
In The Early Twentieth Century, Many Americans Were Troubled By The Way Agriculture Was Becoming Increasingly Industrial And Corporate. Mainline Protestant Churches And Cooperative Organizations Began To Come Together To Promote Agrarianism: The Belief That The Health Of The Nation Depended On Small Rural Communities And Family Farms. In Baptized With The Soil, Kevin M. Lowe Offers For The First Time A Comprehensive History Of The Protestant Commitment To Rural America. Christian Agrarians Believed That Farming Was The Most Moral Way Of Life And A Means For People To Serve God By Taking Care Of The Earth That God Created. When The Great Depression Hit, Christian Agrarians Worked Harder To Keep Small Farmers On The Land. They Formed Alliances With State Universities, Cooperative Extension Services, And Each Other's Denominations. They Experimented With Ways Of Revitalizing Rural Church Life--including New Worship Services Like Rural Life Sunday, And New Strategies For Raising Financial Support Like The Lord's Acre. Because They Believed That The Earth Was Holy, Christian Agrarians Also Became Leaders In Promoting Soil Conservation. Decades Before The Environmental Movement, They Inspired An Ethic Of Environmental Stewardship In Their Congregations. They May Not Have Been Able To Prevent The Spread Of Industrial Agribusiness, But Their Ideas Have Helped Define Significant And Long-lasting Currents In American Culture.
This book investigates the historical intersection of Protestant theology and agrarian movements in early twentieth-century America, specifically examining how religious organizations sought to preserve the family farm against the rise of industrial agribusiness. Kevin M. Lowe, a scholar of American religious history, utilizes archival records from mainline Protestant denominations and cooperative organizations to document this movement. He argues that these Christian agrarians viewed soil stewardship as a divine mandate, effectively establishing an early framework for environmental ethics long before the modern ecological movement gained national prominence.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and historians recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of American religious history and the origins of environmental stewardship. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the research and the clarity with which the author connects theological beliefs to tangible social and agricultural policies.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190249463
ISBN-13:
9780190249465
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