'Better thoughts of our excellent Liturgy': Nelson's 'Life of Bull', Dissent, and the Toleration Act
Last week, we left Parson Bull and Squire Sheppard in 1685, in the Tory idyll of the Cotswolds' parish of Avening. Perhaps we spoke too soon, for all was not well in the Tory idyll. In the parish, according to Nelson's 1713 Life of Dr. George Bull , "there were ... many more disaffected to the Discipline and Liturgy of the Church of England". Nelson's reference here probably reflects one of the consequences of the 1640s and 50s, when use of the Book of Common Prayer was prohibited. In addition to this, of course, criticism of the Prayer Book had also loomed large in the political controversies of the civil wars, with renewed controversy surrounding the 1662 Act of Uniformity. Indeed, Nelson had referred to this in his description of Bull's ministry at the Restoration. Added to this, Nelson's readers in 1713 would also have recognised the situation, as the Toleration Act of 1689 gave recognition to Dissenting bodies largely defined by a rejection of the Pr...