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Christ and Culture (1951)

di H. Richard Niebuhr

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2,45386,126 (3.72)6
This 50th-anniversary edition, with a new foreword by the distinguished historian Martin E. Marty, who regards this book as one of the most vital books of our time, as well as an introduction by the author never before included in the book, and a new preface by James Gustafson, the premier Christian ethicist who is considered Niebuhr’s contemporary successor, poses the challenge of being true to Christ in a materialistic age to an entirely new generation of Christian readers.… (altro)
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From Goodreads:

It is hard to find public theologies today that are not engaging with Niebuhr's classic work. And from that perspective, it really is worth reading. It will illumine just about everything else you read on the subject since most authors either assume his typology or are building from it. While this may not always be the best course of action, it is the reality.

On the whole, I'm left rather dissatisfied--not because I think he's completely wrong but because I'm unsure of its overall value. His conclusion encapsulates this tension well. On the one hand, his point about the "historical and cultural relativity of our reasoning" (236) is apt: public theology is not necessarily a plug-and-place enterprise. Some situational awareness is required if one wants to navigate the road between these two polarities well. But Niebuhr stresses relativity (importantly not relativism) so much so that no answer is really available (However, his lack of criticism for the conversionist type leads the reader to believe that this is the most acceptable one to the author). What each type needs is the other--a pluralistic band of brothers checking and balancing each other's worst tendencies. How feasible that fellowship is remains a mystery.

Some helpful contributions that many evangelical Christians may consider is Niebuhr's attention to the act and event of Jesus Christ as the God-man. Within my own Reformed camp especially, most public theologies begin in God's creative act--a position which Niebuhr himself is sympathetic to. But most of the book roots the question of Christ and culture in the implications of God made man and the hypostatic union. In the person of Jesus, the obvious tension is most evident. Christ saves men from the cares and concerns of this world, focusing their attention on his spiritual kingdom. And yet, his incarnation and commissioning of his disciples into the world for the sake of man impregnates this world with present significance. It is a double movement.

Niebuhr works from a number of assumptions--either because of personal conviction or historical context--that today's reader must constantly keep in the back of his mind. The first is that Niebuhr writes during a high point of American Mainline Protestantism. The question of what hath Christ to do with culture was hardly relevant--culture was Christian and Christianity was the culture. That it is not the same today is self-evident. Of all the types that seem most backward to Niebuhr it is Christ Against Culture. Today, Rod Dreher can become a best-selling author encouraging Christians to adopt a Benedict Option. Niebuhr accepts historical relativity in his conclusion. It must not be applied.

Finally, Niebuhr is a liberal in the broadest sense meaning he accepts pluralism not just as fact but as good. There is an outstanding lack of confessional clarity in Niebuhr's work. He can easily lump individuals of all different stripes together and comfortably call them all Christian. His bar for orthodoxy is set so low that one wonders who doesn't qualify. Of course, the phenomenon is not original to Niebuhr; it was the water he swam in. But a more complete picture of the historical realities of that liberal movement reveal a much more concentrated effort to restrict membership into respectable company than build a big-tent movement.

Overall, Christian readers will enjoy Niebuhr's prose--far more literary than the kind today--and the insight it will offer for further reading in the field ( )
  rdhasler | Nov 14, 2023 |
Very smart, although also a good reminder that mid-century American prose could be astonishingly abstract and slippery. ( )
  stillatim | Oct 23, 2020 |
Although this book is over 40 years old, Niebuhr's work remains just as relevant as it was then. The author presents 4 different perspectives of what a church may look like in engaging the culture in which it is in. Expanding on these perspectives, he shares with the reader what each church would be doing whether active or reactive. I should say this work is a bit above the average reader's head but if one has the patience to read each perspective one day or one week at a time, this may be a better thing & give the reader time to digest it. ( )
  walterhistory | Feb 17, 2015 |
As relevant today as when first written. ( )
  dhamid | May 30, 2013 |
H. Richard Niebuhr's most famous work is Christ and Culture. It is often referenced in discussions and writings on a Christian's response to the world's culture. In the book, Niebuhr gives a history of how Christianity has responded to culture. He outlines five prevalent viewpoints:
Christ against Culture. For the exclusive Christian, history is the story of a rising church or Christian culture and a dying pagan civilization.
Christ of Culture. For the cultural Christian, history is the story of the Spirit’s encounter with nature.
Christ above Culture. For the synthesist, history is a period of preparation under law, reason, gospel, and church for an ultimate communion of the soul with God.
Christ and Culture in Paradox. For the dualist, history is the time of struggle between faith and unbelief, a period between the giving of the promise of life and its fulfillment.
Christ Transforming Culture. For the conversionist, history is the story of God’s mighty deeds and humanity’s response to them. Conversionists live somewhat less “between the times” and somewhat more in the divine “now” than do the followers listed above. Eternity, to the conversionist, focuses less on the action of God before time or life with God after time, and more on the presence of God in time. Hence the conversionist is more concerned with the divine possibility of a present renewal than with conservation of what has been given in creation or preparing for what will be given in a final redemption.
1 vota gmicksmith | Oct 2, 2011 |
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This 50th-anniversary edition, with a new foreword by the distinguished historian Martin E. Marty, who regards this book as one of the most vital books of our time, as well as an introduction by the author never before included in the book, and a new preface by James Gustafson, the premier Christian ethicist who is considered Niebuhr’s contemporary successor, poses the challenge of being true to Christ in a materialistic age to an entirely new generation of Christian readers.

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