Mighty England Do Good: Culture, Faith, Empire and World in Foreign Missions of England: 1850-1915 (Studies in the History of Christian Missions)
Stock No: WW869463
Mighty England Do Good: Culture, Faith, Empire and  World in Foreign Missions of England: 1850-1915 (Studies in  the History of Christian Missions)  -     By: Steven S. Maughan

Mighty England Do Good: Culture, Faith, Empire and World in Foreign Missions of England: 1850-1915 (Studies in the History of Christian Missions)

Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. / 2014 / Paperback

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Stock No: WW869463

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Title: Mighty England Do Good: Culture, Faith, Empire and World in Foreign Missions of England: 1850-1915 (Studies in the History of Christian Missions)
By: Steven S. Maughan
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 560
Vendor: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co.
Publication Date: 2014
Weight: 1 pound 11 ounces
ISBN: 0802869467
ISBN-13: 9780802869463
Stock No: WW869463

Editorial Reviews

The Catholic Historical Review
"Anyone working on Anglican missions in the Victorian and Edwardian periods will find Steven Maughan's study an invaluable guide."

The Catholic Historical Review
"Anyone working on Anglican missions in the Victorian and Edwardian periods will find Steven Maughan's study an invaluable guide."

Anglican & Episcopal History
"A major contribution to the history of Anglican foreign missions, but also to that of the Victorian Church of England more generally. It is a very significant work of scholarship and serves to be consulted for many years to come."

Victorian Studies
"Extraordinarily comprehensive. . . . Will surely offer the definitive account of the history of Church of England missions for many years to come. A major triumph of synthesis. . . . It is hard to imagine that it will be bettered."

Andrew Porter
— King's College London
"The last two decades have seen an explosion of interest in Britain's Christian missions. Steven Maughan's monumental study will be of particular significance in understanding the complexities of British overseas expansion, the changing nature of metropolitan religious society, and the ideology of evangelicalism everywhere. The range of Maughan's research will make this an indispensable starting point for years to come."

Jeffrey Cox
— University of Iowa
"Steven Maughan's Mighty England Do Good provides the best introduction to one of the most important voluntary institutions of modern England - the Anglican missionary enterprise. Guiding readers through the complexities of the High Church and Evangelical church parties, he explores competing visions of the relationship between Christianity, English national identity, and empire."

Rhonda Semple
— St. Francis Xavier University
"A much-needed study. . . . Maughan argues convincingly that as Britain became modern, increasingly tied to and shaped by its international links, the foreign missions of its national church mattered immensely to its developing national identity, at home as well as abroad. In particular, Maughan's meticulously researched and elegantly written work does what most mission histories do not: it offers a nuanced analysis of the contribution of women and gender in missions."

Mission Studies
"In this comprehensive history of the foreign missions in the Church of England, Maughan has masterfully interpreted the voluminous data on the subject and dexterously documented his findings. With its bold questions and incisive responses, this book would be of interest to students in the fields of mission history, Anglicanism, gender, and postcolonial studies."

Church Times
"This book demonstrates the complexities of the missionary enterprise, and of the engagement with cultures both imperial and encountered in the Empire. Then, as now, there are powerful questions, ecclesiological and theological, behind the too easily uttered mantras of mission. Among other things, this book reminds us of the historical roots of the Anglican Communion, which still bears the imprint of the conflicts and tensions, and — yes — heroic Christian endeavor — recounted in this scholarly and important major study."

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