In the World, But Not of the World: Christian Social Thinking at the End of the Twentieth Century

Front Cover
Lexington Books, 2000 - Religion - 267 pages
In the World, But Not of the World explores the threefold tension among Alasdair MacIntyre's prognosis for Western society; the desires of some for a social transformation with a Christian moral vision at the sacred centre; and a "baptist" understanding of Christianity as essentially voluntary, non-sacralist discipleship. Andrew Fitz-Gibbon uses five contemporary Christian social thinkers, from different traditions, as conversation partners. Through his examination of these thinkers, Fitz-Gibbon explores how the church may continue to truthfully narrate the Christian story in the midst of the moral tensions of late-capitalist Western society. His creative conclusion is that the church at the beginning of the twenty-first century can move toward a resolution of the central tension of "being in the world, but not of the world" through a synthesis of the believers' church tradition and an affirmation of communitarian liberal democracy.
 

Contents

INTRODUCTION
1
THE CONTINUING SAGA OF CHRISTIAN SOCIAL THINKING
7
CHRISTIAN SOCIAL THEORY AND THE TELLING OF STORIES
43
A TRUTHFUL TALE OF MESSIANIC COMMUNITY
63
A RETELLING OF PROTESTANT NEOORTHODOXY
97
A MAGISTERIAL STORY OF POLISH CATHOLICISM POPE JOHN PAUL II
127
CREATING A NARRATIVE FOR AMERICAN POPULAR CONSERVATISM
159
A NARRATION OF THE CATHOLIC WHIG TRADITION MICHAEL NOVAK
187
TOWARD A RESOLUTION OF THE CENTRAL TENSION OF CHRISTIAN SOCIAL THINKING
219
THESIS DIAGRAMMATICALLY DISPLAYED
229
THREEFOLD TENSION OF THE STUDY
231
BIBLIOGRAPHY
233
INDEX
257
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Copyright

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About the author (2000)

Andrew L. Fitz-Gibbon is an ordained Baptist minister. He is Adjunct Professor at Trinity College and Seminary in Newburgh, Indiana, and has been a guest scholar at the University of Newcastle and a visiting scholar at Cornell University.