Godliness and Greed: Shifting Christian Thought on Profit and Wealth

Godliness and Greed: Shifting Christian Thought on Profit and Wealth

by Skip Worden
Godliness and Greed: Shifting Christian Thought on Profit and Wealth

Godliness and Greed: Shifting Christian Thought on Profit and Wealth

by Skip Worden

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Overview

Traditional scholarship often points to the Calvinists and Max Weber’s writing on the Protestant ethic as the catalysts to changing Christian attitudes concerning profit-seeking and wealth. Author Skip Worden argues that the seeds of this change occurred centuries earlier. From the beginning of the Commercial Revolution to the fifteenth-century Renaissance, he shows that the predominant Christian thought on economics went through a fundamental shift, becoming favorable toward profit-seeking and wealth-holding. Worden discusses this dramatic change and explains how the general antagonism toward the pursuit of wealth before the Commercial Revolution transformed into Protestant theologians' fighting against the prevailing view of a pro-wealth paradigm during the fifteenth century.

Worden contends that the shift away from the Patristic view of wealth occurred well before the addition of the Calvinist spirit of capitalism and the Puritan work ethic into Christian economic vernacular. Drawing on Plato, Cicero, and Augustine, early Protestant theologians unsuccessfully sought to check the rising dominance of the pro-wealth Christian paradigm, which they believed had been pushed too far. These theologians of the sixteenth and seventeenth century felt it was too close to advocating love of gain itself, something too close to the sin of greed. How well the Reformation succeeded can be assessed by Worden’s insightful concluding study of John D. Rockefeller, the ascetic steward of God’s Gold in the form of monopoly.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739139837
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 12/10/2010
Pages: 328
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

Skip Worden is a researcher and writer. He received his PhD from the University of Pittsburgh and M.Div. from Yale Divinity School.

Table of Contents

1 Table of Contents
2 Preface
Part 3 I. The Patristic Anti-Wealth Paradigm
Chapter 4 1. Antecedents: Natural Wealth and Justice
Chapter 5 2. The Strict and Moderated Anti-Wealth Schools
Chapter 6 3. Augustine
Chapter 7 4. Medieval Voluntary Poverty
Part 8 II. The Paradigmatic Shift
Chapter 9 5. Aquinas
Chapter 10 6. The Renaissance
Part 11 III. The Protestant Reformation
Chapter 12 7. Luther
Chapter 13 8. Calvin
Chapter 14 9. Puritan Stewardship
Part 15 IV. John D. Rockefeller
Chapter 16 10. Rockefeller's Business Ethic
Chapter 17 11. The Pietistic Puritan
Chapter 18 12. Conclusion: On the Complicity of Christianity
19 Appendix I: A Translation of Calvin's Fifth Sermon on Deuteronomy 23
20 Bibliography
21 Index
22 About the Author
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