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The Dove, the Fig Leaf and the Sword: Why Christianity Changes its Mind About War by Alan Billings

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For Theology Students, Scholars and Professors. Are you looking to understand the complexity of peace keeping, and the vital role of praying for those in authority? After reading you'll have a greater understanding of the complexity of peace keeping. The Dove, the Fig Leaf and the Sword' is a fascinating critique of the Church's varying response to the use of force over the centuries that gives Christians a greater understanding of the complexity of peace keeping, and stresses the vital role of praying for those in authority. Alan Billings is an Anglican priest and a former Director of the Centre for Ethics and Religion at Lancaster University. In recent years he has taught the ethics of war to chaplains to the forces at the UK Defence Academy, Amport, and on military bases in England and Germany. ' The Dove, the Fig Leaf and the Sword' is a highly informative, well-researched and systematic approach to historically changing Christian views around war and peace is an excellent overview that does not flinch from also facing the contentious contemporary context. Billings believes Christianity must engage both ethically and realistically if its message is going to have any relevance in the arena of war and the spectrum of other military operational options with those who bear the weight of making those life-changing and responsible choices.

About the Author
The Revd Canon Alan Billings is an Anglican priest and a former Director of the Centre for Ethics and Religion at Lancaster University. In recent years he has taught the ethics of war to chaplains to the forces at the UK Defence Academy, Amport, and on military bases in England and Germany.

Reviews
This highly informative, well-researched and systematic approach to historically changing Christian views around war and peace is an excellent overview that does not flinch from also facing the contentious contemporary context. Alan Billings is well placed to tackle this theme, being an Anglican priest, theologian, ethicist and occasional lecturer to military chaplains. Highlighting historical tensions and change-points within Christianity over the ethics ofwar, he acknowledges his own position by contending that Christianity was never a "pacifist" movement in an absolute sense, even though it commits its followers to seek for peace, and therefore military action may be contemplated in certain circumstances as a "cruel necessity". He then skilfully navigates us through four phases of Christian thought beginning with Christianity's earliest approach which renounced violence and largely took a pacifist approach up to Constantine (The Dove). He moves to Christianity's second thoughts which largely accepted the necessity of violence and developed the JustWar tradition fromConstantine to the Reformation (The Fig Leaf). He asserts the third change-point as the embracing of violence in a righteous cause, covering the post Reformation and the rise of the nation-state to the tragedy of the FirstWorldWarwhere this approach stumbles and then stops at the end of the SecondWorld War (The Sword). The great names, and the greatest name, are all here-Thucydides, Plato, Cicero, Aristotle, Jesus, Augustine, Aquinas, Luther, Grotius and even the Anabaptists getmore than a mention! It is a succinct, sharp and erudite survey. The contentious debate is reserved for the contemporary context. In the fourth section- Return of the Dove?-the recovery of Just War and the more recent questioning of its usefulness are debated with vigour in which Billings argues that Christianity will and should continue to change its mind over military operations and war. Following and adapting Niebuhr, Billings argues for a Christian realist position, acknowledging that any discussion of ethics must work with the realities of power or the ethic will either fail or remain irrelevant to decision-makers. Indeed, with moral ambiguity more present than ever in the complexities surrounding military operations and war in the twenty-first-century context, a Christian realist position that accepts a measure of pragmatism to bring the best or least worst out of situations, is a necessary reality according to Billings. He argues that the Just War tradition in itself is just not enough in today's context; especially with a state deciding to take preventive action to frustrate what it thinks may be a future possibility. He highlights the Middle East in this regard. Indeed, this position will hold that Christianity will mostly change its mind about operations and war, depending on the choices available to a nation-state at any given time. This applies to the combination of motives and reasons behind the more recent emphasis upon pre-emption and prevention; humanitarian interventions; regime change and the prevention of terrorism. The choices of when to intervene militarily in humanitarian circumstances or respond to a violent movement rather than a nation-state are cases in point. If adult theological education is about serious thinking, this highly readable, informative and contentious book will deliver on whichever side of the debate you find yourself. With a light touch, Billings brings additional thinking, especially in the twenty-first-century context, to the tensions that Christianity has with military operations and war. One thing is clear. Billings believes Christianity must engage both ethically and realistically if its message is going to have any relevance in the arena of war and the spectrum of other military operational options with those who bear the weight of making those life-changing and responsible choices. -- Jonathan Woodhouse * JATE *



Book Information
ISBN 9780281072248
Author Alan Billings
Format Paperback
Page Count 192
Imprint SPCK Publishing
Publisher SPCK Publishing
Weight(grams) 252g

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