Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 192
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7425-5833-5 • Hardback • June 2007 • $27.95 • (£19.99) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
David Yount writes the nationally syndicated column "Amazing Grace" and hosts a weekly cable TV program. He regularly appears in the media and is the author of nine books, including What are We to Do? and Be Strong and Courageous. He lives in Montclair, VA.
Chapter 1 Foreword — A Tale of Two Quakers
Chapter 2 Preface — Of Time and Eternity
Chapter 3 Introduction — Convincement
Part 4 Part I — How the Quakers Invented America
Part 5 Part II — Friendly Persuasion
Chapter 6 Faith vs. Feeling
Chapter 7 The Meaning of the Light
Chapter 8 The Significance of Jesus
Chapter 9 How Quakers Approach the Bible
Chapter 10 The Good Quaker
Chapter 11 The Holy Experiment
Chapter 12 Living in the Light of Eternity
Chapter 13 Why Did the Quakers Stop Quaking?
Chapter 14 A Peculiar People
Part 15 Part III — Quaker Spirituality
Chapter 16 What Jesus Learned in the Desert and Thoreau Learned in the Woods
Chapter 17 To See the World in a Grain of Sand
Part 18 Part IV — How the Quakers are Reinventing America
Silence and inner light permeate this personal exposition and witness. Yount invites us to take a practical and deep wisdom from the Quakers.
— John W. Crossin, OSFS, executive director, Washington Theological Consortium
From its curiosity piquing title to its final satisfying sentence, How the Quakers Invented America is an entertaining and informative book about both the United States and the influence of those quirky Quakers on it. David Yount's writing is crisp and clean and the story he tells is engaging, surprising, and delightful.
— J. Brent Bill
From the Bill of Rights to frugality, individualism, egalitarianism, family life, religious voluntaryism, and various folkways, Quaker fingerprints are everywhere in the American ethos. David Yount chronicles this heritage with the clear, informative insight of an insider (himself a Friend) and a lifelong observer of religion in America. Not sparing critique of Quaker ways, Yount traces the rich contributions of Friends from their origins to the contemporary branches of Quakerism where their distinctives might still be found.
— Max L. Carter, director, Guilford College Friends Center
If you want to see how Quakerism influenced the principles of American democracy...if you want insight into a complex religion . . . if you want to understand Quakerism in the context of the larger Christian community. . . if you want to understand the significance of Quakerism in the modern transformation of American society through its leadership and participation in social justice movements—then I urge you to read David Yount's How Quakers Invented America.
— Mary Ellen McNish, general secretary, American Friends Service Committee
An attractive, wide-ranging, personal view of Quakerism . . . thought-provoking, full of life and optimism.
— John Punshon; Quaker Life
Yount is a fine writer. The book is a pleasant, interesting, and meaningful read.
— January 2008; Friends Journal
A thorough reading revealed the author's ability to take a wide range of approaches to the subject matter. Some sections were stimulating, and other parts personally reflective and thoughtful. . . . This book can promote some understanding of Quakerism . . . I can recommend this book as a quick and easy read, with an interesting (if quirky) personal style.
— Paul Sheldon, Ph.D., Villanova University; Peace and Justice Studies