The Reformation of the Future: Dating English Protestantism in the Late Stuart Era

In late Stuart England, print genres such as histories and almanacs were happy to put a precise date on the Reformation, but 1517 was not widely memorialised. This was partly because the complex history of English Protestantism meant that different dates for its founding could be canvassed (the arri...

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Main Author: Tony Claydon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut du Monde Anglophone 2017-12-01
Series:Etudes Epistémè
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/episteme/1831
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author Tony Claydon
author_facet Tony Claydon
author_sort Tony Claydon
collection DOAJ
description In late Stuart England, print genres such as histories and almanacs were happy to put a precise date on the Reformation, but 1517 was not widely memorialised. This was partly because the complex history of English Protestantism meant that different dates for its founding could be canvassed (the arrival of Luther's ideas in the 1520s, Henry VIII's 1532 break with Rome, the reforms of Edward VI's reign (1547-1553) and Elizabeth's ecclesiastical settlement (1558-1599); and because this ambiguous past was used as a weapon in contemporary religious battles. While Anglicans tended to point to the settlements under Henry and Elizabeth as their ideal moment in the past, Dissenters and the more radical wing of the church celebrated the reforms of Edward’s rule and efforts by the Elizabethan puritan movement to perfect worship in England from the 1560s. These disputes first prevented a dating consensus emerging, and then convinced those trying to unite English Protestantism that it was counter-productive to be too precise about Tudor history. Particularly after the 1689 Revolution, commentators tried to resolve the issue by placing the Reformation in the future. The idea that reform still had to be completed provided an unfinished objective to unite different strands of opinion. This enshrined the notion of a long Reformation, that was a process – not an event; and helps explain the great spiritual energy of late Stuart Protestantism.
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spelling doaj.art-1927138951294f218b21cccb32b7f5812022-12-22T02:05:11ZengInstitut du Monde AnglophoneEtudes Epistémè1634-04502017-12-013210.4000/episteme.1831The Reformation of the Future: Dating English Protestantism in the Late Stuart EraTony ClaydonIn late Stuart England, print genres such as histories and almanacs were happy to put a precise date on the Reformation, but 1517 was not widely memorialised. This was partly because the complex history of English Protestantism meant that different dates for its founding could be canvassed (the arrival of Luther's ideas in the 1520s, Henry VIII's 1532 break with Rome, the reforms of Edward VI's reign (1547-1553) and Elizabeth's ecclesiastical settlement (1558-1599); and because this ambiguous past was used as a weapon in contemporary religious battles. While Anglicans tended to point to the settlements under Henry and Elizabeth as their ideal moment in the past, Dissenters and the more radical wing of the church celebrated the reforms of Edward’s rule and efforts by the Elizabethan puritan movement to perfect worship in England from the 1560s. These disputes first prevented a dating consensus emerging, and then convinced those trying to unite English Protestantism that it was counter-productive to be too precise about Tudor history. Particularly after the 1689 Revolution, commentators tried to resolve the issue by placing the Reformation in the future. The idea that reform still had to be completed provided an unfinished objective to unite different strands of opinion. This enshrined the notion of a long Reformation, that was a process – not an event; and helps explain the great spiritual energy of late Stuart Protestantism.http://journals.openedition.org/episteme/1831ReformationAnglicanismApocalypticProtestantismChronology
spellingShingle Tony Claydon
The Reformation of the Future: Dating English Protestantism in the Late Stuart Era
Etudes Epistémè
Reformation
Anglicanism
Apocalyptic
Protestantism
Chronology
title The Reformation of the Future: Dating English Protestantism in the Late Stuart Era
title_full The Reformation of the Future: Dating English Protestantism in the Late Stuart Era
title_fullStr The Reformation of the Future: Dating English Protestantism in the Late Stuart Era
title_full_unstemmed The Reformation of the Future: Dating English Protestantism in the Late Stuart Era
title_short The Reformation of the Future: Dating English Protestantism in the Late Stuart Era
title_sort reformation of the future dating english protestantism in the late stuart era
topic Reformation
Anglicanism
Apocalyptic
Protestantism
Chronology
url http://journals.openedition.org/episteme/1831
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