Anthropology and Social Life

  • Sławomir Nowosad The John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin, Faculty of Theology
Keywords: Demant; man; anthropology; sociology; Christianity

Abstract

Vigo Auguste Demant (d. 1983) was one of those in the Christendom Group who most influenced Christian sociology and Church life. Confronted with various manifestations of the crisis of European civilization in the first half of the 20th c. his constant emphasis was on the “true nature and end of man” and the concept of “human life as a whole”. This included understanding man above all as a spiritual being who needs to stay in contact with God as his Creator and Redeemer. Thus, it is secularization which damages man and his social environment most. Demant's firm conviction was that European societies must rediscover their “common humanity” transcending the earthly reality in order to reintroduce God's order in their individual and social life. However different the early 21st c. social and cultural context may be, Canon Demant is truly worth revisiting.

References

Demant V. A.: God. Man and Society: An Introduction to Christian Sociology. London: SCM 1933.

Demant V. A.: Christian Polity. London: Faber and Faber 1936.

Demant V. A.: The Religious Prospect. London: F. Muller 1939.

Demant V. A.: The Idea of a Natural Order. W: Prospect for Christendom: Essays in Catholic Social Reconstruction. Red. M. B. Reckitt. London: Faber and Faber 1945.

Demant V. A.: Goals of our Culture. W: Our Culture: Its Christian Roots and Present Crisis. Red. V. A. Demant. London: SPCK 1947 s. 1-16.

Demant V. A.: A Two Way Religion: Talks on the Inner and Outer Life. London: Mowbray 1957.

Demant V. A.: What Is Happening to Us? London: Dacre Press [b.r.w.].

Hudson C. E.: Nations as Neighbours: An Essay in Christian Politics. London: Victor Gollancz 1943.

Nowosad S.: Odnowa anglikańskiej teologii moralnej. Lublin: RW KUL 2001.

Reckitt M. B.: Church and Society in England from 1800. London: Allen & Unwin 1940.

The Return of Christendom: By a Group of Churchmen [with an Introduction by Bishop Gore and an Epilogue by G. K. Chesterton]. London: Allen & Unwin 1922.

Published
2020-11-17
Section
Articles