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Christian Kinship

Family-Relatedness in Christian Practice and Moral Thought

Christian Kinship

Family-Relatedness in Christian Practice and Moral Thought

This item is a print on demand title and will be dispatched in 1-3 weeks.

Hardback

£90.00

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN: 9780567699800
Number of Pages: 216
Published: 20/10/2022
Width: 15.6 cm
Height: 23.4 cm

Ideas of kinship play a significant role in structuring everyday life, and yet kinship has been neglected in Christian ethics, moral philosophy and bioethics. Attention has been paid in these disciplines to the ethics of ‘family,’ but with little regard to the evidence that kinship varies widely from culture-to-culture, suggesting that it is, in fact, culturally constructed.

Surveying notions of shared substance (e.g. blood ties), house, gender and personhood, as theorised and practiced in the Christian tradition, Torrance critiques the special privileging of the ‘blood tie’. In the place of European and American cultural assumptions to the contrary, it is kinship in Christ that is presented as the basis of a truly Christian account for social ties. Torrance also aims to stimulate the moral imagination to consider Christian kinship might be lived out in miniature, in everyday life.

Introduction:
The Neglect of Kinship in Theological Ethics

Chapter 1:
What is Kinship?

Chapter 2:
Shedding Blood? Kinship and Substance

Chapter 3:
The Christian Household and the Reimagining of Kinship

Chapter 4:
Gendered Relatedness

Chapter 5:
Persons in Christ: Kinship by Baptism

Conclusion

Bibliography
Index

Rev’d Dr David A. Torrance (Church Mission Society, Tanzania)

David A. Torrance is a Mission Partner with Church Mission Society, working in theological education in Tanzania.

Christians - and not only Christians - have tended to think of kinship as simply 'natural'. Such a thought silences the radical and distinctive call of the Gospel. With this study, David Torrance offers an original, critical and constructive approach to the topic, and one which will allow that call to be heard afresh. -- Michael Banner, University of Cambridge, UK Christian ethics has too often been satisfied with an understanding of the family it has presumed to be universal. David Torrance's conceptually astute account of kinship, reflecting the recent turn to social anthropology in moral and systematic theology, is a fine demonstration of the rich theological rewards such interdisciplinary engagement can bring. -- Robert Song, Durham University, UK In this thorough, careful discussion, David Torrance considers theology and anthropology in relation to Christian kinship. Torrance shows that Christians are not limited only to nuclear families for living faithfully, but that an array of creative Christian communities not bound by procreation can also yield lives of faithful discipleship. -- Jana M. Bennett, University of Dayton, USA

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