Recently a local paper published an article by a retired pastor lamenting the loss of the “Social Gospel,” the mainline Protestant church’s reformist response to the challenges of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
The social conditions that necessitated this response, he says, were in part the result of the closing of the American frontier and the completion of the cross-country rail system. What emerged was a new national identity. At the same time, a new urban/industrial economy was rapidly replacing the older rural/agricultural model. Continue reading “One Little Problem”