
Methodist Morals offers keen insight into the public church, interpreting the United Methodist Social Principles as a dynamic discourse about morality and human rights in light of faith. Revised every fouryears by the General Conference of the United Methodist Church, the Social Principles exposes the moral deliberations of this distinctly American and increasingly “worldwide” church as it struggl...
Hardcover: 320 pages
Publisher: Univ Tennessee Press (May 14, 2016)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1621902404
ISBN-13: 978-1621902409
Product Dimensions: 6.5 x 1 x 9.5 inches
Amazon Rank: 799549
Format: PDF ePub Text djvu book
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This is a difficult review to write because of the breadth and depth of this scholarly watershed coverage of the Social Principles of the UMC. We members of the UMC know about the Social Principles and argue vociferously about certain parts of it. So...
e community across multiple languages and cultures. Perhaps no other document provides as rich a depiction of Protestants participating in the moral argument of public life.This is the first full-length study of Methodist social teachings in over fifty years. Examining official Methodist teachings from institutional, historical, and cross-cultural perspectives, Darryl Stephens provides arich analysis of this case study of Protestant social witness, drawing on his expertise in church polity, Methodist history, and Christian social ethics. A wide range of comparisons— with documents of theUnited Nations, with moral debate in Germany and Zimbabwe, and with historical Methodist statements of social witness—shows the Social Principles to be a unique form of social witness. The issues of war,abortion, human sexuality, and marriage illustrate the messiness of democratic deliberation in an ecclesial context and the evolution of a people ever concerned with the sin of “worldliness” even as theybecome more attuned to transforming social structures. Stephens also contrasts this conception of the public church with the ecclesiologies of prominent Methodist ethicists Stanley Hauerwas and PaulRamsey.Intended for students of Methodism, ecumenical church leaders, and scholars of Christian social ethics and contemporary US mainline religion, this work reveals the challenges to and possibilities forachieving moral community in an increasingly global and diverse world.