Financing American Religion
By (Author) Mark Chaves
Edited by Sharon L. Miller
AltaMira Press
AltaMira Press
12th November 1998
United States
General
Non Fiction
Anthropology
Finance and accounting
306.60973
Paperback
308
Width 149mm, Height 226mm, Spine 16mm
322g
Money always has been a subject of deep concern for religious leaders. In recent decades, however, this perennial concern has taken on a new urgency as a crisis situation is perceived. Financing American Religion brings together short, readable essays representing the best, most up-to-date research and thinking on the intersections of money and religion. Sociologists, historians, economists, and theologians ask who gives, how much, and why. They investigate how money moves and how it affects religious organizational behavior. And throughout they explore how attitudes toward money have altered over time. Religious leaders and scholars of American religion will welcome this much-needed volume.
Chaves and Miller provide a well-integrated, systematic, cohesive, and unified discussion of various aspects of religious financing. As such, this work will take its place as both a practical guide for religious leaders and laity, and as a brief but thorough introduction to research regarding finance and religion for scholars. -- Laura Vance, (Georgia Southwestern State University) * Nova Religio: The Journal Of Alternative And Emergent Religions *
A richly textured conversation emerges out of this volume in a way that is atypical of most edited volumesparticularly when those authors come from the diverse backgrounds that are evidenced here....this compedium is a worth-while addition to the personal library of anyone interested in the topic. -- John P. Bartkowski, University of Texas at San Antonio * Sociology of Religion: A Quarterly Review *
This compact, valuable book brings together the most important current research on faith and money....Worthwhile for anyone interested in the state of individual giving, the congregational resources available for addressing faith and money issues, or philanthropy in religious institutions. -- Jerry Dean Weber, Presbyterian Church (USA) Foundation * The Christian Century *
Mark Chaves: University of Arizona Sharon L. Miller: University of Notre Dame