Charitable Hatred: Tolerance and Intolerance in England, 1500-1700Charitable Hatred offers a challenging new perspective on religious tolerance and intolerance in early modern England. Setting aside traditional models charting a linear progress from persecution to toleration, it emphasizes instead the complex interplay between these two impulses in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. |
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Page ix
... exile Strategies for survival and ways of lying : conformity and dissimulation The cohabitation of the faithful with the unfaithful 140 160 162 177 188 207 5 Loving one's neighbours : tolerance in principle and practice Advocates and ...
... exile Strategies for survival and ways of lying : conformity and dissimulation The cohabitation of the faithful with the unfaithful 140 160 162 177 188 207 5 Loving one's neighbours : tolerance in principle and practice Advocates and ...
Page 14
... exiles fervently wished . The Acts of Supremacy and Uniformity and Royal Injunctions declared the Queen Supreme Governor , replaced the Latin mass with a vernacular service at which attendance was made compul- sory , and ordered the ...
... exiles fervently wished . The Acts of Supremacy and Uniformity and Royal Injunctions declared the Queen Supreme Governor , replaced the Latin mass with a vernacular service at which attendance was made compul- sory , and ordered the ...
Page 17
... exile and separatism . The collapse of the Personal Rule and the summoning of the Long Parli- ament unleashed much pent - up feeling against the evil and antichristian institution of episcopacy , as attested by the passionate call 17 ...
... exile and separatism . The collapse of the Personal Rule and the summoning of the Long Parli- ament unleashed much pent - up feeling against the evil and antichristian institution of episcopacy , as attested by the passionate call 17 ...
Page 23
... exile in the Netherlands , under the leadership of John Smyth , John Robinson , William Ames and others ; some , notably Henry Jacob , returned to London to set up semi - separatist congregations which maintained an element of ...
... exile in the Netherlands , under the leadership of John Smyth , John Robinson , William Ames and others ; some , notably Henry Jacob , returned to London to set up semi - separatist congregations which maintained an element of ...
Page 25
... exiles flocked across the Channel , augmenting the ranks of existing foreign Protestant congregations and establishing new ones . These survived the unwelcome assaults on their autonomy by Archbishop Laud in the 1630s and Restoration ...
... exiles flocked across the Channel , augmenting the ranks of existing foreign Protestant congregations and establishing new ones . These survived the unwelcome assaults on their autonomy by Archbishop Laud in the 1630s and Restoration ...
Contents
Fraternal correction and holy violence the pursuit of uniformity and the enforcement of religious orthodoxy | 39 |
The theology of religious intolerance | 40 |
The rise of the Erastian state and the ideal of a national Church | 49 |
The parameters and politics of persecution | 56 |
Spiritual sanctions and corporal penalties | 66 |
Godly zeal and furious rage prejudice persecution and the populace | 106 |
Barbarous behavior and uncivil conduct | 108 |
Ritual and verbal violence | 120 |
The cohabitation of the faithful with the unfaithful | 207 |
Loving ones neighbours tolerance in principle and practice | 228 |
Advocates and arguments | 232 |
Official edicts and political initiatives | 247 |
The tolerance of practical rationality | 269 |
The consequences of toleration | 280 |
Coexisting with difference religious pluralism and confessionalisation | 300 |
Confessionalisation and the European Reformations | 302 |
Incentives for action and occasions for conflict | 129 |
the social profile of the persecuted | 140 |
Living amidst hostility responses to intolerance | 160 |
martyrdom | 162 |
resistance and exile | 177 |
conformity and dissimulation | 188 |
Separation and assimilation introversion and integration | 305 |
The rise of a denominational society? | 315 |
329 | |
350 | |
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Common terms and phrases
Anabaptists Anglican Anti-Catholicism Baptists bishops Calvinist Cambridge Catholic Catholicism Christian Church of England church papists civil Clarendon Code clergy coexistence communities confessional conformity congregation conventicles conviction Culture Davies declared deviance Diarmaid MacCulloch dissidents divine doctrine early modern England Early Modern Europe ecclesiastical Elizabeth Elizabethan enforce English Reformation exile faith Family of Love Fifth Monarchists godly Grell Henry VIII heresy heretics History Huguenot individuals James Jesuit John king later likewise Lollards London Marian martyrdom martyrs medieval ministers monarch neighbours nonconformists nonconformity official orthodoxy Oxford papists parish Parliament passim Patrick Collinson period Persecution and Toleration Peter Lake political popery popish Popular Prayer Presbyterian priests Protestant Protestantism punishment puritan Quakers Questier recusants regime reign religion religious minorities religious pluralism Religious Toleration Restoration Church Revolution Richard sectarian sects separatist seventeenth century sixteenth social society spiritual Spurr statute stranger churches Thomas tolerance and intolerance Tyacke violence Walsham William
Popular passages
Page 5 - Toleration is not the opposite of Intolerance, but is the counterfeit of it. Both are despotisms. The one assumes to itself the right of withholding Liberty of Conscience, and the other of granting it.
Page 36 - Anne Hudson, The Premature Reformation. Wycliffite Texts and Lollard History. Oxford 1988: Derek Plumb.