In the tumultuous aftermath of the English Civil War, as a nation struggled to rebuild itself from the ashes of regicide and revolution, a philosophical bombshell detonated in London's intellectual circles. Thomas Hobbes' masterwork Leviathan presented a vision of humanity, politics, and religion so radical that it threatened the very foundations of Christian society. With its portrayal of human beings as mechanistic creatures driven by self-interest and fear, its derivation of absolute sovereignty from social contract rather than divine ordination, and its subordination of church to state, Hobbes' philosophy challenged everything the Anglican establishment held sacred. This book tells the riveting story of how the Church of England's greatest minds rose to confront this existential threat. Through vivid portraits of fascinating figures-from the patriarchal absolutism of Sir Robert Filmer to the Platonic idealism of the Cambridge Platonists, from the scientific natural law theory of Richard Cumberland to the pragmatic adaptations of Gilbert Burnet-this book reveals the surprising diversity and sophistication of Anglican responses to Hobbes' revolutionary ideas. Set against the dramatic backdrop of the Restoration, the Exclusion Crisis, and the Glorious Revolution, this intellectual drama played out alongside political intrigue, religious persecution, and the birth of modern science. The stakes could not have been higher: at risk were not just abstract philosophical principles but the very understanding of what it meant to be human in relationship to God, king, and community. With engaging prose and meticulous scholarship, this book brings to life a crucial but overlooked chapter in intellectual history-one with striking parallels to contemporary debates about the relationship between religion and politics, faith and reason, tradition and innovation. It reveals how these Anglican thinkers forged a distinctive "middle way" that neither rejected modern ideas wholesale nor abandoned core Christian convictions, but instead developed sophisticated theological alternatives that would shape religious and philosophical discourse for centuries to come. This groundbreaking study offers not just historical insight but enduring wisdom about how religious traditions can engage constructively with philosophical challenges without losing their soul. For anyone interested in the history of ideas, religious responses to secularism, or the timeless questions of political legitimacy and moral obligation, this work provides an illuminating exploration of a pivotal moment when the relationship between faith and reason, church and state, divine authority and human freedom hung in the balance-with consequences that continue to resonate today.
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