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- Wiley
More About This Title The Blackwell Companion to Christian Ethics 2e
- English
English
- Features new essays on class, race, disability, gender, peace, and the virtues
- Includes a number of revised essays and a range of new authors
- The innovative and influential approach organizes ethical themes around the shape of Christian worship
- The original edition is the most successful to-date in the Companions to Religion series
- English
English
Samuel Wells is Dean of Duke University Chapel and Research Professor of Christian Ethics at Duke Divinity School. His books include Improvisation: The Drama of Christian Ethics (2004), God's Companions: Reimagining Christian Ethics (2006), Power and Passion: Six Characters in Search of Resurrection (2007), Speaking the Truth (2008), and, with Ben Quash, Introducing Christian Ethics (2010).
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English
Preface.
PART I Studying Ethics Through Worship.
1 Christian Ethics as Informed Prayer (Stanley Hauerwas and Samuel Wells).
2 The Gift of the Church and the Gifts God Gives It (Stanley Hauerwas and Samuel Wells).
3 Why Christian Ethics Was Invented (Stanley Hauerwas and Samuel Wells).
4 How the Church Managed Before There Was Ethics (Stanley Hauerwas and Samuel Wells).
PART II Meeting God and One Another.
5 Gathering: Worship, Imagination, and Formation (Philip Kenneson).
6 Greeting: Beyond Racial Reconciliation (Emmanuel Katongole).
7 Naming the Risen Lord: Embodied Discipleship and Masculinity (Amy Laura Hall).
8 Being Reconciled: Penitence, Punishment, and Worship (John Berkman).
9 Praising in Song: Beauty and the Arts (Kevin J. Vanhoozer).
10 Collecting Praise: Global Culture Industries (Michael L. Budde).
11 Praise: The Prophetic Public Presence of the Mentally Disabled (Brian Brock).
PART III Re-Encountering the Story.
12 Reading the Scriptures: Rehearsing Identity, Practicing Character (Jim Fodor).
13 Listening: Authority and Obedience (Scott Bader-Saye).
14 Proclaiming: Naming and Describing (Charles Pinches).
15 Deliberating: Justice and Liberation (Daniel M. Bell).
16 Discerning: Politics and Reconciliation (William T. Cavanaugh).
17 Confessing the Faith: Reasoning in Tradition (Nicholas Adams).
PART IV Being Embodied.
18 Interceding: Poverty and Prayer (Kelly S. Johnson).
19 Interceding: Giving Grief to Management (Michael Hanby).
20 Interceding: Standing, Kneeling, and Gender (Lauren F. Winner).
21 Being Baptized: Race (Willie Jennings).
22 Being Baptized: Bodies and Abortion (Frederick Christian Bauerschmidt).
23 Becoming One Body: Health Care and Cloning (M. Therese Lysaught).
24 Becoming One Flesh: Marriage, Remarriage, and Sex (David Matzko McCarthy).
25 Sharing Peace: Class, Hierarchy, and Christian Social Order (Luke Bretherton).
26 Sharing Peace: Discipline and Trust (Paul J. Wadell).
PART V Re-Enacting the Story.
27 Offering: Treasuring the Creation (Ben Quash).
28 Participating: Working Toward Worship (R. R. Reno).
29 Remembering: Offering Our Gifts (D. Stephen Long and Tripp York).
30 Invoking: Globalization and Power (Timothy Jarvis Gorringe).
31 Breaking Bread: Peace and War (Stanley Hauerwas and Samuel Wells).
32 Receiving Communion: Euthanasia, Suicide, and Letting Die (Kathryn Greene-McCreight).
33 Sharing Communion: Hunger, Food, and Genetically Modifi ed Foods (Robert Song).
34 Eating Together: Friendship and Homosexuality (Joel James Shuman).
35 Being Silent: Time in the Spirit (Michael S. Northcott).
36 Footwashing: Preparation for Christian Life (Mark Thiessen Nation).
PART VI Being Commissioned.
37 Being Blessed: Wealth, Property, and Theft (Stephen Fowl).
38 Bearing Fruit: Conception, Children, and the Family (Joseph L. Mangina).
39 Being Sent: Witness (Michael G. Cartwright).
Afterword.
40 The Virtue of the Liturgy (Jennifer Herdt).
41 Afterword (Rowan Williams).
Index.
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English
"But of course, no Companion can say it all, and for what this one is trying to accomplish, it is a brilliant work. In the past several years, I have gone back to several of the original essays over and over again, and I'm sure I will do the same with some of the new ones." (Jesus Creed, 15 October 2011)
"This is a must-have book on the minister's bookshelf." (Regent's Reviews, 1 October 2011)
"But of course, no Companion can say it all, and for what this one is trying to accomplish, it is a
brilliant work." (Theatrical Theology, 2011)
"This is a very fine book which deserves a place on the shelves of all those who love Walsingham and its parish church." (New Directions, 1 September 2011)