Hugh Latimer and Nicholas Ridley were martyred for the Gospel of Jesus Christ, burning at the stake in the famous English university town of Oxford on October 16th 1555. Latimer was Bishop of Worcester and Ridley was Bishop of London. Both were powerful evangelists and fiercely outspoken critics of the attempt to crown the Catholic Bloody Mary as Queen of England because she was hellbent on killing Protestants. After Mary’s accession to the English throne the two bishops were seized by royal guards and taken to the infamous Tower of London where they shared a cell with Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Cranmer who wrote the Common Book of Prayer that is still used today. Latimer and Ridley were in the dock at the Great Heresy Trials of February 1555. Hugh Latimer bravely stood to his feet and took the opportunity to deliver a blistering defence of the Gospel and the right of every person to have direct access to God through Jesus, not the Pope. There was never any doubt about the verdict, his words sealed their fate and they were both sentenced to burn. As they went to the pyre, the two evangelists knelt together and prayed before they were chained up and bags of gunpowder were hung around their necks. Thomas Cranmer was made to watch and would go to his own death the following year. These were Latimer’s final words on earth “Be of good cheer brother Ridley for tonight, by God’s grace, we light a candle in England that will never be extinguished” Remarkable faith-filled words in the face of such horror. How badly we need the flame of the Gospel that Latimer spoke of to burn across our spiritually stricken nation.







