Baptists in America: A History
Autor Thomas S. Kidd, Barry G Hankinsen Limba Engleză Paperback – 27 dec 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190919450
ISBN-10: 0190919450
Pagini: 348
Ilustrații: 9 illus.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 231 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190919450
Pagini: 348
Ilustrații: 9 illus.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 231 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
In this engaging survey, the authors focus on a number of major themes: struggles for religious liberty, revivalism, race and slavery, liberal-fundamentalist disputes, the civil rights movement, and the religious Right...overall this is a very good book.
The final section on Baptist identity was both thought-provoking and perceptive. This is an excellent introduction to Baptists in America.
Thomas Kidd and Barry Hankins are two of the most respectable church historians in the academy today. Their work is always incisive and illuminating
'Baptists,' the authors say, 'are notorious for two things
In clear and compelling prose, filled with enlightening anecdotes, this book tells the amazing story of how a persecuted minority of Christians, who rejected infant baptism and state control of the church, grew into the largest denomination in the United States with culture-shaping consequences. An important contribution to American Religious History, this book should be widely read by anyone interested in the history and present state of religion in U.S. culture and politics.
Some books on Baptists in America sprinkle the reader with superficial simplicity, focusing on only one tribe or one aspect of the Baptist experience. Others drown the reader in historical narrative, but with no clear connection as to why non-Baptists ought to care. This book is different. This history offers a full immersion in the Baptist story, in every stream and fork of the Baptist river. This volume connects the Baptist experience to larger trends in American culture, politics, and theology in a way that informs both insiders and outsiders. This book is, without doubt, the definitive work on Baptists in America for this generation.
A thoroughgoing study of Baptists, radicalized by persecution and honed by internal schism. ... The authors usefully trace the Baptists' shift from outsiders to consummate insiders, all the way to the White House. An instructive work that allows for a fuller understanding of an important religious element in America.
This fascinating piece of cultural history dynamically examines religious tensions between church, state, and evolving U.S. cultural norms.
Baptists have been one of the most influential groups of any kind in American history... This book covers that remarkable past with a nice mix of readability and reliability... Highly recommended...
...Thomas Kidd and Barry Hankins, both history professors at Baylor University, a Baptist institution in Texas, wrestle capably with the oddly difficult question of what defines Baptists.
Kidd and Hankins know their stuff... the two have crafted an engaging read.
There are few historians I have more respect for than Tommy Kidd and Barry Hankins... In their capable hands, Baptist history will be both lively and engaging.
With such awareness of the personal and political dimensions of writing history, especially to be read by other Baptists, they offer an insightful short history of the Baptist movement.
Kidd and Hankins have produced a helpful and well-written study that offers non-Baptists a sense of who Baptists were and are, while helping to ground Baptists themselves in a sense of identity that might well prepare them for the next inevitable controversy.
Kidd and Hankins have provided Baptists and non-Baptists with a nuanced and generally balanced introduction to many of the decisive moments in the history of this vast and diverse Baptist tradition. Weaving together memorable anecdotes, examples, and observations about what 'Baptist' has meant, Baptists in America promises to be an enjoyable and trustworthy read for novice and expert alike.
The final section on Baptist identity was both thought-provoking and perceptive. This is an excellent introduction to Baptists in America.
Thomas Kidd and Barry Hankins are two of the most respectable church historians in the academy today. Their work is always incisive and illuminating
'Baptists,' the authors say, 'are notorious for two things
In clear and compelling prose, filled with enlightening anecdotes, this book tells the amazing story of how a persecuted minority of Christians, who rejected infant baptism and state control of the church, grew into the largest denomination in the United States with culture-shaping consequences. An important contribution to American Religious History, this book should be widely read by anyone interested in the history and present state of religion in U.S. culture and politics.
Some books on Baptists in America sprinkle the reader with superficial simplicity, focusing on only one tribe or one aspect of the Baptist experience. Others drown the reader in historical narrative, but with no clear connection as to why non-Baptists ought to care. This book is different. This history offers a full immersion in the Baptist story, in every stream and fork of the Baptist river. This volume connects the Baptist experience to larger trends in American culture, politics, and theology in a way that informs both insiders and outsiders. This book is, without doubt, the definitive work on Baptists in America for this generation.
A thoroughgoing study of Baptists, radicalized by persecution and honed by internal schism. ... The authors usefully trace the Baptists' shift from outsiders to consummate insiders, all the way to the White House. An instructive work that allows for a fuller understanding of an important religious element in America.
This fascinating piece of cultural history dynamically examines religious tensions between church, state, and evolving U.S. cultural norms.
Baptists have been one of the most influential groups of any kind in American history... This book covers that remarkable past with a nice mix of readability and reliability... Highly recommended...
...Thomas Kidd and Barry Hankins, both history professors at Baylor University, a Baptist institution in Texas, wrestle capably with the oddly difficult question of what defines Baptists.
Kidd and Hankins know their stuff... the two have crafted an engaging read.
There are few historians I have more respect for than Tommy Kidd and Barry Hankins... In their capable hands, Baptist history will be both lively and engaging.
With such awareness of the personal and political dimensions of writing history, especially to be read by other Baptists, they offer an insightful short history of the Baptist movement.
Kidd and Hankins have produced a helpful and well-written study that offers non-Baptists a sense of who Baptists were and are, while helping to ground Baptists themselves in a sense of identity that might well prepare them for the next inevitable controversy.
Kidd and Hankins have provided Baptists and non-Baptists with a nuanced and generally balanced introduction to many of the decisive moments in the history of this vast and diverse Baptist tradition. Weaving together memorable anecdotes, examples, and observations about what 'Baptist' has meant, Baptists in America promises to be an enjoyable and trustworthy read for novice and expert alike.
Notă biografică
Thomas S. Kidd is Distinguished Professor of History at Baylor University and Associate Director of Baylor's Institute for Studies of Religion. His most recent book is Benjamin Franklin: The Religious Life of a Founding Father.Barry Hankins is Professor of History and Chair of the Department of History at Baylor University. He is the author of numerous books, most recently Woodrow Wilson: Ruling Elder, Spiritual President.