Between Principles and Practice: Grotius’ Commitment to Religious Peace in a Contemporary Context
Publication date
2013
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Abstract
This article discusses Hugo Grotius’s ‘pamphlet’ Ordinum pietas in the political and religious setting of 1613, attempting to draw some lessons from a contemporary perspective. At a time of religious struggle and strife De Groot felt himself committed to ´religious peace´, implying freedom of conscience as a public-political principle coupled with toleration of religious diversity in practice. It is in the context of religious conflict at a time of transition that his allegiance to an established confession and his rejection of sectarian sectarian concepts of theocracy, may be understood. A connection is made to both modern requirements of ‘religious peace’ and universal human rights as a ‘global faith’.
Keywords
Grotius, Ordinum pietas, Lubbertus, religious conflict, church and state, established religion, theocracy, Huguenots, human rights
Citation
de Gaay Fortman, B 2013, 'Between Principles and Practice: Grotius’ Commitment to Religious Peace in a Contemporary Context', Grotiana, vol. 34, no. 1, pp. 25–40. https://doi.org/10.1163/18760759-03400004