Loyalty vs Conscience: Thomas More

Thomas More [1478-1535]


Loyalty to one’s nation is a great virtue especially in times of political turbulence. But what happens when your conscience rebels against your loyalty? Let us look at that problem through the experience of a person who was a brilliant humanist and Lord Chancellor of England. This man whose political stature was just below the royalty had to choose between loyalty to his King and the voice of his conscience.

This was a long time ago, when conscience was priced high – 16th century. Henry VIII was the king of England. Loyalty to the country was not merely expected; it was a rule. Henry had transformed the British monarchy into an absolute power.

When Henry broke from the authority of the Church to secure his divorce and declared himself the Supreme Head of the Church of England, it was not just a political act; it was a demand for personal allegiance. Every subject of importance was required to affirm this new order. In Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall trilogy, Henry VIII is not governed by law, but his personal will. “What the king wants, the king will have.” In such a world, loyalty is no longer fidelity; it is submission.

And Thomas More, Lord Chancellor, refused to submit his conscience.

More had been very close to the King for decades. His loyalty to the crown had never been in doubt. He had successfully navigated the treacherous water of Tudor politics with prudence and integrity. But now, the king’s command encroached upon a territory that More believed no ruler had the right to govern: one’s conscience.

Henry wanted to divorce Catherine and marry Anne Boleyn. The Church wouldn’t let him do that, however, because the reason given by the king did not sanction divorce. Henry parted ways with the Church and declared himself the Supreme Head of the Church of England. The Pope’s authority was repudiated.

Thomas More, the Lord Chancellor, was willing to accept the political part of the oath that every British citizen was required to take. He could bring himself to recognise Anne Boleyn as Henry’s lawful wife and their children as the rightful heirs to the throne. But when it came to religion, the Pope was the Supreme Head, not the King of England. More refused to take the oath. Thus he became a traitor. He was not loyal to his King.

More’s stand was that his conscience was not on sale. The State does not own a citizen’s soul. Religion is a citizen’s personal affair and the government has nothing to do with it. But More did not argue his case. He maintained absolute silence.


More’s silence was the voice of his conscience. Words could not have saved him anyway. His silence was interpreted as resistance and resistance is betrayal in any autocracy. More was imprisoned. And then executed.

His final words have echoed through history: “I die the King’s good servant, but God’s first.”

This is not merely a statement of religious faith. It is a profound articulation of the limits of political loyalty.

Loyalty detached from conscience is servility. Such loyalty transforms individuals into instruments: obedient and efficient but morally hollow. Conscience resists. It questions. It draws invisible lines that power cannot easily erase.

For More, righteousness was more important than loyalty.

We live in a time far removed from Tudor England. But we are no strangers to this dilemma. Institutions still demand allegiance. Leaders still equate dissent with disloyalty. The pressure to conform – to echo, to endorse, to comply – remains as powerful as ever. So the questions persists: Is loyalty still a virtue when it requires the betrayal of one’s conscience?

PS. This post is a part of Blogchatter A2Z Challenge 2026

Previous Posts in this series

Authority

Bigotry

Courage

Dissent

Empathy

Faith

Gaslighting

Hero Worship

Integrity

Joker

Kafka in His Labyrinth

Tomorrow: Majoritarianism

 



Comments

  1. Dear Tomichan, Reading the researched and well-crafted piece on More was a Morning Meditation for me. Primacy of Conscience, respected even by God, beyond all authority is Supreme. I would add in today's context, it is political holiness. Stan Swamy, who was institutionally martyred, say murdered in jail, would be an Icon of Political Holiness. "I die King's good servant. But God's First." Did More bring himself to accept Anne Bolyne as Henry VIII"s legitimate wife and her children. May be you have researched nuancedly.. I thought More opposed the King on the Divorce, as well as Papacy. Loyalty detached from conscience is servility, whether under Steely but autocratic Indira, or the wily, 56'' chested pussy cat Mody. More and his conscience echoes to and against the echo- chambers of today.

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    1. More was willing to accept the political part of the Succession Act like making Anne's children heirs, etc. He had opposed Henry's marriage to Anne, of course, since the Church wouldn't approve of it. Nevertheless, what really irked More was Henry's claim to authority over the Church. More chose to be silent on the issue of Anne. This is how I understand the issue.

      But both Robert Bolt’s 'A Man for All Seasons' and Hilary Mantel's 'Wolf Hall' show More as rigidly opposed to the marriage. So your understanding could be right as well. My knowledge of history isn't so deep.

      We have many contemporary counterparts of More like Stan Swamy you mentioned. Centuries may pass but politics doesn't evolve, it seems.

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    2. Thanks for thd Comments. Hope is a Gift and Grace, that makes the. Humans, the Homo Viator get on ahead. We live in Hope... In and through our Fears...

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  2. Loyalty is a tricky one. Is loyalty more important than your conscience? Who is one loyal to? Yeah, lots of sticky situations with this one.

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    1. There are many people who find it impossible to go against their conscience. Mahatma Gandhi was one such. Thomas More was. Many others too, of course. And quite many of them had to pay heavy price for that.

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  3. That's a personal choice. Being loyal to someone who your conscience tells you is on the wrong track is a difficult choice to make.

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    1. When it comes to politics, the personal dimension dwindles seriously. I think that's why most of our politicians don't have anything of conscience.

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  4. Hari OM
    Lusciously Laid out, the Layers of commitment. Like the difference between Lust and Love, knowing how one is destructive, the other constructive, albeit there's a place for the first if well-tempered and measured with a balance of the second... Too many fall, surrendering to the first. YAM xx

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    1. If only at least ten percent of our political leaders were balanced that way...

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