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OverviewWesley and the Wesleyans challenges the cherished myth that at the moment when the Enlightenment and the Industrial Revolution were threatening the soul of eighteenth-century England, an evangelical revival - led by the Wesleys - saved it. It will interest anyone concerned with the history of Methodism and the Church of England, the Evangelical tradition, and eighteenth-century religious thought and experience. The book starts from the assumption that there was no large-scale religious revival during the eighteenth century. Instead, the role of what is called 'primary religion' - the normal human search for ways of drawing supernatural power into the private life of the individual - is analysed in terms of the emergence of the Wesleyan societies from the Church of England. The Wesleys' achievements are reassessed; there is fresh, unsentimental description of the role of women in the movement, and an unexpectedly sympathetic picture emerges of Hanoverian Anglicanism. Full Product DetailsAuthor: John Kent (University of Bristol)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press (Virtual Publishing) ISBN: 9780511841101ISBN 10: 0511841108 Publication Date: 05 June 2012 Audience: General/trade , College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , General , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Undefined Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of Contents1. The Protestant recovery; 2. Early Wesleyanism, 1740–70; 3. Later Wesleyanism, 1770–1800; 4. Women in Wesleyanism; 5. Anglican responses; 6. Conclusions.Reviews'Professor Kent provides sharply critical yet sympathetic (or at least understanding) portraits of Wesley, Wesleyans, and the place of what he helpfully calls primary religion, and there are deftly drawn relationships with Quakers, Dissent, and especially with Anglicanism. It is an important book.' Clyde Binfield, University of Sheffield 'A book which is certainly worth reading, and one that would serve as a provocative introduction to Wesley and Wesleyanism for students and other intelligent readers. Readable and stimulating.' David Hempton, Boston University '… Kent's book is a modern statement of the from sect to denomination story… Was Wesley as cut off from the center of society as Dr Kent argues? The questions pile up and if a book stimulates debate, I for one take it seriously and commend it.' Methodist Recorder 'A well-argued book, especially in its analysis of the early Methodist people and the contemporary Anglicans who rejected Wesley's holiness teaching from both the liberal and evangelical wings.' John Munsey Turner, Methodist Recorder 'Professor Kent's study is incisive.' James Munson, Contemporary Review 'An important and provocative reassessment of both early Methodism and its Anglican context.' John Wolffe, Church Times '… an original, stimulating and provocative treatment.' Henry D. Rack, Expository Times '… this is a stimulating … book …' Proceedings of the Wesley Historical Society '… a good, lively and interesting read'. Reviews in Religion and Theology 'Wesley and the Wesleyans offers a bracing and elegantly written antidote to tercentenary hype.' Epworth Review '… a fascinating book which provides some profoundly interesting insights into both Wesley and the Wesleyans and also the Hanoverian established church.' European Journal of Theology 'For anyone interested in the role of religion in public life, Wesley and the Wesleyans provokes timely thought.' Scottish Journal of Theology 'Professor Kent provides sharply critical yet sympathetic (or at least understanding) portraits of Wesley, Wesleyans, and the place of what he helpfully calls primary religion, and there are deftly drawn relationships with Quakers, Dissent, and especially with Anglicanism. It is an important book.' Clyde Binfield, University of Sheffield 'A book which is certainly worth reading, and one that would serve as a provocative introduction to Wesley and Wesleyanism for students and other intelligent readers. Readable and stimulating.' David Hempton, Boston University '... Kent's book is a modern statement of the from sect to denomination story... Was Wesley as cut off from the center of society as Dr Kent argues? The questions pile up and if a book stimulates debate, I for one take it seriously and commend it.' Methodist Recorder 'A well-argued book, especially in its analysis of the early Methodist people and the contemporary Anglicans who rejected Wesley's holiness teaching from both the liberal and evangelical wings.' John Munsey Turner, Methodist Recorder 'Professor Kent's study is incisive.' James Munson, Contemporary Review 'An important and provocative reassessment of both early Methodism and its Anglican context.' John Wolffe, Church Times '... an original, stimulating and provocative treatment.' Henry D. Rack, Expository Times '... this is a stimulating ... book ...' Proceedings of the Wesley Historical Society '... a good, lively and interesting read'. Reviews in Religion and Theology 'Wesley and the Wesleyans offers a bracing and elegantly written antidote to tercentenary hype.' Epworth Review '... a fascinating book which provides some profoundly interesting insights into both Wesley and the Wesleyans and also the Hanoverian established church.' European Journal of Theology 'For anyone interested in the role of religion in public life, Wesley and the Wesleyans provokes timely thought.' Scottish Journal of Theology What John Kent has achieved is to provide a different emphasis which allows us to see the religious movement Wesley created in a new light. This eminent historian of British religion has produced a slim, provocative book which will probably spur further debate as well as becoming a key text on reading lists everywhere. [T]his is an excellent little book which will create debate among scholars and spark interest in students. Susan Mumm, The Open University, Canadian Journal of History ...it certainly should be read by everyone who has an interest in the scholarly interpretive issues surrounding the Wesleyan movement. Albion The analysis is Kent's book is very broad, encompassing, for instance, the writings of Thomas Hobbes as well as the novelists of Wesley's day. Above all, Wesley and the Wesleyans is fresh and suggestive, because it challenges all existing interpretations of the rise of Methodism...[this work is] always vibrantly opinionated. Books & Culture ...provocative and interesting... Cithara The book concludes with an interesting chapter on the role of women in Wesleyanism and another that describes the hostility of the church of England. Kent has provided readers with a stimulating and insightful account of 18th-century Wesleyanism. Recommended. Choice 'Professor Kent provides sharply critical yet sympathetic (or at least understanding) portraits of Wesley, Wesleyans, and the place of what he helpfully calls primary religion, and there are deftly drawn relationships with Quakers, Dissent, and especially with Anglicanism. It is an important book.' Clyde Binfield, University of Sheffield 'A book which is certainly worth reading, and one that would serve as a provocative introduction to Wesley and Wesleyanism for students and other intelligent readers. Readable and stimulating.' David Hempton, Boston University '... Kent's book is a modern statement of the from sect to denomination story... Was Wesley as cut off from the center of society as Dr Kent argues? The questions pile up and if a book stimulates debate, I for one take it seriously and commend it.' Methodist Recorder 'A well-argued book, especially in its analysis of the early Methodist people and the contemporary Anglicans who rejected Wesley's holiness teaching from both the liberal and evangelical wings.' John Munsey Turner, Methodist Recorder 'Professor Kent's study is incisive.' James Munson, Contemporary Review 'An important and provocative reassessment of both early Methodism and its Anglican context.' John Wolffe, Church Times '... an original, stimulating and provocative treatment.' Henry D. Rack, Expository Times '... this is a stimulating ... book ...' Proceedings of the Wesley Historical Society '... a good, lively and interesting read'. Reviews in Religion and Theology 'Wesley and the Wesleyans offers a bracing and elegantly written antidote to tercentenary hype.' Epworth Review '... a fascinating book which provides some profoundly interesting insights into both Wesley and the Wesleyans and also the Hanoverian established church.' European Journal of Theology 'For anyone interested in the role of religion in public life, Wesley and the Wesleyans provokes timely thought.' Scottish Journal of Theology Author InformationJohn Kent is Emeritus Professor of Theology, University of Bristol. His many publications include Holding the Fort: Studies in Victorian Revivalism (1978), The End of the Line?: The Development of Theology since 1700 (1982), The Unacceptable Face: The Modern Historian and the Church (1987) and William Temple: Church, State and Society in Britain, 1880–1950 (1993). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |