| Genre de document: | 
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| Auteur/éditeur: | Adam L.Hoose Standard: Hoose, Adam L. [Adam L. Hoose] | ||
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		  	Titre:
		   | Orthopraxy and the formation of the early Waldensians and Franciscans, 1173-1228 Standard: | ||
| Année de parution: | 2011 | ||
| Justification de possession: | TESI 421 | ||
| Numéro de notice: | http://search.proquest.com/docview/884003998 | ||
| Sujets: | Franciscains et Vaudois - 1200-1300 Thèse de doctoral Valdès de Lyon et François d'Assise | ||
| Table des matières: | TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER 2: LITURGICAL PRAXIS CHAPTER 3: RELATIONS WITH THE LOCAL PRELATES CHAPTER 4: ORTHOPRAXY AND PREACHING CHAPTER 5: THE PRAXIS OF VOLUNTARY POVERTY  CHAPTER 6: RELATIONS WITH THE ROMAN CURIA  CHAPTER 7 CONCLUSION | ||
| Résumé/commentaire: | Dissertazione: Saint Louis University, August 2011 Abstract: "Orthopraxy and the Formation of the Early Waldensians and Franciscans,  1173-1228" compares how the medieval Waldensians, whom the clergy  labeled heretical, and the Franciscans, whom the Roman Church accepted  as orthodox, negotiated their identities in response to various factors.  It argues that the clergy's perceptions of the Waldensians and  Franciscans were rooted not in the groups' religious beliefs but in  their distinctive practices, which the clergy saw as either orthopraxic  or heteropraxic. Both Waldes and Francis received some of their initial  ideas for their way of life from a gospel lesson at Mass. However, the  groups that they established began to form a community around the gospel  and other texts in different ways. The Waldensians interpreted those  texts independently of the liturgy, while the Franciscans did so through  the liturgy. Moreover, the archbishops of Lyon and the bishop of Assisi  reacted to the Waldensians and Franciscans respectively with local  interests in mind, seeing them as results of or even remedies for  problems that existed in their ecclesiastical territories. Because the  clergy saw respect for the sacraments and the office of preaching as  intertwined, they did not believe that someone could accept the  sacraments but reject their preaching authority, which is one reason  they saw the Waldensians as heretics. The major difference between the  Waldensians' and the Franciscans' voluntary poverty was that the  Waldensians laid claim to a definitive right of alms in return for  preaching, while the Franciscans, rejecting all such claims to power,  embraced an orthopraxy of work. Finally, there was no major shift in  papal policy toward new religious groups between 1173 and 1228. Rather,  the popes adopted an emphasis on praxis when examining the new religious  groups, much as the prelates in Lyon and Assisi had done. |