Conscience and Compromise: Forgotten Evangelicals of Nineteenth-Century Scotland (Studies in Evangelical History and Thought): Forgotten Evangelicals ... (Studies in Evangelical History & Thought)

Conscience and Compromise: Forgotten Evangelicals of Nineteenth-Century Scotland (Studies in Evangelical History and Thought): Forgotten Evangelicals ... (Studies in Evangelical History & Thought)

by Patricia Meldrum (Author)

Synopsis

The Scottish Episcopal Church in the nineteenth century was dominated by High Churchmen. But by around 1820, Evangelical clergy began to take up posts within its fold, particularly in the major Scottish cities, holiday centres and in places where wealthy patrons could supply funds necessary to sustain a church. The Evangelical newcomers reached a numerical peak from 1842 to 1854, when they accounted for around one in seven of all episcopal clergy in Scotland. They provided some of the most active and vibrant ministries in the country, notable for their work among the poor and in Sabbatarian, temperance and missionary endeavours. At the same time their private lives were marked by an attractiveness which belied some contemporary critics of Evangelicalism. The book explores the history of Evangelical Episcopalians in nineteenth-century Scotland. Doctrinal differences with the Scottish Episcopal Church particularly concerning evangelism eucharistic and baptismal thought are studied in detail against the background of the social history of this important group of churchmen.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 300
Publisher: Paternoster Press
Published: 01 Jan 2006

ISBN 10: 184227421X
ISBN 13: 9781842274217

Author Bio
Patricia Meldrum was educated at the Henrietta Barnett School, London, and went on to obtain an honours BSc from London University. She then worked for the Medical Research Council in Cambridge and as a teacher in Biology at the Cambridgeshire College of Arts and Technology. On moving to Edinburgh in 1969 she spent the ensuing years caring for her family and helping with a variety of children's activities, home groups, women's and missionary meetings and Alpha courses at St Thomas's Church in that city. In 1994 she gained an honours degree in Arts from the Open University which led to obtaining a PhD in History at Stirling University, the content of which forms the substance of this book.