
St. Augustine's Press
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Locke’s The Reasonableness of Christianity,
published anonymously in 1695, entered
a world upset by fierce theological conflict
and immediately became a subject of
controversy. At issue were the author’s
intentions. John Edwards labeled it a
Socinian work and charged that it was
subversive not only of Christianity but of
religion itself; others praised it as a sure
preservative of both. Few understood
Locke’s intentions.
This work describes the background
to Locke’s book and documents the disputes
that followed its publication.
Providing an invaluable insight into the
context of its conception and reception, it
includes contributions by Samual Bold,
John Edwards, Charles Blount, and
Daniel Waterland, bringing the discussion
up to the eighteenth century. Also
included is a review found among
Locke’s unpublished papers and published
here for the first time.
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