
Contents
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1 Puritans and Revolution: Remembering the Origin; Religion and Social Critique in Early New England
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Additional Themes in Retrospect Additional Themes in Retrospect
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Some Concluding Questions Some Concluding Questions
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Notes Notes
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Conclusion: Prophesies, in Retrospect and Prospect
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Published:September 2008
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From the time of the Puritans to today, Americans have been devout believers who are deeply anxious about their believing. With each new era, every new stage in the nation's history, these anxieties translated into prophesies of godlessness and godliness. The serial predictions explored in this book, spanning four centuries, arose in successive waves. By tracking these prophetic scripts and their reincarnations in virtually every generation—sometimes returning to the same phrases—we have tried to establish that these prophesies have been very powerful, and are very American. They have been adapted to dramatically different contexts and challenges by Americans of almost every political bent and religious (or irreligious) persuasion.
Today, questions about America's moral and religious future are just as anxiety‐inducing, and just as pressing, as they have been in the past. From the pages of prominent newspapers to academic conferences, to church study groups, to presidential debates, concerns about the nation's moral and religious condition, today and in the future, continue to generate new predictions and new uses of the long‐standing rhetorics of ascension and declension.
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