Praise Disjoined: Changing Patterns of Salvation in 17th-century English LiteratureWilliam P. Shaw P. Lang, 1991 - Počet stran: 306 Growing skepticism and rationalism contributed to the decline of religious enthusiasm in England in the seventeenth century, and time-honored notions about salvation and damnation became increasingly vitiated by secular, pragmatic concerns. This important collection of essays investigates the ways important writers of the age forcefully renegotiated their understanding of the terms of salvation and damnation, either affirming the old or accomodating some new understanding. After the Puritan Revolution had run its course, the end of the century witnessed a new consensus, one more deferential to individualism, utilitarianism, and secular millenarianism than to the hierarchical orders inherent in Christian feudalism and monarchy. |
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Strana 53
... Familists to King James , entitled A Supplication of the Family of Love ( 1606 ) , along with his observations . He says that in twenty - five years they have increased beyond their original habitations in Surrey , Middlesex , Berkshire ...
... Familists to King James , entitled A Supplication of the Family of Love ( 1606 ) , along with his observations . He says that in twenty - five years they have increased beyond their original habitations in Surrey , Middlesex , Berkshire ...
Strana 125
... Familists , maintained that he was neither " author , nor fautor of any sect " ( Disc . 190 ) , and like Lipsius and the Familists - and in anticipation of Milton and Blake — Jonson believed that " to utter [ the ] truth of God may be ...
... Familists , maintained that he was neither " author , nor fautor of any sect " ( Disc . 190 ) , and like Lipsius and the Familists - and in anticipation of Milton and Blake — Jonson believed that " to utter [ the ] truth of God may be ...
Strana 135
... Familists intellectuals such as Dr. John Everard through his interest in Neoplatonic texts and , like other Familists , drew upon the European libertine tradition for his belief in mortalism ( see Hill 78 , 318 , 321 , 333 ) . 28 ...
... Familists intellectuals such as Dr. John Everard through his interest in Neoplatonic texts and , like other Familists , drew upon the European libertine tradition for his belief in mortalism ( see Hill 78 , 318 , 321 , 333 ) . 28 ...
Obsah
Introduction | 1 |
Rhetoric and Salvation in the Seventeenth Century | 51 |
The Puritan Rhetoric of Childbearing | 73 |
Autorská práva | |
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