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The Hybrid Reformation
A Social, Cultural, and Intellectual History of Contending Forces

AUD$141.95 inc GST

  • Date Published: September 2022
  • availability: Available
  • format: Hardback
  • isbn: 9781108477970

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  • Three basic forces dominated sixteenth-century religious life. Two polarized groups, Protestant and Catholic reformers, were shaped by theological debates, over the nature of the church, salvation, prayer, and other issues. These debates articulated critical, group-defining oppositions. Bystanders to the Catholic-Protestant competition were a third force. Their reactions to reformers were violent, opportunistic, hesitant, ambiguous, or serendipitous, much the way social historians have described common people in the Reformation for the last fifty years. But in an ecology of three forces, hesitations and compromises were natural, not just among ordinary people, but also, if more subtly, among reformers and theologians. In this volume, Christopher Ocker offers a constructive and nuanced alternative to the received understanding of the Reformation. Combining the methods of intellectual, cultural, and social history, his book demonstrates how the Reformation became a hybrid movement produced by a binary of Catholic and Protestant self-definitions, by bystanders to religious debate, and by the hesitations and compromises made by all three groups during the religious controversy.

    • Offers a model of the Reformation as a hybrid produced by 'third forces'
    • Shows that the historical concept of the Reformation must involve both intellectual-cultural and social-historical methods
    • Suggests new frameworks for thinking of Anabaptism, late medieval theology and nominalism, and biblical interpretation in Reformation history
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    Product details

    • Date Published: September 2022
    • format: Hardback
    • isbn: 9781108477970
    • length: 350 pages
    • dimensions: 265 x 183 x 22 mm
    • weight: 0.8kg
    • availability: Available
  • Table of Contents

    Part I. Indifference and Ambiguity:
    1. After the Peasants War: an anabaptist fights for her property
    2. Living between the old faith and the new
    3. 'A middle man'
    Part II. Medieval Protestants:
    4. A reformation stake in medieval thinking
    5. The trouble with Ockham: nominalism
    6. Wegestreit: Via Moderna, Via Antiqua, Wycliffites
    Part III. Interpretation Beyond Borders:
    7. Erasmus and biblical scholasticism
    8. A literal incident, a spiritual menace: Calvin versus Castellio and Libertines
    9. The trouble with allegory
    10. Third forces in a hybrid reformation.

  • Author

    Christopher Ocker, Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley
    Christopher Ocker is Assistant Provost and Professor of History at The Graduate School of Theology, University of Redlands, and member of the Core Doctoral faculty of the Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley.  He is the author of Biblical Poetics before Humanism and Reformation, Church Robbers and Reformers in Germany, 1525-1547 (2006) and Luther, Conflict, and Christendom: Reformation Europe and Christianity in the West (2018).

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