Introduction John Witte, Jr and Gary S. Hauk; 1. Moses, the Prophets, and the Rabbis Elliot N. Dorff; 2. Jesus and St. Paul Gary S. Hauk; 3. Emperor Constantine Judith Evans Grubbs; 4. St. Augustine of Hippo David G. Hunter; 5. St. John Chrysostom Vigen Guroian; 6. Emperor Justinian Peter Sarris; 7. Theodore Balsamon John McGuckin; 8. Gratian Anders Winroth; 9. Peter Lombard Giulio Silano; 10. Popes Alexander III and Innocent III Charles Donahue; 11. St. Thomas Aquinas Philip L. Reynolds; 12. Martin Luther Steven Ozment and John Witte, Jr; 13. John Calvin Barbara Pitkin; 14. King Henry VIII Henry Ansgar Kelly; 15. Thomas Sanchez Rafael Domingo; 16. John Selden Jason P. Rosenblatt; 17. Mary Wollstonecraft Eileen Hunt Botting; 18. Abraham Kuyper James D. Bratt; 19. Emil Brunner Don S. Browning and John Witte, Jr; 20. Popes Leo XIII and Pius XI Russell Hittinger; 21. Pope Paul VI Steven J. Pope; 22. Pope John Paul II Robert P. George and Gerard V. Bradley; 23. Paul Evdokimov Michael Plekon; 24. Derrick Sherwin Bailey Mark D. Jordan; 25. Jean Bethke Elshtain M. Christian Green.
A comprehensive analysis of Christian influences on Western family law from the first century to the present day.
John Witte, Jr is Robert W. Woodruff University Professor, McDonald Distinguished Professor, and Director of the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University, Atlanta. He has published numerous articles and thirty books, including Law and Protestantism: The Legal Teachings of the Lutheran Reformation (Cambridge, 2002), The Reformation of Rights (Cambridge, 2007), Christianity and Law (Cambridge, 2008), The Sins of the Fathers (Cambridge, 2009), Christianity and Human Rights (Cambridge, 2010), and The Western Case for Monogamy over Polygamy (Cambridge, 2015). Gary S. Hauk is University Historian and former Vice-President and Deputy to the President of Emory University, Atlanta. He is the author of A Legacy of Heart and Mind: Emory Since 1836 (1999) and editor of Where Courageous Inquiry Leads (2006), and has published numerous essays.
'The authors and editors seek to provide both legal and historical frameworks for the development of family law, stressing the relationship between Christian teachings and various topics. Most are experts on the personages discussed, frequently noting that their contributions are taken from larger works. Almost every chapter reveals new insights, and sometimes the figures themselves are novel (at least to this reader), even though their thoughts may creep into the modern discourse on the family. The editors seek to balance the various divisions in contemporary Christianity and largely succeed. They also include a variety of disciplines.' Margaret F. Brinig, Journal of Church and State
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