Renaissance Culture and Religion:
A Look at Shakespeare, Donne, and Johnson in Regard to Religious Reform
This idea of the internalization of religion is expressed forthright in William Perkins 'Cases for Conscience' and his implantation of technometria-charts which allowed a person to see exactly where they as an individual were on their path to salvation. Other writers such as John Donne, Aemilai Lanyer, and George Herbert also expressed their support for the idea of internalization and personal choice. Donne extolling the idea with the passage, "doubt wisely; in strange way to stand inquiring right, is not to stray"[1]. Herbert in his Sinne I and Prayer I speaks of this internalization in verse saying, "The sound of glorie ringing in our eares; / Without, our shame; within our consciences; [2] and talks about how this internalization brings, "Softnesse, and peace, and joy, and love, and blisse." [3] Lanyer in "To all virtuous Ladies in generall" then adds, "fill your lamps with oyle of burning zeale, that to your faith he may his Truth reveale."[4] Alluding to the biblical story that teaches us that all must have their own personal internalized faith in order to reach salvation.
You may also like...
- Aspects of German Immigration and German-American Life
- Harlem and Black History
- Classical Greek and Roman Cultures Courses at the University of Colorado at Boulder
- Music and Prayer in the Jewish Tradition: Where Are Our Songs?
- Why Religion is a Necessity
- Anorexia Nervosa: History, Causes and Symptoms
- The American Literary Renaissance
- The Jesuit Mission in Japan: Cultural Synthesis and Inter-Cultural Conflict
- The African American Culture
- Introduction to the Renaissance
Comments
Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Most Commented On


