BOOKS - HISTORY - Church in the Wild Evangelicals in Antebellum America
US $9.75
186884
186884
Church in the Wild Evangelicals in Antebellum America
Author: Brett Malcolm Grainger
Year: 2019
Number of pages: 281
Format: PDF
File size: 11 MB
Language: ENG
Year: 2019
Number of pages: 281
Format: PDF
File size: 11 MB
Language: ENG
Since Perry Miller's 1940 essay on the connection between Puritan theology and Transcendentalism, "From Edwards to Emerson," there has been a dominant model for thinking about the relationship between American religion and nature. According to Miller, Emerson and his fellow New England elites were the only ones during the antebellum period to turn to nature for a direct, unmediated access to spirituality; this was part of their protest against the orthodoxy of Protestantism. We would, however, misunderstand the past if we forgot that New England Transcendentalists, as important as they are to American intellectual history, were an elite minority. There were other religious groups who also turned to the field and stream, the stone and the tree, in their everyday religious practice and their theology. Evangelical Christianity was the popular religion of antebellum America. During this period, evangelical relationships to the material world, and to nature at large, were closer to Catholicism than one might expect.