The Spirit of Early Evangelicalism: True Religion in a Modern World
Autor D. Bruce Hindmarshen Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 feb 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190616694
ISBN-10: 0190616695
Pagini: 376
Ilustrații: 29
Dimensiuni: 236 x 155 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190616695
Pagini: 376
Ilustrații: 29
Dimensiuni: 236 x 155 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Hindmarsh's erudite and graceful book will become an indispensable guide for the perplexed.
[this book] does not disappoint. It should be essential reading for religious and nonreligious students alike who are interested in understanding evangelicalism and the eighteenth-century Anglo-American World.
This remarkable book ... places Hindmarsh in the highest echelon of scholars writing on evangelical history today. Experts on Christianity in the English-speaking world simply must contend with Hindmarsh's brilliant assessment of the reasons for evangelicalism's emergence in tandem with modernity.
This is a remarkable book. One is impressed by the breadth of figures discussed, the depth of analysis, and skill in integrating it all intro a clear and readable account. But more than this, Hindmarsh takes us into new territory, giving us a far richer understanding of evangelical spirituality than we have had before.
offering what is perhaps the most complete and far-ranging assessment of early evangelical spiritual life as it relates to contemporary developments in science, law, art, and literature ... this new work offers a more expansive cultural account of the practical implications that flowed from making "true religion" a matter of transformative personal religious experience.
[a] magnificent new book ... Hindmarsh's wide frame of methodological reference is exceptionally stimulating
Hindmarsh broadens and reconfigures our understanding of the early stages of the evangelical movement, laying out fresh avenues of research for future scholars.
There could scarcely be a more satisfying perspective on North Atlantic evangelicalism than Hindmarsh's triple play: full definition, demographic sweep, and interdisciplinary skill....Hindmarsh excels at engaging a range of disciplines outside his formal academic ex-pertise. A church historian who can sometimes read language as closely as a literature professor, he observes just how far eighteenth-century aesthetics intersect with, and pro-ceed from, evangelical creativity.
The work as a whole is a brilliant synopsis of Christian belief and cultural engagement (especially in its Reformed and Wesleyan expressions) during the eighteenth century.
The Spirit of Early Evangelicalism weaves together an amazing breadth of scholarship with depth of knowledge in detail. Its analysis is subtle and suggestive, as well as comprehensive in synthesis. The thesis presented-that evangelicalism represents 'a distinctive form of traditional Christian spirituality that emerged in the eighteenth century highly responsive to the conditions of the modern world' (276)-is made persuasively and elegantly. This is a lucid and beautifully written book, and an important one.
Based on deep knowledge of Whitefield's and especially the Wesleys' reading and vast output of writings and of the contemporary context, this book throws brilliant new light on the emergence and development of Evangelicalism, whose flame still burns bright. For anyone seeking to explore Evangelicalism, this is an admirable book and, at this price in hardback, a bargain.
This fascinating and meticulously researched book explores facets of early evangelicalism that have hitherto been underexplored in the literature. Hindmarsh, who is a specialist in evangelical spirituality, presents fresh perspectives on that spirituality as it relates to George Whitefield, the rise of modernity and science, the natural world, issues of conscience and conversion, and various forms of artistic expression. His style is pleasant to read and the prose is pregnant with historical richness.
[this book] does not disappoint. It should be essential reading for religious and nonreligious students alike who are interested in understanding evangelicalism and the eighteenth-century Anglo-American World.
This remarkable book ... places Hindmarsh in the highest echelon of scholars writing on evangelical history today. Experts on Christianity in the English-speaking world simply must contend with Hindmarsh's brilliant assessment of the reasons for evangelicalism's emergence in tandem with modernity.
This is a remarkable book. One is impressed by the breadth of figures discussed, the depth of analysis, and skill in integrating it all intro a clear and readable account. But more than this, Hindmarsh takes us into new territory, giving us a far richer understanding of evangelical spirituality than we have had before.
offering what is perhaps the most complete and far-ranging assessment of early evangelical spiritual life as it relates to contemporary developments in science, law, art, and literature ... this new work offers a more expansive cultural account of the practical implications that flowed from making "true religion" a matter of transformative personal religious experience.
[a] magnificent new book ... Hindmarsh's wide frame of methodological reference is exceptionally stimulating
Hindmarsh broadens and reconfigures our understanding of the early stages of the evangelical movement, laying out fresh avenues of research for future scholars.
There could scarcely be a more satisfying perspective on North Atlantic evangelicalism than Hindmarsh's triple play: full definition, demographic sweep, and interdisciplinary skill....Hindmarsh excels at engaging a range of disciplines outside his formal academic ex-pertise. A church historian who can sometimes read language as closely as a literature professor, he observes just how far eighteenth-century aesthetics intersect with, and pro-ceed from, evangelical creativity.
The work as a whole is a brilliant synopsis of Christian belief and cultural engagement (especially in its Reformed and Wesleyan expressions) during the eighteenth century.
The Spirit of Early Evangelicalism weaves together an amazing breadth of scholarship with depth of knowledge in detail. Its analysis is subtle and suggestive, as well as comprehensive in synthesis. The thesis presented-that evangelicalism represents 'a distinctive form of traditional Christian spirituality that emerged in the eighteenth century highly responsive to the conditions of the modern world' (276)-is made persuasively and elegantly. This is a lucid and beautifully written book, and an important one.
Based on deep knowledge of Whitefield's and especially the Wesleys' reading and vast output of writings and of the contemporary context, this book throws brilliant new light on the emergence and development of Evangelicalism, whose flame still burns bright. For anyone seeking to explore Evangelicalism, this is an admirable book and, at this price in hardback, a bargain.
This fascinating and meticulously researched book explores facets of early evangelicalism that have hitherto been underexplored in the literature. Hindmarsh, who is a specialist in evangelical spirituality, presents fresh perspectives on that spirituality as it relates to George Whitefield, the rise of modernity and science, the natural world, issues of conscience and conversion, and various forms of artistic expression. His style is pleasant to read and the prose is pregnant with historical richness.
Notă biografică
D. Bruce Hindmarsh is the James M. Houston Professor of Spiritual Theology at Regent College in Vancouver, British Columbia.