A theology of gratitude : Christian and Muslim perspectives / edited by Mona Siddiqui, University of Edinburgh, Nathanael Vette, University of Edinburgh.

Contributor(s): Siddiqui, Mona [editor.] | Vette, Nathanael [editor.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY, USA : Cambridge University Press, 2023Description: 209 ; pagesContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781009198400; 9781009198424Subject(s): Gratitude -- Religious aspects -- Christianity | Gratitude -- Religious aspects -- IslamAdditional physical formats: Online version:: Theology of gratitudeDDC classification: 234/.2 LOC classification: BV4647.G8 | T455 2023Summary: "How, from a theological standpoint, should we make sense of gratitude? This rich interdisciplinary volume is the first concertedly to explore theologies of gratitude from both Christian and Muslim perspectives. While the available literature has tended to rhapsodize gratitude to God and others as both a virtue and an obligation, this book by contrast offers something new by detailing ways in which gratitude is complicated by inequality: even to the point of becoming a vice. Gratitude now emerges as something more than a virtue and other than merely transactional. It can be a burden, bringing about indebtedness and an imbalance of power; but it may also be a resonant source of reconciliation and belonging. Topics discussed cover the personal and political dimensions of gratitude, including such issues as justice, multiculturalism, racism, imperialism, grief, memory and hope. The book assembles, from different traditions, some of the leading theologians of our times"-- Provided by publisher.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

"How, from a theological standpoint, should we make sense of gratitude? This rich interdisciplinary volume is the first concertedly to explore theologies of gratitude from both Christian and Muslim perspectives. While the available literature has tended to rhapsodize gratitude to God and others as both a virtue and an obligation, this book by contrast offers something new by detailing ways in which gratitude is complicated by inequality: even to the point of becoming a vice. Gratitude now emerges as something more than a virtue and other than merely transactional. It can be a burden, bringing about indebtedness and an imbalance of power; but it may also be a resonant source of reconciliation and belonging. Topics discussed cover the personal and political dimensions of gratitude, including such issues as justice, multiculturalism, racism, imperialism, grief, memory and hope. The book assembles, from different traditions, some of the leading theologians of our times"-- Provided by publisher.

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