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LANCELOT ANDREWES (1555-1626)

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Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 974 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LANCELOT ANDREWES (1555-1626)  ,
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English divine, was born in 1555 in
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London . His
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family was an ancient Suffolk one; his
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father, Thomas, became master of Trinity House . Lancelot was sent to the Cooper's
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free school, Ratcliff, in the parish of Stepney, and then to the Merchant Taylors' school under Richard Mulcaster . In 1571 he was entered as a Watts scholar at Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, where in 1574–1575 he graduated B.A., proceeding M.A. in 1578 . In 1576 he had been elected
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fellow of Pembroke . In 158o he took orders; in 1581 he was incorporated M.A. at Oxford . As catechist at his college he read lectures on the Decalogue, which, both on their delivery and on their publication (in 163o), created much
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interest . He also gained much reputation as a casuist . After a residence in the north as
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chaplain to Henry Hastings,
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earl of Huntingdon, President of the North, he was made vicar of St Giles's, Cripple-
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gate, in 1588, and there delivered his striking sermons on the temptation in the
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wilderness and the Lord's prayer . In a
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great sermon on the loth of
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April (
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Easter week) 1588, he stoutly vindicated the Protestantism of the Church of England against the Romanists, and, oddly enough, adduced " Mr Calvin " as a new writer, with lavish praise and affection . Andrewes was preferred to the prebendal stall of St Pancras in St Paul's, London, in 1589, and on the 6th of September of the same
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year became master of his own college of Pembroke, being at the time one of the chaplains of Archbishop Whitgift . From 1589 to 1609 he was also prebendary of Southwell .

On the 4th of

March 1590, as one of the chaplains of Queen Elizabeth, he preached before her a singularly outspoken sermon, and in
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October gave his
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introductory lecture at St Paul's, undertaking to comment on the first four chapters of Genesis . These seem to have been worked up later into a compilation called The
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Orphan Lectures (1657) . Andrewes was an incessant worker as well as preacher, and often laboured beyond his strength . He delighted to move among the
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people, and yet found time to meet with a society of antiquaries, of which Raleigh, Sidney, Burleigh, Arundel, the Herberts, Saville, Stow and Camden were members . In 1598 he declined the two bishoprics of Ely and Salisbury, as the offers were coupled with a proposal to alienate
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part of the revenues of those
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sees . On the 23rd of November 1600 he preached at
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Whitehall a remarkable sermon on
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justification, which gave rise to a memorable controversy . On the 4th of
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July 16o1 he was appointed dean of Westminster and gave much attention to the school there . He assisted at the coronation of James I. and in 1604 took part in the Hampton Court
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conference . His name is the first on the list of divines appointed to make the authorized version of the Bible . In 16o5 he was consecrated bishop of
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Chichester and made lord almoner . In 1609 he published Torture Torti, a learned
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work which grew out of the
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Gunpowder Plot controversy and was written in answer to Bellarmine's Matthaeus Tortus, which attacked James I.'s
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book on the oath of allegiance . After his
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translation to Ely (1609), he again controverted Bellarmine in the Responsio ad Apologiam, a
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treatise never answered .

In 1617 he accompanied James I. to

Scotland with a view to persuading the Scots that Episcopacy was preferable to Presbyterianism . In 1618 he attended the synod of Dort, and was soon after made dean of the
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Chapel Royal and translated to Winchester, a diocese which he ad-ministered with loving prudence and the highest success . He died on the 26th of September 1626, mourned alike by leaders in church and state . Two generations later, Richard Crashaw caught up the universal sentiment, when, in his lines " Upon Bishop Andrewes' Picture before his Sermons," he exclaims: " This reverend shadow cast that setting sun, Whose glorious course through our horizon run,
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Left the dim face of this dull hemisphere, All one great eye, all drown'd in one great teare." Andrewes was distinguished in many fields . At court, though no trifler or flatterer, he was a favourite counsellor in three successive reigns, but he never meddled much in
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civil or temporal affairs . His learning made him the equal and the friend of Grotius, and of the foremost contemporary scholars . His preaching was a unique combination of rhetorical splendour and scholarly richness; his piety that of an ancient saint, semi-ascetic and unearthly in its self-denial . As a churchman he is typically
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Anglican, equally removed from the Puritan and the
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Roman positions . He stands in true succession to Richard Hooker in working out the principles of the English Reformation, though while Hooker argued mainly against Puritanism, Andrewes chiefly combated Romanism . A good
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summary of his position is found in his First Answer to Cardinal Perron, who had challenged James I.'s use of the title " Catholic." His position in regard to the Eucharist is naturally more mature than that of the first reformers . " As to the Real Presence we are agreed ; our controversy is as to the node of it . As to the mode we define nothing rashly, nor anxiously investigate, any more than in the Incarnation of Christ we ask how the human is
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united to the divine nature in One Person .

There is a real

change in the elements—we allow ut panis iam consecratus non sit penis
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quern nature formavit; sed, quern benedictio consecravit, et consecrando etiam immutavit " (Responsio, p . 263) . Adoration is permitted, and the use of the terms " sacrifice " and " altar " maintained as being consonant with scripture and antiquity . Christ is " a sacrifice—so, to be slain; a propitiatory sacrifice—so, to be eaten " (Sermons, vol. ii. p . 296) . ' By the same rules that the
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Passover was, by the same may ours be termed a sacrifice . In rigour of speech, neither of them; for to speak after the exact manner of divinity, there is but one only sacrifice, veri nominis, that is Christ's
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death . And that sacrifice but once actually performed at His death, but ever before represented in figure, from the beginning; and ever since repeated in memory to the
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world's end . That only absolute, all else relative to it, representative of it, operative by it . . Hence it is that what names theirs carried, ours do the like, and the Fathers make no
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scruple at it—no more need we " (Sermons, vol. ii. p . 300) . As to reservation, " it needeth not : the intent is had without it," since an invalid may always have his private communion .

Andrewes declares against the invocation of

saints, the apparent examples in patristic literature are " rhetorical outbursts, not theological
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definitions." His services to his church have been summed up thus:—(1) he has a keen sense of the proportion of the faith and maintains a clear distinction between what is fundamental, needing ecclesiastical commands, and subsidiary, needing only ecclesiastical guidance and
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suggestion; (2) as distinguished from the earlier protesting standpoint, e.g. of the
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Thirty-nine Articles, he emphasized a positive and constructive statement of the Anglican position .

End of Article: LANCELOT ANDREWES (1555-1626)
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