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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 10 page essay that offers summary and commentary on chapter 35 of The Story of Christianity, Volume II: The Reformation to the Present Day by Justo Gonzalez. No additional sources are cited.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KL9_khgonrefc35.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. Gonzalez, The Story of Christianity, Vol.
II, Chapter 35 Research Compiled By - March, 2012 properly! Chapter 35:
Protestantism in the United States From World War I to the Great Depression 750 Gonzalez begins this chapter by pointing out that World War I did not have the same
devastating consequences in the US that it produced in Europe because the US did not enter the war until its final stages and, also, the war was not fought on
US soil.1 While public opinion towards the war was initially in favor of maintaining US isolationism, by the time America entered the war, many Christians, such as the Liberal and
the fundamentalists, were calling for involvement in the war in order to "save civilization," with some fundamentalists interpreting events in terms of fulfillment of prophecy.2 Gonzalez points out that failure
to critical consider the causes of the war and the way in which Germany was handled in defeat had serious consequences for Americas future.3 President Woodrow Wilsons ambition, which was
that Germany would be treated fairly, as this would avoid "bitterness" and the possibly of renewed conflict, was "shattered both by the ambition of the victorious allies and the lack
of support" that his initiatives received in the US.4 The US was so convinced by the rhetoric that justified the war that it rejected the League of Nations and refused
to join.5 Gonzalez comments that rhetoric of "hatred and prejudice," which had been supported from numerous pulpits was difficult to undo and was not counteracted by the "call for love
...