The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

Salvation and Sin: Augustine, Langland, Fourteenth-Century Theology
Salvation and Sin: Augustine, Langland, Fourteenth-Century Theology

Salvation and Sin: Augustine, Langland, Fourteenth-Century Theology

Current price: $125.00
Loading Inventory...
Get it at Barnes and Noble

Size: Hardcover

Get it at Barnes and Noble
explores various modes of displaying the mysterious relations between divine and human agency, together with different accounts of sin and its consequences. Theologies of grace and versions of Christian identity and community are its pervasive concerns. Augustine becomes a major interlocutor in this book: his vocabulary and grammar of divine and human agency are central to Aers' exploration of later writers and their works. After the opening chapter on Augustine, Aers turns to the exploration of these concerns in the work of two major theologians of fourteenth-century England, William of Ockham and Thomas Bradwardine. From their work, Aers moves to his central text, William Langland's , a long multigeneric poem contributing profoundly to late medieval conversations concerning theology and ecclesiology. In Langland's poem, Aers finds a theology and ethics shaped by Christology where the poem's modes of writing are intrinsic to its doctrine. His thesis will revise the way in which this canonical text is read. concludes with a reading of Julian of Norwich's profound, compassionate, and widely admired theology, a reading which brings her into conversation both with Langland and Augustine.
Powered by Adeptmind