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John Locke's Christianity

  • Date Published: August 2022
  • availability: Available
  • format: Paperback
  • isbn: 9781108819428

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  • John Locke's religious interests and concerns permeate his philosophical production and are best expressed in his later writings on religion, which represent the culmination of his studies. In this volume, Diego Lucci offers a thorough analysis and reassessment of Locke's unique, heterodox, internally coherent version of Protestant Christianity, which emerges from The Reasonableness of Christianity and other public as well as private texts. In order to clarify Locke's views on morality, salvation, and the afterlife, Lucci critically examines Locke's theistic ethics, biblical hermeneutics, reflection on natural and revealed law, mortalism, theory of personal identity, Christology, and tolerationism. While emphasizing the originality of Locke's scripture-based religion, this book calls attention to his influences and explores the reception of his unorthodox theological ideas. Moreover, the book highlights the impact of Locke's natural and biblical theology on other areas of his thought, thus enabling a better understanding of the unity of his work.

    • Provides a comprehensive examination of Locke's religious thought
    • Examines and clarifies Locke's religious ideas by taking into account his influences, motivations, and legacy
    • Elucidates the originality, heterodoxy and internal coherence of Locke's version of Christianity
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    Reviews & endorsements

    'Lucci's book is the most up-to-date and comprehensive treatment of Locke's religious thought and writings. It is a masterly account that in many ways has mastered Locke.' Peter Anstey, University of Sydney

    'Many books have asserted the importance for Locke of his Christian convictions. Now at last we have a comprehensive and authoritative reconstruction of Locke's theology. Embedded as deeply in the archive as in Locke's published works, Diego Lucci's book is a model of exposition and interpretation.' Mark Goldie, University of Cambridge

    'After reading this book, one would no longer think of John Locke merely as a precursor of secular political theory or Enlightenment epistemology. Diego Lucci has convincingly demonstrated how Locke needs to be situated within the context of early modern English and European philosophical and theological debates surrounding the human self, divine saviour, and society.' Paul Lim, Vanderbilt University

    'John Locke's Christianity is an impressive scholarly work that locates important historical and theological distinctions within 17th century Christianity and uses these distinctions, as well as Locke's own religious writings, to make a strong textual and contextual case that Locke's Christianity was both unique and sheds light on theological complexities inherent in epistemological, metaphysical, moral, and political aspects of his thinking. This remarkably detailed work occupies an otherwise unfilled and welcome place in Locke studies.' Shelley Weinberg, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

    'Through a careful study of the relevant publications and manuscripts, in this admirable book Diego Lucci both presents a reconstruction of John Locke's biblical Christianity and makes a compelling case for its importance to understanding his moral, philosophical and political thought. Lucci not only establishes the importance of theology to Locke, but demonstrates that it helped bind together his various intellectual endeavours.' Stephen Snobelen, University of King's College

    'Lucci's conclusion is an incisive intellectual history of Lockean scholarship, especially regarding Locke's placement in the narrative of the origins and triumph of the secular Enlightenment … Recommended.' E. J. Eisenach, Choice

    'Diego Lucci's John Locke's Christianity is a fabulous work of scholarship - meticulously researched, well argued, and judicious. It should be required reading for everyone interested in John Locke's thought … Lucci not only provides an excellent account of Locke's Christian beliefs but also shows how those beliefs are relevant for interpreting and understanding some of Locke's philosophical positions. Lucci's book will be read and discussed by scholars for years to come.' Benjamin Hill, Journal of the History of Philosophy

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    Product details

    • Date Published: August 2022
    • format: Paperback
    • isbn: 9781108819428
    • length: 252 pages
    • dimensions: 228 x 151 x 14 mm
    • weight: 0.37kg
    • availability: Available
  • Table of Contents

    Introduction
    1. The context and background of Locke's biblical theology
    1.1 Rejecting antinomianism and deism
    1.2 Searching for the foundations of morality
    1.3 Reason, revelation, and morality
    2. Engaging with scripture and heterodoxy
    2.1 Socinianism and Arminianism
    2.2 Scriptural authority and historical method
    2.3 The way of fundamentals
    3. A scripture-based moralist soteriology
    3.1 Natural theology, biblical theology, and natural law theory
    3.2 Law of nature, law of Moses, law of faith
    3.3 Original sin, satisfaction, and atonement
    4. The soul and the Last Judgment
    4.1 Death and resurrection
    4.2 Personal identity and moral accountability
    4.3 Consciousness, repentance, and salvation
    5. The Trinity and Christ
    5.1 The Trinitarian controversy
    5.2 Locke's messianic and non-Trinitarian Christology
    5.3 The debate on Locke and the Trinity
    6. Religious toleration and Christian irenicism
    6.1 The theoretical framework of A Letter concerning Toleration
    6.2 Locke's omissions and exceptions to toleration in the letter and other writings
    6.3 Salvation and toleration in Locke's theological writings
    Conclusion
    Bibliography
    Index.

  • Author

    Diego Lucci, American University in Bulgaria
    Diego Lucci is Professor of Philosophy and History at the American University in Bulgaria. Among his publications are the monograph Scripture and Deism (2008) and the co-edited volume Atheism and Deism Revalued (with Wayne Hudson and Jeffrey R. Wigelsworth, 2014).

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