Christianity and Social Order

Christianity and Social Order

by RonaldH.Preston (Foreword), EdwardHeath (Foreword), WilliamTemple (Author)

Synopsis

William Temple, Archbishop of Canterbury from 1942 until his death in 1944, is by common consent among the greatest holders of that office and one of the most remarkable Englishmen of this century. The son of Archbishop Frederick Temple (1897-1902) and in his twenties and thirties an Oxford don and public school headmaster, he made creative contributions in many fields: as the leader of the Life and Liberty Movement which led to the creation in 1921 of the Church Assembly; as a pioneer of the Ecumenical Movement; as a philosopher of religion (he was author of Mens Creatrix , Christus Veritas and Nature, Man and God ); as an interpreter of Christianity for the general public; and as one who argued from Christian principles to find solutions to contemporary problems. This book gives clear and popular expression to views which Temple held, in general, for most of his working life. The book's first appearence in 1942 coincided with a surge of feeling that victory over Nazism must be followed by a new deal at home. Temple's objectives are: firstly, to vindicate the Church's right to intervene in economic questions; secondly, to show that it has something worthwhile to say; and thirdly, to indicate clearly where the competence of the Church ceases because technicalities are involved. Other points he emphasises are the need to determine the proper balance between the profit motive and service to the community, and between the power of the state and the freedom of the individual; and the importance for man of rediscovering his true relationship with the earth upon which he lives.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 128
Edition: New Ed
Publisher: Shepheard-Walwyn (Publishers) Ltd
Published: Dec 1984

ISBN 10: 0856830259
ISBN 13: 9780856830259

Media Reviews
Its arguments are just as relevant today; we can only regret that we have made so little progress in the directions Temple prophetically indicated. -- Third Way

A key piece of writing in Christianity this century, no book has yet replaced it. --Professor Ronald Preston
Author Bio
The enduring appeal of Temple is that while he clearly looks to principle for guidance, he is no Utopian and sagely remarks that 'the art of government in fact is the art of so ordering life that self-interest prompts what justice demands.' During his lifetime he became a household name for the radical but constructive way in which he challenged the established orders, including the Church. His work earned him the title 'the People's Archbishop'.