Justification in a Post-Christian Society
Since the Reformation in the sixteenth century, Lutheran traditions have impacted culture and politics in many societies. At the same time, Lutheran belief has had an effect on personal faith, morality, and ethics. Modern society, however, is quite different from that at the time of the Reformation. How should we evaluate Lutheran tradition in today's Western multicultural and post-Christian society? Is it possible to develop a Lutheran theological position that can be regarded as reasonable in a society that evidences a considerable weakening of the role of Christianity? What are the challenges raised by cultural diversity for a Lutheran theology and ethics? Is it possible to develop a Lutheran identity in a multicultural society, and isthere any fruitful Lutheran contribution to the coexistence of diff erent religious and non-religious traditions in the future?
1120802568
Justification in a Post-Christian Society
Since the Reformation in the sixteenth century, Lutheran traditions have impacted culture and politics in many societies. At the same time, Lutheran belief has had an effect on personal faith, morality, and ethics. Modern society, however, is quite different from that at the time of the Reformation. How should we evaluate Lutheran tradition in today's Western multicultural and post-Christian society? Is it possible to develop a Lutheran theological position that can be regarded as reasonable in a society that evidences a considerable weakening of the role of Christianity? What are the challenges raised by cultural diversity for a Lutheran theology and ethics? Is it possible to develop a Lutheran identity in a multicultural society, and isthere any fruitful Lutheran contribution to the coexistence of diff erent religious and non-religious traditions in the future?
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Justification in a Post-Christian Society

Justification in a Post-Christian Society

Justification in a Post-Christian Society

Justification in a Post-Christian Society

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Overview

Since the Reformation in the sixteenth century, Lutheran traditions have impacted culture and politics in many societies. At the same time, Lutheran belief has had an effect on personal faith, morality, and ethics. Modern society, however, is quite different from that at the time of the Reformation. How should we evaluate Lutheran tradition in today's Western multicultural and post-Christian society? Is it possible to develop a Lutheran theological position that can be regarded as reasonable in a society that evidences a considerable weakening of the role of Christianity? What are the challenges raised by cultural diversity for a Lutheran theology and ethics? Is it possible to develop a Lutheran identity in a multicultural society, and isthere any fruitful Lutheran contribution to the coexistence of diff erent religious and non-religious traditions in the future?

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780227175231
Publisher: James Clarke & Co. Ltd
Publication date: 03/26/2015
Pages: 270
Product dimensions: 5.98(w) x 9.02(h) x (d)

About the Author

Carl-Henric Grenholm is Senior Professor of Ethics at the Department of Theology, Uppsala University, Sweden. His main research areas are ethical theory, Christian social ethics, work ethics, ethics and economics, and theological ethics. He is the leader of a research project on Lutheran Theology and Ethics in a Post-Christian Society. Among his publications are Protestant Work Ethics (1993), Teologisk etik (Theological Ethics, 1997), Bortom Humanismen (Beyond Humanism, 2003), Sustainable Development and Global Ethics (2007), and Etisk teori: Kritik av moralen (Ethical Theory, 2014). Goran Gunner is Associate Professor in Mission Studies, Uppsala University, and Researcher at Church of Sweden Research Unit, Uppsala. Dr. Gunner is also Senior Lecturer at Stockholm School of Theology, Stockholm, Sweden. His research areas include religious minority situations in the Middle East and issues related to human rights. He is also the editor of Church of Sweden Research Series. Among his publications are An Unlikely Dilemma: Constructing a Partnership between Human Rights and Peace-Building (co-authored with Kjell-Ake Nordquist, 2011) and Genocide of Armenians: Through Swedish Eyes (2013).

Table of Contents

Contributors Abbreviations 1 Introduction: Remembering the Past-Living the Future -Carl-Henric Grenholm and Goran Gunner PART ONE: Justification, Atonement, and Reconciliation 2 Promise and Trust: Lutheran Identity in a Multicultural Society -Christoph Schwobel 3 The Experience of Justification -Christine Helmer 4 Atonement in Theology and a Post-Einsteinian Notion of Time -Antje Jackelen 5 Healing as an Image for the Atonement: A Lutheran Consideration -Cheryl M. Peterson PART TWO: Lutheran Theology and Ethics in a Post-Christian Society 6 Law and Gospel in Lutheran Ethics -Carl-Henric Grenholm 7 Outside Paradise: Renegotiating Original Sin in Contemporary Lutheran Theology -Eva-Lotta Granten 8 Lutheran Spiritual Theology in a Post-Christian Society -Karin Johannesson 9 Lutheran Theology and Dialogical Engagement in Post-Christian Society -James M. Childs, Jr. 10 Physicality as a New Model for Lutheran Ethics in a Multicultural Global Community -Richard J. Perry, Jr. PART THREE: Reformation as a Model for Interpretation of the Present 11 Incarnate vs. Discarnate Protestantism: Martin Luther and the Disembodiment of Faith -Niels Henrik Gregersen 12 Contra Philosophos: The Lutheran Reformation as Critique of the Rationality of Modernity -Knut Alfsvag 13 Priesthood of all Believers as Public Opinion: An Unexplored Link between the Lutheran Reformation and the Enlightenment? -Urban Claesson 14 Luther's Interpretation of the Magnificat and Latin American Liberation Theology -Elina Vuola 15 "Satis est" (CA 7): The Confessional Unity of the Church and the Augsburg Confession Today -Henning Theissen Contributors Abbreviations 1 Introduction: Remembering the Past-Living the Future -Carl-Henric Grenholm and Goran Gunner PART ONE: Justification, Atonement, and Reconciliation 2 Promise and Trust: Lutheran Identity in a Multicultural Society -Christoph Schwobel 3 The Experience of Justification -Christine Helmer 4 Atonement in Theology and a Post-Einsteinian Notion of Time -Antje Jackelen 5 Healing as an Image for the Atonement: A Lutheran Consideration -Cheryl M. Peterson PART TWO: Lutheran Theology and Ethics in a Post-Christian Society 6 Law and Gospel in Lutheran Ethics -Carl-Henric Grenholm 7 Outside Paradise: Renegotiating Original Sin in Contemporary Lutheran Theology -Eva-Lotta Granten 8 Lutheran Spiritual Theology in a Post-Christian Society -Karin Johannesson 9 Lutheran Theology and Dialogical Engagement in Post-Christian Society -James M. Childs, Jr. 10 Physicality as a New Model for Lutheran Ethics in a Multicultural Global Community -Richard J. Perry, Jr. PART THREE: Reformation as a Model for Interpretation of the Present 11 Incarnate vs. Discarnate Protestantism: Martin Luther and the Disembodiment of Faith -Niels Henrik Gregersen 12 Contra Philosophos: The Lutheran Reformation as Critique of the Rationality of Modernity -Knut Alfsvag 13 Priesthood of all Believers as Public Opinion: An Unexplored Link between the Lutheran Reformation and the Enlightenment? -Urban Claesson 14 Luther's Interpretation of the Magnificat and Latin American Liberation Theology -Elina Vuola 15

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"The present volume documents that the Lutheran theological tradition is still doing well. These contributions testify to a Lutheranism not captured in the past, but actively engaging with contemporary issues in society and culture; a Lutheranism both open, self-critical, constructive, and creative. This is a must read for anybody who wants to see how the Lutheran tradition related to the wider theological dialogue, and what it has to contribute to the ecumenical reflection about the relevance of Christian faith for people of today."
—Jan-Olav Henriksen, Norwegian School of Theology, Oslo, Norway

"This volume emanating from a 2013 conference in Uppsala, Sweden on Lutheran Tradition in Transition makes a critical but not unsympathetic evaluation of the past and discusses what would be a reasonable Lutheran position in the future. Well-known Lutheran theologians, both from Europe and the USA, focus on three themes, justification, Lutheran theology and ethics, and the Reformation as a model for interpreting the present. The contributors convincingly show that Lutheran theology, though diverse in itself, still makes an important contribution to the theological discourse."
—Hans Schwarz, Regensburg University, Regensburg, Germany

"This book shows how the Lutheran doctrine of justification, despite its historical location in the 16th century—when examined with a self-critical ambition, as this book certainly does—has the capacity of challenging common values and ways of thinking, not least in societies marked by a post-Christian mentality."
—Bo Kristian Holm, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark

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