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Summary
Be it fair trade coffee or foreign oil, our choices as consumers affect the well-being of humans around the globe, not to mention the natural world and of course ourselves. Consumption is a serious ethical issue, and Christian writers throughout history have weighed in, discussing topics such as affluence and poverty, greed and gluttony, and proper stewardship of resources. These voices are often at odds, however. In this book, Laura M. Hartman formulates a coherent Christian ethic of consumption, imposing order on the debate by dividing it into four imperatives: Christians are to consume in ways that avoid sin, embrace creation, love one's neighbor, and envision the future. An adequate ethics of consumption, she argues, must include all four considerations as tools for discernment, even when they seem to contradict one another. The book includes discussions of Christian practices such as fasting, gratitude, solidarity, gift-giving, Sabbath-keeping, and the Eucharist. Using exemplars from the Christian tradition and practical examples from everyday life, The Christian Consumeroffers a thoughtful guide to ethical consumption.
Author Biography
Laura M. Hartman is Assistant Professor of Religion at Augustana College in Rock Island, Illinois.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments | p. xi |
Introduction: Consumption Matters | p. 3 |
Consumerism Distinguished from Consumption | p. 5 |
Consumption: Beyond Sociology | p. 9 |
Refining the Definition | p. 11 |
The Moral Import of Consumption | p. 16 |
Four Considerations | p. 21 |
Methods, Perspective, and Audience | p. 25 |
To Avoid Sin | p. 30 |
Consumption Practices of Francis, Woolman, and Sider | p. 33 |
Asceticism, Poverty, and Simplicity | p. 36 |
Complicity in Consumption | p. 42 |
The Economy of Avoiding Sin | p. 45 |
The Importance of Avoiding Sin in Consumption | p. 49 |
To Embrace Creation | p. 54 |
The Earth Is Fruitful and Blessings Abound | p. 55 |
Human Hungers Are Not Sinful | p. 59 |
We Should Consume with Gratitude, Savoring, and Sharing | p. 61 |
Wealth May Be Virtuous | p. 63 |
We Are God's Beloved Children | p. 66 |
Good Stewardship of Blessings | p. 70 |
Consumption and Creation | p. 81 |
To Love the Neighbor | p. 84 |
What Is Love? | p. 86 |
Love of Self | p. 89 |
Love of Close Others | p. 93 |
Love of Somewhat Distant Others | p. 96 |
Love of Place | p. 110 |
Love of Faraway Others | p. 114 |
Love of God | p. 123 |
Envisioning a Better Life for All Neighbors | p. 126 |
To Envision the Future | p. 128 |
Sabbath Keeping | p. 130 |
Who Observes the Sabbath? | p. 132 |
What Does Sabbath Keeping Entail? | p. 135 |
How Observing a Sabbath Affects Consumption | p. 141 |
Eucharist | p. 152 |
What It Means to Take the Eucharist | p. 153 |
What Makes the Eucharist Eschatological? | p. 159 |
What the Eucharist Teaches about Consumption | p. 160 |
Beyond Bread and Wine | p. 164 |
Sabbath, Eucharist, and Visions of the Future | p. 167 |
Conclusion: Considered Consumption | p. 169 |
Four Considerations | p. 170 |
Considerations Working Together: Three Contemporary Authors | p. 172 |
An Ethics of Discernment | p. 181 |
Some Examples: Transportation and Meat | p. 184 |
Consumerism Revisited | p. 192 |
Notes | p. 195 |
Index | p. 235 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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