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. |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-3 z 20
Strana 76
... physical birth will go well but assurance that , if her spiritual birth succeeds , then the outcome of the physical labor is anticlimactic : once she has accepted Christ , " the New birth is carried on ! Thus you have gone through the ...
... physical birth will go well but assurance that , if her spiritual birth succeeds , then the outcome of the physical labor is anticlimactic : once she has accepted Christ , " the New birth is carried on ! Thus you have gone through the ...
Strana 180
... physical sense as the speaker's last " scene ... mile ... pace ... inch ... point . " The enjambed lines hurriedly diminish the self , the " quick " " pace " enacting a swift reduction of the linear self to the smallest " point . " This ...
... physical sense as the speaker's last " scene ... mile ... pace ... inch ... point . " The enjambed lines hurriedly diminish the self , the " quick " " pace " enacting a swift reduction of the linear self to the smallest " point . " This ...
Strana 185
... physically unbounded desire of his self ; but " falls " back again into the dominating present of limitation , confinement , and imprisonment by the physical absence of wholeness . Just as the first quatrain was dominated by reference ...
... physically unbounded desire of his self ; but " falls " back again into the dominating present of limitation , confinement , and imprisonment by the physical absence of wholeness . Just as the first quatrain was dominated by reference ...
Obsah
Introduction | 1 |
Rhetoric and Salvation in the Seventeenth Century | 51 |
The Puritan Rhetoric of Childbearing | 73 |
Autorská práva | |
Další části 6 nejsou zobrazeny.
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
accept Adam appears argues authority become believed body bring called Catholic century Christ Christian church Covenant critics damnation death desire discussion divine doctrine Donne Donne's effect Elizabethan England English example experience expressed faith Fall Familists figure final forgiveness further gift gives God's grace heart Herbert Hobbes Holy human interpretation Jehu Jesus John Jonson judgment King language lines literature Lives London Lord Lost Macbeth man's Mather means metaphor Milton moral nature never Niclaes notes offers Paradise Regained physical play poem poet poetry political present Press promise Prospero Protestant provides published Puritan Quakers readers reason references religious Restoration rhetorical sacrament saints salvation Satan says scene seems sense Sermons seventeenth-century sins soul speaker spiritual Studies suggests Taylor things Thomas thou tradition Univ University woman women writings York