Dispensational Modernism - B. M. Pietsch
eTextbook alternate format product

Instant online reading.
Don't wait for delivery!

Dispensational Modernism

By: B. M. Pietsch

Hardcover | 20 August 2015

At a Glance

Hardcover


RRP $275.00

$162.25

41%OFF

or 4 interest-free payments of $40.56 with

 or 

Aims to ship in 5 to 10 business days

When will this arrive by?
Enter delivery postcode to estimate

In the twentieth century dispensationalism emerged as one of the most influential forces in American religion as well as one of America''s most significant religious exports. By the close of the century, dispensationalism had developed into a global religious phenomenon claiming millions of adherents. Scanning for the "signs of the times" in current world events, scouring their Bibles for prophetic meaning, and creating vivid and elaborate stories about the end times, dispensationalists have played a major role in transforming American religion and politics. The most common contemporary form of prophecy belief, dispensationalism also plays a significant role in American popular culture (65 million copies of the Left Behind novels sold) and throughout the world, influencing movements from the Nation of Islam to global Pentecostalism. Despite its importance and continuing appeal, however, scholars often reduce dispensationalism to an anti-modern, apocalyptic literalist branch of Protestant fundamentalism. Brendan Pietsch argues that, on the contrary, the seemingly mysterious allure of prophecy belief can be understood as a form of technological modernism. Pietsch shows that dispensational thinking and practices, which emerged between 1870 and 1920, grew out of the popular fascination with applying technological methods - such as quantification and classification - to the interpretation of texts and time. The central node of this network of texts, scholars, institutions, and practices was the lightning-rod Bible teacher C.I. Scofield, whose best-selling Scofield Reference Bible became the canonical formulation of dispensational thought. The first book to contextualize dispensationalism in this new and provocative way, Dispensational Modernism shows how the mainstream, urban Protestant clergy of this time, as they began developing new "scientific" methods for interpreting the Bible also sought to create new grounds for confidence in religious understandings of the Bible and of time itself.
Industry Reviews
"Any scholar wishing to write anything about dispensationalism would do well to consult this book first, because B. M. Pietsch gives us the most developed and nuanced interpretation of dispensational ideas yet seen." -- Barry Hankins, Journal of Religion "Pietsch has permanently altered the way we will understand dispensationalism. And for this we indeed owe him dearly."-- Timothy E. W. Gloege, Fides et Historia "Any scholar wishing to write anything about dispensationalism would do well to consult this book first, because B. M. Pietsch gives us the most developed and nuanced interpretation of dispensational ideas yet seen. In doing so, he problematizes much of what we often say about premillennialism, dispensationalism, fundamentalism, and modernism."--Barry Hankins, Journal of Religion "With humor and brilliant insight, B. M. Pietsch offers one of the most creative, innovative, and original books to appear in years. Dispensational Modernism challenges almost everything we think we know about American religious thought around the turn of the twentieth century. He has destroyed our categories and upended our historiography and I fear there is no going back." --Mathew Avery Sutton, author of American Apocalypse: A History of Modern Evangelicalism "B. M. Pietsch's Dispensational Modernism is a bold reinterpretation of an enormously important modern religious movement. Making use of an array of understudied original sources and recent scholarship, Pietsch skillfully argues that dispensationalists applied the technological methods and epistemologies of modernism. He traces the history of this movement through the late 19th and early 20th centuries and reveals the fascinating ways that its champions held 'thoroughly modernist assumptions.' Perhaps most importantly, Pietsch, with clear and fluid prose, links what had once been thought of as a disconnected sectarian movement with the vital intellectual and cultural currents of the age." --Randall J. Stephens, co-author of The Anointed: Evangelical Truth in a Secular Age "Dispensational Christians often appear in historical and polemical works as anti-intellectual yahoos who read their Bibles literally and turned their backs on modern science, technology, and biblical scholarship. In this unrelentingly revisionist book, the historian B. M. Pietsch brilliantly shatters these stereotypes, showing instead that the early dispensationalists warmly embraced scientific and technological methods and engaged in serious research. Dispensational Modernism is the freshest study of conservative American Christianity to appear in years." --Ronald L. Numbers, Hilldale Professor Emeritus of the History of Science and Medicine, University of Wisconsin

More in Religious Fundamentalism

Under the Banner of Heaven : TV Tie-In - Jon Krakauer

RRP $24.99

$22.75

Islamic State : Rewriting History - Michael Griffin
For God's Sake : The Christian Right and US Foreign Policy - Lee Marsden
The Mind of Jihad - Laurent Murawiec

RRP $154.95

$134.75

13%
OFF
Unafraid : Moving Beyond Fear-Based Faith - Benjamin L. Corey
Speaking In Tongues : A Memoir - Tom Tilley

RRP $34.99

$31.75

Mormonism : Elements in New Religious Movements - Matthew  Bowman
Unafraid : Moving Beyond Fear-Based Faith - Benjamin L. Corey
Fundamentalism and Gender - John Stratton Hawley
Fundamentalisms Observed : Volume 1 - Martin E. Marty