Ranter

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The Ranters were one of a number of nonconformist dissenting groups that emerged around the time of the English Commonwealth (1649–1660). They were largely common people, and there is plenty of evidence that the movement was widespread throughout England, though they were not organised and had no leader.[citation needed]

Ranters were regarded as heretical by the established Church and seem to have been regarded by the government as a threat to social order. They denied the authority of churches, of scripture, of the current ministry and of services, instead calling on men to listen to the divine within them. In many ways they resemble the 14th century Brethren of the Free Spirit.[1]

Their central idea was pantheistic, that God is essentially in every creature. Many Ranters seem to have rejected a belief in individual immortality and in a personal God.[citation needed] They embraced antinomianism and believed that Christians are freed by grace from the necessity of obeying Mosaic Law, rejecting the very notion of obedience, thus making the government view them as a great threat.[citation needed] The Ranters revived the Brethren of the Free Spirit's amoralism and “stressed the desire to surpass the human condition and become godlike.”[2] They held "that a believer is free from all traditional restraints, that sin is a product only of the imagination, and that private ownership of property is wrong."

Their most famous member, Laurence Clarkson or Claxton, joined the Ranters after encountering them in 1649.[3] Under the influence of the Ranters, Claxton published his 1650 tract called A Single Eye in which he espoused the dissenting group's ideals.

Ranters were often associated with nudity, which they may have used as a manner of social protest as well as religious expression as a symbol of abandoning earthly goods.[citation needed] Ranters were accused of antinomianism, fanaticism, and sexual immorality, and put in prison until they recanted.[citation needed]

Even Gerrard Winstanley, the leader of another English dissenting group called the Diggers, commented on Ranter principles by denoting them as "a general lack of moral values or restraint in worldly pleasures."[4]

John Bunyan, author of Pilgrim's Progress, claimed in his autobiography, Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners, to have encountered Ranters prior to his Baptist conversion.[5] They came into contact and even rivalry with the early Quakers, who were often falsely accused of direct association with them.[1] George Fox stated that most of the Ranters were converted to Quakerism at the time of the Restoration.[citation needed]

The historian J. C. Davis has suggested that the Ranters were a myth created by conservatives in order to endorse traditional values by comparison with an unimaginably radical other.[6] Richard L. Greaves, in a review of Davis's book, suggests that though a very radical fringe existed, it was probably never as organized as conservatives of the time suggested.[7]

In the mid-19th century, the name was often applied to the Primitive Methodists, with reference to their crude and often noisy preaching.[1]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2  Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Chiara Ombretta Tommasi, “Orgy: Orgy in Medieval and Modern Europe,” Encyclopedia of Religion, no. 10 (2005).
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[self-published source?]
  5. Bunyan, John. Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners. par. 44–45
  6. J.C. Davis, Fear, Myth and History: The Ranters and Their Historians.
  7. Church History, Cambridge Univ. Press, 1986, Vol. 57, No. 3. (Sep., 1988), pp. 376–378.

Further reading

  • Grant, Linda. (1994). Sexing the Millennium: Women and the Sexual Revolution. Grove Press. pp. 19–25. ISBN 0-8021-3349-5
  • Hill, Christopher. The World Upside Down: Radical Ideas During the English Revolution. London: Maurice Temple Smith, 1972. Reprinted by Penguin.