What Does the Lord Require?: How American Christians Think about Economic Justice
📄 Viewing lite version
Full site ›
Book Details
Author(s)Stephen Hart
PublisherRutgers University Press
ISBN / ASIN0813523257
ISBN-139780813523255
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank2,942,079
CategoryPaperback
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description ▲
From the support given to Reagan and Bush's conservative economic agenda by the Religious Right, to the questioning of some features of American capitalism by the Catholic Bishops, Christians have been highly visible in the public forum during the last decade. In What Does the Lord Require?, Stephen Hart shows that the views on economic issues held by less vocal Christians are also grounded in deeply-held religious beliefs. For these grass roots Christians, Hart writes, faith lays the foundation for views that range from staunchly conservative to radical. Hart paints a rich portrait of how everyday Christians actually connect their faith to such issues as economic equality, government intervention, and the rights of private enterprise. Drawing on lengthy interviews, he makes a comprehensive analysis of forty-seven diverse Christians--Roman Catholics, Pentecostals, mainline Protestants, Jehovah's Witnesses, and others--who range from manual laborers to corporate executives, from conservatives to socialists. The results are sometimes surprising. On economic issues, Hart shows, evangelicals and fundamentalists are at least as liberal as mainline Protestants. One Missionary Alliance member, for example, bases her populist views on the ideas that we are all children of God and God favors the lowly. Many traditionalists come to liberalism through the belief that economic life should be governed by an ethical vision, not just market forces. Modernists, on the other hand, often desire an unbridled free market out of concern to maximize individual freedom. Hart identifies five themes from Christian tradition--voluntarism, universalism, love, thisworldliness, and otherworldliness--thatrespondents repeatedly draw upon when they think about economic justice issues. He shows how these themes are used to support both conservative and liberal views, arguing that Christianity is a terrain of debate with no single inherent set of political implications, let alone the monolithi
More Books in Paperback
Nightmare Hour TV Tie-in Edition
View
First Light
View
The Miles Between
View
Prize Stories 1990: The O. Henry Awards (Pen / O. Henr…
View
Democracy Begins Between Two
View
The Model Locomotive Engineer, Fireman, and Engine Boy
View
Bloodline in the Sand
View
Making America, Volume A, Brief, 2nd Ed + Perfect Unio…
View
Ellis, Becoming a Master Student, 11th Edition Plus My…
View