Great Voices Of The Reformation

by Harry Emerson Fosdick (Editor)

Hardcover, 1952

Status

Available

Call number

BX4801.F6

Publication

The Modern Library (1952), Edition: 1st Modern Library Edition, 546 pages

Description

THIS ANTHOLOGY ENDEAVORS TO PRESENT, WITHIN THE LIMITS of a single volume, the major emphases of Protestant thought from John Wyclifle to John Wesley. The term "Protestant" -for a brief discussion of which the reader may turn to the Epilogue-originated long after Wyclise, and by Wesley's time had far outgrown its first meaning, but no other word is now available to connote the entire movement of thought and life which led up to and followed the dissevering of Christendom in the sixteenth century. The negative significance of the word in present usage, however, is unfortunate, for, as this anthology should make evident, while the Reformation certainly involved protest against Roman Catholicism, it was at heart an affirmation, a vigorous protestation of positive principles.… (more)

LCC

BX4801.F6

Physical description

546 p.; 8.1 inches

Barcode

31342000068246
Page: 0.1921 seconds