The Opening of the Protestant Mind: How Anglo-American Protestants Embraced Religious Liberty

  • Mark Valeri

Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

This book describes how English and colonial American Protestants described religions throughout the world during a crucial period of English colonization of North America, from 1650 to 1765. It uses a variety of sources, including thick accounts of Catholicism, Islam, and Native American traditions, to argue-against much of current scholarship-that Protestants changed their perspectives on non-Protestant religions and conversion during the early eighteenth century. This account of a transformation in Protestant discourse locates the English Revolution of 1688 and subsequent growth of the British Empire as a turning point when observers keyed the well-being of Britain to civic moral virtues, including religious toleration, rather than to any particular religious creed. A wide range of Protestants, including liberal Anglicans, Calvinist dissenters, deists, and evangelicals endorsed this new understanding of religion and the state. They accordingly began to parse religions around the world not as good or bad as a whole but as complex traditions with some groups who sustained religious liberty and other groups that, under the sway of power-hungry clergy, suppressed religious liberty. They also changed their evangelistic practices, jettisoning civilizing agendas for reasoned persuasion as the means of mission. This story concerns ambiguities in Protestant ideas yet suggests the importance of those ideas for contemporary understandings of religious liberty, matters of race, and moral reasonableness in public life.

Original languageEnglish
PublisherOxford University Press
Number of pages298
ISBN (Electronic)9780197663707
ISBN (Print)9780197663677
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2023

Keywords

  • Indigenous American missions
  • Protestantism and empire
  • The world’s religions
  • conversion
  • religious liberty

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'The Opening of the Protestant Mind: How Anglo-American Protestants Embraced Religious Liberty'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this