rach⭐️⭐️

9%
Flag icon
As Catholicism toward the close of the Middle Ages settled into a character of hard, stiff objectivity, incompatible with the proper freedom of the individual subject . . . so Protestantism has been carried aside, in later times, into the opposite error of a loose subjectivity, which threatens to subvert all regard for church authority.
What It Means to Be Protestant: The Case for an Always-Reforming Church
Rate this book
Clear rating
Open Preview