Protestant Nations Redefined: Changing Perceptions of National Identity in the Rehetoric of the English, Dutch, and Swedish Public Churches, 1685-1772

Front Cover
BRILL, 2005 - Religion - 664 pages
This volume reconstructs the various meanings attached to the concepts of nation and fatherland in eighteenth-century English, Dutch and Swedish political preaching. After discussing sermons as a medium of national ideology, it analyses the decline of the Israelite prototype of nation, the changing relationship between religious and national communities, international Protestantism, the weakening stereotype of popery, redefinitions of the Protestant monarchy, and the diversification of national vocabulary. It also compares the rise of non-theological languages of classical patriotism, freedom, economy and nature in three political cultures, revealing how the secular worship of nation arose even within the public presentation of religion. As post-nationalist comparative history, this study will be welcomed by readers with varied national and scholarly backgrounds interested in the Enlightenment and nationalism.

From inside the book

Contents

Anniversaries
1
Chapter Two Israelite Parallels in the Language
2
Rise of the British Nation
3
Chapter Seven Definitions and Redefinitions of
5
and Political Liberty
9
Sermons
10
Europe
270
Swedes and Pitied Germans
280
Protestant Element Within the Constitution
348
Princes
360
Chapter Eight The Rise of Classical Patriotism in
443
Swedish Clerical Estate
552
Chapter Eleven The Language of Nature in Protestant
558
2
570
National as an attribute in state sermons
601
Bibliography
616

Chapter Five The Stereotype of Popery
299
of the National Community
324
Chapter Six Interaction Between the Concepts
333

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2005)

Pasi Ihalainen is a Research Fellow of the Academy of Finland.

Bibliographic information