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272 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2003
"Luther's doctrine of justification by faith alone had freed mankind from morality, but equally it had freed man for morality.... For here was the essential difference between what would now take shape as Protestantism and Catholicism as would be constituted by the Council of Trent: two versions of Western Civilization. It was essentially as anthropological difference. What is man? Was his creative in the image of God carried forward triumphantly in his salvation in Christ, which is what Counter-Reformation mannerist painting and exuberant baroque churches...tell us? Or was he a humble, receptive creature, nobody without the overwhelming grace of God, an idea that is reflected in the plainness of modesty of Protestant places of worship, which are mere receptables of the saving Word?.... The contrast is between a triumphant Church and a mundane, passive, receptive Church." (57)..