No Rising Tide: Theology, Economics, and the Future
Author(s): Joerg Rieger (Author)
Publisher: Fortress Press
Publication Date: 24 Sept. 2009
Language: English
Print length: 208 pages
ISBN-10: 9780800664596
ISBN-13: 0800664590
Book Description
Even though economic downturns are still followed by upturns, fewer people benefit from them. As a result, economic crisis is an everyday reality that permanently affects all levels of our lives. The logic of downturn, developed in this book, helps make sense of what is going on, as the economy shapes us more deeply than we had ever realized, not only our finances and our work, but also our relationships, our thinking, and even our hopes and desires. Religion is one arena shaped by economics and thus part of the problem but, as Joerg Rieger shows, it might also hold one of the keys for providing alternatives, since it points to energies for transformation and justice. Rieger’s hopeful perspective unfolds in stark contrast to an economy and a religion that thrive on mounting inequality and differences of class.
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Joerg Rieger uses the occasion of the present financial crisis to remind us once again that the religion that controls most human history at present is devoted to the market rather than to the father of Jesus Christ. He shows how far we who call ourselves Christians have been sucked into the orbit of worship of this God. May his call to repentance be widely heard.” –John B Cobb Jr “Professor Emeritus of Theology, Claremont School of Theology”
“This is an important and welcome addition to the growing body of literature which recognizes that global economics is a theological as well as an ethical and political issue of great urgency.” –Theodore Jennings “Professor of Biblical and Constructive Theology, Chicago Theological Seminary”
About the Author
Joerg Rieger is distinguished professor of theology, Cal Turner Chancellor’s Chair of Wesleyan Studies, and director of the Wendland-Cook Program in Religion and Justice at Vanderbilt University. Hs books include Jesus vs. Caesar: For People Tired of Serving the Wrong God (2018), No Religion but Social Religion: Liberating Wesleyan Theology (2018), Unified We Are a Force: How Faith and Labor Can Overcome America’s Inequalities (2016), and No Rising Tide: Theology, Economics, and the Future (2009).