Introduction
Part One. Setting Out the Stall
1. Out of Ireland: John Nelson Darby, 1800-1837
2.The Emergence of Faith Missions: Baghdad and Beyond
3. Brethren in Christian Unity?
Part Two. Rightly Dividing
4. The Fretful Future
5. Red Mist Rising
6. A Very Dirty Winter
Part Three. Managing a Religious System
7. Boundary Walls and Corpse Contagion.
8. The (only) Church of God
9. Charisma and Responsibility
10. A Singular Social Universe
11. A Taut Ship is a Happy Ship?
Conclusion
Appendix: A Statement of Facts
Bibliography
Index
Donald Harman Akenson grew up in Minnesota, received his B.A. from Yale and his Ph.D. from Harvard, and is Douglas Professor of Canadian and Colonial History, Queen's University, Ontario. He has published several award-winning books on the history of Ireland and on the development of the Judeo-Christian tradition.
"Recommended." -- CHOICE
"Akenson's engaging style and appreciation of human foibles make
the story come alive. It helps that there is an interesting story
to tell and a fascinating, if not always attractive, cast of
characters." -- Andrew R. Holmes, Queen's University, Belfast,
American Historical Review
"Akenson's provocative portrayal of both John Nelson Darby and the
Plymouth Brethren gives readers much to chew on concerning the
sociological and cultic aspects of particular denominational
histories and the power politics that drive those histories.
Celebrity and power combine into a lethal combination that shape
the life of organizations. Akenson reminds organizations to be
aware of their possible need to curb their organizers." -- Joseph
T. Cochran,
Presbyterion: Covenant Seminary Review
"This captivating study explores the takeover and mobilization of
radical Protestants who embraced John Nelson Darby's dispensational
reading of the Bible and a novel doctrine of a secret-Rapture. With
vivid language and erudite analysis, Akenson succeeds in making the
movement's ecclesiology as fascinating as its eschatology,
disclosing the machinations that created a global network and
transformed 19th-century evangelicalism. To grasp the mindset and
tactics
of today's evangelicals, read this book."--Phyllis D. Airhart,
Professor of the History of Christianity, Emmanuel College,
University of Toronto
"A brilliant, deeply original study of transatlantic religious
history. Akenson reveals the complex dynamics and roots of
North-American evangelicalism, and he does so in a manner that is
both compelling and magnificently erudite. A major work on a major
topic." --Richard English, Professor of Politics, Queen's
University Belfast
"Focusing on the premillennial dispensationalism of John Nelson
Darby, Akenson presents a radical reappraisal of American
apocalyptical evangelicalism, from its origins in Ireland to its
entry through Canada to the northern states of the USA. This is
revisionist history in the best sense of the term. No one will ever
see American fundamentalism in quite the same way again."--David A.
Wilson, Professor of Celtic Studies and History, University of
Toronto, and
General Editor of the Dictionary of Canadian Biography
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