Encompassing a wide range of topics--from the timely (health care and business ethics) to the traditional (atonement, suffering and the kingdom of God)—this work features an easy-to-use reference system and eighteen articles that introduce readers to key themes in moral, pastoral and practical theology. Edited by David J. Atkinson and David F. Field with consulting editors Arthur Holmes and Oliver O'Donovan.
This dictionary breaks new ground by combining articles on Christian ethics and pastoral theology in one volume. It seeks to integrate moral, pastoral and practical theology in a way not...
1:7) and sets the virtue of prudence firmly within the life of God's people and God's redemptive work. In the prophets, the practice ... Eerdmans, 2007; Charles, J. Virtue amidst Vice: The Catalog of Virtues in 2 Peter 1. JSNTSup 150.
Renewing Moral Theology unfolds an ethical perspective that is Thomistic in structure, evangelical in conviction and Anglican in ethos.
Best-selling author and professor Wayne Grudem distills over forty years of teaching experience into a single volume aimed at helping readers apply a biblical worldview to difficult ethical issues, including wealth and poverty, marriage and ...
This classic one-volume reference work is now substantially expanded and revised to focus on a variety of theological themes, thinkers and movements.
The years 1987 and 1990 saw the publication of two unprecedented and immediately popular reference works, The New Dictionary of Theology and The New Dictionary of Sacramental Worship. The present...
The stress is on everyday life rather than abstract moral philosophy. The book combines a biblical and a practical approach. It is an updated version of Pastoral Ethics in Practice.
Written by significant researchers and practitioners within the field, this unique collection of key texts introduces the reader to practical theology.
The first positive, in-depth study of cohabitation outside marriage from a mainstream Christian theological perspective.
In Pastoral Ethics, Gaylord Noyce looks at clergy as professionals, and shows what can be learned from the professional ethics of other disciplines.