In 1903, after seven years traveling the country as itinerant
preachers, Benjamin and Mary Purnell moved to Benton Harbor, Michigan,
where they founded a commune. Their settlement soon blossomed into a
vibrant religious colony and booming business enterprise. They called
it the House of David, and its members--hailing from across the United
States and around the world--were Christian Israelites, members of a
millennialist faith who seek to assemble the remnants of the lost
tribes of Israel in a new Jerusalem. Once gathered, they believed,
this community of 144,000 would never die. Over the next six decades
about two thousand believers moved to Benton Harbor. They accepted
stringent rules that included relinquishing all assets, practicing
celibacy, and renouncing meat, hair-cutting, and traditional family
ties--all in exchange for community, economic security, and the
promise of immortality. Working in the commune's multiple business
enterprises, they sought refuge from the abuses of industrial
capitalism at a time of widespread social and economic upheaval, even
as they brilliantly seized on the opportunities the modern economy had
to offer. They also eagerly embraced popular culture by running a
successful amusement park, performing in touring musical groups, and
playing on barnstorming baseball teams that were the delight of
audiences nationwide. The House of David thrived into the 1960s and
lingers on as a tiny remnant today despite early decades characterized
by a steady stream of financial and sexual scandals, a torrent of
litigation, and obsessive coverage in the press.In her study of this
distinctive and little-known group, Evelyn Sterne reveals a larger
story about religion and social change during a pivotal era in modern
American history. Drawing upon extensive archival sources, many
consulted for the first time, she sheds light on a host of questions,
examining who joined this Christian Israelite community and why, and
showing what their choices reveal about the strategies that immigrants
and native-born Americans embraced at a time of disorienting economic,
social, and cultural change. Sterne considers the critics who worked
tirelessly to discredit the Michigan commune and what their efforts
tell us about the limits of religious toleration and debates over what
counts as "religion." Finally, she unveils how the House of David
weathered decades of scandals to survive, becoming one of the
longest-lasting intentional communities in American history.
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Salvation, Scandal, and Survival in a Modern American Commune
Product details
ISBN
9780197792353
Published
2025
Edition
1. edition
Publisher
Oxford University Press Academic US
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author