'This is Bertram's doctrine': Cranmer's 'Answer to Gardiner', Ratramnus, and the genealogy of Reformed eucharistic teaching
In his Answer to Gardiner (1551), Cranmer had to address Gardiner's allegation that his view of the Sacraments of the Old and New Covenants, as both being a participation in Christ, was "a novelty of speech". Cranmer, we should note, entirely rejected what we might term 'Scriptural primitivism' - that is, a belief that a thousand years of erroneous teaching within the Churches was of little concern as that was required was to return to Scripture. Instead, Cranmer invoked the genealogy for Reformed eucharistic teachings that he had previously set out in this work , with particular regard to how it also supported the Reformed emphasis on the sacraments of the New Covenant working as did the sacraments of the Old Covenant. The last post in this series demonstrated how this understanding of the sacraments was " after the mind of St. Augustine ". Cranmer, however, did not stop with the great Augustine. He then turned to the 9th century Frankish divine Ratra...