Monthly Bulletin

Monthly Bulletin

Author: St. Louis Public Library

Publisher:

Published: 1918

Total Pages: 474

ISBN-13:

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"Teachers' bulletin", vol. 4- issued as part of v. 23, no. 9-


Billy Sunday and the Redemption of Urban America

Billy Sunday and the Redemption of Urban America

Author: Lyle W. Dorsett

Publisher: Mercer University Press

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 230

ISBN-13: 9780865548985

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Part of the Library of Religious Biography, this is the first full-length treatment of mass-evangelist Billy Sunday to appear in 30 years. Lyle Dorsett makes a fresh and original contribuion to our understanding of this pugnaious baseball player-turned-preacher with his use of the Sunday family papers, a source previously unavailable to biographers.


The Devil’s Music

The Devil’s Music

Author: Randall J. Stephens

Publisher: Harvard University Press

Published: 2018-03-19

Total Pages: 222

ISBN-13: 0674919726

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When rock ’n’ roll emerged in the 1950s, ministers denounced it from their pulpits and Sunday school teachers warned of the music’s demonic origins. The big beat, said Billy Graham, was “ever working in the world for evil.” Yet by the early 2000s Christian rock had become a billion-dollar industry. The Devil’s Music tells the story of this transformation. Rock’s origins lie in part with the energetic Southern Pentecostal churches where Elvis, Little Richard, James Brown, and other pioneers of the genre worshipped as children. Randall J. Stephens shows that the music, styles, and ideas of tongue-speaking churches powerfully influenced these early performers. As rock ’n’ roll’s popularity grew, white preachers tried to distance their flock from this “blasphemous jungle music,” with little success. By the 1960s, Christian leaders feared the Beatles really were more popular than Jesus, as John Lennon claimed. Stephens argues that in the early days of rock ’n’ roll, faith served as a vehicle for whites’ racial fears. A decade later, evangelical Christians were at odds with the counterculture and the antiwar movement. By associating the music of blacks and hippies with godlessness, believers used their faith to justify racism and conservative politics. But in a reversal of strategy in the early 1970s, the same evangelicals embraced Christian rock as a way to express Jesus’s message within their own religious community and project it into a secular world. In Stephens’s compelling narrative, the result was a powerful fusion of conservatism and popular culture whose effects are still felt today.


The Great Revivalists in American Religion, 1740-1944

The Great Revivalists in American Religion, 1740-1944

Author: William H. Cooper, Jr.

Publisher: McFarland

Published: 2014-01-10

Total Pages: 193

ISBN-13: 078646206X

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This book presents a historical and theological understanding of how and why Christian revivalism came to be what it is, mainly a series of ineffective meetings. The work shows how revivalism moved from the Edwardian emphasis on the amazing works of God, as the Puritans would have put it, to the "new methods" of Charles Finney and revival as the reasonable works of man as befits Jacksonian democracy. Later, D.L. Moody concentrated on methodology to such a degree that revivals became big business and the focus of the Gilded Age. With Billy Sunday, revivalism has lost all content and has become nothing more than entertainment.


Preacher

Preacher

Author: Roger A. Bruns

Publisher: University of Illinois Press

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 366

ISBN-13: 9780252070754

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Born in Iowa during the Civil War, Billy Sunday rose to fame as the fastest man in baseball during his career with the Chicago White Stockings in the 1880s. In this account of Billy Sunday's life, the author unfolds the story of modern evangelism.