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The Puritans on Independence
The First Examination, Defence, and Second Examination
Synopsis
The Puritans on Independence sheds light on the rise of new claims by puritans to freedom as 'independence' several decades earlier than modern scholarship has assumed. This critical edition of long-lost English manuscripts provides access to a set of treatises which are the most significant hitherto unpublished texts for understanding puritan debate over this concept of liberty. Although once mis-catalogued as anti-separatist polemic, they in fact document
the presbyterians' clandestine 'First Examination' of Henry Jacob's argument for 'independent' liberty and ecclesiology. It includes Jacob's 'Defence' of his early congregational experiment in response to the 'First Examination'. The volume concludes with the presbyterians' 'Second Examination' of Jacob's
'Defence' in 1620, written several years after the erection of Jacob's independent church in Southwark.
This work provides unprecedented insight into divisions among the godly in England before the public contentions over church government in the Westminster Assembly during the mid-seventeenth century. The introductory chapter traces the development of radical notions of liberty among puritans over the first half of the seventeenth century through to the English Revolution. All this had a lasting impact well beyond the British Isles and the early modern period. The edition will be of interest to
early modern and modern scholars across many disciplines, from history and divinity to English literature and political science.
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What Reviewers Are Saying
Ha and her team have provided a great service in making these texts available to the scholarly community. The documents are transcribed with great care and accompanied by extensive footnotes and images of key passages from the original manuscripts, such as one in which Jacobs critics first use the term independency to highlight the novelty of his position...[This book] will doubtless long be embraced as a key resource for all those who wish to understand this period
of intense theological and political upheaval. * Joseph P. Ward, Utah State University, Reading Religion * The texts themselves are well presented and thoroughly annotated ... In addition to commenting on the condition and layout of the manuscripts themselves, the editors' annotations de?ne archaic terms, provide references to sources mentioned in the text, explain obscure refer-ences and, in the main, help to make the dif?cult source material as readable and accessible as possible. * Matthew C. Bingham, Journal of Ecclesiastical History *