Bruce Hindmarsh Course Syllabus
Prepared for the Center for the Study of Religion and American
Culture by:
Bruce Hindmarsh
Briercrest Biblical Seminary
The Center is pleased to share with you the syllabi for
introductory courses in American religion that were developed
in seminars led by Dr. Grant Wacker of Duke University Divinity
School. In all of the seminar discussions, it was apparent
that context, or the particular teaching setting, was an
altogether critical factor in envisioning how students should
be introduced to a field of study. The justification of
approach, included with each syllabus, is thus germane to
how you use the syllabus.
For the personal use of teachers. Not
for sale or redistribution.
© Center for the Study of Religion and American Culture,
1998
I. Syllabus Justification
I teach at Briercrest Biblical Seminary, which is located
in a small town in southern Saskatchewan. The seminary originated
as the graduate school of a successful interdenominational
bible college and this year has approximately 270 students
enrolled in one or more courses (115 FTE). We typically
provide advanced training for ministry for college graduates
with experience in Christian leadership, whether lay or
clerical. Geared less toward pre-ordination training than
toward continuing education of Christian leaders, the seminary
has also focused relatively more upon practitioner skills
than upon strictly academic preparation. It began in 1983
as a summer school for those active in ministry. When year-round
scheduling was instituted, the summer-school modular format
was retained with the result that almost all courses are
offered within two- or three-week blocks of concentrated
teaching.
The seminary is confessional in theology and has an evangelical
heritage and ethos. The original bible school began in 1935
as a part of a distinctive revival movement on the Canadian
Prairies characterized by an emphasis upon personal holiness,
the evangelization of the newly settled Prairie West, and
the task of world mission. Since then, the Canadian Prairies
has become less of a religious frontier, and Briercrest
has likewise become less preoccupied with rural mission
than with servicing a growing constituency which is more
diverse and sophisticated in its needs and expectations.
The seminary evolved largely to meet these needs.
The seminary is in the midst of an accreditation process
with ATS and it is a time of rapid change and revision to
the curriculum. One of the implications is that our degree
offerings will be much more clearly distinguished between
an MA (Theol. Studies) which is primarily academic in focus,
and an MA in various ministry specializations which has
a practitioner focus. My responsibilities lie with teaching
church history and historical theology for the former degree,
although I always have some students taking one or two of
my courses for the latter qualification or for an M.Div.
degree.
Students come from a large number of denominations, though
these would be for the most part baptistic in ecclesiology,
and conservative and evangelical in ethos. A quarter to
a third of our students are women. While Canadian law forbids
the collection of racial or ethnic data, my impression is
that our student diversity is typical of the Canadian Prairies
and does not include a large number of students from minority
communities.
This particular course, "Studies in Christian Conversion
and Spiritual Autobiography" is one which the seminary
has recently added to the history curriculum at my request.
My concerns in designing the course were several:
David Bebbington's widely accepted definition of evangelicalism,
teased out in his Evangelicalism in Modern Britain (London,
1989), emphasizes that conversionism was the first important
trait to characterize the modern evangelical movement, and
that despite the many modulations of the evangelical impulse
over time and in different cultural settings, this stress
upon the personally meaningful conversion has remained constant.
The constituency Briercrest serves has a relatively short
identity-giving past but it is self-consciously evangelical.
I hope that this course can tap into a lively popular interest
in evangelical conversion, but offer a larger historical
perspective on the subject and connect this contemporary
piety to a more critical, catholic, and ecumenical sense
of Christian tradition.
I also hope that this course will serve the task of ministerial
preparation in particular by both stimulating personal reflection
on the student's own spiritual experience and by contributing
to the development of his or her understanding of formative
spirituality. In the 17th century Richard Baxter reflected
on his own spiritual experience and that of the people around
him and wrote, 'At last I came to realize that God breaks
not all men's hearts alike.' I hope that my students will
come to a similar realization.
Briercrest's constituency has sometimes been characterized
by an attitude of caution, even mistrust, toward the intellecta
legacy of conservative reactions to modernist revisions
of orthodoxy earlier this century and the hegemony of Protestant
liberal theology in mainstream Canadian seminaries. I hope
that this course can stimulate advanced critical thinking
about the evangelical piety my students cherish, without
being corrosive of that piety. I hope to model and advocate
a constructive use of the intellect not only along the reformed
lines indicated in recent books by Mark Noll and others
in the American context, but also in the pattern exemplified
in the best Catholic spiritual writing where prayer, spirituality,
and theological reflection are held together in a community
of memory and hope.
I also hope to bring my students along to an understanding
of church tradition which is better related to academic
discipline. By discussing the insights into conversion offered
by literary criticism, moral philosophy, psychology, and
sociology, and other disciplines, I hope that this course
will give them a sense of the general terrain of academic
discourse about religion. I also want to introduce them
to specific tools and methods of research in the humanitiesparticularly
in historyand some of the skills of critical thinking,
argumentation, and academic writing. In short, I hope to
make better students of them, and prepare some of them for
thesis work, or further graduate studies in religion elsewhere.
The intensity of the modular format presents some unique
challenges in course design, the most obvious of which is
the danger of giving the students more information than
they can process in a short period of time. One of my students
once described the experience as being like trying to take
a drink from a fire hydrant. As one concession to this format,
I have tried to design this course with an even balance
between lecture and other methods and media, and to include
a good amount of discussion of primary sources and specific
articles which sharply focus certain issues of scholarly
debate. Some of my lectures are more thesis-driven than
others, but I have tried to include easily accessible narrative
history, biography, and anecdote, on the one hand; and an
introduction to select issues, analytical approaches, and
scholarly debates, on the other. My choice of subjects looks
something like taking 'core samples' from different periods,
and the figures and texts I have focused upon are for the
most part the traditional, even canonical, ones of church
history. However, my intention is not to introduce a Whig
interpretation of conversion. In some ways it is the opposite:
I hope to historicize the evangelical conversion narrative,
not to discredit it, but to show the way in which it has
appeared as a particular witness to the gospel in the modern
period as one important part of a longer story of Christian
proclamation and response.
II. Introductory Course Syllabus
BRIERCREST BIBLICAL SEMINARY
BT764 STUDIES IN CHRISTIAN CONVERSION AND SPIRITUAL AUTOBIOGRAPHY
scheduled for Summer 1998
two-week modular format (40 hours)
Mon.Fri., 9.3012.00, 1.002.30
Dr. Bruce Hindmarsh
Office tel.: 756-3637
Email: bhindmarsh@briercrest.ca
Office hours: by appointment
COURSE DESCRIPTION
I have designed this course to stimulate you to think in
a disciplined way about the nature of Christian conversion
through the study of a number of historical examples. We
will focus most intently in the second half of the course
on the early evangelical tradition of spiritual autobiography
or 'conversion narrative', though we will set this withinand
sometimes againstthe larger history of the response
of women and men to Christian proclamation through the centuries.
Attention will be paid chiefly to theological themes in
the literature studied, but this will be augmented by some
discussion of interdisciplinary perspectives on the conversion
experience. We will explore the relevance of all of this
to our experience of faith and ministry in the contemporary
world, and you will be encouraged to think through your
own theology of conversion.
OBJECTIVES
I want you to reflect upon the nature of God's work in
the lives of those he calls to follow him. I hope you will
more carefully consider the teaching of Scripture on conversion
for having seen historical examples of Christian experience
which compare or contrast with your own in various ways.
Again, because of the historical contexts we will be exploring,
I hope you will be able to relate the concept of conversion
to theological tradition in a more careful way than is often
the case.
I would like you to be able to describe in outline the
nature of some of the most notable examples of Christian
conversion in the history of the church. I would also like
you to be able to describe the similarities and differences
between these.
You should be able to explain why the medieval period produced
almost no conversion narratives of the kind with which we
are familiar. I hope this will give you occasion to consider
the influence of 'Christendom' on the nature of conversion,
and to think about our own 'post-Christendom' context for
ministry.
I want you to be able to explain why there was such an
efflorescence of spiritual autobiography in the 17th and
18th centuries and throughout most of the modern periodWhy
then?
I want you in particular to be able to describe some of
the features of conversion in the period when evangelicalism
as a modern movement originated. Wesley, Whitefield, and
Edwards have been the subject of renewed interest today,
and I want you to understand their lives and ministries
in outline, the revivals in which they took part, and the
patterns of conversion which became typical for evangelical
Christians.
You should be able to describe various patterns of conversion
as you analyze the many examples you read and hear about
in class.
I would like you to be able to identify some of the most
important issues pertaining to narrative self-identity which
are discussed in an overlapping way in contemporary debate
in moral philosophy, critical theory, sociology, and psychology.
I hope that you will be more personally committed to proclaiming
the good news about Jesus Christ, being more convinced than
ever that through the work of his Spirit, God graciously
changes the lives of ordinary people. I hope that you will
likewise have a stronger desire to be fully converted into
the image of Christ yourselfto go in for the whole
treatment, as C. S. Lewis once put it.
TEXTBOOKS
- St. Augustine, Confessions, trans. R. S. Pine-Coffin,
Penguin, 1961.
- Hugh Kerr and John Mulder, Famous Conversions, Eerdmans,
1985.
- Jonathan Edwards on Revival , Banner of Truth, 1965.
- Lewis R. Rambo, Understanding Religious Conversion,
Yale University Press, 1993.
Secondary source readings for BT764 on reserve in the library
(marked * below).
PRE-READING (please note)
Because this is a modular course it is important for you
to read Augustine's Confessions, Kerr and Mulder's Famous
Conversions, and Rambo's Understanding Religious Conversion
before the first day of class. Read also, before class,
the reserve article: Larry W. Hurtado, "Convert, apostate
or apostle to the nations: The 'conversion' of Paul in recent
scholarship," Studies in Religion, 22, no. 3 (1993):
273-84.
COURSE CONTENT
The course will include lectures, discussion of source
documents, video, and small group assignments. The main
headings below refer to principal lecture topics, and the
bulleted points, to discussions of documents or articles,
tutorials, and small group sessions.
First WeekChristian Conversion from the Apostolic
Period to the Reformation
Monday Conversion in New Testament theology
Hurtado article* on the apostle Paul's conversion (cf.
Kerr & Mulder, 1-3)
Conversions from Judaism and Paganism in Early Christianity
conversions in the Acts of the Apostles
conversion of pagans from elite and popular levels of society:
excerpts from Justin Martyr, Dialogue with Trypho , from
Arnobius, and from the Life of St. Gregory Thaumaturgus
Tuesday
The Controversial Conversion of Emperor Constantine and
its Implications
the account in Eusebius (Kerr & Mulder, 4-10)
revitalization theory of Anthony Wallace
The Three Conversions of St. Augustine: Mani, Plotinus,
and Christ the tolle lege episode in the garden (Augustine,
157-179; Kerr & Mulder, 11-14)
Wednesday
The Temporal Dimension of Conversion: the Origins of the
Penitential System
the problem of post-baptismal sin, lapsed Christians, and
penitence in early Christianity: handout with excerpts from
Shepherd of Hermas and Augustine
The Conversion of the Barbarians and the Christianization
of Europe
excerpts from Gregory of Tours, History of the Franks, on
the conversion of Clovis, and from the Life of Boniface,
on the conversion of the Saxons.
Video: Kenneth Clark, "By the Skin of Our Teeth,"
from the BBC Civilisation series
Thursday
Conversion in the high Middle Ages: sacramental conversion,
conversio as the taking of religious vows, and the development
of ascetical and mystical theology excerpts from Bernard
of Clairvaux, On Conversion
Martin Luther on Conversion
his 'tower experience' from the 1545 autobiographical fragment
excerpts from Luther on conversion from Bondage of the
Will, "Sermon on the Afternoon of Christmas Day",
and the Ninety-Five Theses.
Friday
John Calvin on Conversion
his 'sudden conversion' mentioned in the Preface to Commentary
on the Psalms (Kerr & Mulder, 24-28)
excerpts from Calvin on conversion from the Institutes
Catholics and Radicals on Conversion in the 16th Century
comparing and contrasting the experience of Ignatius Loyola
and Teresa of Avila (Kerr & Mulder, 15-23)
Excursus on William James, Varieties of Religious Experience
the ecstatic conversion experience and James' pragmatic
test. Question of patterns or typologies of conversion.
Second WeekConversion since the Reformation
Monday
The Autobiographical Moment: the Narrative of Conversion
among the English Puritans and Continental Pietists
discussion of John Bunyan's Grace Abounding and Richard
Baxter's Autobiography (Kerr & Mulder, 29-35, 48-53);
and a handout with an excerpt from August Hermann Francke's
Autobiography.
The Formalization of an 'Order of Conversion'
Alleine's Alarm to the Unconverted , and Baxer's Call to
the Unconverted
Jerald C. Brauer, "Conversion: From Puritanism to
Revivalism," Journal of Religion 58 (1978): 227-43.*
Tuesday
Conversion and the Protestant Evangelical Revivals of the
18th century
discussion of the conversion of John Wesley, George Whitefield,
and Jonathan Edwards (Kerr & Mulder, 54-70)
small group session: visualizing the evangelical pattern
of conversion
Narrative Self-Identity in the Early Modern Period: the
cultural context for the flourishing of evangelical autobiography
discussion of modern self-consciousness based upon Georges
Gusdorf, "Conditions and Limits of Autobiography,"
in Autobiography: Essays Theoretical and Critical, ed. James
Olney (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1980),
28-48.*
Video: John Wesley as Preacher, a dramatic reconstruction
of one of his sermons
Wednesday
Conversion and Social Order: narratives by women, slaves,
and the poor or uneducated
discussion of David George's narrative in Grant Gordon,
From Slavery to Freedom: the Life of David George (Hansport,
Nova Scotia: Lancelot Press, 1992), 168-83.
discussion of transcript of Elizabeth Hinsom's ms. account
of her conversion in early Methodism
Evangelical Conversion in the Second Great Awakening/Evangelical
Revival
discussion of Charles Finney's conversion (Kerr & Mulder,
103-112) and the question of how discursive theology translates
into first-person plot lines
small group session on revival and revivalism, reacting
to J. I. Packer, "The Means of Conversion," in
With Heart, Mind, & Strength , ed. Donald M. Lewis (Langley,
BC: Credo, 1990), 63-79.*
Thursday
A few modern cases of conversion
John G. Stackhouse, Jr., "Billy Graham and the nature
of conversion: A paradigm case," Studies in Religion
21, no. 3 (1992): 337-50.*
Conversion and the Modern Missionary Movement
Alan R. Tippett, "Conversion as a Dynamic Process
in Christian Mission," Missiology 2 (1977): 203-21.*
Friday
Workshop discussion of Rambo, Understanding Conversion.
Each person in the course will be assigned a chapter of
Rambo's book to review for class discussion. We'll spend
most of the morning working through his model of conversion
and discussing its relevance and applicability to contemporary
faith and ministry.
There will also be time for a general review of the course
and a discussion of the assignments. Bring along preliminary
drafts of any written work you have done if you would like
feedback or critique which can be incorporated into your
final revisions.
ASSIGNMENTS AND GRADING
Interpretative Book Review 20%
Write an interpretative review of one important spiritual
autobiography other than Augustine's Confessions. Get to
know it well, think about it, tell me about it. Use critical
introductions and reference books to get a handle on the
context. Refer to periodical indices and secondary sources
only after you've wrestled with the text yourself. Use parenthetical
references for your main source. Quote sparingly. 1,200
words. Note: I'd like you to check out your choice of source
material with me before you proceed. Your reading of Augustine
should help to inform your review and you may want to note
points of comparison or contrast.
Essay (from textbooks) 30%
Write an essay integrating your reading of Edwards and
of Famous Conversions by Kerr and Mulder. Note first with
especial care the 'distinguishing marks' Edwards develops
to attempt to discern a true work of God. Describe these
and explain the context of the Northampton revival out of
which Edwards was writing. Then, secondly, I would like
you to attempt to do something similar to what Edwards did
by reflecting upon the narratives in Kerr and Mulder. Do
these narratives get a passing grade by Edwards' criteria?
What about by your own criteria? I'm not interested in which
narratives confirm your theological prejudices (!), but
I am interested to see if you can evaluate several of these
narratives from the perspective of an articulate theological
method. Carefully integrate historical case studies with
biblical theology. Do not proof-text. Total length of essay
to be not more than 2,500 words.
Article File 30%
I will place an article file on reserve in the library.
These are all relatively short, specialized pieces, and
I would like you to read and report on six of them. These
articles are listed in the bibliography and under Course
Content and will be referred to in my lectures, or used
in class discussions. These articles must be read and reviewed
prior to class for the particular day on which they are
assigned. This is an exercise in close, careful reading.
Your written summary and reaction to each article must be
no more than 300 words each, so make every word count.
Conversion Typology 20%
Based upon the course readings, lectures, and discussions,
I would like you to respond to the model of conversion in
Rambo, Understanding Religious Conversion. Another similar
model, based upon a more narrow anthropological study may
be found in Alan R. Tippett, "Conversion as a Dynamic
Process in Christian Mission," Missiology 2 (1977):
203-21 (on reserve in the article file). Both of these models
are phenomenological, that is, they are attempts based loosely
on the social sciences to generalize religious experiences
into a typical sequential pattern, or to analyze religious
experiences into a kind of taxonomy of distinctive species.
I'd like you to critique Rambo's model and Tippet's and/or
propose an alternative. 1,200 words.
Please Note: All assignments are due one month after the
last day of class, with the exception of the article reading
reports, which are due on the day of class for which they
are assigned. Please note the essay grading sheet attached
below for the criteria which I shall use to evaluate assignments
1, 2, and 4.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Article File
- Jerald C. Brauer, "Conversion: From Puritanism
to Revivalism," Journal of Religion 58 (1978): 227-43.
- Georges Gusdorf, "Conditions and Limits of Autobiography,"
in Autobiography: Essays Theoretical and Critical, ed.
James Olney (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press,
1980), 28-48.
- Larry W. Hurtado, "Convert, apostate or apostle
to the nations: The 'conversion' of Paul in recent scholarship,"
Studies in Religion 22, no. 3 (1993): 273-84.
- J. I. Packer, "The Means of Conversion," in
With Heart, Mind, & Strength, ed. Donald M. Lewis
(Langley, BC: Credo, 1990), 63-79.
- John G. Stackhouse, Jr., "Billy Graham and the
nature of conversion: A paradigm case," Studies in
Religion 21, no. 3 (1992): 337-50.
- Alan R. Tippett, "Conversion as a Dynamic Process
in Christian Mission," Missiology 2 (1977): 203-21.
General Reference
There is a detailed bibliography on conversion in your
text, Lewis R. Rambo, Understanding Religious Conversion
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1993), 209-234. See also
the literature review by the same author in "Current
Research on Religious Conversion," Religious Studies
Review 8, no. 2 (1982): 146-159.
Select List of Other Sources Mentioned in Lectures
- Baxter, Richard. The Autobiography of Richard Baxter.
Edited by J. M. Lloyd Thomas. Everyman edition (abridged
from the Reliquiae Baxterianae, 1696) ed. London: J. M.
Dent and Sons, 1931.
- Bebbington, David. "Evangelical Conversion, c.1740-1850."
Paper presented at the North Atlantic Missiology Project,
Cambridge 1996.
- Bebbington, David. Evangelicalism in Modern Britain:
A History from the 1730s to the 1980s. London: Unwin Hyman,
1989.
- Bullock, Frederick William Bagshawe. Evangelical Conversion
in Great Britain, 1696-1845. St Leonards on Sea: Budd
& Gillatt, 1959.
- Bullock, Frederick William Bagshawe. Evangelical Conversion
in Great Britain, 1516-1695 . St. Leonards on Sea: Budd
& Gillatt, 1966.
- Caldwell, Patricia. The Puritan Conversion Narrative.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983.
- Edwards, Jonathan. Religious Affections. Edited by John
E. Smith. Vol. 2, The Works of Jonathan Edwards. New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1959.
- Elliott-Binns, L. E. The Early Evangelicals: A Religious
and Social Study. London: Lutterworth Press, 1953.
- Ertl, Heimo. ""The manner wherein God has
dealt with my soul": Methodistische "Lives"
im 18.Jahrhundert." Anglia-Zeitschrift fur Englische
Philologie civ (1986): 63-93.
- Gerstner, John H., and Jonathan Neil Gerstner. "Edwardsean
Preparation for Salvation." Westminster Theological
Journal 42, no. 1 (1979): 5-71.
- Goen, C. C., ed. The Great Awakening. Edited by John
E. Smith. Vol. 4, The Works of Jonathan Edwards . New
Haven: Yale University press, 1972.
- Gordon, Grant. From Slavery to Freedom: the Life of
David George, Pioneer Black Baptist Minister, Baptist
Heritage in Atlantic Canada. Hansport, Nova Scotia: Lancelot
Press, 1992.
- Haller, William. The Rise of Puritanism. 1st edn., 1938;
repr. New York: Harper Torchbooks, 1957.
- Hambrick-Stowe, Charles E. The Practice of Piety: Puritan
Devotional Disciplines in Seventeenth-Century New England.
Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1982.
- Heffernan, Thomas J. Sacred Biography: Saints and Their
Biographers in the Middle Ages. New York: Oxford University
Press, 1988.
- Hefner, Robert W., ed. Conversion to Christianity: historical
and anthropological perspectives on a great transformation.
Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993.
- James, William. The Varieties of Religious Experience.
rev. edn ed. London: Longmans, Green & Co., 1902.
- Lewis, Donald M., ed. The Blackwell Dictionary of Evangelical
Biography, 1730-1860. 2 vols. Oxford: Blackwell, 1995.
- Mascuch, Michael. Origins of the Individualist Self:
Autobiography and Self-Identity in England, 1591-1791
. Cambridge: Polity Press, 1997.
- Miller, Perry. ""Preparation for Salvation"
in Seventeenth Century New England." Journal of the
History of Ideas 4 (1943): 253-86.
- Nock, A. D. Conversion, Oxford, 1933.
- Noll, Mark A., David W. Bebbington, and George A. Rawlyk,
eds. Evangelicalism: Comparative Studies of Popular Protestantism
in North America, the British Isles, and Beyond, 1700-1990.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1994.
- Norris, John N. Versions of the Self: Studies in English
Autobiography from John Bunyan to John Stuart Mill . New
York: Basic Books, 1966.
- Nussbaum, Felicity A. The Autobiographical Subject:
Gender and Ideology in Eighteenth-Century England. Baltimore
and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989.
- Nuttall, Geoffrey G. "Methodism and the Older Dissent:
Some Perspectives." United Reformed Church Historical
Society Journal 2 (1981): 259-74.
- Olney, James, ed. Autobiography: Essays Theoretical
and Critical. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1980.
- Olney, James, ed. Studies in Autobiography. New York:
Oxford University Press, 1988.
- Packer, J. I. "Puritanism as a Movement of Revival."
In Among God's Giants: The Puritan Vision of the Christian
Life, 41-63. Eastbourne: Kingsway, 1991.
- Peterson, Linda H. "Gender and Autobiographical
Form: The Case of Spiritual Autobiography." In Studies
in Autobiography, edited by James Olney, 211-22. New York:
Oxford University Press, 1988.
- Pettit, Norman. The Heart Prepared: Grace and Conversion
in Puritan Spiritual Life. New Haven, CT: Yale University
Press, 1966.
- Porter, Roy, ed. Rewriting the Self: Histories from
the Middle Ages to the Present : Routledge, 1996.
- Raboteau, Albert J. "The Black Experience in American
Evangelicalism: The Meaning of Slavery." In The Evangelical
Tradition in America, edited by Leonard I. Sweet, 183-97.
Macon, Georgia: Mercer University Press, 1984.
- Rattenbury, J. E. The Conversion of the Wesleys. A Critical
Study. London, 1938.
- Rawlyk, George, and Mark Noll, eds. Amazing Grace: Evangelicalism
in Australia, Britain, Canada, and the United States.
Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press,
1994.
- Rawlyk, G. A. The Canada Fire: Radical Evangelicalism
in British North America, 1773-1812. Kingston: McGill-Queen's
University Press, 1994.
- Rivers, Isabel. "'Strangers and Pilgrims': Sources
and Patterns of Methodist Narrative." In Augustan
Worlds, edited by J. D. Hilson, M. M. B. Jones and J.
R. Watson, 189-203. Leicester, 1978.
- Robe, James, and et al. A Narrative of the Extraordinary
Work of the Spirit of God at Camusland, Kilsyth, etc.,
Begun in 1742. Written by James Robe and Others. With
Attestations by Ministers, Preachers, etc. Glasgow, 1790.
- Sargent, W. Battle for the Mind, 1959.
- Scott, Thomas. The Force of Truth: an Authentic Narrative.
London, 1779.
- Shea, Daniel B., Jr. Spiritual Autobiography in Early
America. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1968.
- Spacks, Patricia Meyer. Imagining a Self: Autobiography
and the Novel in Eighteenth-Century England. Cambridge,
MA: Harvard Universtiy Press, 1976.
- Steinmetz, David C. "Reformation and Conversion."
Theology Today 35, no. 1 (1978): 25-32.
- Stendahl, Krister. "The Apostle Paul and the Introspective
Conscience of the West." In Paul Among the Jews and
Gentiles and Other Essays, edited by Krister Stendahl,
78-96. London: SCM Press, 1976.
- Stoeffler, F. Ernst. The Rise of Evangelical Pietism,
Studies in the History of Religions, 9. Leiden, 1971.
- Telford, John, ed. Wesley's Veterans: Lives of Early
Methodist Preachers Told by Themselves. 7 vols. London:
Robert Culley, 1912-14.
- Ward, W. R. The Protestant Evangelical Awakening. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1992.
- Watkins, Owen. The Puritan Experience: Studies in Spiritual
Autobiography. London: Schocken Books, 1972.
- Wessels, Anton. Europe: Was it Ever Really Christian?
Translated by John Bowden. London: SCM, 1994.
Essay/Research Paper Grading Sheet
Course:____________________________________
Assignment:____________________________________
Student:____________________________________
Grade:________
1. Grammar and Style (25%)
Is the text clean of spelling mistakes?
Is the text punctuated correctly?
Does the sentence structure consistently adhere to basic
rules of good grammar?
Does the footnote/bibliographic apparatus follow Turabian
consistently?
Is the paper written in a clear, straight-forward style
of academic prose (e.g., the guidelines in Strunk and White)?
2. Organization (25%)
Is the subject of the paper clearly delimited? Is it significant,
but still manageable?
Does the subject correspond to what was assigned in the
syllabus?
Does the paper have a well-designed thesis statement and
outline?
Does the running text of the paper adhere to the outline,
and are the larger divisions of the paper clearly signposted?
Are the sentences and paragraphs of the text linked together
clearly and in such a way that the thought of the student
builds throughout the paper with continuity and coherence?
3. Clarity and Force of Argument (25%)
Is a convincing case made to support the thesis statement?
Is the evidence marshaled to support the argument used
judiciously?
Where the student provides exposition or summary, does
she do so succinctly and objectively?
Is there evidence of mature Christian reflection on the
subject matter?
4. Research (25%)
Does the paper draw on primary sources for its main evidence?
Are the secondary sources selected and used judiciously?
Does the paper demonstrate sufficient depth and breadth
of research, given the nature and level of the assignment?
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