Scarecrow Press / Cnt Sty World Christ Rev Mov
Pages: 350
978-1-4617-4834-2 • eBook • September 2006 • $44.50 • (£35.00)
John R. Tyson has served as Professor of Theology at Houghton College since 1979.
Boyd Schlenther, now retired, was formerly professor of ecclesiastical history at the University of Wales. He is the author of The Queen of the Methodists: The Countess of Huntingdon and the Eighteenth Century Crisis of Faith and Society (1997).
Part 1 Preface
Part 2 Endorsement
Part 3 Editor's Preface
Part 4 Chronology
Part 5 Abbreviations
Chapter 6 1. Introducing Lady Huntingdon
Chapter 7 2. Domestic Correspondence
Chapter 8 3. In the Midst of the Revival
Chapter 9 4. Lady Huntingdon's Preachers
Chapter 10 5. Lady Huntingdon's College
Chapter 11 6. Letters of Friendship and Counsel
Chapter 12 7. American Correspondence
Chapter 13 8. Steps Toward Separation
Chapter 14 9. Lady Huntingdon's Connection
Chapter 15 10. Lady Huntingdon's Last Days
Part 16 Appendix A: Preface to the Hymn Book of Lady Huntingdon's Connection
Part 17 Appendix B: Contents of Lady Huntingdon's Connectional Hymn Book
Part 18 Appendix C: Lady Huntingdon's Letters and Papers
Part 19 General Index
Part 20 About the Author
These studies are impressive works of scholarship, based upon painstaking research in the Countess's massive correspondence and other contemporary materials.
— 2008; New Perspectives on the Eighteenth Century
She corresponded with the Wesleys, George Washington, John Jay and African American poet Phillis Wheatley. She appointed chaplains and ran the business of nearly 70 chapels, operated an orphanage and established a seminary. The efforts of Selina Hastings, Countess of Huntington, were integral to all the eighteenth century revival movement and to Methodism in particular. In this collection, which begins as she is married and ends as she is dying, we read of her concerns for John Wesley's peace of mind, her substantial finances, and her ability to know which candlesticks were at which chapel awaiting the new preacher. We read her assessments of the Calvinism with which she is so closely associated, and the means by which she intends to illuminate all with it. Mostly, she informs us that women of the period could be capable and powerful as well as prayerful.
— Reference and Research Book News
• Winner, Saddlebag Selection of the Historical Society of the United Methodist Church 2007