Suscribing to Faith The Anglican Parish Magazine 1859 1929

Suscribing to Faith  The Anglican Parish Magazine 1859 1929
Author: Jane Platt
Publsiher: Palgrave Macmillan
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2014-01-14
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 134957354X

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This book reveals the huge sales and propagandist potential of Anglican parish magazines, while demonstrating the Anglican Church's misunderstanding of the real issues at its heart, and its collective collapse of confidence as it contemplated social change.

Suscribing to Faith The Anglican Parish Magazine 1859 1929

Suscribing to Faith  The Anglican Parish Magazine 1859 1929
Author: Jane Platt
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 347
Release: 2016-01-12
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781137362445

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This book reveals the huge sales and propagandist potential of Anglican parish magazines, while demonstrating the Anglican Church's misunderstanding of the real issues at its heart, and its collective collapse of confidence as it contemplated social change.

Suscribing to Faith The Anglican Parish Magazine 1859 1929

Suscribing to Faith  The Anglican Parish Magazine 1859 1929
Author: Jane Platt
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 291
Release: 2016-01-12
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781137362445

Download Suscribing to Faith The Anglican Parish Magazine 1859 1929 Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book reveals the huge sales and propagandist potential of Anglican parish magazines, while demonstrating the Anglican Church's misunderstanding of the real issues at its heart, and its collective collapse of confidence as it contemplated social change.

Religion in Victorian London

Religion in Victorian London
Author: William M. Jacob,W. M. Jacob
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 361
Release: 2021-09-17
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780192897404

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This innovative book challenges many of the widely held assumptions about the place of religion in Victorian society and in London, the world's first great industrial and commercial metropolis. Against the background of Victorian London it explores the religiosity of Londoners as expressed through the dynamic renewal of traditional faith communities, including Judaism and the historic churches, as well as fresh expressions of religion, including the Salvation Army, Mormons, spiritualism, and the occult. It shows how laypeople, especially the rich and women were mobilised in the service of their faith, and their fellow citizens. Drawing on research in social, economic, oral, cultural, and women's history Jacob argues that religious motivations lay behind concerns that subsequently preoccupied people in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. These include the changing place of women in society, an active concern for social justice, the sexual exploitation of women and children, and provision of education for all classes and all ages. By examining religion broadly, in its social and cultural context and looking beyond conventional approaches to religious history, Religious Vitality in Victorian London illustrates the dynamic significance of religion in society influencing even the expression of secularism.

The Sunday School Movement in Britain 1900 1939

The Sunday School Movement in Britain  1900 1939
Author: Caitriona McCartney
Publsiher: Boydell & Brewer
Total Pages: 227
Release: 2023-04-25
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781783277650

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Demonstrates the vital role Sunday schools played in forming and sustaining faith before, during, and after the Frist World War for British populations both at home and abroad. Sunday schools were an important part of the religious landscape of twentieth-century Britain and they were widely attended by much of the British population. The Sunday School Movement in Britain argues that the schools played a vital role in forming and sustaining the faith of those who lived and served during the First World War. Moreover, the volume contends that the conflict did not cause the schools to decline and proposes that decline instead set in much earlier in the twentieth century. The book also questions the perception that the schools were ineffective tools of religious socialisation and examines the continued attempts of the Sunday school movement to professionalise and improve their efforts. Thus, the involvement of the movement with the World's Sunday School Association is revealed to be part of the wider developing international ecumenical community during the twentieth century. Drawing together under-utilised material from archives and newspapers in national and local collections, The Sunday School Movement in Britain presents a history of the schools demonstrating their lasting significance in the religious life of the nation and, by extension, the enduring importance of Christianity in Britain during the first half of the twentieth century.

Periodizing Secularization

Periodizing Secularization
Author: Clive D. Field
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 336
Release: 2019-10-31
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780192588579

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Moving beyond the (now somewhat tired) debates about secularization as paradigm, theory, or master narrative, Periodizing Secularization focuses upon the empirical evidence for secularization, viewed in its descriptive sense as the waning social influence of religion, in Britain. Particular emphasis is attached to the two key performance indicators of religious allegiance and churchgoing, each subsuming several sub-indicators, between 1880 and 1945, including the first substantive account of secularization during the fin de siècle. A wide range of primary sources is deployed, many of them relatively or entirely unknown, and with due regard to their methodological and interpretative challenges. On the back of them, a cross-cutting statistical measure of 'active church adherence' is devised, which clearly shows how secularization has been a reality and a gradual, not revolutionary, process. The most likely causes of secularization were an incremental demise of a Sabbatarian culture (coupled with the associated emergence of new leisure opportunities and transport links) and of religious socialization (in the church, at home, and in the school). The analysis is also extended backwards, to include a summary of developments during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries; and laterally, to incorporate a preliminary evaluation of a six-dimensional model of 'diffusive religion', demonstrating that these alternative performance indicators have hitherto failed to prove that secularization has not occurred. The book is designed as a prequel to the author's previous volumes on the chronology of British secularization - Britain's Last Religious Revival? (2015) and Secularization in the Long 1960s (2017). Together, they offer a holistic picture of religious transformation in Britain during the key secularizing century of 1880-1980.

The Life of Christian Doctrine

The Life of Christian Doctrine
Author: Mike Higton
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 287
Release: 2020-07-09
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780567687227

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The lives of Christian churches are shaped by doctrinal theology. That is, they are shaped by practices in which ideas about God and God's ways with the world are developed, discussed and deployed. This book explores those practices, and asks why they matter for communities seeking to follow Jesus. Taking the example of the Church of England, this book highlights the embodied, affective and located reality of all doctrinal practices – and the biases and exclusions that mar them. It argues that doctrinal theology can in principle help the church know God better, even though doctrinal theologians do not know God better than their fellow believers. It claims that it can help the church to hear in Scripture challenges to its life, including to its doctrinal theology. It suggests that doctrinal disagreement is inevitable, but that a better quality of doctrinal disagreement is possible. And, finally, it argues that, by encouraging attention to voices that have previously been ignored, doctrinal theology can foster the ongoing discovery of God's surprising work.

Literature and Union

Literature and Union
Author: Gerard Carruthers,Colin Kidd
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 443
Release: 2018
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 9780198736233

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"This volume provides a fresh perspective on the ways in which writers have dealt with the relationship between literature and union, especially in Scottish literary contexts. It interrogates, from various angles, the assumption of a binary opposition between organic Scottish values and those supposedly imposed by an overbearing imperial England."--Provided by publisher.