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Standing Against the Whirlwind is a history of the Evangelical
party in the Episcopal Church in nineteenth-century America. A
surprising revisionist account of the church's first century, it
reveals the extent to which evangelical Episcopalians helped to
shape the piety, identity, theology, and mission of the church.
Using the life and career of one of the party's greatest leaders,
Charles Pettit McIlvaine, the second bishop of Ohio, Diana Butler
blends institutional history with biography to explore the
vicissitudes and tribulations of evangelicals in a church that
often seemed inhospitable to their version of the Gospel. This
gracefully written narrative history of a neglected movement sheds
light on evangelical religion within a particular denomination and
broadens the interpretation of nineteenth-century American
evangelicalism as a whole. In addition, it elucidates such wider
cultural and religious issues as the meaning of millennialism and
the nature of the crisis over slavery.
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