Results for 'S. Hauerwas'

982 found
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  1. Foundation of Ethics.Leroy S. Rouner, Stanley Hauerwas & Alasdair Macintyre - 1984 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 16 (2):178-181.
     
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  2.  28
    How Christian Ethics Became Medical Ethics: The Case of Paul Ramsey.S. Hauerwas - 1995 - Christian Bioethics 1 (1):11-28.
    Over the last century Christian ethics has moved from an attempt to Christianize the social order to a quandary over whether being Christian unduly biases how medical ethics is done. This movement can be viewed as the internal development of protestant liberalism to its logical conclusion, and Paul Ramsey can be taken as one of the last great representatives of that tradition. By reducing the Christian message to the ‘ethical upshot’ of neighbour love, Ramsey did not have the resources to (...)
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  3.  7
    Truthfulness and Tragedy: Further Investigations in Christian Ethics.Stanley Hauerwas, Richard Bondi & David B. Burrell - 1977 - University of Notre Dame Press.
    In Truthfulness and Tragedy Stanley Hauerwas provides an account of moral existence and ethical rationality that shows how Christian convictions operate, or should operate, to form and direct lives. In attempting to conceptualize the basis of Christian ethics in a manner that will render Christian convictions morally intelligible, the author casts fresh light on traditional theoretical issues and articulates the distinctive Christian response to contemporary concerns such as suicide, medical ethics, and child care. The first section of the book (...)
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  4.  74
    Practicing Patience: How Christians Should Be Sick.S. Hauerwas & C. Pinches - 1996 - Christian Bioethics 2 (2):202-221.
    In contemporary society nothing upsets us more than having to wait for our bodies. Our bodies serve us as we direct and when they break down we become angry that they have failed us. Christians, however, are called to be a patient people even in illness. Indeed, impatience is a sin. Learning to be patient when sick requires practicing patience while healthy. First, we must learn that our bodies are finite — they will die. Second, we must learn to live (...)
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  5.  18
    Book Notes. [REVIEW]Daniel Dombrowski, Don Garrett, Stanley Hauerwas, Sheridan L. Hough, Hugh LaFollette, Ariela Lazar, S. E. Marshall, Corinne M. Painter, Rosamond Rhodes & Mary Anne Warren - 2002 - Ethics 112 (3):651-657.
  6.  68
    Self-Deception and Autobiography: Theological and Ethical Reflections on Speer's "Inside the Third Reich".David Burrell & Stanley Hauerwas - 1974 - Journal of Religious Ethics 2 (1):99 - 117.
    Albert Speer's life offers a paradigm of self-deception, and his autobiography serves to illustrate Fingarette's account of self-deception as a persistent failure to spell out our engagements in the world. Using both Speer and Fingarette, we show how self-deception becomes our lot as the stories we adopt to shape our lives cover up what is destructive in our activity. Had Speer not settled for the neutral label of "architect," he might have found a story substantive enough to allow him to (...)
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  7.  25
    Remaining in Babylon: Oliver O'Donovan's Defense of Christendom.Hauerwas Stanley & Fodor James - 1998 - Studies in Christian Ethics 11 (2):30-55.
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  8. Remaining in Babylon: Oliver O'Donovan's Defense of Christendom.Stanley Hauerwas & James Fodor - 1998 - Studies in Christian Ethics 11 (2):30-55.
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  9. With the Grain of the Universe: The Church's Witness and Natural Theology.Stanley Hauerwas - 2001
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  10.  4
    After Christendom?: How the Church is to Behave If Freedom, Justice, and a Christian Nation are Bad Ideas.Stanley Hauerwas - 1991 - Abingdon Press.
    Liberal/conservative and modern/postmodern concepts define contemporary theological debate. Yet what if these categories are grounded in a set of assumptions about what it means to be the church in the world, presuming we must live as though God's existence does not matter? What if our theological discussion distracts us from the fact that the church is no longer able to shape the desires and habits of Christians? Hauerwas wrestles with these and similar questions constructing a theological politics necessary for (...)
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  11.  20
    Christians Among the Virtues: Theological Conversations with Ancient and Modern Ethics.Stanley Hauerwas & Charles Robert Pinches - 1997 - University of Notre Dame Press.
    This work investigates the distinctiveness of virtues as illuminated by Christian practise using a discussion of Aristotle's ethics with contemporary scholars. It contrasts non-Christian accounts of virtue with Christian accounts of key virtues, including obedience, hope, courage, and patience.
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  12.  6
    Christian Existence Today: Essays on Church, World, and Living in Between.Stanley Hauerwas - 2010 - Wipf and Stock Publishers.
    Stanley Hauerwas begins this volume with a vigorous response to the charge of sectarianism leveled against his work by James Gustafson, among others. "Show me where I am wrong about God, Jesus, the limits of liberalism, the nature of the virtues, or the doctrine of the church," Hauerwas replies to his critics, "but do not shortcut that task by calling me a sectarian."The essays that follow explore in a lucid, compelling, firm, and provocative way the church's nature, message, (...)
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  13. The Politics of the Cross: The Theology and Ethics of John Howard Yoder.Craig A. Carter, Stanley Hauerwas, Chris K. Huebner, Harry J. Huebner, Mark Thiessen Nation & Ben C. Ollenburger - 2005 - Journal of Religious Ethics 33 (1):139-174.
    In his landmark monograph, "The Politics of Jesus", John Howard Yoder challenged mainstream Christian social ethics by arguing that the New Testament account of Jesus's founding of a messianic community entails a normative politics, not only for early Christianity but for the contemporary church. This challenge is further elaborated in several important posthumous publications, especially "Preface to Theology", in which Yoder examines the development of early Christology with attention to its political and ethical implications, and "The Jewish-Christian Schism Revisited", Yoder's (...)
     
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  14. Remembering how and what I think: A response to the jre articles on Hauerwas.Stanley Hauerwas - 2012 - Journal of Religious Ethics 40 (2):296-306.
    In this essay Stanley Hauerwas reflects on his life's work by responding to the critical contributions found in the essays of this volume. Rather than trying to defend a “position,” Hauerwas takes this opportunity to offer further insight into how he sees his work to be driven by theology, insofar as his ethical reflection cannot be extricated from Christological considerations. It is this Christological center that allows him to avoid making a false separation between the person and work (...)
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  15.  45
    Some theological reflections on Gutierrez's use of 'liberation' as a theological concept.Stanley Hauerwas - 1986 - Modern Theology 3 (1):67-76.
  16.  49
    The Self as Story: Religion and Morality from the Agent's Perspective.Stanley Hauerwas - 1973 - Journal of Religious Ethics 1:73-85.
    Objecting to a restrictive view of morality that limits moral philosophy and religious ethics to what can be logically displayed, this essay seeks to expand our understanding of morality in a way that permits one to account for intentionality in the moral life. It claims that religion makes a contribution to our moral behavior beyond that of motivating one to be moral. The author argues that a right understanding of the relationship of thought and action is essential if we are (...)
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  17.  7
    In Good Company: The Church as Polis.Stanley Hauerwas - 1995 - University of Notre Dame Press.
    In Good Company is a book about the politics and practices that constitute the salvation made possible by God through the church. By exposing a different account of politics - the church as polis and "counter-story" to the world's politics - Hauerwas helps Christians see that in fact God has given them the means to escape the destructive practices of the world by placing them "in good company" with one another, Catholic and Protestant alike. Hauerwas explains: "What we (...)
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  18.  20
    The Strength to Be Patient.Stanley Hauerwas & Gerald Mckenny - 2016 - Christian Bioethics 22 (1):5-20.
    To set medicine within the context of a good or faithful life requires virtues that give physicians and patients the skills to understand and practice the kind of care medicine is capable of giving. We begin with a prayer that names some of these virtues. We then show how the language of medicine impedes these virtues by fostering the illusion that medicine will free us from illness and mortality. While Aristotle’s account of virtue and happiness seems capable of telling us (...)
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  19. With the Grain of the Universe.Stanley Hauerwas - 2004 - Journal of Religious Ethics 32 (1):219-234.
    Stanley Hauerwas's Gifford Lectures are, at least in part, an interpretation of the Giffords that came before him. As a contribution to intellectual and theological history, however, I wish Hauerwas had given witness to Santayana's Hermes the hermeneut, along with the considerable, indeed considerate, witness he does give to his own Christian faith. Hauerwas seems to dislike Reinhold Niebuhr and, by my account, misreads William James. Thus I have to conclude that "With the Grain of the Universe" (...)
     
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  20.  6
    On God and Democracy: Engaging Bretherton’s Christ and the Common Life.Stanley Hauerwas - 2020 - Studies in Christian Ethics 33 (2):235-242.
    In this article I try to introduce the overall structure of Bretherton’s book Christ and the Common Life by showing how each chapter displays how talk of God and talk of politics are mutually constitutive. In particular I try to show how Bretherton’s ‘case studies’ are arranged to develop his constructive thesis. My paper was not meant to be critical, though I raise the question of whether Bretherton’s project is not a very sophisticated form of Constantinianism—a question that very much (...)
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  21. With the grain of the universe: the church's witness and natural theology: being the Gifford Lectures delivered at the University of St. Andrews in 2001.Stanley Hauerwas - 2013 - Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Academic.
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  22.  37
    Niebuhr One More Time.Stanley Hauerwas - 2013 - Journal of Religious Ethics 41 (3):548-550.
    In this essay Stanley Hauerwas offers a response to Edmund Santurri's review of Reinhold Niebuhr's An Interpretation of Christian Ethics.
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  23.  17
    Time and History in Theological Ethics: The Work of James Gustafson.Stanley Hauerwas - 1985 - Journal of Religious Ethics 13 (1):3 - 21.
    This essay traces Gustafson's understanding of the methodological significance of history and time for theological ethics. I argue that Gustafson qualifies his original thoroughgoing historicist perspective in the interest of developing a natural theology and ethics. His continuing emphasis on a historical perspective, I suggest, is best understood by attending to his recommendation that the theologian's task is best captured by the image of the "participant.".
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  24.  30
    Obligation and Virtue Once More.Stanley Hauerwas - 1975 - Journal of Religious Ethics 3 (1):27 - 44.
    The author maintains that virtue and obligation are interdependent notions, neither of which is capable of either being understood or put into practice without the other. He argues that William Frankena's treatment of these concepts obscures this relationship, both because it gives primacy to an ethics of obligation and because it consists in examination of an artificial model of a "pure" theory of virtue. The author also considers the implication of this relationship for the question of the relation of morality (...)
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  25.  46
    Remembering Martin Luther King Jr. Remembering: A Response to Christopher Beem.Stanley Hauerwas - 1995 - Journal of Religious Ethics 23 (1):135-148.
    The question of the relation of my work to that of Martin Luther King Jr. cannot be resolved with the theoretical tools Christopher Beem brings to the task. Stanley Fish has written that "those who detach King's words from the history that produced them erase the fact of that history from the slate, and they do so, paradoxically, in order to prevent that history from being truly and deeply altered." The vice of liberalism is not selfishness so much as a (...)
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  26.  20
    Bearing Reality: A Christian Meditation.Stanley Hauerwas - 2013 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 33 (1):3-20.
    In this essay I draw on the work of novelist J. M. Coetzee and philosophers Cora Diamond, Stanley Cavell, and Stephen Mulhall to reflect on what it might mean to do Christian ethics without denying the "difficulty of reality." I then turn to John Howard Yoder's 1987 SCE presidential address to show how his call to see history doxologically enables the Christian to acknowledge the "difficulty of reality" without succumbing to despair. To acknowledge humanity's limitations without falling into despair or (...)
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  27.  14
    Christians in the Hands of Flaccid Secularists.Stanley Hauerwas - 1997 - Ethical Perspectives 4 (1):32-44.
    I am a Christian theologian who teaches ethics. I could alternatively say I am a Christian ethicist, with the hope that most people would concentrate on the noun and not the qualifier but that probably wouldn t help matters much. In fact many people have become and still do become Christian ethicists because they do not like theology. They think justice is something worth thinking about or even advocating or doing, but they do not like or they see little point (...)
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  28.  5
    Dissent from the Homeland: Essays After September 11.Stanley Hauerwas & Frank Lentricchia - 2003 - Duke University Press.
    Noted scholars, theologians, and others question the U.S. government’s reaction to the September 11th attack on the World Trade Center.
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  29. Hauerwas and Pinches, Christians among the Virtues.S. Wells - 1998 - Studies in Christian Ethics 11:121-124.
     
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  30. Reading Hauerwas in the cornbelt: The demise of the american dream and the return of liturgical politics.Michael S. Northcott - 2012 - Journal of Religious Ethics 40 (2):262-280.
    In this paper I examine criticism of Hauerwas's critique of American democracy and liberalism, and of American violence and war, as sectarian and politically irrelevant. This twin account has the merit of engaging his critics from left and right. I show that his critique of American Christians, and their support of America's ways of promoting justice and freedom at home and in the world, has analogies with Foucault's genealogical project in France, and represents a more powerful critique of American (...)
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  31.  8
    Scripture and ethics: twentieth-century portraits.Jeffrey S. Siker - 1997 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    How should the Bible be used in Christian ethics? Although this question has been addressed many times, little attention has gone to how the Bible actually has functioned in constructing theological ethics. In this book, Siker describes and analyzes the Bible's various uses in the theology and ethics of eight of the twentieth century's most important and influential Christian theologians: Reinhold Niebuhr, H. Richard Niebuhr, Bernhard Haring, Paul Ramsey, Stanley Hauerwas, Gustavo Gutierrez, James Cone, and Rosemary Radford Ruether. In (...)
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  32.  16
    Physicians of No Value. [REVIEW]Courtney S. Campbell - 1991 - Hastings Center Report 21 (3):32.
    Book reviewed in this article: Naming the Silences: God, Medicine, and the Problem of Suffering. By Stanley Hauerwas.
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  33.  26
    Bonhoeffer's Non‐Commitment to Nonviolence: A Response to Stanley Hauerwas.Michael P. DeJonge - 2016 - Journal of Religious Ethics 44 (2):378-394.
    Stanley Hauerwas's claim that Bonhoeffer had a “commitment to nonviolence” runs aground on Bonhoeffer's own statements about peace, war, violence, and nonviolence. The fact that Hauerwas and others have asserted Bonhoeffer's commitment to nonviolence despite abundant evidence to the contrary reveals a blind spot that develops from reading Bonhoeffer's thinking in general and his statements about peace in particular as if they were part of an Anabaptist theological framework rather than his own Lutheran one. This essay shows that (...)
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  34.  37
    Book Review: Pierre-Yves Materne, La condition de disciple: Ethique et politique chez J.B. Metz et S. Hauerwas[REVIEW]Pierre-Yves Materne & H. StJ Broadbent - 2015 - Studies in Christian Ethics 28 (2):236-240.
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  35.  6
    Book Review: Pierre-Yves Materne, La condition de disciple: Ethique et politique chez J.B. Metz et S. Hauerwas[REVIEW]Pierre-Yves Materne & H. StJ Broadbent - 2015 - Studies in Christian Ethics 28 (2):236-240.
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  36.  20
    Hauerwas's "With the Grain of the Universe" and the Barthian Outlook: A Few Observations.Roger Gustavsson - 2007 - Journal of Religious Ethics 35 (1):25 - 86.
    This article has two main divisions, the first consisting in parts 1-3, the second in parts 4-8. The purpose of the first division is to assess Hauerwas's contentions regarding what he takes to be serious debilities in modern theological culture. The objects of Hauerwas's criticism are: (1) natural theology; (2) reason as it is represented in the structure of the modern university and in the "Enlightenment Project"; and (3) liberal Protestantism--the latter particularly as it turns up, by his (...)
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  37.  37
    Catholicity Without Leviathan: Stanley Hauerwas's Perspective on the Church as an Alternative Political Community.Ionut Untea - 2019 - The Politics and Religion Journal 12 (1):1-31.
    The article brings into focus a series of political arguments of Stanley Hauerwas's “theological politics” and argues that these arguments are in stark contrast with the theoretical perspective of a political rule by a god-like Leviathan, an image inherited in modern and contemporary political culture from the early modern English philosopher Thomas Hobbes. The first section focuses on Hauerwas's arguments regarding the political potential of the term “Catholicity” to represent an alternative to the coercive politics reinforced by the (...)
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  38.  23
    Hauerwas's with the grain of the universe and the Barthian outlook: A few observations.Roger Gustavsson - 2007 - Journal of Religious Ethics 35 (1):25-86.
    This article has two main divisions, the first consisting in parts 1-3, the second in parts 4-8. The purpose of the first division is to assess Hauerwas's contentions regarding what he takes to be serious debilities in modern theological culture. The objects of Hauerwas's criticism are: natural theology; reason as it is represented in the structure of the modern university and in the "Enlightenment Project"; and liberal Protestantism--the latter particularly as it turns up, by his account, in Reinhold (...)
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  39.  7
    Stanley Hauerwas Hannah's Child: A Theologian's Memoir (London: SCM Press, 2010). Pp. xii+ 288.£ 19.99 (Pbk). ISBN: 978 03340 4368 3. [REVIEW]Mikel Burley - 2011 - Religious Studies 47 (4):527-531.
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  40. Hauerwas among the virtues.Jennifer A. Herdt - 2012 - Journal of Religious Ethics 40 (2):202-227.
    Despite the fact that Stanley Hauerwas has not taken up many of the topics normally associated with virtue ethics, has explicitly distanced himself from the enterprise known as “virtue ethics,” and throughout his career has preferred other categories of analysis, ranging from character and agency to practices and liturgy, it is nevertheless clear that his work has had a deep and transformative impact on the recovery of virtue within Christian ethics, and that this impact has largely to do with (...)
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  41.  5
    The necessity of witness: Stanley Hauerwas's contribution to systematic theology.Ariaan W. Baan - 2015 - Eugene, Oregon: Pickwick Publications.
    The role of witness is a recurring theme in the work of Stanley Hauerwas: it is through enacting the truth in a world of lies, through seeking peace in a world of violence, that witnesses show who God is, who we are, and what the world is like. The Necessity of Witness is a study of Hauerwas and his fascinating but complex understanding of witness. Ariaan W. Baan argues that Hauerwas's approach makes a significant contribution to current (...)
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  42.  11
    Conceptual Problems for Stanley Hauerwas’s Virtue Ethics.Ronald Scott Smith - 2001 - Philosophia Christi 3 (1):153-164.
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  43.  40
    Hauerwas and political theology: The next generation. [REVIEW]Charles Pinches - 2008 - Journal of Religious Ethics 36 (3):513-542.
    In this review essay, I consider the recent work of students of Stanley Hauerwas on matters related to political theology. Eight books (and scattered articles) are treated in two groups: one more theoretical, the other more practically oriented. Of special interest is whether and how Jeffrey Stout's concerns about Hauerwas's negative political "influence" apply. I suggest that while sometimes narratives of decline dominate overmuch, these works rightly and creatively seek to expand our political imagination beyond the narrowness of (...)
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  44. Talking the walk and walking the talk: Stanley Hauerwas's contribution to theological ethics.William Werpehowski - 2012 - Journal of Religious Ethics 40 (2):228-249.
    ABSTRACTStanley Hauerwas's contribution to the study of Christian ethics is analyzed in the course of offering an overview of his work, including his early reflections on “vision,”“narrative,” and moral agency; his continuing focus on Christian virtues and practices in contrast to the ethos of moral and political liberalism; and his specific attention to the meaning of peaceableness and the rejection of violence. The essay concludes by considering Hauerwas's legacy as a postliberal theologian, a critical participant in American Protestant (...)
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  45. Considering Stanley Hauerwas.Charles Pinches - 2012 - Journal of Religious Ethics 40 (2):193-201.
    After introducing the five articles that comprise this focus issue, I consider Hauerwas's claim that he is a theologian without a position. The claim has merit, I hold, since Hauerwas writes in response to what he reads, which is his way of learning it better. Moreover, he writes socially, characteristically soliciting help from his friends. As such, he purposefully makes himself accountable to those he addresses. In his later years this accountability has extended especially to the Church and (...)
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  46.  10
    Book Reviews : Hauerwas S 1993: Naming the silences: God, medicine, and the problem of suffering. Edinburgh: T & T Clark. 168pp. 9.95 . ISBN 0 567 29234 7. [REVIEW]V. Tschudin - 1995 - Nursing Ethics 2 (2):176-176.
  47.  79
    Let Us Be Saints If We Can": A Reflection on Stanley Hauerwas's "With the Grain of the Universe. [REVIEW]Henry Samuel Levinson - 2004 - Journal of Religious Ethics 32 (1):219 - 234.
    Stanley Hauerwas's Gifford Lectures are, at least in part, an interpretation of the Giffords that came before him. As a contribution to intellectual and theological history, however, I wish Hauerwas had given witness to Santayana's Hermes the hermeneut, along with the considerable, indeed considerate, witness he does give to his own Christian faith. Hauerwas seems to dislike Reinhold Niebuhr and, by my account, misreads William James. Thus I have to conclude that "With the Grain of the Universe" (...)
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  48.  5
    The Justified Body: Hauerwas, Luther and the Christian Life.Justin Nickel - 2018 - Studies in Christian Ethics 31 (1):65-78.
    Stanley Hauerwas and others argue that Luther’s understanding of justification denies the theological and ethical significance of the body. Indeed, the inner, spiritual person is the one who experiences God’s grace in the gospel, while the outer, physical person continues to live under law and therefore coercion and condemnation. While not denying that Luther can be so read, I argue that there is another side of Luther, one that recognizes the body’s importance for Christian life. I make this argument (...)
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  49.  14
    Why Stanley Hauerwas Needs Blaise Pascal: Sin, Anthropology, and Christian Witness.Lexi Eikelboom - 2014 - Studies in Christian Ethics 27 (4):404-416.
    This article investigates the similarities between the ethics and theology of Blaise Pascal and Stanley Hauerwas regarding natural law, original sin and witness, in order to support Pascal as an important thinker for Christian ethics. It argues that Pascal’s theological anthropology is an important contribution to Hauerwas’ ethics by elucidating less clear dimensions of his thought, such as how it is that witness ought to proceed and might be effective despite human sinfulness, and the relation between human corruption (...)
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  50.  66
    ‘Yes!’ to Natural Theology and Justice: Stanley Hauerwas, Martin Luther King Jr., and Charles Hartshorne.” In Unsettling Arguments: A Festschrift on the Occasion of Stanley Hauerwas’s 70th Birthday.Theodore Walker Jr - 2011 - Process Studies 40 (1):198-200.
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