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  1. 17 de mai. de 2024 · Stanley M. Hauerwas is a theologian, ethicist, and educator at Duke Divinity School. He is known for his work on Christian virtues, church, narrative, and social ethics, and was named \"America’s Best Theologian\" by Time magazine in 2001.

  2. Há 3 dias · Dorrien’s essay, which critiques Stanley Hauerwas’s take on “freedom and justice” (113), immediately precedes Hauerwas’s own chapter, which makes for an intriguing juxtaposition. In defense of his perspective, Hauerwas reiterates his concerns about liberation theology, echoing Petrusek’s perspective.

  3. Há 37 minutos · We may speak of others as gentlemen or gentlewomen, but that is mostly about being polite. Over the last 50 years, several books have renewed an interest in the expression of virtues and the development of character. "After Virtue" by Alasdair MacIntyre. "A Community of Character" by Stanley Hauerwas. "A Book of Virtues" by William Bennett.

  4. Há 6 dias · “Let the Church be the Church,” said leading American ethicist, Stanley Hauerwas. He has spent much of his time calling the Church, especially in the Euro-North American world, not to compromise who they are in the midst of strong temptations to accommodate and concede ground to the gods of our age.

  5. Há 5 dias · “In this brief book Stanley Hauerwas, one of the most prolific writers in Christian ethics of his generation, sets forth his clearest, most readable, and most cogent statement to date of his own perspective on how ethics should be done in a Christian context.”

  6. Há 5 dias · In this episode of Chasing Leviathan, PJ and Dr. Stanley Hauerwas discuss Living Gently in a Violent World and the inspiration behind it. Hauerwas reflects on the controversy surrounding co-author Jean Vanier and the L'Arche movement.

  7. 3 de mai. de 2024 · As Christian theologian Stanley Hauerwas warned in War and the American Difference, we too often see people sacrificed “upon the altar of the nation” as war becomes “a ritual.” He particularly sees this idolatrous ritual in the U.S. context since “war remains for Americans our most determinate moral reality.”