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What we know today as evangelicalism originated in a series of great revivals in the mid-eighteenth century.
Inward Baptism demonstrates how the rationale for the "new birth," the characteristic and indispensable evangelical experience, developed slowly but inevitably from Luther's critique of late medieval Christianity.
Table des matières
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Chapter One: "Conversion" in Late Medieval Christianity
- Chapter Two: Luther Insists on Faith
- Chapter Three: Can One Turn to One's Outward Baptism for Assurance of Salvation?: The Colloquy at Montbéliard .
- Chapter Four: The "Conscience Religion" of William Perkins
- Chapter Five: Grace Resolved into Morality?
- Chapter Six: The Outbreak of Evangelicalism
- Concluding Remarks
- Appendix A: Decree and Execution in Theodore Beza's Doctrine of Predestination
- Appendix B: Reflections on Darkness Falls on the Land of Light
- Bibliography
A propos de l'auteur
Baird Tipson is Adjunct Professor of Religious Studies at Gettysburg College. After seventeen years as a faculty member, Tipson (AB Princeton University, PhD Yale University) became Provost of Gettysburg College (1987-1995), President of Wittenberg University (1995-2004) and President of Washington College (2004-2010). A student of Sydney Ahlstrom, he specializes in the European Reformation and the early history of Religion in America. He is the author of Hartford Puritanism: Thomas Hooker, Samuel Stone and Their Terrifying God.
Résumé
What we know today as evangelicalism originated in a series of great revivals in the mid-eighteenth century. Inward Baptism demonstrates how the rationale for the "new birth," the characteristic and indispensable evangelical experience, developed slowly but inevitably from Luther's critique of late medieval Christianity.
Texte suppl.
Inward Baptism would be useful in classes on historical theology or religious history and should be read by anyone interested in the history of Protestant doctrine.