Insular Christianity

Alternative models of the Church in Britain and Ireland, c.1570–c.1700

Editors:
Robert Armstrong
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Tadhg Ó hAnnracháin
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Catholicism and Presbyterianism were the most powerful alternatives to the varieties of Protestant episcopalianism, which secured the backing of governments from the 1560s to the 1680s, challenging that order in each of the three insular kingdoms - England, Ireland and Scotland. This book explores some of the complexities of the Catholic and Presbyterian projects in each, focusing on how they sought to gain, or regain, the position of church establishments inclusive of entire populations and exclusive in their claims, the guardians of the spiritual welfare of nations, and how they sought to adapt to the fact that most of the time such aspirations were far short of fulfilment. It studies the changing views on church and state and suggests the value of a comparative approach to the intellectual history of Presbyterianism, one that attends to the reciprocal influence of English, Irish, Scottish and American Presbyterians on each other, and also registers the shaping role of national context. Presbyterianism looked different in each of the nation. In England, most Presbyterians became increasingly liberal theologically, drifting from moderate Baxterian Calvinism towards Arminianism, and then towards Arianism, Socinianism and Unitarianism; in Scotland, they became sharply divided between Calvinists and Moderates; in Ulster, the orthodox remained ascendant, but there was a liberal minority; in America, divisions between revivalists and their critics disguised a basic Calvinist consensus.

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