Table of Contents
The Bible, the Economy, and the Poor
Edited by Ronald A. Simkins and Thomas M. Kelly, Creighton University
Introduction (pp. 1-3)
The Biblical Tradition
1. The Creation of Poverty in Ancient Israel (pp. 4-19)
2. The Widow and Orphan in the Political Economy of Ancient Israel (pp. 20-33)
3. The Political Economy of Peasant Poverty: What the Eighth-Century Prophets Presumed but Did Not State (pp. 34-60)
4. “The Poorest of the Land”: Perception and Identity of the Remnant in 2 Kings and Jeremiah (pp. 61-69)
5. You Didn’t Build That! A Prophetic View of the Political Economy from the Exile (pp. 70-82)
6. Centralization of Political-Economic Power and the Generation of Poverty: The Mission of Jesus (pp. 83-105)
7. “Prophet Margins” in the Economy of Salvation: Having, Being, and Doing in the Gospel of Luke (pp. 106-31)
8. Justification and Justice: Reading Paul with the Economically Vanquished (pp. 132-46)
Theological, Ethical, and Other Responses
9. “God Stands Together with the Poor”: How Jews Viewed Poverty and Aided the Poor in the Post-Biblical Period (pp. 147-64)
10. The Bible and Social Justice: Has Anything Changed in Our Third Millennium? (pp. 165-78)
11. Challenging the Status Quo: How Rutilio Grande, S.J. Used Scripture to Address Socio-Economic Inequality (pp. 179-89)
12. Financialization and the Changing Face of Poverty: Christian and Muslim Perspectives (pp. 190-216)
13. Luxury: Sign of the Beast, or of the Blessing? (pp. 217-28)
14. The Danger of Description: The Ethnic Labeling of the Poor in Colonial Rwanda (pp. 229-41)
15. Business in the Service of the Common Good: A Christian Perspective (pp. 242-56)
16. Teaching and Learning an Option for the Poor: The Book of Job and Belief in a Just World (pp. 257-64)