Matter of Fact in the English Revolution

Journal of the History of Ideas 64 (2):317-335 (2003)
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Abstract

In the religious controversies of the English Revolution (1640-60), one problem became particularly urgent. How far were the Scriptures to be accepted as a faithful record of history? Much ink was spilled over the theoretical and practical problems of evidence and testimony and there swiftly developed an increasing self-consciousness and sophistication about the meaning of "matter of fact." This paper describes the response to skeptics and dogmatists of such moderate divines as Henry Hammond, Seth Ward, Richard Baxter, and Brian Walton, and the way in which they attempted to construct a defense of the Biblical story—incidentally helping to defend the claims of history in general.

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