In Giles Firmin and the Transatlantic Puritan Tradition, Jonathan Warren Pagán offers an intellectual biography of Giles Firmin (1613/14â1697), who lived in both Old and New England and lived through many of the transitions of international puritanism in the seventeenth century. By contextualizing Firmin in his intellectual milieu, Warren Pagán also offers a unique vantage on the transition of puritanism to Dissent in late Stuart England, surveying changing approaches to ecclesiology, pastoral theology, and the ordo salutis among the godly during the Restoration through Firminâs writings.
Jonathan Warren Pagán, Ph.D. (2014, Vanderbilt University), is Associate Rector at Church of the Ascension in Pittsburgh, PA.
Acknowledgements Introduction
1 âScholarly and Strangely Courteous Controversiesâ: Firminâs Ecclesiastical Identity in the 1640s and 1650s
â1 Firminâs Experience to 1651
â2 Firminâs âInterpendencyâ in the Early 1650s
â3 Growing Presbyterian Identity in the Later 1650s
â4 Sects, Quakers, and the Power of the Magistrate
â5 Conclusion
2 âNor Yet a New-Style Episcopalianâ: Firminâs Writings in the Early 1660s
â1 Laudians, Moderates, and the Problem of Re-Ordination
â2 Gifted Ministers and the Imposition of the Liturgy
â3 The Solemn League and Covenant, Primitive Episcopacy, and Tyrannical Prelacy
â4 Conclusion
3 "Truth and the Lambs of God Must be Regarded": Firmin on Effectual Calling, Faith, and Assurance
â1 The Real Christian in Context
â2 Preparation for Salvation: against Shepard and Hooker
â3 Defining Faith: for and against the Rogers and Perkins
â4 Effectual Calling, Self-Love, and the Glory of Go
â5 Imposing Duties on a âChristian Constitutedâ
â6 Conclusion
4 âWhat Episcopacy Is It You Mean?â Conscience, Schism, Anti-Popery, and the Edward Stillingfleet Debate
â1 Erastians and Latitudinarians against Dissenting Schismatics in the 1670s and 1680s
â2 The Latitudinarians on the Seperation and Schism of Dissenters
â3 Stillingfleet's Polemics in the 1680s
â4 Dissenting Replies to Stillingfleet and Anglican Polemics
â5 Firmin's Position vis-a-vis Presbyterian Dissent
â6 Conclusion
5 âOut of Whose Hive the Quakers Swarmâdâ: Firmin, Federalists, and Anabaptists in the 1670s and 1680s
â1 Henry Danvers, Thomas Grantham, and the Paedobaptist/Anti-Paedobaptist Debate
â2 Of Quakerism, Popery, and the Slippery Slope
â3 Exegetical and Hermeneutical Disputes
â4 The Matter and Form of Baptism
â5 Pastoral Concerns
â6 Conclusion
6 âThe Gospel is a Lawâ: Firmin, Free Grace, and Justification in 1690s Context
â1 The Antinomian Conflict, 1690â1698
â1.1Antinomianism and Polemics
â1.2Antinomianism and Neonomianism in the Polemics of the 1690s
â1.3Free Grace and Justification, 1690â1694
â1.4Richard Davis, Antinomianism, and the Fragmentation of the Happy Union
â1.5Firmin on Justification and Assurance
â1.6Conclusion
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
All interested in the history of puritanism, Stuart Dissent, and the transformation of Anglicanism in the seventeenth century. Keywords: Puritanism, Stuart Dissent, Anglicanism, seventeenth century, ecclesiology, Reformed theology.