
The Irish Presbyterian Mind Considers How One Protestant Community Responded To The Challenges Posed To Traditional Understandings Of Christian Faith Between 1830 And 1930. Andrew R. Holmes Examines The Attitudes Of The Leaders Of The Presbyterian Church In Ireland To Biblical Criticism, Modern Historical Method, Evolutionary Science, And Liberal Forms Of Protestant Theology. He Explores How They Reacted To Developments In Other Christian Traditions, Including The So-called 'romeward' Trend In The Established Churches Of England And Ireland And The 'romanisation' Of Catholicism. Was Their Response Distinctively Presbyterian And Irish? How Was It Shaped By Presbyterian Values, Intellectual First Principles, International Denominational Networks, Identity Politics, The Expansion Of Higher Education, And Relations With Other Christian Denominations? The Story Begins In The 1830s When Evangelicalism Came To Dominate Mainstream Presbyterianism, The Largest Protestant Denomination In Present-day Northern Ireland. It Ends In The 1920s With The Exoneration Of J. E. Davey, A Professor In The Presbyterian College, Belfast, Who Was Tried For Heresy On Accusations Of Being A 'modernist'. Within This Timeframe, Holmes Describes The Formation And Maintenance Of A Religiously-conservative Intellectual Community. At The Heart Of The Interpretation Is The Interplay Between The Reformed Theology Of The Westminster Confession Of Faith And A Commitment To Common Evangelical Principles And Religious Experience That Drew Protestants Together From Various Denominations. The Definition Of Conservative Within The Presbyterian Church In Ireland Moved Between These Two Poles And Could Take On Different Forms Depending On Time, Geography, Social Class, And Whether The Individual Was A Minister Or A Member Of The Laity.
This work investigates how the Irish Presbyterian community navigated the intellectual and theological challenges to traditional Christian faith between 1830 and 1930. Andrew R. Holmes, a scholar of Irish religious history, utilizes archival records and denominational documents to analyze the responses of church leaders to biblical criticism, evolutionary science, and liberal theology. He argues that the community maintained a conservative intellectual identity by balancing the Reformed theology of the Westminster Confession with broader evangelical principles.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars of Irish religious history recognize this text as a rigorous examination of the intersection between conservative theology and modern intellectual shifts. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's meticulous attention to the specific denominational pressures faced by Irish Presbyterians during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Page Count:
304
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192512226
ISBN-13:
9780192512222
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!