An Uncommon Union, John D. Hannah
An Uncommon Union, John D. Hannah
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An Uncommon Union
Dallas Theological Seminary and American Evangelicalism

Author: John D. Hannah

Narrator: Jeremy Johnson

Unabridged: 14 hr 41 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 10/20/2009


Synopsis

Dallas Theological Seminary is often viewed as a bastion of conservative evangelicalism, marked by an unswerving devotion to theological positions of fundamentalism, biblical inerrancy, and dispensational premillennialism.An Uncomfortable Fraternity, the first book-length history of Dallas Theological Seminary, written by a graduate and veteran faculty member of DTS, provides a necessary corrective to such a simplistic assessment. Using the tenures of the school’s five presidents as the backbone for his narrative, John D. Hannah reveals the tensions that DTS has experienced in its eighty-plus years of existence.Each successive president of DTS brought his own unique style and perceptions to the school, even as he dealt with the changing religious and cultural milieu that swirled around it. Hannah argues that, rather than being a monolithic institution, Dallas Theological Seminary is a unique blend of differing heritages and of opposing traditions, a place that defies easy categorization.A keenly insightful and thoughtful work, An Uncomfortable Fraternity illuminates the path charted by the leaders of a prominent American seminary in a rapidly changing world. All readers interested in the history and future of evangelicalism, regardless of their theological persuasion, will benefit from this book.

About John D. Hannah

Dr. John D. Hannah (ThD, PhD) is distinguished professor of historical theology at Dallas Theological Seminary and research professor of theological studies. He has received numerous awards and has written several books, including The Glory of God Alone, The Kregel Pictorial Guide to Church History, and Our Legacy: A History of Christian Doctrine.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Russel on May 29, 2020

DTS History Good historical review of the theological culture without and within the Dallas Theological Seminary. Statistics and references support the inferences drawn by John Hannah.......more

Goodreads review by Sean on September 09, 2022

Aside from a few interesting tidbits I found it rather boring. Yes, it’s an institutional biography but the statistics at the end of each chapter reads more like an accreditation report. These could have been easily incorporated into a set of tables and/or graphs in the appendix.......more

Goodreads review by Daniel on July 24, 2011

This institutional history is much needed as historians of religion and conservatism work to further understand the roots and success of American evangelicalism in the 20th century. Dallas Theological Seminary (DTS) provides an excellent lens into the Dallas area (a stand in, perhaps, for the Sunbel......more

Goodreads review by Wallace on June 28, 2013

An interesting insight to what was and is a evangelical phenomena. However, my overall enjoyment of the book was spoiled by the under-emphasis on Dallas's impact and interaction with American Evangelicalism, especially in the simple overviews of various controversies, e.g. neo-evangelicalism, Lordsh......more