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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Stone, Ronald H.Publisher: Augsburg Fortress Publishers Imprint: Fortress Press,U.S. ISBN: 9781506446240ISBN 10: 1506446248 Pages: 205 Publication Date: 01 April 2019 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsRonald H. Stone waited until his own retirement years to write about the retirement years of Reinhold Niebuhr. This winsome book is judicious, deeply informed, and generous, like every book that Stone has written about Niebuhr. --Gary Dorrien, Union Theological Seminary Ronald H. Stone has delivered a must read for anyone seeking to understand Reinhold Niebuhr beyond the caricatures of him as a young radical, middle-aged sage, and elderly crank. Through Stone's eyes, we meet an older and physically challenged Niebuhr who was determined to overcome pain and depression to speak to issues of justice in both foreign policy and American culture. Stone helps us better understand the Niebuhr who remained prophetic to his final days. This book should cause us to reconsider the possibilities of Christian realism in these days of populist politics. --David True, Wilson College This is a careful and insightful reading of Reinhold Niebuhr's public thought and influence by a scholar who was his student, friend, and, subsequently, among his leading scholarly interpreters. Stone draws much-needed attention here to the latter phrases of Niebuhr's public scholarship from the turbulent 1960s and to Niebuhr's analytic relevance for that decade and for our twenty-first-century social landscapes. --R. Drew Smith, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary Exploring Niebuhr's life during the 1960s, Stone finds a man who is still evolving, producing novel works, pushing in radical directions to realize racial justice, and challenging the American status quo at every turn. This book will be of interest to those who seek to reclaim the living spirit of Christian realism for our own secular age. --Kevin M. Carnahan In this important book, Ronald H. Stone underscores the evolution of Niebuhr's thought and political engagement in the 1960s. Stone emphasizes the continued significance of Niebuhr's arguments for contemporary political philosophy and foreign policy and adds insight to the debates about how committed Niebuhr was to the women's and Civil Rights movements. Readers also get a sense of Niebuhr as both a charismatic religious leader and as a mentor. This book will be an excellent resource for those seeking to understand both Niebuhr's legacy as a scholar and his ongoing impact on contemporary theology and ethics. --Elizabeth Hinson-Hasty, Bellarmine University Ronald H. Stone waited until his own retirement years to write about the retirement years of Reinhold Niebuhr. This winsome book is judicious, deeply informed, and generous, like every book that Stone has written about Niebuhr. --Gary Dorrien, Union Theological Seminary Ronald H. Stone has delivered a must read for anyone seeking to understand Reinhold Niebuhr beyond the caricatures of him as a young radical, middle-aged sage, and elderly crank. Through Stone's eyes, we meet an older and physically challenged Niebuhr who was determined to overcome pain and depression to speak to issues of justice in both foreign policy and American culture. Stone helps us better understand the Niebuhr who remained prophetic to his final days. This book should cause us to reconsider the possibilities of Christian realism in these days of populist politics. --David True, Wilson College This is a careful and insightful reading of Reinhold Niebuhr's public thought and influence by a scholar who was his student, friend, and, subsequently, among his leading scholarly interpreters. Stone draws much-needed attention here to the latter phrases of Niebuhr's public scholarship from the turbulent 1960s and to Niebuhr's analytic relevance for that decade and for our twenty-first-century social landscapes. --R. Drew Smith, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary Exploring Niebuhr's life during the 1960s, Stone finds a man who is still evolving, producing novel works, pushing in radical directions to realize racial justice, and challenging the American status quo at every turn. This book will be of interest to those who seek to reclaim the living spirit of Christian realism for our own secular age. --Kevin M. Carnahan In this important book, Ronald H. Stone underscores the evolution of Niebuhr's thought and political engagement in the 1960s. Stone emphasizes the continued significance of Niebuhr's arguments for contemporary political philosophy and foreign policy and adds insight to the debates about how committed Niebuhr was to the women's and Civil Rights movements. Readers also get a sense of Niebuhr as both a charismatic religious leader and as a mentor. This book will be an excellent resource for those seeking to understand both Niebuhr's legacy as a scholar and his ongoing impact on contemporary theology and ethics. --Elizabeth Hinson-Hasty, Bellarmine University Exploring Niebuhr's life during the 1960s, Stone finds a man who is still evolving, producing novel works, pushing in radical directions to realize racial justice, and challenging the American status quo at every turn. This book will be of interest to those who seek to reclaim the living spirit of Christian realism for our own secular age. --Kevin M. Carnahan Author InformationRonald H. Stone is the John Witherspoon Professor of Christian Ethics emeritus at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary. Born and educated in Iowa, Stone undertook graduate study at Union Theological Seminary, Columbia University, and Oxford University. Returning to the United States, he became Reinhold Niebuhr's last teaching assistant and, later, colleague. Stone has written two dozen books on religion and society and served as chairman of the local Development Corporation and the Allegheny County Ethics Commission. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |