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Scott B. Rae says that our culture is in an ethical mess because we’ve neglected moral training and education. In Doing the Right Thing, he argues that there is such a thing as moral truth, that it can be known, and that it can be put into practice.
Looking at the areas of medicine, the marketplace, public life, education, and the family, Rae shows how foundational ethical principles can guide you in making moral day-to-day decisions. Informed by Scripture and calling for a renewed understanding of the importance of the Christian faith in moral training, Doing the Right Thing issues a call for cultivated virtue that can bring about both better lives and a better society.
Gain a comprehensive understanding of Christian ethics with Christian Ethics in Plain Language.
“A third critical element in cultivating virtue is the practice of repentance” (Page 76)
“A fourth way our culture attempts to foster virtue is by urging us to look inside ourselves.” (Page 73)
“Truth is, to put it simply, correspondence to reality” (Page 43)
“A third strategy of the culture to produce good people is education” (Page 73)
“A third element a Christian worldview provides for virtue is the most important. Christian faith takes our fallen nature very seriously, and it is not assumed that if you know the right thing to do that you will do it.” (Page 80)
Scott Rae is professor of Christian ethics at Talbot School of Theology at Biola University in La Mirada, California. He is the author of Business for the Common Good, The Virtues of Capitalism: A Moral Case for Free Markets, and Moral Choices: An Introduction to Ethics.