Abstract
On the titlepage of his collection of
sermons, The Happinesse of the
Church (1618), Thomas Adams styled
himself “preacher” at St. Gregory’s, London. The
term could indicate puritan leanings, and in the
nineteenth century Robert Southey went so far as
to call Adams “the prose Shakespeare of puritan
theologians… scarcely inferior to Fuller in wit or
to Taylor in fancy.” Adams often used the word
“puritan” pejoratively. Historians, however, have
classified as puritans people who rejected the
term for themselves, just as political
analysts-sometimes justly-classify as “liberals”
or “conservatives” politicians who cavil at these
terms. The problem, as always, is one of
definition, and Adams affords an excellent
opportunity to test the adequacy of our
definitions. Like “humanist” or “republican,”
“puritan” is one of those terms that have come to
have a meaning that transcends the circumstances
in which they originated. I argue that Adams was
not a puritan; he was instead a mainstream
Calvinist episcopalian of the kind so convincingly
described by Patrick Collinson in his Ford
lectures. Nevertheless, an attempt to place Adams
in the spectrum of religious opinion has a value
beyond merely getting one individual situated.
Scholars have contradicted each other in their
placing of Adams, and this analysis, by getting
him right, will throw light on our understanding
of the varieties of Calvinism in early Stuart
England.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献