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            ready to become the most prominent form of global   Bouyer, L. (2001). The spirit and forms of Protestantism. San Francisco,
            Protestantism as the European churches declined in    CA: Sceptre.
                                                                Brauer, J. C. (1965). Protestantism in  America. Philadelphia:
            numbers and significance.                              Westminster.
                                                                Brown, R. M. (1961). The spirit of Protestantism. New York: Oxford Uni-
                                                                  versity Press.
            The End of One Millennium,
                                                                Cragg, G. R. (1960). The Church in the age of reason. Grand Rapids: MI:
            the Beginning of Another                              Eerdmans.
            Through centuries, Protestantism developed many schools  Curtis, C. J. (1970). Contemporary Protestant thought. New York: Bruce.
                                                                Dillenberger, J., & Welch, C. (1954). Protestant Christianity interpreted
            of theology, not least impressively in the twentieth cen-  through its development. New York: Scribner’s.
            tury, long after many cultural observers had expected such  Drummond, A. L. (1951). German Protestantism since Luther. London:
                                                                  Epworth.
            fresh flowerings in a secular world. These schools re-
                                                                Flew, R. N., & Davies, R. E. (Eds.). (1950). The Catholicity of Protes-
            flected the dominant philosophies of the day, as their  tantism. London: Lutterworth.
            ancestral versions had done during periods characterized  Forell, G. (1960). The Protestant spirit. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-
                                                                  Hall.
            by idealism and the Enlightenment, for example. In the  Greengrass, M. (1987). The French Reformation. London: Blackwell.
            same way existentialism, language philosophies, phe-  Groh, J. E. (1982). Nineteenth century German Protestantism:
                                                                  The church as a social model. Washington, DC: University Press of
            nomenology, and other philosophies inspired Protestant
                                                                  America.
            thinkers, usually in university settings, to rework biblical  Halverson, M., & Cohen, A. A. (Eds.). (1958). A handbook of Christian
            and historic evangelical motifs to meet new challenges.  theology: Definition essays on concepts and movements of thought in
                                                                  contemporary Protestantism. New York: Meridian.
            These included coming to terms with whatever industrial-  Hastings, A. (1976). African Christianity. London: Continuum.
            ization, urbanism, globalization, and humanistic crises  Hastings, A. (1991). A history of English Christianity 1920–1990.
                                                                  Philadelphia: Trinity Press.
            brought to people’s lives. Far from fading, as it seemed
                                                                Heim, K. (1963). The nature of Protestantism. Philadelphia: Fortress.
            to be doing in its own heartland, Protestantism in the  Heron, A. (1980). A century of Protestant theology. Philadelphia:
            early twenty-first century represents a confusing, explo-  Fortress.
                                                                Kerr, H.T. (1950). Positive Protestantism. Philadelphia: Westminster.
            sive, adaptive force in secular and religiously pluralistic  Léonard, E. (1966, 1967). A history of Protestantism (Vols. 1–2). Lon-
            settings. Hard-line reactive Protestant fundamentalists  don: Nelson.
                                                                Marty, M. E. (1972). Protestantism. New York: Holt.
            resist adaptations, but their leaders manifest an ability
                                                                Nichols, J. H. (1947). Primer for Protestants. New York: Association
            to engage in invention on the ever-changing front of  Press.
            Protestantism.                                      Pauck,W. (1950). The heritage of the Reformation. Boston: Beacon.
                                                                Rupp, G. (1986). Religion in England, 1688–1791. Oxford, UK: Oxford
                                                                  University Press.
                                              Martin E. Marty
                                                                Tillich, P. (1951). The Protestant era. Chicago: University of Chicago
                                                                  Press.
            See also Luther, Martin; Missionaries; Pentecostalism
                                                                Troeltsch, E. (1966). Protestantism and progress:A historical study of the
                                                                  relation of Protestantism to the modern world. Boston: Beacon.
                                                                Von Rohr, J. (1969). Profile of Protestantism. Belmont, CA: Dickenson.
                                                                Weber, M. (1958). The Protestant ethic and the spirit of capitalism. New
                               Further Reading                    York: Scribner’s. (Original work published 1904)
            Ahlstrom, S. (Ed.). (1967). Theology in America: The major voices. New  Welch, C. (1972, 1983). Protestant thought in the nineteenth century
              York: Bobbs-Merrill.                                (Vols. 1–2). New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
            Barth, K. (1972). Protestant theology in the nineteenth century: Its back-  Whale, J. S. (1955). The Protestant tradition. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge
              ground and history. London: SCM Press.              University Press.
            Bergendoff, C. (1967). The Church of the Lutheran Reformation: A his-  Williams, G. H. (1961). The radical Reformation. Philadelphia:
              torical survey of Lutheranism. St. Louis, MO: Concordia.  Westminster.
            Bossy, J. (1985). Christianity in the West, 1400–1700. Oxford, UK: Ox-  Worrall, B. G. (1988). The making of the modern church: Christianity in
              ford University Press.                              England since 1800. London: SPCK.
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