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Reforming Priesthood in Reformation Zurich: Heinrich Bullinger's End-Times Agenda (1. Auflage 2019)

Contributor(s): Wood, Jon D (Author)

ISBN: 9783525570920

Publisher: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht

Hardcover
$63.00
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Pub Date: November 12, 2018

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.00" H x 0.00" L x 0.00" W ( 0.00 lbs) 150 pages

BISAC Categories:

History | Europe | General | Religion | Christianity | Protestant

Series: Reformed Historical Theology

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: The dramatic task of re-imagining clerical identity proved crucial to the Renaissance and Reformation. Jon Wood brings new light to ways in which that discussion animated reconfigurations of church, state, and early modern populace. End-Times considerations of Christian religion had played a part in upheavals throughout the medieval period, but the Reformation era mobilized that tradition with some new possibilities for understanding institutional leadership. Perceiving dangers of an overweening institution on the one hand and anarchic "priesthood of all believers" on the other hand, early Protestants defended legitimacy of ordained ministry in careful coordination with the state. The early Reformation in Zurich emphatically disestablished traditional priesthood in favour of a state-supported "prophethood" of exegetical-linguistic expertise. The author shows that Heinrich Bullinger's End-Times worldview led him to reclaim for Protestant Zurich a notion of specifically clerical "priesthood," albeit neither in terms of statist bureaucracy nor in terms of the traditional sacramental character that his precursor (Huldrych Zwingli) had dismantled. Clerical priesthood was an extraordinarily fraught subject in the sixteenth century, especially in the Swiss Confederation. Heinrich Bullinger's private manuscripts helpfully supplement his more circumscribed published works on this subject. The argument about reclaiming a modified institutional priesthood of Protestantism also prompts re-assessment of broader Reformation history in areas of church-state coordination and in major theological concepts of "covenant" and "justification" that defined religious/confessional distinctions of that era.

Review Quotes: "Wood blends theological and political history more thoroughly than some scholars may be used to. This feature makes his work even more valuable because it expands our historical horizons by tracing the interrelationship between theological and political ideas and influences. This is precisely the kind of research that scholars need to learn from and interact with to understand post-Reformation Europe more accurately. This book is dense and closely argued and accomplishes many things in a short space." --Ryan M. McGraw, Greenville Presbyterian Theological Seminary

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