@sambostock Complex. Saw the religious case as their ‘job’? Perhaps NI’s stricter Sunday observance in mid-late c.20th made it a low priority issue? 1695 Sunday Observance Act, maybe?
PCI did think much about Sundays in mid-1950s, with hints of the civic/moral in their findings.
How can today’s church leaders deal with international tensions and armed conflict involving competing ideological systems?
My review of Andrew Chandler’s important book on British Christian responses to the Third Reich is now free online with @Themelios_TGC
Several years ago UTC received papers and personal items belonging to former Principal, J. Ernest Davey. Ahead of the 100th anniversary of the ‘Davey Trial’ we continue to work to archive, conserve, and catalogue this collection to promote research into Davey’s life and thought.
OUT NOW: The latest book in our Histories of the Sacred and Secular, 1700-2000 series is 'Christianity in Britain Since 1914', edited by David Goodhew and Mark Smith - find out more here: https://t.co/eGoLyUzHbX
Delighted that, 4 years after I started writing it, my article on Archbishop J.A.F. Gregg, the Church of Ireland, and the Second World War has been included in this issue!
#churchhistory#secondworldwar#twitterstorians
A couple months late, but our March 2022 issue of "Church History: Studies in Christianity and Culture" is now available on @CambridgeCore!
ASCH members can log in and access the issue through our website:
https://t.co/TQqLO2tUEY
On #VEDay, Archbishop Gregg of the Church of Ireland said ‘But while we thank God, let us not forget those many at the price of whose endurance and sacrifice, even unto death, this victory has been won.’ #VEDay75#churchhistory
#OTD 1939 #WWII broke out. W.S. Kerr, Dean of Belfast, claimed that: 'A Christian minister could not tolerate his country taking the sword for selfish reasons, for aggression or revenge or prestige, but there are holy causes that we dare not allow to be destroyed.'
#churchhistory
Something for the weekend: as part #DDay75thAnniversary, why not read this #cleverblogs about the Church of Ireland and interpretations of the Second World War: https://t.co/Hy40lww7yQ
#OTD 1944 Presbyterians at the General Assembly in Belfast heard of the D-Day landings. They sang the national anthem, prayed and sent a telegram to the King, assuring him of their 'loyalty and affection' and prayers for 'victory and deliverance'. #DDay75#presbyterian#belfast
#OnThisDay in 1941 Rosemary Street Presbyterian Church was destroyed in an air raid on Belfast. By 05:00 'the interior of the Church seemed a mass of flame and the mahogany pews were burning fiercely.'
#belfast#WW2#presbyterian#NorthernIreland
This day in 1941 saw the most intense air raid on Northern Ireland of the Second World War.
Among the damaged or destroyed property were at least 11 church buildings of various denominations.
Thanks to @TheBlitzMaps for the map of the #BelfastBlitz#belfast#churchhistory
Congratulations to Matthew Houston who received our Neely Postgraduate Prize for 2018 (read his blog here:https://t.co/Hy40lww7yQ). The deadline for the 2019 prize is *30 August*. Details here: https://t.co/obWsTKH6u7
Just 9 days before the first raid on Belfast and just over 2 weeks before the devastating raid on Easter Tuesday which killed over 900 people, the greatest loss of life to a single raid outside London, official concern over inadequate AA defence