Review of Anthony M. Annett’s Cathonomics

Stephy Joseph Journal of Economics, Theology and Religion, vol. 3, no. 1/2 (2023): 61-64 Publication historyFirst view: 10 August 2023Published: 22 December 2023 Pope Francis’s papacy has influenced many lives through his farsighted insights on humanity as a whole. Cathonomics, written by Anthony M. Annett, is the outcome of such influence, which he acknowledges inContinue reading “Review of Anthony M. Annett’s Cathonomics”

The Scholastic View on Usury and Economic Instability

Emil B. Berendt Journal of Economics, Theology and Religion, vol. 3, no. 1/2 (2023): 23-38 AbstractThis article argues that much of Scholastic and neo-Scholastic teaching on usury rests on practical considerations regarding redistribution and market instability. This aspect of usury is underappreciated by economists, especially those in the field of the history of economic thought.Continue reading “The Scholastic View on Usury and Economic Instability”

Review of Richard A. Horsley, You Shall Not Bow Down and Serve Them

Jennifer A. Quigley Journal of Economics, Theology and Religion, vol. 3, no. 1/2 (2023): 57-60 Publication historyFirst view: 30 May 2023Published: 22 December 2023 One of the major themes in Richard A. Horsley’s extensive body of scholarship has been the intersection of politics, economics, and biblical studies. You Shall Not Bow Down and Serve Them:Continue reading “Review of Richard A. Horsley, You Shall Not Bow Down and Serve Them”

Martin Luther’s Business Ethics and the Economic Utopia

Esa Mangeloja Journal of Economics, Theology and Religion, vol. 3, no. 1/2 (2023): 1-22 AbstractThe principle of benevolence is at the root of Martin Luther’s (1483-1546) thinking on society, the economy, and business ethics. Luther was the forerunner of the moral economy. He saw the necessity of strong public authorities, which should take into accountContinue reading “Martin Luther’s Business Ethics and the Economic Utopia”

Review of Robert Sirico, The Economics of the Parables

Paolo Santori Journal of Economics, Theology and Religion, vol. 3, no. 1/2 (2023): 53-56 Publication historyFirst view: 17 February 2023Published: 22 December 2023 In explaining the scarcity of encounters between the disciplines of economics and theology, the Italian economist Emanuele Sella wrote, “This is because the theological culture of economists in general is nil andContinue reading “Review of Robert Sirico, The Economics of the Parables”

Review of Michel Dion & Moses Pava, The Spirit of Conscious Capitalism: Contributions of World Religions and Spiritualities

Lans Bovenberg Journal of Economics, Theology and Religion, vol. 2, no. 2 (2022): 109-11 Publication historyPublished: 02 December 2022 Capitalism has created a great deal of material wealth. At the same time, it is losing its legitimacy for many people because it is failing to address growing inequalities, civil polarization, ecological challenges, and a growingContinue reading “Review of Michel Dion & Moses Pava, The Spirit of Conscious Capitalism: Contributions of World Religions and Spiritualities”

Review of Alina Potempa, Wie Katholiken die moderne Ökonomie entdeckten

Paul van Geest Journal of Economics, Theology and Religion, vol. 2, no. 2 (2022): 105-7 Publication historyPublished: 02 December 2022 In line with the basic premise of Paul Oslington’s Oxford Handbook of Christianity and Economics (2014) to see history as the best place to start for understanding relationships between Christianity and economics (p. 4), the author ofContinue reading “Review of Alina Potempa, Wie Katholiken die moderne Ökonomie entdeckten”

Review of Love Does Not Seek Its Own: Augustine, Economic Division, and the Formation of a Common Life

Wilco de Vries Journal of Economics, Theology and Religion, vol. 2, no. 2 (2022): 101-3 Publication historyFirst view: 17 November 2022Published: 02 December 2022 The wound out of which Love Does Not Seek Its Own was born is increasing economic inequality. In New Zealand, where Jonathan D. Ryan is a Presbyterian minister, the income gapContinue reading “Review of Love Does Not Seek Its Own: Augustine, Economic Division, and the Formation of a Common Life”

Value and the Market’s (Dis)Order: Market Prices as a Theological Problem in Patristic Thought and the Value Theory of Peter of John Olivi

Ida Simonsson Journal of Economics, Theology and Religion, vol. 2, no. 2 (2022): 85-100 AbstractThis article analyzes prices and value as constituting a theological problem in early and medieval Christian thought. First, it looks at the patristic critique of wealth and market prices and shows that such critique was rooted in a concern with aContinue reading “Value and the Market’s (Dis)Order: Market Prices as a Theological Problem in Patristic Thought and the Value Theory of Peter of John Olivi”

Volatility and Foresight: Risk, Derivatives, and Kierkegaard’s Christian Discourses

Andrew Swann Journal of Economics, Theology and Religion, vol. 2, no. 2 (2022): 67-83 AbstractThis essay explores the use of financial instruments and the way such instruments discipline actors to envisage time, the future, and its possibilities. Through the construction of a contrastive theological account of futurity, using the Christian Discourses of the Danish theologian-philosopherContinue reading “Volatility and Foresight: Risk, Derivatives, and Kierkegaard’s Christian Discourses”

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