When I read that President Obama had told an assemblage of rabbis that “We are God’s partners in matters of life and death” and that the immediate business of the partnership was to enact health care insurance reform, there returned to my mind the long forgotten (and not just by me) tome of liberal theologian Harvey Cox, The Secular City: Secularization and Urbanization in Theological Perspective (1965).
One of Dr. Cox’s themes was that God and man should be viewed as “partners” in bringing about a man-centered utopia. In fact, God was the “junior partner”, since the things of this world were of the foremost importance and He, as an abstract ground of all being, was in no position to appreciate them fully.
Whatever its philosophical merits, Dr. Cox’s theology obviously has no connection with historical Christianity. Our Lord instructed us to pray, “Thy will be done”, not “Be a nice god, and help me to do my will”. Nonetheless, The Secular City was popular in modernist Christian circles, until they moved on to the next demi-prophet
I don’t know whether Barack Obama has ever read a word of The Secular City, but the coincidence of sentiment is fascinating. If the President is sincere – and I believe and hope that he is not – America could become the site of history’s first secular theocracy.
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