Thomas Morton (bishop)

For other people named Thomas Morton, see Thomas Morton (disambiguation).
The Right Reverend
Thomas Morton
Bishop of Durham
Diocese Diocese of Durham
In office 1632–1646 (Episcopacy abolished)[1]
Predecessor John Howson
Successor Vacant (Civil War)
Other posts

Dean of Gloucester (June 1607–1609)
Dean of Winchester (1609–1616)
Bishop of Chester (1616–1619)

Bishop of Lichfield & Coventry (February 1619–1632)
Orders
Ordination 1594
Consecration c.1616
Personal details
Born (1564-03-20)20 March 1564
Pavement, York, East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Died 20 September 1659(1659-09-20) (aged 95)
Easton Maudit, Northamptonshire, England
Buried Easton Maudit parish church
Nationality English
Denomination Anglican
Residence Richard Morton & Elizabeth née Leedale
Spouse never married
Alma mater St John's College, Cambridge

Thomas Morton (20 March 1564 – 20 September 1659) was an English churchman, bishop of several dioceses. Well-connected and in favour with King James, he was also a significant polemical writer against Roman Catholic views. He rose to become Bishop of Durham, but despite a record of sympathetic treatment of Puritans as a diocesan, and underlying Calvinist beliefs shown in the Gagg controversy, his royalism saw him descend into poverty under the Commonwealth.

Life

Morton in 1637, painted by Simon Luttichuys.[2]

Morton was born in York on 20 March 1564,[2] the sixth of the nineteen children of Richard Morton, mercer, of York, and alderman of the city, by his wife Elizabeth Leedale, and was born in the parish of All Saints' Church, Pavement, York. He was brought up and grammar school educated in the city and nearby Halifax. In 1582, he became a pensioner at St John's College, Cambridge from which he graduated with a BA in 1584 and an MA in 1590.[3][4] William Whitaker picked him out for a Fellow of the college, and he proceeded to the degree of BD in 1598, and that of DD 'with great distinction' in 1606.[5]

Morton was ordained in 1592, and held the office of university lecturer in logic till in 1598 when he obtained the living of Long Marston, Yorkshire. He was then chaplain to Henry Hastings, 3rd Earl of Huntingdon, Lord President of the North. In 1602, when the plague was raging at York, he devoted himself to the inmates of the pest-house. He conducted disputations with Roman Catholics; Herbert Croft, who became bishop of Hereford, was claimed as Morton's convert to the Church of England.[5]

In 1602 he was selected, with Richard Crakanthorpe as his colleague, to accompany Ralph Eure, 3rd Lord Eure when sent by Elizabeth as ambassador extraordinary to the Holy Roman Emperor and the King of Denmark. He made the acquaintance of foreign scholars and theologians, including Jesuits, and collected books at Frankfurt and elsewhere. He met Hugh Broughton, then residing at Middelburg, to whom he proposed scriptural difficulties. On the queen's death Morton returned to England, and became chaplain to Roger Manners, 5th Earl of Rutland. He had time for theological writing, and residence at Belvoir Castle enabled him to consult the libraries of London.[5]

Dean

Through Richard Bancroft's recommendation Morton was appointed one of the king's chaplains, and in 1606 became Dean of Gloucester, and, on the nomination of his former patron, Lord Eure, the lord president, member of the Council of the Marches. On accepting the deanery he offered to resign the living of Long Marston in favour of his friend John Donne, not yet in holy orders, but the offer was declined. In the same year he visited Oxford, where he was admitted to an ad eundem degree on 12 July. On this occasion he met eminent theologians, such as John King, John Rainolds, Henry Airey, and Daniel Featley.[5]

In 1609 James I made him Dean of Winchester, where Thomas Bilson, who conferred on him the living of Alresford. At Winchester he became the intimate friend of Arthur Lake, then master of St. Cross, and of John Harmar, head-master of Winchester School. In 1610 he preached the sermon ad clerum at the opening of Convocation. When in London he lodged at the deanery of St Paul's Cathedral with John Overall, in whose house he enjoyed the society of Isaac Casaubon, who became a friend; and met Abraham Scultetus, Giovanni Diodati, and Pierre Du Moulin. On Casaubon's death in 1614 Morton had a monument erected to him in Westminster Abbey at his own cost. Among his associates from abroad at a later period were Friedrich Spanheim and Marco Antonio De Dominis.[5]

In 1610 he was nominated to one of the seventeen fellowships in Chelsea College. Preferments then followed: in July of the same year he was collated by Archbishop Tobias Matthew to the canonry of Husthwait in York Minster. In 1615, on the death of George Lloyd, the king nominated him bishop of Chester; his consecration was delayed till 7 July 1616. The ceremony, of unusual stateliness, was performed at Lambeth Palace by Archbishop George Abbot, assisted by the primate of Ireland, the Bishop of Caithness, and others. While the palace at Chester was readied he stayed with Sir Christopher Hatton at Clay Hall, Essex, where he was seriously ill. He had resigned Alresford, but during his episcopate he held the living of Stopford, given him by the king in commendam.[5]

Bishop of Chester

Morton's see was large: Cheshire and Lancashire, the north-western portion of Yorkshire, and large parts of Cumberland and Westmoreland. Lancashire had a Catholic majority and Calvinist minority.[5] Two significant works came out of this period, in which Morton had to deal with local issues outside the grander scope of the allegiance oath controversy to which he had devoted his efforts.[2]

Nicholas Byfield preached in Chester to a congregation including John Bruen.[6] Morton tried to reason with his Puritanical clergy. His tenure as bishop coincided with a watershed moment in opinion, namely a changed view of the relative threat of Catholicism and Protestant nonconformity.[7]

Sabbatarianism was at issue, with an attempt by the magistrates to suppress the diversions customary on Sunday afternoons. King James asked advice from Morton, who recommended:

James based the substance of his subsequent declaration on these points; but his publication of the Book of Sports in the following year led to new disturbances. Morton's own dealings with nonconformist clergy were marked by moderation.[5]

Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry

In 1618, on John Overall's translation to Norwich, Morton became Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry, on the recommendation of Lancelot Andrewes. With the bishopric he held the living of Clifton Camville in commendam. In 1621, he served on the commission for granting a dispensation to Archbishop Abbot for the casual homicide of a keeper in Bramshill Park.[5]

In February 1626, he took a leading part in the York House Conference on Richard Montagu's incriminated books. With John Preston, Morton did his best to impugn the statements contained in them on predestination and freewill.[5]

Bishop of Durham

In June 1632, Morton became bishop of Durham, which he held by canonical right until his death in 1659, although parliament claimed to deprive him of it in 1647. Complaints were later made against him to the House of Commons by his prebendary, Peter Smart. He showed forbearance in claiming the rights of the palatinate, was liberal in almsgiving, and maintained poor scholars at the universities. On the king's journey to Scotland in 1633, Charles I and his suite were received by Morton in princely style; six years later, in May 1639, he again entertained Charles at the beginning of the First Bishops' War. The next year, in the month of August, the Scots crossed the River Tweed, and pushed on to the city of Durham. The cathedral clergy fled, and Morton himself retired into Yorkshire.[5]

Early in 1641 he was in London attending Parliament, and was nominated a member of the sub-committee to prepare matters for the consideration of the abortive committee of the lords appointed on 1 March—the day of William Laud's committal to the Tower of London—to take cognisance of innovations in religion. In the following December a mob threatened to drag him out of his coach when on his way to the House of Lords. Morton never took his seat in the lords again. Two days later, 29 December, he joined in John Williams protest against the legality of all acts done in the enforced absence of the spiritual lords. For this he and his 11 associates were next day impeached of high treason on William Prynne's motion; and the same night they were all committed to the Tower, with the exception of Morton and the aged Robert Wright, bishop of Lichfield, who were allowed to remain in the house of the usher of the black rod.[5]

After four months' imprisonment Morton was released without a trial, and remained unmolested at Durham House, in The Strand, till April 1645, when he was again brought before the bar of the House of Commons on the charges of baptising the infant daughter of the Earl of Rutland according to the rites of the Church of England, and of refusing to surrender the seal of the County palatine of Durham. He was committed to the custody of the serjeant-at-arms for six months.[5]

On the abolition of episcopacy in 1646 an annual income was assigned to him, but without indications of by whom it was to be paid not being specified. He obtained a sum of £1,000 from the committee at Goldsmiths' Hall, which he employed in paying his debts and purchasing an annuity. In 1648 he was driven from Durham House soldiers, who took forcible possession of it. He then resided with his friends, the Earl and Countess of Rutland, at Exeter House in The Strand; and the passed his time with royalist lay friends. Returning to London on horseback, he fell in with Sir Christopher Yelverton, son and heir of Sir Henry Yelverton. Sir Christopher did not recognise the bishop. To his inquiry who he was, Morton replied, 'I am that old man, the Bishop of Durham, in spite of all your votes;' asked where he was going, his answer was, 'To London, to live there a little while, and then to die.' Ultimately Sir Christopher invited him to his house at Easton Mauduit, ten miles from Northampton. Morton became a member of the family, and tutor to Henry, his eldest son.[5]

At Easton Mauduit Morton held secret ordinations. Sir Christopher died in 1654. The bishop died at there on 22 September 1659. He was buried in the Yelverton chapel of the parish church. His chaplain, John Barwick, preached the funeral sermon. He died unmarried.[5]

Patronage

Morton was a patron of learned men. At the beginning of the First English Civil War, he offered Thomas Fuller a home and maintenance. Isaac Basire was one of the scholars whom he brought forward. Ralph Brownrig, Henry Ferne and John Barwick were among his chaplains. He was a patron of foreign Reformed theologians, whom he received into his house and treated generously. He favoured the work of John Durie for reconciling Protestants. He numbered Richard Hooker among his friends as well as Hooker's biographer Isaak Walton, who wrote of the information he derived from Morton. William Laud was one of his correspondents.[5]

Views

In theology he belonged to the school of James Ussher and William Bedell, and had little sympathy with Laudianism. Richard Baxter speaks of him as 'belonging to that class of episcopal divines who differ in nothing considerable from the rest of the reformed churches except in church government,' and Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon classes him with 'the less formal and more popular prelates'. He was a sincere episcopalian, regarding ordination by presbyters valid in case of necessity, no such necessity however warranting it in the Church of England.[5]

From the moderation of his ecclesiastical views he was at one time well regarded by William Prynne. Edmund Calamy recorded his liberal treatment of Puritans such as John Hieron, Richard Mather, and John Shawe of Christ's College, Cambridge.[5]

His attitude towards the Roman Catholic Church was hostile; he was one of the only three bishops who, according to a statement made to Gregorio Panzani, the papal envoy, by Richard Montagu, were 'counted violently bent against the Papists'.[5] Morton corresponded with Sibrandus Lubbertus on matters concerning anti-papal polemic, and their views were close.[8] Lubbertus was a leading contra-Remonstrant and Morton was one of his significant English supporters in the conflict over the appointment of Conrad Vorstius at the University of Leiden.[9]

Legacy

One of Morton's last acts before his death was to publish a denial that he had in a speech in the House of Lords acknowledged the fiction of the Nag's Head Consecration of Archbishop Matthew Parker. By his will he left money to the poor of the parish in which he died, and his chalice to All Saints, York, the parish in which he was born. He also bequeathed a silver-gilt chalice and paten of large size for the use of the chapel recently added to the manor-house by Sir Henry Yelverton. A codicil to his will contained a declaration of his faith and of his adhesion to the Church of England.[5]

In the 1680s Richard Baxter, who as a schoolboy received confirmation from Morton in Durham, called him "one of the learnedest and best bishops that ever I knew".[10]

Works

He gained a reputation as a Protestant controversialist, and published numerous works against Roman Catholicism, prominent among them being the Apologia catholica (1605) and A Catholicke Appeale (1609).[11]

Morton's major works were:[5]

Other works of the 1590s which have been ascribed to this Thomas Morton were the works of another Thomas Morton, of Berwick and Christ's College, Cambridge. [5]

References

  1. King, Peter (July 1968), "The Episcopate during the Civil Wars, 1642–1649", The English Historical Review (Oxford University Press) 83 (328): 523–537, doi:10.1093/ehr/lxxxiii.cccxxviii.523, JSTOR 564164
  2. 1 2 3 4 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press.
  3. "Morton, Thomas (MRTN582T)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  4. "Thomas Morton (1564–1659)". St John's College, Cambridge.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Venables 1894.
  6. A History of the County of Chester, Victoria County History, pp. 109–112
  7. Richardson, p. 21; Google Books.
  8. Anthony Milton, Catholic and Reformed: The Roman and Protestant Churches in English Protestant Thought, 1600–1640 (2002), p. 399; Google Books.
  9. Peter T. van Rooden, Theology, Biblical Scholarship, and Rabbinical Studies in the Seventeenth Century: Constantijn L'Empereur (1591–1648), professor of Hebrew and theology at Leiden (1989), p. 26; Google Books.
  10. Patrick Collinson (1979). Archbishop Grindal 1519–1583 The struggle for a reformed church. ISBN 0-224-01703-9.
  11. Remains, historical and literary, connected with the palatine counties of Lancaster and Chester. Chetham Society. 1865.
  12. Charles W. A. Prior, Defining the Jacobean Church: the politics of religious controversy, 1603–1625 (2005), p. 48; Google Books.
  13. Peter Lake, Conformity and Orthodoxy in the English Church, c. 1560–1660 (2000), p. 142; Google Books.
  14. Richardson, p. 24; Google Books.
  15. Richardson, p. 34; Google Books.
  16. Richardson, p. 34 note 47; Google Books.
  17. Wilfred W. Biggs, The Controversy concerning Kneeling during the Lord's Supper—after 1604, pp. 58–9, in Transactions of the Congregational History Society vol. XVII, 1952–1955; archive.org.
  18. Suellen Mutchow Towers, Control of Religious Printing in early Stuart England (2003), p. 149; Google Books.

Sources

Church of England titles
Preceded by
George Lloyd
Bishop of Chester
1616–1618
Succeeded by
John Bridgeman
Preceded by
John Overall
Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry
1618–1632
Succeeded by
Robert Wright
Preceded by
John Howson
Bishop of Durham
1632–1646
Vacant
Title next held by
John Cosin
Political offices
Preceded by
John Howson
Lord Lieutenant of Durham
1632–1642
Succeeded by
Sir Henry Vane
(Parliamentary)
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