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Although Richard Hooker (1554-1600) is now known principally as the
author of the "Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity" in his lifetime the
"Tractates and Sermons" brought him greater notoriety. Hooker's
views on justification, the perseverance of faith, and the
relationship of the Church of Rome to the reformed Church of
England were widely reported, and texts of the tracts were
extensively circulated in manuscript. Thanks to the meticulous
editing of Laetitia Yeandle, Curator of Manuscripts at the Folger
Shakespeare Library, the contemporary impact of these debates can
now be appreciated for the first time. These tracts provide a
unique perspective on the turbulent world of late Elizabethan
theology. In addition, they lay the doctrinal foundations of the
"Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity" itself and--with the excellent
commentary of Egil Grislis, Professor of Theology at the University
of Manitoba in Winnipeg enable us to trace the intellectual
formation of sixteenth-century England's most innovative and
provocative theologian. The volume includes a newly discovered
letter; three newly attributed sermon fragments; and analysis by P.
F. Forte of Hooker's distinctive preaching style.
The journal of Governor John Winthrop, one of the key documents of
early New England history, records the first two crucial decades of
the Bay Colony. Writing in a precise expository style, Winthrop
details the myriad religious and political problems of the new
settlement. The modernized abridgment incorporates about 40 percent
of the text and includes a copy of Winthrop's sermon, "A Model of
Christian Charity." This abridged edition, complete with
introduction and annotations, also modernizes the governor's
spelling and punctuation.
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