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The love [Agape] which the gospel demands is justified and validated only transcendentally. We are asked to love our enemies that we may be children of our Father in Heaven…

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The love [Agape] which the gospel demands is justified and validated only transcendentally. We are asked to love our enemies that we may be children of our Father in Heaven…

Reinhold Niebuhr

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Agape Love

Topic: Love, Compassion, & Kindness

There is, nevertheless, a distinction between them [Eros and Agape]. The love [Agape] which the gospel demands is justified and validated only transcendentally. We are asked to love our enemies that we may be children of our Father in Heaven. An attitude of spirit is enjoined without any prudential or selfish consideration. We are not told to love our enemies because in that case they will love us in return. The love that is asked of us does not move on the plane of emotion or desire.

Reinhold Niebuhr

Reinhold Niebuhr (born June 21, 1892, in Wright City, Missouri – died June 1, 1971, in Stockbridge, Massachusetts) was an American theologian, ethicist, and public intellectual whose thought profoundly shaped modern Christian ethics and political philosophy. The son of German immigrant parents—his father a pastor in the Evangelical Synod—Niebuhr grew up in a household marked by faith, intellectual curiosity, and moral seriousness. After studying at Elmhurst College and Eden Theological Seminary, he completed his education at Yale Divinity School, where he began forming a theology deeply attuned to the social and ethical questions of the modern world. Ordained in 1915, he soon accepted a pastoral call in Detroit, where the stark realities of industrial labor, economic exploitation, and racial inequality began to sharpen and redirect his moral vision.

During his thirteen years in Detroit, Niebuhr confronted firsthand the tensions of industrial capitalism and the limits of individual idealism, insights that would lead to the development of his influential perspective known as Christian realism. Rejecting both sentimental optimism and rigid dogmatism, he emphasized the persistence of human sin, self-interest, and collective pride—even within movements seeking justice. His later academic career at Union Theological Seminary in New York brought him international recognition. Through seminal works such as Moral Man and Immoral Society (1932) and The Nature and Destiny of Man (1941–43), he argued that while love remains the highest moral ideal, in political life it is necessarily mediated through justice, compromise, and restraint. His writings profoundly shaped generations of theologians, philosophers, and public leaders wrestling with the complexities of democracy, power, and responsibility.
A critic of totalitarianism, nationalism, and moral complacency alike, Niebuhr defended democratic ideals while warning against prideful illusions of innocence. His famous “Serenity Prayer” reflects his practical spirituality: the courage to change what must be changed, the serenity to accept what cannot, and the wisdom to discern the difference. Though illness limited his work in his later years, he remained a moral voice calling for humility, vigilance, and compassion in a world marked by conflict and ambiguity. Niebuhr’s legacy endures as a reminder that faith must not retreat from the world’s struggles but must engage them with honesty, realism, and hope.

Niebuhr’s major works, including Moral Man and Immoral Society (1932) and The Nature and Destiny of Man (1941-1943), explored human nature’s complexities, balancing creativity with destructiveness and altruism with self-interest. His reflections on original sin and humanity’s limitations shaped his critiques of political and moral systems. He argued that justice was achievable through democracy, famously stating, “Man’s capacity for justice makes democracy possible; but man’s inclination to injustice makes democracy necessary.” His ideas deeply influenced responses to historical events like the Great Depression, World War II, and the Cold War.

Niebuhr’s influence extended beyond academia. Awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1964, he remains well-known for penning The Serenity Prayer, embraced by recovery communities and others. His reflections on the intersection of faith, politics, and human nature left a lasting impact. Niebuhr passed away on June 1, 1971, but his ideas continue to shape ethical and theological discussions today.

(1892-1971) Christianity
Love Your Enemies

Niebuhr, Reinhold. Love and Justice: Selections from the Shorter Writings of Reinhold Niebuhr. Westminster John Knox Press, 1957, p. 220 [Reinhold Niebuhr (Love Your Enemies, Christianity and Society, Autumn 1942)].

Reinhold Niebuhr


Reinhold Niebuhr, Love Your Enemies

There is, nevertheless, a distinction between them [Eros and Agape]. The love [Agape] which the gospel demands is justified and validated only transcendentally. We are asked to love our enemies that we may be children of our Father in Heaven. An attitude of spirit is enjoined without any prudential or selfish consideration. We are not told to love our enemies because in that case they will love us in return. The love that is asked of us does not move on the plane of emotion or desire.

Such a love is not easily achieved. In a sense no one ever perfectly achieves it. But it is, at least, no psychological absurdity. It does not demand that we should be emotionally attached [Eros] to someone with whom we are in conflict. It does demand that we should desire the good of our enemy. If achieved, it purges us of hatred; for hatred always has an egoistic root….

The love that the New Testament defines as AGAPE is spiritually difficult; but it is psychologically possible…

Resources

  • Google Books website: Love and Justice: Selections from the Shorter Writings of Reinhold Niebuhr

Related Quotes

  • Be Kind to One Another - Apostle Paul, Letter to the Ephesians
  • Love Your Enemies - Jesus of Nazareth, The Gospel of Matthew
  • How Do You Pray - Rabbi Meir, Talmud (Berakot)
  • The Quintessence of True Religion - Mohandas K. Gandhi,
  • The Divine Mystery - Mohandas K. Gandhi, The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi
  • Nonviolence Is a Lifestyle - Mohandas K. Gandhi,
  • To Be Living Signs - Henri J. M. Nouwen, My History With God
  • Redemptive Love - Martin Luther King Jr., Strength To Love
  • When We Love Our Enemies - Sun Myung Moon,
  • Great Forgiveness Is Possible - Sun Myung Moon,

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