Catholic Conciliarism and the Protestant Reformation

by Timothy G. Enloe

Catholic Conciliarism and the Protestant Reformation by Timothy G. Enloe (Book) in History
Publisher: Timothy Enloe
Copyright: © 2006  Standard Copyright License
Language: English
Country: United States

Printed: 144 pages, 6" x 9", perfect binding, black and white interior ink

Download: 1 documents, 801 KB

Description:

Thanks to a mixed heritage, the catholic Christian tradition has always been pluriform in its notions of authority. During the Western Schism of 1378-1418, conflict between two types of theoretically interlocked authority, papalist and conciliarist, reached a fever pitch. The battle between these views consumed the fifteenth century and provided substantial ecclesiological preparation for the Protestant reformation in the sixteenth. Throughout the reformation and into the seventeenth century Protestants repeatedly invoked moderate conciliarist principles against the papacy’s absolute monarchy. Standing on catholic conciliarism, the reformers worked for lawful, biblical reform of the Church. The Modern Protestant failure to soberly consider this essential backdrop leads us to distort the best parts of our own heritage, and to remain vulnerable to the half-truths of polemicized history on both sides of the Catholic-Protestant divide.


Listed in:

History

Stats:

Lulu Sales Rank: 18,531

This item has not yet been rated. Be the first to rate it!

Please log in or sign up to rate this item.
Publishing Services

Have your own story to tell?

We've got publishing services to get you started.

Reviews:

This item has not yet been reviewed.

Please log in or sign up to post a review.


[Click the preview to close]

Share this item

Lulu is an advocate for global consumer privacy rights, protection and security.
Member Agreement   |   Privacy Pledge