Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Revising Basic Christian Ethics: Rethinking Paul Ramsey’s Early Contributions to Moral Theology
View through CrossRef
Despite petitions from friends and critics through much of his career, Paul Ramsey adamantly refused to revise his first book, Basic Christian Ethics. Yet, several pieces of Ramsey’s private correspondence indicate specific changes to Basic Christian Ethics that he felt were necessary. These include a desire to distance his use of agape from associations with Anders Nygren’s Agape and Eros, an added emphasis on the importance of the doctrine of creation for his understanding of agape, covenant, and natural law, and a shift from eschatology to Christology as the foundational doctrine for political ethics. Drawing upon personal letters and other disparate comments throughout Ramsey’s published work, this paper explores the impact such proposed revisions might have on contemporary interest (or lack thereof) in Basic Christian Ethics. In so doing it also highlights Ramsey’s ability to rethink central theological concepts in his work and draw his readers’ attention to fundamental questions in the field of moral theology.
Title: Revising Basic Christian Ethics: Rethinking Paul Ramsey’s Early Contributions to Moral Theology
Description:
Despite petitions from friends and critics through much of his career, Paul Ramsey adamantly refused to revise his first book, Basic Christian Ethics.
Yet, several pieces of Ramsey’s private correspondence indicate specific changes to Basic Christian Ethics that he felt were necessary.
These include a desire to distance his use of agape from associations with Anders Nygren’s Agape and Eros, an added emphasis on the importance of the doctrine of creation for his understanding of agape, covenant, and natural law, and a shift from eschatology to Christology as the foundational doctrine for political ethics.
Drawing upon personal letters and other disparate comments throughout Ramsey’s published work, this paper explores the impact such proposed revisions might have on contemporary interest (or lack thereof) in Basic Christian Ethics.
In so doing it also highlights Ramsey’s ability to rethink central theological concepts in his work and draw his readers’ attention to fundamental questions in the field of moral theology.
Related Results
An AI ethics ‘David and Goliath’: value conflicts between large tech companies and their employees
An AI ethics ‘David and Goliath’: value conflicts between large tech companies and their employees
AbstractArtificial intelligence ethics requires a united approach from policymakers, AI companies, and individuals, in the development, deployment, and use of these technologies. H...
The Place of Cicero in Locke’s Moral Theology
The Place of Cicero in Locke’s Moral Theology
Abstract
Locke’s published and unpublished works disclose a marked contempt for classical moral philosophy, with one signal exception: Cicero. This chapter reconstru...
Can Christian Ethics be Saved? Colonialism, Racial Justice and the Task of Decolonising Christian Theology
Can Christian Ethics be Saved? Colonialism, Racial Justice and the Task of Decolonising Christian Theology
Christian ethical practice has historically fallen short, when we consider the histories of European colonial violence from the sixteenth century and the transatlantic slave trade ...
How We Decide in Moral Situations
How We Decide in Moral Situations
AbstractThe role normative ethics has in guiding action is unclear. Once moral theorists hoped that they could devise a decision procedure that would enable agents to solve difficu...
The Analysis of the Relationship between God, Religion and Politics in Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan and De Cive
The Analysis of the Relationship between God, Religion and Politics in Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan and De Cive
Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) was a
significant political theorist who could be regarded as the founder of social
contract theories. Hobbes’s philosophy is worthy of attention in the h...
Hearing the Mermaids Singing: The Possibility and Limits of Moral Enhancement
Hearing the Mermaids Singing: The Possibility and Limits of Moral Enhancement
AbstractThe possibility of moral bioenhancement, and the alleged need for it, have been widely discussed both in ethics journals and the media since this type of enhancement was fi...
Justice, Impartiality, and Reciprocity a Response to Edwin Hartman
Justice, Impartiality, and Reciprocity a Response to Edwin Hartman
Readers of Business Ethics Quarterly will be grateful to Professor Hartman for this very fine paper. He has, at last, advanced the dialogue on organizations. Instead of the usual a...
Pirates, Kings and Reasons to Ad: Moral Motivation and the Role of
Sanctions in Locke's Moral Theory
Pirates, Kings and Reasons to Ad: Moral Motivation and the Role of
Sanctions in Locke's Moral Theory
Locke's moral theory consists of two explicit and distinct elements — a
broadly rationalist theory of natural law and a hedonistic conception of
...