Gary W. Jenkins - John Jewel And The English National Church The Dilemmas Of An Erastian Reformer
Florentine’s part in the controversy with Hooper in which he had enjoined Hooper to conform. Martyr had argued that vestments we ...
even lacking aptitude in theology, the prince still grants others to judge in matters of doctrine only ‘by his authority’. When ...
sentiments that the royal decree made vestments pure, vindicated Parker’s claims for a monarchical, ecclesiastical primacy; and ...
published works. Jewel’s personal letters to Zurich, largely written to Martyr and Bullinger, reveal an individual alternately e ...
condition of the universities, especially his Oxford, in an apparently tragic state both intellectually and morally. In his very ...
made his boast, Jewel asks Bullinger to authenticate his claims. The second point concerns the nature of the 794 Council of Fran ...
Jewel probably would have been horrified to have known that his private letters would somehow be made public. Yet while his miss ...
proclivities of the hotter sorts of English Protestantism. This does not mean that Jewel saw the Zurichers as an ambiguous court ...
both to matters peculiar to Geneva (that is, Calvin’s triumph over the Perrinists following the Servetus affair) and to Geneva’s ...
London bishop sought to deprive him for non-conformity. See Thomas Fuller, The sermons of Mr. Henry Smith ... learned treatises: ...
expressing fear that war alone seemed the outcome of the problems of France. Jewel now echoes Martyr’s assessment of the situati ...
unjust (iniquior) in his indictment, and that the label of preciseness unfairly portrays how Calvin defined Reform. Jewel’s conf ...
vestments had not affected the peace or doctrine of the Church of England; and though on matters of adiaphora some in the Church ...
queen’s chapel. Wretched me! This thing will easily be made into a precedent.’^102 The crucifix in Elizabeth’s chapel showed Jew ...
of a bishop, fully in support of his prince and archbishop’s actions, remained pristine. In his letters to Parker and others in ...
involve a contradiction, for if the abuse had destroyed the use, then ought not Puritan clergy be indulged? For Jewel, this was ...
assessment, though Jewel’s apologetic may only look in one direction explicitly, it nonetheless does assert the foundational pri ...
a prince whose will would support the Church and one whose religious proclivities would not change with the fortunes of politics ...
queen Mary’s days, the faithful brothers of England and Scotland, and devised a most seditious and traitorous book against the m ...
Jewel, who had wished the Scots the best in their fight first with Mary of Guise and then later with Mary Queen of Scots, in no ...
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