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The Convocation of 1710: an Anglican attempt at counter-revolution

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 March 2010

Cuming
Affiliation:
Pädagogische Akademie, Graz, Austria
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Summary

The Revolution of 1688 began for the clergy of the Church of England an era of grave crisis. It was not merely that the deposition of James II had posed for many of them a critical question of conscience. More serious were the effects of the Toleration Act of 1689 which quickly showed themselves in diminished attendances at church, and in a marked decline in the authority and status of the parish priest. By its literal provisions the act permitted dissenters a bare liberty to worship in their own way; but, as interpreted by successive administrations and by the great majority of the laity, it effected an ecclesiastical revolution. Although various statutes required all Englishmen to attend their parish-church each Sunday, and though the act merely permitted them to go to a meeting-house instead, it was widely held after 1689 that church-attendance was voluntary. The ecclesiastical courts continued to exercise their traditional jurisdiction in matrimonial, probate, and faculty causes, and over the clergy; but their coercive authority over the morals and religious duties of the laity became virtually impossible to enforce. Likewise the Toleration Act gave no permission for dissenting education, but bishops found legal obstacles put in their way when they tried to assert their right to license all schools and teachers. In 1695 the official censorship of books was allowed to lapse and, though it remained hazardous to libel ministers of the Crown, it became to all intents allowable to defame the ministers of God and to deride orthodox religious formulations.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1970

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