Justice based on Christian Teaching (original) (raw)
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Estudos de Religião, 2018
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Justice Anchored in Truth: A Theological Perspective on the Nature and Implementation of Justice
International Journal of Public Theology, 2009
I propose that a theological perspective makes a constructive and creative contribution to the global struggle for justice. Christian theology recognizes other theories of justice, but at the same time suggests that the struggle for justice is enhanced by providing an ontological foundation for and specifi c content to justice. Th e Hebrew Bible, Jesus of Nazareth and the earliest Christian communities located justice in God and God's relationship to the world. Jesus' engagement for justice raised opposition and led to his crucifi xion; yet, according to the biblical accounts God validated Jesus' vision by raising him from the dead, and God's Spirit keeps the story of Jesus alive in the world by empowering humans in their struggle for the implementation of justice.
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CHRISTIAN PERSPECTIVE OF SOCIAL JUSTICE
The quest for justice in our society has been a constant problem since inception of the society. Practically every experienced individual can identify naturally what is ―just,‖ and can instinctively distinguish ―injustice.‖ However, definitely characterizing what ―justice‖ implies, or what the idea of justice envelops is not very simple to define. The Social Contractarians had showed that in the state of nature, human had to come together to surrender some of their rights to a sovereignty who is to administer social justice when necessarily, this was because the state of nature was characterized by Social Injustice. Decays after that event, the problem of Social Justice Still evolves. In order to solve the problem, philosophers and scholars through the history of western thought have attempt to expose the problem of what social justice is and how it can be administered. Christianity one of the world foremost religions offers an insight into its problem and solution, even before most western scholars on the issue. This article attempts to take a look at Christian most profound sense of being which it is in its moral imperative ―love your neighbor as yourself‖. It takes a critical look at the biblical view of social justice while exposing the some misconception inherent.
Toward a Christian Spirituality of Justice
Philippiniana Sacra, 2006
To treat of a Christian spirituality of justice is not simply a matter of making an exposition of a doctrine of justice in the Christian tradition. Indeed there is such a teaching on justice in the Judaeo-Christian thought; but a doctrine of justice does not amount to a spirituality of justice. Spirituality, as I shall show, is more than a doctrine. Justice as Virtue Let us begin by recalling that justice has been approached traditionally, for the most part of Christian history, as a moral virtue. What has been customary is to speak of the virtue of justice, not of the spirituality of justice. Much of this approach to justice as a moral virtue can be traced to St. Thomas Aquinas' teaching on justice, especially in his Summa Theologiae,1 which has become a standard reference on the topic for centuries. It is interesting to note that Thomas first treats the theme of justice in his consideration of God's action. God exercises justice when he gives to each one what ought to be given to each according to its nature and condition. "This giving 'what ought to be given' is what God wills for himself and for all his creatures. To do this, whether as rational creature or as God, is to 1 Thomas' main sources include Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics and Cicero's De officiis. His commentary on the first is another important source of his teaching on justice.
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ICOANA CREDINȚEI, 2019
This article provides a critical approach to justice and social justice as reflected in Scripture and contemporary Orthodox theology. Some readings from the prophets and the wisdom books are commented and related to some key texts in the New Testament, especially those in the Sermon on the Mount. Usually, human beings seek justice because they need an ordered social context. Christians, however, pursue justice mainly because they intend to live according to the Lord's commandment to love the neighbor as themselves. Christians show their faith in their deeds, i.e., they express their orthodoxy through orthopraxy, which is particularly evident in the way they approach their neighbor and the environment where they live.