Jason Byassee reviews two promising-sounding books that try to reappropriate Augustine for a political theology that steers between Niebuhrian realism and Hauerwasian sectarianism. Sounds good to me.
Category: Theology & Faith
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(Re)birth of the Reformation?
This is a very interesting article about the efforts of the Evangelical (that is, Lutheran) Church in Germany to reestablish itself in the east, after years of suppression under Communism. One idea being floated is to turn Wittenberg into a kind of “Protestant Rome” and to amp up the public face of Protestantism with more pomp, ritual, and ceremony. Another pastor profiled in the article has a more low-key approach, one that involves simply “being present” with people during the various occasions in their lives, offering advice and counsel, and so on.
Many Christian thinkers have assumed that people naturally feel a pressing thirst for transcendence, a “God-shaped hole,” to use J.P. Sartre’s expression. Sartre’s view was that we should heroically suppress this need and bravely face up to the meaninglessness of the universe. But what if, after decades of secularism, people no longer feel that thirst? What if it’s not as ineradicable as we’ve thought? There are some hints in this article that the church in Germany is facing this very situation: many people simply have no interest whatsoever in religion (even the woman who works at the “Luther House” in Wittenburg!). How do you minister to people like that?
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Voting as Catholics (and other Christians)
At Commonweal, William J. Gould advocates a plurality of approaches to voting among Catholics:
The kind of pluralism I have in mind would range from radical perspectives such as that of the eminent Catholic philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre—who contends that the two major parties are so defective that not voting is actually preferable to voting—to support for antisystem third-party candidates like Ralph Nader, to voting for Obama (as I will) on the grounds that, on balance, his administration will do more to serve the common good than McCain’s, to voting for McCain (as many others will) on prolife or other grounds.
As a non-Catholic, I obviously don’t consider myself bound by the Magisterium, but I agree with Gould’s general approach: Christian principles don’t yield a single approach to politics. Some might say that means that Christian principles are vacuous if they’re compatible with such a diversity of approaches. But I’d contend that it’s because these principles are rather general and don’t necessarily entail detailed policy prescriptions and because in the real world we’re often required to make trade-offs among competing goods.
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The blood of the martyrs
The Nation (of all places) has a troubling article on the persecution of Christians in India, something Pope Benedict has drawn attention to recently (along with the plight of Christians in Iraq).
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School of prayer
Christianity Today has a piece on praying the Psalms, making the point that prayer is “learning to desire the things God wants to give, and then asking him for them,” and that the Psalms are an excellent–if not the best–way to do this.
Praying the Psalms is something I don’t do nearly as much as I should (the same goes for praying at all, for that matter).
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Annals of pandering
As a son of western Pennsylvania I’m naturally delighted to learn from John McCain that my ancestral homeland is the most God-loving part of the country!
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Against obedience and suffering
I’m still mulling over this couple of posts from the blog “An und für sich”:
“Against Obedience”
“Christ’s Suffering”They’re interestingly contrarian (as opposed to contrarian in a shallow, knee-jerk way).