'...a good entre into the complex world of the Pietists in Europe and America.' Craig D. Atwood, Church History, volume 81"The essays share an effort to defend Pietism from charges that the movement's emphasis upon religious experience and regeneration frequently degenerated into individualism and anti-intellectualism, an egregious charge for authors defending and promoting pietism as the key to evangelical higher education."Carter Lindberg, Catholic Historical Review July 2013'[This volume] remains a good resource for selective reading based on research needs. The authors successfully dispel antiquated notions and demonstrate Pietism's rich intellectual and theological impact throughout history.'Hoon J. Lee, Reviews in Religion and Theology, Vol.21, No.1, January 2014"...an excellent introductory resource into the polyphone of voices comprising pietism within protestant Christianity, and yet communicates the intricacies, nuances, and regional diversities through its collection of easily accessible essays. [...] the work is not only a helpful text for those new to the study of pietism and its impact on global Christianity, it also continues to explore the deeper - and highly nuanced - impact pietism has had on Protestantism since the reformation." Joseph McGarry, University of Aberdeen, in Theological Book Review (tbr), Vol. 25, No.1, 2013"The Pietist Impulse in Christianity has often been viewed as a negative stereotype of Protestantism. In this book, edited by Christian Collins Winn, Christopher Gehrz, William Carlson, and Eric Holst, a more positive assessment is given. The essays trace the origins and effects of the fast-moving reform movement, which originated with the German Lutherans."-Church Times, 13 November 2015"The reading of the collected volumes is enlightening and enriching and offers new concepts and perspectives for the [study of pietism]."-Hans-Anton Drewes, Theologisch Literaturzeitung No 139 Heft 1, Januray 14