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Continental Patterns and the Reformation in England and Scotland
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 February 2009
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The Reformed churches have frequently regarded the Reformation in ways that are contradictory but without seeing the contradictions. On the one hand the Reformation is assumed to be the common and binding heritage of Fundamentalists, the various Presbyterian churches throughout the world, the Southern Baptists, the Taizé Community, even the avant garde of the Second Vatican Council and BonhoefFer's ‘Protestants without a Reformation’. ‘Justification by faith’, ‘the priesthood of all believers’, ‘the Bible alone’ and often ‘no Bishops’ are catchwords, said to be common to all, and somehow entailing each other.
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- Copyright © Scottish Journal of Theology Ltd 1969
References
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page 306 note 2 Quoted Rupp, op. cit., 55.
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page 314 note 4 Calvin sent Knox a copy of a Lasco's Church order with its office of Superintendent presumable as a model. For the various analogies with other reformed models and suggestions, see G. Donaldson, The Scottish Reformation, particularly pp. III-16.
page 314 note 5 In his letters to Cranmer and Edward VI, Calvin nowhere attacks the government of the Church of England as un-Christian. Bucer's writings on the subject would point to something like a bishop in Presbytery. See Collinson, Patrick, The Elizabethan Puritan Movement (London, 1967), pp. 103, 159–60.Google Scholar
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page 316 note 5 The Elizabethan Puritan Movement, Part Four. I am much indebted to this discussion.
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page 318 note 4 The Seconde Parte of a Register, ed A. Peel, 1.148.
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page 319 note 4 See above, p. 313.
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page 320 note 1 See the brilliant discussion of this changing Puritan emphasis in Patrick Collinson, The Elizabethan Puritan Movement. He shows that the central stream in the Church of England was for moderate reform under a reformed pastoral episcopate, and that under Grindal this position had every hope of binding the Church together. But the Queen's dismissal of Grindal wrecked this hope. Whitgift embarked on a repressive and more Erastian policy with the result that the Presbyterian Puritans could now persuade the non-Presbyterian Puritans, who formed the big majority, that the only way to get reform was by means of a Presbyterian polity.
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page 320 note 4 Quoted Collinson, op. cit., 108.
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page 321 note 1 G. Donaldson, The Scottish Reformation, p. 167.
page 321 note 2 When they came to discuss the Form of Church Government, ‘we met in the Committee and the business we did was to collect all the texts where mention of any church officers is’, Lightfoot, ‘Journal of Proceedings of Assembly of Divines’, Works (London, 1824), XIII, 21Google Scholar. In the Form of Church Government, note particularly the difficulty of getting proof texts for the setting up of Presbyteries, the casual attention given to ‘Deacons’, and the way the proof text to see that ministers are moderators of Church sessions is bolstered up by an appeal to expediency.
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page 322 note 2 C. F. Allison, The Rise of Moralism, pp. 194ff.
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