Available Formats
Democracy and the Christian Churches: Ecumenism and the Politics of Belief
By (Author) Dr Donald W. Norwood
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
25th June 2020
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Centrist democratic ideologies
General and world history
Ecumenism
261.7
Paperback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
354g
How has Christianity engaged with democracy In this authoritative new treatment of a sometimes troubled relationship, Donald Norwood reflects on the way that democracy has become, especially under the auspices of the United Nations and the World Council of Churches, not just an ideal but a universally applicable moral principle. Yet, as the author demonstrates, faith and democracy have not always sat comfortably together. For example, the Vatican has dealt harshly with radical theologians such as Leonardo Boff and Hans Kung; while churches with a dictatorial style have all too often shown a willingness to accommodate authoritarian regimes and even dictators. Norwood argues that if democracy is a universal norm, a basic right, it is not possible for the Church to be indifferent to its claims. Offering a sustained exposition - from Marsilius of Padua to Christian Democracy and Christian Socialism - of the often uneasy interaction between Christianity and democratic politics as both idea and ideal, this is a major contribution to church history and to wider topical debates in politics and religious studies.
This careful overview is the fruit of considerable reading and research into what Christians (mainly from the Catholic and Reformed traditions) have said about governance and participation in Church and state ... This rich collection of essays will be valued by all who wish to reflect on the role of religion in Europes current refugee crisis. * Reform Magazine *
Donald Norwood holds a PhD in Theology and Religious Studies from King's College London. A former Tutor in Practical Theology at Westminster College, Oxford, he is a life member of Mansfield College, Oxford, where he has been the Adam von Trott Lecturer. He is the author of Reforming Rome: Karl Barth and Vatican II (2015) and of An Introduction to the World Council of Churches (forthcoming, 2017).