1st Edition

The Religious Roots of American Sociology

By Cecil E. Greek Copyright 1992
    284 Pages
    by Routledge

    284 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book, first published in 1992, demonstrates that American sociology has deep religious roots which continue, both directly and indirectly, to influence the discipline today. Early American sociology was closely aligned with the social gospel movement in Protestantism, which hope to make use of the new science of sociology to help solve social problems and, ultimately, prepare America for the establishment of Christ’s kingdom on earth. Although American sociology became secularized after 1920, it retained its ameliorative outlook, hoping to ‘save’ mankind through positivistic analysis and technocratic societal planning.

    1. Social Reform and Protestant Theology: From the Colonial Period to the Civil War  2. The Rise of the Social Gospel  3. The Turn to Sociology  4. Protestant Theology in Mainstream American Sociology  5. The Demise of the Social Gospel  6. The Transvaluation of Christian Sociology

    Biography

    Cecil E. Greek