All Things Made New: The Reformation and Its Legacy

All Things Made New: The Reformation and Its Legacy

by Diarmaid MacCulloch
All Things Made New: The Reformation and Its Legacy

All Things Made New: The Reformation and Its Legacy

by Diarmaid MacCulloch

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Overview

The most profound characteristic of Western Europe in the Middle Ages was its cultural and religious unity, a unity secured by a common alignment with the Pope in Rome, and a common language - Latin - for worship and scholarship. The Reformation shattered that unity, and the consequences are still with us today. In All Things Made New, Diarmaid MacCulloch, author of the New York Times bestseller Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years, examines not only the Reformation's impact across Europe, but also the Catholic Counter-Reformation and the special evolution of religion in England, revealing how one of the most turbulent, bloody, and transformational events in Western history has shaped modern society. The Reformation may have launched a social revolution, MacCulloch argues, but it was not caused by social and economic forces, or even by a secular idea like nationalism; it sprang from a big idea about death, salvation, and the afterlife. This idea - that salvation was entirely in God's hands and there was nothing humans could do to alter his decision - ended the Catholic Church's monopoly in Europe and altered the trajectory of the entire future of the West. By turns passionate, funny, meditative, and subversive, All Things Made New takes readers onto fascinating new ground, exploring the original conflicts of the Reformation and cutting through prejudices that continue to distort popular conceptions of a religious divide still with us after five centuries. This monumental work, from one of the most distinguished scholars of Christianity writing today, explores the ways in which historians have told the tale of the Reformation, why their interpretations have changed so dramatically over time, and ultimately, how the contested legacy of this revolution continues to impact the world today.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780190616830
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 08/04/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 448
File size: 10 MB

About the Author

Diarmaid MacCulloch is Professor of the History of the Church at Oxford University. His Thomas Cranmer (1996) won the Whitbread Biography Prize, the James Tait Black Prize and the Duff Cooper Prize; The Reformation: A History (2004) won the Wolfson Prize and the British Academy Prize. Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years (2010), which was adapted into a six-part BBC television series, was awarded the Cundill and Hessel-Tiltman Prizes. His Gifford Lectures at the University of Edinburgh were published in 2013 as Silence: A Christian History. His most recent television series, Sex and the Church, broadcast in 2015. He was knighted in 2012.

Table of Contents

Preface I: Reformations across Europe Christianity: the bigger picture Angels and the Reformation The Virgin Mary and Protestant Reformers John Calvin The Council of Trent The Italian Inquisition II: The English Reformation Tudor Royal Image-Making Henry VIII: pious king Tolerant Cranmer? The Making of the Prayer Book Tudor Queens: Mary and Elizabeth William Byrd The Bible before King James The King James Bible The Bay Psalm Book III: Looking back on the English Reformation Putting the English Reformation on the Map The Latitude of the Church of England Modern Historians on the English Reformation Thomas Cranmer's Biographers Forging Reformation History: A Cautionary Tale And Finally: the nature of Anglicanism Acknowledgements Notes Index
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