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English
Cascade Books
07 March 2023
The Wesleyan-Methodist movement entered American history as a fragment of British Methodism. It quickly took on a new identity in the early republic and grew into a vibrant denomination in the nineteenth century. The transitions from the rugged pioneer religion modeled by Bishop Francis Asbury to the urbane religion of industrial America was by design the goal of influential leaders of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Nathan Bangs was perhaps one of the most significant of such leaders. He rose from obscurity to the ranks of power and influence by refining patterns of worship, expanding denominational publishing, and structuring ministerial education. This study is concerned with the development of respectability in American Methodism. It also explores questions on how Bangs and other leaders dealt with in-house conflicts on issues related to race, slavery, and the poor.

By:  
Foreword by:  
Imprint:   Cascade Books
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 14mm
Weight:   367g
ISBN:   9781666713961
ISBN 10:   1666713961
Series:   Wesleyan and Methodist Explorations
Pages:   244
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Daniel F. Flores is the university librarian and Sappenfield Chair of Library Science at Texas Lutheran University and an elder in the Rio Texas Annual Conference of The United Methodist Church. He served as general editor and contributor of Los Profetas: The Prophetic Role of Hispanic Churches in America (2022). Dr. Flores lives in Seguin with his wife Rev. Dr. Thelma Herrera Flores.

Reviews for Respectable Methodism

Revisiting but reinterpreting the pivotal role of Nathan Bangs in Methodism's migration into the middle class, this engaging, readable study revises our assessment of Methodism and of nineteenth-century American Protestantism as a whole. --Russell E. Richey, Emory University, emeritus Daniel Flores' new book on Nathan Bangs is comprehensive and provocative. It interweaves the embourgeoisement of the nineteenth-century Methodist movement with the details of Bangs' biography, cementing Bangs' status as a major player in the drive towards greater Methodist respectability while never collapsing his motives into the purely economic. Flores gives us a well-rounded and nuanced picture of this pivotal second-generation Methodist leader, rooted in Bangs' own theological and cultural contexts and relevant to current debates. --Jennifer Woodruff Tait, editor, Christian History Magazine Daniel Flores has masterfully shown the outsize influence Bangs had on Methodism's shift to greater respectability. As a pastor, presiding elder, editor, and perennial General Conference delegate, he strongly supported clerical education, orderly worship, additional church construction, and an evolving approach to abolition consistent with the national mood. Flores has woven together little-known primary sources, helpful contextualizations, and insightful analyses in crafting a well-written, engaging, and fascinating study! --Philip Hardt, author of The Soul of Methodism Respectable Methodism is a well-researched and well-documented exposition of the efforts of Nathan Bangs that shaped an early nineteenth-century frontier phenomenon into a respected American Methodist organization. Flores demonstrates convincingly that the desire for respectability by American people and Bangs' contributions 'intertwined to form a double-helix relationship' producing a 'new genetic code for the social structure' of American Methodist Christianity. --Norman A. Beck, Texas Lutheran University Daniel Flores has skillfully used the career of Nathaniel Bangs to produce a meticulously researched, eminently readable account of the transition of the Methodist Episcopal Church from a simple frontier religion into a denomination of 'respectability' in worship, preaching, hymnody, church order, and architecture. While covering antebellum America, its lasting impact challenges the MEC today. --Donald J. Bruggink, Van Raalte Institute, emeritus Daniel Flores' impressive archival project offers a fresh and expanded view of Nathan Bangs, one of the most emblematic representatives of Methodist identity and aspirations in the early-to-mid nineteenth century. Bangs shaped Methodism's urban profile, charted its theological maturation, and set the Methodist Episcopal Church on a course of upward mobility and respectability that took it to the apex of religious, social, and political influence. Flores' sober analysis also counts the cost of that pursuit. --Daniel Ramirez, Claremont Graduate University


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