This thesis is the first study of 'Christian radicalism' in the Church of England between 1957 and 1970. Radicalism grew in influence from the late 1950s, and burst into the national conversation with John Robinson’s 1963 bestseller, Honest to God. Emboldened by this success, between 1963 and 1965 radical leaders hoped they might fundamentally reform the Church of England, even though they were aware of the diversity of their supporting constituency. Yet by 1970, following a controversial turn towards social justice issues in the late 1960s, the movement had largely reached the point of disintegration. The thesis offers five central arguments. First, radicalism was fundamentally driven by a narrative of epochal transition, which understood ...
This thesis considers the peak and decline of Sunday Schools in the twentieth century and the emerge...
This thesis analyses the social and political mobilisation of groups of conservative Christians in t...
This article argues that the myth of ‘the sexual revolution’, increasingly accepted in Britain's nat...
This thesis is the first study of 'Christian radicalism' in the Church of England between 1957 and 1...
This thesis is the first study of ‘Christian radicalism’ in the Church of England between 1957 and 1...
The thesis deals with Britainâs early Cold War history and the political history of the Church of En...
Religious developments in the later seventeenth century form, by common consent, a neglected phase o...
Social historians have long suspected that religious convictions made a difference in the sixteenth ...
This project examines the conservative evangelical response to 1960s era sexual revolution in order ...
This thesis seeks to show the acceptance of Christian Science, an American healing religion, in Brit...
Early nineteenth-century Great Britain witnessed the rise of numerous dissenting and nonconformist m...
The aim of the thesis is to demonstrate the operation of the three major sociological forces of Glob...
Reformation studies have been transformed since the ground-breaking research of Eamon Duffy and othe...
This thesis views the Catholic tendency in English Anglicanism within the context of its wider theol...
This thesis is a case study of two Church of England congregations in Kent. It describes and analyse...
This thesis considers the peak and decline of Sunday Schools in the twentieth century and the emerge...
This thesis analyses the social and political mobilisation of groups of conservative Christians in t...
This article argues that the myth of ‘the sexual revolution’, increasingly accepted in Britain's nat...
This thesis is the first study of 'Christian radicalism' in the Church of England between 1957 and 1...
This thesis is the first study of ‘Christian radicalism’ in the Church of England between 1957 and 1...
The thesis deals with Britainâs early Cold War history and the political history of the Church of En...
Religious developments in the later seventeenth century form, by common consent, a neglected phase o...
Social historians have long suspected that religious convictions made a difference in the sixteenth ...
This project examines the conservative evangelical response to 1960s era sexual revolution in order ...
This thesis seeks to show the acceptance of Christian Science, an American healing religion, in Brit...
Early nineteenth-century Great Britain witnessed the rise of numerous dissenting and nonconformist m...
The aim of the thesis is to demonstrate the operation of the three major sociological forces of Glob...
Reformation studies have been transformed since the ground-breaking research of Eamon Duffy and othe...
This thesis views the Catholic tendency in English Anglicanism within the context of its wider theol...
This thesis is a case study of two Church of England congregations in Kent. It describes and analyse...
This thesis considers the peak and decline of Sunday Schools in the twentieth century and the emerge...
This thesis analyses the social and political mobilisation of groups of conservative Christians in t...
This article argues that the myth of ‘the sexual revolution’, increasingly accepted in Britain's nat...