Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
More Money, More Ministry
More Money, More Ministry
Oct 6, 2024 2:29 PM

Most of the sixteen essays in this volume originated at a consultation on “Evangelicals and Finance” in Naperville, Illinois, in early 1998. The purpose of the book is to take “a first step toward understanding how evangelicals have thought about, used, and raised money during the twentieth century.” The majority of its authors are historians and sociologists, so the perspectives are, for the most part, historical and social in nature.

Perhaps the most obvious feature of the book is its broad scope, which makes it interesting but also very hard to manage properly in a review. The editors divide the book into three major parts. The first is “Overviews and Orientation,” in which economists John Lunn and Robin Klay, with historian Michael Hamilton, survey the American economy from 1870 to 1997. Sociologist Gary Scott Smith follows with a chapter on how evangelicals “confronted” American capitalism between 1880 and 1930. Pastor/historian Charles Hambricke-Stowe writes on the financing of revivals, and then Hamilton discusses how evangelicals go about financing themselves generally.

The second part is simply “Specific Studies,” which begins with sociologist Peter Dobkin-Hall on the “interaction” of evangelicals and the economy of the United States between 1870 and 1920 (more on this essay later). Historian Susan Yohn follows with a chapter on the role of women in raising money for charities. Historian Alvyn Austin writes next on Hudson Taylor's famous “faith principle,” and historian (and expert on the South) Ted Ownby writes on the quite differing approaches to money among Southern Pentecostals and the Churches of Christ. Historian Joel Carpenter offers a revised version of an earlier publication on the rise of evangelical institutions during the Great Depression (more on this essay and his perspective, too). Then, historian/political scientist Robert Burkinshaw relates contrasts between American and Canadian evangelicals in their financial support for Christian colleges. Financial consultant Barry Gardner describes the correlation between growth in evangelical giving and growth in high technology. es a chapter by Larry Eskridge on the life and theory of Larry Burkett on money and the economy. Next, sociologist Dean Hoge and historian Mark bine to relate statistics on giving among American and Canadian evangelicals—again there are contrasts (Americans give a lot more). At last, legal scholar Thomas Berg offers an accounting (in detail) of the infamous New Era scandal.

In the final part, “Concluding Observations,” Carpenter draws some general conclusions, the most notable being “the relative absence of consistent Christian perspective tools” on this subject among evangelicals and a mistrustful (of systematic theory) “biblicism” (such as Burkett's, among others). It is a little ironic that the last essay, by theologian John Stackhouse, pretty much just states the problem of forging the required theology of modern economic life rather than offers the outline of one.

The majority of the essays are in their very different ways as solid and informative as they are lacking in integrated historical revision and/or constructive Christian theory. The exceptions are the quite dissimilar essays by Dobkin-Hall and Carpenter. Unfortunately, the finely researched piece by Dobkin-Hall raises a critical question for evangelicals that someone ought to have taken up elsewhere in the volume.

At the end of his careful effort to “locate” evangelicals in the course of economic change from 1870 to 1920, Dobkin-Hall more or less confirms the grim truth of Max Weber's well-known theory of the “iron cage.” Simply, it states that Protestant Christianity was really what ignited capitalism and made it work in the United States, but—great irony—capitalism itself was bound to e the sort of culture that was incapable of integrating genuinely Christian principles. Protestants had thus manufactured (literally) their very own cage of iron, and the only way out of it was—well—out of capitalism (which might have been a good subtitle for this book, judging from its many variations on that theme). Dobkin-Hall closes with these astonishing (given their context in this “consultation”) thoughts. Even the “contemporary resurgence” of evangelicalism in politics and the economy (and he could have added scholarship, too) “does not answer the question of whether evangelicalism, because of its deep-seated fort with the materialism and pragmatism of modern life can ever effectively institutionalize itself “ (my italics). For Dobkin-Hall, then, the rise of separate distinctively evangelical institutions (which Carpenter treats as a sort of triumph) is itself evidence of this problem.

If Dobkin-Hall's suspicions are correct, the rise of these institutions is no vindication of fundamentalism against the anti-religious interpretations of Richard Hofstadter and H. L. Mencken. The emergence of these institutions is not unambiguous evidence against the theory that fundamentalism went spiraling into decline in the 1930s. While important to note, as Carpenter rightly does (and as Hofstadter and Mencken do not), they prove that evangelicalism remained in these forms a “dynamic movement,” the implications are troubling. On Dobkin-Hall's analysis, for all these new institutions vigor and success, they are veritable monuments to what was, more deeply, a desperately sad promised retreat into cages of capitalism with distinctly Christian covering.

Perhaps not to be so gloomy, Dobkin-Hall grants that it is “not impossible to envision a bination of religious fervor and worldliness fully capable of remaking the world as we know it.” So on that condition, it is possible to envision a time when evangelicals have the “consistent Christian perspective tools” they require in this area of life. (Of course, we may wonder whether they would be real evangelicals anymore.) But until this happens, it is probably best to expect Christian theology for life under modern high-tech capitalism e mainly from where it now mainly does—from Jewish, Catholic, Reformed, and Lutheran sources, in which traditions exist for relating doctrines of creation creatively to matters of redemption in a modern economic context.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
Weaver's Southern Christendom
On March 27, 1998, Belmont Abbey College in Belmont, North Carolina, hosted a two-day symposium to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the publication of Professor Richard Weaver's seminal book, Ideas Have Consequences. From that small gathering of 100 people nine speakers were asked to submit papers. These submissions make up a rather remarkable book entitled: Steps Toward Restoration, The Consequences of Richard Weaver's Ideas. The book was edited by Professor Ted Smith III, one of the symposium's organizers, and...
John Paul II Remembers the Twentieth Century
In 1993, Pope John Paul II met with Polish philosophers Józef Tischner and Krzysztof Michalski to discuss the events of the twentieth century, namely the rise of Nazism munism. The Holy Father revisited the transcripts from these conversations and added to his earlier thoughts, expounding on democracy, freedom, and the future of Europe. The resulting work is Memory and Identity: Conversations at the Dawn of a Millennium, published in March by Rizzoli. In what reads more like a father's...
Democracy Does Not Ensure Liberty
Eighty years ago, Woodrow Wilson took America into the twentieth century with a challenge to make the world safe for democracy. As we enter the twenty-first century, our task is to make democracy safe for the world”: the very significance of Fareed Zakaria’s The Future of Freedom: Illiberal Democracy at Home and Abroad is condensed in its brilliant last paragraph. Dr. Zakaria, who is the editor of Newsweek International and a mentator, is not the first who tries plete...
An Orthodox View of Contemporary Economics, Politics, and Culture
In 1967, following two decades of progressively harsher persecution of religion munist rule, Albanian dictator Enver Hoxha triumphantly declared his nation to be the first atheist state in history. Hoxha, inspired by China’s Cultural revolution, proceeded to confiscate mosques, churches, monasteries, and shrines. Many were immediately razed, others turned into machine shops, warehouses, stables, and movie theaters. Parents were forbidden to give their children religious names. Anyone caught with bibles, icons, or religious objects faced long prison sentences. In...
Character for Free
During a recent lecture at Loyola University New Orleans, Michael Novak argued that for centuries individuals have been asking the wrong questions. Up until around 1776, he said, people inquired, “What is the cause of poverty?” Novak suggests they should have been asking what Adam Smith asked—that is, “What is the cause of the wealth of nations?” Or in other words, why are the rich rich? In Personal Character and National Destiny, Harold B. Jones, Jr. takes up Smith's...
Technology, Culture, and Christianity
mercial success of the Matrix franchise is em- blematic of a pervasive cultural curiosity about the nature and future of the relationship between technology and humanity. In The Matrix: Reloaded, the savior-figure Neo has a conversation with Councillor Hamman, one of the leaders of the last human city Zion. Neo and Councillor Hamman travel to the engineering level of the city, where Hamman observes, “Almost no es down here, unless of course there’s a problem. That’s how it is...
The Market, the Needy, and the Argument
Wealth, Poverty, & Human Destiny is a joint project— by the John Templeton Foundation and the Intercollegiate Studies Institute—whose stated purpose is to investigate “whether and to what extent the market economy helps the poor.” The book’s co-editors, Doug Bandow of the Cato Institute and David Schindler of the John Paul II Institute in Washington, D.C., were given the task of gathering together an array of scholars who would offer their reflections on this question in the light of...
Hot Topics in Economics
Bulls, Bears & Golden Calves: Applying Christian Ethics in Economics by John E. Stapleford (Intervarsity Press) is both a reference for Christian thinking on specific economic topics and a panion to the major economics texts of our day. The list of chapters reads like a recipe for staying up all night in group debate or private turmoil (depending on your inclination): environmental stewardship, legalized gambling, debt relief for less developed nations, population control, pornography, immigration. The only hot issue...
Law, Naturally
In 1945 the initial formation of the United Nations promised a renaissance in “natural law.” Stating a “faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person …” the preamble to the UN charter outlined what appeared to be a basic conception of natural law and human dignity reaffirmed by the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948. Even as the expansion of historical knowledge revealed an unfathomed diversity in global cultures...
Spending Spiritually
Building Wealth from the Inside Out“ is Lee Jenkins' trademark phrase. Literally. Its meaning is unpacked in the pages of Jenkins' Taking Care of Business. Written by a man who is both a financial advisor and ordained Christian minister, Taking Care of Business is an eminently practical mix of Jenkins' financial expertise and biblically grounded faith, all intertwined with the wisdom and anecdotal color es from years of experience with both realms. Bringing these two realms together has been...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved