- Marty, Martin E
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▪ 1999Despite reaching the age of 70 in February 1998 and retiring from his teaching post at the University of Chicago in March, American church historian Martin Marty continued apace of his masterwork, Modern American Religion. A proposed four-volume study of national religious tradition over the past century, as of 1998 it comprised three books: The Irony of It All, 1893-1919 (1986), The Noise of Conflict, 1919-1941 (1990), and Under God, Indivisible, 1941-1960 (1996). During his 35 years as professor of the history of Christianity at the university's Divinity School, Marty wrote some 50 books and 4,300 articles, was awarded 57 honorary degrees, and trained more than 100 doctoral students. At his birthday celebration, the university announced the establishment of a theological research institute in his name—the Martin E. Marty Center—in honour of his strong history of public ministry. Though rarely acting in a political role, Marty accepted in the autumn of 1997 the appointment to head the Lutheran-Episcopalian Concordat, an ecumenical program almost 30 years in the making.Academic in thought but accessible to a wide readership, Marty's writings examined contemporary religion against the institutional infighting and growing secularity of the 20th century. An ordained minister in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, he wrote much on Protestantism, but he also wrote with authority on Catholicism and other traditions. Marty was admired for his ability to explain trends in terms of their broader cultural and historical context. In 1997 he was named director of the Public Religion Project, which interprets American religious issues, and was awarded the National Humanities Medal and the inaugural Martin E. Marty Award in the Public Understanding of Religion.Marty was born Feb. 5, 1928, in West Point, Neb., and was educated at Concordia Seminary in St. Louis, Mo., where he studied theology and church history (B.A., 1949) and, in 1952, received a master's degree in divinity. Ordained in 1952, he served as assistant pastor in River Forest, Ill. (1952-56), while working toward his master's degree in sacred theology at the Lutheran School of Theology (1954) and his doctorate in American religious and intellectual history at the University of Chicago (1956).While serving as the founding pastor of a church in Elk Grove Village, Ill. (1957-63), he began his career in publishing, writing books and moonlighting as an editor of Christian Century, where he was a weekly columnist and, later, senior editor. Marty wrote several primers of religious history, beginning with A Short History of Christianity (1959) and continuing with Pilgrims in Their Own Land: Five Hundred Years of Religion in America (1984) and A Short History of American Catholicism (1995). In 1972 he won a National Book Award for Righteous Empire: The Protestant Experience in America (1971), which describes how Protestantism shaped early American culture and then, except for brief revivals, waned after the Civil War.TOM MICHAEL
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Universalium. 2010.