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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Tim NoblePublisher: Pickwick Publications Imprint: Pickwick Publications Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.535kg ISBN: 9781666713077ISBN 10: 1666713074 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 29 July 2022 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews"""Liberation against Entitlement strikes at the heart of the political and religious conflicts of our time. Noble discerns two opposing and incompatible concepts of grace: one that . . . favors a politics of exclusion; the other that proceeds from the free self-giving of divine love, liberating and 'building a people' through recognition of the excluded. As an exercise in discernment in times of populism, the book also offers a key to understanding Pope Francis's theology. An important and timely book!"" --Martin Kirschner, Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt ""As a Brazilian theologian, I enthusiastically greet this book. First, because of reflecting on the nonnegotiable dream of theology: to articulate reality and grace. Second, because of the successful attempt to bring together the core proposals of Latin American theology and Pope Francis's magisterium. Third, because of the conviction Tim Noble expresses so strongly that any social transformation has to be accompanied by the work of the Holy Spirit."" --Maria Clara Bingemer, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro ""Noble's impressive comparative study of divided polities puts the theology of liberation to work for a post-COVID-19, viciously polarized world. Beginning with Karl Marx and concluding with Pope Francis's Fratelli Tutti, Noble explores a vast terrain. His identification of a tension between theology of liberation and theology of entitlement is an invaluable key for understanding our bewildering context; and for imagining how disheartened societies might become heartened once again."" --Michael Kirwan SJ, Loyola Institute, Trinity College Dublin" Liberation against Entitlement strikes at the heart of the political and religious conflicts of our time. Noble discerns two opposing and incompatible concepts of grace: one that . . . favors a politics of exclusion; the other that proceeds from the free self-giving of divine love, liberating and 'building a people' through recognition of the excluded. As an exercise in discernment in times of populism, the book also offers a key to understanding Pope Francis's theology. An important and timely book! --Martin Kirschner, Catholic University of Eichstatt-Ingolstadt As a Brazilian theologian, I enthusiastically greet this book. First, because of reflecting on the nonnegotiable dream of theology: to articulate reality and grace. Second, because of the successful attempt to bring together the core proposals of Latin American theology and Pope Francis's magisterium. Third, because of the conviction Tim Noble expresses so strongly that any social transformation has to be accompanied by the work of the Holy Spirit. --Maria Clara Bingemer, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro Noble's impressive comparative study of divided polities puts the theology of liberation to work for a post-COVID-19, viciously polarized world. Beginning with Karl Marx and concluding with Pope Francis's Fratelli Tutti, Noble explores a vast terrain. His identification of a tension between theology of liberation and theology of entitlement is an invaluable key for understanding our bewildering context; and for imagining how disheartened societies might become heartened once again. --Michael Kirwan SJ, Loyola Institute, Trinity College Dublin ""Liberation against Entitlement strikes at the heart of the political and religious conflicts of our time. Noble discerns two opposing and incompatible concepts of grace: one that . . . favors a politics of exclusion; the other that proceeds from the free self-giving of divine love, liberating and 'building a people' through recognition of the excluded. As an exercise in discernment in times of populism, the book also offers a key to understanding Pope Francis's theology. An important and timely book!"" --Martin Kirschner, Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt ""As a Brazilian theologian, I enthusiastically greet this book. First, because of reflecting on the nonnegotiable dream of theology: to articulate reality and grace. Second, because of the successful attempt to bring together the core proposals of Latin American theology and Pope Francis's magisterium. Third, because of the conviction Tim Noble expresses so strongly that any social transformation has to be accompanied by the work of the Holy Spirit."" --Maria Clara Bingemer, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro ""Noble's impressive comparative study of divided polities puts the theology of liberation to work for a post-COVID-19, viciously polarized world. Beginning with Karl Marx and concluding with Pope Francis's Fratelli Tutti, Noble explores a vast terrain. His identification of a tension between theology of liberation and theology of entitlement is an invaluable key for understanding our bewildering context; and for imagining how disheartened societies might become heartened once again."" --Michael Kirwan SJ, Loyola Institute, Trinity College Dublin Author InformationTim Noble is associate professor of missiology in the Protestant Theological Faculty of Charles University in Prague. He is the author of The Poor in Liberation Theology (2013) and Mission from the Perspective of the Other (2018) and numerous articles on mission, liberation theology, and theology and culture. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |