ABSTRACT

This is a source book for the study of religions in Britain in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It covers an important period in the history of religions in Britain, a period of challenge to religion and a period of change in the religious map of Britain. Each author is a specialist in a particular aspect if this history, and there are extensive bibliographies. The book demonstrates how pluralistic the map of religion has been in Britain, thereby challenging the view that Britain is and has been a predominantly single religion country. This religious pluralism is shown to apply within the Christian religion as much as to those movements outside Christianity. There are six contributors: Dr Sheridan Gilley, (Durham); Rev Ieuan P. Ellis, (Hull) ; Professor Anthony O. Dyson, (Manchester); Dr Kim Knott, (Leeds); Dr David Hempton, (Belfast); Dr Kenneth A Thompson, (The Open University).

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

part 1|84 pages

THE NINETEENTH CENTURY

chapter CHAPTER ONE|29 pages

'Official Religion'

chapter CHAPTER TWO|24 pages

The Intellectual Challenge to 'Official Religion'

chapter CHAPTER THREE|29 pages

East Comes West

part 2|77 pages

THE TWENTIETH CENTURY

chapter CHAPTER FOUR|30 pages

The Christian Religion

chapter CHAPTER FIVE|25 pages

Other Major Religious Traditions

chapter CHAPTER SIX|20 pages

New Religious Movements

part 3|61 pages

OTHER PERSPECTIVES

chapter CHAPTER SEVEN|29 pages

'Popular Religion' 1800–1986

chapter CHAPTER EIGHT|29 pages

How Religious Are The British?