Laudianism was both a way of being Christian and a political ideology.
This definitive account establishes the theological roots and political
resonances of Laudianism, and shows how it was based on the recuperation
of the theological principles and ecclesiastical and pietistic ambitions
that underpinned it. Peter Lake shows how the Laudians' famous obsession
with the beauty of holiness contained a plan for the reinvigoration of
both the church and the state. It represented a self-conscious reaction
against the long-term evils of puritanism and of the immediate political
crisis of the 1620s, caused in turn by the evils of (an often puritan)
popularity. The result was a coherent account of the theological,
liturgical and political essence of the Church of England. On Laudianism
explores how this intensely controversial movement, and the strong
reactions it provoked, helped cause the English Civil War, but over the
long term provided one of the visions of the national church, one that
has been in contention to define 'Anglicanism' ever since.