Re-Envisioning Christian Humanism

(Martin Jones) #1

Hooker, on the other hand, order, hierarchy, and obedience, the entire exter-
nal, visible, and coercive apparatus of the church are to be celebrated and
embraced as the institutionalizing and necessary normalizing of the Reforma-
tion in England. Systematic defence of the church’s institutional structures is
the burden of Hooker’s apologetic discourse, and in a very palpable sense it
stands at odds with the extreme polarization of the visible and invisible
communities presupposed by the apocalyptic ecclesiology embraced by his
Puritan critics.^81
The primary function of Jewel’s Erasmian narrative of the Elizabethan
Settlement, therefore, is to fashion a Reformed religious identity based upon
a deconstruction of the key premise of late medieval‘sacramental culture’,
namely the externalized ontological union ofsignumandres significataas
epitomized by the traditional teaching concerning the conversion of substance
or transubstantiation. At the same time, Jewel’s recasting of sacramental
hermeneutics in the Challenge Sermon cannot be portrayed as a simple shift
away from‘enchantment’towards‘disenchantment’, i.e. from the fusion of
sign and thing to their radical separation. The burden of the apologetic
discourse of both Jewel and Hooker is to redefine religious identity within a
reconstructed order wherein the visible physical signs of sacramental and
institutional community and of hierarchical order are linked to invisible
spiritual mysteries through the consciences of individuals. In this fashion,
the English reformers, from Cranmer, Vermigli, and Ridley to Jewel and
Hooker, contribute to a distinctively Erasmian approach to rethinking how
to negotiate the space between the inner, private realm of individual con-
science and the external, public realm of religious and political community
with all of its hierarchical institutions, structures, and coercive demands. In
the course of this reformation of religious identity based upon a thorough
reform of sacramental hermeneutics with its attending‘culture of persuasion’
and revised assumptions of moral ontology, the sense of a modern‘public
sphere’begins to emerge as an indispensable means of mediation between
individual and community. Perhaps more than any other Tudor institution
the outdoor pulpit of Paul’s Cross comes to exemplify this nascent public
sphere in early modern England.^82


Century Apocalypticism, Millennarianism and the English Reformation: From John Bale to John
Foxe and Thomas Brightman(Abingdon: Sutton Courtenay Press, 1978).

(^81) See my article‘Apocalyptics and Apologetics: Richard Helgerson on Elizabethan England’s
Religious Identity and the Formation of the Public Sphere’, in Paul Yachnin and Marlene
Eberhart (eds),Forms of Association: Making Publics in Early Modern Europe(Boston, MA:
University of Massachusetts Press, 2015), 58–75.
(^82) See my‘The Public Sermon: Paul’s Cross and the Culture of Persuasion in England,
1534 – 1570 ’,Renaissance and Reformation/Renaissance et Réforme31/1 (2008), 3–29.
Erasmian Humanism and Eucharistic Hermeneutics 117

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