Godly Violence in the Puritan Atlantic World, 16361676

A Study of Military Providentialism

By (author) Dr Matthew Rowley PhD from University of Leicester

Ebook (VitalSource) - £19.99

Publication date:

20 February 2024

Length of book:

332 pages

Publisher

Boydell Press

Dimensions:

234x156mm

ISBN-13: 9781800108554

A rich analysis of the mindset of Puritans and of their theology which justified military action and acts of killing.

This book recounts Puritan struggles for military dominance and for an authoritative interpretation of God's agency in war. It asks: What did Puritans say was God's will in warfare; and how did they claim to know? It applies the term 'military providentialism' to this attempt to understand God's will and agency in war; and the term 'godly violence' to an act of killing that was deemed to be both just and holy. The book explores these themes by examining Puritan warfare against four groups: Native Americans, royalist Episcopalians, Irish Catholics and Scottish Presbyterians. It employs a wide range of printed and archival sources: sermons, treatises, official documents, newsbooks, letters, diaries, poems and objects related to material culture; and considers private providential interpretations written by obscure individuals alongside published works by more prominent people. Overall, the book provides a rich analysis of the mindset which sustained Puritan political theology and military action at the time when Puritans were at the height of their power on both sides of the Atlantic.
Godly Violence is a timely exploration of the powerful religious convictions that underpinned military conflict in the puritan Atlantic world. By probing the passionate zeal of those who fought in the name of God in seventeenth-century Britain and its colonies, Matthew Rowley's book illuminates anew the enduring connections between theology and war.