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Interesting review at Slate.com on Jean Elshtain's new book: http://www.slate.com/id/2192789/

quote:
... Elshtain has written a bold book, one meant to shake up the now-entrenched view that we are at center of the universe and the better for it. She argues that medieval theology offered anything but a blind worship of obedience. A long struggle between popes and kings ended with a standoff: a realm in which God was supreme and another ruled by the sword. As long as such a duality existed, absolutism could not; Christians could appeal to divine authority to protect themselves against the worldly dictates of a prince. From this point of view, the transfer of sovereignty from God to government was a giant step backward. Once the state takes over, the Christian right to resistance—and the sense of being responsible to God—atrophies.


Also with accompanying discussion at Slate: http://fray.slate.com/discuss/forums/2930/ShowForum.aspx?ArticleID=2192789
 
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ISI Home    ISI Forum    Forums  Hop To Forum Categories  First Principles  Hop To Forums  The Porch    Elshtain's "Sovereignty: God, State, Self" Reviewed