Thus while it may appear that Marjorie Suchocki made social justice to be a normative reference point for dialogue, in fact she defined justice in terms of dialogue: “Liberation theology has pointed to the invidious effects that follow ...
He walked up Broadway, past the sushi joints and pizza parlors and McDonald's and the Payless shoe store and the sausage vendors, all the cheap stuff on streets where powerful people rocked the universe, made decisions that caused tuna ...
This is the future of love--vast love, love beyond boundaries, love without preconceptions and judgments, love without outdated myths--love which can actually be experienced.
In the manner of a contemporary Edith Wharton, Shirley Abbott exposes the inner lives and the tangled relationships of eight characters—before and after New York's tragedy—and forces both them and the reader to see the world in a new ...
This work is essential reading for all concerned with the current situation of religion in the era of globalization and with the future development of Radical Orthodoxy.