Student Resources
Please note: This title has recently been acquired by Taylor & Francis. Due to rights reasons, any multimedia resources will no longer be available.
Click on the tabs below, to view the resources for each chapter.
Learning Objectives
Chapter 1
- Recall the meaning of ethics, Christian ethics, and morals.
- Compare teleological and deontological approaches to ethics.
- Analyze the assumptions that impact Christian ethics.
- Understand why knowledge can be more important to ethicists than behavior.
Chapter 2
- Compare the beliefs of Christians, Jews, and Muslims.
- Define objectivism, humanism and behaviorism
- Understand the meaning of “the moral life” in various faith traditions.
- Consider whether varying philosophies can lead to the same conclusions.
Chapter 3
- Understand the spectrum of ideas that make up Christian ethics.
- Identify the major alternative thinkers and their arguments.
- Explain the meaning and historical impact of liberation theology.
- Recall the importance of personal decision making in Christian ethics.
Chapter 4
- Identify sources of Christian moral authority.
- Understand different ways of interpreting the authority presented in the Bible.
- Analyze the role of the church in community and individual religious life.
- Recall the importance of personal conscience in Christian ethics.
Chapter 5
- Understand the basis of Hebrew morality.
- Compare Hebrew and Christian moral teachings.
- Recall the significance of Paul to Christian ethics.
- Analyze Jesus’s ethical teachings.
Chapter 6
- Identify the main theological premises for Christianity.
- Analyze the meaning and importance of faith.
- Understand the significance of worship and its link to morality.
- Evaluate the forms and meanings of love.
Chapter 7
- Recall how sexual expression and morality has changed in modern times.
- Understand the Christian perspective on sex.
- Explain how marriage is perceived in Christianity.
- Evaluate whether Christianity is inclusive and affirming to homosexuals.
Chapter 8
- Understand the role of biomedicine in reproduction.
- Explain the emergence of cloning as a new technology.
- Analyze the moral questions that advancements in reproductive technology create.
- Evaluate how society can care for the dying in keeping with Christian morality.
Chapter 9
- Recall the difference between stereotypes, prejudice, and discrimination.
- Explain the historical events in the last century that significantly impacted minority groups.
- Evaluate how the Bible deals with minorities generally and race specifically.
- Understand the power of social change.
Chapter 10
- Analyze the contemporary outlook on women’s roles.
- Identify the roles and importance of women in scripture.
- Explain the viewpoints of various forms of feminism.
- Understand the impact of the feminist movement.
Chapter 11
- Explain the meaning of democracy for Christians.
- Understand the importance of justice to democracy.
- Recall the scriptural teachings about government.
- Analyze how Christians can contribute to and help improve the state.
Chapter 12
- Understand the basis of the American justice system.
- Recall the reasons why we punish people who commit crimes.
- Evaluate the rights of the victims of crime.
- Describe the ethical quandary presented by capital punishment.
Chapter 13
- Explain the historical instances in which Christianity has engaged in war.
- Understand how the Christian perspective on warfare changed in modern times.
- Analyze how the development of nuclear and chemical weapons has changed the ethical questions presented by war.
- Recall the meaning of preemptive warfare in modern times.
Chapter 14
- Define capitalism and explain how it operates.
- Understand the broad social issues of our time that relate to economic conditions.
- Evaluate the significance of what we do for work to the larger Christian ethical perspective.
- Recall Jesus’s perspective on economics and ethics.
Chapter 15
- Evaluate the problem of balancing a growing population with limited resources.
- Identify the factors that are involved in the ecological crisis.
- Analyze why and how we can treat animals ethically.
- Understand the perspectives of the main Christian ethicists who have addressed the ecological problem.