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The Long Truce: How Toleration Made the World Safe for Power and Profit [Hardcover]

A.J. Conyers (Author), A. J. Conyers (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 1, 2001
Reconsidering one of our central political dogmas, a distinguished theologian argues that the principle of toleration-as reformulated over the last four centuries-is not the bulwark of social harmony that it appears. In a new book from Spence Publishing, A. J. Conyers shows that toleration, by banishing questions of ultimate meaning from public life, has aided the consolidation of power in the state while debasing our politics and undermining social cohesion.

It is customary to regard the principle of toleration as the reasonable and humane solution to the religious strife that ravaged Europe in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The real history of toleration, however, is considerably more complicated. Professor Conyers shows that the new nation-states of early modern Europe-comprehensive, jealous, and demanding-propagated a novel version of toleration based on indifference to all values other than political power and material prosperity. By dissolving the loyalties that bound men to their church, their family, and the other intermediate institutions, toleration produced the modern "bi-polar society," in which the isolated citizen confronts the unmediated power of the state. In its modern form, then, toleration is not a virtue but a strategy for the relentless imposition of secularism in the service of power and profit.

Professor Conyers attacks the modern superstition that our only choice is between bloody sectarian conflict and the suppression of all transcendent concerns. A more authentic model of toleration is to be found, surprisingly enough, in pre-Reformation Christianity, which preached humility rather than indifference.



Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Conyers (theology, Baylor Univ.; How To Read the Bible) examines the philosophy of toleration and its application through history, tracing the path of this rarely questioned principle to its current place in our culture and government. By examining the concept of tolerance as viewed by Thomas Hobbes, Pierre Bayle, John Locke, and others, he shows that, historically, toleration has existed in groups and societies that had moral purposes and a conscience. Whereas toleration had historically been group related, now we see individual personal preference as a major basis for toleration. Conyers contends that as a public policy tolerance is used to lay the ground for peace and harmony, but instead of protecting minority groups, it allows for the centralization of power and indifference to values. Conyers believes that there is a need, in humility, to recover God's overall purpose of "telos," a morality that recognizes final causes. This thought-provoking study is recommended for academic libraries. George Westerlund, formerly with the Providence P.L.
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Conyers is a professor at Baylor University's Truett Theological Seminary and the author of The End: What Jesus Really Said about the Last Things (1995) and How to Read the Bible (1986). He now considers the concept of toleration and contends that the developing nation-states of the seventeenth century transformed toleration from an ancient and universal practice based on humility to a strategy for governing and controlling increasingly diverse populations. The result, he charges, is that differences between cultures become minimized and that the influence of an individual culture that claims a universal validity such as religion becomes neutralized. Both conditions pave the way for a central government to extend its power. As nations assumed responsibility for trade, manufactures, banking, monetary policy, education of the young, and public welfare, the family and religion lost dignity, independence, and authority. Conyers analyzes the philosophical arguments of Thomas Hobbes, Pierre Bayle, and John Locke to show that the rise of toleration was not coincidental to the rise of the nation-state but rather a necessary condition. David Rouse
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Spence Publishing Company; 2 edition (April 1, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1890626368
  • ISBN-13: 978-1890626365
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,938,953 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars When toleraton is no virtue, April 6, 2004
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This review is from: The Long Truce: How Toleration Made the World Safe for Power and Profit (Hardcover)
We live in an age where virtues have become vices, and vices have become virtues. What most societies shuttered at just decades ago is now paraded and promoted, especially by popular culture. And the old virtues, like faithfulness in marriage, truth-telling, humility and concern for others, are now mocked and derided as hopelessly out of date.

The old virtues have all but disappeared. But there is one "virtue" that has risen to the top of the charts. There is one word that is heard constantly and incessantly: "tolerance". We are to tolerate everyone and everything. All points of view and all lifestyles are to be tolerated.

Yet as this revealing study makes clear, the modern notion of tolerance is far removed from what it traditionally has always meant. The recent concept of tolerance is a perversion of its former self, being the polar opposite to its original meaning.

Today we have managed to turn tolerance into a virtue or a doctrine. It used to be a practice or a habit. It used to be based on the way we treated one another. Today it is a an ism promoted by the state for its own ends. It used to be seen as a means to an end. Today it is treated as an end in itself.

In the past, you tolerated someone, treated them with respect, even though you might violently disagree with their beliefs or their lifestyle. Today, to tolerate someone means you must also embrace their philosophy, their worldview, their lifestyle. That is a big difference.

In this historical and philosophical inquiry, Conyers examines how the concept of tolerance has changed over the last few centuries. He argues that its redefinition emerged at the same time as the modern nation state arose. He argues that there is a connection between the rise of the centralization of power in the modern state, and this redefinition of tolerance.

The modern idea of tolerance first arose in the seventeenth century. He argues that two parallel developments, the rise of the nation state, and emergence of the isolated individual, served as a backdrop to the changing concept of tolerance. As mediating institutions like the church and family began to wane, increasingly isolated and fragmented individuals had to be kept in check by growing state bureaucracies. Indeed, a pressing question for thinkers of this time was, how could a mass of individuals be controlled, when former social glues like religion and community were in decline?

Natural groups like the family and other associations are easily contained. But unnatural groups, like the organised state, need other means to achieve social harmony and conflict resolution. How can individuals live together in peace when natural groupings break down? The state, in order to reduce threats to its centralisation and control, had produced a concept of toleration which minimised absolutes, sought to water down religious and moral conviction, and promoted a fuzzy egalitarianism.

Thus questions of ultimate meaning are settled, not by religion or morality, but by the state. The state maintains power by subsuming to itself powers formerly held by family, religion and the church. Mediating structures between the individual and the state were seen as threats, and the philosophical understanding of tolerance changed to accommodate the centralizing powers of the state.

That is why those who today argue that family does not mean any and all types of relationships, or those who proclaim that the Christian message is exclusive and absolutely true, are seen as such a threat by the state and its supporters. A watered down religion, and an amorphous definition of family, are acceptable in today's climate, but an insistence on truth and absolutes is not. Thus relativism rules.

Conyers looks at how modern thinkers such as Hobbes and Locke altered our understanding of tolerance, to make it serve the interests of the rising state powers. He argues that we need to return to the earlier, Christian understanding of tolerance. That understanding was based on humility, not indifference.

Indeed, the modern attempt to disavow absolutes and certainty have made matters worse, not better. Our times are characterised by doubt, fear and distrust. The old verities and certainties have been jettisoned for a hodge-podge of multiculturalism, relativism and apathy. In an age if uncertainty, people continue to look for assurance and direction. The state cannot provide this. All it can offer is bread and circuses. But even these are not enough. Thus the persistence of marriage and family and credal religion.

The modern promoters of secularism and tolerance may have won in the halls of power and influence (academia, the media, etc.), but the common person looks for something more sure. A notion of tolerance that waters down all convictions, that squashes dissent, and preaches relativism, is not going to satisfy.

Says Conyers, the early Judeo-Christian understanding of tolerance is preferred. Strong conviction, based on eternal verities, coupled with humility and love, is the right sort of tolerance. Indeed, he argues that the right sort of tolerance is necessarily a theological one.

The modern doctrine of toleration promotes isolation, but the practice of real toleration pushes us gently to community. Thus we need to reclaim the lost tradition of real tolerance. The modern hijacking of the concept has served the interests of those seeking economic and political power, but has not been a panacea to the struggling masses.

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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Original, scholarly, fascinating, and iconoclastic, May 19, 2001
This review is from: The Long Truce: How Toleration Made the World Safe for Power and Profit (Hardcover)
In The Long Truce: How Toleration Made The World Safe For Power And Profit, A.J. Conyers (professor at the George W. Truett Theological Seminary at Baylor University, Waco, Texas) reveals how the new, comprehensive, jealous, and demanding nation-states of early modern Europe propagated a novel version of toleration based on indifference to all values other than political power and material prosperity. By dissolving the loyalties that had previously bound European men to their church, family, and other intermediate institutions, toleration produced the modern "bi-polar society" in which the isolated citizen confronts the unmediated power of the state. In its modern form, toleration evolved not as a virtue, but as a strategy for the relentless imposition of secularism in the service of power and profit. Original, scholarly, fascinating, iconoclastic, Professor Conyers' The Long Truce is stimulating, informative, iconoclastic, "reader friendly", and a very highly recommended addition to any personal or academic reading list or reference collection in European social history, economic history, and political development.
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a good work of scholarship that is also a great read, May 10, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: The Long Truce: How Toleration Made the World Safe for Power and Profit (Hardcover)
The subject is tolerance. What does the doctrine of tolerance mean, from what intellectual sources does this doctrine derive, what are the unintended consequences of tolerance? A.J. Conyers weaves an intriguing story around these questions. I recommend this book to anyone interested in understanding how a great-sounding idea like tolerance can run amuck.
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