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The Encyclopedia of American Religions

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Title: The Encyclopedia of American Religions


1
The Encyclopedia of American Religions
200.973 M528e (2002 edition is at KCLS, among
other libraries NUC code WaSKC)
The seventh edition, 2002 (HCC has the first,
1978)
2
Citation (for the first edition)
  • Main Author Melton, J. Gordon.
  • Title The encyclopedia of
    American religions / J. Gordon Melton.
  • Publisher Wilmington, N.C. McGrath Pub.
    Co., c1978.
  • Subjects Sects--United States.
    Cults--United States.
  • Call Number 200.973 M528e

3
Arrangement (first edition)
  • The 1978 (first) edition is in 2 volumes, each
    with its own table of contents, references, and
    index. Volumes are paginated separately.
  • The first volume contains an introduction and
    acknowledgements.
  • The first volume includes most of the Christian
    religious families. The second includes other
    religions, some of which the author sees as
    hidden religions and out of the mainstream
    spiritualists, Buddhists, Sufis, witches
  • The text of Bibliographical Notesnotes on
    referencesis the same in both volumes. It
    identifies main sources abbreviated in notes and
    lists other main reference sources, including
    Census data and files at the authors Institute
    for the Study of American Religions.
  • Entries are arranged within main church
    families, each family in a separate chapter.
    Entries contain information on beliefs history,
    including points of difference with other groups
    practices where located in the country.
  • For addresses of churches, the reader is referred
    to another work by Melton.

4
Contents pages, v. 1 (1st ed.)
5
Contents pages, v. 2 (1st ed.)
6
Arrangement (seventh edition)
This edition includes one section in columns,
with a format like that of the Encyclopedia of
Associations. This entry is under the
Pentecostal Familylonger entries include
sections on history, beliefs, and organization.
The author notes groups different
interpretations of history leading to schism. A
second section provides longer historical essays.
7
Indexing (first edition)
  • Separate index for each volume
  • Indexed people, places, churches, other
    religious organizations, publications, a very few
    issues (including birth control). No indication
    of main entries. Publication names are
    italicized.
  • No index or table of contents covering both
    volumesthe user may need to check each index or
    table of contents to find a particular group or
    person or a family of religions.

8
References
  • Endnotes are numbered separately for each
    chapter.
  • Usually, the first note for a chapter on a
    religious family gives main references on its
    heritage, thought world, and lifestyle.
  • Notes are hard to usetheyre arranged by chapter
    number, with no running caption indicating which
    chapter they pertain to. Main text includes
    caption referring to religious family name but
    not chapter number.

9
Sample entry Kennedy Worshippers
Nothing to orient the reader in the running head.
Table of contents and index likewise just headed
TABLE OF CONTENTS and INDEX.
10
References for the Kennedy Worshippers
In the new editions, publications issued by each
group are identified in its listing.
11
Scope (1st edition)
  • Includes 1200 primary religious bodies in 17
    families, each with a common heritage, thought
    world (theology in its broadest sense), and
    lifestyle.
  • Criteria for inclusion First, a church seeks
    the chief religious loyalty of its members.
    Second, it meets requirements of size. If it is
    organized into congregations, it has at least two
    congregations, or it has one congregation of more
    than 2,000 members who make a measurable impact
    on the country through the mass media. If a
    church is not organized into congregations, it
    meets the size requirement when its members come
    from more than one state and from beyond a single
    metropolitan area. The third criterion concerns
    faith a primary religious body tends to promote
    its particular views. For instance, it may
    encourage belief or disbelief in the Trinity. Or
    it may try to discourage the wearing of neckties
    some holiness churches consider wearing neckties
    ostentatious.
  • These criteria are meant to supplant the older
    church/sect/cult division drawn from earlier
    European sociological research. The author also
    sees these criteria as more useful than any
    division by ethnicity or leadership type.
  • American Indian and American gypsy religions are
    not includedthe author is not familiar with
    them, says that researchers have scarcely begun
    a thorough examination.

12
The 17 families
  • The Liturgical Family, in two chapters (Western,
    including Catholics and Anglicans, and Eastern,
    including all Eastern Orthodox churches
  • The Lutheran family
  • The Reformed-Presbyterian Family, including
    Congregational churches
  • The Liberal Family, including Unitarians and
    American Atheists, Inc.
  • The Pietist-Methodist Family
  • The Holiness Family, including some separate
    black and white denominations
  • The Pentecostal Family, including snake handlers
    and a section of Latin American churches
  • The European Free-Church Family, including
    Mennonites, Amish, and Quakers
  • The Baptist Family, many kinds, including
    anti-mission Baptists
  • The Independent Fundamentalist Family, including
    Church of God
  • The Adventist Family, including Jehovahs
    Witnesses

13
The 17 (continued)
  • The Latter Day Saints Family, including
    polygamy-practicing groups
  • The Communal Family communes formed before and
    after 1960
  • The Metaphysical Family, including Christian
    Scientist groups
  • The Psychic and New Age Family (in two chapters),
    including spiritualist groups, Rosicrucians,
    drug-oriented groups, flying saucer groups,
    Theosophists, Liberal Catholicism, Scientology
  • The Magick Family Ritual Magick groups,
    Witchcraft, Neo-Paganism
  • The Eastern and Middle Eastern Family (in three
    chapters) Jews and Muslims Hinduism, Sikhism,
    and Jainism Buddhism, Shintoism, and
    Zoroastrianism
  • Also, New Unaffiliated Religious Bodies
    Jesus people, gay religion, mail-order
    denominations, politically-oriented bodies,
    Hawaiian family churches

14
Currency
  • Highlines 1978 copy is the first editionthe
    seventh edition was published in 2003.
  • The first edition covered 1200 primary religious
    bodies. The seventh covers 2300.
  • The first edition has no information on anything
    later, of courseon the Branch Davidians, on
    later televangelists, on subsequent history of
    any of the included religions.
  • In his introduction, the author stresses both the
    up-to-the-minute coverage of the first edition
    and its fleeting currency With few exceptions,
    if a church existed in the United States in 1976,
    it is discussed in the Encyclopedia. In addition,
    many churches formed in 1977 and in 1978 were
    added during the final editing. To paint a
    picture of Americas religious bodies in 1978 is
    not to describe them as they will be in 1988.
  • The 2002 edition includes about 250 groups not
    listed in the 1999 version, 2630 total..
  • The reference work is current, but our edition
    isnt.

15
Intended Purpose and Additional Purposes
  • The author doesnt state a purpose beyond
    tracing the stories of the 17 religious
    families.
  • A main purpose it can aid historians and
    sociologists of religion.
  • The encyclopedia also works well as a
    ready-reference source on religions (the first
    edition best on Christian groups).
  • Good for students, relatives of members, people
    interested in local history or news. Maybe also
    for deprogrammers.

16
Other formats
  • Available as a database through Gale's Ready
    Reference Shelf.
  • Available as an eBook through Gale Virtual
    Reference Library.

17
Special features
  • In the 2002 edition, addresses of groups,
    membership numbers, and publications included in
    entries
  • In the first edition, an essay on each family
    at the beginning of the relevant chapter in the
    2002 edition, historical essays
  • Detailed endnotes
  • Detailed index

18
Authority
  • J. Gordon Melton is an ordained Methodist
    minister, with a doctorate from Garrett
    Theological Seminary. Since 1969, he has been
    director of the Institute for the Study of
    American Religion. http//www.americanreligion.org
    /index.html
  • He is a religious studies professor at the
    University of California, Santa Barbara (2003).

19
Reviews (1)
  • Gordon Melton has been involved in editing this
    standard reference work for over a quarter of a
    century. The encyclopedia provides historical
    perspective and current information on over 2,600
    religious and spiritual groups in North America.
    For this new edition, old entries have been
    revised and more than 250 new entries have been
    added. Theology Digest (Spring 2003), on
    the seventh edition

The Christian Century (March 1, 1989), on the
third edition
20
Reviews (2)
  • This edition, like past ones, includes both
    historical and current information on extant and
    defunct religious and spiritual groups in the
    United States and Canada. The author's criteria
    for inclusion are clear, and the entire volume is
    executed with precision. Delightful to use,
    this work is a necessary purchase for public,
    academic, and theological libraries. ARBA Guide
    to Subject Dictionaries and Encyclopedias, on the
    5th edition

21
A review by a covered group
  • What The Encyclopedia of American Religions
    Reveals
  • Editor's Note The Institute for the Study of
    American Religion in Santa Barbara, California,
    publishes the ENCYCLOPEDIA OF AMERICAN RELIGIONS.
    In the fourth edition, there was printed the
    following forthright article on FATHER DIVINE'S
    Peace Mission Movement. It is reproduced here
    verbatim, except for the correction of a few
    minor mistakes---corrections which will appear in
    the fifth edition, soon to be published. In
    contrast to what some sources have printed, this
    article presents an accurate, though brief,
    picture of the Peace Mission Movement. We are
    grateful for the intelligent manner in which the
    Movement is portrayed in certain articles.
    http//fdipmm.libertynet.org/cvlrigts/cyclopda.htm
    l

Picture also from the International Peace Mission
Movement website
22
A negative view Melton as cult apologist
http//www.apologeticsindex.org/m06.html
In a 1992 trial involving JZ Knight, who claims
to channel a 35,000 spirit, Ramtha the
Enlightened One, Melton testified that the Ramtha
movement wasnt a cult. He also believes that
Knight is a multiple personality.
http//seattlepi.nwsource.com/archives/1995/950726
0006.asp
23
My impression
  • Im impressed by the breadth of coverage,
    detail, and respectful impartiality.
  • The first edition is lacking in coverage of
    major non-Christian religions.

24
Reference uses
  • What exactly do the Kennedy Worshippers believe?
  • What are the differences between the Amish and
    Mennonites?
  • Why do people handle snakes?
  • What kinds of groups have come out of X
    traditional church?

25
Web results
  • What do the Kennedy Worshippers believe?
  • The 4 pages of Google results for Kennedy
    worshippers include links to Melton and the
    encyclopedia and links to stuff on worshippers in
    the sense of Kennedy-lovers, without any
    religious sense.
  • A search on John F. Kennedy Memorial Temple
    or its founder, Farley McGivern, leads to a
    single page dedicated to the view that JFK is the
    Antichrist One of the most difficult tasks in
    persuading Christians that John F. Kennedy is the
    Antichrist is in convincing them that he is
    alive.
  • What are the differences between the Amish and
    Mennonites?
  • Search on Amish Mennonites differences? some
    good info, but mostly not in detail. Information
    on the Mennonite-Amish break easier to find than
    current lifestyle and belief differences not
    much detail on specific groups.
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