We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Catherine Booth
Regular price
$29.99
Regular price
$0.00
Sale price
$29.99
Unit price
/
per
Sold out
Re-stocking soon
A biography of Catherine Booth, examining an often overlooked aspect of her legacy – her role in shaping the theological outlook of the Salvation Army.Catherine Booth's achievements - as a revivali...
Read More
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
Ships within 2 business days
-
30 January 2014

A biography of Catherine Booth, examining an often overlooked aspect of her legacy – her role in shaping the theological outlook of the Salvation Army.
Catherine Booth's achievements - as a revivalist, social reformer, champion of women's rights, and, with her husband William Booth, co-founder of the Salvation Army - were widely recognized in her lifetime. However, Catherine Booth's life and work has since been largely neglected. This neglect has extended to her theological ideas, even though they were critical to the formation of Salvationism, the spirituality of the movement she cofounded. This book examines the implicit theology that undergirds Catherine Booth's Salvationist spirituality and reveals the ethical concerns at the heart of her soteriology and the integral relationship between the social and evangelical aspects of Christian mission in her thought. Catherine Booth emerges as a significant figure from the Victorian era, a British theologian and church leader with a rare if not unique intellectual and theological perspective: that of a woman.
Catherine Booth's achievements - as a revivalist, social reformer, champion of women's rights, and, with her husband William Booth, co-founder of the Salvation Army - were widely recognized in her lifetime. However, Catherine Booth's life and work has since been largely neglected. This neglect has extended to her theological ideas, even though they were critical to the formation of Salvationism, the spirituality of the movement she cofounded. This book examines the implicit theology that undergirds Catherine Booth's Salvationist spirituality and reveals the ethical concerns at the heart of her soteriology and the integral relationship between the social and evangelical aspects of Christian mission in her thought. Catherine Booth emerges as a significant figure from the Victorian era, a British theologian and church leader with a rare if not unique intellectual and theological perspective: that of a woman.
Price: $29.99
Pages: 240
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: Lutterworth Press
Publication Date:
30 January 2014
Trim Size: 9.02 X 5.98 in
ISBN: 9780718893200
Format: Paperback
Throughout the book the various influences on Catherine's theological position are considered and [...] the thoroughness with which these interplays of thought are studied is one of the greatest strengths of the book.'
— Hugh Osgood
Previous writing on Catherine Booth - a cofounder of The Salvation Army - has been broadly biographical, but this book concentrates on the theology ... The book reveals some of the major debates that were hot topics in some 19th Century Christian circles: how to understand the atonement, whether you needed a very personal experience of salvation, the relationship between prevenient grace and personal choice in relation to faith, the place of sacraments in the life of the church, the risks of antinomianism etc ... Comparisons with today's renewal movements are invited by this book too. The Booths were inspired to live a Christianity that was faithful to the first generation of Christians. Is that hope as lively today? Are we as hungry to be faithful to the apostolic church?
— Rev Susan Durber
Christ-like response to injustice and inequality remains as relevant as ever.
— Ted Harrison
This volume engages with the work and teaching rather than with the person of Catherine Booth ... the author uses the first three chapters to examine her doctrine of salvation, which embraced the doctrines of justification and sanctification, and the way this doctrine relates to the birth of the Salvation Army. Another set of three chapters is concerned with Catherine Booth's doctrines of church, ministry, and sacraments which derive from her doctrine of salvation.
— Journal of Contemporary Religion
— Hugh Osgood
Previous writing on Catherine Booth - a cofounder of The Salvation Army - has been broadly biographical, but this book concentrates on the theology ... The book reveals some of the major debates that were hot topics in some 19th Century Christian circles: how to understand the atonement, whether you needed a very personal experience of salvation, the relationship between prevenient grace and personal choice in relation to faith, the place of sacraments in the life of the church, the risks of antinomianism etc ... Comparisons with today's renewal movements are invited by this book too. The Booths were inspired to live a Christianity that was faithful to the first generation of Christians. Is that hope as lively today? Are we as hungry to be faithful to the apostolic church?
— Rev Susan Durber
Christ-like response to injustice and inequality remains as relevant as ever.
— Ted Harrison
This volume engages with the work and teaching rather than with the person of Catherine Booth ... the author uses the first three chapters to examine her doctrine of salvation, which embraced the doctrines of justification and sanctification, and the way this doctrine relates to the birth of the Salvation Army. Another set of three chapters is concerned with Catherine Booth's doctrines of church, ministry, and sacraments which derive from her doctrine of salvation.
— Journal of Contemporary Religion
1. Introduction
2. Salvation
3. The Pursuit of Holiness
4. Doctrine of Holiness
5. The Church
6. Ministry
7. The Sacraments
8. Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
2. Salvation
3. The Pursuit of Holiness
4. Doctrine of Holiness
5. The Church
6. Ministry
7. The Sacraments
8. Conclusion
Bibliography
Index