WRITINGS OF JOHN BRADFORD MA F


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The Writings of John Bradford, M.A., Fellow of Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, and Prebendary of St. Paul's, Martyr, 1555: Containing letters, treatises, remains (Letters ; Three pieces from Emmanuel MSS., Cambridge ; Confutation of four Romish doctrines ; Hurt of hearing mass ; Meditation on the Kingdom of Christ ; Complaint of verity ; Remains of Bishops Ridley, Hooper, and others ; Index to volumes I. and II


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The Writings of John Bradford, M.A., Fellow of Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, and Prebendary of St. Paul's, Martyr, 1555 ... Edited for the Parker Society; Volume 1


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The Writings of John Bradford, M.A., Fellow of Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, and Prebendary of St. Paul's, Martyr, 1555: Containing sermons, meditations, examinations, &c. (Two prefaces by Bradford, 1548 ; Preface to Melancthon on prayer, 1553 ; Sermons on repentance and the Lord's Supper. &c. ; Godly meditations on the Lords's Prayer, belief, and Ten Commandments, with other exercises ; Private prayers and meditations, &c. ; Meditations from the autograph of Bradford in a copy of the New Testament of Tyndale ; Meditations and prayers from MSS. in Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and other sources ; Five treatises ; Ten declarations and addresses ; Exhortation, 1554-5, and Farewells, 1555 ; Examinations and prison-conferences, 1555


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Inferior Office


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In spite of the centrality of the threefold orders of bishop, priest and deacon to Anglicanism, deacons have been virtually invisible in the contemporary Church of England. 'Inferior Office?' is the first complete history of this neglected portion of theclergy, tracing the church's changing theology of the diaconate from the Ordinal of 1550 to the present day. Francis Young skilfully overturns the widely held belief that before the twentieth century, the diaconate was merely a brief and nominal period of probation for priests, revealing how it became an integral part of the Elizabethan defence of conformity and exploring the diverse range of ministries assumed by lifelong deacons in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Lifelong deacons often belonged to a marginalised 'lower class' of the clergy that has since been forgotten, an oversight of considerable importance to the wider social history of the clergy that is corrected in this volume. 'Inferior Office?' tells the story of persistent calls for the revival of a distinctive diaconate within the Victorian Church of England and situates the institution of deaconesses and later revival of the distinctive diaconate for women, as well as subsequent developments, within their wider historical context. Set against this backdrop, Young presents a balanced case both for and against the further development of a distinctive diaconate today, offering much to further discussion and debate amongst clergy of the Church of England and all those with an interest in the rich tapestry of its history.