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Indulgences as a Social Factor in the Middle Ages
 
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Indulgences as a Social Factor in the Middle Ages [Paperback]

Nikolaus Paulus (Author), J. Elliot Ross (Translator), Eugene Campbell Barker (Foreword)

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Book Description

May 1, 2001
Dr. Nikolaus Paulus dealt with the theological discussions on indulgences, showing not only what theologians thought about indulgences but also what they rejected, and here traces of popular understanding may be found.

Since the age of Luther and the Protestant Revolt, indulgences have been to non-Catholics one of the least understood and most criticized institution of the Catholic Church. Some of the misconception is undoubtedly due to the fact that the writings of Catholic historians, lay or cleric, too generally ignore the point of view of the intelligent non-Catholic. Some of it, equally without doubt, is due to the failure of non-Catholic secular historians to avail themselves fully even of the means at hand to understand the ecclesiastical viewpoint.

In the present essay, which Fr. Ross has put in to such straightforward English, Dr. Paulus has not concerned himself with the doctrine of indulgences, and for that reason, his book will make a wider appeal to the non-Catholic mind. Frequently the indulgence was merely a permit to commute one form of penance into another, and Dr. Paulus has pointed out the social significance of this fact. Fasting or some other such penance was changed into a contribution of money or service to some useful public undertaking, and Dr. Paulus presents an impressive list of these works due to a commutation of penances, or indulgences.

The foreword is by Eugene C. Barker (1874-1956) who was an American historian, born near Riverside, Walker County, Texas and the son of Joseph and Fannie (Holland) Barker. Shortly after his father's death in 1888, his mother moved the family to Palestine, where fourteen-year-old Eugene found employment in the Missouri Pacific railroad shops. In the months that followed, he became a fine blacksmith while working during the day and attending evening school in the home of Miss Shirley Green. He entered the University of Texas in September 1895 and thus started an association that continued until his death. At the time of the original publication (1922), Dr. Barker was Chairman of the School of History at UT.


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