The Transformation of John Foster Dulles: From Prophet of Realism to Priest of Nationalism

Front Cover
Mercer University Press, 1985 - 277 pages
"Was the John Foster Dulles who personified the Cold War as U.S. secretary of state in the 1950s the same man who denounced narrow nationalism as a leader of worldwide ecumenism and liberal Protestantism in the 1930s? In this remarkable study Mark Toulouse documents the 'transformation' of Dulles 'from prophet of realism to priest of nationalism,' overturning misconceptions of those historians who have tended to read Dulles's early years backward from what they know of him as secretary of sate. Christian missions and international diplomacy shaped John Foster Dulles from childhood. His father was a liberal Presbyterian minister; one grandfather had been a missionary to India, while the other had served as U.S. secretary of state under Benjamin Harrison, and an uncle would serve Woodrow Wilson in the same office. As a Princeton undergraduate Dulles accompanied his grandfather to an international peace conference at The Hadue in 1907, where he became a secretary to the Chinese delegation. That experience, and a year at the Sorbonne, pointed Dulles toward international law rather than the ministry. But he remained an active, ecumenically minded Presbyterian lay leader, serving in several important denominational posts. He successfully defended the the controversial Harry Emerson Fosdick and Henry P. Van Dusen before the Presbyterian General Assembly when fundamentalists attempted to depose them. In 1921 Dulles was appointed to the newly formed Commission on International Justice and Goodwill of the Federal Council of Churches. Dulles emerged as an international leader in 1937 at the ecumenical Oxford conference on life and work. Convinced in his discussions there of the ned to translate his inherited 'spiritual values' into practical international diplomacy, Dulles organized and became chairman of the Federal Council's Commission to Study the Bases of a Just and Durable Peace. Through the years of world war and as a participant in the United Nations Conference in 1945, Dulles sought a peace that would transcend the narrow concerns of nationalism and political ideology. But after 1945, as Professor Toulous shows, the 'prophetic realism' that had guided Dulles's ecumenical quest for world peace and justice became a 'priestly nationalism' that uncompromisingly pursued the international political aims of the United States in the name of a 'supreme moral law.' Toulouse's incisive analysis of that 'transformation' is compelling reading for scholars of international diplomacy and American religion, and for every person who seeks to reconcile the imperatives of religion with the necessities of statecraft" --

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Contents

Religious Influences and Church Involvements
3
Diplomatic Influences and International Involvements
27
Prophet of Realism The Narrative Setting and the Ideological Framework 19371945
45
The Great Enlightenment
47
The Commission on a Just and Durable Peace
61
What Is Diagnosing the Problem of International Relations
87
What Ought To Be Suggesting a Solution for the Problem
113
Moving from Problem toward Solution The United Nations Charter
133
From Prophet of Realism to Priest of Nationalism The Years of Transformation 19451952
151
Toward Noncooperation 19451946
153
From Noncooperation to Prevention 19461949
181
From Prevention to Opposition 19491952
215
Conclusion
249
Bibliography
255
Index
271
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Page 37 - By it they understand that compensation will be made by Germany for all damage done to the civilian population of the Allies and their property by the aggression of Germany by land, by sea, and from the air.
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Page 91 - And now in cathektonik ethics, or the ethics of the fitting, we find ourselves led to the notion of universal responsibility, that is, of a life of responses to actions which is always qualified by our interpretation of these actions as taking place in a universe, and by the further understanding that there will be a response to our actions by representatives of universal community, or by the generalized other who is universal, or by an impartial spectator who regards our actions from a universal...
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