Politics and Beatitude

Studies in Christian Ethics 30 (2):199-206 (2017)
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Abstract

The limits and secularity of political life have been signature themes of modern Augustinianism, often couched in non-theological language of realism and the role of religion in public life. In dialogue with Gilbert Meilaender, this article inverts and theologizes that interest by asking how Augustinian pilgrims might characterize the positive relation of political history to saving history and the ways in which political action in time might teach us something about the nature of salvation that comes to us from beyond history. This relation of continuity and discontinuity eludes dogmatic formulation, but the goal of the present article is to see where a shared Augustinianism and a shared commitment to aspects of the liberal political tradition might find illuminating disagreement.

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Assessing the Augustinian Democrats.Jonathan Tran - 2018 - Journal of Religious Ethics 46 (3):521-547.

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References found in this work

Religion as Conversation-stopper.Richard Rorty - 1994 - Common Knowledge 3 (1):1-6.
Divine Grace and Ethics.Gilbert Meilaender - 2005 - In Gilbert Meilaender & William Werpehowski, The Oxford handbook of theological ethics. New York: Oxford University Press.

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