Christ and Culture (Torchbooks), by H. Richard Niebuhr

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Christ and Culture (Torchbooks), by H. Richard Niebuhr

Christ and Culture (Torchbooks), by H. Richard Niebuhr


Christ and Culture (Torchbooks), by H. Richard Niebuhr


Ebook Christ and Culture (Torchbooks), by H. Richard Niebuhr

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Christ and Culture (Torchbooks), by H. Richard Niebuhr

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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Product details

Series: Torchbooks

Paperback: 320 pages

Publisher: Harper & Row; 1 Reprint edition (October 5, 1975)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 9780061300035

ISBN-13: 978-0061300035

ASIN: 0061300039

Product Dimensions:

5.3 x 0.7 x 8 inches

Shipping Weight: 8.5 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.1 out of 5 stars

54 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#42,783 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

I wrestle with my appreciation for this book. I think the categories or types Niebuhr discusses and outlines are very helpful for the discussion of Christ and culture, and yet there were times where I felt he was almost portraying a caricature of the people he was presenting as examples of each approach. I know his presentation of Luther failed to adequately embrace the nuances of the great Reformer's evolving theology over the years. I though his presentation of Paul's thought was saddeningly simple at best and deceivingly stereotypical at worst. I understand why he created these types for the discussion, because they represent ideals which many proponents of different approaches to how to engage culture as a Christian fall into. And yet the 'types' were almost too pure to be comfortable for any one person to be associated with. I am just uncomfortable lumping Paul, Marcion, and Luther all together...despite the similarity in their thoughts which Niebuhr raises.Niebuhr's style was really hard for me to settle into as well. He tends to indulge in logical motifs, drawing out an idea and reiterating it multiple ways to better describe it and draw out some deeper thoughts about it. It's a rhetorical technique which yields a greater effect when spoken, in my opinion. As a reader I found my attention drifting easily. So it wasn't the easiest read, though there were places where I think Niebuhr really stumbled across an insightful way to describe something.Ultimately, I think it is a solid book for scholars dealing with engaging culture to read. And the categories/types Niebuhr discusses can probably be helpful to pastors as they strive to shepherd their people, to help them think well about how to engage culture as a Christian. Yet it's not the easiest read, so brace yourself.

I didn't know anything about Niebuhr. I learned about him one day from a material maintaining that to shape your spirit you should start with a classic language (Latin or Greek); also for getting a large religious perspective, beyond any dogmatic seclusion, any parochial confinement, you should read Niebuhr.Actually there were two brothers Niebuhr; both of them were great theologians. They lived in the US and belonged to the Protestant Church. Reinhold Niebuhr was the most famous; but I started by buying a book of the other, H. Richard Niebuhr, for a very cheap reason (as I was completely ignorant on both brothers, I bought the cheapest book I found). It was a very small book, annotated on almost all pages. The annotations were in Chinese: the guy who had read the book before me was a Chinese. The book was Christ and Culture. I think it is one of the most important theology books I have read.Christ and Culture - you can think also at it as Faith and Culture: what is the relationship between them.Niebuhr considers five different types of Christ-Culture relationships (of course, nobody could be strictly framed in one type or another):1. Faith against Culture (Tolstoi) - faith denies culture, you should make the choice - the risk is that denying the culture can lead to denying the world, it means denying God's Creation - also denying culture is actually a cultural fact, which leads to paradox2. Faith framed in Culture (Jefferson, Renan) - faith is a cultural phenomenon, explained through cultural facts - it means that faith is rationalized - which leads to keeping from faith only the rational3. Faith and Culture in sync (St. Thomas Aquinas) - faith and culture do not deny one another (as it was in the first case) - they live in agreement - the elements of faith that cannot be explained rationally belong to the realm of Revelation4. Faith and Culture in paradox (Luther, Kierkegaard) - though faith and culture do not deny one another (as it was in the first case) they do not live in agreement (as it was in case 3) - any act beyond faith (it means any cultural act, even keeping God's commandments, even good deeds) is alien to faith, alien to God, because it fatally belongs to this world, so it is idolatry - the faithful has to realize this tragic paradox; there is no escape from culture as we have to live in this world - keeping faith is the only way to salvation (while living in the world)5. Faith transforming Culture (Calvin) - the faith should be used as a driving force in transforming the culture (the society), leading it towards DivinityLet me quote here a little bit from the foreword (written by Martin E. Marty): Augustine left us The Two Cities, Pascal left us the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, Kierkegaard brought us the Either/Or - they polished the archetypes; we have in the twentieth century I and Thou (Martin Buber), The Nature and Destiny of Man (Reinhold Niebuhr) and Christ and Culture (H. Richard Niebuhr).I tried to read The Nature and Destiny of Man, but I was not in the mood - I should take it sometime later. I also started to read I and Thou, several times, I was too lazy. But Christ and Culture, I read it breathlessly.It's not my first theology book. I have read some books of the great Christian Orthodox theologians of the Twentieth century (Schmemann, Lossky, among others) and I could talk days in a row about them - about their rigor, about the beauty of Eastern Christianity, that I belong to. The book of Niebuhr is different, and maybe one should start with it, to read then Tillich, to continue then in his own ways, while free of any parochial closeness.

This is a well organized argument presenting five sides to a critical problem between Christ and culture. Niebuhr argues Christ against culture, Christ of culture, Christ above culture, Christ and culture in paradox and finally Christ transforming culture. Although his postscript to these arguments is inconclusive, he does call for a decision, not from the community of faith but from the individual to decide. He begins with an impasse that Christ is sinless but culture is sinful overlaying this with veneers of scripture that seem to contradict. For instance, we are called out of the world but are also sent into the world. Throughout each argument Christ is presented as central but the application to culture swings from rejecting homes, property and the protecting hand of government, seen in the life of Tolstoy, to a harmony of Christ and culture. The latter has a danger of interpreting culture through Christ, but also Christ through culture.Although each of the five arguments is persuasive, Christ and the transformation of culture appear to be stronger theologically. Niebuhr calls the Christian with this view a `conversionist.' The argument is that God is our Creator and that his creation was `good'. The work of the Christian is to bring Christ into culture transforming it for our `good'. Culture itself is something God made and cannot be the source of sin. Therefore culture is neither good nor bad. The Christian who lives for Christ by keeping their focus on him in a positive and productive manner will bring a Christ-centeredness into culture. Virtues of hope, love and peace become part of everyday life.My disagreement is not with the various arguments presented but an agreement where there is no conclusion. Christ against culture has probably done more harm in creating separatists not only between Christ and culture but within the Body of Christ. Niebuhr correctly notes that very little has been accomplished in this view of Christ against culture within any point of history. Sin does not find its origin in culture although it finds a place there. Therefore culture must not be opposed and rejected escaping the community Christ came to serve. The first chapter of John's Gospel ratifies that Christ `became one of us' along with Philippians chapter three. Christ was born under Roman rule in occupied Judea (two cultures colliding together) yet He influenced both.Niebuhr's work still touches on the obvious debate among Christian leaders today of Christ and culture. It is strong in presentation but weak in current application of a postmodern culture. It leaves too much for the reader to interpret for themselves, even in Niebuhr's call for decision in his final chapter. Written near the end of a modern culture the examples are more historical. If this can be overcome by the reader it is vital material for arguing intellectually with a postmodern culture and presents five different perspectives. Unlike material that wants to make a `statement', Niebuhr crosses a difficult bridge that can appear dismantling of the church and its fundamental belief in Christ. He does not challenge the doctrine of Christ (eternal, incarnate, became man, died, buried, resurrected and ascended) but the commission given to the church concerning all that Christ has done. His tone is subtle avoiding all political overtones making the material relevant for our day fifty years after it was written.If each chapter could have a short journalistic story, from any time in history, explaining how a culture was impacted through Christ against, of, above, as a paradox and transformation of culture, it would attract far more attention in a postmodern culture of today.By Andrew Fox author of Change Through Challnge

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