Faith & Economics
NUMBER 58, Fall 2011
Symposium: What Do Economists and Theologians Have to Say to Each Other? Present Situation and Future Prospects
Symposium Chair’s Introduction
Paul Oslington
The Conversation between Economics and Theology in Christian Colleges
Andrew Yuengert
Christian Scholarship in Economics at American Research Universities
Daniel Hungerman
What Do Economists and Theologians Have to Say to Each Other? The International Situation
Michael Pollitt
Economics and American Theological Curricala: What’s Missing
Craig Blomberg
Discussion: Economics and Theology in Conversation
Mary Hirschfeld
Articles
Divisible Goods and Common Good: Reflections on Caritas in Vertate
Francis Russel Hittinger
Comment on Hittinger’s “Divisible Goods and Common Good: Reflections on Caritas in Veritate”
Joseph Kaboski
A Spiritual Response to the Financial Crisis? Making Decisions for the Really Long Run
Charles W. Calomiris
Book Reviews
Remember the Poor: Paul, Poverty, and the Greco-Roman World
by Bruce W. Longenecker
Engaging Economics: New Testament Scenarios and Early Christian Reception
by Bruce W. Longenecker and Kelly D. Liebengood
Reviewed by Kurt C. Schaefer
This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly
by Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth S. Rogoff
Reviewed by Jeff Haymond, Zach Weston, and Kyle Wilcox
Slapped by the Invisible Hand: The Panic of 2007
by Gary B. Gorton
Reviewed by John Lunn
Entrepreneurship in the Catholic Tradition
by Anthony Percy
Reviewed by John Larrivee
The Economics of Honor: Biblical Reflections on the Meaning of Life, Money, and What Really Matters
by Ian Harper
Reviewed by Gordon Menzies and Trevor Thomas