Puneet Varma (Editor)

Gangraena

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Author
  
Thomas Edwards

Copyright date
  
1646

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Similar
  
Areopagitica: A Speech for the Lib, Canons of Criticism and Glos, Foxe's Book of Martyrs, Dictionary of National Biography

Gangraena is a book by English puritan clergyman Thomas Edwards, published in 1646. A notorious work of "heresiography", i.e. the description in detail of heresy, it appeared the year after Ephraim Pagitt's Heresiography. These two books attempted to catalogue the fissiparous Protestant congregations of the time, in England particularly, into recognised sects or beliefs. Pagitt worked with 40 to 50 categories, Edwards went further with around three times as many, compiling a list of the practices of the Independents and more extreme radicals:

Contents

Nature of Gangraena

Gangraena is generally described as an alarmist work, deducing a collapse of national polity from the ramification of different religious creeds. Typically, the Baptist Hanserd Knollys was accused of being an Anabaptist. Heresy is foregrounded, and the analogy suggested that heresy is to the soul as witchcraft to the body. Edwards was an unsparing writer and Gangraena is described as "monumentally vituperative". The title itself refers to 2 Timothy 2:17, and "canker" in the King James translation.

It is not really a unified work, called a "complex, ramshackle text" by Nicholas Tyacke. It appeared in three volumes, with information added from correspondents, and Richard Baxter in particular was also a contributor. Scholarly opinions on it are now mixed, having in the past been somewhat dismissive of the work as paranoid and probably counter-productive in the way of providing and circulating a menu of "heretical" options. Some scholars now see it as made more coherent by its inferences from and to the diabolical element, and more readable casually for the audience of the times, than it has in the past been allowed credit.

Reception

It provoked over 30 pamphlet responses in the period 1646-7, mostly hostile. Among them were works by Jeremiah Burroughes, John Goodwin, John Lilburne, John Saltmarsh and William Walwyn.

References

Gangraena Wikipedia