Early evangelicalism : a global intellectual history, 1670-1789
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Bibliographic Information
Early evangelicalism : a global intellectual history, 1670-1789
Cambridge University Press, 2010
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 194-213) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Evangelicalism contributed to the great transformation of ideas in the modern world. This book represents a pioneering study of discussions within the evangelical movements from Central Europe to the American colonies about what constituted evangelical identity and of the basis of the fraternity among evangelical leaders of strikingly different backgrounds. Through a global study of the major figures and movements in the early evangelical world, W. R. Ward aims to show that down through the eighteenth century the evangelical elite had coherent answers to the general intellectual problems of their day and that piety as well as the enlightenment was a significant motor of intellectual change. However, as the century wore on the evangelicals lost the ability to state a broad intellectual setting for their case, and when they entered on their period of greatest social influence in the nineteenth century their former cohesion disintegrated into acute partisan wrangling.
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1. The thought-world of early evangelicalism
- 2. Spener and the origins of church pietism
- 3. The mystic way or the mystic ways
- 4. The development of pietism in the Reformed churches
- 5. The Reformed tradition in Britain and America
- 6. Zinzendorf
- 7. John Wesley
- 8. Jonathan Edwards
- 9. The disintegration of the old Evangelicalism
- Conclusion
- Bibliography.
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