The relationship between contemporary theologians and economists has tended to range from frosty to indifferent. Economists usually relegate theological reasoning to the realm of private spirituality, viewing it as holding little relevance for the analysis of markets and economic activity. Theologians, on the other hand, often make lofty and idealized pronouncements about economics with very little understanding of the economic realities they are critiquing. This sometimes fraught, sometimes apathetic relationship is especially troubling given the broad consensus, among both religious and non-religious scholars, that—among the profusion of business and economic-related problems of the last decade—many could be classified as moral crises.
Theology and Economics seeks to fill the gap in understanding, respect, and communication between economists and theologians and set a uniquely collaborative example. Jeremy Kidwell and Sean Doherty have brought together a group of prominent Christian economists and theologians to discuss how we might transform economic and theological reasoning from antagonistic forces into tools with which to cultivate more just and moral economies in the twenty-first century.
Author(s): Jeremy Kidwell, Sean Doherty
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Year: 2015
Language: English
Pages: x+294
Tags: Business Professional Growth Christian Living Social Issues Theology Angelology Demonology Anthropology Apologetics Catholic Christology Creationism Ecclesiology Ecumenism Eschatology Ethics Fundamentalism Gnosticism Historical Liberation Mysticism Pneumatology Process Prophecy Protestant Salvation Theory Systematic Economics Banks Banking Commerce Commercial Policy Comparative Development Digital Currencies Econometrics Economic Conditions History Environmental Free Enterprise Income Inequality
Introduction
PART I SWORDS: CRITICAL ENGAGEMENTS BETWEEN ECONOMICS AND THEOLOGY
1. Why Is Engagement Difficult?
2. What Do Theologians Need To Know About Economics?
3. A Framework For Doing Theology In The Marketplace
4. Red Toryism, Common Good, And One Nation
5: A Response To Hartropp, Pollitt, Poole And Chapman
PART II PLOWSHARES (1): RESOURCES FOR COLLABORATION
6. On The Idea Of Commerce As A Natural Means Of Human Improvement:
7. Economics And Virtue Ethics: Reflections From A Christian Perspective
8. Radical Or Realist? The Social Ethics Of John Of Chrysostom And Reflection On The Common Good
9: Response: Finding Common Ground: Contemporary Resources For Collaboration
10. The Kingdom Of God And The Economic System: An Economics Of Hope
PART III PLOWSHARES (2): VISIONS OF THE COMMON GOOD
11. Theological Perspectives For A Human Economy At Its Limits And Within Its Limits
12. Is The Model Of Human Nature In Economics Fundamentally Flawed?
13. Transcending The Long Twentieth Century: Why We Should And How
14. Christianity And Social Flourishing: Theology, Politics And Economics 328
Conclusion
Selected Bibliography