J. B. Lightfoot - the Christian Ministry
Peter Toon - Evangelical Theology 1833-1856
Paul Avis - The Church in the Theology of the Reformers, & Anglicans and the Christian Church (esp. Chapter 15 on Julius Hare)
Henry Wace - Principles of the Reformation
Tyng - Lectures on the Law and Gospel
T. H. L. Parker - English Reformers
W. H. Griffith Thomas - The Principles of Theology
Hooker's - Learned Discourse on Justification
P. E. Hughes - Theology of the English Reformers
J. Atkinson - Martin Luther and the birth of Protestantism
Fitz Allison - The Rise of Moralism
--find these books, read them, circulate them. they represent and document that which has almost entirely been lost!--
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7 comments:
Dear Tom,
I appreciate your additions here, but they sort of run against the main purpose of this list. I wanted to establish that my own theological leanings (away from both Calvin and things Anglo-Catholic) are not alien to the history of the Anglican Communion (the church in which I am preparing to be ordained). That such thinking is historically rooted in the Anglican Church's past is a fact that seemingly few people are aware of, and, so, I posted this list of books that offer creedence to my position.
I dearly love the books you have mentioned, and think maybe we should start a great books list here on my blog, but this is not really the right post for such a list. Can you see where I'm coming from?
Thanks, John
The Rise of Moralism by Allison was particularly helpful for me.
John,
This was a great book list. Tyng was actually St. George's former rector.
Jacob
zSorry: I count Griffith Thomas a Calvinist!!
and what of the others?
I find many of these are very much Calvinist, which I agree with that theology whole heartedly, so thanks for the list. Martin Luther was among some of the greatest of Calvinist.
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