American Faith: Its Religious, Political, and Economic Foundations |
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Page 64
... Calvin's ideal was thus a kind of revised Catholicism , equally authoritarian , equally intolerant , but more broadly based and strengthened by the inclusion of an upper middle - class laity in its counsels . In 1534 , the year after ...
... Calvin's ideal was thus a kind of revised Catholicism , equally authoritarian , equally intolerant , but more broadly based and strengthened by the inclusion of an upper middle - class laity in its counsels . In 1534 , the year after ...
Page 66
... Calvin succeeded in reducing the civil legislative body to a purely nominal position , thus placing the church definitively over the state . Twenty years after the first publication of the Institutes , Calvin's ideal theocracy had ...
... Calvin succeeded in reducing the civil legislative body to a purely nominal position , thus placing the church definitively over the state . Twenty years after the first publication of the Institutes , Calvin's ideal theocracy had ...
Page 68
... Calvin as " excessive interest " tentatively fixed as any- thing over five per cent . In this way he gave a ... Calvin's revolutionary reinterpretation of the Lutheran Beruf or " calling , " which was transformed by him from the duty of ...
... Calvin as " excessive interest " tentatively fixed as any- thing over five per cent . In this way he gave a ... Calvin's revolutionary reinterpretation of the Lutheran Beruf or " calling , " which was transformed by him from the duty of ...
Contents
Contents | 9 |
The Reformation as a Social Revolution | 17 |
The Left Wing of the Reformation | 34 |
Copyright | |
25 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
American Anabaptists Anglican Anne Hutchinson authority Baptists became Bible Book of Mormon Boston British Brook Farm Calvin Calvinistic Carolina Cathars Catholic century Charles Beard Christ Christian church civil clergy colony congregation Constitution Cotton Cotton Mather declared Deism democracy democratic developed doctrine dogma economic elect England equality established evil faith father followed freedom frontier human hundred Hutchinson ideal Indians influence interest Jefferson John John Humphrey Noyes King labor land later leaders less liberal liberty Lollards Lord Luther Massachusetts ment MICHIGAN ministers moral Mormon movement natural rights Negroes Nephites never North Noyes organization original Penn Pennsylvania persecution philosophy Pilgrims Plymouth political popular Presbyterians principle Protestant Puritan Quakers radical Reformation religion religious Revolution Roger Williams sects Shakers slavery slaves Smith social society South South Carolina southern spirit struggle theocracy theory Thomas tion trade Transcendentalist Uncle Tom's Cabin UNIVERSITY Virginia women wrote York