General
- Introduction
- Dickens and Religion: The Life of Our Lord (1846)
- Dickens, the Bible, and Christianity
- Dickens's antisectarian religious attitudes (and anti-sabbatarianism)
- Discards Old Testament portion of Christianity (which was so important to Evangeicals)
- Dickens's dislike of religious controversy
- Dickens, the man who invented Christmas
- Biblical Allusions and Theme in Hard Times
- Devoted, selfless clergmen in Dickens
- Fracturing biblical patterns int the later novels
- Victorian Religion: An Overview
Pickwick Papers
- Dickens satirical criticism of Evangelical clergy — Rev. Stiggins in Pickwick Papers
- The Preacher as Depicted in Nineteenth-Century Visual Art
- Sam Weller on "The worst o' these here shepherds"
- Pickwick at first only half Christian
- Mocking Muggleton's "zealous advocacy of Christian principles with a devoted attachment to commercial rights"
- Restoring Faith in Pickwick
Great Expectations
- Spiritual Destruction and Renewal in Great Expectations and Jane Eyre
- Explicit discussions of faith absent from Great Expectations
- Combining Christ and Cinderella in Great Expectations
Other Works
- The Life of Our Lord — intentionally unpublished during his lifetime
- Allusions to Gospel of St Luke in Hard Times
- Christian innocents in Oliver Twist and other works
- Christian pessimism in Little Dorrit
- Mrs. Clenham and criticism of Evangelicals in Little Dorrit
Last modified 9 June 2011