

An edition of The Beloved Community (2004)
How Faith Shapes Social Justice, from the Civil Rights Movement to Today
By Charles Marsh
Publish Date
December 28, 2004
Publisher
Basic Books
Language
eng
Pages
292
Description:
U.Va. Regligious Studies professor Marsh argues that the Civil Rights movement was, at its core, a Christian attempt to forge a "beloved community" of believers who identify with the poor and dispossessed and seek justice on their behalf. As his alternative telling unfolds, he introduces readers to a Martin Luther King Jr. they may not recognize (one who looked forward to a life of privilege and comfort until he was forced into leadership of the Montgomery Bus Boycott), as well as lesser-known figures such as Koinonia farm founder Clarence Jordan and Voices of Calvary founder John Perkins. Both of these men, like many others featured in the book, came to activism by way of Christian faith and belie the popular notion of "the civil rights movement as a secular movement that used religion to its advantage." Marsh laces his narrative with powerful critiques of secularism-among both activists and academics-and of white evangelical Christians for shallow, ineffectual concern for the poor and for people of color.
subjects: Christliche Sozialethik, Civil rights, Religious aspects, Social justice, Christianity, Civil rights movements, Bürgerrechtsbewegung, African Americans, Glaube, Soziale Gerechtigkeit, Literature, history and criticism, Christian sociology, SOCIAL SCIENCE, General, Droits de l'homme, Aspect religieux, Christianisme, Justice sociale, Mouvements des droits de l'homme, History