C. Douglas Weaver is Professor of Religion at Baylor University.

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Description
Introduction Part One 1. Baptists and the Holiness Movement 2. Holiness, Healing, and A. J. Gordon 3. Baptist Responses to Holiness Teaching 4. Gender and Race in the Baptist Holiness Movement 5. The Radical Fringe and Spirit-Led End-Time Revivals Part Two 6. Baptist Involvement in the Azusa Street Revival 7. Baptist Hostility to the Azusa Street Revival 8. Baptists and Second-Generation Pentecostals Describe Each Other 9. Baptists, Pentecostals, and Divine Healing 10. Women Preachers among Baptists and Pentecostals 11. From Baptists, to Holiness-Baptists, to Pentecostals Part Three 12. The Charismatic Movement and Southern Baptists, 1960s 13. Conflict and Confrontation between Southern Baptists and the Growing Charismatic Movement 14. Keswick, Spirit-Filled, but Not Charismatic Southern Baptists, 1970s 259 15. American Baptists and the Charismatic Movement, 1960s-1970s 16. Southern Baptist Charismatics Seek Fulness, 1980s 17. Baptists and the Third Wave 18. Southern Baptists and Charismatics at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century 19. American Baptists and the Holy Spirit Renewal Ministries, 1980s-2000s 20. Gender and Race in the Baptist Charismatic Story Conclusion
Weaver paints a vivid and illuminating picture of the complicated relationship between Baptists and the Holiness, Pentecostal and Charismatic movements. -- Ken Camp -- Baptist Standard Weaver covers the entirety of the Baptist tradition and the various embodiments of Baptist identity such as Southern Baptists, Black Baptists, and American Baptists. The research is thorough and the text is engaging. Weaver is to be commended for this important work. -- Choice
