Sin and the Vulnerability of Embodied Life: Towards a Catholic Theology of Social Sin

Research output: Book/ReportBook

Abstract

This book explores how Catholics should speak about sin and grace in a world where structural injustice holds sway causing violence and harm. Bray brings diverse voices into creative dialogue to explore why unjust social situations can properly be called sin from a Catholic theological perspective, and how this sin can be understood to impact one's agency, freedom, and historical condition vis-à-vis God.

Discussing disparate thinkers such as John Paul II, Judith Butler, Thomas Aquinas, and key Latin American liberation theologians, Bray deepens and constructively develops the Catholic understanding of social sin. She argues that the language of social sin presents us with an idea more theologically profound than just the identification of structural injustice; it depicts the power of collective human sinfulness to shape our lives and environments in ways which harm our relations with God, one another, and the rest of the created world.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationLondon
PublisherBloomsbury T&T Clark
Number of pages240
Edition1st
ISBN (Electronic)9780567714893
ISBN (Print)9780567714879
Publication statusPublished - 20 Feb 2025

Publication series

NameT&T Clark Studies in Systematic Theology
PublisherBloomsbury T&T Clark
Volume44

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