Reformation without end : religion, politics and the past in post-revolutionary England

Reformation Religion and politics Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.) Religion Great Britain e-böcker History
Manchester University Press
2018
EISBN 9781526126955
Cover; Reformation without end; Contents; List of illustrations; Preface; Acknowledgements; Abbreviations; 1 Why then are we still reforming?; Part I: Purity of faith and worship against corruptions: Daniel Waterland; 2 Truth is always the same; 3 Philosophy-lectures or the Sermon on the Mount: Samuel Clarke and the Trinity; 4 Has not reason been abused as well as religion?: Matthew Tindal and the Scriptures; 5 The sacrament Socinianized: Benjamin Hoadly and theEucharist; Part II: The history of the Church be fabulous: Conyers Middleton; 6 I know not what to make of the author.
14 The incendiaries of sedition and confusion15 Neither a slave nor a tyrant: Church and state reimagined; 16 The triumph of Christ over Julian: prodigies, miracles and providence; 17 A due degree of zeal: enthusiasm and Methodism; Conclusion; Index.
7 Conversing ... with the ancients: Rome and the Bible8 Treating me worse, than I deserved: heterodoxy and the politics of patronage; 9 Flood of resentment: assailing the primitive Church; Part III: Neither Jacobite, nor republican, Presbyterian, nor papist: Zachary Grey; 10 Popery in its proper colours; 11 Factions, seditions and schismatical principles: Puritans and Dissenters; 12 The religion of the first ages: primitivism and the primitiveChurch; 13 None of us are born free: self-restraint and salvation; Part IV: The abuses of fanaticism: William Warburton.
Reformation without end conceives of eighteenth-century English history as a late chapter in the nation's long Reformation. Contemporaries thought that the Reformation had caused two bloody seventeenth-century English revolutions.
14 The incendiaries of sedition and confusion15 Neither a slave nor a tyrant: Church and state reimagined; 16 The triumph of Christ over Julian: prodigies, miracles and providence; 17 A due degree of zeal: enthusiasm and Methodism; Conclusion; Index.
7 Conversing ... with the ancients: Rome and the Bible8 Treating me worse, than I deserved: heterodoxy and the politics of patronage; 9 Flood of resentment: assailing the primitive Church; Part III: Neither Jacobite, nor republican, Presbyterian, nor papist: Zachary Grey; 10 Popery in its proper colours; 11 Factions, seditions and schismatical principles: Puritans and Dissenters; 12 The religion of the first ages: primitivism and the primitiveChurch; 13 None of us are born free: self-restraint and salvation; Part IV: The abuses of fanaticism: William Warburton.
Reformation without end conceives of eighteenth-century English history as a late chapter in the nation's long Reformation. Contemporaries thought that the Reformation had caused two bloody seventeenth-century English revolutions.
