Problems of Authority in the Reformation DebatesCambridge University Press, 18 avr. 2002 - 348 pages Problems of Authority in the Reformation Debates shows that in the early sixteenth century much was seen to be wrong with both the doctrine and the practice of authority in the Western Church. A great deal of scholarly effort was devoted at the time to trying to understand the nature of the problem, but this, as the author points out, was largely a piecemeal endeavour. No one succeeded in providing a comprehensive account of the complex 'authority' questions which were being raised about absolute divine sovereignty, the centrality of Christ, the primacy of scripture, the necessity of grace, and so on. Dr Evans aims here to piece together underlying connections in the theology of the Reformation period, as a contribution to ecumenical dialogue. She shows how, as theologians struggle today about words and meanings, the detailed texture of semantic debate similarly underlies many of the Reformation controversies. |
Table des matières
The authority of the text | 37 |
Authoritative testimony | 70 |
Authoritative proof | 86 |
Powerlessness before sin | 115 |
The empowering of the will for good | 137 |
The saving power of the sacraments | 143 |
The Eucharist and authority to forgive | 167 |
Visible and invisible | 199 |
Making ministers | 216 |
Higher Authority | 227 |
A decisionmaking body | 241 |
Decisionmaking in a divided Church | 260 |
the unity we seek | 285 |
293 | |
313 | |
The two swords and the political analogy | 205 |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
acceptance Acta CT argued argument attempt Augustine authority baptism believe bishops body bring called Calvin Canon Catholic century Christ Christian Church claim concern Confession continuing Council debates difficulty discussion divine doctrine early Erasmus Eucharist example explains faith follows forgiveness give God's grace Greek Hebrew Holy Holy Spirit human idea important individual justification language late later Latin Letter living logic Luther Lutheran Mass matter means mediaeval meet Melanchthon Middle Ages mind ministry nature necessary notion offering original Paris Peter Pope possible practice present priest principle problem question reason reference reformers remained repentance Roman rule sacraments salvation says Scripture seemed seen sense side sins sixteenth sixteenth-century speaks teaching theologians theology Thesis things thinking thought topics tradition Trent true truth understanding universal whole
Références à ce livre
Reformers, the Preacher and Skepticism: Luther, Brenz, Melanchthon and ... Robert Rosin Affichage d'extraits - 1997 |
The Loyal Opposition: Tudor Traditionalist Polemics, 1535-1558 Ellen A. Macek Affichage d'extraits - 1996 |