Pietist$506128$ - definizione. Che cos'è Pietist$506128$
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Cosa (chi) è Pietist$506128$ - definizione

PIETISTS WHO BROKE WITH LUTHERANISM
Radical Pietist; Radical Pietistic
  • Women belonging to the [[Old Order River Brethren]], an Anabaptist denomination in the Radical Pietistic tradition
  • Soap Lake]], Washington
  • Palestine]] before being relocated to Australia.
  • A church belonging to the [[Church of the Brethren]], a [[Schwarzenau Brethren]] denomination that is a part of the Radical Pietistic tradition.

Pietist         
  • [[Haugean]] Pietist [[Conventicle]]
  • ''The Broad and the Narrow Way'', a popular German Pietist painting, 1866
  • The "Five Brothers of Württemberg Pietism": Johannes Schnaitmann (1767–1847), Anton Egeler (1770–1850), Johann Martin Schäffer (1763–1851), Immanuel Gottlieb Kolb (1784–1859) and [[Johann Michael Hahn]] (1758–1819).
  • Revelation 15]]:3, where those who triumph over the beast sing the songs of Moses and the Lamb.
  • [[Philipp Spener]] (1635–1705), the "Father of Pietism", is considered the founder of the movement.
  • Pietistic Lutheran frugality, humility, restraint, sense of duty and order have been strong cultural and religious influences in Scandinavia.
  • [[Summer services]] are a feature of [[Laestadian Lutheran]] piety.
MOVEMENT WITHIN LUTHERANISM
Pietist; Pietists; Pietistic; Lutheran Pietism; Pietist Christian; Württemberg pietism; Johan Stendahl; Church Pietists; Pietist Lutheranism; Christian pietism; Pietistic Lutheran; Pietistic Lutheranism
·noun One of a class of religious reformers in Germany in the 17th century who sought to revive declining piety in the Protestant churches;
- often applied as a term of reproach to those who make a display of religious feeling. Also used adjectively.
Pietism         
  • [[Haugean]] Pietist [[Conventicle]]
  • ''The Broad and the Narrow Way'', a popular German Pietist painting, 1866
  • The "Five Brothers of Württemberg Pietism": Johannes Schnaitmann (1767–1847), Anton Egeler (1770–1850), Johann Martin Schäffer (1763–1851), Immanuel Gottlieb Kolb (1784–1859) and [[Johann Michael Hahn]] (1758–1819).
  • Revelation 15]]:3, where those who triumph over the beast sing the songs of Moses and the Lamb.
  • [[Philipp Spener]] (1635–1705), the "Father of Pietism", is considered the founder of the movement.
  • Pietistic Lutheran frugality, humility, restraint, sense of duty and order have been strong cultural and religious influences in Scandinavia.
  • [[Summer services]] are a feature of [[Laestadian Lutheran]] piety.
MOVEMENT WITHIN LUTHERANISM
Pietist; Pietists; Pietistic; Lutheran Pietism; Pietist Christian; Württemberg pietism; Johan Stendahl; Church Pietists; Pietist Lutheranism; Christian pietism; Pietistic Lutheran; Pietistic Lutheranism
a 17th-century movement for the revival of piety in the Lutheran Church.
Pietism         
  • [[Haugean]] Pietist [[Conventicle]]
  • ''The Broad and the Narrow Way'', a popular German Pietist painting, 1866
  • The "Five Brothers of Württemberg Pietism": Johannes Schnaitmann (1767–1847), Anton Egeler (1770–1850), Johann Martin Schäffer (1763–1851), Immanuel Gottlieb Kolb (1784–1859) and [[Johann Michael Hahn]] (1758–1819).
  • Revelation 15]]:3, where those who triumph over the beast sing the songs of Moses and the Lamb.
  • [[Philipp Spener]] (1635–1705), the "Father of Pietism", is considered the founder of the movement.
  • Pietistic Lutheran frugality, humility, restraint, sense of duty and order have been strong cultural and religious influences in Scandinavia.
  • [[Summer services]] are a feature of [[Laestadian Lutheran]] piety.
MOVEMENT WITHIN LUTHERANISM
Pietist; Pietists; Pietistic; Lutheran Pietism; Pietist Christian; Württemberg pietism; Johan Stendahl; Church Pietists; Pietist Lutheranism; Christian pietism; Pietistic Lutheran; Pietistic Lutheranism
Pietism (), also known as Pietistic Lutheranism, is a movement within Lutheranism that combines its emphasis on biblical doctrine with an emphasis on individual piety and living a vigorous Christian life. It is also related to its non-Lutheran (but largely Lutheran-descended) Radical Pietism offshoot that either diversified or spread into various denominations or traditions, and has also had a contributing influence over the interdenominational Evangelical Christianity movement.

Wikipedia

Radical Pietism

Radical Pietism are those Christian churches who decided to break with denominational Lutheranism in order to emphasize certain teachings regarding holy living. Radical Pietists contrast with Church Pietists, who chose to remain within their Lutheran denominational settings. Radical Pietists distinguish between true and false Christianity and hold that the latter is represented by established churches. They separated from established churches to form their own Christian denominations.

Radical Pietism emphasizes the need for a "religion of the heart" instead of the head, and is characterized by ethical purity, inward devotion, charity, asceticism, and mysticism. Leadership was empathetic to adherents instead of sacramentalism. The Pietistic movement developed in Germany, led by those who believed a deeper emotional experience was incompatible with what they saw as a preset adherence to form, no matter how genuine. They stressed a personal experience of salvation and a continuous openness to new spiritual illumination.

Many of the Radical Pietists are influenced by the writings of Jakob Böhme, Gottfried Arnold, and Philipp Jakob Spener, among others. They teach that personal holiness (piety), spiritual maturity, Bible study, prayer, and fasting are essential toward "feeling the effects" of grace.

Churches in the Radical Pietist movement include the Mennonite Brethren Church, Community of True Inspiration (Inspirationalists), the Baptist General Conference, members of the International Federation of Free Evangelical Churches (such as the Evangelical Covenant Church and the Evangelical Free Church), the Templers, the River Brethren (inclusive of the Brethren in Christ Church, the Calvary Holiness Church, the Old Order River Brethren and the United Zion Church), as well as the Schwarzenau Brethren.