Topic:How significant was Edinburgh 1910 in the development of the modern ecumenical movement?

Subject:Religious studies

Volume: 7 pages

Type; Essay

Format:Other

Description
THIS IS SUPPOSED TO BE 3000 TO 3500 WORDS INCLUSING FOOTNOTES (NOT LESS, NOT MORE). THE BOOKS AND ARTICLES THAT MUST BE USED IN THIS PAPER ARE ALSO GIVEN. THE WRITER CAN USE OTHER BOOKS/ARTICLES/ RELIABLE WEBSITES (PREFERABLY UK AUTHORS) THAT ARE RELEVANT TO ANSWERING THE QUESTION. IN ALL, ABOUT EIGHT OR NINE BOOKS SHOULD BE USED INCLUDING THE ONES PROVIDED. FOOTNOTES ARE VERY IMPORTANT IN THIS PAPER AND AN EXAMPLE OF HOW IT IS TO BE WRITTEN IS AS FOLLOWS: BOOKS: Author Forename(s) (only use initials if that is the form used on the title page) Author Surname, Title of Book: Subtitle, Series/Edition/Volume if relevant (Place of Publication: Publisher, Date of Publication), page number(s). EXAMPLE R.P. Beaver, Ecumenical Beginnings in Protestant World Mission (New York: Thomas Nelson, 1982), pp. …… -Use the abbreviations p. for one page and pp. for a range -Do NOT use ibid, op. cit., and et al. JOURNAL ARTICLES: Author’s forename (or initials) and surname (NB this is the author of the article, not the editor of the journal), ‘Title of article in single quotation marks’, Title of journal in italics, Volume number of journal (Year of publication), page numbers for the whole article (page(s) of specific reference) EXAMPLE Brian Stanley, ‘Defining the boundaries of Christendom: the two worlds of the World Missionary Conference, 1910’. International Bulletin of Missionary Research, 30.4 (2006), pp. 171-176. WEBSITES: Author or organisation (if available), Title (Place: Publisher, year) (if available) <web address of document> [accessed Day Month Year]. THESE BOOKS/ ARTICLES MUST BE USED -R.P. Beaver, Ecumenical Beginnings in Protestant World Mission (New York: Thomas Nelson, 1982) – R.S. Bilheimer, Breakthrough: the emergence of the ecumenical tradition (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1989) – R. Rouse & S.C. Neill, eds, A History of the Ecumenical Movement, Vol. 1: 1517-1948 (3rd ed., Geneva, WCC, 1986), chs. 8-9 – Brian Stanley, ‘Edinburgh 1910 and the Oikumene’, in: Anthony R. Cross (ed.), Ecumenism and History: Studies in Honour of John H.Y. Briggs (Carlisle: Paternoster, 2002), pp. 89-105 – Stanley, Brian, ‘Defining the boundaries of Christendom: the two worlds of the World Missionary Conference, 1910’. International Bulletin of Missionary Research, 30.4 (2006), pp. 171-176. – Bonk, Jon, Edinburgh 1910: friendship and the boundaries of Christendom’, International Bulletin of Missionary Research, 30.4 (2006), pp. 169-170. – Günther, Wolfgang, ‘The history and significance of world mission conferences in the 20th century’, International Review of Mission, 92.367 (2003), pp. 521-537.

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