ABSTRACT

Most general accounts of the reformation concentrate on its events and personalities while recent scholarship has been largely devoted to its social and economic consequences. Benard Reardon's famous book has been designed specifically to reassert the role of religion in the study of reformation history and make the theological issues and arguments that fuelled it accessible to non-specialists today.

chapter |24 pages

The Eve of The Reformation

Anticipations of Reform

chapter |18 pages

Desiderius Erasmus

chapter |19 pages

Martin Luther

I. The Religious Revolutionary

chapter |23 pages

Martin Luther

II. The Founder of Protestantism

chapter |25 pages

Huldrych Zwingli

chapter |27 pages

Calvin and Reformed Christianity

I. Strassburg and Geneva

chapter |31 pages

Calvin and Reformed Christianity

II. A Pattern of Sound Doctrine

chapter |28 pages

The Radical Reformation

chapter |26 pages

The Reformation in Britain

I. Crisis

chapter |29 pages

The Reformation in Britain

II. Consolidation