In The Age of Reformation, first published in 1955, E. Harris
Harbison shows why sixteenth-century Europe was ripe for a
catharsis. New political and social factors were at work the growth
of the middle classes, the monetary inflation resulting from an
influx of gold from the New World, the invention of printing, the
trend toward centralization of political power. Against these
developments, Harbison places the church nearly bankrupt because of
the expense of defending the papal states, supporting an elaborate
administrative organization and luxurious court, and financing the
crusades. The Reformation, as he shows, was the result of "a long,
slow shifting of social conditions and human values to which the
church was not responding readily enough. The sheer inertia of an
enormous and complex organization, the drag of powerful vested
interests, the helplessness of individuals with intelligent schemes
of reform this is what strikes the historian in studying the church
of the later Middle Ages."
Martin Luther, a devout and forceful monk, sought only to
cleanse the church of its abuses and return to the spiritual
guidance of the Scriptures. But, as it turned out, western
Christendom split into two camps a division as stirring, as
fearful, as portentous to the sixteenth-century world as any in
Europe's history. Offering an engaging and accessible introductory
history of the Reformation, Harbison focuses on the age's key
individuals, institutions, and ideas while at the same time
addressing the slower, less obvious tides of social and political
change. A classic synthesis of earlier generations of historical
scholarship on the Reformation told with clarity and drama, this
book concisely traces the outlines, interlocked and interwoven as
they were, of the various phases that comprised the "Age of
Reformation.""
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