- John Bramhall
John Bramhall (
1594 —June 25 1663 ), was an Archbishop of Armagh, and anAnglican theologian andapologist . He was a noted controversialist who doggedly defended the English Church from bothPuritan andRoman Catholic accusations, as well as thematerialism ofThomas Hobbes .Life to the Restoration
Bramhall was born in
Yorkshire and matriculated toSidney Sussex College , Cambridge. He was ordained around1616 . He went toIreland in1633 with the Earl of Strafford and became thebishop ofDerry in1634 . In1642 , he returned toEngland , but in1644 he left England forEurope , returning to Ireland only briefly in1648 . During the Interregnum, the royalist Bramhall spent his time primarily inParis, France . He returned to Ireland after the Restoration, and in1661 he was rewarded for his faithfulness by elevation to the position of Archbishop of Armagh. As archbishop, Bramhall was responsible for ensuring that the Acts of religious conformity were prosecuted with moderation in Ireland.Archbishop of Armagh
Bramhall's greatest historical importance lodges in the writing he did while in exile. While without office, he turned his hand to writing replies to all attacks on the Anglican church. In
1643 , he wrote "Serpent Salve," a defence ofepiscopacy and monarchy against the attacks of the Puritan presbyterian model and democracy. He followed this with1649 's "Fair Warning against the Scottish Discipline," which was an attack on the weaknesses of the presbyterian model and an excoriation of the Puritan religious claims. He also attacked and defended against Hobbes's "Leviathan." In1655 , Bramhall wrote "Vindication of True Liberty." Hobbes replied to Bramhall with "Animadversions," and Bramhall replied to this with "Castigation of Hobbes' Animadversions" (with an afterpiece called "The Catching of Leviathan, the Great Whale") in1658 .Additionally, Bramhall attempted to defend the English Church from attacks from the Roman Catholic Church. In
1653 , he counteredThéophile Brachet de la Milletière 's restatement of the doctrine oftransubstantiation with a reply that restated the justifications of the Anglican doctrine ofReal Presence . He also attacked the Ultramontanists ofFrance . Bramhall's "A Just Vindication of the Church of England from the Unjust Aspersion of Criminal Schism" (1654 ) was answered by thetitular Bishop of Chalcedon , and Bramhall replied to this with "Replication" in1656 , where he prays that he might live to see the day when all Christian churches united again.He is remembered for the phrase "It is the last feather that breaks the horse's back" (Works, 1655), an early version of "The last straw that breaks the camel's back". [ [http://books.google.com.au/books?id=7PMZJqSR4sAC&pg=PA324&lpg=PA324&dq=john+bramhall+last+straw&source=web&ots=ARduMFLuW1&sig=B6HlWqmzqid2_iEcbJI7q2J_iU0&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=5&ct=result#PPA324,M1 Dictionary of Proverbs] ]
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