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Theological Ethics Seminar 2

Class at Protestant Theological Faculty |
RET5021

This text is not available in the current language. Showing version "cs".Syllabus

4. 10.

Úvod do semináře 11. 10.

 Reimagining Ourselves (s. 1-20) 18. 10.

Christian Culpability in Groaning Creation (s. 21-60)  25. 10.

Imago Dei: The Scriptural Background (s. 61-87)  1. 11.

Two Historical Conceptions of Imago Dei (s. 88-112)  8. 11.

The Ontology of Communion (s. 113-139)  15. 11.

Dimension of Human Relatedness (s. 140-160)  22. 11.

Being-With-Nature I. (oddíl I.-V., s. 161-183)  29. 11.

Being-With-Nature II. (oddíl VI.-IX., s. 183-205) 6. 12.

C. Palmer: Stewardship: A Case Study in Environmental Ethics (s. 63-75)  13. 12.

P. H. Santmire: Partnership with Nature according to Scriptures (s. 253-272) 3. 1.

M. Rae: To Render Praise (s. 291-311) 10. 1.

Závěrečná diskuse, zhodnocení semináře  

Annotation

The main goal of the seminar is to introduce students to a concrete theological perspective on the relationship between humans and nature and to make available to them the basic ideas underlying environmentally oriented theology. In the seminar we will focus primarily on the book Imaging God: Dominion as Stewardship by Canadian theologian Douglas John Hall (1928-).

In this work, Hall systematically and engagingly answers questions that have not ceased to be the subject of debate and controversy: Is Christianity to blame for the environmental crisis? What does it mean to "subdue the earth"? What is the meaning of the biblical statement that human being was made in the image of God? Is stewardship the proper relationship to nature? The author's perspective will be complemented by selected chapters of the book Environmental Stewardship: Critical Perspectives, Past and Present, in which the topic of stewardship is examined from various angles - both critically and favorably.