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 122
... Thomas Palmer , the scholar from Oxford for whose book Jonson wrote a prefatory poem . There was Wright's friend Hugh Holland , like Jonson a Westminster boy , for whose Pancharis Jonson composed an ode in which he refers to Essex's ...
... Thomas Palmer , the scholar from Oxford for whose book Jonson wrote a prefatory poem . There was Wright's friend Hugh Holland , like Jonson a Westminster boy , for whose Pancharis Jonson composed an ode in which he refers to Essex's ...
Strana 140
... Thomas insists , to be sure , that grace is necessary , that man cannot achieve salvation on his own . Grace comes not to sinners , however , in the Thomistic analysis , but to the virtuous , and is therefore not the ' efficacious ...
... Thomas insists , to be sure , that grace is necessary , that man cannot achieve salvation on his own . Grace comes not to sinners , however , in the Thomistic analysis , but to the virtuous , and is therefore not the ' efficacious ...
Strana 141
... Thomas assert : " There can be no infusion of grace without an actual movement of the free - will towards God and against sin . ” 8 Such a statement suggests that , after all , man really is in charge of the time when he is going to ...
... Thomas assert : " There can be no infusion of grace without an actual movement of the free - will towards God and against sin . ” 8 Such a statement suggests that , after all , man really is in charge of the time when he is going to ...
Obsah
Introduction | 1 |
Rhetoric and Salvation in the Seventeenth Century | 51 |
The Puritan Rhetoric of Childbearing | 73 |
Autorská práva | |
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