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The History of the Free Church of Scotland’s Mission to the Jews in Budapest and its Impact on the Reformed Church of Hungary

1841-1914

Erschienen am 05.07.2006
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Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9783631553671
Sprache: Englisch
Format (T/L/B): 21.0 x 14.0 cm

Beschreibung

The Budapest Scottish Mission with its twofold aim, mission to the Jews and initiating an Evangelical revival in the largest Protestant body had played a remarkable, decisive and unique role in the «long 19th century» of the Hungarian Kingdom. This study focuses on how the Scottish Mission implanted British Evangelicalism, German Pietism, voluntary organisations such as YMCA, IFES, WSCF, Sunday School, Women’s Guild, social outreach, medical missions, home mission, personal piety, concepts of mission and evangelisation through their Scottish Presbyterianism into Hungary. The study presents the interaction of Scottish Presbyterians, Orthodox, Neolog (Reform and Conservative) and Status Quo Ante Jews of Hungary, and the Hungarian Reformed Protestants. It also discusses their attitudes to conversion, mission, proselytising, education, assimilation, and nationalism. While discussing the Mission’s aims, the book pays careful attention to church, institutional, and religious histories. In addition to these, local theologies, ideologies and worldviews of the people are scrutinized. Through these issues this study introduces the reader to the daily life of a multicultural community gathered around the Scottish community.

Autorenportrait

The Author: Ábrahám Kovács read his Ph.D. at Edinburgh University in 2003. He also holds degrees in History from Lajos Kossuth University in Debrecen, in Theology from Debrecen Reformed University and in Religious Studies from Princeton Theological Seminary. He studied also at Princeton University, and at the University of Tübingen. Most recently he was awarded of the Andrew W. Mellon Research Fellowship by the University of Edinburgh and the Eötvös Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Science. The author is now a Senior Lecturer at Debrecen Reformed University, a Research Fellow of the Institute of Habsburg History (Budapest), and a Research Fellow at the Protestant Institute for Mission Studies in Budapest. He is currently the secretary of the Hungarian Association for the Science of Religion and acting secretary of the CEEAMS.