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The political Left has had a turbulent relationship with religion,
from outright hostility to attempts to meld religious faith with
progressivism. Confronted with contemporary social ills, the
progressive Left continues to disagree about the role that religion
should play, whether in understanding social challenges and
solutions, or stimulating social critique and reform. Radical
Religion presents valuable insights, from both religious and
secular perspectives, for progressives today as they struggle to
formulate a coherent agenda and effective strategies for social
change. This book presents arguments from a diverse group of
scholars, and offers a snapshot of contemporary, progressive
thinking about religion.
The political Left has had a turbulent relationship with religion,
from outright hostility to attempts to meld religious faith with
progressivism. Confronted with contemporary social ills, the
progressive Left continues to disagree about the role that religion
should play, whether in understanding social challenges and
solutions, or stimulating social critique and reform. Radical
Religion presents valuable insights, from both religious and
secular perspectives, for progressives today as they struggle to
formulate a coherent agenda and effective strategies for social
change. This book presents arguments from a diverse group of
scholars, and offers a snapshot of contemporary, progressive
thinking about religion.
This book presents the work of the "Sacred Choices Initiative" of the Religious Consultation on Population, Reproductive Health, and Ethics. The purpose of this Packard and Ford Foundation supported initiative is to attempt to change international discourse of family planning and to rescue this debate from superficial sloganeering by drawing on the moral stores of the world's major and indigenous religions. In many of the world's religions there is a restrictive and pro-natalist view on family planning, and this is one legimate reading of those religious traditions. As the essays in this volume demonstrate, however, this is not the only legitimate or orthodox view. These authors show that the parameters of orthodoxy are wider and gentler than that, and that the great religious traditions are wiser and more variegated and naunced than a simple repetition of the most conservative views would suggest. This theme is carried out in essays on each of the world's major religious traditions, written by scholar practitioners of those faiths.
This thoroughly funny memoir proves that life's tragedies and
challenges should never defeat our sense of humor. Whether it is in
a happy breakfast with Geraldine Ferraro, an unfriendly lunch with
Clarence Thoms, or a grim tete-a-tete with Pope Benedict XVI
Maguire finds the fun in life and shares it with us in these
hilarious pages.
This call to rethink major religious traditions on key topics of
family planning provides a fresh, underreported side of these
traditions. Written in a lively, engaging, and skilled style by a
leading ethicist, this guide brings expert insights of major
scholars in a manageable format.
Moral injury is a profound violation of a human being's core moral
identity through experiences of violence or trauma. This is the
first book in which scholars from different faith and academic
backgrounds consider the concept of moral injury not merely from a
pastoral or philosophical point of view but through critical
engagement with the sacred texts of Judaism, Christianity, Islam,
Buddhism and American Civil Religion. This collection of essays
explores the ambiguities of personal culpability among both
perpetrators and victims of violence and the suffering involved in
accepting personal agency in trauma. Contributors provide fresh and
compelling readings of texts from different faith traditions and
use their findings to reflect on real-life strategies for recovery
from violations of core moral beliefs and their consequences such
as shame, depression and addiction. With interpretations of the
sacred texts, contributors reflect on the concerns of the
morally-injured today and offer particular aspects of healing from
their communities as support, making this a groundbreaking
contribution to the study of moral injury and trauma.
Maguire urges that Christianity's real relevance for the renewal of
American public life lies not in the myopic morality of the
Christian Right nor in any particular program of the Left but in
the enduring relevance of Jesus and biblical Christianity. He
explains Christianity's indispensable moral conviction about God's
care, rapport with the earth, the nature of ownership, the bond
between justice and peace, the nature of enmity, the illogic of
militarism, and the creative potential of the human species.
Includes questions for group discussion.
Full Subtitle: When the World's Religions Sit Down to Talk about
the Future of Human Life and the Plight of This Planet This short
volume seeks to capture the energy and dynamism of these world
religious traditions-a central force in human history and
society-for illuminating and addressing major global issues:
population growth, environmental destruction, freedom, the rights
of women and minorities, the place of economics and work, issues of
sexuality and the body. Based on consultations of leading scholars
and religious leaders from a variety of traditions, and worked out
in conjunction with international conferences sponsored by the
Religious Consultation on Population, Reproductive Health, and
Ethics, this book highlights the special insights and lessons each
major religious tradition has to offer today.
Ethics for a Small Planet offers complementary studies by two major
social ethicists on these issues. Daniel C. Maguire indicts our
male-dominated religions for the problems they have caused for our
ecology and reproductive ethics. He raises the controversial
questions of whether the very concept of God is a problem and
whether Christianity's notions of afterlife and a divinized male
have done more harm than good. Larry L. Rasmussen also recognizes
that the problems of our planet are largely male-made and
rich-dominated. He writes that Europeans packaged a form of
earth-unfriendly capitalism and shipped it all over the world with
missionary zeal. He ably scans the long history that led to the
current manic rush to push the earth beyond its limits, and goes on
to suggest moral norms and policy guidelines for sustainable
communities and genuinely shared power. Both authors argue that
there are positive and renewable moral energies in the world's
religions and that unless religion, understood as a response to the
sanctity of life, animates our ethical debates, the prospects for
the world are grim. The sense of the sacred is presented here as
the nucleus of the good and the only force that can bring about the
lifestyle changes and power reallocations that are necessary to
prevent terracide.
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