To Contest with All the Powers of Darkness: New England Baptists, Religious Liberty, and New Political Landscapes, 1740–1833: America's Baptists
Autor Jacob E. Hicksen Limba Engleză Hardback – 27 sep 2024
Baptist leaders like Isaac Backus, Noah Alden, Samuel Stillman, John Leland, Jonathan Going, and Luther Rice exploited their church-based ministerial training in public speaking, conflict resolution, and intra-denominational networking to become political organizers. With significant gains in the formation of the Warren Association (1767), the Backus-led Grievance Committee (1769), and Leland’s formative experience in the campaign to disestablish Virginia (1780s), the Baptists allied themselves with the rising Democratic-Republican Party, touching off a coalition of anti-Federalist politics and evangelical religion that, while not directly disestablishing Massachusetts, would bear significant fruit in the Religious Freedom Act of 1811.
To Contest with All the Powers of Darkness brings a unique movement into focus that had at its inception the communal values and ministry preparation practices of a loose network of New England Baptist churches. This movement drove a significant first wedge in the church-state fusion of the Early Republic and, simultaneously, left memorable lessons in successful collective action for a New England Baptist community on the verge of an institutional explosion on the western frontier.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781621908289
ISBN-10: 1621908283
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: University of Tennessee Press
Colecția Univ Tennessee Press
Seria America's Baptists
ISBN-10: 1621908283
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: University of Tennessee Press
Colecția Univ Tennessee Press
Seria America's Baptists
Notă biografică
JACOB E. HICKS is assistant professor of religion at Grand Canyon University. He has written book reviews for a variety of publications, including Church History, Nova Religion, and Religious Studies Review.
Recenzii
Scholars often use descriptors such as ‘individualistic’ and ‘democratic’ to describe Baptists in early national America. But as Jacob Hicks demonstrates, these terms don't offer much help in understanding how Baptist luminaries including Isaac Backus and John Leland organizationally transformed their movement from a persecuted sect into a respected denomination. Hicks breaks new ground by locating Baptists in the era’s vibrant milieu of politicking, publishing, and partisanship.
—Thomas S. Kidd, Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary
Jacob Hicks’s To Contest the Powers of Darkness maps out how New England Baptists wedded their individualistic instincts to savvy organizational strategies in order to obtain their religious and political goals in the early American republic. Through regional church networks, book and newspaper publications, and partisan activism, leaders like Isaac Backus and John Leland helped establish the once scattered and harassed Baptists on a firm footing in the young nation.
– Eric C. Smith, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Author of John Leland: A Jeffersonian Baptist in Early America
Jacob Hicks rightfully points readers to important developments among New England Baptists across the long Revolutionary era. He situates famous Baptists like Isaac Backus, John Leland, and Adoniram Judson in larger frames of Baptist church life and institutional development and demonstrates that Baptists both shaped and were shaped by their political contexts. To Contest with All the Powers of Darkness helpfully contributes to the growing scholarly interest in, and understanding of, Baptist history in the new nation.
– Jonathan Den Hartog, Samford University
—Thomas S. Kidd, Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary
Jacob Hicks’s To Contest the Powers of Darkness maps out how New England Baptists wedded their individualistic instincts to savvy organizational strategies in order to obtain their religious and political goals in the early American republic. Through regional church networks, book and newspaper publications, and partisan activism, leaders like Isaac Backus and John Leland helped establish the once scattered and harassed Baptists on a firm footing in the young nation.
– Eric C. Smith, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Author of John Leland: A Jeffersonian Baptist in Early America
Jacob Hicks rightfully points readers to important developments among New England Baptists across the long Revolutionary era. He situates famous Baptists like Isaac Backus, John Leland, and Adoniram Judson in larger frames of Baptist church life and institutional development and demonstrates that Baptists both shaped and were shaped by their political contexts. To Contest with All the Powers of Darkness helpfully contributes to the growing scholarly interest in, and understanding of, Baptist history in the new nation.
– Jonathan Den Hartog, Samford University