Raccoon John Smith: Frontier Kentucky's Most Famous PreacherUniversity Press of Kentucky, 23 dic 2005 - 506 pagine The Disciples of Christ, one of the first Christian faiths to have originated in America, was established in 1832 in Lexington, Kentucky, by the union of two groups led by Alexander Campbell and Barton W. Stone. The modern churches resulting from the union are known collectively to religious scholars as part of the Stone-Campbell movement. If Stone and Campbell are considered the architects of the Disciples of Christ and America's first nondenominational movement, then Kentucky's Raccoon John Smith is their builder and mason. Raccoon John Smith: Frontier Kentucky's Most Famous Preacher is the biography of a man whose work among the early settlers of Kentucky carries an important legacy that continues in our own time. The son of a Revolutionary War soldier, Smith spent his childhood and adolescence in the untamed frontier country of Tennessee and southern Kentucky. A quick-witted, thoughtful, and humorous youth, Smith was shaped by the unlikely combination of his dangerous, feral surroundings and his Calvinist religious indoctrination. The dangers of frontier life made an even greater impression on John Smith as a young man, when several instances of personal tragedy forced him to question the philosophy of predeterminism that pervaded his religious upbringing. From these crises of faith, Smith emerged a changed man with a new vocation: to spread a Christian faith wherein salvation was available to all people. Thus began the long, ecclesiastical career of Raccoon John Smith and the germination of a religious revolution. Exhaustively researched, engagingly written, Raccoon John Smith is the first objective and painstakingly accurate treatment of the legendary frontier preacher. The intricacies behind the development of both Smith's personal religious beliefs and the founding of the Christian Church are treated with equal care. Raccoon John Smith is the story of a single man, but in carefully examining the events and people that influenced Elder Smith, this book also serves as a formative history for several Christian denominations, as well as an account of the wild, early years of the Commonwealth of Kentucky. |
Dall'interno del libro
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... Donaldson—presents both a great advantage and a great disadvantage to readers of Kentucky, American, and Appalachian history. On one hand, the memory of one of Kentucky's great native sons, or, as Louis Cochran wrote, one who had at ...
... Donaldson hesitated to quote Cochran directly in his own Smith biographical writings and always admitted the novelist's fictionalizations when he did so, Cochran still managed to color the Donaldson biographies by way of Donaldson's ...
... Donaldson; of modern writers in the tradition Leroy Garrett and Richard T. Hughes, to name only two, are much more inclined to be objective. Baptist apologists, prominent among them the Kentuckians John Henderson Spencer and Thomas M ...
... Donaldson; and J. H. Spencer, Thomas Vaughan, and many of their disciples are curiously reticent. Paul Tillich once noted that great historical figures inevitably appear to us not as they actually lived, but rather in the light of their ...
... Donaldson biographies as references to cross-check other data dealing with the same events, that is, certain details of the evolution of the religious movement that Shubal Stearns initiated in backcountry colonial North Carolina into ...
Sommario
Why I Make Use of This Newspaper | |
The Moment | |
This Has to Be Said | |
The Repetition | |
A Concluding Unscientific Postscript | |
Bibliography | |