The ascetic spirituality of Juan de Ávila (1499-1569)
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The ascetic spirituality of Juan de Ávila (1499-1569)
(Studies in the history of Christian thought, v. 150)
Brill, 2010
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [249]-262) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Juan de Avila (1499-1569) was one of the most significant exponents of Spanish Golden Age spirituality. His work throughout Andalusia gave rise to the school of Avilista spirituality, a spirituality adopted by both lay men and women as well as secular and regular members of the clergy who were inspired by his stress on moral and spiritual formation and were bound together by the observance of a rigorous program of spiritual discipline. Scholars have increasingly identified him as the author of a distinctively judeoconverso spirituality. Currently, however, there are no comprehensive studies of his spirituality that seriously take into account his judeoconverso background. The present work seeks to analyze his ascetic spirituality and place it against its proper early-modern Spanish context.
目次
Preface
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
Juan de Avila and Mental Prayer as the Hallmark of his Judeoconverso Spirituality
Juan de Avila in Contemporary Scholarship
Juan de Avila and Mental Prayer as a Mark of Holiness
Outline of the Work
Chapter One. The Spiritual Exercises of Juan de Avila: His Rule for the Clergy
Avila's Letter to His Disciple from Cordoba (1538)
Juan de Avila's Letter to Master Garcia Arias (2 [January] 1538)
The Rule in the Letter "to a Priest," post-1542
The Rule in the Letter to Fray Luis de Granada of c. 1544
Conclusion
Chapter Two. The Spiritual Exercises of Juan de Avila: His Rule for the Laity
The Short Rule of Christian Life in the Wider Context of Fray Luis de Granada's Guia de pecadores (1556)
Villanueva's Reglas in Relation to Avila's Short Rule
The Short Rule of Christian Life of 1556
The Posthumous Correction of the Short Rule
The Fall of Maria de la Visitacion and Juan Diaz's Edition of the Diez documentos
The Question of Personal Merits in the Revised Edition of the Short Rule
Conclusion
Chapter Three. Juan de Avila and the Audi, filia of 1556 as a Manual for Holy Women
Of Beatas and Religiosas: Women Disciples of Juan de Avila
The Audi, filia of 1556 as a Manual for Holy Women
The Visions and Experiences of Ana Ponce de Leon: A Woman's Experience of Mental Prayer
Conclusion
Chapter Four. Juan de Avila and Frequent Communion: Historical Background
Frequent Communion in New Testament and Patristic Sources
Medieval and Scholastic Sources on Frequent Communion
Erasmus, the Spanish Erasmians, and Frequent Communion
The Council of Trent on Frequent Communion
The Spanish Debate over Frequent Communion
Conclusion
Chapter Five. Juan de Avila and Frequent Communion: His Sermons on the Eucharist
Juan de Avila on Frequent Communion: His Sermon on the Eight Day of Corpus Christi, 1542
The Problem of Annual or Rare Communion: The Protestant Heresy
Frequent Communion and Spiritual Discipline: Avila's "Bien Comulgar"
Frequent Communion, Social Discipline, and Avila's Views on Women
Frequent Communion, Social Discipline, and Avila's Criticism of the Spanish Grandees
Chapter Six. Juan de Avila and his Ascetic Doctrine of Union with the Holy Spirit
Espirituacion, or Union with the Holy Spirit
Espirituacion: Avila's Vision of Moral Reform
Chapter Seven. Juan de Avila and the Spiritual Discipline of Public Service
The Spirituality of Public Service in His Sermons
The Spirituality of Public Service in His Letters
Conclusion
Concluding Remarks: Juan de Avila and the Contours of Converso Spirituality
Marcel Bataillon and the Definition of Judeoconverso Spirituality
Juan de Avila: Ascetic Spirituality as Social Practice
Bibliography
Index
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