At Cambridge, he studied law, graduating LL.B. and taking
holy orders in 1519. Finding no satisfaction in the mechanical system of the
schoolmen, he turned his attention to the Greek edition of the
New Testament published by
Erasmus in 1516. During his reading in the Epistles, he was struck by the words of
1 Timothy 1:15, which in English reads, "This is a
faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners; of whom I am the chief." "Immediately", he records, "I felt a marvellous comfort and quietness, insomuch that my bruised bones lept for joy,
Psal. 51:8. After this, the Scripture began to be more pleasant unto me than the honey or the honeycomb; wherein I learned that all my labours, my fasting and watching, all the redemption of masses and pardons, being done without truth in Christ, who alone saveth his people from their sins; these I say, I learned to be nothing else but even, as St. Augustine saith, a hasty and swift running out of the right way". The Scriptures now became his chief study, and his influence led other young Cambridge men to think along the same lines. Among his friends were
Matthew Parker, the future
Archbishop of Canterbury, and
Hugh Latimer. Latimer, previously a strenuous conservative, was completely won over, and a warm friendship sprang up between him and Bilney. "By his confession", said Latimer, "I learned more than in twenty years before". == Preaching and imprisonment ==