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For sales information, contact Paternoster, c/- Authentic Media, 9 Holden Avenue, Bletchley, Milton Keynes, MK1 1QR, UK Web: http://www.authenticmedia.co.uk/paternoster For more information, intending authors should contact Dr Anthony R. Cross jlarcross@aol.com |
updated 170106
Baptists form one of the largest Christian communities in the world, and while they hold the historic faith in common with other mainstream Christian traditions, they nevertheless have important insights which they can offer to the worldwide church. Studies in Baptist History and Thought will be one means towards this end. It is an international series of academic studies which includes original monographs, revised dissertations, collections of essays and conference papers, and aims to cover any aspect of Baptist history and thought. While not all the authors are themselves Baptists, they nevertheless share an interest in relating Baptist history and thought to the other branches of the Christian church and to the wider life of the world.
The series includes studies in various aspects of Baptist history from the seventeenth century down to the present day, including biographical works, and Baptist thought is understood as covering the subject-matter of theology (including interdisciplinary studies embracing biblical studies, philosophy, sociology, practical theology, liturgy and women's studies). The diverse streams of Baptist life throughout the world are all within the scope of these volumes.
The series editors and consultants believe that the academic disciplines of history and theology are of vital importance to the spiritual vitality of the churches of the Baptist faith and order. The series sets out to discuss, examine and explore the many dimensions of their tradition and so to contribute to their on-going intellectual vigour.
Volumes in this series are not always published in sequence
Please note that the prices are those
applying in UK and are given here as a guide; prices elsewhere
will vary from country to country.
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David Bebbington and Anthony R. Cross (eds) Global Baptist History (SBHT vol. 14) 2006 / 1-84227-214-4 / approx 300pp. / £24.99 |
This book brings together studies from the Second International Conference on Baptist Studies which explore different facets of Baptist life and work especially during the twentieth century. David Bebbington is Professor of History,
University of Stirling, UK. |
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David Bebbington (ed.) The Gospel in the World International Baptist Studies |
This volume of essays from the First International Conference on Baptist Studies deals with a range of subjects spanning Britain, North America, Europe, Asia and the Antipodes. Topics include studies on religious tolerance, the communion controversy and the development of the international Baptist community, and concludes with two important essays on the future of Baptist life that pay special attention to the United States. David Bebbington is Professor of History, University of Stirling, UK |
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David Bebbington and Anthony R. Cross (eds) Mission (SBHT vol. 29) |
This book brings together studies from the Fourth International Conference on Baptist Studies held at Acadia University, Nova Scotia, Canada, in July 2006. The theme of these collected papers is 'Mission', which includes home and foreign mission, evangelism and social concern. What has been the Baptist experience of mission in different lands at various times? The theme will be considered by case studies, some of which will be very specific in time and place while others will cover long periods and more than one country. David Bebbington is Professor of History,
University of Stirling, UK |
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John H.Y. Briggs (ed.) Pulpit and People |
The eighteenth century was a crucial time in Baptist history. The denomination had its roots in seventeenth-century English Puritanism and Separatism and the persecution of the Stuart kings with only a limited measure of freedom after 1689. Worse, however, was to follow for with toleration came doctrinal conflict, a move away from central Christian understandings and a loss of evangelistic urgency. Both spiritual and numerical decline ensued, to the extent that the denomination was virtually reborn as rather belatedly it came to benefit from the Evangelical Revival which brought new life to both Arminian and Calvinistic Baptists. The papers in this volume study a denomination in transition, and relate to theology, their views of the church and its mission, Baptist spirituality, and engagements with radical politics. John H.Y. Briggs is Senior Research Fellow in Ecclesiastical History, and Director of the Centre for Baptist History and Heritage, Regent's Park College, Oxford, UK |
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Damian Brot Church of the Baptized or Church of Believers? (SBHT vol. 26) |
The dialogue between the Catholic Church and the Free Churches in Europe has hardly taken place. This book pleads for a commencement of such a conversation. It offers, among other things, an introduction to the American and the international dialogues between Baptists and the Catholic Church and strives to allow these conversations to become fruitful in the European context as well. Damian Brot is Pastor of a Reformed congregation in Switzerland. |
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Dennis Bustin Paradox and Perseverence |
The seventeenth century was a significant period in English history during which the people of England experienced unprecedented change and tumult in all spheres of life. At the same time, the importance of order and the traditional institutions of society were being reinforced. Hanserd Knollys, born during this pivotal period, personified in his life the ambiguity, tension and paradox of it, openly seeking change while at the same time cautiously embracing order. As a founder and leader of the Particular Baptists in London and despite persecution and personal hardship, he played a pivotal role in helping shape their identity externally in society and, internally, as they moved toward becoming more formalised by the end of the century. Dennis Bustin is Assistant Professor of History, Atlantic Baptist University, Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada. |
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Anthony R. Cross Baptism and the Baptists (SBHT vol. 3) |
At a time of renewed interest in baptism, Baptism and the Baptists is a detailed study of twentieth-century baptismal theology and practice and the factors which have influenced its development. Anthony R. Cross is a Fellow of the Centre for Baptist History and Heritage, Regent's Park College, Oxford, UK |
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Anthony R. Cross and Philip E. Thompson (eds) Baptist Sacramentalism (SBHT vol. 5) |
This collection of essays includes biblical, historical and theological studies in the theology of the sacraments from a Baptist perspective. Subjects explored include the physical side of being spiritual, baptism, the Lord's supper, the church, ordination, preaching, worship, religious liberty and the issue of disestablishment. Anthony R. Cross is a Fellow of the Centre
for Baptist History and Heritage, Regent's Park College, Oxford,
UK |
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Anthony R. Cross and Philip E. Thompson (eds) Baptist Sacramentalism 2 |
This second collection of essays exploring various dimensions of sacramental theology from a Baptist perspective includes biblical, historical and theological studies from scholars from around the world. Anthony R. Cross is a Fellow of the Centre
for Baptist History and Heritage, Regent's Park College, Oxford,
UK |
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Paul S. Fiddes Tracks and Traces (SBHT vol. 13) |
This is a comprehensive, yet unusual, book on the faith and life of Baptist Christians. It explores the understanding of the church, ministry, sacraments and mission from a thoroughly theological perspective. In a series of interlinked essays, the author relates Baptist identity consistently to a theology of covenant and to participation in the communion of God. Paul S. Fiddes is Professor of Systematic Theology, University of Oxford, and Principal, Regent's Park College, Oxford, UK. |
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Stanley K. Fowler More Than a Symbol (SBHT vol. 2) |
Fowler surveys the entire scope of British Baptist literature from the seventeenth-century pioneers onwards. He shows that in the twentieth century leading British Baptist pastors and theologians recovered an understanding of baptism that connected experience with soteriology and that in doing so they were recovering what many of their forebears had taught. Stanley K. Fowler is Professor of Theology, Heritage Theological Seminary, Cambridge, Ontario, Canada. |
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Steven R. Harmon Towards Baptist Catholicity (SBHT vol. 27) |
Towards Baptist Catholicity contends that the reconstruction of the Baptist vision in the wake of modernity's dissolution requires a retrieval of the ancient ecumenical tradition that forms Christian identity through liturgical rehearsal and ecclesial practice. Themes explored include catholic identity as an emerging trend in Baptist theology, tradition as a theological category in Baptist perspective, the relationship between Baptist confessions of faith and the patristic tradition, the importance of Trinitarian catholicity for Baptist faith and practice, catholicity in biblical interpretation, Karl Barth as a paradigm for a Baptist and evangelical retrieval of the patristic theological tradition, worship as a principal bearer of tradition, and the role of Baptist higher education in shaping the Christian vision. This book submits that the proposed movement towards catholicity is neither a betrayal of cherished Baptist principles nor the introduction of alien elements into the Baptist tradition. Steven R. Harmon is Associate Professor of Christian Theology, Campbell University Divinity School, Buies Creek, North Carolina, USA |
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Michael A.G. Haykin (ed.) 'At the Pure Fountain of Thy Word' (SBHT vol. 6) |
One of the greatest Baptist theologians of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, Andrew Fuller has not had justice done to him. There is little doubt that Fuller's theology lay behind the revitalization of the Baptists in the late eighteenth century and the first few decades of the nineteenth. This collection of essays fills a much needed gap by examining a major area of Fuller's thought, his work as an apologist. Michael A.G. Haykin is Principal of The Toronto Baptist Seminary and Bible School, Ontario, Canada |
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Michael A.G. Haykin Studies in Calvinistic Baptist Spirituality (SBHT vol. 15) 2005 / 1-84227-149-0 / approx. 300pp / £19.99 |
In a day when spirituality is in vogue and Christian communities are looking for guidance in this whole area, there is wisdom in looking to the past to find untapped wells. The Calvinistic Baptists, heirs of the rich ecclesial experience in the Puritan era of the seventeenth century, but, by the end of the eighteenth century, also passionately engaged in the catholicity of the Evangelical Revivals, are such a well. This collection of essays, covering such things as the Lord's Supper, friendship and hymnody, seeks to draw out the spiritual riches of this community for reflection and imitation in the present day. Michael A.G. Haykin is Principal of The Toronto Baptist Seminary and Bible School, Ontario, Canada |
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Brian Haymes, Anthony R. Cross and Ruth Gouldbourne On Being the Church (SBHT vol. 21) |
The aim of the book is to re-examine Baptist theology and practice in the light of the contemporary biblical, theological, ecumenical and missiological context drawing on historical and contemporary writings and issues. It is not a study in denominationalism but rather seeks to revision historical insights from the believers' church tradition for the sake of Baptists and other Christians in the context of the modern-postmodern context. Brian Haymes is the former Minister of Bloomsbury
Central Baptist Church, London, UK |
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From Woolloomooloo to 'Eternity' Volume 1: Growing an Australian Church (1831-1914) Volume 2: A National Church in a Global Community (1914-2005)
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From their beginnings in Australia in 1831 with the first baptisms in Woolloomoolloo Bay in 1832, this pioneering study describes the quest of Baptists in the different colonies (states) to discover their identity as Australians and Baptists. Although institutional developments are analyzed and the roles of significant individuals traced, the major focus is on the social and theological dimensions of the Baptist movement. Ken R. Manley is Distinguished Professor of Church History, Whitley College, The University of Melbourne, Australia |
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Ken R. Manley 'Redeeming Love Proclaim' (SBHT vol. 12) |
A leading exponent of the new moderate Calvinism which brought new life to many Baptists, John Rippon (1751-1836) helped unite the Baptists at this significant time. His many writings expressed the denomination's growing maturity and mutual awareness of Baptists in Britain and America, and exerted a long-lasting influence on Baptist worship and devotion. In his various activities, Rippon helped conserve the heritage of Old Dissent and promoted the evangelicalism of the New Dissent Ken R. Manley is Distinguished Professor of Church History, Whitley College, The University of Melbourne, Australia |
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Peter J. Morden Offering Christ to the World (SBHT vol. 8) |
Andrew Fuller (1754-1815) was one of the foremost English Baptist ministers of his day. His career as an Evangelical Baptist pastor, theologian, apologist and missionary statesman coincided with the profound revitalization of the Particular Baptist denomination to which he belonged. This study examines the key aspects of the life and thought of this hugely significant figure, and gives insights into the revival in which he played such a central part. Peter J. Morden is Senior Minister, Shirley Baptist Church, Solihull, UK |
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Peter Naylor Calvinism, Communion and the Baptists (SBHT vol. 7) |
Dr Naylor argues that the traditional link between 'high-Calvinism' and 'restricted communion' is in need of revision. He examines Baptist communion controversies from the late 1600s to the early 1800s and also the theologies of John Gill and Andrew Fuller. Peter Naylor is a retired Baptist minister living in Wellinborough, UK, and completed his doctorate at the University of Potchefstroom, South Africa |
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Ian M. Randall, Toivo Pilli and Anthony R. Cross (eds) Baptist Identities (SBHT vol. 19) |
These papers represent the contributions of scholars from various parts of the world as they consider the factors that have contributed to Baptist distinctiveness in different countries and at different times. The volume includes specific case studies as well as broader examinations of Baptist life in a particular country or region. Together they represent an outstanding resource for understanding Baptist . Ian M. Randall is Deputy Principal and Lecturer
in Church History and Spirituality, Spurgeon's College, London,
UK, and a Senior Research Fellow, International Baptist Theological
Seminary, Prague, Czech Republic. |
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James M. Renihan Edification and Beauty (SBHT vol. 17) |
Edification and Beauty describes the practices of the Particular Baptist churches at the end of the seventeenth century in terms of three concentric circles: at the centre is the ecclesiological material in the Second London Confession, which is then fleshed out in the various published writings of the men associated with these churches, and, finally, expressed in the church books of the era. James M. Renihan is Associate Professor of Historical Theology, Institute of Reformed Baptist Studies at Westminster Theological Seminary in California, Escondido, California, USA |
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Frank Rinaldi 'The Tribe of Dan' (SBHT vol. 10) |
'The Tribe of Dan' is a thematic study which explores the theology, organizational structure, evangelistic strategy, ministry and leadership of the New Connexion of General Baptists as it experienced the process of institutionalization in the transition from a revival movement to an established denomination. Frank Rinaldi is a retired Baptist minister and gained a doctorate from the University of Glasgow, Scotland, UK |
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Peter Shepherd The Making of a Modern Denomination (SBHT vol. 4) |
John Howard Shakespeare introduced revolutionary change to the Baptist denomination. The Baptist Union was transformed into a strong central institution and Baptist ministers were brought under its control. Further, Shakespeare's pursuit of church unity reveals him as one of the pioneering ecumenists of the twentieth century. Peter Shepherd is minister of Broadway Baptist Church, Derby, and completed his doctorate at the University of Durham, UK |
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Karen Smith The Community and the Believers (SBHT vol. 22) |
The period from 1730 to 1830 was one of transition for Calvinistic Baptists. Confronted by the enthusiasm of the Evangelical Revival, congregations within the denomination as a whole were challenged to find a way to take account of the revival experience. This study examines the life and devotion of Calvinistic Baptists in Hampshire and Wiltshire during this period. Among this group of Baptists was the hymn writer, Anne Steele. Karen Smith is Tutor in Church History and Spirituality at South Wales Baptist College and in Cardiff University, Wales, UK |
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Martin Sutherland Dissenters in a 'Free Land' (SBHT vol. 24) |
Baptists in New Zealand were forced to recast their identity. Conventions of communication and association, state and ecumenical relations, even historical divisions and controversies had to be revised in the face of new topographies and constraints. As Baptists formed themselves in a fluid society they drew heavily on both international movements and local dynamics. This book traces the development of ideas which shaped institutions and styles in sometimes surprising ways. Martin Sutherland is Director, R.J. Thompson Centre for Theological Studies, Carey Baptist College, Auckland, New Zealand |
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The Search for a Common Identity (SBHT vol. 9) |
In the period 1800 to 1827 there were three streams of Baptists in Scotland: Scotch, Haldaneite and 'English' Baptist. A strong commitment to home evangelization brought these three bodies closer together, leading to a merger of their home missionary societies in 1827. However, the first three attempts to form a union of churches failed, but by the 1860s a common understanding of their corporate identity was attained leading to the establishment of the Baptist Union of Scotland. Brian Talbot is minister of Cumbernauld Baptist Church, Scotland, and completed his doctorate at the University of Stirling, Scotland, UK |
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Philip E. Thompson The Freedom of God (SBHT vol. 20) |
This study contends that the range of theological commitments of the early Baptists are best understood in relation to their distinctive emphasis on the freedom of God. Thompson traces how this was recast anthropocentrically, leading to an emphasis upon human freedom from the nineteenth century onwards. He seeks to recover the dynamism of the early vision via a pneumatologically-oriented ecclesiology defining the church in terms of the memory of God. Philip E. Thompson is Associate Professor of Systematic Theology and Christian Heritage, North American Baptist Seminary, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, USA |
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Philip E. Thompson and Anthony R. Cross (eds) Recycling the Past or Researching History? (SBHT vol. 11) |
In this volume an international group of Baptist scholars examine and re-examine areas of Baptist life and thought about which little is known or the received wisdom is in need of revision. Historiographical studies include the date Oxford Baptists joined the Abingdon Association, the death of the Fifth Monarchist John Pendarves, eighteenth-century Calvinistic Baptists and the political realm, confessional identity and denominational institutions, Baptist community, ecclesiology, the priesthood of all believers, soteriology, Baptist spirituality, Strict and Reformed Baptists, the role of women among British Baptists, while various 'myths' challenged include the nature of high-Calvinism in eighteenth-century England, baptismal anti-sacramentalism, episcopacy, and Baptists and change. Philip E. Thompson is Associate Professor
of Systematic Theology and Christian Heritage, North American
Baptist Seminary, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, USA |
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Linda Wilson Marianne Farningham (SBHT vol. 18) |
Marianne Farningham, of College Street Baptist Chapel, Northampton, was a household name in evangelical circles in the later nineteenth century. For over fifty years she produced comment, poetry, biography and fiction for the popular Christian press. This investigation uses her writings to explore the beliefs and behaviour of evangelical Nonconformists, including Baptists, during these years. Linda Wilson is a tutor in Church History with the Open Theological College, UK, and author of Constrained by Zeal: Female Spirituality amongst Nonconformists 1825-1875 (Paternoster Press, 2000) |
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George R. Beasley-Murray Baptism in the New Testament (Paternoster Digital Library)
2005 / 1-84227-300-0 / x + 422pp / £24.99 |
This is a welcome reprint of a classic text on baptism originally published in 1962 by one of the leading Baptist New Testament scholars of the twentieth century. Dr Beasley-Murray's comprehensive study begins by investigating the antecedents of Christian baptism. It then surveys the foundation of Christian baptism in the Gospels, its emergence in the Acts of the Apostles and development in the apostolic writings. Following a section relating baptism to New Testament doctrine, a substantial discussion of the origin and significance of infant baptism leads to a briefer consideration of baptismal reform and ecumenism. George R. Beasley-Murray was a Principal of Spurgeon's College, London, UK, and Professor of New Testament Interpretation at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville, Kentucky, USA |
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Paul Beasley-Murray Fearless for Truth 2002 / 1-84227-134-2 / xii + 244pp / £15.99 |
Without a doubt George Beasley-Murray was one of the greatest Baptists of the twentieth century. A long-standing Principal of Spurgeon's College, he wrote more than twenty books and made significant contributions in the study of areas as diverse as baptism and eschatology, as well as writing highly respected commentaries on the Book of Revelation and John's Gospel. Paul Beasley-Murray is Senior Minister of Central Baptist Church, Chelmsford, UK |
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Edward W. Burrows 'To Me To Live Is Christ' 2005 / 1-84227-324-8 / xxii + 236pp / £11.99 |
This book is about a remarkably gifted and energetic man of God. Peter H. Barber was born into a Brethren family in Edinburgh in 1930. In his youth he joined Charlotte Baptist Chapel and followed the call into Baptist ministry. For eighteen years he was the pioneer minister of the new congregation in the New Town of East Kilbride, which planted two further congregations. At the age of thirty-nine he served as Centenary President of the Baptist Union of Scotland and then exercised an influential ministry for over seven years in the well-known Upton Vale Baptist Church, Torquay. From 1980 until his death in 1994 he was General Secretary of the Baptist Union of Scotland. Through his work for the European Baptist Federation and the Baptist World Alliance he became a world Baptist statesman. He was President of the EBF during the upheaval that followed the collapse of Communism. Edward W. Burrows has been Lecturer and Librarian at the Scottish Baptist College, Glasgow, UK |
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John E. Colwell Promise and Presence 2005 / 1-84227-414-7 / xiv + 284pp / £12.99 |
John Colwell presents a robust sacramental theology for Protestant churches. He maintains that a doctrine of the Trinity leads us to conceive of God's gracious engagement with his creation as one that is mediated through that creation. And this lies at the foundation for an understanding of the sacraments. Colwell further argues that the Church and Scripture confer context, definition, and validity on all other sacramental events. The final section reconsiders the seven sacraments of the Catholic tradition in the light of the understanding of sacramentality developed earlier in the book: baptism, confirmation, the Lord's Supper, cleansing, healing, ministry, and marriage. Colwell discusses the sacraments from an evangelical perspective but with a committed ecumenical intent. John E. Colwell is Tutor in Christian Doctrine and Ethics at Spurgeon's College, London, UK |
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Anthony R. Cross (ed.) Ecumenism and History (Studies in Christian History and Thought) |
This collection of essays examines the inter-relationships between the two fields in which Professor Briggs has contributed so much: history - particularly Baptist and Nonconformist - and the ecumenical movement. With contributions from colleagues and former research students from Britain, Europe and North America, Ecumenism and History provides wide-ranging studies in important aspects of Christian history, theology and ecumenical studies. Anthony R. Cross is a Fellow of the Centre for Baptist History and Heritage, Regent's Park College, Oxford, UK |
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Keith E. Eitel Paradigm Wars (Regnum Studies in Mission) |
The International Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention is the largest denominational mission agency in North America. This volume chronicles the historic and contemporary forces that led to the IMB's recent extensive reorganization, providing the most comprehensive case study to date of a historic mission agency restructuring to continue its mission purpose into the twenty-first century more effectively. Keith E. Eitel is Professor of Christian Missions at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, Wake Forest, North Carolina, USA |
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Stephen R. Holmes Listening to the Past 2002 / 1-84227-155-5 / xiv + 168pp / £14.99 |
Beginning with the question 'Why can't we just read the Bible?' Stephen Holmes considers the place of tradition in theology, showing how the doctrine of creation leads to an account of historical location and creaturely limitations as essential aspects of our existence. For we cannot claim unmediated access to the Scriptures without acknowledging the place of tradition: theology is an irreducibly communal task. Listening to the Past is a sustained attempt to show what listening to tradition involves, and how it can be used to aid theological work today. Stephen Holmes is Lecturer in Theology, University of St Andrews, Scotland, UK |
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Mark Hopkins Nonconformity's Romantic Generation (Studies in Evangelical History and Thought) |
A study of the theological development of key leaders of the Baptist and Congregational denominations at their period of greatest influence, including C.H. Spurgeon and R.W. Dale, and of the controversies in which those among them who embraced and rejected the liberal transformation of their evangelical heritage opposed each other. Mark Hopkins lectures at the Theological College of Northern Nigeria in Bukuru |
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Galen K. Johnson Prisoner of Conscience (Studies in Christian History and Thought) |
This is an interdisciplinary study of John Bunyan's understanding of conscience across his autobiographical, theological and fictional writings, investigating whether conscience always deserves fidelity, and how Bunyan's view of conscience affects his relationship both to modern Western individualism and historic Christianity. Galen K. Johnson is Assistant Professor of Theology, John Brown University, Siloam Springs, Arkansas, USA |
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Stanley E. Porter and Anthony R. Cross (eds) Semper Reformandum |
Clark Pinnock has clearly been one of the most important evangelical theologians of the last forty years in North America. Always provocative, especially in the wide range of opinions he has held and considered, Pinnock, himself a Baptist, has recently retired after twenty-five years of teaching at McMaster Divinity College. His colleagues and associates honour him in this volume by responding to his important theological work which has dealt with the essential topics of evangelical theology. These include Christian apologetics, biblical inspiration, the Holy Spirit and, perhaps most importantly in recent years, openness theology. Stanley E. Porter is President and Dean,
and Professor of New Testament, McMaster Divinity College, Hamilton,
Ontario, Canada. |
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Meic Pearse The Great Restoration |
Pearse charts the rise and progress of continental Anabaptism - both evangelical and heretical - through the sixteenth century. He then follows the story of those English people who became impatient with Puritanism and separated - first from the Church of England and then from one another - to form the antecedents of later Congregationalists, Baptists and Quakers. Meic Pearse is Assistant Professor of History, Houghton College, New York |
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Jim Purves The Triune God and the Charismatic Movement (Paternoster Theological Monographs) |
All emotion and no theology? Or a fundamental challenge to reappraise and realign our trinitarian theology in the light of Christian experience? This study of charismatic renewal as it found expression within Scotland at the end of the twentieth century evaluates the use of Patristic, Reformed and contemporary models (including those of the Baptist Union of Scotland) of the Trinity in explaining the workings of the Holy Spirit. Jim Purves is pastor of Bristo Baptist Church, Edinburgh, and serves on the Baptist Union of Scotland's national leadership team. |
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A Study in the Spirituality of English Evangelicalism 1918-1939 |
This book makes a detailed historical examination of evangelical
spirituality between the First and Second World Wars. It shows
how patterns of devotion led to tensions and divisions. In a
wide-ranging study, Anglican, Wesleyan, Reformed and Pentecostal-charismatic
spiritualities are analysed. Ian M. Randall is Deputy Principal and Lecturer in Church History and Spirituality, Spurgeon's College, London, UK, and a Senior Research Fellow, International Baptist Theological Seminary, Prague, Czech Republic |
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Ian M. Randall Spirituality and Social Change (Studies in Evangelical History and Thought) |
This is a fresh appraisal of F.B. Meyer (1847-1929), a leading Free Church minister. Having been deeply affected by holiness spirituality, Meyer became the Keswick Convention's foremost international speaker. He combined spirituality with effective evangelism and socio-political activity. This study shows Meyer's significant contribution to spiritual renewal and social change. Ian M. Randall is Deputy Principal and Lecturer in Church History and Spirituality, Spurgeon's College, London, UK, and a Senior Research Fellow, International Baptist Theological Seminary, Prague, Czech Republic |
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Sorin Sabou Between Horror and Hope (Paternoster Biblical Monographs) |
This book argues that Paul's metaphorical language of death in Romans 6.1-11 conveys two aspects: horror and hope. The 'horror' aspect is conveyed by the 'crucifixion' language, and the 'hope' aspect by 'burial' language. The life of the Christian believer is understood, as relationship with sin is concerned ('death to sin'), between these two realities: horror and hope. Sorin Sabou is Lecturer at Bucharest Baptist Seminary and Senior Pastor of the Romanian Baptist Church, Brasov, Romania. |
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Ian Stackhouse The Gospel-Driven Church |
Charismatic Renewal has at the core of its ideology an aspiration for revival. This is a laudable aspiration, but in recent years, in the absence of large-scale evangelistic impact, such a vision has encouraged a faddist mentality among church leaders in this part of the body of Christ. The Gospel-Driven Church documents this development and the numerous theological and pastoral distortions that take place when genuine revival fervour transmutes into revivalism. Moreover, Ian Stackhouse aims to show how a retrieval of some of the core practices of the church, such as preaching, sacraments, the laying on of hands, and prayer are essential at this stage in the trajectory of the renewal movement. He commends to church leaders a recovery of these means of grace as a way of keeping the church centred on the gospel rather than mere pragmatic concerns about size and numbers. Ian Stackhouse is pastoral Leader of Guildford Baptist Church, UK |
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David M. Thompson Baptism, Church and Society in Modern Britain
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The theology and practice of baptism have not received the attention they deserve. How important is faith? What does baptismal regeneration mean? Is baptism a bond of unity between Christians? This book discusses the theology of baptism and popular belief and practice in England and Wales from the Evangelical Revival to the publication of the World Council of Churches' consensus statement on Baptism, Eucharist and Ministry (1982). David Thompson is Fellow and President of Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, and Reader in Modern Church History in the University of Cambridge |
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Nigel G. Wright
(Paternoster Theological Monographs) |
This book is a timely restatement of a radical theology of church and state in the Anabaptist and Baptist tradition. Dr Wright constructs his argument in dialogue and debate with Yoder and Moltmann, major contributors to a free church perspective. Nigel G. Wright is Principal of Spurgeon's College, London, UK |
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Nigel G. Wright New Baptists, New Agenda |
New Baptists, New Agenda is a timely contribution to the growing debate about the health, shape and future of the Baptists. It considers the steady changes that have taken place among Baptists in the last decade - changes of mood, style, practice and structure - and encourages us to align these current movements and questions with God's upward and future call. He contends that the true church has yet to come: the church that currently exists is an anticipation of the joyful gathering of all who have been called by the Spirit through Christ to the Father. Nigel G. Wright is Principal of Spurgeon's College, London, UK |
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Nigel G. Wright
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Free Church, Free State is a textbook on baptist ways of being church and a proposal for the future of baptist churches in an ecumenical context. Nigel Wright argues that both baptist (small 'b') and catholic (small 'c') church traditions should seek to enrich and support each other as valid expressions of the body of Christ without sacrificing what they hold dear. Written for pastors, church planters, evangelists and preachers, Nigel Wright offers frameworks of thought for baptists and non-baptists in their journey together following Christ. Nigel G. Wright is Principal of Spurgeon's College, London, UK |