A History of the Tennessee Baptist Convention

A History of the Tennessee Baptist Convention
Title A History of the Tennessee Baptist Convention PDF eBook
Author William Frederick Kendall
Publisher
Pages 392
Release 1974
Genre Baptists
ISBN

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Authorized and published by the Tennessee Baptist Convention to commemorate its centennial in 1974, this comprehensive volume relates the history of Southern Baptists in Tennessee from their beginnings two centuries ago to the present.

Proceedings of the ... Anniversary of the Tennessee Baptist Convention ...

Proceedings of the ... Anniversary of the Tennessee Baptist Convention ...
Title Proceedings of the ... Anniversary of the Tennessee Baptist Convention ... PDF eBook
Author Tennessee Baptist Convention
Publisher
Pages 1230
Release 1879
Genre Baptists
ISBN

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History of Middle Tennessee Baptists

History of Middle Tennessee Baptists
Title History of Middle Tennessee Baptists PDF eBook
Author J. H. Grime
Publisher
Pages 594
Release 1902
Genre Baptists
ISBN

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Fundamentalism, Fundraising, and the Transformation of the Southern Baptist Convention, 1919-1925

Fundamentalism, Fundraising, and the Transformation of the Southern Baptist Convention, 1919-1925
Title Fundamentalism, Fundraising, and the Transformation of the Southern Baptist Convention, 1919-1925 PDF eBook
Author Andrew Christopher Smith
Publisher America's Baptists
Pages 0
Release 2016
Genre Religion
ISBN 9781621902270

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Scholars and journalists have paid significant attention to the contemporary Fundamentalist tendencies of southern Protestantism. However, many studies neglect to consider how the Fundamentalist controversies that roiled the Baptists and Presbyterians of the North during the 1920s affected the Southern Baptist Convention schism of 1970-2000. Fundamentalism, Fundraising, and the Transformation of the Southern Baptist Convention, 1919-1925 explores the scope and character of the interaction between Southern Baptists and early Fundamentalism during the late 1910s and early 1920s. By focusing more closely on the Southern Baptist Convention, Andrew Christopher Smith examines the interaction between the northernFundamentalist movement and southern religion during the era. Though scholars agree that Fundamentalism is not native to the South, no book thus far has considered the effects of the Fundamentalist movement and how it influenced southern Protestant denominational organizations, independent of southern rejection of Fundamentalist-sponsored interdenominational evangelistic andeducational institutions. Smith proposes that Fundamentalist ideas, lingering in the atmosphere of the South after wafting there through hearsay, national religious periodicals, and the secular press,likely influenced Southern Baptist self-understanding during this critical period. Examining documentary evidence, Smith explains that following the First World War, Southern Baptists pushed toward bureaucratization. The "Seventy-Five Million Campaign," a fundraising and organization-building drive that the convention approved in 1919, was the denominational movement through which the selective appropriation of Fundamentalist ideas occurred. Exploring the interplay of Southern Baptist claims and northern Fundamentalist precepts, Smith fills a void in scholarly examination of early-twentieth-century Baptist history.

Inventory of the Church Archives of Florida

Inventory of the Church Archives of Florida
Title Inventory of the Church Archives of Florida PDF eBook
Author Florida Historical Records Survey
Publisher
Pages 188
Release 1939
Genre Baptists
ISBN

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A Matter of Conviction

A Matter of Conviction
Title A Matter of Conviction PDF eBook
Author Jerry Sutton
Publisher B&H Publishing Group
Pages 534
Release 2008
Genre Christian ethics
ISBN 0805447555

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The Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission (ERLC) is the public policy arm of America's largest Protestant denomination, the Southern Baptist Convention, and is dedicated to addressing social, moral, and ethical concerns, paying particular attention to their impact on U.S. families and their faith. A Matter of Conviction chronicles the history of the ERLC against the backdrop of "culture war" challenges that drive the larger movement of evangelical activism, from the organization's earliest days to its current activities under the leadership of conservative values champion Dr. Richard Land. Author and renowned pastor Jerry Sutton anchors his writing in the biblical mandate for cultural engagement, a biblical understanding of the relationship between church and society, and the rise of Baptist influence in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This heartfelt book will interest all who are passionate about preserving the Christian values upon which America was founded.

Baptist Battles

Baptist Battles
Title Baptist Battles PDF eBook
Author Nancy Tatom Ammerman
Publisher Rutgers University Press
Pages 410
Release 1990
Genre Religion
ISBN 9780813515571

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Since 1979 Southern Baptists have been noisily struggling to agree on symbols, beliefs, and practices as they attempt to make sense of their changing social world. Nancy Ammerman has carefully documented their struggle. She tells the story of the Baptist reversal from a moderate to a fundamentalist outlook and speculates on the future of the denomination. Ammerman places change among the Southern Baptists in the context of the cultural and economic changes that have transformed the South from its rural past into an urbanizing, culturally diverse region. Not only did the South change; Southern Baptists did as well. Reflecting this diversity, the Southern Baptist bureaucracy was relatively progressive. During the 1960s and 1970s, moderate sentiments prevailed, while fundamentalists remained on the margins. These two were, however, becoming increasingly divergent in what they considered important about being a Baptist, in their views about the Bible, in their attitudes on the origination of women, on Christian morals, and on national politics. Late in the 1970s, a fundamentalist coalition emerged, followed by unsuccessful efforts by moderates to oppose it. The battles escalated until 1985, when 45,000 Baptists gathered in Dallas to decide between contending presidential candidates. That dramatic event illustrated the extent to which organized political resources were determining the course of the conflict. Ammerman studies these strategies and resources as well. Examining how this tension affected Baptists, Ammerman begins with case studies of the change it is producing in Baptist agencies. But she also brings us back to the local churches and individual believers who are renegotiating their relationships within their denomination. She asks whether the denomination's polity can accommodate an increasingly diverse group of Baptists, of whether the only way dissidents can have a voice is through schism.