Ranters
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Assorted References
- adoption by Claxton
- In Laurence Claxton
…religious sect known as the Ranters.
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- In Laurence Claxton
- approach to Christian mysticism
- In Christianity: Protestant Christianity
The Ranters provide a good example of the conflict between mysticism and established religion. They held, with Fox and Hendrik Niclaes, that perfection is possible in this life. Puritan leaders under the Commonwealth denounced them for their “blasphemous and execrable opinions,” and there was, no doubt,…
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- In Christianity: Protestant Christianity
influence on
- England
- In United Kingdom: Commonwealth and Protectorate
…were mystics, such as the Ranters, led by Laurence Claxton, who believed that they were infused with a holy spirit that removed sin from even their most reprehensible acts. The most enduring of these groups were the Quakers (Society of Friends), whose social radicalism was seen in their refusal to…
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- In United Kingdom: Commonwealth and Protectorate
- English literature
- In English literature: Prose styles
…Law of Freedom (1652); and Ranters, whose language and syntax were as disruptive as the libertinism they professed. The outstanding examples are Milton’s tracts against the bishops (1641–42), which revealed an unexpected talent for scurrilous abuse and withering sarcasm. Milton’s later pamphlets—on divorce, education, and free speech (Areopagitica, 1644) and…
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- In English literature: Prose styles