S T Kimbrough, Jr, Dr Stanley Hauerwas (Duke University)
Description: This volume brings together for the first time the writings of Charles Wesley on the theme of justice for the poor and marginalized, drawing upon his sermons, manuscript journal, poetry, and a few letters. Most of his poems/hymns that address poverty and justice were left unpublished at his death. The author studies the theology of these texts for the first time in relation to relevant themes in his sermons, manuscript journal, and letters, and evaluates it in the light of its application and implementation in the eighteenth century and its viability for the twenty-first-century...
Description: This volume brings together for the first time the writings of Charles Wesley on the theme of justice for the poor and marginalized, draw...
Peter J Leithart, Dr Stanley Hauerwas (Duke University), John D Roth
About the Contributor(s): John D. Roth is Professor of History at Goshen College, where he also serves as editor of The Mennonite Quarterly Review and director of the Mennonite Historical Library. He is the author of numerous books and articles on subjects related to the Radical Reformation and contemporary Anabaptist and Mennonite theology, including Teaching that Transforms: Why Anabaptist-Mennonite Education Matters (2011).
About the Contributor(s): John D. Roth is Professor of History at Goshen College, where he also serves as editor of The Mennonite Quarterly Review and...
Stephan Kampowski, Dr Stanley Hauerwas (Duke University)
Description: How does biotechnology touch on human destiny? What are its promises and challenges? In search for a response, the present volume turns to the thought of Hans Jonas, one of the pioneers and founding fathers of bioethics. The continued relevance of his ideas is exemplified by the way Jurgen Habermas applies them to the current debate. The chief promise of biotechnology is to increase our freedom by overcoming the limits of the human condition. The main risk of biotechnology, as both Jonas and Habermas see it, is to diminish or outright abolish our capacity for responsibility and...
Description: How does biotechnology touch on human destiny? What are its promises and challenges? In search for a response, the present volume turns t...
Michael G Harvey, Dr Stanley Hauerwas (Duke University)
About the Contributor(s): Michael G. Harvey holds a bachelor's degree in physics and astronomy (magna cum laude) from the University of Pittsburgh. He holds master's degrees in religion and philosophy from Yale University and Brown University, where he received Teaching and University Fellowships, respectively. He has also studied at Princeton Theological Seminary, where he received a Princeton Doctoral Fellowship. He has published in Religious Studies, The Journal of Religion, and the Routledge Major Work Religion and Science.
About the Contributor(s): Michael G. Harvey holds a bachelor's degree in physics and astronomy (magna cum laude) from the University of Pittsburgh. He...
Theodore L Lewis, Dr Stanley Hauerwas (Duke University)
In the course of Theodore Lewis' career in the US Foreign Service--spanning twenty-nine years and including tours of duty in Vietnam, Pakistan, the DRCongo, and Korea--he came upon many significant links with theology. This book tells the story of his discovery of these links and their importance. It is also a story of God bringing good out of human tragedy. Lewis ends by drawing together the implications of these links for natural theology, which deals with how theology ought to relate to the world--and thus is of prime importance for both theology and the world. The salient implication of...
In the course of Theodore Lewis' career in the US Foreign Service--spanning twenty-nine years and including tours of duty in Vietnam, Pakistan, the DR...
Dr Stanley Hauerwas (Duke University), Joel Halldorf, Fredrik Wenell
In the world, but not of the world--this has been the motto of the Free Church tradition. But to what extent can freedom and independence from the world be realized in modernity, and how have these churches fared so far? These are the questions with which this book wrestles. The particular focus is Sweden, where a state-facilitated hypermodernity has created what some call the most modern nation in the world. The Swedish free churches have in many ways succumbed to the pressure of the modern welfare state and as a consequence lost their distinctive voice. The argument of this book is that the...
In the world, but not of the world--this has been the motto of the Free Church tradition. But to what extent can freedom and independence from the wor...
Kyle Childress, Rodney Wallace Kennedy, Dr Stanley Hauerwas (Duke University)
This collection of essays and sermons by Rodney Kennedy and Kyle Childress is focused on honoring the memory of Will Campbell--the prophet from the South who made a vocation of destroying sacred cows. The essays and sermons attempt to be true to the spirit of Will Campbell's devotion to the gospel above all else. It should not be surprising that the essays and sermons are about the business of deconstructing more sacred cows while lifting up the truth claims of the gospel. ""The same God who blessed us with preacher man Will Campbell now blesses us with Childress and Kennedy.These two...
This collection of essays and sermons by Rodney Kennedy and Kyle Childress is focused on honoring the memory of Will Campbell--the prophet from the So...
Brian Brock, Bernd Wannenwetsch, Dr Stanley Hauerwas (Duke University)
The ailments of the contemporary church are remarkably similar to those suffered by the fractious Corinthian church in the first century. This is the challenge presented in The Malady of the Christian Body, a two-volume commentary by Brian Brock and Bernd Wannenwetsch. The manner in which Paul engages questions of factionalism, sexuality, legal conflict, idolatry, dress codes, and eating habits reveals that neither the malady he diagnoses nor the therapy he offers track the dominant accounts currently on offer of the malaise suffered by today's church. This volume depicts the Apostle as...
The ailments of the contemporary church are remarkably similar to those suffered by the fractious Corinthian church in the first century. This is the ...
Dr Stanley Hauerwas (Duke University), Nathan Crawford
What does the Wesleyan message have to say to the greater theological world? This is a question that Laurence Wood has taken up as his concern throughout his career. In order to honor his work, this collection takes up this question through a series of essays designed to show how Wesleyan Theology, while distinctive, has a continued relevance to the wider world of theological scholarship. This collection does this in two ways. First, by showing how the Wesleyan distinctives have been present throughout the history of theology. And secondly, the collection brings the Wesleyan distinctives into...
What does the Wesleyan message have to say to the greater theological world? This is a question that Laurence Wood has taken up as his concern through...