Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Power, Possibility, and Personal Agency: What Should Ethics Know of Sin?

Tranter, Samuel

Power, Possibility, and Personal Agency: What Should Ethics Know of Sin? Thumbnail


Authors



Abstract

One striking feature of apocalyptic readings of Paul—and the Protestant dogmatics that follows after such a Paulinism—is the ‘widescreen’ portrayal of Sin as Power. This account stresses the ‘three-agent drama’ of salvation and the bondage of human persons to anti-God forces. It resists moralising interpretations of human sins in favour of a starker moral cosmology. In this way, it seems to leave ‘ethics’ and ‘freedom’ in suspension. Contrast the approach of the moral theologian Oliver O’Donovan. Here, sin is a case study in the difference of perspectives between dogmatics and ethics. Dogmatics, ‘making sin exceedingly sinful, quickly resorts to apocalyptic largeness of scale’. Ethics is concerned instead with ‘possible’ sins. It describes sin in phenomenological rather than ultimate terms—something to be avoided in the next moment of free agency. This article distils the theological commitments each intends to secure, observes what each risks, and seeks to determine what is at stake. It draws them together in a synthetic moral ontology, but also looks further, to an integrative account that can inform moral discernment. To this end, the final section observes how subsequent work in Pauline studies converges with discussions about structural sin in Catholic social thought.

Citation

Tranter, S. (2024). Power, Possibility, and Personal Agency: What Should Ethics Know of Sin?. Studies in Christian Ethics, 37(2), 344-366. https://doi.org/10.1177/09539468241235048

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 22, 2024
Online Publication Date Mar 11, 2024
Publication Date 2024-05
Deposit Date May 21, 2024
Publicly Available Date May 21, 2024
Journal Studies in Christian Ethics
Print ISSN 0953-9468
Electronic ISSN 1745-5235
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 37
Issue 2
Pages 344-366
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/09539468241235048
Keywords moral theology, Christian ethics, sin, Oliver O’Donovan, John Webster, apocalyptic, Catholic social thought, Beverly Gaventa
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/2392445

Files





You might also like



Downloadable Citations