Library Catalog

"Poor Sinning Folk" : Confession and Conscience in Counter-Reformation Germany /

Myers, David

"Poor Sinning Folk" : Confession and Conscience in Counter-Reformation Germany / David Myers. - 1 online resource (224 p.) : 6 b&w illustrations

Frontmatter -- Contents -- Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- I. Late-Medieval and Reformation Confession -- II. The Catholic Reformation and Sacramental Confession -- Bibliography -- Index

restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec

In "Poor, Sinning Folk," W. David Myers investigates the sixteenth-century fate of the medieval Christian sacrament of penance, the process of confessing to a priest in secret one's sins against God and other humans. In Pre-Reformation Germany, numerous layers of public ritual, expectation, and display surrounded the central secret act of confessing and conditioned its meaning. Less frequent and less private than the ritual familiar to modern Catholics, medieval penance was for most German-speaking Christians a seasonal event with social as well as spiritual ramifications for participants. Protestantism swept confession away from many German lands. Even where Catholicism survived and flourished, as in the lands comprising modern Bavaria, the sacrament of penance changed profoundly. The modern confessional booth was introduced, making the sacrament more prominent, more secure from scandal, and ultimately more private. This reform coincided with the efforts of secular rulers to fashion a more disciplined, obedient population. New religious orders, most notably the Society of Jesus in Bavaria, saw the frequent confession of lay people as a means to piety and spiritual discipline amidst the temptations of worldly affairs. By the middle of the seventeenth century, political and religious forces combined to forge the sacrament of penance into an effective instrument of spiritual discipline which would fashion the modern Catholic conscience and endure essentially unchanged into the late twentieth century.


Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.


In English.

9781501744709

10.7591/9781501744709 doi


Confession.
German Studies.
History.
West European History.
HISTORY / Europe / Germany.

BX2263.G3M94 1996

265/.6/094309031