An Ethic For Enemies
Donald W. Shriver Jr. (Oxford University Press: Jan 15, 1998), 304 pages.The author, president emeritus of Union Theological Seminary, has produced a work that deserves close scrutiny. The casual reader is likely to conclude that Shriver is addressing, in some flight of fancy, the oxymoronic. After all, political forgiveness seems patently absurd, especially given the history of the 20th century-not to mention our contemporary culture of violence. However, while recognizing that forgiveness is a morally complex concept, Shriver argues that it reaches beyond the realm of the personal to the arena of political ethics. He contends that forgiveness is (or at least should be seen as) an indispensable element in politics and that it is an essential ingredient in our attempt to construct a proper political ethics. Not everyone will be persuaded by Shriver’s attempt to make forgiveness the cornerstone of a political ethic; nonetheless, his argument should not be ignored. ~ Library Journal
Table of Contents
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- Introduction 3
- A Complex and Multi-Dimensional Concept: Some Definitions 6
- The Plan of the Book 9
- 1 Revenge, the End of Politics; and Justice, the Beginning 12
- Aeschylus: The Taming of Revenge by Institutions of Justice 13
- Thucydides: The Triumph Fury in War 18
- Cain, Joseph and Their Kin: A Saga of Restorative Justice 22
- “Who Can Forgive Sins but God Alone?” 29
- Interlude: Reflections on Revenge, Justice, and Forgiveness 30
- 2 Forgiveness in Politics in Christian Tradition 33
- Jesus – The Discoverer” of Social Forgiveness? 34
- The Political Context of Jesus’ Ministry 36
- Forgiveness as Community Building in the New Testament 38
- Did Christians Believe that Forgiveness Belonged in the Public Sphere? 45
- Appearances and Disappearances of Forgiveness in the “Christian” Political Order 46
- The Crisis for All Formulations of Forgiveness: The Enlightenment Perspective 58
- 3 Political Ethics as Moral Memory 63
- The Politics of Death and Life 64
- Remembering History Morally 68
- Can Nations Remember, Repent, and Forgive? 71
- 4 Vengeance and Forbearance: Germans and Americans 73
- Germans and Americans: 1914-45 74
- Democracy at War: A Note on “Just War” Ethics, 1941-45 76
- Vengeance versus Truth, Reparation versus Restoration, 1945-60 78
- The United States and Germany: Forty Years after World War II 92
- Postscript: 1995 and Beyond 116
- 5 Enmity and Empathy: Japan and the United States 119
- Remembering the Pacific War 121
- Remembering Japanese Americans 155
- 6 Justice and Forgiveness: The Long Road to Equal Citizenship for African Americans 170
- The Oldest American Civic Injustice 171
- An Early Civil Rights Movement: 1865 174
- Wholly Belonging: The Civil Rights Movement, 1955-68 179
- Black Power and Political Forgiveness? 204
- “That Old and Still Unpaid Debt,” 210
- 7 Whither Forgiveness in American Politics? 218
- The Place of Apology 220
- Restitution and Domestic Tranquillity 224
- Forgiveness Too Soon, Too Late 225
- Pluralism: Our Coming National Trial by Diversity 227
- Notes 235
- Bibliography 271
- Name Index 277
- Subject Index 281