In 2011, Emerick, an ordained minister in the United Methodist Church and a licensed clinical social worker, embarked on a self-directed study to educate himself about the nation\'s principal political disputes.
Kirkus Reviews.
Emerick writes in unfailingly lucid prose, and his command of the issues is notable... the book includes a collection of all of them-in order to excavate that teaching. [Emerick] singularly focuses on the sayings of Jesus...
In the second part of the book, the author argues that Christianity has drifted away from the true ministry of Jesus, replacing his core message of love with errant institutional doctrine. attempt to reconcile political polarities, offering a way to structure an Economy that...he calls a \'Preamble Economy\'. [Emerick] makes an... discovers, contrary to the opinions of many, that the federal government\'s active role in fiscal affairs can have a stimulating effect...and trickle-down economics has largely been a failure... [He] also... the concerns of individual liberty and the general welfare are given equal weight, and a more equitable national philosophy will...combine the two.
But in the Constitution\'s preamble... pitting the demands of the individual against the needs of the community.
He discovered that America\'s dominant political and economic theories...are...
In 2011, Emerick, an ordained minister in the United Methodist Church and a licensed clinical social worker, embarked on a self-directed study to educate himself about the nation\'s principal political disputes