medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
I don't get it. Philip Edgecomb Hughes (now deceased) was a low church
Anglican, serving as an Associate Pastor at a low church episcopal parish in
Pennsylvania and teaching at the presbyterian, Westminster Theological
Seminary. Why would he provide a catholic view?
Philip Edgecomb Hughes always used his full middle name when publishing because
of an other (perhaps two) P. E. Hughes, or Philip E. Hughes, scholar who were
already well published. Could one of these be whom you are referring to?
This sounds like one for Izbicki.
V. K. Inman
Quoting Dennis Martin <[log in to unmask]>:
> medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
>
> One note regarding this bibliography: all the authors, in varying degrees,
> view and interpret the Protestant Reformation from a Protestant perspective
> (Moorman would probably be closest to a Catholic reading of the events). For
> some balance, with about the same level of confessional bias but from the
> Catholic side, one might look at Philip Edgecomb Hughes's or Hubert Jediin's
> books. Writing from a confessional commitment is not the problem--buit the
> reader deserves to know where the author he is reading is coming from.
>
> Dennis Martin
>
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