How should we understand the relationship between Christian ethics and religious ethics? Among comparative, ethnographic, and normative methodologies? Between confessional and non-confessional orientations, or between theology and philosophy? This volume brings together emerging religious ethicists to engage the normative dimensions of Christian ethics. Focusing on scripture, tradition, and reason, the contributors to this volume argue for a vision of Christian ethics as religious ethics. Toward this end, they engage with scripture, interpretation, and religious practice; examine the putative divide between reason and tradition, autonomy and heteronomy; and offer proposals about the normative characterization of conceptual and practical issues in contemporary religious ethics. Collectively, the volume engages Christian thought to make an argument for the continuing relevance of normative methodologies in contemporary religious and theological ethics.
How should we understand the relationship between Christian ethics and religious ethics? Focusing on scripture, tradition, and reason, the contributors to this volume argue for a vision of Christian ethics as religious ethics.
1. Normative Dimensions in Christian Ethics.- Section I Scripture.- 2. Christian Ethics, the Bible, and the Powers of Reading.- 3. Between Comparison and Normativity: Scriptural Reasoning and Religious Ethics.- 4. The Asceticism of Interpretation: John Cassian, Hermeneutical Askēsis, and Religious Ethics.- Section II Tradition.- 5. Choosing to Become Who You Are: Authority and Freedom in Karl Barth’s Account of Moral Formation.- 6. Natural Law, Freedom, and Tradition: A Catholic Perspective on Mediating Between Liberty and Freedom.- 7. Schelling’s Pauline Anthropology.- Section III Reason. -8. Paul Ramsey’s Christian Deontology.- 9. Union with Christ: Participation as the Ground of Christian Ethics in Augustine and Reformed Augustinianisms.- 10. Mothering Theo-Political Ideology: Natural Law, Empirical Facts, and Discourse Politics.
How should we understand the relationship between Christian ethics and religious ethics? Among comparative, ethnographic, and normative methodologies? Between confessional and non-confessional orientations, or between theology and philosophy? This volume brings together emerging religious ethicists to engage the normative dimensions of Christian ethics. Focusing on scripture, tradition, and reason, the contributors to this volume argue for a vision of Christian ethics as religious ethics. Toward this end, they engage with scripture, interpretation, and religious practice; examine the putative divide between reason and tradition, autonomy and heteronomy; and offer proposals about the normative characterization of conceptual and practical issues in contemporary religious ethics. Collectively, the volume engages Christian thought to make an argument for the continuing relevance of normative methodologies in contemporary religious and theological ethics.
“At a time when few assumptions can be made about what precisely is denominated by the adjective “religious,” and about what distinguishes religious insiders from religious outsiders, this band of emerging scholars has stepped into the breach to redraw the lines of debate over religious ethics. Complementing recent descriptive and comparative initiatives, they stake out a place for Christian ethics within religious ethics. Along the way, they unsettle several widespread assumptions: Both Christians and non-Christians, they argue, can engage in Christian ethics, as it takes confessional and non-confessional forms. Scholars do not lose their credibility when they engage in first-personal normative judgments. Refraining from such assessments does not preserve scholarship from complicity with Western Christian hegemony. An invigorating read, this volume heralds a bright new day for religious ethics.” (Jennifer A. Herdt, Senior Associate Dean of Academic Affairs and Gilbert L. Stark Professor of Christian Ethics, Yale Divinity School, USA)
“Showcasing the work of emerging scholars in the field, this important volume demonstrates that Christian ethics can engage with religious ethics while also upholding its commitment to normativeinquiry. It not only bridges the divide between Christian ethics and religious ethics; it also shows how each enterprise can benefit from the other. I heartily recommend it to students and scholars in both fields.” (Gerald McKenny, Walter Professor of Theology, University of Notre Dame, USA)
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Biographical note
Bharat Ranganathan is the Beamer-Schneider SAGES Fellow in Ethics at Case Western Reserve University, USA.
Derek Woodard-Lehman is Lecturer in the Department of Theology and Religion at the University of Otago, New Zealand, where he also serves as the Wellington Programme Coordinator for the Centre for Theology and Public Issues.