01353cam a22002777i 450000100090000000300040000900500170001300800410003001000170007102000310008802000280011903500240014704001000017104200140027105000250028508200200031010000550033024501050038530000270049050400690051752003570058660000380094360000440098165000220102565000280104719798922OSt20210609160059.0170719s2016 mnu b 001 0 eng d a 2017385169 a9781451496260 (alk. paper) a1451496265 (alk. paper) a(OCoLC)ocn951227300 aYDXCPbengerdacYDXCPdBTCTAdBDXdLTSdOCLCOdLNTdMR4dBHAdBCTdISBdOCLCFdOCLCQdISSdDLC alccopycat00aBX4827.B57bE45 201600a230/.0440922231 aElliston, Clark J.q(Clark James),d1980-eauthor.10aDietrich Bonhoeffer and the ethical self :bchristology, ethics, and formation /cClark J. Elliston. axv, 220 pages ;c24 cm aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 205-211) and indexes. aThis volume argues that Bonhoeffer's early work, particularly his Christocentric anthropology, grounds his later expressed commitments to responsibility and faithfulness in a ""world come of age."" Ellison suggests, in fact, that a concern for otherness permeates all of Bonhoeffer's work: a Christian self-defined by its orientation towards otherness.10aBonhoeffer, Dietrich,d1906-1945.17aBonhoeffer, Dietrich,d1906-1945.2fast 0aChristian ethics. 7aChristian ethics.2fast