Featuring essays from various reformation scholars, this collection of articles focuses on some foundational documents (e.g. Book of Homilies, Articles of Religion) and foundational reformers (e.g. Thomas Cranmer, Martin Bucer, Heinrich Bullinger) involved with the English Reformation, and its Edwardian phase in particular. This edited volume not only offers a sustained focus on the often neglected mid-Tudor phase of the Reformation but explores new avenues of research on overlooked subjects such as the 45 Articles of Religion, John Ponet's Short Catechism, the Reformatio Legum Ecclesiasticarum, the ministry of John Hooper, and the memory of Martin Bucer. Students and scholars alike will benefit from this fresh examination of these anchors of Anglicanism which were hotly contested both then, and now.
Rev Dr Mark Earngey is the Head of Church History and Lecturer in Christian Thought at Moore Theological College. His research interests include ecclesiastical history, historical theology, and systematic theology, with special focus on the European Reformations.
Stephen Tong is a History Master at Sydney Grammar School. He is the author of "Building the Church: The Book of Common Prayer and the Edwardian Reformation". He is married to Bettina and they have three young children.
Peter Jensen is the former Archbishop of Sydney and former Principal of Moore Theological College. He was one of the founding members of the Global Anglican Future Conference (GAFCON), which he served as General Secretary.