As happens all too often, I’ve been sidetracked from my reading schedule (loosey-goosey as it is) by a trip to the Philly public library. (The beautiful weather we’ve been having has made the walk from the office to the library enjoyable as well as edifying!)
Two acquisitions of note on the latest trip:
- Justification: An Ecumenical Study by George Tavard. Tavard is a Roman Catholic theologian making the case, more or less, that Luther got it right. I’m about 2/3rds of the way through this. Some interesting bits about the Council of Orange and how it seems to have been unknown for much of the Middle Ages.
- Chrisitan Faith and Modern Democracy: God and Politics in the Fallen World by Robert P. Kraynak. This looks really interesting. Seems that Kraynak is going to argue against the common assumption that Christianity necessarily entails support for liberal democracy. Instead, he’s going to emphasize the Augustinian “Two Cities” notion as setting certain limits to how full-throated an endorsement Christians can give to any political system.
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