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Authority and freedom : the medieval roots of an understanding of religious freedom

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Title: Authority and freedom : the medieval roots of an understanding of religious freedom
Author: Moss, Rodney
Abstract: Some regard religious freedom as a product of the Enlightenment. However, the roots of a later understanding of religious freedom as articulated in Dignitatis Humanae of the Second Vatican Council lie in the Middle Ages. These roots are threefold: first, the relative academic freedom of the period together with the scholastic theological method of doubting, secondly, the rise of constitutional government and the dualism of the Church and the State in medieval society and thirdly, the theological speculation on the freedom of conscience all eventually contributed to the idea that everyone has the right to live his or her relationship with God in a freedom that is constitutionally and judicially protected against any form of coercion. However freedom of religion is not simply an affair of the individual. It is also an affair of the community for it is the freedom to commune with others.
Description: Peer reviewed
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4501
Date: 2008
Citation: Moss, R. 2008,'Authority and freedom: the medieval roots of an understanding of religious freedom', Studia Historiae Eclessiasticae, vol. XXXIV, no. 1, pp. 1-21.


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