The Protestant Evangelical Awakening
by
W. R. Ward
(Author)
ISBN-13:
978-0521892322
ISBN-10:
0521892325
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"...this book embodies scholarship of the very highest calibre and the historical narrative is presented in all its detail." American Studies
"This account of the Great Awakening is, in my judgement, a magisterial work. Its main achievement is that it provides an integrated account of the Great Awakening for the first time. In particular, by careful study and exposition of the links between continental pietism and North Atlantic revivalism, Professor Ward is able to show that the well-known meeting between the Wesleys and a group of Moravian Brethren while on ship to America, whilst in one sense an accident, was not some chance encounter between two different religious cultures, but a natural (and almost inevitable?) meeting....In short I regard this as one of the most significant books written on eighteenth-century religion. It will be a standard work of reference for years to come." David M. Thompson, University of Cambridge
"Ward's book is the only piece of scholarship, certainly in English and possibly in German, that examines the revival with any thoroughness in its international context. In this sense it is original in its conception; and as a work of reference, it meets a real need." Frederick Dreyer, Canadian Journal of History
"...consistently offers rich detail and sophisticated insight....Breadth, detail, exemplary scholarship, and especially discernment make The Protestant Evangelical Awakening a glowing achievement....The result is required reading for colonialists and religious historians...." Jon Butler, Journal of American History
"The Protestant Evangelical Awakening goes well beyond a colonial or Anglo-American examination of the mid-eighteenth century revivals by providing an authoritative overview of the rise of Protestant evangelicalism from the easternmost expanses of Europe to the frontiers of the American wilderness." Church History
"There is no doubt that Ward's book is a milestone in its field. His place o fthe earliest Anglo-American revival in the context of the mature European Awakening is a badly needed historiographical corrective." Journal of the Canadian Church Historical Society
"Ward's book is a significant achievement in scholarship investigating the transatlantic connections of Protestant piety and renewal....It stands nearly alnoe in English language publications on the topic....Ward's The Protestant Evangelical Awakening provides arousing reading." Jeff Bach, Brethren Life and Thought
"This account of the Great Awakening is, in my judgement, a magisterial work. Its main achievement is that it provides an integrated account of the Great Awakening for the first time. In particular, by careful study and exposition of the links between continental pietism and North Atlantic revivalism, Professor Ward is able to show that the well-known meeting between the Wesleys and a group of Moravian Brethren while on ship to America, whilst in one sense an accident, was not some chance encounter between two different religious cultures, but a natural (and almost inevitable?) meeting....In short I regard this as one of the most significant books written on eighteenth-century religion. It will be a standard work of reference for years to come." David M. Thompson, University of Cambridge
"Ward's book is the only piece of scholarship, certainly in English and possibly in German, that examines the revival with any thoroughness in its international context. In this sense it is original in its conception; and as a work of reference, it meets a real need." Frederick Dreyer, Canadian Journal of History
"...consistently offers rich detail and sophisticated insight....Breadth, detail, exemplary scholarship, and especially discernment make The Protestant Evangelical Awakening a glowing achievement....The result is required reading for colonialists and religious historians...." Jon Butler, Journal of American History
"The Protestant Evangelical Awakening goes well beyond a colonial or Anglo-American examination of the mid-eighteenth century revivals by providing an authoritative overview of the rise of Protestant evangelicalism from the easternmost expanses of Europe to the frontiers of the American wilderness." Church History
"There is no doubt that Ward's book is a milestone in its field. His place o fthe earliest Anglo-American revival in the context of the mature European Awakening is a badly needed historiographical corrective." Journal of the Canadian Church Historical Society
"Ward's book is a significant achievement in scholarship investigating the transatlantic connections of Protestant piety and renewal....It stands nearly alnoe in English language publications on the topic....Ward's The Protestant Evangelical Awakening provides arousing reading." Jeff Bach, Brethren Life and Thought
Book Description
This book studies the early history of the Protestant revival movements of the eighteenth century.
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Product details
- Publisher : Cambridge University Press (April 11, 2002)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 392 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0521892325
- ISBN-13 : 978-0521892322
- Item Weight : 1.38 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.98 x 0.97 x 8.98 inches
-
Best Sellers Rank:
#4,134,381 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #6,972 in Christianity (Books)
- #11,532 in History of Religions
- #20,063 in Protestantism
- Customer Reviews:
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Reviewed in the United States on May 3, 2015
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This book by Ward is a cornerstone of recent research into church history. This book is well researched, and contains much material that I have not seen elsewhere. Many of the well known modern authors on evangelicalism reference Ward. I thought Ward's bias against John Wesley showed in the later chapters though.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 12, 2001
This is a masterpiece by one of the great scholars of English Methodism!
W. R. Ward provides us with a comprehensive and sweeping examination of the context into which (and from which) early British Methodism emerged. One of the few Methodist scholars with a true command of the German language, Ward has gone to the roots of Continental Pietism and drawn out the social, religious, and political circumstances that led to the Continental influence upon the religious developments of 18th Century Britain. Ward skillfully avoids both understatement and overstatement when situating the early Methodists within the events and trends of their era. Balance is one of the great strengths of this book, in fact.
This work monumental in scope. It is a must-read for anyone seriously interested in Methodist scholarship. But it is not an easy read. This is not a book you pick up and browse through. It requires a concerted and determined 'plough through.' But, for those who dare to take on the challenge, the rewards far outweigh the pains involved.
Superb!
W. R. Ward provides us with a comprehensive and sweeping examination of the context into which (and from which) early British Methodism emerged. One of the few Methodist scholars with a true command of the German language, Ward has gone to the roots of Continental Pietism and drawn out the social, religious, and political circumstances that led to the Continental influence upon the religious developments of 18th Century Britain. Ward skillfully avoids both understatement and overstatement when situating the early Methodists within the events and trends of their era. Balance is one of the great strengths of this book, in fact.
This work monumental in scope. It is a must-read for anyone seriously interested in Methodist scholarship. But it is not an easy read. This is not a book you pick up and browse through. It requires a concerted and determined 'plough through.' But, for those who dare to take on the challenge, the rewards far outweigh the pains involved.
Superb!
7 people found this helpful
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