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Oxford 1937

The Universal Christian Council for Life and Work Conference

by Graeme Smith (Author)
©2004 Thesis 282 Pages

Summary

The Oxford 1937 Life and Work Conference is a highly important event in the history of the ecumenical movement. It met at a time of international political crisis. Within two years the world would be at war. The churches in Europe and North America were confronted by the rise of totalitarian regimes, especially in Germany and Russia. Led by Joseph Oldham the conference delegates analysed this crisis theologically. They understood totalitarian regimes to be a form of political religion adopted by people whose lives lacked meaning and purpose. The advent of secularism had removed Christian belief and practice from the West and humanity turned to false and pagan religions to fill the void. Oxford 1937 was a call to the churches to reassert themselves against this secular and pagan challenge.

Details

Pages
282
Year
2004
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631522325
Language
English
Keywords
Oxford Ökumenische Bewegung Ecumenical history Mission history Secularism Totalitarianism Oldham, Joseph Bell, George Brunner, Emil Weltkirchenkonferenz für Praktisches Christentum Geschichte
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2004. 282 pp.

Biographical notes

Graeme Smith (Author)

The Author: Graeme Smith is Dean of Non-Residential Training at St Michael’s College, Llandaff, and a member of Cardiff University’s Faculty of Theological Studies.

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Title: Oxford 1937