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  1. Oct 1, 2007 · The book explains what happened to religion in the 1960s, why it happened, and how the events of that decade shaped the rest of the 20th century. Keywords: Christianity, new theology, new morality, Bishop Robinson, Charismatic Movement, Pop John XXIII, Martin Luther King, 1960s.

    • View Chapter

      Abstract. This chapter begins by discussing some of the main...

    • Introduction

      The end of the ‘long 1960s’ did therefore see at least a...

    • Abbreviations

      Oxford University Press is a department of the University of...

    • Acknowledgements

      I also owe a lot to the many other friends and colleagues...

    • Bibliography

      1968: A Student Generation in Revolt (interviews with those...

    • List of Tables

      1. Church of England Easter communicants, 1934–1973 392....

  2. 23. McLeod, Religious Crisis, 141–60, 259. radical elites and legislative change that, building up, led to a cumulative challenge to religious and political conservativism by the late 1960s. But the case must be put that ideas were being led by popular actions.

    • Callum G. Brown
    • 2010
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  4. Nov 15, 2010 · The crisis of the 1960s is now central to debates about religious change and secularisation in the twentieth century. However, the nature of the crisis is contested. Using Hugh McLeod's The Religio...

    • Callum G. Brown
    • 2010
  5. Apr 1, 2009 · For McLeod makes clear beyond the shadow of a doubt that the socio-cultural changes associated with the 1960s were often helped along by religious players. He is centrally concerned to demonstrate that there is little ‘validity in the view which sees religion and the churches as passive victims of overpowering secularizing forces’ (p. 233).

    • Gerd-Rainer Horn
    • 2009
  6. The Sixties were a time of transformative change in the social and cultural experience for many Western people. Their religious lives were no exception. The era has often been presented as one of significant religious crisis for the dominant tradition in the West: Christianity.

  7. Reviews 747. suffer from the hyperbole of branding. The "Veritas" series has much in with "Radical Orthodoxy" beyond its editors and directors - namely, hubris. self-importance of the series introduction is matched by the bafflingly production and packaging of these books - £60 each. If only scholarly argument was allowed to speak for itself ...

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