Answer to Sir Thomas More's Dialogue

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality
Cover of the book Answer to Sir Thomas More's Dialogue by William Tyndale, CrossReach Publications
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: William Tyndale ISBN: 9788869095474
Publisher: CrossReach Publications Publication: August 24, 2018
Imprint: Language: English
Author: William Tyndale
ISBN: 9788869095474
Publisher: CrossReach Publications
Publication: August 24, 2018
Imprint:
Language: English

It was in 1528, that Sir Thomas More, being already regarded as the most accomplished scholar in England, and having before his eyes a near prospect of being invited to fill the chief place in his sovereign’s council, was induced to accept bishop Tonstal’s permission to read the works of the reformers, that he might be qualified to refute them; nor did he suffer the year to elapse before he had composed, as the first fruits of his consequent researches and zeal, an imaginary dialogue between himself and the confidential messenger of a friend desirous to know his opinions respecting the religious questions which were then forcing themselves into general notice. In the edition of Sir Thomas More’s works, printed at London in 1557, and then dedicated to queen Mary, as “To that person to whom specially of all worldly creatures the editor [William Rastell, serjeant at law] trusted the book should be most acceptable,” the title of this effort to write down Tyndale and his labours is as follows: “A dialogue of Sir Thomas More, knt. one of the council of our sovereign lord the king, and chancellor of his duchy of Lancaster. Wherein he treated divers matters, as of the veneration and worship of images and reliques, praying to saints, and going on pilgrimages, with many other things touching the pestilent sect of Luther and Tyndale, by the one begun in Saxony, and by the other labored to be brought into England. Made in the year of our Lord, 1528.” The dialogue was divided by its author into four books; and occupies in that quarto edition a hundred and eighty-four closely printed pages.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

It was in 1528, that Sir Thomas More, being already regarded as the most accomplished scholar in England, and having before his eyes a near prospect of being invited to fill the chief place in his sovereign’s council, was induced to accept bishop Tonstal’s permission to read the works of the reformers, that he might be qualified to refute them; nor did he suffer the year to elapse before he had composed, as the first fruits of his consequent researches and zeal, an imaginary dialogue between himself and the confidential messenger of a friend desirous to know his opinions respecting the religious questions which were then forcing themselves into general notice. In the edition of Sir Thomas More’s works, printed at London in 1557, and then dedicated to queen Mary, as “To that person to whom specially of all worldly creatures the editor [William Rastell, serjeant at law] trusted the book should be most acceptable,” the title of this effort to write down Tyndale and his labours is as follows: “A dialogue of Sir Thomas More, knt. one of the council of our sovereign lord the king, and chancellor of his duchy of Lancaster. Wherein he treated divers matters, as of the veneration and worship of images and reliques, praying to saints, and going on pilgrimages, with many other things touching the pestilent sect of Luther and Tyndale, by the one begun in Saxony, and by the other labored to be brought into England. Made in the year of our Lord, 1528.” The dialogue was divided by its author into four books; and occupies in that quarto edition a hundred and eighty-four closely printed pages.

More books from CrossReach Publications

Cover of the book The Great Parenthesis by William Tyndale
Cover of the book The Indian Christians of St. Thomas Otherwise Called the Syrian Christians of Malabar by William Tyndale
Cover of the book Shall the Fundamentalists Win? by William Tyndale
Cover of the book The Anxious Bench by William Tyndale
Cover of the book Michele Nardi the Italian Evangelist by William Tyndale
Cover of the book Philo's Contribution to Religion by William Tyndale
Cover of the book The Family, in its Civil and Churchly Aspects by William Tyndale
Cover of the book The Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew (Annotated) by William Tyndale
Cover of the book The Scripture Alphabet of Animals by William Tyndale
Cover of the book The Gospel according to St Mark: A Devotional Commentary by William Tyndale
Cover of the book Notes on the History of Jonah by William Tyndale
Cover of the book Let Us Go On by William Tyndale
Cover of the book The Christ of Today by William Tyndale
Cover of the book Salvation Universal by William Tyndale
Cover of the book The Proof or Demonstration of the Apostolic Preaching by William Tyndale
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy