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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Hoon Choi
It’s Time: Narratives of Illness, Aging, and Death: Narratives of Illness, Aging, and Death
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182.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Myles Werntz
Christian Pacifism for an Environmental Age
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183.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Aaron Stauffer
Consumer Ethics in a Global Economy: How Buying Here Causes Injustices There
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184.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Tobias Winright
Mining Morality: Prospecting for Ethics in a Wounded World
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185.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Andrea Vicini
Third Displacement: Cosmobiology, Cosmolocality, Cosmosocioecology
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186.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Peter K. Fay
Building Bridges in Sarajevo: The Plenary Papers from CTEWC 2018
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187.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Howard Pickett
Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s Ethics of Formation
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188.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Craig A. Ford, Jr.
Religious Ethics and Constructivism: A Metaethical Inquiry
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189.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Meg Stapleton Smith
Street Homelessness and Catholic Theological Ethics
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190.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Debra J. Erickson
Discerning Ethics: Diverse Christian Responses to Divisive Moral Issues
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191.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Michael McCarthy
The Cry of the Poor: Liberation Ethics and Justice in Health Care
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192.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Leocadie Lushombo
Sustainable Abundance for All: Catholic Social Thought and Action in a Risky Runaway World
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193.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Matthew Elmore
Science and Christian Ethics
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194.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Matthew Philipp Whelan
A Pilgrim People: Becoming a Catholic Peace Church
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195.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Kent A. Van Til
God’s Sabbath with Creation: Vocations Fulfilled, the Glory Unveiled
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196.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Nicholas R. Brown
All God’s Animals: A Catholic Theological Framework for Animal Ethics
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197.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Scott R. Paeth, Kevin Carnahan
Preface
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selected essays |
198.
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Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics:
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Patricia Beattie Jung
Celebrate Suffrage
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2020 marks 100 years of women’s suffrage in the U.S. Considering this anniversary and the Christian presumption in favor of democracy, this essay invites readers to honor all those who worked for women’s suffrage in two specific ways. First, it invites them to tell the whole truth about the movement, both its many moments of grace and its moral failures. Second, it encourages readers to make the connection between this ambiguous legacy and ongoing forms of voter suppression in the U.S. and then to celebrate suffrage by finishing the fight for it.
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James F. Keenan, S.J., STD
Vulnerable to Contingency
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Over the past forty years, the administrations of American colleges and universities have developed and expanded the ranks of contingent faculty as an alternative to the tenure line. While acknowledging the gross inequities that divide these two tracks, this essay attempts to awaken tenure-line ethicists through the concept of recognition to the conditions of their colleagues and then argues through the concept of vulnerability that faculty are deeply and unavoidably related, and concludes that through solidarity ethicists from both lines might work together toward the university becoming a more ethical workplace than it presently is.
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Myung Su Yang
Luther’s Reformation and His Political and Social Ideas for Korean Church and Society
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Luther’s beliefs provide three avenues of change for the Korean church and Korean society at large. First, Luther’s argument about two different kingdoms can help the Korean church set itself free from the deeply rooted political attachment stemming from the ideological conflict with North Korea over the past six decades. Second, Luther’s understanding of the individual’s inner mind as the locus of revelation of the divine truth is expected to enhance an autonomous self-determination that is independent of the collective mindset of the multitude, which leads to the naissance of being truly individual. Lastly, Luther’s ethics of love will hopefully improve the public awareness concerning human rights of criminals and, through his vocation theory, give the vision of a unified organic society that Rises above the possessive individualism that spread widely during Korea’s rapid economic growth.
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