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    The Imposing Preacher: Samuel DeWitt Proctor and Black Public Faith

    The Imposing Preacher: Samuel DeWitt Proctor and Black Public Faith

    by Adam L. Bond


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      ISBN-13: 9781451452242
    • Publisher: Augsburg Fortress, Publishers
    • Publication date: 06/01/2013
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 264
    • File size: 1 MB

    Adam L. Bond is assistant professor of historical studies at The Samuel DeWitt Proctor School of Theology, Virginia Union University.

    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgments vii

    Abbreviations xi

    Introduction 1

    1 Racism and the Post-Segregation Witness of Black Public Faith 7

    2 On the Making of a Public Theologian Proctor's Cultural Roots 35

    3 On the Making of a Public Faith Proctor's Intellectual Roots 75

    4 Everybody Is God's Somebody A Defense of Black Humanity 115

    5 Preparing Public Theologians Black Preachers and Racial Uplift 149

    6 Creating a Genuine Community A Black Christian Vision for Transforming American Public Space 179

    Conclusion 209

    Appendix: Photo Gallery 219

    Bibliography 223

    Index of Names and Subjects 235

    Index of Biblical References 247

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    As a distinguished pastor, educator, and public servant, Samuel DeWitt Proctor made it his mission to serve American life by fighting racism. In The Imposing Preacher, Adam Bond shows how Proctor, as the product of a prophetic black church tradition, a social gospel-laced liberal Protestantism, and a black middle-class integrationist ethos, envisioned a pulpit activism through which the United States could realize an integrated civil society and was able to anticipate themes articulated by black religious movements of the late twentieth century. Proctor presents an alternative model of religious and social leadership and for studies of African American religion.

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