21 |
False Oaths: The Silent Alliance between Church and Heretics in England, c.1400-c.1530Raskin, Sarah January 2016 (has links)
This dissertation re-examines trials for heresy in England from 1382, which saw the first major action directed at the Wycliffite heresy in Oxford, and the early Reformation period, with an emphasis on abjurations, the oaths renouncing heretical beliefs that suspects were required to swear after their interrogations were concluded. It draws a direct link between the customs that developed around the ceremony of abjuration and the exceptionally low rate of execution for “relapsed” and “obstinate” heretics in England, compared to other major European anti-heresy campaigns of the period. Several cases are analyzed in which heretics who should have been executed, according to the letter and intention of canon law on the subject, were permitted to abjure, sometimes repeatedly. Cases that ended in execution despite intense efforts by the presiding bishop to obtain a similarly law-bending abjuration are also discussed. These cases are situated within explorations of the constitutions governing heresy trials, contrasting their use of apparently standard legal terminologies with more aggressive continental inquisitors, as well as the theology and cultural standing of oaths within both Wycliffism and the broader Late Medieval and Early Modern world. This dissertation will trace how Lollard heretics gradually accepted the necessity of false abjuration as one of a number of measures to preserve their lives and their movement, and how early adopters using coded writing carefully persuaded their co-religionists of this necessity. Furthermore, it will argue that the bishops who conducted the trial system deliberately constructed it to encourage this type of perjury, even suppressing attempts to alter heretics’ actual convictions, for the sake of social order and stability.
|
22 |
The Mind of a Medieval Inquisitor: an Analysis of the 1273 <i>Compilatio de Novu Spiritu</i> of Albertus MagnusMcKinstry, Emily 19 April 2018 (has links)
The fight against heresy in medieval Europe has fascinated scholars for centuries. Innumerable books, movies, and even video games have been made about this struggle to combat heresy in the Middle Ages. Despite this apparent fascination with the subject, our understanding of medieval heretics and the inquisitors who prosecuted them remains murky. What we do know is that many medieval people lost their lives, while others were punished with imprisonment or excommunication. We also know that many others dedicated their lives to rooting out what they believed was the evil of heresy among the populace. And we know that fear of the spread of heresy was rampant within the later medieval Church. But what constituted heresy? Who were the people accused as heretics? And why were they accused? These are questions that are still debated and discussed within the scholarly community.
As a contribution to the study of heresy, I have chosen to analyze one particular document and its author. This document, the Compilatio de Novu Spiritu, written by Albertus Magnus around 1273, consists of a list of ninety-seven heretical beliefs attributed to heretics in the Swabian Ries. It has been previously studied as marking the beginning of the "Free Spirit" heresy. However, many of the previous assumptions about the heresy of the Free Spirit have been questioned by more recent scholarship, including whether the sect existed at all. Instead, the heresy of the Free Spirit is now generally acknowledged to be closely related to medieval mysticism, and practiced by only a few individuals or possibly small groups. Therefore, the significance of the Compilatio has changed. I will re-examine the document, analyzing it not as a precursor to a later religious movement that preached that souls united with God can act with moral impunity, but as a window into the mind of its inquisitorial author, Albertus Magnus.
The intent of this study is to better understand the thinking of the inquisitors who fought against heresy, focusing particularly on the Compilatio and its author, Albertus Magnus (c.1200 - 1280). The methodology of the study of heresy has elicited significant debate among historians, and these issues need to be addressed prior to an analysis of this document. Therefore, I will discuss the historiography of medieval heresy and address the major disagreements within the field in this introduction. In Chapter 1, I set forth as historical background the religious situation in medieval Europe at the time the Compilatio was written. The medieval Church spent considerable time and resources in the struggle against heresy, so I will also examine the Church's response to heresy in this chapter. In the second chapter, I address how Albertus responded to the statements enumerated in the document and in particular, the manner in which he cites early church heresies. Lastly, in the final chapter, I explore how Albertus Magnus used early church writers such as Augustine and Gregory for substantiation throughout the document. Specifically, I analyze how Augustine, Gregory, and Albertus treat the sin of pride.
|
23 |
John of Damascus and heresiology: a basis for understanding modern heresyMushagalusa, Timothee Baciyunjuze 04 1900 (has links)
This study investigates the understanding of heresy and the heretic according to John of
Damascus. For him, a heretic was any Christian who, by wilful choice, departs from the
one orthodox tradition by adopting a personal opinion on the common faith which he
intends to institute as sole truth. Our research is divided into two parts and aims to apply
John of Damascus' understanding of the recurring identity of the Christian heretic and his
behaviour.
By using historical-theological, interdisciplinary and diachronical approaches, our
research demonstrates that this Church Father, who is the `seal of the patristic era,'
remains a relevant authority for our comprehension of heresy and the heretic. Through
two case studies, namely, the Dutch Reformed Churches and Apartheid, and
Kimbanguism, our study specifies, on the one hand how a distorted Christian confession
contributed to the rise of Apartheid, with its attendant sense of a theocracy,
predestination, election, supremacy, divine love and justice. Kimbanguism, on the other
hand, represents a heresy against its will. It is an example of Christian leaders who
abused their power to apply cultural elements that resulted in a dramatic misinterpretation
of the Christian dogma of the Trinity. Finally, our study intends to apply the notions of
wilful choice, obstinacy and fanaticism, libertine exegesis, personal opinion and orthodox
tradition or common faith, to portray a heretic by using an interdisciplinary approach:
theologically as a libertine-exegete, psychologically as a dogmatic and fanatic person,
and sociologically as a negative cultural reformer. Thus, our analysis is both historical
and theological, and clearly and substantially elucidates the heretical mind in modern
times.
Consequently, our inquiry may be summed up as follows. Firstly, heresy habitually
comes from an existing text, doctrine or discipline; secondly, it concerns people who are
originally Christians; thirdly, it demonstrates that a heretic may be a fervent and an educated Christian, a layman or a church leader, who, on the basis of wilful choice,
interprets Biblical texts freely, with his personal exegesis and hermeneutics, and
ultimately incorrectly. From this exegesis and hermeneutics he deduces and sustains a
new doctrine that he defends with obstinacy and fanaticism. / Christian Spirituality, Church History & Missiology / D. Div. (Church History)
|
24 |
John of Damascus and heresiology: a basis for understanding modern heresyMushagalusa, Timothee Baciyunjuze 04 1900 (has links)
This study investigates the understanding of heresy and the heretic according to John of
Damascus. For him, a heretic was any Christian who, by wilful choice, departs from the
one orthodox tradition by adopting a personal opinion on the common faith which he
intends to institute as sole truth. Our research is divided into two parts and aims to apply
John of Damascus' understanding of the recurring identity of the Christian heretic and his
behaviour.
By using historical-theological, interdisciplinary and diachronical approaches, our
research demonstrates that this Church Father, who is the `seal of the patristic era,'
remains a relevant authority for our comprehension of heresy and the heretic. Through
two case studies, namely, the Dutch Reformed Churches and Apartheid, and
Kimbanguism, our study specifies, on the one hand how a distorted Christian confession
contributed to the rise of Apartheid, with its attendant sense of a theocracy,
predestination, election, supremacy, divine love and justice. Kimbanguism, on the other
hand, represents a heresy against its will. It is an example of Christian leaders who
abused their power to apply cultural elements that resulted in a dramatic misinterpretation
of the Christian dogma of the Trinity. Finally, our study intends to apply the notions of
wilful choice, obstinacy and fanaticism, libertine exegesis, personal opinion and orthodox
tradition or common faith, to portray a heretic by using an interdisciplinary approach:
theologically as a libertine-exegete, psychologically as a dogmatic and fanatic person,
and sociologically as a negative cultural reformer. Thus, our analysis is both historical
and theological, and clearly and substantially elucidates the heretical mind in modern
times.
Consequently, our inquiry may be summed up as follows. Firstly, heresy habitually
comes from an existing text, doctrine or discipline; secondly, it concerns people who are
originally Christians; thirdly, it demonstrates that a heretic may be a fervent and an educated Christian, a layman or a church leader, who, on the basis of wilful choice,
interprets Biblical texts freely, with his personal exegesis and hermeneutics, and
ultimately incorrectly. From this exegesis and hermeneutics he deduces and sustains a
new doctrine that he defends with obstinacy and fanaticism. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / D. Div. (Church History)
|
25 |
Les inquisitions modernes dans les Pays-Bas méridionaux, 1520-1633: législation, compétence, répressionGoosens, Aline January 1995 (has links)
Doctorat en philosophie et lettres / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
|
26 |
An ontological history of ecclesial unionFredsti, Sean Paul 08 1900 (has links)
A critical survey of early Church history, the works of the Church Fathers and several councils of the Church reveals a consistent call for unity. Heresies, politic intrigue and struggles for governance have aggravated attempts to remain in the union. The insistence on unity and the persistence of the Church to unify reveals an ontological reality.
While our knowledge of the Church can be given in epistemological terms, looking at the Church to discover its essence, what it means to be church, opens a different way of encountering the Church and, eventually, understanding the nature of the Church to be one.
The transformations in the early Church as it spread to new cultures, the impact on the Church at the founding of “New Rome” by the Emperor Constantine, the changes brought about when Constantinople fell to the Ottomans in 1453 and the resulting birth of the Renaissance in the West with the beginning of the autocephaly Church in Russia and subsequent reunions, are especially rich in manifestations of unification among dissidence. This paper will focus on these particular moments.
The concept of looking at the essence of the Church exposes us to an understanding of what the Church is as a universal presence. Stating that the Church has no physical dimension, that it is a unique congregation abiding solely by an actual historic document or defined only by written doctrines does not show us its full essence. Likewise, seeing the Church as defined by how it differs from another, exists in objection to another church or how it avoids affiliation with others, reveals a body that does not have a unifying essence and is lifeless. Looking closer at its essence as it is revealed over time, shows us a living Church that has repeatedly manifested unification as its particularly unique identity.
This paper is a reflective look of the Church through the ages which presents to us a look into the essence of the Church. Primary and secondary sources are critically examined with an emphasis on ontological manifestations. The moments in history that are presented in this paper are especially revealing of the unifying nature of the Church in various settings. This paper has limitations though. While the deliberate historic selections may give extraneous interpretations, it is intended to reveal previously under-estimated treasures, and this topic will require being given greater context in any expanded study. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / D. Th. (Church History)
|
27 |
How the process of doctrinal standardization during the later Roman Empire relates to Christian triumphalismMoore, David Normant 06 1900 (has links)
My thesis examines relations among practitioners of various religions, especially Christians and Jews, during the era when Jesus’ project went from being a Galilean sect, to a persecuted minority, to religio licita status, and eventually to imperial favor, all happening between the first century resurrection of Jesus and the fourth century rise of Constantine.
There is an abiding image of the Church in wider public consciousness that it is unwittingly and in some cases antagonistically exclusionist. This is not a late-developing image. I trace it to the period that the church developed into a formal organization with the establishment of canons and creeds defined by Church councils. This notion is so pervasive that an historical retrospective of Christianity of any period, from the sect that became a movement, to the Reformation, to the present day’s multiple Christian iterations, is framed by the late Patristic era. The conflicts and solutions reached in that period provided enduring definition to the Church while silencing dissent. I refer here to such actions as the destruction of books and letters and the banishment of bishops.
Before there emerged the urgent perceived need for doctrinal uniformity, the presence of Christianity provided a resilient non-militant opponent to and an increasing intellectual critique of all religious traditions, including that of the official gods that were seen to hold the empire together. When glaringly manifest cleavages in the empire persisted, the Emperor Constantine sought to use the church to help bring political unity. He called for church councils, starting with Nicaea in 325 CE that took no account for churches outside the Roman Empire, and many within, even though councils were called “Ecumenical.”
The presumption that the church was fully representative without asking for permission from a broader field of constituents is just that: a presumption.
This thesis studies the ancient world of Christianity’s growth to explore whether, in that age of new and untested toleration, there was a more advisable way of responding to the invitation to the political table. The answer to this can help us formulate, and perhaps revise, some of our conduct today, especially for Christians who obtain a voice in powerful places. / Christian Spirituality, Church History & Missiology / D. Th. (Church History)
|
28 |
Les femmes, les hérétiques et les marchands : trois groupes sociaux représentés sur la façade de l’église abbatiale de Saint-Gilles-du-GardBélanger, Mireille 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
|
29 |
How the process of doctrinal standardization during the later Roman Empire relates to Christian triumphalismMoore, David Normant 06 1900 (has links)
My thesis examines relations among practitioners of various religions, especially Christians and Jews, during the era when Jesus’ project went from being a Galilean sect, to a persecuted minority, to religio licita status, and eventually to imperial favor, all happening between the first century resurrection of Jesus and the fourth century rise of Constantine.
There is an abiding image of the Church in wider public consciousness that it is unwittingly and in some cases antagonistically exclusionist. This is not a late-developing image. I trace it to the period that the church developed into a formal organization with the establishment of canons and creeds defined by Church councils. This notion is so pervasive that an historical retrospective of Christianity of any period, from the sect that became a movement, to the Reformation, to the present day’s multiple Christian iterations, is framed by the late Patristic era. The conflicts and solutions reached in that period provided enduring definition to the Church while silencing dissent. I refer here to such actions as the destruction of books and letters and the banishment of bishops.
Before there emerged the urgent perceived need for doctrinal uniformity, the presence of Christianity provided a resilient non-militant opponent to and an increasing intellectual critique of all religious traditions, including that of the official gods that were seen to hold the empire together. When glaringly manifest cleavages in the empire persisted, the Emperor Constantine sought to use the church to help bring political unity. He called for church councils, starting with Nicaea in 325 CE that took no account for churches outside the Roman Empire, and many within, even though councils were called “Ecumenical.”
The presumption that the church was fully representative without asking for permission from a broader field of constituents is just that: a presumption.
This thesis studies the ancient world of Christianity’s growth to explore whether, in that age of new and untested toleration, there was a more advisable way of responding to the invitation to the political table. The answer to this can help us formulate, and perhaps revise, some of our conduct today, especially for Christians who obtain a voice in powerful places. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / D. Th. (Church History)
|
Page generated in 0.0869 seconds