516 resultados para Presbyterian
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The purpose of this thesis was to explore how Christian networks enable strategies of transnational alliance, whereby groups in different nations strive to strengthen one another’s leverage and credibility in order to resolve conflicts and elaborate new possibilities. This research does so by analyzing the case of the Presbyterian Church of Colombia (IPC). The project examines the historical development of the IPC from the initial missionary period of the 1850s until the present. Specifically, the purpose of the study was to consider how the historical struggle to articulate autonomy and equality vis-à-vis the U.S. Presbyterians (PCUSA) and paternalist models of ecclesial relations has affected recent political strategies pursued by the IPC. Despite the paternalism of the early missionary model, changing conceptions of social transformation during the 60s contributed to a shift in relations. Over time the IPC and PCUSA negotiated relationships in which groups both acknowledge a problematic history and insist upon an ethnic of partnership and respect. Today, PCUSA groups, in concert with the IPC, collaborate on a range of transnational political strategies aimed at strengthening the IPC’s leverage in local struggles for justice and peace. A review of this case suggests that long-established Christian networks may have an advantage over other civil society groups such as NGOs in facilitating strategies of transnational alliance. Although civil society organizations often have better access to important resources needed for international advocacy initiatives, Christian networks, such as the one established between the IPC and U.S. Presbyterian communities, rely on a history of negotiating power-disparity in order to elaborate relationships based on listening and partnership. Such findings prove important not only to how we conceptualize transnational alliance but also to the ways that we think about the history and future of Christian networks.
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Essa dissertação compara os processos de construção identitária das igrejas católica e presbiteriana e a socialização dos fiéis em cada uma delas para identificar a influência desses fatores nas atitudes de católicos e presbiterianos frente ao sincretismo religioso. A adesão à igreja católica é, via de regra, definida em termos da participação nos sacramentos. Nessa identidade sacramental preconiza-se o aspecto encantado e místico sobre o intelectual e a unidade dogmática tende a desempenhar um papel secundário. Contrariamente, no caso do protestantismo a identidade tende a ser definida em termos intelectuais, já que o critério para a participação é a confissão a reta doutrina tal como está definida nas confissões de fé. Além disso, as diferenças organizacionais entre as duas igrejas parecem interferir nesse processo de formação das identidades. A igreja católica, por concentrar em uma imensa unidade as diversas maneiras de se aderir a ela, pode ser classificada como uma organização de massas. Já a igreja presbiteriana mais parece uma organização de quadros, menor, mais inflexível à diversidade, ela doutrina seus quadros internamente através da Escola Bíblica Dominical. Para entender a sociabilidade e educação religiosa de cada igreja escolhi estudar dois grupos de preparação para rituais homólogos: a Crisma no caso católico e a Pública Profissão de Fé no caso presbiteriano. Ambos podem ser classificados como ritos de iniciação, pois dramatizam a passagem dos fiéis da infância para a maturidade espiritual.Uma vez adultos na fé, tanto católicos quanto presbiterianos, deveriam, segundo a visão institucional, repudiar ao sincretismo religioso, pois não se pode servir a dois senhores. Mas será que essa rejeição ao sincretismo de fato acontece? Se não, de que formas ele se manifesta entre católicos e presbiterianos? São essas as perguntas que pretendo responder.
An Address delivered in the Mercer Street Church at the funeral of the Hon. Benjamin Franklin Butler
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Address
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Address
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http://www.archive.org/details/thepoliticalprin00weicuoft
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http://www.archive.org/details/thesacrededict01kanguoft
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http://www.archive.org/details/conversionmaoris00macduoft
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http://www.archive.org/details/missionaryheroin00cooprich
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http://books.google.com/books?vid=OCLC09108077
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http://name.umdl.umich.edu/ABB4262
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http://www.archive.org/details/bibleworkinbible00birduoft
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http://www.archive.org/details/missionpima00amonrich
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In his presidential address to the Belfast meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1874, John Tyndall launched what David Livingstone has called a ‘frontal assault on teleology and Christian theism’. Using Tyndall's intervention as a starting point, this paper seeks to understand the attitudes of Presbyterians in the north of Ireland to science in the first three-quarters of the nineteenth century. The first section outlines some background, including the attitude of Presbyterians to science in the eighteenth century, the development of educational facilities in Ireland for the training of Presbyterian ministers, and the specific cultural and political circumstances in Ireland that influenced Presbyterian responses to science more generally. The next two sections examine two specific applications by Irish Presbyterians of the term ‘science’: first, the emergence of a distinctive Presbyterian theology of nature and the application of inductive scientific methodology to the study of theology, and second, the Presbyterian conviction that mind had ascendancy over matter which underpinned their commitment to the development of a science of the mind. The final two sections examine, in turn, the relationship between science and an eschatological reading of the signs of the times, and attitudes to Darwinian evolution in the fifteen years between the publication of The Origin of Species in 1859 and Tyndall's speech in 1874.
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Historians of Ireland have devoted considerable attention to the Presbyterian origins of modern Irish republicanism in the 1790s and their overwhelming support for the Union with Great Britain in the 1880s. On the one hand, it has been argued that conservative politics came to dominate nineteenth-century Presbyterianism in the form of Henry Cooke who combined conservative evangelical religion with support for the established order. On the other hand, historians have long acknowledged the continued importance of liberal and radical impulses amongst Presbyterians. Few historians of the nineteenth century have attempted to bring these two stories together and to describe the relationship between the religion and politics of Presbyterians along the lines suggested by scholars of Presbyterian radicalism in the last quarter of the eighteenth century. This article argues that a distinctive form of Presbyterian evangelicalism developed in the nineteenth century that sought to bring the denomination back to the theological and spiritual priorities of seventeenth-century Scottish and Irish Presbyterianism. By doing so, it encouraged many Presbyterians to get involved in movements for reform and liberal politics. Supporters of ‘Covenanter Politics’ utilised their denominational principles and traditions as the basis for political involvement and as a rhetoric of opposition to Anglican privilege and Catholic tyranny. These could be the prime cause of Presbyterian opposition to the infringement of their rights, such as the marriage controversy and the Disruption of the Church of Scotland in the early 1840s, and they could also be employed as a language of opposition in response to broader social and political developments, such as the demands for land reform stimulated by the agricultural depression that accompanied the Famine. Despite their opposition to ascendancy, however, the Covenanter Politics of Presbyterian Liberals predisposed them towards pan-protestant unionism against the threat of ‘Rome Rule’.
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During his forty-year curatorship of the Royal Dublin Society's botanical gardens in Glasnevin (1838–1879), David Moore undertook a number of excursions to continental Europe. These served to deepen the networks of plant exchange between Dublin and other botanical institutions and allowed him to examine the relationships between climate, plant survivability and societal development. This paper focuses on two trips taken in the 1860s to Scandinavia and Iberia and charts how Moore situated his experience of these places within a climatic hermeneutic. Moore's understanding of northern and southern Europe was organized around a set of judgments about their relative backwardness or advancement with respect to his experience of home and was seen through the lens of a moral climatology. Moreover, his Scots Presbyterian background and his commitment to natural theology informed his interpretation of the landscapes he encountered in his excursions across Europe.