Thursday, February 19, 2009

Anna Trapnell, apocalyptic prophetess

Yesterday I was reading about early Baptists in preparation for a youth lesson when I came across a comment in one book about an "All Hallows Church" in the City of London (that is, a central district of London called "the City"). All Hallows, traditionally a Church of England parish church, was a "gathered church" or Independent congregation during Oliver Cromwell's Protectorate. During the 1650s the church was led by a lecturer named John Simpson, who came to Baptist convictions while maintaining a stance of open communion with paedobaptists.

Much thanks goes to Dr. Freeman for pointing out how Simpson was a leader among the Fifth Monarchists, a radical dissenting group proclaiming the advent of Christ's millennial kingdom, the "fifth" world empire, in the year 1666. Freeman also directed me to the booklet The Cry of a Stone, a pamphlet written by All Hallows member and purported prophetess Anna Trapnell. Trapnell was severely critical of Cromwell and apparently a proponent of greater rights for women. The Cry is an account of her apocalyptic visions she received over the course of a twelve-day trance. Here is a selection:

A third vision followed, wherein I saw great darkness in the Earth, and a marvellous dust, like a thick smoak ascending upward from the Earth; and I beheld at a little distance a great company of Cattel, some like Buls, and others like Oxen, and so lesser, their faces and heads like men, having each of them a horn on either side their heads; For the foremost, his Countenance was perfectly like unto Oliver Cromwels; and on a suddain there was a great shout of thsoe that followed him, he being singled out alone, and the foremost; and he looking back, they bowed unto him, and suddenly gave a shout, and leaped up from the Earth, with a great kind of joy, that he was their Supreme...

Should be an interesting read!

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Saturday, January 24, 2009

Currently reading: Scripture, Culture and Agriculture




Ellen Davis, Old Testament professor at Duke, is going to tell me why I should go live on a farm....

...okay, maybe not quite. But she is going to confirm my bias toward renewing a closer relationship with the land (in my case, beefing up my garden!), supporting local agriculture and economy, increasingly avoiding the mess that is industrial agriculture, and finding grounds for it all in the Bible to boot. Green acres is the place to be - i'chaim!

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Monday, December 10, 2007

The Gospel of Judas: Not a Hero, After All?

According to one scholar at Rice University, the people who rushed to make a sensation out of the Gospel of Judas may have fundamentally misread the Coptic text. In this story, Judas is a demon.

Click here

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