Buch, Englisch, Band 13, 424 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 748 g
Ethical Traditions in Anglican Public Theology
Buch, Englisch, Band 13, 424 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 748 g
Reihe: Anglican-Episcopal Theology and History
ISBN: 978-90-04-73764-8
Verlag: Brill
In The Church of England and the Second World War, John D. Alexander analyses how historic Christian ethical traditions influenced the Church of England’s contributions to British pre-war and wartime public policy debates. These traditions include just war, holy war, pacifism, and Christian realism as deployed by such diverse Anglican figures as Cosmo Gordon Lang, William Temple, Herbert Hensley Henson, George Bell, Cyril Forster Garbett, Charles Raven, Percy Hartill, Evelyn Underhill, Vera Brittain, and James Parkes. Additional themes include war as divine judgement, humanitarian intervention, and Church of England responses to the Holocaust. As a case study in the application of Christian ethical traditions, this book makes vital connections between Anglican studies, international relations theory, and the diplomatic, military, and humanitarian challenges of the mid-twentieth century.
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Weitere Infos & Material
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
1 War and Peace: Christian Ethical Traditions 1 Christian Pacifism 2 The Just War Tradition 3 War’s Justification—Jus ad Bellum 4 War’s Conduct—Jus in Bello 5 War’s Ending—Jus Post Bellum 6 Humanitarian Intervention 7 Holy War and Crusade 8 Holy War and Chivalry 9 Classical Realism 10 Christian Realism 11 A Traditions-Based Approach
2 The Church of England and the British Constitution 1 Establishment 2 The First World War 3 The Church Assembly 4 Christian Socialism and COPEC 5 The 1926 Strikes 6 The 1928 Prayer Book 7 The Rediscovery of Christian Civilisation 8 The Abdication Crisis 9 Foundations of the Welfare State 10 The 1944 Education Act 11 A Dynamically Evolving Relationship
3 The Pre-war Church of England and Nazi Germany: Uses and Limits of Soft Power 1 The Anglican Legacy of Protesting Persecution 2 Responses to Persecution of the Jews 3 The German Church Struggle 4 Anglican Responses to the German Church Struggle 5 The Autumn 1934 Crisis 6 Temple and the Concentration Camps 7 Bell and the Refugees 8 Repression Intensifies in 1935 9 Ribbentrop in London 10 Escalating Conflicts, 1936–1937 11 Niemöller’s Trial and Imprisonment 12 Bell’s Refugee Advocacy 13 After Kristallnacht 14 Bell’s Lucien Wolf Lecture 15 The End of the Church Struggle 16 The Uses and Limits of Soft Power
4 The Church’s Function in Wartime: ‘To Be Still the Church’ 1 Wartime Days of Prayer 2 Military Chaplaincies in Wartime 3 The Clergy Exemption 4 The Wartime Use of Church Buildings 5 The Wartime Church and the British Constitution 5 Justifying War: Jus ad Bellum and Christian Realism 1 The Just War in Anglican Context 2 The Just War in 1914–1918 3 An Incipient Christian Realism 4 The Treaty and the Covenant 5 The Failure of Collective Security 6 A Righteously Regulated Coercion 7 The 1937 Oxford Conference 8 Appeasement and Its Discontents 9 The Munich Agreement 10 From Kristallnacht to Prague 11 A Just War Debate on the Eve of War 12 The Just War in the Theological Colleges 13 Eve of War Sermons 14 Thoughts in War Time 15 A Plain Duty 16 Waging Just War Justly 17 Relevance of the Jus ad Bellum and Christian Realist Traditions
6 War as Divine Judgement: the Call to Repentance and Prayer 1 War in the Anglican Liturgical Tradition 2 Challenges to a Providential Universe 3 Divine Judgement in World War I 4 The Theology of Crisis 5 Divine Judgement in 1939–1940 6 Critiques of Divine Judgement 7 Prayers for Victory 8 A Vanishing Discourse
7 The Struggle for Christian Civilisation: Holy War, Crusade, and Chivalry 1 Crusade and Chivalry in the Great War 2 The Struggle for Civilisation in 1939 3 Five Books of 1939 4 Henson: the Good Fight 5 The Persistence of Chivalry 6 Henson: Last Words in Westminster Abbey 7 Was the Second World War a Crusade?
8 Justice in Warfare I: the City-Bombing Debate 1 Reprisals in World War I 2 Protesting Inter-war Atrocities 3 The First Year of War 4 A New Method of Warfare 5 The Committee to Abolish Night Bombing 6 The May 1941 Convocation 7 Churchill and Retribution 8 The Switch to Area Bombing 9 Temple’s First Year at Lambeth 10 The Air War Escalates 11 Seeking Clarifications 12 The Bishop’s Speech 13 Temple’s Christian Realism 14 Seed of Chaos 15 Sentimental Nonsense and Sheer Humbug 16 The Bombing of Ethics 17 Dresden and Churchill 18 Competing Ethical Perspectives
9 Justice in Warfare II: Internment, Prisoners of War, Blockade 1 Internment of Enemy Aliens 2 Shackling Prisoners of War 3 Blockade and Famine Relief 4 Relevance of the Jus in Bello Tradition 10 Peace Aims and Jus Post Bellum 1 Seeking an Early Settlement 2 The Berggrav Initiative 3 New Year’s Resolutions 4 Christianity and World Order 5 The Hope of a New World 6 Sword of the Spirit 7 The December 1940 Joint Letter 8 The Stoll Theatre Meetings 9 The Canterbury Convocation and Churchill 10 The Elusive Quest for Christian Cooperation 11 Vansittartism 12 Bell’s Visit to Sweden 13 Bell’s Return to England 14 Campaigning for the Resistance 15 Germany and the Hitlerite State 16 News from America and Russia 17 Temple on the Balance of Power 18 The Momentous Summer of 1944 19 Debating the Occupation 20 Envisioning Europe’s Future 21 Peace Aims and Jus Post Bellum
11 The Church of England and the Pacifist Conscience 1 Conscience and Objection 2 Conscientious Objection in British Law 3 Conscientious Objection in World War I 4 Anglican Pacifism between the Wars 5 Dick Sheppard 6 The Peace Army 7 The Peace Pledge Union 8 Saying No to War 9 Heresy versus Apostasy 10 The Church Assembly Debates Pacifism 11 Over the Bridge to Lambeth 12 Pacifism as a Personal Vocation 13 A Pacifist Interpretation of Article 37 14 The Archbishops Meet the APF 15 Pacifist Episcopacy 16 An Anglican Compromise
12 The Pacifist Witness in the Church of England 1 A Pacifist Academic: Charles Raven 2 A Pacifist Parson: Percy Hartill 3 A Pacifist Mystic: Evelyn Underhill 4 A Pacifist Activist: Vera Brittain 5 Assessing the Anglican Pacifist Witness
13 The Church of England and the Holocaust 1 Antisemitism and Ambivalence 2 Henson on Judaism 3 James Parkes on Church and Synagogue 4 The Council of Christians and Jews (CCJ) 5 Initial Responses to Genocide 6 The Allied Joint Declaration 7 The Bar of History, Humanity, and God 8 The Bermuda Conference 9 Radio Broadcasts to Hungary 10 Vagaries of Bystander Scholarship 11 Lawson’s Critique 12 Assessing the Anglican Witness
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index