Moral Character, Reformed Theology, and Jonathan Edwards

Studies in Christian Ethics 30 (3):262-277 (2017)
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Abstract

Reformed theology is often thought to be antipathetic to virtue theory. However, Jonathan Edwards is a counterexample to this way of thinking. In this article, I offer an account of Edwards’s moral thought as a case study of Reformed theology that is also a species of virtue theory, focusing on what he says about the formation of character. I argue that key doctrinal commitments drive his moral theology, and generate some interesting problems for his ethics. Although his work is not without shortcomings, Edwards is a thinker whose moral theology might be usefully repaired and retrieved by contemporary theologians in the Reformed tradition for whom ‘duties are founded on doctrines’.

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Honoring Jonathan Edwards.Philip L. Quinn - 2003 - Journal of Religious Ethics 31 (2):299 - 321.

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