A godly and fruitfull sermon preached at Grantham, Oxford, 1595

Fiche technique

Format : Broché
Nb de pages : 154 pages
Poids : 265 g
Dimensions : 16cm X 24cm
Date de parution :
ISBN : 978-2-84516-599-1
EAN : 9782845165991

A godly and fruitfull sermon preached at Grantham, Oxford, 1595

de

chez Presses universitaires Blaise Pascal

Collection(s) : Collection CERHAC

Paru le | Broché 154 pages

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edited with an introduction and notes by Marie Couton, Isabelle Fernandes, Christian Jérémie and Monique Vénuat


Quatrième de couverture

A Godly and Fruitfull Sermon
Preached at Grantham
Oxofrd, 1595

This 1592 Elizabethan Protestant sermon on Isaiah 24.1-3 offers an économic, social and moral portrait of late Tudor England stressing the need for equity. Trigge attacks enclosures as he was to do from a différent perspective in his Humble Pétition of Two Sisters (1604). He analyses and condemns usury, the hoarding of corn, « great rents and excessive fines », conspicuous spending and the sale of benefits. He also intends the sermon to be « a glasse[wherein] every degree may plainly see their spots and staines: and may bee thereby made indeede beautifull (if they doe not hate to be reformed) against the appearance of Jésus Christ. « He discusses vocation in the Commonwealth, expounding the duties of servants and masters, ministers and people. The numerous shortcomings that he detects in his society are interpreted as tokens of the Second Coming, an event which fofms the prophétic background of his preaching, its imminence being further stressed by signs in the physical world.

The Godly and Fruitfull sermon shows Trigge's mastery of rhetorical techniques, combining the parenetic and protreptic genres, both warning and encouraging his readers to reform their ways in view of the impending judgment.

This 1595 printed version offers a learned sermon with a close reading of the Vulgate collated with new Latin translations of the Hebrew Bible and the Septuagint and supported by references to Josephus, the Sibylline Oracles and other humanist and more traditional sources. Many of the references and quotations are traced in the footnotes providing insights into the reading of an Elizabethan preacher.