TY - BOOK TI - Church history AV - PER .C62 2002 V.71 PY - 2002/// CY - Berne,Indiana PB - The American Society of Church History N1 - No. 1; Heretics and Jews in the Writings of Ademar of Chabannes and The Origins of Medieval Anti-Semitism/Michael Frassetto. --- pp. 1-15; Religious Diversity and Everyday Ethics in the Seventeenth-Century Dutch City Kampen/Frank Van Der Pol. --- pp. 16-62; Monasteries Without Walls: Secret Monasticism in the Soviet Union,1928-39/Jennifer Wynot. --- pp. 63-79; " She offered herself up": The Victim Soul and Victim Spirituality in Catholicism/Paula M. kane. --- pp. 80-119; Reflections on Regionalism and U.S. Religious History/Bret E. Carroll. --- pp. 120-131; If It's South Dakota You Must Be Episcopalian: Lies, Truth-telling, and the Mapping of U.S. Religion/Laurie F. Maffly-Kipp. --- pp.132-142; Mapping the Metaphysical, Plotting the Pious: Assesing Four New Atlases of Religion/David F. Ley. --- pp. 143-151; The Shift from Church and State to Religions as Public Life in Modern Europe/C. T. McIntire. --- pp. 152-167; No. 2; Healing in the History of Christianity Presidential Address, January 2002 American Society of Church History/Amanda Porterfield. --- pp. 243-272; Hymnody as History: Early Evangelical Hymns and the Recovery of American Popular Religion/Stephen Marini. --- pp. 273-306; " The Abominable Crime of Onan": Catholic Pastoral Practice and Family Limitation in the United Staes, 1875-1919/Leslie Woodcock Tentler. --- pp. 307-340; Who Needs Enemies?: Jews and Judaim in Anti-Nazi Religious Discourse/Stephen R. Haynes. --- pp. 341-367; Does American Religion Have a Center?/Amanda Porterfield. --- pp. 369-373; American Religious History-Decentered with Many Centers/Stephen J. Stein. --- pp. 374-379; Is There a Center to American Religious History?/William Vance Trollinger, Jr., --- pp. 380-385; "Does American Religious History Have Center?" Reflections/Peter W. Williams. --- pp. 386-390; No. 3; Introduction/Hans J. Hillerbrand. --- pp. 471-472; The Early Church in North America: Late Antiquity, Theory, and the History of Christianity/David Brakke. --- pp. 473-491; The Future of Medieval Church History/John Van Engen. --- pp. 492-522; Recent Currents in the Historiography of the Radical Reformation/John D. Roth. --- pp. 523-535; Problems and Promises of Pietism Research/Jonathan Strom. --- pp. 536-554; Church History, History of Christianity, Religious History: Some Reflection on British Missionary Enterprise Since the Late Eighteenth Century/Andrew Porter. --- pp. 555-584; The History of Twentieth-Century Christianity as a Challenge for Historians/Hartmut Lehmann. --- pp. 585--599; Women, Gender, and Church History/Merry E. Wiesner-Hanks. --- pp. 600-620; Tradition and History/Richard P. Heitzenrater. --- pp. 621-638; No. 4; The Blood of Christ in the Later Middle Ages/Caroline Walker Bynum. --- pp. 685-714; " The same cause and like quarell": Eusebius, John Foxe, and the Evolution of Ecclesiastical History/Gretchen E. Miton. --- pp. 715-742; Historical and Systematic Theology in the Mirror of Church History: The Lessons of "Ordination" in Sixteenth-Century Saxony/James M. Kittelson. --- pp. 743-773; The Imagined Crusade: The Church of England and the Mythology of Nationalism and Christianity during the Great War/Shannon Ty Bontrager. --- pp. 774-798; Conservative Social Christianity, the Law, and Personal Morality: Willbur F. Crafts in Washington/Gaines M. Foster. --- pp. 799-819; Without Comment or Controversy: The G.I. Bill and Catholic Colleges/Elizabeth A. Edmondson. --- pp. 820-847; Post-secularism Marginializes the University: a Rejoinder to Hollinger/C. John Sommerville. --- pp. 848-857; Why Is There So Much Christianity in the United States? A Reply to Sommerville/David A. Hollinger. --- pp. 858-864 ER -