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Zadok Catalogue 2007
Society, Culture and Religion
Longing
for a better country: Christianity and the vocation of social change.
Jonathan Cornford
Zadok Paper S154, Winter 2007
Cornford describes this paper as "an attempt to grapple
with some of the peculiar difficulties of living as a Chistian in these
times", and takes as his starting point the question "What is
the responsibility of Christians in relation to the world of society and
politics around us?" He sets out to say something not just to "those
quarters of the church that have long privatised the faith" but more
sepecially to Christians involved in social activism, in whom he often
detects a loss of confidence, direction, and those in the face of enormous
change in the world and in the church (which no longer has the influence
over the state that it had). Cornford speaks of a serious loss of the
understanding of the nature of Christian hope.
Jesus
in Australia: some reflections on Peter Jensen's 2005 Boyer lectures.
Ian Barns
Zadok Perspectives 93, Summer 2006
It is vital that the relationship between Christian faith and
a culture of secular freedom be opened up by moderate public Chirstians
such as Jensen if we are to avoid the kinds of polarising culture wars
that disfigure US public life.
Don't
circumcise the Gentiles!
Matthew Stone
Zadok Perspectives 89, Summer 2005
A
significant proportion of the New Testament is devoted to this question:
Can cultural diversity and Christian unity be reconciled?
Dialogue
with the Jesus movement.
Brian McLaren speaks to Mick Pope
Zadok Perspectives 89, Summer 2005
If
we hope that post-modernity will go away, we may not realise that we've
already become captivated by modernity. What do we hope will happen in
its place? More modernity? More commercialism? More nuclear weapons? More
cold or hot wars? More colonialism and racism?
Religion
and politics in Australia: reviving the connection.
By Peter Corney
Zadok Perspectives 88, Spring 2005
Larger
forces, events and ideas, both beyond and within Australia, are pushing
religion and politics back together.
Jesus
Dude Superstar
Steve McAlpine
Zadok Perspectives 85, Summer 2004
Is
Jesus content to settle for 'dudedom' and, by extension allow us to settle
for it as well?
No
place for Utopia?
Sally Cloke
Zadok Perspectives 84, Spring 2004
If William Blake sang today about building Jerusalem in
anyone's green and pleasant land they'd see him off with a shotgun. Contemporary
Jerusalem is no sane person's utopia - decades of conflict have made it
a symbol of violence - abd latterly division. Governments that exclude
all those who do not fit inside their white picket fences and churches
that refuse to widen the walls of their utopia should be careful lest
this is what they are building too.
Clash of Civilisations?
Gordon Preece
Zadok Perspectives 82, Autumn 2004
Respect for difference is based not on a thin liberal
tolerance, or relativisim, but on covenant
The Idol of Empire.
James Wellman
Zadok Perspectives 82, Autumn 2004
It is time to step back and examine the theological assumptions
behind the George Bush vision of the campaign against terror - that survival
depends upon military strength, and more than that, the ability to preemnt
violence against us. Our Western religious traditions attack the very
heart of this message: to value survival over every other value, to make
it one's core priority, is to create an idol.
Today the headscarf, tomorrow the cross.
Mark Greene
Zadok Perspectives 82, Autumn 2004
President Chirac's proposal to ban the wearing of Muslim
headscarves and other religious symbols in French schools and other public
institutions is a blatant, arrogant and insensitive act of religious persecution.
It reveals the intolerance and paranoia at the heart of secularism.
God's
and Their Kingdoms.
Paul Mitchell
Zadok Perspectives 77, Summer 2002
We
will all be cultures for 15 minutes – or longer. Paul Mitchell reflects
of western society's move from a culture of the individual to the individual
as culture.
The
Silver Anniversary of Punk.
Tim Corney
Zadok Perspectives 76, Spring 2002
The church needs to realize that commodification, the propensity
of the market to place a dollar value on everything, is one of the greatest
dangers to its gospel struggle.
Black-Skinned
Storm Troopers: Muhammad Ali and the Revolt of the Black Athlete.
Bill Stewart
Zadok Paper S120B, Spring 2002
Noting the prophetic spectacles (provocative symbolic actions)
performed by prophetic figures in the ancient Near East including Jesus,
the author argues that neglect of such action may be attributed to the
‘anti-body’ tradition in Western religious and philosophical
traditions. He asks what such prophetic action might look like in the
postmodern world The paper attempts to answer this question by narrating
a series of analogous acts from the later 20th century which the author
considers echo the style and content of the ancient prophetic actions.
The author also argues for a reconsideration of the relevant of such action
in an increasingly visual ‘society of the spectacle’ where
saturation in new forms of media is considered by some to the separating
the link between emotion and action.
Crown
of Thorns, Half Naked, Tits: Rachel Griffiths' Lady Godiva / Naked Girl
Christ.
Bill Stewart
Zadok Paper S120A, Winter 2002
Noting the prophetic spectacles (provocative symbolic actions)
performed by prophetic figures in the ancient Near East including Jesus,
the author argues that neglect of such action may be attributed to the
‘anti-body’ tradition in Western religious and philosophical
traditions. He asks what such prophetic action might look like in the
postmodern world. The paper attempts to answer this question by narrating
a series of analogous acts from the later 20th century which the author
considers echo the style and content of the ancient prophetic actions.
The author also argues for a reconsideration of the relevant of such action
in an increasingly visual ‘society of the spectacle’ where
saturation in new forms of media is considered by some to the separating
the link between emotion and action.
Have
Faith in Irony.
M Christian Green
Zadok Perspectives 74, Autumn 2002
Shortly after September 11, irony was pronounced dead by the
editor of Vanity Fair. However, rumours of the death of irony may be exaggerated.
Tim
Winton's Holy Lands: an interview.
Jennifer Sinclair
Zadok Perspectives 74, Autumn 2002
Tim Winton is one of Australia’s most popular and acclaimed
authors. In this interview, he discusses the ways in which religious and
other influences inform his work.
Discerning
the Presence of Christ at the Centre of Culture.
Julian Jenkins
Zadok Perspectives 71, Winter 2001
How many powerful opportunities to crack open a seed of spiritual
truth are lost because we attack secular culture with a sledge-hammer,
rather than sifting through it carefully to find the latent fruitful spiritual
resources?
Reclaiming
the Marketplace: an Interview with Ched Myers.
Zadok Perspectives 69, Summer 2000
American social activist and theologian Ched Myers raises question
about the future of radical faith-based protest movements. He critiques
global economics and explores the dynamics of new protest movements like
S11. He recounts the impact of the 1960s and 70s protest movements on
his Christian faith, and gives a frank critique of Jubilee 2000 and encourages
people of faith to engage in the spiritual discipline of civil disobedience.
Resisting
the Privatisation of Faith in Theological Education.
Robert Banks
Zadok Paper S110, Summer 2000
Robert Banks has made it the focus of his life and teaching to
counter the assumptions of the modern sacred-secular divide, with the
aim of both practicing and providing the resources for the creation of
an integrated Christian lifestyle. The focus of this paper is upon Bank’s
biblical / theological resources for resisting the privatisation of faith
in the area of theological education. It examines the history of the theory-practice
split in Western academic theology, Segundo’s proposed alternative
to the Western model, Banks’ interaction with and extension of this
influential source, and concludes with some critical intersection with
his proposals.
Encountering
Jesus in Disneyland.
David Lyon
Zadok Perspectives 67, Winter 2000
Disneyland is used as a metaphor for postmodern times and a lens
through which to consider faith and commitment in the context of consumerism
and communication technologies.
Tendering
unto Caesar: Issues of Social Justice and the Responsibility of the Christian
Community.
Robert Fitzgerald
Zadok Perspectives 67, Winter 2000
In giving unto Caesar it is conditional upon Caesar operating
within a just, ethical framework.
How
do you Post to Postmodernity? Christian Education and Communication in
a Post or Hyper-Modern Age.
Gordon Preece
Zadok Paper S107, Winter 2000
This paper explores the social, moral and educational implications
of the nature of post or hyper-modernity as the speeding up and fragmenting
of modern industrial and technological processes and the turnover of capital
in information, service and image-based societies. These lead to a breaking
up of society into a bewildering variety of identity and interest groups,
with their own lifestyles and values. A sense of total flux and relativism
often results. Post-modernity’s rejection of all master narratives
as dividing people into masters and slaves leaves us ‘free’
but with no sense of an over-arching story or meaning to direct our freedom.
This paper argues that there is an appropriately modest yet confident
Christian ‘master narrative without masters’ which enables
us to still speak of moving towards truth, without using it as a truncheon
to reinforce our own power over others.
Ethnic
Cleansing and the Theology of Land.
Ray Barraclough
Zadok Perspectives 66, Autumn 2000
Have religion, nationalism and genocide shared a too cosy alliance
in recent conflicts?
A
Tale of Two Prophets: Tim Costello & Dave Andrews
Zadok Perspectives 66, Autumn 2000
Prophecy is a term often over-used in church social justice circles.
Neither Tim Costello or Dave Andrews fit neatly into any pigeonhole, however,
both men call for change in the church and in society to an extent. Tim
describes his approach to speaking to those in power in society. Dave
Andrews calls for Christians to move from a perspective that defines faith
in terms of boundaries of belief and behaviour to faith centred on Christ.
The
Abuse of Consumerism.
Dave Collis
Zadok Paper S101, Winter 1999
This paper was borne out of the question the author, Dave Collis,
faced while working in an inner city soup van: "How can otherwise
loving and compassionate people simply walk past cold and hungry people?"
This question led Dave away from an analysis of poverty and into the heart
of consumerism, a culture which systematically predisposed people toward
a restricted horizon of compassion through a kind of psychic confusion
or fatigue. Drawing from narrative theory, his paper seeks to link the
fragmented machinations of consumerism to the fragmented poverty of identity
which characterizes the consumer.
A
Manne for All Seasons: Daniel Batt interviews Robert Manne.
Zadok Perspectives 62, Spring / Summer 1998/1999.
Since Manne left the conservative journal Quadrant in a blaze
of controversy, his cultural comments seemed to have gained a breadth
of respect his Quadrant days seemed to prevent.
The
Rise of the Relativists: What is Beyond the Left/Right Divide on Values?
Valerie Braithwaite
Zadok Perspectives 62, Spring / Summer 1998/1999
The reason for so much despondency at the moment is that the
moral relativists have really captured the discourse.
Social
Capital and Religious Faith.
Philip Hughes, John Bellamy and Alan Black
Zadok Paper S97, Spring / Summer 1998/1999
What are some of those “things” people refer to that
“aren’t like they used to be”? A perceived rise in the
level of crime, 'young people' not being as 'committed' as they used to
be and an apparent breakdown in the neighbourhood community form part
of the proverbial notion of these "things". That these sentiments
in some sense refer to that ubiquitous neologism social capital allows
the perception of the decline in social trust to be analysed and, say
the authors, also enables us to examine what correlation there is to that
more measurable social decline – that of church attendance.
Nietzsche:
Insight and Immorality.
Greg Restall
Zadok Paper S94, Autumn 1998
Twentieth Century philosophy and culture is profoundly indebted
to the writings of Friederich Nietzche. His influence on poets and novelists
such as Rilke, Yeats, Shaw, Hesse, Gide and Malraux has been much commented
upon, as has his effect on the philosophy of Camus, Sartre, Spengler and
Tillich. Recent critical theorists such as Roland Barthes, Gilles Deleuze,
Julia Kristeva, Paul de Man, Michel Foucault and Jacques Lacan are incalculably
indebted to him. Greg Restall, however, focuses on Nietzsche's notorious
criticisms of Christianity, found particularly in The Antichrist, and
asks what a genuine Christian engagement with his thought might be, and
whether we have the courage to apply Nietzsche's critique to ourselves.
Princess
Di: Super Saviour.
Paul Mitchell
Zadok Perspectives 59, Summer 1998
Apparently there is a small species of crustaceans on the east
coast of Africa that do not know that Princess Diana died in September
this year. A communications company is knocking on their shell at this
moment, encouraging them to hook up to cable. This article takes a brief
tour of the phenomenon that was, and will continue to be, Lady Diana,
the former Princess of Wales.
The
Republic of God is a Great Outdoor Restaurant.
Gordon Preece
Zadok Paper S91, Summer 1998
As we approach a constitutional convention in 1998, it is important
that we set notions of a republic in the context of fundamental questions
about the nature of a good society. This paper seeks to do so by tying
together two key themes of Zadok’s history, public theology, and
theology of everyday life, summed up respectively by the republic and
restaurants parts of the title. In doing so it sets the republican debate
in the context of Jesus’ preaching and embodying of the kingdom
of God, and Augustine’s alternative vision of the City of God. Rather
than taking over ready made notions of a republic or of social justice,
we need to critique the very roots of republican thought as Augustine
does and demonstrate the reality of Christian hospitality as an alternative
to a society that views all others as strangers.
Un-equal worlds.
Various authors
Canberra /Melbourne : Zadok / Tear Australia, 1997?
24 page booklet Edited by Digby Hannah and Steve Bradbury
A collections of articles on inequality: the biblical perspective, Economists’
views on inequality and social justice, an aboriginal perspective, a response
to global issues of justice, gender inequality, and an interview with
C B Samuel.
Understanding
world view for effective Christian ministry
Graham Buxton
Zadok Paper S84, Spring 1996
The author articulates the need for a critical dialogue between
gospel and context in the practice of Christian ministry through the concept
of world view. Specifically, those who are engaged in ministry on behalf
of Christ in the world are challenged to explore how other people perceive
reality. The concept of world view is briefly surveyed through the lenses
of philosophy, theology, history and culture, offering the possibility
of a rich and creative engagement between gospel and culture. Throughout
the paper the author makes an impassioned plea for Christian ministry
that is both faithful to the gospel and relevant to the unique context
in which it takes place. The benefits of integrating world view and ministry
are clearly spelled out in terms of greater pastoral sensitivity, more
authentic incarnational ministry and, not least of all, growth in personal
self-awareness.
Postmodernism and Christianity: a reading
Lyn McCredden
Zadok Perspectives 50, October 1995
A short discussion of postmodernism and Christianity from a literary
perspective.
Christian Faith in a Postmodern Age
Philip Hughes
Zadok Paper S74, July 1995
This paper contrasts the ways in which those over 50 years and
those under 40 tend to view the world. These quite different world-views
derive in part from the very different life experiences of the two age-groups.
Hughes compares these world-views, traces how the differences have emerged
and explores the implications for the beliefs and shape of the church
in our post-modern world. Individual feelings and experiences have assumed
greater significance at the expense of the traditional regard for corporate
beliefs and institutions. These cultural changes are reflected in expressions
of faith and worship which are characterised by the charismatic and meditative
movements, and by a supermarket approach to church attendance. The paper
provides many challenges, as well as food for thought, for all those concerned
to find an authentic expression of the gospel for our own times.
Fundamentalism, Modernity and Postmodernity
Winifred Wing Han Lamb
Zadok Paper S73, March 1995
This paper examines the epistemology of Protestant fundamentalism
and advances the thesis that it was unduly influenced by its opponent
and by its own oppositional agenda. The effect is the adoption of an epistemology
which is in marked ways modern and which in important ways departs from
orthodoxy. Common features between modern thought and Protestant fundamentalism
are traced and a common metaphysical load is located. The paper then raises
the question of what theology would look like without the epistemological
certainties of modern thought. The suggestion is advanced that there are
resources within orthodoxy to direct an alternative epistemology that
meet the challenge of our postmodern condition.
A Tribute to Jacques Ellul
Richard Donnelly
Zadok Perspectives 47, December 1994
Jacques Ellul, sociologist, historian, lawyer and theologian,
died on 19 May 1994. Ellul's writings on the relationship between Christian
faith and the modern world have been profound, and have greatly influenced
the Zadok community. Here Richard Donnelly reflects upon Ellul's life,
his work and his ideas.
Towards a Vision of the Common Good
Various authors
Zadok Perspectives 43, January 1994
What are the values which we would choose in fashioning a future
Australian society committed to the common good? Articles seeking to answer
this question include: Common wealth and common grace, What good should
we have in common? Common good: naming what we value, Discerning and achieving
the common good, Marketing and the gospel: do they mix?
What is dawning with the New Age?
Various authors
Zadok Perspectives 46, September 1994
This issue of Perspectives explores the ideas, emphases and effects
of the New Age movement, with articles including: The New Age: editorial,
New Age trauma: the unhappy consequences of one family's encounter with
the New Age, The New Age: why be so disturbed? The New Age: an opportunity
to learn, Let's get physical: on keeping body and soul together.
New Age: a christian response to a serious challenge
John Harris
Zadok Paper S50, December 1990
John Harris explains what new age thinking is, considers it from
a biblical perspective, and discusses the challenge this presents to the
church to demonstrate the values of the Kingdom of God. Harris identifies
the ancient and modern roots of New Age theology. He provides some interesting
insights into the motivations and interests of New Age practitioners.
Christianity and Multiculturalism in Australia
Bruce N. Kaye
Zadok Paper S42, 1989
Multiculturalism in Australia is closely related to the question
of religious pluralism. This paper examines what religion is in the Australian
constitution, and discusses what a Christian attitude should be towards
co-existence with people of other religious traditions.
What's Right about the 'New Religious Right'?
John Williams
Zadok Paper T31, 1988
The emergence of the so-called new religious right is a very
important phenomenon in late 20th century western Christianity. It was
most evident at first in the USA, but is now a significant move in Australia.
Williams' paper makes an important contribution to our understanding of
both its desirable and undesirable features.
Gospel and Culture: the Christian challenge at the end of the
second millenium
John Harris
Zadok Paper S32, 1987
Christians face the challenge of living an unchanging gospel
in changing cultures. This paper deals with culture from a biblical and
anthropological perspective and looks at some of the forces which shape
western culture.
Islam
David Penman
Zadok Paper R13, 1983
A must for anyone interested in understanding Islam and its new
vitality.
The Critical Vision: an introduction to and reading guide on Christian
social perspectives
Doug Hynd
Zadok Paper R19, 1982
A comprehensive bibliography on Christian approaches to social
issues, together with an introduction to the development of a Christian
world view.
Christian Missions
David Penman
Zadok Paper R14, 1979
A survey on the mass of literature on Christian missions.
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