By Mark Tooley on 1.20.09 @ 6:07AM
Well before the era of Rick Warren there was Reinhold Niebuhr,
the great theologian whom Obama has cited as one of his
favorites.
Last year, Barack Obama cited Reinhold Niebuhr (1892-1971) as one
of his favorite philosophers. The choice contrasted with George
W. Bush's famous citation in 2000 of Jesus Christ as his favorite
philosopher. Citing a deceased theologian with a German name
seems sophisticated, and Jimmy Carter likewise often pointed to
Niebuhr, and justifiably so. Niebuhr was probably the 20th
century's finest ethicist in the liberal Protestant tradition.
Despite lay fans like Obama and Carter, who are themselves
liberal Protestants, Niebuhr is today rarely embraced by the
modern Religious Left, which prefers utopianism to Niebuhr's
school of Christian realism. Niebuhr would appreciate the irony,
because he himself was once a sort of utopian who shared the
pacifism and socialism of Social Gospel enthusiasts after World
War I. The rise of Nazism jolted Niebuhr back to the reality of
transcendent evil, and he steadfastly endorsed World War II, even
while criticizing the Allied bombing of German cities and
questioning the atomic attacks on Japan. Later, he supported
Western resistance to Soviet communism, though he opposed the
Vietnam War almost from its start.
Niebuhr always remained left of center politically, endorsing the
New Deal and welfare state, and heartily endorsing civil rights.
A Lutheran, he taught for 30 years at Union Seminary in New York,
which was then America's flagship liberal seminary. Today, like
most once distinguished liberal seminaries, Union is a shadow of
its former influence. But in Niebuhr's day it hosted some of
America's great theological minds, including Niebuhr's colleague
and close friend, Paul Tillich.
Often described as neo-orthodox, Niebuhr did share that
movement's belief in the power of human sin. But he did not share
neo-orthodoxy's attempt to salvage the supernatural aspects of
Christian orthodoxy. Niebuhr did not believe in biblical
miracles, a physical resurrection or an afterlife for
individuals. He criticized neo-orthodoxy's main proponent, the
Swiss theologian Karl Barth, for his adherence to supernatural
and extra-rational Christian doctrines. Ironically, at least in
the 1950s, he was politically to the right of Barth, and he was
chagrined by Barth's sometimes accommodating stances towards
Soviet communism.
Niebuhr's unrelenting conviction that humanity is sinful, and his
denial of transcendent salvation through supernatural
intervention, confines him to a rather grim worldview. It also
somewhat limits his appeal to orthodox Christians, as a
theologian, if not so much as an ethicist. Evangelicals in the
mid-20th century did not admire Niebuhr, but evangelicals were
then on the periphery of American culture, with liberal
Protestants still at the pilot's wheel. Today, searching for
serious political philosophers, some evangelical intellectuals
appreciate Niebuhr as superior to most other prominent Protestant
ethicists of his era. Despite their ascension to America's
largest religious demographic, evangelicals seemingly still lack
moral and political thinkers of Niebuhr's caliber. Regretfully,
evangelical left academics are often filling the void, espousing
the pacifism and utopianism that Niebuhr rejected.
Adlai Stevenson, a cerebral Democrat who, like Obama, appealed to
intellectuals, admired and befriended Niebuhr. Lyndon Johnson
awarded Niebuhr the Medal of Freedom in 1964. But perhaps it was
Hubert Humphrey who was the politician to whom Niebuhr was
closest. Both helped found Americans for Democratic Action (ADA)
as a voice of mainstream, anti-communist liberalism in America.
Wittily in his address at ADA's founding in 1947, Niebuhr
obliquely denounced pro-Soviet left-wingers by declaring, "I
never believed in my country right or wrong, especially when it
wasn't my country."
Niebuhr's anti-communist liberalism was in sync with Humphrey's
until the Vietnam War, which Niebuhr opposed as "fantastic," even
though he understood the nasty outcome of a communist Southeast
Asia. He thought U.S. involvement in Asian land wars unwise and
unwinnable, though he had tacitly endorsed the Korean
intervention. He speculated that Vietnam's surrender to communism
could be accepted if anti-communist Vietnamese relocated to
Thailand and were protected with "massive" U.S. military power,
as recounted in Richard Wightman Fox's biography.
Vice President Humphrey was not persuaded, and in 1966 he made
his pro-war case at the 25th anniversary dinner of
Christianity & Crisis magazine, which Niebuhr had
founded to rally support for World War II. The gala was at New
York's famous shrine of progressive Protestantism, Riverside
Church, and Niebuhr's declining health prevented him from
attending. So Humphrey visited Niebuhr's apartment beforehand and
discussed Vietnam. Niebuhr's later described his friend's
adherence to President Johnson's war policy as "very sad."
At the dinner, Humphrey stalwartly tried to enlist Niebuhrian
realism in his case for Vietnam. "We reaffirm our intention of
using military power of almost limitless quantities in measured
limited degree," the Vice President told 400 mostly liberal
Protestant listeners. "In Vietnam we have one -- and only one --
military objective: the halting of forceful conquest of South
Vietnam by North Vietnam."
Tying the Vietnam War to a larger social justice agenda, Humphrey
insisted: "We reaffirm our intention to sustain the struggle
against the forces of Communist expansion, against the forces of
poverty, illiteracy, famine and disease for as long as the cause
of freedom requires it." According to the New York
Times, he even bitingly criticized the rising chorus of
anti-war protests, observing that among the failings of "the
great tradition of social protest in America" were
oversimplification, political naiveté and sweeping impatience
with "everybody in authority."
Commenting on the speech, Niebuhr privately regretted that
Humphrey had tried "claiming my anti-Nazi stance of the 1930's
with the present war." And he lamented that his friend was "in a
tragic position of outdoing the Machiavelli of the White House,
meanwhile losing all his friends." Despite the Vietnam
disagreement, Niebuhr eventually would support him for president
in 1968. When approaching death, Niebuhr once rose from his bed
upon seeing President Richard Nixon on the television,
exclaiming, "That bastard!" Niebuhr evidently never voted for a
Republican, though reportedly he was willing to support Nelson
Rockefeller, had he won the Republican nomination.
Rejecting Christian orthodoxy, Niebuhr even dismissed much of
Christianity's Just War tradition as untenable. He constructed
his own purportedly more realistic rationales for war in defense
of justice. His exertions were brilliant, and his proposed
worldview was justifiably influential across nearly a half
century. Obama and other political liberals who admire Niebuhr
could look to far worse. But orthodox Christians of all stripes
might begin to look for alternatives who balance Niebuhr's
reasoned pessimism about humanity with equal hopefulness about an
active Christian Providence.
topics:
Barack Obama, Reinhold Niebuhr, Hubert Humphrey, Anti-Communism