|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
The book is a collection of essays from the International
Conference of Baptist Studies VI that was held at Southeastern
Baptist Theological Seminary, Wake Forest, North Carolina in July
2012. The topic of Baptist Identity remains important for Baptists
across the globe. This collection of essays reveals the richness
and the diversity of conceptions about Baptist identity that have
been shared by and about Baptists. The essays, written by an
international set of authors, examine issues of Baptist origins and
questions of identity up to the present. Written with attention to
historical context and grounded in primary source research, the
essays will contribute to current and future debates about Baptist
history and identity past and present. -Publisher
The Acts of the Apostles: Four Centuries of Baptist Interpretation
is a landmark work of research, containing examples of specific
ways that Baptists have used Acts in their confessions, sermons,
tracts, commentaries, monographs, devotional and denominational
literature, speeches, and hymns. Including the entirety of the Acts
as translated by Baptist luminary Helen Barrett Montgomery, this
commentary beautifully illustrates the diversity of Baptist
responses to this book of Scripture, and in so doing, a variety of
hermeneutical approaches within the Baptist tradition.
Exploring Christian Heritage provides students and teachers with a
rich and substantial introduction to the texts that have shaped the
Christian faith. Including works by Augustine, Aquinas, Martin
Luther, John Wesley, John Calvin, and Karl Barth, among others,
this collection also highlights essential movementsafrom the second
to thetwenty-first centuriesaoften glossed over in primary source
readers. From Pentecostalism and Baptists to feminism and religious
liberty movements, Exploring Christian Heritage succinctly joins
together the most influential voices of Christian history and
theology with those that have been forgottenand sometimesignored.
Now in its second edition, voices ancient and modern have been
added to deepen and widen the story of Christianity in varied
forms. Exploring Christian Heritage , second editionalso contains
additional classroom resources, including new textual introductions
and over ninety new quizzes.
This work offers a survey on the history of Baptists. When John
Smyth organized the first Baptist church, he wanted to establish
the New Testament church; believer's baptism was the missing link.
Baptists of subsequent eras often continued the search to embody
'New Testament Christianity'. Unique to surveys of Baptist life,
Doug Weaver highlights this restorationist theme as a way to
understand Baptist identity. Weaver does not force the theme, but
the 'search' is ever present. It is found in the insistence upon
believer's baptism, but also in examples like the Sabbath worship
of Seventh Day Baptists, the 'nine rites' of colonial Separate
Baptists, the women preachers of Free Will Baptists, the 'trail of
blood' of Landmarkism, the social gospel of Walter Rauschenbusch,
the 'fundamentals' of fundamentalism and the ministry of the
European pioneer Johann Oncken. Like other recent Baptist studies,
Weaver describes Baptist diversity. Still, he highlights the
persistent commitment of most Baptists to an informal constellation
of 'Baptist distinctives'. Alongside the quest for the New
Testament church (and congregational community), Weaver especially
highlights the Baptist commitment to religious liberty and the
individual conscience. This emphasis, while later reinforced by
Enlightenment ideals, could already be found in the biblicist piety
of the earliest Baptists who insisted that individual believers
must have the right to choose their religious beliefs because they
would stand alone before God at the final judgment. Both
chronological and thematic, this book addresses such themes as the
role of women, the social gospel, ecumenism, charismatic
influences, and theological emphases in Baptist life. The book's
focus is America, but it also includes helpful introductory
chapters on early English Baptists and international Baptists.
The record is clear that Baptists, historically, have prioritized
conversion, Jesus, and God. Equally clear is that Baptists have
never known what to do with the Holy Spirit. In Baptists and the
Holy Spirit , Baptist historian C. Douglas Weaver traces the way
Baptists have engagedaand, at times, embracedathe Holiness,
Pentecostal, and charismatic movements. Chronicling the
interactions between Baptists and these Spirit-filled movements
reveals the historical context for the development of Baptists'
theology of the Spirit. Baptists and the Holy Spirit provides the
first in-depth interpretation of Baptist involvement with the
Holiness, Pentecostal, and charismatic movements that have found a
prominent place in America's religious landscape. Weaver reads
these traditions through the nuanced lens of Baptist identity, as
well as the frames of gender, race, and class. He shows that, while
most Baptists reacted against all three Spirit-focused groups, each
movement flourished among a Baptist minority who were attracted by
the post-conversion experience of the "baptism of the Holy Spirit."
Weaver also explores the overlap between Baptist and Pentecostal
efforts to restore and embody the practices and experiences of the
New Testament church. The diversity of BaptistsaSouthern Baptist,
American Baptist, African American Baptistaleads to an equally
diverse understanding of the Spirit. Even those who strongly
opposed charismatic expressions of the Spirit still acknowledged a
connection between the Holy Spirit and a holy life. If,
historically, Baptists were suspicious of Roman Catholics'
ecclesial hierarchy, then Baptists were equally wary of free church
pneumatology. However, as Weaver shows, Baptist interactions with
the Holiness, Pentecostal, and charismatic movements and their
vibrant experience with the Spirit were key in shaping Baptist
identity and theology.
This study of William Marrion Branham's ministry reveals much about
the healing methodology of deliverance evangelists. Branham's
theology of healing highlights the widely accepted role of
evangelists as mediators between God and the afflicted. The dynamic
growth of Pentecostalism in the twentieth century is a major
feature of the modern religious scene. Branham is acknowledged as a
leader of the healing revival movement. Although little known
outside of the Pentecostal movement, his work had tremendous
influence on today's televangelists and the whole of Pentecostalism
itself.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|