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American academic, author, and educator (1940–2022) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stephen Joseph Stein (March 22, 1940 - January 12, 2022) was an American academic, author, and educator. His writings focused on religion in the United States. He was the Chancellor's Professor Emeritus of Religious Studies at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana, and served as President of the American Society of Church History. He is known especially for his writing on eighteenth-century religious thought, particularly the Shakers, Jonathan Edwards, and new religious movements. His 1992 book The Shaker Experience in America won the Philip Schaff prize from the American Society of Church History and has been seen as a definitive work on the topic.
Stephen J. Stein | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | January 12, 2022 81) | (aged
Academic background | |
Education | Concordia Seminary Yale University |
Doctoral advisor | Sydney E. Ahlstrom |
Academic work | |
Discipline | Religion in the United States |
Sub-discipline | Shakers, Jonathan Edwards, new religious movements |
Institutions | Indiana University Bloomington |
Stein was born on March 22, 1940, in Chillicothe, Missouri.[1] His father was a Lutheran pastor and Air Force chaplain, and his mother was a teacher. Stein's family moved multiple times as he grew up because of his father's work. He attended high school at Concordia College in Austin, Texas, before transferring to St. Paul's College in Concordia Missouri, where he completed high school and two years of junior college. He then attended Concordia Senior College in Fort Wayne, Indiana, from which he graduated in 1962 before going on to Concordia Seminary in St. Louis.[2]
Stein began his career teaching at Lutheran High School North in St. Louise, where he realized he did not want to become a pastor. He then attended Yale University to study American religious history under Sydney E. Ahlstrom. Ahlstrom suggested Stein's dissertation on Jonathan Edwards' "Notes on the Apocalypse". Stein graduated with a Ph.D. in 1970 and joined the Department of Religious Studies at Indiana University Bloomington the same year.[1][2][3]
Stein taught religious studies and history at Indiana University, with a specialization in eighteenth-century religious thought. He served as editor of The Works of Jonathan Edwards published by Yale University Press in two volumes, Apocalyptic Writings (1977) and Notes on Scripture (1998), as well as a scholarly edition of Edwards' "Blank Bible".[2] Edwin Gaustad has said of Stein's editing work that "It would be difficult to exaggerate Stein's diligence, thoroughness, and prodigious scholarship."[4] Stein also published various works on religion including Letters from a Young Shaker: William S. Byrd at Pleasant Hill (1985); The Shaker Experience in America: A History of the United Society of Believers (1992); Alternative American Religious (2000); and Communities of Dissent: A History of Alternative Religions in America (2003); and was editor of Apocalypticism in the Modern Period and the Contemporary Age, volume 3 in The Encyclopedia of Apocalypticism (1998).[2] He contributed to works such as Critical essays on Jonathan Edwards (1980);[5] The Apocalypse in English Renaissance thought and literature (1984);[6] Perspectives on American religion and culture (1999);[7] Pietism in Germany and North America 1680-1820 (2009);[8] and The Columbia guide to religion in American history (2012).[9] His research has included religious diversity and dissenting religious communities in America, as well as the role of apocalyptic literature, and the implications of the religious clause of the First Amendment.[3]
Stein's The Shaker Experience in America is widely regarded as the definitive study of the religion and culture of the Shakers, and received the Philip Schaff prize from the American Society of Church History.[2][10][11] William Sims Bainbridge wrote: "Stein's superb book is a revelation in at least three ways. First, it reminds us that historical research and writing can be performed at a very high level of skill and thoroughness, something we may have forgotten if the history we read is limited to small religious movements. Second, it casts the pre-twentieth-century Shakers in a substantially new light, through fact-based revision of the untrustworthy accounts by earlier writers. Third, it brings their story up to the present day, with an enlightening synopsis of the closure of most Shaker colonies and the precarious survival of the Canterbury and Sabbathday Lake communities."[12] Another review called it "an unusually comprehensive and eminently readable chronicle of more than two centuries of Shaker life;"[13] and Marilyn J. Westerkamp called it "religious history at its best".[14]
From 1994 to 1995, Stein served as president of American Society of Church History,[15][16] he was awarded fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, and received Indiana University's College of Arts and Sciences Distinguished Faculty Award and the Tracy M. Sonneborn Award for Excellence in Teaching and Research.[2] He was Director of American Studies at Indiana University from 1981 to 1984, and chaired the Religious Studies department from 1990 to 1998.[3] He served as co-editor along with Catherine L. Albanese of the "Religion in North America" series put out by Indiana University Press.[17][3] He also served on the National Advisory Board of The Joseph Smith Papers along with other scholars such as Terryl L. Givens, Harry S. Stout, Richard Lyman Bushman, and Dean C. Jessee.[18][19][20]
Stein retired from teaching in 2005.[2] He died in 2022 at the age of 81.[1]
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