| 
Crisis
of Conscience
Arkansas Methodists and the Civil Rights Struggle
Edited by James T. Clemons and Kelly L. Farr
Crisis of Conscience features personal stories by
Arkansas Methodist pastors, laypersons, and community leaders—including
Dale Bumpers, M. Joycelyn Elders, and Miller Williams—who
lived through the struggles for civil rights in the 1950s
and saw their congregations and other institutions rocked
by the tumultuous events of the history-making era. The book
also depicts the desegregation of Hendrix College, the prophetic
role of Philander Smith College in civil rights activism,
and the experiences of other Arkansas Methodist institutions
in the great freedom struggle that caused many of the state’s
church members to realize they could no longer reconcile their
belief in God with participation in a segregated society.
James T. Clemons is a native of Arkansas,
a retired United Methodist minister, and professor emeritus
of New Testament at Wesley Theological Seminary in Washington,
D.C. Kelly L. Farr, also an Arkansas native, is an editor
and journalist.
July
6 x 9, 212 pages, 5 illustrations
$18.50 (s) paper
ISBN 978-0-9708574-4-6 | 0-9708574-4-6
Distributed for the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies
|