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This volume brings together a diverse group of scholars to consider one of the most pressing issues of our time: increasing inequalities of income and wealth that grate against justice and erode the bonds that hold society together. Spirit and Capital in an Age of Inequality explores the inner experience of life in a society marked by inequality, tracing the contours of stress, hopelessness, and a restless lack of contentment by pointing to visions of a common good that might offer some new ways forward.This volume will be of interest to undergraduate and postgraduate students and scholars of…mehr
This volume brings together a diverse group of scholars to consider one of the most pressing issues of our time: increasing inequalities of income and wealth that grate against justice and erode the bonds that hold society together. Spirit and Capital in an Age of Inequality explores the inner experience of life in a society marked by inequality, tracing the contours of stress, hopelessness, and a restless lack of contentment by pointing to visions of a common good that might offer some new ways forward.This volume will be of interest to undergraduate and postgraduate students and scholars of religion and economics, as well as policy-makers seeking a more thorough understanding of the role of religion and theology in public life.
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Autorenporträt
Robert P. Jones is the founding CEO of the nonpartisan Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI), based in Washington, DC. He previously served as Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at Missouri State University, USA. Ted A. Smith is Associate Professor of Preaching and Ethics at Emory University's Candler School of Theology, USA.
Inhaltsangabe
Contributors. Introduction. Robert P. Jones and Ted A. Smith. Thinking with Traditions. Chapter 1: The Little Commonwealth: The Family as Matrix of Markets and Morality in Early Protestantism. John Witte, Jr. and Justin J. Latterell. Chapter 2: When Ancient Teachings Meet Modern Problems: Jewish Approaches to Poverty, Inequality, and the Market. William A. Galston. Chapter 3: Election, Selection, and Distinction: Paradoxes of Grace, Clan, and Class. Timothy P. Jackson. Chapter 4: Pope Francis, Catholic Social Thought, and the Rejection of Fear. E.J. Dionne, Jr. Moral Sentiments. Chapter 5: More Than Enough: Contentment and the Dominance of the Economic Sphere. Christine D. Pohl. Chapter 6: Stress. Julie Meadows. Chapter 7: Riots and Rip-Offs in Baltimore: Toward a Theology of Hopelessness. Miguel A. De La Torre. For the Love of the World. Chapter 8: Wasting Human Lives: Hyper-Incarceration in the United States. Elizabeth M. Bounds. Chapter 9: Challenging a New Frontier of Market Morality: The Case of Sweatshop Economics. Keri Day. Chapter 10: Wage Against the Machine: Wage Activism, Worker Justice, and Disruptive Jesus in the Age of Advanced Capitalism. C. Melissa Snarr. Chapter 11: Speak Up, Judge Righteously, Stand with the Poor: The Jewish Imperative for Social Justice. Jonah Dov Pesner. Public Theology and the Common Good. Chapter 12: America, Land of the Free and Home of the Poor: Inequality as a Way of Life. Darryl M. Trimiew. Chapter 13: The Integrity of the Church in a Divided Society. Steven M. Tipton. Index.
Contributors. Introduction. Robert P. Jones and Ted A. Smith. Thinking with Traditions. Chapter 1: The Little Commonwealth: The Family as Matrix of Markets and Morality in Early Protestantism. John Witte, Jr. and Justin J. Latterell. Chapter 2: When Ancient Teachings Meet Modern Problems: Jewish Approaches to Poverty, Inequality, and the Market. William A. Galston. Chapter 3: Election, Selection, and Distinction: Paradoxes of Grace, Clan, and Class. Timothy P. Jackson. Chapter 4: Pope Francis, Catholic Social Thought, and the Rejection of Fear. E.J. Dionne, Jr. Moral Sentiments. Chapter 5: More Than Enough: Contentment and the Dominance of the Economic Sphere. Christine D. Pohl. Chapter 6: Stress. Julie Meadows. Chapter 7: Riots and Rip-Offs in Baltimore: Toward a Theology of Hopelessness. Miguel A. De La Torre. For the Love of the World. Chapter 8: Wasting Human Lives: Hyper-Incarceration in the United States. Elizabeth M. Bounds. Chapter 9: Challenging a New Frontier of Market Morality: The Case of Sweatshop Economics. Keri Day. Chapter 10: Wage Against the Machine: Wage Activism, Worker Justice, and Disruptive Jesus in the Age of Advanced Capitalism. C. Melissa Snarr. Chapter 11: Speak Up, Judge Righteously, Stand with the Poor: The Jewish Imperative for Social Justice. Jonah Dov Pesner. Public Theology and the Common Good. Chapter 12: America, Land of the Free and Home of the Poor: Inequality as a Way of Life. Darryl M. Trimiew. Chapter 13: The Integrity of the Church in a Divided Society. Steven M. Tipton. Index.
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