China Political theology in China includes responses from Chinese government leaders, scholars, and religious leaders who deal with the relationship between religion and politics. For two millennia, this was organized based on a Confucian understanding of religion and politics, often discussed in terms of Confucian political philosophy. At various points throughout its history, Chinese Buddhism presented an alternative to the political import of Confucianism. However, since the mid-twentieth century,
communist understandings of religion have dominated the discourse. For Christianity, this relationship can be seen from the religion's earliest encounters in the country during the imperial period, with the
Church of the East's interaction with the
Emperor Taizong and
Jesuit missionaries in the Ming court. But it has developed the most in the 20th and 21st centuries after the establishments of the
Republic of China and
People's Republic of China, especially through the establishment of the
Three-Self Patriotic Movement and rise of
house churches.
Germany The influence of the philosopher
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831) is also evident throughout much of German political theology. This is particularly clear in the work of the
Roman Catholic theologian
Johann Baptist Metz (1928–2019) who explored the concept of political theology throughout his work. He argued for the concept of a "suffering God" who shared the pain of his creation, writing, "Yet, faced with conditions in God's creation that cry out to heaven, how can the theology of the creator God avoid the suspicion of apathy unless it takes up the language of a suffering God?" This leads Metz to develop a theology that is related to
Marxism. He criticizes what he terms bourgeois Christianity and believes that the Christian Gospel has become less credible because it has become entangled with bourgeois religion. His work
Faith in History and Society develops apologetics, or fundamental theology, from this perspective. Two of the other major developers of political theology in Germany were
Jürgen Moltmann and
Dorothee Sölle. As in Metz' work, the concept of a suffering God is important to Moltmann's theological program. Moltmann's political theology was influenced strongly by the Marxist philosopher
Ernst Bloch, and both Moltmann and Sölle were influenced heavily by
liberation theology, as was Metz. Another early influence was the
Frankfurt School of
critical theory, especially
Walter Benjamin, and the Frankfurt School's broader critique of
modernity.
Odo Marquard became the center of discussion and controversy with his 1979 essay "
In Praise of Polytheism". It argues that the
separation of powers has it origin in
polytheism, and proposes a political theology based on "enlightened polymythical thinking".
Middle East Christian political theology in the
Middle East is a religious response by Christian leaders and scholars to political problems. Political theologians try to balance the demands of a tumultuous region with the delicate but long history of Christianity in the Middle East. This has yielded a diversity of political theology disproportionate to the small size of Middle East Christian minorities. The region's importance to Christians worldwide – both for history and doctrinal authority for many denominations – also shapes the political theologies of the Middle East. For many Christian leaders, the dominant approach to political theology is one of survival. Many
Arab Christians see themselves as the heirs of a rich Christian heritage whose existence is threatened by regional unrest and religious persecution. Their chief political goal is survival, which sets their political theology apart. At times, Arab Christian leaders have appealed to Christians outside the region through both denominational challenges and broader calls to Christian unity for humanitarian or political aid. In other cases, Christian politicians downplay their faith in the public sphere to avoid conflict with their Muslim neighbours. In the mid-20th century, many Christians in the Middle East saw secular politics as a way out of their traditional status as a minority community in the Islamic world. Christians played prominent roles throughout the
pan-Arab nationalist movement in the mid-20th century, where their experience with Western politics and generally high educational attainments made their contributions valuable to nationalist governments around the region. One prominent example was
Michel Aflaq, an
Eastern Orthodox Christian who formed the first
Ba'ath group from students in Damascus in the 1940s. His belief was that Christians should embrace Islam as part of their cultural identity because nationalism was the best way for Christians to be successful in the Middle East.
Sub-Saharan Africa Political theology in sub-Saharan Africa deals with the relationship of theology and politics, arising from the
anti-apartheid struggle in
South Africa and nationalist campaigns of the mid to late twentieth century elsewhere. The increasing numbers of Christians in
sub-Saharan Africa has led to an increased interest in Christian responses to the region's continuing issues of poverty, violence, and war. According to the Cameroonian theologian and sociologist
Jean-Marc Éla, African Christianity "has to be formulated from the struggles of our people, from their joys, from their pains, from their hopes and from their frustrations today." African theology is heavily influenced by
liberation theology, global
black theology, and postcolonial theology. Notable thinkers include Itumeleng Mosala,
Jesse N. K. Mugambi, and
Desmond Tutu.
United States Reinhold Niebuhr also developed a theology similar to Metz in the practical application of theology. During the 1930s, Niebuhr was a leader of the
Socialist Party of America, and although he broke with the party later in life, socialist thought is a prominent component of his development of
Christian realism. The work by Niebuhr that best exemplifies his relationship with political theology is
Moral Man and Immoral Society: A Study of Ethics and Politics (1932). One of the most influential developers of recent political theology is
Stanley Hauerwas, though he considers his work to be better termed a "theological politics". Hauerwas has actively critiqued the political theology of both
Reinhold Niebuhr and
H. Richard Niebuhr, and has been a frequently critic of Christians' attempt to attain political power and align themselves with secular political ideologies. Moreover, he has been a severe critic of
liberal democracy,
capitalism, and
militarism, arguing that all of those ideologies are antithetical to Christian convictions. == See also ==