Do Protestants have answers to the pressing questions of the day?
For over one hundred years, the Roman Catholic Church has steadily curated a body of papal encyclicals, classic texts, and go-to answers on pressing moral issues of the day, that has come to be known as “Catholic Social Teaching.” Meanwhile, in Protestantism, mainline churches have steadily jettisoned nearly every historic Christian moral teaching in an effort to make the faith more “relevant” and progressive, while evangelicals, though still committed to Scripture, have often done little better in holding fast to the norms that used to guide faithful Christian discipleship when it came to love, war, and everything in between. However, Protestants too have a rich heritage of social teaching, if only they knew their own tradition, a heritage that dovetails on many points with Roman Catholic teaching, but is also inflected by the Reformation’s emphasis on the goods of the family and the nation.
Now, for the first time, we are planting a flag for “Protestant social teaching,” a coherent, catholic, biblical set of convictions about what it means to love one’s neighbor in both personal and political life. The essays in this volume span the breadth of human life, from birth to death, from work to welfare, while providing a clear moral compass on hot-button issues like abortion, just war, and environmental care. This volume brings together contributions from a dozen authors who have deeply studied these diverse moral issues from a classical Protestant standpoint, distilling their biblical and historical insights into short, accessible chapters that can guide the reflections of every pastor or Christian leader.
270 pages.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
Steven Wedgeworth
PART ONE: LAW, JUSTICE, AND PUNISHMENT
I: Law and the Christian
E. J. Hutchinson
II: The Civil Magistrate
Bradford Littlejohn
III: Resistance and Rebellion
Glenn Moots
IV: Just War
Mark LiVicche
PART TWO: MARRIAGE, LIFE, AND DEATH
V: Procreation and Children
Matthew Lee Anderson
VI: Abortion
Steven Wedgeworth
VII: Sex, Marriage, and Divorce
Onsi Aaron Kamel & Alastair Roberts
VIII: Death and Dying
John Wyatt
PART THREE: PROPERTY, WEALTH, AND POVERTY
IX: Work and Labor
Joseph Minich & Colin Redemer
X: Private Property
Eric Enlow
XI: Taxation and Welfare
Allen Calhoun
XII: Environmental Care
Jake Meador
Protestant Social Teaching: An Introduction is in the following collections: