“The rising influence of lay piety is particularly marked upon the Mariological controversies of the late medieval period. Two rival positions developed: the maculist position, which held that Mary was subject to original sin, in common with every other human being; and the immaculist position, which held that contrary view that Mary was in some way preserved from original sin, and was thus to be considered sinless. The maculist position was regarded as firmly established within the High Scholasticism of the thirteenth century. The veneration of the Virgin within popular piety, however, proved to have an enormously creative power that initially challenged, and subsequently triumphed over, the academic objections raised against it by university theologians.”
Quote by Alister E. McGrath
Work
The Intellectual Origins of the European Reformation
Browse quotes and source details for this work. more
Author
You May Also Like
Source: On the Mystical Life: The Ethical Discourses : On Virtue and Christian Life Vol. 2
Source: Early Christian Doctrines
“No revolution, no political change, is ever born from immaculate conception.”
Source: Until the Mountains Fall
Source: Until the Mountains Fall
Source: Grace Walk: What You've Always Wanted in the Christian Life
Source: Until the Mountains Fall
Source: Between the Wild Branches
Source: The ides of March
