David M. Gides is associate professor of theology at the University of Providence in Great Falls, Montana.
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I: Uncivil Disobedience - Philosophical Foundations and Historical Considerations 1. In Defense of Uncivil Disobedience Candice Delmas 2. Which Extreme, Whose Extremist?: Limitations of Eric Hoffer's The True Believer for Countering Contemporary Fascist Movements Joan Braune 3. Cultural Images of, and Experiences with, Disobedience Nick Braune 4. "We Must Obey God Rather Then Men": Lutheran Resistance Against Pope and Emperor in the Reformation Era John Witte, Jr. 5. "Let the Princes Hear and Be Afraid": John Calvin and Resistance to Tyranny Matthew J. Tuininga 6. The Virtues of Democratic Disobedience: Catholic Ethics and Political Disobedience Anna Floerke and Matthew A. Shadle 7. Civil Disobedience, Violence, or Revolution?: Liberation Theology and the Narrative of Violence Ryan R. Gladwin II. Application - Theological Perspectives on Contemporary Uncivil Disobedience 8. Uncivil Disobedience and the Free Passage of the Word: Sanctuary as a Preparing of the Way Michael Laffin 9. Bonhoeffer, Antifa, and the Moral Defensibility of Uncivil Disobedience David M. Gides 10. Black Lives Matter: A Just War Perspective Joshua W. Carpenter 11. The Storming of the Capitol: The Outcome of a Theology of Political Power Andre Gagne 12. Theology, Decoloniality, and Idle No More Jordan E. Miller
We live in hyper-partisan times with dire consequences to the breakdown in public trust and concomitant political dysfunction and social dislocation we face. Meanwhile serious theological inquiry has been increasingly relegated either as a relic of the past or an inaccessible realm reserved for academic and religious specialists. Does contemporary theology have anything to offer to our current situation of political turmoil? Can it help us understand different modes of political protest, different claims to moral authority, different rationales for resistance and protest? This book answers these questions with a resounding YES. And in so doing, not only shows what can be learned from well-known historical figures and standard teachings and theories, but also and most interestingly, navigates the thickets surrounding the difficult questions about our present forms of political order, power, and mobilization. -- Jeffrey W. Robbins, Lebanon Valley College, author of Radical Democracy and Political Theology