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Church and State


Article # : 15785 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 1 / 1989  1,423 Words
Author : Paul Seabury
Paul Seabury is a professor of political science at the University of California at Berkeley. His War: Ends and Means, coauthored with Angelo Codevilla, is forthcoming.

       NAIROBI TO VANCOUVER
       The World Council of Churches And the World, 1975-1987
       Ernest Lefever
       Washington, D.C.: Ethics and Public Policy Center, 1988
       149 pp., $19.75
       
        In our times, the line separating religious life from secular action--church and state--has been more in the nature of a zone (sometimes a war zone) that shifts according to dubious encounters between transcendental and immanent forces. In some times and places, the secular-political has triumphed over the religious by sheer force, even to the point of destroying it or driving it into catacombs. In other times and places, what T.S. Eliot dubbed the "deliquescence of faith" may so atrophy the institutional church as to transform it into simply one among many political actors with its own religious agenda lost among the secular agendas of others. In the communist world, the former experience has recurred again and again. In the West, the latter has characterized many of the mainstream Christian churches.
       
        In the West, what the English theologian Edward Norman has called the politicization of religion has meant "the internal transformation of the faith itself, so that it comes to be defined in terms of political values." Religious values have been redefined "according to the categories and references provided by the compulsive moralism of contemporary [secular] intellectual culture."
       
        A Leftist Agenda
       
        ... (1997 of 8987 Characters)
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