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Books > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches
The Rotterdam City Library contains the world's largest collection
of works by and about Desiderius Erasmus (1469?-1536), perhaps
Rotterdam's most famous son. The origin of this unique collection
dates back to the seventeenth century when the city fathers
established a library in the Great or St. Laurence Church. This
bibliography of the Erasmus collection lists, for the first time,
all of the Rotterdam scholar's works and most of the studies
written about him from his time to the present day. The collection
is of vital importance to Erasmus studies and has, in many cases,
provided the basic material for editions of Erasmus's complete
works. In addition to the unique sixteenth-century printings listed
in this book, the collection includes many translations into
Estonian, Polish, Russian, Czech, Hebrew, and other languages. The
Rotterdam Library has acquired publications about Erasmus that
cover such topics as his life, work and times; his contemporaries;
his humanism, pedagogy, pacifism, and theology; his relationship to
Luther and the Reformation; and his influence on later periods. The
collection numbers (as of 1989) roughly 5,000 works divided as
follows: 2,500 works by Erasmus himself, 500 works edited by him,
and 2,000 books and articles about him. This bibliographic resource
will be of great value to Erasmus scholars, philosophy researchers,
and historians studying the path of philosophical and religious
thought.
This volume investigates Paul Tillich's relationship to Asian
religions and locates Tillich in a global religious context. It
appreciates Tillich's heritage within the western and eastern
religious contexts and explores the possibility of global
religious-cultural understanding through the dialogue of Tillich's
thought and East-West religious-cultural matrix.
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.
This valuable contribution to the debate about the relation of religion to the modern city fills an important gap in the historiography of early nineteenth-century religious life. It is a pioneering study of local churches in the urban environment. Based on extensive archival research of churches in Manchester and London in the years 1810-60, it considers the work and thought of ministers who held to a high Calvinistic form of theology. Exploration of this little studied and often derided grouping reveals that their role in the religious and social life of these cities was highly active and responsive, and merits serious reappraisal.
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.
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.
Martin Luther was one of the most influential figures of the last
millennium, with around 900 million people worldwide belonging to
Protestant churches that can trace their origins back to the
Reformation which he started five hundred years ago. His thinking
and his writing were always original, fresh, controversial and
provocative; evoking world-changing reactions in the sixteenth
century that are still echoed today. This book offers an accessible
path into Luther's mode of thought, by paying close attention to
the way he approached a wide range of issues in his own century,
and how some of that thinking might give us new ways to approach
contemporary issues. Analysing his approach to topics such as sex,
freedom, prayer, evil, pilgrimage and Bible translation, Tomlin's
analysis vividly illustrates the mind of a man who was very much of
his time, and yet whose ideas still speak creatively to the modern
world and those who follow in his footsteps. Combining scholarly
insight into some of the key issues surrounding the study of Luther
today with a written style that renders it easily accessible to the
academic and non-specialist alike, the result is an ideal guide for
those wishing to get inside the mind of this most remarkable man.
All truly religious movements are informed by a search for
spiritual renewal, often signalled by an attempt to return to what
are seen as the original, undiluted values of earlier times.
Elements of this process are to be seen in the history of almost
all modern religious revivals, both inside and outside the
mainstream denominations.
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.
In the twenty-first century there are an increasing number of books
in different fields that are evaluating critically aspects of life
in the previous century. The Religious History of British people in
this period is a significant part of that story. A Distinctive
People will evaluate aspects of the history of one of the Christian
denominations in Scotland looking at major themes such as Baptist
attitudes to war and pacifism, the influence of the charismatic
movement and their involvement in social action, their contribution
to ecumenical relations in Scotland and relationships with fellow
Baptists in other countries, together with the theological
influences on Baptists, and a chapter on home mission. COMMENDATION
"This thoroughly researched and engagingly written set of essays
will be of keen interest, not to just to Scottish Baptists eager to
know about their recent past, but also to all those concerned with
the changing place of Christian belief and practice in
twentieth-century Scottish society." - Brian Stanley, the
University of Edinburgh, UK
"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.
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