John Kettlewell

John Kettlewell, frontispiece from the 10th edition of his Help and Exhortation to Worthy Communicating

John Kettlewell (10 March 1653 – 12 April 1695) was an English clergyman, nonjuror and devotional writer. He is now known for his arguments against William Sherlock, who had justified the change of monarch of 1688–89 and his own switch of sides in The Case of the Allegiance. According to J. P. Kenyon, Kettlewell's reply made a case "with which conformist Anglicans could only agree, because it was spiritual, while Sherlock's was resolutely aspiritual".[1] He went on to attack defenders of the Glorious Revolution generally as proponents of fallacious contractarian theories.[2]

  1. ^ J. P. Kenyon, Revolution Principles: The Politics of Party 1689-1720 (1990), p. 28.
  2. ^ Andrew Pyle (editor), Dictionary of Seventeenth Century British Philosophers (2000), article on Kettlewell, pp. 487-8.