Translating Resurrection : the debate between William Tyndale and George Joye in its historical and theological context /
By situating it in its historical and theological context, Translating Resurrection presents an original look at the fascinating but little-known debate between William Tyndale and George Joye about their beliefs concerning post-mortem existence at the beginning of the English Reformation.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Boston :
Brill,
2013.
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Colección: | Studies in the history of Christian traditions.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Acknowledgments; List of Illustrations; Abbreviations; Chapter One The Tyndale-Joye Debate in the Literature; A Tumultuous World; The Pamphlet and Its Author: The Debate on the Doom of the Dead between George Joye and William Tyndale; William Tyndale; George Joye; The Sources for the Tyndale-Joye Debate; A Status Quaestionis; The First Biographical References by Joye's Contemporaries; The Conservative Consensus and Some Exceptions to It; A Shift in the Study of Joye; Charles Butterworth and Joye's Only Biography; William Clebsch; Recent Studies; Conclusion of the Status Quaestionis.
- Methodological Considerations and the Structure of the BookChapter Two Views on Post-Mortem Existence Prior to the Reformation; Views on Post-Mortem Existence in the Bible; Belief in the Afterlife in the Old Testament; Belief in the Afterlife in the New Testament; Post-Mortem Existence in the Church Fathers; Post-Mortem Existence in the Theology of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance; Chapter Three Views on Post-Mortem Existence in the Early Reformation Period; Introduction; Wessel Gansfort; Erasmus; Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples; Martin Luther; Andreas Karlstadt and Gerhard Westerburg.
- Philipp MelanchthonHuldrych Zwingli; Martin Bucer; Heinrich Bullinger; Bartholomäus Westheimer and Otto Brunfels; William Roye, Simon Fish, and William Tracy; John Fisher and the Defenders of Purgatory; Thomas More; John Frith; The Anabaptists; Conclusion to Chapter Three; Chapter Four The Tyndale-Joye Debate in Antwerp; Tyndale's Worms New Testament and Its Antwerp Reprints (1526-33); A Common Protestant Basis; Diverging Opinions: Tyndale's Position on Soul Sleep; Joye's Letter to Latimer and the Letter to Brother William (29 April 1533); Joye's First New Testament (August 1534).
- Tyndale's Second Foreword in His First Revised New Testament (November 1534)Joye's Second New Testament (November 1534-January 1535); Joye's Apologye (February 1535); Joye's Non-Theological Arguments; Joye's Theological Arguments; Joye's Scholarship and Sources; Joye's Style; Joye's Translational Strategy; Aftermath; Chapter Five Conclusion; The Inappropriateness of the Conservative Consensus; An Exegetical Debate in Its Context; The Legacy of the Tyndale-Joye Debate; Appendices; 1. George Joye to Hugh Latimer (29 April 1533); 2. John Coke to Brother William (29 April 1533).
- 3. The 'Attached Paper'4. Joye's Address 'Unto the Reader' in His Second New Testament; 5. Biblical Texts where Joye Changed 'resurreccion' into 'lyfe after this'; Bibliography; Index of Biblical References; General Index.