impaling Sharp) Memoirs of the Secret Services of
John Macky Esq.: John Archbishop of York, is Dr. Sharp, he was a Rector of
St Giles in the Fields, in the Reign of
King James; when, preaching warmly against Popery, he was silenced, and the Bishop of London (
Dr. Compton) suspended from his office, for not turning him out. He was made by
King William Archbishop of York; and
this Queen hath made him her Lord Almoner. He is one of the greatest Ornaments of the Church of England, of great Piety and Learning; a Black Man, and fifty-five Years old. John Sharp was born at
Bradford, the eldest son of Thomas Sharp, a salter, and Dorothy Weddal. His father was a
Puritan who enjoyed the favour of
Thomas Fairfax and inculcated in him
Calvinist and
Low Church doctrines, while his mother, being a strong
royalist, instructed him in the liturgy of the
Book of Common Prayer. He was educated at
Bradford Grammar School and
Christ's College, Cambridge. Sharp was ordained deacon and priest on 12 August 1667 at St. Mary's, Westminster, by special faculty from the
Archbishop of Canterbury,
Gilbert Sheldon. He was until 1676 the chaplain and tutor to the family of
Heneage Finch, 1st Earl of Nottingham at
Kensington House. Sharp was incorporated at Oxford on 12 July 1669 on the occasion of the opening of the Sheldonian Theatre. Meanwhile, he became
archdeacon of Berkshire (1673), prebendary of
Norwich and rector of
St Giles in the Fields (1675), and in 1681
Dean of Norwich. In 1685, Sharp drew up for the grand jury of London their address of congratulation on the accession of
James II, and on 20 April 1686 he became
chaplain in ordinary to the king. However, provoked by the subversion of his parishioners' faith by Roman Catholics, Sharp preached two sermons at
St. Giles's on 2 and 9 May, which were held to reflect on the king.
Henry Compton,
bishop of London, was ordered to suspend him Sharp from his position at St Giles. Compton refused, but in an interview at
Doctors' Commons on the 18th instant privately advised Sharp to ‘forbear the pulpit’ for the present. On 1 July, by the advice of
Judge Jeffreys, he left London for
Norwich; but when he returned to London in December, his petition, revised by Jeffreys, was received, and in January 1687 he was reinstated. In August 1688, Sharp was again in trouble. After refusing to read the
declaration of indulgence, he was summoned before the
ecclesiastical commission of James II. He argued that though obedience was due to the king in preference to the archbishop, yet that obedience went no further than what was legal and honest. After the
Glorious Revolution he visited the imprisoned
'Bloody' Jeffreys in the
Tower of London and attempted to bring him to penitence and consolation for his crimes. Soon after the
Revolution Sharp preached before the
Prince of Orange (soon to be
King William III) and three days later before the
Convention Parliament. On each occasion, he included prayers for
King James on the ground that the lords had not yet concurred in the
abdication of James II. On 7 September 1689 he was named
dean of Canterbury succeeding
John Tillotson. The same year he was appointed a commissioner for the reform of the liturgy and the ecclesiastical courts. Sharp was seen by some as the '
lowest' of the
High Church party and therefore the most fitting candidate to appease the concerns of the
Dissenters. The historian
Lord Macaulay later described him as ‘the highest churchman that had been zealous for comprehension and the lowest that felt a scruple about succeeding a deprived prelate'. The mooted Comprehension Bill was intended to admit within the pale of the
Church a large number of the
Nonconformists was, eventually, allowed to drop. Under
William III and
Mary II he succeeded
Tillotson as
Dean of Canterbury in 1689, and (after declining a choice of
sees vacated by
non-jurors who were his personal friends) followed
Thomas Lamplugh as
Archbishop of York in 1691. He made a thorough investigation of the affairs of his see, and regulated the disordered chapter of
Southwell. He was whole-hearted in his renunciation of loyalty to James II, and a sceptic about the
Divine Right of Kings. In 1701 his friend Lord Nottingham admitted to having the gravest doubts about swearing the Oath of
Abjuration. Sharp replied cheerfully that in his view "Princes hold their Crowns by the same legal right as your Lordship holds his estates, and that they may forfeit their rights as well as you". ==Advisor to Queen Anne==