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A Primer in Christian Ethics: Christ and the Struggle to Live Well

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How does Christian belief and practice relate to living well amid the difficulties of everyday life and the catastrophes and injustices that afflict so many today? In his introduction to Christian ethics, Bretherton provides a new, constructive framework for addressing this question. Connecting the theory and practice of Christian moral thought to contemporary existential concerns, this book integrates classic approaches to the pursuit of wisdom with contemporary liberationist and critical voices. The relationship between human and nonhuman life provides a central focus to the work, foregrounding environmental justice. As well as addressing a broad range of ethical questions, Bretherton situates moral formation and the pursuit of human and nonhuman flourishing alongside a concern for spirituality, pastoral care, and political struggles to survive and thrive in the contemporary context. Written for those seeking a place to start, as well as those seasoned in the field, Bretherton's book provides an innovative ethical framework that moves beyond many of the impasses that shape current moral and political debates.

388 pages, Kindle Edition

Published November 9, 2023

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55 people want to read

About the author

Luke Bretherton

12 books12 followers
Luke Bretherton is professor of theological ethics and senior fellow of the Kenan Institute for Ethics at Duke University. Before joining the Duke faculty, he was reader in Theology & Politics and convener of the Faith & Public Policy Forum at King's College London. He has worked with a variety of faith-based NGOs, mission agencies, and churches around the world, particularly in Central and Eastern Europe.

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Jack Mohr.
6 reviews
April 16, 2025
This is a good book on ethics which keeps a strong objective of cultivating love for God and neighbor throughout. My biggest gripe with the book is that it didn’t always seem to have a consistent point or takeaway throughout. Often at the end of a chapter I wondered if the author actually had a way to practically apply what he wrote. It is hard to fault the book for this however, because Bretherton acknowledges in his epilogue that “throughout this book I raise more questions than I answer.” What I most appreciated about this book was the wide range of quotes Bretherton uses. I enjoyed the variety of perspectives from Augustine, Bonhoeffer, Gutierrez, Nietzsche etc. etc. Overall, I think that while it’s not perfect, Bretherton does a good job in this book laying down groundwork of how Christians should think about a wide range of issues, all the while providing differing opinions from both historical and contemporary thinkers.
Profile Image for Josiah Harmon.
35 reviews2 followers
April 14, 2025
Overall, this is a pretty good book. Not sure I would recommend this book as a "primer" because there are elements in here that I don't think are truly the best way to go about discussing ethics. I tend to agree that the ethics debate falls under the argument that Hauerwas and Wells make about it simply becoming a separation of Christian values and Christian practice out of fear, but also because it dilutes life to a system that revolves around rules. While Bretherton certainly knows what he is talking about, a better book to read for Christians trying to figure out how to live "the good life," would be Practicing the Way by John Mark Comer.
Profile Image for Michael DeVito.
41 reviews
April 23, 2025
I can't decide if I really enjoyed reading this book. I was required to read this book for my ethics course at Messiah, otherwise I probably would not have read it. Luke Bretherton has some interesting views to say the least, and I disagree with a lot he has to say. His claim that Scripture is fallible undermines the entire purpose of the book to me, especially in moments where he puts the Word of God on the same level as listening to strangers. Christian Ethics looks very different to me than it does to Bretherton, with his focus being much more on relations and those around us rather than on following the Word of God.

Despite this, I do agree with Bretherton on what he has to say about work and how we are to live our lives in this secular world. I think he would agree that we should strive to be good citizens of our nation and good representatives of Christ in the world, whether its in our jobs, our education, or our family life.

Overall, I wouldn't recommend this book for a new Christian or someone who believes they are weak in faith. You can get a lot more from other authors such as C.S. Lewis, or simply by reading Scripture.
Profile Image for Chaim Moore.
29 reviews1 follower
June 21, 2025
Bretherton’s exercise in a newer path of doing ethics, one focused on a Christological-relational focus on neighborly interactions, feels much more tangible than traditional ethical approaches. If you have some intuition for the field already, this is a helpful, nearly comprehensive framework.
Chapter 4, “Listening to Strangers”; Chapter 10, “Virtues and Vision”; Chapter 11, “Deliberation and Judgment”; and Chapter 14; “Politics” are highly recommended.
Profile Image for Tim Curcuruto.
53 reviews
May 5, 2025
Love that every single review on Goodreads comes from Messiah University Honors Ethics students lol.

In the introduction, Bretherton writes "Overall, this book explores what it means for Christians to act faithfully, lovingly, and hopefully in the contemporary Western context." If that was the man's mission, I'd say he did a great job. This is a deeply rich and meaningful work on ethics. I loved that Bretherton purposefully combines ethical and political theology, understanding how much the two blend into each other. I love that he pulls and references practically all of my theological GOATs, from Dietrich Bonhoeffer to Gustavo Gutierrez to Stanley Hauerwas to Dorothy Day to even more contemporary figures like Jonathan Tran. I love that he provides answers yet leaves just enough questions for the readers to take his abstractions and try living them out in their lives themselves.

I'm not gonna be all positive in this review though. In fact, "all positive" is maybe the main issue I had with the book. There are times in the book where Bretherton is so focused on describing the goodness and beauty of what living and acting faithfully looks like (which honestly is fair) that his writing starts to feel a little utopian. This especially stood out to me in the final chapter, the one on politics, where Bretherton spends practically the entire chapter describing what great "Christian politics" looks like, without really touching much on how these ideal Christian politics fit into the current Christian and political landscapes. I'm down for "politics as a mode of neighbor love" as much as the next guy, but how can we make that a reality? This is less so an example of questions being purposefully left than confusion being left, and its at times like these were the book feels less like a primer and more like a fantasy.

That critique aside, I found this to be an excellent work on Christian ethics. Its got good, true, and beautiful written all over it. Nice work Luke. 4 stars.
Profile Image for Russell Sigler.
71 reviews
September 1, 2025
My knowledge of classical ethics before this book was pretty much just the trolley problem. Bretherton's book opened me up to a range of ethical frameworks, and also asked some helpful questions. He centers on the Hebrew concept of "shalom" for much of the book, which I found to be a very effective lens. If you're dumb like me, he uses some big words so that takes a little getting used to.
Profile Image for Ashlyn Pendergrass.
134 reviews
December 7, 2024
Read this for Bible capstone. I didn’t enjoy it per se, but it fundamentally changed my brain, so I figured I should include a review.

Read this if you’re looking to escape legalism and think about faith in abstract ways. Don’t read it if you hate passive voice and meandering prose.
Profile Image for Kristina Knight.
123 reviews2 followers
March 12, 2023
Disclosure: I read a pre-published copy of this book, granted access by Dr. Bretherton via Intro to Christian Ethics 757 at Duke Divinity School. I look forward to its public release.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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