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Surprised by History


Article # : 10529 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 2 / 1986  1,994 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).

       REINHOLD NIEBUHR: A BIOGRAPHY
       Richard Wightman Fox
       New York: Pantheon Books, 1985
       340 pp., $19.95
       
        Reinhold Niebuhr's appearance on the cover of Time magazine's twenty-fifth anniversary number on March 8, 1948, sealed his reputation as America's leading theologian. Though never a household word--like Billy Graham or Jerry Falwell in the present era--Niebuhr was for more than three decades a towering figure among American intellectuals and a major force in defining both theological and political liberalism.
       
        Richard Fox is a young historian who teaches at Reed College in Portland, Oregon. His new biography of this complex and sometimes controversial thinker fits well into the current genre of critical biographies of Christian leaders such as Dorothy Day, Harry Emerson Fosdick, Martin Luther King, Jr., Oral Roberts, and Francis Cardinal Spellman. And it follows three other books that deal with both Reinhold Niebuhr's life and thought--all of which it surpasses in quality. June Bingham's Courage to Change: The Life and Thought of Reinhold Niebuhr (1961) was the first comparable study, and the only one of three to make extensive use of unpublished sources. But it is not documented and bears the marks of overenthusiasm and the biases of an ardent disciple. Then came Richard H. Stone's Reinhold Niebuhr: Prophet to Politicians (1972), which draws heavily on the journalism in which Niebuhr's concrete intelligence was often more apparent than in his books. It is scholarly and clearly written but lacks a critical distance from its subject and exaggerates Niebuhr's prophetic detachment from cold ... (1999 of 12581 Characters)
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