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Description: No one is so intimately acquainted with
Schleiermacher's Christian Ethics material or with the 1821-1822
first edition of his companion volume, Christian Faith, than
Hermann Peiter. The present volume is a collection of Peiter's
nineteen essays and thirty reviews. Extensive English summaries are
offered for all this material, and an English version for four of
the essays. Professor Peiter's summary of this volume reads as
follows: ""This book treats of praxis in the Christian life and of
Christian responsibility for the world we have in common. The
following, however, forms a background for these considerations.
Schleiermacher reminds his Christian brethren, who often deck
themselves out with alien, borrowed plumes from morals and
metaphysics, of their actual theme, that of religion, which he also
designates as a kind or mode of faith. Like Luther, he also turns
against both the practical misconception that considers faith
itself to be a good work and the theoretical misconception that
faith is a product of thinking, a theory. Whether a practitioner
thinks to give thanks for one's own work or whether a theoretician
hopes to find final fulfillment and justification in one's range of
metaphysical ideas amounts to the same thing. Faith is the courage
to be (Paul Tillich). For Schleiermacher, to want to have
speculation (thus, metaphysics) and praxis without religion is the
nonsalutary intention of Prometheus, who faintheartedly stole what
he could have expected to possess in restful security. If taken
seriously, the 'gods'-to use that pagan expression for once-are
that nature to which a human being belongs. Each human being is
their possession. When one steals what the gods have, one steals
oneself, can thank oneself for a robbery. For a gift that is
stolen, one cannot possibly be thankful. Only a pure gift awakens
true joy. A human being has the chance to receive the gift that one
is or is not (in case it is stolen) not from a thief but from
religion. Thanks to one's birth, both physical and spiritual, one
gains oneself and has oneself. To steal means to take away, to
depreciate. In contrast, whoever has oneself from elsewhere is no
longer extracted from oneself or from the one to whom one
belongs."" Endorsements: ""This remarkable volume is a most welcome
contribution to a conversation about life and faith that has been
going on in the academy and in the church for two centuries, to a
considerable extent due to Schleiermacher. Christian Ethics
according to Schleiermacher distills great insights from Hermann
Peiter's lifetime of work on this towering figure in the history of
theology. Terrence Tice deserves our thanks for being midwife to
the birth of this volume, offering exact summaries and providing
English translations side-by-side with the German."" --James M.
Brandt, author of All Things New: Reform of Church and Society in
Schleiermacher's Christian Ethics ""This highly engaging, timely
contribution introduces Hermann Peiter's magisterial work on
Schleiermacher's Christian ethics. In essays luminously summarized
or translated by the noted Schleiermacher scholar Terrence N. Tice,
Peiter here insightfully explores Schleiermacher's thesis that
Christian teaching regarding faith (Glaubenslehre) and life
(Sittenlehre) are expressive of communion with God in Christ,
experienced in community."" --Allen G. Jorgenson, author of Awe and
Expectation: On Being Stewards of the Gospel ""As a combined
discipline regarding faith-doctrine and ethics, Schleiermacher's
theology of Christian piety has tended not to be studied with
adequately systematic care. Thus, the father of modern theology's
positions have been chiefly understood in terms of faith, but
ignored in terms of action in every part of life. Peiter's
thoroughgoing studies on Schleiermacher's theology aptly correlate
faith and action with constant references to situations of
contemporary life."" --John S. Park, author of Theological Ethics
of Friedrich
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