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Freedom of a Christian Ethicist

The Future of a Reformation Legacy

Freedom of a Christian Ethicist

The Future of a Reformation Legacy

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Hardback

£130.00

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN: 9780567665959
Number of Pages: 224
Published: 14/01/2016
Width: 15.6 cm
Height: 23.4 cm
What is the significance of the Protestant Reformation for Christian ethical thinking and action? Can core Protestant commitments and claims still provide for compelling and viable accounts of Christian living. This collection of essays by leading international scholars explores the relevance of the Protestant Reformation and its legacy for contemporary Christian ethics.

Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Contributors


Introduction
Michael Mawson

1. Citizens of Heaven
Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity School, USA

2. The Plight of Protestant Ethics
Gerald McKenny, University of Notre Dame, USA

3. The Messianic Contours of Evangelical Ethics
Hans G. Ulrich, Friedrich-Alexander University, Germany

4. Living in the Wake of God’s Acts: Luther’s Mary as Key to Barth’s Command
Brian Brock, University of Aberdeen, UK

5. How to Do or Not Do Protestant Ethics
Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity School, USA

6. Anabaptist Ethics After Yoder: Accepting the Limits on the Freedom of a Christian Ethicist
Paul Martens, Baylor University, USA

7. The Politics of Jesus and the Ethics of Christ: Why the Differences between Yoder and Bonhoeffer Matter
Michael Mawson, University of Aberdeen, UK

8. ‘We, as to our own Particulars…’ Conscience and Vocation in Quaker Tradition
Rachel Muers, University of Leeds, UK

9. Sleepers Wake! Eudaimonism, Obligation, and the Call to Responsibility
Jennifer A. Herdt, Yale Divinity School, USA

10. On What we Lost when (or if) we Lost the Saints.
Michael Banner, University of Cambridge, UK


Bibliography
Index

Dr Brian Brock (University of Aberdeen, UK), Dr Michael Mawson (University of Auckland, New Zealand)

Brian Brock is Reader in Moral and Practical Theology at the University of Aberdeen, UK.

Michael Mawson is Lecturer in Theological Ethics, University of Aberdeen, UK.

This is a very well-presented volume of ten fiercely intelligent engagements on the current state of the discipline ... To those in the guild it will be essential reading. To those beyond it, it provides a window into the state of the art. * The Expository Times * The Freedom of a Christian Ethicist is a book not to be missed. Unusually rewarding in theological insight, spiritual nourishment and ethical challenge, this collection engages a tradition that is very much alive. * Ecclesiology * This volume should be commended for its rich and varied contribution to contemporary Protestant ethics. * Reviews in Religion and Theology * An eclectic and unfailingly provocative collection of real contemporary relevance ... I can imagine a well-merited place for these essays in an advanced seminary or university class on moral theology. * Reviews in Religion and Theology (23:4) * Very thought provoking both in wrestling with the Yoder issue and thinking through what freedom and obedience look like in this fearful new world. * Theology * This distinguished collection of studies of the legacy and prospects of Protestant moral theology brings together some of the most lively thinkers in the field. In scope, argumentative power and theological dedication, the explorations of the enduring value of the various Reformation ethical traditions could hardly be bettered. * John Webster, University of St Andrews, UK * Recent Protestant ethics is notable for its ecumenism. This provocative volume - without anxiety, caricature, or triumphalism - adopts a fresh approach by rethinking the distinctive legacies of various Reformation sources themselves. At a time when this inheritance can be met with indifference or suspicion, The Freedom of a Christian Ethicist assembles a stellar group of essays that speak to urgent questions of theory and practice. This diverse assessment by leading scholars will be of interest to many beyond the "guild" of Christian ethics. But it is a must read for those within it. * Eric Gregory, Princeton University, USA *