Gary W. Jenkins - John Jewel And The English National Church The Dilemmas Of An Erastian Reformer
obliterated – at least to his own mind – unity as a prerequisite of true religion, he then proceeds to defend the divisions that ...
divines of Europe, both Protestant and Catholic – seems certain: it was read by both Protestants in Zurich and Catholics in Fran ...
Patristic era a canon, for the ‘they have not’ could in like manner be applied to Jewel and the Church of England. William Fulke ...
Yet if the ancient Church failed as a dogmatic authority for Jewel, they did give him a club by which he could assault tradition ...
which he took the occasion of the letter to inform Scipio, whose acquaintance Jewel had made when he had studied in Padua,^155 p ...
Such matters Jewel treated in his other works, especially in the Apologia, and many of the arguments that Jewel employs in the E ...
councils could not be an ultimate court of authority, they became ancillary in the questions of dogma.^160 But the question of t ...
Calvin’s view, hardly traditional as shall be shown, nonetheless contrasts sharply with Luther’s, who coupled his own opinions a ...
authority over councils, either to convene or guide. For Jewel, it was the ancient emperors who sat over the earliest councils, ...
freedom of the clergy, that the clergy could come or go, were free to discuss and free to act, was entirely absent at Trent. For ...
later quoted Cicero as saying that he only loved Caesar when Caesar sought the good of the republic.^174 This of course was a re ...
provided extraordinary means by which the Conciliarists could circumvent former canonical categories. Jewel knew both his recent ...
was representative of all (omnes), as well as for the necessity of a council convening when matters of the gravest urgency neces ...
peculiar role in English ecclesiastical polity. The Apologiaof necessity had made reference to the place of the godly prince, bu ...
Constantine, Valentinian, Gratian, Theodosius, Arcadius, Honorius, and other godly emperors have done’. Further, ‘God hath given ...
glory in the sight of all the world ... our noble and renowned queen, whom God hath mercifully appointed to rule over us in plac ...
was to strip the papal claims to sovereignty from the pope, and having done this, to enfeoff them to Elizabeth.^196 Jewel’s main ...
We now therefore marvel the more at the unreasonable dealing of the bishop of Rome, who, knowing what was the emperor’s right, w ...
monk’s sole vocation is prayer, the opus Dei. Should the monk fail in piety of what avail were his prayers? The Gregorian Reform ...
Gregory VII.^208 Jewel quotes extensively from all the contemporaries who treat the life of Gregory, both those whose ad hominem ...
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