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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches
Cultures of Care: Domestic Welfare, Discipline and the Church of
Scotland, c. 1600-1689 explores voluntary networks of charity and
their interaction with the Reformed Church of Scotland. Whereas
most previous histories have assessed the growth of institutional
charity, this book contends that the Reformed Church of Scotland
was heavily reliant on informal, domestic modes of self-help
throughout the seventeenth century. The existence and widespread
acceptance of informal care dramatically changes our understanding
of the impact of the Calvinist Reformation. Local ecclesiastical
and secular leaders did not have a concerted policy to affect or
ameliorate informal networks of care. Reformed authorities were
members of these networks, as well as agents to police them,
collapsing distinctions between informal and formal modes of
Calvinist authority.
In this biography of Reformed theologian Francis Turretin
(1623-87), Nicholas A. Cumming provides critical context for the
life and theology of this important seventeenth-century theologian
and his impact on the Reformed tradition as a whole. Turretin has
commonly been identified as a strict scholastic theologian; this
work places Turretin in his broader context, analyzing his life and
theology in terms of the political and religious aspects of
post-Reformation Europe and his posthumous influence on nineteenth-
and twentieth-century Reformed theology. This work begins with a
biography of Turretin, including his education and ministry, then
proceeds to the context of Turretin's theology in the early modern
and modern periods, particularly in relation to his major work The
Institutes of Elenctic Theology.
Stories from a Place That Feels Like Home
Master storyteller Philip Gulley envelops readers in an almost
forgotten world of plainspoken and honest small-town values,
evoking a simpler time when people knew each other by name, folks
looked out for their neighbors, and people were willing to do what
was right--no matter the cost.
When Philip Gulley began writing newsletter essays for the
twelve members of his Quaker meeting in Indiana, he had no idea one
of them would find its way to radio commentator Paul Harvey Jr. and
be read on the air to 24 million people. Fourteen books later, with
more than a million books in print, Gulley still entertains as well
as inspires from his small-town front porch.
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