
The-five Volume Oxford History Of Protestant Dissenting Traditions Series Is Governed By A Motif Of Migration ('out-of-england'). It First Traces Organized Church Traditions That Arose In Britain And Ireland As Dissenters Distanced Themselves From A State Church Defined By Diocesan Episcopacy, The Book Of Common Prayer, The Thirty-nine Articles, And Royal Supremacy, But Then Follows Those Traditions As They Spread Beyond Britain And Ireland—and Also Analyses Newer Traditions That Emerged Downstream In Other Parts Of The World From Earlier Forms Of Dissent. Secondly, It Does The Same For The Doctrines, Church Practices, Stances Toward State And Society, Attitudes Toward Scripture, And Characteristic Patterns Of Organization That Also Originated In Earlier British And Irish Dissent, But That Have Often Defined A Trajectory Of Influence Independent Of Ecclesiastical Organizations. The Oxford History Of Protestant Dissenting Traditions, Volume V Follows The Spatial, Cultural, And Intellectual Changes In Dissenting Identity And Practice In The Twentieth Century, As These Once European Traditions Globalized. While In Europe Dissent Was Often Against The Religious State, Dissent In A Globalizing World Could Redefine Itself Against Colonialism Or Other Secular And Religious Monopolies. The Contributors Trace The Encounters Of Dissenting Protestant Traditions With Modernity And Globalization; Changing Imperial Politics; Challenges To Biblical, Denominational, And Pastoral Authority; Local Cultures And Languages; And Some Of The Century's Major Themes, Such As Race And Gender, New Technologies, And Organizational Change. In So Doing, They Identify A Vast Array Of Local And Globalizing Illustrations Which Will Enliven Conversations About The Role Of Religion, And In Particular Christianity.
This volume investigates how Protestant dissenting traditions adapted their identities and practices in response to the forces of globalization and modernity throughout the twentieth century. Mark P. Hutchinson and a team of contributors analyze the shift of these traditions from their British and Irish origins into a global context. The work examines how dissenting groups navigated the transition from opposing state-sanctioned religion to confronting colonialism, secularism, and new social paradigms. By synthesizing historical data with theological analysis, the text provides a framework for understanding the evolution of dissent in a rapidly changing world.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and historians recognize this series as a comprehensive reference for the study of global Protestantism. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the rigorous, multi-contributor approach to complex historical shifts.
Page Count:
592
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191006696
ISBN-13:
9780191006692
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