Shapers of English Calvinism, 1660-1714
Variety, Persistence, and Transformation
Dewey D. Wallace, Jr.
Reviews and Awards
"In this pathbreaking, important study, Dewey D. Wallace, Jr. tracks the ways in which varieties of English Calvinism creatively adapted to the challenges of a period usually and incorrectly associated simply with Calvinist decline. A must read for anyone interested in the religion of the period."--Michael Winship, Professor of History and E. Merton Coulter Chair, University of Georgia
"This is a masterly study by a historian who has thought long and deeply about the history of early modern English theology. Dewey Wallace demonstrates that the death of Calvinism after 1660 has been much exaggerated. He shows how Reformed writers responded to new intellectual challenges by developing different strains of Calvinism, blending it variously with mysticism, 'ancient theology,' evangelical pietism, natural theology and evidentialism, and Church of England conformism."--John Coffey, Professor of Early Modern History, University of Leicester
"Shapers of English Calvinism is a significant addition to scholarship, providing a highly nuanced perspective on a series of significant but often neglected thinkers, and demonstrating the continuing importance of Calvinistic thought to English intellectual culture after the Restoration. Wallace's choice of individual thinkers is judicious and the volume as a whole is characterized by a mastery of the sources and a careful attentionto the changing contexts of English Calvinism."---Richard A. Muller, P. J. Zondervan Professor of Historical Theology, Calvin Theological Seminary
"How does one assess change? Wallace has not only provided insights into seventeenth-century English Calvinism but also prompted us to think once more about that question."--Church History
"...[I]mpressive scholarship... Wallace couches his conclusions in elegantly crafted prose; given how numerously and variously he directly quotes his sources, this is a noteworthy achievement. Wallace's book both pleases and instructs. I heartily recommend it to historical theologians, intellectual historians, and students of Calvinism." --Anglican and Episcopal History