The first grace
Work detail
"In the book's first section, Hittinger defines the natural law, considers its proper relationship to moral theology and the positive law, and explains how and when judges should be guided by natural law considerations. Then, in the book's second section, he contends with a number of controversial legal and cultural issues from a natural law perspective. Among other things, he shows how the modern propensity to make all sorts of "rights claims" undermines the idea of limited government; how the liberal legal culture's idea of privacy elevates the individual to the status of a sovereign; and how the Supreme Court has come to cast religion as a dangerous phenomenon from which children must be protected.". "Whether discussing the nature of liberalism, the constitutional and moral problems posed by judicial usurpation, or the dangers of technology, Hittinger convincingly demonstrates that in our post-Christian world it is more crucial than ever that we recover older, wiser notions of the concepts of freedom and law - since to oppose them is to misunderstand both profoundly."--BOOK JACKET.
Overview
Shared work-level identity and catalog context.
Contributors
People credited with this work in the active catalog.
- Open Author
Russell Hittinger
Editions
Publication-specific versions linked to this work only.
- Image source: Open LibraryTF
The First Grace
1 views - TFThe first GraceRussell Hittinger
The first Grace
1 views - Image source: Open LibraryTF
The First Grace
- FGFirst GraceRussell Hittinger
First Grace
- TFThe first graceRussell Hittinger
The first grace
- FGfirst graceRussell Hittinger
first grace
- TFThe first graceRussell Hittinger
The first grace
