Faith, Morality, and Civil Society

Faith, Morality, and Civil Society

Faith, Morality, and Civil Society

Faith, Morality, and Civil Society

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Overview

In this rich collection of essays, editors Dale McConkey and Peter Augustine Lawler explore the contributions that religious faith and morality can make to a civil society. Though the level of religious expression has remained high in the United States, the shift from traditional religious beliefs to a far more individualized style of faith has led many to contend that no faith commitment, collective or personal, should contribute to the vibrancy of a civil democratic society. Challenging those who believe that the private realm is the only appropriate locus of religious belief, the contributors to this volume believe that religion can inform and invigorate the secular institutions of society such as education, economics, and politics. Drawn from a wide variety of religious and moral traditions, these diverse essays show, from many perspectives, the important contribution religion has to make in the public square that is civil society.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739154946
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 06/05/2003
Series: Applications of Political Theory
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 250
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Dale McConkey is Associate Professor of Sociology at Berry College. He is the Editor-in-Chief of The Christian Sociologist, and the coeditor, with Peter Augustine Lawler, of Faith, Reason, and Political Life Today (Lexington Books, 2001), Social Structures, Social Capital, and Personal Freedom (2000), and Community and Political Thought Today (1998). Peter Augustine Lawler is Professor of Government at Berry College.

Table of Contents


Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 The Potential for Pluralism: Religious Responses to the Triumph of Theory and Method in American Academia
Chapter 3 Neo-Calvinist Social Thought and Civic Education
Chapter 4 The Principle of Subsidiarity and the Agrarian Ideal
Chapter 5 The Varieties of Democratic Experience
Chapter 6 The Changing Landscape of Religion and Politics in America: The 2000 Presidential Elections
Chapter 7 Holy Books, Not Pocketbooks: Religious and Cultural Influences on the 2000 Presidential Election
Chapter 8 Religious Civility, Civil Society, and Charitable Choice: Faith-Based Poverty Relief in the Post-Welfare Era
Chapter 9 Speech, Not Religion: The Dilemma of Religious Conservatives in the Public Square
Chapter 10 Faith, Tolerance, and Civil Society
Chapter 11 Aliens and Citizens: Competing Models of Political Involvement in Contemporary Christian Social Ethics
Chapter 12 Inverted Morality
Chapter 13 From Virtues to Values: Some Opening Thoughts
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