J. Ross Wagner

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J. Ross Wagner



Average rating: 4.46 · 39 ratings · 8 reviews · 8 distinct worksSimilar authors
Being Christian After the D...

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4.77 avg rating — 13 ratings3 editions
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Heralds of the Good News: I...

4.18 avg rating — 11 ratings — published 2001 — 7 editions
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The Word Leaps the Gap: Ess...

4.33 avg rating — 6 ratings — published 2008 — 4 editions
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Reading the Sealed Book: Ol...

4.25 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2013 — 4 editions
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A Scribe Trained for the Ki...

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it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 3 ratings2 editions
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Between Gospel and Election...

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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2010 — 4 editions
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Like Joseph in Beauty: Yeme...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2008
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Heralds of the Good News: I...

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More books by J. Ross Wagner…
Quotes by J. Ross Wagner  (?)
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“Aristotle spoke of the goal or end, the telos, of human moral behavior. We are on a journey toward that point, which he called EObaiµovia. That has normally been translated as "happiness"; but the meaning Aristotle had in mind was not the one that word often suggests in today's Western world (the feeling of contentment or pleasurable excitement) but the more organic one of becoming our full and true selves, discovering in practice the best and highest activity of which humans are capable.”
J. Ross Wagner, The Word Leaps the Gap: Essays on Scripture and Theology in Honor of Richard B. Hays

“We live in a confused time, with democracy in apparent decline and with the church and Christian consciences increasingly at risk from governments, in various parts of the globe, that, having made a mess of almost everything else, decide to distract attention by stirring up anti-Christian sentiment and passing laws designed to make life difficult for those who want to be faithful followers of Jesus Christ. This is where faithfulness, loyalty, and trustworthiness will stand out, where that fourth meaning of rrionc is needed over against the shrinkage of "faith" to merely "my personal belief." The rhetoric of the Enlightenment has been extremely keen to squash "faith" into "private, personal belief," so that it can then insist that such "faith" should stay as a private matter and not leak out to infect the wider world. But since the Christian's personal belief is in the creator God who raised Jesus from the dead, this personal belief can never remain only a personal belief but, rooted in the trust that is the first meaning of rricrts, must grow at once into the loyalty, the public trustworthiness, that is the fourth meaning. This too is part of the virtue of "faith": to take the thousand small decisions to be loyal, even in public, even when it is dangerous or difficult, and so to acquire the habit of confessing this faith (sense 3) both when it is safe and when it is dangerous. Just as Mother Teresa spoke of recognizing Jesus in the Eucharist and then going out to recognize him in the poor and needy, so we need to learn the virtue of affirming our faith in our liturgical and prayer life so that we
can then go out and affirm it on the street, in public debate, in pursuit of that freedom for which the second-century apologists argued.
Christian faith, then, does indeed belong among the virtues. But we can only understand that in the light of the full biblical and eschatological narrative, in which God's eventual new creation, launched in Jesus' resurrection, will make all things new. Christian faith looks back to Jesus, and on to that eventual new day. It tastes in advance, in personal and public life, the freedom that we already have through Jesus and that one day we shall have in all its fullness. The practice of this "faith" is, on the one hand, the steady, grace-given entering into the habit by which our character is formed, a habit correlated with those resulting from the similar practice of hope and love. On the other hand, the practice of this faith is the genuine anticipation in the present of that trust, belief, and faithfulness that are part of the telos, the goal. That goal, already given in Jesus Christ, is the destination toward which we are now journeying in the power of the Spirit. Virtue is one of the things that happen in between, and because of, that gift and that goal.”
J. Ross Wagner, The Word Leaps the Gap: Essays on Scripture and Theology in Honor of Richard B. Hays

“Such a dream would be the moral or even emotional equivalent of a poor person suddenly winning the lottery: without effort, suddenly all your problems are over! Just pray about it and there won't be any more moral battles!
But virtue is not like that, and Christian moral living is not like that either. The romantic dream of an inner transformation that will make moral effort unnecessary is untrue both to the New Testament and to worldwide and millennia-long Christian experience.”
J. Ross Wagner, The Word Leaps the Gap: Essays on Scripture and Theology in Honor of Richard B. Hays



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