
Protestant Nation - The Fragile Christian Roots of America`s Greatness
St Augustine's Press
Published on 4. March 2019
Book
Hardback
288 pages
978-1-58731-665-4 (ISBN)
Description
Alain Besancon's studies, over decades, on Russia, France, Islam, and art have convinced him that "that nothing is comprehensible if one neglects the religious choices that determine a historical destiny." His aim is to comprehend the most powerful nation on the earth, and he was convinced that Protestantism was the key to America. The question of Protestantism and its origins implicated, in turn, the origins of the Reformation and thus the problem of the moral and political meaning of Christianity itself. And Besancon traces theological dynamic that was to stamp the Reformation, behind Luther's break with Rome, to the late medieval nominalists' failure to maintain the fragile communion that Thomas Aquinas had articulated between love and intellect.
This then is the ambition of this elegant and magisterial essay: to explore the question of the spirit of America as bound up with the most fundamental and most problematic promise of Christianity: the union of heart and mind. This exploration leads the reader, after a deft analysis of Nominalism, through a luminous tour of the sources of modern Christianity that includes the revival of speculative mysticism in authors such as Meister Eckhart and Tauler, the devotion moderna, the main figures and movements of the Reformation proper, a brilliant digest of Anglicanism, and a survey of Puritanism in England and America. This uniquely synoptic exploration concludes with the emergence of a democratic religion of humanity, a faith whose future is as uncertain as its grasp of the modern spirit's Christian sources that Alain Besancon has so judiciously laid bare.
This then is the ambition of this elegant and magisterial essay: to explore the question of the spirit of America as bound up with the most fundamental and most problematic promise of Christianity: the union of heart and mind. This exploration leads the reader, after a deft analysis of Nominalism, through a luminous tour of the sources of modern Christianity that includes the revival of speculative mysticism in authors such as Meister Eckhart and Tauler, the devotion moderna, the main figures and movements of the Reformation proper, a brilliant digest of Anglicanism, and a survey of Puritanism in England and America. This uniquely synoptic exploration concludes with the emergence of a democratic religion of humanity, a faith whose future is as uncertain as its grasp of the modern spirit's Christian sources that Alain Besancon has so judiciously laid bare.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Indiana
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 157 mm
Thickness: 18 mm
Weight
363 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-58731-665-4 (9781587316654)
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Schweitzer Classification