182 research outputs found

    Romans Jest at the Protestant Test or How Catholic Missions and Debate Changed Protestant Minds about Toleration

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    Missions And The Challenge Of Conversion

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    How Dangerous, the Protestant Stranger? Huguenots and the Formation of British Identity c. 1685-1715

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    Catholic Parenting in a Protestant State

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    Catholic Parenting in the Protestant State Roman Catholic parents in England after the Reformation had challenging choices to make. They needed to find ways to educate their children in their faith while not putting their control over those children at risk. Protestant rulers were concomitantly concerned that Catholic children be given the chance to embrace Protestantism and to ensure that the next generation move away from Catholicism. Catholic parents attempted to work around the laws regarding education, inheritance and emigration to Catholic countries while not losing control to the state of their children\u27s education and custody. This paper assesses how these tactics changed over time and the extent of the Protestant state\u27s effectiveness in suppressing Catholic parenting of the next generation

    Unexpected Scope for Work: Black Women Doctors and the Seventh-day Adventist Church

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    “The Grand Turk and Inquisitor: Huguenot Immigrants and the Black Legend in 17th Century England”

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    My Adventist Family History: Myths, Oral History and the Archives

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    Traveling Tolerances: English-Speaking Protestants Abroad After the Restoration

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    The debate over whether to tolerate Roman Catholics in England, and what any such toleration should look like, was especially lively after the Interregnum. The Act of Toleration did not, of course, include Roman Catholics, though there was widespread de facto freedom of worship for them after 1688. The scholarship of this conversation about toleration and its context is primarily rooted in conversations about political theology, the development of liberalism, and state formation. This paper begins and investigation into the ways in which travel observations and cultural comparisons rooted in international tourism might have shaped the views of English men and women regarding political tolerance of religious difference. The Netherlands was frequently a point of contrast for those arguing in favor of toleration, while France and Spain served to show how dangerous it would be to allow Catholics to have widespread perchance within England, Scotland and Wales. From time to time Ireland was even brought into the conversation, especially by William Petty. Experiences in Rome shaped some of the protagonists in this debate, for better or for worse. In this paper, I attempt to tease out the ways in which personal experience was parlayed as a legitimate epistemology as the basis for an argument about toleration. Travel provided authority for the writer, as well as the context in which some of their ideas had been shaped. It has long been understood how identity is formed in contrast to an “Other,” but tourists are often looking for what they admire or have in common with their hosts. This sort of sympathetic cultural experience was just as much part of the toleration debate as was the negative contrast
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