Gates, Susan Wharton2014-03-142014-03-141998-05-01etd-41498-211556http://hdl.handle.net/10919/30513Public administration literature lacks richness and context regarding the moral history of the founding of the field in the early 1900s. As a result, current calls for &quot;recapturing the soul&quot; of public administration have failed to stimulate a theory-or even a working understanding-of how to &quot;rehydrate&quot; the observed desiccation of public life and revivify the concept of the public interest. In correcting the historical record, this dissertation shows that the &quot;soul&quot; of public administration stemmed from the field's deep roots in the social gospel movement of the early 20th century. For that short period, the nascent field was not viewed as a bastardization of constitutional order, but as a noble endeavor in which beloved sons and daughters participated in their nation's governance. As a representative character of that era, Charles M. Sheldon serves as an exemplar of a citizen administrator whose sojourn into the public square was characterized by deep faith, empathy for the common person and commitment to action-regardless of the personal cost. His optimism, innovation and creativity stand in sharp relief to today's dispirited and over-regulated public work force. Sheldon's best-selling book, In His Steps (1896), stands as a pre-modern parable for moral decision-making in a dynamic and uncertain postmodern environment. In allowing for uncertainty, discourse and experimentation, the book's operative question, &quot;What would Jesus do?&quot; enriches our understanding of normative theory as process. It also offers back the field's lost &quot;soul&quot; in the way of submission, empathy, covenant, grace and hope.iii, 131 pagesapplication/pdfenIn CopyrightTangier IslandCharles M. Sheldonsocial gospelLD5655.V856 1998.G384Rediscovering the Heart of Public Administration: The Normative Theory of <i>In His Steps</i>Dissertationhttp://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-41498-211556/