Presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
Penn State University Press
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
4 “Silence Is a Fine Jewel for a Woman”: Anne Cooke Bacon, Jewel’s Apology, and Reformed Women’s Publications
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction: John Jewel and the Invention of the Church of England 1
- 1 John Jewel’s Early Life: Developing a Community of Reformers 18
-
Part I: John Jewel as Theologian, Polemicist, and Apologist
- 2 The Homiletical Theologian: Jewel’s Self- Identity as Preacher of the Word 31
- 3 John Jewel at Paul’s Cross: A Culture of Persuasion and England’s Emerging Public Sphere 42
- 4 “Silence Is a Fine Jewel for a Woman”: Anne Cooke Bacon, Jewel’s Apology, and Reformed Women’s Publications 63
- 5 “A Crime So Heinous”: The Concept of Heresy in John Jewel’s Apology of the Church of England 79
- 6 An Apology of the Church of England’s Cathedrals 98
- 7 The Jewel–Harding Controversy: Defending the Champion 119
- 8 Defending the Defender of the Faith: The Use of History in Responses to Queen Elizabeth’s Excommunication 139
-
Part II: The Impact and Legacy of John Jewel
- 9 Moses the Magistrate: The Mosaic Theological Imaginaries of John Jewel and Richard Hooker in Elizabethan Apologetics 161
- 10 The Use and Abuse of John Jewel in Richard Hooker’s Defense of the English Church 183
- 11 Redefining Unity in the Jacobean Church: The Legacy of John Jewel 205
- 12 Edwin Sandys and the Defense of the Faith 224
- 13 Defense, Dialectic, and Dialogue: The Role of the Antagonist in the English Church 242
- 14 A Multifaceted Jewel: English Episcopacy, Ignatian Authenticity, and the Rise of Critical Patristic Scholarship 263
- 15 Defending Reformation Anglicanism: The Bishop Jewel Society at Oxford University, 1947–1975 284
- Appendix: The Publications of the Jewel–Harding Controversy, 1560–1640 305
- Selected Bibliography 313
- List of Contributors 331
- Index 333
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction: John Jewel and the Invention of the Church of England 1
- 1 John Jewel’s Early Life: Developing a Community of Reformers 18
-
Part I: John Jewel as Theologian, Polemicist, and Apologist
- 2 The Homiletical Theologian: Jewel’s Self- Identity as Preacher of the Word 31
- 3 John Jewel at Paul’s Cross: A Culture of Persuasion and England’s Emerging Public Sphere 42
- 4 “Silence Is a Fine Jewel for a Woman”: Anne Cooke Bacon, Jewel’s Apology, and Reformed Women’s Publications 63
- 5 “A Crime So Heinous”: The Concept of Heresy in John Jewel’s Apology of the Church of England 79
- 6 An Apology of the Church of England’s Cathedrals 98
- 7 The Jewel–Harding Controversy: Defending the Champion 119
- 8 Defending the Defender of the Faith: The Use of History in Responses to Queen Elizabeth’s Excommunication 139
-
Part II: The Impact and Legacy of John Jewel
- 9 Moses the Magistrate: The Mosaic Theological Imaginaries of John Jewel and Richard Hooker in Elizabethan Apologetics 161
- 10 The Use and Abuse of John Jewel in Richard Hooker’s Defense of the English Church 183
- 11 Redefining Unity in the Jacobean Church: The Legacy of John Jewel 205
- 12 Edwin Sandys and the Defense of the Faith 224
- 13 Defense, Dialectic, and Dialogue: The Role of the Antagonist in the English Church 242
- 14 A Multifaceted Jewel: English Episcopacy, Ignatian Authenticity, and the Rise of Critical Patristic Scholarship 263
- 15 Defending Reformation Anglicanism: The Bishop Jewel Society at Oxford University, 1947–1975 284
- Appendix: The Publications of the Jewel–Harding Controversy, 1560–1640 305
- Selected Bibliography 313
- List of Contributors 331
- Index 333