This study of the life and thought of John Williamson Nevin (1803-1886) offers a revised interpretation of an important nineteenth-century religious thinker. Along with the historian, Phillip Schaff, Nevin was a leading exponent of what became known as the Mercersburg Movement, named for the college and theological seminary of the German Reformed Church located in Mercersburg, Pennsylvania. The story is a neglected aspect of American studies. Wentz provides a kind of post-modern perspective on Nevin, presenting him as a distinctively American thinker, rather than as a reactionary romantic. Although influenced by German philosophy, historical studies, and theology, Nevin's thought was a profound response to the American public context of his day. He was, in many respects, a public theologian, judging the prevailing development of American Christianity as a new religion that was fashioning its own disintegration and that of American culture at large. Nevin's reinterpretation of catholicity in the American context opened the way for a radical understanding of religion and of American public life.
ISBN: | 9780195082432 |
Publication date: | 1st May 1997 |
Author: | Richard E Professor of Religious Studies, Professor of Religious Studies, University of Arizona, USA Wentz |
Publisher: | Oxford University Press Inc |
Format: | Hardback |
Pagination: | 178 pages |
Series: | Religion in America |
Genres: |
Protestantism and Protestant Churches Christianity Theology Cultural studies |