Wyclif

Trialogus

John Wyclif author Stephen E Lahey editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:15th Nov '12

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Wyclif cover

A complete translation of Trialogus, John Wyclif's three-way dialogue which familiarized priests and layfolk with complex issues underlying Christian doctrine.

John Wyclif wrote Trialogus to familiarize priests and layfolk with the complex issues underlying Christian doctrine. His thought was condemned as heretical and catalyzed the Lollard movement in England. This translation will be useful for scholars and students of late medieval philosophy and theology and fourteenth-century English history and politics.John Wyclif is known for translating the Vulgate Bible into English, and for arguing for the royal divestment of the church, the reduction of papal power and the elimination of the friars and against the doctrine of transubstantiation. His thought catalyzed the Lollard movement in England and provided an ideology for the Hussite revolution in Bohemia. Wyclif's Trialogus discusses divine power and knowledge, creation, virtues and vices, the Incarnation, redemption and the sacraments. It consists of a three-way conversation, which Wyclif wrote to familiarize priests and layfolk with the complex issues underlying Christian doctrine, and begins with formal philosophical theology, which moves into moral theology, concluding with a searing critique of the fourteenth-century ecclesiastical status quo. Stephen Lahey provides a complete English translation of all four books, and the 'Supplement to the Trialogue', which will be a valuable resource for scholars and students currently relying on selective translated extracts.

'… Lahey makes the thought of the fourteenth-century Oxford scholastic theologian and Yorkshire-born English ecclesiastical reformer much more accessible to contemporary readers.' Andrew Kloes, The Expository Times

ISBN: 9780521869249

Dimensions: 235mm x 160mm x 25mm

Weight: 680g

368 pages