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Hardcover Modern American Religion, Volume 1: The Irony of It All, 1893-1919 Volume 1 Book

ISBN: 0226508935

ISBN13: 9780226508931

Modern American Religion, Volume 1: The Irony of It All, 1893-1919 Volume 1

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Book Overview

Martin E. Marty argues that religion in twentieth-century America was essentially shaped by its encounter with modernity. In this first volume, he records and explores the diverse ways in which American religion embraced, rejected, or cautiously accepted the modern world.

"Marty writes with the highest standards of scholarship and with his customary stylistic grace. No series of books is likely to tell us as much about the religious condition...

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An Outstanding Study of Modern American Religion

The dust jacket of the original hardcover edition of this book has a photograph of Martin E. Marty, one of the deans of American religious history, grinning like the Chesire Cat from Alice in Wonderland. He has reason to grin, for this book was the impressive first fruits of a projected four-volume chronicle of American religion in the twentieth century. It offers a unique interpretation of the nation's religious history. Marty contends that religion in twentieth century America has been shaped, essentially, by its contact with the modern world and all that this contact implies.In this volume Marty explores the diverse ways in which American religion and religious leaders embraced, rejected, or cautiously accepted what he called "modernity." Some, the anti-modernists, self-consciously preserved older ways against the onslaught of new ideas such as Darwinism, socialism, and a host of other "isms" which were viewed as contrary to the "truth of the gospel." Others, such as the progressives of the early twentieth century, embraced the modern world and sought to make it their own through such vehicles as the social gospel. A few reached an uneasy alliance with modern America, seeking to channel what they considered the best the new society offered into areas they believed would be most advantageous to their followers and the larger religious community. Within this larger framework, Marty narrates a story that begins with the World's Parliament of Religions at the Columbian Exposition of 1893 and ends at the conclusion of World War I, as the nation returned to "normalcy." The author figuratively follows the participants in the World 's Parliament of Religions in their various spiritual arenas, recording the story of individuals and movements which shaped and directed American religion in the early part of this century.At the heart of his study, as it should be with all historical inquiry, are the people themselves. Marty sees much to appreciate in all of the reactions to modernity by various leaders: the progressivism of "modernists" like William Rainey Harper; the unique mixture of religion and secularity found in the lives and thoughts of Henry Adams, George Santayana, and John Dewey; the transforming spirit of ethnicity in religion among Indian, African American, and other minority groups; and the anti-modern conceptions of such revivalists as Dwight L. Moody and Billy Sunday. Whether they embraced the modern world or not, whether they attempted to pass beyond the modern world to a more basic religious stance unaffected by it or not, Marty perceives each of these individuals and each of the groups as representative of the fascinating kaleidoscope of the nation's religious makeup. Although religious groups are diverse, each offers an essential ingredient to the whole, thereby making our spiritual lives a little richer.Marty argues that a healthy irony marked these decades in American religious history. He notes that however strenuously the individual
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