- RT @quan_the_queen: You ever sit quietly and your brain goes "shakira shakira" https://t.co/BAOKDkx5mq ->
- RT @WelshDalaiLama: April Fool's Day. A day when people pause to think if that thing they read on the internet is true or not. A skill sore⊠->
- Mum just asked if it was too much garlic.
There is no such thing as too much garlic. ->
- RT @no1_emily: The best egg poem ever written (by @underwood_jack). Happy egg day https://t.co/MCnsVVu2RG ->
Daily Archives: April 2, 2018
Tweets for 2018-04-01
- RT @quan_the_queen: You ever sit quietly and your brain goes "shakira shakira" https://t.co/BAOKDkx5mq ->
- RT @WelshDalaiLama: April Fool's Day. A day when people pause to think if that thing they read on the internet is true or not. A skill sore⊠->
- Mum just asked if it was too much garlic.
There is no such thing as too much garlic. ->
- RT @no1_emily: The best egg poem ever written (by @underwood_jack). Happy egg day https://t.co/MCnsVVu2RG ->
Christian political engagement
From The Atlantic’s “The Last Temptation”:
Where did this history leave evangelicalsâ political involvement?
For a start, modern evangelicalism has an important intellectual piece missing. It lacks a model or ideal of political engagementâan organizing theory of social action. Over the same century from Blanchard to Falwell, Catholics developed a coherent, comprehensive tradition of social and political reflection. Catholic social thought includes a commitment to solidarity, whereby justice in a society is measured by the treatment of its weakest and most vulnerable members. And it incorporates the principle of subsidiarityâthe idea that human needs are best met by small and local institutions (though higher-order institutions have a moral responsibility to intervene when local ones fail).
In practice, this acts as an âif, thenâ requirement for Catholics, splendidly complicating their politics: If you want to call yourself pro-life on abortion, then you have to oppose the dehumanization of migrants. If you criticize the devaluation of life by euthanasia, then you must criticize the devaluation of life by racism. If you want to be regarded as pro-family, then you have to support access to health care. And vice versa. The doctrinal whole requires a broad, consistent view of justice, whichâwhen it is faithfully appliedâcuts across the categories and clichĂ©s of American politics. Of course, American Catholics routinely ignore Catholic social thought. But at least they have it. Evangelicals lack a similar tradition of their own to disregard.
Christian political engagement
From The Atlantic’s “The Last Temptation”:
Where did this history leave evangelicalsâ political involvement?
For a start, modern evangelicalism has an important intellectual piece missing. It lacks a model or ideal of political engagementâan organizing theory of social action. Over the same century from Blanchard to Falwell, Catholics developed a coherent, comprehensive tradition of social and political reflection. Catholic social thought includes a commitment to solidarity, whereby justice in a society is measured by the treatment of its weakest and most vulnerable members. And it incorporates the principle of subsidiarityâthe idea that human needs are best met by small and local institutions (though higher-order institutions have a moral responsibility to intervene when local ones fail).
In practice, this acts as an âif, thenâ requirement for Catholics, splendidly complicating their politics: If you want to call yourself pro-life on abortion, then you have to oppose the dehumanization of migrants. If you criticize the devaluation of life by euthanasia, then you must criticize the devaluation of life by racism. If you want to be regarded as pro-family, then you have to support access to health care. And vice versa. The doctrinal whole requires a broad, consistent view of justice, whichâwhen it is faithfully appliedâcuts across the categories and clichĂ©s of American politics. Of course, American Catholics routinely ignore Catholic social thought. But at least they have it. Evangelicals lack a similar tradition of their own to disregard.
Christian political engagement
From The Atlantic’s “The Last Temptation”:
Where did this history leave evangelicalsâ political involvement?
For a start, modern evangelicalism has an important intellectual piece missing. It lacks a model or ideal of political engagementâan organizing theory of social action. Over the same century from Blanchard to Falwell, Catholics developed a coherent, comprehensive tradition of social and political reflection. Catholic social thought includes a commitment to solidarity, whereby justice in a society is measured by the treatment of its weakest and most vulnerable members. And it incorporates the principle of subsidiarityâthe idea that human needs are best met by small and local institutions (though higher-order institutions have a moral responsibility to intervene when local ones fail).
In practice, this acts as an âif, thenâ requirement for Catholics, splendidly complicating their politics: If you want to call yourself pro-life on abortion, then you have to oppose the dehumanization of migrants. If you criticize the devaluation of life by euthanasia, then you must criticize the devaluation of life by racism. If you want to be regarded as pro-family, then you have to support access to health care. And vice versa. The doctrinal whole requires a broad, consistent view of justice, whichâwhen it is faithfully appliedâcuts across the categories and clichĂ©s of American politics. Of course, American Catholics routinely ignore Catholic social thought. But at least they have it. Evangelicals lack a similar tradition of their own to disregard.