
The claim that the Bible was 'the Christian's only rule of faith and practice' has been fundamental to Protestant dissent. Dissenters first braved persecution and then justified their adversarial status in British society with the claim that they alone remained true to the biblical model of Christ's Church. They produced much of the literature that guided millions of people in their everyday reading of Scripture, while the voluntary societies that distributed millions of Bibles to the British and across the world were heavily indebted to Dissent. Yet no single book has explored either what the Bible did for dissenters or what dissenters did to establish the hegemony of the Bible in British culture. The protracted conflicts over biblical interpretation that resulted from the bewildering proliferation of dissenting denominations have made it difficult to grasp their contribution as a whole. This volume evokes the great variety in the dissenting study and use of the Bible while insisting on the factors that gave it importance and underlying unity. Its ten essays range across the period from the later seventeenth to the mid-twentieth century and make reference to all the major dissenting denominations of the United Kingdom. The essays are woven together by a thematic introduction which places the Bible at the centre of dissenting ecclesiology, eschatology, public worship and 'family religion', while charting the political and theological divisions that made the cry of 'the Bible only' so divisive for dissenters in practice.
This volume investigates the central role of the Bible in the formation, identity, and cultural influence of British Protestant dissent from the mid-seventeenth to the mid-twentieth century. Editors Michael Ledger-Lomas and Scott Mandelbrote curate a collection of ten essays that examine how dissenting groups utilized the principle of 'the Bible only' to justify their separation from the established church and to shape public life. The work argues that despite the theological fragmentation of these denominations, a unified commitment to biblical authority served as the primary driver for their ecclesiology, eschatology, and domestic religious practices.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this collection as a significant contribution to the study of British religious history, providing a cohesive framework for understanding the diverse dissenting traditions. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the essays and the clarity with which the editors synthesize complex theological and political developments.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2013-01-01
ISBN-10:
0191626732
ISBN-13:
9780191626739
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