Christian Faith and Violence 2

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Volume Editors: and
Volumes 10 and 11 of Studies in Reformed Theology consist of the texts written for the fifth international conference of the International Reformed Theological Institute (IRTI), which was dedicated to the theme, 'Christian Faith and Violence'.

Specific theological questions were at the core of the discussions, e.g. what does violence imply for the doctrine of God? How to deal with biblical stories and commands that often contain an overwhelmingly violent character? What about applying christian ethics in situations of violence that we are exposed to? What is our calling in situations of oppression and a longing for liberation and justice?

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Calvin and Servetus:
A Case of Violence and Calvin’s Involvement
Pages: 104–114
Contents
Acknowledgements
Note on Conventions
List of Figures
Abbreviations Used
Introduction
1 Political Emotions: Political Authority and Political Belonging
 1 Augsburg’s Divisions
 2 Religious Reform in Augsburg
 3 Constitutional and Religious Upheavals
 4 Peaceability and Obedience
 5 The Common Good
 6 Augsburg’s Council and the Ministers
 7 Peaceability and Modesty
 8 Good Neighborliness
 9 Trust
2 Protestant Emotions in Sixteenth-Century Augsburg
 1 Protestant Emotions and the Interim
 2 Constancy’s Limits
 3 Protestant Emotions after 1552
 4 Catechisms
 5 Funeral Sermons
3 Catholic Emotions in Sixteenth-Century Augsburg
 1 The Catholic Church as Institution in Augsburg
 2 Catholic Reforms in Augsburg
 3 Jesuits in Augsburg
 4 Cathedral Sermonists
 5 Catholic Catechisms in Augsburg
 6 Catholic Print in Augsburg
 7 Exorcisms
 8 Processions and Confraternities
 9 Jesuit Education in Augsburg
4 Urban Spaces and Emotions in Tension
 1 Affective Spaces
 2 The Reformation and the Problem of Space in Augsburg
 3 Augsburg’s Spaces
 4 Transformations of Augsburg’s Political Spaces
 5 City Hall and the Streets
 6 Religious Spaces
 7 Space and Emotions in Conflict
 8 Contesting Emotions in Contested Spaces
5 Peaceful Practices Tested: From the Interim, through the Calendar Controversy, and Beyond
 1 Growing Tensions?
 2 Calendar Reforms
 3 Georg Müller and Emotions in Conflict
 4 Debates over the ius vocationis
 5 The Events of 4 June 1584
 6 An Uneasy Peace
 7 Towards a Resolution
 8 Augsburg’s Peaceful Coexistence Reestablished
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index
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