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    Christianity and the Social Crisis in the 21st Century: The Classic That Woke Up the Church

    Christianity and the Social Crisis in the 21st Century: The Classic That Woke Up the Church

    by Walter Rauschenbusch


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      ISBN-13: 9780061741272
    • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
    • Publication date: 10/13/2009
    • Sold by: HARPERCOLLINS
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 400
    • File size: 916 KB

    Walter Rauschenbusch (1861-1918) was the leading proponent of the Social Gospel Movement whose mission was to reform society to meet the social needs of the poor through the ministrations of the institutional church. PBS recently called him "one of the most influential American religious leaders of the last 100 years."

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    Christianity and the Social Crisis in the 21st Century
    The Classic That Woke Up the Church

    Chapter One

    The Historical Roots of Christianity

    The Hebrew Prophets

    It seems a long start to approach the most modern problems by talking of men who lived before Lycurgus and Solon gave laws to Sparta and Athens. What light can we get on the troubles of the great capitalistic republic of the West from men who tended sheep in Judea or meddled in the petty politics of the Semitic tribes?

    History is never antiquated, because humanity is always fundamentally the same. It is always hungry for bread, sweaty with labor, struggling to wrest from nature and hostile men enough to feed its children. The welfare of the mass is always at odds with the selfish force of the strong. The exodus of the Roman plebeians and the Pennsylvania coal strike, the agrarian agitation of the Gracchi and the rising of the Russian peasants—it is all the same tragic human life. And in all history it would be hard to find any chapter so profoundly instructive, and dignified by such sublime passion and ability, as that in which the prophets took the leading part.

    Moreover, the life and thought of the Old Testament prophets are more to us than classical illustrations and sidelights. They are an integral part of the thought-life of Christianity. From the beginning the Christian Church appropriated the Bible of Israel as its own book and thereby made the history of Israel part of the history of Christendom. That history lives in the heart of the Christian nations with a very real spiritual force. The average American knows more about David than about KingArthur, and more about the exodus from Egypt than about the emigration of the Puritans. Throughout the Christian centuries the historical material embodied in the Old Testament has been regarded as not merely instructive, but as authoritative. The social ideas drawn from it have been powerful factors in all attempts of Christianity to influence social and political life. Insofar as men have attempted to use the Old Testament as a code of model laws and institutions and have applied these to modern conditions, regardless of the historical connections, these attempts have left a trail of blunder and disaster. Insofar as they have caught the spirit that burned in the hearts of the prophets and breathed in gentle humanity through the Mosaic Law, the influence of the Old Testament has been one of the great permanent forces making for democracy and social justice. However our views of the Bible may change, every religious man will continue to recognize that to the elect minds of the Jewish people God gave so vivid a consciousness of the divine will that, in its main tendencies at least, their life and thought carries a permanent authority for all who wish to know the higher right of God. Their writings are like channel-buoys anchored by God, and we shall do well to heed them now that the roar of an angry surf is in our ears.

    We shall confine this brief study of the Old Testament to the prophets, because they are the beating heart of the Old Testament. Modern study has shown that they were the real makers of the unique religious life of Israel. If all that proceeded from them, directly or indirectly, were eliminated from the Old Testament, there would be little left to appeal to the moral and religious judgment of the modern world. Moreover, a comprehension of the essential purpose and spirit of the prophets is necessary for a comprehension of the purpose and spirit of Jesus and of genuine Christianity. In Jesus and the primitive Church the prophetic spirit rose from the dead. To the ceremonial aspects of Jewish religion Jesus was either indifferent or hostile; the thought of the prophets was the spiritual food that he assimilated in his own process of growth. With them he linked his points of view, the convictions which he regarded as axiomatic. Their spirit was to him what the soil and climate of a country are to its flora. The real meaning of his life and the real direction of his purposes can be understood only in that historical connection.

    Thus a study of the prophets is not only an interesting part in the history of social movements but it is indispensable for any full comprehension of the social influence exerted by historical Christianity, and for any true comprehension of the mind of Jesus Christ.

    For the purposes of this book it is not necessary to follow the work of the prophets in their historical sequence. We shall simply try to lay bare those large and permanent characteristics which are common to that remarkable series of men and which bear on the question in hand.

    Religion Ethical and Therefore Social

    The fundamental conviction of the prophets, which distinguished them from the ordinary religious life of their day, was the conviction that God demands righteousness and demands nothing but righteousness.

    Primitive religions consisted mainly in the worship of the powers of nature. Each tribe worshiped its local tribal god, who dwelt in some gloomy ravine or on some mountaintop and sent rain and fertility to his people when he was pleased, or drought and pestilence on crops and herds when he was offended. Like every other despot, the god had to be kept in good humor by valuable gifts and prayers, offered in the right places, in the right manner, and by the duly qualified persons. If the sacrifices were neglected, the god was sure to be angry and then had to be propitiated by redoubled offerings, incantations, and dances. There was always some connection between religion and morality. It was always understood that the tribal god had instituted the tribal customs and was displeased with any violation of them. But the essential thing in religion was not morality, but the ceremonial method of placating the god, securing his gifts, and ascertaining his wishes. He might even be pleased best by immoral actions, by the immolation of human victims, by the sacrifice of woman's chastity, or by the burning of the firstborn.

    Christianity and the Social Crisis in the 21st Century
    The Classic That Woke Up the Church
    . Copyright © by Walter Rauschenbusch. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

    Table of Contents


    Foreword   Paul B. Raushenbush     xi
    Introduction     xix
    The Historical Roots of Christianity: The Hebrew Prophets     1
    Religion ethical and therefore social
    Public and not private morality
    The champions of the poor
    The effect of the social interest on the religious life
    The later religious individualism
    The prophetic hope of national perfection
    The "pessimism" of the prophets
    Summary
    Response: A Rhetorician for Righteousness   Phyllis Trible
    The Social Aims of Jesus     39
    The new social insight into the Gospel
    Jesus not a social reformer
    His relation to contemporary movements
    The purpose of Jesus: the kingdom of God
    The kingdom of God and the ethics of Jesus
    Insistence on conduct and indifference to ritual
    His teaching on wealth
    The social affinities of Jesus
    The revolutionary consciousness of Jesus
    Response: A Response by an Evangelical   Tony Campolo
    The Social Impetus of Primitive Christianity     81
    The limitations of our information
    The hope of the coming of the Lord
    The revolutionary character of the millennial hope
    The political consciousness of Christians
    The society-making force of primitive Christianity
    The so-called communism at Jerusalem
    The primitive churches as fraternal communities
    The leaven of Christian democracy
    The outcome
    Response: Unless the Call Be Heard Again   Joan Chittister
    Why Has Christianity Never Undertaken the Work of Social Reconstruction?     123
    Impossibility of any social propaganda in the first centuries
    Post-ponement to the Lord's coming
    Hostility to the Empire and its civilization
    The limitations of primitive Christianity and their perpetuation
    The otherworldliness of Christianity
    The ascetic tendency
    Monasticism
    Sacramentalism
    The dogmatic interest
    The churchliness of Christianity
    Subservience to the State
    The disappearance of church democracy
    The lack of scientific comprehension of social development
    The outcome of the discussion
    The passing of these causes in modern life
    Conclusion
    Response: Repent. The Kingdom Is Here   Stanley Hauerwas
    The Present Crisis     177
    The industrial revolution
    The land and the people
    Work and wages
    The morale of the workers
    The physical decline of the people
    The wedge of inequality
    The crumbling of political democracy
    The tainting of the moral atmosphere
    The undermining of the family
    The fall or the rise of Christian civilization
    Response: Can These Dry Bones Live?   Cornel West
    The Stake of the Church in the Social Movement     235
    The Church and its real estate
    The Church and its income
    The supply and spirit of the ministry
    The Church and poverty
    The Church and its human material
    The hostile ethics of commercialism
    Christian civilization and foreign missions
    The forward call to the Church
    Response: Sounding the Trumpet Today: Changing Lives and Redeeming the Soul of Society in the 21st Century   James A. Forbes Jr.
    What to Do     281
    "No Thoroughfare"
    Social repentance and faith
    Social evangelization
    The pulpit and the social question
    The Christian conception of life and property
    The creation of customs and institutions
    Solidarity and communism
    The upward movement of the working class
    Summary of the argument
    The new apostolate
    Response: What to Do   Jim Wallis
    Afterword: Buds That Never Opened   Richard Rorty     347
    Notes     351
    Contributors     357
    Index     361

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    The 100th Anniversary Edition of the Classic That Changed the American Church Forever

    Published at the beginning of the twentieth century, Christianity and the Social Crisis is the epoch-making book that dramatically expanded the church’s vision of how it could transform the world. The 100th anniversary edition updates this classic with new essays by leading preachers and theologians.

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    Commonweal
    Republication in this form is a forceful intervention in contemporary debates in American religion and politics.
    Christian Century
    Skillfully fashioned and perfectly timed, [Rauschenbusch’s] book was a supercharger for a movement . . . and set a new standard for political theology. Rightly viewed from the beginning as the greatest statement of the social gospel movement.
    The New York Times Book Review
    In a 100th-anniversary edition, Paul Raushenbush, the author’s great-grandson, has reprinted the text with essays by Cornel West, the Rev. Jim Wallis and others to prove that one can be a dedicated Christian and a social reformer at the same time.
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