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Who is Martin Marty?
| Article
# : |
13428 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
Date : |
9 / 1987 |
3,024 Words |
| Author
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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). |
In academic circles and the mass media, Martin E. Marty is recognized as the principal interpreter of the American religious scene. It is rare, when a major religious news story breaks, not to find him quoted in the New York Times, Newsweek, Time, or U.S. News and World Report. In an increasingly pluralistic, secular society, the authority of theological systems in public life is virtually nonexistent, but religion, now mostly "privatized," is still important in contemporary America. We still need scholarly and understandable interpreters of the shapes and moods of American religion who can tell us where we have been and where we are likely to go. Foremost among these commentators is Martin E. Marty.
The context of Marty's rise
The death of Paul Tillich in the mid-1960s marked the end of an era in American theology. Tillich had tried to make God relevant to a modern world in which science and the rational methods of scientific investigation had rendered traditional theological metaphysics largely irrelevant. Tillich attempted to accommodate the God of classical Christian tradition to modern thought by defining God as "the ground of being," or "being itself." Bringing a transcendent God "down to earth" and making God "immanent" in human affairs and history had been attempted before but never in such a definitive way.
After Tillich, theology centered on human experience. Much contemporary theology arises from reflection on the reality of the human condition in its various historical and social contexts, rather than on God as first principle. Thus, in recent years we have seen a plethora of works dealing with ethnic theology,
... (1993 of 18304 Characters)
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