Scarecrow Press / Cnt Sty World Christ Rev Mov
Pages: 224
978-0-8108-5983-8 • Hardback • June 2007 • $140.00 • (£108.00)
978-0-8108-5817-6 • Paperback • June 2007 • $84.00 • (£65.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
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Hans Schneider is professor of church history at the University of Marburg, Germany.
Part 1 Foreword
Part 2 Series Editor's Preface
Part 3 Translator's Note
Part 4 List of Abbreviations
Part 5 Part I: German Radican Pietism in the Seventeenth Century
Chapter 6 1 The Roots, Origin, and Terminology of Radical Pietism
Chapter 7 2 Outline of the Developments in the Seventeenth Century
Part 8 Part II: German Radical Pietism in the Eighteenth Century
Chapter 9 3 The Petersens and the Early Period of the Philadelphian Movement in Germany
Chapter 10 4 Reconciliation with the Church? Arnold-Horch-König
Chapter 11 5 The Separatists in Wittgenstein and in the Wetterau
Chapter 12 6 Divergent Expressions
Chapter 13 7 Berleburg and the Late Flowering of the Philadelphian Movement
Part 14 Part III: German Radical Pietism in Recent Research
Chapter 15 8 Historical Development of the Terminology Related to Pietism
Chapter 16 9 Two Interpretive Models and Their Implications for Radical Pietism Research: Hirsch and Schmidt
Chapter 17 10 Hirsch and Schmidt Reprise: Fundamental Problems, State of Research
Part 18 Bibliography
Part 19 Name Index
Part 20 Subject Index
Gerald MacDonald has made a significant contribution to the study of Christian history.
— Craig D. Atwood, Moravian Theological Seminary; Journal Of Moravian History
This translation is a most welcome addition to the growing scholarly literature available in English on this important topic. For newcomers to the study of Pietism and for scholars interested in the Pietist roots of the Brethren, Quaker, and Methodisttraditions, the bibliography alone is worth the price of the book....
— Religious Studies Review
Schneider (church history, U. of Marburg) tracks the development of German Pietism in the seventeenth century and its influence in the eighteenth on a number of leading thinkers in a range of reform movements within the Protestant contingent. He tracks pietism's geographical and theological shifts (his chapters on the Philadelphian movement in Germany are particularly interesting) and notes efforts at reconciliation with the mainstream, details splits and schisms, some of which depended on charismatic leaders, and describes new research that indicates there are two models of contemporary pietism based on the structures set by Hirsch and Schmidt.
— Reference and Research Book News
This translation is a most welcome addition to the growing scholarly literature available in English on this important topic.For newcomers to the study of Pietism and for scholars interested in the Pietist roots of the Brethren, Quaker, and Methodist traditions, the bibliography alone is worth the price of the book.
— Religious Studies Review