In this biography of the noted French philosopher and theologian
Jean Gerson, the first since 1929, Brian Patrick McGuire presents a
compelling portrait of Gerson as a voice of reason and Christian
humanism during a time of great intellectual and social tumult in
the late Middle Ages.
Born to a peasant father and mother in the county of Champagne,
Gerson (1363-1429) was the first of twelve children. He overcame
his modest beginnings to become a scholastic and vernacular
theologian, a university intellectual, and a church reformer.
McGuire shows us the turning points in Gerson's life, including
his crisis of faith after becoming chancellor of the University of
Paris in 1395.
Through these key moments, we see the deeper undercurrents of
his mystical writings. With their rich display of spiritual and
emotional life, these writings were to earn Gerson the appellation
"doctor christianissimus." In turn, they would influence many later
thinkers, including Nicholas of Cusa, Ignatius of Loyola, Francis
de Sales, and even Martin Luther.
Gerson is a man perhaps easier to admire than to love:
conscientious to a fault, at once a pragmatist and an idealist in
church politics, a university intellectual who both fostered and
distrusted the religious aspirations of the laity, a powerful
prelate who moved among the great yet never forgot his peasant
origins, a self-revealing yet intensely private man who yearned for
intimacy almost as much as he feared it.
McGuire ably situates Gerson in the context of his age, an age
replete with doctrinal controversies and the politics of papal
schism on the eve of the Protestant Reformation. Gerson emerges as
a proponent of dialogue and discussion, committed to reforming the
church from within. His courageous effort to renew the unity of a
unique civilization bears examination in our own time.
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