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A Long Road: How Quakers Made Sense of God and the Bible

A Long Road: How Quakers Made Sense of God and the Bible - Paperback

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Availability:In StockContributor:T. Vail Palmer, Darryl Brown (Cover Design by)Publish date:2018-01-01Pages:312
Language:EnglishPublisher:Barclay PressISBN-13:9781594980428ISBN-10:159498042XUPC:9781594980428Book Category:ReligionBook Subcategory:Christianity, TheologyBook Topic:QuakerSize:9.00 x 6.00 x 0.70 inchesWeight:1.0119Product ID:SCQS4RZWWW

By the beginning of the nineteenth century, the effort to keep outside influences from impacting Quaker spirituality was clearly failing. Many Friends were impressed by the Enlightenment emphasis on reason in religion and commitment to religious and political freedom. Many others were caught up in Evangelical enthusiasm and commitment to social justice.

The result was a series of separations and divisions--Quakers disagreed about the nature of God, the atonement, and the function of scripture.

A long, rocky, even muddy road.

This is not the first time the story has been told. We find in the contemporary splits of one yearly meeting after another, the underlying issues are the same as they have always been. After all, the story of Quakerism is a story of divisions. It is also a story of creativity. And of hope.

Significant, original contributions by Quaker scholars to our understanding of the Bible suggest that there has always been tremendous vitality at the heart of Quakerism--a vitality that supports the claim that the Quaker vision is indeed a restoration of the earliest Christian vision.

Language:EnglishPublisher:Barclay PressISBN-13:9781594980428ISBN-10:159498042XUPC:9781594980428Book Category:ReligionBook Subcategory:Christianity, TheologyBook Topic:QuakerSize:9.00 x 6.00 x 0.70 inchesWeight:1.0119Product ID:SCQS4RZWWW
Palmer, T. Vail: - T. Vail Palmer, Jr. grew up as a member of Concord (Pennsylvania) Meeting, received his BA in philosophy and mathematics from the University of Pennsylvania and his PhD in ethics and society from University of Chicago's Divinity School. Palmer spent time at Oberlin College's Graduate School of Theology and held a postdoctoral T. Wistar Brown Fellowship in Quaker studies at Haverford College. He is a former editor of Quaker Religious Thought. Palmer has been recorded as a minister by yearly meetings in Friends United Meeting, Friends General Conference, and Evangelical Friends Church International. He is a member of Freedom Friends Church (unaffiliated), Salem, Oregon. Palmer is married to Izzy Covalt. Between them they share eight children and thirty-some grandchildren and great grandchildren. He and Izzy live in Albany, Oregon.
Publisher: Barclay Press

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