Virtue Reformed

Virtue Reformed
Title Virtue Reformed PDF eBook
Author Stephen A. Wilson
Publisher BRILL
Pages 433
Release 2005
Genre History
ISBN 9004143009

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Drawing on Protestant scholasticism, Puritan "precisionism," and virtue ethics, "Virtue Reformed" offers a comprehensive rereading of the ethical position of American philosopher-theologian Jonathan Edwards and his fascinating struggle to be both forwarder of the Reformation and participant in the Enlightenment.

Reformed Virtue after Barth

Reformed Virtue after Barth
Title Reformed Virtue after Barth PDF eBook
Author Kirk J. Nolan
Publisher Westminster John Knox Press
Pages 224
Release 2014-11-14
Genre Religion
ISBN 1611645433

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With its focus on the traditions and communities that form us over the course of a lifetime, virtue ethics has richly expanded our understanding of what the Christian life can look like. Yet its emphasis on human virtues and habits of mind and life seems inconsistent with the Reformed tradition's insistence that sin lies at the heart of the human condition. For this reason, virtue ethics seems out of place in Reformed theology, especially in the company of the Reformed tradition's greatest twentieth-century theologian, Karl Barth. In this new addition to the Columbia Series in Reformed Theology, Kirk Nolan argues that Barth's theology actually proves virtue ethics can be compatible with the Reformed tradition. Rather than see virtue as an inevitable and natural process of growth, Barth helps us understand that development in the Christian life comes through a process of repetition and renewal, and that all virtue comes solely as a gift from God. Nolan establishes an important bridge between Reformed moral teaching and the tradition of virtue ethics.

Longing for the Good Life: Virtue Ethics after Protestantism

Longing for the Good Life: Virtue Ethics after Protestantism
Title Longing for the Good Life: Virtue Ethics after Protestantism PDF eBook
Author Pieter Vos
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Pages 225
Release 2020-11-12
Genre Religion
ISBN 0567695107

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This book argues that Protestant theological ethics not only reveals basic virtue ethical characteristics, but also contributes significantly to a viable contemporary virtue ethics. Pieter Vos demonstrates that post-Reformation theological ethics still understands the good in terms of the good life, takes virtues as necessary for living the good life and considers human nature as a source of moral knowledge. Vos approaches Protestant theology as an important bridge between pre-modern virtue ethics, shaped by Aristotle and transformed by Augustine of Hippo, and late modern understandings of morality. The volume covers a range of topics, going from eudaimonism and Calvinist ethics to Reformed scholastic virtue ethics and character formation in the work of Søren Kierkegaard. The author shows how Protestantism has articulated other-centered virtues from a theology of grace, affirmed ordinary life and emphasized the need of transformation of this life and its orders. Engaging with philosophy of the art of living, Neo-Aristotelianism and exemplarist ethics, he develops constructive contributions to a contemporary virtue ethics.

Protestant Virtue and Stoic Ethics

Protestant Virtue and Stoic Ethics
Title Protestant Virtue and Stoic Ethics PDF eBook
Author Elizabeth Agnew Cochran
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Pages 230
Release 2017-12-28
Genre Religion
ISBN 0567671364

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The Stoics are known to have been a decisive influence on early Christian moral thought, but the import of this influence for contemporary Christian ethics has been underexplored. Elizabeth Agnew Cochran argues that attention to the Stoics enriches a Christian understanding of the virtues, illuminating precisely how historical Protestant theology gives rise to a distinctive virtue ethic. Through examining the dialogue between Roman Stoic ethics and the work of Martin Luther, John Calvin, and Jonathan Edwards, Cochran illuminates key theological convictions that provide a foundation for a contemporary Protestant virtue ethic, consistent with theological beliefs characteristic of the historical Reformed tradition.

Earthkeeping and Character

Earthkeeping and Character
Title Earthkeeping and Character PDF eBook
Author Steven Bouma-Prediger
Publisher Baker Academic
Pages 286
Release 2019-11-19
Genre Religion
ISBN 1493410741

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Addressing a topic of growing and vital concern, this book asks us to reconsider how we think about the natural world and our place in it. Steven Bouma-Prediger brings ecotheology into conversation with the emerging field of environmental virtue ethics, exploring the character traits and virtues required for Christians to be responsible keepers of the earth and to flourish in the challenging decades to come. He shows how virtue ethics can enrich Christian environmentalism, helping readers think and act in ways that rightly value creation.

Putting On Virtue

Putting On Virtue
Title Putting On Virtue PDF eBook
Author Jennifer A. Herdt
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Pages 467
Release 2012-05-09
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 0226327191

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This work reveals how a distrust of learned and habituated virtue shaped both early modern Christian moral reflection and secular forms of ethical thought. The author's broad historical sweep takes in the Aristotelian tradition as taken up by Thomas Aquinas and has chapters on Luther, Bunyan, the Jansenists, Hume, and others.

Receptive Human Virtues

Receptive Human Virtues
Title Receptive Human Virtues PDF eBook
Author Elizabeth Agnew Cochran
Publisher Penn State Press
Pages 218
Release 2015-08-26
Genre Religion
ISBN 0271050594

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This book offers a new reading of Jonathan Edwards’s virtue ethic that examines a range of qualities Edwards identifies as “virtues” and considers their importance for contemporary ethics. Each of Edwards’s human virtues is “receptive” in nature: humans acquire the virtues through receiving divine grace, and therefore depend utterly on Edwards’s God for virtue’s acquisition. By contending that humans remain authentic moral agents even as they are unable to attain virtue apart from his God’s assistance, Edwards challenges contemporary conceptions of moral responsibility, which tend to emphasize human autonomy as a central part of accountability.