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Books > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches
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Mennocostals
(Hardcover)
Martin William Mittelstadt, Brian K. Pipkin
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R1,065
R899
Discovery Miles 8 990
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Grounded in Grace
(Hardcover)
Pieter J. Lalleman, Peter J. Morden, Anthony R. Cross
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R1,387
R1,150
Discovery Miles 11 500
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With its exalted emotionality, Pentecostalism is a widespread
religious movement in Latin America and Africa. It is a blend of
Methodism and African religious culture which arouses the passions
of the poorest Brazilian masses. Pentecostal conversion is
experienced as a sudden break which radically transforms the life
of these sectors of the population. Pentecostalism is an Utopia of
equality, love and emotion, which is staged during the worship
service. However, it is also characterized by authoritarian
features. Pentecostalism is slowly eroding the foundation of
Western political categories.
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Earnest
(Hardcover)
Andrew C. Koehl, David Basinger
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R1,289
R1,072
Discovery Miles 10 720
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Anglican theology has been a hotbed of debate about the issue of
authority since the Reformation. What do we really appeal to when
attempting to decide matters of doctrine, worship, ministry or
ethics? The debate is very much alive today, between Evangelical,
Liberal and Catholic Anglicans around the world. This proposed book
focuses on the understanding of authority in Anglican theology. It
looks at the way that Anglican theologians, in the past and today,
have developed their theories of authority in relation to burning
issues. Avis critiques them in a continuous dialogue or running
commentary and set them in an ecumenical context, comparing
Anglican positions with Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox and
Protestant ones. In each area - Bible, tradition, reason,
experience -he sets out a new understanding of authority in a
constructive and persuasive way, moving to a series of overall
conclusions and recommendations. The sharp critiques of various
positions will help to make it the subject of discussion and
debate.
Theodore Parker, a great orator of the mid-19th century, was a
Unitarian clergyman who directed much of his oratory towards
ecclesiastical and social reform. Parker challenged slavery and
other social ills. As a volume in the Great American Orators
series, the focus is on Parker's oratory and its effect on theology
and the social structures of the mid-19th century. Biographical
information pertains to those aspects of Parker's life that
influenced and shaped his elocution and ideas. Parker's rhetoric
and rhetorical techniques are examined. Three of Parker's important
speeches are included, each with an introduction that places it in
its proper context.
This study will appeal to students of rhetoric, theology, and
mid-nineteenth-century American religious history. The book is
divided into two sections. The first concentrates on Parker's life,
his role as an abolitionist, social reformer, and public order.
Part Two scrutinizes three of Parker's most famous discourses. The
author establishes Parker's place among mid-19th-century
preachers.
The unique character of Rudolf Bultmann's thought has been missed
by many traditional studies that cast him in exegetical or
hermeneutic frameworks. His methods of source criticism and his
concept of 'demythologizing'have led some to reject his thought in
toto, otherstolabel him as a subjectivist. Tim Labron steps out of
such traditional studies by reading Bultmann as a unique scholar
and leading to the keys that unlockthe distinct character of
Bultmann's thought, namely, John 1,14 and the principle of
justification by faith.Bultmann uses them in aparallel function -
to burn the traditional subject-object hierarchies and self-made
foundationsto the ground. Labron shows the implications this hadfor
theology, religious studies and philosophy.
The conventional picture of Benjamin Jowett (1817-93) is of the
outstanding educator, the famous master of Balliol College, Oxford,
whose pupils were extremely influential in the public life of
Britain in the second half of the nineteenth century. However, he
is also recognized as a theologian since he contributed an essay
'On the Interpretation of Scripture' to Essays and Reviews, a
collection published in 1860; the book's liberalism aroused great
controversy, and it was eventually synodically condemned in 1864.
It has been thought that having got into trouble over his essay,
Jowett abandoned theology and became a purely secular figure. This
book attempts to identify the ideas which caused Jowett to develop
his theology, the thinkers who influenced him and how his own
religious ideas evolved. It argues that, after the Essays and
Reviews controversy, he deliberately chose to disseminate those
ideas through the college of which he became master. It also shows
how he influenced other religious thinkers and theologians of the
late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, arguing that he was
more important in the history of English theology than is usually
recognized.
This is a collection of essays from some of the most important
contemporary theologians engaging critically with Colin Gunton's
work. In "The Theology of Colin E. Gunton", a number of
contemporary theologians from across the world critically engage
with the work of this influential British theologian. Gunton's
handling of the gospel of Jesus Christ is celebrated, key doctrines
critically examined, and his contribution to the ongoing
theological task carefully evaluated. Contributors address key
issues at the centre of Gunton's understanding of the Christian
gospel, thereby enabling readers to appreciate how Gunton's
fundamental analysis of the relation between God, creation and
Jesus Christ impacts the church's ongoing task of faithful
theological enquiry. In this volume of essays, contributors explore
Gunton's constructive thinking on a range of doctrinal topics, as
well as critically analyze Gunton's theological method and use of
the Christian tradition. As such, this collection of essays
provides the Christian theological community with its first
wide-ranging and carefully argued examination into the influential
work of Colin E. Gunton.
This reference offers a concise, well-written overview of
Lutheranism's history, from The Book of Concord to the present.
Grtisch explores the sect, examining the basic struggle among
Lutherans who consider themselves heirs to a reform movement and
Lutherans who see themselves as members of a denomination. Numerous
photos and illustrations accompany the text.
Hans W. Frei (1922-1988) was one of the most influential American
theologians of his generation. Early in his career he drew
attention to the importance of biblical narratives; he helped make
Karl Barth once again a creative voice in contemporary theology;
and he served as a model of what his colleague, George Lindbeck,
has called "postliberal theology." This volume collects ten of
Frei's lectures and essays, many of them never before published.
Addressing audiences of theologians, biblical scholars, and
literary critics, Frei explores the implications of his work for
hermeneutics and Christology, and discusses Barth, Schleiermacher,
and his own teacher, H. Richard Niebuhr. William Placher has
provided an introduction to Frei's life and work, and the volume
ends with an essay by George Hunsinger on Frei's significance for
theology today. This collection provides an unrivaled introduction
to Frei's work.
In this book, author Alan Tulchin breaks apart the process of mass
conversion in the sixteenth century to explain why the Reformation
occurred, using Nimes, the most Protestant town in France, as a
case study. Protestantism was overwhelmingly successful in Nimes,
since most people converted, but the process culminated in two
bloody massacres of Nimes's remaining Catholics. Beginning in 1559,
Nimes underwent a revolutionary period comparable to 1789 in its
intensity. Townspeople flocked to hear Protestant preachers, and
then took over Catholic churches, destroyed statues and stained
glass, and zealously took part in the Wars of Religion, which
convulsed France beginning in 1562. As the Protestant movement
grew, it had to adapt to changing circumstances. Nimes's first
Protestants were attracted to Calvin's Eucharistic theology; later
converts believed that the Church needed to be cleansed of its
excesses to encourage moral reform of the Crown; and in the end,
many converted due to peer pressure or under duress. Thus rather
than argue that one factor - whether religious, economic, or
political - explains the Reformation, That Men Will Praise the Lord
emphasizes that the Protestant movement was the result of
compromises forged among its members. The result is a new theory of
the Reformation, which explains how previous theories, thought to
be incompatible, in fact fit together. In order to prove his
thesis, Tulchin constructed a database of all surviving wills and
marriage contracts for the period. He also consulted church, court,
city council, and tax records. The book thus marries quantitative
techniques from the social sciences and anthropology to cultural
history in a dramatic analytic narrative.
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