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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches > Methodist Churches
In 1834 the weary missionary Jason Lee arrived on the banks of the
Willamette River and began to build a mission to convert the local
Kalapuya and Chinook populations to the Methodist Church. The
denomination had become a religious juggernaut in the United
States, dominating the religious scene throughout the mid-Atlantic
and East Coast. But despite its power and prestige and legions of
clergy and congregants, Methodism fell short of its goals of
religious supremacy in the northwest corner of the continent. In A
Country Strange and Far Michael C. McKenzie considers how and why
the Methodist Church failed in the Pacific Northwest and how place
can affect religious transplantation and growth. Methodists failed
to convert local Native people in large numbers, and immigrants who
moved into the rural areas and cities of the Northwest wanted
little to do with Methodism. McKenzie analyzes these failures,
arguing the region itself-both the natural geography of the place
and the immigrants' and clergy's responses to it-was a primary
reason for the church's inability to develop a strong following
there. The Methodists' efforts in the Pacific Northwest provide an
ideal case study for McKenzie's timely region-based look at
religion.
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