Record Detail
Advanced SearchText
Christian Morality: The Word Becomes Flesh
In this third collection of his essays on Christian ethics, Josef Fuchs takes up a number of pressing questions both in fundamental and applied ethics. Several essays explore the biblical basis for establishing Christian norms and principles for ethical decision-making. These deal in detail with the nature of human conscience and the effect on it of religious values in a pluralistic culture. The author also deals with current and pressing issues of a Christian moral life: continuity and change in moral teaching as exemplified by the debate over religious freedom; pluralism in the understanding of Christian marriage as early as the twelfth century; bioethical problems dealing with the beginning and end of human life; and the general question, is there a Catholic ethical moral theology?
Availability
| 5453 | 241.042 Fuc c | Available |
Detail Information
| Series Title |
-
|
|---|---|
| Call Number |
241.042 Fuc c
|
| Publisher | Georgetown Univ. Press : Washington, D.C.., 1987 |
| Collation |
210hlm; 15x23cm
|
| Language |
English
|
| ISBN/ISSN |
0-87840-452-A
|
| Classification |
241.042
|
| Content Type |
-
|
| Media Type |
-
|
|---|---|
| Carrier Type |
-
|
| Edition |
-
|
| Subject(s) | |
| Specific Detail Info |
-
|
| Statement of Responsibility |
-
|
Other version/related
No other version available






