Book contents
- On Laudianism
- Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History
- On Laudianism
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Laudianism: Where It Came From
- Chapter 1 A Trinitarian and Incarnational Theology
- Chapter 2 Andrewes’ Political Theology
- Chapter 3 Andrewes’ Anti-Puritanism
- Chapter 4 Puritan Politics
- Chapter 5 The Tree of Repentance and Its Fruits
- Chapter 6 Absent Presences
- Chapter 7 The Visible Church and Its Ordinances
- Part II Laudianism: What It Was
- Part III Laudianism: What It Wasn’t
- Part IV Laudianism and Predestination
- Part V Laudianism as Coalition: The Constituent Parts
- Conclusion
- Index
Chapter 6 - Absent Presences
The Role of Predestination in Andrewes’ Divinity
from Part I - Laudianism: Where It Came From
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2023
- On Laudianism
- Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History
- On Laudianism
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Laudianism: Where It Came From
- Chapter 1 A Trinitarian and Incarnational Theology
- Chapter 2 Andrewes’ Political Theology
- Chapter 3 Andrewes’ Anti-Puritanism
- Chapter 4 Puritan Politics
- Chapter 5 The Tree of Repentance and Its Fruits
- Chapter 6 Absent Presences
- Chapter 7 The Visible Church and Its Ordinances
- Part II Laudianism: What It Was
- Part III Laudianism: What It Wasn’t
- Part IV Laudianism and Predestination
- Part V Laudianism as Coalition: The Constituent Parts
- Conclusion
- Index
Summary
This chapter concerns the place of predestination in Andrewes’ own style of divinity. On the one hand, because of the organising role of predestinarian error in Andrewes’ sense of puritanism and of the importance of puritanism as the defining other against which Andrewes constructed his own position, predestination was in some sense central to Andrewes’ thought. But on the other, since presumption was precisely what was wrong with the puritan attitude to predestination, a topic which the puritans thought they could subjugate to their own rationalist cross-questioning, this was an area in which Andrewes affected an extreme reticence. Nevertheless, what looks like an explicitly Arminian account of theology of grace can be teased out of his sermons and assigned a central role in his overall theology, which stressed the collaboration between the grace of God and human effort, the will of God and that of fallen humanity, enabled by Christ’s sacrifice and the ameliorating effects of sacramental grace to help people collaborate actively in their own salvation.
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- On LaudianismPiety, Polemic and Politics During the Personal Rule of Charles I, pp. 93 - 100Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023