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  1. Love and Liturgy.Terence Cuneo - 2015 - Journal of Religious Ethics 43 (4):587-605.
    For two millennia Christians have assembled on the “day of the sun” to celebrate the liturgy together. But why do it? Why structure one's life in such a way that participation in ritualized religious activity is a fixed point in the weekly rhythm of one's comings and goings? The project of this essay is to identify reasons to engage in such activity that emanate from the Christian ethical vision. Fundamental to this vision is a contrast between an ethic of proximity, (...)
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  • Suffering, Ethics, and the Body of Christ: Anointing as a Strategic Alternative Practice.M. T. Lysaught - 1996 - Christian Bioethics 2 (2):172-201.
    Within the moral/social order maintained and reproduced by biomedical ethics (i.e., the “peaceable community”), suffering is a senseless accident with no value. Insofar as suffering compromises the fundamental pillar of this order, namely, autonomy, it threatens the existence of the “peaceable community”. Consequently, biomedical ethics is only able to offer those who suffer one moral or practical response: that of elimination, embodied most vividly in the increasingly approved practice of assisted-suicide. Another moral/ social order, however, the “peaceable Kingdom” or the (...)
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  • Religion, liturgy and ethics, at the intersection between theory and practice. The revolution of Pope Francis.Nóda Mózes - 2017 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 16 (46):17-33.
    The role of religion in the public space is a matter of debate. The public sphere understood as a space oriented to achieving interests of common concern, reaching social and political consensus by means of deliberation has relegated religion to the private sphere. The last decades have attested a revival of the public role of religion, a “de-privatization” of religion. This paper explores the contemporary influence of religious beliefs and liturgical practice on issues of public concern focusing on the statements (...)
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