Lexington Books
Pages: 382
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7391-9409-6 • Hardback • June 2015 • $155.00 • (£119.00)
978-0-7391-9411-9 • eBook • June 2015 • $147.00 • (£113.00)
Kent Eaton is provost and professor of historical theology at the Houston Graduate School of Theology.
Part One: The Protestant Preoccupation with Spain
Chapter One: The Fellowship of Dissent
Chapter Two: The Development of Dispensational Missiology
Chapter Three: The Awakening of Protestant Interest in Spain as a Mission Field
Part Two: The First Republic and the Protestant Experience
Chapter Four: Spain and Religious Freedom, 1868–1875
Chapter Five: Missionary Methodology in Spain
Part Three: A Precarious Foundation
Chapter Six: Uncertainty and Advances, 1875–1898
Chapter Seven: From Darkness to Light, 1898–1933
Part Four: The Calm Before the Storm
Chapter Eight: The Protestant Experience during the Second Spanish Republic
Chapter Nine: The Lasting Legacy
There is, as yet, little scholarly work on Spain’s small protestant minority, and this first full-length study of British missionaries is therefore to be welcomed. . . .The book provides many insights. There is a welcome acknowledgement of Protestantism’s association with the working class and the poor in Spain, which the author associates with limiting the missions’ impact, given the failure to penetrate the elites. There are also illuminating discussions of the women who were involved in mission work. . . .One of the most attractive, if unconventional, features of the book is a sense of dialogue between the author and his sources, which reflects his insider position. He takes his protagonists seriously, treats their thoughts and feelings with respect, and fully recognizes the extent of their pastoral task. . . .This is, in short, an interesting and thoughtful…contribution to the understudied field of Spanish Protestantism.— European History Quarterly
This solidly researched study covers the period between the revolution of 1868, the most progressive and democratic of Spain’s nineteenth-century political upheavals, and the outbreak of the Civil War in July 1936. The author has used a rich variety of sources, including church archives, the letters and diaries of missionaries, as well as the Spanish and British press, both religious and secular. One merit of this study is that it is placed within the wider context of the cultural and religious milieu of Victorian Britain…. This study examines in depth many important themes—the identities of the missionaries, the evolution of their pastoral strategies, the areas where they were most successful (Madrid, Barcelona, and rural Galicia), and the social composition of their converts—largely the poor. In the end, the efforts of the Brethren proved disappointing, but the personal stories in this volume make abundantly clear that the missionaries were undaunted in their religious quest. The author also offers a convincing explanation of some of the reasons behind the meager results of the Brethren’s work, particularly the failure to develop native missionaries and a lack of appreciation for aspects of Spanish popular culture…. [T]his study makes a major contribution the religious history of modern Spain.— The Catholic Historical Review
Eaton’s book is a meticulously researched study grounded in extensive Spanish and English primary sources. . . this is a valuable study that reminds us that, for British Protestants, not all overseas mission was directed to the tropical world.
— Journal of Ecclesiastical History
Eaton’s work will likely remain the best of its kind for many years to come. ... Researchers in Victorian and Brethren missionary history, missiologists and Spanish missionaries will be most interested in this work. The book, or a summary of it, should be translated into Spanish, which would help correct the historical ‘amnesia’ amongst Spanish Protestants that Eaton so rightfully laments.
— Evangelical Review Of Theology
Kent Eaton’s account of Protestant missionaries in Spain provides a unique account of a much-neglected field of study. Eaton’s carefully documented historical research underlines the importance of the Brethren Pietistic Dispensational Theology on all Spanish Protestant groups, although most today are unaware of this history. His penetrating but sympathetic analysis of a community that he knows well illustrates the importance of bringing historical and theological insights together if we wish to understand why some religious groups flourish, while others struggle to reach hearts and minds. — Fiona Bowie, King's College London