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Angels, Worms, and Bogeys: The Christian Ethic of Pietism is unavailable, but you can change that!

From their theological and devotional writings to their social and ecclesial practices, the fathers and mothers of Pietism boldly declared the ethical spirit of the Christian faith. This seventeenth-century renewal movement inspired a simple Christian ethic by connecting Christian character with the theological virtues of faith, hope, and love. The Pietists sought to cultivate these virtues by...

encouragement. In some ways, they were ordinary Christians who used their gifts well and who engaged basic practices on a daily basis. In other ways, they were extraordinary because through their faithful practices they were co-participants in renewing the church and in expanding the priesthood to include marginalized people. In the end, their devotion to Christ and practices of faith reveal that these categories—ordinary and extraordinary—collapse when one engages the gospel faithfully and when
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