1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910828784603321

Autore

Hope Nicholas

Titolo

German and Scandinavian Protestantism, 1700-1918 / / Nicholas Hope

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Oxford, : Clarendon Press

New York, : Oxford University Press, c1995

ISBN

0-19-152057-8

0-19-826923-4

1-282-05219-5

9786612052194

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (xxvii, 685 pages) : maps

Collana

Oxford history of the Christian Church

Disciplina

280/.4/094309033

Soggetti

Lutheran Church - Germany - History

Lutheran Church - Scandinavia - History

Protestant churches - Germany - History

Protestant churches - Scandinavia - History

Germany Church history 18th century

Germany Church history 19th century

Germany Church history 20th century

Scandinavia Church history 18th century

Scandinavia Church history 19th century

Scandinavia Church history 20th century

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references (p. [612]-668) and index.

Nota di contenuto

Preface; Contents; List of Maps and Tables; Abbreviations; A Simple Chronology; Part I. Consolidation Of Reformation Church Order and the Continuance Of Reform; 1. Hard Times; i. Prayer as Remembrance and Comfort; ii. An Unsettled Extended Family of Reformation Church Orders; iii. The Rite of Public Worship; 2. Consolidation of a Protestant Canon of Prayer; i. Prayer as the Practice of Piety; ii. Printers and Editions; iii. Reception of Anglican and Puritan Spirituality; 3. Parish Crisis in a Credulous World; i. The Baltic Region; ii. Divine Intervention; iii. Customary Observance



iv. Propagation of the Gospel; 4. The Political Parish and 1648; i. A Blind Official Eye to Parish Convention; ii. The Home Parish and Simultaneous Arrangements; 5. Government of the Church-State; i. From Custodian to Sovereign; ii. Absolutism and the Governance of a Reformation Church; iii. Jus publicum and Jus ecclesiasticum protestantium; 6. The Clergy; i. A Training in Theology; ii. Lutheran 'Orthodoxy' Fashioned by Hallesian Pietism and a German University Reformation of Manners c.1690-1730; iii. Training; iv. Background; 7. Cura Animarum Specialis: The Pastoral Office

i. The Practice of Piety; ii. Anglican, Puritan, and Dutch Reformed Influence; iii. Philipp Jakob Spener (1635-1705) and August Hermann Francke (1663-1727); 8. Reform; i. Visitation; ii. Land and People, Propagation of the Gospel, and a Reformation of Manners; iii. Pietism as a Post-War Official Programme; iv. The Catholic Christian Year in Church and Home; v. A New Interest in the Shape of the Liturgy; vi. Church Architecture: From Latin Choir to Congregational Nave; vii. Church Music: From Gregorian to Ambrosian; 9. Towards an Apostolic Congregation in Church and Home; i. Spirituality

ii. A Plain Person's Daily Devotional Exercise: Halle and Württemberg; iii. Denmark-Norway and Sweden-Finland; iv. Homiletic Reform; v. Hymns; Part II. Piety, Enlightenment? Religious Awakening, Rediscovery (c.1763-1918); Introduction; 10. The Larger Whole; 11. Herrnhut; i. Etiquette and Experiment; ii. After 1750; 12. The Parish and the Office of the Clergy; i. The Unchanging Historic Parish; ii. The Lutheran Office Revisited; 13. Liturgical Reform: The End of the Established Church; i. A Modern Liturgy?; ii. Suitable Liturgical Music?; iii. A Modern Sermon?; iv. Renovation of Churches

v. End of the Established Church: Denmark-(Norway), Sweden-(Finland), Prussia; 14. A Constitutional Reformation Church Order?; i. New Boundaries and Parishioners; ii. The Reformation Family of Church Orders Reshaped; iii. Sweden, Prussia, and Bavaria; 15. Awakening; i. Pastoral Failure; ii. Preaching and Prayer; iii. Timing and Geography; 16. Charity; i. The Gradual End of Home-Parish Benevolence; ii. A Mix of Enlightened and Moravian Charity; iii. Saving Children; iv. Diacony; v. Innere Mission; 17. Rediscovery; i. Partial Rediscovery of the Lutheran Sung Liturgy; ii. Reformation Hymns and Bach's Choral Works

Sommario/riassunto

Dealing with the early modern period from 1700 right through to the end of the First World War, and the beginning of a radically altered Europe, this is a full history of the Lutheran church in Germany and Scandinavia.