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02-08-2012, 04:51 AM | #21 |
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What AK objected to ... 4 of 4
This relates to the middle ages, which is when he believes that Church socialism finally broke down completely.
IV The church property in the Middle AgesDCH (Now, I must go to work ... proletarian as I am) |
02-09-2012, 07:58 PM | #22 |
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This idea that K. Kautsky parrots A. Kalthoff
I've been trying to trace down this contention that Kautsky took over and modified Kalthoff's Roman community communism theory (cobbled from the Platonic ideal state that was in the air so to speak and practical survival tactics of the neglected members of households rarely if ever visited by their masters) and then applying it to the Jerusalem community.
I found a discussion group message by Klaus Schilling here, that describes Kalthoff as: A. Kalthoff, [a] Lutheran minister, ... [upon following the path of Strauss and subsequent] theologians [who] attempted ... to distill history from the envelope made by church-tradition concerning the life of Jesus.Through pure luck, I happened upon a German transcription of Kalthoff's "book" (it appears to be only 88 pages, and resembles a position statement) Das Christus-Problem: Grundlinien zu einer Sozialtheologie ("The Christ-problem: baselines to a social theology," 1902) at Hermann Detering's website, which I was able to more or less successfully run through Google Translate. Now that I have had a chance to review it, it actually quite tame stuff. Schweitzer critiqued attempts to find the source of influence for early Christian development, looking at scholars who attribite it to Judaism and/or Hellenism, and Kalthoff appears to be one of those who advocates Hellenism (through Plato and Romanized large scale agriculture). More to come ... DCH |
02-11-2012, 08:57 AM | #23 | |
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Saint Peter and "Communism"
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Saint Peter had a big hammer in his hand when Ananias and Sapphira died "miraculously". And the young men who buried hurriedly Ananias and Sapphira were the body-guards of Peter. It seems that Peter kept the money of the sect, partly for the organisation, partly for himself and his body-guards. |
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02-12-2012, 07:22 AM | #24 | ||
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Very labor-ish to use a hammer, that. Actually, Kautsky thought that the Church started out as a charitable organization operated with volunteers. Over time, as the job duties became more intense with the expansion of the church population starting in the 4th century, it grew into an institution with paid administrators (Bishops) and those in charge of distribution (Deacons). Supposedly there was no coercion for contributions (the sale of property had shortly morphed into using property for the benefit of others).
In Kautsky's POV, the relative value of an organization is not in how it uses resources, but how it produces resources. The Church itself was not actually producing anything, and the rag-proletariat (most of the Christians) continued to be as complacent as they had been before christianity, only more so as the distributions of food, etc, became entitlements. DCH Quote:
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02-20-2012, 07:49 PM | #25 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Wiki articles on Marx, Engles, Kalthoff and Kautsky really suck!
Curious about the relationship between the socio-economic theories of Marx & Engles and the theories about early Christian development of Albert Kalthoff and Karl Kautsky, I created this table of their works. I've annotated some of it, especially as it related to Kalthoff in order to show how he was influenced by Liberal Theology of Schleiermacher, the higher criticism and Christian Socialism of Kingsley, Bousset's History of Religion School which caused Kalthoff to abandon the concept of an historical Jesus, and finally the new-agey "life-affirmation" of Nietzsche which pushed him to the ultra left of Christian liberalism.
Kautsky's social ideas are of a completely different nature than Kalthoff's. Schweitzer made the point that Kalthoff came to his conclusions about the unknowable nature of a historical Jesus Christ independently of Bruno Bauer. Engles recognized the value of Bauer's identifications of influences that affected early Christian development, as it set a framework under which Marxist theory could explain the development of the Christian church. Kautsky mentions both Bauer and Kalthoff only in the sense that they showed that theologians had dressed the scant details about Jesus with their own views of what Jesus should have been like. What Kautsky did was to use that as a launching point for deducing facts from these accounts about the social conditions that influenced the early Christian writers. DCH
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02-20-2012, 08:36 PM | #26 | |
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I think much analysis of early Christianity and other political and social movements focuses too much on content and not enough on structure and organization. Conley's central idea that early Christianity was the first quasi-Leninist organization in the world and that this was the key to its success is quite insightful. My own experience of living in one-party states tells me that structure is more important than content -- look at Mormonism, which has the same quasi-Leninist organizational style in the modern US, is obviously stupid and easily refutable from easily accessible sources, but that has very little effect on its adherents, who have been trained to categorize those critiques in a certain way so as to remove their critical power. Years ago on my Taiwan blog I noted how Mormon missions abroad exist not to spread the faith but to socialize the missionary further into it.... In the early struggles for orthodox Christians, you can see how they were trying to evolve a structure that would give them power over their own adherents, training their adherents to engage in thought control (sin) and to place themselves under the authority of political commissars (bishops). Naturally this led to a natalist policy (no infanticide, birth control, or abortion) which would have the positive side effect of controlling the messy power of female sexuality, and cradle to the grave totalizing social philosophy. I wish there was a modern work that mapped all that out. Vorkosigan |
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03-06-2012, 06:17 PM | #27 | ||
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Now I am not totally unacquainted with Mike Conley. He and I had exchanged some e-mails for a year or so back around 2000-2001, after he stumbled on a post somewhere where I stated that I had graduated from his alma mater, Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio. Hermann Detering was at the time a regular poster on the ibiblio.org version of the Corpus-Paul list (now at Yahoo Groups, I think), and I had suggested he join it. His response was as follows: Corpus-Paul (corpus-paul.lists.ibiblio.org)Based on a file he sent me containing an early draft of the JHC article, I had wrote: Corpus-Paul (corpus-paul.lists.ibiblio.org)DCH |
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