Grant Us Courage: Travels Along the Mainline of American Protestantism
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Grant Us Courage: Travels Along the Mainline of  American Protestantism  -     By: Randall Balmer

Grant Us Courage: Travels Along the Mainline of American Protestantism

Oxford University Press / 1996 / Hardcover

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Stock No: WW00867

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Product Description

(PUBOxford)In 1950 Christian Century ran a series of articles on 12 prominent mainline Protestant churches. Now 45 years later Balmer, who wrote and hosted "Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory" for PBS, revisits these places and finds an altogether different state of affairs. 176 pages, hardcover.

Product Information

Title: Grant Us Courage: Travels Along the Mainline of American Protestantism
By: Randall Balmer
Format: Hardcover
Number of Pages: 176
Vendor: Oxford University Press
Publication Date: 1996
Dimensions: 8.5 X 5.5 (inches)
Weight: 4 ounces
ISBN: 0195100867
ISBN-13: 9780195100860
Stock No: WW00867

Publisher's Description

In 1950, Christian Century ran a series of articles on twelve churches, some large, some small, each representing a strand of American mainline Protestantism. Now, nearly fifty years later, Randall Balmer--author and host of Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory, the acclaimed book and PBS series on American evangelicism--has revisited each of these twelve churches to take the pulse of Protestantism today. The result is a remarkable narrative, graced with touches of local color and memorable portraits of the people involved, and filled with deft observations and carefully nuanced insights about Protestantism at century's end.
Much as he did in Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory, Balmer crisscrosses America to give us a first-hand look at how Christianity has fared in the last half-century. What emerges is a church challenged by diminished influence, but with signs of hope for the future. For instance, he takes us to West Hartford, Connecticut, where we learn how a gregarious pastor, Bob Heppenstall, rekindled the spirit of the First Church of Christ Congregational--still housed in its stately, classic New England meetinghouse--that had suffered from inept management until recent years. And in Ames, Iowa, at the Collegiate United Methodist Church, we watch George White struggle to regain his church's once dominant voice in the religious life of the town, a voice now dimmed by the growth of fundamentalism. Some churches have held steadfastly to long-established roles, such as the Washington Prairie Lutheran Church, in Decorah, Iowa, which has been a model of continuity, serving its Norwegian-American community in much the same way since it was founded in 1851. And Balmer also visits some thriving churches, such as Hollywood's First Presbyterian Church, led by the great preacher John Lloyd Ogilvie, who was recently appointed chaplain of the U.S. Senate. In Minneapolis, Balmer encounters Mount Olivet Lutheran Church, a congregation that has not only increased its membership, but can now call itself the biggest Lutheran church in the world.
In Grant Us Courage, one of our most thoughtful chroniclers of the American scene offers an intimate look at mainline Protestantism at the close of the century. We come away with the feeling of having been there, of having listened to the voices of an important segment of Christian life, and of having found a deeper understanding of religious life in America today.

Author Bio

Randall Balmer is Professor of Religion at Barnard College, Columbia University.

Library Journal

Balmer (The Presbyterians, LJ 1/93) here revisits 12 "great churches" (all Protestant) that Christian Century profiled in 1950. Many have fallen on hard times, with diminished congregations and resources, though a few--such as Hollywood First Presbyterian--continue to flourish. Bellevue Baptist of Cordova, Tennessee, abandoned downtown Memphis for the suburbs and the mainstream for militant fundamentalism. Balmer believes that American Protestantism has become "calcified, complacent, routinized, and institutionalized...bereft of ideas and wary of innovation." As Balmer demonstrates, American religion now thrives on the margins of evangelicalism and New Age spirituality. For general readers.--Richard S. Watts, San Bernardino Cty. Lib., Cal.

Publisher's Weekly

Balmer, professor of religion at Columbia, is best know as the personable and insightful host of the PBS Series, Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory, and author of the 1994 book by the same name. Balmer once again crisscrosses America, this time to revisit the 12 churches that, in 1950, were chosen by the readers of Christian Century magazine as America's ``great'' mainline Protestant congregations. In so doing, the author provides his 1995 readers with 12 vivid snapshots of the tremendous changes in American religious life. He concludes that while several of the 1950 12 still have remarkable life, none would now be known as ``great.'' (In 1950, for instance, one of the ``powerful'' churches reported that nearby schools all checked its calendar before making up theirs; the reverse is now true.) From their position of overweening confidence in 1950, most of the 12 have now been marginalized by the surrounding culture. Balmer is an engaging and challenging commentator with a sprightly style, and his concluding essay on the state of the American church is absolutely penetrating. (Nov.)

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