Scarecrow Press
Pages: 192
Trim: 6 x 8½
978-0-8108-5104-7 • Paperback • March 2006 • $73.00 • (£56.00)
Fred van Lieburg is professor of Protestant history at the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam and co-director of ReLiC, the VU Centre for Dutch Religious History.
Part 1 Editor's Preface
Part 2 Foreword
Part 3 Acknowledgments
Chapter 4 1. Pietistic Personal Pocuments
Chapter 5 2. Historical Background
Chapter 6 3. Twenty Lives of Godly Men and Women
Chapter 7 4. Youth and Vanity
Chapter 8 5. From Crisis to Christ
Chapter 9 6. The Experience of the Saints
Chapter 10 7. One in Heart, Soul and Flesh
Chapter 11 8. The Large Church and the Small Church
Chapter 12 9. In the World but Not of the World
Chapter 13 10. In Word, Walk and Writing
Part 14 Primary Bibliography
Part 15 Secondary Bibliography I: Pietist Autobiography
Part 16 Secondary Bibliography II: Dutch Pietism
Part 17 Index of Names
Part 18 About the Author
In this study of the international pietist movement as in appeared amongst Dutch Calvinists and the Reformed Church in Holland, van Lieburg (Protestant history, Vrije U., Amsterdam) notes that Dutch pietism was a major influence in Eastern Europe and Scandinavia and in fact held its own beside England and Germany. He uses the personal accounts of 14 men and six women to explain how they came to their practices and beliefs about youth and vanity, the conversion process, the experience of the saints, marriage, the concept of the church, the world, and the Word, the Walk and writing.
— Reference and Research Book News, August 2006
The author is to be commended and thanked for such an important contruibution to an illuminating and important series.
— Calvin Theological Journal, April 2007 (vol 42, no 1)