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Apology of the Church of England
Discover the Protestants as Genuine Reformers
John Jewel (1522-1571), Bishop of Salisbury, stands as one of the leading architects and perhaps the staunchest defender of the Protestant Church of England. Writing in 1562 when the Elizabethan church was yet young and fragile, and menaced by Catholic foes at home and abroad, Jewel proudly proclaimed the independence of the English church from Roman rule, and the deep catholicity of its reformation.
Appealing throughout to the testimonies of the Church Fathers, Jewel made a powerful case that the Protestants were not heretics or innovators, but genuine reformers, restoring the church to the purity of apostolic practice and proclaiming anew the “faith once delivered to the saints.” Along the way, he refutes common misunderstandings or caricatures of Protestant teaching, and takes the offensive against what he sees as the tyrannical power of the medieval papacy.
The result is a ringing defense of the English Reformation that became an instant classic, integral to the theological self-understanding of the Church of England and to the Anglican Communion that later developed from it. It remains essential reading today for Anglicans—or any English-speaking Protestants—seeking to better understand and articulate their relation to the church’s biblical roots, catholic tradition, and sixteenth-century renewal.
Publication Details
- Publisher: Davenant Press
- ISBN: 978-1949716047
- Publication Date: November 27, 2020
- Pages: 165
- Author: John Jewel
- Price: $22.95
Endorsements
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“Against the undying myth that the Church of England came into being only to satisfy the political ambitions of King Henry VIII, ‘An Apology of the Church of England’ demonstrates that genuine reform was at the heart of England’s split from Rome. The expansive and comprehensive learning of the Bishop of Salisbury, John Jewel, illustrates that the first generation of Reformers in England were fully able to do intellectual battle with their Roman Catholic adversaries. Jewel argues for reform of the inherited Catholic tradition, not because it was wrong in its entirety, but because it had been twisted. We are reminded of why, in its day, the Apology was considered such a tour de force. More accessible than older editions, and featuring enumerated sections and updated footnotes, this modernized edition of Jewel’s ‘Apology’ is long-awaited. I hope it is a bestseller.”
— Roberta Bayer Ph.D., Associate Professor of Government, Patrick Henry College and Former Editor of Anglican Way Magazine
