The Great Ejectment of 1662: Its Antecedents Aftermath and Ecumenical Significance
English


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About The Book

Description: By Bartholomews Day 24 August 1662 all ministers and schoolmasters in England and Wales were required by the Act of Uniformity to have given their unfeigned assent and consent to the Book of Common Prayer of the Church of England. On theological grounds nearly two thousand ministers--approximately one fifth of the clergy of the Church of England--refused to comply and thereby forfeited their livings. This book has been written to commemorate the 350th Anniversary of the Great Ejectment. In Part One three early modern historians provide accounts of the antecedents and aftermath of the ejectment in England and Wales while in Part Two the case is advanced that the negative responses of the ejected ministers to the legal requirements of the Act of Uniformity were rooted in positive doctrinal convictions that are of continuing ecumenical significance. Endorsements: Notwithstanding the need to revise judgment on many events in the seventeenth century the Great Ejectment of 1662 remains a significant dividing of the ways in the history of British Christianity deserving the penetrating analysis that Alan Sell and his colleagues provide for what was designed to secure an Anglican monopoly in national life in the event confirmed a large part of the nation in its Nonconformity thereby giving birth to Britains unique form of Christian pluralism. -John H. Y. Briggs Professor Emeritus University of Birmingham Director Emeritus of the Baptist History and Heritage Centre Regents Park College University of Oxford Author of The English Baptists of the Nineteenth Century (1994) Broad and deep like the Dissenting tradition it surveys this book is a valuable compendium of information and a clear-sighted generous account of the historical significance of Black Bartholomew for the history of English and Welsh Protestantism over three hundred and fifty years. -John Spurr Professor and Head of the College of Arts and Humanities Swansea University Author of The Post-Reformation: Religion Society Politics and Britain 1603-1714 (2006) About the Contributor(s): Alan P. F. Sell a philosopher-theologian and ecumenist is employed in research writing and lecturing in the United Kingdom and abroad. He has held academic posts in England Canada and Wales and ecclesiastical posts in England and Geneva. He is the author or editor of over thirty books of which the most recent are Convinced Concise and Christian: The Thought of Huw Parri Owen (Pickwick 2012) and Christ and Controversy: The Person of Christ in Nonconformist Thought and Ecclesial Experience (Pickwick 2012).
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