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How does one become a “Righteous among the Nations"? In the case of Henri Nick (1868-1954) and Andre Trocme (1901-1971), two French Protestant pastors on whom that title was conferred by Yad Vashem (Jerusalem) for their acts of solidarity toward persecuted Jews, the answer seems to be: by being immersed, from an early age, in the discourses and practices of social Christianity. By focusing on the lives of two significant figures of twentieth-century Christianity, this study, the first in English on the Social Gospel in French Protestantism, presents a genealogy of that movement, from its emergence in the last decades of the nineteenth century to its high point, during World War II, in Le Chambon-sur-Lignon, where Trocme and many people of that area of southern France rescued hundreds of Jewish refugees. As social Christians who prayed and worked for the coming of God’s kingdom on earth in the midst of a world torn by two world wars, Henri Nick and Andre Trocme combined a deep revivalist faith with a concern for the concrete conditions in which people live. They wished to "save” others, and indeed they realized that intent in ways they did not foresee.
”People marvel that the folk at Le Chambon took in the Jews. But
what Chalamet helps us see is this did not come out of the blue.
Rather, this was made possible by people such as Henri Nick and
Jacques Kaltenbach, whose discovery of the social dimensions of the
gospel made Trocme possible. The implications are clear--heroism is
the outworking of lives that never appear heroic."
--Stanley Hauerwas, Professor of Theological Ethics, Duke Divinity
School
“Based on original archival research, Chalamet richly fills in the
background of the famous events at Le Chambon, where the Christian
community, led by Andre Trocme, saved the lives of thousands of
Jewish children during the Nazi occupation of France. . . .
Nonviolent social action and spirituality were forged in a crucible
of courage and suffering to produce a new and compelling version of
the Social Gospel."
--George Hunsinger, Professor of Systematic Theology, Princeton
Theological Seminary
"This book helps us rediscover the deep spiritual and social
influence in the first half of the twentieth century of the
Protestant movement known as the Social Gospel. The author unveils
the ties between two great pastors, Henri Nick and Andre Trocme,
who sought to evangelize the workers and who contributed to the
rescue of Jews during the Holocaust. The result is a real
contribution to the history of twentieth-century France."
--Patrick Cabanel, Professor of Late Modern History, University of
Toulouse-Le Mirail
Christophe Chalamet is Associate Professor of Theology at the University of Geneva (Switzerland). He is the author of Dialectical Theologians: Wilhelm Herrmann, Karl Barth and Rudolf Bultmann (2005).