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Title: 9'0 Church History


1
9.0 Church History History of Christian Thought
2
9.1 General Bibliographic Indexes
  • 9.1.1 General Indexes
  • 9.1.1.1 Christian Periodical Index
  • 9.1.1.2 Religious Periodical Index One Two
  • 9.1.1.3 Catholic Periodical Literature Index
  • 9.1.1.4 Ephemerides Theologicae Lovanienses
  • 9.1.1.5 Philosopher's Index

3
9.1 General Bibliographic Indexes
  • 9.1.2 Special Indexes
  • 9.1.2.1 Mills, Watson E. Charismatic Religion in
    Modern Research A Bibliography. (1995).
  • 9.1.2.2 Jones, Charles Edwin. The Charismatic
    Movement A Guide to the Study of
    Neo-Pentecostalism with Emphasis on
    Anglo-American Sources. 1995.
  • 9.1.2.3 Jones, Charles Edwin. A Guide to the
    Study of the Holiness Movement. 1983.

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9.1 General Bibliographic Indexes
  • 9.1.2.4 Jones, Charles Edwin. A Guide to the
    Study of the Pentecostal Movement. 1983.
  • 9.1.2.5 Blumhofer, Edith L. Joel A. Carpenter.
    Twentieth-Century Evangelicalism A Guide to the
    Sources. 1990.
  • 9.1.2.6 Magnuson, Norris A. William G. Travis.
    American Evangelicalism An Annotated
    Bibliography. 1990.

5
9.1 General Bibliographic Indexes
  • 9.1.3 Journals
  • 9.1.3.1 Zeitschrift Für Kirchengeschichte.
  • 9.1.3.2 Second Century.
  • 9.1.3.3 Church History.
  • 9.1.3.4 Journal of Ecclesiastical History

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9.1 General Bibliographic Indexes
  • 9.1.3.5 Revue d'Histoire Ecclesiastique
  • 9.1.3.6 Calvin Theological Journal
  • 9.1.3.7 Journal of the Canadian Church Historical
    Society
  • 9.1.3.8 Pneuma

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9.1 General Bibliographic Indexes
  • 9.1.4 Dictionaries Encyclopedias
  • 9.1.4.1 Hastings, James, ed. Encyclopedia of
    Religion and Ethics. 12 vols. Reprint 1959.
  • 9.1.4.2 M'Clintock, John and Strong, James, eds.
    Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological, and
    Ecclesiastical Literature. 12 vols.

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9.1 General Bibliographic Indexes
  • 9.1.4.3 New Catholic Encyclopedia. 17 vols.
    (online)?
  • 9.1.4.4 Rahner, Karl, et al. Sacramentum Mundi
    An Encyclopedia of Theology. 6 vols.
  • 9.1.4.5 Cross, F. L. Oxford Dictionary of the
    Christian Church.
  • 9.1.4.6 History E-Book Project
    http//www.historyebook.org/index.html

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General Church History - Internet
  • 1. Hall of Church History http//www.gty.org/phi
    l/hall.htm
  • 2. The Saint Pachomius Library A First Draft
    for a Living Encyclopedia of Orthodox
    Christianity http//www.ocf.org/OrthodoxPage/read
    ing/St.Pachomius/
  • 3. Art History Resources on the Web
    http//witcombe.sbc.edu/ARTHLinks.html
  • 4. Hanover College Department of History
    http//history.hanover.edu/

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9.2 Early Church History Patristics
  • 9.2.1 Quasten, Johannes. Patrology. 4 vols.
  • 9.2.2 Di Berardino, Angelo. Encyclopedia of the
    Early Church. 2 vols. See http//www.lutterworth.c
    om/jamesclarke/jc/titles/eec.htm

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9.2 Early Church History Patristics
  • 9.2.3 Bauer,Walter. Orthodoxy and Heresy in
    Earliest Christianity.
  • 9.2.3 Frend,W.H.C. The Early Church.

18
9.2 Early Church History Patristics
  • 9.2.6 Frend, W.H.C. The Rise of Christianity.
  • 9.2.7 Ferguson, Everett. Encyclopedia of Early
    Christianity.
  • 9.2.8 Jonas, Hans.The Gnostic Religion.

19
9.2 Early Church History Patristics
  • 9.2.9 Kelly, J.N.D. Early Christian Creeds.
  • 9.2.10 Kelly, J.N.D. Early Christian Doctrines.
  • 9.2.11 Ware, Kallistos. The Orthodox Church

20
9.2 Internet Patristics
  • 1. The Tertullian Project http//www.tertullian.o
    rg/
  • 2. The Confessions of Augustine An Electronic
    Edition http//www.stoa.org/hippo/
  • 3. Ecclesiastical History List
    http//www.neiu.edu/ghsingle/ecc.htm
  • 4. Guide to Early Church Documents
    http//www.iclnet.org/pub/resources/christian-hist
    ory.html

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9.2 Internet Patristics
  • 5. The Saint Pachomius Library Global Index of
    Orthodox Patristic Texts http//www.ocf.org/Ortho
    doxPage/reading/St.Pachomius/globalindex.html
  • 6. Augustine of Hippo http//ccat.sas.upenn.edu/j
    od/augustine.html

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9.3 Medieval Church
  • 9.3.1 The Cambridge Medieval History. 2nd ed. 9
    vols.
  • 9.3.2 Dictionary of the Middle Ages. 13 vols.
  • 9.3.3 Cistercian Fathers Series. Kalamazoo, MI
    Cistercian Publications.
  • 9.3.4 The Classics of Western Spirituality A
    Library of the Great Spiritual Masters. Ramsay,
    NJ Paulist Press, 1978ff.

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9.3 Medieval Church
  • 9.3.5 The Fathers of the Church, Mediaeval
    Continuation. Edited by R. J. Deferrari, et al.
    Washington, DC CUA Press, 1989ff.

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9.3 Internet Medieval Church
  • 1. The Gregorian Chant Home Page
    http//silvertone.princeton.edu/chant_html/
  • 2. Internet Medieval Sourcebook
    http//www.fordham.edu/halsall/sbook.html (N.B.
    the Full Text Sources)?
  • 3. Historical Documents of the Church Writings
    of the Church Fathers http//www.gty.org/phil/wr
    itings.htm
  • 4. The Labyrinth Resources for Medieval
    Studies http//www.georgetown.edu/labyrinth/labyr
    inth-home.html

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9.3 Internet Medieval Church
  • 5. Internet Connection for Medieval Resources
    http//www.netserf.org/

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9.4 Reformation Post Reformation Europe
  • 9.4.1 Corpus Reformatorum. Edited by Karl G.
    Bretschneider, et al. 101 vols. Halle, Berlin,
    Leipzig, and Zurich, 1834-1962. Includes the
    complete works of Melanchthon (vols. l-28),
    Calvin (vols. 29-87), and Zwingli (vols. 88-101).
  • 9.4.2 Luther's Works.

39
9.4 Reformation Post Reformation Europe
  • 9.4.3 The Lutheran Reformation Sources,
    1500-1650 on Microfiche. Edited by W. S. Maltby.
    Leiden IDC Microform Publishers. Approximately
    1750 titles are projected for the series.
  • 9.4.4 The Comprehensive John Calvin Collection.
    Ages CD-Rom.
  • 9.4.5 The Reformation Period. Ages CD-Rom.

40
9.4 Internet - Reformation Post Reformation
Europe
  • 1. Project Wittenberg http//www.iclnet.org/pub/r
    esources/text/wittenberg/wittenberg-home.html
  • 2. Reformation Guide http//www.educ.msu.edu/home
    pages/laurence/reformation/index.htm

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9.5 American Church History
  • 9.5.1 Ahlstrom, Sydney. A Religious History of
    the American People. (1972)?
  • 9.5.2 Kuklick, Bruce. Churchmen and Philosophers
    from Jonathan Edwards to John Dewey. (1985) See
    Book Review http//theologytoday.ptsem.edu/jan198
    6/v42-4-bookreview11.htm
  • 9.5.3 Wilson, John and Mulder, John. Religion in
    American History Interpretive Essays. (1978)?

44
9.5 American Church History
  • 9.5.4 Sweet. W.W. Story of Religion in America.
    (1939)?
  • 9.5.5 Denominational Based Research
  • 9.5.6 The Use of Early Journals Newspapers.

45
9.5 Internet American Church History
  • Making of America http//moa.umdl.umich.edu/
  • MoA Books
  • MoA Journals

46
9.6 History of Christian Thought General
  • 9.6.1 Gonzalez, Justo L. A History of Christian
    Thought. (revised 1987) 3 vols.
  • 9.6.2 Harnack, Adolf von. History of Dogma.
    (trans. 1958) 7 vols.
  • 9.6.3 Pelikan, Jaroslav. The Christian Tradition
    A History of the Development of Doctrine.
    (1971-89) 5 vols.
  • 9.6.4 Seeberg, Reinhold. Text-Book of the History
    of Doctrines. (trans.1952) 2 vols. Logos

47
9.7 Early Christian Thought
  • 9.7.1 Chadwick, Henry. Early Christian Thought
    and the Classical Tradition. (1966)
  • 9.7.2 Danielou, Jean. The Development of
    Christian Doctrine Before the Council of Nicea.
    (trans.1964) Vol.1 The Theology of Jewish
    Christianity.
  • 9.7.3 Grillmeier, Aloys. From the Apostolic Age
    to Chalcedon. (trans. 1975, 1987) 2 vols.

48
9.7 Early Christian Thought
  • 9.7.4 Kelly, J.N.D. Early Christian Doctrines.
    rev. ed. (1978)?
  • 9.7.5 Pelikan, Jaroslav. The Emergence of the
    Catholic Tradition. (1971).
  • 9.7.6 TeSelle, Eugene. Augustine the Theologian.
    (1971)?

49
9.8 Theology of Western Medieval Christendom
  • 9.8.1 Fairweather, E.R. A Scholastic Miscellany
    Anselm to Ockham. (1956)?
  • 9.8.2 Ozment, Steven. The Age of Reform
    1250-1550. (1980)?
  • 9.8.3 Pelikan, Jaroslav. The Growth of Medieval
    Theology (600- 1300). (1978)?

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9.9 Theology of Eastern Christendom
  • 9.9.1 Meyendorff, John. Byzantine Theology
    Historical Trends and Doctrinal Themes. (1974)?
  • 9.9.2 Pelikan, Jaroslav. The Spirit of Eastern
    Christendom (600- 1700). (1974)?
  • 9.9.3 Ware, Kallistos. The Orthodox Church.
    (1964)?

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9.10 Reformation Counter-Reformation Theology
  • 9.10.1 Pelikan, Jaroslav. Reformation of Church
    and Dogma (1300-1700). (1983)?
  • 9.10.2 Luther Lutheranism
  • 9.10.2.1 Althaus, Paul. The Theology of Martin
    Luther. (trans. 1966)?
  • 9.10.2.2 Preus, Robert D. The Theology of
    Post-Reformation Lutheranism. (1970- 2) 2 vols.
  • 9.10.2.3 Schmid, Heinrich F.F. The Doctrinal
    Theology of the Evangelical Lutheran Church.
    (trans. 1899)?

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9.10 Reformation Counter-Reformation Theology
  • 9.10.3 Calvin Reformation Tradition
  • 9.10.3.1 Heppe, Heinrich. Reformed Dogmatics.
    (trans. 1950)?
  • 9.10.3.2 McNeill, John T. The History and
    Character of Calvinism. (1967)?
  • 9.10.3.3 Wallace, R.S. Calvin's Doctrine of the
    Word and Sacrament. (1953)?
  • 9.10.3.4 Wendel, Francois. Calvin The Origins
    and Development of his Religious Thought. (trans.
    1963)?

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9.10 Reformation Counter-Reformation Theology
  • 9.10.4 Radical Reformation
  • 9.10.4.1 Williams, George H. The Radical
    Reformation. (1962)?
  • 9.10.4.2 Williams, George H. Spiritual and
    Anabaptist Writers. (1957)?
  • 9.10.5 Catholic Counter Reformation
  • 9.10.5.1 Dickens, A.G. The Counter Reformation.
    (1969)?

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9.11 Theology in the Modern Period
  • 9.11.1 Barth, Karl. Protestant Theology in the
    Nineteenth Century. (trans. 1973)?
  • 9.11.2 Smart, Ninian et al, eds. Nineteenth
    Century Religious Thought in the West. (1985) 3
    vols.
  • 9.11.3 Welch, Claude. Protestant Theology in the
    Nineteenth Century. (1972, 1985) 2 vols.
  • 9.11.4 Macquarrie, John. Twentieth Century
    Religious Thought The Frontiers of Philosophy
    and Theology, 1900- 1980. (1981)?

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9.12 The Process of Analysis
  • 9.12.1 Topic
  • 9.12.2 Reading in Tertiary Secondary Sources
  • 9.12.3 Evaluating the Resources Materials
  • 9.12.3.1 Surveys
  • 9.12.3.2 Well documented materials
  • 9.12.3.3 Critical works of the original documents

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9.12 The Process of Analysis
  • 9.12.3.4 Archival versus critical analysis
  • 9.13 Note Taking
  • 9.14 From Notes to Outline

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9.13 The Argument
  • 9.13.1 The Four Elements of a Research Argument
  • Your answers constitute your argument. It should
    offer a claim, evidence or grounds that support
    it, something we call a warrant, a general
    principle that explains why you think your
    evidence is relevant to your claim,
    qualifications that make your claim and evidence
    more precise. Craft of Research, 89

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9.13 The Argument
  • ". . . your claim states what you want readers to
    believe
  • your evidence or grounds are the reasons they
    should believe it." Craft of Research, 90

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9.13 The Argument
  • "The warrant of an argument is its general
    principle, an assumption or premise that bridges
    the claim and its supporting evidence, connecting
    them into a logically related pair. Your warrant
    answers questions not about whether your evidence
    is accurate but about whether it is relevant to
    your claim or, to put it the other way around,
    whether your claim can be inferred from your
    evidence." Craft of Research, 90

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9.13 The Argument
  • "The fourth part of an argument consists of
    qualifications. Qualifications limit the
    certainty of your conclusions, stipulate the
    conditions in which your claim holds, address
    your readers potential objections, and when -
    not overdone - make you appear a judicious,
    cautious, thoughtful writer." Craft of Research,
    92

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9.13 The Argument
  • 9.13.2 Claims and Evidence
  • 9.13.2.1 "Your main claim is the heart of your
    report, the part that most fully reflects your
    personal contribution to your research. To hold
    up your end of the dialogue, that claim must meet
    the expectations of your readers. They expect it
    (as well as the subordinate claims that support
    it) to be substantive, contestable, and
    explicit." Craft of Research, 94

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9.13 The Argument
  • 9.13.2.2 Your claim is the heart of your paper,
    but most of the paper will be devoted to
    supporting evidence. If readers reject your
    supporting evidence because they think it is
    weak, it will fail one or more of six tests they
    will judge it not to be accurate, precise,
    sufficient, representative, authoritative, or
    perspicuous. (Readers may also reject evidence
    because it is irrelevant or inappropriate, but to
    test evidence by those two criteria you have to
    know more about warrants, which we discuss in the
    next chapter.) Craft of Research, 97

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9.13 The Argument
  • 9.13.2.3 Features of Contradictions Craft of
    Research, 107-110
  • Category Contradictions
  • Part-whole Contradictions
  • Internal development Contradictions
  • External Cause-effect Contradictions
  • Value Contradictions
  • Perspectival Contradictions

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9.13 The Argument
  • 9.13.3 Warrant
  • 9.13.3.1 To explain why your data are relevant,
    you may have to articulate an element of your
    argument that is often left tacit. It shows
    readers why any particular body of data should
    count as evidence in support of your claim. This
    connection between claim and evidence is your
    warrant. Craft of Research, 111

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9.13 The Argument
  • 9.13.3.2 But to qualify as a warrant, it must
    satisfy these three criteria
  • One part must describe the general kind of
    evidence you offer.
  • The other part must describe the general kind of
    claim that follows from the evidence.
  • It must state or imply a connection between them,
    such as cause-and-effect . . . ,
    one-as-a-sign-of-another. Craft of Research,
    113-114

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9.13 The Argument
  • 9.13.3.3 . . . justifiably reject claims that
    are poorly formulated or based on unreliable
    evidence. Even when your claim is clear and
    significant and your evidence reliable, they will
    still reject your argument if they think your
    warrant is false, unclear, the wrong kind for
    your research community, or if it does not
    validly admit your evidence. Craft of Research,
    115

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9.13 The Argument
  • 9.13.3.4 Kinds of Warrants Craft of Research,
    128-131
  • Warrants based on Empirical Experience
  • Warrants Based on Authority
  • Warrants Drawn from Prior Systems of Knowledge
    and Belief
  • General Cultural Warrants
  • Methodological Warrants
  • Articles of Faith

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9.13 The Argument
  • 9.13.4 Qualifications
  • 9.13.4.1 . . . four ways you may have to qualify
    your argument
  • Rebut mistaken objections to your evidence or
    warrants.
  • Concede objections that you cannot rebut.

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9.13 The Argument
  • Stipulate conditions that qualify your evidence
    or limit the application of your warrant.
  • Stipulate the degree of certainty of your
    evidence, warrant, or claim. Craft of Research,
    135

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9.13 The Argument
  • 9.13.5 Arguments Two Common pit-falls Craft of
    Research, 146-148
  • Inappropriate evidence
  • Comfortable simplicity
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