
The opening chapters consider late medieval thought and the emergence of the young Luther at the center of the Reformation movement. There follows a study of the impact upon Luther of the philological, spiritual, and philosophical traditions of sixteen-century Europe. These traditions are fully examined in order to discern what Luther and his followers silently ignored or rejected, and so to delineate what is new and original in early Reformation thought.
The remaining chapters move from Luther to the wider world of events marking the Reformation era: the Peasant War, the Copernican Revolution, the beginning of the Counter-reformation and the reformed initiated by the Council of Trent.
" Here is Oberman at his most provocative and creative, a scholar from whom one always learns something new. "
Professor Steven Ozment
"Harvard University"
" At last, a Protestant scholar, with immense learning, has landed on this dark side of the moon, with scholarly essays as enthralling as they are indispensable. "
Reverend Professor Gordon Rupp
"Emeritus Dixie Professor of Ecclesiastical History, University of Cambridge"
This collection of seminal articles written over the last twenty years by a distinguished scholar of medieval, Renaissance, and Reformation history places the Reformation movement in its medieval context, paying particular attention to the continuity between the later Middle Ages and Reformation Europe. Oberman's discerning perspective illuminates the modern reader in regard to the multifaceted historical-cultural context out of which the Reformation arose.
| william clark russell martin hewings alan dean foster stephen j dubner robert hunt | stephen covey maharishi mahesh yogi y c fung m m ripley s |