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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches > General
This book shows how creative writing gives voice to the drama and
nuance of religious experience in a way that is rarely captured by
sermons, reports, and the minutes of church meetings. The author
explores the history of religious Dissent and Evangelicalism in
Australia through a variety of literary responses to landscape,
from both men and women, lay and ordained. The book explores
transnational themes, along with themes of migration and travel
across the Australian continent. The author gives insight into the
literature of Protestant Dissent, concerned as it is with travel,
belonging, and the intersection of national and religious identity.
Much of the writing is situated on the road: a soldier returning
from the Great War, a child on a lone adventure, a night-time
journey through urban slums; all of these are in some way dependent
on the theme of "walking with Jesus" as the Holy Land travelogues
make explicit. God in the Landscape draws the links between
landscape, literature, and spirituality with imagination and
insight and is an important contribution to the historical study of
religion and the environment.
Expanding a hypothesis the author first developed in his earlier
publications, this is an examination not merely of the extent to
which ministers of the Church of Scotland, depending on their
factional loyalties, sharply differed in the messages they sought
to convey to their own congregations (and through the medium of
print to the wider world) on a wide spectrum of contemporary
issues, but also of how their own personalities impacted on their
sermons, often revealing their innate political as well as their
theological leanings. In a wide-ranging and thoughtful
Introduction, Crawford argues that politics and the pulpit have
been inter-dependent from the middle ages - but more especially
since the Reformation when political preaching became synonymous
with the preaching of men like Luther, Calvin and, in Scotland,
Knox. Subsequent chapters analyse key Enlightenment issues
including the stance of the Kirk - and of individual ministers - on
patronage, the stage, heresy, political reform, patriotism,
America, popery and slavery, as articulated from the chair of
verity. Additionally, and unusually in an Enlightenment historian,
the author is able to deploy an impressive understanding of legal
history in order to extend the scope of his study, specifically to
cover the related (but imperfectly understood) issue of pulpit
censure.
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