Abstract
In a famous exchange with his brother H. Richard in the pages of The Christian Century over the U.S. response to the Manchurian crisis, Reinhold Niebuhr reproached the moral complacency of the pacifist’s detachment from the affairs of the world. Christian realists, however, have always had an uneasy relationship with pacifism. Striving to reconcile the Christian command of love with the harsh realities of power as the consequence of universal sinfulness, Christian realists tended to oscillate between the two sides of a pendulum swinging from Christian pacifism (as in the case of early Martin Wight) to the endorsement of interventionist policies (as in the case of Jean Bethke-Elshtain’s defence of the ‘War Against Terror’). This chapter argues that while this ambivalence has been a source of frustration for both sympathisers and critics, it should primarily be recognised as an asset that accounts for Christian realism’s continued relevance and resurgent popularity.
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Paipais, V. (2021). The Christian Realist Pendulum: Between Pacifism and Interventionism. In: Reichwein, A., Rösch, F. (eds) Realism. Trends in European IR Theory. Palgrave Pivot, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-58455-9_7
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