Richard John Neuhaus
Richard John Neuhaus was a prominent Christian cleric and writer. Born in Canada, Neuhaus moved to the United States where he became a naturalized United States citizen. He was the longtime editor of the Lutheran Forum magazine newsletter and later founder and editor of the monthly journal First Things and the author of numerous books. A staunch defender of the Roman Catholic Church's teachings on abortion and other life issues, he served as an unofficial adviser to 43rd President George W. Bush on bioethical issues.
Early life and education
Born in Pembroke, Ontario, in 1936, Neuhaus was one of eight children of a Lutheran minister and his wife. Although he had dropped out of high school at age 16 to operate a gas station in Texas, he returned to school, graduating from Concordia Lutheran College of Austin, Texas, in 1956. He moved to St. Louis, Missouri, where he earned his BA and MDiv from Concordia Seminary in 1960.Career
Lutheran minister/pastor
Neuhaus was first an ordained minister in the conservative Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod.In 1974, a major schism in the Missouri Synod resulted in many "modernist" churches splitting to form the more progressive Association of Evangelical Lutheran Churches to which Neuhaus eventually affiliated. The AELC, merged a decade later in 1988 with the other two more liberal Lutheran denominations in the U.S., The American Lutheran Church and the Lutheran Church in America, to finally form the current Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, for which Neuhaus was a member of the clergy.
From 1961 to 1978, he served as pastor of St. John the Evangelist Church, a poor, predominantly black and Hispanic congregation in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. From the pulpit he addressed civil rights and social justice concerns and spoke against the Vietnam War. In the late 1960s he gained national prominence when, together with Jesuit priest Daniel Berrigan and Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, he founded Clergy and Laymen Concerned About Vietnam.
He was active in the Lutheran "Evangelical Catholic" movement and spent time at Saint Augustine's House, the Lutheran Benedictine monastery, in Oxford, Michigan. He was active in liberal politics until the 1973 ruling on abortion in Roe v. Wade by the U.S. Supreme Court, which he opposed and his perspective changed. He became a member of the growing neoconservative movement and an outspoken advocate of "democratic capitalism". He also advocated faith-based policy initiatives by the federal government based upon Judeo-Christian values. He originated the "Neuhaus's Law", which states, "Where orthodoxy is optional, orthodoxy will sooner or later be proscribed."
He was a longtime editor of the monthly newsletter published in between quarterly issues of the interdenominational independent journal Lutheran Forum, published by the American Lutheran Publicity Bureau during the 1970s and 1980s. He was a supporter of the movement to reestablish, in Lutheranism, the permanent diaconate as a full-fledged office in the threefold ministry of bishop / presbyter / deacon under the historic episcopacy, following earlier actions of the Roman Catholics in the Second Vatican Council and the Episcopal Church in the U.S., along with others in the worldwide Anglican Communion and the Church of England.
In 1981, Neuhaus helped to found the Institute on Religion and Democracy and remained on its board until his death. He wrote its founding document, "Christianity and Democracy". In 1984, he established the Center for Religion and Society as part of the conservative think-tank Rockford Institute in Rockford, Illinois, which publishes Chronicles. In 1989, he and the center were "forcibly evicted" from the Institute's eastern offices in New York City under disputed circumstances.
In March 1990, Neuhaus founded the Institute on Religion and Public Life and its journal, First Things, an ecumenical journal "whose purpose is to advance a religiously informed public philosophy for the ordering of society."
Roman Catholic priest
In September 1990, Neuhaus was received into the Roman Catholic Church. A year after becoming a Roman Catholic, he was ordained by John Cardinal O'Connor as a priest of the Archdiocese of New York. He served as a commentator for the Catholic television network Eternal Word Television during the funeral of Pope John Paul II and the election of Pope Benedict XVI.Neuhaus continued to edit First Things as a Catholic priest. He was a sought-after public speaker and wrote several books, both scholarly and popular genres. He appeared in the 2010 film, The Human Experience, released after his death, where his voice features in the narration and in the film's trailer.
Personal life and death
Neuhaus died from complications of cancer in New York City, on January 8, 2009, aged 72.Political significance
In later years, Neuhaus compared anti-abortion activism to the civil rights movement of the 1960s. During the 2004 Presidential campaign, he was a leading advocate for denying communion to Catholic politicians who supported abortion. It was a mistake, he declared, to isolate abortion "from other issues of the sacredness of life."Neuhaus promoted ecumenical dialogue and social conservatism. Along with Charles Colson, he edited Evangelicals and Catholics Together: Toward a Common Mission. This ecumenical manifesto sparked much debate.
A close, yet unofficial, adviser of President George W. Bush, he advised Bush on a range of religious and ethical matters, including abortion, stem-cell research, cloning, and the Federal Marriage Amendment. In 2005, under the heading of "Bushism Made Catholic," Neuhaus was named one of the "25 Most Influential Evangelicals in America" by Time Magazine:
Neuhaus was criticized for his political engagement as "theoconservatism." In contrast, theologian David Bentley Hart describes Neuhaus as
a reflective, intelligent, self-possessed, generous, and principled man, is opinionated, but not at all spiteful or resentful towards those who disagree with him; words like "absolutist" are vacuous abstractions when applied to him. His magazine publishes articles that argue views contrary to his own, and he seems quite pleased that it should do so.
Works
Books
- Movement and Revolution
- In Defense of People: Ecology and the Seduction of Radicalism
- Time Toward Home: The American Experiment as Revelation
- Against the World for the World: The Hartford Appeal and the Future of American Religion
- Freedom for Ministry"
- Unsecular America
- The Naked Public Square: Religion and Democracy in America
- Confession, Conflict, and Community
- Dispensations: The Future of South Africa As South Africans See It
- Piety and Politics: Evangelicals and Fundamentalists Confront the World
- Democracy and the Renewal of Public Education
- Jews in Unsecular America
- The Catholic Moment: The Paradox of the Church in the Postmodern World
- Believing Today: Jew and Christian in Conversation
- Reinhold Niebuhr Today
- Guaranteeing the Good Life: Medicine and the Return of Eugenics
- Doing Well & Doing Good: The Challenge to the Christian Capitalist
- America Against Itself: Moral Vision and the Public Order
- Freedom for Ministry: A Guide for the Perplexed Who are Called to Serve
- To Empower People: From State to Civil Society
- The End of Democracy?: The Celebrated First Things Debate, With Arguments Pro and Con and "the Anatomy of a Controversy"
- The Best of the Public Square
- Appointment In Rome: The Church in America Awakening
- The Eternal Pity: Reflections on Dying
- A Free Society Reader: Principles for the New Millennium
- There We Stood, Here We Stand: Eleven Lutherans Rediscover Their Catholic Roots
- The Second One Thousand Years: Ten People Who Defined a Millennium
- The Best of the Public Square: Book 2
- Death on a Friday Afternoon: Meditations on the Last Words of Jesus from the Cross
- As I Lay Dying: Meditations Upon Returning
- The Chosen People in an Almost Chosen Nation: Jews and Judaism in America
- Your Word Is Truth: A Project of Evangelicals and Catholics Together
- As I Lay Dying: Meditations Upon Returning
- The Best of the Public Square: Book 3
- Catholic Matters: Confusion, Controversy, and the Splendor of Truth
- American Babylon: Notes of a Christian Exile''
Journalism
- "" First Things – On the Square blog, retrieved December 31, 2008.