Thomas of Cantimpré, Mulieres Religiosae, and Purgatorial Piety: Hagiographical Vitae and the Beguine 'Voice'

Sweetman, Robert. "Thomas of Cantimpré, Mulieres Religiosae, and Purgatorial Piety: Hagiographical Vitae and the Beguine 'Voice'." In A Distinct Voice: Medieval Studies in Honor of Leonard E. Boyle, O.P., pp. 606-628. Ed. Jacqueline Brown and William P. Stoneman. Notre Dame IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 1996.

This study explores and identifies criteria by which one is able to establish what the thirteenth-century Dominican Thomas of Cantimpré learned from women religious whose spirituality he was attracted to, sought to serve as preacher and confessor, and whose sanctity he sought to promote as a writer of saints’ lives. In so doing it shows how the distinctive character of his interest in Purgatory and in suffrages on behalf of one’s beloved dead cannot be explained by the commonplaces of a person of his religious identity, sex and education, nor by modern psychological expectations, but rather by patterns of piety he discovered among beguines of the Southern Low Countries he ministered to or heard tell of in and around Liège. In so doing the study disputes the widespread assumption found within many feminist and Annales-school histories that male mediations of medieval female religious experience covered over that experience such that it has been lost to us, root and branch.

Humans Being: Essays Dedicated to Stuart Fowler

Humans Being: Essays Dedicated to Stuart Fowler. Doug Blomberg (editor). 1996.

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As the sub-title indicates, Humans Being was conceived as a festschrift for Australia’s leading reformational scholar, social philosopher Stuart Fowler. The broad range of topics and contributors testifies to the significant impact of Rev. Dr. Fowler’s work, in partnership with his recently deceased wife, Joy Fowler, whom he never neglected to honour as such.

Pledges of Jubilee: Essays on the Arts and Culture

Pledges of Jubilee: Essays on the Arts and Culture. Edited by Lambert Zuidervaart and Henry Luttikhuizen. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1995.

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Produced in honor of Calvin G. Seerveld, this volume highlights Seerveld’s legacy as a scholar, teacher, and cultural leader even as it breaks new ground in the fields of cultural theory and aesthetics.

The introduction discusses the importance of Seerveld’s contributions to the study of the arts and culture, summarizes the essays in this collection, and relates them to themes in Seerveld’s work. The volume’s fourteen essays extend Seerveld’s efforts to new areas and probe the traditions on which his efforts rely. An open letter from Nicholas Wolterstorff and a bibliography of Seerveld’s writings begin and conclude the volume. United by the cross-fertilizing of theory, criticism, and history, and sharing a concern to help transform culture through Christian scholarship, all of these essays make a fitting tribute to Seerveld, a Reformational interdisciplinarian par excellence.

An Ethos of Compassion and the Integrity of Creation

An Ethos of Compassion and the Integrity of Creation. Brian J. Walsh, Hendrik Hart, Robert E. VanderVennen, editors. 1995

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Essays presented at ICS's 25th anniversary conference which consider anew the strengths and weakness of creation order in the light of an ethos of compassion. The book suggests new answers to old questions.