Difference between revisions of "Religious Socialism"

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'''Religious Socialism''' is the publication of the Religious Commission of [[Democratic Socialists of America]].
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'''Religious Socialism''' is the publication of the [[Religion and Socialism Commission of Democratic Socialists of America]].
  
==DSA's Religion and Socialism Commission==
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==History==
Religious types continued to meet informally at conventions of the [[Socialist Party USA]] and [[Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee]]. But it wasn't until 1977 when delegates to the DSOC
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[[File:30851 442165246981 4171915 n.jpg|thumb|250px]]
convention in Chicago met and organized a Religion & Socialism Committee (later Commission) and decided to publish Religious Socialism.
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The original [[Religious Socialism]] was founded by [[John Cort]], a long time Christian Socialist writer and activist as well as co-chair of the Religion and Socialism Commission of [[Democratic Socialists of America]] (DSA). The publication was originally structured as a printed newsletter in 1977 and was in circulation for more than thirty years.
  
Among early co-editors and contributors were [[Harvey Cox]], [[Cornel West]], [[Peter Steinfels]], [[Jim Wallis|Jim Wallace]], Sister [[Mary Emil Penet]], [[Maxine Phillips]],    [[Rosemary Ruether]], [[Arthur Waskow]], [[Joe Holland]], [[Jim Adams]], and [[Gary Dorrien]].
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In 2015, the new [[Religious Socialism]] is a work in progress. We invite you to join us in making it useful both to people of faith within DSA and to the wider religious left. <ref>[http://www.religioussocialism.org/about Religious Socialism, about, accessed July 6, 2015]</ref>
  
In one  three-way exchange, [[Michael Harrington]], [[Rosemary Ruether]] and  "labor priest" Monsignor [[George Higgins]] "sparred over Mike's claim that "the political and social Judeo-Christian God of the
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==Personnel==
West is dying"; Rosemary's claim that Mike did not appreciate the vitality of liberation Christianity in Poland and among the Sandinistas in Nicaragua; and Msgr. Higgins's claim that the Sandinistas were not all that great or that Brazilian bishops did not fit Rosemary's dismissal of the institutional church in Latin America. That same year Maxine Phillips, then organizational director of DSA, organized a successful Religion & Socialism conference in a Catholic retreat center."
 
  
Most of those listed above spoke there, plus [[Dorothee Soelle]], the German poet/theologian. About 140 attended, including a sizable Jewish contingent attracted by [[Arthur Waskow]].<ref>Dem. Left Millennium issue, part 2, 1999, page 36.</ref>
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'''Editorial group'''
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*[[Maxine Phillips]]
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*Rev. [[Lara Hoke]]
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*[[Elliot Ratzman]]
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*[[Nick Reynolds]]
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*[[David Wheeler-Reed]]
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*Rev. [[Andrew Wilkes]]
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'''Contributing editors'''
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*[[Alex Caring-Lobel]]
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*[[Gary Dorrien]]
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*[[Rannfrid Thelle]]
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*Rev. [[Lawrence Ware]]
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*Dr. [[Cornel West]]<ref>[http://www.religioussocialism.org/about Religious Socialism, about, accessed July 6, 2015]</ref>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
{{reflist|2}}
 
{{reflist|2}}
 
[[Category:Democratic Socialists of America]]
 
[[Category:Democratic Socialists of America]]
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[[category:Religious Socialism]]

Latest revision as of 00:54, 1 February 2019

UntitledWest.jpg

Religious Socialism is the publication of the Religion and Socialism Commission of Democratic Socialists of America.

History

30851 442165246981 4171915 n.jpg

The original Religious Socialism was founded by John Cort, a long time Christian Socialist writer and activist as well as co-chair of the Religion and Socialism Commission of Democratic Socialists of America (DSA). The publication was originally structured as a printed newsletter in 1977 and was in circulation for more than thirty years.

In 2015, the new Religious Socialism is a work in progress. We invite you to join us in making it useful both to people of faith within DSA and to the wider religious left. [1]

Personnel

Editorial group

Contributing editors

References

Template:Reflist