Good and Evil


Book Description

In this multi-disciplinary collection we ask the question, 'What did, and do, Quakers think about good and evil?' There are no simple or straightforwardly uniform answers to this, but in this collection, we draw together contributions that for the first time look at historical and contemporary Quakerdom's approach to the ethical and theological problem of evil and good. Within Quakerism can be found Liberal, Conservative, and Evangelical forms. This book uncovers the complex development of metaethical thought by a religious group that has evolved with an unusual degree of diversity. In doing so, it also points beyond the boundaries of the Religious Society of Friends to engage with the spectrum of thinking in the wider religious world.










An Historical and Literary Account of the Formularies, Confessions of Faith, or Symbolic Books, of the Roman Catholic, Greek, and principal Protestant Churches. By the author of the Horæ Biblicæ, and intended as a supplement to that work ... To which are added four essays. I. A succinct historical account of the religious orders of the Church of Rome. II. Observations on the restriction imposed by the Church of Rome on the general reading of the Bible in the vulgar tongue. III. The principles of Roman-catholics in regard to God and the King, first published in 1684 ... IV. On the reunion of Christians


Book Description