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Books > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches > Baptist Churches
This book presents the history of two religious sects successfully established in seventeenth-century Massachusetts, where it was illegal to participate in any faith other than the legally established congregationalism of the Puritan founders of the colony. Taking a comparative approach, the author examines the Quaker meeting in Salem and the Baptist church in Boston over more than a century. The work opens with the dramatic events surrounding dissenters' efforts to gain a foothold in the colony, and goes on to locate sectarians within their families and communities, and to examine their beliefs and the changing nature of the organizations they founded and their interactions with the larger community and its leaders. The work deals with the religiosity of lay colonists, finding that men and women responded to these sects differently. It also analyzes sociological theories of sectarian evolution, the politics of dissent, and changes in beliefs and practices.
Everyday Christians need practical and accessible theology. In this
handbook first published in 1890, Charles Octavius Boothe simply
and beautifully lays out the basics of theology for common people.
"Before the charge 'know thyself,'" Boothe wrote, "ought to come
the far greater charge, 'know thy God.'" He brought the heights of
academic theology down to everyday language, and he helps us do the
same today. Plain Theology for Plain People shows that
evangelicalism needs the wisdom and experience of African-American
Christians. Walter R. Strickland II reintroduces this forgotten
masterpiece for today. Lexham Classics are beautifully typeset new
editions of classic works. Each book has been carefully transcribed
from the original texts, ensuring an accurate representation of the
writing as the author intended it to be read.
Written by a leading authority on Baptist life and thought, this
inclusive survey traces the development of the Baptist tradition in
North America over the past 400 years.
Shows how from a handful of churches on the Atlantic Coast, the
Baptist movement spread to become the largest Protestant
denomination in the United States.
Considers the contribution of all Baptists, including those in the
United States and Canada, men and women, Caucasians and
non-Caucasians.
Includes statistical data, a timeline, lists of Baptist groups and
related institutions, and a glossary of terms.
In the English-speaking Western world alone, thousands of men and
women begin formal training for Christian ministry each year or
informally seek to equip themselves for pastoral ministry. Over the
past fifty years, the ancient world of virtue ethics has been
re-imagined as a means of forming people of character and morality
today. In Shaped for Service, this experience is used as the
framework to understand what we are doing as we form Christian
ministers now, and how we might strengthen that development by more
consciously linking the practices of ministry with the person,
spirituality, and wisdom of the practitioner. Writing from the
context of a lifetime of pastoral ministry and the oversight of
ministers in the Baptist Union of Great Britain, Goodliff explores
what pastors do and who they are called to be using a mixture of
theological and pastoral enquiry, reflections upon art and personal
story. This book will be of interest to those who are charged with
forming the next generation of ministers, but anyone beginning that
journey of formation for ministry themselves will also find this
vision of ministry challenging and inspiring.
The Dr G.R. Beasley-Murray Memorial Lectures were delivered
annually between 2002 and 2012 with the aim of extending the legacy
of this significant New Testament scholar and church leader into
the twenty-first century. Themes addressed include baptism,
ministry, preaching, mission, and theological faithfulness. Having
first been delivered at the annual Assembly of the Baptist Union of
Great Britain, the lectures in this volume are now made available
to a wider audience and will be of interest to church leaders
across the denominations and across the world, and not least to
those who stand in Beasley-Murray's own Baptist tradition. George
Beasley-Murray died in 2000. The lectures cover a wide range of
topics, from baptism to missions, from Evangelical identity to
preaching. The lecturers are: Paul Beasley-Murray, former Principal
of Spurgeon's College; David Coffey, former President of the
Baptist Union and of the Baptist World Alliance; John E. Colwell,
Pastor of Budleigh Salterton Baptist Church; Anthony R. Cross,
Emeritus Director of the Centre for Baptist History and Heritage,
Oxford; Ruth M.B. Gouldbourne, former Tutor in Church History at
Bristol Baptist College; Stephen R. Holmes, Senior Lecturer at the
University of St Andrews; Mark Hopkins, Associate Professor of
Church History, Theological College of Northern Nigeria; Bruce
Milne, formerly Minister of First Baptist Church, Toronto; Michael
Quicke, former Principal of Spurgeon's College, London; Brian
Stanley, Professor of World Christianity, University of Edinburgh.
The antebellum southern Baptist churches were led, in general, by populists who addressed their appeals to the common person and allowed women and slaves to vote on membership matters. Paradoxically, at the same time, no denomination could wield the religious authority as ruthlessly as the Baptists - between 1785 and 1860 they ritually excommunicated forty to fifty thousand church members in Georgia alone. Wills traces this split to two rival strains in the Baptist church - moderates who emphasized personal religious freedom and tolerance, and fundamentalists who preached discipline and the inerrancy of scripture. He demonstrates how a denomination of freedom-loving individuals came to embrace exclusionist spirituality, and how the results of that conflict continue to affect the church.
Best-selling author John Piper puts the life of Andrew Fuller on
display as inspriration for all Christians to devote themselves to
knowing, guarding, and spreading the true gospel-to the ends of the
earth.
Text and Authority in the South African Nazaretha Church tells the
story of one of the largest African churches in South Africa,
Ibandla lamaNazaretha, or Church of the Nazaretha. Founded in 1910
by charismatic faith-healer Isaiah Shembe, the Nazaretha church,
with over four million members, has become an influential social
and political player in the region. Deeply influenced by a
transnational evangelical literary culture, Nazaretha believers
have patterned their lives upon the Christian Bible. They cast
themselves as actors who enact scriptural drama upon African soil.
But Nazaretha believers also believe the existing Christian Bible
to be in need of updating and revision. For this reason, they have
written further scriptures - a new 'Bible' - which testify to the
miraculous work of their founding prophet, Shembe. Joel Cabrita's
book charts the key role that these sacred texts play in making,
breaking and contesting social power and authority, both within the
church and more broadly in South African public life.
"The recent reprint of The Baptist Catechism has given families and
study classes a helpful tool for memorizing the great doctrines of
the Christian faith. Now, a hidden jewel, Benjamin Beddome's 'A
Scriptural Exposition of the Baptist Catechism, ' takes its place
alongside the Catechism to give much needed assistance to the same
families and classes. Beddome shows how the doctrines contained in
the Catechism are founded upon Scripture, and explains them for all
to understand. This is indeed a wonderful instrument to make
skilled craftsmen from apprentices " - Dr. James M. Renihan
Nearly 25 centuries ago, the angel Gabriel foretold the time Christ
would transfer His ministry from the holy place to the most holy
place of the heavenly sanctuary in preparation for the time when
divine intercession for man's salvation would be finished. Christ
has revealed His plans about the reward of the righteous and the
final disposition of evildoers inside the pages of the Bible. The
Most High has assured us in His word that the root and branches of
sin will be consumed into smoke and ashes - evil shall not rise the
second time. The Sanctuary is mentioned in both the beginning and
end of the Bible. Between these entries are some of the most
fascinating and inspiriting themes that can occupy the human mind
is revealed. The study of the sanctuary may properly engage the
interest of the one who desires to understand the purposes of the
Creator in the salvation of the rigorous and the final disposition
of evil.
Embracing in one common trajectory the major Baptist confessions of
faith, the major Baptist theologians, and the principal Baptist
theological movements and controversies, this book spans four
centuries of Baptist doctrinal history. Acknowledging first the
pre-1609 roots (patristic, medieval, Reformational) of Baptist
theology, it examines the Arminian versus Calvinist issues that the
General and the Particular Baptists first expressed. These issues
dominated English and American Baptist theology during the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries from Helwys and Smyth and from
Bunyan and Kiffin to Gill, Fuller, Backus, and Boyce and were
quickened by the awakenings and the missionary movement.
Concurrently, the Baptist defended distinctives vis-a-vis the
pedobaptist world and the unfolding of a strong Baptist
confessional tradition. Then during the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries the liberal versus evangelical issues became dominant
with Hovey, Strong, Rauschenbusch, and Henry in the North and
Mullins, Conner, Hobbs, and Criswell in the South even as a
distinctive Baptist Landmarkism developed, the discipline of
biblical theology was practiced and a structured ecumenism was
pursued. Missiology both impacted Baptist theology and took it to
all the continents, where it became increasingly indigenous.
Conscious that Baptists belong to the free churches and to the
believers' churches, a new generation of Baptist theologians at the
advent of the twenty-first century was somewhat more Calvinist than
Arminian and decidedly more evangelical than liberal.
Provides an illuminating look at the diverse world of Black
religious life in North America, focusing particularly outside of
mainstream Christian churches From the Moorish Science Temple to
the Peace Mission Movement of Father Divine to the Commandment
Keepers sect of Black Judaism, myriad Black new religious movements
developed during the time of the Great Migration. Many of these
stood outside of Christianity, but some remained at least partially
within the Christian fold. The Black Coptic Church is one of these.
Black Coptics combined elements of Black Protestant and Black
Hebrew traditions with Ethiopianism as a way of constructing a
divine racial identity that embraced the idea of a royal Egyptian
heritage for its African American followers, a heroic identity that
was in stark contrast to the racial identity imposed on African
Americans by the white dominant culture. This embrace of a royal
Blackness—what McKinnis calls an act of “fugitive
spirituality”—illuminates how the Black Coptic tradition in
Chicago and beyond uniquely employs a religio-performative
imagination. McKinnis asks, ‘What does it mean to imagine
Blackness?’ Drawing on ten years of archival research and
interviews with current members of the church, The Black Coptic
Church offers a look at a group that insisted on its own
understanding of its divine Blackness. In the process, it provides
a more complex look at the diverse world of Black religious life in
North America, particularly within non-mainstream Christian
churches.
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