A New History of ChristianityContinuum, 1996 - 426 páginas A New History of Christianity bears all the hallmarks of a good one-volume history of Christianity: balanced, judicious, lacking in confessional bias or special pleading, comprehensive (without overwhelming the reader with superfluous detail), and readable. Vivian Green has the knack of telling an intricate, ever-changing story of vast historical sweep and a large cast of characters, with clarity, simplicity, and literary grace. In 11 chapters, Green covers 20 centuries from the youthful Christian community, with its intrinsically Jewish origins, to the vast multifaceted institution on the verge of the Third Millennium. Particularly noteworthy is the attention devoted to the present condition of the Christian movement. Green studies the pontificate of John Paul II, the status of religion in post-Communist Russia and Eastern Europe, the rise of televangelism and neo-Fundamentalism, and the crisis of changing moral values. He also examines the ordination of women, the exponential growth of Christianity in Africa and its decline in the Northern Hemisphere, and the ferment in Latin America. |
Contenido
The Church Triumphant | 25 |
The Matrix of Medieval Christianity | 45 |
Church life | 79 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 11 secciones no mostradas
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Términos y frases comunes
Africa American Anglican anti-clerical appointed Archbishop authority Baptist became believed Bible bishops Canterbury Cardinal Catholic Church Catholic Reformation century Christ Christian Christian Church Christian faith Church of England clergy clerical condemned congregations Constantinople converts council Council of Trent critics death divine doctrine Dutch Reformed Church early ecclesiastical emperor English episcopal established Eucharist evangelical Father favour followed founded France French German gospel heresy Holy influence Jesuits Jesus John king laity later liberal living Lollardy Luther Lutheran martyrs medieval Methodist mission monasteries monastic monasticism monks moral movement native ordination ordination of women Orthodox Church pagan papacy papal parish pastoral patriarch Paul persecution Pius political Pope Pope's prayer preaching priests princes Protestant Reformation Protestantism Puritan radical religion religious revival Roman Catholic Roman Catholic Church Roman Church Rome sacraments saints scripture secular seemed social spiritual successor Synod teaching theologians theology traditional Vatican women worship wrote