Religion
Showing 76–86 of 86 results
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Augustine And Politics
$54.99Add to cartDedicatory Preface
Thomas F. Martin O.S.A.
Introduction
John Doody, Kevin L. Hughes, And Kim Paffenroth
Human Nature And Virtue In Relation To PoliticsUnited Inwardly By Love: Augustine’s Social Ontology
Phillip Cary
Truthfulness As The Bond Of Society
Robert P. Kennedy
Friendship As Personal, Social, And Theological Virtue In Augustine
Kim Paffenroth
Freedom Beyond Our Choosing: Augustine On The Will And Its Objects
David C. Schindler
Augustine’s Theory And Critique Of PoliticsBetween The Two Cities: Political Action In Augustine Of Hippo
Robert Dodaro O.S.A.
Democracy And Its Demons
Michael Hanby
Local Politics: The Political Place Of The Household In Augustine’s City Of God
Kevin L. Hughes
Augustine And The Politics Of Monasticism
Thomas F. Martin O.S.A.
The Glory And Tragedy Of Politics
Thomas W. Smith
Augustinian Influence And PerspectivesToward A Contemporary Augustinian Understanding Of Politics
Todd Breyfogle
Sexual Purity, “the Faithful,” And Religious Reform In Eleventh-Century Italy: Donatism Revisited
Louis I. Hamilton
The Enchanted City Of Man: The State And The Market In Augustinian Perspective
Eugene McCarraher
Machiavelli’s City Of God: Civic Humanism And Augustinian Terror
Paul WrightAdditional Info
The study of Augustine’s political teachings has suffered from a history of misreadings, both ancient and modern. It is only in recent years that the traditional lines of “Augustinian pessimism” have been opened to question. Scholars have begun to explore the broader lines of Augustine’s political thought in his letters and sermons, and thus have been able to place his classic text, The City of God, in its proper context. The essays in this volume take stock of these recent developments and revisit old assumptions about the significance of Augustine of Hippo for political thought. They do so from many different perspectives, examining the anthropological and theological underpinnings of Augustine’s thought, his critique of politics, his development of his own political thought, and some of the later manifestations or uses of his thought in the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, and today. This new vision is at once more bracing, more hopeful, and more diverse than earlier readings could have allowed. -
Augustine And Politics
$140.00Add to cartDedicatory Preface
Thomas F. Martin O.S.A.
Introduction
John Doody, Kevin L. Hughes, And Kim Paffenroth
Human Nature And Virtue In Relation To PoliticsUnited Inwardly By Love: Augustine’s Social Ontology
Phillip Cary
Truthfulness As The Bond Of Society
Robert P. Kennedy
Friendship As Personal, Social, And Theological Virtue In Augustine
Kim Paffenroth
Freedom Beyond Our Choosing: Augustine On The Will And Its Objects
David C. Schindler
Augustine’s Theory And Critique Of PoliticsBetween The Two Cities: Political Action In Augustine Of Hippo
Robert Dodaro O.S.A.
Democracy And Its Demons
Michael Hanby
Local Politics: The Political Place Of The Household In Augustine’s City Of God
Kevin L. Hughes
Augustine And The Politics Of Monasticism
Thomas F. Martin O.S.A.
The Glory And Tragedy Of Politics
Thomas W. Smith
Augustinian Influence And PerspectivesToward A Contemporary Augustinian Understanding Of Politics
Todd Breyfogle
Sexual Purity, “the Faithful,” And Religious Reform In Eleventh-Century Italy: Donatism Revisited
Louis I. Hamilton
The Enchanted City Of Man: The State And The Market In Augustinian Perspective
Eugene McCarraher
Machiavelli’s City Of God: Civic Humanism And Augustinian Terror
Paul WrightAdditional Info
The study of Augustine’s political teachings has suffered from a history of misreadings, both ancient and modern. It is only in recent years that the traditional lines of “Augustinian pessimism” have been opened to question. Scholars have begun to explore the broader lines of Augustine’s political thought in his letters and sermons, and thus have been able to place his classic text, The City of God, in its proper context. The essays in this volume take stock of these recent developments and revisit old assumptions about the significance of Augustine of Hippo for political thought. They do so from many different perspectives, examining the anthropological and theological underpinnings of Augustine’s thought, his critique of politics, his development of his own political thought, and some of the later manifestations or uses of his thought in the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, and today. This new vision is at once more bracing, more hopeful, and more diverse than earlier readings could have allowed. -
Touchdown Jesus : The Mixing Of Sacred And Secular In American History
$38.00Add to cartThis book is an intriguing narrative of the interplay between American religion and patterns of American culture in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. R. Laurence Moore considers the ways nationalism, the separation of church and state, democratic pluralism, and shifts in boundaries between secular and sacred practice have shaped American religion for the past two hundred years.
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Christianity On Trial
$15.95Add to cartVincent Carroll and David Shiflett do not shrink from confronting the tragedies that have been perpetrated in the name of Christianity. But they contend that the current fashionable emphasis on the dark side of the Christian record is an instance of willful historical illiteracy.
In Christianity on Trial, Carroll and Shiflett dispassionately and systematically dissect the charges against Christianity-specifically that it has justified racism and misogyny, encouraged ignorance, and promoted the despoliation of the environment and even genocide. Then, in a narrative whose intellectual elegance and verve calls up comparisons to How the Irish Saved Civilization, they show how in fact the Christian tradition has not only injected morality into our political order, but softened brutal practices and confining superstitions, created the foundation for intellectual inquiry, and cultivated the charitable impulse.
Christianity on Trial challenges readers of all beliefs-even those with a belief in disbelief itself-to question the anti-religious bigotry that thrives in our intellectual world and to reevaluate the role of Christianity not only as a source of consolation but of enlightenment and human liberation as well.
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Religion And Literature
$38.00Add to cart1. History Of The Field And Theoretical Issue
2. The Expoloration Of Origins
3. The Interpretive Tradition Of Literature And Religion
4. The Language And Literature Of Worship
5. The Literary Structres Of Religious Text Genres
6. Religious Dimesions Of Literary Text Genres
7. The Great Themes Of Literature And Religion
8. Interations New Challenges To And From Other FieldsAdditional Info
Religion and literature contains selections from more than seventy sources, ranging from the ancient classics, the Bible, Western materpieces, and contemporary literature. Study questions for each chapter appear at the end of the book. The insights of two internationally renowned scholars in the field of religion and literature provide a magisterial and accessible entree into this important acedemic discipline. Religion and Literature is destined to become a classic in its own right. -
Feminist Ethic Of Risk (Revised)
$29.00Add to cartRich and suggestive, distinctive and influential, A Feminist Ethic of Risk proposes a new model for ethics and new life-orientation for social justice. Directly addressing American and European “middle-class despair” over issues and challenges seemingly too large to tackle.
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What You Will See Inside
$24.99Add to cartVisual and informative, What You Will See Inside a Catholic Church features full-page pictures and concise descriptions of what is happening, the objects used, the clergy and laypeople who have specific roles, and the spiritual intent of believers. Ideal for teachers, parents, librarians, clergy, and lay leaders who work with children ages 6 to 10.
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History Of Christianity
$23.00Add to cartSince publication of the first edition in 1918, A History of the Christian Church by Williston Walker has enjoyed outstanding success and recognition as a classic in the field. Written by an eminent theologian, it combines in its narrative a rare blend of clarity, unity, and balance. In light of significant advances in scholarship in recent years, extensive revisions have been made to this fourth edition. Three scholars from Union Theological Seminary in New York have incorporated new historical discoveries and provided fresh interpretations of various periods in church history from the first century to the twentieth. The result is a thoroughly updated history which preserves the tenor and structure of Walker’s original, unparalleled text.