Secularization

From CRCE Wiki

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 18: Line 18:
Noll, Mark. [https://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/157383405X/ref=nosim/christianityc-20 ''What Happened to Christian Canada?''] Vancouver: Regent College Publishing, 2007.
Noll, Mark. [https://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/157383405X/ref=nosim/christianityc-20 ''What Happened to Christian Canada?''] Vancouver: Regent College Publishing, 2007.
 +
 +
Stackhouse Jr., John G. "Who is to say?: Defining and Discerning Secularization in Canadian Christianity." ''Historical Papers: Canadian Society of Church History (1994): 193-200.
<big>Related Pages: </big>
<big>Related Pages: </big>

Revision as of 14:02, 22 July 2010

Alternate Names:

Burkinshaw, Robert. "Mark Noll, What Happened to Christian Canada?: A response from an Evangelical perspective." Church & Faith Trends 2:1 (October 2008): 3 pp.

Flatt, Kevin N. "The Survival and Decline of the Evangelical Identity of the United Church of Canada, 1930-1971," Ph.D. diss. McMaster University, 2008.

Gidney, Catherine Anne. A Long Eclipse: The Liberal Protestant Establishment and the Canadian University, 1920-1970. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2004.

Guenther, Bruce. "Mark Noll, What Happened to Christian Canada?: A response from an Anabaptist perspective." Church & Faith Trends 2:1 (October 2008): 3 pp.

Marshall, David B. Secularizing the Faith: Canadian Protestant Clergy and the Crisis of Belief, 1850-1940. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1992.

Miedema, Gary Richard. "How Can We Sing the Lord's Song in this Foreign Land?" M.A. thesis, Queen's University, 1995.

Noll, Mark. “So, What Did Really Happen to “Christian Canada”? Church & Faith Trends 2:1 (October 2008): 4 pp.

Noll, Mark. "What Happened to Christian Canada?" Church History 75 (June 2006): 245-73.

Noll, Mark. What Happened to Christian Canada? Vancouver: Regent College Publishing, 2007.

Stackhouse Jr., John G. "Who is to say?: Defining and Discerning Secularization in Canadian Christianity." Historical Papers: Canadian Society of Church History (1994): 193-200.

Related Pages:

Personal tools