Miracles and the Protestant imagination

the Evangelical wonder book in Reformation Germany

  • 1 Want to read

My Reading Lists:

Create a new list

  • 1 Want to read

Buy this book

Last edited by MARC Bot
July 9, 2025 | History

Miracles and the Protestant imagination

the Evangelical wonder book in Reformation Germany

  • 1 Want to read

"The Reformation's war against the saints and their miracles is well known. The story of the Protestant Reformers' embrace of natural wonders as miracles that could similarly spur piety and moral discipline is much less familiar. In Miracles and the Protestant Imagination, Philip M. Soergel examines the sixteenth-century Lutheran wonder books, works filled with accounts of monstrous births, celestial apparitions, natural disasters, plagues, and other seemingly aberrant events occurring in the natural world. Soergel traces the inspiration behind these books to a widespread appropriation of wonders that was taking place throughout late-medieval and early-modern Europe. As sixteenth-century rulers stocked their curiosity cabinets with all manner of strange and confounding bits of nature collected from the far corners of the globe, evangelical theologians, too, compiled enormous compendia filled with accounts of fantastic events long recorded in the natural world. Many embraced such tales to satisfy an innate curiosity about nature and its often incomprehensible processes, but Germany's devout evangelicals relied upon them to warn of imminent Apocalypse, to drive home the full scope of human depravity, and to encourage the repentant to keep the Law of an angry, Deuteronomic God. Luther had dismissed natural signs as inferior when compared against the testimony of the scriptures. Nevertheless, inspired by Melanchthon and other contemporaries who embraced history, natural philosophy, and rhetoric as proofs for Christian doctrine, the authors of late-Reformation wonder books fashioned natural signs into powerful defenses of treasured evangelical principles. In so doing, their works revealed the tensions as well as fears at play within a maturing Reformation movement as it faced mounting internal dissension and external pressures from Calvinism and resurgent Catholicism." -- Publisher's description.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
234

Buy this book

Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Miracles and the Protestant Imagination
Miracles and the Protestant Imagination: The Evangelical Wonder Book in Reformation Germany
2012, Oxford University Press, Incorporated
in English
Cover of: Miracles and the Protestant Imagination
Miracles and the Protestant Imagination: The Evangelical Wonder Book in Reformation Germany
2012, Oxford University Press
in English
Cover of: Miracles and the Protestant imagination
Miracles and the Protestant imagination: the Evangelical wonder book in Reformation Germany
2012, Oxford University Press
in English

Add another edition?

Book Details


Table of Contents

The appropriation of wonders in sixteenth-century Germany
Luther on miracles
Nature and the "signs of the end" in Job Fincel's wonder signs
Caspar Goltwurm on the rhetoric of natural wonders
The polemics of depravity in the wonder books of Christoph Irenaeus
Enduring models and changing tastes at century's end.

Edition Notes

Includes index.

Published in
New York

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
230/.4109031
Library of Congress
BX8020 .S58 2012, BX8020.S58 2012

The Physical Object

Pagination
p. cm.
Number of pages
234

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL24918108M
ISBN 13
9780199844661
LCCN
2011026824
OCLC/WorldCat
741415804

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL16014572W

Community Reviews (0)

No community reviews have been submitted for this work.

Lists

History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
July 9, 2025 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
December 22, 2022 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
December 12, 2022 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
May 8, 2021 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
July 30, 2011 Created by LC Bot Imported from Library of Congress MARC record