clerks [clergy]; and a thing much to my comfort to come in my old days to be taught by my wife!’” 4
Providentially, the papers sealing Katherine’s fate fell into the Queen’s hands, unbeknownst to Henry. The discovery caused Katherine to have a nervous breakdown. The King had confided in his physician the plan to execute his wife and when Henry learned that Katherine had become ill, he sent Dr. Wendy to check on her. The doctor was fond of the Queen and secretly advised her to play ignorant and try to dissuade her husband.
Wise as a serpent and harmless as dove, Katherine
refused the temptation to engage in religious discussion when Henry
brought up the subject. Instead, she stated
that her opinions as a woman were inferior and
unimportant, and declared Henry to be her “only anchor,
Supreme Head and Governor here on earth, next under God.”5
Convincing her husband that she had merely
argued religion with him in order to divert his attention
away from his physical suffering, Henry forgave her and their
disagreement ended with a kiss.
When Henry’s henchmen came to arrest Katherine
they were raked over the coals, while Katherine responded
graciously in their defense. This wise and humble woman showed “no
limit of self-denigration, and self-disparagement.”6
A SCHOLAR
Katherine was as talented in literary endeavors as she was generous in spirit. Proving the pen can be mightier than the sword, Katherine’s books—Prayers or Meditations (1546) and The Lamentation or Complaint of a Sinner (1547) became instant successes, making her the first English Queen to publish an original work under her own name. Additionally, Katherine financed the English translations of Erasmus’ Latin Paraphrases of the Gospels, which were important texts for Reformed scholars.
“ [Katherine] championed the language of the people, encouraged academia to put Christ before Plato, urged Henry to bring England closer to the Reformation, commissioned scholarly translations of Erasmus, and brought a royal English family together. In Katherine’s day, her books became examples of the bold Reformation spirit. Her brilliant mind captured the souls of her people and the respect of the Reformers themselves"7A BITTERSWEET END
During Christmas of 1546 the
King became terminally ill and isolated
himself at Whitehall to make final preparations. The
historian John Foxe (1516-1587) records
that Henry made peace with God in the end. Henry ignored Stephen
Gardiner in his Will, sent the Duke of Norfolk and his son to the Tower
for treason, and then called for the Reformer
Archbishop Thomas Cranmer. Unable to speak, Dr.
Cranmer exhorted Henry to put his faith in Christ alone by
showing—
“…some token with his eyes, or with hand, as he trusted in the Lord. Then the King holding him with his hand, did wring his hand in his, as hard as he could, and so shortly after departed,” 8On January 28, 1547 King Henry VIII was dead. Though leaving his wife generous provisions of wealth and honor, the King did not appoint her as Queen Regent.
Finally free to pursue her own happiness, Katherine hastily married Thomas Seymore. Tragically, her marital bliss ended abruptly when Thomas made advances towards Katherine’s teenage stepdaughter, Elizabeth. After three childless marriages Katherine bore a daughter before the last enemy struck again. On September 5, 1548, four days after giving birth, Katherine developed puerperal fever and died at the age of 36.
Like Priscilla (Rom. 16:3-4), Queen Katherine was a true servant and a scholar who was willing to take great risks for the furtherance of the Gospel. As a result, God used Katherine's determination “to be useful in all I do” to profoundly impact on the advancement of the English Reformation.
“The fact that the Reformation was preserved in England can be attributed to the amazing presence of mind, and maturity of Katherine Parr.” 9
_____________________________________
- Six Wives: The Queens of Henry VIII by David Starkey; HarperCollins Publishers; 2003; pg. 701.
- Five Women of the English Reformation by Paul F.M. Zahl; William B. Eerdmans Publishing, Grand Rapids, MI. 2001; pg. 26
- John Foxe-The Acts of the Monuments
- ibid.
- ibid
- Five Women of the English Reformation by Paul. F. M Zahl; Eerdman’s Publishing; 2001; pg.45
- John Foxe -The Acts of the Monuments
- Five Women-Paul F.M. Zahl; pg.40
ADDITIONAL SOURCES
The Reformation of the Sixteenth
Century by Roland H. Bainton; Beacon Press; 1963
Lady Jane Grey: 9 Day Queen of
England by Faith Cook; Evangelical Press 2004
Women of the Reformation in France
and England by Roland H. Bainton; Fortress Press; 2007;
Six Wives: The Queens of Henry VIII
by David Starkey; HarperCollins Publishers; 2003;
Five Women of the English
Reformation by Paul. F. M Zahl; Eerdman’s Publishing; 2001;
A Lamentation or Complaint of a
Sinner (1547) by Queen Katherine Parr
Katherine the Queen; by Linda
Porter; St Martins Griffen; NY
The
Unquenchable Flame: Discovering the Heart of the Reformation, by Michael Reeves
B & H Academic, 2010
Katherine Parr image: National Portrait Gallery - London
Katherine Parr image: National Portrait Gallery - London
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