Four Books of Sentences | work by Lombard | Britannica (original) (raw)
Learn about this topic in these articles:
Assorted References
discussed in biography
In Peter Lombard …was a 12th-century bishop whose Four Books of Sentences (Sententiarum libri IV) was the standard theological text of the Middle Ages. Read More
commentaries by
Albertus Magnus
In St. Albertus Magnus …two years on Peter Lombard’s Sentences, the theological textbook of the medieval universities. In 1245 he was graduated master in the theological faculty and obtained the Dominican chair “for foreigners.” Read More
Blessed Innocent V
In Blessed Innocent V …is his commentary on the Sentences by the 12th-century theologian Peter Lombard. He established the papal custom of wearing a white cassock, the habit of the Dominicans. Read More
Bonaventure
In Saint Bonaventure …1253 he lectured on the Sentences, a medieval theology textbook by Peter Lombard, an Italian theologian of the 12th century, and he became a master of theology in 1254, when he assumed control of the Franciscan school in Paris. He taught there until 1257, producing many works, notably commentaries on… Read More
Duns Scotus
In Blessed John Duns Scotus: Early life and career …preparing lectures on Peter Lombard’s _Sentences_—the textbook of theology in the medieval universities—and the second to delivering them. A bachelor’s role at this stage was not to give a literal explanation of this work but rather to pose and solve questions of his own on topics that paralleled subject “distinctions”… Read More
Luther
In Martin Luther: Doctor of theology …him to teach Peter Lombard’s Four Books of Sentences (Sententiarum libri IV), the standard theological textbook of the time. Because he was transferred back to Erfurt in the fall of 1509, however, the university at Wittenberg could not confer the degrees on him. Luther then unabashedly petitioned the Erfurt faculty… Read More
William of Ockham
In William of Ockham: Early life …and 1319 lectured on the Sentences of Peter Lombard—a 12th-century theologian whose work was the official textbook of theology in the universities until the 16th century. His lectures were also set down in written commentaries, of which the commentary on Book I of the Sentences (a commentary known as Ordinatio)… Read More
importance in
Christian doctrine and dogma
In Christianity: Consensus: patterns of agreement …Paris, was author of the Four Books of Sentences. This seminal work treats God the Holy Trinity; creation, humankind, and sin; the Incarnation of the Word and the redemption of humanity; faith, hope, love, and the other virtues; the seven sacraments (baptism, confirmation, Eucharist, penance, unction of the sick and… Read More
Roman Catholicism
In Roman Catholicism: The renaissance of the 12th century …resolved the apparent contradictions—in his Four Books of Sentences. His classic manual may be said, in modern terms, to have created the syllabus of theological study for the age that followed. Together with the enrichment of logic brought about by the discovery of the works of Aristotle (through Muslim sources)… Read More
Scholasticism
In Scholasticism: Early Scholastic period …famous Sententiarum libri iv (Four Books of Sentences)—which, though written one or two decades later than Hugh’s summa, belonged to an earlier historical species—contained about 1,000 texts from the works of Augustine, which constitute nearly four-fifths of the whole. Much more important than the book itself, however, were the… Read More