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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches
Letters of important clergyman provide a well-informed and lively
commentary upon the religion, politics and society of the time. The
letters of Theophilus Lindsey (1723-1808) illuminate the career and
opinions of one of the most prominent and controversial clergymen
of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. His petitions for
liberalism within the Church of England in 1772-3, his subsequent
resignation from the Church and his foundation of a separate
Unitarian chapel in London in 1774 all provoked profound debate in
the political as well as the ecclesiastical world. His chapel
became a focal point for the theologically and politically
disaffected and during the 1770s and early 1780s attracted the
interest of many critics of British policy towards the American
colonies. Benjamin Franklin, Joseph Priestley and Richard Price
were among Lindsey's many acquaintances. The first of this
two-volume edition of the letters of Theophilus Lindsey covers the
period from 1747 to the eve of the French Revolution; their
subjects include religious and political debate, campaigns for
ecclesiastical and political reform, and the emergence of a
theologically distinct Unitarian denomination. The letters are
accompanied by full notes and introduction. G.M.DITCHFIELD is
Professor of Eighteenth-Century History, University of Kent at
Canterbury.
This book is unique in recording the history of all the Protestant
churches in Ireland in the twentieth century, though with
particular focus on the two largest - the Presbyterian and the
Church of Ireland. It examines the changes and chances in those
churches during a turbulent period in Irish history, relating their
development to the wider social and political context. Their
structures and beliefs are examined, and their influence both in
Ireland and overseas is assessed.
This study describes the creation of the Primitive Baptist movement
and discusses the main outlines of their thought. It also weaves
the story of the Primitive Baptists with other developments in
American Christianity in the Early Republic.
The growth of Christianity in the global South is one of the most
important religious stories of the last decade. In no branch of
Christianity has that growth been more rapid than Pentecostalism.
There are over 100 million Pentecostals in Africa, and Pentecostal
practices infuse Catholic, Anglican, and Independent churches. In
the traditional Catholic stronghold of Latin America,
Pentecostalism now vies with Catholicism for the soul of the
continent. And the largest Pentecostsal church in the world, with
over 800,000 members, is in Seoul. In To the Ends of the Earth,
Allan Anderson offers a historical and theological examination of
the growth of global Pentecostalism. Examining such issues as
revivalism, healing, gender, worship, and globalization, Anderson
seeks to show how the growth of global Pentecostalism is changing
the face of Christianity as a whole.
This is a contemporary, eyewitness account of the life of Martin
Luther translated into English. Johannes Cochlaeus (1479-1552) was
present in the great hall at the Diet of Worms on April 18, 1521
when Luther made his famous declaration before Emperor Charles V:
"Here I stand. I can do no other. God help me. Amen". Afterward,
Cochlaeus sought Luther out, met him at his inn, and privately
debated with him. Luther wrote of Cochlaeus, "may God long preserve
this most pious man, born to guard and teach the Gospel of His
church, together with His word, Amen". However, the confrontation
left Cochlaeus convinced that Luther was an impious and malevolent
man. Over the next 25 years, Cochlaeus barely escaped the Peasant's
War with his life. He debated with Melanchthon and the reformers of
Augsburg. It was Cochlaeus who conducted the authorities to the
clandestine printing press in Cologne, where William Tyndale was
preparing the first English translation of the New Testament
(1525). For an eyewitness account of the Reformation - and the
beginnings of the Catholic Counter-Reformation - no other
historical document matches the first-hand experience of Cochlaeus.
After Luther's death, it was rumoured that demons seized the
reformer on his death-bed and dragged him off to Hell. In response
to these rumours, Luther's friend and colleague, Philip Melanchthon
wrote and published a brief encomium of the reformer in 1548.
Cochlaeus consequently completed and published his monumental life
of Luther in 1549. This volume brings the two documents
head-to-head in a confrontation postponed for more than four
hundred and fifty years. In addition, this book supplies a life of
Cochlaeus, plus a full scholarly apparatus for readers who wish to
make a broader study of the period.
This monograph tracks the development of the socio-economic stance
of early Mormonism, an American Millenarian Restorationist
movement, through the first fourteen years of the church's
existence, from its incorporation in the spring of 1830 in New
York, through Ohio and Missouri and Illinois, up to the lynching of
its prophet Joseph Smith Jr in the summer of 1844. Mormonism used a
new revelation, the Book of Mormon, and a new apostolically
inspired church organization to connect American antiquities to
covenant-theological salvation history. The innovative religious
strategy was coupled with a conservative socio-economic stance that
was supportive of technological innovation. This analysis of the
early Mormon church uses case studies focused on socio-economic
problems, such as wealth distribution, the financing of publication
projects, land trade and banking, and caring for the poor. In order
to correct for the agentive overtones of standard Mormon
historiography, both in its supportive and in its detractive
stance, the explanatory models of social time from Fernand
Braudel's classic work on the Mediterranean are transferred to and
applied in the nineteenth-century American context.
An examination of the role played by civil society in the
legitimization of South Africa's apartheid regime and its racial
policy. This book focuses on the interaction of dominant groups
within the Dutch Reformed Church and the South African state over
the development of race policy within the broader context of state
civil society relations. This allows a theoretical examination and
typology of the variety of state civil society relations.
Additionally, the particular case study demonstrates that civil
society's existence in and authoritarian situations can deter the
establishment of democracy when components of civil society
identify themselves with exclusive, ethnic interests.
While there are a growing number of researchers who are exploring
the political and social aspects of the global Renewal movement,
few have provided sustained socio-economic analyses of this
phenomenon. The editors and contributors to this volume offer
perspectivesin light of the growth of the Renewal movement in the
two-thirds world.
This book focuses on Christological-Monotheism, an underexplored
area which combines two disciplines of theological appraisal often
addressed as separate subjects. Christological-Monotheism is
currently underexplored in the literature, and even more
underexplored is an inclusion of inclusion of the meaning of
"Christological-Monotheism" from the perspectives of Christian
voices from the "Oneness Pentecostal" faith tradition. Oneness
Pentecostalism offers opposing perspectives to what is considered
'fixed orthodoxy' within the Christian faith traditions: i.e., its
views differ on doctrines relating to the nature of God and Christ
from accepted norms. This project seeks to include various Oneness
Pentecostal interpretations to commonly held perspectives, and
explore what such might look like when juxtapose with Christian
orthodoxy. Moreover, it rereads perspectives about the relationship
between God and Christ offered by both traditions in the contexts
of earlier contributors to Christian history, all the way to the
Second Temple Jewish periods, and includes similar patterns exposed
by various groups/scholars along this trajectory.
Evangelical Bible study groups are the most prolific type of
small group in American society, with more than 30 million
Protestants gathering every week for this distinct purpose, meeting
in homes, churches, coffee shops, restaurants, and other public and
private venues across the country. What happens in these groups?
How do they help shape the contours of American Evangelical life?
While more public forms of political activism have captured popular
and scholarly imaginations, it is in group Bible study that
Evangelicals reflect on the details of their faith. Here they
become self-conscious religious subjects, sharing the intimate
details of life, interrogating beliefs and practices, and
articulating their version of Christian identity and culture.
In Words upon the Word, James S. Bielo draws on over nineteen
months of ethnographic work with five congregations to better
understand why group Bible study matters so much to Evangelicals
and for Evangelical culture. Through a close analysis of
participants' discourse, Bielo examines the defining themes of
group life--from textual interpretation to spiritual intimacy and
the rehearsal of witnessing. Bielo's approach allows these
Evangelical groups to speak for themselves, illustrating Bible
study's uniqueness in Evangelical life as a site of open and
critical dialogue. Ultimately, Bielo's ethnography sheds much
needed light on the power of group Bible study for the
ever-evolving shape of American Evangelicalism.
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