Enemies of the Cross
Enemies of the Cross
Suffering, Truth, and Mysticism in the Early Reformation
Evener, Vincent
Oxford University Press Inc
03/2021
432
Dura
Inglês
9780190073183
15 a 20 dias
754
Introduction
1. "No one comes to the living truth except through the way of his nothingness": Mysticism at the Margins of Christendom
2. "I will choose what they ridicule": The Theme of Suffering in Martin Luther's First Theological Protests
3. "To where should he who hopes in God come, unless into his own nothingness?": Mystical Concepts, Transformed Perception, and the Wittenberg Call to the Cross up to 1522
4. "Bring about...that I may become to myself like a bitter boil": Self-Accusation and Sinking into the Divine Will in Karlstadt's Pamphlets, 1522-24
5. The "Bitter Side of Faith": Suffering and Thomas Muentzer's Critique of the Wittenberg Solas, 1517-24
6. "The Cross and the Impossibility of Faith": Suffering and Right Action in a Troubled World, 1524-25
Epilogue
Abbreviations
Introduction
1. "No one comes to the living truth except through the way of his nothingness": Mysticism at the Margins of Christendom
2. "I will choose what they ridicule": The Theme of Suffering in Martin Luther's First Theological Protests
3. "To where should he who hopes in God come, unless into his own nothingness?": Mystical Concepts, Transformed Perception, and the Wittenberg Call to the Cross up to 1522
4. "Bring about...that I may become to myself like a bitter boil": Self-Accusation and Sinking into the Divine Will in Karlstadt's Pamphlets, 1522-24
5. The "Bitter Side of Faith": Suffering and Thomas Muentzer's Critique of the Wittenberg Solas, 1517-24
6. "The Cross and the Impossibility of Faith": Suffering and Right Action in a Troubled World, 1524-25
Epilogue
Abbreviations