Connecting Jesus to Social Justice argues a doctrinally traditional, orthodox basis for Christian participation in the public sphere on behalf of social justice. The book addresses a situation internal to churches in the U.S. from a Catholic perspective yet not without analogies in other churches and Christian movements. This book is a contributive, as well as distributive, idea of social justice from Catholic social teaching. The chapters take into account discussion on the public sphere and propose a theologically-principled, ecumenical and interreligious public for social justice.
Connecting Jesus to Social Justice argues a doctrinally traditional, orthodox basis for Christian participation in the public sphere on behalf of social justice. The book addresses a situation internal to churches in the U.S. from a Catholic perspective yet not without analogies in other churches and Christian movements. This book is a contributive, as well as distributive, idea of social justice from Catholic social teaching. The chapters take into account discussion on the public sphere and propose a theologically-principled, ecumenical and interreligious public for social justice.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Thomas Hughson, SJ, PhD, is associate professor emeritus of theology at Marquette University. He is the author of The Believer as Citizen: John Courtney Murray in a New Context. Hughson has published many articles in such journals as the Journal of Church and State, Anglican Theological Review, Theological Studies, Ecclesiology, and One in Christ. He had a role in the launching of a society for the study of Anglicanism in the AAR.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements Introduction 1: Public Theology: Some Elements 2: An Illustrative Problem 3: Is It Really a Problem?: Benedict XVI and Social Justice 4: Christological Solution: Two Natures 5: Christological Solution: One Person 6: Public Theology: Interior, Ecumenical, Interreligious Epilogue Notes Bibliography Author Biography
Acknowledgements Introduction 1: Public Theology: Some Elements 2: An Illustrative Problem 3: Is It Really a Problem?: Benedict XVI and Social Justice 4: Christological Solution: Two Natures 5: Christological Solution: One Person 6: Public Theology: Interior, Ecumenical, Interreligious Epilogue Notes Bibliography Author Biography
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