Revolution as Reformation: Protestant Faith in the Age of Revolutions, 1688-1832
Essays that explore how Protestants responded to the opportunities and perils of revolution in the transatlantic age
 
Revolution as Reformation: Protestant Faith in the Age of Revolutions, 1688–1832 highlights the role that Protestantism played in shaping both individual and collective responses to revolution. These essays explore the various ways that the Protestant tradition, rooted in a perpetual process of recalibration and reformulation, provided the lens through which Protestants experienced and understood social and political change in the Age of Revolutions. In particular, they call attention to how Protestants used those changes to continue or accelerate the Protestant imperative of refining their faith toward an improved vision of reformed religion.
 
The editors and contributors define faith broadly: they incorporate individuals as well as specific sects and denominations, and as much of “life experience” as possible, not just life within a given church. In this way, the volume reveals how believers combined the practical demands of secular society with their personal faith and how, in turn, their attempts to reform religion shaped secular society.
 
The wide-ranging essays highlight the exchange of Protestant thinkers, traditions, and ideas across the Atlantic during this period. These perspectives reveal similarities between revolutionary movements across and around the Atlantic. The essays also emphasize the foundational role that religion played in people’s attempts to make sense of their world, and the importance they placed on harmonizing their ideas about religion and politics. These efforts produced novel theories of government, encouraged both revolution and counterrevolution, and refined both personal and collective understandings of faith and its relationship to society.
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Revolution as Reformation: Protestant Faith in the Age of Revolutions, 1688-1832
Essays that explore how Protestants responded to the opportunities and perils of revolution in the transatlantic age
 
Revolution as Reformation: Protestant Faith in the Age of Revolutions, 1688–1832 highlights the role that Protestantism played in shaping both individual and collective responses to revolution. These essays explore the various ways that the Protestant tradition, rooted in a perpetual process of recalibration and reformulation, provided the lens through which Protestants experienced and understood social and political change in the Age of Revolutions. In particular, they call attention to how Protestants used those changes to continue or accelerate the Protestant imperative of refining their faith toward an improved vision of reformed religion.
 
The editors and contributors define faith broadly: they incorporate individuals as well as specific sects and denominations, and as much of “life experience” as possible, not just life within a given church. In this way, the volume reveals how believers combined the practical demands of secular society with their personal faith and how, in turn, their attempts to reform religion shaped secular society.
 
The wide-ranging essays highlight the exchange of Protestant thinkers, traditions, and ideas across the Atlantic during this period. These perspectives reveal similarities between revolutionary movements across and around the Atlantic. The essays also emphasize the foundational role that religion played in people’s attempts to make sense of their world, and the importance they placed on harmonizing their ideas about religion and politics. These efforts produced novel theories of government, encouraged both revolution and counterrevolution, and refined both personal and collective understandings of faith and its relationship to society.
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Overview

Essays that explore how Protestants responded to the opportunities and perils of revolution in the transatlantic age
 
Revolution as Reformation: Protestant Faith in the Age of Revolutions, 1688–1832 highlights the role that Protestantism played in shaping both individual and collective responses to revolution. These essays explore the various ways that the Protestant tradition, rooted in a perpetual process of recalibration and reformulation, provided the lens through which Protestants experienced and understood social and political change in the Age of Revolutions. In particular, they call attention to how Protestants used those changes to continue or accelerate the Protestant imperative of refining their faith toward an improved vision of reformed religion.
 
The editors and contributors define faith broadly: they incorporate individuals as well as specific sects and denominations, and as much of “life experience” as possible, not just life within a given church. In this way, the volume reveals how believers combined the practical demands of secular society with their personal faith and how, in turn, their attempts to reform religion shaped secular society.
 
The wide-ranging essays highlight the exchange of Protestant thinkers, traditions, and ideas across the Atlantic during this period. These perspectives reveal similarities between revolutionary movements across and around the Atlantic. The essays also emphasize the foundational role that religion played in people’s attempts to make sense of their world, and the importance they placed on harmonizing their ideas about religion and politics. These efforts produced novel theories of government, encouraged both revolution and counterrevolution, and refined both personal and collective understandings of faith and its relationship to society.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780817393328
Publisher: University of Alabama Press
Publication date: 01/19/2021
Series: Religion and American Culture
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Peter C. Messer is associate professor of history at Mississippi State University. He is the author of Stories of Independence: Identity, Ideology, and History in Eighteenth-Century America and coeditor, with William Harrison Taylor, of Faith and Slavery in the Presbyterian Diaspora.
 
William Harrison Taylor is associate professor of history at Alabama State University. He is author of Unity in Christ and Country: American Presbyterians in the Revolutionary Era, 1758–1801 and coeditor, with Peter C. Messer, of Faith and Slavery in the Presbyterian Diaspora.
 

Table of Contents

Contents Introduction | Peter C. Messer and William Harrison Taylor 1. Pierre Bayle’s Revolutionary Script: Protestant Apologetics and the 1688 Revolutions in England and Thailand | Bryan A. Banks 2. Eleutheria (1698): Cotton Mather’s History of the Idea of Liberty That Links the Reformation to the Glorious Revolution and the American Revolution | Rick Kennedy 3. Presbyterian Confederal Ideology from the Imperial British Constitution to the New United States | Gideon Mailer 4. Old Light Republicanism: Samuel Williams’s Political Theology of Temptation | Peter C. Messer 5. “Conscious of Their Own Idolatry”: American Newspapers, the Suppression of the Jesuits, and American Religious Liberty | William Harrison Taylor 6. Rabaut Saint-Étienne and the Huguenot Fight for Religious Freedom | Katrina Jennie-Lou Wheeler 7. “Under the Claw of an Inraged Lion”: Thomas Bradbury Chandler, Benjamin Hoadly, and the Meaning of the Glorious Revolution | S. Scott Rohrer 8. Redefining Protestant and Catholic Space in Languedoc after the French Revolution | Rebecca K. McCoy 9. “Here Is the Reformation That Is So Much Wanting”: The Times and Travails of Christopher Marshall, Disowned Quaker | S. Spencer Wells 10. Freedom from Bondage, Freedom from Sin: Transatlantic Black Protestantism in the Age of Revolutions | Anderson R. Rouse Conclusion | David Bebbington Notes Bibliography About the Contributors Index
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