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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Asking
hypothetical questions of dead presidents
helps understand where our current one is
taking us.
Niels C. Nielsen believes it is time
to revisit one of the most controversial
issues of the recent presidential campaign –
Obama’s religious beliefs and background –
and how they influence his day-to-day
decisions. God in the Obama Era
(Morgan James Publishing) begins and ends
with chapters on Obama for relevance and
interest, but the integral part of the book
is actually a history of successive
presidencies. Nielsen’s book is
non-sectarian, positive and critical, and
leaves the subject of Obama’s possible
accomplishments and success open since it is
too early yet for definitive judgments.
Understanding that nations which ignore
their past live in a narrow time period,
discounting the fact that what has gone
before tells us much about what is going on
now and what will happen in the future.
Historically, religion – as both a positive
and negative force – has influenced
economics, international statecraft, as well
as individual and social ethics. This brings
up the question of where Barack Obama is
taking this country – politically,
religiously, economically and ethically.
Comparing our current president with past
presidents, from Washington through Bush,
Nielsen wonders what they would say to each
other as contemporaries. Since the election
of 2008 turned out to be a watershed
contest, looking to crucial decisions of
policy change on the war in Iraq, the
international economy, global warming,
social security and immigration, it is the
main intention of the author to help bring
objectivity and perspective to the
much-debated issues.
This brilliantly enlightening book offers
guidance to evaluate what an ambitious new
leader has done, and may do, in the longer
setting of the history of his office. At the
beginning of each chapter the author uses a
narrative and chronological approach to show
both the similarities and the differences
between our current president and one of his
predecessors, then asks a number of
hypothetical “what if” questions of many
past great leaders in an attempt to see how
history could have been dramatically changed
by their answers. Visit his informative
website at:
www.presidentsreligionandethics.com
Niels C. Nielsen, Jr. is the J. Newton
Rayzor Professor of Philosophy and Religious
Thought emeritus at Rice University in
Houston, Texas. He is well-recognized for
his earlier book, The Religion of Jimmy
Carter, also translated into German. The
author’s daughter is the only non-native
faculty member of her department at the
University of Vienna, where she is intensely
involved in explaining the Obama phenomenon
to her students who have a varied interest
in the transition from Bush II to a very
different sort of presidency. Nielsen’s
Religions of the World is a widely used
college and university textbook.
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TIP SHEET:
Ron Highfield, Professor of Religion,
Pepperdine University: “...this erudite,
lucid, enlightening book brilliantly
illuminates the central icon of American
culture ... In the aftermath of the
election, in which religion played a greater
role than in any election since 1960, we are
fortunate to receive this book…rich in
insight, lively in style and wide-ranging in
scope…penetrating analyses of 20 presidents
… a “must read” for anyone interested in the
presidency, the place of religion in
American history and culture, or religion in
the Obama campaign and presidency.”
Rev. George M. Atkinson, Director
emeritus, Perkins School of Theology, TX:
“Nielsen has written an unusually fine
examination of the role of religion in the
life and work of our presidents…
comprehensive, balanced, puts into shadow
any comparable books on the subject…students
of American history will especially
appreciate his careful treatment of this
understudied topic, since it reveals ethical
issues and nuances not examined in
conventional studies ... students of
religion will appreciate the connections
between the personal piety and the social
justice efforts of each president
studied…heartily recommend this book!”
Bishop Andy Doyle, Houston Diocese,
Episcopal Church: “…very much enjoyed the
book…captured the virtue of American
presidents and their particular and faithful
understanding of our country’s civil
religion. While no one president…Nielsen
wrote about reflects each citizen’s faith or
lack thereof…it represents them well as
faithful men who have believed in a
providential God. As for President Obama, I
was intrigued and challenged by …(the)
comment that “the responsibility of his
presidency reaches out beyond the external
history to the internal history of the soul,
spirit, intention and vision” …words will
stay with me for some time as I think about
the topic of virtuous leadership both
secular and religious. |