JAMES AND CONRAD STORM PRAGUE
Around the time that John Huss was beginning to be influenced by the writings of Wycliffe two young men from England swept through Prague. James and Conrad of Canterbury were young theology students who had spent time at Oxford under the mentorship of John Wycliffe.
Wycliffe’s teachings had revolutionized their thinking and they, in turn, were eager to revolutionize the thinking of any sentient human being within arm’s length of themselves. They came to Prague with one thing in mind: spreading the gospel and throwing down the authority of the Pope, all in a single blow.
It was an ambitious plan and something they undertook with a dramatic flair. Entering the city they immediately made their way into the city center, planted themselves in the most conspicuous corner and like the apostle Paul in Athens, began to invite open debate on the topics of the gospel and the authority of the Pope.
Prague was not ready for this kind of radicalism. The entire city was firmly Catholic in outlook and extremely loyal to the Pope. James and Conrad’s antics soon drew the attention of the authorities and they were arrested and put in prison for a short period of time. The city council hoped that this would shut them up or at the very least compel them to pack up their bags and take their ranting elsewhere. It didn’t do either of those things.