1 / 13

Religion and culture: How followers of religions view the larger culture

Religion and culture: How followers of religions view the larger culture. Cultural Anthropology Southern Nazarene University. Two books. Richard Niebuhr. Pastor in Evangelical and Reformed Church (St. Louis) Yale seminary professor when he published “Christ and Culture” (1951).

Download Presentation

Religion and culture: How followers of religions view the larger culture

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Religion and culture: How followers of religions view the larger culture Cultural Anthropology Southern Nazarene University

  2. Two books

  3. Richard Niebuhr • Pastor in Evangelical and Reformed Church (St. Louis) • Yale seminary professor when he published “Christ and Culture” (1951)

  4. Niebuhr’s classic positions • Christ against culture • Following Christ means rejecting any loyalty to culture • Disengagement from the world because of the world’s rebellion against God • A “holy huddle” of Christians who do not dialog with anyone else

  5. Niebuhr’s classic positions • Christ of culture • Christianity and culture become fused regardless of their differences • Affirming both Christ and culture and denying any necessary opposition between the two.

  6. Christ above culture • An attempt at a synthesis of the two • The issues of culture find an answer in Christian revelation • The church perceives that her role is fundamental if there is to be any cultural achievement

  7. Christ and culture in paradox • A tension between the church and the world around it, even as they interpenetrate one another • Each Christian is a subject of two realms--two "kingdoms," but one king, Christ.

  8. Christ the transformer of culture • the kind of Puritan ethic which sees the whole of life as in some sense requiring to be converted to Christ

  9. Charles Kraft • Missionary anthropologist • “Christianity in Culture,” 30 years after Niebuhr • Sees 3 groupings of positions • God against culture • God in culture • God above culture

  10. Charles Kraft’s listing • God against culture • Commitment to God is a decision to oppose culture • Assumes all of culture is evil • Speaking in tongues

  11. 2 God-in-culture positions • God or Christ is merely culture hero (position of many anthropologists) • God is contained within, or at least endorses, one particular culture (Example: Hebrews)

  12. 5 God-above-culture positions • God is above culture and unconcerned about human beings • Deism, African religions • Ignore God while holding tightly to some of Jesus’ teachings • Christians follow requirements of both Christ and culture, but each in its own place (Thomas Aquinas)

  13. 5 God-above-culture positions • Dualism in which Christian is like an amphibian • Conversionist (Augustine, Calvin) • Culture is corrupted but usable and even redeemable • Christ above-but-through-culture Summary web page

More Related