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On Being Rich and Poor: Christianity a Time of Economic Globalization
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On Being Rich and Poor: Christianity a Time of Economic Globalization
Current price: $40.95
Barnes and Noble
On Being Rich and Poor: Christianity a Time of Economic Globalization
Current price: $40.95
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One of the most original thinkers of the twentieth century, Jacques Ellul (1912–1994) was a French law professor, sociologist, lay theologian, and self-described “Christian anarchist.” Collecting Ellul’s lectures on the Bible,
On Being Rich and Poor
contains his prescient meditations on some of the most important theological questions of the modern age. In this volume, a follow-up to the Ellul lectures collected in
On Freedom, Love, and Power
, Ellul asks how it is that Christianity can justify abandoning the poorest, weakest, and most vulnerable members of society, depriving the next generation of a liveable future, and participating in an unprecedented wave of environmental destruction.
In these talks, Ellul observes that some of the harshest language in the Jewish and Christian Bibles is reserved for those who are rich and powerful, and thus able to bend others to their will. Through his analysis of the prophetic vision of Amos and the epistle of James, Ellul exposes the gap between the principles of Christian life and the practices of the modern world. Critiquing a world that values domination over collaboration, he offers an alternative path.
Transcribed from the original recordings and translated by Willem H. Vanderburg, a student and long-time colleague of Ellul’s,
is an unprecedented look at how one of the twentieth century’s foremost thinkers grappled with some of today’s most challenging issues.
On Being Rich and Poor
contains his prescient meditations on some of the most important theological questions of the modern age. In this volume, a follow-up to the Ellul lectures collected in
On Freedom, Love, and Power
, Ellul asks how it is that Christianity can justify abandoning the poorest, weakest, and most vulnerable members of society, depriving the next generation of a liveable future, and participating in an unprecedented wave of environmental destruction.
In these talks, Ellul observes that some of the harshest language in the Jewish and Christian Bibles is reserved for those who are rich and powerful, and thus able to bend others to their will. Through his analysis of the prophetic vision of Amos and the epistle of James, Ellul exposes the gap between the principles of Christian life and the practices of the modern world. Critiquing a world that values domination over collaboration, he offers an alternative path.
Transcribed from the original recordings and translated by Willem H. Vanderburg, a student and long-time colleague of Ellul’s,
is an unprecedented look at how one of the twentieth century’s foremost thinkers grappled with some of today’s most challenging issues.