Introduction
Part 1 What Makes Christian Ethics Christian?
1. The Bible
2. Following Jesus
3. Some Key Theological Themes
Part 2 What Makes Christian Ethics "Ethics"?
4. Classical Roots
5. Modern Options
6. Contemporary Challenges
Part 3 The Stuff of Christian Ethics
7. Baptism and Identity
8. Mercy and Peace
9. Justice from Above (Order)
10. Justice from Below (Liberation)
11. Sexuality
12. Vulnerable Life
13. Challenges Posed by Science and Technology
A fresh, engaging and thoroughly biblical account of Christian ethics for the twenty-first century
Craig Hovey is Associate Professor of Religion and Director of the Ashland Center for Nonviolence at Ashland University Ohio. He is the author of What Makes Us Moral? (SPCK, 2012) and Bearing True Witness: Truthfulness in Christian Practice (Eerdmans, 2011), and is co-editor of An Eerdmans Reader in Contemporary Political Theology (Eerdmans, 2008).
In this refreshing and at times exhilarating exploration, Craig
Hovey portrays Christian ethics as the discovery of what is made
possible because Christ is born, has died, is risen and will come
again. In doing so, he dismantles the popular perception of
Christianity as a catalogue of prohibitions and opens out a vista
of promise, purpose and potential.
*The Revd Dr Samuel Wells, Vicar of St Martin-in-the-Fields,
London*
A succinct and thoughtful account of Christian belief and practice,
demonstrating their integral relationship to each other and showing
how some of the key ethical dilemmas troubling contemporary society
may be seen in their light.
*Dr Susan Parsons, Editor of Studies in Christian Ethics*
Craig Hovey draws on a wider variety of sources, texts and
traditions, and delves into more intricacies of history, philosophy
and doctrine, than most introductory ethics books would dare
attempt, yet he does so in a way that is unfailingly accessible and
clear. The dexterity with which he draws the reader into complexity
without obscurity is a gift to students and teachers alike.
*Dr Elizabeth Phillips, Tutor in Theology and Ethics, Westcott
House, University of Cambridge*
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