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History
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Christian Historiography: five rival versions by Jay GreenPublication Date: 2015
Overlapping, and even contradictory, Christian models for thinking and writing about the past abound--from accountings empathetic toward past religious expressions, to history imbued with Christian moral concern, to narratives tracing God's movement through the ages. Jay Green illuminates five rival versions of Christian historiography. Christian Historiography serves as a basic introduction to the variety of ways contemporary historians have applied their Christian convictions to historical research and reconstruction.
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God and Man in Time : a Christian approach to historiography by Earle E. CairnsPublication Date: 1979
History as science. The historian's materials ; The historian's method -- History as philosophy. The men of history : ancient and medieval ; The men of history : modern ; Schools of historical interpretation ; Philosophies of history : pessimistic and optimistic ; Philosophies of history : pessimistic-optimistic ; A philosophy of history : contemporary and Christian -- History as art. The historian as literary artist.
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Lonergan and Historiography: the epistemological philosophy of history by Thomas J. McPartlandPublication Date: 2010
Although Bernard Lonergan is known primarily for his cognitional theory and theological methodology, he long sought to formulate a modern philosophy of history free of progressive and Marxist biases. Yet he never addressed this in any single work, and his reflections on the subject are scattered in various writings. In this pioneering work, Thomas McPartland shows how Lonergan's overall philosophical position offers a fresh and comprehensive basis for considering historiography.
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Jonathan Edwards's Philosophy of History: the re-enchantment of the world in the Age of Enlightenment by Avihu ZakaiPublication Date: 2003
Zakai considers Edwards's historical thought as a reaction, in part, to the varieties of Enlightenment historical narratives and their growing disregard for theistic considerations. Zakai analyzes the ideological origins of Edwards's insistence that the process of history depends solely on God's redemptive activity in time as manifested in a series of revivals throughout history, reading this doctrine as an answer to the threat posed to the Christian theological teleology of history by the early modern emergence of a secular conception of history and the modern legitimation of historical time.
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