Reformation in Britain and IrelandOUP Oxford, 20.03.2003 г. - 686 страници The study of the Reformation in England and Wales, Ireland and Scotland has usually been treated by historians as a series of discrete national stories. Reformation in Britain and Ireland draws upon the growing genre of writing about British History to construct an innovative narrative of religious change in the four countries/three kingdoms. The text uses a broadly chronological framework to consider the strengths and weaknesses of the pre-Reformation churches; the political crises of the break with Rome; the development of Protestantism and changes in popular religious culture. The tools of conversion - the Bible, preaching and catechising - are accorded specific attention, as is doctrinal change. It is argued that political calculations did most to determine the success or failure of reformation, though the ideological commitment of a clerical elite was also of central significance. |
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Страница xii
... Doctrine 7 The Word Disseminated I The Perils of Idolatry III Preaching and Teaching IV Idols , Words , and Texts 8 Theology and Worship Confessions Doctrine Before the Confessions : Henry VIII's Reign IV Forms of Protestantism : The ...
... Doctrine 7 The Word Disseminated I The Perils of Idolatry III Preaching and Teaching IV Idols , Words , and Texts 8 Theology and Worship Confessions Doctrine Before the Confessions : Henry VIII's Reign IV Forms of Protestantism : The ...
Страница 2
... doctrine of obedience that led him to insist that he and his colleague Hugh Goodacre be consecrated in Dublin according to the new ordinal of 1550. George Browne , the archbishop of Dublin , wanted to use the old text on the grounds ...
... doctrine of obedience that led him to insist that he and his colleague Hugh Goodacre be consecrated in Dublin according to the new ordinal of 1550. George Browne , the archbishop of Dublin , wanted to use the old text on the grounds ...
Страница 3
... doctrine of obedience to the conscience of the prince could take extreme forms . John Foxe cites a remarkable speech by the chronicler Edward Hall to the 1539 parliament , in which he asserts the duty of subjects to obey their prince in ...
... doctrine of obedience to the conscience of the prince could take extreme forms . John Foxe cites a remarkable speech by the chronicler Edward Hall to the 1539 parliament , in which he asserts the duty of subjects to obey their prince in ...
Страница 6
... doctrine combined with good discip- line . ' For doctrine without discipline and restraint of vices maketh dissol- ute hearers . And on the other side discipline without doctrine maketh either hypocrites or else desperate doers.21 The ...
... doctrine combined with good discip- line . ' For doctrine without discipline and restraint of vices maketh dissol- ute hearers . And on the other side discipline without doctrine maketh either hypocrites or else desperate doers.21 The ...
Страница 20
... doctrine of papal supremacy met with no direct challenge from British theologians in the early sixteenth century . Zealous support of full claims of papal plenitude of power , however , was quite another matter in the period before ...
... doctrine of papal supremacy met with no direct challenge from British theologians in the early sixteenth century . Zealous support of full claims of papal plenitude of power , however , was quite another matter in the period before ...
Съдържание
1 | |
13 | |
The Coming of Reformation | 113 |
Word and Doctrine | 255 |
Reformations Established and Contested | 351 |
Bibliography | 485 |
Index | 537 |
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Archbishop Articles authority behaviour belief Bible bishops British Cambridge Catholic Christ church courts clergy clerical Collinson communion congregations council Cranmer Cromwell crown Culture debate Diocese discipline dissolution divine doctrine Dublin Early Modern ecclesiastical Edinburgh Edward Edwardian Elizabeth Elizabethan England English Reformation episcopal Eucharist evangelical example faith Foxe Gaelic Gardiner godly Henrician Henry VIII Henry's heresy historians History holy Hooker images Ireland Irish James John John Bale John Knox king Kirk Knox laity late medieval Lollards London Lord MacCulloch Marian Mary ministers Oxford papacy papal parish parishioners Parliament parochial political popular Prayer Book preachers preaching prelates priests Protestant Protestant Reformation Protestantism Puritan Reginald Pole reign Religion religious change Rome royal sacrament Scotland Scots Scots Confession Scottish Reformation Scripture secular sermon significant sixteenth century Society spiritual St Andrews Stephen Gardiner theology Thomas Thomas Cranmer tion traditional Tudor vols Wales Welsh Whitgift William worship
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Страница 338 - Call his name Lo-ammi : for ye are not my people, and I will not be your God.
Страница 320 - Declaration of such true articles as George Joye hath gone about to confute as false (1546), and Joye countered with The refutation of the byshop of Winchesters derk declaration of his false articles (1546).
Страница 30 - that shall it not. We are so much bounden unto the See of Rome that we cannot do too much honour unto it.
Страница 299 - Yea, would God that our minstrels had none other thing to play upon, neither our carters and ploughmen other thing to whistle upon, save psalms, hymns, and such godly songs as David is occupied withal! And if women, sitting at their rocks, or spinning at the wheels, had none other songs to pass their time withal, than such as Moses...
Страница 99 - For else what made the people to run from their seats to the altar, and from altar to altar, and from sacring, as they called it, to sacring, peeping, tooting, and gazing at that thing which the priest held up in his hands...
Страница 269 - Alas, Gossip, what shall we now do at church, since all the saints are- taken away, since all the goodly sights we were wont to have are gone, since we cannot hear the like piping, singing, chanting, and playing upon the organs, that we could before?