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EBOOK Questions Women Asked: Historical Issues, Timeless Answers (Carr) - EBOOK

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SKU:
9781601788399
Publisher:
Reformation Heritage Books
Pages:
240
Binding:
MOBI and EPUB
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Paperback

This is an 'ebook'. It contains the same content of its equivalent hard copy (NOT A PDF) and is available in ePub or MOBI formats to be read on your computer, tablet or electronic book reader that accepts those formats. 

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While books about the lives of women in church history are abundant, in this book Simonetta Carr focuses on the important questions they asked—relevant both in the past and today. Throughout church history, women like you (single, married, mothers, and grandmothers, with careers both in and outside their homes) have carefully considered theological issues and asked intelligent and penetrating questions, faithfully seeking the answers in Scripture. You will be encouraged through “Food for Thought” sections at the end of each chapter to consider their questions, raise your own, and discuss them with others. Join your sisters from the church of all ages in taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ!

Read Sample Pages

 

Table of Contents:

1. Marcella of Rome (ca. 325–410): “How Do I Understand the Scriptures?”

2. Macrina the Younger (ca. 330–379): “Should a Christian Live Separate from the World?”

3. Monica of Tagaste (ca. 331−387): “Will My Son Be Lost?”

4. Dhuoda of Uzès (ca. 800–843): “How Can I Nurture a Distant Son?”

5. Kassia (ca. 810–865): “The Fullness of My Sin Who Can Explore?”

6. Christine de Pizan (1364–1430): “Is Woman a Defect of Creation?”

7. Argula Von Grumbach (1492–1554): “Should We Speak against Injustice?”

8. Elizabeth Aske Bowes (ca. 1505–1572): “How Can I Be Sure I Am Saved?”

9. Renée of France (1510–1575): “Should We Pray for God’s Enemies?”

10. Giulia Gonzaga (1513–1566): “How Can I Find Peace of Conscience?”

11. Olympia Morata (1526–1555): “What Can I Do if My Husband Neglects Me?”

12. Charlotte de Bourbon (1546–1582): “What Should I Consider in a Marriage Proposal?”

13. Charlotte Arbaleste Duplessis-Mornay (1550–1606): “Does God Care about Hairstyles?”

14. Dorothy Leigh (d. 1616): “What Should a Mother Teach Her Sons?”

15. Bathsua Makin (ca. 1600–1675): “Should Women Be Educated?”

16. Anne Bradstreet (1612–1672): “How Do I Know the True God Is the One Described in Scriptures?”

17. Elisabeth of the Palatinate (1618–1680): “Are Mind and Body Separate?”

18. Lucy Hutchinson (1620–1681): “How Can We Trust God’s Providence?”

19. Mary White Rowlandson (ca. 1637–1711): “Why Am I Troubled?”

20. Anne Dutton (ca. 1692–1765): “Can Women Write about Theology?”

21. Kata Bethlen (1700–1759): “Can I Marry a Nonbeliever?”

22. Marie Durand (1711–1776): “Can I Be a Secret Christian?”

23. Anne Steele (1717–1778): “Must I Forever Mourn?”

24. Isabella Marshall Graham (1742–1814): “How Can I Help Neglected Families?”

25. Phillis Wheatley (ca. 1753–1784): “How Can I Not Oppose Tyranny?”

26. Ann Griffiths (1776–1805): “What Have I to Do with Idols?”

27. Betsey Stockton (ca. 1798–1865): “Are These the Beings with Whom I Must Spend the Remainder of My Life?”

28. Lydia Mackenzie Falconer Miller (1812–1876): “Can True Science Disagree with the Bible?”

29. Sarah Miller (d. 1801): “Can Christians Have Disturbing Thoughts?”

30. Anne Ross Cundell Cousin (1824–1906): “Can We Sing in Heaven if Our Loved Ones Are Missing?”

31. Jeanette Li (1899–1968): “Can the Church of Christ Be Destroyed?”

 

Author

Simonetta Carr, mother of eight and homeschool educator for twenty years, has worked as a freelance journalist and a translator of Christian works into Italian.

 

Endorsements

“I regularly teach a course on women in church history, and so I was thrilled to see this new volume by Simonetta Carr. Here are many unfamiliar names even for historians with an expertise in church history! Simonetta has recovered a number of great and stirring stories of how God has used gracious and godly women for the good of the church. Highly recommended!” — Michael A. G. Haykin

“Women have played a significant though often overlooked role in church history. Questions Women Asked explores how they have encouraged, corrected, and inspired men—but especially how their questions have helped shape Christian dialogue as ‘iron sharpens iron.’ Contemporary Christians, both women and men, will be challenged to ponder and discuss these questions while further questions will inevitably come to mind.” — Janie B. Cheaney, senior writer, WORLD News Group