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God-Optional Religion in Twentieth-Century America: Quakers, Unitarians, Reconstructionist Jews, and the Crisis Over Theism

Autor Isaac Barnes May
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 feb 2023
By the beginning of the twentieth century, it had become harder for many Americans to believe in God. Religious groups struggled to adapt to rapidly changing cultural and scientific developments that seemed to challenge the plausibility of traditional beliefs. In God-Optional Religion in Twentieth-Century America, Isaac Barnes May focuses on the stories of three groups-liberal Quakers, Unitarians, and the forerunners of what would become Reconstructionist Judaism-that attempted to preserve their faith in the modern world by redefining what it meant to be religious. Between the 1920s and the 1960s, these communities underwent the most massive theological change imaginable, allowing their members the choice of what kind of God they wanted to believe in, or the option to not believe in God at all.These groups pioneered the idea that being religious and believing in God might be separate concepts, a notion that spread widely, moving from church pulpits to novels and magazine covers. Eventually, the Supreme Court enshrined the idea that "God" could mean many different things in American law. God-Optional Religion in Twentieth-Century America provides an intellectual history that helps make sense of why most contemporary Americans' answer to whether they believe in God is often far more complicated than a simple "yes" or "no."
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780197624234
ISBN-10: 0197624235
Pagini: 352
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.64 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

Isaac Barnes May skilfully weaves biography and history to show how a group of radical theological thinkers, confronted with religious doubt, found existential meaning and social hope, even at the boundaries of belief. May charts the despair that Christians and Jews in the early twentieth century felt at the loss of religious certainty, as well as the persistence and passion of their struggles to keep the faith, pointing toward a profound reconsideration of the sources of the self and social progress in an increasingly non-theistic America. This brilliant historical narrative speaks to the present era with an undeniable urgency.
This important book, so well researched and written, builds beautifully on previous scholarship and original research to show how three religious groups have constructed a collective permissive spirituality to navigate the problems of belief in God on one hand and the challenges of secularisation and secularism on the other. This is a significant moment in church history and thus this is a significant book that requires our close attention.
For a wide array of twentieth-century liberals, modernists, and humanists, God became a dispensable character not only within their cosmologies but also within their religious communities. Training his attention on Unitarians, Quakers, and Reconstructionist Jews, May expertly navigates the swirling currents of skepticism, agnosticism, and political activism that propelled so many in these circles beyond the borders of theism into a God-optional religion.
This work delivers exactly what its title promises: a history of how several religions, or subsects of those religions, moved away from a traditional conception of a transcendent god to one more amenable to personal, scientific, and even secular understanding.
May's book is most significant for carving out "God-optional" as a category for religious study - a meaningful iteration of American liberal religion that overlaps with, yet remains distinct from the entirely "Godless" or irreligious... Scholars interested in this larger phenomenon or the study of American liberal religion will find the book of interest.
Isaac Barnes May's God-- Optional Religion in Twentieth- Century America is an impressive and engaging piece of scholarship.