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The Origins Of Primitive Methodism Studies In Modern British Religious History Vol 33 Sandy Calder

  • SKU: BELL-48275900
The Origins Of Primitive Methodism Studies In Modern British Religious History Vol 33 Sandy Calder
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The Origins Of Primitive Methodism Studies In Modern British Religious History Vol 33 Sandy Calder instant download after payment.

Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
File Extension: PDF
File size: 7.39 MB
Pages: 317
Author: Sandy Calder
ISBN: 9781783270811, 1783270810
Language: English
Year: 2016
Volume: 33

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The Origins Of Primitive Methodism Studies In Modern British Religious History Vol 33 Sandy Calder by Sandy Calder 9781783270811, 1783270810 instant download after payment.

The Primitive Methodist Connexion's mature social character may have been working-class, but this did not reflect its social origins.

This book shows that while the Primitive Methodist Connexion's mature social character was working-class, this did not reflect its social origins. It was never the church of the working class, the great majority of whose churchgoers went elsewhere: rather it was the church whose commitment to its emotional witness was increasingly incompatible with middle-class pretensions. Sandy Calder shows that the Primitive Methodist Connexion was a religious movementled by a fairly prosperous elite of middle-class preachers and lay officials appealing to a respectable working-class constituency. This reality has been obscured by the movement's self-image as a persecuted community of humble Christians, an image crafted by Hugh Bourne, and accepted by later historians, whether Methodists with a denominational agenda to promote or scholars in search of working-class radicals. Primitive Methodists exaggerated their hardships and deliberately under-played their social status and financial success. Primitive Methodism in the later nineteenth and early twentieth centuries became the victim of its own founding mythology, because the legend of a community of persecuted outcasts, concealing its actual respectability, deterred potential recruits.

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