The Kingdom of God and the American Dream: The Religious and Secular Ideals of American HistoryHarper & Brothers, 1941 - 319 Seiten |
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Seite 168
... experience the degradation of their own homes . Slavery became the enemy both of morality and religion . While New England gave birth to scores of brilliant writers during this period , Southern culture was stultifying itself in the ...
... experience the degradation of their own homes . Slavery became the enemy both of morality and religion . While New England gave birth to scores of brilliant writers during this period , Southern culture was stultifying itself in the ...
Seite 233
... experience not only martial but spiritual and emotional . " No , far from it ! He seems to have experienced only a small fraction of emotional , intellectual , and chiefly sensuous human experi- ence , brilliantly told , but he has had ...
... experience not only martial but spiritual and emotional . " No , far from it ! He seems to have experienced only a small fraction of emotional , intellectual , and chiefly sensuous human experi- ence , brilliantly told , but he has had ...
Seite 244
... experience , though this does not appear in most of his other works . He believes that finally : " The individual soul fed and grown great by its awareness of the divine within it , believed it could dispense with the divine . " This ...
... experience , though this does not appear in most of his other works . He believes that finally : " The individual soul fed and grown great by its awareness of the divine within it , believed it could dispense with the divine . " This ...
Inhalt
AMERICAS RELIGIOUS AND SECULAR IDEALS | 1 |
GELISM | 78 |
TEMS | 122 |
Urheberrecht | |
1 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
American Dream American history Andrew Jackson Anglican Anne Hutchinson Awakening became began believed Boston Calvin capitalism Catholic cent character Christ Christian church civil colonies Congress conscience Constitution Coolidge deism democracy democratic divine doctrine economic eighteenth century Emerson England Europe evil faith father feudal finally Ford Franklin frontier Germany Gilded Age gospel of wealth Hamilton Hitler human Indians individual industrial intellectual Jackson Jefferson Jesus John Adams Jonathan Edwards justice Kingdom Kingdom of God labor land later leaders liberty Lincoln live Luther Massachusetts ment million ministers moral movement nation nature Negro never organized persecuted Pietists Pilgrims plutocracy Plymouth political poor preached Presbyterians President principles prophet Protestant Puritan Quakers Reformation religion religious ideal revival Revolution rich Rockefeller Roger Williams says sects secular slavery slaves social gospel society soul South spiritual theocracy Theodore Parker theology tion Virginia Washington Whitefield whole writers wrote Wycliffe youth