Fausto Socino: La salvación del hombre en las fuentes del racionalismo

The Socinian doctrine, springing from the early errors of Calvinism, found its source in the humanism, pietism and anti-rationalism of the Venetian anti-trinitarian radical Reformers. Fausto Sozzini (born in Siena) exiled himself in Poland, where he united the antitrinitarian and anabaptist refugees...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: González, Carlos Ignacio 1937-2006 (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:Spanish
Check availability: HBZ Gateway
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Published: Ed. Pontificia Univ. Gregoriana 1985
In: Gregorianum
Year: 1985, Volume: 66, Issue: 3, Pages: 457-490
Online Access: Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
Parallel Edition:Non-electronic
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Summary:The Socinian doctrine, springing from the early errors of Calvinism, found its source in the humanism, pietism and anti-rationalism of the Venetian anti-trinitarian radical Reformers. Fausto Sozzini (born in Siena) exiled himself in Poland, where he united the antitrinitarian and anabaptist refugees, with a body of salvific doctrine which eventually provided several important principles to the later deist and illuminist thinkers. Among these doctrines were: the rejection of the possibility of knowing God in himself (beyond his role as Creator and giver of the law); the denial of original sin and therefore of Christ's redemptive function; the concept of salvation as obedience to divine law inlaid in nature; the reduction of religion to ethical life, pietistic «adoration» and the imitation of the example of life of Christ the man; and the concept of the Church as merely a school of morals.
Contains:Enthalten in: Gregorianum