"Genetics and Christian Ethics" explores the ethical implications of human genetic advancements, urging Christian ethics to engage in the genetics debate. It addresses issues like genetic screening and gene therapy through a modified virtue ethics lens, emphasizing prudence and justice, and highlights the importance of a theological perspective in these discussions.
Focusing on the intersection of theology and science, the book proposes a Christology informed by humanity's evolutionary history and contemporary evolutionary theories. It emphasizes the roles of wisdom and wonder as key concepts that bridge scientific understanding and theological reflection. This approach aims to foster a spirituality that harmonizes scientific insights with spiritual beliefs, offering a fresh perspective on the relationship between faith and the natural world.
In this book, Jewish, Muslim and Christian scholars explore the question: what can it mean to love Planet Earth? Many people will profess casually that 'I love nature', but can that love make an actual impact on the life of our distressed and ravaged world? The writers consider how love might be, not just an emotional extravangance, but a practical response to the ecological crisis into which the human and non-human world is plunged at the present time. Correspondingly, they enquire whether this love can be reciprocated by non-human forms of life and even by apparently inanimate objects. As believers from three main Abrahamic faiths they ask how this love for nature connects both with the act of loving God and with receiving the love that God bestows on all creation. Thus they dare to maintain that love of God can be a practical response to environmental emergency.