Description

Book Synopsis
This work offers a way of thinking about Protestantism and its role in shaping American society. The author judges the relevance of a faith from a standpoint opposite the norm - faith that is irrelevant, marginal and cut off from societal influence, D.G. Hart says, is more likely to be genuine.

Trade Review
Scholarly and important work . . . his [Hart's] warnings about the dangers of seeking to gain the world while losing one's soul should be welcomed by all who sense that something is fundamentally wrong in the way religion appears today on the American scene. * The Weekly Standard *
This book has a provocative thesis that engages the question of the corpus Christianum in a new and engaging manner. Recommended. * CHOICE *
D. G. Hart’s argument is original, important, and provocative. The book forces us to re-examine our assumptions concerning the fissures that define the history of American Protestantism. It points us toward a fundamental reassessment of Protestantism’s role in the formation of modern American culture. -- David Watt, Temple University
D. G. Hart's The Lost Soul of American Protestantism is the first book to flesh out the theology of 'Confessional Protestantism,' a concept formerly discussed primarily, if not exclusively, within the ethnic and political confines of 'ethno-cultural' political history. In this remarkable volume readers will encounter a third way in Protestantism that is neither 'evangelical' nor 'liberal,' but a tradition grounded in liturgy and historic creeds and confessions. This is a thoroughly useful, entirely readable, and historically notable volume of interest to scholars and informed lay readers alike. It is a splendid example of innovative argument and has a few surprising conclusions. -- Harry S. Stout, Yale University
Good historical writing calls our attention to something that allows us to ponder it. It may or may not offer a guide for change or summon us to action, but by merely allowing us to look afresh at something we think we know that which was familiar can become intriguing. Such is the service The Lost Soul of American Protestantism provides. In this volume D. G. Hart offers an illuminating new way of looking at the schismatic arena of American Protestantism. * Journal of Church and State *
D. G. Hart wants participants in, and observers of, American religion to realize that dividing things up between 'liberals' and 'conservatives' is simply too simple. Hart asserts that there is a category of religious believers—he calls them 'confessionalists'—who differ fundamentally from both liberals and conservatives. Who these confessionalists are, and why they are important for all who want to resist the trivialization of religion, is the well-told story of this important book. -- Mark A. Noll, Wheaton College
For those interested in the history of American Protestantism, this is D. G. Hart at his best—intelligent, cranky, and iconoclastic. He writes from the perspective of Old School Calvinism and as an opponent of many Christian historians in the academy. -- Bruce Kuklick, University of Pennsylvania
We can thank Hart for opening up a stimulating discussion. * American Historical Review *
Deeply informed. * Theology Today *
Students of church history and American religion can find much food for thought in this volume. * Wisconsin Lutheran Quarterly *
Hart offers numerous historical illustrations. . . . Hart's examples provide an interesting and original mix of materials. * Lutheran Quarterly *

Table of Contents
Foreword Chapter 1: The American Way of Faith Chapter 2: Confessional Protestantism Chapter 3: Defining Conservatism Down Chapter 4: The Intolerance of Presbyterian Creeds Chapter 5: The Sectarianism of Reformed Polity Chapter 6: The Irrelevance of Lutheran Liturgy Conclusion: Confessional Protestantism and the Making of Hyphenated Americans

The Lost Soul of American Protestantism American

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    A Hardback by D. G. Hart, R. Laurence Moore

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      View other formats and editions of The Lost Soul of American Protestantism American by D. G. Hart

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
      Publication Date: 9/4/2002 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780742507685, 978-0742507685
      ISBN10: 0742507688

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This work offers a way of thinking about Protestantism and its role in shaping American society. The author judges the relevance of a faith from a standpoint opposite the norm - faith that is irrelevant, marginal and cut off from societal influence, D.G. Hart says, is more likely to be genuine.

      Trade Review
      Scholarly and important work . . . his [Hart's] warnings about the dangers of seeking to gain the world while losing one's soul should be welcomed by all who sense that something is fundamentally wrong in the way religion appears today on the American scene. * The Weekly Standard *
      This book has a provocative thesis that engages the question of the corpus Christianum in a new and engaging manner. Recommended. * CHOICE *
      D. G. Hart’s argument is original, important, and provocative. The book forces us to re-examine our assumptions concerning the fissures that define the history of American Protestantism. It points us toward a fundamental reassessment of Protestantism’s role in the formation of modern American culture. -- David Watt, Temple University
      D. G. Hart's The Lost Soul of American Protestantism is the first book to flesh out the theology of 'Confessional Protestantism,' a concept formerly discussed primarily, if not exclusively, within the ethnic and political confines of 'ethno-cultural' political history. In this remarkable volume readers will encounter a third way in Protestantism that is neither 'evangelical' nor 'liberal,' but a tradition grounded in liturgy and historic creeds and confessions. This is a thoroughly useful, entirely readable, and historically notable volume of interest to scholars and informed lay readers alike. It is a splendid example of innovative argument and has a few surprising conclusions. -- Harry S. Stout, Yale University
      Good historical writing calls our attention to something that allows us to ponder it. It may or may not offer a guide for change or summon us to action, but by merely allowing us to look afresh at something we think we know that which was familiar can become intriguing. Such is the service The Lost Soul of American Protestantism provides. In this volume D. G. Hart offers an illuminating new way of looking at the schismatic arena of American Protestantism. * Journal of Church and State *
      D. G. Hart wants participants in, and observers of, American religion to realize that dividing things up between 'liberals' and 'conservatives' is simply too simple. Hart asserts that there is a category of religious believers—he calls them 'confessionalists'—who differ fundamentally from both liberals and conservatives. Who these confessionalists are, and why they are important for all who want to resist the trivialization of religion, is the well-told story of this important book. -- Mark A. Noll, Wheaton College
      For those interested in the history of American Protestantism, this is D. G. Hart at his best—intelligent, cranky, and iconoclastic. He writes from the perspective of Old School Calvinism and as an opponent of many Christian historians in the academy. -- Bruce Kuklick, University of Pennsylvania
      We can thank Hart for opening up a stimulating discussion. * American Historical Review *
      Deeply informed. * Theology Today *
      Students of church history and American religion can find much food for thought in this volume. * Wisconsin Lutheran Quarterly *
      Hart offers numerous historical illustrations. . . . Hart's examples provide an interesting and original mix of materials. * Lutheran Quarterly *

      Table of Contents
      Foreword Chapter 1: The American Way of Faith Chapter 2: Confessional Protestantism Chapter 3: Defining Conservatism Down Chapter 4: The Intolerance of Presbyterian Creeds Chapter 5: The Sectarianism of Reformed Polity Chapter 6: The Irrelevance of Lutheran Liturgy Conclusion: Confessional Protestantism and the Making of Hyphenated Americans

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