
Published online:
01 November 2003
Published in print:
08 March 2001
Online ISBN:
9780199869008
Print ISBN:
9780195130485
Contents
Chapter
13 John Hooper (1495–1555): The Birth of the Puritan Spirit
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Pages
100–105
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Published:March 2001
Cite
Steinmetz, David C., 'John Hooper (1495–1555): The Birth of the Puritan Spirit', Reformers in the Wings: From Geiler von Kaysersberg to Theodore Beza, 2nd edn (New York , 2001; online edn, Oxford Academic, 1 Nov. 2003), https://doi.org/10.1093/0195130480.003.0014, accessed 7 May 2025.
Abstract
Had Bishop John Hooper been born in the seventeenth century, he would have been regarded as a Low Church Anglican of a rather Puritan disposition. In the emerging Church of England of the sixteenth century, he was deemed a strong supporter of the theology and practices of the Reformed churches on the continent. He was opposed to the wearing of clerical vestments, and he dismissed the notion of a legitimate place for adiaphora or “indifferent matters.” He was an effective bishop during the reign of Edward VI, but was later martyred by Queen Mary Tudor.
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