In the last two decades of the nineteenth century, a veritable explosion of narratives appeared detailing experiences of faith healing. Because these narratives were written as first-person testimonials to faith healing and published in religious journals, they have been neglected as a potential source for exploring late-Victorian perceptions of medical culture, health, and the body. An examination of Protestant healing testimonials and their relationship to the medical culture of North America between 1880 and 1910 indicates that faith healing was not isolated from broader social trends, nor was it a backward reaction. While medicine attempted to distance itself from religion, these personal narratives bridged the two realms, shaping a new...
Phenomena associated with the cults of the saints--petitions for healings, the exchange of gifts or ...
The incipient therapeutic movements of the late-Victorian and Progressive eras in the US are salient...
Nature of Word of Faith (WOF) teaching and practice of healing, in relation to incidence of divine h...
In the last two decades of the nineteenth century, a veritable explosion of narratives appeared deta...
This is the first study to examine how pastors lost authority over bodily healing in the nineteenth ...
How constructions of the body, gender, and social space informed the cultural practice of Protestant...
Practitioners of alternative medicine and spirituality often highlight narratives of healing as evid...
Thesis (Ph.D. (Church and Dogma History))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus in cooperatio...
The body and soul were intimately linked in early modern religious thought. This thesis examines one...
Focused on three different protestant communities - puritans, pietists, and Methodists - this essay ...
Recipient of the Frank S. and Elizabeth D. Brewer Prize of the American Society of Church History fo...
The basis of faith by which, cures are effected lies in the faith healer in whom the patient has con...
How did ordinary early modern Europeans regard health and sickness? How did they explain their illne...
Abstract: Predating monastic healthcare in the Middle Ages (Siraisi, 2019), spirituality and/or rel...
The practice of medicine was perceived as effective in the nineteenth century. It was the healing sy...
Phenomena associated with the cults of the saints--petitions for healings, the exchange of gifts or ...
The incipient therapeutic movements of the late-Victorian and Progressive eras in the US are salient...
Nature of Word of Faith (WOF) teaching and practice of healing, in relation to incidence of divine h...
In the last two decades of the nineteenth century, a veritable explosion of narratives appeared deta...
This is the first study to examine how pastors lost authority over bodily healing in the nineteenth ...
How constructions of the body, gender, and social space informed the cultural practice of Protestant...
Practitioners of alternative medicine and spirituality often highlight narratives of healing as evid...
Thesis (Ph.D. (Church and Dogma History))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus in cooperatio...
The body and soul were intimately linked in early modern religious thought. This thesis examines one...
Focused on three different protestant communities - puritans, pietists, and Methodists - this essay ...
Recipient of the Frank S. and Elizabeth D. Brewer Prize of the American Society of Church History fo...
The basis of faith by which, cures are effected lies in the faith healer in whom the patient has con...
How did ordinary early modern Europeans regard health and sickness? How did they explain their illne...
Abstract: Predating monastic healthcare in the Middle Ages (Siraisi, 2019), spirituality and/or rel...
The practice of medicine was perceived as effective in the nineteenth century. It was the healing sy...
Phenomena associated with the cults of the saints--petitions for healings, the exchange of gifts or ...
The incipient therapeutic movements of the late-Victorian and Progressive eras in the US are salient...
Nature of Word of Faith (WOF) teaching and practice of healing, in relation to incidence of divine h...