This is the best study of congregations to have appeared in the past seventy years.
- Robert Wuthnow (Princeton University, author of Christianity in the 21st Century) In this excellent example of comparative case-study research, Ammerman (sociology of religion, Hartford Seminary) and her research team focus on how congregations respond to changes in their communities. The book studies 23 congregations in nine communities where significant economic, structural, and cultural changes occurred with respect to class structures, age distributions, racial diversity, developing homosexual enclaves, new immigrant populations, and recessions caused by industrial relocationà.This book belongs in every seminary library, but it has value also for sociologists interested in organizations and communities..Eminently readable, it has useful notes and a valuable bibliography. General; upper-division undergraduate through professional.
(Choice) This is a path-breaking study of the way in which churches adapt, or fail to adapt, to changes in their environment. This definitive study should be read both by people active in church work and by academics interested in religion in a changing American society.
- Peter L. Berger (Boston University)