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OverviewObedience to Jesus's second love command yields a life characterized by such practices as voluntary poverty, communal living, shared life with marginalized people, Gandhian nonviolence, and refusal to participate in the violence of the state. Shalom Ethics offers an exposition of the second love command. The command is best read as an injunction to pursue neighbor inclusion in shalom, the state of a community in which the sustenance, safety, freedom, and dignity of all are secure. Thomas Crisp takes up the question of what normative ethical theory is suggested by the command and related love teachings in the Jesus tradition, the investigation of which yields the book's focal love ethic. He then extrapolates from that ethic, using a combination of biblical and philosophical arguments, to arrive at an ethics of nonviolence, Christian anarchism, open borders, prison abolition, anticapitalism, and voluntary poverty. Loving your neighbor as yourself has implications for living a more radical style of Christian discipleship. Shalom Ethics explores the theory and praxis of the early Jesus movement as a model and suggests what this might look like today. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Thomas M. CrispPublisher: Augsburg Fortress Publishers Imprint: Fortress Press,U.S. Weight: 0.318kg ISBN: 9798889838159Pages: 286 Publication Date: 19 May 2026 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsJesus's life and ministry are an unveiling of reality, which at its core means an exposure to God's merciful and just heart for all the vulnerable. What Tom Crisp beautifully and transformatively conveys here is the way this revelation has cracked open his own experience of this love and, even more, drawn him in communion with others toward those at the cultural margins who, in fact, dwell in the heart of God. This changes everything. --Mark Labberton, president emeritus, Fuller Theological Seminary When it comes to love, Christians too often turn to sentimentality or platitudes. Thomas Crisp moves beyond both to offer us an interpretation of love as shalom that's both intellectually rigorous and deeply grounded in biblical tradition. Not content with limiting himself to analysis, Crisp also offers practicable reflections about shalom love in relation to state power, geopolitical borders, and economic structures. Truly a book to stimulate the mind and inspire practical action. --Kerry Walters, professor emeritus of philosophy and of Peace & Justice Studies, Gettysburg College Shalom Ethics: Loving Your Neighbor as Yourself is a magisterial exploration of the implications for life today of the biblical injunction ""Love your neighbor as yourself."" The author anticipates that readers will regard a good many of the conclusions at which he arrives with an ""incredulous stare."" For this reader, quite right he is. Can the love command really imply the abolition of prisons? Can it really imply not voting and paying as little tax as possible? On and on. Crisp's bracing conclusions are so compellingly argued, however, that over and over, the incredulous stare morphs into the eye of enlightenment. --Nicholas Wolterstorff, Noah Porter Professor Emeritus of Philosophical Theology, Yale University; senior research fellow, Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture, University of Virginia Like the author himself, Shalom Ethics is a profound gift. It is nothing less than a comprehensive development and defense of the project of grounding Christian ethics in love. But it is much more than this too. It is, at once, a work of first-rate moral philosophy and a gut-churning, mind-bending, goose-bumping prophetic vision. Those paying attention know that Crisp is among the most penetrating thinkers of his generation. The combination of this level of philosophical precision with such deeply humane and vulnerable moral sensitivities is vanishingly rare. Says Crisp, the way of Jesus is the way of a richly coherent but morally demanding agape. And the demands are going to be surprising too. Still, the beauty of the way comes through--and leaves us wondering if maybe, just maybe, we might risk taking it up. Pulling things together, this is a bracing book, both intellectually and morally. No one will walk away from a fair-minded read of it without a limp. Can a book that leaves you with a limp also be a gift? Yes, yes, it can be. --Daniel Speak, professor of philosophy, Loyola Marymount University Tom Crisp's Shalom Ethics is my favorite sort of book--the sort in which the only thing more exciting than wrestling with its soul-making challenges is imagining the provocative and healing ferment it may generate--in journals, books, and classrooms (for sure!), but also and more importantly in the lives of radically loving people yearning to bring the peace that passes understanding into the meanest streets of human experience. Agree or disagree with Crisp's often demanding conclusions, but you cannot escape this book without an exceedingly more rigorous and vastly expanded understanding of the transformational power of love and the deep joy its votaries can realize in their lives and communities. --Matthew C. Halteman, professor of philosophy, Calvin University Author InformationThomas Crisp is a professor of philosophy at Biola University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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