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Religion in Modern America
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11358 |
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BOOK WORLD
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11 / 1986 |
3,045 Words |
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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). |
MODERN AMERICAN RELIGION, VOLUME 1: THE IRONY OF IT ALL
1893-1919
Martin E. Marty
The University of Chicago Press, December 1986
$24.95, cloth
Being "in the world, but not of it" has been the most important ethical concern of Christianity since it's beginning. The relationship between Christ and "the world" (i.e., culture) continues to be an enduring concern, expressing itself differently under varying historical circumstances. Each believer's Concept On Of Christ (i.e., the whole Christian tradition) influences his participation in the wider culture around him, and his involvement in culture shapes his understanding of Christ. These assumptions function as the prologue to H. Richard Niebuhr's classic study of religion in society, Christ and Culture, first published in 1951. In this work, Reinhold's brother on the Yale Divinity School faculty gave us a then-novel typology by which to view the worldly and other worldly behavior of Christendom and assess its impact on culture, and vice versa. Here he discerns five main kinds of relationships between church and world held by different groups within Christianity, historically considered. Then, like a good sociologist and ethicist, he describes each grouping objectively, setting forth their goals, their strengths and shortcomings, and in so doing gives us a finely-drawn map to use to make sense of the way Christians have lived and acted within society.
In Niebuhr's typology, the two extreme positions are "Christ against culture" and "the Christ of culture." The first of these "ideal types" gives
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