<p>The relationship between Calvinist political theory and John Locke&rsquo;s <em>Two Treatises on Civil Government</em>&nbsp;has been debated for some time and the consensus is that Locke&rsquo;s theory constitutes the fur&shy;ther development of Calvinist theory. But upon closer analysis that conclusion proves entirely flawed. Calvinism proves to be worlds apart from the political phi&shy;lo&shy;&shy;sophy of John Locke. It proves to be the mature fruit of the medieval &ldquo;two swords&rdquo; form of government in which church and state share public power rather than an early stage on the road to the dissociation of church and state a road which Locke put us firmly upon with his own formu&shy;lation of political power. Indeed upon closer inspection Calvinism proves to be the product of a thousand-year tradition of Western political thought commenc&shy;ing with Augustine and moving through the Carolingian Renais&shy;sance and the Papal Rev&shy;olution. That history is redis&shy;covered and outlined in this book as the preliminary means for recovering the true meaning of political Calvinism and its utter discontinuity with the modernism that commenced with Locke&rsquo;s paradigm. It also helps disabuse us of the notion that history is linear and that progress is straightforward. Rather it helps us to under&shy;stand the deformational period of history in which we live and the need for a return to a confess&shy;ional under&shy;stand&shy;ing of law the state and constitutionalism.</p>
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
Delivery Options
Please enter pincode to check delivery time.
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.