3 resultados para Demonología

em Portal de Revistas Científicas Complutenses - Espanha


Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

El presente trabajo se propone analizar la campaña de los demonólogos ingleses que escribieron entre 1584 y 1627 contra los sanadores carismáticos como un episodio específico de las tensiones entre carisma e institución que caracterizaron la historia del cristianismo. Se intentará demostrar que los teólogos reformados pretendieron erradicar a aquellos personajes por el desafío que planteaban a la Iglesia oficial y su ortodoxia teológica, pero también porque amenazaban el rol que estaban construyendo para si en la sociedad. Para devaluar la posición de los sanadores y fortalecer la propia, los miembros de la alta cultura teologal protestante los vincularon con los demonios y el catolicismo, estrategia retórica que a su vez buscaba presentar a las ideas reformadas como la única expresión legítima del cristianismo.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Skepticism regarding witchcraft, characteristic (but not exclusive) of the Spanish lands, corresponds with a particular view of evil’s etiology. Whereas paradigmatic texts of radical demonology, as the Malleus Maleficarum, gave a conclusive step towards the demonization of natural evil (as they put the blame on the devil and the witches for calamities and plagues), texts of Castilian origin, as Alonso de Espina’s Fortalitium fidei, embraced the traditional position: they considered the devil as a promoter of moral evil in the world, meanwhile natural evil is seen as a result of the wrath of God for the sins of His people –particularly, the sin of Christian princes. I argue that the distinction between these two ways of thinking the causality of the world’s misfortunes can be read in political terms.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Many 16th century Spanish chroniclers and missionaries, arriving at what they interpreted as a New World, saw the Devil as a “hermeneutic wildcard” that allowed them to comprehend indigenous religions. Pedro Cieza de León, a soldier in the conquest of Peru, is a case in point. Cieza considers the Devil responsible for the most aberrant religious practices and customs of the Indians, although he views the natives in a positive light, as men susceptible to divine salvation. From a providentialist perspective of the history of the conquest, Cieza interprets that the evangelization and conversion of the Indians and the implantation of Christian civilization by the Spanish Crown, were able to defeat the Devil.