Status
Available
Call number
Collections
Publication
Wallingford, Pa., Pendle Hill, 1948 [reprinted 1971]
Original publication date
1948
Other editions
The Quaker doctrine of inward peace by Howard H. Brinton (Paper Book)
The Quaker doctrine of inward peace by Howard H. Brinton (Paper Book)
The Quaker doctrine of inward peace by Howard H. Brinton (Pamphlet)
User reviews
LibraryThing member QuakerReviews
This is an amazing, thorough, and tender explanation of the Quaker understanding of spiritual transformation, of what and how it happens. We all need to know this. Brinton includes many examples from Quakers over three centuries that inspire and clarify. A careful reading can be helpful to the
Brinton writes, with all his scholarship, in a low-key sweetness and clarity that make a pleasure to read.
Reading through Howard Brinton's 17 Pendle Hill Pamphlets is an excellent Quaker education in itself.
Show More
confused and the discouraged (which surely must be all of us at some time). Brinton writes, with all his scholarship, in a low-key sweetness and clarity that make a pleasure to read.
Reading through Howard Brinton's 17 Pendle Hill Pamphlets is an excellent Quaker education in itself.
Show Less
Similar in this library
Barclay in brief: a condensation of Robert Barclay's Apology for the true Christian divinity, being an explanation and vindication of the principles and doctrines of the people called Quakers. First published in 1676 by Robert Barclay
Women of power and presence : the spiritual formation of four Quaker women ministers by Maureen Graham
Christianity and the inner life : twenty-first century reflections on the words of early Friends by Margery Post Abbott
Words & testimonies : the Carey memorial lecture, Baltimore Yearly Meeting, 1971 by Thomas H. Silcock
Call number
CP 44/1