
The Hauerwas Reader
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Persons
Stanley Hauerwas is Gilbert T. Rowe Professor of Theological Ethics in the School of Divinity and Professor of Law at Duke University. In addition to having published over three hundred scholarly articles to date, he is the author or editor of more than thirty books, including Resident Aliens: Life in the Christian Colony, Wilderness Wanderings: Probing Twentieth-Century Theology and Philosophy, and Christians among the Virtues: Theological Conversations with Ancient and Modern Ethics.John Berkman is Assistant Professor of Theology at The Catholic University of America. Michael G. Cartwright is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Religion at the University of Indianapolis.
Content
Acknowledgments xi
Part I: Editorial Introductions
John Berkman, An Introduction to The Hauerwas Reader 3
William Cavanaugh, Stan the Man: A Thoroughly Biased Account of a completely Unobjective Person 17
Part II: Reframing Theological Ethics
Who Are Christians? The Christian Story
1. How "Christian Ethics" Came to Be (1997) 37
2. On Keeping Theological Ethics Theological (1983) 51
3. A Retrospective Assessment of an "Ethics of Character": The Development of Hauerwas's Theological Project (1985, 2001) 75
4. Why the "Sectarian Temptation" Is a Misrepresentation: A Response to James Gustafson (1988) 90
5. Reforming Christian Social Ethics: Ten Theses (1981) 111
6. Jesus and the Social Embodiment of the Peaceable Kingdom (1983) 116
7. The Church as God's New Language (1986) 142
What Are Christians to Be? Christian Discipleship
8. Vision, Stories, and Character (1973, 2001) 165
9. A Story-Formed Community: Reflections on Watership Down (1981) 171
10. Self-Deception and Autobiography: Reflections on Speer's Inside the Third Reich, with David B. Burrell (1974) 200
11. Character, Narrative, and Growth in the Christian Life (1980) 221
12. The Interpretation of Scripture: Why Discipleship is Required (1993) 255
13. Casuistry in Context: The Need for Tradition (1995) 267
How Are Christians to Live? Discipleship Exemplified
14. Courage Exemplified, with Charles Pinches (1993) 287
15. Why Truthfulness Requires Forgiveness: A Commencement Address for Graduates of a College of the Church of the Second Chance (1992) 307
16. Peacemaking: The Virtue of the Church (1985) 318
17. Remembering as a Moral Task: The Challenge of the Holocaust (1981) 327
18. Practicing Patience: How Christians Should Be Sick, with Charles Pinches (1997) 348
Part III: New Intersections in Theological Ethics
The Church's Witness: Christian Ethics after "Public Theology"
19. The Servant Community: Christian Social Ethics (1983) 371
20. Should War Be Eliminated? A Thought Experiment (1984) 392
21. On Being a Church Capable of Addressing a World at War: A Pacifist Response to the United Methodist Bishops' Pastoral In Defense of Creation (1988) 426
22. A Christian Critique of Christian America (1986) 459
23. Sex in Public: How Adventurous Christians Are Doing It (1978) 481
24. The Radical Hope in the Annunciation: Why Both Single and Married Christians Welcome Children (1998) 505
25. Why Gays (as a Group) Are Morally Superior to Christians (as a Group) (1993) 519
26. Christianity: It's Not a Religion, It's an Adventure (1991) 522
The Church's Hospitality: Christian Ethics after "Medical Ethics"
27. Salvation and Health: Why Medicine Needs the Church (1985) 539
28. Should Suffering Be Eliminated? What the Retarded Have to Teach Us (1984) 556
29. Memory, Community, and the Reasons for Living: Reflections on Suicide and Euthanasia, with Richard Bondi (1976) 577
30. Must a Patient Be a Person to Be a Patient? Or, My Uncle Charlie Is Not Much of a Person, But He Is Still My Uncle Charlie (1975) 596
31. Abortion, Theologically Understood (1991) 603
Michael G. Cartwright, Stanley Hauerwas's Essays in Theological Ethics: A Reader's Guide 623
Selected Annotated Bibliography 673
Scripture References 699
Name Index 701
Subject Index 709
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