Power, Authority, and the Anabaptist Tradition

Przednia okładka
Benjamin W. Redekop, Calvin Redekop
JHU Press, 10 maj 2001 - 246

Founded in part on a rejection of "worldly" power and the use of force, Anabaptism carried with it the promise of redemptive power. Yet the attempt to banish worldly power to the margins of the Christian community has been fraught with dilemmas, contradictions, and, at times, blatant abuses of authority. In this groundbreaking book, Benjamin W. Redekop, Calvin W. Redekop, and their coauthors draw on classic and contemporary thinking to confront the issue of power and authority in the Anabaptist-Mennonite community. From the power relationships of the sixteenth-century Peasants' War to issues of contemporary sexuality, the topics of Power, Authority, and the Anabaptist Tradition are sure to interest a wide audience.

Contributors: Stephen C. Ainlay, College of the Holy Cross ? J. Lawrence Burkholder, President Emeritus, Goshen College ? Lydia Neufeld Harder, Toronto School of Theology ? Joel Hartman, University of Missouri ? Jacob A. Loewen, missionary, retired ? Dorothy Yoder Nyce, Writer and former Assistant Professor, Goshen College ? Lynda Nyce, Bluffton College ? Wesley Prieb (deceased), former dean, Tabor College ? Benjamin W. Redekop, Kettering University ? Calvin W. Redekop, Conrad Grebel College, emeritus ? James M. Stayer, Queen's University, Ontario

-- Fred Kniss, Loyola University Chicago

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Informacje o autorze (2001)

Benjamin W. Redekop is an assistant professor of social science at Kettering University. Calvin W. Redekop is a professor of sociology emeritus at Conrad Grebel College, University of Waterloo, Ontario. His many books include The Old Colony Mennonites, Mennonite Society, Anabaptist-Mennonite Faith and Economics, and Mennonite Entrepreneurs, the last available from Johns Hopkins.

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