The Wesleyan Holiness Movement

The Wesleyan Holiness Movement

Author: Charles Edwin Jones

Publisher:

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 1032

ISBN-13:

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The Wesleyan Holiness Movement began out of the teachings of John Wesley, who held that Christ's atonement provided sufficient grace for the believer to live in this world continually loving God and neighbor unconditionally, although the believer's expressions of that love would not be perfect. Since its founding, different movements have been spawned and have interpreted Wesley's doctrine in their own way. The two volumes presented here represent the first installation of a three-part series that greatly expands upon Charles Jones's landmark 1974 work. This work focuses on the Wesleyan Holiness Movement, while the third and fourth volumes have the Keswick Movement and the Holiness Pentecostal Movement as their focal points. This series provides materials for study of doctrine, worship, institutional development and personalities, as well as antecedent and related movements. It will serve to illustrate the history both of the Holiness Movement and the rural-urban transition in which it developed. Theological reconsiderations, realignments, and changes, as well as the nearly exponential growth of the Movement since the book's publication, make these new publications almost absolutely necessary. The guides retain all of the good and strong qualities exhibited in the first edition, and have strengthened them.


Spirit and Intellect

Spirit and Intellect

Author: Darius Salter

Publisher: Metuchen, N.J. : Scarecrow Press

Published: 1986

Total Pages: 298

ISBN-13:

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Investigates the life and thought of one of America's significant but neglected thinkers.


Canon and Criterion in Christian Theology

Canon and Criterion in Christian Theology

Author: William James Abraham

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 528

ISBN-13: 9780199250035

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This is a study of canon in the Christian tradition. Standard accounts locate the canonical heritage of the church within epistemology. The author explores the consquences of this move, from the Fathers to modern feminist theology.