Do Good Unto All: Charity and Poor Relief Across Christian Europe, 1400-1800
By (Author) Timothy G. Fehler
Edited by Jared B. Thomley
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
25th October 2023
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
European history
Christianity
261.83250940903
Hardback
272
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 16mm
558g
For nearly two millennia, Christians have tried to make sense of the Bibles reminder that the poor are always among us. This volume explores the diverse range of ideas, institutions, and experiences early modern Europeans brought to bear in response to this biblical adage.
Do good unto all traces the concept and practice of charity across the four major early modern Christian confessions Catholic, Lutheran, Calvinist, and Anabaptist and over a wide range of geographical areas from Scotland to Switzerland and the Spanish Atlantic World. By bringing such a diverse set of localised studies into concert for the first time, this volume exposes the many intersections and tensions that arose between and within communities as they attempted to translate the ideal of charity into practice.
This comparative approach shifts the focus from binary definitions of deserving and undeserving poor or Catholic and Protestant. Instead, Do good unto all charts a new course for the study of charity beyond institutional poor relief, where the matrix of individual ideas and experiences can be fully appreciated.
Timothy G. Fehler is Professor of Early Modern History at Furman University
Jared B. Thomley is an independent researcher, and received his PhD from the University of Aberdeen