Hope for Common Ground
![]() 264 pp., 6 x 9 Hardcover ISBN: 9781626163089 (1626163081) 264 pp., 6 x 9 Paperback ISBN: 9781626163065 (1626163065) eBook ISBN: 9781626163072 E-Inspection Request E-Inspection May 2016 Moral Traditions series EXPLORE THIS TITLE DescriptionTable of Contents Reviews |
Hope for Common Ground
Mediating the Personal and the Political in a Divided Church
Julie Hanlon Rubio
Winner of the 2017 College Theology Society Book Award of the College Theology Society, the 2017 CPA Book Award for Faithful Citizenship of the Catholic Press Association
Much like the rest of the country, American Catholics are politically divided, perhaps more so now than at any point in their history. In this learned but accessible work for scholars, students, and religious and lay readers, ethicist Julie Hanlon Rubio suggests that there is a way beyond red versus blue for orthodox and progressive Catholics. In a call for believers on both sides of the liberal-conservative divide to put aside labels and rhetoric, Rubio, a leading scholar in marriage and family for more than twenty years, demonstrates that common ground does exist in the local sphere between the personal and the political. Julie Hanlon Rubio is a professor of Christian ethics at St. Louis University. She is the author of Family Ethics: Practices for Christians (GUP 2010) and A Christian Theology of Marriage and Family, and coeditor of Readings in Moral Theology No. 15: Marriage. David Cloutier, Kristin Heyer, and Andrea Vicini, SJ, Series Editors
Reviews
"Rubio's book is best in its review of the theological place that communities offer us to live as Christians in the world. Her call for choosing the incremental and the pragmatic—and I would add "the prudential"—is compelling."—U.S. Catholic Magazine "This book could not have come at a better time. When so many people both in the church and in society seem hopelessly divided over pressing ethical issues, Rubio shows us a path forward by focusing on the often overlooked importance of local communities, neighborhood organizations, and churches as ways of gathering us together to find common ground we may not have thought to be possible. Clearly written, richly researched, balanced, and eminently accessible, Hope for Common Ground deftly exemplifies how Catholic social teaching can aid us in addressing some of the most contested issues that confront us. It's a gift for anyone concerned about the common good."—Paul J. Waddell, Professor of Theology & Religious Studies, St. Norbert College "In Hope for Common Ground, respected theological ethicist Julie Hanlon Rubio offers a fresh, balanced, insightful, and cumulatively persuasive case for local engagements around commonly-held values as a way beyond the stale left-right, liberal-conservative polarizations that beset so many US Catholics and their neighbors today. Never denying nor forgetting the indispensable places of the personal and the structural levels for advancing human well-being, justice, and the common good, Rubio argues that on-the-ground Catholic and Christian communities possess a special genius for and calling to activism in 'the spaces between' the personal/familial and the political: in neighborhoods, civic life, local institutions, voluntary associations and grassroots organizing."—Christine Firer Hinze, Professor of Theology, Director, Francis & Ann Curran Center for American Catholic Studies, Fordham University Table of Contents Acknowledgements Introduction: Reasons for Hope in a Divided Church PART I: FOUNDATIONS FOR COMMON GROUND 1. Faithful Citizenship: Is There Hope for Politics? Moving from Faith to Politics The Contemporary Context: Three Reasons for Skepticism Public Faith in "the Space Between": Realism and Humility "Be the Church"? Notes 2. Cooperation with Evil: Personal Responsibility for Social Problems Cooperation in the Manuals of Moral Theology Cooperation and the Contemporary Political Scene A Deepening Awareness of Social Sin White Privilege The Case of Sweatshop Clothing Conclusion Notes 3. Why Bother to Act Locally? The Potential of the "Space Between" A Social Ethic for Ordinary Christians Faithful and Effective Politics: Necessary but Insufficient Personal Transformation through Local Action Possibilities of Social Change from Below Notes PART II: CASES 4. Family: What Does It Mean to Be Promarriage? A Theological Vision of Marriage Marriage and Relationship Education Jobs and Just Wages Helping Married Couples Avoid Divorce and Providing Support after Divorce Common Ground and Progress Notes 5. Poverty Reduction: A Social Virtue Ethic New Problems, New Possibilities Principles of Poverty Reduction Strategies for Poverty Reduction Adapting Contemporary Catholic Responses to Poverty From Above, From Below, and in Between Notes 6. Abortion: Toward Cooperation with the Good Law and Public Opinion: Where are we? What is Possible? Human Life, Women's Agency, and the Cooperation with Evil Listening to Young, Unmarried Pregnant Women The Limits of Traditional Strategies Building a Culture That Welcomes New Life What Are We Hoping For? Notes 7. End-of-Life Care: Enabling Better Practices for Dying Well Human Dignity: Finitude, Vulnerability, and Community Autonomy and Control Understanding the Social Context Building Up an Alternative Context "Changing the World" Notes Conclusion: Francis and Ferguson Index |