Karlstadt and the Origins of the Eucharistic Controversy
A Study of the Circulation of Ideas
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:26th May '11
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The debate over the Lord's Supper had momentous consequences for the Reformation, causing the division of the evangelical movement, influencing the formation of political alliances, and contributing to cultural differences among the Protestant territories of Germany and Switzerland. Karlstadt and the Origins of the Eucharistic Controversy is the first full-length study of the beginning of that debate. Going beyond the traditional focus on Martin Luther and Ulrich Zwingli, it emphasizes the diversity of the "sacramentarian" challenge to traditional belief in Christ's corporeal presence and re-evaluates the significance of Luther's colleague, Andreas Bodenstein von Karlstadt, to the debate. The book describes Luther's earliest criticisms of the mass and the efforts in Wittenberg to reform liturgical praxis to correspond with his ideas. It then looks at pamphlets written by other reformers to show how Luther's understanding of the sacrament was adapted and modified outside of Wittenberg. It shows how Karlstadt's eucharistic pamphlets introduced into the public debate several arguments that would become standard Reformed criticisms of the Lutheran position. The book also demonstrates the influence not only of Erasmus but also of John Wyclif and the Hussites for discussions of the sacrament, highlights the role of the reformers of Basel and Strasbourg for developing the "Zwinglian" understanding of the Lord's Supper, and draws attention to the early eucharistic theology of the Silesians Kaspar Schwenckfeld and Valentin Krautwald. The book will become an indispensable guide for readers seeking to understand the issues surrounding the outbreak of the eucharistic controversy in the sixteenth century.
Burnett makes some very important arguments ...Readers will be hard pressed to find much to criticise in these books. Burnett's prose is clear and precise. * Carrie Euler, Ecclesiastical History. Vol. 64.2 *
fills an important gap in the scholarly literature on the early Reformation by providing a historical prelude to the eucharistic controversy which erupted towards the end of 1524 between Wittenberg and Zurich ... . Thanks to Burnetts careful reconstruction of the earliest stages of this debate, scholars are now in a better position to address the wider significance of this epochal shift. * David C. Fink, Journal of Theological Studies *
The book is a very successful invocation of the flux and fluidity of this early debate, a work of careful scholarship and broad learning that represents a lasting contribution to Reformation history. * C. Scott Dixon, The Sixteenth Century Journal *
ISBN: 9780199753994
Dimensions: 156mm x 234mm x 18mm
Weight: 567g
252 pages