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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches > Calvinist, Reformed & Presbyterian Churches > General
Bringing together a rich range of primary sources - images,
liturgies, sermons, letters, eyewitness accounts, and Genevan
consistory records - this book examines worship as it was taught
and practiced in John Calvin's Geneva. Several of these primary
sources are translated into English for the first time, offering
new resources for studying Calvin and his context. Karin Maag uses
Geneva as a case study for investigating the theology and practice
of worship in the Reformation era. Covering the period from 1541 to
1564, the year of Calvin's death, Lifting Hearts to the Lord
captures both Calvin's signal contribution to Reformation worship
and the voices of ordinary Genevans as they navigated - and
debated, even fought about - the changes in worship resulting from
the Reformation.
The translator has done a truly excellent job of putting Calvin's
work into a very readable English format. If you have ever wanted
to read Calvin, here is your chance. Frankly, one might compare the
study of Calvin to the opportunity to either sit with Christ on the
mount or later to hear Matthew retell the story. Why go to a
secondary source when Calvin is so easy to understand and so
readily available in this edition? These pages bring Calvin right
into your living room, where you learn the reformed faith first
hand. To sum it up: Pastor, student, or layman, if you don't have
this work in your study collection, such a collection is
incomplete. Complete enough to suit the demands of the scholar,
written so the average layman can understand, here is John Calvin.
This is a terrific tool in understanding our Reformed faith from
the very father of the reformation that led to the Presbyterian
Church.
Cotton Mather (1663-1728) was America's most famous pastor and
scholar at the beginning of the eighteenth century. People today
generally associate him with the infamous Salem witch trials, but
that picture has mostly come down to us from one unreliable,
antagonistic source. This biography by Rick Kennedy, based largely
on new research by an international team of scholars, corrects
misconceptions of Cotton Mather and focuses on the way he tried to
promote, socially and intellectually, a biblical lifestyle. As
older Puritan hopes in New England were giving way to a broader and
shallower Protestantism, Mather led a populist, Bible-oriented
movement that embraced the new century -- the beginning of a
dynamic evangelical tradition that eventually became a major force
in American culture.
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