Read more
This three-volume series provides a critical examination of the history of theology in Scotland from the early middle ages to the close of the twentieth century. In Volume Three, the 'long twentieth century' is examined with reference to changes in Scottish church life and society.
List of contents
- 1: Domhnall Uillean Stiùbhard: Carmina Gadelica
- 2: Bruce McCormack: Scottish Kenotic Theology
- 3: Jason Goroncy: Theologies of the Cross: Denney and Forsyth
- 4: Brian Stanley: The Theology of the Scottish Protestant Missionary Movement
- 5: Marlene Finlayson: Theology and Ecumenism after Edinburgh 1910
- 6: Adam Hood: From Idealism to Personalism: Caird, Oman and Macmurray
- 7: Gordon Graham: The Gifford Lectures
- 8: Johnston Mackay: A Century of Social Theology
- 9: George Newlands: John Baillie and Donald Baillie
- 10: David Brown: Theology and Art in Scotland
- 11: Paul Nimmo: The influence of Barth in Scotland
- 12: David Fergusson: Modern Christology: Mackintosh, Baillie and Macquarrie
- 13: John Riches: The dissemination of Scottish theology: T. and T. Clark
- 14: Cairns Craig: The Scottish Theological Diaspora: Canada
- 15: Peter Matheson: The Scottish Theological Diaspora: Australasia
- 16: George Pattison: Ronald Gregor Smith
- 17: Paul Molnar: Thomas F. Torrance
- 18: Alexander Forsyth: Theology and Practice of Mission in Mid-Twentieth Century Scotland
- 19: Ian Bradley: The Revival of Celtic Christianity
- 20: Linden Bicket: Catholic and Protestant Sensibilities in Scottish Literature: Stevenson to Spark
- 21: Doug Gay: Theological Constructions of Scottish National Identity
- 22: William McFadden: Catholic Theology since Vatican II
- 23: Lesley Orr: Late Twentieth-Century Controversies in Sexual Ethics, Gender and Ordination
- 24: Alison Peden: Episcopalian Theology in the Twentieth Century
- 25: Gary Badcock: Reformed Theology in the Later Twentieth Century
About the author
David Fergusson is Professor of Divinity at the University of Edinburgh. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and a Fellow of the British Academy. His publications include The Providence of God: A Polyphonic Approach (2018) and Faith and Its Critics: A Conversation (2009).
Mark W. Elliott is Professor of Divinity and Biblical Criticism at the University of Glasgow. Glaswegian by birth, he was further educated at Oxford, Aberdeen and Cambridge, where he wrote a PhD on The Song of Songs and Christology in the Early Church. Before Glasgow, he taught at St Andrews, Nottingham University and Liverpool Hope. His main focus is the relationship between biblical exegesis and Christian doctrine, both ancient and modern, but has a particular interest in Scottish theology in its international context.
Summary
This three-volume series provides a critical examination of the history of theology in Scotland from the early middle ages to the close of the twentieth century. In Volume Three, the 'long twentieth century' is examined with reference to changes in Scottish church life and society.
Additional text
...those who will consult these volumes can expect to learn about matters that continue to be of great significance to the future of Britain and Europe.