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Nov 29, 2019 · Capitalism and Christianity were not always at such odds. In his 1904 classic The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, Max Weber argued that capitalism’s initial “spirit” may not itself have been Christian, but it was roughly compatible with Christian practices and drew much of its dynamism from this compatibility. Or at least ...
With certain significant caveats in place, which I will name, I find that capitalism is largely compatible with Christian ethics. Christian Ethics and Market Economic Activity. What do we mean by capitalism? Capitalism is a system of economic and social relations built around several key institutions.
In Christianity and the New Spirit of Capitalism, I argue that life projects like these, enforced by the current organization of capitalism, are dehumanizing but can be countered by renewed spiritual projects of similar depth and scope whereby one strives to orient one’s life to God.
Miroslav Volf and David French discuss economy, morality, and human flourishing—looking in particular at the questions of whether capitalism and conservative moral values can coexist, and how the demands of Jesus’s ethics implicate free market economy.
One question emerges over and over again among congregations and Christian ethicists: Is the economic theory underlying modern capitalism Christian? Are its ethical principles compatible with the Christian worldview?
In his 1904 classic The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, Max Weber argued that capitalism’s initial “spirit” may not itself have been Christian, but it was roughly compatible with Christian practices and drew much of its dynamism from this compatibility.
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p: Christianity maintains control while capitalism maintains our attention. With capitalism comes neolib-eralism, and the prin. iples that justify greed and callous attitudes for the poor and vulnerable. Today, it is more common to hear an American Evangelical proclaim that assisting others is creating a leech to t.