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The Methodist Conference in AmericaThe Methodist Conference in America

The Methodist Conference in America1996

Russell E. Richey

About this book

In the Methodist lexicon, 'conference' refers to a body of preachers (and later, of laity as well) that exercises legislative, judicial and (to some extent) executive functions for the church or some portion thereof. But 'conference,' Richey argues here, defined the Methodist movement in more than political ways: On conference hinged religious time, religious space, religious belonging, religious structure, even religiosity itself. Methodist histories uniformly recognize, typically even feature, conference's centrality, but describe that in primarily constitutional and political terms. The purpose of this volume is to present conference as a distinctively American Methodist manner of being the church, a multifaceted mode of spirituality, unity, mission, governance, and fraternity that American Methodists have lived and operated better than they have interpreted.

Details

First published
1996
OL Work ID
OL3245277W

Subjects

HistoryMethodist conferencesMethodist ChurchGovernmentMethodismeKirchenpolitik11.55 ProtestantismGeschichteConferentiesMethodismusMethodist church (u.s.)

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.