8/16
[ stop the slideshow ]

Public Penance

Public Penance.jpg Laying by the heels in the bilboesThumbnailsRyding the wooden horseLaying by the heels in the bilboesThumbnailsRyding the wooden horseLaying by the heels in the bilboesThumbnailsRyding the wooden horseLaying by the heels in the bilboesThumbnailsRyding the wooden horseLaying by the heels in the bilboesThumbnailsRyding the wooden horseLaying by the heels in the bilboesThumbnailsRyding the wooden horseLaying by the heels in the bilboesThumbnailsRyding the wooden horse

The custom of performing penance in public by humiliation in church either through significant action, position or confession has often been held to be peculiar to the Presbyterian and Puritan churches. It is, in fact, as old as the Church of Rome, and was a custom of the Church of England long before it became part of the Dissenters’ discipline. All ranks and conditions of men shared in this humiliation. An English king, Henry II, a German emperor, Henry IV, the famous Duchess of Gloucester, and Jane Shore are noted examples; humbler victims for minor sins or offenses against religious usages suffered in like manner.