The Evangelical Quadrilateral

BAYLOR UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781481314435

Characterizing the British Gospel Movement

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By David W. Bebbington
Imprint:
BAYLOR UNIVERSITY PRESS
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Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
228 x 152 mm
Weight:
330 g
Pages:
396

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Description

David W. Bebbington is Emeritus Professor of History at the University of Stirling.

Introduction: The Parameters of Evangelical Identity I The Character and Culture of Evangelicals 1 The Nature of Evangelical Identity 2 Revival and Enlightenment in Eighteenth-Century England 3 Gospel and Culture in British Evangelicalism 4 Evangelicalism and Cultural Diffusion II Evangelicals, Americans and the Wider World 5 The Legacy of Jonathan Edwards in Britain 6 Dwight L. Moody and Transatlantic Evangelicalism 7 Global Evangelicalism in the Nineteenth Century III Evangelicals, Doctrine and Experience 8 The Advent Hope in British Evangelicalism since 1800 9 Evangelical Conversion, c. 1740-c. 1850 10 Holiness in the Evangelical Tradition 11 The Deathbed Piety of Evangelical Nonconformists in the Nineteenth Century IV Evangelicals, History and Science 12 Calvin and British Evangelicalism in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries 13 The Evangelical Discovery of History 14 Science and Evangelical Theology in Britain from Wesley to Orr V Evangelicals into the Twenty-First Century 15 Evangelical Trends, 1959-2009 16 Evangelicals and Public Worship, 1965-2005

Students and researchers will be grateful to the author and to Baylor University Press for making this material accessible, so that it can continue to stimulate engagement with the unfailingly fascinating phenomenon of evangelicalism. --Martin Wellings "Wesley and Methodist Studies" Attractively produced in paperback (but also available in more expensive hardback), the essays benefit from a detailed index, while the introductions in each draw them together into a coherent body of work. For those who have been influenced by Bebbington's work and/or mentored by him as a supervisor/examiner, these essays will be important acquisitions. What they also do is amplify Bebbington's role in the recent renaissance of scholarly writing on Evangelicalism in Britain, a field that remains in rude health, in no small part as a result of the approach modelled so inspirationally in these two volumes. --David Ceri Jones "Proceedings of the Wesley Historical Society" In addition to the insights they shed on the 'characterization' of the evangelical current and the research of D. Bebbington, these two books, written with great clarity, will offer the reader a remarkable overview of the history of the movement. --Emmanuel Dumont "Revue Istina"

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