{"id":369,"date":"2010-11-12T09:04:00","date_gmt":"2010-11-12T09:04:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/monkeymind\/2010\/11\/james-luther-adams\/"},"modified":"2011-11-01T15:03:31","modified_gmt":"2011-11-01T19:03:31","slug":"james-luther-adams","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/monkeymind\/2010\/11\/james-luther-adams.html","title":{"rendered":"James Luther Adams"},"content":{"rendered":"<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC \"-\/\/W3C\/\/DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional\/\/EN\" \"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/TR\/REC-html40\/loose.dtd\">\n<html><head><meta http-equiv=\"content-type\" content=\"text\/html; charset=utf-8\"><meta http-equiv=\"content-type\" content=\"text\/html; charset=utf-8\"><\/head><body><div class=\"separator\" style=\"clear: both;text-align: center\"><a href=\"https:\/\/3.bp.blogspot.com\/_niPwTW3rBbU\/TN1I-VZfXYI\/AAAAAAAADk0\/BLzrjSwUPVs\/s1600\/jameslutheradams.jpg\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" border=\"0\" height=\"400\" src=\"https:\/\/3.bp.blogspot.com\/_niPwTW3rBbU\/TN1I-VZfXYI\/AAAAAAAADk0\/BLzrjSwUPVs\/s400\/jameslutheradams.jpg\" width=\"276\"><\/a><\/div>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/James_Luther_Adams\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">James Luther Adams<\/a> was born on this day in 1901.<\/p>\n<p>It is very easy to argue Adams is the last significant Unitarian Universalist theologian. Hopefully more will follow. And, yes, people have been contributing to the literature. I like to think of myself as part of that gang. But significant. That\u2019s the word. And that\u2019s Adams.<\/p>\n<p>Chris Walton, editor of the <a href=\"http:\/\/www.uuworld.org\/\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\"><i>UU World<\/i><\/a>, wrote of Adams:<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhen James Luther Adams, a young Unitarian minister and newly appointed  professor of theology at Meadville Lombard Theological School, went to  Germany in 1935 to study with some of the greatest theologians of the  time, he confronted a deeply unsettling fact: Germany\u2019s churches were  not effectively resisting the rise of Nazism. A convert to Unitarianism  from Baptist fundamentalism, Adams had high expectations for Germany\u2019s  long tradition of liberal theology. After all, a century earlier,  Unitarians had found the inspiration for Transcendentalism in the new  German theology of their time. But German liberalism hadn\u2019t foreseen the  Nazi threat, nor did it seem to offer adequate resources for resistance.  Adams came to admire the German \u201cconfessing church\u201d movement, whose  members did actively oppose Hitler at great personal risk.\u201d (For the rest of that article, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.uuworld.org\/ideas\/articles\/2871.shtml\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">go here<\/a>)<\/p>\n<p>This would lead to a personal spiritual odyssey that has profoundly shaped Unitarian Universalism.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.uua.org\/uuhs\/duub\/authors\/vanericfox.html\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">Van Eric Fox<\/a> and <a href=\"http:\/\/www.minnslectures.org\/archive\/wesley\/wesley.htm\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">Alice Blair Wesley<\/a> wrote a first rate <a href=\"http:\/\/www25.uua.org\/uuhs\/duub\/articles\/jameslutheradams.html\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">biographical sketch<\/a> of Adams for the UU Historical Society, copied in its entirety here:<\/p>\n<p>James Luther Adams (November 12, 1901-July 26, 1994) was a Unitarian  parish minister, social activist, journal editor, distinguished scholar,  translator and editor of major German theologians, prolific author, and  divinity school professor for more than forty years. Adams decisively  shaped the minds of hundreds of students in preparation for the liberal  ministry, and other scholarly professions as well. Adams was the most  influential theologian among American Unitarian Universalists of the  20th century, and one of the finest 20th-century American liberal  Christian theologians generally. <\/p>\n<p>Adams\u2019s path to Unitarianism was similar to that of many members of  Unitarian Universalist congregations. He grew up in a fundamentalist  Christian family in eastern Washington. At home and at church, the Day  of Judgment heralding the end of time was constantly held up as a real  possibility, perhaps coming very soon. As a college student at the  University of Minnesota, Adams was, in his own words, \u201con the rebound  from fundamentalism.\u201d He railed against organized religion and briefly  embraced an atheistic form of humanism. Eventually, however, he began to  attend meetings of the Saturday Men\u2019s Club of the Unitarian church, and  was soon listening to the Unitarian preaching of the Rev. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.uua.org\/uuhs\/duub\/articles\/johnhasslerdietrich.html\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">John Dietrich<\/a>,  a leading proponent of another type of humanism, at once scientific and  religious. One of his professors, Frank Rarig, a Unitarian, saw that  young Adams\u2019s outbursts against religion came from a passionately  religious impulse. In a career counseling session, Rarig calmly told  Adams, much to his consternation, that he would be a minister. The  \u201craving humanist\u201d astonished his friends when, upon completion of his  undergraduate work in 1924, he left for Harvard Divinity School to begin  preparation for the Unitarian ministry. <\/p>\n<p>At Harvard, Adams found the divinity school curriculum stale, and  lacking adequate intellectual grounds for a modern faith. Though he took courses \u201cin the Yard,\u201d i.e.  in other schools of the university, he found many of these inadequate as  well, and for the same reason. Growing up, he had learned firsthand the  warping effects upon institutions and individuals of an ungrounded  mysticism, which, he often said, \u201cbegins in mist and ends in schism.\u201d  Having overcome these effects, he found an ungrounded confidence in  modernism, based on nothing more substantive than \u201cthe spirit of the  age,\u201d to be equally unacceptable. Adams would settle for nothing less  than a faith which could be held intellectually accountable.<\/p>\n<p>When he  graduated from HDS in 1927, he was not yet the spirited Christian  humanist he would become after several more years of study. Before  graduation, working on a field assignment at the Unitarian church in  nearby Salem, Adams had started a new youth group. He married a member  of the group, Margaret Ann Young, an accomplished pianist. Margaret  Adams remained all her life an active church member and also an  important, lively presence in the life of his Unitarian (later Unitarian  Universalist) students. Throughout his teaching career, Jim and  Margaret welcomed, every week, any or all Unitarian students in the  academic community to an evening open house in their living room. The  Adams had three daughters. Margaret Adams died in 1978. <\/p>\n<p>After graduation Adams served as minister of two congregations,  the Second Church, Unitarian in Salem, Massachusetts, 1927-34, and the  First Unitarian Society in Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts, 1934-35.  During his Salem pastorate, he earned a master\u2019s degree in comparative  literature from Harvard and taught in the English department at Boston  University, 1929-32. In Salem, in response to a labor strike at the  Pequot textile mills, Adams looked into the workers\u2019 grievances, which  had received no press coverage. His call from the pulpit for a public  airing of their grievances led to press coverage and settlement. The  mill\u2019s owners and managers, as well as workers, were members of the  church. Not one of the members objected to his having addressed issues  of the strike from their pulpit, a fact which illustrates, Adams told  generations of students, what freedom of the pulpit means. <\/p>\n<p>His Salem experience strengthened Adams\u2019s already firm  conviction that a liberal church can and should make itself a faithful  voice for the voiceless oppressed. He was sharply critical of the  prevailing liberalism which, because of its excessive individualism,  barely noticed and never decisively addressed issues of social justice. A  weak liberal religion bestows a spurious blessing on the status quo.  The point never ceased to be a major theme of his classes. <\/p>\n<p>In 1935, after only a year in Wellesley Hills, Adams was called  to join the faculty of the Unitarian and Universalist Meadville\/Lombard  Theological School in Chicago. He was called because certain others  believed the Unitarian movement urgently needed him to help raise the  intellectual standards of theological education, lest the churches be  unequipped to meet the challenges of the modern world. He accepted the  call, on the condition that he might study for a year in Europe before  assuming his teaching duties. <\/p>\n<p>In Germany during 1935-36, Adams watched as the Nazi government  of Adolph Hitler ruthlessly crushed any and all dissent as it marshaled  forces for its coming march across the continent. Interrogated by the  Gestapo, he narrowly avoided imprisonment as a result of his engagement  with the Underground Church movement. Using a home movie camera, he  filmed Karl Barth, Albert Schweitzer and others, including those who  were involved in clandestine, church-related resistance groups, as well  as pro-Nazi leaders of the so-called German Christian Church. Adams  returned to the United States more convinced than ever that the tendency  of religious liberals to be theologically content with vague slogans  and platitudes about open-mindedness could only render liberal churches  irrelevant and impotent in face of the world\u2019s evils, and he stated his  convictions loudly and frequently. <\/p>\n<p>Adams taught at Meadville\/Lombard from 1936 to 1943, and also  served as a professor in the Federated Theological Faculties of the  University of Chicago, of which Meadville\/Lombard was a member  institution, from 1943 to 1956. In 1945 Adams earned a Ph.D. from the  University of Chicago. He worked vigorously with the Independent Voters  of Illinois, an independent, grassroots political organization whose  goal was open and honest government. Adams\u2019 work with the IVI brought  him friendship with liberal politicians Paul Douglas and <a href=\"http:\/\/www.uua.org\/uuhs\/duub\/articles\/adlaistevenson.html\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">Adlai Stevenson<\/a>. <\/p>\n<p>In 1957 Adams left Chicago to join the faculty of Harvard  Divinity School. After age-mandated retirement from Harvard in 1968, he  continued to teach at Andover Newton Theological Seminary and  Meadville\/Lombard. In the realm of academia, Adams is credited with  making the works of liberal German theologians Paul Tillich, Ernst  Troeltsch, and Karl Holl accessible to the English-speaking world by  translating, editing, and interpreting their writings. His many other  essays and articles focused largely on the theology of social ethics,  addressing an exceedingly broad range of topics, from politics to the  grotesque in the arts, from the significance of angels to AIDS.  Especially notable was his work on the history and theory of voluntary  associations in a democratic culture. <\/p>\n<p>Adams\u2019s conception of the meaning and importance of voluntary  associations grew directly from his understanding of authentically free  spirit in the free church. He described the free church as a body of  believers freely joined in a covenant of loyalty to the holy spirit of  love, intentionally inclusive of dissent, governed by its own members  and fiercely independent from government control, with the reign of the  spirit of love among members to be seen in their voluntary assumption of  responsibility for the just character of their whole society. He came  to see the idea of the free church as the root idea of the  Judeo-Christian tradition of which Western civilization is the fruit,  especially as it is manifest in the deliberate and carefully preserved  limitation of the government\u2019s power to control thriving, independent  voluntary associations in a democratic society. He interpreted  participation in voluntary associations, whatever the character of the  government, as the chief means by which beneficial social change has  been effected throughout history, and as key to the meaning of human  history.<\/p>\n<p>To Adams, the notion that any group might hold a monopoly on  the spirit of love was preposterous and idolatrous. In the Western  world, the free church provides the historical model for many other  voluntary associations, whose purpose is to maintain high standards or  to promote constructive change. As a theologian, Adams was interested in  voluntary associations because his experience and his studies had  brought him to the belief that through voluntary participation in groups  humanity may respond in all times to \u201cthe community-forming power\u201d of  God\u2019s love, present in and available to every human heart and mind. <\/p>\n<p>Paraphrasing Jesus, Adams gives voice to his theology with the  expression, \u201cBy their groups ye shall know them.\u201d It is also briefly  summarized in a short piece of his writing, often read antiphonally in  Unitarian Universalist worship services, \u201cI Call That Church Free.\u201d The  free church, in Adams\u2019s theology, is an institution of special value  only insofar as it meets two other criteria. If its membership is varied  and includes people of all ages and social ranks, many occupations,  various types and levels of ability, degrees of wealth, etc., then the  church will address a much broader range of human concerns than do  other, more narrowly based groups. <\/p>\n<p>Moreover, the primary purpose of the free church is worship,  which is experience of renewed loyalty to the spirit of love and all its  ways. This means the church must have an explicit theology, capable of  intelligent formulation in fresh, living language and forever subject to  informed criticism and reform, lest it slide unawares into idolatry,  which is loyalty, in actual practice, to some far less worthy reality.  Adams believed that all organizations embody a theology, implicit in  their assessments of legitimate and illegitimate uses of power, but  careful attention to terms used in articulation of religious loyalty is  not the task of other organizations, whose primary purpose is not  worship. Adams insisted that the language of the liberal free church  must be richly flexible, not doctrinaire. \u201cPeople can die,\u201d he often  said, \u201cfrom hardening of the categories.\u201d He mourned the confused  weakness of liberal churches whose members will not strive, in the  ongoing mutual dialogue of their church, to examine and explain their  own personal, central, essential loyalties. Said Adams, paraphrasing  Socrates,\u201dAn unexamined faith is not worth having.\u201d  <\/p>\n<p>Busy as he was in his profession and many other voluntary  associations, Adams was ever an active participant in his own church and  always present at Sunday worship services. He was active, too, in the  Unitarian Universalist Association, serving on numerous UUA committees,  most notably on the Commission on Appraisal, 1934-36. His and others\u2019  work on this Commission resulted in a significant reorganization of the  Association. <\/p>\n<p>Adams was a brilliant teacher, so much so that his classes always  drew students from many faith traditions. Through them, his influence  extends to the many institutions his former students now serve, not a  few with high distinction. He had a capacity to expand the horizons of  his students\u2019 minds and fire them with his own enthusiasm for the  life-giving spirit of ideas, especially ideas of freedom and justice. He  was impatient with lifeless abstraction. He wanted to know and be able  to document the dramatic stories of ideas, the situation of their  origin, the struggle for their acceptance, whose interest their  suppression served, and how they worked out in ongoing, daily human  lives. And that is what he required that his students learn and  scrupulously document in their assigned coursework. Once, at a  conference, Adams repeatedly challenged Edwin Wilson, leader of the  Unitarian humanists, to cite the sources of the ideas that his group  promoted. Adams delighted to recall and quote to students Wilson\u2019s  public dig at himself: \u201cJames Luther Adams believes in salvation by  bibliography.\u201d Adams\u2019s retort: \u201cThere is no such thing as the immaculate  conception of an idea.\u201d  <\/p>\n<p>Adams\u2019s acquaintances affectionately refer to him as \u201cJLA,\u201d after  the signature he used on his thousands of memos and letters to hundreds  of correspondents around the world. Among ministers especially, JLA  stories abound. Most end with one of JLA\u2019s memorable punch lines and  bursts of laughter, as well as the illumination of some important issue.  In his early days, Adams\u2019s criticism of liberal religion rankled his  more established colleagues. He was occasionally told that if he found  so much wrong with the Unitarian church he was welcome to leave the  Unitarian fellowship, but over the years he came to be respected by a  great many Unitarians as a constructive reformer, worth listening to for  the depth and breadth of his concerns. <\/p>\n<p>Adams suffered painfully from a disease of the spine in his last  years. Even in his late 80\u2019s and not well, he kept up his lively  correspondence and continued his studies, gracious as ever to his many  visitors. He died, 92 years old, at his home in Cambridge, Massachusetts  in 1994.  <span> <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span>The primary collection of Adams papers and  films is at the George Arents Research Library for Special Collections  at Syracuse University. Additional materials are found at the James  Duncan Phillips Library at the Essex Institute in Salem, Massachusetts,  and the archives of the Andover-Harvard Theological Library at the  Harvard Divinity School. The James Luther Adams Foundation was set up in  1977. One of its stated purposes is \u201cassisting, encouraging and  engaging in the collection, maintenance, and publication of the records  of the life and thought of James Luther Adams.\u201d <\/span><br><span>Because he could never resist a summons to any series of  meetings aimed at reshaping yet another institution, Adams never got  around to organizing his published work. His principal editor, George  Kimmich Beach, has published three volumes of Adams\u2019s papers: The Prophethood of All Believers (1986), An Examined Faith: Social Context and Religious Commitment (1991), and The Essential James Luther Adams: Selected Essays and Addresses  (1998). These volumes include Beach\u2019s own illuminating essays, written  to introduce each of the volumes and each of their sections. Beach\u2019s  work lifts up the sytematic nature of Adams\u2019s thought. Adams essays have  also been collected in Taking Time Seriously (1957); On Being Human Religiously: Selected Essays in Religion and Society, edited by Max L. Stackhouse (1976); Voluntary Associations: Socio-cultural Analyses and Theological Interpretation, edited by J. Ronald Engel (1986). In addition, there are two special editions of the Unitarian Universalist Christian devoted to Adams\u2019s essays and sermons (1977 and 1993). Paul Tillich\u2019s Philosophy of Culture, Science, and Religion  (1965) is a revised version of Adams\u2019s doctoral dissertation.  Comprehensive bibliographies of Adams\u2019s writings may be found in D.B.  Robertson, ed., Voluntary Associations: A Study of Groups in Free Societies. (1966) and John R. Wilcox, Taking Time Seriously: James Luther Adams. (1978). <\/span><br><span>\u00a0<\/span><br><span>Adams wrote an autobiography, Not Without Dust and Heat: A Memoir (1995). Wilcox\u2019s work, Taking Time Seriously: James Luther Adams,  is partly a biography, but is mostly a study of Adams\u2019s ethics.  Biographical articles include Max L. Stackhouse, \u201cJames Luther Adams: A  Biographical and Intellectual Sketch\u201d in Voluntary Associations: A Study of Groups in Free Societies  (1966) and George W. Pickering, \u201cJames Luther Adams: Religious  Liberalism at the Intersection of History and Biography,\u201d in the American Journal of Theology and  Philosophy (2000). <\/span> <\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.jameslutheradams.org\/archives\/003676.html\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">Of course, eventually one should go to the source.<\/a> Personally, I\u2019d recommend starting with George Kimmich Beach\u2019s <a href=\"http:\/\/books.google.com\/books?id=ujPVWQKlFzcC&amp;printsec=frontcover&amp;dq=%22essential+james+luther+adams%22&amp;source=bl&amp;ots=5OOS3OmyrK&amp;sig=A5NipG62dSid486LfikNuyweYy4&amp;hl=en&amp;ei=nUfdTMuYBYOgsQOplaTWCg&amp;sa=X&amp;oi=book_result&amp;ct=result&amp;resnum=2&amp;ved=0CB8Q6AEwAQ#v=onepage&amp;q&amp;f=false\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\"><i>Essential James Luther Adams<\/i><\/a>\u2026<\/p>\n<div class=\"blogger-post-footer\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"1\" height=\"1\" src=\"https:\/\/blogger.googleusercontent.com\/tracker\/33904114-4769671037758777721?l=monkeymindonline.blogspot.com\" alt=\"\"><\/div>\n<\/body><\/html>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>James Luther Adams was born on this day in 1901. It is very easy to argue Adams is the last significant Unitarian Universalist theologian. Hopefully more will follow. And, yes, people have been contributing to the literature. I like to think of myself as part of that gang. But significant. That\u2019s the word. And that\u2019s [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":120,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-369","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v21.1 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>James Luther Adams<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"James Luther Adams was born on this day in 1901.It is very easy to argue Adams is the last significant Unitarian Universalist theologian. 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He has been authorized as a teacher within two traditional Zen lineages. James has washed dishes, assisted a crab fisherman on the Florida keys, worked in bookstores up and down the California coast, and served as a Unitarian Universalist parish minister. He currently lives with his spouse Jan and her mother in Los Angeles. His next book the Intimate Way of Zen is due from Shambhala Publications in July, 2024.\",\"sameAs\":[\"http:\/\/www.emptymoonzen.org\",\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/james.ford.1029\",\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/James_Ishmael_Ford\"],\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/monkeymind\/author\/jamesford\"}]}<\/script>\n<!-- \/ Yoast SEO plugin. -->","yoast_head_json":{"title":"James Luther Adams","description":"James Luther Adams was born on this day in 1901.It is very easy to argue Adams is the last significant Unitarian Universalist theologian. 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