City Libraries, City of Gold Coast

God's just vengeance, crime, violence, and the rhetoric of salvation, Timothy Gorringe

Label
God's just vengeance, crime, violence, and the rhetoric of salvation, Timothy Gorringe
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
God's just vengeance
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Timothy Gorringe
Series statement
Cambridge studies in ideology and religion, 9
Sub title
crime, violence, and the rhetoric of salvation
Summary
This 1996 book examines the relationship between the theologies of atonement and penal strategies. Christian theology was potent in Western society until the nineteenth century, and the so-called 'satisfaction theory' of atonement interacted and reacted with penal practice. Drawing on the work of Norbert Elias and David Garland, the author argues that atonement theology created a structure of affect which favoured retributive policies. He ranges freely between Old Testament texts, St Anselm, and eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British social history, to show the integral connection between sin and crime, the legal and the moral. The question arises if the preaching of the cross not only desensitised us to judicial violence but even lent it sanction. The last two chapters review theory and practice in the twentieth century, and Timothy Gorringe makes concrete proposals for both theology and criminal and societal violence
Table Of Contents
1. Religion and retribution -- pt. I. The Cultural Formation of Atonement: Biblical Sources. 2. Blood which makes atonement. 3. Accounting for the cross -- pt. II. Making Satisfaction: Atonement and Penalty 1090-1890. 4. The ladder of all high designs. 5. The wounds of Christ. 6. Three angry letters in a book. 7. The moral government of the universe. 8. The age of atonement -- pt. III. Contemporary Directions in Atonement and Penal Theory. 9. The gospel and retribution. 10. Forgiveness, crime and community
Classification
Content