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John Bradford

John Bradford (1510–1555) was an English preacher, reformer, and martyr whose brief but impactful ministry left a lasting mark on the Protestant Reformation in England. Born in Blackley, near Manchester, he received a solid education and initially pursued a secular career, serving as a paymaster under Sir John Harrington during Henry VIII’s wars and later studying law at the Inner Temple in London. Around 1547, a sermon by Hugh Latimer convicted him of a fraud he had concealed for his master, prompting a profound conversion. Abandoning law, he enrolled at Cambridge University in 1548 to study divinity, earning an MA and a fellowship at Pembroke Hall, where Martin Bucer encouraged his preaching. Ordained a deacon in 1550 by Bishop Nicholas Ridley, he became a royal chaplain to Edward VI and a prebendary of St. Paul’s Cathedral, preaching widely across London, Lancashire, and Cheshire. Bradford’s ministry ended abruptly with the accession of Queen Mary I in 1553. Arrested within a month for alleged sedition after calming a riot at Paul’s Cross—ironically protecting a Catholic preacher—he was imprisoned in the Tower of London. There, he continued preaching to fellow prisoners, including reformers like Cranmer, Latimer, and Ridley, and wrote extensively, earning the nickname “Holy Bradford” for his piety and humility. On July 1, 1555, he was burned at the stake in Smithfield alongside John Leaf, facing death with courage, famously saying, “Be of good comfort, brother, for we shall have a merry supper with the Lord this night.” Often credited with the phrase “There but for the grace of God go I,” Bradford’s legacy endures as a symbol of steadfast faith and sacrificial devotion to the gospel.