HomeStore

Christianity and Democracy, the Rights of Man and Natural Law

Product image 1

Christianity and Democracy, the Rights of Man and Natural Law

Few political philosophers have laid such stress upon the organic and dynamic characters of human rights, rooted as they are in natural law, as did the great 20th century philosopher, Jacques Maritain.

Few Christian scholars have placed such emphasis upon the influence of evangelical inspiration, or of the Gospel message, upon the temporal order as has Maritain. As this important work reveals, the philosophy of Jacques Maritain on natural law and human rights is complemented by and can only be properly understood in the light of his teaching on Christianity and democracy and their relationship.

Maritain takes pains to point out that Christianity cannot be made subservient to any political form or regime, that democracy is linked to Christianity and not the other way around, and that every just regime, such as the classic forms of monarchy, aristocracy and republic, is compatible with Christianity and in it a person is able to achieve some measure of fulfillment even in the temporal order.At the same time he argues his distinctive thesis that personalist or organic democracy provides a fuller measure of freedom and fulfillment and that it emerges or begins to take shape under the inspiration of the Gospel.

Even the modern democracies we do in fact have, with all their weaknesses, represent an historic gain for the person and they spring, he urges, from the very Gospel they so wantonly repudiate.

Few political philosophers have laid such stress upon the organic and dynamic characters of human rights, rooted as they are in natural law, as did the great 20th century philosopher, Jacques Maritain.

Few Christian scholars have placed such emphasis upon the influence of evangelical inspiration, or of the Gospel message, upon the temporal order as has Maritain. As this important work reveals, the philosophy of Jacques Maritain on natural law and human rights is complemented by and can only be properly understood in the light of his teaching on Christianity and democracy and their relationship.

Maritain takes pains to point out that Christianity cannot be made subservient to any political form or regime, that democracy is linked to Christianity and not the other way around, and that every just regime, such as the classic forms of monarchy, aristocracy and republic, is compatible with Christianity and in it a person is able to achieve some measure of fulfillment even in the temporal order.At the same time he argues his distinctive thesis that personalist or organic democracy provides a fuller measure of freedom and fulfillment and that it emerges or begins to take shape under the inspiration of the Gospel.

Even the modern democracies we do in fact have, with all their weaknesses, represent an historic gain for the person and they spring, he urges, from the very Gospel they so wantonly repudiate.

$5.38

Original: $17.95

-70%
Christianity and Democracy, the Rights of Man and Natural Law

$17.95

$5.38

Description

Few political philosophers have laid such stress upon the organic and dynamic characters of human rights, rooted as they are in natural law, as did the great 20th century philosopher, Jacques Maritain.

Few Christian scholars have placed such emphasis upon the influence of evangelical inspiration, or of the Gospel message, upon the temporal order as has Maritain. As this important work reveals, the philosophy of Jacques Maritain on natural law and human rights is complemented by and can only be properly understood in the light of his teaching on Christianity and democracy and their relationship.

Maritain takes pains to point out that Christianity cannot be made subservient to any political form or regime, that democracy is linked to Christianity and not the other way around, and that every just regime, such as the classic forms of monarchy, aristocracy and republic, is compatible with Christianity and in it a person is able to achieve some measure of fulfillment even in the temporal order.At the same time he argues his distinctive thesis that personalist or organic democracy provides a fuller measure of freedom and fulfillment and that it emerges or begins to take shape under the inspiration of the Gospel.

Even the modern democracies we do in fact have, with all their weaknesses, represent an historic gain for the person and they spring, he urges, from the very Gospel they so wantonly repudiate.

You may also like

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

The Persecuted: True Stories of Courageous Christians Living Their Faith

$18.95

$5.68

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Fierce Mercy: Daring to Live Out God's Compassion in Bold and Practical Ways

$16.99

$5.10

NEW
Thumbnail 1

School of Darkness: The Record of a Life and of a Conflict between Two Faiths

$17.05

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Live Not by Lies: A Manual for Christian Dissidents

$27.00

NEW
Thumbnail 1

America on Trial: A Defense of the Founding

$27.95

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Fighting for Life: Becoming a Force for Change in a Wounded World

$26.99

$8.10

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Who Am I to Judge?: Responding to Relativism with Logic and Love

$16.95

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

It Is Right and Just: Why the Future of Civilization Depends on True Religion

$22.95

$6.88

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Awake, Not Woke: A Christian Response to the Cult of Progressive Ideology

$27.95

$8.38

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

The Persecution and Genocide of Christians in the Middle East: Prevention, Prohibition, & Prosecution

$21.95

$6.58

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

The Great Heresies

$14.95

$4.48

NEW
Thumbnail 1

The Myth of an Anti-Science Church: Galileo, Darwin, Teilhard, Hawking, Dawkins

$17.95