Books by Bruce Ellis Benson

Evangelicals and Empire Christian Alternatives to the Political Status Quo

by Peter Goodwin Heltzel, Bruce Ellis Benson

This groundbreaking collection considers empire from a global perspective, exploring the role of evangelicals in political, social, and economic engagement at a time when empire is alternately denounced and embraced. It brings noted thinkers from a range of theological perspectives together to engage the most explosive and discussed theorists of empire in the first decade of the twenty-first century, Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri. Using their work as a springboard, the contributors challenge evangelicalism's identification with right-wing politics and grapple with the natures of both empire and evangelicalism.

Contributors
Jim Wallis
Helene Slessarev-Jamir and Bruce Ellis Benson
M. Gail Hamner
Lester Edwin J. Ruiz and Charles W. Amjad-Ali
Jennifer Butler and Glenn Zuber
James K. A. Smith
John Milbank
Patrick Provost-Smith
Sébastien Fath
Kurt Anders Richardson
Juan Martínez
Eleanor Moody-Shepherd and Peter Goodwin Heltzel
Elaine Padilla and Dale T. Irvin
Donald W. Dayton and Christian T. Collins Winn
Mark Lewis Taylor
Corey D. B. Walker
Amos Yong and Samuel Zalanga
Michael S. Horton
Mabiala Kenzo and John Franke
Paul Lim
Mario Costa, Catherine Keller, and Anna Mercedes

"Powerful, urgent, and rigorous. Evangelicals and Empire's diverse voices combine solid scholarship and moral passion to produce a challenging rethinking of what it means to be evangelical."--Ronald J. Sider, president of Evangelicals for Social Action

"Evangelicals and Empire is a significant book because it deals with religious groups that are usually identified with the politics of empire. Helping the reader understand the deeper reasons for the connection of empire and religion, the essays in this book come together to provide a truly invaluable resource for our time as they flesh out alternative resources that resist empire within the evangelical traditions. The future belongs to such efforts that seek to identify new horizons for the interplay of religion and politics."--Joerg Rieger, Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University

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The Phenomenology of Prayer (Perspectives in Continental Philosophy)

by Norman Wirzba, Bruce Ellis Benson

This collection of ground-breaking essays considers the many dimensions of prayer: how prayer relates us to the divine; prayer's ability to reveal what is essential about our humanity; the power of prayer to transform human desire and action; and the relation of prayer to cognition. It takes up the meaning of prayer from within a uniquely phenomenological point of view, demonstrating that the phenomenology of prayer is as much about the character and boundaries of phenomenological analysis as it is about the heart of religious life.

The contributors: Michael F. Andrews, Bruce Ellis Benson, Mark Cauchi, Benjamin Crowe, Mark Gedney, Philip Goodchild, Christina M. Gschwandtner, Lissa McCullough, Cleo McNelly Kearns, Edward F. Mooney, B. Keith Putt, Jill Robbins, Brian Treanor, Merold Westphal, Norman Wirzba, Terence Wright and Terence and James R. Mensch.

Bruce Ellis Benson is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Wheaton College. He is the author of Graven Ideologies: Nietzsche, Derrida, and Marion on Modern Idolatry and The Improvisation of Musical Dialogue: A Phenomenology of Music.

Norman Wirzba is Associate Professor and Chair of the Philosophy Department at Georgetown College, Kentucky. He is the author of The Paradise of God and editor of The Essential Agrarian Reader.

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