The Boxmaker's Revenge: 'orthodoxy', 'heterodoxy', and the Politics of the Parish in Early Stuart LondonBy narrating a protracted and frequently bizarre altercation between a London minister and a member of his flock, this book provides a vivid picture of puritanism at the parish level in early Stuart England. On February 11, 1627, Stephen Denison preached a sermon that violently denounced an erstwhile boxmaker, John Etherington, as a heretic, a sect master, and an Anabaptist. The accused stood before Denison and then was returned to prison, where he languished for another three years. Denison published his denunciation later that year under the title The White Wolf. By the 1630s, however, Denison himself was in trouble with the same Court of High Commission that had sentenced Etherington. Denison was deprived of his living after being denounced by parishioners who resented his irascible temper, his harsh pulpit style, and his belittling of their church activities. Then, in 1641, Etherington came back to haunt Denison when, taking advantage of the collapse of censorship, the boxmaker heatedly replied in print to the accusations made against him fourteen years before. The book places this dispute in the multiple social, cultural, and political contexts necessary to understand it. What forces and what ideological and personal trajectories brought these two men into conflict? What issues did the dispute raise and what do they tell us about the religious history of early Stuart England? The story of Denison and Etherington provides an example, almost unique before 1640, of the interaction between a minister and a parishioner. We also gain a portrait of an arena of lay activities and at least potentially heterodox doctrinal debate in puritan circles. The author challenges the bad name that polemic has acquired of late among scholars by using overtly polemical sources, arguing that polemical intensity allows us a privileged glimpse into a world we do not usually get to see. He reads his sources against the grain, collating and comparing them to overcome the biases, silences, and exaggerations that the polemical mode also produces. In the end, the polemical constructions through which the story of Denison and Etherington has come down to us become necessarily a part of the story itself. |
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Contenido
Introduction the occasion | 2 |
The puritanism of Stephen Denison i doctrinal and pietistic underpinnings | 11 |
The puritanism of Stephen Denison ii ecclesiastical forms and political consequences | 53 |
Denison and Etherington or was John Etherington a familist? | 86 |
Another pair of initials? TL HN and the ideological formation of the young Etherington | 120 |
What Etherington really thought the 1620s | 148 |
The London puritan underground | 170 |
William Chibald and the strange case of A trial of faith | 190 |
Doctrinal dispute and damage limitation in the London puritan community | 218 |
Heading for the high ground Denison and Etherington on order authority and orthodoxy | 262 |
The Laudian style and the politics of the parishpump | 298 |
Retrospective Denison and Etherington position themselves for posterity | 342 |
CONCLUSION | 389 |
416 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Boxmaker's Revenge: 'orthodoxy', 'heterodoxy', and the Politics of the ... Peter Lake Vista previa limitada - 2001 |
The Boxmaker's Revenge: Orthodoxy, Heterodoxy, and the Politics of the ... Peter Lake Sin vista previa disponible - 2001 |
The Boxmaker's Revenge: 'orthodoxy', 'heterodoxy', and the Politics of the ... Peter Lake Sin vista previa disponible - 2001 |
Términos y frases comunes
according amongst appear Arminian assurance authority baptism believe bishop called cause certainly charges Chibald Christ Christian church claimed clearly confirmed continued course court deal Denison described divine doctrine doth early effect elect England English errors Etherington explained fact faith familist forms God's godly grace hand hath heart High holy Ibid ideological issue John justifying Laudian least living London Lord means meeting merely ministers nature never opinions orthodoxy outward parish parishioners passage perhaps polemical political position preaching precisely prepared present pulpit puritan radical receive reformed religion repentance sabbath sacrament salvation saving scripture seems seen sense sermon sins social sort spiritual style surely taken things thought true truth unto vestry Walker Wotton
Referencias a este libro
Charitable Hatred: Tolerance and Intolerance in England, 1500-1700 Alexandra Walsham Vista previa limitada - 2006 |
Censorship and Cultural Sensibility: The Regulation of Language in Tudor ... Debora Shuger Sin vista previa disponible - 2013 |