This book lays out how the lessons of the dark past shaped a people’s religious quest for liberation and their long struggle for freedom, justice, and equality. The book bears witness to the stor…
Although evangelicals enjoyed repect and leadership in American society in the decades before the Civil War, their fortunes declined precipitately in the wake of the industrialism, modernism, and s…
This book is a follow-up to Thomas Bergler’s acclaimed work The Juvenilization of American Christianity, which documents how church youth ministries over the past several decades have contributed…
Mark Noll describes and interprets American Evangelical Christianity, utilising research by theologians, sociologists and political scientists, as well as the author's own historical interests, to …
Fundamentalism is the movement arising among Christians in the early 20th century who fervently defended the fundamental doctrines of Christianity while opposing modernist liberalism. In his Fundam…
The first theological school established in New England was born out of the cultural and spiritual conflicts which reached their high point of intensity at the close of the eighteenth century and d…
Out of Silence probes into particular religious expressions by presenting a description and analysis of the experiences of Asian American Christians of Chinese. Filipino, Japanese, and Korean ances…
Over the last thirty years African American voices and perspectives have become essential to the study of the various theological disciplines. Writing out of their particular position in the North …
Why do evangelicals care so much about Israel? How did this special relationship develop? What has it produced? Certain understandings of Bible prophecy have profoundly shaped the way evangelicals …
If you saw a missional church, what would it look like? Building on the ground laid by the book missional church, this book centers on case studies of nine missional congregations from across North…