
Be sure to check out this new CPH book due out January 7, 2011:  
Natural Law: A Lutheran Reappraisal.  Pre-order your copy today!
Natural Law: A Lutheran Reappraisal presents  engaging essays from contemporary Lutheran scholars, teachers, and  pastors, each offering a fresh reappraisal of natural law within the  context of historic Lutheran teaching and practice. Thought-provoking  questions following each essay will help readers apply key Bible texts  associated with natural law to their daily lives.
  
  Why the Natural Law Is Necessary
No  contemporary thinker is interested in a wooden repristination of the  natural law that is tied necessarily to the particular metaphysical  foundations in the Thomistic–Aristotelian synthesis. The history of  natural law shows a wide variety of interpretations and applications.  But they all have some elements in common. They all oppose cultural  relativism, the notion that laws are mere moral conventions that vary  among societies, with no transcendent ontological claim to being  universally valid and binding. To the contrary; those who hold to the  natural law believe that for a law to be just, it must conform to the  structure of reality itself and not depend on the oscillating opinions  and preferences of human beings. The law must be the same for all human  beings and at all times, so that if murder is morally wrong in America,  it is equally so in Asia and Africa. If torture is to be condemned as  evil in Jerusalem, it must be equally so in London and Tehran. The  United Nations’ Declaration of Human Rights formulates rules with  respect to freedom and equality that are binding on all nations and  peoples, not because of any majority vote, but because of an inherent  correspondence between reason and nature. That is what is meant by  saying that the Law is “written on the hearts” (Romans 2:25) of all  human beings.
- Carl Braaten -
  
  CONTRIBUTORS
Rev. Robert C. Baker (LCMS)
Rev. Dr. Carl E. Braaten (ELCA)
Mr. Matthew E. Cochran (LCMS)
Rev. Dr. Albert B. Collver III (LCMS)
Mr. Jacob Corzine (LCMS)
Dr. Adam S. Francisco (LCMS)
Rev. Gifford A. Grobien (LCMS)
Rev. Dr. Korey D. Maas (LCMS)
Dr. Ryan C. MacPherson (ELS)
Dr. Thomas D. Pearson (ELCA)
Rev. Prof. John T. Pless (LCMS)
Rev. Dr. Carl E. Rockrohr (LCMS)
Rev. Dr. Armin Wenz (SELK)
Rev. Dr. J. Larry Yoder, STS (NALC)
Prof. Marianne Howard Yoder (NALC)
Rev. Prof. Roland Ziegler (LCMS)
   
 What Others Are Saying
 Natural law was a common idea among the Reformers and their heirs.  There has been some fledgling reconsideration of this heritage in recent  years in my own Reformed tradition, and it is very encouraging to see  similar discussions taking place among Lutherans.  Natural Law: A Lutheran Reappraisal helpfully  wrestles with natural law from various historical and theological  angles and also explores its relevance for several important social and  ecclesiastical controversies of the present day. These essays on natural  law—some enthusiastic, some cautious, others skeptical—are a wonderful  contribution to the literature and should help to stimulate important  conversations about this perennial issue for years to come.
David VanDrunen
Robert B. Strimple Professor of Systematic
Theology and Christian Ethics
Westminster Seminary California
  
 As a Catholic, I found it fascinating to read these fine essays and  “listen in” on a conversation about natural law conducted by an  outstanding group of Lutheran scholars. The authors consider such topics  as whether there really is a natural human capacity to identify and  affirm valid moral norms, and whether belief in a moral law accessible  to unaided reason is compatible with an acknowledgment of the  devastating impact of sin on the human intellect as well as the human  will. Lutherans will benefit from reading these essays, but so will  everybody else.
Robert P. George
McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence
Princeton University
  
 God's law is written in two ways and two places:  Not only in the  words of revelation, but in our being, for we are made in God's image.   For a long time, many Christians neglected or even denied this insight  because of the mistaken idea that if the image of God can be obscured by  sin, then for all practical purposes there is no natural law.  How  ironic, and how deadly to our common witness, that this common ground  among all human beings, this universal prologue to the gospel, should  have become a battle ground among Christians themselves.  Catholic  myself, I rejoice to see the rekindling of reflection on natural law  among Lutherans, and I look forward to many interesting conversations.
 J. Budziszewski
Professor of Government and Philosophy
University of Texas at Austin
 
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