Peace in the Post-Reformation
Christians are supposed to love their neighbours, including their enemies. This is never easy. When feud and honour are common realities, it is even harder than usual. This book sketches the history of peace-making between people (not countries) as an activity of churches or of Christianity between the Reformation and the eighteenth century. The story is recounted in four countries (Italy, France, Germany, and England) and in several religious settings (including Roman Catholic, Lutheran, Church of England, and Calvinist). Each version is a variation upon a theme: what the author calls a 'moral tradition' which contrasts, as a continuing imperative, with the novelties of theory and practice introduced by the sixteenth-century reformers. In general the topic has much to say about the destinies of Christianity in each country, and more widely, and strikes a chord which will resonate in both the social and the religious history of the West.
- A brilliant general account of human relations in the centuries of upheaval following the Reformation
- Offers a totally original general statement about the nature of post-Reformation history, in giving new historical insight into basic human characteristics
- Author is one of the most successful of senior academic authors: his recent book on Giordano Bruno brought life to an 'unknown' figure and attracted even a general 'crime' readership
Reviews & endorsements
"Bossy's lectures on the moral tradition are well worth reading because of the ideas they provoke about the analysis and impact of peace in post-Reformation Europe." Renaissance Quarterly
Product details
November 1998Paperback
9780521646055
116 pages
229 × 152 × 7 mm
0.18kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. Italy
- 2. France
- 3. Germany
- 4. England.