Virtue ethics and the public calling of reformational thought

Philosophia Reformata 71 (1):3-13 (2006)
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Abstract

In 2001 the leading American newsweekly, Time magazine, ran a series featuring the people who were considered to be the most influential in their fields of leadership. The religious thinker who was given the title “America’s Best Theologian” was Stanley Hauerwas, who teaches ethics at Duke University. There is an element of irony in the fact that one of the leading arbiters of cultural popularity would choose to honor Hauerwas in this manner. While Hauerwas is officially a Methodist, he identifies closely with the Anabaptist tradition of ethical thought, often citing the late Mennonite theological ethicist John Howard Yoder as the primary influence on the development of his ethical thought. The Anabaptists, as we all know, make much of the need to form communities of radical disciples of Jesus who stand over against the dominant cultural patterns, and Hauerwas, like his mentor Yoder, is not shy about calling for this over-against-ness

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On worldviews.Sander Griffioen - 2012 - Philosophia Reformata 77 (1):19-56.

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References found in this work

Evangelical Ethics and the Anabaptist-Reformed Dialogue.Richard J. Mouw & John H. Yoder - 1989 - Journal of Religious Ethics 17 (2):121 - 137.

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