Dianne Rayson addresses the theological and ethical questions of anthropogenic climate change by engaging the works of Dietrich Bonhoeffer. She dives deep into Bonhoeffer's texts and ecotheological insights, and emerges with an Earthly Christianity for the Anthropocene that is Christological, relational, and steeped in ethical responsibility.
Dianne Rayson addresses the theological and ethical questions of anthropogenic climate change by engaging the works of Dietrich Bonhoeffer. She dives deep into Bonhoeffer's texts and ecotheological insights, and emerges with an Earthly Christianity for the Anthropocene that is Christological, relational, and steeped in ethical responsibility.
Dianne Rayson received her PhD in Theology from The University of Newcastle. She lectures in several universities following a career in public health and social policy in Australia and the Pacific.
Inhaltsangabe
1 Theology and Climate Change 2 The Problems 3 Bonhoeffer's Christology 4 Creator and Creation 5 Creaturely Theological Anthropology 6 God's Kingdom on Earth 7 Ecoethics 8 Who Actually Is Christ in the Anthropocene?
1 Theology and Climate Change 2 The Problems 3 Bonhoeffer's Christology 4 Creator and Creation 5 Creaturely Theological Anthropology 6 God's Kingdom on Earth 7 Ecoethics 8 Who Actually Is Christ in the Anthropocene?
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