Men waiting in the Bread Line at the Bowery Mission, New York

The Crusading Newsman Who Taught Americans to Give to the Poor

In the 1890s, Louis Klopsch’s popular newspaper, the Christian Herald, insisted that philanthropy was not only for the elite, but was a duty for everyday citizens. This post for the Smithsonian’s What It Means to Be American series describes his long-lasting influence on the practice of charity in the United States.

India’s Awful Famine Cropped

How American Christian Media Promoted Charity Abroard

In this short piece for the Conversation, published in observance of the United Nations’ International Day of Charity, I explain how a popular 19th century Christian newspaper used media technologies to publicize humanitarian crises and encourage Americans to donate millions toward international aid efforts.

Immanent Frame Image

Changing the Frame: American Evangelicalism in Global Perspective

Rather than continuing to conjecture about Trump’s most faithful constituency, what if observers of contemporary American Christianity asked a different question? In this essay, for the Immanent Frame, I reflect on the importance of the global frame of Melani McAlister’s The Kingdom of God Has no Borders.

Famine Sufferers Full Page Jul 1897

The Historical Roots of Humanitarian Photography: a 19th-Century Evangelical Newspaper’s Enduring Influence on the Global Aid Industry

On September 2, 2015, the body of 3-year-old Alan Kurdi washed up ashore near the Turkish resort of Bodrum. Within several days, a photograph of the lifeless toddler lying facedown on the beach made front-page headlines around the globe, sparking a wave of concern to address humanitarian crisis in Syria. In this post for HistPhil, I trace the power of such images to the 19th-century evangelical newspaper, the Christian Herald.

Image of a freedom trail sign pointing the way to Park Street Church in Boston, with the Massachusetts State House in the background

Massachusetts: A Teacher Strolls Along the Freedom Trail

This post is my contribution to the States of the Union Project (where writers from around the country tell about where they discovered religion and politics in their states) for Religion & Politics, the online news journal of the John C. Danforth Center on Religion and Politics at Washington University in St. Louis, MO.

Men waiting in the Bread Line at the Bowery Mission, New York

“God is Not Affected by the Depression”: Pentecostal Missions during the 1930s

Published in Church History: Studies in Christianity and Culture. This article asks how the Great Depression of the 1930s shaped pentecostal efforts to proclaim the “full Gospel” in “foreign lands,” showing how some missionaries argued that alleviating poverty, suffering and even some forms of systemic oppression was an integral part of their “spirit-filled” witness.

Nothing Found

It seems we can’t find what you’re looking for. Perhaps searching can help.

Heather Curtis

Heather D. Curis

Author

heatherdcurtis@tufts.edu
617-555-1212

Bio goes here

Heather Curtis

Heather D. Curtis

Author and Teacher

e. heather.d.curtis@tufts.edu
p. 617-555-1212

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Proin convallis odio euismod turpis varius finibus. Cras arcu nunc, condimentum quis nisl non, luctus luctus est. Ut magna justo, tincidunt eget nibh sit amet, molestie consequat orci. Suspendisse potenti. Interdum et malesuada fames ac ante ipsum primis in faucibus. Mauris semper fringilla efficitur. Nulla facilisi. Aenean finibus condimentum lacinia. Nulla a purus tortor. Vestibulum mauris justo, malesuada a cursus sit amet, ultrices ac risus. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. Vestibulum lorem augue, fermentum eget elit nec, tincidunt facilisis mi. Donec iaculis velit justo, eu tincidunt turpis facilisis a.

Cras at maximus ex. Duis tempor nisl at rutrum facilisis. Nullam lectus lacus, ultricies id scelerisque et, aliquet at massa. Mauris lobortis, dui sit amet placerat mattis, sapien ante ullamcorper sapien, vitae condimentum ante lacus vel ex. Class aptent taciti sociosqu ad litora torquent per conubia nostra, per inceptos himenaeos. Aliquam lacus purus, fermentum id ligula eu, cursus vehicula sem. Aenean sapien orci, lobortis vitae dolor vel, placerat porttitor purus. Donec ultricies mattis egestas.

Donec consequat dui leo. Aenean finibus sapien mi, et aliquet ex condimentum ut. Fusce sollicitudin ultrices pellentesque. Vestibulum a tempus dui. Donec et neque sed quam bibendum placerat. Donec non sapien accumsan, laoreet lectus sed, rhoncus massa. Etiam mi purus, rhoncus non velit eu, cursus lobortis magna. Maecenas facilisis euismod risus in convallis. Sed sollicitudin eu nisl in aliquet.

Heather Curtis

Heather D. Curtis

Author and Teacher

e. heather.d.curtis@tufts.edu
p. 617-555-1212

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Proin convallis odio euismod turpis varius finibus. Cras arcu nunc, condimentum quis nisl non, luctus luctus est. Ut magna justo, tincidunt eget nibh sit amet, molestie consequat orci. Suspendisse potenti. Interdum et malesuada fames ac ante ipsum primis in faucibus. Mauris semper fringilla efficitur. Nulla facilisi. Aenean finibus condimentum lacinia. Nulla a purus tortor. Vestibulum mauris justo, malesuada a cursus sit amet, ultrices ac risus. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. Vestibulum lorem augue, fermentum eget elit nec, tincidunt facilisis mi. Donec iaculis velit justo, eu tincidunt turpis facilisis a.

Cras at maximus ex. Duis tempor nisl at rutrum facilisis. Nullam lectus lacus, ultricies id scelerisque et, aliquet at massa. Mauris lobortis, dui sit amet placerat mattis, sapien ante ullamcorper sapien, vitae condimentum ante lacus vel ex. Class aptent taciti sociosqu ad litora torquent per conubia nostra, per inceptos himenaeos. Aliquam lacus purus, fermentum id ligula eu, cursus vehicula sem. Aenean sapien orci, lobortis vitae dolor vel, placerat porttitor purus. Donec ultricies mattis egestas.

Donec consequat dui leo. Aenean finibus sapien mi, et aliquet ex condimentum ut. Fusce sollicitudin ultrices pellentesque. Vestibulum a tempus dui. Donec et neque sed quam bibendum placerat. Donec non sapien accumsan, laoreet lectus sed, rhoncus massa. Etiam mi purus, rhoncus non velit eu, cursus lobortis magna. Maecenas facilisis euismod risus in convallis. Sed sollicitudin eu nisl in aliquet.