Biblical Religion and Family Values: A Problem in the Philosophy of Culture
By (Author) Jay Newman
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th August 2001
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Christianity
Religious social and pastoral thought and activity
Philosophy of religion
261.835
Hardback
368
In this broad philosophical examination of the relationship between religion and the family, Jay Newman delves into issues concerning Biblical religion, culture, sociology, and family values. He maintains that recent media debates about the Bible and family values have obscured the complex relationship between the family and religion. Focusing on how the family values that the Biblical literature imparts might be relevant--or irrelevant--to family problems and other cultural problems in a modern Western democracy, this study contributes to the understanding of basic cultural relations between religion and the family. After reflecting on the effects of much Biblical teaching on the family, the book proceeds to explore the cultural and existential significance of competition and cooperation between Biblical religion and the family.
[J]Jay Newman brings some much needed philosophic acumen to the tangled debate currently taking place in North America on the perceived deterioration of the family....Newman should be commended for his detailed and thoghtful examination of some very difficult biblical texts....This book will be useful to anyone working on issues related to family life in the fields of biblical studies, theology, philosophy, sociology, and anthropology.-SR WLU Press
Recommended for general readers and undergraduates.-Choice
"JJay Newman brings some much needed philosophic acumen to the tangled debate currently taking place in North America on the perceived deterioration of the family....Newman should be commended for his detailed and thoghtful examination of some very difficult biblical texts....This book will be useful to anyone working on issues related to family life in the fields of biblical studies, theology, philosophy, sociology, and anthropology."-SR WLU Press
"Recommended for general readers and undergraduates."-Choice
"[J]Jay Newman brings some much needed philosophic acumen to the tangled debate currently taking place in North America on the perceived deterioration of the family....Newman should be commended for his detailed and thoghtful examination of some very difficult biblical texts....This book will be useful to anyone working on issues related to family life in the fields of biblical studies, theology, philosophy, sociology, and anthropology."-SR WLU Press
Jay Newman is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Guelph where he has taught since 1971.