XLogin

Password lost?  

Facebook Options


Sign up
download process

An Outline of the History of Christian Thought Since Kant - Caldwell Moore, Edward

Price: 3.99 USD
Download
Now
Add to cart
Instant Download from ebook-reader, digital version

Pay for An Outline of the History of Christian Thought Since Kant - Caldwell Moore, Edward
top quality provided by
ingram
for Adobe Digital Editions

Works on PC, Mac and modern smartphones and tablets!
  1. Create an Adobe account.
  2. Install/update Adobe Digital Edition.
  3. Buy this book on TRADEBIT.COM.
    See the How-To!

We have reader Apps for
Android™ and iOS™ (iPhone™ or iPad™).
  • Size: 1.387 MB  

File Data:

Contact Seller: ebook-reader, Member since 09/08/2010
URL: Twitter this Tweet this
Embed: Create JavaScript Mobile Tag Widgets for your homepage
Resell product: click here

Description:

(ID 109966377)
The Protestant Reformation marked an era both in life and thought for the modern world. It ushered in a revolution in Europe. It established distinctions and initiated tendencies which are still significant. These distinctions have been significant not for Europe alone. They have had influence also upon those continents which since the Reformation have come under the dominion of Europeans. Yet few would now regard the Reformation as epoch-making in the sense in which that pre-eminence has been claimed. No one now esteems that it separates the modern from the mediæval and ancient world in the manner once supposed. The perspective of history makes it evident that large areas of life and thought remained then untouched by the new spirit. Assumptions which had their origin in feudal or even in classical culture continued unquestioned. More than this, impulses in rational life and in the interpretation of religion, which showed themselves with clearness in one and another of the reformers themselves, were lost sight of, if not actually repudiated, by their successors. It is possible to view many things in the intellectual and religious life of the nineteenth century, even some which Protestants have passionately reprobated, as but the taking up again of clues which the reformers had let fall, the carrying out of purposes of their movement which were partly hidden from themselves. Men have asserted that the Renaissance inaugurated a period of paganism. They have gloried that there supervened upon this paganism the religious revival which the Reformation was. Even these men will, however, not deny that it was the intellectual rejuvenation which made the religious reformation possible or, at all events, effective. Nor can it be denied that after the Revolution, in the Protestant communities the intellectual element was thrust into the background. The practical and devotional prevailed. Humanism was for a time shut out. There was more room for it in the roman church than among Protestants. Again, the Renaissance itself had been not so much an era of discovery of a new intellectual and spiritual world. It had been, rather, the rediscovery of valid principles of life in an ancient culture and civilisation. That thorough-going review of the principles at the basis of all relations of the life of man, which once seemed possible to Renaissance and Reformation, was postponed to a much later date. When it did take place, it was under far different auspices. There is a remarkable unity in the history of Protestant thought in the period from the Reformation to the end of the eighteenth century. There is a still more surprising unity of Protestant thought in this period with the thought of the mediæval and ancient Church. The basis and methods are the same. Upon many points the conclusions are identical. There was nothing of which the Protestant scholastics were more proud than of their agreement with the Fathers of the early Church. They did not perceive in how large degree they were at one with Christian thinkers of the Roman communion as well. Few seem to have realised how largely Catholic in principle Protestant thought has been. The fundamental principles at the basis of the reasoning have been the same. The notions of revelation and inspiration were identical. The idea of authority was common to both, only the instance in which that authority is lodged was different. The thoughts of God and man, of the world, of creation, of providence and prayer, of the nature and means of salvation, are similar. Newman was right in discovering that from the first he had thought, only and always, in what he called Catholic terms. It was veiled from him that many of those who ardently opposed him thought in those same terms.
Words: catholic roman church, communion first, prayer of the, roman church

Author: Moore, Edward, Caldwell
Publisher: EbooksLib
Illustration: N
Language: ENG
Title: An Outline of the History of Christian Thought Since Kant
Pages: 00000 (MicrosoftReader.lit) / 00000 (Encrypted PDF)
On Sale: 2005-06-04
SKU-13/ISBN: 9781412146623
Category: Religion : Christianity - History - General
Category: Religion : General

User tags: caldwell moore, edward, religion, christianity, history, general

Preview

More Files From This User

Related Files

Outline Of The History Of Christian Thought Since Kant, An - Edward Caldwell Moore

It is hoped that this book may serve as an outline for a larger work, in which the Judgments here expressed may be supported in detail. Especially, the autho......


The Caldwell Objects And How To Observe Them

Preface.- Acknowledgements.- About the Author.- Sir Patrick Moore, Observer Extraordinaire.- The Caldwell Objects.- How to Visually Observe the Caldwell Obje......


Mp3 Michael Buffalo Smith - Southern Lights

A blend of influences from blues, southern rock and country rock 9 MP3 Songs ROCK: Roots Rock, BLUES: Rockin'' Blues Details: Dreaming Buffalo Records ha......