A Global Introduction to Baptist ChurchesCambridge University Press, 13. 9. 2010 - Počet stran: 444 Coinciding with the four-hundredth anniversary of the birth of the Baptist movement, this book explores and assesses the cultural sources of Baptist beliefs and practices. Although the movement has been embraced, enriched, and revised by numerous cultural heritages, the Baptist movement has focused on a small group of Anglo exiles in Amersterdam in constructing its history and identity. Robert E. Johnson seeks to recapture the varied cultural and theological sources of Baptist tradition and to give voice to the diverse global elements of the movement that have previously been excluded or marginalized. With an international communion of over 110 million persons in more than 225,000 congregations, Baptists constitute the world's largest aggregate of evangelical Protestants. This work offers insight into the diversity, breadth, and complexity of the cultural influences that continue to shape Baptist identity today. |
Obsah
Introduction I | 1 |
FOUNDATIONS | 7 |
AGE OF EMERGING BAPTIST DENOMINATIONAL | 51 |
GLOBAL BAPTIST | 97 |
Baptists Frontier Age in the United States | 145 |
Baptists Frontier Age in Europe Africa Asia and Latin | 185 |
GLOBAL BAPTIST DEVELOPMENT PHAsE 3 1890 TO PRESENT | 231 |
Baptists Evolving Traditioning Sources in Latin America | 285 |
Baptists Evolving Traditioning Sources in North America | 334 |
BELIEFS AND PRACTICES | 385 |
A New Context for Baptist Identity | 428 |
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African American Amerindian Anglo Baptist Anglo-American Baptist Arminian Asian American Australia Baptist bodies Baptist churches Baptist Convention Baptist development Baptist identity Baptist Missionary Society Baptist movement Baptist traditions Baptist Union Baptist women Baptist World Alliance became began believers Bible black Baptist Calvinist Canada Canadian Baptists challenges Chinese Christian colonies congregations context convictions cultural doctrine dreams early Baptist economic efforts emerged England English Baptists established ethnic European Evangelical faith find first first Baptist Foreign Mission formed Free Will Baptists frontier German Baptist God’s groups heritage Hispanic identified immigrants independence Indian influence interpretations leadership major National Baptist National Baptist Convention Native American nineteenth century North numbers ofthe organized Particular Baptists pastor persons political populations practices preachers preaching reflected region Regular Baptists religious roles Separate Baptists Seventh Day Baptists significant significantly social South Southern Baptist Southern Baptist Convention specific spiritual theological traditioning processes traditioning sources twentieth century United worship