Digital Logos Edition
This long-awaited second volume was published five years after the first one was completed in 1907, due to Dargan accepting a pastorate at First Baptist Church in Georgia. Picking up where he left off in the first volume, Dargan begins with the end of the sixteenth century. He narrows his focus in this volume to specific countries and various styles of preaching. Still attentive to the influence on preaching from art, literature, politics, and education, Dargan presents valuable historical content and context for preaching right up until the end of the nineteenth century.
“eighteenth century was Franz Hunolt (d. about 1740 or” (Page 211)
“The rebuke of evil is virile and sometimes rude, and the struggles of the time called forth a sharpness of polemic not always consonant with Christian love. The easy morals of some elements of society were also reflected in a few of the clergy of the epoch, though sternly reproved in others.” (Page 138)
“We must now retrace our steps from the beginning of the century, taking up in similar manner the notable series of dissenting preachers, who were the contemporaries, the rivals, and in many cases the equals of their brethren of the Established Church.” (Page 168)
“third great culmination—the powerful Catholic preaching of the thirteenth century” (Page 8)
“more attention was given both to analytic and synthetic form.” (Page 12)
Edwin Charles Dargan was born in 1852 in South Carolina. He was a pastor and professor of homiletics and history. After teaching homiletics for fifteen years at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, he wrote A History of Preaching (2 Vols.). Dargan died in 1930.