Ethics in Crisis, Ethics in Hope

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"active embrace of guilt"
"analogia relationis
"crisis in ethics"
A01=Matthew Puffer
anthropocentrism
Author_Matthew Puffer
Barth's ethics
Carl Schmitt
Category=QDTQ
Category=QRVG
CD II/2
CD II2
Christ
Christian dogmatics
contemporary permacrisis
doctrine of election
Eberhard Bethge
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
forthcoming
Grenzfall concept
John Howard Yoder
Karl Barth
Karl Jaspers
Larry Rasmussen
moral anthropology
moral complexities of living
moral reasoning
moral theology
Nazi Germany
reproductive freedom
unjust cultural systems

Product details

  • ISBN 9780567715555
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Jul 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This incisive volume offers fresh historical and constructive engagements with the ever fascinating and perplexing theological ethics of Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Matthew Puffer examines the historical crises out of which Bonhoeffer composed the manuscripts that would become his posthumously published magnum opus, Ethics. He explores the ways in which Bonhoeffer understood his work as a response not only to the ecclesial, social, and political crises of Nazi Germany, but more specifically to a “crisis in ethics,” the failure of traditional forms of ethics to effectively respond to the state of emergency. Bonhoeffer famously wrestles with novel proposals for how Christians should think about responsibility, complicity, culpability, and guilt in ways that have left not only casual readers but also philosophers and Bonhoeffer scholars scratching their heads.

In these chapters, Matthew Puffer argues for a critical reconsideration of the ethics supposed to have informed Bonhoeffer’s participation in German resistance, but also for an extension of Bonhoeffer’s thought to the global, ecological, and intergenerational crises of ethics that we face today. An ethics of hope proves to be an essential and ineliminable feature of Bonhoeffer’s thought, evident in his insistence that ethics is fundamentally about how coming generations will live.

In Bonhoeffer we find fresh inspiration for contemporary debates regarding the meaning and political implications of human dignity, integrating the wellbeing of not-yet-existing future generations into the moral calculus regarding what it means to treat present day persons with dignity.

Matthew Puffer is Associate Professor of Humanities and Ethics at Valparaiso University, USA.

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