Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Rising to the Challenge of Modern Capitalism (Or Not)
Rising to the Challenge of Modern Capitalism (Or Not)
Dec 19, 2025 8:01 PM

What is the relationship between Christianity and the modern world? Is the spirit of capitalism fundamentally patible with the requirements of charity that were first formulated in the New Testament? While these have always been important questions for Christians, they have taken on a renewed sense of urgency. The recent terrorist attacks on New York and Washington forcefully reminded Americans that they cannot escape the question of the relationship between God and politics. On that day, the most economically and politically successful of all modern states was attacked by men who claimed to be defending the integrity of the Islamic religion. Since then, many American Christians have begun to wonder how their religion relates to the economic and political arrangements that constitute a modern democracy such as the United States.

The new book, Christianity Incorporated: How Big Business Is Buying the Church, raises many important questions about the relationship of Christianity to the modern world. Michael Budde, a political economist, and Robert Brimlow, a philosophy professor, have written a highly readable, factually informative book; this attractive, slim volume can easily be read in one sitting. Combining political, economic, and theological analysis, the authors issue a timely warning: “Christianity shouldn’t be so naive to think that churches can imitate the corporate giants without risking some essentials of their faith and mission,” they write. “When [Christianity] lends its stories, symbols, and integrity to the corporate world, it always gets them back in need of some serious dry cleaning and repair.” Budde and Brimlow realize that their “gospel and church-centered analysis” of Christianity, capitalism, and liberal democracy is bound to “make people fortable.” And, indeed, it will. Their book is replete with examples of how corporations currently use new-age, Christian spirituality to further their own fiscal gain and how both Protestant and Catholic thinkers periodically have embraced the theories behind capitalist democracy too closely. Unfortunately, the “church-centered” economic and political analysis that Budde and Brimlow offer finally is not dialectical enough. Truth be told, their analysis cannot do justice either to plexity of the fundamental religious and political questions their book raises or to the necessarily prudential responses that Christianity must give to these questions.

Protesting the Prostitution of the Gospel

Slightly more than half of this book details various instances of what the authors call “Christianity Incorporated in action.” In the first four chapters, Budde and Brimlow map out the “peculiar cross-dressing in which the church further internalizes the ideologies and practices of for-profit firms” while these same firms appropriate “Christian symbols, stories, and meaning structures” to further their own corporate advantage. The authors do a good job of showing just how widespread and lucrative so-called “corporate spirituality initiatives” have e. They shed a deservedly harsh light on Laurie Beth Jones, the best-selling author of Jesus CEO: Using Ancient Wisdom for Visionary Leadership. For Jones, Jesus is not the Son of God who became flesh in order to ransom man from sin but, rather, a “practitioner” of a highly successful “Omega management style,” which, fortunately, “can be implemented by anyone who dares.” Jones parlayed the success of her 1995 best-seller into a virtual traveling salvation mercialization show. She founded the Jesus CEO Foundation and continues to publish the Jesus CEO News—a publication with the motto, “Power You Can Use.” Such prostitution of the Gospel, the authors rightly note, “floods the culture with degraded forms of spiritual and religious engagement and cheapens whatever living religious traditions it ransacks.”

The problem with Christianity Incorporated begins when Budde and Brimlow move away from presenting social science–based analysis to considering the “intellectual and theological assumptions … facilitating the subordination of the church to capitalist democracy.” (While Budde and Brimlow identify themselves as Roman Catholics, it is difficult to discern exactly what they mean by church.) Budde and Brimlow criticize documents such as the World Alliance of Reformed Churches’ “Justice for All Creation” and the United Church of Christ’s “Christian Faith and Economic Life,” but they reserve the bulk of their criticisms for the kind of cheerleading “chaplaincy church” that they feel is advocated by Pope John Paul II. Chapter five of Christianity Incorporated, unjustly titled, “John Locke in Ecclesial Drag? The Problem with Centesimus Annus,” revolves around the authors’ half-serious claim that “one might … think that Centesimus Annus was promulgated not to celebrate the hundredth anniversary of Rerum Novarum but the three hundredth anniversary of [John Locke’s] Second Treatise.”

For Budde and Brimlow, John Paul’s encyclical does not offer a prudential defense of capitalism and liberal democracy, inspired, in part, by the palpable failure munist totalitarianism. Rather, they remarkably argue that John Paul gives an account of the individual and his right to private ownership that “is virtually identical to that made by John Locke.” John Paul not only practically accepts the “theoretical basis” of Lockean liberalism but es dangerously close to subjugating the Gospel to the “American liberal, capitalist ideology.” But a careful reading of the encyclical makes these kinds of claims impossible to sustain. To take just three examples: Centesimus Annus repeatedly criticizes the “atheism” informing Lockean liberalism; it opposes philosophic liberalism’s “dehumanizing,” materialist account of human beings; and, in the name of Christianity, it insists on the universal destination of material goods.

The Question and How Not to Address It

Over and against the Lockean liberalism they detect in John Paul’s work, the authors offer a model of the “Church as oikos.” Drawing on the injunctions of the Sermon on the Mount, they sketch an “economics of discipleship,” an approach that embodies many of the “labor sharing” initiatives upheld by the Catholic Workers’ movement. By returning to the demands of “basic Christian charity,” the economics of discipleship would help correct the now “too familiar” consequences of “neoliberal philosophy—abandonment of the poor, stagnant real wages, [and] rapidly increased levels of economic and political inequality.” Aside from the highly questionable empirical evidence behind this claim, it is important to see that Budde and Brimlow can make this claim only by downplaying the transcendent trajectory of the Sermon on the Mount. Christ, after all, blesses not simply the poor but also those who are “poor in spirit”; not simply those who hunger and thirst but also those who “hunger and thirst for righteousness.” Despite what the authors suggest, because the Sermon on the Mount is meant to fulfill, not abolish, the law, it does not easily translate into effective prescriptions for social and economic policy.

Christianity Incorporated finally fails because, in the name of preserving the integrity of Christian faith, its authors oversimplify the question of Christianity’s relationship to the social, political, and economic arrangements of the modern state. Whether one agrees with the prudential, theological modation that Centesimus Annus tries to forge with capitalist liberal democracy, one has to view the encyclical as a model of prudential Christian thinking. Such thinking appreciates the fact that the Incarnation calls Christianity to engage the world. But such engagement presents a particular challenge—a challenge that Budde and Brimlow do not fully appreciate. Christian theological reflection is called to speak to the world in a language that the world can understand; yet this does not mean that it should speak the exact same language as the world. The theological approach offered by John Paul in Centesimus Annus, contrary to what Budde and Brimlow claim, takes up this challenge. The encyclical presents prudential reflection on capitalist democracy that finally appeals to theological truth that transcends the limited categories of capitalism and democracy. John Paul’s success at meeting this theological challenge is, of course, a question open to debate. That there are sound, theological reasons that this kind of challenge must be faced, however, is not.

Christianity Incorporated demonstrates that there are no easy solutions to Christianity’s relationship to the modern world. Its authors are right: A discussion of this important question should make both Christians and non-Christians fortable. However, one has to think about this question far more seriously than this book does.

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
What Korea Means for Ukraine
  As the Russian invasion of Ukraine drags into its third year, there are reports from credible sources that North Korean troops are fighting for Russia. Russian President Putin has consciously avoided imposing the full costs of this conflict onto the upper and middle classes of his country, particularly in Moscow and St. Petersburg. He has chosen instead to call in...
Shackles on a Free Society
  The action of the Trump administration in suspending several hundred million dollars in aid to Columbia University and in threatening a half-dozen other leading universities with similar treatment has aroused indignation among liberal-minded persons, but few have noted what made this outrage legally possible.   I did not attend Columbia, but I have some attachments to it. My mother held a...
Trust the God Who Sees Ahead of You (Psalm 136:13)
  Trust the God Who Sees Ahead of You (Psalm 136:13)   By Lia Martin   Today’s Bible verse is Psalm 136:13 - Give thanks to him who parted the Red Sea. His faithful love endures forever.   Are you worried these days? Do you ever feel if you don’t save up, batten down, build defenses, or control every aspect of the outcome, that...
DOGE
  “Government” and “efficiency” should never appear in the same sentence, a truth that I frequently reiterate to my students. The reason is that the public sector is institutionally incapable of functioning cost-effectively. Unlike the private sector, the government does not face a profit-and-loss bottom line that incentivizes allocating the scarce resources under its control to their highest-valued uses. Politicians and...
Life in the Fast Lane
  Life in the Fast Lane   This devotional was written by Jim Burns   The LORD will fight for you; you need only to be still. —Exodus 14:14   Far too many of us live in what some people call crisis mode living. This lifestyle is when you spend most every waking moment of almost every day trying to figure how to keep...
When Delete Leads to Peace
  March 21, 2025   When Delete Leads to Peace   LYNN COWELL   Lee en español   “On my bed I remember you; I think of you through the watches of the night. Because you are my help, I sing in the shadow of your wings. I cling to you; your right hand upholds me.” Psalm 63:6-8 (NIV)   It felt like I couldn’t help...
No Tariffs Without Representation
  The Executive Branch has expanded its powers beyond the vision of the American founders—far beyond. Its agencies have practically become a fourth branch of government. With powers ceded by Congress, they issue thousands of pages of regulations each year, effectively creating new statutory law. This runs against the spirit of the Constitution. It imposes a good deal of uncertainty and...
The Past Year in Originalism
  Every year at the beginning of the Hugh Hazel Darling February Works-in-ProgressConference, I discuss what I regard as the most significant developments concerning originalism in the past year.   2024 was another big year for originalism—with the Supreme Court deciding many important cases on originalist grounds, while regrettably departing from originalism in a few others. Even events outside the Court show...
When God Says No
  Tuesday, March 18, 2025   When God Says No   “But God said to me, ‘You must not build a Temple to honor my name, for you are a warrior and have shed much blood.’” (1 Chronicles 28:3 NLT)   What is your purpose in life? I think for some people it’s just long life. That’s not a bad thing to aspire to,...
Praying through Weaknesses as a Couple
  Praying through Weaknesses as a Couple   By Lynette Kittle   Pray continually, - 1 Thessalonians 5:17   Even though I write articles and devotionals encouraging husbands and wives to entrust spiritual growth of their spouse to God, looking to Him to transform and change their hearts, at times I still find myself trying to speed up the process with my own husband....
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved