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Protestant Soul-Searching


Article # : 10149 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 8 / 1986  4,006 Words
Author : Richard Quebedeaux
Richard Quebedeaux is a senior consultant for the International Religious Foundation in New York. He is the author of The New Charismatics II (1983), By What Authority: The Rise of Personality Cults in American Christianity (1982), I Found It! The Story of Bill Bright and Campus Crusade (1979), and The Worldly Evangelicals (1978).

       LIBERAL PROTESTANTISM: REALITIES AND POSSIBILITIES
       Robert S. Michaelson and Wade Clark Roof, editors
       The Pilgrim Press, 1986
       $11.95, paperback
       
        Robert S. Michaelson and Wade Clark Roof are the editors for this collection of fifteen scholarly essays that together evaluate the current status and future prospects of "liberal," "mainline," or "old-line" Protestantism. Once the dominant school of Christian thought and practice in the United States, liberal Protestantism has lost its prominence and popularity in recent years in the wake of a resurgence of "conservative" Protestantism. The contributors are professors and doctoral students or religion, history, and sociology. They identify themselves as Protestant liberals and share a view of theology that stresses “freedom, liberation from earthly authoritarianism, closed systems, [and] the ultimate authority whose way is dynamically disclosed in and through the Bible."
       
        Normally, such collections are full of "in-house" academic jargon, so much so that their appeal is limited, meriting review only in the appropriate professional society journals. Liberal Protestantism, however, avoids the pitfalls of the academic journal and provides the reader with accurate, concise, comprehensible, and thorough analyses of the issues that confront liberal Protestantism. The essays are arranged thematically. None seems out of place or irrelevant, and the writers are not reluctant to make bold value judgments. The authors give us the empirical data that we would require of "objective scholarship," but they also interpret the date from the perspective of their own ... (1996 of 25948 Characters)
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