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Education of Phillips Bro
Contributor(s): Woolverton, John F. (Author)
ISBN: 025202186X     ISBN-13: 9780252021862
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
OUR PRICE:   $28.71  
Product Type: Hardcover
Published: September 1995
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Annotation: The Education of Phillips Brooks probes the formative years of one of the best-known figures of Victorian America's "Gilded Age". Rigorously researched, bringing as yet untapped archival material into play, John F. Woolverton's book is an extremely readable and fascinating look at a gifted, persuasive clergyman and public figure. The sermon Brooks delivered at his Holy Trinity Church in Philadelphia while Abraham Lincoln's body lay in state overnight in Independence Hall was published, making him nationally famous overnight. He also is known for penning the lyrics to "O Little Town of Bethlehem". Although Brooks was not a major theologian, he was nurtured in an atmosphere of serious religious thought. In the crisis era of pre-Civil War America, he sought a religious and cultural ideal in the "perfect manhood" of Jesus Christ and consequently "won a name" for himself, as his slightly envious cousin, Henry Adams, once remarked. Woolverton places Brooks in his cultural context and shows how this religious leader was shaped psychologically and by his times and how those factors helped him forge a spiritual ideal for a troubled nation.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Biography & Autobiography | Religious
- History
Dewey: B
LCCN: 95-1881
Series: Studies in Anglican History
Physical Information: 0.76" H x 6.27" W x 9.33" (0.98 lbs) 168 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
The Education of Phillips
Brooks probes the formative years of one of the best-known figures
of Victorian America's "Gilded Age." Rigorously researched,
bringing as yet untapped archival material into play, John F. Woolverton's
book is an extremely readable and fascinating look at a gifted, persuasive
clergyman and public figure. One of the most influential ministers of
his time, Brooks delivered the sermon over the body of Abraham Lincoln
at Independence Hall in Philadelphia and is known for penning the lyrics
to "O Little Town of Bethlehem."
Although Brooks was not a
major theologian, he was nurtured in an atmosphere of serious religious
thought. In the crisis era of pre-Civil War America, he sought a religious
and cultural ideal in the perfect manhood of Jesus Christ and consequently
"won a name" for himself, as his slightly envious cousin, Henry
Adams, once remarked. Woolverton places Brooks in his cultural context
and shows how this religious leader was shaped psychologically and by
his times and how those factors helped him forge a spiritual ideal for
a troubled nation.
"Not only casts new light
on the young manhood of one of the preeminent Anglican ministers in America,
but enhances our understanding of key cultural trends in the mid-nineteenth
century." -- Anne C. Rose, author of Victorian America and the
Civil War