Gary W. Jenkins - John Jewel And The English National Church The Dilemmas Of An Erastian Reformer
When stopping in Strasbourg on his return, Jewel wrote Martyr that the religious situation in England was proving no less turbul ...
Yet ironically Mary and her cohorts had already largely opened the door, if not to the triumph of Protestantism, at least to a m ...
coming. Few doubted this, least of all the exiles. Even the traditionalist Catholic clergy were anticipating an attempt at a cha ...
his authority without our ordinances and precautions; so that it is idly and scurrilously said, by way of joke, that, as heretof ...
the growing realization that matters would neither resolve themselves with the thoroughness of reformed zeal, nor with the rapid ...
both political and religious dissent from abroad. Against their assertions Jewel would exert the greater part of his intellectua ...
neither the clergy nor the prince owed allegiance to any foreign potentate (that is, the Pope), it is both their prerogative and ...
Polemics with Catholic authors, most notably with the Louvain professor and former Salisbury canon and treasurer Thomas Harding, ...
In fact, except for the Anabaptists, Erastianism was the order embraced by all the Reformers, though all to a relatively greate ...
University upon the occasion of her accession, and having for a brief time been an interim president of Corpus Christi, none of ...
the Abbot of Westminster Feckenham, also a member of the House of Lords, is listed by Jewel, but was not one of the formal debat ...
debate called for written responses to the truth or nullity of the propositions, and then (perhaps) extempore comments following ...
Jewel, contradicting himself in the letter of 6 April, maintained, on the one hand, that the disputation was to pick up where it ...
wherever it may seem to make for edification’,^54 is certainly an expansion on ‘Every particular church hath authority to instit ...
Parkhurst. Sampson also never consented to other matters on which Martyr told him to bend, namely vestments. For his part, Jewel ...
Whatever the private misgivings Jewel entertained about the state of English religion, in the fall of 1559, following his duties ...
This is exactly what he feared about the crucifix, that ‘Me miserum! res ea facile trahetur in exemplum’.^64 The arguments and c ...
Vix credas in re fatua quantum homines, qui aliquid sapere videbantur, insaniant. Ex illis, quos quidem tu noris, praeter Coxum ...
Simultaneous with Jewel’s consternation over the crucifix and his carping about the use of vestments,^72 Jewel prepared and deli ...
Many of the arguments Jewel used in treating the Mass apply to seeming minutiae, matters probably too arcane for the vast majori ...
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