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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Christian institutions & organizations > General
Church History, Volume One offers a unique contextual view of how
the Christian church spread and grew from its development in the
days of Jesus to the years leading up to the Reformation. Looking
closely at the integral link between the history of the world and
that of the church, Church History paints a portrait of God's
people within its setting of times, cultures, and events that both
influenced and were influenced by the church. FEATURES: Maps,
charts, and illustrations spanning the time from the first through
the thirteenth centuries. Overviews of the Roman, Greek, and Jewish
worlds and how they developed or declined. Insights into the
church's relationship to the Roman Empire, with glimpses into pagan
attitudes toward Christians. Explanations of the role of art,
architecture, literature, and philosophy-both sacred and secular-in
the Church. Details on the major theological controversies of the
periods. Each chapter also contains callout passages from Scripture
to assist in understanding the narrative of the Church, even to the
present day, as part of the greater narrative of the Bible.
AUTHOR'S PERSPECTIVE: Scholar and writer Everett Ferguson wrote
this history of the church from the perspective that such a history
is the story of the greatest movement and community the world has
known. It's a human story of a divinely called people who wanted to
live by a divine revelation. It's a story of how they succeeded and
how they failed or fell short of their calling. From the Apostle
Paul to the apologists and martyrs of the second century to Martin
Luther, the historical figures detailed are people who have
struggled with the meaning of the greatest event in history-the
coming of the Son of God-and with their role in that event and in
the lives of God's people.
Die Vorstellungen von den Osmanen schwanken in ihren Nachbarlandern
und uberhaupt im Abendland. Eingebettet in eine romanhafte
Rahmenhandlung werden Geschichte, Soziologie und Psychologie der
Osmanen des 18. Jahrhunderts vor ihrer zunehmenden Verwestlichung
im 19. Jahrhundert dargestellt und zeigen ein Selbstverstandnis,
das in abgewandelter Form vor allem auch heute noch nachschwingt.
Insgesamt vermitteln sie einen verstandnisvolleren Blick in die
Entwicklung des Islam.
Morrissey has written a lengthy and detailed life and times
biography of Peter Kenney. His book is an important contribution to
19th-century Irish and American religious history.
Am 15. September 1680 fand die feierliche Translation der Reliquien
der Katakombenheiligen Sergius, Bacchus, Hyacinthus und Erasmus im
Kloster St. Gallen statt. Als Director musicae bekam der
Stiftsorganist Pater Valentin Muller (Molitor) die Aufgabe, die
Musik fur die Feier zu verfassen. 1681 wurde ein Teil des dafur
komponierten Repertoires unter dem Titel Missa una cum tribus
Mottetis in Solemni Translatione SS. MM. Sergii, Bacchi, Hyacinthi
et Erasmi ab octo vocibus concertantibus, et 7. Instrumentis, sed
tantium quatuor necessariis in Monasterio S. Galli decantata
herausgegeben. Der im Kloster St. Gallen produzierte Musikdruck
enthalt ein vollstandiges Ordinarium missae (Kyrie, Gloria, Credo,
Sanctus und Agnus Dei) sowie drei Motetten. Grandios ist die
aufwendige Besetzung mit zwei vierstimmigen Choeren sowie einem
reichen, dem Festcharakter angemessenen Instrumentarium. Die Musik
stellt damit ein wertvolles Zeugnis des benediktinischen
Musikrepertoires dar, wie es im Kloster St. Gallen in der zweiten
Halfte des 17. Jahrhunderts gepflegt wurde. Der vorliegende Band
enthalt die vollstandige kritische Ausgabe der 1681 erschienenen
Werke von Pater Valentin Muller (Molitor) sowie eine historische
Einleitung.
Shu'ayb al-'Arna'ut war ein zeitgenoessischer Hadith-Gelehrter, der
einen grossen Teil des Hadith-Kanons und daruber hinaus
klassifiziert hat. In diesem Band wird zum ersten Mal seine
Methodologie vorgestellt. Anhand einer komparativen Analyse wird
ein exemplarischer Korpus von Hadithen untersucht, um die
Charakteristika der Methodologie von al-'Arna'ut feststellen zu
koennen. Zudem werden seine Beurteilungen von Hadithen mit denen
von al-Tahanawi und al-'Albani verglichen. Die Autorin zeigt in
diesem Buch auf, wie zeitgenoessische Hadith-Gelehrte mit den
Erkenntnissen fruherer Gelehrter umgehen, welche Herausforderungen
und neuen Entwicklungen dabei entstanden sind.
Obwohl die Apostolische Paenitentiarie das alteste Dikasterium der
Roemischen Kurie ist, gehoert sie zugleich zu den unbekannteren
Dikasterien. Ihr Hauptcharakteristikum ist ihre exklusive und fast
ausschliessliche Zustandigkeit im Forum internum. Ihre Aufgaben
sind vielfaltig und umfassen den Strafnachlass von reservierten
Zensuren genauso wie die Gewahrung verschiedener Gnadenerweise und
von Ablassen. Die vorliegende Arbeit stellt Kompetenzen, konkrete
Aufgaben, personelle Zusammensetzung und spezifische
Verfahrensweisen der Apostolischen Paenitentiarie anhand der
geltenden Rechtsgrundlagen dar. Dabei werden fortlaufend unter
vergleichendem Aspekt die AEnderungen, Erganzungen und
Modifikationen mit vorangegangenen Gesetzes- und Normenkomplexen
gepruft und ausgewertet.
In der Geografie, als einer Leitwissenschaft in Sachen
"Landschaft", definiert man aktuell Stadtelandschaften als
massstablich und raumlich ganz unterschiedliche Ebenen. Diese
lassen sich auf einzelne Stadte, auf bestimmte Stadtregionen und
selbst auf Metropolregionen oder die seit 1918 eingefuhrte
Megalopolis projizieren. Historiker verstehen unter einer
"Stadtelandschaft" meist ein Gebiet mittlerer Groessenordnung mit
unterschiedlich starker Urbanisierung, wobei in der
"Stadtlandschaft" Stadte und Markte, Burger und Handler im
umschriebenen Raum zwangslaufig eine dominierende Rolle spielen.
Der interterritoriale Vergleich fuhrt uns einerseits hinaus in die
Welt der europaischen Urbanitat, andererseits liegt ein deutlicher
Fokus auf den grossen wie kleinen Stadten Suddeutschlands. In Farbe
und Ausfuhrlichkeit analysieren die Autoren dort die Stadtkultur
vom Mittelalter bis zur Moderne. Politische, soziale und
oekonomische Netzwerke werden ebenso behandelt wie spannende
interstadtische Bezuge durch Reisende, Gelehrsamkeit, Schulen,
Literatur oder Musik. Teildisziplinen wie die Historische
Ortsnamenforschung runden das Bild ab.
What is the relationship between evangelical Christianity and
democracy in America? In Good News for Common Goods, sociologist
Wes Markofski explores how multicultural evangelicals across the
United States are addressing race, poverty, inequality, politics,
and religious and cultural difference in America's increasingly
plural and polarized public arena. Based on extensive original
research on multicultural evangelicals active in faith-based
community organizing, community development, political advocacy,
and public service organizations across the country-including over
90 in-depth interviews with racially diverse evangelical and
non-evangelical activists, community leaders, and neighborhood
residents-Markofski shows how the varieties of public religion
practiced by evangelical Christians are not always bad news for
non-evangelicals, people of color, and those advancing ethical
democracy in the United States. Markofski argues that multicultural
evangelicals can and do work with others across race, class,
religious, and political lines to achieve common good solutions to
public problems, and that they can do so without abandoning their
own distinctive convictions and identities or demanding that others
do so. Just as ethical democracy calls for a more reflexive
evangelicalism, it also calls for a more reflexive secularism and
progressivism.
Recent studies on the development of early Christianity emphasize
the fragmentation of the late ancient world while paying less
attention to a distinctive feature of the Christianity of this time
which is its inter-connectivity. Both local and trans-regional
networks of interaction contributed to the expansion of
Christianity in this age of fragmentation. This volume investigates
a specific aspect of this inter-connectivity in the area of the
Mediterranean by focusing on the formation and operation of
episcopal networks. The rise of the bishop as a major figure of
authority resulted in an increase in long-distance communication
among church elites coming from different geographical areas and
belonging to distinct ecclesiastical and theological traditions.
Locally, the bishops in their roles as teachers, defenders of
faith, patrons etc. were expected to interact with individuals of
diverse social background who formed their congregations and with
secular authorities. Consequently, this volume explores the nature
and quality of various types of episcopal relationships in Late
Antiquity attempting to understand how they were established,
cultivated and put to use across cultural, linguistic, social and
geographical boundaries.
Religion in Enlightenment England introduces its readers to a rich
array of BritishChristian texts published between 1660 and 1750.
The anthology documents the arc of Christian writings from the
reestablishment of the Church of England to the rise of the
Methodist movement in the middle of the eighteenth century. The
Enlightenment era witnessed the explosion ofmass print culture and
the unprecedented expansion of literacy across society. These
changes transformed many inherited Christian genresasuch as the
sermon and the devotional manualawhile also generating new ones,
from the modern church hymn to spiritual autobiography. The authors
included in this collection confronted the rise of modern science
and forged new rules of modern toleration.Their writing reveals the
unprecedented spiritual authority assumed by women and helps
explain how emotion moved to the center of religious experience.
Religion in Enlightenment England captures the literary energy and
excitement unleashed by the Enlightenment itself: authorsengageone
another in spirited dialogue that pits reason against revelation,
religious conformity against dissent, innovation against tradition,
andFreethinking against natural religion. An indispensable asset
for any scholar's library, the anthology includes texts by William
Law, John Bunyan, Elizabeth Singer Rowe, John and Charles Wesley,
Richard Baxter, John Toland, Mary Astell, Daniel Defoe, John
Norris, Margaret Fell Fox, Isaac Watts, Thomas Traherne, John
Tillotson, William Penn, and Anne Conway.
For some of us, the apostle Paul is intimidating, like a distant
and difficult uncle. Maybe not someone you'd like to hang out with
at a coffee shop on a rainy day. He'd make a scene, evangelize the
barista, and arouse looks across the room. For a mid-morning latte,
we'd prefer Jesus over Paul. But Paul is actually the guy who-from
Ephesus to Athens-was the talk of the marketplace, the raconteur of
the Parthenon. He knew everyone, founded emerging churches, loved
the difficult people, and held his own against the intellectuals of
his day. If you're willing to give Paul a try, Rediscovering Paul
is your reliable guide. This is a book that reacquaints us with
Paul, as if for the first time. Drawing on the best of contemporary
scholarship, and with language shaped by teaching and conversing
with today's students, Rediscovering Paul is a textbook that has
passed the test. Now in a reworked edition, it's better than ever.
There are fresh discussions of Paul's letter writing and how those
letters were received in the churches, new considerations of
pseudonymity and the authenticity of Paul's letters, and updated
coverage of recent developments in interpreting Paul. from Paul's
conversion and call to his ongoing impact on church and culture,
this second edition of Rediscovering Paul comes enthusiastically
recommended.
In this sometimes controversial book, Lynda Telford explores the
lives of women who have had personal and unofficial influence at
the Vatican over the centuries. They may have coerced or otherwise
influenced various popes into making decisions which affected papal
rule. Against the background of the history of the papacy, when
popes were expected to be celibate, the author identifies those
popes whose love and admiration for women led to their giving them
a voice, not only in their domestic arrangements but also in
matters concerning the Church. The women discussed include Marozia,
said to have been the mistress of Pope Sergius III, who appears to
have taken a violent path to power; and Vanozza dei Catanei, who
was the mistress of Alexander VI (Rodrigo Borgia) and bore him four
children. Rodrigo was thought to have obtained the title of pope
through simony and, although possessed of many engaging qualities,
there was no denying his worldliness and determination to ignore
the Church's rules on celibacy. He then took on a mistress, Giulia
Farnese, who was able to use her influence to promote the cause of
her brother, Alessandro Farnese, who would later become Pope Paul
III. There were several notable and influential women through the
16th, 17th and 18th centuries, including Felice della Rovere,
Catherine de Medici and Olimpia Pamphilj. The list also includes
queens, such as Christina of Sweden, who abdicated and moved to
Rome. Although the scandals abated in the nineteenth century,
Mother Pascalina's close relationship with Pope Pius XII in the
twentieth caused a great deal of speculation. Engaging,
controversial and sometimes illuminating, this is ultimately an
exploration of the Catholic Church's sometimes fraught relationship
with women.
This book analyzes two large surveys of clergy and lay people in
the Church of England taken in 2001 and 2013. The period between
the two surveys was one of turbulence and change, and the surveys
offer a unique insight into how such change affected grassroots
opinion on topics such as marriage, women's ordination, sexual
orientation, and the leadership of the Church. Andrew Village
analyzes each topic to show how opinion varied by sex, age,
education, location, ordination, and church tradition. Shifts that
occurred in the period between the two surveys are then examined,
and the results paint a detailed picture of how beliefs and
attitudes vary across the Church and have evolved over time. This
work uncovers some unforeseen but important trends that will shape
the trajectory of the Church in the years ahead.
2020 For the Church Book Award This brief, accessible invitation to
the historic creeds and confessions makes a biblical and historical
case for their necessity and shows why they are essential for
Christian faith and practice today. J. V. Fesko, a leading Reformed
theologian with a broad readership in the academy and the church,
demonstrates that creeds are not just any human documents but
biblically commended resources for the well-being of the church, as
long as they remain subordinate to biblical authority. He also
explains how the current skepticism and even hostility toward
creeds and confessions came about.
Die Autorin schliesst eine Lucke in der Dogmengeschichte des
Rechtsgedankens der Nichtigkeit sittenwidriger Vereinbarungen. Sie
weist nach, dass die Kanonistik des Hochmittelalters im
Zusammenhang mit der Entwicklung des Grundsatzes "pacta sunt
servanda" eigene, neue inhaltliche Kriterien fur die Zulassigkeit
von Vereinbarungen einfuhrte und spater einen theologisch
begrundeten Begriff der "boni mores" schuf. Dieser wich von dem
roemisch-rechtlichen Begriff der guten Sitten in der Legistik ab.
Der Rechtsgedanke der Begrenzung der Vertragsfreiheit durch die
guten Sitten als allgemeines und moralisches Kriterium ist heute in
138 BGB verankert. Die Untersuchung zeigt, dass er auf das
naturrechtlich begrundete Verstandnis der "boni mores" im
kirchlichen Recht des Hochmittelalters zuruckzufuhren ist.
Die Marktfahigkeit der Volkskirche, ihre Steigerung, Kritik und
theologische Legitimitat sind Gegenstand kirchlicher Diskurse seit
den fruhen 90er Jahren. Die vorliegende Studie behandelt nicht die
Themen dieser mit hoher Intensitat gefuhrten Debatten, sondern die
Art ihrer Diskursivierung und fragt, wie Plausibilitat und
Akzeptanz hergestellt werden. Michel Foucaults Konzept von Subjekt
und Macht und dessen aktuelle Reformulierung in den
Gouvernementalitatsstudien bilden Basis und Rahmen der Analyse, die
die Veranderungsprozesse der Kirche als Generierung eines
"unternehmerischen Selbst" rekonstruiert. Dabei bilden Debatten,
wie sie im Deutschen Pfarrerblatt gefuhrt wurden,
Internetprasentationen von Gemeinden und Kirchenkreisen und
Techniken der Selbst- und Fremdfuhrung die Grundlage der
Untersuchung. Erkennbar wird, wie sich eine an oekonomischer
Rationalitat orientierte "Regierung des Selbst" bei Person und
Organisation auf eine kirchlich spezifische und eigensinnige Weise
durchsetzt und dabei widerspruchliche Effekte erzeugt. Den
zeitgenoessischen kirchlichen Diskursen wird in wissenschaftlicher
Selbstaufklarung auf diese Weise ein fokussierter Spiegel
vorgehalten.
We need a bigger vision for the city. It's not enough to plant
individual churches in isolation from each other. The spiritual
need and opportunity of our cities is too big for any one church to
meet alone. Pastors Neil Powell and John James contend that to
truly transform a city, the gospel compels us to create localized,
collaborative church planting movements. They share lessons learned
and principles discovered from their experiences leading a
successful citywide movement. The more willing we are to
collaborate across denominations and networks, the more effectively
we will reach our communities-whatever their size-for Jesus. Come
discover what God can do in our cities when we work together.
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