Edward Wightman

Edward Wightman (c. 1580 – 11 April 1612) was an English radical Anabaptist, executed at Lichfield on charges of heresy.[1][2] He was the last person to be burned at the stake in England for heresy.[3]

Edward Wightman
Bornc. 1580
Died11 April 1612 (aged 3132)
Cause of deathExecution by burning
NationalityEnglish
OccupationMercer then Minister
Spouse(s)Frances Darbye of Hinckley
Children7 children—2 boys and 5 girls

Life

Edward Wightman[4] may have been the child baptised at Hinckley, Leicestershire, on 14 July 1580, by his father, John Wightman.[5] [Unlikely, unless he married at 13 and led the Thomas Darling investigation at 16!] He attended Burton Grammar School and entered the clothiers business of his mother's family. Eventually, he served an apprenticeship as a woollen draper in the town of Shrewsbury.[6] He married Frances Darbye of Hinckley in 1593[7] and settled in Burton upon Trent. Apart from his mercer's business in Burton he also became a minister of the local Anabaptist church.

Case of Thomas Darling

Wightman became involved with the Puritans and in 1596 was chosen as one of the leaders assigned to the investigation of demonic possession of 13-year-old Thomas Darling.[8] This suggests that by the mid-1590s Wightman was an important and well-respected public figure, taking part in the newly formed movement that began to hold sway over Burton's society and politics. His involvement in the Darling case proved a turning point in his life, making him entirely amenable to the possibility of unmediated spiritual intervention. Darling claimed not just to be possessed by the devil, but engaged in a series of ‘spiritual wars’ in which both demonic and angelic voices were said to emanate from him:

As I know at this present for a certainty, that I have the spirit of God within me: so do I with the like certainty believe, that in my dialogues with Satan, when I [quoted] sundry places of scripture, to withstand the temptations he assaulted me with: I had the spirit of God in me, and by that spirit resisted Satan at those times, by [quoting] the scriptures to confound him.[9]

Religious persecution

Wightman's adoption of "heresy" commenced with his understanding of the mortality of the soul, adopting the "soul sleep" view of Martin Luther. In one of his early public messages he preached that "the soul of man dies with the body and participates not either of the joys of Heaven or the pains of Hell, until the general Day of Judgment, but rested with the body until then".[10]

Between 1603/4 and 1610/11, he became more active and vocal. According to court records, he was a prolific writer, although none of his writings have been found to date.[11] He came to the attention of the local church authorities and a warrant for his arrest was issued. The order instructed the constables of Burton to immediately bring him before the Bishop of Lichfield Richard Neile (or Neale) for interrogation.[12]

Condemned by King James I

Wightman set about putting together a compendium of his theology for his upcoming hearing and defence. Perhaps thinking that he would at least be allowed time to plead his case, he delivered copies of it to members of the clergy in an effort to shore up support. But then, perhaps as a last resort, he delivered a copy to King James I,[13] a move that would ultimately seal his fate. No copy survives.

James I came to the English throne in 1603, "thinking himself a competent judge of religious questions and disposed to take seriously his title of ‘Defender of the Faith’".[14] Since 1607 he had been engaged in a battle of books with Roman Catholic apologists over the Oath of Allegiance, both personally and by encouraging others to write in his defence. "One of the central planks of the king's case was the preservation of his catholic orthodoxy through his adherence to the three great creeds of the church, the Apostles', the Nicene and the Athanasian".[15]

Wightman was fully aware of the king's firmly orthodox stance, yet he set about to combat both his State and Church. Of the handful of fragments of his defence treatise that have survived, he refers to the doctrine and "heresies of the Nicolaitan;... most of all hated and abhorred of God himself ... the common received faith contained in those three inventions of man, commonly called the Three Creeds ... the [Apostles’], Nicene and Athanasius Creed, which faith within these 1600 years past hath prevailed in the world".[16]

Wightman had by now isolated himself from all orthodox groups, calling into question many tenets of orthodox belief, arguing "that the baptizing of infants is an abominable custom ... the practice of the Sacraments as they are now used in the Church of England are according to Christ his Institution ... [and affirming that] only the sacrament of baptism [is] to be administered in water to converts of sufficient age of understanding converted from infidelity to the faith".[17]

But what finally spelled his end was his public rejection of Trinitarianism. It was presumably on these points that he so vehemently rejected the formulae of the Nicene Creed of 325 and the subsequent ‘Athanasius' Creed of 381.[18] He claimed that the doctrine of the Trinity was a total fabrication, stating that Christ was only a man "and a mere Creature and not both God and man in one person... [Although this did not mean that Christ was a man like all others but] only a perfect man without sin".[19] King James was by now more set than ever in securing the execution of Wightman, since in the intervening years he had launched a dual campaign against heresy at home and abroad.

Summary of charges by the Commission

Edward Wightman's examination and hearing was addressed in 16 points:

  1. That there is no Trinity;
  2. That Jesus Christ is not God, perfect God and of the same substance, eternity and majesty with the Father in respect of his God-head;
  3. That Jesus Christ is only man and a mere creature and not both God and man in one person ;
  4. That Christ was never incarnate and did not fulfill the promise that the seed of the woman shall break the serpents head;
  5. The person of the Holy Ghost is not God, co-equal, co-eternal and co-essential with the Father and the Son;
  6. That the three creeds of the apostolic church are the heresies of the Nicolaitanes;
  7. That he, Edward Wightman, is the prophet spoken of in Deuteronomy 18 in the words "I will raise them up a prophet" and in Isaiah "I alone have trodden the wine press" and in that place "Whose fan is in his hand";
  8. That he was the Holy Spirit, the Comforter spoken of in John 16;
  9. That the words of Jesus on the sin of blasphemy against the Holy Spirit refer to him;
  10. That the fourth of Malachi refers to his person (the prophecy of Elijah);
  11. That the soul and body does sleep and this sleep is the first death, and that the soul and body of Jesus did also sleep in the sleep of death;
  12. That the souls of the elect departed (that is dead) are not in heaven;
  13. That the baptizing of infants is an abominable custom;
  14. That the practice of the Church of England in reference to the Lords Supper and baptism are incorrect and baptism of water should be administered only to those with sufficient age and understanding;
  15. That God has ordained and sent him, Edward Wightman, to do his part in the work of the Salvation of the world, (to admonish the heresy of the Nicolaitanes);in comparison to Christ who was sent to save the world and by his death to deliver it from sin and to reconcile it to God;
  16. That Christianity is not wholly professed and preached in the Church of England, but only in part.[20]

Trial and execution

Wightman's trial was played out against the backdrop of the so-called "Vorstius Affair", involving the intense opposition on the King's part to block the appointment of the German academic Conrad Vorstius to the University of Leiden. Vorstius was being accused of atheism, Arianism and heretical opinions about the Holy Spirit.

After months of being subjected to a series of conferences with "learned divines", Wightman was finally brought before Bishop Neile for the last time. According to Wightman, the Bishop told him "that unless I did recant my opinions he would burn me at a stake in Burton before Allholland day next".[21] The final verdict and list of charges included "the wicked heresies of Ebion, Cerinthus, Valentinian, Arius, Macedonius, Simon Magus, Manichees, Photinus, and of the Anabaptists and other arch heretics, and moreover, of other cursed opinions belched by the instinct of Satan".

He was ordered to be placed "in some public and open place below the city aforesaid [and] before the people burned in the detestation of the said crime and for manifest example of other Christians that they may not fall into the same crime".[22]

When he was finally brought to the stake his courage left him, and as the fires were lit he is said to have quickly cried out to recant and was pulled from the fire, although by then he had been "well scorched". Two or three weeks later he was again brought before the courts and, no longer fearing the searing flames, refused and "blasphemed more audaciously than before".[22] The King quickly ordered his final execution, and on 11 April 1612, he was once more led to the stake.

[Wightman] was carried again to the stake where feeling the heat of the fire again would have recanted, but for all his crying the sheriff told him he should cost him no more and commanded faggots to be set to him whence roaring, he was burned to ashes.[23]

Aftermath

In the months that followed Wightman's execution, a number of religious radicals nearly met the same fate,[24] even though the downfall of the bishops and abolition of the High Commission in 1640–2 did not bring about any changes to the constitution:

The act of the Long Parliament which abolished the Court of High Commission used such very general words that, if it did not abolish the old ecclesiastical courts, it practically deprived them of their power. At the Restoration, however, by statute passed in 1661 (13 Car II, c. 12) it was ‘explained’ that this was not the desired result; the Court of High Commission was not to be re-established, but the old ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the ecclesiastical courts was to be exercised as of old.[25]

On 2 May 1648, a new ‘Ordinance for the Punishment of Blasphemies and Heresies’ was created, "principally those of the triune God, the resurrection, the last judgment, and that the Bible is the Word of God...relapse is to be punished as felony with death without benefit of clergy".[26] Opposition from Independents and sectaries, however, meant that the ordinance was never enforced.[27] And only with the passage of another act in 1677 ("forbidding the burning of heretics"[28]) was Wightman's position in history ‘as the last person in England to be burned at the stake for heresy’ secured.[29]

Mention of his case came almost 100 years later by a handful of writers in the wake of the 1689 Toleration Act.[30] The only immediate result was that of a minority opposition to his execution, a shift in public opinion which may have led to a relative decline in the practice.[31]

Meanwhile, James I seemed to have lost faith in this method of discouraging heresy (his actions owed more to a thaw in his private attitude to Roman Catholics than to any feelings about the impropriety or inadvisability of burning heretics[32]) and seeing that heresy still survived, “publicly preferred that heretics hereafter, though condemned, should silently and privately waste themselves away in the prison rather than to grace them, and amuse others, with the solemnity of a public execution”.[32]

Legacy

Edward Wightman has gone down in history as the last person in England to be burned at the stake for heresy.[33] Like most cases of this kind, it is a story dominated by the religious and political climate of its time.

“If, then, dead books may be committed to flames, how much more live books, that is to say, men?"[34][35]

Family

Little is known about the subsequent fate of Edward Wightman's wife and children. It is known, however, that one son, John, was born on 7 January 1599 in Burton upon Trent. John's sons, George (1632–1722) emigrated to North Kingston, Rhode Island, in 1660. George Wightman had two daughters and five sons. Three of the sons' names are known: Daniel, Valentine, and George. George's descendants remained in Connecticut and Rhode Island and played a role in the American Revolutionary War and Civil War. One of his children was Stillman King Wightman, who lived in Cromwell, Connecticut, graduated from Yale University in 1825 and was a practising lawyer until his death in 1899. Stillman Wightman married Clarissa Butler on 18 October 1827. Together they had 6 children: Charles S. Wightman, Sgt Major Edward King Wightman, Fredrick B. Wightman, James S. Wightman, Mary C. Wightman, and Ellen A. Wightman.[36]

References

  1. Wikisource: Dictionary of National Biography
  2. Cobbett's complete collection of state trials and proceedings, 735–736.
  3. Atherton and Como 2005.
  4. "In the King's letter, under the privy seal, as well as in the warrant for his execution, he is called ‘Edward Wightman, of the parish of Burton-upon-Trent, in the diocese of Coventry and Lichfield’". Robert Wallace, Antitrinitarian Biography, E. T. Whitfield, 1850, pp 567–568.
  5. Wright 2004.
  6. A. Macdonald, A Short History of Repton, London, 1929, p 86, 91, 244.
  7. Staffordshire Record Office, marriage recorded as 11 Sept. 1593.
  8. D. P. Walker, Unclean Spirits, London, 1981, p 56; J. Bruce (ed.), Diary of John Manningham, Camden Society, 1st series, 99, 1868, p 169.
  9. S. Harsnett, A Discovery of the Fraudulent Practices of John Darrel, London, 1599, p 290.
  10. M. W. Greenslade, ‘The 1607 Return of Staffordshire Catholics’, Staffordshire Catholic History, 4, 1963–4, p 6–32; Clarke, Lives of Two and Twenty English Divines, p 147.
  11. Robert Wallace, Antitrinitarian Biography, E. T. Whitfield, 1850, p 567-568.
  12. Durham Dean and Chapter Library, MS Hunter 44/17, fo. 216r.
  13. Collections for a History of Staffordshire, Staffordshire Record Society, 1982, p. 176.
  14. Earl Morse Wilbur, A History of Unitarianism, Harvard, 1945, p 177.
  15. F. Shriver, Orthodoxy and Diplomacy: James I and the Vorstius Affair, ante, lxxxv, 1970, pp. 453–4; James VI and I, The Workes of the Most High and Mightie Prince, Iames by the Grace of God, King of Great Britaine, London, 1616, p. 302.
  16. Bodleian Library, ms Ashmole, A True Relation of the Commissions and Warrants for the Condemnation and Burning of Bartholomew Legate and Thomas Withman, 1521 B, 7, 1a–1b, London, 1651, p. 8.
  17. Bodleian Library, ms Ashmole, A True Relation of the Commissions and Warrants for the Condemnation and Burning of Bartholomew Legate and Thomas Withman, London, 1651, pp. 8–9, 23.
  18. Both of the Creeds had been structured primarily as responses to Arian denials of the Trinity. And like the Arians of the 4th century, Wightman flatly denied them.
  19. All quotes, Bodleian Library, ms Ashmole, A True Relation of the Commissions, p 5.
  20. Cobbet's.
  21. Lincolnshire Archives, D & C, Ciij/13/1/2/2, fo. 1r.
  22. All quotes, Robert Wallace, Antitrinitarian Biography, E. T. Whitfield, 1850, pp 567–568.
  23. All quotes, George Birkhead, Michael C. Questier, Newsletters from the Archpresbyterate of George Birkhead, Cambridge University Press, 1998, p 153.
  24. Champlin Burrage, The Early Dissenters in the Light of Recent Research (1550–1641), vol. I, p 169-171.
  25. F.W. Maitland, H.A.L. Fisher, The Constitutional History of England: A Course of Lectures, Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., 2001, p 522.
  26. Felix Makower, The Constitutional History and Constitution of the Church of England, Ayer, 1972, p 193.
  27. C. H. Firth and R. S. Rait, Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum, 1642–1660, 3 vols., London, 1911, p 1133–6; H. J. McLachlan, Socinianism in Seventeenth-Century England, Oxford, 1951, p 163–217.
  28. Burning at the stake remained on the statute book in England until 1790, as the punishment for a woman who murdered her husband. A. Aspinall, A. Smith, English Historical Documents 1783–1832, Routledge, 1996, p 339f.; F. E. Dolan, Dangerous Familiars: Representations of Domestic Crime in England, 1550–1700, Cornell, 1994.
  29. M. Fisher, The Constitutional History of England, p 522.
  30. G. Croese, The General History of the Quakers, London, 1696, 2, 193; E. S. De Beer, The Correspondence of John Locke, 8 vols., Oxford, 1976–89, 6, nos. 2621, 2631, 2653; Truth brought to Light: Or, the History of the First 14 Years of King James, London, 1692.
  31. The case “much startled the common people”. Thomas Fuller, J.S. Brewer, The Church History of Britain: From the Birth of Jesus Christ until the Year 1648, University press, 1845, p 506-508.
  32. Loomie, A. J. (1996). "Bacon and Gondomar: An Unknown Link in 1618". In Loomie, A. J. (ed.). Spain and the Early Stuarts 1585–1655. Aldershot. ISBN 0-86078-576-9.
  33. Narrowly edging out another accused anti-Trinitarian and heretic, Bartholomew Legate, burned in London three weeks earlier.
  34. ‘Matthieu Ory, Inquisitor of Heretical Pravity for the Realm of France, Paris, 1544’. Lawrence Goldstone, Nancy Goldstone, Out of the Flames, Broadway, 2003.
  35. Works Cited I. A. H. Firth and R. S. Rait (ed.), Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum, 1642–1660, 3 vols. London, 1911. II. Aspinall, Anthony Smith, ‘Debate in the House of Commons on the Bill for altering the sentence of burning women’, English Historical Documents 1783–1832, Routledge, 1996. III. Bodleian Library, ms Ashmole, A True Relation of the Commissions and Warrants for the Condemnation and Burning of Bartholomew Legate and Thomas Withman, London, 1651. IV. D. P. Walker, Unclean Spirits, London, 1981. V. E. A. Wilbur, A History of Unitarianism, Harvard University Press, 1945. VI. Felix Makower, The Constitutional History and Constitution of the Church of England, Ayer, 1972. VII. F. W. Maitland, H. A. L. Fisher, The Constitutional History of England: A Course of Lectures, The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., 2001. VIII. G. Birkhead, M. C. Questier, Newsletters from the Archpresbyterate of George Birkhead, Cambridge University Press, 1998. IX. J. Loomie, ‘Bacon and Gondomar: An Unknown Link in 1618’, in A. J. Loomie (ed.), Spain and the Early Stuarts 1585–1655, Aldershot, 1996. X. Lawrence & Nancy Goldstone, Out of the Flames: The Remarkable Story of a Fearless Scholar, a Fatal Heresy, and One of the Rarest Books in the World, Broadway, 2003. XI. M. W. Greenslade, ‘The 1607 Return of Staffordshire Catholics’, Staffordshire Catholic History, iv, 1963–4. XII. A. Macdonald, A Short History of Repton, London, 1929. XIII. Robert Wallace, Antitrinitarian Biography, E. T. Whitfield, 1850. XIV. S. Harsnett, A Discovery of the Fraudulent Practices of John Darrel, London, 1599. XV. Staffordshire Record Society, Collections for a History of Staffordshire, 1982. XVI. T. Fuller, John S. Brewer, The Church History of Britain: From the Birth of Jesus Christ until the Year 1648, University press, 1845.
  36. P. Lewis, History of Long Island: Part 3, 1905, pp. 274–76.

Further reading

  • Atherton, Ian; Como, David (2005). "The Burning of Edward Wightman: Puritanism, Prelacy and the Politics of Heresy in Early Modern England". English Historical Review. 120: 1215–50. doi:10.1093/ehr/cei330.
  • Wright, Stephen (2004). "Wightman, Edward (bap. 1580?, d. 1612)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/29371. (subscription required)
  • A History of the Baptists, by John T. Christian
  • A History of the English Baptists, by Joseph Ivimey
  • The Baptist Heritage: Four Centuries of Baptist Witness, by H. Leon McBeth
  • George Wightman of Quidnessett, RI and Descendants, by Mary Ross Whitman, (1939, Chicago: Edwards Brothers).
  • The Wightman Ancestry, Wade C. Wightman, (1994, Chelsea, MI: Bookcrafters).
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