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the Rise and Fall of Dispensationalism: How Evangelical Battle over End Times Shaped a Nation
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the Rise and Fall of Dispensationalism: How Evangelical Battle over End Times Shaped a Nation
Current price: $29.99
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Barnes and Noble
the Rise and Fall of Dispensationalism: How Evangelical Battle over End Times Shaped a Nation
Current price: $29.99
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A fascinating history of dispensationalism and its influence on popular culture, politics, and religion
In
The Rise and Fall of Dispensationalism
, Daniel G. Hummel illuminates how dispensationalism, despite often being dismissed as a fringe end-times theory, shaped Anglo-American evangelicalism and the larger American cultural imagination. Hummel locates dispensationalism’s origin in the writings of the nineteenth-century Protestant John Nelson Darby, who established many of the hallmarks of the movement, such as premillennialism and belief in the rapture. Though it consistently faced criticism, dispensationalism held populist, and briefly scholarly, appeal—visible in everything from turn-of-the-century revivalism to apocalyptic bestsellers of the 1970s to current internet conspiracy theories. Measured and irenic, Hummel objectively evaluates evangelicalism’s most resilient and contentious popular theology. As the first comprehensive intellectual-cultural history of its kind,
is a must-read for students and scholars of American religion.
In
The Rise and Fall of Dispensationalism
, Daniel G. Hummel illuminates how dispensationalism, despite often being dismissed as a fringe end-times theory, shaped Anglo-American evangelicalism and the larger American cultural imagination. Hummel locates dispensationalism’s origin in the writings of the nineteenth-century Protestant John Nelson Darby, who established many of the hallmarks of the movement, such as premillennialism and belief in the rapture. Though it consistently faced criticism, dispensationalism held populist, and briefly scholarly, appeal—visible in everything from turn-of-the-century revivalism to apocalyptic bestsellers of the 1970s to current internet conspiracy theories. Measured and irenic, Hummel objectively evaluates evangelicalism’s most resilient and contentious popular theology. As the first comprehensive intellectual-cultural history of its kind,
is a must-read for students and scholars of American religion.