Jared B. Thomley
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Charity’s assurance
Exhortation and election in seventeenth-century Scotland
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From the onset of the Reformation in Scotland, charity and the rhetoric of reform were inextricably linked. Reformers echoed the critiques of Luther’s theses as they charged Catholic priests and mendicant preachers with the theft of charity from the truly indigent. As in other theatres of reform, one way Scottish theologians sought to distinguish themselves from their Catholic counterparts was through their theological interpretation and practice of charity. Until recently, historiography has accepted these polemical writings as proof of a Catholic–Protestant dichotomy. Drawing heavily on sermonic material, alongside kirk session and city council records, this chapter instead focuses on how early modern Scottish ministers exhorted their flocks to charity. It argues that when confronted with the spiritual needs of their parishioners, ministers articulated a theology of charity that was far more complicated: one caught between doctrinal purity and pragmatic reality. As they sought to offer comfort in assurance, ministers attached the performance of charity to salvation: the very abuse for which they condemned their Catholic adversaries. Thus, this examination serves as a useful case study in the movements of theology from the realm of ideas to that of practice.

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