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Bound to Sin

Bound to Sin

Bound to Sin

Abuse, Holocaust and the Christian Doctrine of Sin
Alistair McFadyen , University of Leeds
September 2000
Available
Paperback
9780521438681

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    This book tests the explanatory and descriptive power of the doctrine of sin in relation to two concrete situations: sexual abuse of children and the holocaust. Taking seriously the explanatory power of secular discourses for analysing and regulating therapeutic action in relation to such situations, the book asks whether the theological language of sin can offer further illumination by speaking of God and the world together. Through its discussion of abuse and the holocaust, an engagement with Augustine, original sin and feminism, a fresh and sometimes surprising perspective is offered, both on the theology of sin and on the pathologies under consideration. The understanding of sin that emerges is centred on joyful worship of the trinitarian God. This essay is more systematic and more theological than most practical, pastoral or applied theology and more practical and concrete than most systematic or constructive theology. It is a genuinely concrete, systematic theology.

    • Discusses doctrine in relation to practical situations (abuse and the holocaust)
    • Offers an alternative understanding of sin
    • Faces squarely the challenge of secular culture to Christian faith and theology in the modern world

    Reviews & endorsements

    'An important contemporary contribution to a debate which Christians ignore at their peril.' Expository Times

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    Product details

    September 2000
    Paperback
    9780521438681
    272 pages
    235 × 156 × 18 mm
    0.483kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Acknowledgments
    • Part I. Drawing into Conversation:
    • 1. The loss of God: pragmatic atheism and the language of sin
    • 2. Speaking morally? The case of original sin
    • 3. Testing, testing: theology in concrete conversation
    • Part II. Concrete Pathologies:
    • 4. Bound by silence: sexual abuse of children
    • 5. What was the problem? 'The Final Solution' and the binding of reason
    • Part III. Testing the Inheritance:
    • 6. Willing
    • 7. Power and participation: feminist theologies of sin
    • 8. Augustine's will
    • 9. A question of standards: trinity, joy, worship and idolatry
    • 10. Concrete idolatries
    • Index of names
    • Index of subjects.
      Author
    • Alistair McFadyen , University of Leeds