The Church of England and Christian antiquity : the construction of a confessional identity in the 17th century / / Jean-Louis Quantin.

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Oxford-Warburg studies
:
TeilnehmendeR:
Year of Publication:2009
Language:English
Series:Oxford-Warburg studies.
Online Access:
Physical Description:xii, 511 p.
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Table of Contents:
  • The English Reformation and the Protestant view of antiquity
  • The Protestant appeal to the Fathers from Cranmer to Jewel
  • Sola scriptura
  • Patristic orthodoxy
  • Unwritten traditions and the consensus of the Fathers
  • Witnesses to the truth : the Fathers and the Protestant view of church history
  • Augustine, Calvin, and Reformed orthodoxy
  • Becoming traditional : the appeal to antiquity in Jacobean controversies
  • Primitive episcopacy
  • Puritanism
  • Christ's descent into hell
  • The cessation of miracles
  • From distinctiveness to singularity
  • Arminianism, Laudianism, and the Fathers
  • Theological method
  • Augustinism and Calvinism
  • The authority of tradition
  • The Fathers assaulted
  • The survival of Elizabethan theology
  • Theological liberalism and the Fathers : the Great Tew circle
  • An anti-patristic breviary : Jean Daill'e's use of the Fathers
  • The first English fortune of Daill'e's use of the Fathers
  • A patristic identity
  • Puritan scripturalism
  • The extinction of the Great Tew spirit?
  • The restoration church between dissenters and papists
  • History versus enthusiasm
  • Winning the patristic argument
  • The case for tradition
  • Defending the Fathers
  • Hierarchical tradition : the solution of Herbert Thorndike
  • Historical tradition : the solution of Henry Dodwell.