Fr. 302.40

Communion of Saints - Radical Puritan and Separatist Ecclesiology 1570-1625

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext This thesis is presented with great erudition! and exhaustive citation from a very large number of contemporary works. D.'s scholarship is profound. As a highly specialized st. of a specific aspect of English puritan thought! this book is penetrating! judicious and exhaustive. Klappentext This study of left-wing puritan and separatist ecclesiology in Elizabethan and Jacobean England explores such topics as the relationship of soteriology, eschatology, and puritan covenant thought to ecclesiology; radical puritan and separatist ideals about the government of gathered churches; the role of synodical authority, and the relationship between church and state. Brachlow underlines the shared ecclesiastical ideals of both radical puritans and separatist "congregationalists," recognizing that while there were presbyterian as well as congregational tendencies in each tradition, they were by no means always clear or denominationally fixed. Zusammenfassung This study of left-wing puritan and separatist ecclesiology in Elizabethan and Jacobean England explores several major ecclesial motifs, including the relationship of soteriology, eschatology, and puritan covenant thought to ecclesiology; radical puritan and separatist ideals about the government of gathered churches; the role of synodical authority; and the relationship between church and state. Instead of looking at pre-revolutionary dissent in terms of two distinct ecclesiological categories of radical puritan `presbyterians' and separatist `congregationalists', the author underlines the shared ecclesiological ideals of both traditions. While recognizing that there were presbyterian as well as congregational tendencies within each of the two movements, he argues that they were by no means always clear, nor denominationally fixed. It was an ecclesiology still in its infancy, largely untested by the moulding of long-standing, unhindered practice, and bearing within itself the possibilities of development in more than one direction. For this reason, radical puritan polity would prove to be a rich and many-layered source, providing an ideology that could be manipulated by both Independents and Presbyterians for historical support of their respective polities, when denominationalism began in the mid- seventeenth century....

Product details

Authors Stephen Brachlow, Stephen (Professor of Church History and Brachlow
Publisher Oxford University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 17.11.1988
 
EAN 9780198267263
ISBN 978-0-19-826726-3
No. of pages 304
Series Oxford Theological Monographs
Oxford Theological Monographs
Oxford Theology and Religion M
Subject Humanities, art, music > Religion/theology > Christianity

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