@inbook{10.7591/j.ctt5hh0z2.5, ISBN = {9780801452741}, URL = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7591/j.ctt5hh0z2.5}, abstract = {“Adew, to al Popish satisfactions,” proclaimed the Protestant clergyman Thomas Wilson in his monumentalChristian Dictionarie(1612).¹ The exclamation is representative of the robust efforts by early modern Protestants to “bend the language of satisfaction … to a new purpose.”² The “language of satisfaction” to which theologian Timothy Gorringe refers here is a vocabulary of divine and human atonement intimated in the Scriptures and established in early and medieval Christian doctrine. The “bending” of this language was a discrete element of the doctrinal program of the European and English Reformations, consistent with their epochal redescription of the relation between humans}, bookauthor = {Heather Hirschfeld}, booktitle = {The End of Satisfaction: Drama and Repentance in the Age of Shakespeare}, pages = {16--38}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, title = {“Adew, to al Popish satisfactions”: Reforming Repentance in Early Modern England}, year = {2014} }