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Methodist Church --- Bishops --- Appointment, call, and election --- History. --- Government --- 287 --- Christian sects --- Methodisten:--algemeen --- Bishops&delete& --- Appointment, call, and election&delete& --- History --- Government&delete& --- Methodist Church - United States - Bishops - Appointment, call, and election - History. --- Methodist Church - United States - Government - History.
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This is a study of the transplantation of a creed devised by and for African Americans--the African Methodist Episcopal Church--that was appropriated and transformed in a variety of South African contexts. Focusing on a transatlantic institution like the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the book studies the complex human and intellectual traffic that has bound African American and South African experience. It explores the development and growth of the African Methodist Episcopal Church both in South Africa and America, and the interaction between the two churches. This is a highly innovativ
Methodist Church --- Missions --- Christian missions --- Christianity --- Missions, Foreign --- Religion --- Theology, Practical --- Proselytizing --- Christian sects --- History. --- History --- African Methodist Episcopal Church --- Methodist Church (U.S.) --- British Methodist Episcopal Church --- A.M.E. Church --- AME Church --- A.M.E. --- AME --- A.M.E. (Bethel) Church --- AMEC --- Methodist Episcopal Church --- Methodist Episcopal Church, South --- Methodist Protestant Church (U.S. : 1830-1939) --- United Methodist Church (U.S.) --- Iglesia Metodista (U.S.) --- Methodist Church (United States) --- Methodist Church in the United States --- South Africa --- Church history.
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The 1919 World's Fair of Evangelical Americanism was used as a way to promote mission trips around the world. The fair functioned as a venue of exchange between the viewer and the viewed. On one level it educated visitors on the history of Methodist world missions. On another level it provided an opportunity to literally watch people from around the world in recreated native homes on the fairground pavilions. Visitors to the exposition could tour eight international pavilions and watch foreigners at work, cleaning up recreated homes, or simply eating native foods.
Methodist Church (U.S.) -- Missions -- Exhibitions -- History. --- Methodist Episcopal Church -- Missions -- Exhibitions -- History. --- Religion --- Philosophy & Religion --- Christianity --- Methodist Episcopal Church --- Methodist Church (U.S.) --- Missions --- Exhibitions --- History. --- Iglesia Metodista (U.S.) --- Methodist Church (United States) --- Methodist Church in the United States --- Methodist Episcopal Church, South --- Methodist Protestant Church (U.S. : 1830-1939) --- United Methodist Church (U.S.) --- Mi Kamni Kyohoe --- Puk Kamni Kyohoe --- Puk Kamnihoe --- Bischöfliche Methodistenkirche --- MEC --- Iglesia Metodista Episcopal
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Since the 2000 presidential election, debate over the role of religion in public life has followed a narrow course as pundits and politicians alike have focused on the influence wielded by conservative Christians. But what about more mainstream Christians? Here, Steven M. Tipton examines the political activities of Methodists and mainline churches in this groundbreaking investigation into a generation of denominational strife among church officials, lobbyists, and activists. The result is an unusually detailed and thoughtful account that upends common stereotypes while asking searching questions about the contested relationship between church and state. Documenting a wide range of reactions to two radically different events-the invasion of Iraq and the creation of the faith-based initiatives program-Tipton charts the new terrain of religious and moral argument under the Bush administration from Pat Robertson to Jim Wallis. He then turns to the case of the United Methodist Church, of which President Bush is a member, to uncover the twentieth-century history of their political advocacy, culminating in current threats to split the Church between liberal peace-and-justice activists and crusaders for evangelical renewal. Public Pulpits balances the firsthand drama of this internal account with a meditative exploration of the wider social impact that mainline churches have had in a time of diverging fortunes and diminished dreams of progress. An eminently fair-minded and ethically astute analysis of how churches keep moral issues alive in politics, Public Pulpits delves deep into mainline Protestant efforts to enlarge civic conscience and cast clearer light on the commonweal and offers a masterly overview of public religion in America.
Christianity and politics --- Methodist Church (U.S.) --- Methodist Episcopal Church --- Methodist Episcopal Church, South --- Methodist Protestant Church (U.S. : 1830-1939) --- United Methodist Church (U.S.) --- Iglesia Metodista (U.S.) --- Methodist Church (United States) --- Methodist Church in the United States --- religion, politics, christianity, methodists, mainline churches, moral majority, denominational strife, church and state, faith-based initiatives, iraq, invasion, war on terror, nonfiction, jim wallis, pat robertson, bush, united methodist, advocacy, political science, protestant, prophetic witness, good news movement, faith, freedom, civil liberties, ird, religious lobbies, ecumenical, interfaith, ecclesiology. --- God --- Methodism --- Methodist Churches --- Mainline Churches --- public life --- America --- the religious right --- Christian center --- Christian left --- United Methodist Church --- mainlen Protestantism --- mainline religious groups --- American culture --- American cultural history
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