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At the beginning of the ‘Puritan’ seventeenth century English monarchs were reluctant to make concessions to those who expected further church reform. Consequently, their objective was to ensure at least outward conformity to the faith and practice of the English church. In this way some of the older church traditions were reintroduced. However uniformity proved to be a vain hope as opinions hardened and resistance mounted first to the monarchy and episcopacy, and later to Parliament and Cromwellian autocracy. Following the Restoration further attempts to enforce conformity were no more successful, and it was recognised that indulgence had become essential. Embryonic denominations and political parties with roots in the Civil Wars and Protectorate (1639-60) had formed independently. Meanwhile within the national church, there were grass root streams dedicated to renewal. Significant contributions were made by deeply spiritual Anglicans. At least some of them were open to the experiential, experimental and expressive religion of seventeenth century Continental Pietism. In succeeding centuries this stream became increasingly influential among evangelical Anglicans.
2017
This chapter surveys the history of the Church of England between the Hanoverian succession and the American Revolution. The religio-political questions that bedevilled the English nation during the 1530s remained live ones during the eighteenth century. What sort of Church should the Church of England be? What should the relation of Church to state be? What should constitute the Church’s doctrinal orthodoxy? Whom should the Church comprehend? What were the bounds of toleration? These questions had not been solved at the Glorious Revolution, so that the story of the eighteenth-century Church of England is the concluding chapter in the story of England’s long Reformation. What ultimately brought that particular story to a close was not Enlightenment secularism but the changes catalysed by war and the fear of relapse into seventeenth-century-like religious violence.
Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2020
Church History and Religious Culture, 2012
“Religiovedenie” (Study of Religion) , 2022
How can the Church of England retain its special place in English life? Will the church remain established by law? The Church of England can move forward only after it has answered these important questions, this essay says. Since the Protestant Reformation of the sixteenth century, and aside from a brief period in the seventeenth century, the Church of England has always been the state church. Its representatives conduct many solemn public ceremonies especially those connected to military commemorations. The church is often present at royal ceremonies also. It provides chaplains to public institutions such as hospitals and schools. Those people who defend continued church establishment usually acknowledge that only a small minority of English persons attend the Church of England’s services on an average Sunday, but these defenders say, the church’s tolerance is its special contribution to English life. That tolerance permeates English society, bringing a peaceful tone and good public order. This benefits all, even those of other religions or of none, the defenders say. This argument has merit, but is tolerance enough to support an argument for continued establishment? Based on tolerance, the argument for establishment resembles the case made by Roman writers for the Roman state’s establishment of pagan sects. That Roman argument was not compatible with the fervor of Christian believers. Their fervor is still incompatible with some discourse about toleration today. All this makes necessary a fuller discussion of English church establishment. This essay contributes to that fuller discussion. Keywords: Church of England, church organization, Anglicanism, English society in the 21st century https://religio.amursu.ru/index.php/en/new-archive/92-articles-en/3-2022/1257-the-structure-of-the-church-of-england
2019
After the Glorious Revolution, the debates cut off, suddenly irrelevant. . . One state could not have two established churches. Each side needed to be absolutely right to justify its claim to truth and therefore to power. Once James left, Catholic liberty to print and plausibility as a theological threat to the Church of England left with him, so that one party could not make its case and the other had no continuing need to do so. (Tumbleson 104‐105)
Prayer Book and Piety in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe, 2023
Before the Reformation the Roman Catholic liturgy comprised the Liturgy of the Word (Gathering, Proclaiming and Hearing the Word, Prayers of the People) and the Liturgy of the Eucharist (together with the Dismissal), but the entire liturgy itself is also properly referred to as the Holy Eucharist. The Mass contained public prayers like the Prayers at the Foot of the Altar or the Penitential Rite, Kyrie eleison ("Lord, have mercy"), Gloria ("Glory to God in the highest"), the prayers said in connection with the scripture readings, Credo ("I believe in one God"), the Nicene Creed, etc. Whereas private prayer also has a place in this faith but in the Mass the public prayers and sacraments are predominant. Reformation leaders wanted to do away with the Roman Catholic Eucharist as a sacrifice or practices like the intercession of the saints, etc. Even though some of the forms of prayer survived, an attempt was made to alter their sense. Unlike Reformation in Europe, in England a middle way was imposed by the English Church after first Henry VIII and later Elizabeth I imposed the Act of Supremacy making themselves the supreme leaders in religion in England.1 Any attempt to understand devotional practices in Europe cannot do without a discussion of the multifarious developments within Protestantism in England and their continuities in New England in the sixteenth and seventeenth century.
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