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Full Description
This important book poses the question of whether Christian proclamation can be made ethically safe for the Jewish neighbour. Boesel assesses two major approaches to a Christian theology of Judaism - those exemplified by Rosemary Radford Ruether and Karl Barth. This book makes a significant contribution to our understanding of systematics, ethics, and homiletics at the intersection of Jewish-Christian relations.
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part I: An Introduction: The Problem and its Context
1. Is the Good News of Jesus Christ Bad News for the Jewish Neighbor?
2. Kierkegaard and Hegel on Abraham: The Openness and Complexity of the Modern Context
Part II: The Problem: A Theological Exemplar
3. The Problem, Part I: The "Perfect Storm" of Christological Interpretive Imperialism
4. The Problem, Part II: The Good News of the Gospel and the Bad News for the Children of Abraham
Part III: The Remedy: A Theological Exemplar
5. The Remedy, Part I: Dispersing the "Perfect Storm"
6. The Remedy, Part II: The Debt to Modernity - Interpretive Imperialism in a Higher Key
7. The Remedy, Part III: Abraham Must Die
Part IV: The Remedy as Problem, the Problem as Remedy
8. Postmodern Discernment and the Limits of the Ethical: The Way of Justice
9. The Problem as Remedy: An Interpretive Imperialism "Without Weapons"?
10. Conclusion: Faith Seeking the Ethical
Bibliography
Author Index
Subject Index



