
Contents
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The Course of the Reformation The Course of the Reformation
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The Slow Germination of ‘Anglicanism’ The Slow Germination of ‘Anglicanism’
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The Battle for the Reformation The Battle for the Reformation
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References References
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2 The Reformation in Anglicanism
Get accessAlec Ryrie is Professor of the History of Christianity at Durham University, England, and editor of the Journal of Ecclesiastical History.
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Published:07 July 2016
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Abstract
The outline of the English Reformation under Henry VIII and the later Tudors is no longer heavily contested. While politically led and slow to take root, it eventually took shape as a decisively Reformed Protestant, even Calvinist, Reformation with a stress on the doctrine of predestination, even though Cranmer retained some traditional trappings in his Prayer Books. Terms such as ‘Anglican’ and ‘via media’ ought not to be applied to the Church of England before 1662. However, that church’s subjugation to the state and the central position it acquired in English national identity helped to sow the seeds of later Anglican distinctiveness. The Reformation’s legacy for modern Anglicans is divisive, and it is used dishonestly, as a weapon, by all sides. This is in part because the true extent of its popularity in its own time remains open to dispute.
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