For God and Globe: An Interview with Michael Thompson
Mark Edwards
at the University of Sydney. He’s also the author of the best single essay I’ve ever read on Reinhold Niebuhr. The following is a recent conversation we had about his important new book on ecumenical Protestants and foreign relations, For God and Globe: Christian Internationalism in the United States between the Great War and the Cold War (Cornell). Michael also shares some thoughts on post-World War II evangelical internationalism.
How did you become interested in the topic of ecumenism and Christian
Internationalism?
Actually, it all
began with that essay you mentioned in your intro—on Reinhold
Niebuhr. In that project I was interested in Niebuhr’s theology as it
interacted with the changing shape of global politics on the one hand and
with the ideologies of American exceptionalism and nationalism on the other. I
encountered Niebuhr while taking an excellent Grad seminar on the American
National Myth with Neville Meaney, a one-of-a-kind diplomatic historian
at Sydney University. As part of that seminar, naturally we looked at
religion’s role in nourishing and sustaining national mythology. We were
reading a lot of old school scholarship—Tuveson, Bercovitch, and some
newer stuff too (although this was before the religious turn…well before Jon
Butler’s famous Jack-in-the-Box call). Niebuhr’s Irony of American History
was on the reading list — not the Obama-endorsed 2008 reissue, but the
dusty old 1950s edition. This was 2003. Niebuhr first of
all didn’t seem to fit into the model of
Protestantism-bequeathing-nationalism that scholarship seemed almost
uniformly to convey. In fact, he seemed to be an insightful
critic of that very dynamic—especially when reading in 2003-4 against the
backdrop of unfolding operations in Iraq.
But I always had
a sense—as I think you did in conceiving of your book—that there was more
to Niebuhr’s world than just Niebuhr. So the
present project actually began with a pretty simple desire to
follow Niebuhr’s footsteps into the murky world of interwar Protestantism. I
suppose at the outset I wanted o use Niebuhr to get beyond Niebuhr. I
thought surely this theologian becoming a public intellectual on
matters of foreign policy had to have some context behind him. He can’t
have been just some random outlier. And of course, the biographies like Fox's
gave hints of that.
My
two-fold question then became i) what kinds of Protestant enterprises
devoted themselves to reflecting on US foreign relations, and ii) what distinctive
ideas did each such enterprise give rise to over time? As you know, and as
other scholarship on internationalism had touched upon (all
the more so recently), the sheer proliferation of knowledge
production enterprises focused on international relations was
a phenomenon in itself in the 1910s-30s. You had the big guns,
Chatham House in the UK and the Council on Foreign Relations in the US, but you
also had scores of smaller, sometimes more ephemeral ventures that
also mattered in their time. International Relations seminars, forums,
retreats, institutes, newsletters and much, much more. I became
fascinated by this world, especially the Protestant parts (which
were usually marginal or absent in existing works on internationalism).
Digging around
in the primary sources, and getting across the secondary scholarship, it seemed
that there were two distinct but overlapping worlds, often treated by
separate bodies of scholarship. You had the generations-old work on
pacifism (Chatfield’s very strong work) or on pacifism versus Niebuhrian
realism—Donald Meyer et al. In another sphere altogether you had
works on the ecumenical movement—which back then, before your book and Graeme
Smith’s, let alone Gene Zubovich’s work—was overall poorly done, and cloistered
off in its own ecclesiastical-historical and missiological world. Heather
Warren’s book was a helpful exception. But I was struck by several things.
One was the way that many actors, Niebuhr included, actually belonged
to and ventured into both worlds--the surging pacifist-socialist interwar left and
the high ecumenical movement-- in the interwar years. Any new treatment needed
to bring the the worlds that were held separate in the historiography back
together.
Another
observation that struck me was how much more than mere “pacifism” was at
stake in American liberal and radical-left Protestant reflection on
war. Christian internationalists, with their missionary roots, constituted
an important element in interwar anti-imperialism, which was something
entirely absent from work on anti imperialism and on religion.
A third thing I
was struck by was just how important the late interwar ecumenical movement both
in America and Europe was in the production of International Relations
knowledge. Just gauging by the personnel involved, and their prominence
internationally in the kind of pre-social-scientific, pre-quantitative
flowering of IR in the 1940s—Niebuhr, Martin Wight, Alfred Zimmern, Max Huber
and others—you could were a bigger than given credit for.
So with these
observations forming, I began looking for ways to give shape to the
project.
Initially I had
planned four or five distinct Protestant enterprises that would structure the
study, as well as the The World Tomorrow and the Oxford 1937
ecumenical conference which form the central foci of the book now, I had
planned sections on the missionary movement, and on the World War
II think-tank as a “genre” of institution. In the end, they are
there, but as subordinate parts—Sherwood Eddy illustrating some of the
missionary connections in the intro (and in what is a separate essay now
in Modern Intellectual History), and the John Foster Dulles-led Commission on a
Just and Durable Peace in the final chapter.
So, to answer
your question about ecumenism specifically, it was Oxford 1937 that
especially drew me in, and still does. I am still struck by the
theological and intellectual caliber of the event, and how unlike it was
anything that came before it in ecumenism, and how it was so much more than a
mere precursor to the World Council of Churches. My sense is that those
doing the new history of Christian human rights will address it soon
and treat it with the seriousness it deserves. I have tried to do my small
part toward that effort—as have you in your book. I’d say there
is still more work to be done on it.
In your book, you discuss one ecumenical site familiar to many scholars
(the 1937 Oxford Conference) and one not so well known (The World Tomorrow
editorial team). What did each
contribute to the development of Christian Internationalism?
The
World Tomorrow was an extraordinary, but ultimately short-lived little
magazine with a strong cast of editors—Reinhold Niebuhr, Kirby
Page, Devere Allen, plus others coming in and out at various points. It
was founded by Socialist leader Norman Thomas, became the Fellowship of
Reconciliation’s official mouthpiece, grew its readership under Anna Rochester
and Grace Hutchins and was then bought out by the wealthy former
missionary and arch-Christian Internationalist philanthropist, Sherwood Eddy in
1926. He was responsible for installing his former YMCA offsider Kirby
Page as editor, and in 1928 also brought Niebuhr to New York to help with the
journal, while paying for his salary at Union seminary.
The World
Tomorrow
is, I think, one of the best artifacts of what was
involved—the possibilities, difficulties, and tensions, many
insurmountable—in attempting to build a Protestant "left.” I mean
that in the Old Left, interwar sense of that word. The editorial team sought to
articulate a left-wing politics more radically anti-capitalist,
anti-imperialist, and anti-nationalist than the Christian Century, an
organ better known to readers of RIAH.
The
World Tomorrow was important to the development history of Christian
Internationalism for several reasons, but first because of its failure. The
editors wanted to stitch together what they hoped was stitchable, but in this
case proved unstitchable. They ultimately faced the impossibility of
trying to be all things at once: Protestant social gospellers,
missionaries, pacifists, Marxian Socialists, proponents of non-violence,
proponents of class warfare, and from the early 1930s, for
some, self-designated “realists.” In that sense, I found
it provided a fresh, gritty, "real time" archive of the messy and conflicted emergence of realism. As well as
the Fellowship of Reconciliation, the journal was closely allied in the 1930s, through
Niebuhr, with the Fellowship of Socialist Christians, which was a
hugely important hub and site, along with the Theological Discussion
Group you’ve so excellently written about, for the articulation of that
new sensibility.
But before
realism's emergence in the 1930s, The World Tomorrow in the
mid-late 1920s was important for its vigorous anti-imperialism and
anti-militarism. As soon as Kirby Page took over, he devoted special
issues to the US in the Philippines (remember that independence was still
being debated) and to the US in the Caribbean. He published symposia
of prominent legal opinion on the Monroe Doctrine, all with an
anti-interventionist edge, and fact finding reports coming from WILPF and
others on the US occupation in Haiti. The journal vigorously opposed the US campaigns
in Nicaragua and instead supported the non-state diplomatic tours
that many of their fold (including Latin Americanists based at
Columbia) organised.
Perhaps even
more important was the institutional base and outlet it provided for
specifically missionary-rooted anti imperialism. In the great
shock waves that swept the mainline missionary movement after World War I,
mainline missionaries developed a strident anti imperialism The World
Tomorrow was a gathering point for them. Not just Sherwood
Eddy and Kirby Page but also Samuel Guy Inman—missionary to
Mexico turned Latin Americanist scholar and anti-imperialist—and others
were connected.
As part of its
opposition to imperialism, militarism and nationalism, The World Tomorrow offered
a pretty simple theology, focused on the "historical
Jesus," seeing him as needing digging out from underneath all
the rubbish of organized religion since Constantine. The real Jesus, not
the one of contemporary churches, they argued, stood against the
militaristic options of his day (Page was reading new scholarship on
Josephus to get at some of this). But the essential logic
was “What would Jesus do”? So they ran series of articles, for
example, on Would Jesus be an Imperialist? Would Jesus be a Capitalist?…even
Would Jesus be a Christian? They essentially wanted readers to deepen
their sense of Jesus as both ethical example and personal
inspiration on one hand, and on the other hand to wake up to the
realities of US foreign policy. If readers were more
deeply aware of both Jesus and US foreign policy, editors seemed
to hope, they would realise the incongruence between the
two. They they could join The World Tomorrow in calling
their country to heel using their democratic and social power.
On that
note, in the book, readers will also find extensive treatment of
the public controversy and fame generated by The World Tomorrow's
fascinating surveys of 100,000 US clergy on war and peace…surveys that even
drew the Chief of Army, Douglas MacArthur, into the debate about whether patriotism
or internationalism was more Christian. You can guess which side MacArthur was
on. Anyway, The World Tomorrow team loved that sort
of oppositional controversy.
As
for Oxford 1937, the atmosphere, the theological method, and
the political emphases were very different to The World Tomorrow -- even
though many of the subjects in my book were personally involved in both.
And so too a lot
had changed since the 1920s in the ecumenical movement to
make Oxford 1937 what it was. The emergence of Nazism, with its pseudo
theology and joining of Jesus and Volk, raised the whole question of
nationalism and religion to a new pitch. Ecumenical Christians led by Jo
Oldham (John Mott’s Scottish offsider at the International Missionary
Council ) made that the central question. What
was the relationship between Christianity and the claims of
national identity and sovereignty? Could there be a way of
theologically articulating a supranational solidarity that stood in protest to
nationalisms, whether German, American or French?
In contrast to
the anti-church message noises coming from The World Tomorrow,
Oxford ecumenists made their conception of the catholicity of the
church central to their intellectual and political program. Their move in
this regard can, in truth, be seen as a kind of overreach, a kind of grabbing
from Catholicism, or neo-medievalism. There is something to each of
these claims. But I think most of all they need to be seen as having
a wariness about merely asserting a rationalistic universalism of abstract
principles. The Continental Europeans in the ecumenical movement had also long
stressed wariness about Anglophone ecumenical tendencies to merely baptise
liberal internationalism and liberal humanism, giving the League of
Nations a Christian badge. So they tried as an alternative to work
intellectually upward from the concrete social reality of the Church universal
-- there being a concrete body of believers whose solidarity crossed national
borders. I think that that more than anything else was what the word and
idea of “ecumene” meant to actors in the movement in the 1930s.
For them, the
transnational solidarity of the church (they used the word
"supranational”) needed to be recovered as the heart of the
Christian witness in and against a world of hyper-nationalisms.
You have to remember the context of the 1930s! This was far and away
the most distinctive contribution of Oxford 1937 to the development of
Christian internationalism.
Another related
distinctive was the theological register of their political
analysis. Other more mechanistic, legalistic and institutionalist
approaches to internationalism-- the League of Nations, the Outlawry of War,
World Federation--were not the same, and not to be conflated with Christian
internationalism, they insisted. In a secondary sense, and it was
only secondary (you can read the debates and reports to confirm that
sense) they advocated for a revived League of Nations as the most preferable
option for future international organization. They saw it as a
middle option between unfettered national sovereignty on one hand
and the kinds of world-state ideas being circulated in the late 1930s.
But they were never mere League enthusiasts, and in fact at Oxford 1937 several
criticized what they saw as the false mystical "religion of
Geneva”—referring to those who imbued the League of Nations with a kind of
elevated reverence.
Oxford also saw
the strong anti-racist elements in missionary and student networks come to the
fore of the ecumenical movement, whereas in the 1920s, they had operated
in parallel to the more elite Europe-oriented establishment of the Life and
Work and Faith and Order movements. In the book, I spend a bit of
time going back over the 1920s conferences of the IMC and WSCF to show how
they functioned as sites for a vigorous anti-imperialism and anti-racism,
especially when seen against the world political climate of the 1920s.
Many—although not all— of those earlier emphases became glued to
the Oxford 1937 emphases on church-based internationalism. Naturally, the calls
to oppose race discrimination as anti Christian challenged those few
American and South African delegates still in favour of segregation!. But
Oxford's anti-racism was carried home, notwithstanding the contradictions with
segregated churches, and as Barbara Mays has shown, affected the decades-long
work of Black activists like Benjamin Mays.
Oxford also
cemented Christian realists’ engagement in the ecumenical enterprise. As you
yourself know from your work, and as I also illustrate in my book, the main
intellectual organizer, Jo Oldham went hard after the cadre of realist
theologians at Union Seminary and in the Theological Discussion Group, and gave
them major roles at Oxford 1937. My view is that this helped Niebuhr and
others mature in their theological reflection, and also saw them further
absorbed into the leadership of the movement at home and internationally in the
1940s.
You talk in your book about the “Americanization of Christian
Internationalism” during and after the Second World War. But wasn’t the Christian Internationalism of
a Niebuhr or John Foster Dulles (or even Sherwood Eddy) always
Americanized? What or how did ecumenical
Christians contribute to the new breed of wartime Christian nationalism (that
we normally associate with evangelicals like Billy Graham)?
Ah, yes! You’ve picked up on one of my more provocative chapter titles.
You’re right. Of course, one can’t posit an “un-American” Christian
internationalism prior to Dulles’ wartime work. My meaning there is specific to
the argument in Chapter 7, the final chapter, and one devoted to on Dulles
and the Commission on a Just and Durable Peace, which achieved extraordinary
public prominence and bipartisan political influence.
There “Americanization” has two meanings. One is that Dulles, who was at
Oxford 1937 and reportedly impacted by it, was one of the main proponents of
ecumenical internationalism in the early-mid 1940s. BUT…and it’s a big but, he
ran it all through a filter that ironed out all the theological nuance and
dialectical subtleties from the Europeans, and also ran it through a filter
that stressed the US experience of
federation between states as a paradigm for overcoming nationalism. His
whole mode of argumentation in getting at his famous Six Pillars of Peace paid
homage to Oxford 1937 (in the Commission’s early statements), but it really
represented a transposition of sorts away from the dialectical neo-orthodox
theology that was at Oxford towards a
vaguer assertion of moral principles which the US ought to lead the way in
universally implementing. As one German friend and critic put it, the Commission
tended to view the world through projecting its own American “imago” onto
others.
The second and perhaps more important sense in which Dulles Americanized
Christian internationalism is that he yoked it to the cause of the new
bipartisan “American” internationalism. That is, both parties, most
conspicuously the Republicans whom he represented were calling for an end to
American “isolationism” and a new beginning for American “internationalism”,
meaning international engagement. So whereas the critical energy of interwar
Christian internationalism had been pointed against US intervention and
nationalism, Dulles ironically re-routed its force to promote US intervention.
In conflating US state-based internationalism with Christian
internationalism—calling for Christians to exert political pressure to see the
US play its international responsibilities—he “Americanized” the latter, I
argue. The book will explain that in more depth.
That’s how I’d answer the second part of your question, just briefly:
Dulles simultaneously lifted the political clout of ecumenical Christian
internationalism to its greatest height, but also collapsed the critical
distance between it and the cause of the American nation-state. This was the
very thing Oxford delegates had warned of…identifying the cause of the nation
with the cause of Christ. And yet, by the end of World War II we can already
discern the contours of a Dulles who sees the American nation as the unique
defender of the cause of Christ, and who calls for Christians to view the cold
war in religious terms.
In that sense, Dulles’ revived
Christian nationalism—an ironic progeny of ecumenical internationalism—was an
easy ally with the Christian nationalism coming from the networks around Billy
Graham and the Christian libertarians we find so well documented in Kevin
Kruse’s book.
It’s important to say that Dulles did not represent or bring the entire
ecumenical movement with him, but he was one important and influential figure
in that particular re-framing, re-constituting of it.
You conclude that the Christian nationalism of the Cold War era made
Christian Internationalism an “alien space” and “lost civilization” (202). To what extent do you think Christian
Internationalist concerns for anti-racism, human rights, and so on went
mainstream in “secular” NGOs and INGOS during that time—in ways that scholars
such as David Hollinger and Matthew Hedstrom have suggested? Melani McAlister, David Swartz, Lauren Turek,
David King, and many other scholars are today writing about the spread of
evangelical internationalism following the Second World War. Do you see evangelical internationalism
having anything in common with prewar ecumenical Christian Internationalism?
Briefly, this a great question, and to be honest, one I’d welcome more
input on from readers and contributors at RIAH. At a broad level, I’d say that
yes, there is definite translation of Christian internationalist concerns,
personnel and outlooks into mainstream “secular” NGOs and INGOs. One straight
forward empirical indication of this is the generation of missionary-descended
and even missionary-trained Americans in the 1950s-60s who continue their
vocational trajectory via secular NGOs, in many cases playing influential
roles. And in the broad history of INGOs, of course, it’s hard to avoid the
fact of missionaries being so early on already doing such work that was
professionalized, secularized and bureaucratised as part of the new Aid and
Development foreign policy orientation after Point IV.
One key area I’ve been doing a bit of work on for example is on the roots
of many postwar development operations in interwar agricultural missionary
work…More on that another time, perhaps. But yes, I find both Hollinger and Hedstrom persuasive on this. I’m in
accord with them overall.
The question of evangelicalism is mixed, I think. If you take the kinds
of anti-nationalist protest coming from the young Jim Wallis and
“post-American” crowd evoked by Swartz so wonderfully in Moral Minority, you
feel sometimes that you could be reading material from Kirby Page and The
World Tomorrow fifty years earlier. I suspect the 1970s evangelical left
shared much politically with the interwar liberal, ecumenical left. But I’m not sure Wallis et al would be too
representative of evangelical internationalism. Turek’s excellent recent work
also makes me want to look closer at parallels and contrasts on their
approaches to US imperial outreach and foreign relations in Latin America.
McAlister’s very textured approach rightly brings to the fore an
internationalism that is very global in orientation, is very peace loving and
humanitarian, but at times, as she points out, perhaps also sentimentalist. My
broad assessment would be that it lacks the self-consciousness about
nationalism, about national identity and religious identity being in tension. I think, overall, it does not have the same caliber of engagement with the
intellectual contours of international thought and international relations that
we saw at Oxford 1937. So yes, some resonances, but I still feel I’d need to
see more in order to be persuaded they aren’t quite different conceptual
worlds.
What are you working on now?
Research-wise, I’m doing two things. One I’m in exploratory stages on a
new project on Agricultural missionaries and US environmental internationalism
in the long New Deal. Looking at folk like Walter Lowdermilk, a missionary
turned soil conservation activist and New Dealer, turned of all things mega-dam
proponent.
Second, I’m working for Ian Tyrrell on a big project on the long history
of American exceptionalism. There, rather than internationalists, I’m spending
a lot of time trying to understand 20th century evangelicals on nationalism.
I’m thinking about a paper on how evangelical theology has often made room—at
violence to its own axioms—for American exceptionalism. Maybe it will be called
“Making Room for America.”
But mainly, I’m actually taking time for the next while to pursue a
Masters of Divinity—brushing up on Biblical languages!—and exploring
possibilities for theological and pastoral work that might intersect still with
history work.
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