Divine Imperatives

Divine Imperatives
Author: Herbert W. Byrne
Publisher: Xulon Press
Total Pages: 122
Release: 2004-06
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1594674256

The Divine Imperative

The Divine Imperative
Author: Emil Brunner
Publisher: James Clarke & Co.
Total Pages: 734
Release: 2002
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780718890452

One of the major works of the great German theologian Emil Brunner, The Divine Imperative deals with what we ought to do. People are unconvinced that there is an inviolable moral obligation governing human life because they do not believe that the 'good'can be precisely and clearly known. Haven't some generations called bad what others have called good? Aren't moral standards relative? Doesn't religion lack uniform and practical moral guidance? Brunner discusses the moral confusion we face. He analyses the nature of the Good, showing why the Christian faith as understood by the Protestant Reformers provides the only true approach and answer to the ethical problem. Philosophical ethics, whether ancient or modern, cannot correctly define the Good, becausethe Good is regarded either as too abstract and absolute or as too concrete and relative. Christianity, by contrast, sees the moral problem as one of responsibility between humans who are created so as to respond to God. He created men for responsive fellowship with Him, establishing orderly ways of acting in the world. Correct understanding of the nature of society, family, state, economic life, is needed to discern one's duty. Because Brunner's analysis is at once fundamental and comprehensive, this book remains a fresh and compelling treatment of the moral problem. It offers a provocative discussion and solution of a perennial human problem.

Past Imperatives

Past Imperatives
Author: Louis E. Newman
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 302
Release: 2012-02-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 1438414641

Past Imperatives explores the nature and development of Jewish ethics by analyzing three important sets of issues: the relationship between Jewish law and ethics, the relationship between Jewish ethics and theology, and the problems and prospects for constructing a contemporary Jewish ethic. The penetrating and provocative essays are drawn from a number of fields, including legal theory, literary theory, and theory of religion. These studies illuminate many previously uninvestigated aspects of Jewish biomedical ethics, covenant theology, and textual interpretation in Judaism. By exploring these issues within the larger context of historical and theoretical work in religious studies, Past Imperatives moves beyond previous work in Jewish ethics, which has largely sought to offer moral guidance from a Jewish perspective. This volume boldly confronts the fact that Judaism encompasses many, sometimes contradictory, ethical perspectives and investigates their theological underpinnings, how they have developed, and how they differ from other moral and/or religious perspectives.

The Divine Imperative

The Divine Imperative
Author: Emil Brunner
Publisher: Westminster John Knox Press
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1979-09
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780664242466

Objective Imperatives

Objective Imperatives
Author: Ralph C. S. Walker
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 205
Release: 2022-09-01
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 0192671235

Kant held the moral law to be an objective imperative, an entity in its own right. It carries with it prescriptive force, in parallel to other principles of pure reason, like those of logic and mathematics. Objective imperatives therefore do not derive their authority from any other source, such as common consensus or the will of God. In Objective Imperatives, Ralph C. S. Walker seeks to show that this is a highly defensible view: Kant's Categorical Imperative, properly understood, is broadly right. The key to it is rationality, and not universality, which functions only as an approximate test. Often, Kant sets the matter out badly, and most of the common objections to him can be shown to be due to misunderstandings. A morality that gives us an objective imperative does appear incompatible with the determinism to which Kant commits himself, but Walker argues that this appearance is misleading.

The Minds of Gods

The Minds of Gods
Author: Benjamin Grant Purzycki
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 285
Release: 2023-02-09
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1350265713

Why are humans obsessed with divine minds? What do gods know and what do they care about? What happens to us and our relationships when gods are involved? Drawing from neuroscience, evolutionary, cultural, and applied anthropology, social psychology, religious studies, philosophy, technology, and cognitive and political sciences, The Minds of Gods probes these questions from a multitude of naturalistic perspectives. Each chapter offers brief intellectual histories of their topics, summarizes current cutting-edge questions in the field, and points to areas in need of attention from future researchers. Through an innovative theoretical framework that combines evolutionary and cognitive approaches to religion, this book brings together otherwise disparate literatures to focus on a topic that has comprised a lasting, central obsession of our species.

Disturbing Divine Behavior

Disturbing Divine Behavior
Author: Eric A. Seibert
Publisher: Fortress Press
Total Pages: 361
Release:
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 145140770X

How should we understand biblical texts where God is depicted as acting irrationally, violently, or destructively? If we distance ourselves from disturbing portrayals of God, how should we understand the authority of Scripture? How does the often wrathful God portrayed in the Old Testament relate to the God of love proclaimed in the New Testament? Is that contrast even accurate? Disturbing Divine Behavior addresses these perennially vexing questions for the student of the Bible. Eric A. Seibert calls for an engaged and discerning reading of the Old Testament that distinguishes the particular literary and theological goals achieved through narrative characterizations of God from the rich understanding of the divine to which the Old Testament as a whole points. Providing illuminating reflections on theological reading as well, this book will be a welcome resource for any readers who puzzle over disturbing representations of God in the Bible.

Covenantal Imperatives

Covenantal Imperatives
Author: Walter S. Wurzburger
Publisher:
Total Pages: 334
Release: 2008
Genre: Law
ISBN:

Covenantal Imperatives, a collection of essays selected from the nearly six decades of Rabbi Walter Wurzburger's illustrious career, combines the authors mastery of Halakhah with a deep understanding of Jewish philosophy. Covering topics ranging from cooperation with non-Orthodox branches of Judaism, the Sabbath, and his concept of modern Orthodoxy, Rabbi Wurzburgers essays are a true representation of the work of an original thinker and leader in the American Jewish community.

Philosopher and Prophet

Philosopher and Prophet
Author: Yochanan Silman
Publisher: SUNY Press
Total Pages: 388
Release: 1995-07-01
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9780791424629

This book relates the various strata of Halevi's Book of Kuzari to the different periods of Halevi's philosophical development.