Dialogue of Comfort Against Tribulation

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Bol Thomas More's Dialogue of Comfort Against Tribulation is a profound work of prison literature and Christian humanist consolation, framed as a conversation between the elderly Anthony and his nephew Vincent amid the looming threat of Ottoman invasion. Through this dialogic form, More examines fear, suffering, temptation, persecution, and spiritual steadfastness. Its style combines classical rhetoric, scriptural meditation, moral wit, and pastoral tenderness, placing it within both the Boethian tradition of consolation and the turbulent religious literature of sixteenth-century Europe. More wrote the Dialogue while imprisoned in the Tower of London, after refusing to endorse Henry VIII's supremacy over the Church. A statesman, lawyer, scholar, and author of Utopia, More brought to this late work the full force of his learning and conscience. The book is inseparable from his own impending martyrdom: its arguments about patience, fidelity, and inward liberty are not abstract theology but meditations forged under mortal pressure. This is an essential book for readers interested in Renaissance humanism, devotional prose, or the literature of conscience. It rewards slow reading, offering not easy consolation but a disciplined vision of courage grounded in faith, reason, and moral integrity.

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Thomas More's Dialogue of Comfort Against Tribulation is a profound work of prison literature and Christian humanist consolation, framed as a conversation between the elderly Anthony and his nephew Vincent amid the looming threat of Ottoman invasion. Through this dialogic form, More examines fear, suffering, temptation, persecution, and spiritual steadfastness. Its style combines classical rhetoric, scriptural meditation, moral wit, and pastoral tenderness, placing it within both the Boethian tradition of consolation and the turbulent religious literature of sixteenth-century Europe. More wrote the Dialogue while imprisoned in the Tower of London, after refusing to endorse Henry VIII's supremacy over the Church. A statesman, lawyer, scholar, and author of Utopia, More brought to this late work the full force of his learning and conscience. The book is inseparable from his own impending martyrdom: its arguments about patience, fidelity, and inward liberty are not abstract theology but meditations forged under mortal pressure. This is an essential book for readers interested in Renaissance humanism, devotional prose, or the literature of conscience. It rewards slow reading, offering not easy consolation but a disciplined vision of courage grounded in faith, reason, and moral integrity.

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Pagina's: 168, Paperback, Sharp Ink


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Merk Sharp Ink
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  • 9788028338978
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