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The Reformation of Feeling - Shaping the Religious Emotions in Early Modern Germany (Paperback)
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The Reformation of Feeling - Shaping the Religious Emotions in Early Modern Germany (Paperback)
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In The Reformation of Feeling, Susan Karant-Nunn looks beyond and
beneath the formal doctrinal and moral demands of the Reformation
in Germany to examine the emotional tenor of the programs that the
emerging creeds-revised Catholicism, Lutheranism, and
Calvinism/Reformed theology-developed for their members. As
revealed by the surviving sermons from this period, preaching
clergy of each faith both explicitly and implicitly provided their
listeners with distinct models of a mood to be cultivated. To
encourage their parishioners to make an emotional investment in
their faith, all three drew upon rhetorical elements that were
already present in late medieval Catholicism and elevated them into
confessional touchstones. Looking at archival materials containing
direct references to feeling, Karant-Nunn focuses on treatments of
death and sermons on the Passion. She amplifies these sources with
considerations of the decorative, liturgical, musical, and
disciplinary changes that ecclesiastical leaders introduced during
the period from the late fifteenth to the end of the seventeenth
century. Within individual sermons, Karant-Nunn also examines
topical elements-including Jews at the crucifixion, the Virgin
Mary's voluminous weeping below the Cross, and struggles against
competing denominations-that were intended to arouse particular
kinds of sentiment. Finally, she discusses surviving testimony from
the laity in order to assess at least some Christians' reception of
these lessons on proper devotional feeling. This book is
exceptional in its presentation of a cultural rather than
theological or behavioral study of the broader movement to remake
Christianity. As Karant-Nunn conclusively demonstrates, in the eyes
of the Reformation's formative personalities strict adherence to
doctrine and upright demeanor did not constitute an adequate piety.
The truly devout had to engage their hearts in their faith.
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