Page:  of 434
 
BOOK II
Christian Humanism and the Religious Divisions
I. SOME FIFTEENTH-CENTURY THEORIES 107
1. Nicholas of Cusa (1401-1464) 107
2. Marsilio Ficino (1433-1499) 110
3. Pico della Mirandola (1463-1494) 112
II. ERASMUS (1466-1536) 114
1. Erasmus and the Beginnings of Luther's Reformation 116
2. The Plans of Erasmus for the Restoration of Christian
Unity
120
3. Conclusion: the Catholicism of Erasmus 129
III. SAINT THOMAS MORE (1478-1535). THE 'UTOPIA' 134
1. Religious Freedom in the Utopia (1516) 134
2. More as Statesman: His Attitude towards Heresy 138
3. Christian Humanism: General Conclusion 141
BOOK III
The Problem of Religious Freedom in the Empire
I. LUTHER: FROM 'CHRISTIAN LIBERTY' TO ESTABLISHED
CHURCH
147
1. 'Christian Liberty' 148
2. Towards the Established Church 154
3. Luther and the Anabaptists 160
II. 'CHRISTIAN FREEDOM' AND THE ADHERENTS OF A
MYSTIC-SPIRITUAL INTERPRETATION
165
1. Sebastian Franck (1499-1542) 166
2. Caspar Schwenckfeld (1489-1561) and His Disciples 176
3. The Spiritualizing and Mystical Tradition in Valentine
Weigel and Jacob Böhme
185
III. ANABAPTISM, ITS AMBIGUITY, ITS REVOLUTIONARY
AND ITS PEACEFUL FORMS
193
1. The Origins of Anabaptism (1522-1525) 194
2. The Growth of Anabaptism in Central Europe before
the Mönster Tragedy (1525-1533)
201
3. The Mönster Tragedy and its Results (1533-1536) 207

-xii-

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Publication Information: Book Title: Toleration and the Reformation. Volume: 1. Contributors: Joseph S. J. Lecler - author, T. L. Westow - transltr. Publisher: Association Press. Place of Publication: New York. Publication Year: 1960. Page Number: xii.
    
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