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About this book
Moltmann attempts to bring together the biblical, historical, and theological elements of a new integrated Christian vision of the world, especially in light of our contemporary understandings of nature and the evolving universe. Anchored in the resurrection of Jesus, such a vision affirms that God is the God of resurrection promise, God is present in justice and righteousness, Jesus is the son of righteousness, and nature can be seen as the site of God's work toward the fulfillment of life. Here is a theological vision that can integrate our faith, inform our worldview, and fuel our life engagements.
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Yes, you can access Sun of Righteousness Arise by Jurgen Moltmann in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Theology & Religion & Religion. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
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PART ONE
THE FUTURE OF CHRISTIANITY
In the winter semester of 1899/90, in Berlin, the great liberal Protestant Adolf von Harnack held his famous series of lectures, âWhat Is Christianityâ. So I should like to begin by recalling what was called Christianity in the nineteenth century, especially in the German Empire. More particularly, we shall look at the âculture Protestantismâ which was a part of that, and which Harnack represented.
In the twentieth century, with the First World War, the age of catastrophes began. The war put an end to the âChristian Centuryâ and âthe Christian Worldâ (to quote the names of two important Protestant journals). What we experienced afterwards was what, in 1927, Otto Dibelius called âa century of the churchâ. In Germany this was the transition from the state church to the Volkskirche, the so-called peopleâs church, which was supposed to serve everyone. Yet today the churches are minorities in multifaith and secular societies. But they are minorities in an ecumenical, worldwide community and with a universal mission. So my theses in this essay can be reduced to simple formulas:
1. The future of Christianity is the church;
2. The future of the church is the kingdom of God.
1
The Christian World
The nineteenth century truly was âthe Christian ageâ, not just for Europe but for the rest of the world too. Christianity determined not only its churches but its âworldâ as well, in public life, in politics and in culture. We call this worldwide complex âChristianityâ, âChristendomâ, âcristianidadâ, meaning by that not just âthe essence of Christianityâ, as we might also talk about the essence of Judaism or Buddhism in whatever cultural form they may take, but the form it takes in the world.
In the nineteenth century the Christian nations of Europe became great powers on a worldwide scale. For these nations, this century became the age of progress and expansion. Continually new scientific discoveries and technical inventions brought them a tremendous growth in power: from the locomotive to the motor car, from the sailing ship to the steamship, from the telegraph to the telephone, from classical physics to the relativity theory, and so forth. âKnowledge is powerâ, Francis Bacon had proclaimed at the beginning of modern times. The immense progress in knowledge during the nineteenth century gave the European nations the increased power with which they believed they could advance to universal domination. By means of education, from the primary school to the university, a nationâs own people, and then the peoples of the world as well, could be led out of the night of superstition into the light of reason.
The Christian nations in Europe conquered their colonial empires in Africa and Asia and spread Europeâs âChristian civilizationâ with messianic missionary zeal. They all participated: Holland in Indonesia, Belgium in the Congo, Italy in Libya and Eritrea, and finally Germany too, in East Africa and âthe German Southwestâ [Namibia]. The rest already belonged to the British Empire, which stretched from Calcutta to Cape Town and Cairo, as Cecil Rhodes boasted. In the United States, the transcontinental railroad carried settlers west; in Russia the Trans-Siberian Railway took the Cossacks as far as Vladivostock. By 1900 the time was not far off when the great Christian powers would carve up China too among themselves. Little was needed for the whole inhabited globe to become Christian.
Even then there was already an unspoken ecumenical community among the national Christian religions in Europe. We can see this from the domed buildings of the national churches, which followed the model of the Hagia Sophia in Byzantium and St Peterâs in Rome: St Paulâs in London, St Isaacâs Cathedral in St Petersburg, the SacrĂ© Coeur in Paris, and the Berlin Cathedral in Prussian Germany.
It is no wonder that these expansions of European Christianity into the world of the nations conduced to messianic notions about Christianityâs end-time domination of the world, nor was it surprising that the unheard-of progress in science and technology should have led to a limitless secular faith in progress.
We call messianic notions about Christian lordship over the world chiliastic or millenarian if they use the image of âthe Thousand Yearsâ Empireâ in which, according to Revelation 20, Christ and those who are his will rule the world and judge the nations. We call them messianic if they already determine and enthuse the present here and now.1
These millenarian visions go back to âthe image of the monarchiesâ in Daniel 7, which counts as an early theopolitical picture of world history. The four bestial empires rise up one after another out of the sea of chaos, each being destroyed by the next. The last of them is the Roman Empire. But then God will send from heaven on to earth the humane kingdom of the Son of Man: âHis dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall not pass away, and his kingdom one that shall not be destroyedâ (7.14). âAnd the kingdom and the dominion and the greatness of the kingdoms under the whole heaven shall be given to the people of the saints of the Most High; and their kingdom shall be an everlasting kingdomâ (7.27). Although according to Daniel this divine kingdom of the Son of Man is an alternative to the violent empires of chaos in history, in the early political theology of Byzantium and later in Spain, it was held to be âthe fifth world empireâ and put on a level with the others.2 As heir to the preceding world empires of the Persians, Greeks and Romans, âthe Christian universal monarchyâ is supposed to complete world history and will finally be victorious in the struggle for world domination. All the other empires will be annihilated by the âstone of Danielâ (Dan. 2), or âthe fire of Danielâ (Dan. 7), until in the end all the nations will be âone flock under one shepherdâ. After the victorious struggle against the Moors, it was with this political theology that the Spanish court theologians justified the conquest of the Aztec, Mayan and Inca kingdoms in Latin America. That was the so-called messianism of the Iberian cultures.3
This was also âthe new world orderâ with which history and its conflicts were to be consummated in a universal empire of eternal peace. Novus ordo saeclorum is impressed on the seal of the United States and on every one-dollar note. This messianic solemnity is still inherent in the political culture of the United States today.4 Every president invokes anew his messianic destiny for the world.
In the âold worldâ of Europe, the emotional fervour of âmodern timesâ took over the corresponding messianic role in firing the sense of superiority and the will to bring history to its completion. The transition from the conflicts and crises of history into the perfected state of eternal peace was dated ânowâ by the prophets of modernity such as Lessing and Kant, Hegel and Marx: what had once been merely awaited could now be realized. After the ancient world and the Middle Ages, modern times are now beginning. That is the end time. The end of history is now almost within our grasp, and it will be our era, âthe Christian eraâ. After the age of revolutions, the age of evolution is now beginning, and its progress will have no end. The kingdom of God is coming so close to us in the kingdom of Christ that without any apocalyptic catastrophes it can now already be made the greatest good of morality and the highest goal of cultural developments in all spheres of life. That is the moral and teleological form of the kingdom of God taught by liberal Protestantism from Immanuel Kant to Albrecht Ritschl.5
Throughout the whole era, the educated classes in Europe and New England cherished the dream of the moral improvement of humanity. My grandfather was the headmaster of a private school and the grand master of a Freemasonsâ Lodge in Hamburg. On his gravestone stands instead of some comforting verse from the Bible, Lessingâs hopeful sentence from his essay âOn the Education of the Human Raceâ (1777, § 88): âIt will come, it will surely come, the time of perfecting, when man ⊠will do the right just because it is the right.â But neither he nor most of the educated people of his time realized that this moral optimism had an ancient apocalyptic presupposition: that the good can only spread unhindered because in the Thousand Yearsâ Empire âSatan has been bound for a thousand yearsâ (Rev. 20.2â4). For Christendom, Lessing and Kant had already proclaimed the âtransition from the historical faith of the church to the general faith in reasonâ, a transition which was supposed to begin now, with the general Enlightenment.
For inward reasons of faith and for external sociological ones, Protestantism was the first of the Christian confessions in western Europe and the United States to enter into the modern world. For many people liberal Protestantism became the convincing cultural form of Christianity. After the old Byzantine symbiosis of throne and altar, after the feudalist and monarchist symbiosis of hierarchy and class society, among the progressive middle classes of the nineteenth century a new unity developed between personal belief and modern culture, a unity which Friedrich Schleiermacher insistently invoked in his introductory letters to LĂŒcke.6 Modern university foundations with theological faculties at their head, and private universities in the United States with divinity schools in their forefront, were directed towards the evangelization and education of humanity in their own country and of other nations as well. âHurrying towards Zionâ was the clear future goal of these educational institutions.7
Sharp-eyed theologians were well aware of the distinction between this cultural Protestantism, with its joyful proclamation of progress, and Jesusâ preaching about the kingdom of God, or the persecuted Christianity of earliest times, for the very reason that they expected from this cultural Protestantism the approach to the future kingdom of God. I may give two examples:
1. Johannes Weiss was a New Testament scholar and the sonin-law of Albrecht Ritschl. In 1882 (revised edition 1900) he published a book which made a considerable stir called Die Predigt Jesu vom Reich Gottes.8 As a historian he maintains that âThe kingdom of God is in Jesusâ view an entirely supernatural entity which is in exclusive contrast to this world. That means that in the thinking of Jesus there can be no question of the kingdom of Godâs developing within this worldâ. But as âa Christian belonging to his own timeâ he declared: âThe real difference between our modern Protestant world view and that of the first Christians is hence that we do not share the eschatological mood ⊠We no longer pray âmay grace come and the world pass awayâ; we live in the joyful confidence that this world will increasingly become the stage for âGodâs own humanityâ.â
2. This happy confidence in the world, then, was the mood of 1900. But fifty years earlier, for Richard Rothe, a Hegel pupil and the chairman of the Baden Protestant Association in Heidelberg, it was not just a mood. It was a firm conviction about the now possible and necessary transition from the church to the kingdom of God on earth. Ultimately God wills the state, the perfected state, the moral theocracy, because he desires mature human beings. The pious churchgoer is a thing of the past, and is now replaced by the responsible Christian as an independent citizen in the realm of morality and culture. For in the progress of world history Christ himself is striding ahead. He is in the process of relinquishing his provisional way of life in the form of the church, and of acquiring his final, moral and political kingdom. Once that has been achieved, the church will have made itself superfluous, since it was a necessary but provisional educational institution. That is perfect millenarianism in modern secular form.9 Only in Christâs consummating kingdom does the Christian spirit abandon the form its life has taken in the church, and become the âsoulâ of the worldwide political commonwealth, which will then for its part become âthe body of Christâ.
The Primal European Catastrophe and the End of Modern Christendom
The age of progress and expansion which began in the West with the industrial and the democratic revolution ended in 1914 in what George Steiner rightly called the âprimal European catastropheâ of the First World War. Afterwards nothing was the same. The age of catastrophes began. Verdun and Stalingrad, Auschwitz and Gulag Archipelago are names typifying the unimaginable crimes against humanity which marked the twentieth century. In them the progressive, modern, Christian world destroyed itself.
Without any justified or even detectible reasons for the war, the great Christian powers in Europe, which were just about to divide up the rest of the world between themselves, fell upon each other. It was a war of annihilation without any victory aims. A true symbol for this was the battle of Verdun in 1916.10 The German idea was that it was to be âa battle of attritionâ. After six months there were more than 600,000 dead and almost no gains or losses of territory. In Ypres the Germans began the poison-gas war and profited nothing by it. It was only the intervention of the United States in 1917 which decided the war between the great European powers. In Germany the patriotic enthusiasm for the war developed into the pure nihilism with which Hitler continued and completed the task of destroying Europe in the Second World War. In the Soviet Union, Stalin exterminated whole classes and peoples through hard labour and hunger in the Gulag Archipelago. I need not describe any further what â...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Part One: The Future of Christianity
- Part Two: The God of Resurrection: Christâs ResurrectionâThe Resurrection of the BodyâThe Resurrection of Nature
- Part Three: God is Righteousness and Justice
- Part Four: God in Nature
- Notes
- Index