Short History of the Christian Church

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John Fletcher Hurst 1893
English
  • Preface
  • 1.1 The Church and Its History
  • 1.2 The Scene of the Labors of the Apostles
  • 1.3 The Greek and Roman Conditions
  • 1.4 The Attitude of Judaism towards Christianity
  • 1.5 The Period of Universal Persecution
  • 1.6 Christian Worship
  • 1.7 The Life of Christians
  • 1.8 Ecclesiastical Organization
  • 1.9 Ebionism and Gnosticism
  • 1.10 The Pagan Literary Attack
  • 1.11 The Christian Defenders
  • 1.12 The Christian Schools
  • 1.13 Liberation under Constantine
  • 1.14 Reaction under Julian
  • 1.15 The Montanistic Reform
  • 1.16 Controversies on Christ
  • 1.17 The Later Controversies
  • 1.18 Ecclesiastical Schisms
  • 1.19 The Scriptures and Tradition
  • 1.20 Apocryphal Writings
  • 1.21 Theology During the Early Period
  • 1.22 Ecclesiastical Government and the Roman Primacy
  • 1.23 Sacred Seasons and Public Worship
  • 1.24 Ecclesiastical Discipline
  • 1.25 Christian Life and Usages
  • 1.26 The Church in the Catacombs
  • 1.27 Monasticism
  • 1.28 The Age of Gregory the Great
  • 1.29 The Expansion of Christianity
  • 1.30 The Close of the Early Period
  • 2.1 The Medieval Transition
  • 2.2 The Reign of Charlemagne
  • 2.3 Church and State under the Later Carolingian Rulers
  • 2.4 The Fictitious Isidore
  • 2.5 Mohammedanism
  • 2.6 The Schools of Charlemagne
  • 2.7 Theological Movements
  • 2.8 The Rule of the Popes
  • 2.9 The Gregorian Reform
  • 2.10 Moral Life and Ecclesiastical Usages
  • 2.11 The Public Services
  • 2.12 The Writers of the Times
  • 2.13 New Missions
  • 2.14 Schism between the East and the West
  • 2.15 The Anglo-Saxon Church
  • 2.16 Arnold of Brescia
  • 2.17 The Waldenses and the Albigenses
  • 2.18 Thomas Becket
  • 2.19 The Monastic Orders
  • 2.20 Monasteries as Centres of Intellectual Life
  • 2.21 Christian Art
  • 2.22 Christian Worship
  • 2.23 The Crusades: A.D. 1096-1270
  • 2.24 Arabic Philosophy
  • 2.25 The Hohenstaufens in Italy
  • 2.26 The Jewish Philosophy
  • 2.27 The Scholastic Philosophy
  • 2.28 Abelard and his Fortunes
  • 2.29 General Literature
  • 2.30 The Great Schools
  • 2.31 The Divided Papacy
  • 2.32 Retrospect
  • 3.1 The Heralds of Protestantism
  • 3.2 The Humanism of Italy
  • 3.3 The Reformatory Councils
  • 3.4 The German Reformation: Martin Luther
  • 3.5 Luther: Further Labors and Personal Character
  • 3.6 Melanchthon and other German Reformers
  • 3.7 The Reformation in German Switzerland
  • 3.8 The Reformation in French Switzerland
  • 3.9 The English Reformation: First Period
  • 3.10 The English Reformation: Second Period
  • 3.11 The Scotch Reformation
  • 3.12 The Reformation in the Netherlands
  • 3.13 The Reformation in France
  • 3.14 The Reformation in Italy
  • 3.15 The Reformation in Spain and Portugal
  • 3.16 The Reformation in Scandinavia
  • 3.17 The Reformation in the Slavic Lands
  • 3.18 Survey of Results
  • 3.19 The Four Hundredth Anniversary of Luther's Birth
  • 4.1 Recuperative Measures of Romanism
  • 4.2 The Order of Jesuits
  • 4.3 The English Church under James I and Charles I
  • 4.4 The English Puritans
  • 4.5 The Quakers
  • 4.6 Cromwell and the Commonwealth
  • 4.7 The Church During the Restoration
  • 4.8 English Deism
  • 4.9 The Protestant Church in Germany
  • 4.10 Mysticism in Germany
  • 4.11 The Thirty Years' War
  • 4.12 The Protestant Emigration to America
  • 4.13 Arminius and the Synod of Dort
  • 4.14 The Salzburg Persecution
  • 4.15 Spener and Pietism
  • 4.16 The Moravians
  • 4.17 Swedenborg and the New Church
  • 4.18 Rationalism in Germany
  • 4.19 The Evangelical Reaction
  • 4.20 French Mysticism and Flemish Jansenism
  • 4.21 French Infidelity
  • 4.22 French Protestantism
  • 4.23 The Russo-Greek Church
  • 4.24 Wesley and Methodism
  • 4.25 The Tractarian Movement
  • 4.26 The Schools in the Church of England
  • 4.27 The English Universities
  • 4.28 Scholars and Divines of the English Church
  • 4.29 Puritan and Presbyterian Scholars and Divines
  • 4.30 Critical Periods in the History of the Scottish Church
  • 4.31 The Ekskine Schism and the Haldane Revival
  • 4.32 The Great Disruption
  • 4.33 Learning and Literary Culture in the Roman Catholic Church
  • 4.34 The Growth of Mary-Worship
  • 4.35 The End of the Temporal Power of the Papacy
  • 4.36 The Contest with Germany
  • 4.37 The Survival of Superstition
  • 4.38 Roman Catholicism in England
  • 4.39 The Vatican Council
  • 4.40 The Old Catholics
  • 4.41 The Evangelical Alliance
  • 4.42 The Sunday-School
  • 4.43 The Revision of the Bible
  • 4.44 The Protestant Mission Field
  • 4.45 The Temperance Reform
  • 4.46 Philanthropy in England and Germany
  • 4.47 English Preachers
  • 4.48 Literature and Religion in England
  • 4.49 The Salvation Army
  • 4.50 Survey of Religious Life on the Continent
  • 5.1.1 The New Christendom
  • 5.1.2 The Spanish Colonization
  • 5.1.3 The French Colonization
  • 5.1.4 The English Colonization: Virginia and Massachusetts
  • 5.1.5 Maryland, Pennsylvania, and other English Colonies
  • 5.1.6 Continental Colonies: Dutch, Swedes, Huguenots, and other Protestants
  • 5.1.7 The Providential Planting
  • 5.1.8 Political Framework of the Colonies
  • 5.1.9 Church Government in the Colonies
  • 5.1.10 Education
  • 5.1.11 Intolerance in the Colonies
  • 5.1.12 Religious Life of the Colonies
  • 5.1.13 Colonial Worship and Usages
  • 5.1.14 Missions to the Indians
  • 5.1.15 Theological Movements
  • 5.1.16 Religious Literature
  • 5.1.17 Early Leaders
  • 5.1.18 The Influence of the Puritans
  • 5.1.19 The Episcopal Defection in Connecticut
  • 5.2.1 The Church at the Founding of the Republic
  • 5.2.2 The Separation of Church and State
  • 5.2.3 The French Infidelity
  • 5.2.4 Revival at the Beginning of the Century
  • 5.2.5 Expansion in the South and West
  • 5.2.6 The Protestant Episcopal Church
  • 5.2.7 The Congregational Church
  • 5.2.8 The Reformed Churches
  • 5.2.9 The Baptist Church
  • 5.2.10 The Presbyterian Church
  • 5.2.11 The Lutheran Church
  • 5.2.12 American Methodism
  • 5.2.13 The Roman Catholic Church
  • 5.2.14 The Unitarian Church
  • 5.2.15 The Universalist Church
  • 5.2.16 The Moravian Church
  • 5.2.17 Alexander Campbell and the Disciples of Christ
  • 5.2.18 The Quakers
  • 5.2.19 Other Denominations
  • 5.2.20 The Transcendentalists
  • 5.2.21 Communistic Churches
  • 5.2.22 The Mormons
  • 5.2.23 The Antislavery Reform
  • 5.2.24 The Temperance Reform
  • 5.2.25 Philanthropy and Christian Union
  • 5.2.26 Missions
  • 5.2.27 The Sunday-School
  • 5.2.28 Christian Literature
  • 5.2.29 The American Pulpit
  • 5.2.30 Theology of the American Church
  • 5.2.31 Theological Scholarship
"The present work has as its basis the series of five Short Histories by the same author, which appeared in the following order: The Reformation, 1884; The Early Church, 1886; The Medieval Church, 1887; The Modern Church in Europe, 1888; and The Church in the United States, 1890. The five volumes form a connected History of the Church nearly down to the present time." (from the preface)

John Fletcher Hurst was an American bishop in the Methodist Episcopal Church. He wrote the 5 histories as Chautauqua textbooks. The audio files are in the following order:
Part 1: The Early Church (A.D. 30-750)
Part 2: The Medieval Church (A.D. 750-1517)
Part 3: The Reformation (A.D. 1517-1545)
Part 4: The Modern Church in Europe (A.D. 1558-1892)
Part 5: The Church in the United States (A.D. 1492-1892)

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