Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations and conventions
- Introduction The Restoration, the Reformation, and the royal supremacy
- Chapter 1 Foundations and legacies: the Reformation and the royal supremacies, 1530–1660
- Chapter 2 The crown and the cavalier Anglicans: prerogative, parliament, and ecclesiastical law
- Chapter 3 Spiritual authority and royal jurisdiction: the question of bishops
- Chapter 4 Dissenters and the supremacy: the question of toleration
- Chapter 5 Anticlericals and ‘Erastians’: the spectre of Hobbes
- Chapter 6 Catholics and Anglicans: James II and Catholic supremacy
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 3 - Spiritual authority and royal jurisdiction: the question of bishops
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations and conventions
- Introduction The Restoration, the Reformation, and the royal supremacy
- Chapter 1 Foundations and legacies: the Reformation and the royal supremacies, 1530–1660
- Chapter 2 The crown and the cavalier Anglicans: prerogative, parliament, and ecclesiastical law
- Chapter 3 Spiritual authority and royal jurisdiction: the question of bishops
- Chapter 4 Dissenters and the supremacy: the question of toleration
- Chapter 5 Anticlericals and ‘Erastians’: the spectre of Hobbes
- Chapter 6 Catholics and Anglicans: James II and Catholic supremacy
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In 1660, amidst heated debates over the nature of the church settlement, the Huguenot divine Jean Gailhard published a tract on The Controversie between Episcopacy and Presbytery. In favour of the latter, he attacked the notion, ‘most uncharitable’ to European Reformed Protestantism, that episcopal ordination was necessary for legitimate ministry. Gailhard highlighted the dangers of exalted claims for episcopacy. ‘To prove, their Prelacy to be of a divine Right’, he wrote of English churchmen, ‘is to disown the Kings Supremacy from whom they acknowledge to receive that preferment’. Gailhard was not the only Restoration writer to express such worries, for many Dissenters and their sympathisers insisted that iure divino episcopacy and supremacy were incompatible.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Godly Kingship in Restoration EnglandThe Politics of The Royal Supremacy, 1660–1688, pp. 129 - 162Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011