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Christian Ethics at the Boundary

Feminism and Theologies of Public Life
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In contemporary reflection on Christianity and politics, the work of realist, witness, and feminist theologians has been done in isolation-that is, each school has largely pursued its projects without incorporating the insights of the others. Christian Ethics at the Boundary offers the first approach to public and political theology developed at the boundaries that separate these approaches. Extending the strong contextual work of theologians like Robin W. Lovin and Stanley Hauerwas on one hand, and Kathryn Tanner, Monica A. Coleman, and Mary McClintock Fulkerson on the other, author Karen V. Guth engages the theologies of prominent public theologians Reinhold Niebuhr, John Howard Yoder, and Martin Luther King Jr. to identify new trajectories for future work in Christian ethics. By fostering constructive dialogue between these pivotal public theologians of the twentieth century, their contemporary representatives, and the vanguard voices in feminist and womanist theology, Guth identifies ecclesiology as a new agenda for realist theologians, feminism as a vital form of Christian politics for witness theologians, and "creative maladjustment" as a productive theological stance for all Christian ethicists. In doing so, the work displays an innovative method that enables a vivid, collaborative vision of Christian politics.
Karen V. Guth is assistant professor of theology at St. Catherine University in St. Paul, Minnesota. She earned a PhD in religious ethics at the University of Virginia and holds an MTS from Harvard Divinity School and an MTh from the University of Glasgow.
Introduction; 1. Old Divides and New Trajectories in Christian Ethics; 2. Churches as Self-Critical Cultures: A Witness- and Feminist-inspired Appropriation of Reinhold Niebuhr on the Church; 3. Feminism as Christian Politics: A Realist- and Feminist-inspired Appropriation of John Howard Yoder's Pacifism; 4. Christian Ethics for the Creatively Mal adjusted: A Feminist- and Womanist-lnspired Appropriation of Martin Luther King Jr.'s Thought on Love; 5. Conclusion: Reconciling Christian Ethics; Bibliography; Index.
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