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Transforming the World? The gospel and social responsibility [Paperback]

Jamie A. Grant , Dewi A. Hughes
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Book Description

15 May 2009 1844743748 978-1844743742
Evangelical Christianity has long been plagued by a dichotomy between evangelism and social action. The debate about whether evangelicals should attempt to make this world a better place in tune with God's will as well as prepare people for life in a better world is the background to this stimulating volume, which seeks to demonstrate that there is no tension between the task of evangelism and the Christian's obligation to care for those in need. The issue should never have been one of 'either/or' but rather should always have been voiced in terms of 'both/and'. The Bible's teaching makes it plain that God's salvific work is both spiritual and physical.
The first seven chapters survey relevant material in the Old and New Testaments; the second seven explore the theme of world transformation from the perspective of social ethics, systematic theology and church history. The clear message is that the proclamation of God's salvation must address both the desperate spiritual need of a sinful humanity and the desperate physical need that is all too apparent in our troubled world - and that there is theoretical and practical work yet to be done as we think and work under the dominion of Jesus, who as a result of his death and resurrection has been given all authority in heaven and earth.

The contributors are David L. Baker, Tim Chester, M. Daniel Carroll R., Jamie A. Grant, Peter S. Heslam, Jason Hood, Dewi A. Hughes, I. Howard Marshall, Rene Padilla, Anna Robbins, David W. Smith, Melvin Tinker, Alistair I. Wilson and Christopher J. H. Wright.


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Product details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: IVP (15 May 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1844743748
  • ISBN-13: 978-1844743742
  • Product Dimensions: 23.1 x 15.5 x 2.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 851,410 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

Product Description

From the Publisher

The gospel and social responsibility

About the Author

Jamie A. Grant is Lecturer in Biblical Studies at the Highland Theological College, Dingwall, Scotland. He is co-editor of 'The God of Covenant' (Apollos) and 'Words and the Word' (Apollos).

Dewi A. Hughes is Theological Advisor for Tearfund, the Christian relief and development agency, and a member of The Lausanne Movement's Theology Working Group. His books include 'Power and Poverty: Divine and Human Rule in a World of Need' (IVP) and 'God of the Poor: A Biblical Vision of God's Present Rule' (OM Publishing).


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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Required reading 19 July 2010
Format:Paperback
This book is important for anyone who wants a genuinely Biblical approach to understanding the mission of the church. David W. Smith's excellent historical chapter states that, "There are multiple new factors (in our contemporary situation) that have created a new context in which discussion of the subject we are dealing with in this volume simply cannot be an optional extra for the Christian community but actually takes us to the very heart of what it means to confess and follow Jesus in the world today." (p266)

The introductory chapter to this collection of essays gives a superb overview of the book, which is very well structured. It is a tragedy of church history that the dichotomy between proclamation and social action developed within Evangelicalism and this book goes a long way towards healing the breach.

The first half of the book explores widely the Biblical material setting out the "social responsibility of the community of faith". (p14)

Having established a Biblical basis for `World Transformation', as a model for mission, the second half seeks to explore this, from the perspectives of social ethics, systematic theology and church history. This book is a valuable contribution to building a public theology of just economics. The whole enterprise would have been strengthened with a summary chapter corresponding to the excellent introduction and setting out some of the key questions, actions and agenda for future development.

So, for example, C. Rene Padilla: "It is my considered opinion that one of the most urgent theological tasks today is the articulation of a Christian social ethics that will provide guidance for the life and mission of the church in the context of an empire that has institutionalised injustice on a global scale." (p201) Anna Robbins' chapter very helpfully develops the idea of regeneration, of the individual, the Christian community, and the world. "For Christians a fully orbed social ethic must be developed from a fully orbed view of the work of the cross." (p209) "(T)he work of the atonement ... helps us to see our call to social transformation in the light of God's victory, and to appreciate the tension of the kingdom inaugurated but awaiting consummation. (p220) Peter S Heslem sets out a clear challenge to developing a much more positive Christian approach to business, which is focused on `productive justice' rather than `distributive justice'. (p275)
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