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Lutheran Ethicists Newsletter
About the Lutheran Ethicists
New theological discussion site
from the
Lutheran World Federation directs discussion
on four tracks:
death and injustice,
multi-faith challenges, charismatic and Pentecostal challenges, and moral differences that threaten church unity.


 

 
                                             August, 2006
 
Lutherans on Deus Caritas Est

John Stumme:

Introduction to Lutherans on Deus Caritas Est

Mark Mattes:

Delivering the Goods: A Radical Lutheran
Response to Deus Caritas Est

Paul Hinlicky:

A Lutheran Encyclical: Benedict's Deus
Caritas Est

Kelly Denton-Borhaug:

Knowing What Cosmos You're In 

Anne Edison-Swift:

One Bread, One Body 

Economy of Grace -- July 2006
 
Reviews of "Economy of Grace"
Kathryn Tanner

Reviews by:
Steven Livingston, Michael Shahan,
Luke Froeb, and Robert Brittingham
The Public Witness of Good Works: Lutheran Impulses for Political Ethics Part III
(Part I and Part II are also available.)
by Stefan Heuser
 
Immigration -- July 2006
 
Immigration
John Kidd, Chris Chiappari and Mark Granquist
Warrior Ethics 101: Everything We Need to Know We Learned in Sunday School David Miller
Lutherans in Public -- May 2006


Lutherans in Public—Threads from a Conversation
Ronald Duty

God, Church, and Country: Berggrav's Leadership in the Norwegian Resistance
Diane Yeager

The Public Witness of Good Works: Lutheran Impulses for Political Ethics
Stefan Heuser

In Civil Rights  
 
The Civil Rights Movement of the 60s:
A Personal Perspective

Robert Benne
As a student at Midland College in the late 50s, I became aware of the civil rights movement going on in the South. The national news carried reports on sit-ins and demonstrations going on in a number of southern states.
 

 

 

 

The Power of One…Community
Rudolf Featherstone
The recent home-going celebrations relevant to the life and Christian witness of Mrs. Rosa Louise Parks makes available to us a reflective moment to seriously ponder her impact upon us, our progeny, and our own witness to the Christian gospel.
 

 
The Church in Socially Turbulent Times
William E. Lesher
As I reflect on it from the vantage point of forty years, the Edmund Petters Bridge in not so sleepy Selma, Alabama marked a turning point in my ministry, both in what was my second parish and since.

 




Our Calling in Education: A Draft Reviewed -- June 2006
 

 
Brief Comments on "Our Calling in Education: A First Draft of a Social Statement"
Tom Christenson

Questions of Purpose, Focus, Consistency, and Strength
James Mahler

Review of "Our Calling in Education"
Gene Maier

A Review of the Draft Social Statement on Education
Margaret Krych


Ethical Lessons Learned in Iraq
Martin L. Cook

The Public Witness of Good Works: Lutheran Impulses for Political Ethics: Part II
Stefan Heuser



In Search of the Common Good, Part II, “Classical Voices”
Roger Nutt
 
Review of In Search of the Common Good
William Hill
 
Review of "In Search of the Common Good," section 1, "Biblical Dimensions"
James Hanson
 
A Journey of Christian Human Responsibility: Harvey Cox's Appropriation of Dietrich Bonhoeffer
Jess O. Hale, Jr.
Lutheran theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s theology and life inspires a multitude of responses, ranging from passionate opposition to a dangerous thinker all the way to emphatic embrace of a saint.  With a large body of contemporary discussion partners included in those responses, Bonhoeffer’s influence extends far beyond the theological society that bears his name.
 
Truth Is Stranger than Fiction:
The Da Vinci Code and Early Christianity

Brad Kierkegaard
Since its appearance in April of 2003, Dan Brown's "The Da Vinci Code" has been a remarkable success.  Although it declares itself as a work of fiction, The Da Vinci Code actually works very hard to blur the lines between fact and fiction.  My fundamental concern is that Christians seem to be so poorly educated in the foundations of their tradition that many do not understand the differences between Brown's fictionalizing and the rich variety of early Christianity.

Shipshewana and the American Way of Fear
David Miller
Follow the fear. It will tell you what you need to know about the challenge of Christian witness in these times. It also reveals the wound that the incarnation of God in human flesh hungers to heal—making us, our nation and world more truly human.
 
Theology in the Context of "World Christianity"
J. Paul Rajashekar
Sometime in the mid 1990’s, the center of gravity of Christianity shifted from the Global North to the Global South. In a relative span of one generation, the Christian faith has witnessed an explosive growth in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.