John eventually bowed to the pressure of Rome, allowing Innocent to appoint the man of his choosing to the seat of Canterbury and, as if that were not enough, also agreeing to pay a Papal tax of 1000 marks to the Papal See. The transaction took place on the 15th of May 1213 and to seal the deal John paid homage to the Papal Legate, Pandulf, by bowing down and laying his crown at his feet. Pandulf, in an attempt to display the power of Rome over the Monarchy of England, is said to have kicked the crown about like a worthless bauble. England was humiliated.
Stunned by the King’s submission to Rome, the Barons of England came together and vowed to protect the ancient liberties of England or to die trying.
Appearing before King John at Oxford in April of 1215 they presented him with a charter detailing their rights and liberties which were to be protected by the crown. They demanded that John sign it and after some protest, he signed the document at Runnymede. The charter in effect communicated to the Pope that England was taking back the kingdom that had been laid at his feet and was revoking its vow to serve the Pope.
Writing about the Magna Carta the prominent historian Wylie states “Magna Carta was constitutional liberty standing up before the face of Papal absolutism and throwing down the gage of battle to it”
The first clause of the Magna Carta states “the English Church shall be free, and shall have its rights undiminished, and its liberties unimpaired” This would become the focal point of John Wycliffe’s early disagreements with Rome, an issue that would rumble on for over a century.
The mechanism that triggered the drawing up of the Magna Carta was a desire to guard the principles of civil and religious liberty, principles that were trampled upon by the authority of Rome. Today this truth is held as self-evident, that the powers of church and state be separated, thus ensuring freedom of conscience for all. It is our privilege to use the opportunities afforded by this separation to spread the gospel now because the tide may turn at any time.