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This book examines what true piety is. The main character is the apprentice of a man, now dead, who is suddenly accused of having been a heretic.
In this book, Edith Pargeter (aka Ellis Peters), through her hero Brother Cadfael, examines where heresy overlaps with true inquiry. Her characters are vindicated for pondering the mysteries of Christianity, including the trinity.
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Previews available in: German English
Subjects
Fiction, Herbalists, Brother Cadfael (Fictitious character), History, Fiction in Spanish, Cadfael, Brother (Fictitious character), Large type books, Fiction, mystery & detective, general, Fiction, historical, England, fiction, Clergy, fiction, Cadfael, brother (fictitious character), fiction, Fiction, historical, general, Literature and fiction, mystery and suspense, Literature and fiction, historical fictionPlaces
Shrewsbury (England), Great Britain, MonksTimes
Stephen, 1135-1154Showing 8 featured editions. View all 23 editions?
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Bruder Cadfael und der Ketzerlehrling
1992, Hoffmann und Campe
in German
- 1. Auflage
3455059090 9783455059090
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The Heretic's Apprentice: The Sixteenth Chronicle of Brother Cadfael
February 1, 1991, Mysterious Press
in English
0446400009 9780446400008
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The heretic's apprentice: the sixteenth chronicle of Brother Cadfael
1991, Futura
in English
0708844103 9780708844106
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The Heretics Apprentice: The Sixteenth Chronicle of Brother Cadfael
1990, General Paperbacks
Mass Market Paperback
in English
0773672699 9780773672697
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The heretics apprentice: the sixteenth chronicle of Brother Cadfael
1990, Ulverscroft
in English
- Large print ed.
0708922449 9780708922446
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Book Details
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Excerpts
"And I say that it's only his own deeds, bad and good, that a man will have to answer for in the judgment, and that's what will save or damn him. Though it's not often I've known a man so bad as to make me believe in damnation," said Elave, still absorbed in his own reasoning, and intent only on expressing himself clearly and simply, without suspicious of hostility or danger. "There was a father of the Church, once, as I heard tell, in Alexandria, who held that in the end everyone would find salvation. Even the fallen angels would return to their fealty, even the devil would repent and make his way back to God."
Beautiful. The character does not know he is endangering himself with these heretical words. But the novel vindicates him, that he cares for the babies and the adults, shriven or no.
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