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Protestant history and identity in sixteenth-century Europe

Part of the St. Andrews studies in Reformation history series
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The reforming movements of the 16th century were constantly being attacked by Rome for breaking the unity of the Apostolic Church.

To counter these accusations the reformers turned to qustions of tradition, history and identity in order to define and express the religious, politicla and social ideals of their movement.

Though this debate was carried on with great vigour and spawned an enormous corpus of literature, a unifying concept of Protestant identity proved elusive; the process produced only divergent theological conclusions and conflicting social and political goals.This volume presents a set of archive-based studies which examine and interpret the issues of identity and history so fundamental to the reformers.

They examine the most important problems addressed, including the relationship between belief and locality in the formation of religious identity, the limitations to a coherent identity in protest, the effects of success on Protestant identity, and the nature of history as it applies to God's Church.

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Product Details
Scolar
1859281753 / 9781859281758
Laminated
940.23
25/07/1996
England
English
408p.
24 cm
postgraduate /undergraduate Learn More