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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches > General
This book studies the early history of the Protestant revival
movements of the eighteenth century from a European as well as
Anglo-American perspective. Professor Ward examines the crisis in
the Protestant world beyond that established and protected by the
Westphalia treaties, and its impact upon the morale of Protestant
communities which enjoyed diplomatic guarantees or other forms of
public protection. He traces the widespread outbreak of forms of
revival to the emergence of a common Protestant mind, shaped by the
appreciation of common problems. The religious effects of
widespread emigration produced by persecution, war and distress are
traced, and the chronology of the familiar revivals of the West is
related to the crises of Eastern revival. The Protestant
Evangelical Awakening is based on archival and published resources
extending from Eastern Europe to the American colonies, and marks a
major contribution to our understanding of the religious history of
both continents.
The religious revolution known as the 'Reformation' must rank among
the most crucial and transforming events in English history. Yet
its original reception by the English people remains largely
obscure. Did they welcome the innovations - or did they resist? By
what internal motivations were their responses determined? And by
what external influences were their attitudes shaped? These are the
key issues explored by Robert Whiting in this major investigation,
based primarily on original research in the south-west. Dr
Whiting's controversial conclusion is that for most of the
population the Reformation was less a conversion from Catholicism
to Protestantism than a transition from religious commitment to
religious passivity or even indifference.
This volume contains studies on two of the most fascinating
personalities in the academic world of the 20th century. In their
common years in Heidelberg, both Weber and Troeltsch developed a
research program in sociology of religion which was devoted to the
analysis of the "cultural importance" of religion, in particular
Protestant piety. Their common interest in an analytical
explanation of religion as vital power ("Lebensmacht"), however,
resulted in different and competing theoretical programs. The
studies in this book explore the constellations of the two men's
lives and works.
This is a case study of one pietist religious group, the Bruderhof.
A Christian brotherhood founded on Anabaptist and evangelical
pietist doctrine, they practice community of goods, seeking to
emulate the vision of the Apostolic church and fulfill the ethic of
brotherhood taught in the Sermon on the Mount. Rubin offers
compelling accounts of the lives of Bruderhof apostates who
foundered over issues of faith, and relates these crises to the
central tenets of Bruderhof theology, their spirituality, and
community life.
Church Life: Pastors, Congregations, and the Experience of Dissent
in Seventeenth-Century England addresses the rich, complex, and
varied nature of 'church life' experienced by England's Baptists,
Congregationalists, and Presbyterians during the seventeenth
century. Spanning the period from the English Revolution to the
Glorious Revolution, and beyond, the contributors examine the
social, political, and religious character of England's 'gathered'
churches and reformed parishes: how pastors and their congregations
interacted; how Dissenters related to their meetings as religious
communities; and what the experience of church life was like for
ordinary members as well as their ministers, including notably John
Owen and Richard Baxter alongside less well-known figures, such as
Ebenezer Chandler. Moving beyond the religious experience of the
solitary individual, often exemplified by conversion, Church Life
redefines the experience of Dissent, concentrating instead on the
collective concerns of a communally-centred church life through a
wide spectrum of issues: from questions of liberty and pastoral
reform to matters of church discipline and respectability. With a
substantial introduction that puts into context the key concepts of
'church life' and the 'Dissenting experience', the contributors
offer fresh ways of understanding Protestant Dissent in
seventeenth-century England: through differences in ecclesiology
and pastoral theory, and via the buildings in which Dissent was
nurtured to the building-up of Dissent during periods of civil war,
persecution, and revolution. They draw on a broad range of printed
and archival materials: from the minutes of the Westminster
Assembly to the manuscript church books of early Dissenting
congregations.
In this book, twelve historians examine the nature of the American Protestant establishment and its response to the growing pluralism of this century. The authors conclude that the period surveyed forms a distinct epoch in the evolution of American Protestantism. The days when Protestant cultural authority could be taken for granted were over, but a new era in which religious pluralism would be widely accepted had not yet arrived.
This book explores the complex ways in which England's gradual
transformation from a Roman Catholic to a Protestant nation
presented men and women with new ways in which to fashion their own
identities and to define their relationships with society.
The past generation's research into the religious history of early
modern England has heightened our appreciation for the persistence
of traditional beliefs in the face of concerted attacks by
followers of Henry VIII and his successor Edward VI. The book
argues that the present challenge for historians is to move beyond
this revisionist characterization of the English Reformation as a
largely unpopular and unsuccessful exercise of state power to
assess its legacy of increasing religious diversification. The
contributors cast a post-revisionist light on religious change by
showing how the Henrician break with Rome and the Edwardian
implementation of a Protestant agenda had a lasting influence on
the laity's beliefs and practices, forging a legacy that Mary I's
efforts to restore Catholicism could not overturn.
If, as revisionist research has stressed, late medieval
Christianity provided the laity with a wide array of means with
which to internalize and individualize their religious experiences,
then surely the events of the reigns of Henry and Edward vastly
expanded the field over which the religiosity of English men and
women could range. This book addresses the unfolding consequences
of this theological variegation to assess how individual spiritual
beliefs, aspirations, and practices helped shape social and
political action on a family, local, and national level.
This book is the first history in English of the Lutheran Church in
Germany and Scandinavia in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
A period of fundamental and lasting change in the political
landscape with the separation of the old twin monarchies of
Sweden-Finland and Denmark-Norway in Scandinavia (1808, 1814), and
the unification of Germany (1866-71), this was also a time of
particular unease and upheaval for the church. Attempts to emulate
the spiritual community of the early church, reform of the church
establishment, and steps taken to enlighten parishioners were
almost always held back by the anomalous structural legacy of the
Reformation, tradition, and parish habit, sacred and profane.
However, the birth of the modern nation-state and its market
economy posed a fundamental challenge to the structure and ethos of
the Reformation churches, as it did to the Catholic Church. The
First World War deepened the crisis further: German Protestants
(and the Scandinavians were not immune either, although they
remained neutral), who bracketed modernity with crisis and religion
with national renewal, and who saw national loyalty as a higher
value than the faith, fellowship, and moral order of the church,
were swept up into the maw of a modern national war machine which
threatened to wipe out Protestantism altogether.
Ab 1906 erschienen unter der Leitung des Kulturphilosophen Paul
Hinneberg im Leipziger Teubner-Verlag die ersten Bande einer
ehrgeizigen Enzyklopadie: "Die Kultur der Gegenwart, ihre
Entwicklung und ihre Ziele" lautete der Titel dieser systematisch
aufgebauten Gesamtdarstellung der Gegenwartskultur. Ernst Troeltsch
oblag die Abfassung des Abschnittes uber Protestantisches
Christentum und Kirche in der Neuzeit, der 1906 in erster Auflage
erschien und 1909 in einer stark erweiterten zweiten Auflage, die
1922 noch einmal unverandert abgedruckt wurde. Im vorliegenden Band
wird Troeltschs Studie erstmals als separate Buchausgabe
prasentiert. Troeltsch rekonstruiert in dieser Abhandlung die
Entwicklungsgeschichte des Protestantismus von der Reformation bis
in die Gegenwart. Als Leitfaden dient ihm die Unterscheidung
zwischen einer altprotestantischen Epoche, die starker dem
Mittelalter angehoert, und der neuprotestantischen Epoche, die er
eher der aufgeklarten Neuzeit zurechnet. Troeltsch macht die
epochalen Differenzen durchsichtig, indem er insbesondere die
Wandlungen in den Kulturbeziehungen und damit in der
Kulturbedeutung des Protestantismus herausstreicht. Dieser Beitrag
in der "Kultur der Gegenwart" begrundete Troeltschs Ruhm als
Kulturtheoretiker des Neuprotestantismus.
Governing the Tongue examines the special nature and power of speech in Puritan New England, where the twin desires to promote godly speech and suppress deviant words dominated everyday culture. The crimes of the accused at such famous events as the Salem witch trials and the banishment of Anne Hutchinson were all related to so-called "sins of the tongue". By placing speech at the heart of her examination of these and other moments in Puritan history, Kamensky develops new ideas about the relationship between speech and power both in colonial New England and, by extension, in our world today.
Comprising papers by such distinguished scholars as John Headley Brooke, James R. Moore, Ronald Numbers, and George Marsden, this collection shows that questions of science have been central to evangelical history in the United States, as well as in Britain and Canada. It is an invaluable resource for understanding the historical context of contemporary political squabbles such as the debate over the status of "creation science" and the teaching of evolution.
This study approaches the Puritan experience from the perspective of the pew, rather than the pulpit. For the past ten years, James Cooper has immersed himself in local Massachusetts manuscript church records. From these previously untapped documents emerge individuals who henceforth will deserve mention alongside the clerical and elite personages who for so long have populated histories of the period. Cooper's new findings both challenge existing models of church hierarchy and offer a new understanding of the origins of New England democracy.
This book addresses several dimensions of the transformation of
English Nonconformity over the course of an important century in
its history. It begins with the question of education for ministry,
considering the activities undertaken by four major evangelical
traditions (Congregationalist, Baptist, Methodist, and
Presbyterian) to establish theological colleges for this purpose,
and then takes up the complex three-way relationship of
ministry/churches/colleges that evolved from these activities. As
author Dale Johnson illustrates, this evolution came to have
significant implications for the Nonconformist engagement with its
message and with the culture at large. These implications are
investigated in chapters on the changing perception or
understanding of ministry itself, religious authority, theological
questions (such as the doctrines of God and the atonement), and
religious identity.
In Johnson's exploration of these issues, conversations about these
topics are located primarily in addresses at denominational
meetings, conferences that took up specific questions, and
representative religious and theological publications of the day
that participated in key debates or advocated contentious
positions. While attending to some important denominational
differences, The Changing Shape of English Nonconformity, 1825-1925
focuses on the representative discussion of these topics across the
whole spectrum of evangelical Nonconformity rather than on specific
denominational traditions.
Johnson maintains that too many interpretations of
nineteenth-century Nonconformity, especially those that deal with
aspects of the theological discussion within these traditions, have
tended to depict such developments as occasions of decline from
earlier phases of evangelical vitality and appeal. This book
instead argues that it is more appropriate to assess these
Nonconformist developments as a collective, necessary, and deeply
serious effort to come to terms with modernity and, further, to
retain a responsible understanding of what it meant to be
evangelical. It also shows these developments to be part of a
larger schema through which Nonconformity assumed a more prominent
place in the English culture of the nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries.
Colonial New Englanders would have found our modern notions of free
speech very strange indeed. Children today shrug off harsh words by
chanting "sticks and stones may break my bones but names will never
hurt me," but in the seventeenth century people felt differently.
"A soft tongue breaketh the bone," they often said.
Governing the Tongue explains why the spoken word assumed such
importance in the culture of early New England. Author Jane
Kamensky re-examines such famous Puritan events as the Salem witch
trials and the banishment of Anne Hutchinson to expose the
ever-present fear of what the puritans called "sins of the tongue."
But even while dangerous or deviant speech was restricted, Kamensky
points out, godly speech was continuously praised and promoted.
Congregations were told that one should ones voice "like a trumpet"
to God and "cry out and cease not."
By placing speech at the heart of familiar stories of Puritan New
England, Kamensky develops new ideas about the relationship between
speech and power both in Puritan New England and, by extension, in
our world today.
American women played in important part in Protestant foreign
missionary work from its early days at the beginning of the
nineteenth century. This work allowed them to disseminate the
Prostestant religious principles in which they believed, and by
enabling them to acquire professional competence as teachers, to
break into public life and create new opportunities for themselves
and other women. No institution was more closely associated with
women missionaries than Mount Holyoke College. In this book, Amanda
Porterfield examines Mount Holyoke founder Mary Lyon and the
missionary women she trained. Her students assembled in a number of
particular mission fields, most importantly Persia, India, Ceylon,
Hawaii, and Africa. Porterfield focuses on three sites where
documentation about their activities is especially rich-- northwest
Persia, Maharashtra in western India, and Natal in southeast
Africa. All three of these sites figured importantly in antebellum
missionary strategy; missionaries envisioned their converts
launching the conquest of Islam from Persia, overturning "Satan's
seat" in India, and drawing the African descendants of Ham into the
fold of Christendom. Porterfield shows that although their primary
goal of converting large numbers of women to Protestant
Christianity remained elusive, antebellum missionary women promoted
female literacy everywhere they went, along with belief in the
superiority and scientific validity of Protestant orthodoxy, the
necessity of monogamy and the importance of marital affection, and
concern for the well-being of children and women. In this way, the
missionary women contributed to cultural change in many parts of
the world, and to the development ofnew cultures that combined
missionary concepts with traditional ideals.
The Devil's Mousetrap approaches the thought of three colonial New England divines --Increase Mather, Jonathan Edwards, and Edward Taylor-- from the perspective of literary theory, illuminating their work's allusive language and intellectual backgrounds.
Recent years have seen the entry of large numbers of women into the ordained clergy of Protestant churches. Nesbitt here analyses the extent to which the large-scale entry of women into the ministry has affected the occupation.
Beginning with the first colonists and continuing down to the
present, the dominant narrative of New England Puritanism has
maintained that piety and prosperity were enemies, that the rise of
commerce delivered a mortal blow to the fervor of the founders, and
that later generations of Puritans fell away from their religious
heritage as they moved out across the New England landscape. This
book offers a new alternative to the prevailing narrative, which
has been frequently criticized but heretofore never adequately
replaced.
The author's argument follows two main strands. First, he shows
that commercial development, rather than being detrimental to
religion, was necessary to sustain Puritan religious culture. It
was costly to establish and maintain a vital Puritan church, for
the needs were many, including educated ministers who commanded
substantial salaries; public education so that the laity could be
immersed in the Bible and devotional literature (substantial
expenses in themselves); the building of meeting houses; and the
furnishing of communion tables--all and more were required for the
maintenance of Puritan piety.
Second, the author analyzes how the Puritans gradually developed
the evangelical impulse to broadcast the seeds of grace as widely
as possible. The spread of Puritan churches throughout most of New
England was fostered by the steady devotion of material resources
to the maintenance of an intense and demanding religion, a devotion
made possible by the belief that money sown to the spirit would
reap divine rewards.
In 1651, about 20,000 English colonists were settled in some 30 New
England towns, each with a newly formed Puritan church. A century
later, the population had grown to 350,000, and there were 500
meetinghouses for Puritan churches. This book tells the story of
this remarkable century of growth and adaptation through
intertwined histories of two Massachusetts churches, one in Boston
and one in Westfield, a village on the remote western frontier,
from their foundings in the 1660's to the religious revivals of the
1740's. In conclusion, the author argues that the Great Awakening
was a product of the continuous cultivation of traditional
religion, a cultural achievement built on New England's economic
development, rather than an indictment and rejection of its Puritan
heritage.
'It is rare for a book to be both erudite and amusing at the same
time, and this book has succeeded. It has changed the common but
unacceptable image of the Puritans as dull, solemn, melancholy
misanthropes' - Horton Davies, author of The Worship of the
American Puritans For over four centuries, 'puritan' has been a
synonym for dour, joyless, and repressed. In Puritans at Play,
Bruce Daniels reappraises the accuracy of this grim portrait by
examining leisure and recreation in colonial and revolutionary New
England. Chapters on music, dinner parties, dancing, sex, alcohol,
taverns, and sports are presented in a lively style making this
book as entertaining as it is illuminating.
Brooklyn's black churches have played a vital role in the borough
since the early nineteenth century. Mr. Taylor quotes contemporary
newspaper accounts of church events, using descriptions of concerts
and lectures to illustrate nuances of class among various
congregations... The Black Churches Of Brooklyn offers a fine
overview of a too-long-neglected chapter in New York history.
Women in the Presence is a study of the religious lives of
middle-class laywomen. Focusing on the ways in which the members of
one Bible study group for women at a suburban Presbyterian church
articulate their beliefs and define their communicative boundaries,
the book reveals a style of managing privacy, diversity, and
fellowship that displays distinct strengths and poignant
prohibitions. Based on eighteen months of participant-observation
fieldwork, complemented by extensive individual interviews, Jody
Shapiro Davie shows that often the deepest beliefs of group members
are voiced only indirectly and that crucial elements of their
personal beliefs are not discussed at all among the group. Women in
the Presence makes apparent some of the difficulties and
complexities of contemporary middle-class religious life in
America: the fear of self-revelation that leads to spiritual
isolation; denominational efforts not to alienate anyone that
result in polite, superficial, and lifeless churches; and the
conventions of middle-class culture that repress the individual's
desire for sincere and active engagement with the life of the soul.
Approaching a middle-class American church through an
anthropologist-folklorist's eyes, Women in the Presence offers a
fresh perspective on the pursuit of spirituality by mainstream
Protestant women. Unique in its field, this book will be of
interest to the general reader and to scholars concerned with
congregational studies, women and religion, vernacular religion and
belief, and the anthropology of contemporary American religious
life.
Available for the first time in trade paperback, this authoritative
biography of the great religious leader was hailed by Time magazine
as "the most readable Luther biography in English". This edition
showcases the intricate woodcuts and engravings that enhance the
text and give the flavor of the era in which Martin Luther lived.
More than 100 woodcuts and engravings.
You're engaged And now you are knee-deep in planning the details of
the wedding. But are you also getting ready for what comes after
the wedding? Alice and Robert Fryling bring over twenty-five years
of marriage experience to this workbook designed to guide you
through open and honest communication about the things that will
really matter in your marriage: money time communication sex family
work faith This isn't just a book you read--it's a book you
experience together. Its interactive style allows you and your
future spouse to explore its biblically-based counsel and
challenging questions together or with a pastor. And with three
chapters tailored specifically to your first few months together,
you can even use A Handbook for Engaged Couples after the wedding.
Set aside time now to develop a marriage that starts well and grows
to lasting maturity.
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