Humanizing Neo-liberal Globalization: A Christian Vision and Commitment in the Context of India

Thesis advisor: Thomas J. Massaro === There is a substantial and growing corpus of literature that describes, with convincing statistics and analysis, globalization as the greatest achievement in the history of our modern world and that it has brought the greatest degree of prosperity and economic g...

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Main Author: Tellis, Cyprian
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/2932
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spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1011572019-05-10T07:38:47Z Humanizing Neo-liberal Globalization: A Christian Vision and Commitment in the Context of India Tellis, Cyprian Thesis advisor: Thomas J. Massaro Text thesis 2011 Boston College English electronic application/pdf There is a substantial and growing corpus of literature that describes, with convincing statistics and analysis, globalization as the greatest achievement in the history of our modern world and that it has brought the greatest degree of prosperity and economic growth to poor countries. However, seen from the perspective of the poor and the marginalized, the current globalization has not helped them to end their misery and marginalization; indeed in most cases it has actually worsened their situation. The Christian community cannot remain an idle spectator of this unjust, inhuman and sinful global reality. Analyzed from a Christian theological perspective, it is not only an economic issue but also a moral issue. It is a social sin to violate human dignity, to commodify human labor, and to marginalize the poor. Based on the teachings of the Federation of Asian Bishops Conferences, the Catholic Bishops Conference of India and some prominent Asian theologians, I contend that dialogue with other faith traditions, cultures and the poor must be an essential part of her mission of humanizing the current globalization. I argue that the Church in India should avoid the presumption that she already possesses a vision of the common good adequate to the Indian society. While remaining committed to gospel values, the Church must be an open-minded listening and learning. Dialogue Globalization Integral Development Listening Church Participation Social Justice Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (STD) — Boston College, 2011. Submitted to: Boston College. School of Theology and Ministry. Discipline: Sacred Theology. 310064 http://hdl.handle.net/2345/2932
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Dialogue
Globalization
Integral Development
Listening Church
Participation
Social Justice
spellingShingle Dialogue
Globalization
Integral Development
Listening Church
Participation
Social Justice
Tellis, Cyprian
Humanizing Neo-liberal Globalization: A Christian Vision and Commitment in the Context of India
description Thesis advisor: Thomas J. Massaro === There is a substantial and growing corpus of literature that describes, with convincing statistics and analysis, globalization as the greatest achievement in the history of our modern world and that it has brought the greatest degree of prosperity and economic growth to poor countries. However, seen from the perspective of the poor and the marginalized, the current globalization has not helped them to end their misery and marginalization; indeed in most cases it has actually worsened their situation. The Christian community cannot remain an idle spectator of this unjust, inhuman and sinful global reality. Analyzed from a Christian theological perspective, it is not only an economic issue but also a moral issue. It is a social sin to violate human dignity, to commodify human labor, and to marginalize the poor. Based on the teachings of the Federation of Asian Bishops Conferences, the Catholic Bishops Conference of India and some prominent Asian theologians, I contend that dialogue with other faith traditions, cultures and the poor must be an essential part of her mission of humanizing the current globalization. I argue that the Church in India should avoid the presumption that she already possesses a vision of the common good adequate to the Indian society. While remaining committed to gospel values, the Church must be an open-minded listening and learning. === Thesis (STD) — Boston College, 2011. === Submitted to: Boston College. School of Theology and Ministry. === Discipline: Sacred Theology.
author Tellis, Cyprian
author_facet Tellis, Cyprian
author_sort Tellis, Cyprian
title Humanizing Neo-liberal Globalization: A Christian Vision and Commitment in the Context of India
title_short Humanizing Neo-liberal Globalization: A Christian Vision and Commitment in the Context of India
title_full Humanizing Neo-liberal Globalization: A Christian Vision and Commitment in the Context of India
title_fullStr Humanizing Neo-liberal Globalization: A Christian Vision and Commitment in the Context of India
title_full_unstemmed Humanizing Neo-liberal Globalization: A Christian Vision and Commitment in the Context of India
title_sort humanizing neo-liberal globalization: a christian vision and commitment in the context of india
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/2932
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