John Reeve (religious leader)

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John Reeve (1608–1658) was an English plebeian prophet who believed the voice of God had instructed him to found a Third Commission in preparation for the last days of earth. This commission was third in succession to the Mosaic Law and the gospel of Christ Jesus.

He and his followers came to be known as

Two Witnesses foretold in the Book of Revelation
chapter 11 verse 3. They are sometimes called “ the Staffordshire prophets”.

Early life

Reeve was born in Wiltshire. His father, Walter, was styled a gentleman but who fell on hard times. As a result, John and his elder brother, William, were apprenticed tailors in the City of London. William was Lodowicke Muggleton's first employer as a journeyman tailor.

Mercurius Politicus (1653) says of John Reeve and Lodowicke Muggleton "only one works and that is Muggleton; the other (they say) writes Prophecies."[1]

"A Transcendent Spiritual Treatise"

A Transcendent Spiritual Treatise was the first Muggletonian book. It is written in the first person singular by Reeve but appears under the names of both Reeve and Muggleton as "the last true witnesses". The book was printed in 1652 with a second, slightly different, print-run the following year.[2] It could not be openly published since it could not be licensed.[3] It purports to be a message from Christ Jesus to the elect by way of his last prophet and is a forerunner to God's reappearance in the skies above earth on the Day of Judgment. It announces Reeve and Lodowicke Muggleton to be the last two witnesses "and suddenly after we have delivered this dreadful message, this God the man Jesus, will visibly appear to bear witness whether he sent us or not."[4] The job of the two witnesses is to declare the mind of God. They are given a power to expound scripture beyond anything that has gone before. Anyone rejecting their commission commits the unforgivable sin against the Holy Ghost. The witnesses shall pronounce such a person cursed by God. The book then proceeds to a number of specific themes.

Establishing the Third Commission

Reeve embarked upon his career as God's chosen prophet by issuing, in 1653, an eight-page pamphlet entitled A General Epistle from the Holy Spirit unto all prophets, ministers and speakers in the world. Reeve pronounced sentence of eternal damnation on two classes of people: those who heard of his commission but despised it, and those who continued to preach the message of the existing churches. Reeve says such ministers are not sent by God. They possess no commission and their opinions are merely their own. "You preach to the people out of the bottomless pit of your own lying imagination, which is the Devil."[12] And perhaps more tellingly, "You know not the Lord Jesus who requires mercy and not sacrifice, who causeth the sun to shine upon the just and unjust."[13]

Reeve was beginning to tread on very dangerous ground. In 1656, James Nayler, a Quaker, was to be convicted of blasphemy after a trial before parliament. "After a debate which reveals the savagery of frightened men, Nayler was sentenced to be flogged, pilloried, branded, his tongue to be bored and then to be imprisoned indefinitely. This was milder punishment than many MPs wanted."[14] Earlier, in 1653, Reeve's General Epistle was rapidly making enemies amongst those who supported Oliver Cromwell's policy of religious toleration as well as those bitterly opposed to it – and for the same reason in both cases. What was the point, the argument ran, of granting toleration to minorities if they then used it as licence to vilify everyone else? Reeve was clearly impelled by a Godly imperative rather than political tact.

Reeve and Muggleton were arrested under the Blasphemy Act 1650, the Transcendent Spiritual Treatise providing the evidence. Reeve was examined by the Lord Mayor of London, John Fowke, on three heads; self-deification, cursing Cromwell and denying the Trinity. Reeve denied all charges. "We own the Trinity more than any Men, both Father, Son and Spirit, are all one Person and one God Christ Jesus."[15] A further charge brought by ministers outraged by the General Epistle was dropped, possibly because of the difficulty of framing a case, or possibly because the minister in attendance was from outside the jurisdiction.[16]

Reeve and Muggleton were remanded to Newgate prison to be tried by jury on 17 October 1653. They were convicted on a single count of denying the Trinity and sentenced to six months in Old Bridewell house of correction. During this period, Reeve's A Remonstrance from the Eternal God (effectively his appeal to Cromwell) was printed and published by Jeremiah Mount and well received. The pair were released in April 1654 to find they had a following. As a result, a number of important letters were written by Reeve during 1654, principally to Rev.

William Sedgwick, an Anglican minister in Ely,[17] to the Earl of Pembroke and to Isaac Pennington the younger.[18] On the face of it, Reeve's letter to these important persons were filled with failure. All three correspondents eventually preferred the Quaker viewpoint. Reading the letters one gets the impression Reeve doesn't much care. He's found the keystone belief for which he has long searched; universal mortality. People die, their souls die with them, the whole universe will soon expire and God has already died. Professor Lamont remarks that most of Reeve's contemporaries would have found this last item disturbingly blasphemous.[19]
It was to provide the subject matter for Reeve's final book, Joyfull News from Heaven, or the Souls Mortality Proved.

Reeve's health never recovered from his prison experiences.[20] From this time, his wife and daughter provided the family livelihood.[21] But his wife died, probably on 29 March 1656. After this, Reeve was a pauper. But he had one great book left in him A Divine Looking-Glass (1656). At the opening of this book it says that all writings come "of divine inspiration or human imagination"[22] So confident was Reeve that only the Commission of the Last Witnesses was of divine origin that he said in a letter of 15 August 1656 to Alice Webb "if the Lord Jesus does not bear witness unto our testimony and make it evident that he has sent us in a few months then you may conclude that there was never any true prophets .. "

Reeve did not see himself as founding a faith so much as announcing imminent events to take place in the skies above London. The record of his prophetic experiences, as given in Lodowicke Muggleton's Acts of the Witnesses, is not naive reportage. Some of its embedded expectations are quite explicit, such as harking back to the Book of Revelation or to the clear parallels with Moses' taking on the first commission. Other references are meant to be felt more obliquely. We are told of Reeve's reluctance to assume his task, implying the matter derived from the will of God, not the pushiness of the prophet. We are told of Reeve's earlier experiences which he had interpreted as being for his personal benefit alone, thus implying he is an old hand who can be relied upon to evaluate such things correctly. The story is framed by the expectations of the times.

Reeve died in July 1658 and was buried in the now-removed Bethlehem Burial Ground (the New Churchyard).[23]

Reevonians

After Reeve's death, Lodowicke Muggleton became the leader of the group as the sole surviving prophet. It is generally agreed that Muggleton introduced one novelty into a faith largely of Reeve's devising. This was the principle that God took no notice of everyday doings in human affairs.[24] Not everyone was happy to accept this innovation. Some people didn't like it because it denied any personal relationship between believer and God. Others didn't like the way it left the prophet all-powerful with no possible appeal against his decisions. As a result, at all times in the faith's history, there have been those who felt they have more in common with Reeve and less in common with Lodowicke Muggleton. So, are there Reevonians?

The relationship between Reeve and Lodowicke Muggleton has been subject to considerable speculation from historians. William Lamont has argued that Muggleton had been the first to experience divine revelations and that Reeve was envious.[25] Christopher Hill, on the other hand, has argued that Muggleton recast the events of 1651–52 after Reeve's death to put himself in a better light.[26] Alexander Gordon may have got nearer the mark with the simplest possible explanation. It was all down to differences of personality. Reeve was a somewhat hot-headed ideologue whereas Muggleton was content with the virtues of a quiet, still people. It might also be a matter of timing. Reeve lived six years in the faith; Muggleton 46 years. The faith had certainly started with the most urgent tidings of apocalypse. As time ticked by and the world remained stubbornly unchanging, something we might call "St Paul's syndrome" may have set in; making it necessary to accommodate this lengthening perspective. Had Reeve lived, he too would have faced the same adjustments, although that is not to say he would have chosen the same solution.

In Reeve's last writings and letters he no longer mentions his fellow witness and his whole tone is of a man who feels himself alone and abandoned. Muggleton's own record of Reeve's death is respectful but detached. It is perhaps significant that whilst Muggleton took steps to look after those who had helped Reeve in his last years[27] there is no suggestion there had been help to Reeve himself.

Sources

Modern knowledge of Reeve derives from three sources. Firstly and predominantly, from Muggleton's autobiographical testament "Acts of the Witnesses" although this was written long after Reeve's death. Secondly, Reeve's own letters and pamphlets in so far as copies survive in the Muggletonian archive. However, Alexander Delamaine's Great Book was not begun until 1682. The tone of these writings is often slanted by Reeve's urgent need for patronage and funds. Lastly, from contemporary commentators, although these may only be retelling gossip and hearsay. Unlike Muggleton, there is no pictorial likeness but Muggleton reports, "He had a fine head of hair, it was black, waving over his shoulders."[28]

By no means all of Reeve's writings survive. Thomas Tomkinson quotes passages from Reeve which can no longer be traced.

References

  1. Mercurius Politicus
    was a semi-official weekly news magazine designed to promote in Parliament the views held by the Independents in the army.
  2. ^ Rev Dr Alexander Gordon of Belfast Ancient & Modern Muggletonians Liverpool: privately printed 1870 p. 5
  3. ^ Underwood Acts of the Witnesses p. 21
  4. ^ which is 14, 15 and 16 February 1652 by modern reckoning. In the old system, the year ended on the March quarter-day. Thus by Victorian times, Muggletonians were celebrating the anniversary of Reeve's experiences on Valentine's day.
  5. Ranter past, it seems that both Reeve and Muggleton had, at some stage, come under the influence of Robins and that the new faith was their psychologically violent reaction against their own earlier involvement. John Robins was a wonder-worker who was imprisoned, recanted and, ultimately, freed by Oliver Cromwell. The address given in the preface of the Treatise for the author is the same address Laurence Clarkson
    was given three years earlier to seek out the libertarian Ranter group My One Flesh: "Mr Mellis, a brown baker, in Great Trinity Lane near the lower end of Bow Lane" Laurence Clarkson The Lost Sheep Found (1660) reprinted 1974 Exeter: The Rota/ University of Exeter p. 25. As the Treatise shows, a great deal of emphasis was originally given to the campaign to bring down Robins but, as time wore on and memories faded, the former association with Robins became embarrassing and dropped out of the picture.
  6. ^ T. L. Underwood Acts the Witnesses p. 150. Generally, Muggletonians reject an older Jewish notion that the reprobate angel is in opposition to mankind rather than to God and his role is to appear as a kind of prosecuting counsel against mankind before God. This view is very clearly expressed in the Book of Job, which is probably originally an Edomite story and accounts for Muggletonian suspicions of that book.
  7. ^ T. L. Underwood Acts of the Witnesses p. 151
  8. ^ The reversal of time back into eternity is an important Muggletonian idea and the turning point begins, not with the birth of Christ or with John Baptist but with Jeremiah and Ezekiel.
  9. ^ T. L. Underwood Acts of the Witnesses p. 154
  10. ^ T. L. Underwood Acts of the Witnesses p. 157
  11. ^ John Reeve A General Epistle reprinted Clerkenwell: R. Brown (no date) p. 2
  12. ^ John Reeve General Epistle p. 7
  13. ^ Christopher Hill God's Englishman: Oliver Cromwell and the English Revolution Harmondsworth:Penguin (1972) p. 176
  14. ^ "The Acts of the Witnesses" p 70
  15. ^ T. L. Underwood Acts of the Witnesses p. 69. At that time, law officers seem to have had difficulty reconciling Cromwell's Instrument of Government with unrepealed Acts of Parliament where these conflicted. In view of the Instrument, it was debatable whether the Blasphemy Act 1650 was still enforceable in cases like Reeve's. Magistrates possibly liked to skirt Cromwell's prerogative carefully. Cromwell was to press exactly this point to Parliament after the Nayler trial asking them by what power they acted, adding darkly, "for the case of James Nayler might happen to be your own case."
  16. ^ T. L. Underwood Acts of the Witnesses gives his dates as 1610? – 1663.
  17. ^ These letters, and one reply to Reeve, were published as John Reeve Sacred Remains Shoreditch: Joseph Frost (1856)
  18. ^ William Lamont Last Witnesses p. 31
  19. ^ William Lamont. "Last Witnesses" Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing 2006 p 29
  20. ^ "Ancient & Modern Muggletonians" p9
  21. ^ Reeve & Muggleton "A Divine Looking-Glass" 5th Edition (1846) Clerkenwell: Catchpool & Trent p 1
  22. ^ This was on a site now occupied by the western end of the Circle & Metropolitan platforms at Liverpool Street tube station.
  23. ^ The idea had originated with Laurence Clarkson.
  24. JSTOR 650583
    .
  25. .
  26. ^ Muggleton organised a generous and discreet collection amongst the faithful to maintain Ann Cakebread and her family. She had been Reeve's helper.
  27. ^ T. L. Underwood "The Acts of the Witnesses" p. 77

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