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.