Converting the Saints: A Study of Religious Rivalry in America

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, Christianity, Denominations, Mormonism, Philosophy
Cover of the book Converting the Saints: A Study of Religious Rivalry in America by Charles Randall Paul, Greg Kofford Books
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Charles Randall Paul ISBN: 1230002400693
Publisher: Greg Kofford Books Publication: September 4, 2018
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Charles Randall Paul
ISBN: 1230002400693
Publisher: Greg Kofford Books
Publication: September 4, 2018
Imprint:
Language: English

Missions are attacks no matter how benign the motive. The history of religious missions is replete with complex social, political, economic, and religious conflict. This historical study of how Americans have managed or mismanaged past religiously-influenced conflicts can provide practical wisdom for our time when many social, political, and economic conflicts are strongly influenced by religious factors. We live in local and global societies that are deeply troubled if not torn apart by the perennial problem of religious or ideological conflict between uncompromising rivals that desire mutually exclusive religious and political ends.

Converting the Saints focuses on American religious history and particularly on the early-twentieth-century Protestant missions to Utah to convert Mormons to traditional Christian belief. After the Mormons acquiesced to federal laws against polygamy and federal pressure to secularize Utah’s governance, the religious conflict over Mormonism’s Christian legitimacy remained unresolved. This was a religious conflict that, in true American style, was engaged as a contest of persuasion held on the figurative battlefield for the human heart. Both rivals understood this, and while unsettled by their mutual opponent’s aggressive criticisms, they did not think it wrong or even strange for their rival to engage them. Centering on the cases of three Protestant missions in Utah, this study explores the crucial understanding at the center of the American experiment: that persuasive contestation over religion, ideology, or founding principles is normal in our secular State, and even healthy for free citizens to flourish within a diverse society.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Missions are attacks no matter how benign the motive. The history of religious missions is replete with complex social, political, economic, and religious conflict. This historical study of how Americans have managed or mismanaged past religiously-influenced conflicts can provide practical wisdom for our time when many social, political, and economic conflicts are strongly influenced by religious factors. We live in local and global societies that are deeply troubled if not torn apart by the perennial problem of religious or ideological conflict between uncompromising rivals that desire mutually exclusive religious and political ends.

Converting the Saints focuses on American religious history and particularly on the early-twentieth-century Protestant missions to Utah to convert Mormons to traditional Christian belief. After the Mormons acquiesced to federal laws against polygamy and federal pressure to secularize Utah’s governance, the religious conflict over Mormonism’s Christian legitimacy remained unresolved. This was a religious conflict that, in true American style, was engaged as a contest of persuasion held on the figurative battlefield for the human heart. Both rivals understood this, and while unsettled by their mutual opponent’s aggressive criticisms, they did not think it wrong or even strange for their rival to engage them. Centering on the cases of three Protestant missions in Utah, this study explores the crucial understanding at the center of the American experiment: that persuasive contestation over religion, ideology, or founding principles is normal in our secular State, and even healthy for free citizens to flourish within a diverse society.

More books from Greg Kofford Books

Cover of the book Traditions of the Fathers: The Book of Mormon as History by Charles Randall Paul
Cover of the book Biography and Family Record of Lorenzo Snow by Charles Randall Paul
Cover of the book Second Witness: Analytical and Contextual Commentary on the Book of Mormon: Volume 3b - Mosiah 11-29 by Charles Randall Paul
Cover of the book Modern Polygamy and Mormon Fundamentalism: The Generations after the Manifesto $31.95 by Charles Randall Paul
Cover of the book Rube Goldberg Machines: Essays in Mormon Theology by Charles Randall Paul
Cover of the book The Expanded Canon: Perspectives on Mormonism and Sacred Texts by Charles Randall Paul
Cover of the book The Mormon Battalion: Its History and Achievements by Charles Randall Paul
Cover of the book President Heber C. Kimball's Journal (With Illustrations) by Charles Randall Paul
Cover of the book The Book of John Whitmer: Kept By Commandment by Charles Randall Paul
Cover of the book History of the Late Persecutions Inflicted By the State of Missouri Upon the Mormons by Charles Randall Paul
Cover of the book New Witnesses for God (All 3 Volumes) by Charles Randall Paul
Cover of the book Prisoner for Polygamy: The Memoirs and Letters of Rudger Clawson at the Utah Territorial Penitentiary, 1884-87 by Charles Randall Paul
Cover of the book Mr. Mustard Plaster and Other Mormon Essays by Charles Randall Paul
Cover of the book Parallels and Convergences: Mormon Thought and Engineering Vision by Charles Randall Paul
Cover of the book Scraps of Biography (With Illustrations) by Charles Randall Paul
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy