Book Information
ISBN | 807012262 | |
---|---|---|
Published Date | 1994 | |
Book Condition | Very Good | |
Jacket Condition | Very Good | |
Binding | Hardcover | |
Size | 8vo | |
Place of Publication | U.S.A. | |
Category: | Religion | |
Author: | Charles B. Strozier | |
Publisher: | Beacon Press |
$15.00 CAD
pp. 316, “Stozier, a psychoanalyst and a history professor at John Jay College, City University of New York, writes about those Christians who believe that God will remake the world in a firestorm of destruction and send Jesus back to rule for a millennium. The author spent five years attending services and interviewing Pentecostals, Baptists and Evangelicals in New York City. His 27 respondents–among them an ex-prostitute, a multimillionaire entrepreneur turned missionary, a fiery preacher and a Wall Street broker–regarded their past as sinful or worthless. Their born-again experiences, in Strozier’s formulation, represent attempts to heal traumatized, fractured selves. The final chapters of this cogent, worthy study attempt to place Christian fundamentalism on a continuum of apocalyptic belief by contrasting it with Hopi Indians’ myths of impending eco-catastrophe and with New Ager premonitions of a dawning Aquarian Age. “
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ISBN | 807012262 | |
---|---|---|
Published Date | 1994 | |
Book Condition | Very Good | |
Jacket Condition | Very Good | |
Binding | Hardcover | |
Size | 8vo | |
Place of Publication | U.S.A. | |
Category: | Religion | |
Author: | Charles B. Strozier | |
Publisher: | Beacon Press |
pp. 316, “Stozier, a psychoanalyst and a history professor at John Jay College, City University of New York, writes about those Christians who believe that God will remake the world in a firestorm of destruction and send Jesus back to rule for a millennium. The author spent five years attending services and interviewing Pentecostals, Baptists and Evangelicals in New York City. His 27 respondents–among them an ex-prostitute, a multimillionaire entrepreneur turned missionary, a fiery preacher and a Wall Street broker–regarded their past as sinful or worthless. Their born-again experiences, in Strozier’s formulation, represent attempts to heal traumatized, fractured selves. The final chapters of this cogent, worthy study attempt to place Christian fundamentalism on a continuum of apocalyptic belief by contrasting it with Hopi Indians’ myths of impending eco-catastrophe and with New Ager premonitions of a dawning Aquarian Age. “
Weight | 1 kg |
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