Henry Luce's Views Of Jesus'sermon On The Mount

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In Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount, he assured his followers in Galilee, “You are the light of the world. A city that is set on a hill cannot be hidden." These divine sentiments were echoed by Puritan leader John Winthrop to his Massachusetts Bay Colony congregation in 1630. He believed God had ordained a few souls to build a righteous country and be a “city on a hill” for the rest of the world to revere. American news mogul and publisher of Time and Life magazines, Henry Luce, grew up as the son of Presbyterian missionaries in China. In February of 1941, he penned his legendary polemic “The American Century” for Life with the rhetorical zeal of a fiery preacher. He shared Winthrop’s vision of America. He believed American politics was mired in …show more content…

His view was not short-sighted, but unprecedentedly looked toward the post-war world and the role America should play. He imagined an age in which the United States vibrantly sought after their own global ascendency amongst nations. Luce wanted to project American power internationally. He compellingly used theological and nationalist rhetoric to entice the American public to seize the opportunity history was offering (since 1919) and move away from isolationism. He alleged that America’s isolationist policy was responsible for the recent international failures. Once their hegemony was established, the moral purity of the United States necessitated they use their tools, as world leader, for betterment of all peoples — through a burgeoning of democratic principles. Uniquely American ideals, such as freedom, justice, love of truth, and the principle of charity, were to refashion the political atmosphere globally. Luce promoted a mythic ideology regarding America’s past and believed the United States and its citizens were a special breed. Luce’s premise was that the high-minded intentions embodied in the American character suited them to rebuild the international political structure after their own

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