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John Wesley's Moral Theology: The Quest For God And Goodness
D. Stephen Long

John Wesley's Moral Theology: The Quest For God And Goodness

Abingdon Press (Apr 15, 2005)
9780687343546
| Paperback
257 pages | 152 x 224 mm | English
Dewey 241.047092
LC Classification BX8495.W5 .L66 2005
LC Control No. 2004011520

Genre

  • Ethics (ETH)

Subject

  • Christian Ethics
  • Religion / Christian Theology / Ethics
  • Religion / Christianity / Methodist
  • Wesley, John - Ethics

Plot

The public theology of the Wesleyan tradition is best understood as moral theology rather than as philosophical and applied ethics. Long asserts that the ethical nature of the Wesleyan tradition can be best understood using the frame of moral theology stemming from the virtue tradition, particularly the work of Thomas Aquinas. This recognizes that the gathering of the faithful for the purpose of seeking holiness is the public voice of the church. Because we squeezed the Wesleyan tradition in the academic discipline of philosophical and applied ethics, we distorted our tradition. This distortion led us into our current ethical impasse, particularly with money, war and peace, homosexuality, and technology.An excerpt from the Circuit Rider review: "In John Wesley’s Moral Theology, D. Stephen Long offers a radical proposal: By letting Wesley be Wesley in his context and thus being out of step with ours, Wesley actually has more to say to us in our postmodern context. Here, our problem with making him relevant for today is implied in the difference between “ethics” and “moral theology.” As a “moral theologian,” Wesley believed that doing and knowing what is good can only be achieved by being united with Christ. In other words, the Good and the True cannot be known outside of God. Thus, there is no separation between ethics and theology since the former is only intelligible in the light of the latter." (Click here to read the entire review.)

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Added Date Aug 21, 2018 09:24:52
Modified Date Aug 21, 2018 09:24:52