Dr. M. Darrol Bryant is a Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Religious Studies and the Director of the Centre for Dialogue and Spirituality in the World’s Religions at Renison University. Dr. Bryant is the author of over 25 books dealing with both modern religions and interfaith dialogue. Professor Bryant has lectured at over one hundred universities, and he is the inaugural honoree of the Huston Smith Interfaith Educator of the Year Award.
2024 1-4955-1277-0 "The relationship of religion and society has undergone dramatic and continued change since the dawn of the modern era in Europe in the 1500s. At the heart of those changes has been the relationship of religion to the secular. The developments that originated in medieval Europe ultimately affected every corner of the globe and thus the relationships of religions and societies everywhere are markedly different today from what they were in 1500." -Dr. M. Darrol Bryant
2001 0-7734-7571-0 This volume is composed of articles by Anglican scholars across Canada, and includes an essay by the Primate of Canada. It examines the current state of the Anglican church, and the challenges it faces, from culture wars to medical ethics and environmentalism.
2001 0-7734-7571-0 This volume is composed of articles by Anglican scholars across Canada, and includes an essay by the Primate of Canada. It examines the current state of the Anglican church, and the challenges it faces, from culture wars to medical ethics and environmentalism.
1986 0-88946-772-2 Collection of 17 essays on the important but little-known thinker Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy, one of the first academics to resign his post in Germany when Hitler came to power.
1984 0-88946-763-3 A collection of eleven essays offered in response to Stephen Sykes' The Integrity of Anglicanism, subjecting Sykes' ideas to searching criticism.
1993 0-7734-9389-1 Provides a close, critical examination of the Heimert thesis. Also offer a close textual examination of the corpus of Edwards's writing in relation to the question of America's symbolic foundations.