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Studies in Christian Ethics, Vol. 20, No. 3, 325-344 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/0953946807082931
© 2007 SAGE Publications

Forgiveness and the End of Economy

Daniel M. Bell, JR

Lutheran Theological Southern Seminary 4201 North Main Street, Columbia, South Carolina 29229, USA, dbell{at}ltss.edu

This paper considers the economic effect of the Christian practice of forgiveness. In particular, the argument is that the gift of divine forgiveness in Christ, as articulated by Anselm, interrupts `economy' (with its logic of scarcity, debt, and finally death) and puts in place an aneconomic order (with its theo-logic of abundance, ceaseless generosity, and resurrection) that is full of the promise of deliverance from the affliction of capitalism. Also addressed here is the way that the human reception of divine forgiveness takes shape in the Works of Mercy, how these works are not rightly understood as `mere charity' at home within `economy' but in fact constitute the appearance of an order that heralds the end of economy, and, finally, how this practice of forgiveness redeems/ reconfigures what is commonly called `economic justice'.

Key Words: economy • exchange • forgiveness • gift • Kathryn Tanner • sacrifice • scarcity • St. Anselm


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