Andrew Sneddon
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Angels and demons
The mental world of an eighteenth-century Anglican pastor
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This chapter examines Francis Hutchinson's view on those subjects considered unorthodox, vulgar or enthusiastic by his contemporaries, such as astrology, modern miracles and divine inspiration. Hutchinson's view of angels was as orthodox as his view of modern miracles. What Hutchinson regarded as enthusiastic was almost always that which Anglican orthodoxy held to be socially dangerous, vulgar or enthusiastic. The symptom of enthusiasm was thought to be delusion, caused by mental disorder or demonic intervention, or sometimes both together. In the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, Church of England clerics opposed religious enthusiasm, because they believed it posed a direct threat to the established Church and the status quo. The religious threat from enthusiasm stemmed from the fact that enthusiasts claimed to have experienced direct divine inspiration.

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Witchcraft and Whigs

The life of Bishop Francis Hutchinson, 1660–1739

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