Papers from the Baptist Historical Society Conference, Prague, Czech Republic, July 2008
1. Conscience and Dissent in a Believers’ Church: Renewing Baptist Global Identity – Bill J. Leonard
2. Renewing the Vision: History for the Health of the Church – Catriona Gorton
3. Baptists and Fellowship: Praxis in Search of Theology – Mark Hopkins
4. A Particular View of the World: Evangelism in the Thought of Benjamin KEach (1640-1704) – Jonathan W. Arnold
5. ‘Rousing the Attention of Christians’: Scottish Baptists and the Baptist Missionary Society prior to the Twentieth Century – Brian Talbot
6. What About the Widows? An Appeal to Nineteenth-Century Baptist Women – Karen Smith
7. ‘Working women make happy homes’: Marianne Faringham and the Role of Women in the Late Nineteenth Century – Linda Hopkins
8. Modern Implications of John Clifford’s Theological Understanding of Socialism – Matthew Tennant
9. ‘Against the Tide’: Episodes Highlighting the Situation of Religious Freedom for Baptists in Central and Eastern Europe, 1908-2008 – Tony Peck
10. Re-Evaluating Baptist Mission in the Baltics – Toivo Pilli
11. Baptist-Anabaptist Identity Amongst European Baptists since the 1950s – Ian M. Randall
12. God’s ‘Moses’ for Pentecostalism: A Study of a Baptist Pastor, Joseph Smale (1867-1926) – Timothy B. Welch
13. The Era of British Pre-Eminence in the Baptist World Alliance – Richard V. Pierard
14. From Mission to Church: The Foundation and Expansion of The Evangelical Baptist Church in Angola – Jim Grenfell
15. On Baptist Identity in the Southern Hemisphere: Narrative Reflections on Similarity and Diversity within the Baptist Vision – Brian Harris
16. The 2008 New Baptist Covenant Celebration through Seminarians’ Eyes – William Loyd Allen and Bailey Edwards Nelson
Filed under: 20th century, anabaptism, baptist historians, baptist quarterly, benjamin keach, european baptists, John Clifford, Marianne Faringham, scottish baptists, women | Comments Off on Baptists and the World: Renewing the Vision edited by John H. Y. Briggs and Anthony R. Cross (Centre for Baptist History and Heritage Vol 8; Regent’s Park College, 2011)