Resisting the tendency to separate the study of religion and
politics, editor Jacob Neusner pulls together a collection of ten
essays in which various authors explain and explore the
relationship between the world's major religions and political
power. As William Scott Green writes in the introduction, "Because
religion is so comprehensive, it is fundamentally about power; it
therefore cannot avoid politics."
Beginning with the classical sources and texts of Judaism,
Christianity, Buddhism, Islam, Confucianism and Hinduism, "God's
Rule" begins to explore the complex nature of how each religion
shapes political power, and how religion shapes itself in relation
to that power. The corresponding attention to differing theories of
politics and views towards non-believers are important not only to
studies in comparative religion, but to foreign policy, history and
governance as well. From early Christianity's relationship to the
Roman Empire to Hinduism's relationship to Gandhi and the caste
system, "God's Rule" provides a basis of understanding from which
undergraduates, seminarians and others can begin asking questions
of relationships "both unavoidable and systematically uneasy."
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