The web of friendship: Nicholas Ferrar and Little Gidding

"The biography of Nicholas Ferrar (1593-1637) is the story of a man whose ministry to his family turned a worldly misfortune into a spiritual opportunity. When financial crises struck the family in 1624, he persuaded them to abandon London for their newly acquired property at Little Gidding in...

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Bibliographic Details
Subtitles:Nicholas Ferrar and Little Gidding
Main Author: Ransome, Joyce (Author)
Format: Print Book
Language:English
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Published: Cambridge [Eng.] James Clarke & Co 2011
In:Year: 2011
Reviews:The web of friendship. Nicholas Ferrar and Little Gidding. By Joyce Ransome. Pp. 291 incl. frontispiece and 11 ills. Cambridge: James Clarke, 2011. £25.50 (paper). 978 0 227 17348 0 (2012) (Thompson, Peter)
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Ferrar, Nicholas 1592-1637 / Little Gidding
Further subjects:B Church of England Clergy Biography
B Ferrar, Nicholas (1592-1637)
B Clergy (England) Biography
B Little Gidding (Christian community)
Description
Summary:"The biography of Nicholas Ferrar (1593-1637) is the story of a man whose ministry to his family turned a worldly misfortune into a spiritual opportunity. When financial crises struck the family in 1624, he persuaded them to abandon London for their newly acquired property at Little Gidding in Huntingdonshire, there to embrace a distinctive pattern of piety that made them an example of community to their own and future generations. As he succeeded in transforming his merchant family into a religious and educational community, Ferrar hoped their example would become a 'Light upon a Hill' to inspire his contemporaries. While that hope was at best only partially fulfilled in his lifetime, those who had known him at Little Gidding preserved accounts of his and the family's life that offered later generations an example of community to follow or adapt. For some that example took the form of voluntary religious societies and helped to make such groups acceptable within a Church of England that was changing from a national to an established but essentially voluntary institution. For its fresh prospective [i.e. perspective] on the unique Little Gidding that Ferrar created, this book will appeal to both an academic and general audience of readers interested in early modern history, church history, English literature, theology, family history (historical sociology) and gender studies"--Publisher's description, back cover
"The biography of Nicholas Ferrar (1593-1637) is the story of a man whose ministry to his family turned a worldly misfortune into a spiritual opportunity. When financial crises struck the family in 1624, he persuaded them to abandon London for their newly acquired property at Little Gidding in Huntingdonshire, there to embrace a distinctive pattern of piety that made them an example of community to their own and future generations. As he succeeded in transforming his merchant family into a religious and educational community, Ferrar hoped their example would become a 'Light upon a Hill' to inspire his contemporaries. While that hope was at best only partially fulfilled in his lifetime, those who had known him at Little Gidding preserved accounts of his and the family's life that offered later generations an example of community to follow or adapt. For some that example took the form of voluntary religious societies and helped to make such groups acceptable within a Church of England that was changing from a national to an established but essentially voluntary institution. For its fresh prospective [i.e. perspective] on the unique Little Gidding that Ferrar created, this book will appeal to both an academic and general audience of readers interested in early modern history, church history, English literature, theology, family history (historical sociology) and gender studies"--Publisher's description, back cover
Item Description:Includes bibliographical references (p. [261]-285) and index
ISBN:0227173481