Alice J. Soulieux-Evans
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Cathedrals, the Reformed, and the Elizabethan Church
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This chapter examines the attitude of Reformed churchmen – both conformist and puritan – towards cathedrals during the reign of Elizabeth. Although various historians, following Patrick Collinson, have demonstrated the strength of a Reformed position on episcopacy in this period, there has been little interest in Reformed engagement with cathedrals. Current scholarship on Elizabethan cathedrals, although highlighting a Protestant cathedral ideal, unwittingly propagates an older view of religious identity, which pits conformist churchmen against puritan opponents. This chapter approaches these Elizabethan debates through a specifically Reformed lens in order to nuance this conformist/puritan dichotomy and demonstrate the Reformed paradigm in which these debates took place. While acknowledging differences, this chapter focuses on this shared Reformed tradition to draw out similarities between conformist churchmen and their puritan counterparts in their engagement with cathedrals; and how such similarities arose from shared Reformed priorities: the centrality of preaching and teaching, godly church government, and a learned ministry. Using John Whitgift’s contributions to the Elizabethan Admonition Controversy in the 1570s as a starting point, it explores how his arguments in defence of cathedrals permeated English Reformed culture more broadly, including in puritan petitions to parliament in the mid-1580s.

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