2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9809.2011.01155.x
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“It Was Never Good World Sence Minister Must Have Wyves”: Clerical Celibacy, Clerical Marriage, and Anticlericalism in Reformation England

Abstract: The impact of the Reformation was felt strongly in the nature and character of the priesthood, and in the function and reputation of the priest. A shift in the understanding of the priesthood was one of the most tangible manifestations of doctrinal change, evident in the physical arrangement of the church, in the language of the liturgy, and in the relaxation of the discipline of celibacy, which had for centuries bound priests in the Latin tradition to a life of perpetual continence. Clerical celibacy, and acc… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
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“…Parish has studied the vexed question of married clergy. Reforming Protestants argued that clerical celibacy simply led to more sin.…”
Section: –1700mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Parish has studied the vexed question of married clergy. Reforming Protestants argued that clerical celibacy simply led to more sin.…”
Section: –1700mentioning
confidence: 99%