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Inspiration and Institution in Christian History: Volume 57 (Hardcover, New Ed): Charlotte Methuen, Alec Ryrie, Andrew Spicer Inspiration and Institution in Christian History: Volume 57 (Hardcover, New Ed)
Charlotte Methuen, Alec Ryrie, Andrew Spicer
R1,971 Discovery Miles 19 710 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Since the apostolic age, Christian churches have seen a constant dialectic between inspiration and institution: how the ungoverned spontaneity of Spirit-led religion negotiates its way through laws, structures and communities. If institutional frameworks are absent or insufficient, new, creative and dynamic expressions of Christianity can disappear or collapse into disorder almost as quickly as they have flared up. If those frameworks are excessively rigid or punitive, they can often quench the spirit of any new movements. This volume explores the interplay between inspirational movements and institutional structures throughout Christianity's history, examining how the paradox of inspiration and institution has been negotiated from the ancient world to the modern era, tracing how different Christian movements have striven to hold these two vital aspects of their faith together, often finding creative or unexpected ways to institutionalize inspiration or to breathe new life into their institutions.

The Church in Sickness and in Health: Volume 58 (Hardcover): Charlotte Methuen, Andrew Spicer The Church in Sickness and in Health: Volume 58 (Hardcover)
Charlotte Methuen, Andrew Spicer
R2,128 R1,975 Discovery Miles 19 750 Save R153 (7%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

In response to the Covid-19 pandemic, this volume reflects on the way that the Church, from the earliest times, has cared for the sick and for the physical and spiritual health of society. Anointing and praying for the sick have always been combined with medical care. Religious foundations such as leper hospitals cared for the diseased but also isolated them to protect the health of society. The institutionalization of the Church's care for the sick led to the foundation of hospitals and medical schools. Many of the articles focus on the Church's response to sickness, especially pandemics. Others explore the connection between the Church and the medical profession, the clerical experience of sickness, and the ways that sickness has served as a metaphor for understanding the Church and its place in the world.

Churches and Education (Hardcover): Morwenna Ludlow, Charlotte Methuen, Andrew Spicer Churches and Education (Hardcover)
Morwenna Ludlow, Charlotte Methuen, Andrew Spicer
R1,990 Discovery Miles 19 900 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This volume brings together the work of a wide range of scholars to explore the long and complex history of the relationships between churches and education. Christianity has always been involved in education, from the very earliest teaching of those about to be baptised, to present-day churches' involvement in schools and higher education. Christianity has a core theological concern for teaching, discipleship and formation, but the dissemination of Christian ideas and positions has not necessarily been an explicitly didactic process. Educational projects have served not only to support but also to question and even reconfigure particular versions of the Christian message, and the recipients of education have also both received and subverted the teaching offered. Under the editorship of Morwenna Ludlow, this volume explores the ways in which churches have sought to educate, catechise and instruct the clergy and laity, adults and children, men and women, boys and girls.

The Church and Empire (Hardcover): Stewart J. Brown, Charlotte Methuen, Andrew Spicer The Church and Empire (Hardcover)
Stewart J. Brown, Charlotte Methuen, Andrew Spicer
R1,972 Discovery Miles 19 720 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

'The Church and Empire', the theme of Studies in Church History, 54, reflects the reality that from its beginnings, the Christian Church has had close, often symbiotic, relationships with empires and imperial power. Initially the Church engaged with the Roman Empire, subsequently in Europe with the Carolingian, Anglo-Norman, Genoese, Venetian and Holy Roman Empires, and later - through the Church's global expansion with European empires in the Americas, Africa and Asia - the Spanish, Dutch, French and British empires, and the imperial structures it encountered there. Bringing together the work of twenty-four historians, this volume explores the relations of churches and empires, and Christian conceptions of empire, in the ancient, medieval, early modern and modern periods, as well as the role of empire in the global expansion of Christianity.

The Churches and Rites of Passage: Volume 59: Frances Knight, Charlotte Methuen, Andrew Spicer The Churches and Rites of Passage: Volume 59
Frances Knight, Charlotte Methuen, Andrew Spicer
R2,124 R1,970 Discovery Miles 19 700 Save R154 (7%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Studies in Church History 59 addresses the historical development of life events to which the churches have responded with specific rites and ceremonies. The volume contributes to current discussion in life cycle history and the ongoing debate about 'rites of passage,' both ecclesiastical and secular. The major life cycle events, such as birth, marriage and death, are considered; so too are the churching or 'purification' of women after childbirth, confirmation and first communion, and ordination, as well as less widespread rites of passage, such as royal anointing and the renunciation of wealth. The twenty-two papers span Christian history and include contributions from Frances Knight, Thomas O'Loughlin, Elisabeth van Houts and Alexandra Walsham. Taken together, the articles offer clear evidence of the continuing potency of ecclesiastical rites of passage, as well as of their ability to be refashioned for the needs of successive generations of believers.

From the Reformation to the Permissive Society - A Miscellany in Celebration of the 400th Anniversary of Lambeth Palace Library... From the Reformation to the Permissive Society - A Miscellany in Celebration of the 400th Anniversary of Lambeth Palace Library (Hardcover)
Melanie Barber, Stephen C Taylor; As told to Gabriel Sewell; Contributions by Arthur Burns, Charlotte Methuen, …
R2,975 Discovery Miles 29 750 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Provides for a selection of texts, together with scholarly introductions, from one of the world's great private libraries, covering a period from Elizabeth I to the Church's involvement in homosexual law reform. This volume of the Church of England Record Society, published in celebration of the 400th anniversary of the foundation of Lambeth Palace Library, is a tribute to the value of one of the world's great private libraries to the scholarly community and its importance for the history of the Church of England in particular. Thirteen historians, who have made considerable use of the Library in their research, have selected texts which together offer an illustration of the remarkable resources preserved by the Library for the period from the Reformation to the late twentieth century. A number of the contributions draw on the papers of the archbishops of Canterbury and bishops of London,which are among the most frequently used collections. Others come from the main manuscript sequence, including both materials originally deposited by Archbishop Sancroft and a manuscript published with the help of the Friends of Lambeth Palace Library in 2007. Another makes use of the riches to the papers of the Lambeth Conferences. Each text is accompanied by a substantial introduction, discussing its context and significance, and a full scholarly apparatus. The themes covered in the volume range from the famous dispute between Archbishop Grindal and Queen Elizabeth I, through the administration of the Church by Archbishop Laud and Archbishop Davidson's visit to the Western Frontduring World War I, to involvement of the Church in homosexual law reform.

The Church and the Law: Volume 56 (Hardcover, New Ed): Rosamond McKitterick, Charlotte Methuen, Andrew Spicer The Church and the Law: Volume 56 (Hardcover, New Ed)
Rosamond McKitterick, Charlotte Methuen, Andrew Spicer
R3,082 R1,983 Discovery Miles 19 830 Save R1,099 (36%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This volume explores the legal issues and legal consequences underlying relations between secular and religious authorities in the context of the Christian Church, from its earliest emergence within Roman Palestine as a persecuted minority sect through the period when it became legally recognized within the Roman empire, its many institutional manifestations in the East and West throughout the Middle Ages, the reconfigurations associated with the Reformation and Catholic/Counter-Reformations, the legal and constitutional complications, and the variable consequences of so-called secularization thereafter. The engagement of secular and religious authorities with the law and the question of what the law actually comprised (Roman law, canon law, national laws, state and royal edicts) are addressed. Bringing together the work of a wide range of scholars, this volume deepens our understanding of interactions between the churches and the legal systems in which they existed in the past and continue to exist now.

Translating Christianity (Hardcover): Simon Ditchfield, Charlotte Methuen, Andrew Spicer Translating Christianity (Hardcover)
Simon Ditchfield, Charlotte Methuen, Andrew Spicer
R2,093 Discovery Miles 20 930 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This volume brings together scholars to explore the challenges of translating Christianity. Christianity has been the impulse behind the creation of more dictionaries and grammars of the world's languages than any other force in history. More people pray and worship in more languages in Christianity than in any other religion. It is a religion without a revealed language; a faith characterized by 'the triumph of its translatability'. Christianity is also a translated religion in a very different sense. Many of its ritual practices have been predicated on the translation of material objects, such as relics. Their movement in time and space reveals shifting lines of power and influence in illuminating ways. Translation can be understood not only linguistically and physically but also in ecclesiastical and metaphorical terms, for instance, in the handing on of authority from one place or person to another, or the appropriation of rituals in different contexts.

Reformatorische Bewegungen Im 16. Und 17. Jahrhundert: Charlotte Methuen, Gury Schneider-Ludorff, Lothar Vogel Reformatorische Bewegungen Im 16. Und 17. Jahrhundert
Charlotte Methuen, Gury Schneider-Ludorff, Lothar Vogel
R2,646 Discovery Miles 26 460 Ships in 12 - 17 working days
Faithful Improvisation? - Theological Reflections on Church Leadership (Paperback): Loveday Alexander, Mike Higton Faithful Improvisation? - Theological Reflections on Church Leadership (Paperback)
Loveday Alexander, Mike Higton; Introduction by Christopher Cocksworth; Contributions by Cally Hammond, Tim Harle, …
R833 R681 Discovery Miles 6 810 Save R152 (18%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Faithful and effective church leadership requires preparation in prayer, theological reflection and a wide range of pastoral, prophetic and practical skills in order to ensure that what the Church discerns as necessary the Church does. Faithful Improvisation? is both a contribution to a current and sometimes vigorous debate on how the Church trains its leaders and also a practical and theological resource for discerning what the Spirit is saying and then acting upon it in local church contexts. Part One includes the full text of the Senior Church Leadership report from the Faith and Order Commission. Part Two offers reflections by Cally Hammond, Thomas Seville, Charlotte Methuen, Jeremy Morris and David Hilborn, on practices, models and theologies of leadership in different periods of church history which informed the FAOC report. Part Three opens up a broader discussion about present and future leadership within the Church of England. Mike Higton sketches out a dialogue between Senior Church Leadership and Lord Green's report, Talent Management for Future Leaders; Tim Harle offers a personal reflection from the perspective of the community of leadership practitioners; and Rachel Treweek concludes with an exploration of the essentially relational character of leadership.

Luther and Calvin - Religious revolutionaries (Paperback, New edition): Charlotte Methuen Luther and Calvin - Religious revolutionaries (Paperback, New edition)
Charlotte Methuen
R405 R355 Discovery Miles 3 550 Save R50 (12%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Martin Luther and John Calvin have both left dramatic and lasting influences on Christianity and on European society. Their calls for reform led to the church breaking off in different directions, and people and nations believed so passionately for or against their causes that wars ravaged Europe for decades. But what exactly did they teach? This book presents Luther and Calvin in context, looking at the work and ideas of each in turn and then at the making of Lutheranism and the Reformed tradition, showing how the sixteenth-century Reformation began a process of political and intellectual change that went beyond Europe to the "New World". The result is that today its influence is tangible all over the Western world. Perfect for those who want to understand and engage with what Luther and Calvin thought, and with the debates surrounding interpretation, this book is an excellent introduction to two of Christianity's most famous thinkers. Charlotte Methuen teaches Church history at the University of Glasgow, and has also worked a the Universities of Hamburg, Bochum, Oxford and Mainz. She specializes in the Reformation period and is the author of numerous books and articles.

Science and Theology in the Reformation - Studies in Interpretations of Astronomical Observation in Sixteenth-Century Germany... Science and Theology in the Reformation - Studies in Interpretations of Astronomical Observation in Sixteenth-Century Germany (Hardcover)
Charlotte Methuen
R5,795 Discovery Miles 57 950 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This book provides an investigation into the role of theological arguments in interpreting astronomical phenomena in the sixteenth century.Beginning with an exploration of how the Reformers conceived the relationship between natural and moral philosophy, that is, physics and ethics, the author then investigates the relationship between natural law and the order of nature in the thought of Philip Melanchthon.These articles set the scene for a discussion of the role of theological arguments, and in particular understandings of God's Providence, in the interpretation of astronomical phenomena in the late sixteenth century. A similar interaction between theological, astronomical and political arguments shaped Michael Maestlin's objections to the Gregorian calendar reform. Johannes Kepler's arguments for the authority of his astronomical theories show a tacit awareness that novelty was to be equated with heresy also draw on theological motifs. The strong parallel between his use of the theory of accommodation and his understanding of hypothesis suggest that questions of theology and questions of proof were closely related in his mind.A final chapter considers critically Sachiko Kusukawa's thesis that Melanchthon established "a Lutheran natural philosophy".

Doubting Christianity - The Church and Doubt (Hardcover): Frances Andrews, Charlotte Methuen, Andrew Spicer Doubting Christianity - The Church and Doubt (Hardcover)
Frances Andrews, Charlotte Methuen, Andrew Spicer
R1,804 Discovery Miles 18 040 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The fifty-second volume of Studies in Church History explores the myriad ways in which doubt has tested Christianity and the life of individual Christians. Men and women have always had doubts about ideas, or individual doctrines, if not faith itself; they have also doubted how truth can be authenticated. The means and the implications of expressing either kind of doubt are shaped by historical circumstance. Led by scholars including Kirstie Blair, Janet Nelson, Charles Stang and Rowan Williams, the essays explore doubt from the Early Church to the contemporary world. They investigate a range of questions, from the familiar 'doubting Thomas', and the more surprising 'doubting John', through the pressing concerns of the Middle Ages, the emphasis on rationalism of the Enlightenment, to the competing ideological and confessional perspectives of the modern world. This fascinating collection offers an introduction to the complex relationship between doubt, faith and the Christian Churches.

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