Academic literature on the topic 'And gospellers'

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Journal articles on the topic "And gospellers"

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Golo, Ben-Willie Kwaku. "Africa’s Poverty and Its Neo-Pentecostal “Liberators”: An Ecotheological Assessment of Africa’s Prosperity Gospellers." Pneuma 35, no. 3 (2013): 366–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700747-12341366.

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Abstract The preponderance of various forms of liberation-oriented gospels among Africa’s neo-Pentecostals, particularly prosperity “gospelling,” should not be surprising when one considers the contexts within which they emerge. However, their narrow focus on the accumulation of wealth and material things as that which liberates from poverty is rather bewildering. Drawing on data collected from neo-Pentecostals, this article examines the definition of prosperity and the theological basis for such teachings, probes the environmental sustainability of the narrow wealth-seeking attitudes of these prosperity gospellers, and examines the ecological adequacy of the theology of salvation upon which prosperity gospelling is founded. The article concludes that the option available to the prosperity gospellers is a quest for liberation from poverty that correlates with the Christian vision for both human welfare and the health of the natural world.
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Todd, Margo. "“An act of discretion”: Evangelical Conformity and the Puritan Dons." Albion 18, no. 4 (1986): 581–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4050131.

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In recent years, church historians have been paying increasing attention to the characters who populate that troublesome “middle ground” of the Elizabethan religious settlement. Neither doctrinaire conformists nor hot gospellers, these adherents of the “religion of protestants” have heretofore had their role in English history minimized simply because they did not fit neatly into the usual historiographic categories, and our view of Elizabethan and early Stuart religious history has thereby been simplified at the expense of accuracy. The orthodoxy now being established instead is that most English protestants in the decades before the Civil War found themselves nearer the middle than the ends of the religious spectrum. The religion of protestants turns out to be the religion of Chaderton and Hutton, Morton and Carleton, rather than that of Laud or of Ames.But now we face a new problem—what do we do with the middle? In particular, what do we do with the ultimate failure of the middle to keep the extremists from each other's throats? The fact of war still looms large on the Stuart horizon, and ending our accounts of the religion of protestants in 1603 or 1625 does not quite eliminate the problem of conflict to come. Where was the middle in 1640?
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Lucas, Scott. "“An Auncient Zelous Gospeller […] Desirous to Do Any Thing to Common Good”: Edward Whitchurch and the Reformist Cause in Marian and Elizabethan England." Reformation 21, no. 1 (2016): 47–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13574175.2016.1160567.

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Jacobs, Pierre. "The Social Gospel movement revisited: Consequences for the church." HTS Teologiese Studies / Theological Studies 71, no. 3 (2015). http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/hts.v71i3.3022.

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This article introduces South African churches to the reasons why elements of the late 19th and early 20th century Social Gospel movement encourages local churches to participate in their respective communities through social contribution. The article argues that the Social Gospellers understood Christian responsibility as an imperative of ‘participatio Jesu’ through social integration of living an ethos of oikoumenē. The history of the Social Gospel should be a relevant influence on mainline churches to understand the tension in the decision to participate or withdraw from social contribution today.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "And gospellers"

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Khalfani, Ajamu Donkor. "Seek ye first the co-operative economic kingdom, the radical social gospellers and the fight for a just society in Canada." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 2000. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape2/PQDD_0017/MQ53316.pdf.

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Books on the topic "And gospellers"

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Nangwaya, Ajamu Akinbiyi. Seek ye first the co-operative economic kingdom: The radical social gospellers and the fight for a just society in Canada. 2000.

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Seek ye first the co-operative economic kingdom: The radical social gospellers and the fight for a just society in Canada. National Library of Canada, 2000.

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Richardson, Kip. Gospels of Growth. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198798071.003.0016.

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This chapter examines one of the most visible institutional expressions of contemporary religious vitality, the American-style evangelical ‘megachurch’, which has proliferated globally since at least the 1970s—with the notable exception of the European continent. While it is tempting to attribute this disparity to a perceived mismatch between European cultural norms and the alleged ‘Americanness’ of the megachurch (i.e. the valorization of bigness, consumerism, and popular leisure aesthetics), there is an alternative historical explanation as well: the ‘gospel of growth’, a long-standing theological emphasis within American evangelicalism on the imperative need and divine sanction for strenuous evangelism and continual harvest of souls. Embraced by revivalists, social gospellers, fundamentalists, black evangelicals, pentecostals, Southern Baptists, and a host of others, the ‘gospel of growth’ outfitted many American evangelical subcultures with a characteristic emphasis on the importance of congregational size, an emphasis largely absent among their European evangelical counterparts.
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Manning, Anne. Passages in the Life of the Faire Gospeller, Mistress Anne Askew. HardPress, 2020.

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Book chapters on the topic "And gospellers"

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Garay, Kathleen. "Early English Translations from the “the fayre langage of Frenche”: William Caxton, Wynkyn de Worde and the Case of The gospelles of dystaues." In Texte, Codex & Contexte. Brepols Publishers, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.tcc-eb.3.1969.

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Mazheika, Hanna. "‘An Earnest Gospeller’ and ‘A Dignified Martyr’." In Social and Cultural Relations in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429262807-12.

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