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God and Caesar Troeltsch's Social Teaching as Legitimation

Langue : Anglais

Auteur :

Couverture de l’ouvrage God and Caesar

H. Richard Niebuhr's powerful interpretation of Ernst Troeltsch has shaped our view of the man for over seventy years. Troeltsch is one of the most respected and renowned figures in liberal Protestant thought. Yet as Harvard philosopher of religion Cornel West observes in his foreword, Constance Benson "shat-ters certain crucial aspects of Troeltsch's image as a liberal religious thinker" with God and Caesar.

Benson reconstructs the historical context in which Troeltsch wrote his landmark The Social Teaching of the Christian Churches, and reinterprets it in relation to that context. She shows that Troeltsch's Christian-ity legitimized class, religious, and gender inequality in response to the challenges of social democracy. Her controversial exploration of why most Troeltsch scholars have remained silent on this deserves seri-ous consideration. Her discovery of Troeltsch's role

in the politics and ideological debates of Imperial Germany require a painful reexamina-tion of an entire chapter of Protestant history. Benson exposes Troeltsch's relationship to Paul de Lagarde, a notorious anti-Semite and architect of what later became Nazi ideology.

God and Caesaris a needed corrective. Troeltsch is an important figure for the Chris-tian right in Germany and for many mainstream Protestants in the United States. Benson's courageous book is the most challenging critique of Troeltsch's politics we have an unsettling perspective that forces us to revise the beloved Troeltsch so many of us had come to admire and cherish. It will be of interest to intellectual historians, theologians and students of religious history, and specialists in German social and political history.

1: Introduction: The Theologian and the Revolutionary; 2: Troeltsch’s “Social Problem”: Revolutionary Movements in Imperial Germany; 3: “Blood and Iron”: The Military-Industrial Complex; 4: The Professors: Guardians of the Citadel; 5: “Catechism, Bayonet, and Scepter”: The Protestant Churches and the State; 6: The Challenge of Social Democracy; 7: “Thy Kingdom Come! Thy Will be Done on Earth!” The Challenge of Christian Socialism; 8: A Quest for the Historical Troeltsch; 9: On Earth as It is in Hell; 10: Troeltsch’s “Political Ethics and Christianity”: The Case for Hierarchy 1; 11: Karl Kautsky’s Social History of Christianity: The Communitarian Church; 12: Troeltsch’s Social Teaching: The Legitimation of Social Inequality; 13: God and Caesar; 14: Conclusion: Religious and Social Transformation
Constance L. Benson