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Heretics

The Creation of Christianity from the Gnostics to the Modern Church

Jonathan Wright
1
(1)
Pages
352
Year
2017
Language
English

About

A lively examination of the heretics who helped Christianity become the world's most powerful religion. In Heretics Jonathan Wright charts the history of dissent in the Christian Church through the stories of some of its most emblematic heretics-from Arius, a fourth-century Libyan cleric who doubted the very divinity of Christ, to more successful heretics like Martin Luther and John Calvin. As he traces the Church's attempts at enforcing orthodoxy, from the days of Constantine to the modern Catholic Church's lingering conflicts, Wright argues that heresy, by forcing the Church to continually refine and impose its beliefs, actually helped Christianity to blossom into one of the world's most formidable and successful religions. Today, all believers owe it to themselves to grapple with the questions raised by heresy. Can you be a Christian without denouncing heretics? Is it possible that new ideas challenging Church doctrine are destined to become as popular as have Luther's once outrageous suggestions of clerical marriage and a priesthood of all believers? A delightfully readable and deeply learned new history, Heretics overturns our assumptions about the role of heresy in a faith that still shapes the world.

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"In this chatty primer, Wright emphasizes the 'extraordinarily creative role' that heresy has played in the evolution of Christianity by helping to 'define, enliven, and complicate' it in dialectical fashion. Among the world's great religions, Christianity has been uniquely rich in dissent, Wright argues-especially in its early days, when there was so little agreement among its adherents that one
The New Yorker

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