Gary W. Jenkins - John Jewel And The English National Church The Dilemmas Of An Erastian Reformer
thought and creed, as delineated in his sermon, were commensurate with this shift. Prompted by circumstances already cited, the ...
shall endure forever, and also notes that it was delivered in December 1552.^114 As such it was one of the last orations he woul ...
against rhetoric may be seen in his adopting – and in some cases virtual plagiarizing – of some of the arguments and phrases of ...
the end of 1554.^123 Such circumstances may have provided the environment in which Jewel would have, exercising all candor and s ...
signaled that Jewel’s busy but happy Oxford life had drastically changed, along with that of every other Protestant in England. ...
him. Consequently, much of what occurred during Mary’s reign may have had less of an obviously formative influence on Jewel than ...
every expectation of seeing him again soon.^134 No years are listed on these letters, only the calender dates of 15 and 22 Octob ...
faced any reprisals, and it is difficult to think that Jewel was singled out in this regard. Edmund Guest, who played a far more ...
of his grey hairs and empty head.^146 [Smith] now keeps a victualling house and gains his living by a hired tavern, despised by ...
be obtained’,^150 and that the church in Frankfurt now had the privilege of worshiping God ‘in puritie off faithe’.^151 Hardly h ...
temporary liturgy. It is this development that incited Knox and Wittingham to draw up a version of services of the Book of Commo ...
to take the pulpit and repent his subscription, which Jewel did with tears.^161 Humphrey’s description of this elaborates not on ...
events as, also ironically, the Coxians now ordered Knox not to preach anymore.^165 The next day a supplication was presented to ...
and Neale assume, especially as the greatest number of exiles involved at Frankfurt would largely embrace what the 1559 Elizabet ...
This indeed grievously afflicts me and is highly absurd, that discord is springing up among brethren who are for the same faith ...
durable, more vehement: when humanism was falling into disrepute at Oxford, it had only begun to flourish at Cambridge. In its w ...
translator, a gentleman named Brent, obtained it, is not known, but as Ayre notes, ‘there can scarcely be any reasonable doubt t ...
a close with effective negotiations taking place at Cateau-Cambrésis even as Mary Tudor lay dying. Charles V in 1555 had conclud ...
50 JOHN JEWEL AND THE ENGLISH NATIONAL CHURCH found in them. Jewel, now almost 36, reentered his former world of ecclesiastical ...
CHAPTER TWO 2 Jewel and the struggle for the Elizabethan Church Elizabethan Church The prospects and duties of an Elizabethan Pr ...
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