Scarecrow Press
Pages: 450
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-0-8108-5280-8 • Paperback • April 2006 • $77.00 • (£59.00)
Howard A. Snyder is Professor of the History and Theology of Mission at the E. Stanley Jones School of World Mission and Evangelism, Asbury Theological Seminary. He is the author of a series of books on the church and its form and mission.
Part 1 Foreword
Part 2 Series Editor's Preface
Part 3 Preface
Part 4 Apparatus
Part 5 Biographical Introduction: John Wesley Redfield
Part 6 Chronology
Part 7 The Text
Chapter 8 I. Redfield's Apologia
Chapter 9 II. Birth and Early Call
Chapter 10 III. Redfield Resists the Call to Preach
Chapter 11 IV. Assisting a Methodist Preacher
Chapter 12 V. Rejection of Call; Wanderings
Chapter 13 VI. Redfield's Unfortunate Marriage
Chapter 14 VII. Licensed to Preach
Chapter 15 VIII. Abolitionism: "Proclaim the Jubilee of God"
Chapter 16 IX. Seeking Holiness: "By faith alone"
Chapter 17 X. Evaluating Impressions: "Faith, fancy, intuition"
Chapter 18 XI. New York City: "Unearthly power lifted me"
Chapter 19 XII. "Resolved to make a business of seeking holiness"
Chapter 20 XIII. Phoebe and Walter Palmer: "I feared them"
Chapter 21 XIV. "A remarkable dream fulfilled to the letter"
Chapter 22 XV. "If you want revival, seek holiness"
Chapter 23 XVI. "Led to review my history"
Chapter 24 XVII. Expanding Revival Minsitry, 1844-1846
Chapter 25 XVIII. "New fields opening"
Chapter 26 XIX. "Jesus cures both soul and body"
Chapter 27 XX. "Ain't I dying?"
Chapter 28 XXI. Phoebe Palmer: "These strange facts"
Chapter 29 XXII. "Entering the harvest field with all my might"
Chapter 30 XXIII. Continue Stressing Holiness?
Chapter 31 XXIV. The 1846 Middletown, Connecticut, Revival
Chapter 32 XXV. Revival Ministry in the East, 1846-1850
Chapter 33 XXVI. Philadelphia: "Operations next to Pentecostal"
Chapter 34 XXVII. Newburgh Camp Meeting: "Gusts of power"
Chapter 35 XXVIII. Further Revivals
Chapter 36 XXIX. Redfield Meets Fay Purdy
Chapter 37 XXX. Prison Ministry in New York
Chapter 38 XXXI. Ministry in Bridgeport, Connecticut
Chapter 39 XXXII. Revivals in Connecticut
Chapter 40 XXXIII. Summer Camp Meetings
Chapter 41 XXXIV. Encountering Paranormal Phenomena
Chapter 42 XXXV. Return to Syracuse, New York
Chapter 43 XXXVI. Pentecost: Dog's Ideal Church
Chapter 44 XXXVII. Redfield Visits His Boyhood Home
Chapter 45 XXXVIII. Revival Ministry in Western New York
Chapter 46 XXXIX. Redfield's "Most Splendid Mansion"
Chapter 47 XL. Ministry with B.T. Roberts in Buffalo, 1853
Chapter 48 XLI. The 1854-55 Burlington Revival
Chapter 49 XLII. Redfield's Second Marriage
Chapter 50 XLIII. Ministry in "The West"
Chapter 51 XLIV. Revival in Marengo and Woodstock, Illinois
Chapter 52 XLV. Ministry in Wisconsin
Chapter 53 XLVI. St. Louis, Missouri, 1858-59
Chapter 54 XLVII. Ministry in Illinois; Growing Controversy
Chapter 55 XLVIII. Return to St. Louis, 1860
Chapter 56 XLIX. Redfield's Stroke, Visions, and Decline
Chapter 57 L. Pentecost: God's Ideal for the Church
Chapter 58 LI. Entering into Jesus' Sufferings
Chapter 59 LII. Suffering and the Plan of Salvation
Chapter 60 LIII. Redfield Assesses Early Free Methodism
Chapter 61 LIV. The Bible versus Rationalism and Spiritualism
Chapter 62 LV. Methodism, Slavery, and the Civil War
Chapter 63 LVI. Last Things
Chapter 64 LVII. Final Return to Syracuse
Part 65 Bibliography
Part 66 Index
Dr. Snyder has done Methodist historians a great service with his meticulous editing of Redfield's entertaining, startlingly vivid autobiography.
— Methodist History
American revivalist Redfield resisted the creeping respectability as Methodists began building large churches with stained glass and organs and tolerating dancing, card playing, novel reading, and jewelry. His recollections reveal a particular position within the debate that wracked the denomination during the 19th century. Published in collaboration with the Center for the Study of World Christian Revitalization Movements, Asbury Theological Seminary.
— Reference and Research Book News, August 2006