Bruce J. Evensen is a Professor in the Department of Communication at DePaul University where he teaches courses on journalism and journalistic history. A former journalist himself, he is the author of Truman, Palestine and the Press: Shaping Conventional Wisdom at the Beginning of the Cold War (1992), The Responsible Reporter (1995), and When Dempsey Fought Tunney: Heroes, Hokum and Storytelling in the Jazz Age (1996).
"For students desiring an introduction to the ways that religion
and 'mass' culture met in nineteenth-century America, this is a
highly suggestive case study." --Religious Studies Review
"This book should attract a wide readership, both from Moody
admirers and from more nearly objective observers of the phenomenon
of mass evangelism"--The Historian
"No one has so thoroughly described Moody's crusades...nor has
anyone so meticulously examined Moody's symbiotic relationship with
the press in both America and Britain...his study helps illuminate
the reasons for Moody's success, his contribution to the rise of
modern mass evangelism, his role in helping create the modern
newspaper, and why many considered him God's man for the Gilded
Age." --Journal of American History
"This study does for Moody's ministry what Harry Stout's work has
done for the ministry of George Whitefield....[Evensen's] writing
style is a great strength of the book, weaving effortlessly in and
out of narration and evaluation. Bruce Evensen and Oxford
University Press have provided historians with a valuable study of
the impact of the mass media on organized mass evangelism...it is
unreservedly recommended as an important monograph for those
interested in
the life of Moody, the story of American revivalism, or the history
of American print media."--Faith & Mission
"God's Man for the Gilded Age is an exemplary achievement. It is
the best study available of Moody's rise to fame--and of his
struggle to deflect the adoration of admirers, keeping them focused
not on himself but on his lifeboat."--he Journal of Religion
"...well written and splendidly researched..."--Scottish Bulletin
of Evangelical Theology
"An important chapter in the history of American revivalism as well
as that of American journalism.... This book merits a wide
readership."--American Historical Review
"masterfully recounts both how the newspapers elevated Moody to
celebrity status and how they came to occupy a central role in
modern mass evangelism. "--Books & Culture
"Bruce Evensen's innovative and well written study of D. L. Moody
and modern mass media deserves a wide readership. Its skillful
narrative reveals much about how religion became spectacle in
American culture and also about how evangelistic fame in Britain
sparked religious renown on this side of the Atlantic. The book
reveals both how important Moody was for the development of the
modern newspaper and how important newspapers were for creating the
great wave of
interest in this one very public evangelist."--Mark A. Noll,
McManis Professor of Christian Thought, Wheaton College; author of
America's God: From Jonathan Edwards to Abraham Lincoln
"This is not only a masterful account of Dwight L. Moody's public
ministry, it is also a must-read study in the history of Christian
evangelism. Evensen has provided all of us who revere Mr. Moody
with a marvelous gift."--Richard J. Mouw, President and Professor
of Christian Philosophy, Fuller Theological Seminary; author of The
Smell of Sawdust: What Evangelicals Can Learn from their
Fundamentalist Heritage
"For students desiring an introduction to the ways that religion
and 'mass' culture met in nineteenth-century America, this is a
highly suggestive case study." --Religious Studies Review
"This study does for Moody's ministry what Harry Stout's work has
done for the ministry of George Whitefield....[Evensen's] writing
style is a great strength of the book, weaving effortlessly in and
out of narration and evaluation. Bruce Evensen and Oxford
University Press have provided historians with a valuable study of
the impact of the mass media on organized mass evangelism...it is
unreservedly recommended as an important monograph for those
interested in
the life of Moody, the story of American revivalism, or the history
of American print media."--Faith & Mission
"This book should attract a wide readership, both from Moody
admirers and from more nearly objective observers of the phenomenon
of mass evangelism"--The Historian
"...well written and splendidly researched..."--Scottish Bulletin
of Evangelical Theology
"God's Man for the Gilded Age is an exemplary achievement. It is
the best study available of Moody's rise to fame--and of his
struggle to deflect the adoration of admirers, keeping them focused
not on himself but on his lifeboat."--he Journal of Religion
"An important chapter in the history of American revivalism as well
as that of American journalism.... This book merits a wide
readership."--American Historical Review
"No one has so thoroughly described Moody's crusades...nor has
anyone so meticulously examined Moody's symbiotic relationship with
the press in both America and Britain...his study helps illuminate
the reasons for Moody's success, his contribution to the rise of
modern mass evangelism, his role in helping create the modern
newspaper, and why many considered him God's man for the Gilded
Age." --Journal of American History
"masterfully recounts both how the newspapers elevated Moody to
celebrity status and how they came to occupy a central role in
modern mass evangelism. "--Books & Culture
"Bruce Evensen's innovative and well written study of D. L. Moody
and modern mass media deserves a wide readership. Its skillful
narrative reveals much about how religion became spectacle in
American culture and also about how evangelistic fame in Britain
sparked religious renown on this side of the Atlantic. The book
reveals both how important Moody was for the development of the
modern newspaper and how important newspapers were for creating the
great wave of
interest in this one very public evangelist."--Mark A. Noll,
McManis Professor of Christian Thought, Wheaton College; author of
America's God: From Jonathan Edwards to Abraham Lincoln
"This is not only a masterful account of Dwight L. Moody's public
ministry, it is also a must-read study in the history of Christian
evangelism. Evensen has provided all of us who revere Mr. Moody
with a marvelous gift."--Richard J. Mouw, President and Professor
of Christian Philosophy, Fuller Theological Seminary; author of The
Smell of Sawdust: What Evangelicals Can Learn from their
Fundamentalist Heritage
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