A Rational Account of the Grounds of Protestant Religion
Stillingfleet's 1664 defence of Protestantism against Catholic apologetics
Tradition: Latitudinarian Anglicanism / Restoration polemical theology
Stillingfleet's 1664 Protestant-Anglican reply to John Sergeant's Catholic apologetic
Published in 1664 in response to the Roman Catholic apologist John Sergeant's 'Sure-Footing in Christianity' (1665) and earlier Catholic attacks, 'A Rational Account of the Grounds of Protestant Religion' is Stillingfleet's defining anti-Romanist polemical work. The book argues that the Protestant rule of faith — Scripture, read by the church but not infallibly mediated by the Pope — is the rational ground of Christian religion, that the Roman appeal to tradition and infallible authority is incoherent, and that the controversies between Rome and Protestantism are to be settled by reason and Scripture, not by ecclesial fiat.
Author
Editions cited
- A Rational Account of the Grounds of Protestant Religion (London, 1664; 2nd ed. 1681); Works (1710), vol. 4
School Embodiments
Defining Restoration-Anglican statement of the Protestant rule of faith.
"Scripture, read in the light of right reason, is the Protestant ground of religion." (A Rational Account, part I)
Reformed-Protestant doctrine of Scripture's sufficiency, defended against Rome.
"Sola Scriptura, rightly understood, requires neither infallible Pope nor tradition co-ordinate with the Word." (A Rational Account, part II)
Rational-theological methodology applied to controversial divinity.
"Controversies are to be tried by reason and Scripture." (A Rational Account, preface)
Realism about historical and doctrinal truth.
"Truth in religion is a real matter, not a matter of which Church one chances upon." (A Rational Account, part I)
Scholastic distinctions deployed in controversial divinity.
"The state of the question must first be exactly stated." (A Rational Account, methodological preface)
Confessional-Christian framework throughout — but Protestant.
"The Protestant cause is the cause of the primitive Christian religion." (A Rational Account, dedication)
Internal Tensions
Stillingfleet's defining anti-Romanist polemic; standard Anglican reference work.
I. Time
1664 — Restoration anti-Romanist controversy.
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II. Space
London — Restoration Anglican polemical context.
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III. Matter
Single large polemical treatise.
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IV. Observer
Stillingfleet as Anglican controversialist against Catholic apologetics.
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V. Energy
Polemical-controversial energies of Restoration church politics.
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VI. Information
Three-part treatise with extensive citation of Catholic and Protestant sources.
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Computed school proximity
The work's attribute fingerprint scored against all schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated embodiments above.
How A Rational Account of the Grounds of Protestant Religion resolves each dilemma
31 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 3 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 26 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 3 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.