Books & Publications
Al-Hibri, Azizah Y., Elshtain, Jean Bethke, Haynes, Charles C., and Marty, Martin E., Religion in American Public Life: Living with Our Deepest Differences. American Assembly Books, 2001, 224 pages, ISBN: 0393322068
From Publishers Weekly: At a time when conflicts are increasingly litigated rather than discussed, forums in which diverse Americans seek common purpose deserve special celebration. This book represents one such forum: the background papers, final report, and call to action of the American Assembly’s second gathering, which was dedicated to the role of religion in American public life. For three days, leaders from many sectors and faith-based organizations worked together on policies and actions concerning religion’s intersection with education, social services, the media, and other arenas. And yet, as the book’s subtitle suggests, this religiously diverse gathering did not achieve consensus on intractable matters of religion and conscience…. This book, and the three-day assembly of which it is the product, represent an invaluable framework for civic disagreement. That the disagreeing citizens are luminary thinkers makes this book a valuable part of the national conversation. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
Brekus, Catherine, The Religious History of American Women: Reimagining the Past (forthcoming, April 2007)
From Amazon.com: More than a generation after the rise of women’s history alongside the feminist movement, it is still difficult, observes Catherine Brekus, to locate women in histories of American religion. In this collection of 12 essays, contributors explore how considering the religious history of American women can transform our dominant historical narratives. Covering a variety of topics-including Mormonism, the women’s rights movement, Judaism, witchcraft trials, the civil rights movement, Catholicism, everyday religious life, Puritanism, African American women’s activism, and the Enlightenment-the volume enhances our understanding of both religious history and women’s history. Taken together, these essays sound the call for a new, more inclusive history.
Butler, Jon (Editor) and Stout, Harry S. (Editor), Religion in American History: A Reader. Oxford University Press, USA, 1997, 527 pages, ISBN: 0195097769
From Amazon.com: At the end of the twentieth century, religion seems to be ubiquitous in America. Its existence and influence are especially apparent in our politics, but its presence is most deeply felt in our personal lives and experience. Was it always this way? Offering a rich selection of classic and recent scholarship, Religion in American History: A Reader presents an extraordinary portrait of religion’s fate across four centuries of the American experience. Its essays cover major issues in American history and religion, detailing religion’s purpose in American life and examining many topics that are either ignored or minimized in similar books. It addresses the decline and revival of American Indian religion; women’s powerful roles in American religion; immigration, assimilation, and separation, and how they have contributed to the American religious experience; political activism; and religious bigotry. It also discusses Catholics, Protestants and fundamentalism, Mormons, and Jews. Selected debates encourage readers to test conflicting interpretations about religion’s impact on American history, and original documents trace religion’s influence on slavery, race, and politics from the colonial era to the late twentieth century. Divided into three sections - colonial era, nineteenth century, and twentieth century - and featuring essays by prominent American historians, this volume serves as an excellent text for courses in American Religion, the History of Religion, and Religion and Culture. It is enhanced by helpful introductions to each essay and ample suggestions for further reading. Uniquely comprehensive, Religion in American History: A Reader serves as a one-volume tour through America’s tumultuous, varied, and often misunderstood religious past.
Cadge, Wendy, Heartwood: The First Generation of Theravada Buddhism in America (Morality and Society Series). University Of Chicago Press, 2004, 278 pages, ISBN: 0226089002
From Publishers Weekly: Cadge presents a carefully considered ethnography examining “how Buddhism arrived in the United States and is… adapting” to its new context. Specifically, she focuses on Theravada Buddhism, the branch practiced in such Southeast Asian countries as Thailand and Sri Lanka. She begins with an overview of the history of Theravada Buddhism and its establishment in the U.S. by both Asian immigrants and - separately - American-born converts who had studied in Asia. She spends the bulk of the book focusing on Wat Phila, a Thai temple near Philadelphia founded and attended by native Thais, and the Cambridge Insight Meditation Center (CIMC), founded and attended primarily by white Americans. © Reed Business Information.
Colson, Charles W., Born Again. Revell, 20th Anniversary edition 1996, 352 pages, ISBN: 0800786335
Thirty years ago, against the backdrop of the explosive Watergate scandal, Charles Colson revealed the story of his own search for meaning during the tumultuous investigations that led to the collapse of the Nixon administration. A convicted former special counsel to the president, Colson paradoxically found new life not with success and power, but while in national disgrace and serving a prison sentence. In the new foreword for this anniversary edition of Born Again, Colson describes the day he sat in his prison cell and began jotting down notes of the events that brought about the fall of a president and the rebirth of his former “hatchet man.” Those notes developed into this book, which has sold more than two million copies. “All I knew was that I had a story I must tell, a story that might bring hope and encouragement to others,” Colson recalls. In a new epilogue, he describes some of the ways the story has indeed brought hope, encouragement, and more
Groeschel, Benedict, Listening at Prayer. Paulist Press; 3rd Ed edition 1984, 96 pages, ISBN: 080912582X
Often times we have the tendency to forget that prayer is a dialogue instead of a monologue. Many times we come to prayer asking God to get rid of this problem or to help with this other situation. However, what about God? What does He want from us? Where does He want us to go or do? We will never find the answers to these questions if we do not do what the title of the book says. To put it simply, prayer is like the conversation that one has with a dear friend on the phone. You talk, they listen; they talk, you listen. The same should be our relationship with God. This book is geared toward orienting our spiritual life not toward venting, asking, or pleading, but toward listening, patience and acting. Groeschel presents a very simple and human approach to prayer that, in the end, is fruitful. This book is a must for anyone young and old in their faith. It is never too late to return to the basics of spirituality, especially if we listen at prayer.
Hauerwas, Stanley, Prayers Plainly Spoken. Intervarsity Press, 1999, ISBN: 0830822097
This collection of prayers in everyday language demonstrates how to pray with passion, turbulence, and life. Described by SPCK (Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge) Publishing: Eloquent in their simplicity, these invigorating, passionate prayers encourage us to come to God with the real concerns of our everyday lives. For we can be sure that God wants our prayers. He does not wish us to hide anything from him, but rather to cry, to shout, to say what we think we understand - and what we do not! This wonderfully accessible book, from a widely-respected theologian, will be invaluable to anyone concerned to deepen and strengthen their relationship with God.
Koenig, Harold and McConnell, Malcolm, The Healing Power of Faith: How Belief and Prayer Can Help You Triumph Over Disease. Simon & Schuster, 2001, 336 pages, ISBN: 0684852977
From Publishers Weekly: Koenig … has spent more than 20 years studying “the impact of people’s religious life on their physical and emotional health,” spurred by his belief in faith’s healing power. Each chapter is illustrated with lively and persuasive anecdotal accounts of people belonging to diverse religious communities, including fundamentalist, conservative and liberal Christians, as well as Jews, and suffering from health problems related to simple stress, marital difficulties, depression, obesity, alcohol and drug addiction, chronic illnesses, heart disease, AIDS, and cancer. Though Koenig often hedges his claims even as he’s making them, his book as a whole drives home the words of one of his patients: “When you have religious faith, you live with constant reminders of hope.” Although it suffers from repetition and fails to answer any of the deeper questions about the nature of suffering, Koenig’s volume offers powerful examples of how religious faith has enabled some to endure and even triumph in the midst of woe. Agent, Boston Literary Group. Copyright © Reed Business Information, Inc.
Marty, Martin E., Health and Medicine in Lutheran Tradition: Being Well (Health/Medicine and the Faith Traditions). Crossroad Publishing Company, 1983, 171 pages, ISBN: 0824506138
The beginning of a series designed to help medical professionals (as well as religious and academic professionals) be more aware of religious resources and restrictions.
Marty, Martin E., Pilgrims in Their Own Land: 500 Years of Religion in America. Penguin, Reprint edition 1985, 512 pages, ISBN: 0140082689
From M.B. Trapp: For a highly readable and engaging history of religion in America, you can’t get much better than Marty. Pilgrims in Their Own Land: 500 Years of Religion in America is the work of an accomplished scholar who knows how to write history as it should be: an ongoing drama filled with interesting characters moved by varying motivations. Marty paints the picture of American religious life as a vivid panorama of people and movements committed, in their own way, to that particularly American brand of the human search for God.
Meacham, Jon, American Gospel: God, the Founding Fathers, and the Making of a Nation. Random House, 2006, 416 pages, ISBN: 1400065550
From Publishers Weekly: Historian and Newsweek editor Meacham’s third book examines over 200 years of American history in its quest to prove the idea of religious tolerance, along with the separation of church and state, is “perhaps the most brilliant American success.” Meacham’s principal focus is on the founding fathers, and his insights into the religious leanings of Jefferson, Franklin, Adams and Co. present a new way of considering the government they created. So it is that the religious right’s attempts to reshape the Constitution and Declaration of Independence into advocating a state religion of Christianity are at odds with the spirit of religious freedom (”Our minds and hearts, as Jefferson wrote, are free to believe everything or nothing at all - and it is our duty to protect and perpetuate this sacred culture of freedom”). Meacham also argues for the presence of a public religion, as exemplified by the national motto, “In God We Trust,” and other religious statements that can be found on currency, in governmental papers, and in politicians’ speeches….Two extensive appendices reprint early government documents and each president’s inaugural bible verses. Copyright © Reed Business Information.
McCloud, Aminah Beverly, Transnational Muslims in American Society. University Press of Florida, 2006, 161 pages, ISBN: 0813029716
From University Press of Florida Web site: “A must read for anyone with a serious interest in American Islam. This indispensable work complicates the process of immigration, citizenship or just what belonging means for Muslim migrants of all sorts . . . a balanced assessment by a highly respected Muslim scholar [and] a much needed voice in our divided world.” - Zain Abdullah, Temple University
This in-depth yet accessible guide to Islamic immigrants from the Middle East, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Africa challenges the widely held perception that Islam is monolithic and exclusively Arab in identity and expression. Offering a topical discussion of Islamic issues, the author argues that there is no one immigrant Islam community but a multifaceted and multicultural Islamic world. She offers an insider’s look at what ideals and practices Muslims bring to this nation, how they see themselves as Americans, and how they get along with each other and with indigenous American Muslims.
McCloud, Aminah and Al Deen, Frederick Thaufeer, A Question of Faith for Muslim Inmates. Kazi Publications 1999, 88 pages, ISBN: 1871031915
The authors have combined their backgrounds and experiences in academic as well as professional prison imam work in a most productive and harmonious manner as they provide authoritative scriptural and legal sources for a wide range of important challenges facing the Muslim inmate, including dietary regulations, observance of required prayers, fasting during Ramadan, ritual purity, and other matters.
Moore, Jr., James P., One Nation Under God: The History of Prayer in America. Doubleday Publishing, 2005, 320 pages, ISBN: 0385504039
From Barnes & Noble.com: In this highly original approach to the history of the United States, James Moore focuses on the extraordinary role that prayer has played in every area of American life, from the time of the first settlers to the present day and beyond. A stirring chronicle of the spiritual life of a nation, One Nation Under God shows how the faith of Americans - from the founding fathers to corporate tycoons, from composers to social reformers, from generals to slaves - was an essential ingredient in the formation of American culture, character, commerce and creed. One Nation Under God brings together the country’s hymns, patriotic anthems, arts, and literature as a framework for telling the story of the innermost thoughts of the people who have shaped the United States we know today. Beginning with Native Americans, One Nation Under God traces the prayer lives of Quakers and Shakers, Sikhs and Muslims, Catholics and Jews, from their earliest days in the United States through the advent of cyberspace, the aftermath of 9/11, and the 2004 presidential election. It probes the approach to prayer by such diverse individuals as Benjamin Franklin, Elvis Presley, Frank Lloyd Wright, Martha Graham, J. C. Penney, Mary Pickford, Cesar Chavez, P. T. Barnum, Jackie Robinson, and Christopher Columbus. It includes every president of the United States as well as America’s farmers, clergy, immigrants, industrialists, miners, sports heroes, and scientists. Available in paperback in May 2007, One Nation Under God is also available on an abridged compact disc. The book is published by Doubleday; the audio book by Random House. A two-CD companion to the book, The Many Voices of One Nation Under God compiles some of the most important music written and recorded to illustrate the history of prayer in America. The music CDs are produced by PBA Music Publishing. Two forthcoming books by James Moore are Don’t Give Up Hope: Keeping America’s Promise (w.t.) and The Treasury of PRAYER IN AMERICA (Doubleday, fall 2007).
Morrill, Susanna, White Roses on the Floor of Heaven: Mormon Women’s Popular Theology, 1880-1920 (Religion in History, Society and Culture). Routledge, 2006, 244 pages, ISBN: 0415977355
Dr. Morrill’s book studies the association of a maternal relationship to nature with Mormon theological beliefs in the poetry and literary writings of women who practiced the Latter-Day Saints religion in the United States.
Ostrander, Rick, The Life of Prayer in the World of Science: Protestants, Prayer and American Culture 1870-1930. Oxford University Press, USA, 2000, 248 pages, ISBN: 0195136101
From Amazon.com: During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Christians carried on an intense debate concerning the doctrine of prayer. This ideological revolution affected not only the ways that they interpreted the Bible but also how they prayed. In this book, Rick Ostrander explores the attempts of American Christians to articulate a convincing and satisfying ethic of prayer amidst these changing circumstances.
Reviewed by Donald A. Yerxa, Professor of History, Eastern Nazarene College: Ostrander has produced a valuable history of Protestant thinking about petitionary prayer and devotional disciplines in America from 1870 to 1930. Apart from the light he sheds on an important aspect of the struggle of American Christianity to accommodate theology and to practice science, Ostrander has also provided important historical context for current research and discussion on the efficacy of prayer. In fact, readers are likely to be struck by how many of the issues that confront contemporary empirical and theological explorations of prayer were raised at the turn of the last century.
Raboteau, Albert J.,Canaan Land: A Religious History of African Americans. Oxford University Press, USA, 2001, 128 pages, ISBN: 0195145852
From Amazon.com: Throughout African-American history, religion has been indelibly intertwined with the fight against intolerance and racial prejudice. Martin Luther King, Jr., America’s best-known champion of civil liberties, was a Baptist minister. Father Divine, a fiery preacher who established a large following in the 1920s and 1930s, convinced his disciples that he could cure not only disease and infirmity, but also poverty and racism.
An in-depth examination of African-American history and religion, this comprehensive and lively book provides panoramic coverage of the black religious and social experience in America. Renowned historian Albert J. Raboteau traces the subtle blending of African tribal customs with the powerful Christian establishment, the migration to cities, the growth of Islam, and the 200-year fight for freedom and identity that was so often centered around African-American churches. From the African Methodist Episcopal Church to the Nation of Islam and from the first African slaves to Louis Farrakhan, this far-reaching book chronicles the evolution of an important and influential component of our religious and historical heritage. The book combines meticulously researched historical facts with a fast-paced, engaging narrative that will appeal to readers of any age.
Sarna, Jonathan D., American Judaism: A History. Yale University Press 2005, 512 pages, ISBN: 0300109768
From Booklist: Sarna’s detailed history of Jewish life in the U.S. spans 350 years, from its colonial beginnings in 1654 to the present. Sarna points out that already in the late colonial period American Judaism had begun to diverge from religious patterns that existed in Europe and the Caribbean. The American Revolution, the ratification of the Constitution, the passage of the Bill of Rights, and the nationwide democratization of religion further transformed Jewish religious life. Fear for American Judaism’s future underlies many aspects of its history, but Sarna believes that the many creative responses to this fear, the innovations and revivals promoted by those determined to ensure that American Jewish life continues and thrives, seem of far greater historical significance. This comprehensive and insightful study of the American Jewish experience is much more than just a record of events. It is an account of how people shaped events: establishing and maintaining communities, responding to challenges, and working for change. It is compelling reading for Jews and non-Jews alike. George Cohen. Copyright © American Library Association.
Sloan, Richard P., Blind Faith: The Unholy Alliance of Religion and Medicine. St. Martin’s Press, October 2006, 304 pages, ISBN: 0312348819
From Amazon.com: Thanks to some studies and to accounts by physicians, patients and theologians, it has become popular to believe that prayer can heal the sick and that attending religious services regularly can extend one’s life. But does the evidence for a link between religion and health hold up? Sloan, professor of behavioral medicine at Columbia, probes the matter in this sometimes provocative but often prosaic book. Reports of the relationship between religion and medicine, he says, are greatly exaggerated and detrimental to both. He writes that dissatisfaction with contemporary medicine, uncritical media stories about religion and health, and advocacy groups that promote a link between religion and health have encouraged patients to seek alternative treatments that exploit that connection. Sloan examines the thousands of reports that prayer has been the key element in healing and finds many are based on anecdotes rather than systematic data collection. Even scientific studies on the healing capacities of faith and prayer do not always prove what they are purported to prove; some, for instance, touch only peripherally on the role of religion in health. For Sloan, attempts to connect religion and medicine can jeopardize patients’ lives by giving false hope.
Stevens Arroyo, Antonio M. and Diaz-Stevens, Ana Maria, Recognizing the Latino Resurgence in U.S. Religion: The Emmaus Paradigm. Westview Press 1997, 292 pages, ISBN: 0813325102
From Amazon.com: This book is a “must read” for all serious students of the contemporary Latino/a religious, cultural, and political experience in the United States. The authors bring research skills and first-hand knowledge of many of the individuals and movements they describe in filling in a complex picture of social change in churches and society. In so doing, they provide an important overview of Latino religious experience (both Protestant and Catholic)…. Most significantly, Recognizing the Latino Resurgence in U.S. Religion illuminates the dangers of entangling the Latino experience - religious and otherwise - with that of Euro-Americans and Afro-Americans, or of naively assuming that Latinos are following the assimilationist model of the Euro-American experience. The American penchant for thinking along racial rather than colonialist lines is also subjected to a much need critique vis-a-vis the Latino experience. The text is dense at points, but always engaging and filled with provocative insights into the ever-changing dynamics of religion and culture in American society. This book is highly relevant to a variety of topics as diverse as ethnic and intergroup relations, the theology of popular religiosity, Latino religion(s), social change, organizational dynamics, studies of identity formation, multicultural pluralism and the complex role of faith experience in American political and social life.
Zaleski, Philip and Zaleski, Carol, Prayer: A History. Houghton Mifflin, 2005, 432 pages, ISBN: 0618152881
Bryce Christensen © American Library Association: In prayer, the poet George Herbert recognized the acme of civilization. Yet this religious practice has rarely received the sort of careful cultural analysis the Zaleskis here offer. From Ramses II’s petitions invoking Amun’s assistance in battle to Ansel Adams’ photographs offered as an opus Dei, this sweeping cultural history illumines the abiding influence of prayer in shaping human thought and behavior. Readers explore the way those who pray - whether in modern America or in ancient Babylon - hope for magic and submit to the divine will, seek for answers and contemplate mysteries. The Zaleskis limn traditional taxonomies of prayer that have long differentiated adoration from confession, thanksgiving from intercession, and they examine the forms of language, art, and music through which generations of believers have reached toward heaven. But many readers will particularly value the distinctively contemporary note in the survey of scientific studies of the efficacy of prayer and in the dissection of recent controversies over prayer in schools and other public forums. Surprisingly, investigation of modern prayer ends up teaching almost as much about skeptics (such as Darwin’s cousin, Francis Galton) as about saints (such as Therese Martin). And in the American passions stirred by post-9/11 prayers, readers will discern a tangle of devotion and politics. A much-needed study of a neglected topic.