Contents:
Introduction Paul Oslington, Paul S. Williams and Mary
Hirschfeld
PART I HISTORICAL RELATIONSHIPS
1. Dotan Leshem (2014), ‘The Ancient Art of Economics’, European
Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 21 (2), 201–29
2. Constant J. Mews and Ibrahim Abraham (2007), ‘Usury and Just
Compensation: Religious and Financial Ethics in Historical
Perspective’, Journal of Business Ethics, 72 (1), April, 1–15
3. M. Douglas Meeks (2011), ‘The Peril of Usury in the Christian
Tradition’, Interpretation, 65 (2), April, 128–40
4. Peter Harrison (2011), ‘Adam Smith and the History of the
Invisible Hand’, Journal of the History of Ideas, 72 (1), January,
29–49
5. Paul Oslington (2012), ‘God and the Market: Adam Smith’s
Invisible Hand’, Journal of Business Ethics, 108 (4), July,
429–38
6. Matthew B. Arbo (2014), ‘Theodicy and Commerce’, Studies in
Christian Ethics, 27 (2), May, 131–43
7. Paul Oslington (2013), ‘God and Economic Suffering’, CRUX, 49
(3), Fall, 12–19
8. Bradley W. Bateman (2008), ‘2007 Presidential Address:
Reflections on the Secularization of American Economics,’ Journal
of the History of Economic Thought, 30 (1), March, 1–20
9. Thomas C. Leonard (2011), ‘Religion and Evolution in Progressive
Era Political Economy: Adversaries or Allies?’, History of
Political Economy, 43 (3), Fall, 429–69
10. Anthony M. C. Waterman (2008), ‘Is “Political Economy” Really a
Christian Heresy?’, Faith and Economics, 51, Spring, 31–55
PART II RELIGIOUS ECONOMICS AND ITS CRITICS
11. António Almodovar and Pedro Teixeira (2010), ‘Is There a
Catholic Economic Thought? Some Answers from the Past’, in Daniela
Fernanda Parisi and Stefano Solari (eds), Humanism and Religion in
the History of Economic Thought: Selected Papers from the 10th
Aispe Conference, Part II, Milan, Italy: FrancoAngeli s.r.l.,
125–47
12. Mary Hirschfeld (2014), ‘On the Relationship Between Finite and
Infinite Goods, Or: How to Avoid Flattening’, Econ Journal Watch,
11 (2), May, 179–85
13. William McGurn (2002), ‘Pulpit Economics’, First Things, 122,
April, 21–5
14. Paul Oslington (2010–2011), ‘Popes and Markets’, Policy, 26
(4), Summer, 31–34A
15. Daniel P. Payne and Christopher Marsh (2009), ‘Sergei
Bulgakov’s “Sophic” Economy: An Eastern Orthodox Perspective on
Christian Economics’, Faith and Economics, 53, Spring, 35–51
16. Michael Schluter (2010), ‘Beyond Capitalism: Towards a
Relational Economy’, Cambridge Papers, 19 (1), March, 1–4
17. Kathryn Tanner (2004), ‘Economies of Grace’, in William
Schweiker and Charles Mathewes (eds), Having: Property and
Possession in Religious and Social Life, Part 3, Grand Rapids, MI,
USA and Cambridge, UK: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company,
353–82
18. Miroslav Volf (2010), ‘Hunger for Infinity: Christian Faith and
the Dynamics of Economic Progress’, in Captive to the Word of God:
Engaging the Scriptures for Contemporary Theological Reflection,
Part III, Chapter 6, Grand Rapids, MI, USA and Cambridge, UK: Wm.
B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 151–78
19. A. M. C. Waterman (1991), ‘The Intellectual Context of Rerum
Novarum’, Review of Social Economy, Special Issue: Centennial of
“Rerum Novarum” and Semicentennial of the Association, 49 (4),
Winter, 465–82
20. A. M. C. Waterman (1999), ‘Market Social Order and Christian
Organicism in Centesimus Annus’, Journal of Markets and Morality, 2
(2), Fall, 220–33
21. Anthony Waterman (2003), ‘Should We Listen to the Churches When
They Speak on Economic Issues?’, Agenda: A Journal of Policy
Analysis and Reform, 10 (3), April, 277–88
22. A. M. C. Waterman (2013), ‘The Relation between Economics and
Theology in Caritas in Veritate’, Erasmus Journal for Philosophy
and Economics, 6 (2), Autumn, 24–42
23. Rowan Williams (2010), ‘Theology and Economics: Two Different
Worlds?’, Anglican Theological Review, 92 (4), Fall, 607–15
24. Amos Yong (2010), ‘Pentecostal Health and Wealth: A Theology of
Economics’, in In the Days of Caesar: Pentecostalism and Political
Theology: The Cadbury Lectures 2009, Part II, Chapter 7, Grand
Rapids, MI, USA and Cambridge, UK: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing
Company, 257–315
25. Andrew M. Yuengert (2014), ‘It’s Not Bad to Have Limits, as
Long as You Know Them: What the Aristotelian Tradition Can Offer
Economics’, Faith and Economics, 64, Fall, 37–54
PART III RELIGION, CAPITALISM AND DEVLOPMENT
26. Peter S. Heslam (2008), ‘The Role of Business in the Fight
against Poverty’, in Ian R. Harper and Samuel Gregg (eds),
Christian Theology and Market Economics, Part III, Chapter 10,
Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing,
164–80
27. Rachel M. McCleary (2007), ‘Salvation, Damnation, and Economic
Incentives’, Journal of Contemporary Religion, 22 (1), January,
49–74
28. Deirdre N. McCloskey (2013), ‘Work in the World: An Economist's
Sermon’, Faith and Economics, 61, Spring, 66–71
29. Bryant L. Myers (2000), ‘The Church and Transformational
Development’, Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic
Mission Studies, 17 (2), April, 64–7
30. Nathan Nunn (2010), ‘Religious Conversion in Colonial Africa’,
American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings, 100 (2), May,
147–52
31. J. David Richardson (2014), ‘Social Entrepreneurship For the
Sake of the Kingdom: Why Microeconomics Matters’, Inaugural John
Mason Lecture, Gordon College, October 13, 2014, Wenham, MA, USA,
1–11
32. Paul S. Williams (2012), ‘Capitalism, Religion and the
Economics of the Biblical Jubilee’, Paper Presented at the
Globalisation for the Common Good Initiative 10th Annual
International Conference, September 2-5, 2012, Oxford, UK, 1–8
33. Robert D. Woodberry (2012), ‘The Missionary Roots of Liberal
Democracy’, American Political Science Review, 106 (2), May,
244–74
PART IV ECONOMICS OF RELIGION
34. Ram A. Cnaan, Tuomi Forrest, Joseph Carlsmith and Kelsey Karsh
(2013), ‘If You Do Not Count It, It Does Not Count: A Pilot Study
of Valuing Urban Congregations’, Journal of Management,
Spirituality and Religion, 10 (1), 3–36
35. Robert B. Ekelund, Jr., Robert F. Hébert and Robert D. Tollison
(2002), ‘An Economic Analysis of the Protestant Reformation’,
Journal of Political Economy, 110 (3), June, 646–71
36. Jonathan Gruber and Daniel M. Hungerman (2008), ‘The Church
versus the Mall: What Happens when Religion Faces Increased Secular
Competition?’, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 123 (2), May,
831–62
37. Jay C. Hartzell, Christopher A. Parsons and David L. Yermack
(2010), ‘Is a Higher Calling Enough? Incentive Compensation in the
Church’, Journal of Labor Economics, 28 (3), July, 509–39
38. Daniel M. Hungerman (2005), ‘Are Church and State Substitutes?
Evidence from the 1996 Welfare Reform’, Journal of Public
Economics, 89 (11–12), December, 2245–67
39. Laurence R. Iannaccone (2012), ‘Extremism and the Economics of
Religion’, Economic Record, Special Issue: Selected Papers from the
40th Australian Conference of Economists, 88 (S1), June, 110–15
40. Derek Neal (2005), ‘Comments on the Economics of Religion’,
Faith and Economics, Symposium: The Economics of Religion, 46,
Fall, 10–13
41. Jörg Stolz (2009), ‘Explaining Religiosity: Towards a Unified
Theoretical Model’, British Journal of Sociology, 60 (2), June,
345–76
42. Christian Smith, Michael O. Emerson and Patricia Snell (2008),
‘Who Gives?’, Christian Century, 125 (20), October, 26–9
PART V ECONOMICS AND BIBLICAL STUDIES
43. John H. Elliott (2008), ‘From Social Description to
Social-Scientific Criticism. The History of a Society of Biblical
Literature Section 1973–2005’, Biblical Theology Bulletin: Journal
of Bible and Culture, 38 (1), February, 26–36
44. Morris Silver (2004), ‘Modern Ancients’, in Robert Rollinger
and Christoph Ulf (eds), Commerce and Monetary Systems in the
Ancient World: Means of Transmission and Cultural Interaction:
Proceedings of the Fifth Annual Symposium of the Assyrian and
Babylonian Intellectual Heritage Project (Melammu) Held in
Innsbruck, Austria, October 3rd–8th 2002, Stuttgart, Germany: Franz
Steiner Verlag, 65–87
45. Johannes Renger (1994), ‘On Economic Structures in Ancient
Mesopotamia: Part One’, Orientalia, 63 (3), 157–208
46. Edd S. Noell (2007), ‘A “Marketless World”? An Examination of
Wealth and Exchange in the Gospels and First-Century Palestine’,
Journal of Markets and Morality, 10 (1), Spring, 85–114
47. Philip F. Esler (2014), ‘An Outline of Social Identity Theory’,
in J. Brian Tucker and Coleman A. Baker (eds), T&T Clark
Handbook to Social Identity in the New Testament, Part I, Chapter
2, London, UK and New York, NY, USA: Bloomsbury T&T Clark,
13–39
48. Zeba Crook (2009), ‘Honor, Shame, and Social Status Revisited’,
Journal of Biblical Literature, 128 (3), Fall, 591–611
49. Deborah Storie and Mark Brett (2009), ‘The Church in the
Economy of God’, Zadok Perspectives, 102, Autumn, 5–10
50. Peter Temin (2001), ‘A Market Economy in the Early Roman
Empire’, Journal of Roman Studies, 91, November, 169–81
51. Walter Scheidel and Steven J. Friesen (2009), ‘The Size of the
Economy and the Distribution of Income in the Roman Empire’,
Journal of Roman Studies, 99, November, 61–91
Index
Edited by Paul Oslington, Professor of Economics and Dean of Business, Alphacrucis College, Australia, Paul S. Williams, Research Professor of Marketplace Theology and Leadership, Regent College, Canada and Mary Hirschfeld, Associate Professor of Economics and Theology, Villanova University, US
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