Protestants - the Birth of a Revolution
S OzmentPaperback 1993-10-01
Steven OzmentWhat were the first Protestants like? What was the emotionalmakeup of the people who decided the Church of Rome was abarrier to salvation? Using the diaries, pamphlets, letters,and other personal documents of those who followed MartinLuther, this scholarly, gracefully written book gives us anup-close, grassroots look at the sixteenth centuryrevolution. To read Steven Ozment is to believe that historyis a living art. - Richard Marius, Harvard University. 288pages,fromDoubleday.
Publisher Description
Who were the first men and women who abandoned the Church of Rome and became the world's first Protestants? Harvard historian Steven Ozment does not present us with the remote, dusty figures of history, but rather with the shoemakers and housewives, students and politicians who were among the first followers of Martin Luther. Using pamphlets, diaries, letters, and other primary soruces, Ozment examines the origins of the Reformation and the nature of Protestantism. Rather than seeing the Reformation as the progenitor of German absolutism, as do many scholars of the period, Ozment sees in Protestantism the historic assertion of key Western values--social reform, individual religious conviction, hard work, and the rejection of corruption, hypocrisy, and empty ritual.
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Steven OzmentWhat were the first Protestants like? What was the emotionalmakeup of the people who decided the Church of Rome was abarrier to salvation? Using the diaries, pamphlets, letters,and other personal documents of those who followed MartinLuther, this scholarly, gracefully written book gives us anup-close, grassroots look at the sixteenth centuryrevolution. To read Steven Ozment is to believe that historyis a living art. - Richard Marius, Harvard University. 288pages,fromDoubleday.
Publisher Description
Who were the first men and women who abandoned the Church of Rome and became the world's first Protestants? Harvard historian Steven Ozment does not present us with the remote, dusty figures of history, but rather with the shoemakers and housewives, students and politicians who were among the first followers of Martin Luther. Using pamphlets, diaries, letters, and other primary soruces, Ozment examines the origins of the Reformation and the nature of Protestantism. Rather than seeing the Reformation as the progenitor of German absolutism, as do many scholars of the period, Ozment sees in Protestantism the historic assertion of key Western values--social reform, individual religious conviction, hard work, and the rejection of corruption, hypocrisy, and empty ritual.