Scholasticism Protestant and Catholic: Medieval Sources and Methods in Seventeenth Century Reformed Thought

Publication date

2004

Authors

Asselt, W.J. van

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

DOI

Document Type

Article in proceedings
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

It is a curious phenomenon that the post-Reformation period of Reformed theology is one of the least known in the history of Christian thought and, at the same time a period in the interpretation of which there are many hidden agendas. The former is primarily due to the fact that Post-Reformation Reformed theology for too long has been a victim of the attempt of modern historians and theologians to claim the Reformers as the forerunners of modernity, whereas post-Reformation theology itself was presented as a highly obscure period characterized by the return of medieval dialectic and Aristotelian logic to the Protestant classroom and, therefore, as a distortion or perversion of Reformation theology.

Keywords

Citation