1st Edition

A Genetic History of New England Theology (Routledge Revivals)

By Frank Hugh Foster Copyright 1907
    588 Pages
    by Routledge

    588 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1907, this text provides a scientific treatment of New England theology and American dogmatic history. Frank Hugh Foster analyses the eighteenth-century rise of the school of New England theology, which became the dominant school of thought in New England congregationalism and, as argued by Foster, a ‘world phenomenon’. The chapters arise from readings of the various distinguished views of such contemporaries as Jonathan Edwards, Joseph Bellamy and Samuel Hopkins, placing them within the historical and theological context in which they developed. A fascinating and detailed title, this reissue will be of value to students of theology and Church history with a particular interest in the development of American religious thought.

    The Historical Background: Introduction;  1. The First Century in New England, 1620-1720;  Jonathan Edwards:  2. Edwards’ Earlier Labors  3. The Treatise on the Freedom of the Will  4. Edwards’ Remaining Metaphysical Treatises;  Edwards’ Contemporaries and Colaborers:  5. Joseph Bellamy  6. Samuel Hopkins  7. Hopkins’ System of Theology;  The Development School:  8. Eschatology and Atonement  9. The Development of the Theory in the Will;  The Great Controversies:  10. The Unitarian Controversy  11. The Universalist Controversy – Concluded  12. The Systems of Theology, 1800-1840;  The Ripened Product:  13. Nathaniel W. Taylor  14. The Later New Haven Theology  15. The New School in Presbyterianism  16. The Oberlin Theology  17. Edwards A. Park;  Conclusion

    Biography

    Frank Hugh Foster