Stephen Gottschalk

Stephen Gottschalk
Born c. 1941
Beverley Hills, California
Died 10 January 2005
Boston, Massachusetts
Education BA, Occidental College, 1962
MA, University of California, Berkeley, 1963
PhD, history, University of California, Berkeley, 1969
Occupation Christian Science historian
Religion Christian Scientist

Stephen Gottschalk (c. 1941 – 10 January 2005) was an historian of the Christian Science church, the Church of Christ, Scientist.[1] A lifelong Christian Scientist, Gottschalk worked from 1978 until 1990 for the church's Committee on Publication in Boston, an organization set up by Mary Baker Eddy (1821–1910), the founder of Christian Science, to protect her own and the church's reputation. He left the committee in 1990 after disagreeing with the church's handling of internal criticism.[2]

Gottschalk was the author of The Emergence of Christian Science in American Religious Life (1973) and Rolling Away the Stone: Mary Baker Eddy's Challenge to Materialism (2005).[2]

Background

Born in Beverley Hills, California, Gottschalk graduated from Harvard School, a former military school in Los Angeles.[1] He obtained a BA in 1962 from Occidental College, an MA in 1963 from the University of California, Berkeley, and a PhD in history in 1969, also from UC Berkeley, for a thesis entitled The emergence of Christian science in American religious life, 1885–1910; the thesis became his first book, published in 1973.[3] From 1967 to 1975 he was an assistant, then associate, professor of history in the department of government and humanities at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California.[4]

From 1978 until 1990 Gottschalk worked for the Christian Science church's Committee on Publication in Boston, but left after a disagreement about the church's direction. In 1989 he gave an interview to U.S. News & World Report in which he said the church had become "worldly"; he was concerned about the amount of money it had spent during the 1980s on radio and television services. In March 1990 he told the church's board of directors that he believed it was suppressing internal dissent, and left his position shortly afterwards. From then until his death he worked as an independent scholar.[5]

Selected works

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Anthony Flint, "Stephen Gottschalk, writer, historian of Christian Science", Boston Globe, 18 January 2005.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Caroline Fraser, "Suffering Children and the Christian Science Church", The Atlantic, April 1995.
  3. For the MA thesis, see Stephen Gottschalk, Essays in American Naturalism, Occidental College, 1962.
  4. Naval Postgraduate School, Catalogue for 1970–1972, p. 89; and Catalogue for 1974–1976, pp. 40, 86.
  5. Caroline Fraser, God's Perfect Child, Metropolitan Books, 1999, pp. 373–374.