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Jansenism and England

Moral Rigorism across the Confessions

Jansenism and England

Moral Rigorism across the Confessions

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Hardback

£110.00

Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISBN: 9780198816652
Number of Pages: 298
Published: 15/03/2018
Width: 16.4 cm
Height: 24.1 cm
Jansenism and England: Moral Rigorism across the Confessions examines the impact in mid- to later-seventeenth-century England of the major contemporary religious controversy in France, which revolved around the formal condemnation of a heresy popularly called Jansenism. The associated debates involved fundamental questions about the doctrine of grace and moral theology, about the life of the Church and the conduct of individual Christians. Thomas Palmer analyses the main themes of the controversy and an account of instances of English interest, arguing that English Protestant theologians who were in the process of working out their own views on basic theological questions recognised the relevance of the continental debates. The arguments evolved by the French writers also constitute a point of comparison for the developing views of English theologians. Where the Jansenists reasserted an Augustinian emphasis on the gratuity of salvation against Catholic theologians who over-valued the powers of human nature, the English writers examined here, arguing against Protestant theologians who denied nature any moral potency, emphasised man's contribution to his own salvation. Both arguments have been seen to contain a corrosive individualism, the former through its preoccupation with the luminous experience of grace, the latter through its tendency to elide grace and moral virtue. These assessments are challenged here. Nevertheless, these theologians did encourage greater individualism. Focusing on the affective experience of conversion, they developed forms of moral rigorism which represented, in both cases, an attempt to provide a reliable basis for Christian faith and practice in the fragmented intellectual context of post-reformation Europe.
Conventions Abbreviations Introduction 1: The Jansenist Critique 2: Transmission into England 3: Translation into English 4: Reception in England 5: Jansenist Augustinianism and the Springs of Pastoral Rigorism 6: Anglican Anti-Augustinianism and the Theology of Holy Living 7: Two Case Studies: Jeremy Taylor on Augustine and Original Sin, 244 and Herbert Thorndike on Jansen and Liberty 8: Popular Asceticism: Antoine Arnauld's Fréquente Communion and Jeremy Taylor's Doctrine of Repentance Conclusion Appendix Bibliography

Thomas Palmer (independent scholar)

Thomas Palmer is an independent scholar.

This important scholarly book is a weight bearing contribution to further work in this area. * Jack McDonald, Augustiniana * ...reading the book is worthwhile. * Geordan Hammond, Wesley and Methodist Studies * [a] fine piece of detective work * Dale K. Van Kley, Emeritus, Ohio State University, Church History * Palmer's book offers a convincing and wellevidenced case for the reappraisal of one of the roots of seventeenthcentury English Protestantism. * William Gibson, Journal Of Ecclesiastical History *