Moral Re-Armament's followers hailed it as the most important spiritual
movement of the twentieth century. It claimed supporters from Mohandas
Gandhi to Mae West, who praised its contributions to global
understanding and personal happiness. Critics saw MRA as naïve and
possibly dangerous, cozy with fascism or a front for corporate power.
Fundamentalists called it a cult. With its mixture of American
evangelicalism, popular psychology, and show business, it attracted men
and women on six continents. This book traces Moral Re-Armament's
reinventions over fifty years, from its Ivy League beginnings to its
spiritual heirs, Up With People and Alcoholics Anonymous.