William Wilbur Miller Barbour: A Faith Full Witness for Human Rights
Jean-Paul Benowitz$21.24
$24.99
What began as a question about a face in a photograph became, in time, one of the most important questions a biographer can askabout the past: not merely who was this person, but what did hislife cost him, what did it build, and what does it ask of us? WilliamWilbur Miller Barbour left no autobiography, no collection of privateletters, no public monument with his name on it. He left instead theharder thing: a career of twenty-five years spent in the spaces betweenthe law's promise and American life's reality, doing the work the lawcould not do, building the conditions for genuine human communityin cities where the word community was used to describe what racialexclusion had produced and preserved. He died at forty-nine, in LosAngeles, in March 1957. He had been working all week. He was stillworking when his heart gave out. The movement he had been buildingtoward since his graduation from Elizabethtown College in 1932would culminate, in the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Voting RightsAct of 1965, and the Fair Housing Act of 1968, in legislation he did notlive to see signed. He was a builder of foundations. He never saw thestructure rise.Barbour learned, in ways no classroom could teach, what it meant tolabor against odds for something larger than oneself. He built foundations.He laid groundwork. He worked in the soil of human rightsand human dignity at a moment when the harvest was nowhere insight, when the arc of history showed no visible signs of bending inthe direction anyone who cared about justice might have wished. Hedid not live to see what rose from what he planted.He brought to the work a dual formation few men of his generationcould claim. The Anabaptist and Pietist tradition of the Church of theBrethren had pressed into him, during his years as a student at ElizabethtownCollege, a mandate both institutional and theological. Theprophetic tradition of the African Methodist Episcopal Church hadformed him from childhood in a conviction equally deep and equallydemanding: racial hierarchy was incompatible with the Gospel. Thesetwo traditions arose from entirely different histories and wholly distinctexperiences of American life. In Barbour they converged on asingle claim. The Declaration meant what it said. The Gospel demandedits fulfillment. The gap between democratic promise anddemocratic practice was not a fact to be accommodated but a civicfailure to be opposed, by specific, costly, theologically grounded work, in specific cities, in institutional settings, for as long as it took.He spent twenty-five years opposing it. At the Semiquincentennial, itremains opposed. His story belongs to this moment.
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Santos Books
Published: 05/22/2026
ISBN: 9798994893821
Pages: 296
Weight: 0.88lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.62d
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Santos Books
Published: 05/22/2026
ISBN: 9798994893821
Pages: 296
Weight: 0.88lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.62d
