Religion, Art, and Money

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A01=Peter W. Williams
All Saints Ashmont
American religious history
American urban culture
Anglicanism
Anglo-Catholicism
art collecting
art museum
Arts and Crafts movement
Author_Peter W. Williams
Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue
Boston
Broad Church
Category=QRM
Category=QRMB31
Category=QRVJ
cathedral
Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine
Church of the Advent
cultural philanthropy
Episcopal Church
Episcopalian
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
F.D. Maurice
Gilded Age
Gothic revival
Grace Cathedral
H.H. Richardson
Henry Codman Potter
institutional church
Isabella Stewart
J.P. Morgan
John Ruskin
National Cathedral
New York
Phillips Brooks
prep school
Progressive era
Ralph Adams Cram
Romanesque revival
settlement house
Social Gospel
St. Bartholomew's Church
St. Bartholomew’s Church
St. George's Church
St. George’s Church
St. Thomas Church
Trinity Church
William Rainsford

Product details

  • ISBN 9781469654713
  • Weight: 430g
  • Dimensions: 155 x 233mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jul 2019
  • Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This cultural history of mainline Protestantism and American cities--most notably, New York City--focuses on wealthy, urban Episcopalians and the influential ways they used their money. Peter W. Williams argues that such Episcopalians, many of them the country's most successful industrialists and financiers, left a deep and lasting mark on American urban culture. Their sense of public responsibility derived from a sacramental theology that gave credit to the material realm as a vehicle for religious experience and moral formation, and they came to be distinguished by their participation in major aesthetic and social welfare endeavors.

Williams traces how the church helped transmit a European-inflected artistic patronage that was adapted to the American scene by clergy and laity intent upon providing moral and aesthetic leadership for a society in flux. Episcopalian influence is most visible today in the churches, cathedrals, and elite boarding schools that stand in many cities and other locations, but Episcopalians also provided major support to the formation of stellar art collections, the performing arts, and the Arts and Crafts movement. Williams argues that Episcopalians thus helped smooth the way for acceptance of materiality in religious culture in a previously iconoclastic, Puritan-influenced society.
Peter W. Williams, University Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Comparative Religion and American Studies at Miami University, is the author or coeditor of several books, including The Encyclopedia of Religion in America.