A Personal Union: Reformed Christology and the Question of the Communicatio Idiomatum
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Andrew R. Hay
Retraction of: Andrew R. Hay. A Personal Union: Reformed Christology and the Question of the Communicatio Idiomatum , Journal of Early Modern Christianity 2, no. 1 (2015): 1–18. https://doi.org/10.1515/jemc-2015-0001.
The article has been retracted, following a complaint from a third-party, at the request of the Author.
The article has been retracted because the article duplicates significant parts of Bruce McCormack’s text “For Us and Our Salvation. Incarnation and Atonement in the Reformed Tradition”, Studies in Reformed Theology and History, Princeton Theological Seminary, Volume 1 No. 2, 1993.
Apologies are offered to readers of the journal that this plagiarism was not detected during the peer-review process.
© 2022 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- The Birth of Modern Sanctity: The 1622 Canonizations
- Introduction
- A Holy Flood of Saints: The 1622 Canonizations
- Research Articles
- The Quintuple Canonization of 1622: Between the Renewal of the Making of Saints and Claims for Pontifical Monopoly
- War Saints: The Canonization of 1622
- Framing Sainthood in 1622: Teresa of Ávila, Ignatius of Loyola, and Francis Xavier
- The Distinctive Features of Religious Festivities in the Spanish Netherlands: The Douai Celebrations for the Canonisation of Ignatius of Loyola and Francis Xavier
- Conversion and Sanctity in Print: The Episode of Ignatius of Loyola and Isaac, the Roman Jew ca. 1600
- Glorifying Francis Xavier’s (1506–1552) Good Deeds or Miracles? The Negotiation of Sanctity in Daniello Bartoli’s Asia (1653)
- Dying in the Odor of Sanctity: Philip Neri and the Performance of Saintly Death in Catholic Reformation Rome
- 1622, the Fatal Year for the Discalced Carmelites: The Canonisation of Teresa, the Crystallisation of Conventual Typologies, and the Reinvention of Iconography
- On the Canonization of the Founders of Religious Orders in Early Modern Times
- Retraction
- A Personal Union: Reformed Christology and the Question of the Communicatio Idiomatum
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- The Birth of Modern Sanctity: The 1622 Canonizations
- Introduction
- A Holy Flood of Saints: The 1622 Canonizations
- Research Articles
- The Quintuple Canonization of 1622: Between the Renewal of the Making of Saints and Claims for Pontifical Monopoly
- War Saints: The Canonization of 1622
- Framing Sainthood in 1622: Teresa of Ávila, Ignatius of Loyola, and Francis Xavier
- The Distinctive Features of Religious Festivities in the Spanish Netherlands: The Douai Celebrations for the Canonisation of Ignatius of Loyola and Francis Xavier
- Conversion and Sanctity in Print: The Episode of Ignatius of Loyola and Isaac, the Roman Jew ca. 1600
- Glorifying Francis Xavier’s (1506–1552) Good Deeds or Miracles? The Negotiation of Sanctity in Daniello Bartoli’s Asia (1653)
- Dying in the Odor of Sanctity: Philip Neri and the Performance of Saintly Death in Catholic Reformation Rome
- 1622, the Fatal Year for the Discalced Carmelites: The Canonisation of Teresa, the Crystallisation of Conventual Typologies, and the Reinvention of Iconography
- On the Canonization of the Founders of Religious Orders in Early Modern Times
- Retraction
- A Personal Union: Reformed Christology and the Question of the Communicatio Idiomatum