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Sacred Borders - Continuing Revelation and Canonical Restraint in Early America (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R2,762
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Sacred Borders - Continuing Revelation and Canonical Restraint in Early America (Hardcover, New)
Series: Religion in America
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One Unitarian preacher prefaces his opposition to the invasion of
Iraq by insisting that meaningful religion is a process of "ongoing
revelation." He pits this essential "liberal" tenet against the
closed-canon biblicism of "the Fundamentalists who find in their
Holy Book the blueprints for war, who discover in the prejudices of
ancient peoples the legitimization of oppression today," and
concludes by invoking Ralph Waldo Emerson as his authority on the
necessity of continuing revelation. Elsewhere, a conservative
evangelical Christian observes the Episcopalian convention that
nearly dissolved over the ordination of a homosexual bishop and is
disgusted by the "ease with which ... clergy and laity speak of an
open canon." We must be, he sarcastically suggests, "all Latter-day
Saints now." Why did these two men revert to religious innovations
of the antebellum era - Transcendentalism in one case, Mormonism in
the other - to frame their understanding of contemporary religious
struggles? David Holland argues that the generation from which
Emerson and Mormonism emerged might be considered the United
States' revelatory moment. From Shakers to Hicksite Quakers, from
the obscure African American prophetess Rebecca Jackson to the
celebrated theologian Horace Bushnell, people throughout antebellum
Americans advocated the idea of an open canon. Holland tells their
stories and considers their place within the main currents of
American thought. He shows that in the antebellum era, the notion
of an open canon appeared to many to be a timely idea, and that
this period marked the beginning of a distinctive and persistent
engagement with the possibility of continuing revelation. This idea
would attain deep significance in the intellectual history of the
United States. Sacred Borders deftly analyzes the positions of the
most prominent advocates of continuing revelation, and engages the
essential issues to which the concept of an open canon was
inextricably bound. Holland offers a new perspective of the matter
of cultural authority in a democratized society, the tension
between subjective truths and communal standards, a rising
historical consciousness, the expansion of print capitalism, and
the principle of religious freedom.
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