An analysis of Dwight Moody's urban social vision

Dwight Moody was the dominant English-speaking evangelist of the late nineteenth century. Much of Moody's work focused on urban centers. This thesis is an analysis of the origins of Dwight Moody's urban social vision. Specifically it studies the role Moody's theology played in the for...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Quiggle, Gregg William
Published: Open University 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.522228
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-522228
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5222282018-11-20T03:20:28ZAn analysis of Dwight Moody's urban social visionQuiggle, Gregg William2010Dwight Moody was the dominant English-speaking evangelist of the late nineteenth century. Much of Moody's work focused on urban centers. This thesis is an analysis of the origins of Dwight Moody's urban social vision. Specifically it studies the role Moody's theology played in the formation of his approach to the various urban ills that emerged during the mid to late nineteenth century in the United States and the United Kingdom. The thesis seeks to show that theology drove Moody's approach to urban ills. Because of Moody's temperament and limited educational background, his personal experiences and personal relationships played an inordinately significant role in the formation of Moody's theology. The thesis explores these experiences and relationships demonstrating how they shaped Moody's theology. It concludes by outlining Moody's theological commitments that framed his social vision, and his resultant social activities. The thesis concludes Moody was an evangelical whose social vision was in significant ways contiguous with those of earlier revivalists like Finney. Specifically, Moody, like Finney, always made evangelism his first priority. Further, similar to Finney, Moody was active in the temperance movement and various educational endeavors. However, Moody's conception of human sinfulness and commitment to premillennialism created a different set of expectations. Moody was dubious about the future of human society. He believed sin was the cause of poverty and that conversion brought freedom from sin and a desire to love others, especially the poor. He also believed the Bible commanded charity to the poor. Consequently, while Moody never fully embraced the Calvinistic goal of a righteous republic, he was concerned about the moral state of the country and the lot of the poor. In fact, Moody was active in numerous charitable endeavors targeting the urban poor. However, Moody maintained the only way to improve public morality and the suffering of the poor was through personal conversion, because only conversion would solve the problem of sin and generate charity. Thus, from Moody's perspective political or structural reforms divorced from evangelism were ultimately doomed to fail.270.092Open Universityhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.522228http://oro.open.ac.uk/54492/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 270.092
spellingShingle 270.092
Quiggle, Gregg William
An analysis of Dwight Moody's urban social vision
description Dwight Moody was the dominant English-speaking evangelist of the late nineteenth century. Much of Moody's work focused on urban centers. This thesis is an analysis of the origins of Dwight Moody's urban social vision. Specifically it studies the role Moody's theology played in the formation of his approach to the various urban ills that emerged during the mid to late nineteenth century in the United States and the United Kingdom. The thesis seeks to show that theology drove Moody's approach to urban ills. Because of Moody's temperament and limited educational background, his personal experiences and personal relationships played an inordinately significant role in the formation of Moody's theology. The thesis explores these experiences and relationships demonstrating how they shaped Moody's theology. It concludes by outlining Moody's theological commitments that framed his social vision, and his resultant social activities. The thesis concludes Moody was an evangelical whose social vision was in significant ways contiguous with those of earlier revivalists like Finney. Specifically, Moody, like Finney, always made evangelism his first priority. Further, similar to Finney, Moody was active in the temperance movement and various educational endeavors. However, Moody's conception of human sinfulness and commitment to premillennialism created a different set of expectations. Moody was dubious about the future of human society. He believed sin was the cause of poverty and that conversion brought freedom from sin and a desire to love others, especially the poor. He also believed the Bible commanded charity to the poor. Consequently, while Moody never fully embraced the Calvinistic goal of a righteous republic, he was concerned about the moral state of the country and the lot of the poor. In fact, Moody was active in numerous charitable endeavors targeting the urban poor. However, Moody maintained the only way to improve public morality and the suffering of the poor was through personal conversion, because only conversion would solve the problem of sin and generate charity. Thus, from Moody's perspective political or structural reforms divorced from evangelism were ultimately doomed to fail.
author Quiggle, Gregg William
author_facet Quiggle, Gregg William
author_sort Quiggle, Gregg William
title An analysis of Dwight Moody's urban social vision
title_short An analysis of Dwight Moody's urban social vision
title_full An analysis of Dwight Moody's urban social vision
title_fullStr An analysis of Dwight Moody's urban social vision
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of Dwight Moody's urban social vision
title_sort analysis of dwight moody's urban social vision
publisher Open University
publishDate 2010
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.522228
work_keys_str_mv AT quigglegreggwilliam ananalysisofdwightmoodysurbansocialvision
AT quigglegreggwilliam analysisofdwightmoodysurbansocialvision
_version_ 1718795786778574848