Canon Arthur James Mason, Dean of Canterbury: "Thomas Cranmer," 197ff.


Other than the hagiographic attributions and imputations to Cranmer on the last few, funny, and man-exalting pages, this volume is good. The Dean of Canterbury hustles falsely or, perhaps, simply falls for the artless-childlike-naive-narrative of Cranmer while laughably commenting about the "reckless Swiss innovators." The last few pages of this volume should be tossed. A good book until those last few pages of Anglican and English hubris.

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