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Christianity and Social Justice: Religions in Conflict

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Christianity and Social Justice: Religions in Conflict

Christianity and Social Justice is everything Christians need to understand and answer the social justice movement in one book. From its history, secular manifestations, and Christian variations, Jon Harris thoroughly describes the movement, shows how it threatens orthodoxy, and offers powerful responses.

162 pages.

 

“Harris tries to show that the social justice movement has created a parallel universe of thought to the Christianity it is working to replace. It has produced its own gospel, metaphysics, and epistemology by selectively blending Marxism, a radically understood notion of “redistributive justice,” and intergenerational social guilt… In his detailed response to [David] French’s war against “systemic white racism,” Harris points out that in the Bible “each person will answer for his own actions”… Harris also notes that since French has no problem defending Drag Queen Story Hours at local libraries, in violation of specific prohibitions in Mosaic Law against men dressing and behaving like women, he is clearly not consistently upholding Old Testament teachings… One wishes Harris’s refutation were made more widely available.”

–Paul Gottfried, editor-in-chief of Chronicles magazine

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Christianity and Social Justice: Religions in Conflict—

$18.55

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Christianity and Social Justice is everything Christians need to understand and answer the social justice movement in one book. From its history, secular manifestations, and Christian variations, Jon Harris thoroughly describes the movement, shows how it threatens orthodoxy, and offers powerful responses.

162 pages.

 

“Harris tries to show that the social justice movement has created a parallel universe of thought to the Christianity it is working to replace. It has produced its own gospel, metaphysics, and epistemology by selectively blending Marxism, a radically understood notion of “redistributive justice,” and intergenerational social guilt… In his detailed response to [David] French’s war against “systemic white racism,” Harris points out that in the Bible “each person will answer for his own actions”… Harris also notes that since French has no problem defending Drag Queen Story Hours at local libraries, in violation of specific prohibitions in Mosaic Law against men dressing and behaving like women, he is clearly not consistently upholding Old Testament teachings… One wishes Harris’s refutation were made more widely available.”

–Paul Gottfried, editor-in-chief of Chronicles magazine

Christianity and Social Justice: Religions in Conflict | Reformers Bookshop