Reason and religion in late seventeenth-century England : the politics and theology of radical dissent
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Reason and religion in late seventeenth-century England : the politics and theology of radical dissent
(The international library of historical studies, 84)
I.B. Tauris, 2013
Available at 3 libraries
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Note
Bibliography: p. 277-283
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Reason has always held an uncertain position within Christianity. 'I believe because it is absurd',wrote Tertullian in the third century as he dismissed rational thought. For Augustine of Hippo, reason had some merit as a route to faith but otherwise was of limited value, since it could undermine a person's ability to approach God: 'the wisdom of the creature', he opined, 'is a kind of twilight.' In seventeenth-century England, reason had come to mean, most usually, a spirit of free enquiry: the exercise of human intelligence upon some form of truth, whether religious or scientific. The notion of revelation, by contrast, indicated the wider divine scheme within which human existence was situated. Despite the influential writings of Erasmus of Rotterdam - exemplary Christian humanist, whose friendships with Thomas More and John Colet were close - rationality and faith continued to sit uneasily together in the early modern period. Christopher J. Walker here explores the tensions between the forces of reason and revelation within English religion in the volatile period following the English Civil War.
Ranging widely across the ideas of the Great Tew Circle, the Anglican clergymen of the Royal Society, the Cambridge Platonists and dissenters like Paul Best and John Bidle (the 'father of English Unitarianism'), the author shows that the rational thinking of the radical figures of the era tended not to be antipathetic to Christian faith but integral to it. Looking also at developments on the continent, he discusses the impact of thinkers like Arminius, who in the previous century affirmed that anyone - not just the elect - could enter heaven, and Faustus Socinus, who held that reason was a gift of God, human free will was real, and that the doctrine of the Trinity was unsupported by the Bible. Though these dangerous and intoxicating ideas spread to England throughout the seventeenth century, and were certainly influential, the paradox of the English context was that radical religion was often allied to conservative politics, while those who were radical in their politics were usually conservative in their religious doctrines.
In exploring this paradox, and the fascinating intellectual cross-currents which informed it,the book makes an important and original contribution to the history of religion and ideas.
Table of Contents
Preface vii
Acknowledgements ix
Part I : Reason alongside Religion
Chapter 1 'Yet Reason must assist too..' 3
Chapter 2 'When Sin and Son were not' 29
Chapter 3 Radical Reformers: 'He who loves is greater than he who believes' 57
Chapter 4 Re-thinking Faith 93
Chapter 5 'Trinunities, Coessentialities, Modalities...monstrous terms' 111
Chapter 6 A Climate of Repression 133
Part II: The Trinitarian Controversy, 1690-98
Chapter 7 'Then in Christ the Father': A Quaker Puzzle 147
Chapter 8 A Conflict Erupts 157
Chapter 9 Anglicans Disunited 185
Chapter 10 An Oxford Tempest 195
Chapter 11 An Injunction and an Act 213
Epilogue 239
Notes 253
Bibliography 277
Index 285
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