Wrestling with God : ethical precarity in Christianity and international relations

Bibliographic Information

Wrestling with God : ethical precarity in Christianity and international relations

Cecelia Lynch

(Cambridge studies in international relations, 152)

Cambridge University Press, 2020

  • : Hardback

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 243-272) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Contrary to charges of religious "dogma," Christian actors in international politics often wrestle with the lack of a clear path in determining what to do and how to act, especially in situations of violence and when encountering otherness. Lynch argues that it is crucial to recognise the ethical precarity of decision-making and acting. This book contextualizes and examines ethical struggles and justifications that key figures and movements gave during the early modern period of missionary activity in the Americas; in the interwar debates about how to act vis-a-vis fascism, economic oppression and colonialism in a "secular" world; in liberation theology's debates about the use of violence against oppression and bloodshed; and in contemporary Christian humanitarian negotiations of religious pluralism and challenges to the assumptions of western Christianity. Lynch explores how the wrestling with God that took place in each of these periods reveals ethical tensions that continue to impact both Christianity and international relations.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Wrestling with God in the Modern West
  • 2. Understanding Christian Wrestling About Ethics
  • 3. Wrestling with the Violence of Conquest
  • 4. Wrestling with War
  • 5. Wrestling with the Violence of Oppression
  • 6. Wrestling with Violence and Injustice Abroad and at Home
  • 7. Has Anyone Prevailed?
  • Bibliography
  • Index.

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