We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Soul Sleepers
Regular price
$50.00
Regular price
$0.00
Sale price
$50.00
Unit price
/
per
Sold out
Re-stocking soon
A comprehensive survey of Reformation and post-Reformation thinkers who repudiated the medieval doctrine of the soul’s immortality.A new and thoroughly researched study of the rise and development ...
Read More
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
Ships within 2 business days
-
31 January 2008

A comprehensive survey of Reformation and post-Reformation thinkers who repudiated the medieval doctrine of the soul’s immortality.
A new and thoroughly researched study of the rise and development of Christian Mortalism, also known as Conditional Immortality or Soul Sleep, in England during the Reformation and Post-Reformation periods.
Dr Bryan Ball traces the origins of the belief in Continental Reformation thought, and then in the writings of Wycliffe and Tyndale, and its growth and development in the writings of many other advocates, including Hobbes, Overton, Milton, Locke, Edmund Law, John Biddle, Peter Peckard, Francis Blackburne, among many others, concluding with the views of Joseph Priestley.
In the context of being a historical study, this book challenges the traditional doctrine of the soul’s innate immortality. Having previously written on English eschatological thought, Dr Ball sets out to demonstrate here that this alternative view of man’s essential nature and ultimate destiny was held across a wide theological spectrum in English thought for at least three centuries.
While dealing with a subject that is at times difficult, the book has been intentionally written in a readable, accessible style, and will appeal to a much wider audience than the purely academic. The book provides important background information for the growing interest in the mortalist point of view in contemporary theological and historical circles.
A new and thoroughly researched study of the rise and development of Christian Mortalism, also known as Conditional Immortality or Soul Sleep, in England during the Reformation and Post-Reformation periods.
Dr Bryan Ball traces the origins of the belief in Continental Reformation thought, and then in the writings of Wycliffe and Tyndale, and its growth and development in the writings of many other advocates, including Hobbes, Overton, Milton, Locke, Edmund Law, John Biddle, Peter Peckard, Francis Blackburne, among many others, concluding with the views of Joseph Priestley.
In the context of being a historical study, this book challenges the traditional doctrine of the soul’s innate immortality. Having previously written on English eschatological thought, Dr Ball sets out to demonstrate here that this alternative view of man’s essential nature and ultimate destiny was held across a wide theological spectrum in English thought for at least three centuries.
While dealing with a subject that is at times difficult, the book has been intentionally written in a readable, accessible style, and will appeal to a much wider audience than the purely academic. The book provides important background information for the growing interest in the mortalist point of view in contemporary theological and historical circles.
Price: $50.00
Pages: 236
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: James Clarke
Publication Date:
31 January 2008
Trim Size: 9.21 X 6.14 in
ISBN: 9780227172605
Format: Paperback
Ball is to be commended for bringing this movement more fully to light.
— Charles Hambrick-Stowe
Ball handles a technical subject with admirable clarity, authoritatively directing his reader through a concentrated and challenging intellectual environment, offering helpful explanations and assessments along the way.
— David Parnham
'This book deserves to be widely read.' Gerhard Pfandl, in College and University Dialogue, 2008
— Well argued researched (and readable) academic work
— Charles Hambrick-Stowe
Ball handles a technical subject with admirable clarity, authoritatively directing his reader through a concentrated and challenging intellectual environment, offering helpful explanations and assessments along the way.
— David Parnham
'This book deserves to be widely read.' Gerhard Pfandl, in College and University Dialogue, 2008
— Well argued researched (and readable) academic work
Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Continental Antecedents
2. English Origins and Developments to 1600
3. The Seventeenth-Century Scene to 1660
4. The Major Seventeenth-Century Advocates
5. Early Eighteenth-Century Debates and Digressions
6. The Ascendancy of Thnetopsychism
7. The World to Come – Realised Immortality
Appendix I. The Mortalist Works of Henry Layton
Appendix II. Mortalist Interpretation of Biblical Texts
Appendix III. The Eighteenth-Century Sussex Baptists
Bibliography
Index of Biblical References
Index of Names and Places
General Index
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Continental Antecedents
2. English Origins and Developments to 1600
3. The Seventeenth-Century Scene to 1660
4. The Major Seventeenth-Century Advocates
5. Early Eighteenth-Century Debates and Digressions
6. The Ascendancy of Thnetopsychism
7. The World to Come – Realised Immortality
Appendix I. The Mortalist Works of Henry Layton
Appendix II. Mortalist Interpretation of Biblical Texts
Appendix III. The Eighteenth-Century Sussex Baptists
Bibliography
Index of Biblical References
Index of Names and Places
General Index