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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches
A.G. Dickens is the most eminent English historian of the
Reformation. His books and articles have illuminated both the
history and the historiography of the Reformation in England and in
Germany. Late Monasticism and the Reformation contains an edition
of a poignant chronicle from the eve of the Reformation and a new
collection of essays. The first part of the book is a reprint of
his edition of The Chronicle of Butley Priory, only previously
available in a small privately financed edition which has long been
out of print. The last English monastic chronicle, it extends from
the early years of the sixteenth century up to the Dissolution.
Besides giving an intimate portrait of the community at Butley, it
reveals many details concerning the local history and personalities
of Suffolk during that period. The second part contains the most
important essays published by A.G. Dickens since his Reformation
Studies (1982). Their themes concern such areas of current interest
as the strength and geographical distribution of English
Protestantism before 1558; the place of anticlericalism in the
English Reformation; and Luther as a humanist. Also included are
some local studies including essays on the early Protestants of
Northamptonshire and on the mock battle of 1554 fought by London
schoolboys over religion.
A penetrating study of Calvin's Institutes and an illumination of
Calvin's theology as a whole.This work, by one of the world's
pre-eminent Calvin scholars, has long been regarded as a work of
the greatest importance. Professor de Kroon is a leading
Reformation historian and historian of doctrine. His knowledge of
Protestant and Catholic theology in the Reformation era is
unparalleled.For all scholars and student of Calvin's theology.
In Theology from Listening: Finding the Core of Liberal Quaker
Theological Thought, Rhiannon Grant explores the changes and
continuities in liberal Quaker theology over the twentieth and
early twenty-first centuries in multiple English-speaking Quaker
communities around the world. The work involves a close analysis of
material produced by Quaker meetings through formal, corporate
methods; of material produced by individuals and small groups
within Quaker communities; and of writing by individuals and small
groups working primarily within academic or ecumenical theological
settings. It concludes that although liberal Quaker theology is
diverse and flexible, it also possesses a core coherence and can
meaningfully be discussed as a single tradition. At the centre of
liberal Quaker theology is the belief that direct, unmediated
contact with the Divine is possible and results in useful guidance.
This book attempts to understand Calvin in his sixteenth-century context, with attention to continuities and discontinuities between his thought and that of his predecessors, contemporaries, and successors. Richard Muller is particularly interested in the interplay between theological and philosophical themes common to Calvin and the medieval doctors, and developments in the rhetoric and argument associated with humanism.
John Calvin revolutionized Christianity. Without him, there would
not have been apologetics, evangelism, or even the protestant
reformation It's easy to say you think he's a pretty important guy,
but it's hard to know why without a clear understanding of things
like total depravity, sovereign grace, and predestination--concepts
that are quite complex to fully grasp. This book breaks down
Calvinism into language we can all understand: plain and simple
English If you are curious about Calvinism, but don't want a bias
view from someone either for the church or against the church, then
this is the book for you. This unbiased book explains Calvinism in
a way that's easy to understand: in plain and simple English
This unique book aims to provide the first extended account of the
intellectual history of aesthetic discourse among British and
American evangelicals from the awakening of a modern aesthetic
consciousness in the eighteenth century to the
fundamentalist-modernist controversy of the early twentieth
century. Drawing on an extensive but largely forgotten body of
periodical source materials, it seeks to map the evangelical
aesthetic tradition's intellectual terrain, to highlight its
connections to other philosophical discourses, and to assess some
of its theological implications. In doing so, it challenges the
still prevalent stereotype of evangelicalism as aesthetically
'impoverished' and devoid of serious reflection on the arts,
offering instead a narrative sensitive to the historical
complexities of evangelical approaches to aesthetic theory and
criticism.
"This colection brings together two generations of scholarship on
many important topics in African-American religious history. . . .
A useful and judiciously chosen compilation that should serve well
in the classroom."
-- "Religious Studies Review"
"It serves as a smorgasbord of the study of black
spirituality."
-- "Black Issues Book Review"
Down by the Riverside provides an expansive introduction to the
development of African American religion and theology. Spanning the
time of slavery up to the present, the volume moves beyond
Protestant Christianity to address a broad diversity of African
American religion from Conjure, Orisa, and Black Judaism to Islam,
African American Catholicism, and humanism.
This accessible historical overview begins with African
religious heritages and traces the transition to various forms of
Christianity, as well as the maintenance of African and Islamic
traditions in antebellum America. Preeminent contributors include
Charles Long, Gayraud Wilmore, Albert Raboteau, Manning Marable, M.
Shawn Copeland, Vincent Harding, Mary Sawyer, Toinette Eugene,
Anthony Pinn, and C. Eric Lincoln and Lawrence Mamiya. They
consider the varieties of religious expression emerging from
migration from the rural South to urban areas, African American
women's participation in Christian missions, Black religious
nationalism, and the development of Black Theology from its
nineteenth-century precursors to its formulation by James Cone and
later articulations by black feminist and womanist theologians.
They also draw on case studies to provide a profile of the Black
Christian church today.
This thematic history of the unfolding of religious life in
AfricanAmerica provides a window onto a rich array of African
American people, practices, and theological positions.
Puritanism has a reputation for being emotionally dry, but
seventeenth-century Puritans did not only have rich and complex
emotional lives, they also found meaning in and drew spiritual
strength from emotion. From theology to lived experience and from
joy to affliction, this volume surveys the wealth and depth of the
Puritans' passions.
The period 1928-1942 saw some of the greatest political and social
upheavals in modern British history. Lang, as Archbishop of
Canterbury, led the Church of England through this tumultuous
period and was a pivotal influence in political and religious
decision-making. In this book, Robert Beaken provides a new
perspective on Lang, including his considerable relationship with
the royal family. Beaken also shows how Lang proved to be a
sensitive leader during wartime, opposing any demonisation of the
enemy and showing compassion to conscientious objectors. Despite
his central role at a time of flux, there has been little written
on Lang since the original biography published in 1949, and history
has not been kind to this intellectually gifted but emotionally
complex man. Although Lang has often been seen as a fairly
unsuccessful archbishop who was resistant to change, Beaken shows
that he was, in fact, an effective leader of the Anglican community
at a time when the Church of England was internally divided over
issues surrounding the Revised Prayer Book and its position in an
ever-changing world. Lang's reputation is therefore ripe for
reassessment. Drawing on previously unseen material and first-hand
interviews, Beaken tells the story of a fascinating and complex
man, who was, he argues, Britain's first 'modern' Archbishop of
Canterbury.
Here, sociologist Ralph Pyle investigates the extent to which a
male-dominated, Ivy League educated Protestant establishment in the
United States since World War II has given way to an elite whose
diversity is more representative of the general population. While
there is evidence that major changes have diminished the social,
political, and economic prerogatives of the traditional Protestant
establishment, the author finds that those in command positions of
the most influential institutions bear a strong resemblance to
their predecessors who directed affairs in an earlier era. Even if
the current expansion of influence among previously disempowered
groups continues at its present rate, the disproportionate power of
white Protestant Ivy Leaguers will persist for several decades to
come.
Rodes examines the legal materials (cases, statutes, canons, and
measures) used in the English experience of updating the medieval
synthesis of church and state.
A compelling new interpretation of early Mormonism, Samuel Brown's
In Heaven as It Is On Earth views this religion through the lens of
founder Joseph Smith's profound preoccupation with the specter of
death.
Revisiting historical documents and scripture from this novel
perspective, Brown offers new insight into the origin and meaning
of some of Mormonism's earliest beliefs and practices. The world of
early Mormonism was besieged by death--infant mortality, violence,
and disease were rampant. A prolonged battle with typhoid fever,
punctuated by painful surgeries including a threatened leg
amputation, and the sudden loss of his beloved brother Alvin cast a
long shadow over Smith's own life. Smith embraced and was deeply
influenced by the culture of "holy dying"--with its emphasis on
deathbed salvation, melodramatic bereavement, and belief in the
Providential nature of untimely death--that sought to cope with the
widespread mortality of the period. Seen in this light, Smith's
treasure quest, search for Native origins, distinctive approach to
scripture, and belief in a post-mortal community all acquire new
meaning, as do early Mormonism's Masonic-sounding temple rites and
novel family system. Taken together, the varied themes of early
Mormonism can be interpreted as a campaign to extinguish death
forever. By focusing on Mormon conceptions of death, Brown recasts
the story of first-generation Mormonism, showing a religious
movement and its founder at once vibrant and fragile, intrepid and
unsettled, human and otherworldly.
A lively narrative history, In Heaven As It Is on Earth illuminates
not only the foundational beliefs of early Mormonism but also the
larger issues of family and death in American religious history.
In autumn 1525, Luther wrote The Bondage of the Will as a response
to humanist and theologian Erasmus of Rotterdam's On Free Will.
Luther's treatise is important on four accounts: First, Luther
wanted to show his own humanist education. Second, against Erasmus,
who had maintained that the question of free will could not be
decided just on the basis of the Bible, Luther stressed the clarity
imbedded in Scripture. Third, Luther stressed that his denial of
the free will pertained to the issue of salvation, while in other
areas of life not relevant for this fundamental existential matter,
free will could be acknowledged. Finally, he introduces the
distinction of the revealed and the hidden God to make clear that a
Christian must focus on God as shown in Jesus Christ rather than
speculating about God's potency in general. Luther's argument on
the matter of the bound and free will poses a challenge and an
invitation for constructive contemporary theology. This volume is
excerpted from The Annotated Luther series, Volume 2. Each volume
in the series contains annotations, illustrations, and notes to
help shed light on Luther's context and to interpret his writings
for today.
'How do such people, with brilliant members and dull ones, fare
when they pass from being a dominant minority to being a powerless
one?' So asked the Kilkenny man-of-letters Hubert Butler
(1900-1991) when considering the fate of Southern Protestants after
Irish Independence. As both a product and critic of this culture,
Butler posed the question repeatedly, refusing to accept as
inevitable the marginalization of his community within the newly
established state. Inspired by the example of the Revivalist
generation, he challenged his compatriots to approach modern Irish
identity in terms complementary rather than exclusivist. In the
process of doing so, he produced a corpus of literary essays
European in stature, informed by extensive travel, deep reading,
and an active engagement with the political and social upheavals of
his age. His insistence on the necessity of Protestant
participation in Irish life, coupled with his challenges to
received Catholic opinion, made him a contentious figure on both
sides of the sectarian divide. This study addresses not only
Butler's remarkable personal career, but also some of the larger
themes to which he consistently drew attention: the need to balance
Irish cosmopolitanism with local relationships; to address the
compromises of the Second World War and the hypocrisies of the Cold
War; to promote a society in which constructive dissent might not
just be tolerated but valued. As a result, by the end of his life,
Butler came to be recognised as a forerunner of the more tolerant
and expansive Ireland of today.
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