
"To Renew the Covenant"
Religious Themes in Eighteenth-Century Quaker Abolitionism
Jon R. Kershner(Author)
Brill (Publisher)
Published on 27. September 2018
Book
Paperback/Softback
124 pages
978-90-04-37268-9 (ISBN)
Description
In "To Renew the Covenant": Religious Themes in Eighteenth-Century Quaker Abolitionism, Jon R. Kershner argues that Quakers adhered to a providential view of history, which motivated their desire to take a corporate position against slavery. Antislavery Quakers believed God's dealings with them, for good or ill, were contingent on their faithfulness. Their history of deliverance from persecution, the liberty of conscience they experienced in the British colonies, and the ethics of the Golden Rule formed a covenantal relationship with God that challenged notions of human bondage. Kershner traces the history of abolitionist theologies from George Fox and William Edmundson in the late seventeenth century to Paul Cuffe and Benjamin Banneker in the early nineteenth century. It covers the Germantown Protest, Benjamin Lay, John Woolman, Anthony Benezet, William Dillwyn, Warner Mifflin, and others who offered religious arguments against slavery. It also surveys recent developments in Quaker antislavery studies.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Leiden
Netherlands
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 7 mm
Weight
182 gr
ISBN-13
978-90-04-37268-9 (9789004372689)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Jon R. Kershner, Ph.D. (2013, University of Birmingham) is Honorary Researcher in Quaker Studies at Lancaster University and Visiting Assistant Professor in Theology and History of Christianity at Pacific Lutheran University. His publications include, John Woolman and the "Government of Christ": A Colonial Quaker's Vision for the British Atlantic World (Oxford University Press, 2018), the co-authored Quaker Studies: An Overview, The Current State of the Field (Brill, 2018), and numerous articles on Quaker theology in journals such as Quaker Studies, Quaker Religious Thought, and Quaker History, and chapters on evangelicalism and global theology in The Cambridge Companion to Quakerism, and John Woolman's apocalypticism in Quakers and their Allies in the Abolitionist Cause, 1754-1808 (Routledge, 2015).