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Roland Herbert Bainton, Ph.D. (Yale University; A.B., Whitman College), served forty-two years as Titus Street Professor of Ecclesiastical History at Yale Divinity School. A specialist in Reformation history, he continued writing well into his twenty years of retirement. His most popular book, Here I Stand, sold more than a million copies.
Ordained as a Congregationist minister, he never served as the pastor of a congregation.
Ages: 14+ Content considerations: it’s a bit more mature content concerning religion through the ages, best suited for an audience very confident and comfortable in their beliefs.
This is a very readable, short history of Christianity. Obviously, not everything can be covered in a book of this size, but the major ideas and players are present, and it’s a very enjoyable history that is well worth reading.
A very interesting beginner's book on church history. Written possibly for high school level and above, it is good for anyone who wants to get a general view of church history. Simply written, with illustrations, by a good author who has written many books on this subject.
Meh.... Actually, I found the chapters pertaining to time periods I was previously interested in to be good and those I didn't particularly care about to be boring. Goodreads says this book is "culturally significant" and I suppose 2000 years boiled down to 219 pages is a pretty good effort.
This book would make a very good beginner primer on church history for high school students. While it begins to unravel and become less detailed toward the end, a majority of this work is well done.
An excellent, concise, and simple version of 2000 years of Church history (focusing especially on the western world, but including some about the eastern church in the earlier part of the book). This book would be a great way for someone in their late elementary/middle school years to first delve into church history. I was reminded of a lot of things I had forgotten and inspired to read more by this book, which are both always good things. It is dated, however, with the most notorious example being his usage of "Mohammedan" (instead of Muslim). Yes, this book came out in like 1941, but seriously, he was an ivy league professor, and at least could have gone with "Moslem". To Muslims, using the term Mohammedan would be sort like calling Christians, "Paulines". But that does not taint the whole book, which I enjoyed thoroughly.
This book provides an excellent survey of Christian history for upper-elementary age children. It isn't a bad place for adults who are new to Christian history to start. The book starts with Jesus and the apostles and continues to the early 20th Century. Several key figures and events are covered in brief summaries that are easy to understand. The focus of the book is primarily upon Europe and the United States, so you will need primer sources for the history of the Church in other locations if you are trying to demonstrate the global impact of Christianity.
Sometimes too simplistic, painting an inacurate view of the circumstances, cause and effect, and the church as a whole, this book is still a valuable source for anyone wanting an introduction or overview of church history.