Phil D.
ὁ βαπτιστὴς
(This post is related to this thread, which is no longer open for additions.)
I have some acquaintances that browse the PB but are not members, and they sometimes ask me questions elsewhere about some of my PB posts that they see. I decided to respond here so that if others happen to have similar questions they can see my answer as well. I was recently asked about these comments I made in the attachment in this post, particularly the bolded part:
The specific question was whether this was simply the later evaluation of some church historians, or was such a concern actually expressed by any establishmentarians of that era. The simple answer is, both. (Ironically, I often fear I attach too many peripheral footnotes to my writings to the point of distraction, yet when I decide to leave one out, that’s the very point I get questioned on… SMH…)
One contemporaneous expression of this concern is from Robert Sanderson (1597–1663), an evangelical yet high-Anglican Bishop of Lincoln. Sanderson was invited to participate in the Westminster Assembly on account of his learning and piety, but declined since he was a Royalist, who could thus not swear allegiance to the Solemn League and Covenant (all similar to Archbishop James Ussher’s situation). In the following extract Sanderson indeed related a long-held fear among the old church guard that Puritanism would result in other sects also gaining a foothold in England’s religious landscape, and specifically the Anabaptists.
I have some acquaintances that browse the PB but are not members, and they sometimes ask me questions elsewhere about some of my PB posts that they see. I decided to respond here so that if others happen to have similar questions they can see my answer as well. I was recently asked about these comments I made in the attachment in this post, particularly the bolded part:
Even though they were severely persecuted, various Anabaptist groups had widely existed, and in a few cases even flourished on the European continent from the very earliest days of the Protestant Reformation. However, while present, the movement had remained relatively small and obscure in the British Isles. Then, as similarly had happened on the Continent, an unprecedented and increasingly effective opposition to the centuries-old and monolithic establishment state-church began to transpire.
In England’s case, such confrontation was primarily led by presbyterian, along with some episcopal and congregationalist Puritans. This mainstream challenge to the existing power structure, particularly as conceived within the polity of Independency (congregationalism), helped create considerable turmoil, even to the extent of contributing to eventual civil war. This opposition then seems to have materially, if inadvertently helped open the door for the concurrent and remarkably rapid rise of various other non-conformist groups in England, especially the Anabaptists and Baptists.
The specific question was whether this was simply the later evaluation of some church historians, or was such a concern actually expressed by any establishmentarians of that era. The simple answer is, both. (Ironically, I often fear I attach too many peripheral footnotes to my writings to the point of distraction, yet when I decide to leave one out, that’s the very point I get questioned on… SMH…)
One contemporaneous expression of this concern is from Robert Sanderson (1597–1663), an evangelical yet high-Anglican Bishop of Lincoln. Sanderson was invited to participate in the Westminster Assembly on account of his learning and piety, but declined since he was a Royalist, who could thus not swear allegiance to the Solemn League and Covenant (all similar to Archbishop James Ussher’s situation). In the following extract Sanderson indeed related a long-held fear among the old church guard that Puritanism would result in other sects also gaining a foothold in England’s religious landscape, and specifically the Anabaptists.
The Reverend Arch-bishop Whitgift [Archbishop of Canterbury, 1583–1603], and the learned Hooker [a prominent high-Anglican theologian of the same period], men of great judgment, and famous in their times, did long since foresee, and accordingly declared their fear, that if ever Puritanism should prevail among us, it would soon draw in Anabaptism after it.
At this Cartwright [the de facto leader of the earliest presbyterian Puritans], and other the advocates for the Disciplinarian interest in those days, seemed to take great offence: as if those fears were rather pretended to derive an odium upon them, then that there was otherwise any just cause for the same; protesting ever their utter dislike of Anabaptism, and how free they were from the least thought of introducing it.
But this was only their own mistake, or rather Jealousy. For those godly men [Whitgift and Hooker] were neither so unadvised, nor so uncharitable, as to become Judges of other mens thoughts or intentions, beyond what their actions spoke them. But these good men judged right; they only considered as prudent men that Anabaptism had its rise from the same principles the Puritans held, and its growth from the same courses they took: together with the natural tendency of their principles and practices thitherward; especially that one principle, as it was by them mis-understood, that the Scripture was adeguata agendorum regula, so as no thing might lawfully be done without express warrant either from some command, or example therein contained.
The clue whereof, if followed as far as it would lead, would certainly in time carry them as far as the Anabaptists were then gone. But that it was no vain fear, the unhappy event has proved; and justified them: since what they feared is now come to pass, and that in a very high degree.
[Robert Sanderson, Fourteen Sermons heretofore preached..., (London: R.N., 1657), Preface, § xxiii.]
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