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El. knyga: Wheat and the Tares: Doctrines of the Church in the Reformation, 1500-1590

  • Formatas: 502 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-May-2017
  • Leidėjas: James Clarke & Co Ltd
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780227906170
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 502 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-May-2017
  • Leidėjas: James Clarke & Co Ltd
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780227906170
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In 1500 Christians knew that God gave them the church to shepherd believers toward salvation and that it was centered at Rome and ruled by a pope. Today, that church is but one of forty thousand Christian denominations, each with distinctive structures and doctrines. How did this happen? Then, as now, all aspects of the church—from its divine mission to its offices and operations, hierarchy, and bureaucracy—were of interest to theologians, thinkers, and troublemakers alike, but for ages there had been satisfaction with the status quo. In the late Renaissance this gave way to frustration and heated debate, as some people wanted fewer clerical controls over their lives, and others sought a church more representative of its purest, earliest form. Ecclesiology (the doctrine and theory of the church) became a major source of controversies separating not only Roman Catholics from emerging Protestants, but also Protestants from one another. In the writings of the various reformers, the same issues surfaced repeatedly. Jesus's parable of the Wheat and the Tares was discussed often as an image of the church, as reformers sought to rediscover the purity of the church as God’s gift. This book uses the words of a range of reformers to explain how the one church began to divide into the many.

In 1500 Christians knew that God gave them the church to shepherd believers toward salvation and that it was centered at Rome and ruled by a pope. Today, that church is but one of forty thousand Christian denominations, each with distinctive structures and doctrines.

Recenzijos

"Chibi's book is a study of the church and ecclesiology in the sixteenth century. He starts with the medieval church, and then considers the reformers, the Reformation churches and Counter-Reformation churches. Jesus' parable of the Wheat and the Tares... is applied to the churches - were the tares allowed to grow alongside the wheat, or did the church try to weed them out? This is a readable book for anyone interested in the church and history." - Ralph S. Werrell, Honorary Research Fellow, University of Birmingham and author of The Roots of William Tyndale's Theology (2013) and The Blood of Christ in the Theology of William Tyndale (2015)

"This is essentially a retelling of the Reformation through the lens of ecclesiology. It is an erudite and ambitious study that makes a significant contribution. I will very likely become of the standard studies on the topic in the field of Reformation studies." - David Barbee, http:readingreligion.org, December 2017

"The study's strength lies in its extensive citations of reformers' arguments along with helpful summaries of their thinking within the contexts in which their doctrines evolved." Robert Kolb, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 2018.

Preface Acknowledgments Abbreviations Introduction: Pre-Reformation Ecclesiology (What Is the Church?) 1 Erasmus, Abuses in the Church, and the Needs of Christendom 2 Luther's Doctrine of the Church 3 Zwingli's Doctrine of the Church 4 The Ecclesiology of the Second-Generation Reformers 5 Tudor Ecclesiology Conclusion: Catholic Ecclesiology of the Sixteenth Century Bibliography Index
Andrew Allan Chibi, whose work has appeared in many scholarly journals, is a freelance scholar and former Lecturer in Early Modern Europe at Leicester University. He is the author of The European Reformation (1999), Henry VIII's Bishops (2003), and The English Reformation (2004).