Family and Christian Ethics
In this book, Petruschka Schaafsma offers an innovative appraisal of family. Eschewing the framework of worry and renewal that currently dominates family studies, she instead explores the topic through the concepts of 'givenness' and 'dependence'. 'Givenness' highlights the fact that family is not chosen; 'dependence' refers to being intimately included in each other's identities and lives. Both experiences are challenging, especially in a contemporary context, where independence and freedom to shape one's own life have become accepted ideals. Schaafsma shows the impasses to which these ideals lead in several disciplines – theology, philosophy, sociology, social anthropology and care ethics. She moves constructively beyond them by tapping literary, artistic and biblical sources for their insights on family. Grounded in a theological approach to family as 'mystery' rather than 'problem', she develops an understanding of the current controversial character of family that accounts for both its ordinary and transcendent character. This title is available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
- Explores family through the lenses of 'givenness' and 'dependence', rather than the framework of worry and renewal that dominates current ethical family studies
- Introduces readers to current family research in humanities and social sciences and shows how they can fruitfully collaborate in understanding the controversial character of the topic of the family
- Shows the specific contributions of a theological attentiveness for the sacred and mystery for understanding the everyday moral phenomenon of family
Product details
August 2023Adobe eBook Reader
9781009324588
0 pages
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Prologue. The difficult question of what family is about
- 1. Family as mystery
- 2. The family tie as mystery
- 3. Family and givenness as mystery
- 4. Family and dependence as mystery
- Epilogue. Morality of appeal and answer: Ethics and the sacred character of the family as mystery.