An article by Linda Watson
Pilgrims kept the 7th Day Sabbath
Purpose:
This article traces the Pilgrims from England to
Holland. The Pilgrims were persecuted by Queen Elizabeth under the
Uniformity Act which required Sunday church attendance. They fled to
Holland where they were allowed to worship freely. They joined with the
Mennonite Church which was a 7th Sabbath-keeping
church.
This article proofs that Pilgrims came from a 7th Sabbath Keeping church and
they left England because they were required by law to attend the Sunday
Keeping churches. They originated from the Brownist or Seperatist.
There were three Protestant groups in England
starting in the 1600’s– The Conformist (which followed the Church of
England), The Puritans ( which were opposed to many of the teachings of the
Church of England but kept Sunday) and the Seperatist (which was started by
Robert Browne many of which kept the Old Testament laws).
Brownist Movement
The term Brownists was a common designation for early
Separatists before 1620. Brownists, Independents, and Separatists were all used
somewhat interchangeably for those nonconformists who broke with the Church of
England.
Robert Browne was a Puritan Congregationalist leader, one of the original
proponents of the Separatist, or Free Church, movement among Non-conformists
that demanded separation from the Church of England and freedom of state
control. His separatist followers became known as Brownists. Educated
at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, and ordained, he, with Robert Harrison,
gathered a Separatist Church at Norwich in 1580. As a consequence of this and
other similar activities, he was imprisoned 32 times and in 1582 was
exiled. He subsequently returned to England, however, and conformed to
the established church. He was the author of a number of books, including A
Treatise of Reformation Without Tarying for Anie (1582).
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Micropaedia, 15th Edition, 1990, Vol. 2, p. 562)
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Micropaedia, 15th Edition, 1990, Vol. 2, p. 562)
1559 Act of Uniformity
Under the 1559 Act of Uniformity, it was illegal not to attend official Church
of England services, with a fine of 12d for each missed Sunday and holy day. The penalties for
conducting unofficial services included imprisonment and larger fines.
John Greenwood
John Greenwood
John Greenwood, a clergyman, was ordained at
Lincoln in 1582, and served in Lincolnshire from 1582-83. Greenwood was
arrested in Norfolk in 1585 probably for preaching without a license, or
against the Church.
In 1586 he was the recognized leader of the
London Separatists, of whom a considerable number had been imprisoned at
various times. In 1586 he and a group of people were sent to jail for
refusing to obey the religious laws of Elizabeth 1, thus beginning a tradition
of religious dissent within Southwark located NE of London. The
dissenters founded a prison church under the guidance of John Greenwood, and
Henry Barrowe, a lawyer. They called themselves ‘Independents’ but were also
known as ‘Brownists’ because of the free thinking of Robert Browne, the
father of the Separatist movement.
Another clergyman, Francis Johnson, soon joined
them. He had been ordered by the English Ambassador to Holland to buy and burn
the books by Greenwood and Barrowe. Inspired by them he came to visit the
authors and found himself being jailed with them!
In 1592 Greenwood, Barrowe and John Penry
gained a temporary reprieve and began meeting at a house in the Borough and
formally constituted the Southwark Independent Church. This
new congregation was being organized around Francis Johnson as its new Pastor,
and John Greenwood as its Teacher.
However the reprieve was short-lived and
Greenwood and Barrowe were executed on 6th April 1593. John Penry was also
executed, at a site near the present day junction between Albany Road and Old
Kent Road, on 29th May 1593. Roger Rippon, whose house was used for worship was
arrested and died of disease in prison.
Eight imprisoned members of the Johnson-Greenwood
congregation were released in April 1593. Others (sic) congregation members
were released in the fall of 1597, these made their way to their former
congregation members in Holland.
On his eventual release Francis Johnson finally
settled in Holland where many of the Southwark dissenters had fled to. The
remaining members of the group continued to meet in secret before being brought
into the open by Henry Jacob in 1616. Jacob had been influenced by the
writing of Johnson and in 1620 some members of the Southwark Church were given
permission to sail to America. It was this group who went on the Mayflower.
GAINSBOROUGH CONGREGATION
Between 1605-07 Richard Clifton had attempted to
establish an Independent or Separatist congregation in the Gainsborough England
area. He joined ranks with Thomas Helwys. During 1607, John
Smyth was visiting Thomas Helwys, the Elder of the Scrooby separatist
congregation located 12 miles from Gainsborough. Smyth a former clergyman
from Lincoln had been living in the area. Smyth was soon elected as the new
pastor of the Gainsborough-on-Trent Congregation with Thomas Helwys as its
Elder.
A decision was soon made to move both congregations to
Holland for safety. The Gainsborough Congregation
under Smyth and Helwys would depart first, and the Scrooby congregation would
follow shortly later.
Members of a Brownist church in Gainsborough, went
over in 1607 to Holland. They left behind a few scattered friends at
Scrooby, twelve miles to the west of Gainsborough in the Hundred of Basset
Lawe, in Nottinghamshire, England.
Scrooby Congregation
In 1608, Johnson’s Amsterdam
congregation was invaded briefly by an influx of another Barrowist congregation
from Gainsborough-on-Trent, under the leadership of John Smyth, a former
clergyman and university friend of Johnson. Some 125 members did
arrive in Amsterdam during 1608 in dribbles and drabs, and by late 1608 most of
the Scrooby congregation had arrived.
(Encyclopaedia Britannica, Micropaedia,
15th Edition, 1990, Vol. 10, pp. 114-5)
John Robinson
“In 1602 Robinson became a curate at St.
Andrew’s Church, Norwich. His refusal to conform to the Anglican anti-Puritan
decrees of 1604 led to his suspension from preaching, and in 1606 or 1607
he joined the Separatist congregation at Scrooby, Nottinghamshire. Also
called Nonconformists, these early congregationalists wished to separate from
the Church of England so they could follow what they believed to be purer and
more simplified forms of church government and worship.
With the Scrooby congregation Robinson travelled
to Amsterdam in 1608, but in 1609 he went with 100 of his followers to Leiden
to escape the dissension prevalent among the other Nonconformist groups. As
pastor at Leiden, he inspired the growth of his congregation to 300 members.
One of them, William Bradford, who later
became governor of Plymouth Colony in Massachusetts, likened Robinson’s
congregation to the early Christian churches because of its “true piety, humble
zeal and fervent love towards God and his Ways.”
Robinson entered Leiden University in 1615 to
study theology, but by 1617 he and his followers were seeking a more secure and
permanent location. In July 1620, while he remained with the majority who were
not yet ready to travel, part of his congregation sailed for England aboard
the Speedwell. Before departure from Leiden, Robinson
declared to them in a celebrated sermon, “For I am confident the Lord hath more
truth and light yet to break forth out of His holy Word.” The following
September, 35 of them left Plymouth on the Mayflower for New
England. Robinson died before he could leave Holland, and the remnant
of his congregation was absorbed by the Dutch Reformed Church in 1658”. (Encyclopaedia
Britannica, Micropaedia, 15th Edition, 1990, Vol. 10, pp. 114-5)
John Robinson
received a letter from the Dutch Government granting him and the Brownist to
settle and practice their faith in the Leiden, Holland:
999 / SA 300 Missives Book C fo. 126 / Letter
“Letter sent by the city of Leiden to Jan Jansz. (van)
Baersdorp, member of the Provincial Executive of the States of Holland, in reply
to an undated letter received from him in 1609. Van Baersdorp is asked to hand
to the lord grand pensionary (of Holland) the reply from the city of Leiden
together with the request received from John Robinson and some members of the
Christian Reformed Religion and the decision taken with regard to that request
on February 12, 1609. The city of Leiden declares that when a request
was received from John Robinson, pastor, and some members of the Christian
Reformed Religion, all born in England, it was decided to grant permission to
them to come and take up residence in Leiden. At the time the city of Leiden
was not aware that the persons in question were members of the sect of the
Brownists.”
Leiden Church
According to the Lenden (sic) Museum, the Pilgrims
joined the Mennonite church. Below is a quote from the Lenden (sic)
Museum:
“1609, the Pilgrims arrived from England as refugees.
After a short period in Amsterdam, the Pilgrims received official permission to
live in Leiden. The city’s response declared that
Leiden refuses no honest people free entry to come
live in the city, as long as they behave honestly and obey all the laws and
ordinances, and under those conditions the applicants’ arrival here would be
pleasing and welcome.
The Pilgrims spent 11 years in Leiden, during which
time they came into contact with Dutch Mennonites, French Calvinists, and other religious dissenters. In 1620, the
Pilgrims set sail for the New World on the Mayflower.”
The Leiden American Pilgrim Museum was founded in 1997
inside a house dating from around 1370, which may have sheltered the Pilgrims
during their stay in Leiden.
Soon after they arrived in Holland they came under
influence of the Anabaptist teachings through the Mennonite. Smyth’s
church in Amsterdam, founded on the principle of adult baptism in 1609, is
considered the first truly Baptist church.
Two years later the congregation split with part of them remaining in Holland where they
eventually united with the Mennonites, a 7th day Sabbath-keeping church. The other part, led by Thomas
Helwys returned to England where they settled at Spitalfield just outside
London.
The Mennonite Church descended from the
Waldesians. They were 7th day Sabbath Keepers.
See quotes below demonstrate how they moved to Holland
and keep the Old Testment laws, the Sabbath, the Passover and circumcision:
“In Holland where Anabaptists grew, the Waldenses were
held to be the first propagandists of Anabaptist views on Holland soil. Also
some of the oldest Mennonite families in Holland had names of Waldensian origin
and claimed to be progeny of such exiled fathers.” William R.
Williams, Lecture on Baptist History, p. 127-128.
“To speak my mind freely, if their (Waldensian)
opinions and customs were to be examined without prejudice, it would appear
that among all the modern sects of Christians, they had the greatest
resemblance to that of the Mennonites or Dutch Baptists.” Limborch, The History of the Inquisition, London, 1731.
“Bohemia was
once the headquarters of those Waldenses who had been driven from the valleys
by persecution. Later it became the main head quarters for the Swiss Baptists,
namely Hutterites (Mennonites).” Peter Ruckman, History of the N.T.
ChurchI, p. 407.
“They who
maintain the Saturday Sabbath to be in force, comply with the
Anabaptists.” Dr. Francis White,
Treatise on the 7th Day, p. 132.
Martin Luther
states, “Thus all other religious tendencies act, aside from the true doctrine
of Scriptures, as Mohammed of the Turks, the Talmud of the Jews, as also our
Anabaptists, are almost the same; all forsake and abandon the true works and
life God’s Word requires and urges…” Luther goes on to state, “the fanatical
revilers of the sacrament (Anabaptists) were for all practical purposes
indistinguishable from the Jews…” Luther writes Against the
Sabbatarians in 1538 and accuses the Anabaptists of circumcision and
partaking in Jewish ritual. Luther was less tolerant of the
Anabaptists than Jews since they “insinuate themselves upon the church and at
the same time refuse to submit to its authority…” Luther also signed a memo in
1536 assessing the death penalty to all Anabaptists. 8th Sunday
After Trinity, Sermons of Martin Luther, vol. 4.
“We shall
afterwards show that the rise of the Anabaptists took place prior to the
reformation of the Church of England, and there are also reasons for believing
that on the continent of Europe, small hidden Christian societies who have held
many of the opinions of the Anabaptists, have existed from the time of
the apostles. In the sense of the direct transmission of divine truth,
and the true nature of spiritual religion, it seems probably that these
churches have a lineage or succession more ancient then that of the Roman
Church.” Robert Barclay, The Innerlife of the Societies of
the Commonwealth, p. 11-12, 1876.
“The
Anabaptists continued observing many of the same external points as the
Waldensians, such as they viewed the Old Testament of great importance,
retained the Waldensian translations of the Bible, which had the epistle of
Paul to the Laodiceans, continued to worship using the same forms of prayers
and hymns, the same observations of the (Passover) once a year, the
same view towards congregation buildings free from idols and crosses, simple
plain dress… all showing that the 16th C. Anabaptists descended from
the Waldensians.” John T. Christian,A History of the
Baptists, Vol. I Ch. 7 and 8.
“If the truth
of religion were to be judged by the readiness and boldness of which a man of
any sect shows suffering, then the opinion and persuasion of no sect can be
truer and more sure than the Anabaptists since there have been none for these
1200 years past, that have cheerfully and steadfastly undergone, and even
offered themselves to the most cruel sorts of punishment than these people….
Were it not that the Baptists (Anabaptists) have been grievously tormented and
cut off with the knife during the past 1200 years, they would swarm in greater
numbers than all the reformers.” Cardinal Stanislaus Hosius, 1504-1579.
The
Anabaptist or Mennonites moved to Holland
“We have now
seen that the Baptists who were formerly called Anabaptists and in later times,
Mennonites, were the original Waldenses and have long in the history of the
church received the honor of that origin…. The Mennonites are descended
from the tolerably pure evangelical Waldenses, who were driven by persecution
into various countries’ and who during the latter part of the 13th C. fled into
Flanders, and into the provinces of Holland and Zealand.”
Dr. Ypeij and Rev. J.J. Dermout,History of the
Dutch Reformed Church Vol. 1,1819.
“The modern Mennonites affirm that their predecessors
were the descendants of the Waldenses.” Mosheim, Institute of
Ecclesiastical History, p. 200, 1755.
These churches met with the Mennonite or
Anabaptist which kept many of the Old Testament Law such as the 7thDay Sabbath.
Baptist
heritage is more closely related to the Gainsborough congregation where John
Smyth and Thomas Helwys were leaders. Their congregation left England about
1607. Soon after they arrived in Holland they came under influence of the
Anabaptist teachings through the Mennonites….
Smyth’s church in Amsterdam, founded on the principle
of adult baptism in 1609, is considered the first truly Baptist church. Two
years later the congregation split with part of them remaining in Holland where
they eventually united with the Mennonites. The other part, led by Thomas
Helwys returned to England where they settled at Spitalfield just outside
London. (Sanford, Don A., A Choosing People: The History of Seventh Day
Baptists, Broadman Press, Nashville, Tennessee (1992) pp. 39-40, 86.
In Fact the
Scrooby Congregation started the 7th Day Baptist Church
in America. See Proof below:
“Among the Scrooby congregation which fled to
Holland but who did not come to America until a decade later was John Dunham,
whose grandson, Reverend Edmund Dunham, founded the Seventh Day Baptist church
in Piscataway, New Jersey, nearly a century later in 1705.”
(Sanford, Don A., A Choosing People: The
History of Seventh Day Baptists, Broadman Press, Nashville, Tennessee
(1992) pp. 39-40, 86.
In
Summary
The Pilgrims came from three churches Scrooby,
Gainborough, and Southwark. They fled to Holland where many attended with
the Mennonites. The Mennonites were the descendants for the Waldesians
who fled also to Holland. The Mennonites were 7th Day Sabbath Keepers.
Members from the Scrooby Congregation later founded the Seventh Day Baptist
Church in 1705. Both John Robinson and William Bradford were members of
the Scrooby Congregation.
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