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Seventeenth-century England was a confused world of conflicting
religious thought, made more complex by the tumultuous events of
the English Civil Wars and the Interregnum under Oliver Cromwell.
Puritanism, a thoroughly Protestant off shoot of the Reformation in
England, was to take centre stage in these years, coming to
prominence as a direct result of the conflict that would see the
execution of an English king. It is argued in 'The English
Connection' that Seventh-day Adventism, established over two
centuries later in nineteenth-century America, can trace its roots
back to this distinct form of seventeenth-century English
Puritanism. Dr. Ball explores the connection between Puritanism and
Seventh-day Adventism by examining doctrinal tenets adopted in
England, such as Gospel obedience and the sufficiency of Scripture.
In this way, he dexterously proves the continuity and cohesion of
Puritan ideas from their growth in the early-modern world to the
thriving present-day community of Seventh-day Adventists. This book
will appeal to those with an academic or general interest in
English Puritanism and seventeenth-century England, as well as to
all practising Adventists and members of the wider Christian
community intrigued by the relationship between contemporary
Christian thought and traditional Puritan doctrine.
'The Seventh-day Men' was a title given by contemporaries in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries to an emerging body of
Christians who observed Saturday, rather than Sunday, as the
divinely appointed day of rest and worship. This is an extensively
revised edition of the first fully documented account of the
Sabbatarian movement and how it spread over England and Wales in
the two centuries following the Reformation. Drawing on many rare
manuscripts and printed works, Dr Ball provides clear evidence that
this Christian movement was far more widespread than is often
recognized, appearing in more than thirty counties. The author
analyses the movement by tracking down its origins as far back as
the Celtic tradition, showing its first appearance as 'modern'
Sabbatarianism around 1402, and finally exploring its decline in
the eighteenth century. As the first comprehensive study of the
subject, this book establishes this movement as a significant
strand of thought in the history of English Nonconformity, with
considerable influence on the religious life of the period. The
first comprehensive study of the history of the Sabbatarian
movement in England and Wales, this book is an invaluable source
for church historians and all those interested in the religious
developments of the early modern period.
A new comprehensive study of the rise and development of Christian
Mortalism, also known as Conditional Immortality or Soul Sleep in
England during the Reformation and Post-Reformation periods. The
Author traces the origins of the belief in Continental Reformation
thought, and then in the writings of Wycliffe and Tyndale, and its
growth and development in the writings of many other advocates,
including Hobbes, Overton, Milton, Locke, Edmund Law, John Biddle,
Peter Peckard, Francis Blackburne, among many others, concluding
with the views of Joseph Priestley. In the context of being a
historical study, this book challenges the traditional doctrine of
the soul's innate immortality. Having previously written on English
eschatological thought, Bryan Ball demonstrates that this
alternative view of man's essential nature and ultimate destiny was
held across a wide theological spectrum in English thought for at
least three centuries. While dealing with a subject that is at
times difficult, the book has been written intentionally in a
readable style, and will appeal to a wider audience then merely
academics. The book provides important background information to
the growing interest in the mortalist point of view in contemporary
theological and historical circles. Bryan W Ball was Head of the
Religious Studies Department at Newbold College, England, and
Principal of Avondale College, Australia. Other books by Dr Ball
include: 'The English Connection. The Puritan Roots of Seventh-day
Adventist Belief' 'Seventh-Day Men: Sabbatarians and Sabbatarianism
in England and Wales, 1600-1800' 'A Great Expectation:
Eschatological Thought in English Protestantism to 1660'.
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