'This book is … not only valuable for historians of religion seeking to understand the social, local and personal effects of 1689, but it is also a helpful reminder for social and cultural historians of the centrality of religion to the way that eighteenth-century individuals perceived one another.' Daniel Rignall, The Proceedings of the Wesley Historical Society
Introduction; 1. Reframing religious difference; 2. Public religion; 3. Politeness and hypocrisy; 4. Drinking, dancing, talking; 5. Neighbours, friends, company; Conclusion.