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Geneva and British Evangelicals in the Early Nineteenth Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 March 2011

Extract

Several historians have recently observed a dichotomy in early nineteenth-century British evangelicalism both within the establishment and outside it. One camp was increasingly traditional, concerned with moral and social improvement, preaching an individualistic gospel of salvation by faith, and decidedly fearful of emotion and enthusiasm; other more daring spirits proved to be more radical, millenarian and ‘apostolic’ emphasising the place of spiritual experience, the need for a ‘higher’ ecclesiology and the dangers of respectability, and in so doing were generally alarming their more staid contemporaries.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1981

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References

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42 The link between the Brethren and Geneva was noted by a former member of the Bourg-de-Four assembly, Charles de Rodt, who visited Plymouth in 1836 and wrote home: ‘Ce qui m’ a tout particulièrement attirè dans cette ville, c'est une chère assemblée du Seigneur qui s'y réunit et qui est entièrement fondée sur notre principe de l'union des croyants.’ Quoted Ischebeck, Gustav, John Nelson Darby, son temps et son oeuvre, Yverdon 1937, 57Google Scholar. Cf. Feuille de la Commission des eglises associées pour l'évangelisation, Geneva 1837, i. 147Google Scholar, for a similar letter by de Rodt.

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45 EM. N.S. vi (1828), 477, 481.

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47 Bost, Memoires, i. 86.

48 Ibid., i. 235.

49 E.M., N.S. iii (1825), 65.