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⋙ Libro Free The English Bible and the Seventeenth Century Revolution eBook Christopher Hill

The English Bible and the Seventeenth Century Revolution eBook Christopher Hill



Download As PDF : The English Bible and the Seventeenth Century Revolution eBook Christopher Hill

Download PDF  The English Bible and the Seventeenth Century Revolution eBook Christopher Hill

The Bible may be the most important book ever written.

But in 17th-century England it was also a radical document.

In this brilliant history Christopher Hill analyses the importance of the Bible to the life of England in the period after it became widely printed and read.

The book, in particular the Old Testament, taught citizens of England how to react to current events and situations in a very volatile era of its history.

As well as looking at the Bible’s influence on literature, chiefly the works of Bunyan and Milton, Hill also describes the concept of Fast Sermons by men of faith and politics.

More than any other nation at the time, England saw itself as the ‘chosen nation’.

‘What caused the English civil war? What brought Charles I to the scaffold? The answer to both questions the Bible. To sustain this provocative thesis, Christopher Hill's maps English intellectual history from the Reformation to 1660, showing how scripture dominated every department of thought from sexual relations to political theory...His erudition is staggering' — John Carey in the Sunday Times

‘Once again, Hill has succeeded in turning upside-down a world of common misconceptions ... The complexity of the relationship between seventeenth-century politics and religion is everywhere in evidence in Hill's book...It is difficult to imagine anyone else writing this book, astonishing in its originality and yet also in the way it makes that originality seem so obvious once stated' — B. A. Cummings in the New Statesman & Society

‘A historical study which deepens and intensifies the peerless work its author has already done in this period...Reading Hill's book, we watch an enormous subject become manageable in the hands of its acknowledged master’ — Andrew Motion, the Observer

‘Hill's discussion...is fascinating, and as usual sure to provoke debate’ — A. C. Grayling in the Financial Times

‘A fascinating study...Hill's work is rooted in that all-embracing 17th-century scholarship of which he is the master, so that his multitudinous references, to say nothing of his allusions to fellow scholars, august or aspiring, are almost as dazzling as the text itself' — Antonia Fraser in The Times

Christopher Hill (1912-2003) was a university lecturer in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century history, and from 1965 to 1978 he was Master of Balliol College. His many books and textbooks include ‘Milton and the English Revolution’ and ‘Liberty Against the Law’.

The English Bible and the Seventeenth Century Revolution eBook Christopher Hill

It was interesting to discover the passages in the Bible that people used as the basis - or only the justification - of their acts and beliefs. If like me you were raised in an American fundamentalist church they will be very familiar.

Product details

  • File Size 1325 KB
  • Print Length 480 pages
  • Publisher Endeavour Media (November 18, 2014)
  • Publication Date November 18, 2014
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B00PUVC94O

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The English Bible and the Seventeenth Century Revolution eBook Christopher Hill Reviews


Hill does a magnificent job examining the impact of vernacular bibles and increased literacy in 17th century England and how reading is fundamental to change, for better or for worse. Although his footnotes are precise and painstakingly formulated, they tend to interfere with the text's fluidity. The frequent quotes are entertaining; however, Hill would have done better to finish his thoughts in his own words. The interruptions make the reading choppy. There is a wealth of information here, though, and I consider this book both a handy reference for Renaissance study and an insightful roadmap to research of pre-modern English theology. The only obstacle between this book and a fifth star is its cerebral approach, making the assumption that its readers are intimately familiar with the period, the environment and the theology of 17th Century England.
Although both the parliamentary and royalist sides (as well as factions within each side) in the English Revolution, the major revolutionary event of the 17th century, quoted the Bible, particularly the newer English versions, for every purpose from an account of the fall to the virtues of primitive communism that revolution cannot be properly understood except as a secular revolution. The first truly secular revolution of modern times. So why would the pre-eminent historian of the English Revolution, the late Christopher Hill, write a whole book about the influence of the Bible in that revolutionary period?

As been noted by more than one commentator there is sometimes a disconnect between the ideas in the air and the way those ideas get fought out in political struggle. In this case secular ideas, or what passed for such to us, such as the questions of the divinity of the monarch, of social, political and economic redistribution and the nature of the new society (the second coming) were expressed in familiar religious terms. That being the case there is no better guide to understanding the significance of the mass of biblical literary articles produced in the period than Mr. Hill. The only objection one can have is that he overloads his argument for the importance of the Bible in the social discourse of the times with more examples than necessary and with a certain redundancy and overlap in the subjects he looks at such as the importance of the garden (of Eden), the wilderness and the hedge in Biblical narrative, the concept of England as a chosen nation and the English as a chosen people and of the decisive weight of the Old Testament as a source of inspiration (and vengeance). However, this is only a minor objection.

In this expansive book Mr. Hill connects the wide spread use of the Bible with the revolution in printing bringing its message to the masses; the effects of the Protestant Reformation on individual responsibility for bible study and leading a moral life; various interpretations of Adam's fall, the consequences of that fall and the possibilities for redemption; the theology of the divine right of kings and the concept of the man of blood exemplified by Charles I; the role of the priesthood of all believers that foreshadow a very modern concept of the validity of individual religious expression; radical interpretations of equality and primitive communism, particularly the work of Gerrard Winstanley ; the Puritan ethic and many more subjects of interests. Here Hill also uses his usual cast of characters that one has met in other works including, Oliver Cromwell, Edmund Sexby, Hugh Peters, John Bunyan, the above-mentioned Gerrard Winstanley, Abizer Coppe, the Levelers, the Ranters, the Quakers and the Fifth Monarchists. And seemingly threading through the whole narrative, John Milton. Read on.
It was interesting to discover the passages in the Bible that people used as the basis - or only the justification - of their acts and beliefs. If like me you were raised in an American fundamentalist church they will be very familiar.
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