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Blown by the Spirit
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05 January 2004

This study explores the intersection of politics, religious thought, and religious culture in pre-revolutionary England, using hitherto unknown or overlooked manuscripts and printed material to reconstruct and contextualize a forgotten but highly significant antinomian religious subculture that evolved at the margins of the early seventeenth-century puritan community. By reconstructing this story, Blown by the Spirit offers a major revision of current understanding of Puritanism and the puritan community. In the process, the author illuminates the obscure and tangled question of the origins of civil-war radicalism, thereby helping to explain the course, consequences, and ultimate failure of the English revolution.
— Sears McGee
". . . Como deserves the high praise for completing a project that some would have thought impossible."
— H-Net Books
"This is a marvelous and much-needed book: impressively researched, engaging and demanding, finely nuanced and robustly argued."
— American Historical Review
"Using antinomianism as his vehicle, he has reconstructed the complex and symbiotic relationship between radical and mainstream Puritanism and established the presence of its legacy in late-seventeenth-century England. This ambitious project is a touchstone for future work in the field of English Puritanism."
— Renaissance Quarterly
"Those who thought we knew all there was to know abot the doctrinal subtleties of the iron-souled band that turned England upside down and conquered a corner of the New World have some reading yet to do. On the required list...belongs Como's magisterial new book on the 'seething sectarian underworld' of mystics, familists, grindletonians, and other antinomans that existed in 'parasitic relationship' to mainstream Puritanism in the two decades leading up to the Civil War."
— Journal of Interdisciplinary History
"Blown by the Spirit is a brilliantly conceived and meticulously researched exploration of what Como calls an "antinomian underground" in early Stuart England, of its dialectical relationship to mainstream Puritanism, and of that dialectic's historical influence."
— Theological Studies
"In this fascinating, deeply researched, and illuminating book, David Como takes his readers on an intellectual adventure which transforms our understanding of early Stuart puritanism."
— Sixteenth Century Journal
"Como has mounted a strong and important argument that deserves to be widely known."
— Journal of Ecclesiastical History