The Lutheran World Federation

Department for Theology and Studies

The Church and Social Issues
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Lutheran Ethics at the Intersections of God's One World

Sorting dried coffee beans, Haiti © LWF/DWS Haiti/ M. Kuehn

In today’s world, there are significantly different ethical perspectives even within one confessional tradition. These perspectives vary with cultural context, history, politics, gender, ethnic and interreligious dynamics.

Cultural particularities, with all the historical and current power dynamics that are a part of such, need to be understood and taken seriously. But how do these intersect and how might the different perspectives be engaged for the sake of greater mutual self-understanding?

What happens at these various “intersections” is the focus of attention in the book Lutheran Ethics at the Intersections of God's One World (ed. Karen L. Bloomquist). [Please click to order, CHF 18, USD 15, Euro 12, plus postage and packing]. What holds us together, despite all our differences, and empowers us to deliberate together in the midst of them, is faith in a God who creates, redeems and promises to transform us and our world.

What is distinctive about the interactions in this book is a theological-ethical “grammar” that reflects a Lutheran interpretation of the wider Christian theological-ethical tradition. This affects how we negotiate with one another at the intersections, and provides a form or direction for the content or substance that emerges in these interactions.

Articles in this book are likely to challenge contextually-limited views on such topics as family and sexuality, human rights, democratization, education, genetically-modified crops and food, privatization of property and of the biological commons.

Authors include Per Anderson, Karen L. Bloomquist, András Csepregi,Wanda Deifelt, Elisabeth Gerle, Puleng Lenka Bula, Phillip Moeahabo Moila, Hans G. Ulrich and Wai Man Yuen.

The book contributes to enriching ethical deliberation and discernment within a global communion of churches, as well as within civil society.

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Responding as a Lutheran Communion to Neoliberal Globalization

Responding to economic globalization 
© epd-bild

Communion, Responsibility, Accountability - responding as a Lutheran communion to neoliberal globalization (Karen L. Bloomquist, ed., LWF Documentation 50: 2004) [Download (1.3 MB)]

From 2000-2004, the LWF had a programmatic focus on the challenges posed today by economic globalization, as part of the wider ecumenical family and with civil society. The first part of this book brings together the publications, processes, events and select responses that were a part of this work, including commitments made at the Tenth Assembly of the LWF. Here are diverse perspectives from LWF member churches, from field programs, and from youth, as well as an indication of what has been said ecumenically.

The second part of this book contains articles that deepen the theological, pastoral and ethical reflections that are evoked by economic globalization, but are much wider in their implications. The intent is to raise up some recognizably Lutheran theological emphases that can be brought to public life on this and related social challenges of our day. The framework here is grounded in what it means for us to be a communion of churches, who are empowered to live out an ethic of responsibility for our neighbors globally and to work together for greater accountability in the governance of globalization today. The perspectives here are diverse, sometimes in tension with each other, and often provocative.

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More resources:
"Engaging Economic Globalization as a Communion" 
"A Call to Participate in Transforming Economic Globalization."  (Both incorporated into Communion, Responsibility, Accountability - responding as a Lutheran communion to neoliberal globalization)

"A Call to Participate in Transforming Economic Globalization" - English | French | German | Spanish 

"Reclaiming the Vocation of Government" - statement from a January 2004 consultation in Geneva 

"Pursuing Neighbor-Love Through Economic Activity." - statement from a June 2004 consultation in Stuttgart, Germany

 

For further information, please contact:

Dr Kathryn Johnson, DTS Interim Director