|
|
Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches > General
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.
`Fundamentalism' is a label used often pejoratively of religious conservatism. Evangelicals are growing in number and power around the world and are frequently regarded as fundamentalist. This volume examines fundamentalism as a mentality which has greatly affected evangelicalism, but which some evangelicals now wish to leave behind.
Educated people have become bereft of sophisticated ways to develop
their religious inclinations. A major reason for this is that
theology has become vague and dull. In The Character of God, author
Thomas E. Jenkins maintains that Protestant theology became boring
by the late nineteenth century because the depictions of God as a
character in theology became boring. He shows how in the early
nineteenth century, American Protestant theologians downplayed
biblical depictions of God's emotional complexity and refashioned
his character according to their own notions, stressing emotional
singularity. These notions came from many sources, but the major
influences were the neoclassical and sentimental literary styles of
characterization dominant at the time. The serene benevolence of
neoclassicism and the tender sympathy of sentimentalism may have
made God appealing in the mid-1800s, but by the end of the century,
these styles had lost much of their cultural power and increasingly
came to seem flat and vague. Despite this, both liberal and
conservative theologians clung to these characterizations of God
throughout the twentieth century.
Jenkins argues that a way out of this impasse can be found in
romanticism, the literary style of characterization that supplanted
neoclassicism and sentimentalism and dominated American literary
culture throughout the twentieth century. Romanticism emphasized
emotional complexity and resonated with biblical depictions of God.
A few maverick religious writers-- such as Harriet Beecher Stowe,
W. G. T. Shedd, and Horace Bushnell--did devise emotionally complex
characterizations of God and in some cases drew directly from
romanticism. But their strange andsometimes shocking depictions of
God were largely forgotten in the twentieth century. s use
"theological" as a pejorative term, implying that an argument is
needlessly Jenkins urges a reassessment of their work and a
greaterin understanding of the relationship between theology and
literature. Recovering the lost literary power of American
Protestantism, he claims, will make the character of God more
compelling and help modern readers appreciate the peculiar power of
the biblical characterization of God.
What's working and not working in your congregation? You'll explore
the factors that inspired and motivated changes to reverse decline
as other congregations wrestled with the same issues you're facing:
ministry to current members, ministry to the unchurched, worship,
changing neighborhoods, and more.
Christians generally recognize the need to live a holy, or
sanctified, life. But they differ on what sanctification is and how
it is achieved. How does one achieve sanctification in this life?
How much success in sanctification is possible? Is a crisis
experience following one's conversion normal--or necessary? If so,
what kind of experience, and how is it verified? Five Views on
Sanctification--part of the Counterpoints series--brings together
in one easy-to-understand volume five major Protestant views on
sanctification: Wesleyan View - represented by Melvin E. Dieter
Reformed View - represented by Anthony A. Hoekema Pentecostal View
- represented by Stanley M. Horton Keswick View - represented by J.
Robertson McQuilkin Augustinian-Dispensationalism View -
represented by John F. Walvoord Writing from a solid evangelical
stance, each author describes and defends his own understanding of
the doctrine sanctification and then responds to the views of the
other authors. The Counterpoints series presents a comparison and
critique of scholarly views on topics important to Christians that
are both fair-minded and respectful of the biblical text. Each
volume is a one-stop reference that allows readers to evaluate the
different positions on a specific issue and form their own,
educated opinion.
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.
Mark A. Noll presents a fresh and accessible history of
Protestantism from the era of Martin Luther to the present day.
Beginning with the founding of Lutheran, Reformed, Anglican, and
Anabaptist churches in the sixteenth-century Reformation, he also
considers the rise of other important Christian movements like
Methodism and Pentecostalism. Focussing on worldwide developments,
rather than just the familiar European and American histories, he
considers the recent expansion of Protestant movements in Africa,
China, India, and Latin America, emphasising the on-going and
rapidly expanding story of Protestants worldwide. Noll examines the
contributions from well-known figures including Martin Luther and
John Calvin, along with many others, and explores why Protestant
energies have flagged recently in the Western world yet expanded so
dramatically elsewhere. Highlighting the key points of Protestant
commonality including the message of Christian salvation, reliance
on the Bible, and organization through personal initiative, he also
explores the reasons for Protestantism's extraordinary diversity.
ABOUT THE SERIES: The Very Short Introductions series from Oxford
University Press contains hundreds of titles in almost every
subject area. These pocket-sized books are the perfect way to get
ahead in a new subject quickly. Our expert authors combine facts,
analysis, perspective, new ideas, and enthusiasm to make
interesting and challenging topics highly readable.
How did John Calvin understand and depict God's relationship with
humanity? Influential readings of Calvin have seen a dialectical
divine-human opposition as fundamental to his thought. As a result,
the importance of the doctrine of the Trinity in his understanding
of the divine-human relationship has been largely overlooked. In
this fresh consideration of Calvin's Christian vision, however,
Philip Butin demonstrates Calvin's consistent and pervasive appeal
to the Trinity as the basis, pattern, and dynamic of God's
relationship with humanity. Butin examines the historical
background, controversial context, and distinctive features of
Calvin's Trinity doctrine. He then explores the trinitarian
character of Calvin's doctrines concerning revelation, redemption,
and human response to God. Finally, his consideration of Calvin's
doctrines of the church, baptism, and the eucharist suggests the
contextuality, comprehensiveness, and coherence of Calvin's
trinitarian vision.
A well researched account of gospel blues that encompasses the broader cultural and religious histories of the African-American experience between the late 1890s and the 1930s. Harris skilfully contextualizes sacred and secular music styles within African-American religious history and significant social developments of the period.
Jesus Christ came to us to suffer temptation, to suffer our fate
with regard to God, and to become our brother. Let us go to him in
the desert to see what he had to endure, and how he had to fight,
so as thus to become our brother. Here we shall learn who we are
and how it stands with this our world....The desert is our world;
the tempter is our tempter; the forty days and nights are our time,
and we are Jesus, for here he stands in our stead. Who are we then,
O God, who are we?
This thought-provoking study examines an apparent paradox in the
history of American Protestant evangelical religion. Fervent
believers who devoted themselves completely to the challenges of
making a Christian life, who longed to know God's rapturous love,
all too often languished in despair, feeling forsaken by God.
Indeed, some individuals became obsessed by guilt, terror of
damnation, and the idea that they had committed an unpardonable
sin. Ironically, those most devoted to fostering the soul's
maturation seemingly neglected the well-being of the psyche.
Drawing upon many sources, including unpublished diaries, spiritual
narratives, and case studies of patients treated in
nineteenth-century asylums, Julius Rubin thoroughly explores
religious melancholy - as a distinctive stance toward life, a
grieving over the loss of God's love, and an obsession and psycho
pathology associated with the spiritual itinerary of conversion.
The varieties of this spiritual sickness include sinners who would
fast unto death ("evangelical anorexia nervosa"), religious
suicides, and those obsessed with unpardonable sin. From colonial
Puritans like Michael Wigglesworth to contemporary evangelicals
like Billy Graham, Rubin shows that religious melancholy has shaped
the experience of self and identity for those who sought rebirth as
children of God. Religious Melancholy and Protestant Experience in
America offers a fresh and revealing look at a widely recognized
phenomenon. It will be of interest to scholars and students of
religious studies, American history, psychology, and sociology of
religion.
An accessible and comprehensive introduction to the life and thought of the Swiss reformer and theologian, The book provides a clear discussion of the main themes in Zwingli's thought, setting his ideas in a historical context, and comparing them with those of other contemporary reformers such as Erasmus and Luther.
The volume contains ten historical theological studies tracing the
significance of Luther for Protestant religious culture (mainly in
the German-speaking world) since the Reformation. The approach
taken is one of the history of reception: selected positions in
modern Protestantism are identified as different forms of reception
of Luther's theology. In the background is the view that at present
a productive systematic theological approach to Luther's theology
primarily requires a detailed consideration of a new Protestant
religious culture.
Using a fresh reading of Barth's Church Dogmatics, Hunsinger advances a new interpretation of the Protestant theologian's work, and places it in relation to contemporary discussions of truth, justified belief, double agency, and religious pluralism.
This text defends a special focus on Jesus in theistic faith,
whilst denying his divinity. Having limited the genuine choice in
Christology to orthodoxy or unitarianism, it argues first for the
prior improbability of an incarnation, examining and dismissing
possible justifications.
October 2017 marks five hundred years since Martin Luther nailed
his 95 theses to the church door in Wittenberg and launched the
Protestant Reformation. At least, that's what the legend says. But
with a figure like Martin Luther, who looms so large in the
historical imagination, it's hard to separate the legend from the
life, or even sometimes to separate assorted legends from each
other. Over the centuries, Luther the man has given way to Luther
the icon, a polished bronze figure on a pedestal. In A World
Ablaze, Craig Harline introduces us to the flesh-and-blood Martin
Luther. Harline tells the riveting story of the first crucial years
of the accidental crusade that would make Luther a legendary
figure. He didn't start out that way; Luther was a sometimes-cranky
friar and professor who worried endlessly about the fate of his
eternal soul. He sought answers in the Bible and the Church
fathers, and what he found distressed him even more - the way many
in the Church had come to understand salvation was profoundly
wrong, thought Luther, putting millions of souls, not least his
own, at risk of damnation. His ideas would pit him against numerous
scholars, priests, bishops, princes, and the Pope, even as others
adopted or adapted his cause, ultimately dividing the Church
against itself. A World Ablaze is a tale not just of religious
debate but of political intrigue, of shifting alliances and daring
escapes, with Luther often narrowly avoiding capture, which might
have led to execution. The conflict would eventually encompass the
whole of Christendom and served as the crucible in which a new
world was forged. The Luther we find in these pages is not a statue
to be admired but a complex figure - brilliant and volatile,
fretful and self-righteous, curious and stubborn. Harline brings
out the immediacy, uncertainty, and drama of his story, giving
readers a sense of what it felt like in the moment, when the ending
was still very much in doubt. The result is a masterful recreation
of a momentous turning point in the history of the world.
'...a masterly study.' Alister McGrath, Theological Book Review
'...a splendid read.' J.J.Scarisbrick, TLS '...profound, witty...of
immense value.' David Loades, History Today Historians have always
known that the English Reformation was more than a simple change of
religious belief and practice. It altered the political
constitution and, according to Max Weber, the attitudes and motives
which governed the getting and investment of wealth, facilitating
the rise of capitalism and industrialisation. This book
investigates further implications of the transformative religious
changes of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries for the nation,
the town, the family, and for their culture.
During the second half of the seventeenth century the entire
intellectual framework of educated Europe underwent a radical
transformation. A secularized view of humanity and nature was
replacing faith in the direct operation of God's will in the
temporal world, while a growing confidence in human reason and the
Scientific Revolution turned back the epistemological skepticism
spawned by the Reformation. By focusing on the Dutch Collegiants, a
radical Protestant group that flourished in Holland from 1620 to
1690, Andrew Fix explicates the mechanisms at work in this crucial
intellectual transition from traditional to modern European
worldview. Starting from Rijnsburg, near Leiden, the Collegiants
spread over the course of the century to every major Dutch city. At
the same time, their thinking evolved from a millenarian
spiritualism influenced heavily by the sixteenth-century Radical
Reformation to a philosophical rationalism similar to the ideas of
Spinoza. Fix has taken on an important topic in the history of
ideas: the circumstances under which natural reason came to be
accepted as an autonomous source of truth for the individual
conscience. He also has fresh and concrete things to say about the
relationship between religion and science in early modern European
history. Originally published in 1990. The Princeton Legacy Library
uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available
previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of
Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original
texts of these important books while presenting them in durable
paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy
Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage
found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University
Press since its founding in 1905.
In No Depression in Heaven, Alison Collis Greene demonstrates how
the Great Depression and New Deal transformed the relationship
between church and state. Grounded in Memphis and the Delta, this
book traces the collapse of voluntarism, the link between southern
religion and the New Deal, and the gradual alienation of
conservative Christianity from the state. At the start of the Great
Depression, churches and voluntary societies provided the only
significant source of aid for those in need in the South. Limited
in scope, divided by race, and designed to control the needy as
much as to support them, religious aid collapsed under the burden
of need in the early 1930s. Hungry, homeless, and out-of-work
Americans found that they had nowhere to turn at the most desolate
moment of their lives. Religious leaders joined a chorus of pleas
for federal intervention in the crisis and a permanent social
safety net. They celebrated the New Deal as a religious triumph.
Yet some complained that Franklin Roosevelt cut the churches out of
his programs and lamented their lost moral authority. Still others
found new opportunities within the New Deal. By the late 1930s, the
pattern was set for decades of religious and political realignment.
More than a study of religion and politics, No Depression in Heaven
uncovers the stories of men and women who endured the Depression
and sought in their religious worlds the spiritual resources to
endure material deprivation. Its characters are rich and poor,
black and white, mobile sharecroppers and wealthy reformers,
enamored of the federal government and appalled by it. Woven into
this story of political and social transformation are stories of
southern men and women who faced the greatest economic disaster of
the twentieth century and tried to build a better world than the
one they inhabited.
|
|