1. I want to say a few words on the importance of Richard John Neuhaus, growing out of this review I wrote:http://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/books-and-media/book-reviews/richard-john-neuhaus-a-life-in-the-public-square-is-a-rewarding-biography-of-an-influential-thinker/article22989723/ …
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Replying to @HeerJeet
2. Neuhaus is mainly now remembered by the Christian right, which is a shame because life traces a larger political & religious trajectory
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3. Neuhaus started on the Lutheran left and ended up on the Catholic right, a journey across the wide field of American political religion.
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4. It's too tempting in retrospect to dismiss Neuhaus's radical period as typical neo-con youthful indiscretion for largely rightwing life.
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5. Neuhaus tended to overstate his tightness with M.L. King, Jr. but no question Neuhaus was pastor at black church, went to Selma, etc.
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6. In terms of anti-Vietnam war activism, Neuhaus even more central. A crucial figure in Committee of Clergy Concerned about Vietnam.
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7. In 60s, Neuhaus was where action was: in jail with Norman Mailer, on stage with Chomsky, singing with Joan Baez.
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8. One through line in Neuhaus's life is ecumenicism, although political valiance of that changed as he moved to the right.
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9. As modern Lutheran in 1950s/1960s, Neuhaus eager to work with Catholics and Jews, which came to fruition in political activism.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
10. 1990s conservative Neuhaus worked to get Catholics and evangelicals to put differences aside for political unity: right wing ecumenicism
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11. Neuhaus's ecumenicism always of 1950s Protestants-Catholics-Jews variety, with little room for a wider religious pluralism
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Replying to @HeerJeet
12. Neuhaus's narrow ecumenicism in contrast to his friend Peter Berger, Lutheran genuinely interested in Hindu & Buddhist spirituality.
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