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Communities of Restoration: Ecclesial Ethics and Restorative Justice

✍ Scribed by Thomas Noakes-Duncan


Publisher
Bloomsbury T&T Clark
Year
2017
Tongue
English
Leaves
290
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


By bringing together the insights of ecclesial ethics, an approach that emphasizes the distinctive nature of the church as the community that forms its mind and character after its reading of Scripture, with the theory and practice of restorative justice, a way of conceiving justice-making that emerged from the Mennonite-Anabaptist tradition, this book shows why a theological account of the theory and practice of restorative justice is fruitful for articulating and clarifying the witness of the church, especially when faced with conflict or wrongdoing. This can help extend the church’s imagination as to how it might better become God’s community of restoration as it reflects on the ways in which the justice of God is taking shape in its own community.
β€œHow does an ecclesial context shape the theological apprehension and praxis of justice?” This question orientates the book. In particular, it asks how, in view of its members having been admitted into God’s restoring justice in Christ, the church might embody in the world this same justice of restoring right relationships. While Christian reflection on the nature of justice has tended to favour a judicial and retributive conception of justice, it will be argued that the biblical understanding of the justice of God is best understood as a saving, liberating, and restorative justice. It is this restorative conception that ought to guide the community that reads Scripture so that it might be embodied in life.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Introduction
Chapter 1. Ecclesial Perspectives on Justice in Historical Perspective
Concepts of Justice in Historical Perspective
Justice in Greco-Roman Philosophy
The Early Church Fathers
Early Christendom and Augustine
Ecclesial and Secular Separation
Anselm’s Retributive Theology
Two Kingdoms, Justice Divided
The Modern Turn
Criminal Justice in the Contemporary Context
Chapter 2. The Ecclesial Turn in Christian Ethics
The Emergence of Ecclesial Ethics
The Eclipse of the Church
The Barthian Revolution
The Character of the Christian Community
The Church as Polis
The Political in Salvation History
A Community of Peacemakers
Reassessments of Virtue
An Ecclesial Ethic of Justice-Making?
Chapter 3. The Emergence of Restorative Justice in Ecclesial Practice
The Roots of Restorative Justice in Christian Praxis
The Kitchener Experiment
The Elkhart Initiative
Faith and VORP
Uncovering the Ecclesial Footprint
The Original Revolution
Mainstreaming Restorative Justice
Some Ecclesial Implications
A Way Forward for Restorative Justice and the Church
Chapter 4. The Theological Interpretation of Scripture and Biblical Justice
The Theological Interpretation of Scripture
Ecclesial Discipline in Matthew 18.15-22
The Biblical Imagination
(Mis) Interpreting Justice in Scripture
Covenantal and Christological Justice
Chapter 5. A Parable of the Justice of God: Luke 15.11-32
Narratives of Restorative Reintegration
Reading Luke 15.11-32 as a Restorative Parable
Wrongdoing as Relational Rupture
The Journey of Repentance
Compassionate Justice, Restoring Belonging
Chapter 6. The Restorative Spirit in Christian Community: A Reading of First Corinthians
Reading First Corinthians
The Setting of the Letter
Remember Your Call (Chapters 1–4)
Practicing Just Relationships (Chapters 5–11)
Practicing a Justice that Restores (Chapters 12–14)
Chapter 7. Ecclesial Embodiments of Restorative Justice Practice
Ecclesial Ethics: Sectarianism, Idealism, or Not?
Worship as the Ecclesial Context for Restorative Justice
The Church’s Restorative Witness in the World
A Restorative Common Life: Peacemaking Circles
A Restorative Missional Life: The Sycamore Tree Project
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index of References
Index of Authors


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