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40 - Atheist

from Part VI - Intrigue 1579–1580

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Summary

Oxford's erstwhile friends accused him of atheism, Henry Howard, for one, distilling his thoughts into five propositions (LIB-3.6.1; also 3.1/1):

The Trinity a fable / Iosephe a wittollde [=wittol, knowing cuckold] / Nothinge so defensible by scripture as bawdry / Scriptures for pollicye / The Turke only wise who made his owne Alchoran

To this list Francis Southwell adds two more (LIB-3.6.1/1):

what a blessing Salamon hadd for his 3C [=300] cuncubinnes / the Bible only to be to hold men in obedience, and mans devis[e]

Charles Arundel presents a list of his own (LIB-4.2/1):

the glorious Trinitie was an old wives tale and voyde of reason / that he [=Oxford] cold make a better and more orderlie scripture in [six] dayes warninge / that Christ was a simple man / that Iosephe was bothe a cuckckold and a wittold / that nothinge was so defensible by the scripture as bawderie / that he cold never beleve in suche a God as delte well with those that deserveid evell and evell with those that deserved well / that he wuld prove by scripture that after this life we shuld be as yf we had never ben and that the rest was deviseid but to make vs afrayd – like babes and childerne – of owr shadowes.

In yet another list Arundel reports of Oxford (LIB-4.3/5, also 4.4/3):

his most horrible and detestable blasphemy in deniall of the devinitie of Christ, owre Saviour / terminge the Trinitie as a fable / that Iosephe was a wittold, and the Blessid Virgin a [w]hore

Arundel adds that Oxford said these things in Richmond, ‘in the presence of a number as my Lord Winsor, Mr Russell, and Rawlie’.

Such atheism is not so much a principled belief as mere sacrilege – dragging in the mud the most cherished beliefs of the Christian faith. First comes a rejection of the Trinity, whose very incomprehensibility is a test of faith. Next Oxford attacks the historical foundation of Christianity, asserting that Jesus was a mere mortal, his purported miraculous birth a fable, since Joseph was a cuckold and Mary ‘made a fault’.

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Monstrous Adversary
The Life of Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford
, pp. 209 - 212
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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