Traditional views of puritan social thought have done a great injustice
to the intellectual history of the sixteenth century. They have
presented puritans as creators of a disciplined, progressive, ultimately
revolutionary theory of social order. The origins of modern society and
politics are laid at the feet of zealous English protestants whose only
intellectual debts are owed to Calvinist theology and the Bible.
Professor Todd demonstrates that this view is fundamentally ahistorical.
She places puritanism back in its own historical milieu, showing
puritans as the heirs of a complex intellectual legacy, derived no less
from the Renaissance than from the Reformation. The focus is on puritan
social thought as part of a sixteenth-century intellectual consensus.
This study traces the continuity of Christian humanism in the social
thought of English protestants.