亨特·贝蒂(1876-1951):边缘的良心拒服兵役者

N. Dickson
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引用次数: 1

摘要

格拉斯哥是开放弟兄会运动最兴盛的苏格兰城市。在第一次世界大战期间,他们的议会领导的重要部分支持英国的战争努力。有一个人与此不同,他是福音传教士兼顺势疗法医生亨特·贝蒂。他是伦敦东区一个集会上的领袖人物,他偶尔出版一份期刊,阐述自己的和平主义观点。他的出版物在一家周日报纸上受到批评,他随后的军事听证会和刑事审判也被这家报纸报道。其他格拉斯哥弟兄会的领袖公开与他的立场划清了关系,这反过来又导致了一些弟兄会非战斗人员对他们的批评。除了给出第一次世界大战期间对待良心拒服兵役者的例子外,本文还考察了贝蒂和他的对手对战争所采取的立场,阐明了兄弟会的各个方面,他们的社会阶级和与社会的关系。它探讨了一些弟兄如何拒绝在教会和社会中完全处于边缘地位,但其他人看到了边缘的吸引力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Hunter Beattie (1876–1951): A Conscientious Objector at the Margins
Glasgow was the Scottish city in which the Open Brethren movement grew most profusely. During the First World War, significant sections of the leadership of their assemblies supported the British war effort. One individual who stood apart from this was the evangelist and homeopath, Hunter Beattie. He was the leading individual in an assembly in the east end who launched an occasional periodical in which he expounded his pacifist views. His publication was criticized in a Sunday newspaper, and his subsequent military hearing and criminal trial was covered by the newspaper. Other leading Glasgow Brethren publicly disassociated themselves from his position, which, in turn, led to criticism of them by some Brethren non-combatants. As well as giving an example of the treatment of conscientious objectors during the First World War, the paper examines the positions adopted towards war by both Beattie and his antagonists, illuminating aspects of the Brethren, their social class and relationships to society. It examines how some Brethren rejected a completely marginal status in church and society, but others saw the attraction of the margins.
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