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Sacred Signs in Reformation Scotland: Interpreting Worship, 1488-1590

Autor Stephen Mark Holmes
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 sep 2015
Sacred Signs in Reformation Scotland is the first study of how public worship was interpreted in Renaissance Scotland and offers a radically new way of understanding the Scottish Reformation. It first defines the history and method of 'liturgical interpretation' (using the methods of medieval Biblical exegesis to explain worship), then shows why it was central to medieval and early modern Western European religious culture. The rest of the book uses Scotland as a case study for a multidisciplinary investigation of the place of liturgical interpretation in this culture. Stephen Mark Holmes uses the methods of 'book history' to discover the place of liturgical interpretation in education, sermons and pastoral practice and also investigates its impact on material culture, especially church buildings and furnishings. A study of books and their owners reveals networks of clergy in Scotland committed to the liturgy and Catholic reform, especially the 'Aberdeen liturgists'. Holmes corrects current scholarship by showing that their influence lasted beyond 1560 and suggests that they created the distinctive religious culture of North-East Scotland (later a centre of Catholic recusancy, Episcopalianism and Jacobitism). The final two chapters investigate what happened to liturgical interpretation in Scottish religious culture after the Protestant Reformation of 1559-60, showing that while it declined in importance in Catholic circles, a Reformed Protestant version of liturgical interpretation was created and flourished which used exactly the same method to produce both an interpretation of the Reformed sacramental rites and an 'anti-commentary' on Catholic liturgy. The book demonstrates an important continuity across the Reformation divide arguing that the 'Scottish Reformation' is best seen as both Catholic and Protestant, with the reformers on both sides having more in common than they or subsequent historians have allowed.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780198747901
ISBN-10: 019874790X
Pagini: 258
Ilustrații: 12 Half-tone
Dimensiuni: 174 x 241 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Recenzii

... [this] book is meticulous in its research and exemplary in its use and interpretation of book history as a source for discovering areas of liturgical interpretation. It brings to light and illuminates not only the history of liturgical understanding and its adaptation in Scotland, but its different expressions and uses, and it does so by successfully unravelling complex interpretations and uses of liturgy for modern readers unfamiliar with the very concept.
This intelligent work restores to modern scholarship the hitherto overlooked genre of liturgical interpretation within medieval and early modern religious culture, amplifies the underestimated Catholic reform movement in Scotland, and offers original contributions to the ongoing discussion about how we should understand and discuss religion in sixteenth-century Scotland... The study does shed new and considerable light on the religious culture of Renaissance Scotland and contributes to and opens up the debate on the nature of religion and religious change in sixteenth-century Scotland.

Notă biografică

Dr Stephen Mark Holmes is an Honorary Fellow at the University of Edinburgh.