The Protestant Interest: New England After PuritanismYale University Press, 2008 M10 1 - 224 páginas During the early eighteenth century, colonial New England witnessed the end of Puritanism and the emergence of a revivalist religious movement that culminated in the evangelical awakenings of the 1740s. This engrossing book explores the religious history of New England during the period and offers new reasons for this change in cultural identity.After England’s Glorious Revolution, says Thomas Kidd, New Englanders abandoned their previous hostility toward Britain, viewing it as the chosen leader in the Protestant fight against world Catholicism. They also imagined themselves part of an international Protestant community and replaced their Puritan beliefs with a revival-centered pan-Protestantism. Kidd discusses the rise of “the Protestant interest” and provides a compelling argument about the origins of both eighteenth-century revivalism and the global evangelical movement. |
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Página 7
... enemies . For instance , the General Court declared a fast on February 12 , 1690 , recommending " to the earnest Supplications of all that fear God , the common Interest of the Protestant Religion in the World , which hath so many ...
... enemies . For instance , the General Court declared a fast on February 12 , 1690 , recommending " to the earnest Supplications of all that fear God , the common Interest of the Protestant Religion in the World , which hath so many ...
Página 8
... enemies and the greatest enemies of Christ . The dissenters of New England feared the French more than anyone in the Atlantic world , for few natural boundaries would prevent the French and their Indian allies from swooping out of ...
... enemies and the greatest enemies of Christ . The dissenters of New England feared the French more than anyone in the Atlantic world , for few natural boundaries would prevent the French and their Indian allies from swooping out of ...
Página 11
... enemy with world Protestants in French and Spanish Catholicism , and had formally agreed to a dis- senting alliance with Presbyterian brethren in England . Though the Mather family would fight to preserve vestiges of it for some years ...
... enemy with world Protestants in French and Spanish Catholicism , and had formally agreed to a dis- senting alliance with Presbyterian brethren in England . Though the Mather family would fight to preserve vestiges of it for some years ...
Página 17
... enemy , but the wars of empire and the perceived and actual declining fortunes of the European Protes- tant community made the rising pan - Protestant cohort much less interested in combating other Protestants , especially if those ...
... enemy , but the wars of empire and the perceived and actual declining fortunes of the European Protes- tant community made the rising pan - Protestant cohort much less interested in combating other Protestants , especially if those ...
Página 20
... enemy in France and Roman Catholicism , combined with a belief that the Protestant kingship was the key to the preservation of New England's liberties , generated an immature but powerful form of British nationalism among lead- ing New ...
... enemy in France and Roman Catholicism , combined with a belief that the Protestant kingship was the key to the preservation of New England's liberties , generated an immature but powerful form of British nationalism among lead- ing New ...
Contenido
1 | |
29 | |
Let Hell and Rome Do Their Worst World News the Catholic Threat and International Protestantism | 51 |
Protestants Popery and Prognostications New England Almanacs | 74 |
The Devil and Father Rallee Narrating Father Rales War | 91 |
The Madness of the Jacobite Party Imagining a HighChurch Jacobite Threat | 115 |
The Dawning of that Sabbath of Rest Promised to the People of God Eschatology and Identity | 136 |
Epilogue | 167 |
Notes | 177 |
Index | 207 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Protestant Interest - New England After Puritanism Thomas S. Kidd Sin vista previa disponible - 2013 |
The Protestant Interest: New England After Puritanism Thomas S. Kidd Sin vista previa disponible - 2004 |
Términos y frases comunes
almanacs American Anglican Antichrist Ashurst Atlantic world Awakening became Benjamin Colman Boston News-Letter Brattle Britain British nation British Protestants Britons Camisard Catholic threat Catholicism Chapter Checkley Christ Christianity church Clough Colonial Congregational Conn controversy conversion Coram Cotton Mather cultural David David Bebbington dissenting establishment eighteenth-century empire enemies England Company English eschatological Europe evangelical faithful Father Rale's Glorious Revolution God's gospel helped New Englanders high churchmen high-church hope identity imagined Increase Mather Indians international Protestant Jacobite threat James Jesuits Jews John Jonathan Edwards Joseph Sewall King George kingdom leaders leading New Englanders letter London Lord Massachusetts ministers missionaries missions monarchy Monis New-England newspapers papists Parkman pastors persecuted political popery Popish pray prayer preached Presbyterian Protes Protestant interest Protestant succession Protestantism provincial Puritan Rale reformed Religion religious reported revival Robert Wodrow Roman Samuel Sewall sermon Shute Solomon Stoddard Stoddard Thomas Prince throne tion transatlantic true Wabanakis William York