This book discusses Griffith Jones’s High Church ministry and theology, which developed into mass evangelism in Wales. It considers Jones’s background, his life as a parson, preaching in Welsh and educational interests, as well as his determination to remain within the Church of England. Bishop George Bull’s concerns about evangelism, influence of the Prayer Book and Continental Pietism, ‘conversionism’, and the tendency to separatism are also discussed. Jones may not have been an original thinker, but he was an untiring communicator and organiser. There are sections on Jones’s catechising, ‘baptismal covenant’, and moderate Calvinism which influenced later Welsh Calvinistic Methodism. Jones’s advocacy of the Welsh language, especially with English donors to his schools, his links with the SPCK, and collaboration with gentry – especially Sir John Philipps and Bridget Bevan – show the effectiveness with which he participated in the growing evangelical movement in Wales.
قائمة المحتويات
Introduction
Chapter 1 Griffith Jones in his Setting
Chapter 2 Sir John Philipps, the SPCK and a New View of Mission
Chapter 3 Bishop George Bull as Griffith Jones’s Mentor
Chapter 4 Prayer-Book Roots of Griffith Jones’s Preaching
Chapter 5 The Theology of Griffith Jones’s Preaching
Chapter 6 Griffith Jones’s Moralism and Theology
Chapter 7 Catechizing, Baptism, and the Trend Towards Evangelicalism
Chapter 8 Griffith Jones’s Ministry and the Language
Chapter 9 Griffith Jones’s Legacy to the Church of England in Wales
Conclusion
Bibliography