Research Catalog

Hallowed ground : rediscovering our spiritual roots / Stephen Burgard ; foreword by Benjamin J. Hubbard.

Title
Hallowed ground : rediscovering our spiritual roots / Stephen Burgard ; foreword by Benjamin J. Hubbard.
Author
Burgard, Stephen
Publication
New York : Insight Books, c1997.

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TextRequest in advance BL2525 .B86 1997Off-site

Details

Description
xvii, 257 p.; 22 cm.
Summary
  • Why can't we practice religion in a way that doesn't divide community and country? The free exercise of religion is central to the First Amendment, but the increasing activism of religious conservatives has raised new concerns about separation of church and state. It also has led to a fractious debate on the national stage between left- and right-wing activists holding the most extreme views about politics and public policy.
  • Hallowed Ground: Rediscovering Our Spiritual Roots argues that the solution lies in making better use of an emerging "moral middle," a flourishing group of Americans who do share the concern of religious conservatives about a crisis of values, but who are put off by what they perceive as intolerance and prejudice. Mr. Stephen Burgard, a journalist with an interest in the cultural impact of religious values, goes beyond the predictable collision of ideologies. He sets the debate in the context of mainstream America's search for a new and more meaningful way of expressing religious values in a multiethnic society.
  • Hallowed Ground maintains that the ongoing partisan argument is being rendered obsolete by these developments and others, such as the changing debate over values. Although shaped mainly by Christianity and Judaism, the values debate may soon be influenced by the presence of "new" religions imported by waves of recent immigration. As more Americans practice Hinduism, Buddhism, and Islam, for example, the context for talk about "family values" considerably broadens and, in some instances, offers fresh insight and resources for all citizens in America's continuing experiment with democracy. This refreshingly unbiased book will engage all readers interested in religion as a force to unite instead of to divide.
Subject
  • 1993-2001
  • Democracy > Religious aspects
  • Democracy
  • Government
  • Morals
  • Social Values
  • Religion
  • United States > Politics and government > 1993-2001
  • United States > History > Religious aspects
  • United States > Moral conditions
Genre/Form
  • History
  • History.
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. 231-243) and index.
Processing Action (note)
  • committed to retain
Contents
pt. I. America is Divided Where it Ought to Be United. Ch. 1. The Language of "Values" Is Doing Us In. Ch. 2. Strutting the Politics of Virtue. Ch. 3. Why Some Opinion Leaders Are Far Apart. Ch. 4. The Bully Pulpit: Saints and Sinners in the White House -- pt. II. Report from the Neighborhood: Seeking a Better Way. Ch. 5. A New Interfaith Spirit Holds the Key. Ch. 6. A Town Meeting Near Disneyland. Ch. 7. Is There Common Ground for Church and State? Ch. 8. Identifying America's Emerging Moral Middle -- pt. III. L.A. Story: How the Riots Got People Thinking. Ch. 9. The Search for a City's Soul. Ch. 10. Can Religious Diversity Be an Asset? Ch. 11. Comparing Beliefs: Why "Our Best versus Their Worst" Is Wrong.
ISBN
0306455684
LCCN
^^^96039457^
OCLC
  • 35835722
  • SCSB-10177494
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library